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The Brussels Post, 1907-8-8, Page 6CURRENT TOPICS, Frain time to time sensational reports appear from geasi-scientifici SOureeS Of neW and sucevesful "eines" for dimes, 'Trypsie has just had quite a run, (else etaIly in pnblientions that are w1io14 innocent Of .niedleal knowledge, in spits of severe . lectures lemn organs of the profession. The publics is warned against ell such alleged discoveries by the report 101' tho current year of Lite I3r111sh .Cancer Research Fund, which is said tO bc 111.-, best orgaraied bolyatiW in existence, that is devoting itself lo Ile scientille study cif cancer. Wo are told that the asserted cures (UV /15.1 a rule lensed on fallacies inseparable from a small number of observatione. The committee has examined several alleged "cures" nd has reached none but nega- Bee 1e1311118. In •fact, the work of the whole year under review has produced no di3lInite results either Of a aurallYs or Preven. 41ve character. To some this announce- ment iney bring disappointment, but the report shows that it Is by 710 1170000 -tantamount to declaring that no pro- gress whatever has been made, Founda- tions; the public Is assured, 1103 being had, which afford hope of a. sound and permanent superstructure. The experi- mental investigations of the year have not been unfruitful. "We have keened,' says the report, "more of the ilature of thc local, and constitutional conditions associated with the origin of - cancer; and we have been able to form more definite conceptions of the nature of the change responsible for the rarid multi- plication of cancer cells." Questions of individual and family liability to the dis- ease have received increased attention ; the possible influence of "inherited ten- dency" is being rigorously inquired into, and experiments have been made which tend to confirm the belief of surgeons that comer is curable if the diseased tis- sue be completely removed at the earliest possible time. Further, the investiga- tions have strengthened certain earlier conclusions of value—for example, that cancer is univeesal in. veotebrate ani- mals, without reference to their food; that it is frequently developed In parts of the body lind are subjected to con- tinued irritation; that it is often con- secutive lo some direct local injury, and so on. .1. A melluxi for ridding the world of mosquitoes seems but a tame nehleve- ment isn, comparison with many others of modern science, yet it is one that pre- sents moro difficulties.. In spite of all that has been accomplished along this lieo the tiny pest continues its peace - destroying bum and man still flees be- fore it. Screens and nets, smudges and ointments seem to fail of their purpose, and if one ssvallow does not make a surnmertt least one mosquito will mak, 'a summer's misery. It is curious what sewer for evil lies withiil these. haled insects. They can break up a lawn fete, put an end to scientific cliscussions, and _make a lover's avowal a thing not worth listening to. The most beautiful land- scape 10 rendered unattractive by their presenee, and the sweetest of musie loses its charms when accompanied bY the all too familiar hum. Magic wands have been waved before these evil things, Jul .they seem in be powerless, or, perhaps, ore not tipped with the right eoison. But ris one deeshis (he fact that seme bene- factor is to arise who will know how to cepo wills these abhorred pests and who will give to summer a peuce and seren- Ity now unknown. MIRACULOUS ESCAPES. -- Iloy Falls From Train, Is Run Over by Another, and Lives. An escape probably without parallel in the semis of railway traveling, wns reported from Buckingham, England, oecently. The accident happened to a little by of five, named Shepherd, who was accompanying his father by train on it vist to a relative. The child was looking out of the car - Tinge window when the door flew open, end he fell out. The tenin was travel - :ling nt high speed, but In answer lo the 'frantic jerking of the communication - mid by the father, It was pulled up. Then, to .111e amazement of the pas- sengers, the ehild was seen on his feet, :toddling on the up -line ralis after the train, aud, so far as anyone could ob- serve at the moment, little hurt, isext instant the delighl or the lather, who Mel sprung to the ground. was changed to dissouy, for the up ex- press Was seen clashing behind the 0111111. *Before a finger email be raised it Mel knocked the boy down and missed over 11(111, Mr. Shepherd and his fellow -passen- gers were oveeconie le, this second ca- tastrophe. 13331 the boy, his heed now bleeding freely, Melseci himself up DA Ins father rustled towards his bodY, end ran ones: more So meet, Mr. Shepherd. This time he was lined safely Into fine tarilage. When the tretn routed Maid- ienheacl be wos attended by Dr. Aothur Edge and then brought on to Bucking - bons The child's svotinds on the heed nnit 'Mee were extensive, but when seen the next clay he was playing happily out in the open air, wills Ms head bond" aged. Mr, Shepherd, selo belongs lo the Instlene at theinley, snys the Malkin is loo terrible to flank or speak 101. The boy is ins :only son, neengsn rs the senility that a man .tekes out fel) eeereise eveiez •Sunday, E LIFE AMONG Christ's Passion for Humanity Is Evidence of His Divinity. "I con amogg y,ei as one that serv- elks—Luke xxii., One of the defects of the uverege lige:es man is ilia he seldom le a guest nIXI', lis either leeks the ability to make himself genially at Immo with his renews, or he Mem that suee inter- course would involve spirituel con - emanation. The monastic., useetie slav- e of separalkm still too generully p11. 001(5. 13M here In this One, Who is the ideal of Use religious man, was ono elm, while tined with thoughts of Osed,breathing a spiritual atmosphere, a being to whom things divine were far snore real than they 111.0 lo 11,5. still chose to live among men; who, seeming to belong to no - other world, deliberately has to stay 111 this one, els, steadily sought to inix with common peoMe. Many have tried lo e.stnblish his di- vinity by showing that he came into this world in a peculiar manner. They are missing the point. His divinity 1* lounges1 in the way he lived in ilio svorld, by his residence here 'rather than, by any arguments as to lus origin Zoom over there, He lived, ale, end slept wills people, with the poor, tho needy, with working- men; Ile broke bread with TIIE HUNGRY MULTITUDE. or dined with the rich. It was all one to Hen whether they wore purple Or marse linen, whether they reclined at banquet tables or ate the fists fresh caught and broileci by the lakeside. Ills passion for humanity is evidence of Ills divinity. Ile loved men more lhan ereeas and ceremonies, Mims and traditions, institulions or customs. He shattered ancient laws to 110 gond to ono poor needy being. Ile would M- iller look into 1110 face of a fellow bo - Ing at any lime than listen to is sermon, or even to the seines of angels. The religious leadets of ilis day se- vtirely denounced 11111) because lie ap- parently was what we would call a "good renew." His presence gave cheer to any company. Ile chased the clouds and glecen from faces and hearts. Mee fellowed ilim because looking into His fl'es thil saw there a 1101)1 light, end hone, and leve. Formal religion in His any Mated 111113 because 1 lis rsegiesi einnee, 01- 301, praiteiti, end of the present. To itim 11 was something to be mixed with 1:10 till 1,11e0W.alyl`11101(igle14'14( , '1(1111,11!11111111 01 411 .".1i11,3 11 1)511 a thing separate, 1011101, end ocensemal. 11 Was the habit and the trend of llis Me rather than any series of suite 01' 1.11/11.11d0-5, HO know no better way to express llis religion, or of giving flis life for religi- ous ends Ulan of simply living wills His fellows, woeking with them, sil- ting by the ronalside wilh thouti, not prouch:ng, bi113 conversing, going about with. sympathetic oars open to their sorrows, coming close bo iheir daily lives, and nunifiesling the spirit, of love Otto 111 till BY 13E17(13 BROTHER TO ALL. Ills was the gospel of the gond neigh - Ler suld friend, that the demist spirit Ilia( broods uver crention is near and ever true neighbor to every nnan, loving and helping; that the highest privilege) of man is to come near to ifis fellow beings, to live singing them wtlh gentle heart and helping hand •even es he was doing. It wouldn't snake a. whit of essentiel difference if Ilse curious should demon- strate Run there eever Mel beers such a life; somehow the world has this. ideal Wawa, and it ilever can be taken away from us. Ours now is the vision once unkno:wn, that Ilie noblest life is that welch gives itself, ond nowhere is the divine better manifested than in the .ife af common everyday kindness. They help us most who come closest to us; we all need Hein:. teachers inOre than the most logical 'leeching. We are hungry not for syllogisms, but for souls, for flesh and blood folks who will let their hearts out to vs. The world is hungry Inc love, the greatest end the sinned of all linings. 11318 a poor heart that Canna learn this les- son, that the best We Can give thls world Is just our simple selves in every- day ways of Mildness. HENRY F. COPE. TEE S. S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUGUST 11. Lesson VI The Sin oi Nadab and _Ala-. hu. Golden Text: Prov. 20, 1. THE LESSON WORD STUDIES. Breed on the text of the Revised V:v- ,SIAJII. • "And He [Jehovah] Called."—Thus did the Jews designate the thirel book of the Pentateuch by the opening phrase of its fleet sentence); 11,0 ennnot say Its first ellapler, or even veme, for the ancien1 writings of the Hebrews, had neither ceased- nor verse divisions nor yet puntuationmarks of any kind, 'We must remind oUrselves again and again that the punctuation, paragraphing. clespler divisions, . bode chigger, and page headings or our lebies 011.1 partitively moist additionS to and modi- fications of Ilse original form sif Ilse texl. Tims also the designation "'rhe Third Book of efoscs, connuenly Called Levi- ticus," foun1 et the beginning ot this book. The book of 'Leviticus was earl3. known by that mune from the fact that it delineates the legislation limiting the duties of Levies. For a similar reason if waS Often called "the tilw of the Priests," and eomeltmes also "the Book of Offerings." lt is (301101'u 113' admitted to I:0 a single document, the contents of which full naturally Into Dim) parts, namely : (1) The Laws or Sneriflee (5113(3. 10311. 1-7* ' 12) Ceremonial Mr Consecra- lion of the Priesthood (8-1(1); je) Lee's Distinguishing the clean from the Un- clean, with appendix the Day of Atones- ment (11-10); Ili) Laws Relating to Holi- ness, wills appendix '(17-27). Taken OS 11 whote 11 mu well be mentalist as the ern -glare book of worship of the aucient 1.1elirews, describing their sacrittees, fensls, and lasts. In 11 elaborate ritual of sacs:Mee it foreshadows the gospel truth of the recovery of guilty 1111111 10 the holiness of God by means of the .atonement. Vense 1. Nadab and Abilnu.--Tiespee- lively the fled, and second sons of Aaron, who wills their father anti seventy of the elders of Lsrael hall ac- comeanied Moses lo Sinai, and there beheld special manifestations of the pre- eenee of Jehovah. With their younger Mothers Elmer and Ithansar and their tether they were admitted lo ilic priestly oifice, clestructem in punishment foe their grols impropriety mut diso- bedience Seems hom the mei:Wive to Sieve (51141311 Mime shortly after if uot on the very tiny of theeconsecration lo the priesthood. Genser—Lit„ fire pen. Any vessel Insect for burning of Mimeses No de- serIption 01 the eensers in use in the Hebrew snncluary are given. It has been conjectured that they were emelt, shallow 11005 made of copper and at - twilled to handles. Offered sloange five.---Peohrips 00111. mon flre 1101 taken from tho sitereil 01151', oe not lighted in the psi:seethed 3120)1(311 01153' way ; or, 11 )31)3 be 111111 1110 ex- Incssion refers shrilly lo tim offering of smile nomullsoeized sneriliee, Both infer- pretalions breve the support, of Monti - nen t biblical expositors. Whet he lind net ecenmencled 1113'01 -- The ispocifte commend is given in Lev, 16. 12: ":11111 he shall Mice a rellsor 11111 eif coats of flre even off ihe altar before lehovish, and his Minds full of sweet 111e02o:0 110(11011 830311, and bring 11011111- 131 the veil." • 2. Devoured them—Killed them. That they weee 11171, consumed is evident from verses 4 and 5, in which their brethren are commanded to carry their bodies from the sencluary. 3. This is it that Jehovah spake—An illustratien of the kind csf irreverence and desecration of the sanctuary against which Jelsevels had specifically warned them. I will be saw:titled in them that ensue nigh me—"And Id the priests also, that come neer to Jehovah, sanctify them- selves, lest helmet break fortis upon them" flexod. 19. 221. Aaron held hie peace—Did not remon- sleuth or complain in the peesenee of so manifest a judgment of Jehovah.. 4. Sons of tezzlel the uncle of Aaron— And therefere members of the priestly family and tribe. Out of the deep—Beyond the thrills of wifieh the bullet would nee.essarily take place. 5. In 11101r coats—The burinl of the priestly gernmels along with Ilse offend- ing priests sons a sign thai they too had Iseen ;saluted by: the sin of the nien who 101(0 them. 6. Eleaznr nnd Ithomar—The two re- maining sons of Afyon. Eleazar, after his father's den 111, becanic3 high priest and seems, even at nn earlier time, to Wive occupied the posillon of child of the Levites. As high priest he later as - 341010)1 3(13100 io distributing the land al Oman enticing the tribes. Ills burial pineo ts sueutiuned in Josh. 24, 33, and from him wove descended all succeeding high priests down to the Menai:mem poslocl, with the exceptions only of tine high rirsIs of the, period between Eli and Selonion. During Iles brief period the high. priestly (Gee was held by members of the felony of lthamar. Let, mit the -heir of yew bends go loose, neither rend your clolhes--Two enskininry and familiar signs of extreme grief and mourning. '10 hero thus pub- licly Inmented lite celaslrophe would have been an equitelent to disputing (kid's justice In Mk visitation of dire punishment, and 'hence the strict peat bition of nny suds outward demonstra- tion and the appended warming, that ye die. not. Bewail ihe bumble which Jehovah halls kindled—The people 11101.0 exhorted to lament rather the fact, that such severity of judgment had been slimes- . sane 7. Ye shell not go (nd, from the deer of the tent—The prohibition osoteto leave tine sanctuary heeelly imposed upon the peleels must nol, be taken literally or nbsolutely, A more detailed and speci- fie commandmeni covering the same point, is given In Lev. 21. 10-12. • The senso of the command is that 1.110 priests: while on duty 111 the sencluary wero not to come inks eonInclwith secular affish:s, nor Mr the sake of those to ithendon the service committed to their hands. 9 Drink no wine nov 'strong drink— The implierilion of thls specific commend or 1010 alistinence from intioxleding themes duping the peeket of ofncial ser- sice in the eanclunry, seems to he that such indulgence had hall something to do wills Ile) unpardonable notion of Nadal) mel Abille, the inference being that these 111011 were 31111101' lila of .011a»ng drink when they disregarded the laws of lho sanctum"). This Is em rtheollitely 31 neceesary Infreence, but tlso seem to bo 113 favor of 011111 en interpretation of the: 0011)11)301(1' 1(1311, - it shell be sintule forever—Thet the 51:solute peohnittion lo priests, widen seeving in the senclunry, of the use of strong drink' nny ferns II. 1I151 ye zney tenets Ilse itilciren of hritele-The words nee addressed to the priests, From Deul, 3:1. 10, we lenses senre ,sqeseifletelly nhout, the twofold office ef lite priesthood I ' "They shell tench Jacob thine 0041. 11(17100s And 1191101 illy ItiW They shall put Ille011.140. 1)0(.1.0 3011, And whole Mott effering upon thine alter," ---es-- PRISON F011 DEBTORS. -- .United Slates 11111/50 Favors. Adoption of British Law, 11, Newton Crane, a well -Seems Am - el Ivan lawy0r in hondOn, explaining 10 in310 of Ms countrymell the statement iltat Mom Wort!, over 110(253 ;Aimee toe ereesued fur debt hid your in EugliuM, suid; Vel -en persons are Imprisoned because of diess it ls clue 10 the hue, that in the ledgmeni of the court suit persons, al' 1130(3(1 quite able to meet their 01,11. miliene, wilfully and contemptuously srefuso to do so. "It is like nibs The butcher or baker :fees a judgment, 31g1111181 3 elisloin01' for s(1y, 525 01125). The customer has, eo vssible properly on whites to levy an :execution. The debtor Is ssimmoned, and Ibto cotirt snakes a (eyeful inquiry into his circumstances—his wages, the number in Ids family, de. 11, in the :court's Milgrim -1S he is able to pay, say, 5 shillings (141.25) 11)03131, Ise Is ordered to pay it. 11 be fells lo do so, and, on 11 &3COM 111(111117, Is unable 10(3(0)10 his :inability to comply with the courrs ois der, lie is sent to prison for contempt of that order. "It is my experience that the judges ere very lenient, Meted ciebtors. No honest man is ever embarrassed or im- prisoned by them. Possibly the deb- tor will be ordered to pay only a shil- ling 11 week and then if he cun show leat the taxes upon las resources ore so great that he is not able to pay -even the shilling Ile is ino13 locked up, hut is sel at liberty, 31 113 is true that when - user distiinieS1 men escape their just debts, in some way or another, honest men must make good the deficiency 1 think IL will be recognized -Ad this :m- ealiest surviva1 of the evils exposed by Dickens is a first-rate thing for the de- cent members of Ilse community. "In my opinion it is ;unfortunate that America has not the same prectice ne 1311s England in respect of deadbeats. The deadbeat injures himself by his in- jury of others; Isis degradation is deep- ened. Therefore, if 11 clearly appeals that he refuses to pay a debt out of What the Americans call 'pure cussed- ness,' there is no doubt, in, my mind that he ought to be locRed up as a pen- ally for his wrongdoing. In Amerlea even a wife who has established her claim to alimony against a delinquent husband mune collect her money un- less Ihe husband has property upon which she can levy. The husband may leo e plenty of resources, but they may be so fluid, so tngetainblee that the wife Is unable to obtain at law what the law has said belongs lo her. Again, the prnelice that prevails in America of putting properly in- the name of one's wife In order to escape just debts is cue that it ought not to be possible for 51 person successfully to pursue." ROUND UP WILD HORSES. There aro Moro Than Two Thousand Animals in the Bands. Ranchers and prospectors along the bounclavy have gone into the 11111s of Southern British Columbia to mend up several bands of wild horses which the Legislative Assembly of the pro- vince have branded as pirates, au- thorisIng any one lo shoot or capture them at stated periods of the year, af- ter notifying horse owners so that lame animals ntny be chained. Range eiders say them are more • then 1010 thousand wild animals in the bands, The neclous of 1110 herd was formed In the fifties, velernn horsemen say, when espies:els ancl prospectors rode ess. horseback Mom eastern to south- ,Oril Slates. Many pioneers perished In the search for gold, but their horses survived, Whoa the gold fever was at its eeight in the Caribou districts in the Melees many horses were brought in from the south for pack cool saddle purposes, and as there were no roads it was the easiest thing Mr these 31111- 1110111 10 leave the trail and join those enjoying the freedom of the wilds. l'he horses seen in the hifis along the border little resemble the stock from which they sprang. They are long - :haired, savage creatures, and show *Peed that would cause a sensation an a race =Arse. They weigh not more thrill seven hundred pounds, all bone, 171115C10 and sinew. The ranchers have declared war 'against 1110 pirates as a means of pro - :Seating 111015 OWn animals, which are :frequently lured into the 111118. '44 WHAT "cALirmr,' MEANS. There is surely no word In the nomen- clature of guns, big and little,: which has caused, and is causing, so much cenfusion in the lay mind as She :weed "calibre." The word "Calibre", /11,5 ap- plied to artillery 'signifies essentially endat, all limes the diameter of the toed of a gun. A gun, then, of six- inch calibre is a gun whose beep Is just six inehes. For comientence, and In- cense the power of 0 mm, when once ils bora has been decided upon, depends so greatly upon its length., artillerists ere in the 1151413 of defining Ithe length 01 1110 gun in terms of tine calibre, In tee vise of sman orms, the calibre is expressed in hundredths of an Mole as when we say n 22-callbre or 32 -calibre pistol, moaning Met the bore Is 212 or Se.hunclredths 01 an fuels in diameter. TREE FOUNTAIN. An extraordinnry emeostly Is to be seen in Ilse SWISS village of Gunton, en Leto Thum IL lakes the form 41 a nalurzsl tree fountain-, the wider Bow- ling continuously from a spout high 1.13 itn the tree, About twenty yenrs ago the water (rem n spring was conducted .theough n stoat, end the pipe was directrd [Immix The rut tronle of a young poplar tree whet was rem - tined in the resenol. Afterse. short 111110 1111( trunk rooted, bressehes followed, land 1101)' there is a. splendid lop growth. 4644444.4.4......40,44-44. 4464444 In the matrinionite librery the Med 1.111710a11111, book is the Muth -Look. 0.1..11.444,* 1.1.4s114.11,141114141 144 11.1 Home .11sri.f44.14.110/.47.11.+111144414 ClIOICK COOKING BEGWES. Wailloss-One quart sour or 1)1)3(01" 13111(0 (Wu eggs, one quart Wm:, one tea- spoon 141111, 0110 teaspoon sugar, one 1e31- :43.0031 1/111k1'. 1111130 111 1101 Unit well - greased W01110 iron. 1O01 Sull111100 131S11.—Ta10' one ((110371 01 currant juice, a small piece of slick cinnamon, put on lire. When boning stit in one-half cup of sage; cook five nilinties and stir all the 111110; sweeten (11,litli:.14.... Pour in fruit MA, put in ids boWhen x. cold serve with 1111114 or 1e4 deified Clackers—Allow jelly to cool hi a ming mulch Whim wady to $cree Win out mid Itli 1110 001.1110 W(11) a 341111(31 made of celery, enmities:3 and radishes mixed wills and thoroughly cut up in small pieres mnyonnaise. Bean. Stilad.—Goolc string beans 1171111 lender. When cold cut In small pieces, ado a good-slud onion and broken Eng- lish walnut meals. Mix with French dressing end serve on lettuce leaf. Willi Iwo cups of beans add 011e -third of a ems of nut meals. Economical Cake.—One cup gram- leted sugar, yolks of two eggs, white of one ,egg, one-quarter testspounful salt, one-half pint of cream, one and one-hasf cups of flour, two level teaspoonfuls of baking powder. 13eal, well and' bake in Illuderale even. Use remaining white for Mein whito frosting. Lime Ilash.—One pound bc)cf liver, not sliced. Put, on to 1301( 1(1 ho1 water with 1111 011101) ; When tender remove 13 ('01)1 fire. 0111 out all pipes dud chop fine, re - Leming to potin which one cup of the water in which it hes been boiling re- mains. Add butter size of an egg, and serve with mashed potatoes. Young Chicken.—Prepare the same as for fry. Roll In flour, have ready roast- ing pan, wills part lard and butler. ISM, in chicken, salt and peppor, and pour two cupfnis rich cream or milk over it, and put in 047011. W11011. 1)1'0\1,110d 11101. When done rcsnove and make gravy from dripping. Milk Shalee.—Fill a glass one' -third with :cracked Ice, add one teaspoonful of vanilla and two of diger, fill with millc and sluthe with ordinary tin shaker. 11131(1.date. a 111110 nutmeg on the top, if u Hot Water Calce.—Four oggs, beaten sepnralely; two cups of sugar, two cups of flour, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder, orse-ledf tenspoonful of °street of lemon. When ell ingredients ore well slimed together add ono cup 01 11011111(3 water, stir and bake quickly, elakes four layers or ly,,e cakes. Meat 11011,—Two sounds beef, one Pound of pork, chopped fine; add one eup of rolled crackers, one .suld one-half cups of sweet milk, threc3 eggs, pepper nnd salt ; mould Into roll, place in pan, wills water to baste. After baking use brotli for brown gravy. Sour Comm Cake.—One and one -hall cups of sugar, one-half cup of butter, three eggs (only whites to be urized, which must be buten thoroughly), three-quar- ids cup of sweet milk, adding eggs Iast wen one and one-half cups flour, alter- nately; one teaspoonful of hnleing pow- der. Filling :—Take ono cup of sour Crealn and bell With 0110 cup of sugar until clear; add one-half cup English walnuts or hickory nuts, chopped fine, 111101 5(310(3(1 between layers. Salad Dressing.—Into the upper part of a double boiler put one tablespoenful ef mustard, one of salt,-akihisill-migable. )of segue; mix thoroughly, m spoonfuls of olive all four eggs, beetle- ing and whipping each one 171 S01)1111111.0- ly add one cep 013 111(1110. Plane in lower pad of double boiler own' 115o, stieeing continuously. When scalded add ono mg. of vinegar, slowly, sliming at same time, When ias thick as sweet cream take fronn flee end stir until cool. :Nam In refrigerator, whore it will keep end be altvays reedy for any and al( kinds of salads. Wheat Flour °nice—Place one-half pint or !lour ozi a cMari cloth which hos -been previously dampened. Over the flour spray one ounce of cold water, tic Bic cloth securely around the flour, forming a ball, then roll in flour to form a. paste on the entire outside. Boil for len hours-. Remove the cloth and place 111 a moderate oven, to be dried for ten hours; remove, grate two teaspoonfuls of flour from the dry brill and mix with enough wales) to form a sm000lh paste. Stir in oneshalf pint of boiling milk. Id t stand from three to Jive minutes. sAedrdveohrsoet-.115111 teaspoonful of sugar and Smelts), Dinner.—On Saturday puis chase a eoast or chicken which is large enough for two meals. Cook it and servo for, dinner Saturday evening. Trim Into shape what is left and lay i(1 aside tor the met dinner, Sunday warm It thoroughly and terve. Prepare the N,egetables as, much as possible. before- hand. If peas, beans, or nny vegetable which requires much cooking. is, to be served, hero it on cooking oiltne you wash Ihe becakfast dishes mid' dress for church, Peel potatoes and:place them and the selad in water. Soup is made beforehand nnd only nerds healing. l'he (lessen:I, is elemys merle on Saturday. Dinner is reedy innhout half an hour after coming 1101110'1rom ehurch, HINTS FOR WASH DAY, ironing Boned Covering.—Use brass - headed leeks lo put 5111 coverings on your Mend. It is slot ecariy One trouble to change the ironing honest as when the comnem 1135110 are 11.501. LI11111(101` 011rtathS.--Wash, select), and dry cuelohis, Lay them away until ready for uso. 'Puke one AL a thee ; put in as hot, wider ns hand 13511 bear ;. wring out; put on stretcher, and your curInins win look Ilke new, Ironing Embroidery Waists, — 'First iron ilie sleeves met item the Wet. Place II homy Turkish lowel 033 fine heard and put the front of the waist on lids. Then Iron on, Ilse wrong side. This will make the onebrokiery ;stand up IL oil. horsing Fine l'icces. — Instead OP strolnkling Mesh Ilse thy learl, 15150 a plceo of muslin, weleg IL out of cold 1 • weirs), Mal lay an ironing board, 111151e3' 1114 article that has lieconse ery; 'Tess With a ille(1111111 seams iron; remove the svie piece of muslin, and boll 111 13110 11011111 10i11111(.1". Wash \Villbuul, („14111148 a)1or 1715111; have a loitor ihree•fourIlis 1,111 or wool'. rut° 11 ellt up 0113' alid on0. lin if burs or mum and Ilse tables,411)11:4 a 10'1'o:4,110 oil, and 101 boil, \Vring eh' thos out Ur e1/111. Wain' 1111(1 11331 itt Me bailing Wahl' 11.11Ven 1 ItilIlIlO, Masi) enough Iwo withos end hues out on th.) line, Vesish lace eyelets in 11143 seine ironing Day, --Stretch It chillies 11110 nesoes the Metres 111111. fr0111 11115 511S- 00110 84111,1111 \011.0 01' 0100(10)1 0,1111. 11111114. 01,14, As you 1111314 13. skuvlu',1 or 011100 garnienifront the hoard, plave it directly on Hie form, 1)11 Ils3100'1' Ileum:vs foo the skirts'folding the Mud into four purls and 111.,,q411.15 bet1)'0011 1114, 011111(1)S 111101010.1 141' 11111 1101100T 11010. 10111 wind, anti 811151 1051115 will captl Lok1 several gertnents, end smaltsized linngers may le3 WM for the tiny. dresses, Have 11, 1113110101 0111.10111 11010 11111 11110 IS Ill:14401S 111 1110 C1011103 (.1411<141, 0/141 1)11101 1110 ironing is completed slip llsis pole threugh the hooks of the garment hang - CPS on Itmo llim, and thin entire horsing tints am he carried upstairs at one trip an the polo slipped Into Ineekels willow(' disturbing the clothes, if Mere ara a 0131)1(11111' oI 1010117.5 provide 17 sepa- rate pole for each apartment cir: cods person. USEFUL HINTS. A little chnneold Infixed witll clear uNter and throwe into a sink will dis- 111100, and deodorize IL Vaseline stains art very obstinate, noel the beet thing for them is 10 Goal( either ill SpilltS of wino or kerosene. Newspapers afford excellent protec- tio)1 against moths, which have a. deckled aver:sem to minter's Mk. Wrap euch garment in lieWSpapers before storing. Tho best way to freSlien home-made sdriii1)110)1yolts101.endlolavrafipn cold water, pet bread so that it (33 as good as 110W is to it. in a p(n, 31)01 bake until it is healed through. 'risen wrap in a damp cloth, and when cold it is as good as when ihst, (1010331, A broom supporter made of spools is a simple end convenient device. Screw two large empty spools high up on the middle frame of a door, just far enough ispart to allow the handle of the broom le slip on. The broom part rests on the 'Saari) storing knives cal them care - them in paper. This is to keep Senn from rusting, 1011 11 will be well lo inspect them occasionally, for they may need oiling again, and with rust prevention is certainly better then cure. To scald milk piece the required amoun1 in lino inner vessel of a double - boiler; partly ifil the the outee vessel with hot, wakes cover; Mol place on the 1100. By the time the water boils rapidly the milk \s'ill be at, the scaleing point, and should bo bud at once. The best way to wash any kincl 01 [tunnel garments, to 13100(3them soft and woolly as when new, Is to put a ten- spoouful of liquid ammonia in the water %sewn washing, and again in the warm rinsing seethe If thls be done, flannel of eny kind will never get hard and spoiled as one sometimes sees IL Mix ono pound'of powdered ltras and half -pound of granulated sugar, and when they ore thorosighly blended roll 131) whole with a rolling pin. If this miseure is put in the 111.011.205 round the ports frequented by blackbeelles they will quickly ,(11.seppear. lt is not seisms and can be freely used, and is 000 one 07 1110 cheapest and best reme- dies that can be found. The cooks who use too little sclit are geilerally those who use too )nuc)1 seism. Just in the same Way, es a little sweetness of manner is pleasen1 a. Mlle sugar is permissible in eatables, inel when the former amonnts to sugariness tl, is cOnteniplible, and the latter in too great qualitthes is sickly. Things under - sweetened can have more sups' lidded whim served, but connot have the sweet - 17,048 reduced when once IL is added. This is not the case wile salt, however. 11 cannot be added to cooked dishes or cakes, nor can it be taken away when onee it is tickled. • POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Bemire of mad dogs and backbiting PeffsieUseless lo forgive on injury if you can't forget IL Thezo are many large talcs connected with small fish. When some people tell the truth others are linable to recognize it, Some men are so nice So their wives thet it arouses the suspicion of their neighbors. The peach crop will probably be a esiture.this year. This does not apply 1°14111 deocsstintn'tillniecogsisrlit'rily follow that a men Is any good luet because he's es good as his word. or course it is absent-minds:fees when you forget, 131113 (1 is gross negligence when your wife forgets, About being 'carried away 'with en- thustasm the worst feature is that we, nearly Mews Miro to walk back: Never jetige-n man b -y 'the patches `Oh 11112 clothes. Peohape he had to buy spring outfits for :cis 11/110 and seven daughters... Don't plate too Misch confidence in a mon who bong'sof being as honest as the day Is long; wait until you meet blin 01 oight, SOME THINGS TO -I,EARN. Learn to laugh.- A good laugh Is Yeller than medicine. Learn to attend strictly lo your busi- ness—a. very important point, learn to Len a story. A well-lold Glory is es welcome 02 55 Sunbeam In Et st:clrit1.11 lx1l1110. I.ita111,1, of saying kind end en- can:aging things, especially to the nY;1.:11:10negeclearloy aish•cisiiidg ap011111c1-trillaalitei dredborenelrael< frIceella(lenn" to keep your freubles toyour- self. The world is loo busy lo cam for yew: ills end sorrows, Learn to slop gremblteg. If you can- nel, see any good in the world, keep the bad 14).LioLe1airs4,1,_. jobbins : "I sew a pichwe of a group ot childless Who will he Gems 'of Men sense any." 'Bolton : "They ware glrls, Of doUrsel" RECOVERED BY MIRACLE: YOUNG MAN WON SUIT, AND THEN GOT WELL. Got at S20,000 Verdict -Dragged ity Street Car and .101111m Cured Spinal injury. Even the most dignified maimbers of' the Stale supreme Court of Weshinglon Territory do nol disguise their amuse- ment ever a story that has recently come out, 111,001, 1110 imparailly tolls recovery of a men who -obtained a Imp Judgment against it railroad cor- Pera11011 fur pm.stinel Mimics which he, ethivineed a jury, a. Mal judge and a majority of the highest court, in th43. stele had rendered 11101 11 (ripple for life.. The case 10-113 that of 31 1111111 clerk, John Williams who was 1110 0-1111101 Of a' wreek on. the Spokane Falls and North- ern Builsvey line a 10117 you's age. Williams was -smelly killed in the wreck, emerging with loss of an eye and bro- lien bones, besides being paralyzed in Ilie lower pae1 of the body. Being un- able to obtain a settlement Old of court,. he brought suit ;against the compluly for $5U,(100. VERDICT FOR $33,600. Tho point 011 0110011 1110 ease hinged was whether the apparent paralysis was, permanent. Ile seemed entirely help- less In the lower part 01 1130 body and expert medica1 testimony was intro- duced to prove eon Im wns parelyzed for life, but this win; vigorously com- batted by other smite& evidenee, Tlio jury returned a verdict for $311,000: Against (ho company, and this was aifirmed by the Stotts Court. Soon after- wards the personnel of tho Supremo - court chuoged somewhat ancl 01 rehear- ingsvns wonted in this case. The result. of the rehearing wns an order directing that Williams be given Um choice of 0e.2.- coi1ing 11.10(11(3211011 in the judgment Inim $33,000 or a n001 trial of tho case. He accepted the $20,000. The denouement, came recently, when members of the Supreme Come, received )1 newspaper clipping telling of the sen- sational recovery of the paralytic. ACCIDENT CURED HIM. According to the story 101.d by the father of Williams, the peralylic had (bagged himself to the middle of thei stro3e1, 111 Los Angeles to board. 1111 ap- proaching street, cur. Befor0.0 was on board the car 8311650. Wthisons did not. grasp the railitsgs firmly or was caught by the fender and was chesgged half a. block. 'rue 01110013c1')t wer.3 horror- stricken, according to- the story. at the sight, of this paralytic being deaf/101 Meng the pavement by the ear. Of a sudden the young 111011 jumped up. Wood 00 las fuel end etepped nimbly alwerd lho car. The peculiar way in which he hill been dragged along the pavement, had, amording to his !ether,, jerked his spine inio shape and Cared 11114 parnlysIS. The mutter has now Isemnie a joke among lawyers or ihs Slul03. even 1110, Supreme Churl. itself was split on Ilse emu. Threo majority and two minority opinions were written by Ilse justices. They nee oil willing to adt1111 Ilse re- markable nature of the case ,as told by Itie young man's Milner, and attribute their smiles when 1,110 mailer is men- tioned to them to the gratification. they feel over the young man's amazing 10. 0010(7. SETTLING, THE STILIICE. Ilow a ProleSsOr of an English College. Managed 11. If all labor difficulties could be ad- justed wtth the celerity and decision displayed by Piofessor ;Jewett, the fam- ous master of Bailie], questions of eru- Woyer rind employe would 1101 manifest thenselves in so 0101011 EL manner e51 hi. frequent. The famous teacher was noted for his brevity of speech and de - Sp nevneterhstolornbeustoinegsrs,eixtbeut tadtisee asntaqngeusliihtolelsi 00 the famous occasion of les denting; wills the refractory washerwomen ot Balliol. These worthy dames struck for high - e1 sveges in one department, Twelve: collars for a slanting was the statutory price. They came to present, their eltim to the. master. "The washerwomen have come to see you," said the butler. "Show the ladies um" said the InaS- ter They clinslccd Into the room, to flad him eolcing the lire. Ho turned reund. "Will you wash twelve collars for is shil1in.g7l he esked, They began to expostulate. He touch- ed the bell; in came the butler. "Show the ladies down," Presently 'the butler appeared again. "They seem very sorry, sir—would like to see you twin." "Shaw them up." The washetwomen found: Ole ma* ter intent, as before, oni the fire grate. "Will you wnsh twelfe collars for a: 11 hitting?" piped his cheery little :voice. A stalwart speaker began to maim explanations. Ile toodsed the beth„ 'Show these ladles down," 110 sold', and: down they went. Again the butler reappeared, 'expressing a liops 11)311 11141 master svould see the women egnin. "CerloittlY. Slime them sm." They entereel the Mins for the :tiara tine, •"Will you we'sh tsvelve collars for stinting?" essze will!" they :cried. "ThnnIc you—good day, good clnyl" 50 (11 the moster. "Knight, show these: ladies down,' and the strike was over. A '1'W0-StI)E1) NEWSPAPER. The oddest newspaper in lho world 'is 0110 11111110(3 01C NVOr11011.1)1/1 113, 11111011 15 ))1.113111110d 131 Gruningen, a smell, town </t 80111.0 1,11/00 inhnliiinnIs Ilse: Cession of 7.1111011, in Switzerland. It is Ilse only eewspaper in 1110 Mime, Not Is at one 01151 the sense 111110 the organ of Ilne Liberisl-Conservntives And the Medal Democrats. Perms one and two belong to the Libernls, and pesos three nrid four to 1110 Soeinliste, end 1 Inc issen parties abtsse one another eamelly be .4'