HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1911-8-24, Page 6,Luw,
j]ts for Busy Housekeepers.
,.N,,.— .. .. --
Rooftrees awed Ottter YAluable informatle*
of Peelicafee laRerest to Wgtpcp Polka
ItEVIaIt,1G1: 3 BUTTE1 M1LK.
A.priset Lemonade. --- One time
laving :about halal' a clip of aprio'tt
ulp left after makia:; aprieot ice
cream, 1 mixed! it with a pitcher
f 1em:,n.. ole, and the result was
c.hghtrul. It gave the beteaaga
that beautiful orange color. Since
then we make it that way on pur-
pose. Oranges, pineapple, etc.,
may he used also with the apricot
and lemon, end tate flavors blond
Buttermilk makes a A e drink for
persons suffering aria, malaria and
kidney. trouble..
To bleach linen which has become
yellow soak in buttermilk twenty-
four hours, rinse, and wash in the
usual way.
By putting silverware in butter-
milk over' night it will remove
stains ail tarnish, making it
bright.
agreeably. --.Mrs. G. M. 'There is nothing equal to it fur
Banana and Lemon Juice. --Slice cleaning mason jar Bele. Cover the
flour ripe bananas. in a gla.3 dish lids with buttermilk and rot stand
and siqueere the juices .uf a large 'two or three day.s
lemon over th•eni. Then add a gill Buttermilk Pie.—Orae cup of but-
termilk, one eup of sugar, one sup
of raisins, yolks of two eggs (save
:whites) one small teaspoonful of
all kinds of spices, one teaspoonful
vanilla. Bake with bottom crust.
Beat whites, add two tablespoon-
fuls of sugar, spread .on top, and
brown.
of ice water and one-half cnptul
of 'sugar. Let stand one-half hour
iu cold place. Delicious in hut
it Walter. •
Cingeralcasle--A most nourishing
hut weather drink can be made
by mixing one :quart of grape 'nice
i.vith one quart of ginger ale and
eour tablespoonful of sugar. Serve
i,vith plenty of cracked ice and
whipped cream on each glass, using
straws.
Tea Letatonatle..--Make some,'
weak lemonade and weak tear; com-
bine then end sweeten to taste.
This can be made, and kept ori ice
for sereral days by making strong
tea and a strong lemonade and
diluting to taste as they are used.
Mint Tea—,Steep tea, same as fur
iced tea, and while' hob drop in
f fivet lk f mint and let
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Gilt frames or ehanoliers cover-
ed with fly specks, are fearful
things, but if three ur four onions
are boiled in a pint of water and
the solution applied with a soft
brush it will prove an excellent
protection against flies settling.
In cleaning wall paper with
bread crumbs, use only two days'
old bread in small pieces. Clean
with downwaid light Stroke. Never
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY
I11'TJ.JtNATIONAI, LESSON,
AUGUST go:
Lemon 1"III. -Jcalemlaib Cast Tufo
I'1'isk.l, ales, 37, Geltte>.
'J'ext, Nett. u. 11.
Verse 4, Came In and went out—
Ile was still •in the enjoyment of
hi, freedom, which almost immedi-
ately after was' to be taken from
him. In fact, at this time, as the
opening ver, ea of the chapter
(which are a kind of summary of
the condition of affairs in Judah)
show, Jeremiah was at least deep-
ly trusted and respected by the
king, On two aecasione Zedekiah
had already sent a. deputation' to
the prophet (Jer. 21. 1; 37. 3), a
fact which proves that the terse t-
at convictions of the sovereign
were clear, h''wever tied his hands
were.
5. The Cbaldeans , . brake up
from Jerusalem—They lifted the
siege against the city upon the ap-
proach of the forces of Egypt, un-
der the command of Apries, the
ruling Pharaoh. It was only a
temporary let-up of the attack on
the city, the C'haldeans withdraw-
ing simply because they feared
they were in danger (see verse 11).
[t is not clear wltetlt^r a battle
took place, although that seems
likely. Josephus declares the
Egyptians were driven out of all
Syria.
7. The king of Judah, that sent
you unto care—Zedekialr's words
had been : "Pray now unto Jeho-
vah our God for us." The forbear-
remain
orbear
remain about fifteen minuted; gu aver Duce of Jehovah had been long ex-
horizontally.
x
strain and dilute'. To one pitcher work lwurizuntally. Cut away tended, but the turn of events in
of tea add juice of to>o lemons.. soiled, part ,f bread cont+nually. the last three reigns only proved
11 u . s ser• e sorb becomes a
:Serve with cracked ice. Sugar to that the hearts of the people were
taa,^te little :shiny, toy sponging it with ,a,that
beyond divine help. It
warm vinegar, diluted with water, was the unhappy Tut of Jeremiah
if the vinegar is very strong. r)115 to bear the reproach of being re -
15 not a permanent relief., but ce yarded as a traitor, preaching sur-
tainly will improve the apliearance render because he knew that 0011
of the garment for a time. tinned resistance meant but a
Blctek goads especially when feeble attempt to escape the cer-
they become aged, take on a gray fain decree of Jehovah. He leaves
{sh hue. This defect can be reme- ,no prop to support the waning volutionary labor newspapers, bun -
died 'bv cleansing the piece thea- hopes of king and people; dreds of Anarchist -minded citizens
oughly with alcohol. The fluid does Pharaoh's army, `heir last cher- seem to be awaiting only a chance
not injure black crepe and is i,shecl refuge, was 'to return to to cut wires, .stall trains and cause
especially good when used on Egypt; the dreaded {'haldeairs the Government and the railroads
black hats• were in a short time to come the greatest possible annoyance,
Never add ham, bacon or smoked a Din ; they were to lac the des- kor more than a month netrspapers
tl stem i pot that is in g have had daily reports of serious
acts of vandalism. Occasionally a
train wreck is traceable to this
cause, and in numerous instances.
disasters have been barely averted.
These manifestations of dangerous
hatred are thought to be largely
owing to the refusal of the rail-
roads to re-employ the men dis-
charged following the strike. The
general labor situation is undoubt-
edly also responsible. As typical
of the conditions prevailing, the
following depredations reported
since July 24 may be cited. Many
of the manor affairs are not made
public:—
Rouen—Block lights stolen and
the telescoping of two passenger
trains on a stone viaduct narrowly
averted; switchman arrested.
Havre—Cross-channels cable to
England cut,
Lille—One hundred and twenty-
five telegraph wires severed in one
night.
Bordeaux -Telegraph poles laid
across railroad tracks.
il'EATS.
Jellied Loaf. Two punn:ls of
veal shank, two pounds of bulling
beef. Cook until tender. Save
liquor in which meat is cooked.,
One-half dozen hard boiled, eggs.
Put through meat chopper. Put
Meat through chopper also, then
'season both meat and eggs teal.
with salt, pepper and mustard if
desired. Place layer of meat in
square granite pan, teen the pre-
pared eggs, then the remainder- of
in lads h4�>� - 1)dde 5 (10)l}, a. MAKING', SAFE' INVESTMENTS.
I?pa'ing the many days (10) that
Ohaldea le resumed their opera
tions at the walls 9f the city,. '1'h'e `WHAT CONSTITUTES THE HUN
kinhe feated'toheonnultithe urror, nus
a� 1'E1tI Net; ilgil'{iJi1 N BOiiUS
Jeremiah openly on account of the ANI) STOCKS.
princes. It marks Zettekialr as a
coward, though it Shows that his
eanvietiona were on the side of Je- Tartlets Securities in Viltiell We
laovah's will. Ialvest—Bonds and Shares Pray
70, Where now ire your pt�a duet of Modern `,Gimes—E:vlilain-
eate that
pronouns used indie ,1 „,e, „,e, ruueo Iletttoelr Bonds
enti tlipeople is oughe ;ed to the and D entures—lIew Ronal In -
It
people through their king, cit.
It is equ"valent to a taunt, or a forest is Paid.
challenge t •rto produce the
l e long o them p This column is Wratten tvitl the
fuliillment of their vaunted pro=
phecies, The kill of Ba+bylou was s'o'le area of s.npp'lying reliubit i;n-
g formation, for the us • and• p)'otee-
ali'eady bofaro their galea•
e0. Let m sn a1•iseeson , be tion—in "S, aneial matters—of : the
Y re
resented before thee—That i9 readers of this paper. Its impartial
'Lest it both come before thee. and and reliable character may bo do-
be accepted." peeled upon. The writer of these
21. The court of the guard -- The artleles and the publi'herof this
court' of the sentries who guarded paper have no eta ; interests to
the palace. The loaf of• bread that serve in cermeo'tion with tine ma
was doled out to Jemesnialr here ter.
was a ver meager affair, beteg not Excepting purchases of real es -
much targer'then one of our oidia_ tate and loans secured by .real ea-
ary biscuit. These were regarded tate mortgages, most investments
as necessary to provide a meal for are represented by what are goes
one person, The name of the street erally known as "securities. Thi
in Jerusalem (this being the able term inelud'es bonds, stooks, de
ins'tanee in the Bible of a street of bentures, shares ancl' all manner. of
the city being named) indicates that documents to show in what you
the baking was confined to one have invested your money. Some -
quarter. Small as this kindness times even, as in the case of Cana -
was, it revealed a bender heart in dian bank stocks, you have no -
the king. The only instances of his thing to show, your name and
exercising authority which are re- number of shares entered in the
carded are the two occasions on "stock lodger" being the only evi-
whieh he sought to mitigate the denee of your interest.
severit of Jeremiah''s suffering Two centuries ago,. if a Sir Wit-
Y
Jer, 37. 21; 38. 10). The prophet. liam Mackenzie had conceived the
(unlike Ezekiel) never employs a idea of building a great.. railroad
harsh abtitude toward ' Zedekiah, like the 'Canadian \ ordhern,
In contrast to the fate which be- would have found it impossible to
fell Jeboiakian, this .last king of have raised the money. There
Judah was promised the boon of a were at that time few, if any, for -
peaceful death and an honorable tunes of eighty million dollars
burial (Jer. 34. 4-5). (which the road has east). Ne. ons
•
had thought of the idea of divid-
F ing up into small amounts the in
VAND_11.1S11 RIFE 1N FRANCE. debtedness of a company desiring
to borrow money on .a mortgage,
Railways' Refusal to Take. Back In short, it could not have been
Men the ('atase. built unless the King and Parlia-
meat had undertaken it.
A great wave of vandalism ap- Then,too,if a miller wished to
paa`ently has been growing since build a floumill requiring a large
the railway strike. Incited by re-
amount of capital, he would have
had either to have put up the
money himself or taken in some
partners. He could nothave taken
in many, for it would have been
too eumbersome. under the old
taws.. Moreover, the idea of our
joint stock eompanies had nut been
thought of.
Now -a -days, however, it is, quite
different. Lawyers have learned
that mortgages can be subdivided
into equal parts, each part as se-
cure as the whole, and involving day" began at 10 a.m., and gener-
no• eery great expense. In 'his ally lasted until midnight. He has
manner a railroad can mortgage been twice at the Crystal Palace—
its, property, just as an ordinary When he opened it on May 12, and
individual can. But the railroad, when the party. was given to 300,-
inutead of one mortgage, can is -
The
children on June 30. T
sue for its huge indebtednees a Tho Bing witnessed the Aaval
large number. of small mortgages,
running from $100 up to $0,000 (or,
in fact, any amount) in face value.
These small mortgages are called
bonds. Most bonds contain• on
their face a copy of the mortgage
of which they form a part, and
are personally signed by the nec-
essary officeu' of the railroad. Moat
bonds, too; have attached what are
called ,"coupons," which are small
certificates of interest, which save
cut off and cashed—at any bank --
on the date when the interest is
-the busjiles,§ to'avme>5n0 slat, Just
so with 1110 shareholder, 'except that
in the case of many of our large
joint stock companies there is a re-
gular market for these shaven,
whioh are bought and, sold daily
at a price determined. largely by
the amount of shares to be sold,
and, the number of buyers and their'
eagerness to buy.
The :Alcf paint to'be remembered
is that shares of stock are not at
all like bonds, for, as w'ei pointed
out above, :bonds are "promises bo
pay," and must be repaid at a
fixed date, while shares involve no
snob promise,
There is one other.£eature, too,
in which bonds and stocks differ,
Most bonds carry a fxed interest
payable at regular dates. Stocks
do not earry any interest. Their
return consists. in a division of Pre'
fits after all obligations of inter-
est, costs of operation, etc., are
provided, They may carry no
"dividend," as the payment is
called, or they may carry a large
one; but it merely. represents a di-
vision of surplus profits. Bond in-
terest, on the contrary, is n fixed
charge, and must be paid, or the
mortgage on the company may bo
forolosed,
"INVESTOR." •
A. HARD -WORKED MAL
King George Will Have Traveled,
2,000 Miles This Season.
meats to res pe rate city under siege once more,
the meat, then pour over all the in-
tended fur soups. Cook these left-
li uor, from the meat. If the wee over ire themselves and use the :with all the horrors of pestilence
q ut and famine ; and then, having tak-
thea• is very warm a little gelatin broth fur tomato soups, sauces or
trill. helpto make the loaf Armes. 1 diehes as tom- en the may, they were to burn it
omelet?, and seek ,with fire (0). That was the pro -
Very nice for an informal Innen- bine well with tlae smoked sweat )]set's emphatic answer to the re -
eon or Sunday sulr,re•r, as this disn
!nay be. prepared the day previous
to serving. •
Meat Sauce,—Simaner Damson
;Hums till tender. su stones will
•.lip out. To each poll ad of pul p
• add a half cup of sugar. Put halt is not intended to be eaten, bu
,Inline each of cinnamon, cloves, only to tempt the appetite by its
• .and mace in bag and drop this in. delicious fragrance.
Cook all thick as jam. If water .be of little use when
eleaning lamp chimneys which —In the, land of Benjamin was his
have become very much blackened native village, Anatheth. Jere -
with emulce, the experiment shoul. .miah's putliosue in going there was
be tried of mixing a little- spirits, to secure his portion of property
flavors.
quest of the distracted king.
A cold lamb loaf is deli^ -ions 10 Thele remained but nt
ended
when glazed withwithaspic jelly and ,men wounded
—Soldiers thrust through with
decorated with triangles of green 'sword and spear. So inevitable
mint jelly and a few „spare sprat•,
were the decrees of Jehovah teat,
of fresh mint. The mint, of course,• even with the Chald•earr army re-
duced to a fragment of mutilated
men, the Jews would be powerless
before them.
32. To receive his portion there
BREAD.
Good Bre:ad.—At noon boil two
potatoes; pour the water from the
potatoes on two rounded table- of wine with the water. This will in that vicinity. He knew the out -
spoons of auger and one of salt; remove the grease winch is, con -
come, the potatoes, mash fine, letcome of the siege, and was anxi-
1rained in the Lampblack. orre, its the midst of the people
stand until evening. Dissolve one When a cake of soap in worn who were crowding out of the
fresh compressed yeast cake• in a nearly thin enough to break, stick Lits, too provide himself with what
little water. and add to the liquid; it to the new cake by putting both belonged to him: Later (see dha.p-
stir• well. There should be at least in quite warm -water, then 'press ter, 32) he had sufficient money
one and one-half quarts of the
liquid. In the morning stir and
take out a pint in a 'Mason fruit
par; set the lid on, but do not
screw dawn, and set beside ice.
:Mix the remaining quart with cheese left rn the pantry, even 18 Int ,gate of Benjamin—It
about two and three-cju;arters th nigh dried and seemingly use- was on the north side of the city,
quarts of good bread Hour and, less. Grate them and sprinkle ever ,atr•d led through territory of
te
the
one tablespoon of lard; let raise a dish of creamed putatle.s, to be Benjamin to that of e teraiun. The
dnvie,e and then snake into loaves,at in a hot oven till a delicate ,eapt,n;,n was on the, watch at this
handling and working as little as brown, or serve with the dish or point for any who mi;ht attentlit to,'vacs.
possible. When baking again -.cart macaroni a..:I tomato sauce. pass out that way, There had been Caene Wires severlaeed on the
as at first, with two potatoes, su- many de.aeri`..+.n.o to the ranks
of ]relines—Stones p
gar, anti salt; at night add yeast i track.
g „i 3L1NS °'D N•I" , , 14 'il-'i Chakleans (Ier, 38, 13), the St. Etienne—Chain attached to
e•aved in the jar; in the morning O S FOR I l 1 II„ . predictions of the prophet lrein ' irn
stir and take out a lint as at fir:,b; i — - T 1 i g the third rad system, dissipating
it will not be noac nary to buy School Chiidre11 are Given 71ules nu small d+agreo responsible. It the current and interrupting ser -
was natural that. 50 conspicuous a
firmly together. When cold it will to purchase, at a round figure, a
be one solid cake. This does away piece of land, the act being in-
, small pieces of snap, and tende¢l to encourage his fellow
there is n+, waste. ,countrymen to believe in a future
Do not throw away the scraps of r'estor,ation.
One of the hardest workedmen
in Great Britain at present is the
King. When the season has ended,
he will have traveled nearly 2,000
miles in Great Britain and Ireland,
visiting his subjects.
The season of 1911 will be remem-
bered for many years as a record
in pageantry. Besides the scores
of addresses presented to the King
at the Coronation,he has received
similar homage from every point in
his tour, when he 'visited Ports-
mout, Aldershot, Windsor, Nor-
wich, °Carnarvon, Dublin, and Ed-
inburgh.
Tne ,following is a list of func-
tions the King hasattended during
the season :—Four Councils, three
courts, ,two levees, "three balls,
thirteen reviews, five theatres, five
race meetings, four garden parties,
three investitures, 0 banquets. Be-
sides this he has presented colors
to ten regiments, has opened, two
public buildings, and laid founda-
tion and memorial stones: On two
occasions he presented medals—to
eight seamen and to colonial and
Indian troops.
it is estimated that about 10,000
persons have been presented to the
King within the last month, and the
number of .addresses received has
been legion.
When in Ireland, his "working
WiND.OLOWN GEMS IN SAND
f)I,1'OSITS OJi DIAMONDS ptl7•.
4lul; GTOLOGISTS,
Heavy Winds Carried the Semi
Many Miles, anll Gems;
Trent 11130.
The diamond deposits discovered
in Damara/and, German South-
West Africa, three yea'r's ago, lie
among great sand dunes hundreds
of feet in height, which pass incon-
tinual motion across the granite,
plateau that follows tile, lino of the
coast from the Orange River to
V1ra]fisch Bay,
These deposits are a puzzle to
geologists, since their place of ori-
gin is a mystery, though there
seems to be little doubt that they
are carried with the sand by the
heavy winds that blow from the
south-west for nine hours out of
the twenty-four. The diamonds,
whish are found mixed with gar-
nets, agates and other semi: pre•►
cions stones, vary in size from one-
fifth to three-quarters of a carat,
They aro almost perfect octahe
drone, and, though small, are of
the purest water. An extraordin-
ary feature of this discovery,. says
1+`. N. White in Harper's Weekly,
is that the diamonds :resemble Braz-
ilian rather than
THEAFRICANSTONE,
although the Orange River, which
marks the southern boundary of
German South-West Africa, has
its source among the volcanic cones
or "diamond pipes" of the richest
diamond mines in the world in and
about Kimberley. There are . no
fissnren in the many miles of gran-
ite floor of the new diamond coun-
try through which these particles
of crystalized carbon might have
been forced up from below, and
geologists find no suggestion of
cones or of what is called "Kimber-
ley formation"—nothing, in fact,.
that will warrant them in giving an
opinion as to the orgin. of these.
travelling gems. The general opin-
ion, nevertheless, is that the pre-
vailing south-west winds bring tine
diamonds from the sea, and Edens
tists do not dispute this theory.,
The discovery of diamonds in
Damaraland, so far as the white
man is concerned, was first made
about twenty: miles south of Lud
eritzbucht, the principal port of
German South-west Africa, whence
the Government is building a rail-
road across to Keetmanshoop to
connect with the proposed road in
British Bechuanaland that will tap.
the markets of ICinberley and Jo-
hannesburg. Here a native, who
had worked in the diamond mines
of Kimberley and had been impres-
sed into the service by the railroad—
builders, on his return ]come picked
up LS
TWO OR THREE CRYSTALS
from the sand and took them to a
and Military Tournament en May station master with the information
19, and the' same evening teas pre- that they were diamonds. The sta-
sent at the dinner and State ball tion master ridiculed the idea, but
at Buekingham Palace. eventually sent the stones to Cape
3
TWENTY-TWO BATTLESHIPS.
Town, where experts pronounced
them to bo gems of the purest wa-
ter,
It may safely be asserted that
Britain Will Have Stronger Elect' few eontrabrand gems have left
Damar•aland since the Government
assumed control of the fields,
though they were probably harmed
c iu 'he 51esliterranean.
In view of the considerable, in-
crease in the strength of the Ital'an away in great quantities before
and Austrian fleets, the British police supervision became effective.
naval forces in the Mediterranean At Luderitzbucht and Swakop-
Cnrmaux—Block system wires cut are to be largely augmented in the mend, the two ports of depat•tnre,
�third Det of vandalism within ten due. Bonds, of oaurse, may be is Spring of next year, when the tom-! all outgoing travelers are subjected
,-___. sued by all kinds of companies. , pletion of net' Dreadnoughts will to a systematic search. Not only
enable this to be done without did the Customs authorities re -
weakening the forces in home wat- quire that a passenger's baggage
ere. sent to the wharf fes examina-
Eight battleships of the Dread- htione three days before the: depart-
nought type are now in full corn ore of the boat by which he leaves,
mission, and these constitute the' but a thorough search is made ea
First Division of the Home Meet. his person and .clothing before he
There are as yet no Dreadnoughts goes on hoard.
Angouleme--Freight cars uncoup-
led, leading to an accident.
. Bonifacio (Corsica) -Dome of the
automatic lighthouse unmounted. many easen used in reference to
Montpelier—Heavy stones placed bonds. ,strictly speaking, how -
on the tracks. ever, a debenture is a promissory
Toulouse—Army sergeant arrest note not secured by a mortgage.
ed on a charge of cutting block They, like the honda, • are divided
into small amounts, and are issued
Eur money bosraweil, just MS 0 man
gives his note to a bank when bor-
rowing.
Thus we see that bunds are
merely mortgages, and mortgages,
as everyone knows, are "promises
to .pay," secured by land or some
other valuable, marketable object,
Debentures, too, are promises to
pay, but often without any se-
cmdty whatever; other than that
involved in the financial standing
of the issuing cum;pnny. Shares
of stock, however, are quite hili- They are all of small types, fourferent. They involve no pro nice being of the 14,000 -ton Ihurean thing is more impressionable, less
class, withon the part of the issuing company twelvearmed 6-inchguns,f while the other is feh and d and molded endent, ?cease essly byouir
to repay the amount they repro- two are the 11,1100 -Lon Triumph and mind and heart.
sent. When you purchase shares Swiftsure, originally built for Chile
re-
in a company you become a paid g Y As our present mural activity re-
ner. In the aid days, when a man and armed tvirh four 10 -inch and . Taxes, aIle things clone in the past
o at fourteen 'r:G inch. Tarr total pin- suds in and assail us; and wee to
started a business, he heel t pt sssnt displaccme.ni; is Lh1a5 70,000 Lim who leaves the door of his
lip all the capital himself, or gather tons, and the number of gens ex- ,heart epee int the, past to enter and
together a few partners to help actly' 100, and these writhe mescal -I dominate hire,
him out, Now, however, it corn- cd to 130,800 tons and 144 guns re I u
prey requiring a million dollars tn spectively. : F" -'
thousand g ha. I r r-
.lot nl ii� •Lane s er c,a
issueten t t sa When tl c )c I
operate will. s i , ('lIAMPTON BIIII:IiI,,'l'i'ER
shares, each repreaenti;rg orre ten- rived out, there tv 11 be in reserve
thousandth part of the proprietor-, in home waters two 15,000 -ton sliipi j Thomas Gagne, of Montreal,
ship of the company-that.is, a $100 of the 'Formidable class, five 11,000- claims the championship of the
Theseproprietors whish ton ships of the I)tincan typo, six wora.d at bricklaying. In -.a day of:
the .s l rt. oee pt p ( 2 - t, nine hours at Montreal he laid in
the �shareltplders actually are) can- 12,250 -ton Alhions, and nine .1'1,,.00
not clemancl' the repayment the ton Majesties --a total of twenty. a well eight inches tart* and tin
epay of 1 two battleshi rs, feet long, 0,218 brlel s. It: a wall. 16
money they have put into the corn- T `� inches• thick and 50 feet long his te-
nsely ordinary ------I
parry any mono than Y — curd. i,a 7,1G2 bricks in a wall 20
Partner can demand his money Sincerity tragstocros all thugs. incises tlticic and 50 feet long lie, laid
Lack Ecom leis utter partners in, a The greatest fault, if it is avoided 0,01» hricics. This freak, lis says,
business. He can only get his in a loyal kiss becomes a verity was aptn'oveci by the anlliiteetsandi.
money out 'Try selling his 's'nnra in more beautiful then innocence, cutrtratlnrs.
Governments and municipalities,
too, issue thein. •
The word "Debentures" is in
;feast again all summer, and the l0 1'rghl• \tihrlr 1'lagnc• Agape as Jeremiah should be sus -
;bread is delicious. `'I must not put money in my rgated 'and held, esp-cially in utas-
fiae;ad flint.-l3reacb will keep mouth. I const not bite off bits of of. his rvalti.,ns with the king and
1resh • until used if a:t is greased lank schoolmate's apple. 1 must not
and covered reit), clamp cloths drink from any schoolmate's -cup.
;when first taken from the oven and I must not use my schoolmates
covered again with the bread Pencil. I must not put anything
cloths, 1 to should remain in the I near my mouth which has iseeit in
or about another pesscrn's mouth." 'executive power. They were fierce: -
pans until soul.
These are amens; the rules past- ly opposed to submission to Baby -
COI
\.
ed in the backs nf schoolbooks
for i k>n,
and hated Jeremiah
for his
pupils in the public schools at Mc- i advocacy of Babylonian rule. Per -
Corn in Casserole. --Cut the corn Alester, Oklahoma. Tite;y are part! haps also :they recalled his refer -
front the esb a:ud cook In a very of a system recently inaugurated !owe to them as "bag figs." They
little milk five .minutes. Make a by Dr. J. 1V. Echols, physician at I are not to be e,nfused with the
;than white, sauce, seasoned well, the State tern+teetiary there, primes of Jelmiakian's reign, who
in which stir the cooked, Porn, Put whereby the spread of tuberculosis were friendly to the prophet, but
nn small individual casseroles, or is to be prevented among children." who •dnrbtless were now in exile.
in one large one. (over top with The children are organized into Put him in prism—An evidence,
fine, stale breecicrumbs, over which "`School Health Clubs," and 0a1h „f the total ustn'patiort of videnr-
is dotted lumps of butter. Brown
member is supplied with a list of ity by the princess. The king was
donts whiel5 are to be pasted in
do oven and serve,
school o P high -
reduced to abject passicit;l' when
Corn Oyeeere.—(Srate r.... _..__ bo ks, men could proceed in thishigh-
iranclyd Way contrary to his will
(eminent . the pitiful note 111 Jer.
38, 51).
16,. The cells --"0 vaulted recess
off it passage oa• room," Excava-
tions in Jerusalem have revealed
many subterranean cisterns and
the dog. rooms of various kinds, supported
b3 pillars.•
1I).3 17.''The king asked him secretly
his pre -Chaldean tit tt
teince5.
15. The princes were wroth wit it
Jeremiah—These leading Wren hall
by this time usurped most cif the
truer cobs. 1'n one cupful of plait
redid one egg ,well beaten, and one -
'quarter cupful ef- nour. Season
highly with salt and pepper. Drop
IbyFpcon rids (.1)a hot, well greased
griddle until hrolva,eid on one•, side
turn and brew* on the other side.
Try these when yorre rn is not 55
rrweet as you wish ib 10 duo oto eat
from therroh
Man is alone, solitary upon this
planet, and aurid all the fn>'ms of
life that surround him, not one, ex-
cept .the dog, has : made alliance
with him. Some ereattn"es fear us,
moat ignore us, nota arae loves n5•'--
except
ISSUE 32-11.
vice.
Acts of this nature are openly en-
couraged by the Radical press, The
authorities profess to have discov-
ered a secret Anarchist organiza-
tion, a Mafia of wreckers, with pol-
itical objects. The Cabinet has dis-
cussed measures for its 5115r'easio1.
On several occasions Socialist news-
papers have .been. found where the
outrages were committed. The pa-
pers were always folded in one pe-
culiar manner, and were marked
with a cabalistic sign.
HELPS MEN ACQUIRE HOMES.
In Sydney, South Australia, a
sum of $500,000 is to be provided
annually by Parliament fdr the use
of men who desire loans to enable
(tern to build a dwelling home or
to enlarge one already in their pos-
session, or to discharge mortgagee
on their homes. The law requires
that 11102e who benefit by this fend
shall earn four-fifths of their in-
Dame by "'actual personal exer-
tion," and that they shall not have
an income over $1,500 a year,
In
the affairs of this world men
are saved not by faith, but by the
want of it.
fire Second Division, which
consists for the time being of the
two 18,600 -ton Lord Nelsons and
six 10,350 -ton ships of the Ring Ed-
ward class.
Two of the Ring Edward—the Af-
rica and Commonwealth—are al-
-.'-_.s
SENTENCE SERMONS,
If you .will not hear reason she
will rap your knocklos.
Lxporienee keeps a dear school,
ready in reserve and the Ring Ed- but fools well learn 01 no tither.
ward VII. and New Zealand . tvi11 14o power, how great saever, can
follow them in the next few weeks, force men to change their .opin-
when the Hercules and Colossus iotas
are eomntissioned to take t1eie
places in the ,Second 1)iision,
At present there ate only six
battleships in the Mediterranean.
Pride breakfasted with Plenty,
dined with Poverty, and supped
with infancy.
The past is not unchangeable; it
is crintarned in memory, and lie -
kc
4,