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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1907-02-14, Page 6rte. e•r-•. • f CURRENT Topics. It may Le that In 6o1110 parts of the c'untry ps' ' will boat a little mores' quickly and lug capeetations nal Le mired through the announcement by Prof. Bigelow That the day Is near at hund when_ it will be passible and ear) lc. forecast weather a year in [Avarice. One may believe 11eiit rush strides in science will leo gratefully weleof,ied I•) the agriculturist, who will be glad 10 know whether he is to no favored with a dry and hot or a cold and wet sutnunrr, end oho wilt tneke his farming arrange- ments ae•c'onlingly. See p,;rdictions, if trey can be relied oil, will be of lncal- cutuble fenr•flt to the farming districts, fol' under this eyste n the limner wdl knew exactly when to put In his crop rind what snag► to select for Itis years fleece! attentk n. Of course it is assumed that the confi- dence of the fanner will be secured be ile lived in lines that were dark, nest►Its • little more satisfactory in the rough, immoral -when nteu's corlscl- \n of ences were blunted and seared us with y present short time forecasting. a hot iron. We must ✓rut expect too 11 may be difticult to convince a farrier much from hien, therefore, nor set too that n weather expert who cermet inful_ high a standard for him, but must judge llbly see ahead twenty-four hours is hire by his time. It was a period of capable of peering Into a future of 3G.5 moral twilight when he lived. lteligi- dnss. Such is fhe pronemc-e 0t the ! otr,ly the night nits ,lark. God raised up this man for a social human mind to doubt and mi -i:'' aief that work which was to deliver his ntti•,n unless examples of near at and ;mfrillt- 1t ern bondage. This was a labor that bility are afforded, the weather prophet, requited great physte•al strength, and whatever his ability will command as this was given trim; fur we tied hill/ per. forming feats of valor --carrying away little credence as Cassandra. the gates of Gaza, killing many in bat- tle and pulling down the temple of 1)ea- AS for the roan in the city or town Eon. Blind Jehn Milton gtwes us n corn- ' n►entary on his life in his "Samsun areal from a slight emotion of curiosity Agosnir:es." rtttd Feientifie interest, he does not care What was the difficulty with iitie the traditional rap what the weather is Mall. Ile was presumptuous and to be a year hence. But he is interested thought God would certainly stand by lo a considerable extent in the weather of filo, hut God never stands Its a imtn to -night or to -morrow morning, and as WHO IS IN THE \\'[ION( . he is likely to have engagements of one Not only this, but he followed the • kind or another It would benefit hint Pulses of tris passionate nature and greatly to be sure whether he must pro- teas led astray. Ile trilled with sin. 11@ 'cid the secret of his great strength to Aide himself with an umbrella r r a fur a wicked woman, and this led 10 his coat. Ile would like 10 know linens .vo- downfall. Ilia enemies took hint, put rally that n zero prediction means zero out his eyes, bound hint with fetters weather, that he may pay adequate at- of brass and made him grind in the hellion to his water pipes and make other prison -house. Sin robs of strength. Satnn is a arrangements confor►iiable to the fore- sand roaster. Christ is a friend who east. Hence, while he has no desire to rids us of sin's allurements and defile - Wild in the way of the advancement of ment. This ratan is a warning agnin-et tr ience or to impede the ambitions of the the influence of reit companions. '''hese weather bureau, he will be content with bra Burr to pull us down sooner or tater. Evil companions are winning multitudes Ihut exhibition of pro;,ress which occur- tee -day in New York from the right way. ittely forewarns hien of n period covering SIN ROBS OF STRENGT Trifling With Sin Is Dangerous Even for the Strong• And she stud "the 1'hilielines are up- The soul is undone Ly sinful conepan- (' ' the, Salm-MIL" And he awoke out k ns unh'ss (Gua g;i\es .tremgth to resi. t c•i his sleep and sa.d "I will go out as There is a %%urning here uteo against at ether times and shake myself free.' i:I-assut'ted nlurriagJcs. 11 is quite pro - But he knew not Ihrit Jehovah was de- i able that Delilah was attractive. Such parted from bun. -Judges x5 i., 20. women are apt t4) study how to allure. The luau wtio trifled with sin in this \Vise men bhuuld be on their guard chapter was Sonrsoll. Ile was from a nguinst the seducli5 a influences of mere good family rind his parents were de- beauty, grace and wealth. This 1111111 we,tit, religious, praying Jx•.)ple. Ile certainly made a grave tnislttke in al- nns early dedicated to his work and lying himself wi:h one who had no depth lead he gone steadily forward would have of chitracler and was lacking in the Leen successful; but he failed and tell element, and graces that make up a and Leeonies re \telling to nrecn in every etieees:ful life. Men and women ought age. to be ecrupuk►u-ly careful in the matter of marriage; ler hasty and ill -matched marriages are the source of much an- noyance and suffering. A warning is also given here against one-sided morality. This man vowed :n his youth 'lint he would never touch strong ,drink, and this was a good re- sr,luliun, since ecienc& and experience prove that temperance and abstinence are a great blessing. The mistake etude was that too much dependence was put upon vir•tye. In opposition to this we plead for A WELL-BALANCED LIFE:. twenty-four or forty-eight hours. Such modesty seeks not to overtax the mind * iK)F***** $ HOME. and vision of the forecaster.t******V-****: sk There no longer is reason why we should grow old, or even die. Thus aalth the man from Paris. Ile is a Paris - inn doeter, Prof. D'Arsenvnl, who says, al'o, that he has found n way to pro- long life together w ith his good friend, Dr. Newtlero. 'Their idea, briefly, is the 4ks:ay of the arteries, whence spring all death. and dL ease may Le prevented or cured by means of their simple expe- dient, an electric. current of high fre- quency. Prof. I)•:\r: envnl has invented Al riinchine of extre•1tte'!r high Jxn:er, with which he already has experimented on patients. One of lois pollen's describes the treatment as an electric bath which clean.ses all then arteries and other or - gene. and rexslorM Ihen) to their original elasticity and health. The doublers say that while there may he bonne ground for the idutements made. they doubt the pre- mises :-Thal the decay of the arteries is Vie cause of death and diseases. PRIVATE POSED AS O1'I'lt:l•:It. elasquerack•d in Superior\ Uniform and Gine Orders to I. ere ane. 1'riwale Morgan of tete Royal \\'eleh I'u•eliers is to be court-ntarlialed for a reeinikably daring expk►it. wage'', whose parents reside nt Staf- ee.rd. England, while on furlough coll- et i5ed tete Idea of masquerading; in his master's uniform. Ile is alleged to have helped himself freely to nrlicle.: belong - Ing to the ofths'ra: w ar•drohr'. ung relepeur• nee . ornelimes in full uniform. and nt others In' mufti. Ile reprimanded .Qev. trill private soldiers on furlough for ep►pearing in sloven'y uniform, nil threat riled to report them to the command- ing ()Meer. Evc'n hluejnckek dill riot ekeape les attention. One able seaman woe, 11 is said. actually escorted to the rnilwny station by Morgan, and sent back nab his kit le rejoin the ('linvinel FIeet. Mrergan's crowning juke wag al the expel..., of the local rectuilingr+ eieg;eant rind drill instruelor, twl)0n) be visual el the \'Muni"er nrmory. Smartly drs"ee'ei in civilian chilhe's, he ndopinl 8.1 imperi(•u4 car. and aceue'd loth of - 11. er; of lnsity in not notifying nrf'n improperly dre*sel on furlough. ilotlt r.f1i.•inle were ':plurally perturbed. rine' wile') their 11.4:101'. with sat. inn dignity, lunnounr.sl himself ns "i.ice!. \'aug1ian- J•.ne=," they al once conclude:I that it wn• n surprise vi!sll by an inspecting,* elee'er, and snttileal accordingly. At length \liergniee identify was die. revered and he w•n< arrested. aai r:Il:\\(:1•:, 'Jrs•ie. 1 Iiave told you again anti again nr.t 141 :peak when older per:.Otos. are I,:tking. but wail mint they stop. v0 tried that already, mamma. They newer do s'oi►." And .by not gellingrn;:rrl el sunt.' rinnag;e 10 live happily cmei• eft -r. i;etween 1fe70 met 1$90 elm en ee;h. mttiine cab:e's Mee laid across the Al - MALI, aeons' DAINTY Di' lkS. Brown Oniort Sauce. -- Slice sonic 01110115 and fry 1110111 till brown, then stir them Into Borne rich brown gravy and serve. Thier sauce is very much appre- ciated \\ iter chops, roast mutton, and rubbits. Poached Eggs and cried Onions. -Take three or four Spanish onions, scald them and fry in dripping till a nice golden brown. Have ready some squares of buttered toast, lay the onion on them npd sprinkle with pepper and salt. Pouch some eggs rind lay one on each square of toast. Scatter a little curry powder over the onions when frying if you like the flavor. Serve very hot. Horror Onk Pudding. ---\\-ash thorough- ly four ounces of rice, place in a pie - dish and cover with waren water. Bake To keep household bills and receipts in ri slow 0\ en until all the water is where the) can he found easily, 11101;4 a absorbed and the rice cooked, which wee; of s;iroiug manila envelopes, morked should be in about half nn hour. Then clearly with the letters of the Alphabet. lake Iwo eggs, odd them to the rice rind Ali accounts reel receipts relating to beat well, afterwards stir in one pint of Jones Ihc grocer go in Ilio envelope J.; milk, sweeten with sugar, and flares 10 to Billings the butcher in 11., and so un. taste. l'ut u piece of butter on the lop Or the envelope mailed G. may include and bake in a moderate oven for rut a:l nCeoumli of groceries, when the he,ul•. S4Tvc hot or cold. Irou.elcetper dues business at several A cabbage dish. 5vhich should be sante- ehopa. pled at on.•e, is prepared ns follows. .. &Millar file of cm elopes is useful for Take a good-sized cribbage and cut out Loping clippings and illustrations rein'. the heart. Chop ramie cold 50211 finely, ing to household platters. Keep ti pad of mix it with herbs and 'Tendert' nee.,tire- paper on the leak, and when It recipe or son highly with snit and peppt•t•. 1111(1 other household hint is clipped from the bind together with neaten egg. tell the newspaper or nhngaiine, paster it am a cavity in the cabbage with the bluffing, leaf of the rind, and shp 11 into it, in - In. the leaves firmly tog'l140 •, and boil ittnl!t"I envelope-milads in the S. en - for an hour. Sere with crumbs span- lek)l►e, cakes in (:., and so on. The kled over and a good gen%y poured c!•g.J,ings can ler+ more readily handled round. rind consulted when pasted on a good- pieceA Cheap Gingerbread Cake. --011111111- +(it:d of paper, and comments can lice required are one pound of flour, rine b' ridded on the Margin of the paper, teaspoonful of ground ginger, the sante afire the recipe has 14411 tested. quantity of linking powder, one tnble- ir.slea(I of a :;crop t+(x►k for clippings spoonful of ✓spice, eight ounces of black of poetry. art. science, noire, etc., which treacle, and tour c'uneee of dripping. lir regt;ires nn elnt,ornte and careful index all the dry ingredients togetherante 1'' stake it convenient for reference, try rubbing the dripping into 111c flour. the envelope 1110. If one is making an Warm the treacle, add a little ntllk to it. exle#siae collection alc►ttg s.eae•rcl fines, lir into the other ing!redientc, and mix one Could 11010 a book for enwelnpe's 0f thoroughly. Bake in n greased lin forere each. 111 the one for notes of travel the !w a hours. Na lien n knife ,luck into the crtlrlcpe'3 wuul►1 1►e in1110Itcel for the (oke conics out quite clean. it is deur, dilfrreel countries ; science. the diff. rent trolled \lutlon.--l:ut a great deal of flit �nrbjecla Iii ore l of ; ort. Ili' 1)mntc of the artist. or the topic, thus \I. would This man was temperate so far as drink was concerned, but most intemperate in ether things. How much good will it do if a man ie temperate but dishonest, immoral, selfish, a hard marl, impulsive, with i red -hut termper' one who Ireats.his wife and children unkindly, if not 5a\aget i; one who cheats his neighbors; one who Is untrustworthy? One virtue will not save. it Is of little value to keep the devil cut from ono dour and let hint in nt another. \\'e 11111114 wlolc1l 111111 wtiule citadel of our being. Isere comers d11 the worth of true religion, which lions at the perfection of the whole character. The programme of Chrlsti- nnity- :s n fine one -"O man of God, flee these things; and follow after righteous- ness, godliness, faith, love. patience, nleeknesc." There can be no doubt about it --(sod helps those who desire help. Jesus Christ Is the perfect example. With His spirit dwelling within us, 'our lives will be happy, Dur chnrnclers svn11nelri- cal and living doily in itis presence, we shall be complete. DAVID G. \\ YLIE. of cheese melted with a little milk; a /l.ictrl of hot milk is added gradually, 00(1 0 cupful of cold boiled rice or mac- aroni i.� Arced in. 'then add two wen. beaten eggs, by mixing with them the hot milk" a little at a tune, for fear of curdling. Return the whole to a sauce- pan, and stir two er three minutes until the eggs aro cooked. Almond Croquettes. - One )half -pound almi.;nds, 6 hard-boiled eggs, ;-t1). stale bread crumbs, 2 raw eggs :)eaten), cup hot milk (sweet), 1 teaspoon finely minced or grated onion, 3a' of a nutmeg grated, X teaspoon powdered sage. salt and pepper to taste. Pour the hot milk over the crumbs, cover closely am( let stand ten minutes. Have the almonds blanched and chopped or sliced thin; rub the i:oited eggs to a paste, add 1110 rr.W eggs, mix willi the so(tenell crumbs, and the nuts and seasoning, mix well together and form Into enroll, oblong rolls; dip into beaten egg, roll in fine cracker crtunl►s, place in n wire ha.skel and cook for three or four minutes in smoking hot oil. A IJOI;SElif .PEIE S FILE. off a neck o lo;rl of mutton, remove the 'Kine, with n sharp knife. scrape all 111(% merit off them. sprinkle all the lean side with pepper. cho1ped I)eri►s. or 11huell- roetne, roll 11 1 ghliy and sew or hind it into a null. Itoae1. 1►t►sting; frequenlly, serve with an Omainliine' ekewet• placed II:rough the meal, roasted onions or baked tomatoes round it, and timid (in tureens) 50)24' gia1y.and melted reed -cur - runt jelly. This will prolinlily nppenr tiuet' i► iiew earn to emir dainty master Dutch it;ce I'ueleltng. -- Wash three ounces of rice thoroughly rind ulaee it in 0 snuccpnn with one pint of milk. I.el This c00% very slowly with the lir' tightly 4;n. until all the milk k at►sorbed by the r;e e. Slone and estop a qucrler pound of raisins. chop one ounce rind a half of mixed peel and two 4)11(05 of else!. Boat nil Ihe;e ingredients together. add sugar 1 ► tn•le. \\ hip Iwo epg•e thoroughly. odd 1 the rice. ore.. pour into a buttered teisin and steam steadily for an hour. Turn out to serve and pour a nice ells - !aril nr Swee't sa11c0 round. Old, but Deticlous. - - Ilex, is n recipe twliiclr conioe from France. Two ounces inehrde articles on Millais and also on 1t►t \tndonna, the n►0w1ue in ur•chileettrre, ore. Mill another• use Mr the 1i108118 envel- ope is to keep paper patterns for the use of the horns elre.emokcr. I11`7'S 1'011 '1'11E IIO\11;. To clean n smoky lamp chimney apply n few drop; of alcohol; this will remove ani trace, of grea;y 811101,0 which soapy worm will not touch. When clarifying coffee with eggs do not use much of the while. as 1t is apt t.) forms n coating about the coffee whieh prevents the water from drawing out Iho 1u11 strength of tie berry. A Useful Cement -Fin a bottle with isinglass chips, and pour In as much gin n; the bottle will 'hold. The isinglass will be dheoh r'd and become n jelly, and when wanted for use must be placed in hot water or before the fire to bring it to 8 liquid elate. L,►►bracili'n Recipe.- Shake together half it pint of turpentine \-ith two eggaf5t then 11t1.1 half a pint of integer, t1J mine quantity of hartshorn, and one•end. Suwetillles the name is restrk!ed ounce of a ampt.or. 'tette bender of this more election). to ibe southern portion recipo 1.0)1) it lb excellent for neuralgia, (1 ltd, .nrge•r area In tie- immediate rheumatism, aid eciaticu. vicinity of the !heed Sea. "l'hc+ Jo1Ja11 Excellent Suet Paste. -Half a pound of valley, owe a sea bottom, contains lunge flour, quarter of u poupd of finely ,e;hred- patches of fait and barren eon; but in ded suet, a pinch of salt, and half a Ira- Keene parts, e•pe-e ally ul'out Jericho spoonful of baking powder. \fix the so here ruhciently tier° were t*uuliful whole with as little water as possible. paler giowcts) and along 1144' 1111148 of the '1'1115 paste Mendel always be used for nivel, it is extremely ferule. and pie. - betted poetry, and rolled 111111 is excel- educes exube'rartt 5egolatien ; mei the lent for puked apple dumplings. \ir;ler, it moms, pictured it as bowing been rift! more fertile. than it was in his (\•» day, "before Seldom end Gomorrah had boron de:trope,'" ;cc111p. (fen. 19. THE S. S. LESSON 212). amd ffoniea rea-•1' f h. "cities of 1he i,:e,.n'' n'!erls•red to 114 w,•ir-e 12 below. 11 hes been a matter (ef some disl►ule shether Sodom and (loin -mil IN"IERN A "ION LESSON, leeg:::.er ' iib leer were located s , ar itee FEB. 17. southern endof ilio Dead Srn, or\\ nether the two former cities were further to the north, near the present rmrtlicrr) cr141. Ali that limy tool pruitiwel). imfecrod teem Lesson VII. Lot's Choice. Golden Test: tho nuriut re• i3 that 114',) were eoine- Lukr 12. 15. where in Ilse aasin known ne "the plain of the Jordan" referrel to above. TILL LES`'t IN WORD STUDIES. Liter the garden of Jrhi vale -The Cur - den of Eden. Bused on the feet of the Revised Ver- l.ilce the land of I:g'yut -The i}'pc and Si4m, ideal of fertility. Egypt, the Land of Plenty. -Tho per - lion of our narrative Intervening Le- 11een this and our last lesson tells of a resit of Abram to Egypt not nseigns u.1 a reason for hint visit (,f the Hebrew patrlur011 and his hous►'huld the fact that there wits famine in Palestine. Egypt was known in nntiquily as the land 1)1 plenty, bemuse its fertility wt..: depen- dent, not on uncertain and scanty rain- fall, as was the case in Pnk'stine, but on the regular and unfailing flow of the Nile Inver, couseJ by the percnniul melt- FLOATING MINE PERIL. ing of the snow and the heavy rainfall __, in curly spring near the headwaters ut Dangerous Derelicts In the Seas About the stream far up in the Nubian pito►:n- Inins to the south. its great fertility made Egypt a land of wealth and also of culture. It is not strange, therefore, 111211 its prosperity :should prompt bar- barian ian neighbors to envy, and stim► me fit them a desire for;}!I►c conquest of 6e) rich and prosperous a country. In titles t hen famine visited surrounding regions Egypt became a place of refuge for many 0)1(1 different peoples. 'Thies, probably, the Ilykeos came into Egypt, about 2200 B.(:., relic() which time the land of the Pharaohs her been entirely overrun by people principally of (:tnunnitish des- cent. on its way Irons \ iedivostok to Song - truthfulness of Abram in .' eelcing to jin. A mine found at llonjornura en eafeguord himself in Egypt Ly telling rl Noveni er 26 exploded, killing one e f deliberate falsehood with regurd b) the 1 the 111011 \who were dragging it up the identity of Sarah, his wife, reflects in a beach. On the sante day, according to rcunnrkal►lo sny Iho milder Judgment of The Japan Chronicle, a mine that hail all Orienlais toward the sin of decep- drifted 11 Kutsute, Aliehikawa-nturn, lion. This same leniency toward un. Yuri distr:et, was first discovered by 71 tr1111e, espeefull)• in eases in which a ile boy of twelve years of age, awl then is loll with no vicious intent, or even to the attention 01 a man named Sasaki, serve nn apporently worthy purpose. is formerly a sailor in the navy, was ri.ct with in niftily portions of Ilio Old called to it. This 1117,1), assisted by a Testament narrative, Even the prophet younger brother and Iwo others, pulled Jeremiah resorts to o\ert fakeliood to thtemine rep find conveyed it to tate proxi- prolect the secret of the king (comp. Jcr. mity of Sasaki's house. 381 21.30). The weakness in Abram's In doing • 111is no doubt, they were character al this point, therefore, must following out the official proclamation i . • what saysthat the be judged in 1110 light of this general offering tie r�•_wnrd, ah h attitude of the early Hebrews 111 corn- finder need only pre -ens some proof ••J gran with oiher Orientals toward the his discovery, such as a fragment of 1110 moral question involved. mine after he has exploded it. If un- able to explode the rni::e wilhoul great Vere 1. And Abram went up out of risk, he should secure it ny a rope at l:g!ypt-=Elle fne•t is that he was sent some safe place and then report the dis- awrey with grave reproaches by 1'huraoll cover.y to 4he' nnlh0tilie=. Now for the fur ha\ ing sought to de'e'eivo the king,►. horrible 80(1114 ►. '1hc (epuly-n►QYor ' f I'or motes nn i;g:yit, noel nncicnl cur►. the village con-idereel 11 h;gt+ly danger- (1►tion, in Ihnn country, • get some book cus to leave the aline near the house, on modern r:+seareh and discovery, -soy, %nd ordered Sasaki 1., cons'. it back one of Fhi►dcra Petrie s. Li the sea -peach and leer all measures Ids wife- tics wife is hero s )c� necessary for the prevention of art ex - Ile and Iciaily utontloncd, doubticsS, becauseofPlosion. Al about 2.34) in 1140 n(lernue►n the incident in which lie had jos! played oil Ihee rrinincen �rawhhclllh11e rexplosive ;plollirtt ilwext so prominent a part. lodcd and twelve Hien were killed int - Lot --comp. \\'ort Studies on the les - mediately. Two others died soon ai• ser'n for February 10. terw•nrels and a great number were in - into the South -The. •0111114.1.1 part of erred ore or less srwcrelr. 'Thus the I'olcstine. known a, the \e gob, 21 (r �' j and almost barren table -land ufft,rdilig! tale ofmIhc victims of Ihc Isle war is r.r,1y scoot pualuraoc' for!lucks and stilt g;nerving;. The total mortality on herds. Ihr Japnnrse side is now o(lkiolly reck- 2. Al,rniti was very riele--Ile had been oiled at 12(1,001, of 5wh4,:n 41,000 died of rich even beton: jour nr) ingf into Egypt, disease. xvliele his wealth had been greatly aug- -+ - mentcd be- Bills front the king.• of w•Ito111 OlerIE 1S .AND TYPHOID. it is e'eid alert. 1:. 16) that lie "dealt veli -.-- with Annuli."Trouble Attributed to the Practice of :t. Itelleel- 4. onip. Weill Studies (in Itirrtrhing and l'utteerinil. lesson (48 February 10. Abrri111 :lowly retraces his slops northward until' he {nves`tignlion has shown that oysfens 001110.5 111110 the place- 55h+'re itis lent 11141 eaten raw frequently cause 1) [MOW. been at the begltuiing, Ihnl is, shortly Not the thin. grayish oysters, fresh from after hi, arrival in Palestine from \leeu• the bans (cep, hal Iho.6e wh;01), in cun- P018111t11. sequence of the consumers' (I('inand 111711 4. Called on the name of Jehovah -11e- the bis nlve be good to his sight as well fearing to Abrain'e habitual c uste.su of 718 to hi.( perverted rutilelure shrhjce'te'e1 1.elpnraW, with w h►um Ire wall l0 Japan, snraklping Jehovah. to a blenching{ process which n►akcs 1)11111 tvl,ere slhe (ie(. Itcturnirtg fee►ti tis►' ('ar G. '''lee) land .111' t11oiu11a3n0us or tug• plump ns5'(11. F;l:st to New• Y4erk, hmr'tl swis geed tableland .e1 lephrriim) Was not able I'o 504 inn5s this appearance the sill buccerr,�ion. I'aur deiedar, oulct' Aisirnppe:.res- 10 lam. then) -Not fernier or productive \wafer product is alite'd in frslr 5water, eat. and eine• he droorced. So he went tel) enough In sustain the whale company frequently in fresh water streams:. This unlit he hind completed his tare of tweRe. of (110 eenni►tntd fern►lies w 1111 their bleaches them;, uii 1, owing; to the fact Another Aniericen, 1)r. James Nicholas nurne'rous peeves rind heeds. 'l his woe that n(.v 11dny• trw fresh voter strcrtms \•non. lint tong ago married his nine elnubllnss especially Inns: otter the period ore purr•, that Ihc oyster absorbs ;e, much teenitr wife 01 fastttn.' through which the Counl1) '5nlrr Ihnt it app(nr:g rilump nod Ihsel lis ,\•I' 71!1:.1(;1. OF NINETY-FIVE.hail poi pit550d +comp. Gen. 12. 10). digestive functions ate retarded by the Ile is the author of n book railed "The 7. A shite between thel5er'dssnr'i--A ur111trtur•81 ixitidtltons, any baccili in the Annuls of an Adventurous Lite." In uwel natural oocur•ren.•e when pasturage water athe:e►11041 rapidly multiply, thus which he has related the story of his fur the bents twos u•arc e. infecting the oyster. Thr Camomile and the Peeizzite- Two phis infected toad, often .shipped long t;lalrirnoninl experiences':, and. under the of the six or ee5011 peoples often 01111- dielances. beeomee a rflennc(• to the rircumetnntcs. sew pt4))d1- 55ou1d quer- nicrn1.1,1.1.,‘,‘,1111111 1)Id '1'ccta21)ent twrilcls tenith of whole mmnlunitles. 'l this prac• re I with the Lille tee ed'e'cd. cihnra1811(1 of 1'uleslino as 1t lice of bleaching; 8nd fatlrning.► the oyes- In Europe, the title of the (:hni npie,n HrbMws look poses. ter certninly should be di'eolurlged by IIu tt1•and has been c1n:ire(1 I ' Fritz Kotl- Kiotl, I;t,ttire Mt' he 81)101• eeO ►Ir:a u.�nally posses - men. el.icureans and conswne.^,, in general. 21101), of 1 t"glinge•n, in \\ urleinl•e•rg. p who hnd eleven wives. The rind Iwo* !Jowl' 5\ ill' these two ere the apioro , died youngt, the 1.1111111 and 111111 ss.'rO Ilse !bele. the lin ite, the Jelekite rinddrowned. the eixlh cnnt'nille d suicide, sometimes the l;irg;\shite !