Exeter Advocate., 1905-03-02, Page 2'
,
4,017dev. suceerne.'.,
:tx.,51(441c40' ean iaalA
anita00,.` • • kaiC.hatAt `:$,F•01ino wefU
-terms biennso (be .'endarlitg
• net's, LtVith, tt_ high tiusiroo- opposes the-
• hien/roe!, Only by the's-friction, or the
.4e;--trititr-catst
. colossal, arrow. •
*Ihe resistance of t,he coil tui
helps the flower climh, into its. Wee-.
som as the tender uplift of the sun.
The clouds gipposing, light make sun -
Sets. In the opposition or the strings
to the bow music ita born. UOW and
rin—g- Make 'eros out Zt vibes*
• pain comes the Mercy or Musk, '
'rhe great things of art are not the
heppy. inepirations of idleness. .The
ache of ditlieult toil :beautifies there
In the Aftidonea's face, Beauty is
the glorification of drudgery. ' By
twe currents in opposition the eiee-
ttic iigbt - shine*. No Inan. ten: leaf
into an achievement. Clay cannot;
-marehill hien into cerstetic beauty.
IL-strv
trey ---et-thte potteeti• whirring wheel;
and repressing hand. It is
FIXEDIN BEAUTY BY FIRE.
Difficulties are opportunities
Invlt-
Ing u* to master them. They are
the necessary friction by wthich we
weed to our .goaL---.The hardness of
m rIiro- makes it.Lworth-Whil
_
Every great &weer ha* been. cut
. into the resisting Marble of difficul
ties;''''When.we learn -this truth , dis-
couragement is dethroned. courage
takes the sceptre and greates. a .king-,
,dons. There its no Snore energy given
to complaining!. no more time waste
- in'Wishing-Ter easier -tasks. vcr
.oppointion ts-alf-invittition'to -here-
- ism. Whet opposes is our workfel-
low 'The we mutt 'en'ylure
is our -friend. .
This truth holds the ways ' or being
*
FEB. 26.
Lesson IX., "The Miracle of Leaves
• and gishes. Golden Text
j'elin 6, 51. '
IE LESSON WORD STlatIES.
Aereening Events. -The healing of
•e impotent. man at Bethesda (see
-preceding lessee). led to.a public dis-
cern'se by .1.0811S4a-detensirot-truii
ing performed the miracle foe the
• Sabbath day. This defense based
Upon the mita
• (which title,' Jesus apples
to bim-
eIt John 5.25) to the Father; %watch
- relation explains the power of the
- life and of eaagitiff -Mo. bodily *resur-
rection of the dead. In Chapter 6 we
•_ _ tim----cordssot-sr---lessafold;- •
a • longer -2d--44-9y0 • a-
iscourse-442--tuen-vro • -
results of 'difiereet hearers. The smir-
acle in this ease is one involving the
sustenance of .111e,. the discourse
.which follows,, in, 'harmony with the
..
tor. •gunt OY.'',1r
thern, for,•.
'•yOtt,.,catt";e,ortnpki,lhe
• •494rtrel
:it', .-,10'
P
treligtie, A• u. from :the tunti-of tha .
'in9ee ra
poltd•i, the water 111 Wind .beaut '-b "•
ra1ecphwatJon
ta eartis. pure. so you eitn in the past fv ytiata then' in 'British
win- from tereptetions .the beauty of CoIunthi. , .The' lettsit ,factireencern.
bobesie., • , a lentyher of tiew paSeeit through the
• AA oyster overcomes ait'IrritiAloo, Rocky Mountains. „
and becomes- itemortateiti the peerrs Seine readers may b surprisuftt
ty--Meny_a___Man.--iitta_kompelled that there , Out i
the distressing', things oflifo to yield in British Celunthin, to discover. The
hint , feet is that the Government surveys
• a
'A BEAUTY OF CILkitACTElt prart3tott.-ga•thratIrPitbaii-CQ440101-04g. thelearilneer
beyond the ./prise ot pearls. What geographical 'work that a mission -
Jesus endured helps tell Ilis beauty Sty has recently been doing shows
to the centuries,- .What nutrtyre that there are Still opportunities for
have guffered makes, the clouds on discovery in this part of the Donde-
which their glory shines across the
,Therptere think mit confident- Father Mork*. -whose mission $0,-,
ly the ,: ---kind of man yeti weet,. to be. tion lei on the sheritsof Lake Stuart
Fix 'Ormly Inour rabid the ideal to nearly in the contra. .01;the
which you 'aspire, Nothing can pre- i!
- been travelling many hundreds
ventyoufrom beeemitet ,the _things_ of inilesin -cial6e,r4napg..a1k_tbe
you yeartrio-be:-.- $53,47-6-:
("4:lakes, ioIntn1n!t and- vat.
tri reality teaches forth a- helping .ies"n the upper:
hand. Co-operate. with it and YOU hes' of the ?Net-
'elielthelt--Ritier. A fine map of.
.win a beautiful, nature „ a noble UscoverIes
, which has•tuet .been_puie.
'effreer.'a • Chritatrike-ilutirt6'' by the Neuchatel Geographi,
but, gives the necessary fr etion . by 1_,
Society of Switzerland,. *thews
-width -you more forWard .into I L'I'a
many details that have beett.seen O.
achi(veinent. no pr•evieue map. Lake Morice, fosit'
Ever Hardness endured, makes the oJIIQ al) the
;Itittre-b-bt-eitrite „„9-2, ,cet
111±
rtenturioseslieeven--iii-ebove.40-S-
teethed, but , the•OPPohesteg The neer. passes in the Itockies
will help you climis.1". Tcrown- onf have been
studied by 'e party r of •
sainthood is -weaving for •
every hardness endured; if the, spirit Grand -Ttinik Pacific engineers who
have been • engaged. in the work and -a quarter of water. skimming it
Well. Squeeze-hito-thiir thirinice
three- oranges, stir and add. One
-
quart of water, end a few strips of
thin orange' peek stir ail togatioer.
Place/hi a covered jug and stand till
cold. Add a few slices of orange be-
fore Serving,
Flat Gingerbread Cake.-Takeone'
pound and a. ,quarter of flour, ' ,and
into it work Nur minces. of lard or
dripping arid ft quarter of a pound in a teacupful of water, 'and add a
nf browtr,sugar, with ono mince ' few tirops of vinegar. - Dip in the
net -sisuesity
and pat with the hand; pull ei.it cares -
n
es -One c
Now AirleanS -reo ass'a and sugar.
ree tableepoonfult; et lard, and aix
of cold' coffee, 'one tee*pooriftd- 'egie
of einnemon„ tri,nirer a'aft OVa*
For ' Apple ,
smototh, red apples th-et are very
t„,cut-n. slice from the tied, then
move the cons Throw the peeled
appl0. into cold water. to keep' it
from discoloring. and -choP rothor
coarsely. Mix it With chopped on.
ion„ and pour oriel. it an ' and
vloegar dressing. Scatter chopped
parsley 'over, And serve.
The Secret Ot Cooking Si:twines
Well -is to let thenaeat - very
grad-
ually. If so prepared the skins will
not burst, "lottit as the Sall$40,gs,t
are fresh. The coalition practice of
pricking ettesigea is net. to ,be
commencl_._ed /telt ellevi_ze_stlitey
:fried with, the liausageti
prevenient.
To boil Rice SuccessrullAS-Have
ready a large sauce -pan of bolting
teeter salt it thoriniishly.' Wash the
.tico_it'i_seczeraletvaterge-i-to-remove-t
-Omar. etc. Threw into the fast boil -
Ing water, add a tablespoonful of
,VInegats-l'or • ac yr a
/11.1#11-11ViZa--2roVier- Tbeir-tfterif
ash o;o4t.0i: Art- Ort . • 4L.
,1414 441), ,,.W.4.74 two
of *Seed: oil -• an ,pixte, ..'pa • 'Ot
tiff
1101,0, 1,1,80 two
arta of, tweet, on One pert. ' of
but the mixture of Horned
-oil-and---tuepentitteAssztosiesirable.-
: To Clean a Feather .lioa.-Firet
procure coarse bran and a small
qpteritkti of ffour. Mix..both together
and set 14 the oven to get thorough-
ly hot. 'Also warm a largo gotten
bag. Put the boa. into the bag,
-Visiske in -t'he bran, etc, and tie .up
-the end. Rub the 'tag well and
ehake it thoroughly. Take Out the
boo; iihake it theroughly and it will
be equal to new. If the.boa be very
flirty: two lots of fiver, etc., will be
required.
Rata. flea nay ho he.ightenediV
bolting "thein in strongboraxWater.
Rinse in hot water and dry. and Un-
less' they haVe 'been very Much n
od-theyg
(smiths; in a pot or saucepan is
espearilly eultable for small pieces Of
meat,. such as French cooks cook, to
perfesttonT—Areit Oat' hettt-,--it -106
tablespoonful of dripping in a pot.
Drown the meat on ail sides' in . this,
se as ,to harden the outside and
keel) in the gravy. Then draw the
Pot to----thesitidessif-the- lireand- 1,0
he -Meat -000lr'idn'tvirr-witit-4Ae'lid
Iiirturfrar batwitireltdatij.
a warm place till wanted. . in n' very econtnnicel .mode of cook -
An Orange Drink -Which you will ing because- of the small quantity of
like is Made by boiling three-querters tire required to heat the miniature
of a Pound of loaf sugar in one pint oven. To snake the joint more tasty
add an onion and a few bits of celery
to thee -pot.
'Wash chiffon, especially white, and
it b s to look almost like
new. Make" a lather of best yellow
soot", and let it stand till lukewarm.
Soak the chiffon in this for one hour.
Shake it gently round in the stiiis,
but do not rub. , Squeeze out care-
fully, an'd rinse in two or three lots
of cold water. Dissolve a little gum
of tirist dwell .within yeti. if fol-
lowing His -banner -you -march.
• -crown or -thorns__ .w
Chrit wears as the king of- the
world. . What you suffer will crown
you, if you 1:nake Yourself worth the
crowning,
John the llaptist'S-death (Matt, 14,
12, 13). •_
The •passoCer-Commentorating
the eseake _ of •the Jews • fr,m_th, the& in _. detail. . and they now re-
_bondup.0133exp_4,and_inot_14imes_st, 7_,..:_ratirottd. i 1 iporlstbs-hesav,„ eittditer-to
ly •tlicir - escape from the avenging ststititteette-gradients-ea-tt
deathrangel who Slew the firstborn east are very gelitio tuid that some
of Egypt (comp. Exed. 12. /21-27). 'of the passes ./6.re wide enough for.
A4("the"). feast -Mor coti•ectlY, the d"ble tracks'
fees t.hesilevisioit. The scheine of the Cariadian Paci-
fic Railroad was laughed at as im-
• 5. Unto hini--Beiter, toward' hi .' : ibablenilitirthe great giireiffey
Twelve; the fourth of thoSe who be- discovered. It is DOW known that
PAilip-The apostle end one of thei through, Kicicieg -Horse pass was
further north there ero,seyon.Lother
irten-loirez-;-Iran those which the
•Canadlati_Pacific-Aises awl that they
will amply suffice for all of Canades
railroad needs through the Melia-
accdrding to Polyera•tes, bad several traEinxps'iorations. of thepastfew years
. _ ..
daughters. Not to be confused with
'Philip the Evangelist one of the show that the old ideas of the
heights of thtg, leadin peaks of the
Waded were inniFE exag-
.....
ger. , . Peeks still appear on teome
Ot_theanape ;Is froth 15„600 t 1
CRIO4giet:iliiiittetlits,ssett-1- --- —2—,,--
tDr. 4.reittor • recently wrote • that
peobalit none of the;Motuitains.- -o
ri s -Columbia, rises above 13,000
or 14,500 feet, Outr4m. Colliefand
sympathy for thit hungr3r multitude.' about a dozen other men have with -
some of the disci les havin .ti ,,,,,,,t,., in the past ten:veers ascended many
14 15 sending the peo_ple
, --.(2) hie willi , • ' st-oltser
his ability to meet an emergency; ascertain their . altitude. The re -
(4) his faith- in his Master's. love
°eve for mankind, eem,passfeei wad
power. Jesus, is teaching his kliscip-
leti--as well as helping gt, needy, hun-
gry -multitude.•• .
'abofit a year. A newspaper ime_re-
ported that this partv has diseover-
-ed the Smoke River, Porcupine. Rod
Deer,•Wapiti and Pine River passes,'
hut this statement is not ---quite eel's
rect.
All these great posses through the
nockies to the north of the•Panatii-
an Pa.cific Railroad have been known
to eitist for some time, but the en-
gine.ers have been, the first to . study
came followers of Jesus, and the first
wherriJoses_directly--calte
-43-)i a fellow townsmen ot_both An-
drew and Peter, • ail •three disciples
having been residentsof'Bettisaida of
fleillees_preachetlinAslieltitiorsanil.
•-seven-eleticons--eirosere-loy-the-clrare
,Jertg'Saletil (Acts 11).
• Bread -A pldral noun better trans-
-iated-loteves"---Itoutitizlorzoblistiesc 'at:eft
1.7.` -
• Or • inixecf-TvIth irt-irer
td-hakettria478•10e-aheilt -afi-la*eta
-
thumb.
life. "Tow much of synoptic bistory,
'Intervenes between the two -lessens) is
difficult to say, but excellent -auth-
orities think all theevents recorded
In. mark 2.23 to 6.30, „Lukts'7.1 to
6.56 and piirellel passages together
Watt. 5 to USh he inserted at
this polist.
Four Accounts -The feeding of the
fiSe ....thiseitid is one 61 the; feiVeVentti
of our • Lord's iife . recorded
by all four; evangelists (comp.,
att. 14-21, - litterk t1,42ePti- Anti
Luke .0. 12-11), and. as. such _is
worthy -ef :special' Stidy-. the
par-
*llel synoptic accounts Should be
carefully compared thratighout,
Verse 1. After these thingti-The
things •raeidiened• in dspter& IIOw
long after is difficult to determine.
4ohn's sequence 'of --events, as far as
, he records events, Is probably cor-
• met,' thongli his account certainly
tontainS gaps, his , purpose tieing
'quite another ream that or' *siting
a chronologies' natvatice. Compare
Intervening Events *hove. •
' Went over '4."went away to tho
other side") -Prom .the vicinity of
,eiepernaum, on the *eat Side of the
lake, across northeast to the 'Vicint
ity. of Iletbsaida-Jttliiiic ttinkO'9-,-'10y
a little diStateet:liatk from, the shore
of the lake. •
- -Gaiileo-A tfiore---tha
laxly miles. northeast of Jorestilem
the wene of our laNt leeson.
Which is (the sea) of Tiberiatee.!
ext. -halitosis added for the benefit.nt
readers not tamilitir with the .older
name Galiltv. .Orte of. many little- In-
dications . that the gospel of *erOliti
*OM Written • ,outeide of 1.74alestitte.
where :people were famjLIilr.witlt
the tempt, naints of. places ,nnit p(o.
e.• Tiberius .was emperor' of 71torrie
itt the time of our Lord.
1"). and tb6csca reeeived•ttlis.haltut
n"hie hon*s
reiloaksil-- 40n toof out 01
-
ra One,
but many others', *hihnJ inter,,
xecorded in %tar 23 to,
.) *Ad. tAike .7.. t to R,56. and
paraill pitstages. It Waa out of„the
eltirs'4'.tf Gali1c, *tete thctselydracles
bad ',.itxtvi ar'iit, that the multi.
' followed
8. Ott int the;').x
be •altine wfth 103 tlisethle*.'
d.rettiv tteWS
lings' Worth") -The tlenarion,
denarius) :wits a silver coin worth
..r.bout lit, 2-3 -cents. Iloilo the sem
mentioned by Philipwas equal ; to
about 83.1-3,dollars (533.83) in onr
money. lta purchasing power was
doubtless' .
Andrewr-frittterfTreltertfiker
-At first a disciple of John the
Baptist; one of. the first two disciples
who followed .Jetats (John 1,
37.40); leza prominent 111 ispostolie
history than the brother -whoni-
hail led to Christ; a native tst Beth -
snide in 041110. Of his later sphere
f work nett -deg certain is known.
Tradition reports him to have labor -
mete. Araegidonia. afitt• Asia
finally suffering mertyrdoin itt
Patine, a, city of Admin.. Peter's
Personal character and history 14
better know* and need not ,be set
forth here.
0. flarky lortvest-Anil, hence
an in-
ferio • nallty .of' food. The word to
.the MM.° at tlint'irabidat-
'breed in verso tibevese-Whielt
tfreireelt Word 3flay-lt))J1
to iiint- generally*, Or to anything
enten th bread t...6 it relish, as Well,
*8 (0 smiill flslu's eo ,altie syn.
a use iktlettet, .the usutti worst
, •
10. Sit down- Ater.tilis resliee.
This, Command would indicate* that
more. than a iCanty bite or sintole
untlieort-ivas, -to-be-setre4;,-, /Wen .-rw
rind te- portake Of a meal.- .nm.
simple alteilimee *et theill.Selplett In
'atIOR se large a tiotriPatir ot bun-
gry
people before a viiihto foot, sun,.
-was o land Is. o, rernarkable
mon '* it their faifh in Jesus'
*sidei*wornen and (hiJd-
ren'
•'14, 21) -#and hence
ettsilk tWitei as tar
11. thanks-titeh. ot the
othr itta re'Aords.his 1nkii1g
and 'blessing. A fami-
used in prayer by. the
Jewsbelore eating was, "Illemert4 art
thou \t,4.4/oveli our OW. Xing of th
weal, 'whd' rautZ!st to OMe forib
breed from. -the (tarth."
To the disciples* 404 the disapl
'
suilt.• Is a decideddecrettsci-- in the
Previously , accepted 'altitude of a
number of the highest mountains of
these ranges.
1.0.1111.11t AS/C. 1111t.
A Lawyer tells how onto 0 small
boy got the better of" hint in cross.
exendriatiote Part of the question-
ing and the relines thereto were as
• yo -ti ettY occupation?"
•• ""''' • "Don't'you do any work at all?" •
"Tlisit's about. all." -
"What doe f yotir father ,do?"
**Nothin. notch."
"Doesn't he do anything to sup-.
port the ftimi1y1"1"--
."Ile does odd Jobs once in a Whitt
'When he can get them."
"Aka •rentter of tect. isn't Your
father pretty "Worthies* fellow,
nearly alwaya. fighting. and # boat -
"1 don't know"- sir: you", It -better -
ask hint. _11Wit sitiins .oter therein
the jury -box.". •'
Attmma Txtptts.
*mere, ate ,protablst few intitifthate
objettS which have not an occult. *iv
attaeheel to theur is. SOine
pot, or theworld4 and for -* long
time ikon; 'lute :.been,lield in serierie,
thin bythe negroes In the -tOtttlt Of
the Piaited,,$4tee. They_temi,
post:Rion tet the. WOO that 1! fron
'be hung upon the branches of a.
it will keep IA evil 'Spirit* ittid
In-
surc g604, crop of fruit.
in M*ry-
liu!d there is a• peach -tree protactsd
,nnit_and hrarehes are
of all, a. goo: teaspoonful of carbon-
ate of soda 'dissolved in a little luke- fully. Cover with a niece' of tissue
warrn milk. Bake in a, Yorkshire paper, and . fries with a moderate
pudding 'tie, cut • int
hot, ruld set on te_sieve to 4001.
reTery-Ifitrtiii—nato saute is an
excellent vegetable course. Iloll tots
era heeds of celery. freed frora green
and, cut into ttito inch Ierigthei---41-1
tender. Drain the celery very dry,
plawit in a _hot.._vegetable dish And
poet- over 1t scene good melted but, -
ter sauce.in which is mixed sufficient
tomato notice to give allit nice color
and flavor. Tura the telery ovew
once, scatter tchopped parsley over
a41949-slie-rv-. Putraerlrg-*"--irdlir—a—ikTe*"wn the reform progrunune spreads etead-
haddoeft; and When cooked re- tily
tnove the meat from the bones °Y.7
a ienAnre_ 3shi
r the whole of Russia there
Xteoea. -2114101;lawl"xiglirTiy'fir-viarli-foiargtea-VoinenlIeurs
k
h jeLltix which are wholly non-political in
.
ety. to .the tle't men
which were- iatetuled to suppi that
species 0U:education which, the cove
rnment wanted, were alt turning in- •
to 'foreleg grounds. of •
RADICAL POLITICS.
The rulers took the' Hue of leas4
resistanee in. creating thousands -of
vacancies in the State service -every
year for nO 'Other purpose then • tO,
absorb these dangerous edecated
poor, Put there is a limit even. to
thi In Russia, and •ter most -01 the
Peet generation. the univereitiesi have
been tUraing out each year larger
numbers :of .nten Who are trained for°
-eeparate, professions and not ter
.everitment service. They rept***
ltuisia,*$ first spechnens of en *doe
.S.01,01.-.1/0-11VId011e,,,n)iddle_c_, kiss.
To reitigir -talierlintii 'a-- Two:7
4less 10.findthans_ls_to_miss theLloei*-
41 working out of national develop-
ment here.
Only two classes in Itus-Sla
historic traditions and legally de-
fined positions -nobles and peaean-
try, The middle ground, between
the two has ben aduatly °ten. ied
have prospered more or lefSe buSi-
ness in the towns or have gone, into
the educated protest; ons. These peo-
ple have found -the elyes without a
political position in the tortuntin-.
41-iii-peasatit -arebased on
'the principle of paternal carp, no re-
sponsibility or authority, but, on
•the other hand, certain legal pro-
tections from fraud, The very tele -
titles that bring people into this
middle ground in the population of
ittiSSia are just those, which make -
peasant laws ' intolerable to them.
:They are not particularly afraid et
being defrauded in the ordinary -are.
airs-of-4ife-he-faits-thittetheysititt.
goes to indicate that their are ..able411
to tale care of themselves. On the. ,
other hand, they are willieg to bear
lierity
ti_.(1'..mAntoss_reor.;
isents a different problem from that
iii -the peasantry.' itis not a 'trues- '
• tion of more food, of more Intelli-
gOnt methas. betterr"
roads and fewer local exactions by
tax .gathererar-...-TILL,s414kre_—_
• Tlth' DAILY QUESTIONS
of the peasantry. For the educated
reformers the agitation is wholly
politice/. • Any -economic reforms
they were allowed to have ti balrpi in
framing the• m.
Their greatest eticeitrisgoinent and
tiligt-fv--4°6rtipi:trottu-77thW=N14/131.1CIt.
•
tion et .the territorial
• -heft& itaireartiod the
• ertstrient:tuactionaries, up to and inr •
eluding the Ministers •of State. as
a ifKries of Chinese literati, trained.
parasites& tm, the body ef. the nation
whescr-f
the a itation roceetts there appears
a closer *lion- between' the-lea-irefd--
of the provincial nobility class and
this new iniddle class whose grand-
fathers were serfs. .
The policy • which M. Witte •
'adopting/aims ..at economic develop- .
et for the peasantry and 13 •
111450 -
Ott by the middle class.. • Resolute
and 'Single minded thotigh he is, it Is
diffictilt to ender/Wand how he can
prevail eventually against •a eon.
StantlY increaSing body which, .hat •
. • •
There is nothing ,tietalernic :shim
that' They reaord 'itIl
around their approval of the act of
-Plehve-'s -aiseaSsin, who was -of
the -class' from .Whith they, are drawn.
The emitionit recurrence of the bond)
idea .in the past two months come,
front the yotinger and' eingtkir 01
this party, anti,tiot from the stare.
tYyt. •
It Is eciaStitutionalism that they
call for in deadly earnest •and , no
longer the. Intel •adminietrative-
forms ot the first progranore. The
"Government ansivere that Iluseia
-it- 40
liticallst' froth any other great,coute
try and that -she riceds a ltoU dl
terent system.
ts not *sattAlies_it lomitt,i151
men, lawyers. doctor*. 'engineers% ail
Oils new class in Ilwsitt, which. .b
multiplying over the spare that lie5
WOO:too noble' and peafttrt: $10
are not .ot Vet* tliffeeelit staff trout
*rhat other wotilit's ate Made of.
we . want to take the tame risks
1 • #
THE NEW LIMN RUSSIA
AWA.B2E/NIIN6 THAT MAYBRING
_ _ABOUT Itr.V.01.11„Tio,N
The Newly Born ddle 5.ess
Are the Product of the
Universities.
• ,po n o po oe a wire a
lub_ g
-iv mai -Teri ,,,a----s-tTxt---0 together, ..,.... 6th -a t °entries are here foremost in
auui-
salt. pepper, r -ie and eayeene. .aow:Pressing the agitation against the
lump of butter or clatified beef Government, soli a St. Petereburg
dripping, an egg beaten.in Vero table) letter.
onfuls • milk. ...Stir al to th r Medical societies, engineers' associ-
and if you like parsley, add a little,. a 0 3
put, in the mixture with a little marc, ag
professors, are as active as the law -
butter on the top. Bake until hot. Yet's. Every nation which duet 'its
through and the top is nicely brown-;„ ed n owlawmaking/bins naturally a big
i 11Pereentage of lawyers, in its Legisla-
. . _
4
Ilam Pickle. -Take tete pound of 1,ere.'" but it IS not this practice
continon stilt, a -quarter et a ponatl, abroad for doctors or lir hitects or
• tid -one ounce. of brown sugar. when--theY meet o di u rnal;
all together thoroughly, and well nittil, effecting. their calling to plunge
the ham witb thil mixture,. Let the., straightway into hot national polihtim lie' in a tub for four days, rub..! tics. That phenomenon here dime
bing ,it and turning It each day.,closes Russia in the erittcal throes
Thn atkl one pound of treacle. Ind! of producing what is tented -4 .rnid-
_leave 41. for -_neartv,threa-wealtsbe-1-4ne,--eam
Ing careful to rub and turn the hamit has been tile uniform practice
every- day. Wipe', off all thii eldresIthere that every -change should be
with a damp cloth; wipe very dry. worked by a stroke of the severe
and hang up to dry. If possible,
- •
HINTS FOR TIM 11011E.
Do not salt stock till'you have
:ei.itri's pen. • Institutions have not;
gl-,19;;;;;PillIell,:"t*tel"ttir'oltrgive6tit-ret4tind AtiePt tIll
asitet
tttlie
PeoPle Who, have been called on tO
adept themst.lves to the fettitutions,
done skimming it, as the salt pre- net the institutions to the pope. •
, .1"0 I je 1 t ,at ws ok .ti 601011,:tistititu,tt whenti‘t iLi;. 11 rro Oltaut°, iei en ri n uos u' of 1 oasS inion Jgbit'otniAilintsdott:stt_tpet'ret:i;yeill:tira:ttib'a:c.,e4dliicanharp fpn:iii.:711401::*:,:otr,(11:001-int:
with whiEh. they tiep, moittpled htyt.4the too4tott or o *var. the transport:
"1**4bdeer-sgeeret -of hating light,- goodiibrevre and .estro ityritlen1;keetfeh. - ve
nittsbcd pottitOCS ilt to keep them hoth the fInglish. ;but in all the inulti-
while mitsbing autki to hare .the-ultugi tude of, things That are necessarv to
'. . soldiers 'had proved at leaSt as
very11(116st a timd. - . .. - ' the flovernenont lir 112' .printealt '0,40
Sa.Ve sour trilit: in largo' or Smelt , fifty years agr# Was that a coniplete
quantities, fitr it is so ailetift fer,nbsence or nattoont education% hail
stove., throw pierit$' of malt on bit•iother TIodiirivtti;i:totiorr.krigsw."3?"41"7that ti4Irts.
.
wiriviltilttiwtleet!bitatiavg*t4knithelir tittriottillintv:tvc:%1 t4.ttti;eglib:10.1:.' , „.r. , :ii iti i /6 nit, ri 4,,,t,t ii,:t :. nt ni. I ta y 0 ilt, es. tr. I or xii b 0 dv ,, , 0 0,, 1 : it "
, l•
the
or prink Atka, 10V-0 Irolti of bourn,* trovemoleot After the' 'seer Widi oVe
"Wilt. inikke a; . 1116".4! ;"ffitt°r•ter t11,41n. consisted in the creation or tinlyer.
01 bilY for ' d you will titles all ei'er the itionte of
knoW ' t ' . ..._.......,,, ,.,_ ._,,,,,,_„,
thee -et -1W autheriare ex. to
..-
100 ItlAritifaCtUred that lin
COVertd useftil thing-440tication..
But none 'of the goertiigcta'is or
'
erritOrial nobility deretit'ed
ing i-Pliejitriisig!!...il_10,.,,t„
Thcy had thein edu.
the *rl1le
it. luto beRing wedec
piece of
spsuils,
nd polished with a
whole' '
rinrd a rapid
.004
who .were to b put int
iveraitlet ahich hail bccn e4-
-d
irhOlesalo. not anly in
Ales, ,but 3/ pro
imimportaint
ot the froni
'thattelear'fbif 1*711-
id end
, Clothed Ireton Ahe ,
the land."htit
pent,
It May
t' of its'
and its
o place.
.E.7e
,
at ltr.it appo-:otl
rf'\ Me, ttilf,,
bri.stal fe.;'sbraio* "141
'ar still.. That
't loc $on." -,