HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1911-9-28, Page 3Hints for Busy Housekeepers,
I eelees at4d Other Valuable leformatlee
of Particular Igcereat to Women Folk&
DAINTY DISHES, hot, fry. the bread a golden eolor,
Dinh a enstard on each and brown
hi. the oven. Garnish with pars-
ley,
Milk Scones: --Boil a quart; of
milk and when honing . take it off
the fire and stir into the pan suf-
ficient oatmeal to make a thick
paste. 1? 111 out very thin on a
pastry board and out into .circles
or triangles; bake on •a hot griddle
for a few minutes, The soonete,
should be nut into a warm napkin
and sent to table at once.
For a plain seed cake rub four
ounces of clarified dripping into
three xlu'arters of a pound of flour,.
and add half an ounce of carraway
seeds; four ounces of sugar, and
one egg beaten in a quarter of it
pint of milk. Beat all together very
bhoronghly, place in greased tin,
and bake fur an hoursin a sbeady'
oven.
For boulogno sausage take equal
:quantities of beef suet, fat, and,
lean baeon, and pass all through.
a sausage machine. Season the
mixture highly with, pepper, salt,
and powdered sage. Fill a skin
with the meat, tie it, prick to pre-
vent bursting, put into boiling
weber, and cook slowly for one and
/ a -half to two hours.
Buttermilk Pie,—Boat two eggs
to a froth with half a teaspoonful
of suga), add gradually a to l
e
spoonful
offlour, one pint of but-
termilk and a tablespoonful of but-
ter. Work all the ingredients to-
gether. Linea flat pie -dish with
t ; pastry, pour in the filling after ad-
• ding any spice preferred and bake
in a steady oven.
Cheap Pork Pie.—Take one and
a"half pounds of lean fresh pork
and cut in small pieces. Place rr
layer in the bottom of a pie -dish,
lightly sprinkle with powdered all-
spice and then put a layer of sliced
apples. Continue this till the dish,
is full. Cover with paste and bake
for two or two and a half hours. A.
little stock seasoned lightly should
be added before the paste is put,
on.
Belgian Soup. -Weigh, after•
peeling, two pounds of turnips and
out them into dice. Simmer Lir
twenty . minutes in one pint of
water with two ounces' of bitter
and a dessertspoonful of brown
sugar, pepper and salt. A cupful
of flour blended with a quart of
-milk should also be added. Let
all come to the boil while stirring,
.and serve with dice of fried bread.
Gingerbread Wafers.—Take one
pound of flour, and work into it
half ei pound of butter and half a
pound of caster sugar, also three
quarters of an ounceof ground
ginger. Whisk up two eggs to a
stiff froth, and mix into the flour
so as to form a light paste. Roll
out very thin, out with a fancy cut-
ter, and bake in a sharp oven till
crisp. Great care must be taken-
or
akenor the wafers will burn.
Apple Mould.—Peel and core two
pounds of apples and cook till soft
with sugar and a quarter of a pint
of water. Soak half an ounce of
gelatine in cold water to cover,
add the juice of a lemon and then
dissolve it by heat. A little of the
lemon -peel may be stewed with the
apples. When the apples are quite.
soft strain the gelatine into thein,
boil rip while stirrilg, .and when
'cool pour into a wetted mould. Turn
out to serve.
Vegetable marrow and cheese
makes a geld savory dish. Peel a
marrow, cut it in half lengthwise
and remove the seeds. Lay the two
pieces of marrow in a saucepan
with sufficient water to cover, and
boil gently fora quarter of an hour.
In a small saucepan put half an
ounce of -butter, mix smoothly with
half en ounce of flour, two table-
spoonfuls of grated cheese, and a
teacupful of milk: Boil the sauce
for five minutes while stirring, and
pour it over the marrow, which
has been well drained, and is quite
cooked. Scatter browned bread
crumbs over, and serve very hot,
Jambolaya.—Cover the 'bottom of
a stove pan with slices of breakfast
bacon; cut up a chicken as for fry-
ing, salt and pepper, dip in flour,
and lay on top of bacon; over this
lour a pint of uncooked rise, tiro
large onions chopped fine, one
quart of tomatoes, and two pods of
red pepper chopped very fine; fill
the pan with water and cook slowly
two or three hours ; put in mere
Water if it begins to dry. When
0iiip't tablespoons ready to serve, stir in three or four
butter. of ut A can of
shr.
mu ooms can b
e addedto this
t 5
', f•tr those who so desire, and if tined
should be put in at the first on top
of the chicken.
Choose Custard.—Beat up four
eggs; add half a cupful of boiling
milk, four tablespoons grated
cheese, -seasoning of sant, pepper,
and a ted peltpnr. Pour into small
molds, stirring al] the time 00 as
•,t to let the cheese settle. Stand
molds in a saucepan, allowing the
rater to come within half an inch
of the top; simmer gently until set.
Cut slices of breach and stamp totem
out in l 7alll<s a, littlo larger than:.
the mould. Put two tablespoons of
butter into a frying -pan and, when
Pastry; use a'moderate even for itiE pg
butts and large cakes; use a slow SUNDAY IbUl�O�611
oven for milk puddings, '
5, When scrubbing boards, torula
with the grain of the wood. INTER il, I4BOSON,
O.0O JJ b Jt 1.
L'Ot:l'IiEN COL'i•,l)ti'T BEAD.
Difficulties of the Postal Service, II Lesson I,—The pi'olrhes ;Ezekiel it
Parts Of Rural Prance.
watehma ft, Ezeh, 3. Golden
Jest as no well oondueted muni-
°heathy would . engage a blind man Text, Eza1c. 3, 17,
as road surveyor it is difficult to Verse I. And he said unto me—
imagine the British Post Office em- God is speaking. This portion 01
(!A ploying as postman gine who could the heavenly
CAULIFLOWER. message, having to do
not read. Yet the rase is not un- with the prophet's inspiration, be-
Cauliflower, Tomato Sattce.—Boil known in I'rauco, writes the Paris
a 'fresh cauliflower, then drain it correspondent of the London Globe. gine withs throverseugh
8 e chapter 2, and
carefully, Sprinlcle with white One el the Figaro's subscribers
extends tltrougli verse 3 of the les -
popper and place on a hot dish.' `wrote to that paper the other day .son. For the source, distinctness,,
Pour over it a cupful:o£ tomato from a little seaside town on the nature, and compulsion of the pro-
saauce, sprinkle with fried - bread Normandy coast: "The postal ser, t jabot's call to his sacred office, and
crumbs, ,add a squeeze of lemon vice is not well done here and we the conrplebness of his surrender
junco, a dash of. pepper, a small bit get our letters very irregularly, In to it, neo the introduction above.
of buttey, and a quarter of a pound winter this little town has only 300 Son of manef Child of man
of grated cheese. Place in oven inhabitants, so it lies only the right would be a preferable translation.
until hot and serve, to one postman over 40 years of age, Tho phrase is of frequent occur-
Cauliflower Salad—Soak a bead who gets £12 a year. He must be ranee in the book, being used over
of cauliflower in cold water, break ovor 40, so that the State will not ninety times. It calls attention to
into flowerets and cook in 'salted be obliged 'to pay him a pension. the contrast between the lowliness
boiling water for thirty minutes, For that price and under these con- of mankind and the majesty of God.
Keep it perfectly white; if it boils ditions we have a modest factor Eat this roll—This is a forcible
too long it willelose itsicolor. i Eb wlio does not know how to read. He way of expressing how thoroughly
done ngt carefully and stand' aside explained a few days ago that know- the prophet must appropriate and
to cool., At serving time arrande ing the names of the people who assimilate the message given him.
to in a bowl, ie arrange age live in his quarter he managed to He must make it his own before he
chopped saladey and sprinkle rwith decipher their names, but for the attempts to speak it to the house
hooparsley
ljye and pour French others it, was `plus difficile, One of of Israel. The roll had appeared
our friends asked him: before the prophet in a stretched
dressipg over all, . "Have you any letters. for moi" out hand, and he saw it to be
Cauliflower, White Sauce.—Care- " p the
fell wash our catilfflower and boil «He replied: roll of be book.only
Ordinarilynone
rolls
Y y I don't. think so, For a little would written ono on one side
until tender in water with salt and while ago I called at your brother's but the contents of this one were
one-half tablespoonful butter. and 11 I had had any for you I full, being written without and
When done lay in a rather deep would have given them to hint." within (compare Rev. 5. 1). Com -
diet). Pour over it a white sauce The story recalls that told by the pare Jeremiah's call (Jer. 1. 7-9).
made as follows: Rub one-eighth late Emmanuel Arene of the Corsi- 3. As honey -The roll was filled
d
pound of butter with one level can postman who could not read or with lamentations and mourning
tablespoonful of flour, a dash .if write. As it was impossible for him and woe (Ezek. 2. 10). But since it
salt and pepper and about one-half to take the letters to those for was from God the ro het found
cupful of warm water. Set on whom they were intended he solv- p p
sweet -
stove and cook until well mixed, ed the difficult byti• his fel- nes
bitterturned into y meeting encs. Therm a common experi-
but don't let it boil. Remove and low citizens on the village market este in life among those consecracrat-
add juice of one-half lemon, a lit- place. At the same Hour every ed to the will of the Lord. Bunyan
tle chopped parsley and a littlo day he stood there with his letters represents the Valley of Humilia-
grated nutmeg: spread out and every one took the tion as a sweet thing.
Missives addressed to them. 4-11,—Strength for his mission to
USES FOR SODA. There was only one man in the his fellow countrymen. He is
Uses for common washing soda: village who received letters every warned of the obstinacy of his peo-
One heaping tablespoonful of soda day, mostly from the surrounding ple, but promised a resoluteness in
(boiling) a
to .pint of water
communes; that was the local dea-
th will purpose more steady than their
tor. The first clay after his appoint -
clean the ugliest burned pan, by ment the postman noticed with a persistency in disobedience.
letting it soak a few hours.
suspicious eye that the doctor 4. Speak with my words—It is
p
In boiling clothes a few table- claimed half of the letters in his echaracteristic of Ezekiel, and of
spoonfuls of soda in the water will box. "What sort of a 'man can Jeremiah, to represent themselves
eradicate stains from clothes and this be 1" he asked himself. The as receiving, not merely the "word"
lend a 'snowy whiteness. I have next- day the same thing happened of God, but his very "words,"
used it on the finest quality of white and it took the postman all his time 5. People of a strange speech—
goods with entire satisfaction. It e0 refrain from asking for an ex- This refers to the inarticulateness
will not injure the material. planation, with which foreigners seem to a
To clean a coffee or tea pot made On the -third day all the letters stranger to speak. They are "deep
of granite or lined with porcelain, were for the doctor. Quietly he col- of lip" (margin). Their utterance
fill up the utensil with cold water, lected thein. One, two,three, four also sounds "heavy" (margin).
set on stove to boil, and add a lump .— As he was about to take the last Compare Isaiah 33, 19 for the first
of soda as large as a hazelnut to one the postman, losing patience, and Exod. 4. 10 for the other ex -
the water. It cleanses perfectly. In asked him angrily: "Aren't you go- pression. Ezekiel was to be spared
fact, sweetness is insured after its ing to leave any for the others 1" the difficulty of mastering a fore -
usage in every instance. It took some pains to calm him, but ign tongue. But there were greater
To clean silver: Put a level table- after that he decided to learn to difmgnities to be met. If he could
spoonful in dish pan, add a --quart read. once make himself clear to the
of cold water, put on fire to boil I remember seeing a rural post- heathen they would be found to be
(put silver in pan in the cold water) man "delivering" his letters from a susceptible 'to the truth, and would
hand wipe immediately after the little table in the centre of a village hearken to him (6).
water boils up. Result: Perfectly in. Aix en Provence about three 7. They will not hearken unto me
shined silverware without any tree- Years ago, but it was not because —This, then, was Ezekiel's task, to
ble. B. he could not read. The surround- try to persuade people who had
ing country had been ravaged by been guilty of a life-long refusal to
MATHEMATICS IN COOKING, an earthquake, hardly one house be persuaded by God himself. Out -
been left standing and it was wardly, they have a hard forehead;
useless for the postman to try to not a muscle in their faces twitches
find the people whose homes had before the condemning truth. In -
been destroyed. wardly, they are stiff of heart;
They were Bleeping in carts, by there is no yielding of will or feel -
the wayside .and in the fields and ing.
every day between certain hours 9, Fear them not—It isnot th
they used to come into the village, business e
and the postman, sitting under a ness of a prophet to measure
tree in the market nonce surrounded out his message according to the
by crumbling walls ants beaus disposition to receive or reject it,
lath and nlnster and broken furni- of those who hear. If they are re-
ture. would select from the pack-
to
still let him speak, for in
are in front• of trim the letters de- the long run his truth is bound to
stinecl for the people who had no ad- prevail. What inspired lezelciel
che
ss. with unsbrinking courage was the
fact that the words were God's
Little problems in mathematics
often confront the beginners in
cooking: If one vegetable will re-
quire thirty minutes for cooking,
how many minutes will one small
xoast require, etc. It is embar-
rassing to feel that the potatoes are
growing cold and soggy while you
coax the fire and try to hasten the
cooking of a belated pudding er
meat dish. The following table
may be helpful: Boiled potatoes,
30 minutes; baked potatoes. 45
minutes; sweet potatoes, boiled, 45
minutes; sweet potatoes, baked, 1
hour; squash, boiled, 25 minutes;
squash, baked, 1 hour; green peas,
boiled, 30 minutes; shelled beans,
boiled 45 minutes ; shelled beasts.
baked. 5 hours; string beans, boiled
30 minutes ; green corn, 25 minutes
asparagus, 20 minutes; spinach, 1
how• ; tomatoes, fresh, 1 hour ; to-
matoes, canned, 30 mninutes; cab-
bage, 1 hour; cauliflower, 1 hour;
onions, 1 hour; beets, 1 hots°; tem
nips, 1 hour; parsnips 45 min. ; car-
rots, 1 hour; rice, boiled, 30 min-
utes; rice, steamed, i% lours;
bread, 1 hour; cake, fruit, 41aours;'
cake. layer, 15 minutes; .muffins,
20 minutes; pies, 30 minutes, pud-
dings, 20 minutes to 1 hour ; beef,
15 minutes for each pound; mut-
ton. 15 minutes for each pound ;
lamb, 15 minutes for each pound ;
veal, 20 minutes for each pound ;
pork, 30 minutes .for each pound ;
chicken 30 minutes for each pound ;
turkey, 20
minutes es furac r
e h pound l
goon, 20
GC minutes for each pound;
duck, 1 hour ; email birds, 30 min-
utes; .fish, small, 30 minutes; fish,
large, 45 minutes.
RULES FOR THE KITCHEN',
b., itlea.t for seep should be put
on the fire in cold water to exteeet
the goodness.
2. Boiled meat should be put into
hot water and boiled for ten min-
es before being allowed d to situ-
inor. Thi,, seals tip the fibres and
prevents the juices oscapusg.
3. Ratters should 'be beaten well,
i
,
and . ,r
. nddb
be allowed d to stand be-
fore they are used, in order that
the sir rune pass into them.
4..t7se a hot oven for bread, meat,
words, not his. Compare Jer. 5.
FAMILY OF NATATORES. 3 and Isa. 50. 7, for the figure of
One spring evening an amateur the flint. Whether the people hear
nature-sbudent, note -book in hand, or forbear (11), the purpose of
penetrated the wilds of a. cow pas- God's servant is to remain as un -
hire and paused to take advantage yielding as the 'hardest rock,
of the practical, although crude 12-15.—Ezekiel's special mission
knowledge of a gray -beard country- •to the captives at Tel-abib. His
men who sat contentedly on a log. work was in behalf of the entire
"There is a strange bird -note this Hebrew nation, but his immediate
evening," she began, with sweet � interest ws.s that part of the na-
ciOndescension. "I wonder—per- � tion in captivity. And his interest
hans you can tell me.what the bird was purely a religious one. Few
is?" hints are given us of the life of the
The old man removed his pipe for people in captivity. In fact, cl-
an instant. most uniformly, Ezekiel seems to
"1 heerci a robin, mann," he ad- be looking beyond his companions If bricks were made larger it
mitred, pulling away at his pipe he- to the largerIsrael scattered would save a great Ileal of time and
fore the last word was out of his ,throughout the world. labor in building, said a, contractor,
n setand
vinely given message, the assur 'VAIN I'M %W,INK RES1',
auoe that' he went as a prophet di-
r'eot from God (verse 11), and the At What ''Fines of Day Mons Your
eonsoiousness of an inward impulse Ilsrein Weenies 7lrightest,
of the Spirit driving him forwary. Lard, Alverstone the Lord Chief It [MIAAIMS TO ottia'1.'E t4.TI
That is equipment enough for any
roan, But, in spite of all this, Eze. Justice of England in an address THEIR L.1' ,GI VA OE. •
kiel felt himself overwhelmed as he tio a gatliering of students some
sat in the very presence of them Lmo ado said that ho had bound
of the captivity, His fselin s were from has .ow•n long experience that
complex as he thought of the sin the early mnrnrng was the time ow P1utrbois o£ I'oliah Sell els
01 his own nation,
now matte clear -when ho could thinlc Dost, says
site perp Alive Their 1lotltt►
er, the awful majesty of an indig- London. Assayers,
sant God, and the superhuman task There is no doubt that our pew- dongtrc,
edboUeforo him. No wonder ha:rorna er to think varies greatly during After ears of oliicial ova io tl
in unbroken silode bso o en- the day, Some people, like Lord RussianSi)uma has just put thetisea!
tire weelc, Als elmovniston°, think best in the early of eon£ession 00 the.eharges i;ltett
10-21,—Ezelc'further mission, i ng :•before breakfast, but the schools of Poland are torture
17. I have eel's these swatch- after and early cup of tea; others centres of persecution,
man—This is oral • a more exact de- think better in the evening or last Thousands of Poles have felt theb thing nt night, force of. the -tyranny
finition of his prophetic function, Our power to think appears to experience, in their own
Like the sentinel who is set upon depend on the quantity of blood Russia.
but not till now has
the tower to observe, and to give circulating in the brain, and any Russia owned before the world that
warning in case of danger, so the device that will increase the flow of Poles who teach their mother to -
prophet was too take account of blood to the head will usually en- gun are treated as criminals, Ye
'p
the present crisis in Israel, and able us to think better, this state of things exists in clear
warn the people of certain clfsas Rousseau, the great French waft- d fiance of the Tsar's ukase of 1905,
ter, while he should point them to or, would think bareheaded in the ora is a statement of those
the way of life. sunshine; while Bossuet, the French guilty of such "crimes." All who
18. His blood—It is the funeiton bishop and theologian, would work lend rooms for teaching Polish; all
of the watchman to give fair warn- in a cold room, with his head wrap- fnst aid such teaching donation; liorson o
ing to the wicked of the danger of ped in furs, Schiller, the German seek Such df ll wilp all who
death. If he fail, then, though the dramatist and the friend of Goethe, or such without
whoopee a school
wicked die in his sins, the watch. would immerse his feet in ice-cold class without police permission;sub-
ject
an must answer for it. "He that water, and and who teach Polish or any sub-
ails to save life kills; and blood Everybody knows from experienea Polish in any private family.
will be required of him, of every that the brain is not at its best It must be .added that the second
man's hand the blood of his bro- after a heavy meal. The explana- description is aimed at priests and
titer." tion of this is simply that all the the wives and daughters of land -
20. When a righteous man doth available blood in the body is drawn owners who teach the alphabet and
turn—His case makes even more from the brain and the extremities catechism to peasant children.
perilous the watchman's position of to help in the work of digestion. Polito permission is never given OK,
responsibility. If the righteous sin, For the same reason we can usual- cept when all the subjects are
Vhe must be warned. Otherwise, he think best after a period of fast- taught in Russian, and as to prr-
ing, and it is known that clerks do tate families the punishment falls
may fall over the stumblingblocic
which God, for purposes of moral better work before lunch than after- not only on teachers; but on parents
test, puts in his path (not that he wards• as well.
may fail, of course, but may have Upton Sinclair, the author of DISTURBERS OF THE PEA CE.
opportunities of moral growth). the `The Jungle," says that he For some weird reason sheseed..
Moreover, ee is important for the pever felt more capable of intellect- fenders are classed under. the head -
watchman to keep on warning the ileo effort than when he was under ing of thane who "disturb the public
righteous man who does not sin, going the fasting cure, and he is peace," They are liable to a fine of -—
rghteo until the end of hisdays,nbeo vwi rtes thatced great poetry ,will 8280 and three months' imprison -
he will be beset with peril (21). sake of their workoets fast for the ment. It is generally grime outthnt
in ante.
of2-2romohere certain the encs The late Professor Mayor, of tmaller fines are ry distriicts, butthefates know
chapterCambridge, when engaged on his p P
tical prophecies of the overthrow latest book would occasionally go theist well the rural olive impose
esof fhe rmita sorb of and .on. preface, refs ehese vers. without food for a day or more at good will.most penalty with a right
p relating a time, and for several years be -
to the command given Ezekiel to fore his death his Food cost him no an government has I.ecn trying to
abandon for a time his sacred work more than twopence a day. For over seventy years the flus
and keep within his own house. Prolonged periods of sleepless- Russify the Poles. Hence these
thee—His They shall
hy y bands upon nese produce a sensitiveness 1 and laws,
inchl bureaucrats
lana ;s refuse' `o
among irritation of the nerves, or, as the P p -r tl ulca c..
iles will be without fruit because doctors salt it, a state of hyperaes- On the other land, the Poles ref•ise
of the 'opposition of sin -hardened thesia, which is frequently fav- to gii•e up their langitege. Scheele
hearts. No doubt Ezekiel had al- orable to thought. Scene people and family classess are are seeeotly car -
ready experienced the truth of this, can think only when walking, and ried on and the children attend with
although nothing is recorded of his others only in the noise of streets their books hidden an av under
ministry in these early days at Tel- and crowds, or with the buzz of their clothes. When the police raid
Abib. But it was as he had ex- conversation all around. But most the suspected hour is the books are
petted, they refused to believe his people require silence and solitude, scattered, often in ing'eetaosiy ton
testimony concerning the inevit- Opium and morphia, in moderate trived crevices, which are, however,
able downfall of the city, doses, cause mental excitement of a nearly always discovered, Then
26. Thou shalt be dumb—This was peculiarly pleasurable character, follow the fines and imprisonments, hpa
a restraintput upon him byJeho- which is always followed b • not a day passing but the papers
y e report snch trials,
vah, and one that was to be lifted period of intense depression. The p
by Jehovah only at such times as opium or morphia habit, once Yet in spite of this seventy -year -
he should choose. Eventually there acquired, is almost impossible to old yet ever -young persecution, the
will be some who will hear (27), and break. upper and middle class Poles not
to him that forbeareth, he will at Both tea and coffee stimulate the only manage to teach their own the
any rate have delivered his soul nervous system and the circulation. Polish language, history, and lit -
(21). The heart beats more quickly, and teratttre, but are fast educating rho
this causes the blood to circulate peasants as well, thereby inspiring
s more rapidly though the brain. Wethein to resist Russifying influences.
GOT EVIDENCE UPSTAIRS. drink tea because we know from our
GERMANS ALSO CRUEL.
own experience that, whatever the But besides Russian Poles, three
Not an Easy Barret, as it iltppcn- doctor may say, we do feel more milliom Poles are under Prussian
erl to he a Nilgha], lively and energetic afterwards, rule, which subjects them to much
But when tea -drinking develops in- the same sort of persecution. Child-'
An Indian Judge when first ap-
pointed to his position, says the tO a habit, as it often does, it brings ren who cannot repeat all their hes-
Bombay Gazette, was not well ac- indigestion, loss of appetite, incl sons and say their prayers in Ger
quainted with. Hindustani. He was nervousness in its train, man, or who refuse to recite verses -
trying a case in which a Hindu was Tho use of strung coffee at night is in which the Pales and their Mug-
man,
known to students who are uage are stocked, are eruelly beat
charged with stealing a nilghai. compelled to cram fur examine- •en. German teachers have fnstruc-
The Judge did not like to betray tions; for, although the coffee, does tions to thrash
his ignorance of what a ni]ghai was, not increase their intellectual CRs- th a_h their Polish pupil-
so he said, "Produce the stolen uutill they renounce their national-
acity, it melees their brain cells ity, The government has decided
property." more sensitive for the time bele,
The court was held in an upper g to Germanize them at all costs, and
roc, so the usher gasped, "Please, `Please, —� many Poles complain that the Ger-
your Lordship, it's downstairs." T man methods, being more thorough,
Then bring it up instant])• ,1 , RL BBElt ROADS. are more painful than the Russian,
sternly ordered the Judge. Ae the International Rubber Lx especially as the Germans aim at
7 he official departed and a mitt hibition at Islington, England, 51 reaching the parents through the
.oto later a loud bumping was heard min -
large area of the hall was pared with t.hilciren.
mingled with loud and earnest ex- rubber, with the expeetutiuo that it As soon as bad times force a Polo
hortations. Nearer came the noise, would serve to show the value of rub-
sehI hos farm or cottage a German
the door was pushed open and the her as a material for covering the sur is put in possession and nn Pole is
panting official appeared dragging faces of sada. At first sight it allowed to buy the property. The
in the blue bull. seems chimerical to propose the Poles straggle against this law as
The Judge was dumfounded, but use of rubber fur such a purpose,hard as they do against the school
only for an instant• butrubber
ubb it blocks on roadways ex- persecutions. They hold it such a
:1h! That will do," said be. posed to heavy traffic have already disgrace to sell land to Germans
"It is always best when passible nen tried, and the amount of -wear that those of them who do so Rio
for the andge personally to inspect upon totem after years of use is irird by a eoul•t of honor, and if
is argued tont owing to
the stolen property, Remove the said to be almost inappreciable. toc'ittble, It foetid guilty by brother Poles of sell -
stolen property, usher.,, its great. ing, except ander great premiere
durability, combined with absence of from the Gorman government, they
THE SIZE O; BRICKS, count and noiselessness, rubber pay.rest of their for th
ostracised will in the end be cheap 110 Rae est
clays. Often the richer Pelee help
compared with -noel or axphalt, It those in difficulties and enable them '
is suggested that an experimental to stay on their land',
block be laid 10 a busy London As some Ressiens and Germans
scree(•, A wide use of rubber paving point out, these persecutions, far `
would demand a great increase iii from attaining their end, are only
the supply of raw material, widening the broach between then-
aq.„ selves and the Poles. Polish na-
tionality is stronger to -day than it
BOYSSTOLE CRUTCHES. e
et has been,
for despite ite repic
s-
s]on, every Pole, ratan, woman, nr
The mystery of an arttfreial leg child, is trained to make any
and a pair of c'r'utches which were sarrhfirr rather than ,
found un the bank of one of the a t forego that
13•ighgnte. ponds, London. England, cherished heritage of ;lpeeelr and
Mu been solved. Police dragged sentiment,
the pond, but with no success, Let- '"" -4,...-....----.
G
er, however, they Mille upon a .,g_ THEF COLOR G1iOLi.wll.
Let -
Mee man lying Helpless under none `"13ink5 seems
bushes in the nciehborhood. He his new job;'" blue chant taking
said that while he was waeliinq in "I ell ee ee
the.. pen �,'' ilia is became he tri
pend some boys ran swat with gates.
the leg and melt elms, Ho mileages] -_
to 5'1.51\1 to the hcdgc, sshnrn he had"lc'e.in' n;
to remain all eight, :1t the the
•.girl yen vatted epee
�' c. jittlice 1n C" said #;11't as silt' t'attte (10W11(10W11it
station the roan's property was re- to the young maze in rite parlor,
teeniest chit to
n• „ ihnt T was beginning to cirinic you
were forgetthu me." "1 4111 f01
•getjing :von," replied the s;Hari
Toto trout of adversity seems to youth, "and thee's why I've called
contain more then sixty minutes to -night.' Can T have your"
CRUEL TREATMENT OF POLES
12, The spirit lifted me—This in- but the standard has her 1
mouth,
"Oh, not" The student of orni clicates that the prophet is still un- any change would be attended by
thology shook her head, prettily im- cler the influence of the trance de- considerable inconvenience, In
England
atl
wore
tpatient. "It is a new call, differ- scribed in ohaptor,1. Ho has been made and up to sixty oseventy !Tom aittheig1 haveyat ramnaecoided avinioncf his relation t0
years a • th •
n there bricks
g on rick
s
across. Can'ttou hear it—naw T„
his own people as
a spokesman of
and in order to evade it the bricks
Once more the old 'man perfunc- Jehovah. And now, under the in- were made of larger and larger
torilyv removed his pipe, and both spiration of the Spirit still, he is sizes. Those were used fur cellars
he and his questioner strained to set down among his fellow exiles.
and other concealed places. To stop
listen. There was a bewilderment Se ie seems to him that the glory 1
of woodland anie farrnvarcl sound, of Jehovah,' in whose presence he rein fraud an act was passed inl
reign of George ITT, fixing the legal
"There.” whispered the girl, had been standing, was left behind size of bricks. Early in Queen
"that full. shrill note! (omit you him. And the Spirit departs as Victoria's reign the tax w'as taken
hear it? In that dirootion 7" with the noise of rushing chariots. off and bricks may new he. legally
A light, broke over the old man's 14. Tho hand of Jehovah was made on any size whatever. But
face, and the hooker of .inte±mso sq- strong upon me—Ezekiel's mission r any change from the standard size
fort vanished from hos fnr•ehcad," was performed under it divine, in- would bring about great inconvon-
escaable constraint. His bitter-.
"nh, that noise 1" 1•!'e throw P ienee, All calculations are 'made
hiwk hie heed with ce chuckle al ro- ,pass and heat aro but a reflection i for building on this standard size,
lief. "That's a frog, mum." of the indignation which his Lord and the London and other building
felt toward tho sinful, obstinate acts have practically fixed it.
ra'i es
Is el to .
A man eennccomelish a lot while 15. Thenr.
I Into -- He was. There are dcgreea of pride, 'Even
waiting for his wife, who is rtoine strengthened with a threefold then with red hair hates to get
to be ready in just a minute. •uipment; thio possession of a di- baldm .