HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-05-03, Page 71
NOTES AND CONMNTS
is meet going out of feeition? Thar()
hag been a theofold c et3o L Mg
reetalts , of the' recent 07:perlU19111t5 Made
-that wa eat to much meet, tend Me
venerelle opeelfitig. we tate). too tan/
food. Tho eaperintentere, fled by Pro
•fehitaindert of Yele Univereity, for se
,eret oionthe, end in 8011150 instancee for
more than half ha year, rednifed the
'ewe!, diet 'ler one-half, and 'Yet. 'mai
,fainied es. nonci or *batter, health than
Ord- The 'huiseurar ,poinerot 'ihe
1Ctes l';an's Increased aini 'mental' actb,
Ay undintinielted. Abanananand , ell
fed
coffee was orni hill of fare for bred,'
fast. Strictly scientifle ,experimen
'tarried on , in, Amcerica, Germany; an
.France,' havo unanimously resulted.
ethe conclusion that health and strengt
.can he maintained with a much les
,.proportion of nitrogenous food tha
meat seating peoples deem necessary.
dfilhe „dhettaate teachififfe .otecience is that;
Exceptthe extremely poor, most people
mi about twice as mdch meat as is
needful, and that the superfluous emote
Is not merely waste but beeornes ti
fruitful cause of disease antlaaufferin
"The rice -eating Japanese and Chines
practically confirm We scientific doe-
'
.91110•111119PPIMPPRIgiliP
PAUL
TRUSTED C
efie.
Ifehaffed beef', tenserodieitt
eanneraneede, seuee ifeafteenel.
tore fiene old, before calletg Foe a freeit
hahienee afy ,taffee orte Re plea) to di-elf/end.)
' nen,: eetitertiee of. every. deeferiptiont
Trw
Hope That Sustaipi the, 07 ristwi itt neat, T�
dllfahhajfEhEff•PraMe
rdlf2cdh. delited win!: en fieeneion
and 'Uncertainty I Defiuod
ir.blow hhhorrn 'hive belie -end
•
CiWt, flb4s tq,
which 4 'IdaVe• eontrhated ,,naete ihifie
ateainet Wet dayehellt THU. LI
.f.. :If Paul had been n nalitortaire,lheee
• words woold not teppeal .n1 the great
p'efipah. 'I he average
•,tatrietiati (tarps' his -bread • -by !biting,
tsa amid privations and' temptations. .lii
d tide fierce struggle for existence he is
(nen crudified on 'unseen crosses met
caustal to ebght many a silent battle,
11 Hence the faith of the average Chile-
s Cart is often temperately' eclipsed i
n Ids trials, and then it is hard for him
to say: "I know whom I have believed."
Now, Paul was a penniless, hard=
working Christian, and he uttered theee
'nerds under the most trying circum-
stances. After enduring the hardships
nt
je
The people who pray for rough we
Ther live along the shores of the Balti
-where they nein a Precarious livellhoo
an timber gathering during tempes
4thssed ,seasons. When the ,wind blow
. from the sea, as' it often does wit
:terrific violence, the b'ewhiers are tos
-ed and tumbled, at the bottom, apd grea
,qeantities of sea weed are washed u
!on the beach. This la' the harvest o
the warders.' For hidden in the root
and brenches of the seaweed lamps o
aerecious gum may be found. othe
arts of the coastddiVers' may be Seel
going crawling on the sea bottom fo
•--the lumps of amber hidden in the sea
e-ecvneel and rocks- It is belleved that -ant
ter is the gum exuded from the trees of
--which nona vestige remains. The find'
-arc Most 'variable, • The largest ,piec
_Ammon, weighing • eighteen spourths,
-411. the Royal Museum at Berlin. • Th
'usual finds ,Vary. from lutnps as bli-e
Man's heed to particles. like grains o
•pand. _The • larger _pieces are _found
Jammed ,in rocks or in f.tanglee of
marine' vegetation. Divers, work .from
:..four to five hears a day in all seasons
6xcept when . the sea is blocked with
dee. The work is mist earduous,
Of these rnissionaryjourneys he was
now, in a , dismal Roman ,dungeon
awaitind his execution. If he had been
like'many brethren of to-cley, we Would
find him complaining about the unjust-
ress of his lot, ' and this comforting
text would not have beert But Paul
forgot his sufferings in his 'sympathy
for Timothy. He wrote the last letter
• r 1 his life to comfort a sorrowful heart.
a- eatch was the faith of Paul -he trusted
c, Christ until that day when the sea shall
d give up its dead and every Man ellen
t. RECEIVE HIS REWABD.
$ But Timothy was like many Christi-
, ens of the •pust and Present. For a he.
" stance, the prophet Elijah., after fleeing
s- eight .miles to escape•the wrath of ;leze-
liel, flung himself' beneath a juniper
e and sobbed to God to let him die. Then
' Jalin ,the Baptist, while languishing. ;n
f 1 the prison eaf Herod, began to wonder
St way God should' treat him so. Had
f ' hie ministry been false? And so ho
A Or do we Iodic for another? And these
1
✓ sent his disciples to the Master to ask:
ea"rt thou the Messiah that was to come
✓ dank days of doubt and uncertainty are
- commop. to every Christian. Some-
- times temptations entice us; we fall and
'with bitterness we cry: "The good that
• I would do I do not; and the evil I
S would 'net do that I do.' .
0 • Now the angaish and doubt suffered
s he so many Christians is occasioned eat
e feihreg to distinguish hetween the cities -
lions "Are you sa.ved?" and "Aro you
s free- 'firom hardships?"
f '
,
aming....maor,+••••••,*Poome •
The endineer has a ,new duty. A,new
rine of switch has been devised which
„Puts its control In the heads of the en.
.,gineer, In this swithh the ,point pieces
:move in a vertical direction instead of
lhorizontally. This means, that bolts,
-nuts, coal, cinders, and other materials
-cannot drop, to obstruct the operation
-or proper closing of .the switch points.,
;as sometimes aceidentally .happens to
terdinary point rails. The wheel flanges.
automatically operate the switch, re.
,gardless. of the engineer, when trains
,are passing over it, trailing on either
the main line or ,side track, but when
•terning from the opposite direction, cr
facing. the switch, the engineer controls
dte actren, there being Wane trips
in advance of the switch on the outside
of either rail where the flange does not
femme in contact. To operate theseout-
. side movable flanges attached to the
, front wheels of the engin e yuck are
iconnecteci by lever with the engine eali,
where the engineer or fireman can
• ;control the switch at will, as enter,
esency.
Fifty cents a ton is the price they pay
'for coal in New South Wales. Coal is
ase. abundant and cheap in New South
Wales that it can hardly be salch in
tpla6es, to add to the value of the sur -
'face. It is, drewnlout.by ponies. Beside
It. are the inexhaustible field of lime.
:stone and permanent water, both 'of
•et railway line. .Rates of haulage on
Minerals are extremely lew. There
etife enormous deposits of iron ore of
/richness varying from 60 to 90 per cent.
•The's chemical „ composition has ,been
found satisfactory to experts in Europe,
and 'these deposits theilally 'are alonth
side deep, water, thus facilitating. trans-
port, At, 'Burnie, in. Tasmania; title de-
posit from -water levelup is• estimated °as
20„000,000 torfge In lareW South 'Wales
the deposite within sight are h0,000000
tons. The deposits known. as the Iron
Knob and Iron Monarch' in South Aus.
balite are atatecif to contain 20,000,000
tons. • The first 'great demand of Aus-
tralia -has been stated :as the compree
bensive production or iron and, steel
Iran her oisin ores. These basic articles
will then be available at half their pre-
ent imported cost, just' .Australia
nOW supplies' herself with the' purest' /
all salt, another basic article, at less
than half the •.price she formerly paid f'
for her importations.
'
thineeel of ,conirtietino color, mei
sogneeOf the pet tile; Lin
for Vette ea' eeittineareome d'affh 10 o"
En 'non eitalteee?a' and ''Aroe yen 0E 'fa cart ataado--eotielt „cover' 'e
farad, eff Paul ler eerele MO. fadrahu; Pillowe• end . same efeeenen
(hate a Men -fto eae; aeaken 111110 •hoete
itetuat,teelinee teat ie e Were a (11;151iall', 111 een hard pot them in be
Jotsat itj-fis° selfle°Pelidn'iltroctlyncleitifde 711* N;rn'a,taeorldle‘,!'14.telli‘li.nuitteswilinCipretiveen1\ Pt
ti " tiad t1
replietle •"Den't'5"Olt thatilieeet, Yolk frompieeaos104rnithffchhanie in Ilia
tmo,
,Iiialartire neceesary to develop the Chan! For a.
Jew graces? is it 'net the niahteatlie atere 4511 4 rOOM, lay a fir or balea
carlf night-athat brings (jut the storea 11 ed p low on the register.
Now, how could you manifest that swept A' liannlees and cleanly treatment
afeeeee et" Such 3ase3 teenrerea2e1
end thee° b geed coneen fee theendal'TIIE SUNDAY SCHOOL
ttet renneal of tho 5123.7!., cnr.1
ttgratrD.s havo bun t'• wilif.E4337
by klilsapinhIled
rnen.erue'llizzelen1Fog the rendialy veith fed -dela
;3:niMICEN103 teneell, it ie theded
-that eehere thee ienei deeivi teft fife zeien
el, tevien feeefice reeentle for fiefiney the
ilee on, etther chhe of the fix -to Lept levee
„ye what it for ce,veral nines, .
bie fhn ateofitee :pert of the retharay nee
litutiooasiu"hail et ,the eine of t, ii
an home '111 1i° aeigideetivied Of ripoile
Viefoida, a strata of Wjild
in, fire ()raven! at the eneed•ore E2,5kO
Itt IMin/AO-. +
The lose e Of live dock liavei heen
enertnous, end millions of rabbite arave
e,1heen deetroyedn oneeplace thef flames'
raf ehowed unbroken fieentage of nearly
thirty Mileee Where not erfgaged rn
tot the straggle for life, men, women, curt
grace of forgiveness unless the Lord dine away rime is to satirate a elo
first permitted An enemy to do you some with cayenne pepper in a solution a
the question, "Are you a ChrlSlianr sttroftwint alittthweillhiofleeep anDtislancer ceonck.
injustice?" Hence, it is self-evident that
Ooes not mean. "Are you free from hard- roAatibhuesmianwilarlcaolang utensilsean he
yl.
'
ships?"' for God (every Christiana
kept bright as new by rubbing with a
polish made by dissolving twenty grams
ef- borax in water to which one-third
the quantity of ammonia is added.
Shake the bottle of mixture before
using. •
To keep a teepot clean and *meet
great, care is needed. Immediately after
use remove the old, leaves, scald the
"None are righteous -no not one To leapet out with fresh hot water and
he saved from the guilt and power of wipe, it quite dry. Never allow the in••
sir. does not mean to be proof against side to become stained with the old
sinning.
• leaves; no good tea can be made in a
And lastly, "Are you it Christian?I,
does not mean "Are you as good as
soine one else?" Salvation is not sanc-
tifieation. One is an act, the other is
a. process. We are saved front the guilt
ef sin as soon as we put our trust in
Christ, but it requires a lifetime to be.
corn° sanctified -that is„ to become holy,
to get the badness out and the goodniss
iit us.' In other woids„ becoming.
"good" is a development, a slow, gra-
&fah imperceptible process like a brook,
gradually becoming a mighty Hudson,
a grain of corn bringing forth •,a, full ear
et harvest, or lump of leaven that gra-
dually permeates the whole bowl of
meal. Therefore Christians -should,- not
mourn .because they are not as good es
some one else. God is not through with
then; yet.
Hence, when Christians like Elijah,
John the I3aptist and Timothy lack the
assurance that they are God's children;
the fault is mit with God, but with them.
'I hey lose sight of his promises as they
grope. among life's tribulations. They
look down when they ought to lc* up!
• JOHN EDWIN TRIPLETT.
ten even 1ittlect were found engaged
lee rie fire fighters. Near Gurielagai, in New
South Wales, th.e live stock on- one of
Jae+ the stations was saved by the women
f-ollecATTIBED --IN i‘l'EN'S_ CLOTHESee.•
the father hncl, brothers being absept.
A• thousand acres of grass and miles of
fenemg were, however, destroyed. '
There has b,e.en. a sad loss of life,„ -oc-
casioned chiefly by inability' to escape
the einbrace of the all devouring ole -
Ment. Near Toora, - in Victoria., six
young men took refuge in a dam, wait-
ing in, suspense the advance of the
flames from ;Which they were, endeavor-
ing to escape. So fearful was the ner-
vous strain to which they svere sub-
jected that one of them went out.of his
mind .and endeavored to cut his throat:
Fortunately bis companions succeeded
ip securing the knife before he dould no.,
comPlihtshe hsiasinPeurnpeoigse..
13 hborhciod' schnoi-
master heroically 'saved the lives of
twenty-eight children in hie charge
Whilefriti the school room the flames
name rrshing toward the building. The
teithher ook in the situation at a glance. -
He made the children lie flat on the
ground•.outside furthest from the fire;
and _covered then with blankets: .whieh.
he . kept mots t with pailfuls off water,
obtained by rushing through the *burn-
ing grass op -to his elbows. Ile said it
was like. posing a through" a fiery fur-
naocne.oe h'
y e
, put .the pail down for a 'few
seConds, and on taking it up again the
handle 'burned the skin off ;his ; hand.
But the courageous man persevered, ,de
did his boys. The children tinted eplen-
didly. • As the flames reached were they
were lying- they ,ran into hollew logs
further on, which they covered with
wet blankefseee•-•Xereenthey passed the
s fatal afternoon and night. Intimately
y every child was. saved.
- . The next day there was a sad funeral
f in the vicinity.- Nine Men had become
surrodnded by the flames and all , per- "
ished. Everywhere farmers and selec-
t tors rose to the occasion, risking their
- lives .over and over again in attempt;
s to rescue the weak p.nd .heipless. • The
c 'emergency brought 'out, the best quali-
ties of the selectors, whose heroic
err-
s cleavers tended to relieve the over..
- whelming disaster of several of its
, gloomiest features, •and show the
brighter aspect of human nature.
SOME CROSS TO BEAR.
That is the Father's way of conforming
the Christian, to We image of His Son. -
"by following in His steps."
Nor does the, question "Are you -a
Christian?" mean "Are you sinless?" For
Paul sinned and all have sinned and
come short of the glou of God
•
WICYOMMIP,iiitf )11.1i
CfE
f •
31i
• SELECTED RECIPE'S.
Richmond Cheese Calces.-13oil a cup-
ful of sour milk and ia cupful of sweet
milketogether until they curd, and then
strain them through a sieve. Add the
yolks of three eggs; a teaspeonful rf
vanilla, and half that quantity of sugar.
When the mikture has been beaten until
smooth it is baked in pans lined, with
-
crust, and covered- with cr meringue.
Banbury Cakes -Cream a pound of
sugar with half a pound of butter, 'add
three-quarters of a an
of flour, two
pounds of currents, an ounce of cinna-
mon and allsnice-ground and mixed in
equar proportions -and half a pound if
candied orange peel. Take, puff paste,
roll it into pieces about eight inches
equate, and, when they have been filled.
with the above mixture, fold the earners
over and press them together: Dust the
top with sugar,' and bake the eakes in te
quick oven.
Potato Salad. -Cut cold bbiled pota-
toes in ono half-inch cubes. Sprinkle
four cupfuls with one-half tablespoon s
salt and one-fourth teaspeon pepper.' I
Add four tablespoons oll and mies theta 1
oughly; then "add two tablespoons vine-
gar. A few deaa of onion juice 'Ply be
added, or one-half tablespoon chives
finely cut. Arrange in a mould and
garnish with whites and yolks of two
hard-boiled eggs, cold boiled red beats
and Parsley. Chop whites and arrange ,"
on one-fourth of the mound; chop beets ff
finely, mix with one tableepoon vine-
gar, and let stand fifteen minutes; then' h.
arrange on fourths of mound next to Iff
whites. Arrange on renutining fourth of c
mound, yolks chopped be forced through se
afpotato ricer. Po' small sprigs of pare
ley in- .lines beets frotn eggs; 41
also garnish with parsley at base.
Lettuce. -Lettuce is eepecially valu-
able during the winter and spring, when
other green Vegetables in market com-
mand a high price. Lettute should be
seearated" by ,removirig leave's froin
stalk (cliscarding wilted Outer leaves),
washed, Witt in eold water until crisp,
drained, and so placed on a towel that
water may drop from leeves, place ih
bag, and hang in lower pert of the -box
to draM. Wire baskets aro Awed for the
same purpose. Arrange lettuce for
,servinh in•nearly oeiginal shape.
Vanilla Wafers -Cream Jialf a cupful
of batter with one cupful of granulated
sugar; eild one heaten ego, a quarter o1.
a cupful of sweet milk end one tea-
spoonful of vanilla; 'then beat in two
and a quarter cupfuls of flour, one tea-
spoonful of baking povedere and half a
teaspoonful of salt sifted together. Roll
thin, cut out and bake In a quick oven.
Hamburg Steak. ---The Hamburg steak
WaS exactly.to our taete, that •\V0 de-
sired to 4cnow how the Wok prepetred
'It, is after a formula of my own," said
our hoetese, proceeding to enlighten us.
To la lb. finely chopped beef etir in 3
egge, season with popper and salt. and
flavor with parsley and sage. 'With a
large speon dip out the mixture into
hot fat.
and blanch thteril, by ponrin vet'
Salted AlmoralsSe-Shell ftee. Orrda
Melt& heiliag el Water te naVb tItet
stated for 10 mitnites, then slip off the
Dry the ilids between thin fold
a clean, eon Cloth; let thero Coot and
then place in a .baking -pan with table.
IIPOOTIG OliVe Turn tiern over
:tnd over in the ell Until Well enatechf
nacenilie pan In the eVen ha4 let re.
Lobster cutlets, sauce tartare.
• Broiled steak, Maitre -dliatel:
HEALTHFUL BRAN BUNNIES.
' Bran is one of the great muscle and
tissue builders: and, acting, pleasantly
on the organs of ,digestaon and assimi-
lation, ' no. clogging ts permitted;- thus
.eirculatiop d is noi impeded. ' A. very
pleasant and agreeable methodeof :Using,
been, and. getting from It 'good results
is by making it into - little cakes called
"bran bunnies." These re deliciotis There have been not a few grimila
disasters eksince then,' writes a Sydney
correspondent of the London. Globe, and
the earlier weeks, of 1906 have found .the
sister States of New South Wales and
Victoria waging a desperate battle with
the fire 'fiend, who has. everywhere beeta
thretnening,. the farmer's homestead and
the selector's hut Linke with' destruction.
In Europe", such widely .spread out-
breaks' are practically impossible; the
matey, being 'Lod largely intersected by.
soda. dissplvfrd in milk. Stir thoroughly i roads, canals and railways; besides bee
Una about ' an inch ,apart; bake in ' a areas by .. lofty: hedgetows, embank
steady
into •comparatiVely small
and drop from a teaspoon on buttered Ing
rule, will make three dozen. •Of their ments; ditches and estreantlets. • In Aus-
steady oven. until a' nice brown. This
keeping qualities I- cannot ,telt; my fam- nut in a patch of -dry 'grass, there is no•
trent it is otherwise. If a fire break
ily do not allow them to get more than thing to prevent 'iteepreading
main until the almonds are light brown Wrill LIGFIT.NINGLIkE SPEED
in, color, stirring cinch so as to have
them evenly browned. Turn, into a for very many penes Fences, as known
. .
colander., sprinkle thickly with fine salt. in England, are not to be mat with in
hake the colander quite hard to die- the • Coroinonevealth; neither.. are the
odge all superflous salt and oil. Keep stone. walls so common in 'teeny parts
n a dry- place. . . of Great Britain, fences of barbed' wire
or wire netting being in universal use.
' 'Although- designated "bush fires" the
outbrea,ks are by no means confined to
the bush, which is the. Australian teeth
for forest. It is rather the other way.
After •a period of drought the gra ;s
springs -up with marvelous -rapidity,
often to the height of three or four ,feet,
and even more, furnishing ,a secureere-
fuge for rabits and all kincle of, 'animal
pests. Pt, is the same with the 'cereal,
crops. But directly the hot summer sun
commences scorching everything in the
like the goope, ehoth require an acid tAion!4ingb14
field, the moment of danger has.arraved.
osnpdarkhmumaya.nkinpdolewear.colonfleaxgtrina:
sauce or ,adjOnct because fir the excess -115. It is ;estimated that ve-hhin the
of ,fat. In the same Way 'mustard is Ito, few weeks between two and areee
taken with corned ,heof to exelte We di.
to take care of •the salted meat.• Million twos of pasture and agricue-
geseivo organs to greater activity needed Weal land . in
For the benefit, ,of the ,inexP,erienced a legs flames
Victoria, have been wept by the rtie.rci-
. New: South Wales and
table with sauce combinations •is given - 0 The two loading causes of bush fir0F3
' Haw oyetors, quartered lemon, horse -
Raked fish; drawn butter, Hollandaise eeestas,"
are the. employment of. Phosphorus for
radish sauce; fobasco. '
sauce. • • rabbit poisotaing, and the careless use -if
• . ' . or wax matches. The phos-
, sh, Mitre d Hotel butter, lelelumFtliipspi lnie°d,maistiecellaidwilyh•aitierifoitiend ibtyrritag
sauee tartare.
Hollandaise settee, sauce : • Piqua..:110.' • '
tee, drawn buttere suggested Abet some kind of substitute
n's heat, and it •• has frequently been
Boiled fish, egg sat • , fill
cream settee. , ,
6110111(1 be utilized ..cluring the evahmer
stained teapot. The smell alone should
reveal this, and yet many persons take
po pains to keep their teapote clean in-
side. A new teapot thus treated from
the beginning will give little trouble
and never become stained.
ENEMIES OF AUSTRALIA
BUSH FIRES HAVE CAUSED GREAT
LOS'S OF PnoPpanTy..
Many Disasters 'This Year-laapidit
With Which the Flames ,
Spread,
Drought and bush fires are the twin
'dreaded enemies' of Australian pastoral-
ists• and- egriculturists, and of -these they
are ala-ays standing in bitter fear.
Heavy floods may occasion seriou
disasters-, but, the area devastated' b
These are of con;paratively limited ex
tent, whereas the ravages ,oteeither u
the two other evils may extend over. th
greater. portion of a State, as in the beeo
of -the tremendous fiery outbreak whicl
some few years ago enveloped the Vic
torian rural districts with a raging mete
of smoke and flame, 'rendering "Blacl
Thursday" a date ho beev.er remembered
with S61Tow by huhdeeds of industriou
'fannies svhb found themselves' sadden •
ly confronted with suffering and- rum
'necessitating their beginning -the ,battl
of life afresh. •
INTERN. TIONAL feEeife;ON•f
NAV 1.
Leeson Vlf 'the Parable fit the tierce.
ifefitlen Teate -
tiffelffON; STUDIV'S.
Note. ----The teat of tho' Peol&t)-2)a Ver.
Ision tzas a' for ti1:13 WCA
Ste:dire, •
A, fdeffuef.---In the Payable of the
Sesver,, or, as wo 'de3ignalcd .it llto
'Word-late:dies' Inc last' Sunday, "Tlid
Parable of We Four „ffolle," Jesus taucht
that the Kingdom of Ood does net in ++
elude all men alike without, di•ecrimina.
tam; Some there are who have not the
oahaoline Or willingness, to receive the
word of the klagdom and to bring their
lives into harmony with its teachings.
The true,- or irivisible,, church • may
Wheel:ere nate be coexteasive with' the
visible church,' some. who seem- [obo
subjects of the kingdom being in reality
not such. To the teaching of this para-
ble the onc we shall scuily ha our les.
son for to -day contains the sequel.
Not only arelhere those in the Chris -
tin ehurdh who do not ;really belong
to Christ, but the good and evil within
the fold of the church are not ahvaya
distinguiehable from • each other, and
hence men, who necessarily err in
judgement, should not try by force to
separate thenevil from the goad. This
will be done at the time of harvest, in
the day of final judgement, when the
works of all men shalt have fully
matured and revealed their true char.'
ac ter.
Verse 24. Another parable -One ef a •
group of eight parables mentioned in'
the introductory note to our last lessea,
which compare. •
25. 'eVhile men slept ---At night. • It
sieffuld be noted that no particular men
are designated, it being the stealthinese
of •the enemy, rather than any neglif
gence •the part of the men wile
slept, which this part, of -the parable
emphapizes. .
' Sowed tares -Darnel. -' This plant or
weed in the earlier stages of its growth
resembles wheat, from which it Can
scarcely be distinguished at first. This
close resemblance gives added force to
the parable.
27. Servants -Literally, ,bond -servants.
28. An enemy-Litetally, a man that
is an enemy.
when warm, • wit,h coffee 'or tea, and
equallyeas good when cold, for a lunch.
They are e natural vegetable laxative,
curing bad forms of constipation and
kindeed --troubles, 'With :a rapidity sur-
prising as ,avell as agreeable. •
To make 'them take 1 qt good ,wheat
bean (do not pack in the measure, but
dip it in), 1 qt. wheat flour, .6 tablespohns
New 'Orleans molasses, 1 pt: sour milk,
a pinata of salt- and 2 level teaspoons
,•••• 10...laaasamai
,SERVING THE RiGHT SAUCE.
A vvell-made .4auee is said hi -glorify
fly. dish, but this dePends to a great
egree on the selection of a right' cont.
illation. The sauce that erihances the
avor of fish may add nothing to meat.
t is generally true that the combination
hich seems to be no more than a mere
ustom. of eating certain things at the
ante time, has in reality a hygienic
eason ,for Its, long:continuance. For
sta,nce, a' meat,. like pork,' or a bird,
A POWERFUL REMEDY.
"So you used eeme og the liniment
• lett hero yesterday" the eget%
"Didn't you find that it Worked well?"
_et amid _sfg,130111 _ffied __ the lady. "1
, raletook it for the furniture polisli and
it took all ft skin off tho piano legs
Ui one aPplieaupe
There Is thing ',the homely girl's
favor', vite seldom 6-4,t(11.11re8 a re )11fation
4* a 'flirt,
1
Roast chicken, bread sauce, green antltA°e1s-itritlil'irst'Isgotrilritdthtsveetlieleitterenu*se ti0tatdev,axIntrnttl'uttetisluecs:
Feted fish, sauce tartare.
grape jelly:
Roast turkey, cranberry jelly. cessfully„' to secure the prohibition of
Roast goose, add apple sauce, bar. elviliclirsatnietinlisiasv. P'Adluilgilitligedtinieta;Aclir glelesivann
,herry jelly.
Boasts duck, orange slime, t currant (.111'6°881Y d°wIl the, other day by a
Fried chicken, cream gravy. Ifirraetnwphilitiercoltiltslulintgu ihniosropirielinsitarted a
jelly. t, , n1
ore
veal, tomato sauce,- horse're-diali MUT" SQUAM MILES
Sallee,.
ROLA mutton, currant jelly, soubise onfoceictaisyturage and growing crops.
.
a man' was Sent to prison for a
sauce.- .
Roast perk., apple sauce. month. Ile wae sitting on the roadside
liottet lamb, mint eauee. on his swag, when he lighted his'plpe.
Immediately afterward he found his
Roast beef, brown gravy, horseradish. swag on fire: Ilelencleavored to beat off
, Roast filet 01 veal, mushreora sauce, the flarnee with his hat and shirt, but
IloaSt venkort, barberry Jelly.
nearit (PA eUrrallt. ialhdtCaler eattee, in the effort to undo the ulechiarife had
in vain. Had he hot, beer badly binned
kant Jelly, olive sauce, '
tloaSt-- canvasback duek, hi ek cui4. eaused, j he would have redeived a
Roiled mutton, caper 'settee, heavier t entence. I ,, 1 1.
In, another case a drunken' man set
Roiled tongue, eauee darter°. ,iire to a patch of dried grass in tWetity-
Corned beef: mustard. )1 ' , seven different plae,a., Vortunately his
Steamed fowl, celery sauce. • attempts jWere witnessed by a, couple Of
Pork , sausage, apple $aueet, feted laborers, Who teatimied on the ignited
aPPleg. s, 1113$03 beiore the flaws could spread,
,
- FIGURES ADOUT 1.LONDON.
Nearly 130.0e0 Births in 1904 - Large
Proportion of Crime.
LOndort's population (4,t31,758), ac-
cording to the annual statistical abstract
just, issued, is roughly 14 per cent. of
that of England and Wales, but Lon-
don's proportion el burgfaries in 1903 ,
was 27, of robbeey 34, and of 'lucency '
38 per cent. It had the due- proportion
of• death sentences, but 30 -pet. centn ,
twice its share, of tetal convictions. t,
London'e birth -rete, 13.9 per cent. of ,
-the total for• England, was slightly be- ,o
low its share, while its illegitimate
hirth-rate was still less,, 12.7 per cent, ,
The death rate was 13.6, and the mar-
riage rate, 15.4, was above it& share.
Londen's share of alien innerigratite
was 57.4 against its due of 14 per cent., t
while its share of houses was only .9.1.
its share of importe. of food-: was 31.5
andexports of food; 15.8. Its propor. h
tion a of on and off licenses were re.
scpctively 13.6 and 11.2. '
The tramway passengers •of the Lon. b
don County Council numbered in 1904 c
156,83013,, London General Omnibus s
passengers 216,311,248; and London
Road Car, 72,653.966. • P
Letters delIvered in 1905 numbered i
727 millions, postcards, 166' millions, d
hook • packete, etc., 163 millions, and e
telegrams handed in, 28 milliona. '
Births in London .in 1904 were 125e
8a5, against130906 in 1903; deaths 74,-
990 against 69,929; marriages, 39,588,
against 40,262. , , it
The rateable value in 1905 was Vele'
657,066, " against eC41,086.974 in 1904. a
Parliamentary electors totalled 621,180,
against„ 612.56tr and County Council a
electors, 742,397, against 7314370."
• Licensed premises numbered 10,37, si
against 10,702.
29. Haply -Perchance.
Root - up the wheat with- them -The
similarity between •the wheat and the -
tares noted- above made title a real dam
ger, but added to this the roots of the
plants would be intertwined the.soil,
and thus it would be ahnost impossible
to remove the one without also np..
rooting the other.
30. Gather up first the taree-Tble
would be impossible in. actual practic,a
in harvest fields with whibh we are
familiar: • In ancient limes, however,
when the grain was all cut with a small
hand sickle and harvesting was ndt so
complicated or. extensive a process as
now, and especially among a people
with whom time counted for little, this
separation of the tares from the wheat
at harvest time was not an impossibil-
ity. . •
• 36. •In verses 31-35 Wnich inteitena
are recorded two other parables which,
Jesus spoke in Connection with the one
under considettation. It was not until
efter he had finished 'speaking that he
eft the multitudes and went into the
house,, the house referred to being,1
raobably, that • of Peter, and An:drew at
eipe.rnaum.
37. The San of Man.-- A title issued
y Jesus - frequently in referring to
=self.
38. • The Field is the World.-- Probab-
y Jesus intended with the term world
c desigetate 'actually the whole world,
hough some have thought that the la-
erpretation of the •parable requires a
:mitation of' the word to that part ef
he world included in the kingdom which,
e was to establish. Such a limitation,
lowever, seems wholly unevarranted. itt
nterpretinh the parablewernust rename, •
et. • that it was not intended that the
Wails of' any of Christ's •parables
hould be forced farther than Jesus
amself carried the interpretation. Each
arable has one main thought or teach.
ng which it emphasizes and any ere.
eavor to interpret details of the fig-
teative language employed leade into
ififilihcoultseoens
of the kingdom - All be
eying disciples.
39., The end of the world - Margin,
te cferistimmation of the age. °
41; All things that cause stumbling, •
nd them that do iniquity - Net per.
oils only, but thinga also that are evil
nd a hindrance to the final commit,
lation. of God's prans for his children
141131.1 11;61erernigiTiePtioirs shine forth'
'rn--Jesus doubtless had in mind the
rophee,y of naniel: "And they that are
ise shall shine aft the -brightness et
PRINCESS AND HER 'CATS.
• many
-
tampered Pets Ilave litot 'Water. Bottles to righteotieness, as the .stars _Or ever *)).
111( tiro -lament; atidt they that turn.
to Snooze Upon, and ever."
Beds heated in Cold weather with
hot water bottles are at the service ra
the twenty-six cats of Princess Victoria
of Schleswig-14°156in, in "Seymour
Lodge," the model cat estahlieliment at
Cumberland Lodge, 'Windsor Park,
En"ildeayn1-
n(1out. Lodge" is a pretty little
two -storied structnre, designed by the
Princees, on the littee of an ordinary
dwelling house. There are four wir.
dows-etwo upstairs and two on the
ground Wend A ladder connecte the
two steireys, anti when missy desires to
go to bed she moinitte the ladder find
finds in a miner Of the Cern ferlably.
fitted bedroom, bedstead and bed.
Here dwell the, prize chinehillas and
*blue Pereians. ?Puck," the ellinchil.
la, stud eat livets in lonely state in a
separate :house, which contains a full
record of the prizes he has taken at
various shows.)
"Eras') 11 thit name [Overt by tha
PrIneeqg 10 a iPet whieh she presented
to Princeee Alexander of Teck. During
Princess Alexander's absence Eros man.
ffested allthe oymptoma of , grief and
despair, and pined away to a shadow
cl his Winer self. No attention could
restore cheerfulness, and Princetl Vk.
torla ilr12 had to return "Eros" to the
hotne for whiOli it pined.
PRINCE ,OF NIGGARDS.
Loving Husband Allowed Ms "Wifit
Six Cents a "Week.
The wife of. Edward John Field, of
Shepherd's Bush ,road, .who sought a
separation order at,.West, Loudon Police
Ccurt,) the other day, told 'a remarkablo
story of her hushancl's autocratio - in.
difference. -
Ifteldfeenid• the wife, was once a fore.i
man, bit 11(1(1 now started in the window .
(leaning tatainesa Ott tie' Own aceolint,
During the past 1iionth4 how0eir lie: had
cnlyi given her one shilling for 11@ ivep
&Ind she 1,vas. nearly; starving-
lt was also stated that 'the Imsliandi
Used to b tug food into t'ie hence , an
i
eat 4t all hituselt 4
I
it,imy h ,sineaa,„" said ,. 1141,, t*, the)
b'- 1011, "I not, prospering, • I don't
see that I ,can proiniso my wife any
'money be,fort the owl of Aprit." •
"Perhaps," said the elerk, "the hatch
will help yol.t," tind the roarlstrLatel
'ranted a eperatiott *rder„ , giving the
k-kflfe the custody of the child,
Marriage, and 'ordered the. Ann to allow
ter 11.,s a woek and to pay a
1 i