Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1910-11-3, Page 3Hin s for Busy Housekeepers. eseeseeesseesseessee Recfpes and Other Valuable Inforinglion et Particular letereit to WQ111100 *mom inn uprnowOMNPrOPMMIINIMM........1mWel.....Weesapamm wq.gmsi, CAKE, uee more or 1.00FT KngAT to suit steur Coconut Ceokies,-One easel one- taste, querter mess segue throe -quarters Tomato Soup. -Use a.; quart uf ea- -cup butter, ene teaspoon level. of illatoes amil boil in a quart of watei,. salt, este teaspoon of vtiaillla, two seasoned- WW1 Raltt PePher, a half eggs eave e whitaud -onion, and a half teaspoonful of . - one ono and eneeteeel cups sweet' mile, three dried parsley and 48 1111101.1 0oJery tatps flour, two level teaspoons salt Wheel almost deo° add a hal/ • cream teeter and ewe with oupfut a boiled rice, and thin if P in and in neeessary with boiling water. The eel) pans - bake hot oven. rice and tomato eamlaination is de - When takieg ;out of the -pans pa 0, paper till coldthen frost and lickes, but the rice must be creaked eprinkle with (mewl -nut. Where you alone to peeeent scorching. .don't use, cream metal. and soda ; NEW CANNING R. ECIPES. use three keel teeepoons baking • powdee. Frosting: Bail one cup After gaming peaches a, delieious • auger in one-querter cup water une Peach marmalade oan be made by tit it threads, then pour in the cooking the peelings and seeds to - beaten white of egg. Beat hard. gether, then rubbing them theough Spice Cake, -Milk and cream will the ;sieve. The seeds add an excels emir during the torrid woo:thee, but lent flavor. Add sugar to taste and save it carefully as ii ji were the eook to desired thickness. As there richest; cream. Many cooks prefer is no waste peamies for eamning to tie° our cream or buttermilk even at high prices are within the and soda, saying it produces a reach of most ever" one. xicher and finer grained mixture An excellent currant sat= for than wheo sweet milk and baking cold meats ean be made by cookutg 'powder are used: This is a, reliable equal parts of red currants and recipe for a spiced cake made from raisins together, Add- sugar and sour cream. Cakes or Gookies made spices to taste. . . with sour eream stay moist for a Plum Butter -Wash the plums longer time than when they are well, drain and cook without water, made with sweet milk. Beat the uutel soft; use an equal amount ,of yolks of two eggs and one whole suear to the amount of 'plum. Cools egg, slightly. .Add theeesfourths of very slowly.on the back:of the stove a -cupful of ' sugar, then three- until thick and rieh. ;Many object fourths of a cupful of sour cream, to plum butter on ageount of Sits in svhich half a teaspoonful of soda being too strong,. but to remedy has been- dissoleed. Sift into the elute, one-third apple sauce, which anixture two cupfuls a flour mea- has been put through a sieve, may sueed before sifting, one teaspoon- be added to two-thirds plum, thus ful of baking powder and one tea- leaking the plums go farther and sponful each of ground cloves, cies also getting rid ot that sharp taste. nemen, and mime. Stir until Boil the plems till the skins crack smooth and bake in three, layer in water with a spoonful of soda, tins in moderately hot oven. Put to reauove the tang. together with any preferred icing. Egglces, Butterless Cake. - One • PIE. pound of fat pork chopped fine or Lemon Raisin Pie. -One large ground, three cups boiling water etie poured over the pork, five cups dark p of seeded mid ;chopped rai- brown. sugar, one pound currants, sins; turn two cups of hot water on them ten minutes. Beat one one pound raisins 10 cents worth spoonfuls ground einnamen, one ietn-igP t°atialsenagpeoirin °onfe efigogn, r,onaenerl ojuunieci of citron, nuts e - if desired, two tea- zle -beteg, two teaspoonfuls allspice, and rind of ono lemon. Mix this nine cups flour, two teaspoonfuls of with the raising; Cool before put - soda. Bake one and one-half hours tin.g into muse Make two pies with two rusts each. C in very slow oven. This is a fine white cake, without eggs or but -Fruit Pie. -Rich puffed paste, ter: One cup white sugar, one-third ed, sour apples, raisins, seed - cup of shortening, one cup sweet , currants, sugar, nutmeg, aim - milk, three cups flour, three tea- namon. Line a two quart basin at end bottom With puff paste, spoonfuls baking powder ; beat thee- ton oughly to makelight and flavor. Chocolate icing without eggs: Two cups sugar, brown preferred, endugh water to diesolve; add two teaspoonfuls...of cocoa; boil until it -theeeds from spoon, beat until thick, and spread. TESTED. RECIPES. , flaxseed in a pint of water, Avian and wad a little lumen, sane ounee rock easely, and the juice; el thrite ! !omens. Mix and buil well,Dnssik as hot as possible. ;Mimes elesuldnever be :Mule en damp walls, AS 410 moistnre, affects the qtrieksilees and produees spate or ;dulls the whole surface in Sall Way that the injury een never be set right unless the glass is re -ell - voted A greet, mamy blemishes an *all paper limy be removed with a rub- ber an 4 leAd. , If room plants are to keep hal- thy, great earn must be taken to remove dust from the leaves. To keep the latter glower. it 15 a good plan to add a few drops of eoal oll to tepid water and sponge the beeves with the, mixture, jelly Hiot.---11 melting jellies of all kinds Olio plan is geed. Instead of making ell eel,' at once, simply can the juke of the fruit. To do this, extract the juice in the usual way bring it to a boil and can without sweetening in quart jars. A jar at a time may then be open- ed the sugar added and the jelly finished in the ttsuel way. In this way you iney have freeb jelly all the Onto end the tinie. and labor ef making it all up at once is saved. •-Home Made Vinegar. - Save the peen:riga- and cores of apples used in cooking. Cover with water and. to every twe gallens of water add a cupful el molasses. and a little mother if available. Cover with good firm netting and keep in warm place for three er four weeks. Use cider if preferred, in which ease two cupfuls ef molasses aro neces- sary to one gallon. • TRIG-ITSUREIN THE! Clan Hobble Skirt-,..yoluminous Compared With Latest Freak of Fashion. Take a look at the peach in the lingerie gown who has sauntered iti range of a quick -firing camera and la pretending she doesn't know there is a dressniaker's scout within a league. Now that you've looked wbat do yoa say she is wearinge A hobble skirt? Jamais I Nothing of the kind! The lady is done ap in Turkish pantre loons, the very latest product of that emotional insanity elech periodical- ly attacks the gown designers. With half an eye you can see that the young persona needs only a veil to sheathe the lower part of her face and she might have stepped from the harem of a pasha for a stroll in the streets of modern Stamboul. The advent of the fashioil has stir- red the world like trouble in the Bal- kans. In the- news it has crowded for place the rumpus in Spain of tha exploits se the bird men. From -the Nevsky Prospect to Main street in Canandaigua it has stirred rancor and argument in salons and sewing cir. 'ales. The head of a great church has cautioned the bishops concerning it; put on this a layer of chopped t) they to warn their wee isles, raisins and currants, sprinkle wi,serieshicners that Turkish panta- loons are going a he too far. Aldermen have been asked to intro. duce ordinances against it, only to find on returning to their homes that of hirs. Alderman has just received and Pineapple Pie. -One cupful fl earn Paris. Editors have shot ridicule granulated sugar, tly° tablespoon"! and sarcasm at it. Paragraphers have fuls a butter; "ream sugar and filed jests at it, FP oreign corres on• butter together; yolks of three. eggs dents in their letter bave tracedits beeberalight, four slices of pine -I progress like a comet over the face apple chopped ane, quarter of u of Europe. You. can't beat it. Until cupful of nxilk, beaten whites of the next sarcasm of sartorial insanity . i omes it will have a place among the three eggs. Bake in crust thirty; models. minutes, then beat separately I The skirt is vOluminous and its full. whites of three . eggs with three, peso :slings to the figure as Turkish dessertspoonfuls oS sugar. Covertrousers cling. The skirt is caught pie and put back in even to brown. ! in at :the shoetops :to a very narrow . hem. This hent is trimmed in some way up the centre, back and front, or WORTH NNOWING. , it is deliberately tacked just below the knees so that it gives the appear. When veils are washed at hones ance of trousers. they usually come out quite linel eseelie the skirt is made a satin .be•r and flimsy. To give them stiff- t and chiffon for afternoon affairs and 11E.,S8 ode a pinch of- sugar to the, of white. net and tulle garnished with rinse water. teed pearls rind crystals for evening sees hos-wheat, wear; and that's as ;close as imperfect Use helerye bread; rub over the rug the game, man can some to describing the freak. as scrubbing, and when through Not So Much of a Joke. Chicken Stew With Dumplings. - Clown and out in pieces two tender -chiekeus. Put in stew pan and boil 'ten ntinutes. Chop fine one large Ionian one piece of garlic, one green popper, seeds removed, and amall bunch of parsley. Put in ' with the chicken and let sienner ever a slow fire, In another sauces pan put a cep or stock from the chicken, one large can of mush- rooms, and oneshaef can of truffles -cut line, a little chopped parsley, a pinch of red pepper, a, tablespoon- ful of butter, and salt enough to taste. Let this manner slowly ten minutes, then thicken it with two teaspoons ;of flour. wet with a little weber. To the ;chicken in stewpan add :pepper, salt, is cookieg spoon- ful of butter, and a pinch of mace. Let this cook until Lander. Sift ono pint of flour, one 'full teaspoon of baking poserice and one-half tea- spoou salt together three times. Make into soft dough with wee bea- ten egg and a little milk. Roll out thin. Cut into four inch squares. Pat one teaspoon of the nituilemom tnixture in center of each' square. Pub it steamer over boiling water, Put the demplings in steamer. Cover and iet the water boil rapitile fifteen minutes, Beat well two eggs, add to what, is left of the meshes= mixtures Stir this into the chicken, Leine Let simr a few min- utes. Dish on center of large plat- ter. Pub dumplings around edge of dish: Sprinkle parsley ever all, 'This. can be mede of game, fowl or mil. Thin 1± dotieinos. SPagilaii. .110604110.--A say - and del ms dish enjoyed by the Mexicans. One-half pnekage spaghetti, cooked in boiling salt weber bents, minutes, drain, add one can of tomatoes, aftvain, Ilave eooking ono pouted. Hembithg. steak • with two large omons. Chop fine and add to mixture. Season with Ted pepper, paprika, adding sixo elives choppei fine. TOMATOES, 'rettette Preserve. -Use any amount; of ripe tometioes thee :yen choose ; :geld tio thee Will peel easily ; out out all spots.' alien., end 'stow slewly in their own juices Then add sugar and ehmenIon Siticke, nod cook down sit eiv, stirring to pees vent burning, theit can. Yoe tan For it cough bail An 0117100 of with sugar, cinnamon, and nutmeg; repeat until dish is full. Bake with- out a top crust. Serve with Whip- ped cream. sweep thoroughle. The rug will be The late Linley Senile:turn°, the 10 - like hew. • mous Punch cartoonist, began life in A heavy broom lasts longest, but - an eneineeigue works. When a youeg a. light one is best fer easy . work, man he was always fond of playing and with care a light broom will prat:tie:a jokes, and a French drafts. last ahuost as long as a more ex-- mall emPloyost :et the engineering works often become the butt of his Pensive 001e• . humor. One day Sambourne hit up. For dusting youv heavily ternmed, , on the bright idea of nailing the hat, the best kind of a brush is a; Frenchman's hat down to his desk, eheap shaving brush. It is both, He awaited the consequences in high . t stiff and ' small enough to reach, glee. But when lunch time oune in - every mete, • ' stead of attenipting to tug the hat After puttinsi light bread in the thiaelyrieronch 3 i toolo n oven to bake to make rise even t11 niY° peg and, out.;e.irien the fu. turn the pans before the breed be Lure cartoonist looked closely and sew gins tobrown, the loaves will rise that it was les own hat he had nailed le the desk. the same on eaeb siee. The work of elsinniug oniens, which useally ends in tears -van be Amended It. ' mede it pkesure by pouring boiling When King George was Pence. of. wales.' over ithein and "'Tering e' Wales ono of his body servants was few, minutee before peelings , mice trying to explain to Sir Arthuti The most practical, est fur old' Bigge some incident that had taken. corks 18 to make a low fire burn up. Empty spools are also good kind- ling, and neither should be allowed to accumulate in eny qualitity. When ironing it is a great pro- tection to wear an the right•hand an old thick leather glove. Tide prevents the: great heat from burn- ing tee back of ler hand and snak- ing the nails brittle. To polish dull linoleum shred in- to a pint of turpentine 2 ources of beeswax, and when melted apply a, little to your flour eleth h,s you would fernitaite Palish with a, soft cloth, In 000king cabbage never add' the salt until the vegetable is cooked, es It Inak011 the. sebbnge -bough, le - stead, whert the weter boils, pith in pinoh of baking sode, and add the sail eve menace before serving. ME S. S LESSO INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. 6. . Mon 111.-Tbe Lest Supper, Matt. 26, 1740. Golden. Text, Luke 22. 19. Verse 17, First day of unleavens ed bread -The jewish passover woos celebrated between the 14th and 21st of the month Mean, that is, the arst month, end always, by a special plan in making the ealen- der, eller the •spring equinox. period was sometimes known 0.0 "the days of unleavened breed," sinee leaven, being regarded as a source ef cotruption, was not per- mitted in the so:orifices. Make reedy . , . the passoverl- The disciples, thinking the prepara- tions were for the regular celebra- tion on Friday, would make such elaborate arrangements as were conenon for that feast. This M - eluded the obtaining al the wine, unleavened bisouits, and the dish of h•erbs and fruits soaked in vine- gar, besides the procuring of the lamb. There is, however, strong doubt as to the presence of any lamb. Jesus mak-es no referee° to any. Perhaps all that the disciples did was to ace that the room was properly furnished. 18. Go into the city to such a man -Apparently, he had had an un- derstanding with this man in Je- rusalem. Conjecture points to the house of John Mark's father. The Teacher saith-From this it is evident that the' man, according to some previous elan, would re- cognize the authority of the mes- sage. If he had been a stranger, and surprised at the demand, the statement, My time is at hand, would have had no meaning. TIiis secrecy was needful OD account of the plot of the rulers and the trea- chery ef Jetties. He wished to eat this passover with his dieciples un- molested, To has e. made known the, ion of the others, Perhams, alsm h.; s s he wished to knew how much Jesus ImElipss povERTy was sure of, although it would be ' otrenge in that case for hint to psis after he had found out through clip- pisg Inc hand with JOS114 in the dish. The answer of Jesus may have commenicatest to him person- sittee he salt so neer the head of the table. Than hest said can only mean "Yeti are the one who said it, not I."- At any rate, the others do not seem to have SON- pected Judas even when lee went out, which may have occurrod at this moment, so that Judas was not present at the instittaitiu of the eupper which followed. THZY ARE REeLlari OF YEARS DF misRuLE ooReA, The Monotony and Decay That Char. acterize Crean Towns Are Outcome • of Gorstiption That Datee Away Sack into Middle Ages,--Japaneso and Their Methods Are Not Wel- , come, But Are Inevitable, • The isolatien wheel eareed kr Co- rea the trame of the Hornet Kingdom were eaViog-Ahoub has also preserved its peculiar cus. Jesus took bread -It woe one loaf, th2e0;niAddeletheelY ttolere apeeetese wohpiecril setheame. toms unchanged. In the costumes of tee breakiog and clistributieg of the primitive construction of houses mprZtioanal whicla waz "a symbol of enrietian 10. 411(.1 the national customs Corea te- nuity in diversity" (1 Car. day is practically the Corea of a 17). thousand years ago. To -day the traveler who crosses from Japan may land at the limbos of Pusan., because it has been select. Blessed , . . it -This set was like our "grace" at meals. Blessing and giving thanks (27) are the same thing, Luke using the latter for ed as the railroad centre of the coun- try by the Japanese. The first lute bah the bread and the cup. The way to bring God's blessing upon toproekssi;oupony no0119ain..disonguitshotrhue Coro oluties grateful heert. 000 /Doe is to eat it with a truly eats were chopped. dowu, the story practically destitute of trees. Its for - This is my body -That is, it goes, in order the more easily to do stands for the body of Christ, and saeosraiirge,wtre titgeh°r; meoottliretliro'sbabfleynlitbeer to partake of it is to be identified with Christ. treason was that the pc.)ople needed 27. Drink ye all of it -Moaning,' . iw000dt and with typical improvidence mot that they sheuld drink the en -1, The telmerlessioen tn. oor thf thi e eon. Mr 015 follow it Into tile net without fear - tire -contents, but that all should !nearing land is th'erefere of dasigiess, drink from the cup. he town itself adding only the gleam. erman dives and closes the mouth of As soon as all the fish are in It a fish - 28. My blood of the covenant -Iingwhite of sandy, sun -baked greets The remission ;of sins is covenant- . and costumes equally white in effect the net, whereupon the rest hate is 11 ed by God to as many as shall be- e wo . Corneeans meenQsa°cYi exmlinel len the lieve on the Crucified One, and this, threw, of' the upper elanisseel tyska; eel's 0.7-' covenant is ratited by blood, I cue white cotton garments consisting 20. The words of this s•erse are of long baggy trousers and a long coat introduced with the solemn declare- of simthpolerigetthtt tahhaotecdloorsesFworiththeamobow,.. tion, I say unto you. They form a near rted men the effect is made even more kind of valedictory, the amPlift- • • A' KA= toll' Curious Beooy Used the Note,* Fiohermen of Hewer?, "Lao naelomelo" Is the mime 01 55 45. oey used by the neave asteneiten 011 ilawalL It is made of the hardest; wood to be founa on tee islanas end la carved and rubbed till it essunies the' tempo of a club witb a little, keeb te; the emaller end, to wilich the Wm Is tied, The club Is from oee te three feet lone A village sorcerer performs cers tale sites ever It over a sacred are; After this is done the dub is magte. and the fisherman must be extreineile careful or it. If 8.-WOOIDD 811011.11:1, OTeT it or enter a canoe in whieh it hes the club would lose all Its power Ina would be useless ever afterward. After the club has been charmed the fisherman nexea candlenut and cocoas' not meat, bakes it and ties the tura In a wrapper of 00004na ; At the flailing grounds tbe club le covered with the oily juice of the mum and Is the towered carefully to the bottom, The scent of the baked flat; meat attracts certain keels of which soon gather and ',begin to nibble at the club, As soon as enougb ash are around the decoy a small bag shaped net Is lowered very gently until its mouth is just over the club. The latter is then pulled up carefully and cunningly till It is withise the bag. The fish are so eager for the stuff 'with which the club le covered that they up quickly. THE MIDDLE AGED MAN. Finding Happiness In a Life That to Youth Is Irksome. "Younger people," sald the middle y , TOW 0 , aged MAD, "want variety. They want cation of whisth is found in John 1 erir4. Biond higitrofmcorsotysto ugnorerwelecinh to be always on the go. Routine galls 14-17. ing that water hes been added to I' The appearance of Careen towns tstle. thTinh This fruit of the vine -Suggest- a knot. :yorbeartee to have todo overtbe would have been, 'omit fruit of is monotonous and depressing once "They want to go somewhere or do and cities, even of Seoul, the capital, again day after day. Ole wine; otherwise, the words the impression of universal and. cone something different all the time. Older the tree.'' Our Lord's saying &es poverty, filth and decay has people are happiest in a life of routine, henceforth he was not to drink this worn off. For though soe' 1 distiee most disturbed when variety is thrust wine, cleanly mean,s that he did par- tions are said to beies strict in this upon them. take of the wine at this feast But country as they are in others they have no outward expression in the "For myseif 1 eveleorne my daily take° and time in the presence of is was ;Lee, lase time eho iees soe.,' do task, endlessly repented and always the traitor would have led to a pre- 00 until h eh Isi 't • a mode of livin , for with the exeeption mature arrest. • • the 'disciples at the Great Slips er . of court and 'iv the :nation lives in the same. I should be lost without it; - Thee he would drink it new je-th raud Meta, usually of two rooms, c•ov- disturbed if it were changed. A life Al thw house -It is probable that 11 , ered with straw roofs and opening in of habit suits me best. 1 like thein: that is, everything, -and es- the back on small yards or compounds scenes -famines friendly sorrontohdein°g1: this house containee the upper rowel mentioned in Acts 1. 13. ' pemally the joy of which the wine ' surrounded by mud we.11s of varying but formidable height. I don't want to change. 10. The disciples -Peter and is a spew, will be elieneee " John. Note other fuller deatils in glorified in the Father s kingdom. , s' n I S nitat" ee f thefforts"Nor do I want much outside pleas- e ion in spi o e of Luke 22. Abe religious missions and the Japan- ure. In fact, I think I should be best • 20. Sitting at meat --The primi- 4--------- 1 ese is practically noe-existent; the suited with none. I like my groove. tive posture was standing ae the WHAT IT CONTAINED. heating in winter is done in a kang, It fits me, and I fit it. 1 don't want 1 a stove similar to that of the OM change. I just want to be mit alone meal, hut this had fallen into dis- A well-known physiciam was nese, in which the fire is made under- to work In my accustomed ways, It is uee as it was the attitude of bond- n ath the stone floor, It gives no walking down one of the main -e h • In my groove that 1 am most coal- men, and they wei:e new freemen. London thoroughfares with his warmt at all or makes the room un- fortable. i like a life of labor and This was the last paschal supper routine. five-year-old son when they wex ,, dangerous. lihohte, otehonsideesy lbseiangholveag Jesus was to eat with •the disciples, 'And could there come to one a' best, eagerness to do so is mans_ ing of a funeral procession. I In the compound domestio animals obliged to stop to await the pass- , the side of the hones near the ground. ' • greater blessing? Nature and the mu- ne youngster heti never seen aro kept if the family possesses any, toms of meu enforce routine upon us 21. One of you Shall betray me-- and In one corner sunk into the whether we like It or not. In youth: anything of the kind, His eyes Mark's addition, "even he that eat- i.,i , .31 . eth with me," gives a color of 1 enec x-01 tingto the hearse is ground are the kimshi jars. Kimshi this irks us, Mit In our rnaturer years (an enclosed one) he asked: the univereal winter food, a pre. In a life of routine, In the undisturbed • 'paration of cabbage, tomatoes, onions enjoyment of familiar labor, we may special rnalkiousness to the betray- "Ded, , , Is ci, svhat s that?" and red peppers tightly packed, eve • al, since among Orientals the eat- lind our greatest happluess."-New ing of a meal with anether WAS a "I" ' ' d eh d se, 'd t f d e ere WI straw an s . a.st e o er- n that, my son, said th physician -with a grim smile, eis went. The older the mixture and the York Sun. pledge of friendship, peace, and ' . stronger the odor the greater delicacy loyalty. a mistaken diagnosis," The One to Pay. 0.:. it is censidered. ; 22. Is it I, Lord ?---Asked with the I.• The street picture increases the im- When sbe was Lady Randolph • HIS WATERLOO. ; press -ion of a hopeless poverty against Churchill, Mrs. George Coruwalless intention of seeming to disclaim all ' which the people base ceased to strug- West consented to electioneer for Mr.: . part in the dreadful crime. Judas A mosquito buzzing on his -way es • • • g . There is little activity. A few ox evidently was not suspected. In roany things did tackle ; he bled a &awn cants go slowly 1 bering by Ashmendeuellett in his first pestle.' fact, it was difficult for them to be- buy and dog, they say then made a and occasionally men . , pass carrying menterY eamPaign• Mr' Ishineull., Bartlett was married to the Baroness' lieve that any one of them was rooster cackle. At last upon a enormous loads on their backs, for in Still. they had Christ's own word to clrill ; he prodded there for half burden, Corea man is the oonunonest beast of' Burdett -Coutts, a very rice woman, who was nearly forty years his senior: equal to such an appalling deed. drummer's eheek he settled down for it, and it caused them anxious- a week -and tlien he broke Ms rhe majority of the population in Lady Randolph, with her beauty and various states of dress and undress charms, dld splendid work for the can- lv to turn their thought in upon bill. are stretched out in the little spots' didata . their 015/1 hearts. , of shade, sleeping, laughing or teas. •To a group of farmers she said one; What &dually occurred is more dippedbis hand -- A Mighty Mountain Range. leoent Everest is guarded from ap.. souffles hero and there, but as a rule "ay' 23. He that ing one another. Idleness leads to e -Won't yon promise me to vote for Mr. Ashmend•Rareett?" emy lady," said a red faced farmer. TTIth a chi:icicle, "we'll ail eme fOr him if every vote '11 be paid for with a kips." "Tbank yon very much," said Lady Randolph, "Tent (der is aec•epted. send for the Baroness Burdett - Coutts at OTICe." comperison wee, gee Rroaci n eitio. side by Tibet and graceful lethargy • prevails. Naked pdeasnstegferoiran Jaohn _13, The dish men- -"eel'', undoubtedly the two most children play le the dirty sewer water inaccessible conntries in the entirewhich usually runs tbrongh a ditch tioned was the on:e into which hael earth. The mountain range between in the middle of the tatreet. Eve - been poured a mixture.of fruit and Everest aucl Kanehinjunga containwhere is indescribable filth andrya vinegar. Pieces of the. unleavened s series of very high mountains, sev- calm acceptance of it. bread were dipped into thee and eve of them over 25,000 feet, The i The reason commonly teem for the passed eround by ' the one peesid- stiTeveslitiglifotthethmonounstainEsuiono.thiliisNraonrgeth . ethoondiotinioonialof oothriros pptrjounerwkhiitiori ell: oisf li. • mg, symbolic reference to the brick-makiee period ef the Egyp- tian liondege. As there ems only elm dish„and all had participated: become honorable. Prom the king to • • ' the lowest man ie authority stealing, Eternal Lamps.00 ng as 11 • • 1±0 in this act with our Lord the words A common superstitioe that the east, was the commou means of exist; are equivalent to those, -Liecl by laltillieli:Slit5Svhich would burn forever for igen built a house, owned property, or possessed the art 01 making eneel, openly carried on. If any cite Marls, "he that miteth with me. a long time obtained, and it was showed other indication of means he 11 ' • Deserted Theis Towne. . So late as the end of the seventeenth century the inhabitants of Ceylon were in the habit of deeertIng their ' towns. Their C0810155 are described c anne t tat one such lamp was die or one of his relatives was promptly on to death' 1 Iteace, "to go back Science, hovsever, has long set this, ed to ransoni him, '.., s;gnilles "to ,go home" and "to go covered in the toinb of Rosicrucius. 'imprisoned and The family was fore- InShewahoortarotirTeninoefteCenaprel:t.s.11orbtvelrut home bs• the way et death." together with other superstitions, I What the official stele from the pee- IWO to 1079, was a captive among , As it, it: written of him - The forever at test, since it has becn dm ; pie the courtier took tram his inferior. them. Fie spe.oks of several towns tis nalonstrated that fire eili uot burn in 0,1Td. the king helped himself uniTer- !yin desolate owing to the foot thet Old Testament is fulltsoif ttehls:s.1\,,tonssl. chamlaer from which tho air has • 11 WI th 1 I d al' ng tbeir Inhabitants had forseken Bleat seal s appointed death, This fact, teopheeies relating left the king sold to wealthy nobles This they die tf many of them fen been exhausted. the right to coin money, which they of course, did not melte nceeesary , nusde the most of by using any ins sick, and two or three died goon after the act of Judas. The old argue After going to the buyer coat ;mire matte tied by cone:sluing even orm abother, thinking that it was a inent, that he was irresponsible, is goes to the cellar. after the right had expired. The even- trhIselmtateloanmeorbetetlit el•vshileoonteh.eyStohinoeugotitt try was soou so full of debased Minn tO fusee him them bus mime. 11 was contradicted by our Lord's attempt A lucky man is always harping that at one port there were quotations the evil virile had departed, on his seperior judgment. current iti 1901 for ()1 Government Place. . . spensible for the final tragedy. but certain that some one would be re - "Statistics prove that Marriage is medium ekes epeoeoertaliet.oest.0 ap,asIdso(41,3) Queer that while the male seal is a nickels; (2) first-clase counterfeits; (a) A Queer Creature. When Sir Arthur pulled him up. "Me and the prities"-he began,' Jtelas need not have been that one. against seic marked the Wise Guy. "Well, it's a preventive, idea re - only aftei dark. counterfeits s'3• 'buil end the _female a cow their young - he " he observed. The mart looked at; therefore, like those in chapter 23, "You ahold say ,the prince sea The •woe pronohneed epee. him, a poor rule thee won't work both The result of this :system was that ster Is not called a calf, but a pup, for a moment arid then said: • is Softened into a wail of infinite ways," adatel the Simple Mug. all manner of work was discouraged Why "seal &Melee" too, when the ''I beg pardon, sir, but 1 did not emeow by th, pity with weiee see "Statistics also prove that seicide until labor fel into discredit, Why seal is not a ash? And why shook? the trees breeding kaow you wore there at all, Hole: egesteg ,,eheeeee hem To ise sow is e preventive against martiage," amats Wealth tbat weeld surely be stolen? One ekes eopied the lemon piece be styled R rookery? ever, you and me and the prince." , $il? Arthur was compelled to laugh one them* •vsbom the Son of man The young 1m18ekeelleT w" 1"lit. of idleness from its superiors. with it looks as if this strange creature is Is betrayed, was to lee the agent mg at genus live chickens in a (mop, itoheiireeoitilt:ttihat even the poorest aud et this and, after another attempt to at sea. On land tor kei be Is classed bxplain to the naan how the store; thenid be told, was content to let him ;tips of GSA but in cerrying out not only in accoreplithing the de. ales,d'r'osetetkol tlosoettiszjoefe thsogi ahnildl Ixoeseth Itlireet ten considered labor be- on(' a fish In common parlance wbile The Coreans ran 11100 no effective popularly with animals or birds. -Ex. kali it in his own lashions-Peassonal. Meseldy. 1'3. 27). surely 11 we,r6 better net ewee,,, rejoined the young beet,. otrp,polsaiteiir ()tot atbrtemiJalFtatindeseo,r4laottlizuoatvieoti; tea awful purposee of Satan (John Send them over to your houtre:' changit. to have 'beet botn than to halm beePor, hoaginglYg•fiyfolYt°171n11:,'", % lake their efforts %treeless against the mrs, nentam_Every timo 1 81:14 to been that; mast, The sum of all positive they ere fresh teagedieS in ft human life is to have . "now largo is the apartment against lapauese superiority as 0 TSCii Cruel, 3. largo end well -train Jetta -nese army, the briby ho ado, Benlette-ele gets peostitutea to teileoly deeds the house you live in?" "Well, I don't aml JaPanese 411Vn1iitt$08 01 expose ,hls ebIlity as a musket critic from Ay gifts of Gkxl, to have seen the right remember the exeut dimensious," owe and -training in, matters politicaland social, side of the iteuria-New York Press, Wee atid to have gone the wrong. replied Mr. Flatson, "but it's so 25, The belie explanation ef this big that settee we asked the jani- Prosperits• demneds of bus more Verse Seems to be that lucks ethed tor foe heat on Sunday :morning Grass Matches. A stiff grass Which is grows obs,,,. :Irtilldenera mid Mederation than adver• IVIth the rest, for his failure to de steam disle't got teemed to the re- &mils, in /ems, is us,,,i for sti,,ks Ix, To live In berme we male hehind ts , , so would have aroused the suspit. dlator 1111 the text Thursday." regisieg matches in that country. ' 5101 10 die.--CanmeelL, Geatitude. Kind Tandy - My poor Lean, WIISt WOUld you do with the monoy 111 gave you It penny? Tired floboeselatiten, I'd boy 11 picture ',esteem an' wr(te yer a note 0* thanks... -Cleveland Lead- er.