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OeSS14.11414.1,44444.4,elleB41
mifullavo lincLas.
See, I'M may be made from veriest
scraps of any sort, Form these into
a stow, told cooked potato, catrot
and 0. 11 1t1 onion. Cover all with
light crust, and servo directly th
,crust 111 (101111.
Dried toegues should be set 1
newel water and allowed to son
twenty-four hours before cooking. A
tongue must be boiled very slowly,
or it will be hard.
get) aro 1101 a eocessary ingrne
In malting a custard the whites of
the eT
.0.. Use the yolks to thicken tho
milk, in Um proportion of ono yolk
to a cup of milk. The whites of the
eggs may then be used as a garnielt
for tho top of the custard.
Po improve green peas which have
become old and dry plaee two or
three large lumps of sugar in the wit.
ter III which they aro to be cooked.
When quite cooked, tako tho sauce-
pan off the nee, and let the Peas
lay In the water for nye namitee
before ntraInIng,
'Po clean glover; lay them out on a
s, clean table or board, and rub a mix-
ture of finely powdered fuller's -earth
u and alma In equal 'quantities. Brush
MI and sprinkle the gloves with dry
bran and whiting. Lastly, dust tho*'-
' mighty. (Dove -Lives aro useful for
cleaning In 1111* way.
Cake can bo easily and quickly
made by beating up three eggs and a
1, cup of castor sugar Lilt vow stiff,
6, add gradually a cup of slf-ralIng
0 flour, and pour into a well -greased 1
and paper -lined flat tin. Bake till a
1e1 light fawn color, then quickly spread'
1 with jam and roll it up.
0 A good ere exLinguisher can bo
f 0 wildi„
7 111110 1rotibl.
118 £1-
1'1' lows: Put three pounds of salt in a,
1 gallon of water, and add Lo this ono
01 and a half pounds of sal ammoniac.
Bottle this liquid, keep in various
$ plaCOS about Lhe house, so that when
• a fire is discovered it may bo quickly
1Iex t inguished.
Lemon cheesecake is made with six
eggs, quarter of a pound of butter,
C. grated rind and juice of four lemons,
and one pound of granulated sugar,
leTelt tho buLLer slowly Jo alt enamel
saucepan, add the lemon rind and
juice, and lastly the sugar. Stir
well till the mixture boils, pour into
a jar, and COVOr when cold. Cook'
slowly, or it will burn. Lemon
cheesecake will keep a long Limo.
Cranberry Pte. -Take half a pin
of cranberriee, a teacupful 01 stone
raisins, two or three apples, peek)
and cored. Add sugarto taste, nen
cover with good short crust. Coo
steadily 1111 the fruit is quite done
For Spiced Milk. -Put one mine
of stick cinnamon into one pint o
old whisky, and macerate for a for
nigh t , shaking 601181 061 ly. Tho
sLrmin MT the whisky int) a C1011
bottle. Take one or two tablespooe
full in half a pint of hot milk. Thi
is a good remedy for 0 cold in it
early stage, and is very sustaining.
O • Rico gruel is popular with childret
if made as follows: Mix a tablespoon
ful of ground rico with ono pint o
milk till perfectly smooth. Boil a006
a slow fire with a little cinnamot
and nuleneg, stirring continually.
When quite cooked, sweeten to taste,
and serve with a piece of buLLer
stirred Mtn It.
Potato Ilagout.-Mash three ounces
of cooked polatoce, flavor them with
two ounces of chopped lean hem and
an onlou (parboiled and chopped)
half 0 teaspoonful of mixed herbs,
pepper and salt. Mix two eggs wit
the mixture, then lightly add the
whiles of egg.. Have ready 0pan o
hat fat, drop the tin:aura in by
dessertspoonfuls. Fry nicely, and
drain on thick paper by the tiro.
Servo piled high and garnished with
chopped parsley.
Roast wood pigeons make a good
dish for 0 small party. Carefully
cleanse some young pigeons, then
dee, them with a cloth. Put a table-
spoonful of butter, add some chopped
nnion and parsley, season with pep-
per Fuld salt, loside each bird. Tie
a Chin rasher and two vine leaves
over the breast of each bird, and
roast steadily for. twenty-five minutes
Tinsto continually with clarified drip-
ping. 801.140 with bread sauce and
31 n giaVy.
Jelly sauce for game and roast
mutton.-efelt a quarter of a pint of
red currant, rowan, or grape jelly in
a saucepan, add hal! an ounca of
butter; cut in small pieces. Let all
boll ten one minute, and just before
serving stir in a tablespoonful of
sherry And the samo quantity of
thick brown gravy.
For Corn lice! Irash.-Mince the
beef finely 61111 add an equal porLion
of cold potatoes, chopped or meshed,
and ono small onion finely chopped.
Season well with salt and pepper.
Put into a large, deep fryitfg-pren
piece of butter the stye of a hen's
ogee end half a cupful of milk. When
these aro hot, put in the beef and
potatoes, stir thoroughly, and as
soon as the mixture Is hot place it
on a 10(1 hot dish and 8,6ve. Salt
beef should be user!, a ttd an excellent
brenkfnst dish results.
Stuffed Ce hbage.-Cleanse, soak
and hull a large, firm head of cab
-
beim mull tender. Scrape out the in-
side, leaving euough for a solid °Mee
wide with the scraped eubbage
a cup rf tine bread crumbs, a little
salt, pepper and celery 110111 and one
small onion eat Bent this up
with a teaspoonful of butter and
three eggs. Fill the cabbage with
the /111111111g, 1(0 around IL a
strip of cloth and bake until brown.
14;1,11 I fam.-Soak the ham in cold
water r011: night. Coloove it from
the enter rout cover the part that is
no1 covered eviLlt Skin with a pa 111 0
of E.0141,411131' -1411X011 flan! Lind Wal
Lini7 care that it Is of sidlicient
thicknees to loop in nil the meat
juke, Bele in a moderate oven, al-
lowing 1 Wen ty-live minutes to Ove)'*
yinnini. 1 ZeinoVe the casing and s% in
and voter with breaderembs. Pet
in the oven unt11 11 becomes a. geld -
e111 brown.
-IE S. S. LESSON
INTERN.VTIONAL LESSON,
MN. 14.
Lesson (I. The *Wee Men Find Jo
Golden Text, Prov. 23, 26.
LESSON W0111) STUDIES.
Nolte -The text of the revised yin'
IS used as a baste fur these W
51611(118,
Olnil Tidings to the JeWee-That Jo
of Nazareth was of a teeth the to
looked -for and eagerly expected 11
stall of 1110 Hebrew people, Um 5811
David and the Saviour King of 161'is the burden, though not the sum to
ce the first evangelist's inessage to
fellow -countrymen, who, having bel
ed on Jesus for his work's sake,
needed for tho strengthening of 11
faith just such a selling forth of his
and work In the light or the 01(1 Te
molt prophesies In him Re
their complete and only fulfillment. '1
au Ilinv's purpose being argisnentat
rather than biographical, he does not
vays In IIIS narrative observe the
lel. chronological order of events
which the gospel of Mark is a be
guide. in addition to ontleavoviiig
strengthen the faith of Jewish Ch
Ions in (106118 as the Messiah, he sou
also to enlarge the vision of those
vliom ha wrote by making plain 1
0 kingdom established by Christ
traversal in scope, embeacing 1111
lions and all peoples and thus abol
ing all narrow 10101511Very early tradition uniformly ascrl
he writing of the nest gospel to 11'
hew, ono of the less conspicuous of
poslollo group. But the book its
toes not mention the name of Rs
bole and there aro many able and c
&Menus scholars who believe 1
his tradition in Its earliest form mea
imply that the sulislanee of the ges
!usage, though probably not the to
if the narrative, is to Ile ascribed
be apostle whose name the gos
(1016. limo is, however, 110 posit
roof for this contention, die prole
esolving itself rather into a quest
f the interpretation of the malice in
er (late available. We ern there!
uslined In assuming that the cavil
WS.
s
Ion
oat
BUS
ng-
1es-
of
eel,
gal
his
inv.
yet
(dr
life
stn.
Ind
'he
Ivo
al-
ex -
for
1(61'to
els-
gth
for
hat
vas
na-
ish-
hes
lat-
the
elf
00 -
hal
ns
pol
rm
(0
spot
Ivo
om
Ion
ea -
ore
est
• ;
AN OLD-FASIIIONED ricx-rx.
This recipe dates -back to the time
of Charles the Second, At that time
f there was a thoroughfare called p
Pickled Egg Walk that lod from the r
city of London to Clerkenevell, a G
northern district; of the dear old g
town. Thera was a tavern in this j
road famous for AS padeled eggs, and t
It is said that the merry monarch 1
once stopped at the Lavern and par- L
took of them.
To 1 qt, vinegar allow one tea- 1
spoon black pepper, 1 teaspoon white 11
Penner anil half oz. whole ginger well d
bruised. Boll the eggs for 12 miu11
-
Ides, then dip them in cold water, I:
and carefully take off the shells.
any should bo broken in handling do 11
not use them, as one broken egg P
would spoil all the rest. Arrange
the eggs with cave in a small' crock
or in largo open-mouLhed bott les.
Now put the pepper and ginger into
the vinegar and when it boils, let it
simmer gently for 10 minutes to ex.
tract the flavor of the spices, cover-
ing the saucepan closely. Then while
hot pour it over the eggs and when 1
cold tie clown closely to exclude the b
air. In one mouth the eggs will be
ready for use.
eaddlon concerning the authorship
ha gospel is correct -that is, (hal M
hew, the apostle, did write the gos
curing las name and that he wrote
n substantially the form in -,vhieh
as come dawn to us. Concerning t
eta rind place of the composition
Ialthew's gospel nothing definite
nown, though the data avnilablepoi
o the year's 08-70 as the approxlm
me, and to Palestine as the PrOba
lam of Its composition.
Verse I. When Jesus was born -0
rd
ist
el,
ek
n-
ot,
vo
ho
110
he
us
of
11
pel
it
11,
he
6!
is
nts
ate
ble
IIT
resent system of chronology, occol
le; 10 *011(0(1 *01) 001111)01' years forwn
lid backward from the birth of Chr
\.D., Anno Domini, year of our Lot
nci B.C., before Christ), dates ba
013' to the middle of the sixth ce
ry, about which limo a Tiernan abb
ionyslus Exiguits, Is reputed to ha
eon instrumental in inaugurating 1.
yslom. But in fixing the tittle of
nett of Jesus W111411 Wan to be 1
aiding point of Inc now order of talc
0011 an error *vas made by
nd Ills co-labotere, the dole of the N
Exlgu
e
a
(I
a
0
lu
TIPS FOR 11011IE SHAVERS.
Practical Hints on flow to Obtain nn
Easy Shave.
Only expOr101100 can teach the art of
shaving. Unfortunately this comes to
1101110 so late in life 11t111 by the time
they have learnt to shave much 11111101!
ossary agony has been endured. To
obtain an easy shave, the first neces-
sity is to wash the face In soap and
eold water, and dry the skin thoroughly
brediately before applying the halter
'1* len, 111c more the face is tethered, 11,1.1l
Ihe thicket. the lather is, the easter wet
ie the s1111600.ve. The ram' is the Hang
however, flint requires the most at
Ilernembee, It is nota smooth
1110,10, as the unscientific. imagine. but
• 11110 8(111'.110 11113'011) W1141 110111410S IC
Once IL under 11 sleong enough
feing-ginee yen escort:AM for 11.1111,,,,r
341011.
reit 110.11g, 010- ense, It Is instinleient lo
lake it overshould In
moved in a Awaying 11)1116116', either
from too lo heel, (1' heel hi foe, (114se eyed 111)1111)111ent (metaled on may ((111010010 1.
'those in ilsnbt should try holit Neve,
64111 11 seeo6'0014l'1( experience 111 111181(1 *0111
• *1111(11, 15 preferable. 'rho blade
he held nearly flat to the fate,.
is1-111(1)111 Is mre e
offete
ees In 11116 1),),1),),;deem, :mil 10es Rely to (1(161(11-0(1(161(11-0eki11(111).H lIts skin is (Irmo ns 11(1(111
ae pos-ildo 111.1 111 11311(1, lli11(1
win 140 forced nod vexed- at a low-
VG1•11,1/,11INTS. 01' level than otheewlee.
Mor ile''f-pearl articles should bo
cleaned with 11'111(111a alld cold Willer.
Snap tliNcolor8 L.110111.
04411 110a:0114 fresh by p1001p16811111 a,
small Meet, of (1016,11101'(1016,11101'or n pinch of
snit in the Walor 111 11111011 (boy
stand,
Ao tvtaln which has a hole in it.
van 11n invoded in the following mem-
nor; (Mt a piece from an old cm,
tate a little bower than the hole, dip
the edges in cold 5111101),5111101),place over
the hole, and iron.
Enamelled ware may be perfeetev
seemed by the careful Pune et finely 1
1)011110(Ni pinnice.stone. A. few drops
of 111111110111a in 11 Pall or water will 1
perform the erdinary demising with- t
0111 resorting to the 5(10111103',(((('0
knife lunettes can he salts-
3,
'PPE' (MEAT RED 0F WARR.
In shakesnenre's TwellTh
l'oby iletch urges sir Andrew Agile
10 pelt a mid 10 rot
‘,11$1 11,.; 11.,11
of paper, elthieugh the 811411e16.1.0.1g enototh Um bed of Ware." This
etiormintS bed, which was n wonder 111
settileepeere'e time, and. 41111 o,;1s1:4 in
Waro, Is (('0(111(('0(111fo1,1 (6(1.4,,4 high and
11(11,)inehos sqOaro, so 1111I.
o1-1)'lve people tem lio condertahly in H.
BenolifollY enived 11. le' a .11(4(1111(111siert-
nen or antique furniiiire, (intim; from
be days of Queen Elie/then). 'Ibis
riindei rid bed is nelneally object et
curiosily to (11:1110 visitors, and It hos
wen their custom In della: from a 11111of beer a 1)1081 impropteate to it. in
let sumo relent there hung a pale
m
tees, main *01)1011 all strangers for-
limey were Ent'0111,
factorily niendoci by filling thn re,yity
in the handle two-thil ils full of 1'118171and hetet:dust. /that tho 5111111kk of t
the Imife, rind while 001.7 hot press
it into the 11611(110,110, holding it in piece 1
until firmly set..
ee
Bswax and tin:T(1111111e 81,011111
never 110 placed on 4 Move in order
to melt, the wax. Accidents irequel1t.
ly result from this. Cut the wax in-
to shavings and cover with turpen-
tine. In it few holies the wax will
13168016'' aril form into a felly.
Rub the hands with dry salt after
having 1111(1 them In water for a
lemeth of Nine; afterwatete rinse
them 011(1 wipe they, 11 this is dono
clatle niter the houeework is finished
it, will keep the hands 611100111, clean
(old whit e,
Lace often 1(1008 its fro:slums%
though not sufnelently polled to re-
quire wrtehing. (1 15 a good plan to
lay it aside for 4 Week ill tISStio.
paper and under heave weight,
having Med: novered the soiled parte
With calcined magnesia,
Giant; through the wards of a largo
linspital will) some medien1 studente, a
weil-known doctor *1115 giving a few re-
marks en each 61180.Velum (hey errived
al a 11011 011 alliCh 4 lleNV tlITIV111 lay, Ile
professor slopped and said: "From Me
nature of 111* 111114e. the palte1)31(1)1 Is suf-
fering from, 1 rem by 118111g my powers
of deduelion, loll 3.11 n11 alum! Ilte
nature of his occupali,n1." Turning to
the (11)11(111 ho ebserved, "Yon ere a
musichni, 111%1 you not?" "l'es, 817'," re-
plied the sulterer, "And you piny a
Wind instrument, eel) 5,',',' "Yng. sir,
1 do," wilierel I thought so• that per.,
Melons blowing does 111010 11110034 la lee
Inn go than. --e•" . "Deg Deeding, sir,"
Said the patient; "I plays a concertina."
sI
la
a-
1i011y being pland several years later
tllan it should have been. From I he
gospel narrative WO kILOW that Jesus
W118 born shortly befOre the death of
Herod the Great. But Herod died in
the yenr of Borne 750-751, which corre-
eponds 10 the year which we now des-
ignnte 08 B,C. 4 to B. C. 3. Hence
;resits oms born at least as early ns
B. C. 4. But Miming, for eonto months
11 elapse between the Mali of Jesus
and the slaughter of the babes at
Bethlehem by Herod, and twain be-
tween this event and the dealh of Me
lung, during whin time Joseph with
Mnry and the yneng child sojourned in
Egypt (cons Mutt. 2. 1, 10, lib, Me
more probable dale becomes B. C. 5 to
B. C. 4.
Herod Ihe King -Son of Antipaler,
governor of id 1110 101.1.I.;
Ion:, 8011111 of the leend Sea where dwelt 1 1
the deseendeols to Esau; feentler of Mei 11.
Iferodian family and dynasty, 11111 11 s
known inter as Herod the Great. Soon r
nfler Syria and Palestine leonine nine -1
of the tionum empire, at the time ef
the invaeion Asin by Pompey the
Great, lISs Idonuenn family bovine
ptominent in PalestMe affairs. 111 11,
C. 37 Mark Antony, Um friend end
neeneer of Julius (eosin., placed lionel
oft the Ihrtme of 311,103. Joeolditte
enteueroles eight wilen of Herod, and
be Is known lo liliVe lind Iwo ollwrN;
the Meesiall. Prehably membeni of Inc
Sanhedrin ere referred to here.
5. Time It is written• -•In Mie, 5. 2, 4:
"But 111011, Bethlehem Ephralhall, whieh
avt talle to bu among the thousunds .1
Judah, out of thee shell one come birth
unto 1110 11141 IS to bu ruler in term)].
. . And lie shall stand, and sheet lend
hit flock in the strength of ,1,•tiot all, in
the majesty of the name of JelIovuht 1118
Cod; end they ellen abide,"
8. Sent (leen to Bethlehem -In ac.
cordance with 1(411 Inanfinitlion gained
horn the priests and seribes.
(1, The sI,, . went before Mont -
They Were not pormilled to remain de-
pendent upon the direellous received
from the treacherous Icing, who was al-
ready plotting the death of the nese-
born babe.
11. The house -Not neeessarily the
same In which. the babe find been
born, now doubtless some days, if not
1I0e110, ago.
Frankincense and myrrh -TIME res-
inous mans obtained from trees founit
in Arabia, used for nuelielniti purposes
and fur oinbulaang, and Very expert -
811(e.
12, Another way-Poseibly procriedleg
0011111 from Bethlehem, Past liehrthie
and through Mumma eastwerd, or to
Um northeast across Jordan, leaving
Jerusulem to the west.
FINANCES OF GERMANY
THE STATE TREASURY IS IN A VERY
BAD WAY.
Rut Industries ore Prosperous - Suc-
cession Duties are Too
Low.
The economic situation in Germany
continues decidedly mixed. While
it is true that tbe Government Itself
is in a bad way and has been obliged
to resort almost to extremities to
raise money for necessary expenses,
it is also true that industrial Ger-
many has been making giant strides.
The situatioa briefly stilted is about
this: The Government itself is prac-
tically bankrupt, but industrially
along certain. lines the Germans are
making as much, or more, progress
than any other nation in the world.
It is difficult: to analyze a sitamtio
like this. About all 1111111 can be don
s to give specific Instances and ta-
lon, stUclentS to draw their own de-
ductions. For instance, the English
hoard of the Buenos Ayres Grea
Southern Railway Company, wit
have recently placed orders for 10
locomotives, are baying 20 of ie
number built In Germany. Tho seer
tary of tho company states that th
price quoted by the German firm 1
26 per cont. lower than that of an
English firm, and that quicker doily
ery can be obtained. The firm is on
of high standing, and there hay
been provioes satisfactory 'dealing
with his company.
CONDIPM TUE BUDGET.
It Is notewoethy that while the an
nouncement of Um proposed gem
increase in the expenditure on th
navy was received with very HUI
adverse criticism, except as was t
have been expected from the Socia
Dentocrats, the now budget of im
porial taxation was in many quarter
condemned before it has been explain.
od to tho Reichstag by its author,
Baron von Stengel, Secretary of
Stato for the imperial Treasury.
Clerical and Radical journals unite
in complaining that 220 to 230 mil-
lion marks -F.5,000,000 -5,000,000 to $57,-
000,000 -of fresh taxation are de-
manded from the /empire without any
anetmate consideration of the natural
and probable increase in the Imperial
revenues from existing SOUrCOS, and,
41)000 411, 11101,1 tho working or tho
new aline It to true that the in
creased revenue from Customs undo
the new commercial treaties will no
(10601110 appreciable in the estimates
till at least a year hence, since tiler
u
will have been nusually largo im
ports under the present Lavin', witl
THE WIZARD OF WELBEGI{
THE MOST MARVELLOUS liOUSE IN
ENGLAND.
Vagaries 01 1110 Late Duke and (bo Re-
markable !louse That Ile
EMIL
The formation of a limited company
to finance the claimant to the Port -
lend eslutm and Lille calls attention to
131c rummies of the late Duke arid Ole
remarkable house that he built.
To describe Wolheck as unique
jai:111710g stiiheenresslittellyllatitietilidnee.s ofusEnggreat
park, mined and honeycombed with
broad tunnels and subterraerran lout -
way's; its palatial 1101156, with Its wider -
ground suite of splendid rooms, includ-
ing the picture gallery excavated from
the solid clay; the levity stables, with
tile neighboring tan gallop -an Im-
mense glass arcade with a straight run
of 11011613'a quarter of a mile; the spaci-
ous riding school, 130 yards long by eft
yawls wide -these Lhings ere known to
have no like among the habitants ef
men the world over.
Even so was the. builder and maker
of modern Welbeck a nem distinct
from all others. Ile stands as grotes-
quely in the long galleries of eccentric
humanity as Wotheck among the man-
sions of this or any other ago. (had
be lived centuries ego he would now
bo dismissed es a mythical creation,
even ns Robin Hood, his fellow -hero 0!
is written down a flgmente,f
legendary growth by latter day histori-
ans.
concoction of buildings. With the
In 1856 Welbeck *as little more than
farmstead, a rambling and 111 -assort -
O imuee-building passion of his ances-
tress,
OLD BESS OF IIARDWICK,
the duke addressed himself to the con-
struction
of Welbeck into a palace and
wonderland that it now is.
Fur eighteen years Welbeck became
one vast workshop. During the whole
of that tline Lhe Duke employed on an
average 1.800 workmen, Including the
finest skilled. claims In Europe. th
some years the numbers rose to 2,500
men, The weekly wages bill exceeded
O $15,000, and the total expenditure ran
O into $35,000,O00.
Then were hutit those miles of sub-
terranean railways and corridors which
make a rabbit warren of Welbecic. Ev-
t crywhere over the estate huge "bulls-
') eyes" of glass obtrude in long lines-
() 11041 the level sward where deer and
10 cattle browse, from the middle of
0- ploughed fields, from long turf avenues,
O even from the middle of the great lake
s before the house. These are Ole lanterns
3' which light the underground tunnels
and rooms by 003'; electricity serves the
O same p11611050 by night. The rambling
0
country mansion became a palace; the
stables, tan gollep, and riding school
were but1L; gardens of beauty were laid
0111, and conservatories erected by the
_ mile.
Of this transformation the Duke *vas
• the hidden rnagiclim. Privacy was the
e ruling p11511101) of his life. He not only
o shut himself 111 Wellieck and renounc.
al the outer world, but he also softer.
Med himself from all contact with his
• fellows. Only with his valet had he di-
_ root caul 6(10411111(1 conta(t. Any ser-
vant or workmen who dared to ap-
proach or address him was •
INSTAN"I'LY DISIIISSED.
In the corridors of 1110 house he built
niches 11) the walls, and every servant
was under 06001,3 to seek refuge in the
nearest when they heard ducal foot-
steps approaching. No p01111111 servant
was allowed 11) (1111 sight.
Ishough building and furntshing the
house as a palace, the duke lived In
two rooms. His 10011 (10115(610,1 o! one
- chicken pee, diem. Ho ate half at one
r meal and 11:111 111 another, These were
t ILLouly meals, and thoy were SPIT041
Ir the 801116 manner. The table being
O prepared, ihe servants withdrew and
- Ging a boll to menet les Grace. '11,
• Duke entered, dined 111 solitude with-
I::214111m a14]141011(,) 14 a 4.
1.411011n, 01111
4
1`0111'041 torero 011111010111.11g 1110
- m401111114 to 11111141V0 11!0 411:411OS.
DilY Ian(lay, year ill. and year oul,
s. 1113 dress was 1110 sone. no his heed
e o o (n ( ng the nwroased (In
les, But 144, 600,11161,1, believe(
11 various quarters that the Govern
tont taking. 011V41111 age of the pre
611L uncertainly a ith rog.L1'd 10 1111
6610,. 1,1 31.3 1,.0,101,4 111 1.0
111p00 frOSI1 LaNntion to nn extent
winch eould not be JUstiii,-d by tlt
0e161/1 1 necessities ,.1 the
11E1;11 AND Tolle -LTD DiselleS,
A good deal of violent eriticeen 144
C1104,01 ord 1151*11(141 1(14' 101100440.41 in-
erhas,:, in th, ,1,1l lo on beer and to -
boor.), and Cmse ar1io1,s of cmismnp:
lied elehl s )s awl 03x
de cruel, unecietoulethe and ,
Israni (11) lho thrown, E
soon3 1101.0,, 10 invvo
poi.aoonhon. runt on ilin,nynt
i)rul-ed 11nn.,,lf a good ft -'i,(
111.0 0118 snecuneLle,1
111,13, slispielons. 011d
1111,4 410111411444444 n4,011018 for lho
01.11411', Lvill 044 fOr 1110 f0411. 111141
mieery of his 0111 113,11,
V1.40 rig!. a Rile elven
to learned men, priests. 1111.1
(,1 the l'eeslims and llehyleoliin8, *eh.,
i*ves a tell lieaver hat neeety two feel
teen, mei meier it a limg old•fa.hion-
.1v
111iea''ari(1111111111.1;41caniivT.111
it lone, (1 :134, Wel (1' nee 1to ('1'' ; I
111111111 and Lira, iltehrelle, whose sphere'
sereelial him from ol.serve-
, nem me 14,u:ere weo, method up al 1
1110 koo0.3 and 1::,41 *Oh f:14•4•4:3 or colii.;(.
Ariog III 111,4 111111111cr fil,Orod by' f
IN THE RUSSIAN TERROR
AN EYE -WITNESS TELLS 00 RED
EXPERIENCES.
An &MIA Coverness who Rad to FIy
For Ilei Life to lilecupe
Rioters.
After adventures recalling the days of
the French 'Ferrol'," Miss Webster, an
English governess, has escuped from
11(6 heart of Russia, and is now resid-
ing in Ealing, England. Iler store
beings; the ecenes of terror and pillage
the horrors of Jew-buiting, and the
ruthless savagery of the Black Huh -
deed vividly before English eyes, says
tht• Lomita' hlail.
Miss Webster bad been flee weeke
with the family of Dr. 5---, about, ten
miles from ,lerolievez, In Tehernigov,
"One of the most dangerous govern-
ments of European Russia.," when her
trcubles began.
On the first alarm Dr. S -'s fam-
ily and ellss Webster left their house
fur that. of a Itessien priest. His cot-
tage, however, WIIS 140 el'farderl with
other refugees that Mis.s Webster de-
eidecl to go back to lir. S -'s house.
Te her surprise, Dr. 5- and the chil-
dren also returned the next eley, But in
a state of Increased alarm.
"At 1 p. me" Miss Webster writes.
"they summoned me to dinner. Just
as we were sitting down a Jewish lad
came flying into the room calling upon
ni to run for our lives, as a band el
leer. hundred rioters had left. Krolewez
some time ago, bound for the doctor's
house. A friendly peasant had passed
them, and had hurried out to Warn us.
The babies, who were asleep, bad to be
rudely awakened, and hurried into gar.
monis of some sort. fifes. S- was
frantic,
NOTHING COULD 135 FOUND; ..
servants and nurses were hunting for
small shoes and goloshes and warm
coals.
"To make matters worse, a blinding
snow storm had come on and the wind
WAS bitterly cold. After doing what
I could I hurried on my own things,
and *vas racing out of the house whea
I suddenly remembered my bag. As no-
thing could be seen of the rioters, 1
thought I had time, and ran back for
IL
"I3ut it was too late. The rioters had
approached the house by another route
and to my horror I saw that the gang,
headed by two mounted police, had al-
ready surrounded the house on two
sides, and that retreat to the priest's
house was cut off. The (bird side was
a cul-de-sac, leading to the stables, so
that my only way to escape Iay by the
garden and thence to the woods. The
savage yells of the rioters as they
surrounded the house, the shouts of the
mounted police as they urged them on,
pointing with theft batons to Inc
house, the furious clanging of iSo
church bells, which were beintigie wrungIilag
by some of them to summon
ors near by to help In the riot, can Irv-
er be forgotten. 1 was paralyzed with
fair, as I realized for the first Lime what
a 'riot' In Russia. might mean.
"1 ran round the house to the hack
in full view of them all, and dropping
ire: bag ran for my life to the fa•r end
of the garden, which led Into the
woods. To my dismay, I saw a peas-
ant hurrying up from this end. The
savage yells becoming more deafening
than ever, I thought that having sighted
me carrying a bag some of them were
after 010. 1 ran for dear life, ancl creep-
ing through a hole in the palings Whieli
separated the geounds from the woods,
I found myself out of sight of the house,
Ina almost
KNEE-DF.EP IN A BOG.
"Here I wailed trembling for hall an
home not daring to 11101'0 out of the
shelter afforded by the. trees. I could
distinctly hear the regular blows cl
hatches and heavy clubs as the house
was donfoilehed.
"As I was sinking deeper and deeper
bi Ihe bog. 1 determined to chance R.
and rail nerceee the open space which
seperatel the garden from the woade.
With di:Ile:illy I pit iiieese. After
eeinengeseverel leenee areived al tee
liffie viliage, curl ie. Neer -eel from
11 14',': 411 the seveiehieeefe-ineb. Omit
of priost mot my 14,3'. 11/ and his
age meaci up a sera fer 1(4:4 1/1 the sit -
111(1 -1' :1). 111141 I 8140111 11 sixontl slep-
0,45 oh:111 W111011! 1.1111TeS01:1:1,
111., 1,11,1 4-honis 1110 piliang
111,1 Went On.
l.e! ,011ing I 0N0411 OL'Or 111•7 -
!(.11440, tin 101•4 1111
The Icie,a N011:3 .S111111, lea. rketly
1. \elm1 hal reit loon ether]
See: „lee:re-el iit(11,011-
11 .1 41:,.:8 and
ireeder."
'flinedithel lee lever re -Jewel
y• ells: Welefe• and 1(1*8-..-
':1
;L1‘1..(11T1:11.141 I(' (1l''!1 I
eza.1
14 pa,,spoi1 nod a bona!,
111111 Ill'e being ili,e11:4;!;•41 4:41 if 1 11O:1 ••N'L
, "'"11." :414.," ,1 1,(" erre viel he I', mined mole the e
11' Lilo y11114111 11%)1.4411.0 1:111,`10.4, tete
roposed est ere ni..0
Nun iho po1nt vi(w of the bw-
14(1 whi.11, cow rary 11
visa 1.-AilcIal st tisaciti s, io
1111v1 been so:dowdy 111111.1,.m.4.,041
h!!!4.01. texation in the Pal:din:0o. a
(Pio rWt %Odell wa:+ talson 1.1w
1411)11-, 133,1:11 writ.-rs 044 a tyeiml ne-
e:eel, id the ability of the brewing
indostro to heavier Imr,lens.
;011 lw the critics of roe
overnment 1:811enie dint. le the reeve
bie,r 14. 1'01:44 iu Nerfri hemetne-
w b000-OrMI,er will become 11
ritteer. At. tee setee time it is 110. -
Mel that these who front one point,
view or o.11,,h(•r aro ecosted in
1,4 p(mular consumptinit of beer
1,1111,1 lonr041011 11144 1141V011111144111. with
‘cpal c711 jog 11 Period of 'M-
10:11 111155 those bolo:tins whieh in
the 1111,ro.4. of the landed «lassos nee
tunninily paid to the anemia of route
311 or (10 marks (F4.1 2,50o,()00
or $1 3,00mo0o) 1110 (110.1mws.
0
‘1 01 0 n180 "n0181 111 Hely:04Y, 14,',) ((5143" 9
ing, and in. 1110 hi 1,41111,1 a 1 ion of 11
dr0111118. anr, 3111, 1, 13 Nermieleirezi ti
Or, 11 prince of the icing of leityleir, 1., a
Algi, The!, the wiee
often Me title "010HeLig," chief or 1
""." *0'1.0 111"°1
it, number, end Ilint 1.11,7 vow,' p(
n lOre 1111(1111On reeling rm very monger I nt
founthillen.
2. 1118 Ann-- k eimernolural phonom-
ellen youth:aka' Moen men In guide
111-1 11 (1 1•81 to .1(191,411m end theft to
lite house in Ilethloliem (comp, 001111) th,
The simplielty of 1110 mwre live 111 tide
pc.1111, is cliaracterislin of ell Naw Te.1-
lemma peeseges 111 whiell miracles are
mentioned.
3, Ho wee iroubled--Iferoere reign
had been tench dietueleel by Nub( end
lotrigttes, tInd as he grew older 1111 (10'
came doubly 81161)11etie end feerhil lost
iionut usurper oe prelender s11011111 rob
hen na 1118 1111•0110, Ile 101eNT also cf
the 1$p00111 11,111 of the Jews coneevning
Mos.:lab whit wits to he their 11114.f,
.111 Jon:entente-All Who helm] of the
1(6!!. end 111 ciniry of the Wi4441 mon,
eepecially those tit authority whose 110.
4:11(4111, Il(1() thnt. of the king, wee (mine-
ently endnilgered. An example of by -
perigee.
4. (:11101 Prieele And eribee-11Ten Sa
3,0m0.(1 (110 I,johrow Scriptures, 01111-
who therefore might be expelled lo le IL
familiar with every prophecy concern- '1
ing 'the Christ, the anointed, that lse, yot
COMPAIZED MTh ENGLAND.
Tha Social 1s! s also complain that
the proposed Imperial death 11111.104
aro not heavily 1.110118.11. 11.8!,08S0d, and
they ntglio that if in England, with'
a population of dt),(100,000 theso
duties yield n50,000,000 meehe
587,000,o0o) they onght in Ger-
many, with a popolitlion 00,000,
000,- to yinid nt lei181 25 million
marks ($6:2,500,000) end nob
paltry 72,000,0b0 maas
0(10,000).
1115-1.11-1`41,-IesTrieet. 11,
lefirer-`'I wondoe 11 Arms realty
is inhabited?"
thingumbob-"Don't 1.now, loft if
turn is 'I'll bet the polieicians own
Tadigger-"Think se?"
thingumbole-"Cortelnlye ten't •
SCO the ringsV4
perk. ee,aeldiee 1111•,.'1!..,a; fz,,,n1ry'
, 444.1 1111,1 111,, o1.,..,,rvuliort of o1k,:rs„Ii
'• • i • • ' • "
v,1111
01, TUNNELS.
l'or n tide) end a he tuned the
1note:i1
ing re feee 1100 10 the miblie, met 1118
to mei; eompetieetien 11:11,1,1 111.1a
114,71.1.1)811.111;11,o11.1141;;;\441'41g1‘;::11:11''111....4"1,1.1"17:11•11:-.1.111S,1111111?!`
1111(11,1,1'.1111111161-111(od:Irl'iTy11"1741;;11.1'1111e (14,'111 (11.01'11z1:1;!:41,
11
o r. 1141 imesteriettely clientatetie end. 1:4
11,111 home,
;11blifIth‘;:::::111
111111 •Tront Weltiook 1:1 111,,ir booty:4,
iniirolnef mul eveninee tip Duke 1,ept
iie. his 1155 (t) 1111,1 fl..:111 work Na 4.N.
1.110iint ter work 011 ,101' rofil 411 an,1
if (4 111n11 Wi1:1 (151111,',',1 111(1' S0011011
he W1144 rN•rtain fal. 4,1101!1!.0 1'I.'
0004ssing Illo 0a0R 10 a.114•00 041100 vv,.1.1..
11M Work 133r \V!IF.
of the 1noet leisurely ,Ieeeriiitioe, 11.
deed. inittly 111011 slept 1110 iley• torae •11
a! Welbeeet, tuld al night wee: el in fie,
neighboting querris, Iline settees tee
mdden( or :4111:inn RV!) In:1,414N a 1111 111
conielelo satlefaeliiiI1 1i,P1, --Peet•
11,
Sons Weieiclee tu
vo
la
INNS Of OLD ENGLAND
AN AMERICAN WRITE'S MS OPINION
OF TIMM*
Satisfectory in Their Roast Meats and
Rave a Pleasant Alines.
[Mere,
If your dote Is steeped In tradition yon
will be Aura' to like English inns, says
P1411431' In the New York Mail. Their out.
((1110 sugeeet eepainting by George More
land, -The square court with its bal-
conies, outside nights of stairs and oriel
windows; the tiled or thatehed roof, Um
cross -Limbered walls and woodbine
and roses clambering upon them; the
venerable sign that croaks above the
road, 010 rook -hunted elms that sha-
dow the way -thy all seem to have
been copied from a painting rather Oran
the mauling from them. lir the tap-
room, at sunset, you wIll find Morlandef
rustles oled In clay -colored leather-nlce
trousers and short velveteen coals, with
soiled silk searLs about their necks and
(testy caps on their heads.. They are
discussing cups of brown ale, and like
the oaken walls above them, seem Pert
of a tableau set for the traveller's enter-
tainment.
The atmosphere of those old Inne
calls up memories of half the classics in
Lhe English tongue -the adventures of
Fielding's and Richardson's and Dick-
enss heroes, the memories of old Sam
Juhnson and his school, "the bards of
passion and mirth," that foregathered
in the Mermaid Tavern when Shakes-
peare lived. You aro almost suspiciolls
of these Blue Boar and
ROYAL GEORGE TAVERNS.
Their moldy antiquity seems too pictur-
esque to be true, and there Is one travel-
ler's suspicion that it well founded -he
soon learns to avoid, as a bard -featured.
fraud everything that, calls itself "Ye
Olde Tavern" or '"Ye Olde Inn." Good
wine needs no bush, and real age does
not have to proclaim itself in ostnta-
tiously obsolete spelling.
English inns, indeed, are something
more than places of entertainment for
man and beasL They are museums of
antiquities and literary curiosities, re-
positories of fine old customs that are
fading out elsewhere. At the Golden
Cross, Oxford, I could have slept, had I
elected to do so, in the "Martyrs' Room,"
where Creamer, Ridley, and Lathner
spent their last hours of repose before
they gave their fiery testimony of tho
truth at the ditch over against Baliol •
College, I preferred a chamber with
memories less distinguished and dolor-
ous. Al the Bull, in the old cathedral
town of Rochester, I spent an evening
surrounded by souvenirs of Pickwick
Papers, and undressed by a large nOrror
that was said to have belonged to Dick-
ens himself. His Gadshill residence was
bet a mile or so away. So one found
the Crulkshank engravings all over the
taproom and coffee room, and. hanging
111 (1111 largo square hall and on tho
walls of the big staircase, there were
engravings of the novelist, together
with brass warming pans, sidearms of
the Georgian period, churchwarden
pips, venerable blue china and copies
of Hogarib's
RAKE'S' P110011E:SS.
You are pleased to sec that the good
Old customs have not all been yielded
up by the English inns. One of them' •
that always delighted me was finding
my own Stub of a candle in a little
cubbyhole at, the foot of thc stairs end
piloting myself to bed by it. Another
was the four-poster canopied bedstead -
in atich slumber took Upon itself the .•
dignify of an Institution; somehow you .
felt that you were supporting the Br-
tish constitution and giving the common
lee' the needed tanction of your approv-
al. You slept well in those beds unless
it was a 'cathedral town and you put up, • •
at 011 inn too near the tower, whence the •
great clock throbbed the minutes and
tclangeidngillueplIfivua
rsa.still another funlirm•
The first time I slept In a country inn I
found 103' boots, whieb. I had put out-
side the chamber door, gone when I
woke, arld had to go diewnelairs in •
steel:ince feet. By the rosy grate fire In
Ili,' coffee reion I greeted n frieud (1
mine end his wife, with whom I had
1-0 nehong a bieyele herr. and they,
10,1, wore in (boil, Mo.4:11g fool: our
f:0,-er:11 eies of beefs, 1,11 pelieh-
ed. were arrayed before the goo. The!
Is the English effete/1h end 11 (6 pleasent-
ly reminiSeent of a oozier,: boys helot
of comploting bis heti, before me (41-
i3 nem fire on Pierer mernings..,e1 •
le. :nod afterwerits to call for pair of
ceireet teeppers belero taking op 11 can- •
die et bedtime.
MEALS AT AN ENCLTSII INN
01(1111fi.:' 111'011,g(('14.411 111 *114314 3iot r
ef teethe -et them. There are a -
A ether .1 11101;riook 11.aring 1:1;oes
mat 613,31y dirrivetimoo -110.8.
You 1117y 14111 Or drill!: ill the lap roam,
ha room, ihn 1la4'10,1 1,,,,,111, 111,3
einunerelel raern, the morello- room
'You mny leive eeten oil to. your- •
s1C 10 '1143(1-511(1 the
and 1,, so:Tv,-,-.1 by 11 oeiiter ph. curries ,
youlgod mei &irk voaise il from the
4111114!,ite. 11 -
31,, 1' are any Movers in ile. garden there
will be a jer of them on the table,
eolea you win get in the food lino in
eeet eases Is - eggs; eetdeni 1111 omelet .
-nothing so dinieult as that, just plebe
111l4i91 egge, and et dinner the
oast beef of old lingland garnished
vith brussels -sprouts, The ceiffee ie •
041(1,1])' bad, the tea 061111113good.: 11 is
tot a itiverethedfare, but I wish to offer • -
ribule to (1110 item. The cold .04151feet, cold 611111011 61111 cold boar's brw
in.
13111(13(11111 are 10011' (10(1(1111(61 Mutt the.
jueleet mid tenderest joint of imy. 01(401'0,108(13',served hot teem :the spit_ The
whole johit is set before yott 01.11.1 you.
Wolk your will 1111011 it,
(then at Epsom,liftera hard bicycle
ride, I explained to 11130 11114111113' at. great'
length that I w8011841,111(1nly&8011841,111(1.61111-
staunch but not too• 0(111)615111101, some-
thing hot and refreshing, but 'not. sur-.
felting. She put, 11 all ,in two 'words.
"011, I see," she said, "you wanee
tmegt
ii
DA Nr,F.110us (I.111141.The Tin ',it'll J1.111.411'10.4 (3.41111,,,%,,r1,
,,,v 14:1,11,') ',yew olii....i,Jiy 13(1014114411
11.1(0', *1111 in lb' ididn, of l',0
r,...1,0„.,,,,11, („
,,,,,,T ,,-Nr,. (4,1,,,,.1 10 1N.1 1
m., 1,o,lytntra of S111,:11 Atuoalh. 7,
Oieginelly (le7y 1111015.1,1 1:1:1, leo , 1
Mier three limel30.4)6Nt ,ro
q4rs c:,* Ic1,1 in.
011.114141 n 111111411.041 fld, end miler 1
8.13011611 the Magnitieeel they formed a 1
feree beetle: .lieeililthed, and noted feri I
hp, wil1 inipetteeely of their ageo, 1
The lestory el thee11 ethizaries alone Is 1
in n,:inspiravies ef ,uvory 1:11141, so 111111 41. .0
141 they brname move dangerous to
Sullen limn le4 eireiga eneinies,
10 -lowest officer; of nee three owe
t• coolie:, who were hell in greeteet
eem. '11103- wore wooden sgeoes in
eir 111110414, mid On greet oceasions
01410101 11114(4,1 their kttles, ethich they
rned upeide down ag 11 token nf 1 04,
11, To lose ono of theee kettles e(6,
tile wits /IA 1)111011 or a disgence ns the
ss of a regiments cetera has been In
ter times..
. .
FINE NeeTEIIAL POTITTlEes,
In tho nottbern part of hfeilegesear
14 Me most remarkelile nelural forlrev
in' Me world. 11 is orenpied be•
1e110 we,1 eau 3 !1emelve8 the People of
(he Roeks. '1110 fortress is lofty nail
peeelpilousi rise: of enormous eize; 8,'
('131 feel high end eight square miles Pi
even, Ils sides nee so sleep that 11 Can.
rot bo climbed without er5llla1'111011115.
Within it es hollow, cunt the only en•
franca ie by subterranean passage.
AND TIlIl enamsrans.
If (were 11)611 wrote Ms own -opi'
:Leith the lombstones 'would have to
Ito enlarged.
WOULD SUIT BETTER,
/t would suit most, of us better if the
reward of virtue were payable in acIN
Vance.
•
Childi.on are so practical! Nlli'it
rather was reading to her the parable of
the 'Prodigal Son, whtch elle listened to
with ewe attention. When ho Came to
the sentence, "and he Tell en 1115 neck
and kissed 111111" silo exclaimed, 11011,
papal how could ho have kissed him.
when he had just been eating 'mai. tha
11111:al was what:I got.