The Brussels Post, 1906-8-2, Page 2SALVATION OF MSE),
Let Religion Have Its Rightful Domain
Through All the Being.
Fop now Is our salvation nearer
than when we believed.—Romans, xiii„
11.
Words are but symbols, and, like
coins, ii they become current, their
sharp nopressfons are worn away.
Theology constantly Is in need of re-
statement in new terms. suited to the
current thought of the people. Its
phraseology is apt to become separated
from the living stream of language and
to aequh'e stereotyped forms and arbi-
trary, often unnatural, meanings.
Salvation is a large sounding word;
it has stood for a long time for the
principal thing which it was supposed
religion could give us. Men have listen-
ed to the specifications of this great
born as detailed by the authorized re-
ligious teachers and often determined
they do not went it. You cannot blame
a men for refusing something for which
he has no possible use.
If salvation simply is an exalted
emotional condition, it is a luxury that
only poels and women who have a sur-
plus of time and deficit of inlelligence
can afford. Men and woolen who face
the fact of sin In themselves and sor-
row in this world deeply feel that a
mere spasm of feeling good will do no-
thing to make this world good in fact.
\Vhen in the face of great necessities
emotions become substitutes for en-
deavors. they become
THE FOES OF MANKIND.
But, say some, salvation simply is a
clear, logical, judicial decision, alto-
gether apart from any feeling, by which
you who are guilty are pronounced
innocent. But it never yet has been
shown that a court decree emptying the
jails has improved public morals, nor
that judicial imputations of rightness
have solved the problem of wrongness
in men.
Religion must strike deeper than this;
man needs not plasters nor paint, nor
certificates of health for his moral dis-
eases. He simply needs the making
whole and perfect his entire nature. It
is the healing of that which is base,
degrading, of all that which we hate
when we are at our best and the leading
of the life out into the fullness of all
that which we admire and love when
the soul's vision is clearest and
noblest.
A man 1s not saved simply because
he changes ins opinions or his profes-
sion. Disease is not cured by buying a
new doctor book. Life is not made
healthy, sane, and perfect by the sub-
scriplion of the 11wne to any code
whether it be of morel, oh' of manners.
And the will that is twisted !n moral
judgments, the heart that is enslaved
to a depraved appetite, cannot be made
normal and healthy by any forums,
ceremonies, or syllogisms,
Neither can the salvation of a neat
be a matter of local application alone.
He is not healthy who boasts a clean,
nurmal hand when alt the. other mem-
bers are diseaeecl. Yon cannot eel's -
rate the soul from the man and save
that while the rest of him takes its own
Course to destruction.
LET RELIGION TEACH MEN
the salvation of the mind ; it may be as
sinful to think unscienttlically as it 's
to speak impiously. If the mind be dis-
eased, depraved; if its life blood be
poisoned by evil imaginings, by base
desires ; if the will be weak, vacillating,
tottering, it matters nothing haw clean
a bill of heallin the ecclesiastical au-
thorities may give to the soul.
But the life we live and the world
we live in demand the salvation cf
erten. This is a world of men. 11 the
soul means anything et all It is but the
citadel of the life. the heart of the
whole moral being, If it Is saved the
health, the right adjustments must be
working through all. - Let salvation
mean the whole life; let religion have
its rightful domain through all the be-
ing and work to set men rlglit in body,
to make llnent know and follow the laws
of health, of right living,
Let religion assert its power over the
will. Let it lead us the way into the
larger life, the whole and perfect and
the complete being. This is salvation
that we shall overcome the beasts in
our boson,, that we shall love and live
toward the noblest and the best, that
the shall overcome all that Motleys
man's perfection. that life shall be
what its lord designed, the perfectly
controlled powers realizing their
largest, possibilities and harmoniously
fulfilling their divine purposes.
HENRY F. COPE.
E
S. . LESSON
THE
INTERNA'T1ONAL (.ARSON,
AL'G. 5.
Lesson VI. False Pretences. Golden
Text: Luke 14, 18.
TIIE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Note.—Tice text of lite Revised Version
is used as a basis for these Word
Studies,
Two Similar Parables,—The Parable
of the Great Supper, which forms the
text of this lesson. is part of the con-
versation of Jesus at the Pharisee's
table, the first portion of which we
studied in last Sunday's lesson. This
visit to the home of one of the chiefs of
the Pharisees belongs, as we noted in
our last lesson, to the period of the
!'ocean ministry, probably some months
prior to the final arrival of Jesus at
Jerusalem, just preceding the last week
of his life. Tater, at the time of his
final great >.'ruggle with the authori-
ties in tine capital city, on the eve of his
passion, Jesus spoke another parable
very similar to this one, namely, the
Pnrable of the Royal Marriage Feast
(Matt, 22. 1-10). The parable in Mat-
thew Is a comment of Jesus on an at-
tempt to arrest )nim, and tells of rebel-
lious subjects of a great king put to
death for insulting and killing their
sovereign's messengers ; the parable in
our present lesson is a comment of
Jesus on a remark made by anuther
guest at the Pharisee's table and tells
of persons who, through indifference,
forfeit. the good things to which they
lune) been invited. l( is less severe in
tone than the former, and even in the
parts which are common to both there
is 111tle similarity of wording. '1'31 iden-
tify the hyo us some have attempted (0
do is a great mistake,
Verse 11, Sat at, meat—Reclined at
supper (compare Word Studies for
July 201.
10. But he said—Commenting on the
words spoken by a fellow guest..Trsus
points out the condition under which
the blessedness to which reference has
been made may be secured.
He bade many ---Probably sent out
a general announcement of the prospec
live event to his friends.
17. Sent forth his servant at supper
time --in harmony with 00 ancient
Oriental custom, a second special invi-
tation was sent out to the invited
.guests as the hour for the festive occn-
Sin approached. To omit this seoond
suminons would be a grievous breach
of etiquette on the pert of the host; to
refuse the second invitation after hav-
ing, excused oneself at the time of re
cowing the first, \vouid be an insult to
the host, equivalent among Arab tribes
of ipaley In a declaration of wa'.
18. And they all with one Consent be-
gnn--Thc choice of words, and their
arrangement In the original, leads one
naturally- to expect an alllrmaiory
answer of cordial acceptance. The
word to make exense, therefore, conies
to an unexpected, disappointment, and
reaatlyat eightens'the effect of the nar-
rative
GO nut and see it--Inlerost in a newly
acquired possession of Valise is often
greater than interest in Mende Or any
other (natter,
10, I go to prove thermNot that they
had not been tested before being puzw
chased, but bfioause ot that tsaMS inter•
eas b newt
est inihnltvhich h been e ac-
quired
n
quired referred to above, Doubtless for
several days the man went "to prove
them" every day.
20. T cannot come—The third guest is
less courteous than the others. We are
lo think not simply of three men who
failed to respond to the invitation but
rather of these three as typical of a
larger number.
21. Go out quickly—There is to he no
delay to accommodate guests who use
not prepared to come at once,
Streets and lanes—In the Greek the
two words here used apply specifically
to the public thoroughfares of a city.
The pone and. maimed, and blind and
lame—Persons who according to cus-
tom would he invited anyway. There
are many instances in the New 'Testa-
ment illustrating 1 -he custom of admit-
ting people from the streets into the
festive hall on such occasions.
22. \Vhat thou didst command is
done—Is done already. Apparently the
invitation had already been extended
to thein and they were now in wetting.
Yet (here is room—'Tete number of
this poorer class of people was doubt-
less much greater than that of the first
class which had refused the invitation,
but still there is room for others.
21. Highways and hedges — Two
words which in Greek indicate public
thoroughfares outside of cities.
The gospel invitation was given first to
the Jews but afterward also to the
Gentiles. 1t is intended for all men
without distinction of class or race.
Constrain—Persuade, urge.
24. None of those amen that were
bidden shall taste of any supper—Like
the foolish virgins, these amen, It they
00)1)8 at a late hour, will find the door
ulreldy shut, and their opportunity
gone forever.
�m1
TO TEST DIAMONDS.
Some Simple Tests by Water, Taste
and Ines Spot.
The expert of diamonds can detect an
imitation as a rule at a glance, but not
so the ordinary individual. An imita-
tion diamond is never so brilliant as a
genuine stone, and a very simple test
is to place It under wales. The tml-
lnlion stone is practically extinguished,
while a genuine diamond will continue
to sparkle. When possible a genuine
stone should be placed beside the imi-
tation one under water. and the arm-
rest will al once he apparent.
Another very simple and efficient test
to In ranee a drop of water on the stone
and carefully observe the result, The
stone, should first be Very carefully
ciennsrl. On an imitation dinmond the
drop, however small, will clelinqucsce,
but on a true stone the drop will retain
its original shape.
Perhaps the simplest method of a11,
hovever, !s lo examine nn ink -sent on
it :Rhein of while paper through n
mond by holding the ander eurfeee
ag(ninnt lite eye. It the stone he mum
tertell thin black spot will nppenr greatly
niagnired, or at least doubled. The
outline will, moreovee, appenr blurred
and indistinct. Ily using a meantfytns
glass the test can readilybo made nh-
solute,
If a real diamond he put in the mouth
Its icy coldness will be noticeable rt
once; not so that ot an imitation gem.
.
"I think that friend of yaurs Is pretty
forward on soh short nequaintnnco,"
oomplained Mrs. Nagger. "1 overhenrd
him remark that I was no chicken,"
Welt, r (
eplied Mr, Nugget, 'you can't
1)101330 hitt, He couldn'6e e e L
b xp c ed to
know you caoltle at times,"
SOME LUCKLESS
ESS (SRA T 1 b)own 3111 (by n practice larpodu•n,lne),
lJ • • . UF` ! oust adrift 111 the Channel in a gale,
driven over the lop of the Goodwin
-- Sands et high water unhurt, sunk two
. 'acnl8 h ever roused thio
y
and yet has nevelt e
ASSN'S' \'is+S1:LS ARE PURSUED BY loss of a life, either of ler own crow,
MISFORTUNE, or any other vessel's, This passing pro -
One Ship in Ten Collisions — Another
Sunk and liaised Six
Tines,
Sold last year on the Clyde, fur
breaking up purpuses, was a ship that
spent thirty years in runnihtg into
danger, in collision twice, had the Ilfe
bout pt t' tour yours eumnimg,
romahtedut loulhe ItorOrpelualhojoy 01 hhsuea,lce
companies, and yet noising could kill
her. In all these disasters site seureely
did herself any dannuge, and she is
10eW11 fear and wide as a ship with ti
(Summed life.
Her mate was the i-lnrdscre, alt leo
steamer, built in the late sevrulies, and
on her first voyage she distinguished
herself by running amuck through
Channel Fleet at night, wtln bolls her
side -lights out, for they would mot burn.
Site )net ,nineteen steel warships, In-
cluding destroyers, travelling at full
fanspeed, in close formation, and was c'0
closely shaved that one chipped her tear -
She sante one torpedo-boat, caused
two )Biers to collide, and carne out
of the encounter having done :225,000
worth of damage, but having barely £25
herself. 'l'hrme mouths liter site went
ashore on Dungeness in a storm, but
was towed oft unlmi't, A German
barque ran into her and wink itself the
year following, without doing much
damage to the Hardacre, which became
known as
THE "IIARD-TO.Klf.L."
After driving ashore near Vermouth
In a fog, and sinking 0. vessel fishing
or, the Newfoundland Banks not long
afterwards, she broke down in the
Channel, and was driven on to tee
French coast In a gale, her crew being
taken off by the rocket apparatus.
Though posted al first as a total wreck,
she was towed off, patched up, and sent
or, a voyage to the Argentine, where her
pilot "piled tier up" on a dangerous reef
in bad weenier. Still she refused to die
for she was refloated aid docked, sent
to sea once more, and was run into by
a cattle boat on the way home, but
amazing good luck, was not sunk. Iier
reputes, from beginning to end, cost
£11.000 --or rather more than twice her
value. She continued unkillablo until
she weir) out w'ilh old age, and eves con-
demned by the Board of Trade.
One of the most astonishing records
held by any ship was that of the Brit-
ish barque Emerald, which becoming
unmanageable off Cape Horn, was driv-
en by wind and Ude through the ter-
rible Magellan Straits, and conte oul un-
scathed ut the other end though she
made a good part of the voyage side-
ways. or stern first, between the terrible
walls of rock and tide -races. only the
finest full -powered steamers under thor-
ough control attempt to face.
Her performance is unique, and not
likely ever to be beaten, for the odds
against bei were about Ilse same ns ore
would give a renawny foto'-in-hand
coach galloping from end to end of
London
WITHOUT COMING TO GRIEF.
Iter rival in that perfornnunce, strange-
ly enough, was a ship that had are-
cord of escapades hardly short of the
miraculous. 'This was the Diomede, a
small cargo -steamer, that was sunk no
less than six titles in twelve years and
raised each time, which constitutes s
record among all the ships of the world.
Site was sunk first In the year she was
built by striking some floating wreck-
age in the Downs, and 'total loss" was
paid over her. A salvage company
bought the wreck cheap Iron the un-
derwriters, and raiser( her at no great
cost. In her third year she was stink
again, in the Hudson River, and raised,
and it was on the voyage following this
that she was wrecked on Sable Island
but saved from total loss. She finally
enjoyed the distinction of having been
sunk in every one of the five oceans of
the world, except lite Antarctic, but al-
ways in water just shallow enough to
allow her to be raised. At last she was
condemned ns too old and unfit for sea,
and is now a quarantine hulk in the
West. Indies.
it would hardly seem worth even a
"wrecker's" while to have fried to sink
the tramp-steemer Vandal, which till
lately held a world's record for having
been in len collisions at sea in seven
year,. Unlike the last-mentioned ves-
sel, she hos never been sums nt all.
though she sail) six out of the ten ships
She collided with.
TiIE STILL MORE CURIOUS FACT
is that only one of these ten collisions
was she in the wrong, and in the oilier
nine cases the owners of the vessels that
collided with her had to pay for her
damages as well as thele own—tete for-
me' amounting in all to over £0,100.
It was often marvellous how she escaped
sinking, es all the collisions but one
took place on the high seas, and she
lend the lack never to be struck in the
vital spot. Apart from her own little
bill for repairs, she did £41,000 worth
of dnhnage by her "Mlle affairs," and
yet she never cane to grief by any
Wizard of the seas, being at present a
store ship of the Spanish Navy.
The magnificent liner Paris, well
known by n11 who cross to the Untied
Slates, holds one record svhlch, 1f she
had no other, would prove her to hear
a charmed life up to rime. She is the
only vassal of any 6180 that ever escnpe.d
ante her lifn from the. terrible Manacles
Rocks, off 11e Cornish coast. It is sev-
eral years no now since she struck
upon that dreaded reef, but many people
niny remember the stir it caused, and 111e
egltation fm' n lighthouse on the Man-
acles that furrowed.
She hnd four hundred and fifteen pee-
sengeu:s nboerd, besides her crew, 11111
did not lose one of them, all being land-
ed sabely, A large part of her under-
hody was Morn clean away, end it ons
thought unlikely that she would ever
float again. In spite of that, she, ons
eveniunlly rescued from the rocks lot
elver engineering, at n Coef of 414.01(0
nncl. lowed Into Fnimmith. The wneiher
luckily held Ane during the operations,
ONE OF THE T.,UCIaaCST,
and et lila Sallie, lune unluOklesi, vessels
that wvel' floated, is a httnnhle "Themes
westing -barge Celled the Ain. wiidll
has stn'vivnd the seas far Orly -three
years, end has been sunk, eat downs
grannie 3,11(5 achieved at various (Imes,
of course, not all 131 once,
The strange pari of it is that such a
comparatively inexpensive. craft should
be worth saving and pnlching tip so of-
ten; ,vet she has carried in her time half
a million totes of merchandise about our
owlets, weathered some of the worst
storms haat blew, and her hull remains
so sound that she now fulfils the role of
store -hulk to a floating small -pox hos-
pital.
As an example of the strangely tit-
tered tuck which two similar vessels
may have, a pate of sister -ships— the
Cambria and the Ccll — both steamers,
and built In the sane yard, were
talented on two succeeding days, Ons
of them \teas run down In the Channel
and badly damaged on her maiden
voyage, causing the loss of three lives;
she has since been three times on fire,
once sunk and raised again, once in
colllssion, twice ashore, and finally
sailed from Rio Ivo years ago, and
has never been heard of since, The
other has never had the smallest. mis-
hap, An odd fact is that the former un-
lucky vessel' was launched on a Friday,
n deed winch many sailors still regard
as deliberately flying in the face of
Providence.
SMOKE' TO PROTECT VINES.
Plan of n Grape Grower to Save His
Crop From Frost.
One of the most successfd growers
of grapes in France to -day is 1t4. Big -
non, a scientist as well as an agricul-
turist, who has lately been. explaining
to the members of the French National
Society of Agriculture the methods he
adopts for saving his vineyards from
lute frosts. M. niguon cdeelores that
for many years he 1130 employed arti-
ficial clouds for lite prevention of
frosts, and that, had his example been
followed by others. millions or francs
worth of W1110 might have been Saved.
"My plan of operation," says M. Big -
non, "is very shuple. Along my walks,
at a distance of same fifty feet apart.
I have basins sunk into the earth to a
depth of about a foot. Into these basins
I place from fifteen to twenty pounds
of resinous natter and some pieces of
pine and other vegetable debris. This
makes a "cloud" of ,sufficient 8180 to
keep any ordinary frost .from affecting
my vines. The amount of material
used, of course, depends on the length
of the frost,
"As a rule tite late frosts cute not
numerous, and if Iva get three or four
during a season we consider ourselves
very badly used. In 1903 the frosts
were bad, and I had recourse to these
artificial fires tour limes with perfect
success. The resinous matter creates al
dense cloud, which hangs over the vines
lilse a curtain, producing a temperature
which successfully Creeps at n distance
those blighting frosts so destructive to
the young buds.
"For a fifteen acre vineyard the cost
for each 'cloud' necessary to kill a
frost should not exceed $100, and
should you be visited by four such
frosts during a setisun nt high average)
this would mean an outlay of some-
thing like 2,000 francs, or 5400, 13111
W11011 you consider that the result will
he the saving of at least 25 per cent. of
the harvest, 00, say, from 150 to 200
barrels of wine, the cost Is loo trifling
to consider,
"During the many years 1 have been
employing. smote as a preventive of
frost d must have saved en least 2,000
barrels of wine, for never once has my
plan failed to accomplish its object—
that is to say, when the smoke cloud
has been sent up in time. As a rule
when a frost comes the atmosphere is
free from all agitation, and the smoke
remains above the vineyard like a can-
opy, 01 course, if a hurricane or even
a moderately strong breeze acconmpan-
ied the frost, we should have our
trouble for nothing; but, fortunately,
this seldom, if ever, happens, and the
smoke cloud honorably and success-
fully performs its duty."
GREAT BRITAN SECURE.
Paris Newspapers Give high Praise to
iler Naval Manoeuvres.
The Paris Temps declares that the
first half of the 1311118/1 naval manoeu-
vres, which it describes as "the grottiest
test of efficiency ever applied to a fleet
in peace time," has been entirely suc-
cessful.
Great Britain has proved bit she can.
ooncentrate "in an incredibly short
space of tithe" 400 warships splendidly
manned, in home waters and that her
ports are secure against surprise.
The Admiralty are praised for admir-
able distribution of the fleet, and the
perfect order with which the mobiliza-
tion was curried out.
The Temps thinks that the promise
of •Ihc Admiralty to give full puhlfcily
t,. the results of rho second phase of the
manoeuvres—the attack on Britain's sea-
borne trade—is made ether because the
navy is confident of fine result or because
it is desired to show the danger of a
n at armaments.reductk>
AND THE TAX WAS RAISED.
"Nice hotel you've got here," said the
affable slrenger,
"I'm glad you like it ,sir," said the
landlord.
"1)0 a good business 7"
Oh, splendid."
"'Voice a large profit?"
"Immense profit."
"1 11113 glad to hear It," ,said the
stranger, pietism -illy.
A little later the landlord esker' ano-
ther of his guests, a commercial tra-
veller, if he knew who the gentleman
1655.
"Oh," replied the traveller, "he's the
new income-tax assessor."
(1FR RESER\'ATION,
"I Irust, 11155 'Tappet;" sold the icbld-
ly employer to 1110 stenographer,
"1110l, You have something in reserve
for a rainy day."
1th,, sir; answered the earnest
,ening woman : "1 11111 going to harry
a man 11011)0d Maelt'inhoslh,"
' »!h14 ,444 ^ 4,1144,0,1 "i'sl*R' , will have a most, draggled nppeurunee
when it is finished,
The folding of under linen Is 4111 1111,
all by itself, and it Is advisable, if one
n es :-
, : d n
,cannot tithe n e rut t a u
I1 e trailing srh001, 10 go holo the fettling
depertln'al of a general laundry for u
few weeks, until One learns just how
all ur110115 are. folded. (h' thin 3 (00•
one w•.0 work,) In the folding &peel-
ItsEla sesse„I,g;,l,,,gspess,;tneene8 melt of n laundry. and listen filen her,
for there is much in the pr11,01' folding
SELECTED RECIPI•;S, or garments ..cal adds Iii the appear -
individual Suluds,—Cups of crisp let- 13)1)0 01 the finished wcirk. (111(1 theme is
lace aro made by placing (lee leaves 11 eerier' knack In doing this part of
together so as to form a sail, and lir this work which must be learned,
ranging ea salad plates. Use as a lilt- A 81111111 trotting stove, burning gas,
ing for these shells one cup each of is the hest for the professional laun-
chnpped celery, English walmlts and dress, since it costs less for fuel ltd
apples, and a IIILIe salt. Put a large the gee does not 8111111 the irons ; have
tablespoonful of this mixture in each boli( stove and Iraq ihlumteuielely
cup, The mayonnaise can be either clean, saaurl,tg the Itnns eachtting lllin)tC
mixed with the ingredients or poll on they are used, and Utes puthe
top after the lining has been inserted, away In small bags to keep them from
Chldmri, lobster, and sheinnp salads aro the dust unci dirt.. If well washed ear n
I
1150d in the same way. Only head let- time It lakes but a few moments, ltd
lute can be used for the cups, as the tion the irons oro always cleat, Keep
leaves 0f Roman and O'dhlary lettuce certain irons for starched pieces, and
oro loo Alt and Aexlble, others fqr the pluier, tougher parts,
Potato Balis.—Crate four cold boiled and do not make the mistake of having
potatoes ; add ono tablespoonful of loo few Irons, _for this entails much
chopped parsley and one teaspoonful wafting for thele to hent.
of melted butter. Beat thoroughly with
--^
the yolks of two eggs and 1110 white of PURCHASING SUPPLIES.
one. Make into small balls, roll in
Of lite supplies Ota family, whether
brenderumbs, and fry in het fat until It be largo on small, is no simple min-
er. Place around the edge of fried ter. It cannot be prescribed for every
or broiled ash' class or condition of housewife. But
Wu01es.—Southern cooks never wash whether one purchnscs by w1111155818 or
their waffle eons, but clean them withwhether
the French fashion of ono day's
salt. Sprinkle salt generously on the supplies at a time, "Serve yourself if
irons and heat ; then rub with a Male you would be well served." Gu in per -
of brown paper or a clout. \Vafile., soli rind see what you purchase.
Hover stick when the )ons aro l.ep As a rule, when food is most cheap
clean and smooth in this way, and plentiful it is al its best; out of
Waffles Matte Vtitl Sour Mills, Alli season it oce
Is expensive and lacking in
together one pint of flour and one pint flavor ans. srummy, h1 the early spring
of sour mills into which half a tea -
the provident housekeeper will haat))
spoonful of soda has been stirred; add use, to a great extent. of vegetables and
one-half cup of melted butler. Stir fruits winch are seasonable through_
into this the well-beatmn yolks of three ,>irt the year,
together witsi sue), dried
Th Hot
eggs, then the beaten whites. Beat told carred adicles us she has found
herd for two minutes and bake in a most wholesome and pnlalablo, e\'51'
hot iron, s i c flavor bearing in mind that "111 things come
To give a lovely old fa h on d Aa o
Lo a foal cake. wash anddry rasa to those who wail," and that a few
\wake will bring a superabundance of
geranium leaves and lay them on a Muse green t'ege1ables 0nd. fruits of
plate. Turn the cake out on it, leaving
which we are so fond.
it there until quite cold, The steam It is laic ecorncnrlrnl to purchase
absorbs the flavor of the leaves, giving the so-called dry groceries" In rchasquanti-
tl a neem delicate taste than any rose ties, and (here Is a salisfaellon in the
flavoring can possibly do, consciousness of having one's larder
A novel delicacy is a cucumber and stocked for an emergency that, will
nut sandwich. Allow the cucumber's to compensate for the extra outlay, if
remain in eco water for an hour or two 111(11 outlay be commensurate with one's
before serrifg; lien peel incl slice, income,
culling ...cur hila minute cubes ; add while (lour mn,v be bnuglhL by thin
half the quantity of finely chopped nut barrel, bol 1110 barrel should 1101 rest
meats, and blend with a sour creast
salad dressing, made by beating hard
for five minutes u cupful of rich sour
cream, gradually stirring In half a
teaspoonful of lemon juice and a table-
spoonful of powdered sugar. Spread
upon thin slices of buttered whole
wheat bread and stamp -with a culler
into neat circles.
Tf a recipe for aspic is wanted, this
ono is vouched for by an authority
Cook together for eight cm ten minutes
011e tablespoonful each of finely chop-
ped carr01, onion, and celery, with a
little parsley, a bit of bay leaf, a clove,
eight whole peppers, and the juice of
Iwo lemons. Have ready half n box of
Cox's gelatine dissolved in a little cold
water, and two cups of brown stock,
or beef extract. I -teat to boiling, and
ads( the vegetables. Season with salt
and cayenne, and add a little kitchen
bouquet. Beat the whites of two eggs
and squeeze in a tablespoonful of le-
mon juice. Add to the mixture fn the
saucepan and stir until it boils. Re-
move from the fire, and allow it to
stand for twenty minutes. Strain
through a double cheese cloth.
In a new boots, "The Up -lo -Date Walt-
ress," by Janet Moitensie Hill, several
new salads are described, A tomato
salad Du Barry sounds attractive.
Peel a good sized tomato for each per-
son to be served, cid a piece from the
lop and with a teaspoon scoop out a
portion of the pulp. Sprinkle inside
with salt and sot upside down In elle
refrigerator. When ready to servo ell
the tomato shells with cold cooked
cauliflower and set on heart leaves of
lettuce. Put a tablespoonful of may-
onnaise on each tomato,
To make doughnuts happy-go-lucky
take one gild of milk, one gill of sugar,
three gills of flour, one-third teaspoon-
ful of salt, one-third of a nutmeg.
grated ; grated rind of a lemon, lite
yellow part; one full teaspoonful of
baling powder, one egg. Beat, the
white of the egg to a stiff front and add
the beaten yolk and sugar. Add the
flavorings, then milk, and last, 'flour
halo which you have stirred the baking -
powder. Drop a teaspoonful into hot
bolter or lard, let cook until brown,
gently turning the doughnuts round as
they fry.
IRONING FINE UNDERWEAR,
Mary Taylor -Ross gives an excellent
method of treating the liner garments
that go to the laundry to be cleansed,
1-iave a set of irons that include all
sizes, the large ones measuring Mus
inches at the largest part, and then-
501n0
hen500111 smell, pointed ones, and one or
two very long, thin ones, for sleeves
and similar puckering places, Witte
the pointed irons, Iron out the laces,
embroidery and ruffles, carefully point-
ing each scallop and avoiding that
great fault of the ordinary laundress,
tearing the lace wills lite iron or pulling
it nut of shape. Iron all insertions and
medallions first, to keep them straight,.
and ironctrcuter ruffles with the
thread of the goods. All frills, laces and
embroideries, as well as the alcoves
ltd yokes, should he done before to
pinioer• ports, for these are apt to get
soiled while (vet, and If properly dried
with the iron will not get out of order
while the larger part of the garment is
ironed, The minces of skirts and draw-
ers should be done first, and then the.
body peel, and one can easily avoid
crushing the trhnming and one etas
become nccu5tou(d to the work, peep
a bawl of tepid water and a piece of
clean linen (tearr tie ironing hoard., t0
remove any spots or specks that may
get on the clothing \vblle drying or be-
ing ironed, and to dampen properly.
any places (hal have become too dry.
13e sure to keep the flatiron on each
part Until it is bent dry, or the work
upon the floor, but he raised will) 1
strong supports, so That a circulation • 1
air may pass below as well as upon
the top and sides. Entire wheat flour
does not keep well and should be
bought in small quantities. Potatoes I
keep well and are lower in price before
they have been stored. Sugar, tea, and
canned goods may be purchased tv
quantities. Coffee should be bought
fresh and roasted at (tome if possible,
but if bought roasted the proper pro-
portion for each morning should be
fresh ground and a coffee mill will pay
for itself in a short time by the differ-
ence in the strength and aroma of elle
morning cup.
With 0 refrigeraloe and ice, butler
and meats can be taken care of. and
besides the ureal Ls much improved by
keeping. Do not roast meat the day it
cones Irons the market unless you are
sure that it has been kept long enough
to be lender. Do not whsle needful
force in trying to digest tough meats.
Whenever It is possible keep mills nntl
butler in a separate compartment of lite
refrigerator and never leave 11 un-
covered. There is nothing gained by
paying extra for mills of assured clean-
liness or Istat inns been pasteurized if
It is lett standing uncovered. Nor
sinould milk 00 any food supply even ;f
covered, be left in the hot 1)ilehe1 for
an bow or Ivo. There 000 a number of
fruits and vegetables that WO 11av0 1111
the year around, such as oranges, le-
mons, apples. end bananas, and in
vegetables suets as potatoes, cabbage,
carrots, turnips, parsnips. and for the
others we must depend on the season
and the amount that our incomes will
permit.
GOLD.
The first mention which we lurve of
gold is in the eleventh verse of the sec-
ond ohapter of Genesis, or in other
wards four thousand and four yea's
before Christ. Gold was used ns money
by the ancient Egyptians 01 n very
early date. Heroclolus tells thin[ 1110 in-
vention of tine coinage of gold belongs
to Lydia, about 750 B. C. Authorities
conflict about the first coinage of gold.
Some say it was SI!1oh1s, 01161 some 1110
Persians, but there are no records to
show just when.
13I0 RAILWAY STATION.
The townspeople of Leipsic, In Sax-
ony, boast that in ten years they will
have the biggest railway station in the
world, It will be spanned by seven
immense arches, each 140 feet wide,
and its thirteen Is in phitferms will
each be more than 1,000 tool long, while
twenty-six different lines will run into
it. It will cost 532,500,000 to build,
BETTER SOiL TO G11OW IN.
"Maria, we'll have to give up that
summer trip, Sly account at .the bane)
isalready overdrawn."
"Oh, John, yotl are such a wretched
financier I Why didn't you put your
account in a banes (lel had plenty of
money 7"
Sufferer— Do you extract Melts with.
out pain?" Dentist --•(Not always, 1
sprained my wrist on one a couple of
clays ago, and It hurts yet."
"May I ask what is going on 111 the
village?" inquired the observant
stranger, "We're celebrating the birth-
day of the oldest inhabitant, sir," re-
plied the native, "She's 101 to -day,
sir." "And tell me, pray, who is that
1(1110 Man with the dreadfully sad
pottntenancc who walks by the old
lady's side?" "That's her ,son-in.law,
sir, Iles been keeping up her tiro
in$urahc0 Mr the last thirty years,"
GAN YOU INVENT T TIiIS ?
GOLDEN OPPORTUNITIES NITIES FOIL 1r011-
TUNE.Iil ,N'IY;BS.
The Dreams 01 To -Day are the Realities
of To morrow — Big Fortunes
Are Waiting].
Why can't a balloon, ptv>perly filled,
Slay up forever? Because 11 leaks. Thu
only known material tluruugn which gas
O1111111,1 peroulule is gold -beater's skin,
lull this is a grout Ileal Lou expensive
fur CO111111011 use. invent. 0 perfect var-
nish foe making sills oe salter material
gas-tight, and the problem is solved.
1l has awl been dune yet.'There is twitting like leather fol' shoes
and bouts, The brown -paper end leather
scrap whion are used to flit the soles of
cheap fooi)•w't:ar are nothing more or
less than sponges to suck up water and
give the wearers pneumonia. '1'hc clev-
er inventor may yet And 13 cheap and
ancient substitute for leather. Why 1311
try?
\0'e have at
pw, hut,
thanks to thegut Italisuan g1055eneraolderGfl1,li'I'c
acoustic telemeter, the location of guns
firing smokeless powder cnn be accur-
ately determined by the opposing force.
What we want is
A SOUNDLESS POWDER.
Such an invention is not out of the reg.
Ions of the possible, and would go far
towards making war absolutely imese-
slble. Its invasin', would confer at big.
benefit upon httnlalily al large.
Pearls aro bringing fabulous prices.
Why? Not bemuse there are not es
good pearls in the sea 0s ever carne out
of IL No; the only reason is, says Air.
Streeter, the well-known expert, Ihat
even in the best diving dresses men can-
not de0eend to much greeter depths lean
fifteen fathoms (ninety feet). The pres-
sure is loo great, and even from the.(
depth they come up bleeding at nose
and mouth, 1'lle pearl 53511')' beds et
(itis depth Have heiin pretty well worked
out, but there are plenty more at great-
er depths. Devise some means by
3111011 the pearl fisherman con deseen 1
thirty nr forty fathoms under water,
and there would be a colossal foliar in
It The submneinc boat won't work f,r
this purpose, for pear oysters cannot be
grappled for. They must be
GATHERED BY HAND.
Smoky chimneys Ore an intolerable
nuisance, and there are plenty of speci-
1111115 which nu known form u! )Owl
Will cure. Won't sumeon11 invent a
good smoke-preventingl, device? 'lucre
would bo money in R.
It is said that an American, Dr. Iler-
beet levalkliu by name, actually suc-
ceeded in producing colored photographs
and submitted them to a leading Am-
ericus hssxintnu With Ine re-
sult that ho received greet. encourage-
ment. 13111, he died suddenly, without
revealing his secret. In spite of many
attempts by other inventors, the secret
1,1 a secret still.
Bullet-proof garments have been an-
nounced by Ih,' dozen, but the inventor
has yid to be found whin will attire him-
self in his invention, and sinful up at
point-blank range before a modern high -
velocity, small-bore Alli(. 'There would
be a big sale fur a really bulletins»f
Wald -root if another was steeled.
Think what ,lmlleablo glass w00111
mean to the whole world! With it gloss
hammer you could pound a glass rail
INTO A GLASS BOARD.
Your could out a hole in pane of glass,
and patch IL with another piece. Oar
houses v'ould be built of daintily limed
glass b:.cks, mud we should wails on
tough and unbreakable pavements of
crystal. Truly, iL would he one of the
biggest industrial revolutions Over seen,
meet the Mucky inventor would rent) an
enormous reward. Remember, it is not
impossible, for Inc art was once known
in old Venice.
13u1 the list of badly needed inventions
i, almost endless. There is no machine
for papering walls; mi envelope which
mot, be opened without detection 1s
greatly \vented; nn oil -can which won't
explode would save many lives; there is
no good device for turning nmstc, and
the man wino could produce a perfect
substitute for ('are rubber would rapidly
acquire a collossal fortune,
BODY FOUND CUT I'll IN 'RUNIC.
Ilan 'Was Murdered by Woman 'With
Whom He Lodged.
A heavy trunk was recently found el,
the Baltic Station. SI. Petersburg, and
es no ono claimed it, was opened by rho
ofliciais, when ii was found to conlelo
the body or an elderly 111511 which hod
been cut into moves, The head was
missing. The. puttee made every effort
M solve the mystery, but until 11111 other
Clay were. uusueaessh,l.
1L now appears Ileal the pian lined :,S
n lodger with n man and his wife, who
did embroidery Work. Two young girls
wore employed at the house as assist'
ends. The victim possrseed n. bond for
5111111, and to °blain this the women killed
1)h01)int 0)'. by sten) es him on the head With e
She afler\vtn'ds out the holly to nieces
with an axe 111111 put the head in the
0\O)), and whet her Disk ryas llnished
called her nns]slenl8 ill to help her clean
the room, threatening them with severe
punishment if they mentioned the blood
to anyone.
Sha tall the bond in a tiox, whore it
sons found by her lm5htnul, who, lov-
ing no nenney, Ino)) it in a bunk. Sus-
picion 1600 monied, and 115 n result or
enquiries, lite women was lurtslcd, Tho
nstdsla1(5 wore questioned tad tall luny
they had Mantel their Mistress chopping
lip something in her omits which wins
emceed with blood when they )stored
The remains In lite 11111) Warn 11110r-
woa'd ilen1ifed as those of the 11)1
lodger.
When a woman drives her husband
to drink he doesn't stop at a svelter
trough.
"Flow old are you?" asked the insets
once agent of the lady. Il Was 1110)1011..
lass of hang, and her indignant "Si' 1"
brought him etrnighlway to his senses.
"0f course, you will underslond," he
went on, "that we have to be careful
about making oe.xlracls. T merely
wished to •assure myself that you aril
legally Of ager," y
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