HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1907-6-13, Page 3•
ity
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'etre
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den
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We
Ste,
:iiii ,-st rrw
,• IETY I AND PATRIOTISMsand
°nee is to lite Wheels which, stoking into
1110 Inolst ground been witch ille
waters had reeedeie were •elogged With
,.or mud.
27, Strength—Wonted !low,
..
Egg
one lehieePoonful
juice
\VIM'.
lion of
Peanut
ereuni
tee ii
11111S end
sandwiches
oe cows,,
Inexpensive
dessert,
rf four
three
ding dish
serve
Maple
eggs ;
Cook In
ly until
pint of
eggs bonen
Ecen
and oven
Me bakery,
elses in.
and frost
a nice,
. Egg
yolk and
one tablespoonful
water.
glass
Nut
Iwo eggs
sweet
spoons
salt, and
cut up
tins and
Sea
pounds
of bolting
water;
Iwo eggs
beat until
One-half
salmon
.
eggs,
teaspoon
Ficur ;setiurn
salmon,
nicely
in the
desired.
Cucumber
imp;
but sliced
- i.nate
hours;
cover
i quails
t t
Isms m
of tvhite
oi• black
Inblespoen
seven
Picnic
boiled
One egg,
spoon
quarter
0,0(28(3',
vinegar,
slowly,
mix with
'slices of
with the
Croun
one quart
sieve (to
8e0s011
(onions
scoons
"
end milk
soda and
pour slowly
and let
minutes,
ers, pickles,
Otnelette.—Cut
large dry
enough
fork until
Separate
little salt
crumbs,
, ,
an" t,,1'
ready With
lard is
brown fast.
berning.
ftve minutes
and make
Chicken
chicken
tender;
dough
granite
edges but
rolled thin.
from the
in the pan,
.
thin. Cut
Put these
rdl is used.
of the
d ee 1
e ses, es
the remaining
'
bullet' size
little thickening.
lo be used
-To remove
d 11111P 00
To clean
end a little
1. old
,t n
soaked
Frequent,
will makeethe
A pincleof
barb and
tliq 21)11011(111
Salt p
will
5000011111g
Uncookrd
end p11111)
cold water
. Potatoes
in their
sending
To Retie
131111110nnfon,
covering
coos
Cooking
Ping down
the side
the edge
et
'
•
I, i
1 4? Tonle
I
44,i+.1,4,4,4444„,v+041400
TESTED 'RECIPEs,
LemonedeseThe while (11 one egg,
111 Pulverized ,41gurn
Of 011fs Ien1011, ad 000 glass of
TIliti is fine In case of influnente
the slotteet or bowies,
Satelwiches,—Get a lout of
bread, then cut it thin and but-
iien. Then buy some sagod pea.
sprinkle with them, PC111111 1
ere nice to „serve with cocoa
Dessert- -An inexpensive
Is made US 10110W14 ; Beet whiles
eggs, add 0ne-11011 cup sumo. and
tablisspoons cocoa; bake 111 pleb
about fifteen minutes, 1111(1
at once willl cream.
ice Crearre—Etrat yolks of four
f aple syru
o ne cup om p.
double holier, stirring constant-
like a custard. Cool; add one
Min) and the whites ofthe four
light. Freeze,
Layer cake.s.syn make. a nice
layer cake, such as you Bee at
cut oft the little hill that
the centre of the layere and fill
right 00(22 11. You'll then have
..
even -looking layer cake
Flip, ---Break one egg and beat
while separately ; add to yolk
of sugar and tour of
Then beat in the while und fill
with crushed ice and serve,
Bread. --One cupful of sugur and
mental; add two cups of
milk, four cups of flour, four lea-
baking powder, .orie teaspoon
one cup of English welnufs
quite fine. Put. In butteeed bread
Id t rise twenty minutes. Bake,
Foam Candy.—One and 0110-111111
brown sugar and one-quarler cup
waier i boll unlit ',Asp in cols
pour slowly on beaten whites of
and add chopped nut meals,
thick and turn out to cool.
of this recline will do,
with leggs,—Bent together four
one hag cup istsi mint. mestidt
salt, one-quarter teaspoon pep-
Billnwto 0 thloe-th 4112it. tlie3oreidffidpatinl ;ru, 11,1 Itir
sliced •
, put on platter, laving
along edge; put scrambled eggs
'
centre; garnish with parsley if
Pickle.—One dozen onions,
two dose,. wieumitcrs, 1101 peeim,
111111, 1111a put in n vessel with
layers of sail, and leave 110.e ,,
then disin therm 1 I
g 1 y end
with this dressing cold ; three
of vinegar, one and one -Milt
r i: ri
0..tre all, three-quarters 02 (11 cup
mustard seed, one-quarter cup
musiare ,seed, one-quarter of a
of celery seed. 'ries 1111s
quart jars.
Sandwiches-- 0110 Pound 01
ham. chopped fine. Dressing:
one teaspoon of segue, one lea-
of flour, one teaspoon of butler,
teaspoon of musleed ; beat vise
and odd one-third cup of strong
two-thircts cup of water. Cook
stirring constantly. Cool ane
other in.gredients. Butter thin
bread sparingly end spread
mixture.
Tomato Scum—Steam mei rub
can tomatoes' through fine
get seeds otd .); cook slowly.
to test° wil'h sails pepper
if liked); two heaping table-
butter; one scant quart, of erearn
mixed ; dissolve one teaspoon
one teaspoon flour in milk and
into the tomatoes while hot
foam, Cook all together five
and serve clear, or with crack-
and cold slaw,
away the crust of one
slice of bread ; pour ovel
milk to soak it; work it with t;
all is broken up In °tombs.
three eggs; beat yolks, add a
then beat whites stiff. Mix
yolks and whites all together
cluioldY• FliVe yoUr frying pan
a tablespoon of lard ; when
hot pour all In; it will incike and
Shake omelette to keep frum
Bake only on one side 'about
and slide half on platter
tutmover of other half,
Pie.—Prepare a nice fat
as you would to stew; boil till
sell 'while boiling, matte a
as for biscuit, only rieher. A
pan 15 preferable. Line the
not the bottom with the crust,
Remove the large banes
meat. place a layer of the meat
then roll some of the crust
in steins about, an inch wide.
over the meat, and so on till
Pour over this about half
broth in which the chicken 10115
Cover with ceust end crimp
tli le elle el rnkr• 13 1 'r ,
•
. is, „. i _ is .... s.r. nee _Bee
part of the liquid, mat in
°I an egg' a 011P 01 00"1", a'
This makes a gravy
when the pie is served.
To rephicestbe handle In the lid ol the
letecellie, coffee, or lerupte, Id ti screw
in 'the hole from Underileath and ,serew
wIll 1101 litive any garbege le thepose of.
Sow old boot lops le make iron and
kettle eoldere. 'rake a Melte Of this heis
Hier mad rover 11 with eretotine oe other
material. and s•ou Wi have a holder
which will protect yaw hand from the
heat of the 111111 01' kettle and will yet
,
iguithioisLuilith.e.N‘016iirl(yi ami.andn(it...Liiialit11111.1441:42.1160.01.
•ellen used.
In one leer -shoe' or seven persons
. ' ' a Ann is
c,,,11 -111a en 1101° 1" 11147 esP°11.1e., ee` '
need by using drippitigs. 1 1 ti ) is nn
' , ,.;•-• .1 '-'1„„..- f'1,-',
i'lee,d of Ourclit'slOg lorto '-'h " '' `' "'''
fats front boiling meats, Mint ele, and
1111 driPP1111•18 fruili 5-1711114 1 111's° °II. the
fe1 Paris of meal er° fried °111' \‘11,01,1
3'01111400 a ‘01111r1e01 (11111111113' 01 f°'
Pine(' In nn jr" 1Wille With " Sl'e".1 rnW
potato, 2\ Mee clarilli•s il. Skim (ill the
seem whiell rises 10 1101 10p. W11011 MO
ist(' is e1'11, strairl the fa•L 111(0 a jilr'
end you have it MASS 411 nice, ('(00)1
i
71(2012 '211112' 181' W111011l'il. 21141113'(4111(1411420
15 better then turd. TIT it, luld sr° YI'Llr
01,11110'01,11110' 11°e°11lit melt aerceelingly,
1 111111°'11111d°Suilli•-"Saee id1 30111' 1011°-
mews trent etteik hare lemeni--in fact
• ' ' •
any triminiugs from meal, so II. is fut.
Also Sal 41 Wakil0 (((P21543 /tom rousts.
11,1r 11 041 1 11W03's1"i"3'1.4' Y'°1e011
1, 12 12), Yo4741(110211101'21l11'pl'''1" ,as,,
113114 12111311111111211230.12111311111111211230.'32.13011 3011 114100 M
1102111421 rendered out, buy a len-mart
out of any lye, Add a quart. of rain-
72.110)' 10 the lye, when emptied In a
lerge old dishpnn. Stir the lye with a
,
Mick and when root (y011 (22111 loll wnen
it is cool by feeling Sid(' of p2211 ; lit -op
„
3.°01' hands erillrelY 1.242111 11-1180 "1°
.s,t)ick) add the lye to the grease and stir
havei111e„,e°,"zieleileY (11 benel''' 7°1 70111
""°"" twenty.flve gond sized bars
of some pure white . 'rlie soap one buys
is etores ennl, 1101d 11 UMW' 10 I1.
Tir iri
2 il .4 r VIVRE BATTLESHIP
, •
• —
.918 'WILLIAM WIETKR VIEWS ON
' THE SUBJECT,
'ne Could0uSi 101 ines tilistlt,t;I:illielsets litillitpeis18'1,:toarsi iy.11.1.01/101 in i'S
Tee suggestien contained In a paper
n 13d IA it meeting of the institution of
Naval Architects, ttl, London, re6ently,
le I•he effete IMO battleships of Iles-Iti.'
ture would be propelled Ily Internet
orenbustion 401(1(100, which will replace
s1c11111 us h .1110117. powor, hos given
rise to considerable dlecussion in 110r (21
eegeneering ell'CIPS. .
one of the chief recommendations 3 1
141)1(2n ei .73471122111)'1,e Muwou
t it ld 10(1.110e
dunensione and dispineement (the or.
111111220121remaining the sante), or the ..e.
placement of boileee and intiellinery le
. heavy guns making the ship a more et-
ttrent lightnig force with no increas11.
, .
in toiniage,
1111) NO EXPIell 10,NCE.
But will the gas-drivee baltleeldp
01.01..11,4 o place in the fighting line?
'1'1)01'1'X'1'1)01'1'are (23'0\32.noiceikine; ,whethel,
they cen be overcome will be the prob-
147112. of lite future.
Sir William Whites ((.11.8., late Chief
construe -kg. to the Royal navy, is by
no means convinced that the gas engines
.
(011 Ns adapted to the requirements of
the modern battleship.
,," het,,, cheerved sir winhuo to a
representative of the London Daily
Muil, "is the highest horse -power inter-
nal combustion marine engine yet met-
(01 mi.. moi:00.11,1e, 111110 read the paper,
Said 11 7122212-800., but \ve would require
i0.000, and I doubt if the -results would '
be forthcoming. In the fleet place, we
have 110 02410'1)1100 of such high -pow.
(-red twines, end aro, therefore unable
(4) f01.1.11 any estimate oAwhat we should
be likely to get.
QUESTION OF ,STABILUY.
"If I might express an opinion I •
would say that I iirmly believe that the
internal combustion engine, is the en -
gine nf the future, generally speaking. :
But how are we to adept it to the pre.
s, ntela111-40,1'type of battleship. You know
11,01 the proposal is to remove the
Jsfs, jbob„ilift7teafiledinenw triniTos n
fornudecble-c. :
1'W 1111,1
Well. immediately you do that you at- .
feet Ihe stability of the vessel. i
'"fhe questinn of the ship's stability (
le one of the most perplexing problems
that beset a naval designer, yel here
we 411)' asked to remove the weight 1
front below the water -line grid trans -1,
form it into an extra risk by inereas- I
ing 0111' lop load, one of lite greatest I
delimiters with which we have to con- .
tend. 1
"1 lien again, it has ,been said a ship 1,
with an internal combustion engine I
. i
0,0111(1 require no funnels, but even .1
gas engine must have an air supply and 1
exheusl. and I do not see how funnels 1
could be dispensed with altogether. e
"Mind. I am net 11 1 1 Ftekin g the ,
12011(1110 (0 ils propoeer. Mr. efeleech- 1
me deserves the thanks of all for the
11nd the able way he has plared it on 1111°1411 110 has give" I° Ifle subleel•
(In)1er. I simply suggest a difficulty 12
lhal wined be bound to 0 'ge ' 1 th les- 1
rt. is , e
sening of a ships stability. (
c
11113 SCIENCE OF PUNISHMENT,
--
A Pew Hints as to llow Children
Should be Reprimanded.
-It es a fact that many it 0111111 1s pun.
Ished \villiont knowing that he is pun.
1111cd. 110 muy neither see how lie did
wrong nor that the punishment lies
anything lo do with it I knew of a
titne boy who was ordered to give up
wearing his precious watch for 11 time
as a penally for ti minor offense which
lied nothing to do with \vetches, or
properly, 'rho next time Ile did the
same deed he Dies. his saiher.s i.eprs
mund with a cheery plea thet he had
obediently 'token off his waked A pun-
!einem may thus be taken as a hind sf
al nction, 1 (1(1011kw
conditionsa non
children who were smacked by Ilielr
parente, wlio showed eventually that
they did not know that the castigation
Hewn that that particular deed Was
wrong, it had been accepted as one
emong tinny things not understeed in
this anshIgtious a(2000011t!011{11nd(2000011t!011{11add
l world.
We see, Men, that punishment 111 114
he Intelligent es tv.ell as atm and fair,
Now, add that it must be timely and
elso sure. • Severity has very little to
do with reformation, except that it lieu-
any retards it Frequency also reducee
1(1.2 efficiency. Treated intelligently and
good.naLueedly, a child can often be
brought to see that his course, is 01)-
jeotionable. In such 0 case a child will
ellen co-operate with his parent in de-
'min(1 a penalty for himself.
it Is not possible in the limitations
Of this article le prescribe for every
pos.sible offence. Taken with the fore-
ging general principles, a few examples
win suffice. A child who has a habit
ot leaving the door open may be made
to shut. it and stand by it every Lime,
counting fitly; it he neglects to brush
hIs teeth, he must go without some or
all of his breekfast; if he does &image
through heedlessness or disobedience,
he must give compensation by work or
money; if he defaces a brick wall, be
must dean it, or, !stirring that, be giv-
en a brick to creyon for a period. The
penalty tit unpunetuality may be re-
straint for doehle the number of min-
utes late—ns the old Hebrews punished
theft by a twofold, fourfold, fivefold re.
stitution. according to the sort of pre-
prrill'sirecrocluenn . soAl, Illrill'iscf1so bNovhpowelnhrie4dt »bye
Misting him—his shame tieing his pen-
ally .of pain. Young people trained to
high Ideals may also be trained into
self-puntshment.
I once heard of a boy who, haying
inlet an untruth. was obliged to go
alma with a plcard on his back. "I am
a liar." :Ole diswas on
cipline (10(433100(1100till
the gentled that he grew up lo be a
good men and a minleteel The eiseipline
was outrageous. ancl Might have cost
the boy hie •eharecter. 11 Ives enough
to harden 'him into adopting the course
nclventised on his hank. It Is amazing
how many children turn out better num
their trathing.—Pallerson DuBois, in
Suceess Magazine.
Tie Battlefield of To., -)Day Is tlieSlum
• • '
0 -
and the Highway.
----es.
The man in whom there aWalifala 00
isponeo Ile the etill (a fattriellem,
ho does: not love one land above all
hers because it is his own land, can-
A love ettir lend ut 1111, minuet eider
to fun living, fur love for one's cella-
1, 2)1141 5014710C foe her \venue ere pert
Mu g0u1 and substance 111 every true
'e,
Living for a city or a 1101011 15 relig-221
Ile SCCVIOC, 11 Is moonshine for men
talk of loving heaven unless tiniy
.11 love this eurtb and taboo to make
heavenly. Such sentlintintalleul use-
ly stands for simple evasion or IsnonIr
tly to the present by deferring [he'll
an indefinite futitio, The important
121g is not, that you. should go up to
0 city of (kid, but 111(21 11 should ogle
vn to us.
Patriotism, after all, simply is hying
r Mid working foe others, those who
nailed() he stele 01' nation. lt en.
t
egos the love from the sell centre to
e fell secial circumference. IL teaches
love the neighbor ns oneself, 11 is
together imperfect and often perilous
ni1 it Includes those high religious
olives of eltruism, service and rever-
ce for noble Idols and inheritances,
It always has seemoa so easy to pray,
hy kingdom come," tied then to wait
e It to drop
FULL 01113ED FROM THE SKIES
at WO have forgotten that every such
Oyer walls for the indorsement of our
cleaver to bring all that that kingdom
pans to us within reach of all our fel-
VS now, that no man really believes
that ideal kingdom who does 001
•ie to make it, immedietely real,
fee best memorial that am be offer-
for the sacrifice end service of days
ag pest is sacrifice end service for
me worthy purpose to -day. Religion
id patnietIsin become one motive,
1m -idling us to willingness to pay the
fell peke of ellizenellip, Th.ere Is no bet-
to. why to 110001 We dead man bailor.
Oily to live for the things for which
Ihey Med
We beer no thrilling call to arms;
we (0141 110 Octal wave or inertial 1111.11u-
stole. There iS 110 21011 for tileee ready.
te die, But there is a Call for those
who will live, .11 lo all the seine, delltil
lhe UM or lighting for the right in
the weed or oily; the patriot Is giving
his hre lo his lend. The flrIng 01. Itle
keeping a whole 0(411 are incideniel; the
essentlnl thing is that we give ourselves.
Valn cire all of QUI' da0111110 oaf glory
past unlese we are making the present
oodly nd the future's Prondee Yet
ga
moce glorious, Too many evaPorille
Mete patriolLsm in pride of YesterdaY's
mighty wrks 01' In
o
TO -DAY'S FULL DRESS PARADE.
The puppets of passing enthusiasins,
they mistake emotional memories tor
endurtrig memorials.
When the captein of all the forces
calls the hoops before him the .scars
11(1031 which he will.look with greatest
love may not be those that remain 10
remind us of sword wounds; they may
be the scars of hearts bruised and !se"
tear stained, of banks bent and hands
made horny in loving, lowly service of
our fellows. . .
WhoeVer loves his neighbor glorifies
helps fellow old-
the etate; whoeverNS
zen hon,oes his ally. The battlefield ee
to -day is the slum and the highwaY1 the
fees are greed and lust; the patriotic
motives will be many,Including love
for men, high espirallons for our land,
cenfidence in the corning of the g1011-
ells city of God. To fight against the
things that keep us down, within and
without; to lay down our lives In daily
living for men is to become part of' the
glorious army that follows the ((Ing.
HENRY F. COPE.
—
USES FOT1 COMMON SOAP.
bar of common ylloW soap will—
e
StoP a. mouse hole effeetuallY•
.Make bureau 1101111012)4 111101 windows
\I.:1km 1110 ir101111011 10 Stielc, Work
enieollity,
'rake the pain from a burn.
Cut uP line ill ((11)1111.1cr of a bar) and
dissulved in seeing hot borax water,
dean Plated silverware. 1,01 souk two or
three hours in the solution, and little
rubbing will be needed.
Combined with brown sugar. bring
painful .732.47011111(1 to a bend, and draw
out ft splinter from under the nail.
ihrliotitilighhedINohrileha iliaii,,I, (ijitcritNi.ti•ennt11,1hmel \stAltd.
1111d. 11. is often need by carpenters, who
drhe the nail through the bar of soap
before usina '
• - -'
Mixed with elnve blackleg, lessen the
labor of opplying and inippove result,
Slop a leek in a boiler in (211100(1011(3'ey
eases'
' Quickly remove the odor of perepira-
11°11'
,
Serve as a substitute for wax to point
darning slim.
' Ile inner Wrapp01.s BM useful to clean
eat lions.
g
HE S. S. LESSON
—
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
JUNE 10.
----
sson XI. Israel's Esc ape prom Etp.m.
"
Golden Text: Exod. 18.80.
•THE LESSON WORD STUDIES.
rho Departure front Egypt.—The WM-
from which the Israelites emigrated
s the vicinity of lite Iwo store cities,
tenses (1taineses) end Pnt ithe(Hero-
As, (1oceoth), which they had built
' Pharaoh. The actual starting point,
s Ilanmses and the first stopping place
Succoth. From thence they proceeded
Award to Etham, "In the edge. of tile
Icierness." Etliarn is In all probability
be Identified with a frontier Egyptian
tress, bearing the same mune (Elie-
ri). Checked before this fortress with
without, loss as the case may he, the
[males were bidden by Jehovah to
i•n back and encamp before Pi-
12, between Migdot and the sen, before
ll-zephon" (Exod. 14. 2). 01 (111 these
ces connected with the Initial stage of
eel's journey only Pillion] has been
dlively located. It is to be identified
I2 the modern Tel-el-l1laskula, which
rks these° of the ancient city also
led Succoth, which again Is the
•ek Ileroopolis. \Vhen 111' bear in
tel that the number of Israelites enid
have left Egypt at the lime of the
due wfts no less then 000,000 mem
ides childeen, and that by "men" is
ant here, as In Num..1. 3-43, only
les above twenty years of 11(10, and
1 therefore the entire body of Israel-
departing from Egypt must have
n upward of LW° million souls, we
not suppnse that thli entire company
1 gathered at, Bea inses, the point from
iell they are said to have started. It
tulle probable that the main body of
grante with Moses and Amon started
11 that place, while the others, in
diene to mosques orders, started on
some day from all Parts of Goshen,
verging upon P1111011100 Succoth,
ch hod been designated as the firsl
dezvous. Along with the Hebrews
l', a large comp,any of syrimathizers,
°intents, and slaves not, of Hebrew
le spoken of in Excel. 12. 28 es a
xed multitude." We are also to think
the teavellers from every section as
ig accompanied by larger and smaller.
Its and herds, which they had ac-
in Egypt. II, was thus it great
;iolory movement of a dependent
ple such ns might well cause the
'Plien king to reconsider his previous
an in granting this people permission
eave and, even after the severe ju
11, which had befallen him end Ms
ple, to endeavor at this juncture to
rlake the departing hosIs and cont.
them In return. To the memorable
nel of this attempt, WC are to give our
tion. iur study of the (10250111 los-
211100.n o
.
iclIiessetouprraaredr cjiiirjtesiellofl.,ahPfvonbsaballyr,.0110-isrreeraeli.i
to some plaoo of secrecy, apart, from mo
multitude.
10. Lift up thy rod—The same shep-
herds crook which from the first ep-
penrenee unto him an the mountainside
of Horeb had served as a medium of so
runny miraculous manifestations of
w
poer.
Over tt d di ed 11—W • 1
t.he sea an 1. e e ale 0
think of the. extreme northwestern arm
ot the Iled Sea, or more -exactly still, of
the extreme not•thern end of the Gull of
SIM. This in ancient times unquegtion-
ably extended farther north even than
ot present, Thnt the bed ot this gulf as
of the entire sea is becoming steadily
shallower by the gradual 1-150 02 the
land, which is largely of a coral forma-
11010 hes been proved beyond the posse
billly of doubt. It is probable that at
the time of the exodus the waters of the
gulf sholched up the Isthmus of Suez
Into the Bitter Lakes, now separated
from the northern end of the channel
be a long ,stretch of 1070111nd. The exact
point et which the Israelites crossed the
waters of the Gulf is not. to be deter.
mined, but we Pa0 doubtless to think of
some point lying between the present
nerthern extremity of the Gulf and ihe
waters of the 1.1itter Lakes. The ntauner
in which the waters weee parted, thus
offering to the Israelites a way of CSCOPC,
is suggested in oui• explanation of verse
21 below,
17. Harden — Lit., "melee strong."
Only here are the hearts of the Egyp-
lions generally said to have been hard-
°lied. It is entirely in accord with lac
generel. laws which govern human 7111--
lure that the heeet, which Is set on pur
suing . 11 certain course should become.
more and more fixed or set, in its deter-
1)11110110111)1111011011to know that course of action.
I will get me honor upon Pharaoh—
Among ancient, peoples the only start-
dard by which a deity was judged was
its manifestations of power. • To the
Egyptians, therefore, Jehovah could
speak only in words and works of
might Tee Ieharrioh here referred to is
generally l'egardod as being Merenprah,
the son mid successor of Raamses II, of
the XIXth Egyptian dynasty. A 1110)111 -Make
•
ment of thts icing mentions the Israel-
Iles es having been destroyed and her-
vied hy him.
Ilorsemen—Charioleers,
Et The angel, of God—Compare In-
(reduction to Word Studies for June 2,
Stood behind them—Took a fixed 110Si-
lion between them and the enemy .der-
ing the night.
20. And there was the cloud and the
darkness, yet gave it light by night—
While this translation is the more cm-
curet°, the ](ing hones version by the
, ,
insertion of the plu.nses "to !twin" 811(1
"Li Iliese," made llte intended meaning
at the posage a Mlle Weiner ; "And it
72.1114dg- S 11 0100(1 and darkness to them [the
Egyptians], bet 11 wive light by night to
these [the Israelites)."
21, Caused the sea to go back by it
strong enst wind all the night, and made
the see dry land—Not an unusual pile-
nm
oenon tit Itils piece. lf, es hes been
suggested above, the waters of the lied
Sea extended at this time as far north as
the 1311101; Lakcs, there must have been
1111111y 11011115 at which 11 NVI1S exceedingly
shallow. A stiong southeast Wind,
therefere, by driving the waters of the
lakes( northward, together with a simul-
Igneous ebb of the Ude in 1.110 I2111(01'
gulf, might easily produce the effect de-
8(31111041 in the text.
24. The morning watch—Between 2
a.m. end sunrise.
Jehovah looked forth upon 1110 11051or leg
Egyptlnns through the pillar of 11)'c and
or cloud, and discomfited the host—In
Psalm 77, verses 18-20, where an epi-
tome of the events here narrated seems
lo he given, the meaning of the words of
this woe is explained as follows 2 "The
voice of Illy (112.1111100 was in the whirl-
wind; the lightnings lightened the
world."
. 25. 'rook off--LIL, bound, 'hampered in 52011111"
their tinning.
'1'110Y drov0 1110111 her vilY-1,11., "And
made them to drive homily." 'The. ester- 11f11114
___.
LAUGHED TO DEATH.
ances Whores r —
Several In I1
enp e Have
Actually Done So.
The case of the. young lady, who, as
recorded in the daily papers, recently
laughed for eight hours on end al, a joke
she heard at her coshanier's, end Mai
so violently as to place her life for a
while in Imminent jeopardy, is not guile
unique 01 its' kind.
Indeed, there have been several in -
stances where people have actually,
under similar circumstances, laughed
themselves to death; while ethers have
only been saved from a like fate by the
application of the electro-cauteev cure,
the galvanic battery the hot wire snare,
.,
and- other such -like powerful counter
irritants used by medical men.
4igigglin g girt
Joan Caron, the famous
°I Ghent," would laugh immoderately
all des, long, the most trumpery incident
sufficing to send her off into uncontrol-
table paroxysms. She was made a show
of, and people took n delight in exciting
her risibility, so that practically her
whole life, from the age of Itteen to
lwenty-three, when she died, was one
long laugh. .
Jolly John Nash, the fameus London
comedian, end the inventor of the now
well-known "laughing -song," was gifted
by memo with a hearty, ringing, must-
nal laugh. lle cullivated it assiduously,
exercised it, continually, and pined
through it a very excellent livelihood
during more than fifty years.
Another noted laugher was Lamont,
the French clown, who, to win a wager,
once laughed for fifteen hours straight
oft the reel. 11 WaS his custom to Doc-
tie° laughing regularly eeeey morning
1111C1 afleenome just aS a musician prec-
lies his music, and Ills stage appear-
times in the evenings were simply laugh-
ing exhibitions, to which, however, all
Paris flocked a/id laughed in unison.
s ,s
“
..N nitially he broke a blood -vessel while
going through his performence, and tm-
11)041010)' expired, thus literally lai,gh-
Mg himself to death, as did Calehas, the
soothsayer, and Zeuxis, the great
.
painter
'
,e.•
43- - —
AN APPETIZING TRADER,
--
German Merchant's Difficulty in Escap-
ing Cannibal Tribe,
, rho C.010 ne Onzetle ublishes an ex-
Ira l'nertg c. nt, ofP • 111 1 n.
ticssminl ths: sane„i°11101„ cameniscnninem„iir
authority -cif --a-' German isade.i.-----' --- e
According lo this correspondent, NV110
visited Nsana, chief of the Make tribe. at
the end of December, 1905, the Meka
p i
poople not only ea 11le1 s \ ptigonei.s of
War. as do all the tribes inhabiting the
-
southern region of the protectorate, but
consume as food the flesh. of their own
o le who are condemned to death for
,
cPicenPles. Ile was present. when a man N 11S-
i Bled b - '''
: ecause his wife died in child-
birth, and had to witness a feest held
1 .1, d . h ii , •
ms re„ w en le tomato of the un-
efosic:tatmerctile am af2011i\ireerre feattel en . i thli edi Ifititenzvlf
roe gist's's, id ,vd''' h• . `'.,
s son cons ete him paiticu
tarty appetizing.
The Govermrient caravan was after-
wards compelled to g 1 i ii th 1
•-: , g 1 s way restful
the Malta territory, •and this tribe killed
all the black dealers and bearers they
came across in a short 81)4,0e of limo
oiling upwards sof a hundred of them. '
In the further course ot his travels the
ccresponden1 (1281100021211 (hatcann 1 -
ism is carried to such an extent by the
tribe that human flesh was offered
10,• sale In the public markets.
+___. • c
ODD FACTS FROM ODD PLACES. ,rc
--
Some Useful Information Which It
Alight De Well to Know. a
•
Jupan has a written Maim extending s
OVC1' 2,500 years. e
The wood used in the best pianos has
been seastmed forty you.
Cornish mimes believe that it Ls
blekY t° whilie underfMnind. c
In Balms nearly all babies are taught e
to mint before they are 2 years old
-1- - ' • (
Chinn raises and consumes more ducks r
111011 tirlY other country in the world. 1,
.
rhe first American oil well was found 11
accidentally by men sinking for salt, in e
the year 1845. c
The biggest f01`111S in the world are in h
South Australia where t
• • • e
he averag b
squatter holds 711.000 acro. ' tl
It Is estimated that nearly 4,000 acres u
of cedar trees are cut down annually to s
Previde the material for lead pencils: d
The pigeon and turkey have each a 11
natural temperature of 109 degrees, li
which is 10 degrees higher than anan's n
11211111-121 temperature. SI
• Themes Blanket, who invented the e,
bed -covering called by his name, MS ei
one of three Flemigh brothers who sel-
lied at Bristol., England, G
Cinchona, or quinine, tal(es Me name a,
from the Marquis of Cinclum. viceroy of is
Peru. NV11050 wife was cur ed by this 7
remedy of fever. R
,The great Austrian ealt mine at Wiel- Is
iczke. has GOO miles of galleries and cm- It
ploys 9,0(10 mineis. It has been worked 117041
for the pest six centuries. ic
There ere more Mee -bodied men to the
total populntion In the Weelern slutes of
the Untied Slates and Canada than any- 01
where else in the world. 0
The age of Whales is neeertained by 111
the size mid number cif laminae of Ole It
,
woa,,chono, which. Increases yearly, In
mes of d h ec
300 an 4110 years have been as
^ I 1 r . II il• I 1'
signed lo w in es 1'0311 1080 in ' ice I ons,
In feeling feels 11" seet of ;thins in W
' 111
India is '' ter ellead or all rivals, Sole of
I 1
in thirty to folly days are very cont. '
fro , ,. „ , . , . s„.
"um' and mire 11 sear thes ale scud to b'
abstain from food foe seventy-II\si , Moe „ s,
A remarkable bird found in elesteo is b'
the bee marlin, which has a Mak of 10
ruining up the feathere on the lop of its 111
li•11d intie exct eselee of a I,f
Isinutiful Hower. mel \\ 111')) a bee comes sif
In sip 1)11(3' from Ille supposed '.,',e
„
It 1W01' 11 to S11)11/1)Cci up hv 1114'hird. sv:
' 1 • nt
if
_____—se
SLANG FORBIDDEN.
sTit t h i • I
siu 0 03'ke0d al1.11t uliST e mck-full of
,,,,,
Pg'" remSr '' 1 ,, 'Pe to his w'''''''
111 a complaining tone. Ile teem nhout
1110 es the gusenar, and 11111 morning I
hee'ed hi tell Brid 1 1 'I 1 '
go, o .e. her en I
.' m - '
'Where doe he pick up such abominable
singe.
e 'conked.
Goodness only knows," 111r •
s. Shaipe
i Tolled.
"At .scho " 1
ol, cont nued the tether "of
those 'Yeirdsley boys, He is altogether
,
kr fiv, that boy, and 11 catell hem will
those boys again 11e m ma 1ce a si 'ome-run
of the Ilvellest kind." d."
else 111113' 110121' some of it at home "
su 1 d s • si . . '
gges ,e 1 1 s. tat pe, with motherly
kindnees.
"At hm
oe I" cried Mr. '
Shat•pe. r 'You
are entirely oft your base, no* dear. Who
uses shines home,
"Probably I rim addict .,
ed to ft, was
111111, shorpres meek 101)33'.It
“Well, Ws a v100 you'd haler get rid
of, then ; relined convetisntion is a mark
or culture. t.et me hear teat kid use
slnng again and I'll glvo 11 to him right
r-- .
off 1110 bat. I'll "
Just men ho saw an amused look on his
1oven
wires taco, and oh mm ,.
men ,sen1y srir-
him, he pick.ed ep hs hal, and'
mumblingsomeIing about. 1laving on
appointment at the' °Mae, fled,
UNPLEASANT.
Old 1311m1—"Ah, MISS Singer. that
'Winter Lullaby' was charming. Il car-
tiled me back to the eas-s of my child-
hood."
Miss Singer—"I'm so glad you liked
it
Old filunt—"\VhY, I Mulct ectunily
hear the call,le bellowing, the old gate
creaking, and net discordant winds
howling about the berm"
a
. I.
USEFUL HINTS.
egg stains from silver use
It .
water bottles use egg shells
water.
f .1 vtll b mad 1 re I d
ow c e 0 11 0 011 er
in salt water.
rubbing with newspnpers
temp shine like glass.
bilking sode added lo rhu-
cranberries requires one-half
<11 sugar,
u
laced nder baking pans in the
prevent pies arm cakes from
on the holtom. i
Caled Pn' 'I,Was11 f.u it
glass cans; then fill up with
and seal lightly.
will go twice as far if boiled
skins mut skinned just before
to the table,
tt rake of compreseed yeast.
Mime in hoitht with a
of water, and oil: tight Ieeep
tieing
Spoon. --To keep it frolic silo-
into the pen Iten1 st bark on in'
of the handle se 11 eill catch
of the pan,
---
ergo 13. And Moses said unto lee
pie—Who, hemmed in between the
re of the sett and the approaching
Is o1 the puesuing Egyptians, were in
ot terror al the prospect, of being re-
11 1)5' i11011' oppressors.
ir the Egyptians whom ye have seen
ny—Or, "for whealong
vetts ye linve 00011
EgypIlens to -day."
.;Jehovah will fight foe you -11 is
nge tha, (ie Unwavering faith of
es and Aaron, together With the mar-
pus manifostalicnis of ids power
otsed in their behalf which Jehovah
already vouchsafed 1111111, had not
tired in the people a greeter conii-
20 in the (1)0581100 a1 difficulties.
n the pillar of cloud anti the pillai•
Ire already granted them for gut&
I (Evict :13. 21) 001'0 1101 enough 10'
'come their for. n,t this juncture.
. WilCaCIOCC 01.1051'11100 0010 Ina?'-.
11° I"411"1'elf\I to 010'01-1111de 111e 3)40(110
ds 70115 tIPPorennY in SeUret 11111011
'INDIAN ANIMAL HOSPITAL.
There is 1111 511111101 hospilni at LocIli-
pm., near Crderilia, where there aro
111108113' about ,000 tne/151s muter treat-
m, ent--horses, oxen. mules, ehiphants,
'logs. and 011011 sheep—all comfortebly
housed and looked after by n slag of
eighty native "nurses," under the orders
of a British veterinary surgeop.
---se—,.
SAME OLD 3013, the
Merchnni ; "Whet, ere yo • 8' I •'
111 IX ,X/,,In
111112.', Uncle Direm ?"
Uncle iliram t "Ain't none of 1e20 do-
nothin' but Jim."
Metchants: "Whei's .11111 doing?"
„
Ihicle Hiram ; "Lotted, ez usual."
.1‘
w
TELEGRAPHING IN 0111NA, ju
in
Secreey in Ille transmission of tele- ,
graph despatches in China is to. be in ft
„ * th
eured in future by a 1111 141211) 101. Inc „.,
deccipitellon nf all offenders revelling "
contents or impiegent messages et
transit ln 1110 enS0 01 01..111111(V 1110,
' ' f 1 1.1 '.
SagC5 01, C01111110100 1t111'. 110:141i00 1110 ,
penally is to le, yors in prison, w.
vise ewe • ,tTr.Ie-ti1 1 in •OV iOf r 1' VII
persons who know of Mc revelalion ef m
sort) ;q0erris end negleet lo report the rs
minter to the proper 1111111 '.1.
01 1 10S. , to
—_.---es
HER CHIEF WORRY.
Shoplifter on her way to jail—"Gracii-
°eel Whet, will the judge, 11111114 of me
when he sees I'm wearing ihe same hal
i bad on when he sent me up last.
Before giving advice a wise Man pre-
In dodge the consequenees.
TWO ItIN&RHABLE CAT
LONG PEDERIViletN FEATS PO:11'VA]li.
111) ny nom.
"Midaa" Travelled 22! Mlles 'lack (01110
Old lionte—"Trainp" Also
Went Dark.
As a rule dogs are credited with pos.
sessing greeter powere of attachment
then cats, hut whether they always
kleserve the cligtheilion 112 anether mallets
Ilere is an Mtercesling and absolutely
true story of at cat's faithfulness which.
would be hard to beat. The animal In
question belo»ge to a Mr, and Mre.
3. Van ENs, of 11, ideArthur Place, De.
Iron, and the facts are vouehed for by
Mr. •Van Ess, The ears name Ls Midge,
and the beginning 01 11(8 unusual career
dates fawn the 15t11 May, 1008, '400 that
day," saYs fdrs. Van Ess, "a lady, a re.
!alive of 011M, 110111g 011 Cass Avenue,
1001404 out of We window and BOW IMO
821)1111 kittens about to be trampled under
the feet of some horses. She ran out,
but was only in Uwe to plots up one dead
and the other very Much (nu -ed, The
latter subsequently recovered, but lrla
wounds (011 11110 with a peculiar linving.
ing walk
LIKE THAT OF A TIGED.
As a ;natter of fact, it was the opinion
011 1)0 veterinary that examined Midge—
as we at once christened hirn—lhat
onto of the bones of the back wets
matured.
"Well, this lady brought the kitten to
ur house and gave it to my wfte's ince
thee, who lives with us. In June, 1899,
ny wife and her mother went to Gorden,
leo, and took Midge along, leaving the
(her eat, Nig, with whom Midge was
greet friends, behind. They arrived at
heir destination in the evening, and the
ext morning Midge N) MS taken to the
atchen to be feth lie managed in ewe
'ay to gel out through the screen door
and took to the fields and woods across
1113 Mad, but though the country was
soorolied for miles around nothing could
be beard 01 1115 animal. .
"On June 171h, 1000, a friend and my -
elf were settled on the hack porch of our
house in Detroit, enjoying our cigars,
vlien we noticed a black cal, climbing the
ence Into the yard. 11 was thin and
ough looking, and 01702)11I0(1 over the
ence as (hough it was about half dead.
jokingly called out to my wife that
edge had at last returned, and when
ler ran out and called,
`COME, MIDGE, MIDGE,'
he eat looked up at her in such a pitiful
vay and began mewing so plaintively
hat my curiosity was aroused.
"We examined the cat and found that
bore all the 0211141 marks of our !Ines,
,g animal, and when he walked citf we
euldn't help 800111(1 that he had Midge's
coheir swinging walk, caused by his
'juries when a kitten. We look hen
no the house. where he met his old
laymate, Nig, and the two eats, instead
fighting and spitting, as strange cats
sually do, fell te rubbing their noses
gether and acting as though they
'eve glad to see each other. After that
enn to the door of the room where
is wife's mother usually slept, and
Mere he was accustomed to jump on
he bed to greet her, but she was still in
leo, and we watched what the animal
*riled do next. Now, when Midge lived
eth us he would never sleep in any
lace but one particular chair 'which
•as kept for him, and so NVO were not
ery surprised when he immediately
ode' for that chair, which was in its
coustorned spot, climbed into It, and
ent lo sleep0 lie seemed completely
xhausted, and for many days
ID NOTIT1NG BUT.SLEEP AND EAT.
"As he grew stronger we kept observ-
g his every ate and et last made up
ur minds that it was indeed Midge. lie
ad travelled 11A whole distance from
ardon to Detroit, a distance of 221
ile,s, taking one year and sixteen days
• make the journey. I notice that he
tuns mech more now than when NVO
ft for Ohio in 1899, and from this I
mclude that on Ms way back he must
ave lived almost entirely on what game
3 Mild catch. Although midge is
oroughly domesticated with Us, he .
sually refuses to make friends with
rangers. HOW he ever knew the right
rection to take, or what guided bbn to
is particular spot where he Used to
o, is more than I can tell. We have
ot the slightest doubt that Ile is the
me eat, and I think you will ego,
ith me that he has had a wonderful
reer."
At 0 cat show held in Madison Square
avden, New York, a couple of years'
0. there WAS on exhibition a very re-
arkeble cat appropriately named
limp, who not only carried off a Blue
ltbon for being an honor to his race,
It also gained considerable distinction
am the fact that he had found his way
om Philadelphia to his Orange home
New jersey, WhIell IS
A COUPLE Ole HOURS' RUN
1 a fast tt•ain. Tramp (he was called
i(3 then), had been made a present, byr
s owner, Mrs. Fielding, to a friend
'ing In Philadelphia, and this cancels
ethod of bartering with his affectionS
ide.ntly rankled in Flip's mind, for 110
d not been a week In his new home
len, after a bad attack of homesick.
5, he determined to find his Wtly bad(
"inother" with as Mlle delay as pos.
Ile, therefore, gave 1125 new friends the
Ip and was 1101 heard of for several
inths, N'1'11011 01112 111017110g he made his
penrenee al les Orange home looking,
not actually sleek ene tat, aeteast, in
cid health, though hewalked with
teething aro limp, Ile 70(15 welcomed
th open ciente and soon made himself
homy, le -Tieing the corigratelailens
111S 1011111(1' mvner With ti quiet dignity
-rich, Mrs. Fielding (100101'00, NVSS
sI reproof for her callous conduct. She
medialely changed his 210010 10
amp, and has since openly declared
at nothing will ever 10111(11 2.1470 to" part
th the animal ngeln.
Yotin(1 Brown (jesti)1gly) "What
1111(1 ('011 See, Me. lone.), if I were in
n away willt vow daughter Ethan"
Jones (talt,-r. of len .six
4411.051/1 say you wouldn't have
run Very 1'1/4%0'