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The Brussels Post, 1909-12-30, Page 2, H nts for 13my Housekeepers. Recipes wed Other Valinible Information Gf Particular Interest to Women Fonts. PUDDINGS. Fig Pudding. — Theee-foerths pound a bretad (stale preferred) chopped fine, one-helf potted of be lige °bopped fine, six °maces brown enema', ene cup milk, one- half /1111a11103, eix maxims a be thee chopped fine (beef sea when cold -will chop easier). Mix bread and euet, then figs, sugar, and nut- meg, one egg well beaten, thee add niilk, two ounces of sweet al- monds chopped fine and grated rind of one leinon, Put in a pan or dish and steam four hours. Serve with tho following bard sauce: One eup fu l of gromulaaed eager, one-half oupfal of butter, two tallespoons. ful a water, Stir th a orewm with the yolk of in egg. Add the white of the ogg beaten to a froth just be fore *ming. Flavor with Prune Pudding.—Ona pound well cooked prunes; remove pits, maah pruner; thoroughly with fork. Beat vvbites of -three eggs, add one-half cup of septa, and nox with prunes. Make a boiled custard of one quart milk, yolks of three eggs well beat- en, one-half cupful of sugar, one teaspoonfud of cornstarch or flour; flavor with vanille„ chill, and serve in glees cups. Put primes in dish first and pour custard aroimel. Add nuts to custard if desired. Mock Charlotte. — Two table spoonfuls corn starch, one-third cupful of sugar, grated rind and juice of one-half lemon, one capful of boiling svister; cook and let cool while you beat the whites of two eggs, then stir together. Serve ice cold with this dressing; Yolks of two eggs, four tablespoonfuls of sugar, one-half pint milk; cook and acid one teaspoonful of vanilla. Set Fig Padding. --Chop a half -pound of beef suet and then rub until creamy with the hands, then add half a pound of figs, finely chopped and again rub with the hands. Soak two and a half cupfule of stale bread crumbs in a half cupful of milk three minutes, add three eggs well beaten, one einsful of sugar, a little sale, heat vigorously, and turn into a mold. Steam three hours, remove from the meld, and serve with sherry sauce. Lemon Foam Pudding,—Two tea spoonfuls of water, one teacupful of sugar, two larga tablespoonfuls of cornstarch; dissolve in a little. water. Boil this well, thou add the juice of two Lemons OT oranges; have the whites a three eggs beat. en stiff and a,cld -the boiled part slowly. Sauce: Yolks of three eggs, two cups of milk, three table- sPoonfole of sugar; cook in nimble boiler until it thickens. English Plum Pudding.—Six well beaten ages, one nutmeg, one tea.- sponnful ef mace, one powasi of currants, tele and ene-half pounds of raisins evrefully seeded, one - 'leaf cupfel of bread crumbs soeked in vile -heft cupful of sweet milk, one-lo:1th Tiered et edcled citron, one red roe -f emit] pounds of dare browa teem:, one-lialf cupful of tvino 'se melted one psuml of fie de' eleipped ei et, and one tea- I spot -tare.' of salt. Mix Lne pound ef flour with Fannin cerrauts, and suet, add cl.rr ingreiliente, aria mix well. Leal tee ours in floured pelt:ling cloth or well buttered meld. If Strpt well covered in a a el pirsee it will k•-vp inelefieitelv and only needs reheatine. Serve with herd or liquid sauce. Thie recipe has been need in one family for more than sixty years. Bread Pudding. Four slices of breed battened and laid in bottout of pudding dish, use one (mart of inlik,scald a line less than half, and sour or the brew, chop it up with a knife, till well mixed Make a custard with the rest of milk, yolk of tno eggs, one tea sin -maul of Lugar. Pour all togetb. ex over bread and bake till •nreu; beat the wletes of eggs and whip in gradually one eu fill of sugar, spread on top and brawn lightly. Bost eaten with milk or cream. Suet Pudding,—' -One cupful finely chopped eon one cupful molasses, one cupful of milk, three cupfuls flour, one teaspoonful nutmeg, one and enfahalf cupfuls of raisins, two tableapoonfuls flour, one teaspoon. fel cinnamon, one-half teaspoonful 'sloven, one-haln teaspoonful nut- • meg, ono and one-half cupfuls of riumns, two tablespoonfuls flour, one teaspoonful of soda„ Mix and sift dry ingredients, add molasses and milk to the suet; combine mix - Lures, andemisins, which have pre- viously been cut in sinall piecea and floured. Turn into buttered molds, cover, and steam three hours. If steamed in one-half or on•e pound baking powder cans two hours; is sufficient. Arrange neatly fon serving and fete ono of the fol. lowing settees; Hard sauce—one- thied ettpfal Og butter, one cupful pulverieed sugar, one ten,spoonful vanilla. Orman and butter, add the sugar gradually, and flavor, The while of in egg may be (wined. Amman amide; in a email dish and sot tetytie to chill or until ready to fterve, For a yellow shoe ese the yolk of fie egg in place of the white of the eag, Lomas or / 41.111iti 1—One-half ctiniul of eugar, two tablespoonfuls of flour, phial set salt, one and one-half cupfuls boil. ling sealer, tsvo tablespoonfuls but. !ter, Qnetableeposenral lemon eice. I grated rind of one Loll a Ileum, or one teeap9onful of 'vanilla, Mix dry materials and pour in boiling wider, stirring onstantly• Boil three to four minutes. Remove from the fire sone add the butter and flavoring, SEASONABLZ DISHES, Macareni.—Break macaroni into short lengtha and erle two onions out fine. Boil twenty minutes M boiling salted salted water. Dram, add milk, a lump of better the size of a -walnut, and a little pepper. Thicken with flour, uring to a boil, end serve hot. Mint Jelly,—Two tablespoonfuls of gelatin, one-fourth eapful of cold water, one cupful of vinegar very hot, one capful of sugar, one-fourth !teaspoonful of salt, one-fourth teas spoonful of cayenne popper and , three-fourths cupful of eut dried mint leaves. Pour cold water over the •gelatin and set over boiling water to dissolve. Add hot vine- gar, sugar and seaaonings and . chopped mint leaves. Set aside to , jell. When it begins to stiffen turn i ipto a mold. By uaing one-half of the tablet that comes with gelatin a pretty dark green color is given. Easily prepared any time of year. Served with leg �f lamb or lamb 1 ehops. I Cranberry Help. — Allow one pint auger and one pint- water to one quart cranberries. Put sugar and water in large kettle and bring Ito boil. Then put in cranberries. cover, and remove from fire and let stand five minutes. Place on fire again and , cook Ave minutes. and then allow to cool, still °over - ed They -will look like candied ,cherries and are delicious. Sauerkraut and Frankfurters. — Boil sa,uerkraut one hour, with on- ions, fine black pepper, an apple or two, thine beef of bacon fat, a little water, then add the sausages and boil about fiften minutes, or until you discover •that one has burst. Potato Salad Dressing. — One teacupful of granulated sugar, one teasponful of salt, a dash of pep- per, a piece of butter the size of an egg, one egg with one teaspoonful of corn starch, and a teaspoonful of mustard mixed together. Add to the other and conk until thick, stir.. ring all the time to keep it smooth. I Will keep indefinitely, and is nice; with a little sweet cream added jusb before a:ening. • Baked Beans.—Seakthree cupfuis of berms over niese in three quarts of water, and one half teaspoonful of soda in the morning, and lot (mine to a beil. Drain, wash, and sil nes in an open Jar with three- quarters pourd of salt pork, three tehle poornie Is Si.par, • onen ,ird van of tomatees. Sliee onione over trp. cover ell with water, and bake te-ale ere or eix liners, *Minn repro water when needed. • KITCHEN; HELPS. Kitchen Rules, Streres fire for romeing. Clear file en broiling, W asli vegeta te ee in three e atm s Boil fish quiegiy. ' Mc -at women. elan -ening doors of men manes • cake ot all. A tee drops saf lemon jeica makes frostins; trey white Tt y sprinkling peaciered cloves about places infested with .res.1 allib. Salt In the oven under baking tins will prevent t corchieg on the bot- tom. Some of the modern up to s d • '-' ' ate net e in every kitchen oze: A meat ani 1 vegetable cutter, a good seemly of peeling knives, a peens for fruit e and vegetblen A combination dip- per only costs a emarter and is one of the roost useful things a woman can have. They can be used as a streieer. a funnel, a measuring cup ; d d . g a large let spoon, one with hos in, svhich can be used as a strainer or is fine for beating' .One , mu certain- ly he supplied with good kettles , and bakingt' _I 1 le y got broome for sw.eeping, cleanittg sinks, etc. 1 Washing Windows.—When wash- ing windows pat a few drops of e turpentine in the water and yon i will b b ing and roll thinner than when balc. lug right alter inieing, , When Baking, -- When creaming tutter And ,gUgar for sakes and cookies, add two tahieepoonfulii hornets water, thou deduet this %Mount from other used. Beet hard with a &peon end mix- ture will boome a light creamy masa in cep -third the tinie it woald etherwise hike, Pie Crust —To have fluffy, light piaernet, to eaoll cup ef lard adduas netten white of one egg; nee ice water; min same as usual, Cleaning Silver. — Place the forks, spoons, etc, in a deep pan o kettle and cover well with warm water. Add a bowlful rif canned tomatoea; let stand an hour if con venient; then boil all together een minutes; remove and drain the ell ver, then rub emelt piece with is dry flannel cloth • dipped in whiaing ENGLAND'S NAVAL LORD StRstItTIII1 IiNT'VET VVILSQN IS A. Fitt -CITED. e Won the Victorist Gross a the Battle of El on the. Red Sea. The selection of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Arthur Knevet Wilson to r anoeeese Lord Either Kileeretone (Sir Sohn Either) as 'PinL t ad of the Adnlirelty has been heiled with _• geeeral so-tie:faction in Great Brit- ain, where it is regarded as herald- _ ing the cesonion ur the disputes and biekeringe that have kept Brit ish oaval cirelo in is turmoil for several years, Sir .Arthur had retired from ac- tive fiervice, and it wise on the King's own initiative that tho ap- pointment was offered him, He is said to enjoy the confidence of the navy and of the British public a,s well, AS a strategist, tactician and s homelier of the fleets the new First Lord is regardeel as the high. est authority in the British navy. Like his predecessor he wag grad- uated in the torpedo school, and he es the inventhr of several appli- ances connected with the Luse of to edoes By thoee who know him he IS tharactesized as "taciturn, secre- tive and independent," and in ap- peara,nce as "BEARDED, GRAY AND GRIM." It was only recently that Admiral Lord °Oates Beresford, who is England's most amine naval critie aud Ofto her severest, announced to the electors of Portsmouth that there wa,s no organization of the 'British fleet for war. Sir Charles pronounced the battleship pro- gramme inade_quate, the fleet short of medium cruisers and torpedo craft, stores inettfficient and ,clang- erously deplethd; said the dock ac- commodation was deficient for heavy ships already afloat and that ; heavy ships under construction, no adequate war reserve of coal and a , shortage of men. ,admiral of the 'Fleet Sir Eelwrd Hobart Seymour, who was over here fcsr the Hudson I Fulton celebratiota me the con- trary, in a'speech in London a few days agn affirmed that the state of the navy was completely satisfac- tory. It is now up to Sir Arthur , Wilson to determine which is right. ' Born on March 4, 13411. the nPnr First Lord has an enviable record and he has stehieved about all the honors end decorations that can be hoped for by British naval officer. Besides having ' THE VICTORIA CROSS. A decoration given usually for signal bravery in battle, he is a Grand Commander of the Victorian Order. .He got his C. B. in 1887 and was made a Knight Command- er of the Bath five years later and a Cirfind Commander in 1901. His uncle, Gen. • Sir Archdale Wilson, won the barotietoy now held by Sir Arthur's brother dur- ing the Ir,dian mutiny by capturing Delhi. Sir Arthur is heir to his heuther, Sir 11. K. Wilson, who is prufessor of Indian law and his tees- in Cembridge Tenn Lenity: An- other brother was killed forty years sum mitile ascending the Vilielhorn in sawitzeeland n The first experience of Sir Arthur Wab gined in the Crimea, Wer, when Im served off Sebastopol as a twelve' ven rad r• intehipm an , along with Sir Edwarti Seymour. He took part in the etorming of the Take frnts in China and served in • tho Egyptian campairen of 1352 and , tee Smith ompaign of 1884. it ens at the battle of El Teb on the Tlecl Sea collet tied .Artheses then a, Captain, won the Victor Cross FOUGHT WITH HIS FISTS. It was at is cede:cal moment, when a corner of the British square had been torn asunder by a furieus on- slaught of the fanatical •tlervishes and throne) the gap the wayseem- ed open for i them to pour n and turn the battle into absoluth rout. Wilson sprangth into e breach and single handed as he was lay about him with Inc sword and absolutely held the enemy in cheek until $ome of tho soldiers of the York and Lancashire regiments rushed ovor ea hit assistance. When in his SW17- ago sword play his sword snapped off at the hilt, Wilson dropped the latter and boom knocking over the dervishers with his fists. So fuil of admiration ste-his brav- ery were his fellow officers that they prenented no him a superb sword in plane of the weapon be hied used up, amil the V, 0. was given him when he next reached' England. Sir Arthur was Lord Commissioner of the Admirelby and Comntroller of the Navy from 1897 to 1901, and for two yodel there- afthe was commander of the Ohan- tiel , home is at Swaffhare; Norfollc, BREEDING THE DAIRY COW. It has been is master ef questlon, as is writer in Town +sensory Journal says, whether the lerodnee of developed or undeveloped am wads were more likely to reproduce the qualities for which they were bred, "It is, however, now con- ceded by all intelligent breeders, that the Wily correct end safe course to pursue is to breed only from developed animate. -In fant, the more highly developed the ani- mals are the better, and the more gene n nom: ass ellopeu amestors the greater assurance of success for inherita,nee of great capacity is found in several members of a farn • ily tha,n when it appears only at rare intervals. "The bull is not developed like & the bee animalt; mentioned. he ac- he inherita his development, he ac- quires it through his dam, &lid lns 'sire's dam, aid his female enees• tors. Although the good milking quality of a cow is not transmietoo to her son, so that he gives milk, it IS transmitted through the son to the son's daughters uninfluenced in quality by the fact that the son did nob exercise it, The sire's dam is therefore, ILS close to the sire's danehter as is the sire's own dam Reference is made to the opinion of an experieneed breeder a ,1 widely known writer, who sus: "My experienee of aver forty years OS a breeder cleuely demoe strntes to me that the get of any sire, whether equine of bovine, has tendency to zemerally enseinhle the characteristics of the dam of thee sire more than that of any other ancestry back of its sewn par- ents, cons.enuenthe ei breedg dairy cows of clifferene classes; ;lave alwava endeavored to thimin a bell to head rev herd from the bees or butter rows to be oh- -tail -104. end generally with t'ne besi, results." FARM NOTES. People who are doing well in dee emintry frequently imagine they will better the condition of them- s..elves and families by reevine, to town. In nine eases out of ten it prove•s a bitter and costly mistake. 1 es eil - • se ,o its fullest capacity with dairy ani- mals Inc ten years, growieg earn end purchasing nitreteseeCene grams will be pioduciag teires the amoula h of fodder a.s at the beeinnieg if the e; MOO has been oroperle „ profit in the production of milk that is not alwe.ys taken int.) aste.unt. Thc Hrmer led new rues Et, mow - the net aine inetern of re-ineinst the Ivied reyte, and if h., gets 5113 a remeh, he has his board and .„ .t e is ant as niee MR that of the. clerk, it costs less and leanes hire itch/ince to save most of his wages. The 1 di t • pcnouth pays out about 532 for Isis board, loclgirm and laundry, and bas hard work 0 rave enough to pureheee the clothing that his employers ex- -sect him to -wear at hie business. Not only have the e.xperiment Winne end dairy schools edu- cated many 'young men up to the point where they 002) take good milk or good cream and make good butter of it, uniform in qual- r• sed oevne het tem yheve -Ise anght many of them lion, to detect and rejeet such as will not make gond butter, lint if added to the other will injure the good milk put vith it. Some cif them are to ex- pert that they can decide very quickly, when they find such milk, what may have been the cause of the •trot'ole, odor, flavor or other ause.s which render it unfit for ieseet- vanit4tv, TI nfrAndPd erne fermere to have their milk re - ectad, lint when the cause and the remedy are pointed out they are usually gleeful tor the inform°, ion. ry thein much s quicker and they will be clear and ; bright, Rules for Housewife. -- Doe't keep anything for the sake of keep- t ing it. Don't be under the tyranny, of too many things. Don't allow a; single box or drawer in your housel into which all sorts of thiriga can find their way for lack of attention and proper order. Have "a plasm for everything and everything in its* place," Don't waste vaineble gas e trying to "save" a few slices of Stab. breed. A few thinste nicely cooked and daintily served from it epotless kitchen and pantry are far better end more appetizing than a Course dinner under opposite condi- Hoes. Onoky Hint,.—Mix cooky dough at eielit arid eat where it is cold. In t lint wily you can use more shorts e I "MacRaggles mot bo about down nnd oet." "'What niakes you think sol" "I met him yesterday and he poke about going away somewhere and starting a chicken farm. F,VIDENCE OF PROSPERITY, Mr. Bierman must gee a terrible big salary," "Why do yoti Ihink go?" " They heve beef tbree times hrough the week foul a roast neer. y every Sunday." there was no proper provision for CONSOLATION, Mrs, Knicker—Oh, Bridget, Yon have brokee that dish in a dozen pion! Pridgee—Well, mum, let's no it foe a picture puzzle. \I LONE 1111Io Christ Belongs to Universal Humanity In Its Love and Sympathy. That dieciple whom Jessie loved from without our eheltered comfoet, said unto Peter; "le is the Lord." We open 50 a ragged, weary, hag- -John xxi. 7. A yoaeg man, a stranger, comes Lem] of Mao's cenimon need arid gard child. "It is tbe Lord," the to is home that has lost it child.. common devotion. Some triek cif manner, a flash of The glory of the Christ:nee time the eye, seizes the sorrowing mos is a two -fold glory, Have you ther's heart, She eries with bears, eaught both its notes S "It is my boy!" thesci A like beslitY. (if ree°6114°11' Christmas TheiscIstayen. °4Tee elnitai rla/lim 10 be 4ised to tliedivintP°Iver' lies Lord ELB we strive te elimb to the the eiraple story of the text. The Itei tits where He lives, rather than Lord was once a little human child. as lite C0111014 clewn to us. We tied • r • teacher, dfriend, home, nurture, growth. A. world ef foreboding, of peril, of burdee- reve411" Ivhs't it is to be divine' Wo find Him ie ed the teof His How was the Christmas baby greete tis ed 7 He cthe t,...,. .t,_ the BO came into a world of love, "n • 1Pen et, bearing. Mary, gra,sping Hen to her heart and picturing his future, cries, "It is My dear one! It is my promieed blessing!" • Could anyone, even the virgin mother, foreknow that failing Could any- one see the Lord in the infant? God was most human in the manger, ON' THE CROSS. It is an untrue temptation to find Him in marvels, Put another text by the sidt) 01 cloud bank epeaks; "Cast the net, ours, the words, "Ye have done it on the right side of the shin " I Keep at it I. Be brave, be steady unto me." Both are Christmas brethren, whom Be loved, whole we serve as oer truce from Him. WE FIND RIM IN OURSELVES.; Looking at our own livem, we may thane again the joy, and weeder and bops of Mary, may bring to birth the divines • There is something worth. redeem- ing .in men.. Tbe stranger whom we 'dimly see en the shore of life's texts, if we be able to eee it: "It is the Lord"; "Ye have done it un- to The first note of Ohristena,s is a note of joy, an illuminated picture. Songs of angels, shepherds with flocks, a star leading wise men. All that story we believe, we follow with them, we End Him and wor- ship. But He comes again in another guise, The beautiful German myth of the Christ Child is true. In the darkness and the cold, in the driv- ing wintry storm, a cry, is knock as your work, whether it be teach ing or study; whether outside la- bor or horpekeeping. Let it not be a hard done duty, but a willing ese, the homage of a life that is is trust from on high. Living can never be as if thero! had been no Christmas in the world. On the shore, in the inist, by the fire, in labor and doubt end monotony, eve mieister to no stuns - ger, no tyrant. Everywhere "Xis the Lord," glory a,nd -peace, love' and good will. REV. H. P. NICHOLS. AFTER SOLOMON'S GOLD DIGGING AT POOL OF SILOAM, NEAR JER CI SALER. • LIVE STOOK NOTES. It is the proper ettention paid to seemingly unnnoortalit deo , tqat epells 81100eaa• for the beekeeper, a,nd the failure to attend to theee things et the proper time accounts for the poor success in is vocation , that is full a great possibilities— Whets selectieg a pure-bred siro to grade up the gook f infenior ewe *elect one which is opecielly strong in those points in which the ewe Itre Weak, ThiS is usually a geeeral lack of meatiness, especi- ally in the back and loins. We want a broad back and square, full • quarters. A ram must not only be thick and meaty in makeup, but he must he hold. strong and active, A seratehineeshed for fowls is as indispensable is a feeding floor for hogs. A serviceable scratehine shed can be made of a few old bowels in a little while, The ground forms the Thaw% ancl tee south side should be loft open. in this shed the fnwI 131 5 'Tits Mystery Attends Excavation of Baglish Party at St. Mary's Under the supervision of two Turkish M.P.'s, an English synsh- one is excavating at the Pool of Siloam, near Jerusalem. It COIS- SilitS of Captain Montague B. Park- er, Grenadier Guards, brother and heir-presumptite or Lord Morley; Mr. Merano° Wilson, Mr. Deft, a relative of the Duke •of Fife; Mr. Cyril Ward, Messrs. Walsh, Foley and others, • Some mystery attends the aim of the excavators. The popular belief is that they are •tha•rehing for the crowns and treasures of David and Solomon and other kings of Judah, which some think are buried in thi8 l'On,i021. Bat Others believe that their main object is to pro- vide Jerusalem with the drinking v sner it sorely needs, of which isa plenty ansio spare ;should they tap tnt source of the spring. • AN HISTORIC POOL. The scene of the excavations is the spieler known as bis. Autry's trsee a ici,enct pi the lour neinn cutlery tats eue einem mice washed the ewadttimg se thes ot tier Sun Unto, it is piuhanig ineunnal with the pool Union, where IgiAtid told nada; the safest, to appoint and annoint nolomon (I. King, U.) Numerous .eftorts were made to rendes the water available fur she use of the inhabitants. Prob- ably one of the earliest is the chan- nel connecting it with the Pool of Siloam, at the moutli of which was found one of the earliest Hebrew inscriptions we possess, now at Constantinople. which desoribos how the work of excavation wns be- gun at both ends, and how, by mis- calculation the two parties missed the true point of junction. SPENDING LARGE SUMS. The eyndicate is working on its own account, and ss not conti.ected with eithci the Pelestine Explora- tion Fund or with the American or Gorman ancluteological institutes. Large sums of money have alrettely been expended in obtaining a per- mit, in purchasing land, and in carrying on the .wurit. Over eixty men are daily employed, and snore than $4,500 is spent 'weekly in sal- aries and wagea. joyees—"I tell you, Singleton, you don't know the joys and feli- cities of is contented, married life, the happy flight of yeers, the long, restful calm of—" Singleton --"Row long hams you bum married?" Joynes---"Jetatis morible" Mr. W. B. Archer, /sett sdee at Campbellford, is ' EXPERIENCE, yv (Inv rsi elovf T1128 is 01.0 natnrel way Inc them to protect themselves from lice, Omit" alt' so viLa-aereliing a.5 /tar - ren7d et: their uee vein uneleeesint seel .wherl OPpliod in .stria,;,Trit quant 'I] somatinase tasirib bbc.eggs and even the flesh of fowls, WHEN THE SLEEPER is "John!" sh5 i,501 elbow into hie "ib e at 2.17 a.m., " dai you leek the kitchen door1" And John, who is inney guard, and sces jitab t3cn drer,tsisag oVer last evening's inclr mretine, sprang un in bed, reade the nrope 11321, and " Worthy Ruler, our portale ar, mtarded." Oh, he hit the title right, even if lie was asleep. A TRICKY PROBLEM. Ask your feiends if they San write down five ode' figures to add up and make fourteen,. It is reelly astonishing how en- grossed most people will get, and how meth time they will spend acme this, at first sight, simple prob- hen. The questioner, however, mot be etteeful to Say figuroe, not numbers. Here is tho answer: NO NOVELTY. "A temperance leoturer hag proved that beer contents ao much alcohol that it may be used as an ilhuniaant." "Nothing eew in that, I can't drinkthree glasees of it without being all lit -up." EASIER TO NEGOTIATE,. • "You look clown in the mouth. • . Now, den'e be borrowing trouble," von lend me $57" "Fr—vall on second thought, perhaps you'd better go ahead and borrow the trouble:" ' A pigeon tiooe without opening lisr believe eveYs1th1ng you hear ftelenhone wire. PLAYED INI111 A LION, A South African Child Who nen 111 Meet the Eno "Po9Sto," The Infant son of one ot the Puteti Settlera in Sown Atriett had StrtiYeti elegy. Atter 61,1/11e I hilt, a 81441y31 1)114'. ty diswevered mos tompreits wetting • . in the direction ot lite host:, Follow. ligi iii) these, the :Waren party same meat a nine tapes sieve, el tes ten nee' Nide et Willoll 1301 discovered tan 'enjoel of thelr search shunt; tingamg A WTI(' WOOOKI doll tilid InUilelling' II Wee (It tirmlil :cod (flitter. .Bernee they coald inalie their way through the thiett tangted ondergrowin a large lien sprang into the vlearing. l'hc lit, tie boy, ler Ot»d biting trighteneo, ran to.thee/ the note Iiiiidlog up Ids breed tele eucier no Hein "qatte a lien doggie." . a be Sather stood poinaless to move er neeenerouge lees, expeei tog 07103 enstent to See 111e etald erashed under the don's VIM, bill ,11181..1131 of aolog as utedreadeti the eon turned tentage 0Vei and lay oh II 18 line!) al the etuld'S feet, looking up, ti aith /at o an a eat i would do at play. Watehmg hls ide „ portualty. the father raised Ills gun and fired eittiog the ADD ID Ihe leg.1 i The animal sprang up and, leaving the C1111(1, 1.11$1.1ed on the party. Injuring two ot thettittabor before it watt thud. 4 lY killedVrtan this eircutnittnnce tlio child was ittnuedlittely elirhoetied uy the 'settlers "latttlel,"--Lonclon blowy. Herald •'WAITED' 'FOR' HEALY.. An Incident of the Land League AO.. • tation In Irelene. 055e inhaling durnig tlie Land league, agitation Mr. Partied teft. Dublin by the early midi VrtIhn for lioseinutuott to address a meeting. Ott urrIvlog hx the town ne received ii tea-14111in :rein Detain which 1.1111: Missed gnat: tram. 0111 set, clown at a 'o'clock, n.)eetinit till ..Ai t,rrLvxe: a bir. Innen was pleased to learn Mae •1* T. 11 thatty, M. was e01111144 Our/ Dengureo, too, were, the luvid pronto, ters ot Lae demonstration, nod the tilepi- ing Wtia gladly postpoOod tor a tew hours. et 8 o'clock the railway station and its approache* were throtiged alth people -with bends and banners, and' the train from Dunne "teamed 111 amid terrific temente; ror tiettly. The tralu pulled Op. a earrlage door opened, and the weal reveption com- mittee IliStled (V It, 511415 111 etQlhpad "Healy." not it was not 1 M. Heat M P„. It was 11. %%edam 5513*0115, welt knowil reputler 01) 1.110 statr the tr1813 Fie tied In the itused mnori nwettu,,. t.stt tap trutee allit it Wet. 111081 Met his paper shouni mire 11 report ot Purusu's henve tile telegram, —Pearson s it Cot ty. What Yeem,n 'Wars ?emboli Were tunnel 10 be tly then tit,t- )U 11 eve‘ lib et,- quipeS, anti they were i•111150 ,yetinwit:On bt'stiits, 111 IIIIIIIt1011 1, Itis l'tttItIss 0 primer ter (dose engagements, trove, foul,nt ill tilt 051114 hltil Hitt how which nas made ot yew : tweet% ttle word, aftot the vonquest cif? haute 01 yeonma, In I'L11,111, t• to the erigmal sulfa, tu 5 in 1'11:11150511 to that sI motet; Lie tem however, was coot luts•ti with dint:twos -.the yeie man ot tile crown, ol the oultoner, ye011111 11 11,ht.r, ett' ottO We that entiNhlei 111,1,' graitti. Were oti 54,5115 11 Ihelli. Ili Ilie legal VIM 11 yeesuants Jamas. to be Otte MDT Itt 11"1511t1 ,n1 the 1111111+ ol 40 silitithm, 03 year and is therett) honimed 10 s,•ri 011 JOries. 1 %%At+ 105 111i551)151 Ot the a1i51 Ili do any Main um wawa the niti 111115 r'i''3' 15 *5 5 11, tot`li it ,N111 Ing pert II) h Niteroi, eltivoiliefl the 5e55iia1lh1,8 or iumr,,,,,m ot the lintgectit, and tiled renown DI warrlurtt rutty' vsiadh,two 11 111011 II I:Inert/05 Liertile twthevemehl 5. -Loll- ti tuba. Insects and Elowertt. Pixperitnents 011 %Mow% dowers lihe the poppy triad tt stiOW 11,111 111,,e1a VP0 tiot always intraettet to flowers uy the brie:tun etitored panes, put'rntlier by the perception dordhiess tly thettisi ,It of 611114i Mit honey or liotiOn, 1.11OS1' OSIJOVIWOOIS the Ittioperietr bower hod is inetosed in a gnuae net , 50 as 10 • 115311w1 it trolli 111141+4.1s, not1 when it expands to petals are yore- tnIty removed witIt0111 ttitli•hllig the illablitit; harts with the' 44,4v.t1's, 1, bees tivoid,t1 011w2;„r„,,,,tt, sees s /mail 'n1 10. Man Lingc1;44e,1'eft Itt It', and toe petal. leas•ke4e014 revelve prnowally thei Vls118 11$ tIlitoCIVIled Ilo 'ere do. • , Her COMpi34.011. onee Sonny 11 women who gnarl rend wite her compicton. Al ono tOtutlicti, it up 50 1111101 11111 it b5tarne tefflehy. At another time It '1111:1 bOyond the otne, uenstoo1,1tet51'...4. broee ant and becalthe very tiery. Bat however Much she clutirrelcti 31j 3558 always ready L01.1111150 0u A Morper, • Regular Customer--l'here used to 110-.; NM. or three littib. bald spots- On 5011.: crown or eny head, awaY back: sSe they there yet? Berber -deo, sin it abet so bed all thee newt* thoee spots need be, sirs there's only one now. A Herd One. "V'ben," fie cleinareled, "wet you elle . • tlito wo waved blip toward 0 confrere.,) "'Yon Whist tisk," WO Bahl. "the pd zie editor."---Citchansse, Nothiug great was ever neblove without eatliUstastr1,-,etaersOn. 3