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The Brussels Post, 1911-7-6, Page 2r Busy Housekeepers, lee4pes ewe Ofher Valuable intormgtto set Particufer let to Woolson Folks, DAINTY DIuSHEfie Date nd vi*hes are novel for nftornoon tea, Steno and oliop f100- ly soma slates, add a• squeeze of Is- amu juice. Out sumo thin shoes of bread ,and butter, spread with the (bopped elates, and over with shoes of plain bread .and butter, Prete together, (jut into Saucy, shapes, and nerve. Culcannon is a good dish, Take equal quantities of cold potato, car- rot, sad cabbage, with onion to taste, and chop all together finely. To every pound of vegetable allow one ounce of drxpping. Melt it in a saucepan, add the vegetable, pep- per and salt them well, and pour into a greased mould. Bake for half an hour, turn out, and serve hot. Macaroni pie is a good way of using up (mkt meat. Grease a pie - dish, scatter breaderunrbs over, and line with bailed macaroni. Fill the .dish with some finely -chopped cold meat, seasoned with salt, pep- per, and sweet herbs, and put a layer of macaroni over. i\ leisten with a little good stock.. Cover with breacterumbs, put a few bits of but- ter on the top, and bake for tbitty to forty minutes. Pork Chops. --"prim the deeps neatly, and press info a neat ehape. Dip =thean in milk and then in deur, (half a pound of p,sndered borax. and fry for about twenty minuees Put the mixture into half a tub - in their own fat. Drain on thick 1 ful of cold water and let the blan- paper. Cat serve raw neeetees Tato ikets soak therein for about two Sliced tomatoes, hard boiled egg quarters, and mayonnaise. To be palatable it must he *billed before serving. BREAKFAST HINTS. Creamed Calf Brains,—This dish is „especially good. Parboil calves' brains, chop fine, mix with . one cupful of cold cooked peas season- ed. ''Make a 'sauce of one cupful of sweet milk, one-half cupful of cream., one level teaspoonful oath. of salt and pepper, Add the peas and calves' brains. Heat and pour over slices of crisp toast. Baked Bananas,—Slice in half THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY INTI RN ATIONAL LESSON, • JULY 9, season IL—The suffering servant of Jehovah, 1sa 53. 13 to 53.. 12. (!olden Test, lea. 58. Versa 13, My servant shall deal wisely—The idea -contained in these welds is, that the suffering servant is, to +carry forward bis work so prudently as to be sure of success, This is implied in what follows, Humiliated ns he is, and afflicted, his ultimate exaltation is to vindi- cate the purpose of God in his suf- fering. 14, Many were astonished ._. The reason was that, his visage was so marred, The sight of physical tor- tura and weakness in a minister of Jehovah was incomprehensible. 15, Shall he eprinkle many Mt- tions—Better, startte many nations, lengthwise They shall hear the unheard of; from skin. Bake for ten minutes. namely, that a sufferer is able to Remove to a hot plate and Pour triumph so gloriously. The prob- ever them one cupful of sweetened pineapple juice. HOW TO WASH BLANKETS. It is generally believed that bean - lem of pain is the acute problem of the ages. The unseeing eye can discern no utility in suffering. So kings .shut their mouths, and the nations stand in awe before the ev- erlasting glory of the crucified Ga- kets are the most difficult things in lateen peasant, risen and exalted the house to wash properly. As a on high. matter of fact, they are about the 1-3—The central thought is found easiest, as will be seen if the fel- in the opening words; unbelief has lowing method is adopted. been unable to accept the suffering Cut a bar of good soap into small Servant, or to sea the strong aim pieces and boil them in two quarts of Jehovah's power and purpose of water until dissolved, Then add revealed in him. He came with no regal pomp of a conquering Mes- siah, Dying upon a cross, he was a stumbiingblook to Jews and -fool- ishness to Greeks. All this is re - Presented by the prophet as already 'past, because he views the future as already accomplished. 2. A. tender plant ... a root—Not a noble tree, but a lowly thing struggling in dry soil. This hu- mility and obscurity of the servant, as he grew up in the presence of Jehovah, awakened in his people no admiration. This is the confes- sion of a "universal human habit, the habit of forgetting, in our sense f the ugliness and helplessness of pain, that it has a motive, a future, and a God." 3. He was despised—Not only were his people not attracted to him. They repelled' him. They looked fur a mighty revelation of strength, triumph over sorrows and grief. So they resented it, that chips and fry hi the let from the pork., Seren tee'Potatoes in a heap -tn the centre of the dish with the chops round, and garnish with par - elate Spring Pudding ?ut four ounces 'af flour into a basn erol add a pinch of salt. Break anega into it, work into a sm,=,:th paste, and add gra- duaily hale a 'pint of milk. Let this batter.stand for ae hour. Cut one pound of pink rhaberb into one- iucb -piecee arei ;'.rec in a pie -dish, hours. Then rinse in six or seven waters until the last water is quite clear. There is no need whatever to scrub; and after the Last rinse the blankets ehould be hung out to dry without wringing. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Metal kitchen spoons should bo washed to get rid of the grease, grate a ,amen -rime v'rer and and then scoured with salt and t t epiink:e i urea' ;lour the but- sajd,•digris may be removed by ter aare,t over the fruit, anal bake in a •:,sip ecru' for three- rubbing with liquid ammonia. quarters of an hour. Serve at eiaw paten.: dipped in bath -brick once. wfl. re,uove stains on knife -blades Cie:weer " uddin As you object and other :tell articles. to suet ;nia•.,ingstry this r^eipe; Tasty Perk Chops.—Add a tea- 1\'ork ±oyether two ounces et but spoonful of finely chopped onium to ter stir nye tab?esp,00nfu1e of brown a beaten egg and a good pinch of One who claimed to be the minister sage. of Jehovah should not rise above the common lot of suffering. d -G -lie hath borne our griefs- This is the sober second thought concerning the suffering Servant. The first judgment was the common one, that his afflictions were a di- vine punishment—he was smitten of God. But now it is apparent that he was wounded, net for his own, but the'rransgre;,sions of the peo- ple. i9.e.e is no more prauotineed statement in Scripture of the sub- stantial into pureed flour. character of the death of p put a small basin of water in to our Lord. It is a striking picture Add half aepchn i of p elL, guar- ,Prevent any disagreeable smell, or of the sinless One, bearing the bur - toroftere r,,£ chc,pned peel, guar- a the oxen getting uverlteated. den and iespnnsibility of the sins of for a pound of sultanas, and When belling pudding put a sen_ men, in order to deliver them. quarter of a pountill ,f to tlterrata half ear at the bottom of the saucepan 5. With his stripes we are healed scat three ego, ent of milk to which has been adr in which the pudding is cooked, —Not only are Christ's sufferings • tied a small teas resuls! of soda. and there will be no danger of its . vicarious; they are also redemptive. Stir into the dry ingredients, beat sticking. "The peace, the healing, is ours, in well, pour into a res~•gid fin. and To clean a badly stained bath, consequence of the chastisement bake ur two hours or two hours there is n+,tlling better than paraf- and the s^ourging that was his." and a half. The oven should be fin. It will remote old stains anti 6. Laid on him the iniquity of us hick when the Cake is first tut in, leitve the palet uninjured. aIt—Note the steps by which this butshould be allowed to cool Dusters, a:td the best, too, are great interpretation of the suffer- but after. made out of old eottun dresses, and ings of the Servant is reached. h erten a la deapolitafre.—Pro- chintz covers. These are nice and First, incredulousness; then, die- Mutton about twoponds and a half soft, and better for use than new gust and aversion; then, reckoning p anaterial. the Servants pains a penalty for of neck or loin of mutton, remove Kee bedrooms sweet by admit- his sins; then, a regio nition of the the bones and some of the fat, tak- p g ing +tray all tee suet. Place a ting plenty of fresh air. Avoid substitutionary character of these little dripping i» a ste vpan, when woollen curtains, and, aboveNothing all sufferings; and finally, a conviction hdt nit in the meat skrwereti into Oise, an old carpet. Nothing is of their redeeming worth. f more likely to give a close smell 7-9—The theme here is the injus- ,own nicely. Arid neat roll, and hr a o an onion, a carrot, a anal] piece to a bedroom. trey lona the innocent Servant, and of mato, pepper and salt. Pour White door matting may be scrub- his remarkable silence under per - over one pint en water, and simmer ''ted with bran water. Put two sczution. Compare Matt. 2e. G3;; for an hour. 'Cake up the meat, pints of bran into two ,warts of 27. 12, 14. add a squeeze of lemon-juiee and water and boil it. Strain, and, 7. He opened not his mouth—This a little otkehire relish to the when cool, nese for eceubbing the is unique in the Old Testament. gravy, thicken and color it, and matting. Under torture he makes no confes- fiour over the meat. Garnish with Flowers in a !sick -room lshu id sion of guilt, for he knows himself *hopped gherkins. have the water changed .lei }, andto be guiltless. He suffers in si- if they are hard -stemmed like lenee fur he knows that his suffer - chrysanthemums they should have ing has endless value for others. their stalks wiped, to remove any Compare the eases of David, Heze- Tulip Salad.-•=Sealel ripe toms- slime that may adhere. kiah, Jeremiah and Job. "All boos, remove skins, and chill thee- To renovate a Brussels carpet, strive and are loud under pain." oughiy; then with a sharp knife out from blossom end to the stem pentane in a pa+1 of water Dtp was taken away lie did not die in end .into k lints, and press open, leaving a round bulb of the seeds in centro; place one spoonful of may- onnaise tinted green en each tulip. If too dry'more dressing may be added; Chrysanthemum Salad, — Shred a crisp cabbage and simmer' ten minutes, drain and chill, the heap roughly on to a beet of foliage. Mix two tablespecefuls of tarragon vin=egar, one tablespoonful of sal- ad oil, one ' teasp,00nful of celery sidle, dark of pepper, pour over Wad, garnisft with tiny sweet pep - pore and !card boiled eggs. Allow to absorb dressing before serving. Tianrietta Salad. --•fide cooked fish into flake's, out cooked carrets, boom( and savoy oabbago into sural pieces, mix with fish, lay on bed of endive; pour ora two tablespoonfuls of vinegar, in tablespoonful of oil, ens teaspoonful of salt, daeh of paprika; when wring garnish with sugar, then add a well -beaten egg, and gra,!-r•irly stir in -tee table- epconf ile •,1 m ,lasses and a tea:sup- ful of fader. efix half a teaspoonful of baking- owder with half a pound m warm water. of flour, and mix it with thbut Steel that is exposed to damp may }Jar, molasses, etc. Plato in a be kept from rusting by the appli- ie seed mould and steam for two cation of a good coat of copal var- g o u' wish. !:ours, std scree with any Soca Meat should he hong in a cool, sweet sauce. airy place but not in a strong Soda cake is rather a rich calve, dranaht, for that makes it dry and but if well belted will keep some unpalatable. • time. Rub half a pound d butter f When roasting meat in the oven Pure g]veorine is a wonderful stain erad,:ator. Smear a coffee or tea settee with it, and then rinse eternal purpose, aiid not merely-LONDONS ALIEN POPULATION penniless German waiter goes when tie Offering s of a iresplt of the rnaohina- he is fresh beim the Continent, Ifo the chance ras exec ge»eretion, wants .i job in a large hotel or re- g for sin �Ooan}sero staurmit, and he knows he will Num, 5. 7, s, and Lev, 5, 14-10; o. have to pay for a place because of 1-7. Christ's death makes poesible the big tips that are given, The the forgiveness of our sins; for, sooret agent lends him the money since death is the ;penalty for in, on Gond xtion that he keeps lxhi oars and faith makes ve one with pini, open when the l.nglish diplomat is he can and does die in eve stead, Tr dining with his friends. setting. 'ns free. Our !.rather, 'But it useless to look for the against whom we have sinned, sees spy; you would never suspect him, the °travail of the soul of his Son, 15 has taken me years to satiety Iny- and is satisfied (11).. self os to the profession of even 11. Shall my righteous servant when a Sunday glee, two or three, They are the nicest justify many—Recalling the words the wander pizit of a mo, and most gena] follows in the of Paul :"That he might himself T long t 1 k } English German quarter, and they take the be test and the justifier of hint that precaution not to live in rt, j for t I t 11 i of the righteous Olirist is God's Their London' lioness are at righteous reason for reckoning as yy k}y. 1 m the only Eng sington and. in the south-western Ken - righteous the unrighteousthsinner. suburbs. I have aeon them ores- IL He shall dividee cal spoil with f G tl eioitally at the London railway ter - the strong—Again i recalling hauls d t} ddl d mini, extending a welcome to Uel• words, "Him also hath God highly man officers in mufti. And then 1 d s art, in the exalted. Though despised and re- 'ddl f h have gone down to the docks to tee jected of men, he, is honored of " h Empire, en n the rank and file arrive. Droves of God, and that, net because of any }k f } B h them there were. Representatives signal vietory, but because he bare a ang of German employment . bureaux the sin of many in willing sacrifice: were there, and as they led their * y g charges to, the Handwerker Heiu, 11 l 1(lHT WJi'HI '1`ill7 CETt 5iA S IN Till!! i�Ui1'ROPOLIS. Ilene Fatherinni in the Middle of the,Capital of the Denise, E mpire. Sometimes on ui a ni "a itws Z a.. andon° 0 sea a the r 1 dust from my feet and go abroad a ime, s'ro a oes to a for- eign club in the vicinity of F itz- roy Square, says a writer in Pear- son s ee. y • a 1 f]shmae present, It is the haunt o ei'mans— le young, the Old, an to mi e -age. . hat. faith in Jesus," The death WHERE THE WINE FLOWS. There in London' he ' h mi e o t e capital of the :Brit- is within fifteen minutes' wa o the British House of Com- mons, I sit with strp n er's feel- ing, with that curious sense of in- security that comes to the average traveller in a land thousands of miles from is own. tout heavy -faced old settlers us e the aiser as tie • raise their lager beer jugs and ape u Wagnerian 'music,The moth- erly frau sips light wine, munches aliver 'sauna a sandwich •young Fritz,a hairdresser from the Black pounds his way across the room to a demure fraulein with corn -colored hair andbiggrey eyes, to suggest a plate of sauer- kraut and black bread; and a wait- er whose home address is "some wait- er, Berlin," shakes his headas give m order, andsays: ang eesh me net spec ' WHEN LONDON SLEEPS. About the time when you Britons are retiring to bed, the club -wakesu —twat is to sa the chairs and little .tables . aro pushed near the wall so as to give space to the dancers. • ith the first stroke of midnight comes' the first bar of the opening waltz, and dancing is kept up for !tours. It is a sight which ought to be seen by all who scoff at "this talk," as they put it, of a probable invasion. The Germans are not coming, they are here, a sufficient number, at any rate, to prove of very mater- ial assistance to their invading compatriots, Where the club is situated is one of the most congested districts in all London, and nearly all the resi- dents ars German—waiters, tail- ors, bakers, hairdressers, and ser- vants, nurses and governesses, liv- ing cheaply until they find berths. The .German language is over every shop door and window. Gere man faces stand out white and eag- er in the darkness of the gloomy doorways. There are German cafes innumerable—all crowded; there are German lodging houses in doz- ens—all packed. The preacher at the street cor- ner here addresses his hearers' in the German language, and the little ring of Christian workers sing the hymn in the same tongue. 11 you inquire your way pf a settler who is ill-informed as to the district, he shakes his head, and says: "Nein," which means "No." The next man you meet, should he know the place you are seeking, will not say "Yes," but "Yah." SPIES—NOT GOOD SORTS. Germans—Germans everywhere. They aro all well-dressed, and most of them are in work. If they ean't get a plaee whore wages are paid they offer their serviees for board and lodging• with an oppor- tunity to learn the English lan- guage. And Engiisbmen are •only too wil- ling to find them employment. We welcome them, We marvel at their quickness in picking up our vowels and our verbs, and we feel flatter- ed at their intense interest in the geography of. our country. You can hear Londoners describing these Germans as "good sorts V.—young men of manners and culture, whose politeness it a pattern to be cop- ied—whose enthusiasm about Eng- land and the English is conclusive proof of their friendliness towards us. And all the time most of them are spies—spies with a capital S. They are more dangerous than An- archists. The have a sauva man- ner and soft speech, Unlike the revolutionary, they do not frown et you; they smile at you, Instead of pistols they carry notebooks, and when they .pick . up a piece of information which they think will be of use to heir Fatherland, they sell it to a secret agent front Ber- lin who"spends his time in this country finding out the latest for the benefit of his Government. During my wanderings. in the Gorman quarter I met a young man from Frankfort. He was the es- sence of amiability, and I spent many happy evenings with hien as my guide through the quarter, One night.I inquired, casually, what business he was engaged in. Hie reply was evasive, and 1 let the subject drop, He was missing from his usual haunt a few nights later, and 1 have not seen lam again, I have since had unques- tionable peoofs that ho Was a spy in the pay of the Kaiser. Bet he get nothing out of me. 1t "ib the secret agent to wheel the which is a temporary home for Ger- HIS OWN QUARTER-DDECI[. it f h' man emigrants, I thought of Moses S y leading the Israelites to the Pro - Jack 1Tired a Stage -Coach All to thunder out Hoche near a raised Land, But there was no.lted • Himself: gar- landed b t f h K ' 1 s Sea flood here. The foreigners were Nowhere Line -the lines of rank sure of a ltonia, in the German col- pia d W g tl ony near Fitzroy Square. more sharply drawn than in the it is a great night, when they navy. On board ship.Jack never g , crowd round the fires at the cafes, dreams of crossing the mark, but and the little restaurants and lodg- off service the personal. ego some- Forest, ' ing houses., Welcomes everywhere, times reasserts itself, and did even The "good Rhine wine" flows free - in the old days. In "Naval 1 21 ly, and the. home-made cake from Yarns W. H. Long cites an in- } the villages of Hanover is cut into stance of this which happened more little slices and handed round, and than one hundred years ago. On that strange noise y'ou hear as you the return of Admiral Rodney the the t B 1 " pass is the German equivalent to British seamen received their first I g' y d "Rule Britannia." • instalment of prize-money,.amount- ,rL 1 k' An old lady came here from Leip- ing to eighty pounds per man. zig years ago recognizes a new - One of the London seamen hired comae from the same place and. the London stage -coach to take the rushes across the room to embrace trip to London with his lady. In tree - born b d him_ those days there were net many } b p Y, "And how is R54olf'1" she in - public conveyances, and Jack took quires in English. the whole coach for himself and The freshman dotes not under - companion. Just as the vehicler stand her -speech. was about to start, a naval officer came up and requested the coach- man to open the•door. "The coach is full, sir," said the coachman, touching his hat. "Hew can that be? There are only two in it." "True, your honor. One of the crew of the Magnificent has engag- ed the coach for himself and party." 0h, if that's the case let me see him, and I'll soon settle the mat- ter," responded the officer, who opend the door and tried to en- ter. Jack stopped him. "What ship? Where are you steering col Don't you know I'm captain of this craft f" "1. know it, Jack," answered his officer. "You must give me a•berth on board for London." "This is my ship,' insisted Jack, "and nobody shall come on board lest I says the word." "Lieutenant Goodwin wants to take a berth in your cabin," inter- posed the coachman. "He never axed me into his cab- in aboard the Magnificent. How- somever, he may go on the deck if he likes. Heine he'll look out for you and see that you're steady at the helm, and don't serve us the same trick one of yon landlubbers did three years ago, when lie erten foul of a landmark and pitched us overboard." The lieutenant tools Jack's reply in good part, mounted to the top of the coach, and was rolled on to London. *- LOVELY LISBON. One of the cheapest cities in the world to live in is Lisbon,. Spain; and it's a city worth living in, too, with its blue sides and quaint• streets. Palms grow in the public gardens, and bananas in the centre fine place of the arty. Lisbon is a to spend a holiday, ,You may live at a decent hotel ab an inclusive charge of about Toe a day. Of course there are drawbacks. You may go to bed at a reasonable hour, hoping to get sleep ; but up til} one o'clock at the earliest, there is a constant turmoil in the corridors, and the row starts about six in the. morning again. And the moments when human activities are at rest are adequately filled by the noctur- nal music of innumerable cats, and the scurryings of rata. mix a tunib'_arful of spirits of tine t. By oppression and judgment he PAUPERS AT AUCTION. The "c Lure of the Finlanders is ' your carpet broom in this, shake hevents,,but T e u1 y i the ordinary course of well, and brush the carpet, Con- was violently out off from the land not ineortipatible, it would seem, stantly dip the brash into the of the living by a tyrannous abuse with an institution that savors water so that the Faust which is ' of lave. Added to that, his owngen-strongly of the old slave markets of taken up will. be got rid of. eration were utterly blind to the ancient home and the Orient of A Fire Escape.—If you are Hary fact that this judicial murder had more recent days, comments the ells of fire, have a length of fire- a vicarious value that it was for the London Standard. The Finnish proof rape fixed t�, a stn.tl in the transgression of leis pe°ale. poor law system puts up able-bodi- floor by your bedroom window. Coil 9. Made bis grave wwith the wick- ed paupers at auction, displaying. it and pert a table or box over to ed—In the end he as associated them iii. the market -place, where hicte it. Should fire occur, it is the with evil -dosis itt guilt. A rich man they are examiner! by employers of work of a few moments to pass it is probablyonly "a synonym here ; labor desirous of finding cheep out of the window, and there is as ften in he East, fr thwicked 1 workmen' The bidding works down year escape. so stupid were the people who ± ward, the authorities banding over A Geed 'x!•lrftvwash.-Put six rid eel him that theyaccounted to the lowest bidder the chosen pan- 1 B per, for the .person acquiring ,the right ht to his labor receives an ecI1ow- mice from the authorities for his, pe eep, the amount' being that of the pounds of whiting into a bucket and erti:ah out the humps, then mix it into a cream with cold water. Dis- solve than minces of powdered glue in water, heating it till 15 is quite dissolved, then pour into the whit- ing while hat, stirring itwell in. This whitewash must be of the con- tistcncy to be applied with a white- wash brush. him worthy of nothing better than a malefactor's death, though he had done no violenee, and they could find no fault in him at all. 10.12 ---We now return to the root- idea, that all this proceeded out of the good pleasure of Jehovah. This accords with the teaching of Jesus himself, that his suffering at Jerusalem was the climax of an Madge --"Don't you think a girl should marry an eeonomieal man 1" Dally—"I suppose ea; but it's_ just awful` being engaged to 000 itt NEW TIPS 10 SIM MONEY 1'T 1S NECESSARY,P0. :1IIIP STRICT A CVA The ;Ileal Secret] of Pottier, a 'bit.. de 131I .t vee 'Bee u Bait{y' Day, 1121.: Rockefeller, who is general. ly believed to be the richest nine in the world, hoe serit that when be. was a youth :he made a point of sen MS one quarter of all he earned.- We can't all be Eookefellers ; wa don't want to be; but there is not one of us who would not bo the better for saving a :certain portion of hie or her income, Saving sounds easy, .As amalter of fact it is not, It is almost 101o00 difficult than earning. And a fun.• ny thing le that people who are struggling along upon a small in- come are, as 0rule, more thrifty than those .who are better off, THE REASON IS THIS. People who have not moth .money and have difficulty in making ends meet are careful aboutspending and as a rule knew to a nicety fust where every cent is ,laid out, while others, whose' income is what may be called comfortable, are not care - of petty clash. They, buy abook here or a box of sweets there. They. are surprised when, at the end et the month or quarter, they find their balance at the bank so low as it is, The first principle in the art 011 saving money is to knew exactly not only how much one spends, bub how one .spend, it, In order to kixow this it is absolutely neceesa.r.•y to keep strict aoeountts, "Accounts! Oli, .1 couldn't be bothered. Just think of having to put down every permy I spend 1 Why, it would take Inc all my time to remember it!" That is what the man says wlia has never been ac- c:nstonred .in keep escounts, And "Poor boy," the old lady says, he really believes ft. :patting him on the iia0lc, ''Not yet,. lis is quits rnietalte.n• {;very bey know l eugleesh. Of, refrs*; of ought to be taught at arlbool to course 1" keep accauuts, but. even the roan A SONG OF THE HOMELAND, who has hod no suck training will be surprised to find !torn easily the "Beit he will }:now it soon:" n t dozen voices cull, le will lino+a' !,sere is acquired, and what a coin - fort it is when once acquired. 1t soon 1,17 " The first step r: t, sj end five And then the little oiclieetra cedes on utri• rash -buck, rJn Strike's' up with Faust or fraviatt dna pale put do;vn an the- money and the �toices lower to whl„pers' rreate on the tpt:usibe all paid .... Now, as the. musicians reach ovt. e hmhc, nxized. a song in the opera that is world- net -utThdr,wnatter in lumustp 511115.itcThe famous, an old tailor with a heavy moustache and the figure of a Fa] 1?'''`i' objcrt in keening accountx Fal- staff rises slowly and deliberately i.; to know with a queer .dreamy !vole in lits \ I71:?li; TIE fCiNI Y GOES: eyes and breaks into melody. I•liti j';,.ch of us it:ir; seine pot extrata- vorco is rich an' full, and when he geese width is i_pt to grow, upon sitsdown tbore is nota 4123' eye. in ane. One roar hands tea much m the room. t::baeco; i:noth is tailor's, or It is lin. of the hurueland, of hosier'rr bill g. a ,yearly t a third German love anu beauty. An i 1 has tan 2a0101.sive d-, a few seconds the new•eomrrrs are day feckeal to enc.. find0'expentho.t the mifew showering invitations on the old cents extr, ua 'y haM inn into B..1,3,man to join them to a favorite her- dol]ai s }n the course of a year. erage, Petty ca`h is chat son el -mulct be But the Geriitan immigrant ped; p,,rtierilarly careful to keep an eye tura I like most to ponder:rsattho rtpon. 'i':te riser woney you !festa picture T have seen n the h In your peteket i , tltu nx'ruing, sometimes, in the early morning, ,:aunt it at bed tore, i,. I tee how as the staz•s began to fade 11i; ay, nturb snn hiv lift. it .s n,it def and the white ant} green ant} 3130 ferule to r,r,.'.'.a the •feed! u,entel ef- lights Cf the moving craft vanish- feat r1.1 ;assay nme.nk"r emir* ed, and the 'crimson shafts .freertt gene. the Eastern quiver darted quickly Neves mime if people luti;.;h when ,across the .whitening ski. .eat you mill r,ut, y4)::? little lxoc-k ane The central figure was a great 4nt:=r up the ri; : ; 1' c r „e your ' ship steaming upwards through the ,, sill') 1yv .v •c ,: s bane* Pool. :Bunches of cagey whir tu.n f 1 n wlen you he.. ronrlu2ta.he bn, a0::1 to your erteine When sen 1,30.0 tour i:,crc•nuts well unelrr ec iv :.c,, rn.;r e«" 'i. ,w much faces were at the port -holes, and leaning over the vessel's siilc:a, their strained eyes towards Lan- don, their star of lope. Cruising ato saga. 1 .r1, nran, round vas a German setty°rt er r•bi settler come to °r v;ou ee either, mist roc! e this gyve an early welcome e t o fon brae o, >r elf. YCu t 1 sues his relatives. k 2o•.: 2, 1 o y mach you can el- fin' While, away west, 011 L' ondon Bridge, a hand of homeless Brit- ishers stood wondering, and curs- ing, and shivering. y NATIONS AT TEA. In England, France and Ger- many tea is made in much the same plebian way; but in other coun- tries the method of enjoying the cup which cheers is a more pictur- esque ceremony; In China, for ex. ample, a large, artistic cup is set in a brass or silver holder, and in this etre the tea is placed and cov- ered with boiling water. A little saucer which justs fits it is placed inside the cup to keep in the steam and flavor of the tea. When it is 10ty .vaur;xth lot O'rt;ry- torn) of ,x• monliture. tic,o' much to pin by for clstt,es, herr it 1011 tor food, t you tar.cs and hew much , y rent and , ran aff id to 1•::v for your .pleas- ures, leaving allotted the various sums for • 'EACH AND 1 heft i' EXPENSE., you can fix on the oeci .t ;mount to put away. Put this muni aside at regulate intervals. It, :met he o fixed sum, and nothing meet interfere with our iron determination to put thst exact sum away week by week or month by month. Your book balance will shun glow lute retl,eatablo tipures. The wise young man who Warta, to save drawn itis poured from the big early will have a pond lump sum cup into daiety little ones no big- put hs* for middle age.. ger than an eggshell. The method ft followed in Japan is almost similar. Tea -malting in lineeia is a eireple, process involving merely the neo of a samovar and a slice of lemon or of lime.. In Java tea is served in broad, flat cups, and flavored with Batavia arrack; and in Formosa it is steeped with tea•tlov/ers and one or two orange -{!ewers. Wee their tea -drinking the Uruguayans em- ploy silver tubes, each of which has ab tete end a ball -t e strainer known as a bombs 00 bombilla. In Martinique an aromatic tea is us- ed, and a peculiar liqueur made by the monks and by the old French housewives is added. ,p Men who give up nothing give up everything. If they don't hurt us, we can af- ford to laugh at the mistakes of ether people. Not in" is snare delightful than to feel that you have 'a rubete,ntial balance which is steadily inerea,s. ing. 1t gives you a eeelen5 of triple' fort and security 'which was un. known before. ROBBED. Benevolent Gent ---"lint what are you so downcast about, my maw?" "Why, 1 have had my whole day's earnings stolon from me." "What a shame! Was it tiruch1" "Yes, three purses, four watches, and a gold chain, Mrs. Starvem—"I'm surprised to . hear you say you're having trouble to got year money out of Mr. Star board. Ile always boasted that he paid as he went," Mrs. Hareem— "Maybe he does; but I can't gee hint to go."