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The Brussels Post, 1898-4-15, Page 66 eitAavly**W6,— fr -ta ihe Home THE EASTERS MARClitNti ON, Do you hear the aolug of triumph, _Rtreldring o'er the brink of dawn,— Wlear the gladness and the glory Of the Easters marching tyo Hark I The universe is throbbing d'o its sweet, unbroken chime, Lo1 7'he ages are resounding With Its chorati strata sublime! Do ye hear its echoes ringing Down the centuries long gone,— Do ye mark the rhythudo footfall. Of the Easters marching on? Do ye see their banners gleaming And their serried cohorts bright, And their standards high u.pliftod, Radiant with celestial light will 'break up emy cold, if taken In Vale. Tele tea, Is a laxative! and induces pre- feese perapiretion. TO CLEAN COPPER VESSELS. O Copper vessels may be effectively Weaned by rabbling them with, half a lemon dipped tn sadt, Miley should then be rinsed in pure water, and afterward polished with a sett cloth, See sin skulking., shadows matter' Conquered Death grow weak and (ware Terrors fleeing from the highway Of the F.ustera marching one— See the grave $o dark and dreaded, Now becomes a royal bed Which the King of Kings hath hallow - Where is neither Death, nor dead I Do ye know the holy juying. Breathing blissful benisan, Sorrow's keenest dart destroying,— Of the Easters marching on? Feel ye not the wings of healing Chase afar tlw cloatis of gloom, As earth thrilled with glad rejoicing Bursts to bright and. beauteous bloom.? With one mighty song Let/creme, IVite ane glorious antiphune With one wet/thwart' are the legions Of the Jesters marching on, "Christ hath tisen, hath abolished Satan's disinherison 1 Life immortal, Uf. eteraal!" Shout the Easters 'needling on I --- FOOD FOR LOREN. Children need more nut : it tells food than older people do; or at hetet they Suffer more. from want. of It. Pota- toes. white ',read, ea -try and tho nanny kinds of eweees Meat make up the feed of grewn peopte do noi supply tee ne- ceseery nutrimeut for the growing I brain, hone and Lucieet» of .•111-dren. • Sdener er tater a diet containing so men, stech will tell on the systerre, it limy be in a ruined digestive ap- partzeus. weakened bones, or in name' other forms ,jf wavieneesee aemost un- known in itegone edwn plebe and single food %cue the rids. In most for -ii countries, marts (except at holder seaeonsare almost unknoerl. Senettieues the food it of the plainest. and ,•tiareeest, alimatt invariably the eialdren are rugged and healthy. As scion as children begin to eataare should le, taken that they have nour- iel•ine food, ale ays remeinbering that tceIr etoznachs cannot digest as hearty aloud as a grown person's ran. It re- qaires but a little Gine to orepare some extra dish fur the little one. Mee flake or whentlet can Le prepared in a few minutes. It 15 light and child- ren loves it, Oat flake may i e given in small quantities. Orairetu prepar- ed In almost any way is g.ottd wheat cakes are wholesome, if the flour is made from clean grain. Et La the smut on tuekwheat cvhieh 1 poieutious, and causes eruptions of the skin. The following recipes for rakes made of graham and flue oatmeal will be found excellent for children's lunches, and are relished by older people, ton: Graham. Fruit Cookies. —Tee -thirds cupful sweet /Teem, one-fourth tea - 'spoonful 001n, one-half teaspoonful Dream tartar. Ilse equal parts gra- lam and white 110.11r to make very stiff. , Roll very thin, ger/nide. chopped fruit ' very thickly over lay on annther a K artn EN RV I, ES. Mire fol/owing mearturea of rapacity may be routed undo! to 'hang iu the kit - ellen for easy refeeenes, Four eveu teaepoonfula liquid equal ono even tablespoonful, Three even teaspoonfuls dry material equal one even tablespoonful. Sixteen teblespoonfels liqutd equal one cupful. 'Twelve tablespoonfuls dry malarial equal one cupful. Two cupfuls equal one piut. Four cupfuls /meal one quart, Four elm -tuts flour equal. rue quart or one pound. Two cupfuls of solid butter equal one pound. Two morale gra'ntilated sugar equal one pound. Two ani a half ocepfuls powderedsug- ar equal one pound. One pine milk or water equals one pound. One. cliezen eggs should weigh 1 1-2 pounds. Tlue followieg table of proportions is a,leo valuable: One teaspoonful soda to one cupfu'i molasses. One teaspoonful soda to one pint sour rai lk. Three tenspoonfuls baking powder o one /peat flour. Oneelialf cupful of yeast, or one -quart- • leirquelatike compressed yeast to 011a pint IOne teaspoonful extract to one loaf plain cake. IttoCtunre. teaspoonful salt to two gnarls stmOvilr teaspoonful salt to one quart One scant cupful of liquid to three, full cupfuls of flour for brona. One scant cupful of liquid to Lem full cupfuls of flour for muffins. WATCHES ARE WONDERFUL. Acme Vari. Abolti rtsueplreee: nitivii Maur Perhang are Not &wave at, Open your water] awl look at the wheels. springs and serows, each an indispensable part of the whole won- derful newhine. &Ale the busy hal- - wisiel as itt 0103 0 and fro un- K.A.T1N,S PART. day and night, Ye": in and: "What have you done,.dear children r year Out. 1:116 Vcanilerfui little ma-, The mother gently sold. chine is the result of hundreds of years And ah e kissed her white-rebed babes oe study and experiment, says tbe at night, Jewelere' Journal. And tucked them up In bed; 1"What have you dune through "1.11 this e Vlsi rarrlsj by the average man iS compoesc'i of ninet,yanglit pieces, To help someone along, the way (" and its manuftedure ontraces more Then each one told her some kind than e. t and separate op- deed— erica/Jas. Senn, of the swebesb serew;1 A loving word just; spoken; are so minute that the unaided eye. ecu- I SecT:gfeatrifleet fordr.Trks wants, not distinguish them frotn steel Hinge But when (:twaereeMe':trrn. to speak or specks of dirt. Under o powerful' A tear -drop glistened on her cheek. magnifying glass a perfect screw is re- "I cannot think of ate thine yealed. The silt at the head is 2-100 of So very good to -day," an Melt wide. It takes 30e,000 of these She sadly said; "only I helped serene/ to weigh. a Lowed, ant a pound 13-Altai:o Iota find lts cvay, .1$ worth 81,580. The hairspring is a But it was lost, and oh, so Small' strip of the finest Steel, about nine e ere," naughty when. 11 1 -en away; and one-half inolles long, 1-100 limb But, dear mamma, 1 kuow wide, 27-10,000 inch thiek. It is wiled It felt so sorry, for it trieti up in spiral form and finely tempered. 1.10"Ojelr,o,eokotto gel eek The provees of tempering these springs To Lave the lost ones eweak. vas long bent an a. secret by the few T11 .BRUSSELS POST. FIG. 1.—CHECKED TAFFET A GOWN WITIT OTIIMPTA. Diaele and white checked taffeta k the material of the gown Must -gated, with tucked light green taffeta. for the guimpe and sleeve insertions. The skirt is cut with the front forming part or a eiroular flounce, which is joined BISHOP OF THE KLONDIKE, THE REV, DR. BOIYIPAS AND HIS RIO SEE IN THE NORTH. 035 'l TlIto Ittolotool C101411 Iric141 larIiicIed itt r(1414111>. Ito Cho Poorest Illoloot000r to the ITerld — /Albers lir the Itistioo Sollhltollt In filo fro%ott Wildernoss—Efreot of the toroth of 11111111011,11. POSSiblY the poorest see la the world. yet one taint includes within Lie ex - tensive boundaries the richest: knowi gold field, is the dioeese of Selkirk. 0 the Obareli of England, in the Kion dike region. The rise extends over 200, 000 square milea of desolate, frozen wil darnel's between the remote Annie Oe even, the Alaskan boundary, the Rooky Mountaine, unit the Northern boundary of lime:tali Columbia. It is supported by the English Missionary Sookity, winch contributes £7011 this year and. the Co. lonine and Continental Church Society which gives sidO, Voluntary contribu timid form a precarious auxiliary source ef ineome, but the aggregate of tho bishopritee revenues '101 hare- ly exceed $5,000 this year. Out of this emu must be paid the salaries of the Biehop, who is 'the Right Rev, William, Carpenter Emulus, Senior Bishop in the Dominion, after the Archbishops, cue Archdeacon, five other clergyman, one schoolmaster, one sehoolinistress, and nine native catechists; and provision must also be made for the maintenance of the rine aehoolechurehes and mission bousee in the see. The se -amity of feed • 0.111.1 other ainiele4 necessary to human welfare which 1:15S' been brought about • hy the rush of inhume to the Klondike, and the resulting high prices, have put the see to groat. inconvenien .0, 1104 the smallness of the flpiecopal ineorne ho keenly felt, The Bishop is stationed at Forty -Mile Creek, where the Rev. 11. A. Naylor, of Montreal, is achieving fame in the gold districts Inc organizing the miners at; that lOnl into It (..+001.).SLEED CONGREGATION. The setena Magnet' mission, and the only other of the kind iu the diemeee is at Dawson City. Mission buildings are in ...011.1.80 erection at Dawson, lint it is feared that work upon them, will( have to be abandoned, hecallse eL the cost ol' materiels end the exorbit- ant wages demanded by lettere and me - /haute*. The Indian missions art) lo- cated /tt Port Yllk0.11, in American Ler- rilory ; at Buxton, on the umer Yu- kon ; at Klondike, near Port Relianee, axed et Fort Selkirk, whence the see takes its name on the Pelly River. The first mission. svfla started ateleort Tu - leen therty-fiee yeare, ago, but the sea - Lion has unity recently been restored t,lite9renr. fizio,em.Rm apart. House, on Poreu- iaThe &gun/Linn of the white and to - dein uniasiosus, whieh bad previously been done merely to secure the best educational results, has become imper- &lave since the labia of the gold -seek- ers. Debtors addressed Icy Bishop 13m - pas and his aseistants to friends in England deplore ,the coining of the white men, who, they say, aro ruining the unsoehisticatall Indian by the in- troduotion of the vines of their semi- eivilization. The children of the frozen forest; have been easily lee into temp- t t' strayed from. graoe. ' 'The introduction of whiskey," wrote Bishop Bompas recently of Dawson. City. " has been enormous, and the /nom keepera appear, to wish tu mon- opolize to themselves the gold. The min - frig ramp is is sviid place„ TRE GOLD EXCHTEMEN'I field indeed, at least from a territorial point of view, for the Mackenzie River see embraced an area of 800,000 .'quare miles, a 5> (1131> equal in extent to all of the Stales mist of Liao Mienissippi River. The diocuse 'inelndedi the im- mense valleys of the Mankenzie and tip- per 'Yukon rivers; the one on the east, the other on the weal of the Rooky Mountains. Ins headquartera u ere at Pert Simpson, on the Mackenzie River, some hundrede of miles south of Great Bear f,alce. Travel' through his diocese 111.,41nt /fomenting more than a jaunt aeross c.u.ttlry Itt long stretelles iu- trvening between headquarters end. r>ectolci put:tilts in the WiltrilP55 0NT1. oo 1 a t possibility o lost thane - and the elmest vete Uhl ty of death by - starvatIon 1>1 erisequenee. 13111, the _ sturdy Bishop, RF4 inured to peril as the trait/lea among cvhont he wets, aceepte ed Lil (halves to reach isolated Indian immle$ or the lextely 'anipsof world -last 1 lumbers. La 114111 a third. 'change of diocese nee ourred, This Lime the Yukon portion weed of the Rooky Alauntame wee par- titioned, off from the Alaeleenzie River • sete, and once. more Biedrop Boutarta el- - erted to take a diorese further re- lererltinZeerlaVn'lleitrfainirD2.rMrilltleicizin e slam abandoned for a neore sheltered lontion at 'early Mite. When lte first Molt charge of this diocese the Blithop pact directly in 'charge FOLna 2,000 na- tives, 150 of whom were regular com- outtileants. The total population of the bishopric', Indian. Eskimo and white, "iiil not exceed 5,000. A majority of the endian.e has been remitted and brought under L110 influenee of ret>g- lotus teaching. The natives within reach of the several ntiesions are meetly at- tendants at the Sunday end daily ser- viees. A. number men RNAI) THE NEW TESTAMENT to aide end bank breadths. Tbe melee. blouses slightly, and is belted with te. • white leather belt with gilt elides. A narrow aper bleak passementerte edges the cut out parts M the waist and heads the flounce of the shirt. NOUN FOLKS 1 The little Waken looked distres.sed, fortunate ones possessing .11. and even And how it cried, poor thing now it is not generally known, Their It was ao glad, to cuddle up nanufaeture requires great skill end Under its mother's wing, and. 9155 80 happy when I found 'are. The strip Ls ganged to 20-10e of 'les, ti iuch, Int no measuring instrument tbere with her all sate and sound." /Meet of dough, Inas the rolfing-pin ov- er it, then nut in shapes, prick deep— 10 end bake. Flee prepared as for lay- e er-eake ere very vire for thebu se. t any - (hopped fruit will do. Graham Cake.—One-lealf Nepal' sweet 1 ereaut, one cupful molasses, flour to e make so stiff it an scarcely he stirred; then thin with one small cupful of woe- e1- end, one teaspoonful ends,. Bake in a loef. Gralain Cake No. 2.—One cupful of 1 auger, two eggs. one-lnef cupful swat cream, one cupfui gralietn, one tea- 1 az,00netil baking powder. Add currants or chopped raisins, and lake in Rae ties. Oatmeal Snaps.—One cupful sweet cream, three tableapoonfuls sugar, a Add fine octeanese until stiff, knead s slightly, reit thin and take crisp in a nueierate oven, has a. yet leen devieuvi capable of fine uough gauging to determine hefere- and by the size of tho strip what, the treugth of the finished spring min 'e, A 20-100 pert of an Inch differ - nor in the thieknitee uf tile strip makes difference in the running of a wateh 1 Mout six minutes per hour. The value of these springs when fin- ehect and pleeed in watches is enormous n proportion to the materiel from Odell thoy are made. A. ton of steel made up into hair springs when in catches is worth more than twelve cid ono-Lalf tines the vitas of the lune it eight in Imre gold. Hairepring vire Weiglai Orie-hventLeth or ti g rftin o MP bid]. One mile of wire weighs leas than hnef a putina. The balance Ives five, vibrations es 'try NRCOFIll, 300 very minute, 18,0e0 every hour, 432,- 100 every day. and 157,680,000 every ear. At earl] '1>al ion it rotates .out one and one-fourth limes, which makes M7,100,003 re:elut ions every etar. Take, for i 1 net ra t I'm it tom - motive with six -ford driving wheels. SUGGESTIONS TO HOITSEKEEpERS.' In making charlotte risme fruit Haar- e lotas, etc., where it is de.eiralee ( molde with cake or fruit it Is some- le Unice difficult to Make the pleas keep (11 their proper place on the males of the mold, To insure their staymer where they ledottge esperially when yott turn 1 In the sitharlotte," touch each piece tt. with a little gelatine% (dip out a talde- epoortful for the. purpoeee It teal then 1 The ohildren hid their smiles beneath The bed's white coverlet, But the mother kissed her Katie just where the cheek was wet, "Tour part," she said, "you, too have done; God, is well pleaeed, my !Rite one." PRIM'S PEANUT PARTY, Mary Ann Prudence Manikins had borne her toed ot names nearly four- teen years. To be sure nearly every one called her Prue, her name, how- ever, was a sore triol to her, for the boys—but there I I started to tell you of her birthday party not her name. She would be fourteen on the tenth of April. and. on the first day of that natant/I—she began to agitate the subject pC a birthday party. The result was time on the third. her mother's eon - seat was gained. "I bavenet time to bake anything for a party, you know, Prue, and your father has no money to spare for non- sense, so you mustn't expect your party ,rt its Wheels he run until they have te ato t a ra a a. atr• seine manlier of revolutions "No," said Prue meekly.. "I \von% hat a watch does in a year, and they expect anything. if you will let me have wilt lune covered a clislanee equal to it. I've got a dollar of my OWM' she wenty-eight template eircuits or the rth. Al, thia a watch does without adhere to the dish, The merest much ea is euffietent. When ready to turn nut a siring a cloth out of hot waito, um() ° round the outside of the mold, leave e few woods, end the vont ruts will turn net smoothly, Heat relea es the seta - tine very quirkly: it is only necessary to keep the cloth on the mold for an lust' n t. 11 in preparing any dish into g gelatine enters as an Ingredient avoid heatiag -numb as possible. An ap- 1] Oroaell to tho welding point brings r out an unpleasant flavor—the 0! - al of the getatine. Oslo tine is ) used merely to give, 1 ody or SOYINiStence to the dish you, are preparing. it re- quires no eooking. Tice powdered gela- tine Is the roost convenient, as it, re10 - (Mire% only fifteen or twenty minutes' Soaking in cold water, An old lady writing' to an eke:lunge reoommends house -mothers to gather f? pletty of elder flowers this seaaonelry them and put aside, for 1350 in winter, " A hot foot bath,' with liberal use of to, tea made ley steeping one cup of the s elderberry tinwers in quart of watts pi:. added leader her breath. "I'll buy idler attention thee winding °nee Ftara-a-1: daa.t. .waaten very twenty-four hours. taty 'ties plain pally, sung ant. brother Dan in a teasing voice. Prue payed no attention to this but, went to look in her tittle shell box the Lep bureau drazver. There lay i her d.ollar safe and sound, wherenponl she mentally hugged herself for hovel -ow RTIQ1111DTTE NOTES. Plain white unmated paper nlways he most refilled and elegant for note - aper end envelopes, though a delicate ing kept 11 for this oecasion. ray L, not in bad taste. The next Saturday was a busy day Place the postegestetrop in a straight, for Mar Ann I?ruderice. Twenty-five lot la, vernal position, in the upper cents o the preeious dollar went to 1 ight hand of the envelope. It argues buy gay colored cheese cloth which she e roat carelessness to put thestump ea made tato fif tont medium-sixed bap n an sort r a f tali 1 with a air string in the top of each, Ihen she got out her box of gilt- edged note paper svisloh Aunt Ann had given her the Christmas before. With great care she wrote out fifteen very formal invitations. Then she got, down Iron box of water eolors and late,' °Piously painted a peanut in the up- per left iltand corner of each ()ten. These she enclosed in envelopes,1 addrossed and hared her little brother ? Re, to deliver, 11 I was lots of work and her reward was not just what she expeotetl. . 4 Anna she reached the school room Monday morning her party ryes the, talk of the school. "Your iaitatii,n, wcsri just g '," said Dora Little paesing her arm arenad Prue's waist. "Sttenning.I' ejaculated Dave Turuer.' "Bnt eay, Prue, tell us whet you put that potato in the corner for r "Pelee° I" repeated Prue feebly. "Why, deeet you know. G umpy ?" Out En Alex Martin. Sbe wants us to each carry a potato i31 our pocket that night :so we \valet come down with rheuma- tism and spoil the pariv." "Pretty -Pruees plat potato party," chuck/tut leme's brattier Dam who had come up in time to hear the last re- mark. "Prztato, the idea I" exclaimed Lou Graves, "There was a pumpkin oa mine. Prue 1 going to have jack-o'- lanterne toed 111 lie there without fail.. Count on me, Prue." "You boys aro just horrid," exelaiin-; ed DOI'n„ draWillg Prue aWay. If 1 were in. Prue's place Pd. never invite such a rides set of boys again.. You haven't manners enough to accept au hisvitation." "Prue. knows we didn't mean any - Wein ted itt talk,' said "Your invitations were fine, Prue,' really they were." `rho teacher ernered and the talk! ceased. Thursday ovenfiage the fifteen. invited s guests gatbered at the Tompkins house. They all seated tbemselves stiffly to i their chairs and spoke only In low One might think they had. never met 117enfo%-re.ancl to the one next to the 1 • o Pretty soon Prue brought out the , oheese cloth saoks zuncl gave cae to: each. "Them are enough peanuts in this ; room and. the dining room to fill all , 1 those sacks," said she. 'erhey are hid , t palmed different places and the one I ), getl‘ttomgle,rtetik:.hsir sacks filled first will t makes et hard 5,1 present to obtain great attention to religion on the part 1 (Me miners', and much patienee and prayer will be ,needed. to prevent the Miami being utterly ruined. The 'cata- lpa work has. come thus to be divided nto two pa.rts—the Engliah and the iselian. It is very. undesirable to fuse hem into one. MS the Indiana are the osers by the contact," 'rlie Bishop of Sellcirlc is a remark - We man, leer years his life has been peat among the people of the -wild Northwest. Thongli seldom heard. of in he United Stales, previous to the rush or gold, Ida achieeements mid enemas 31 missionary work among the Indians ave been fre.quently diecuseed. intermit 11riitain, and much praise has been be - towed upon him Lor the tirelessness his efforts and his undittinted cour- zgre in assailing new iel ds. He is a ative of England. His father, the late haries Curpeater Rompas, a, sergeant- belaw of numb' ability, is soil to have vett satirized by Charles Dickens in xis Sergeonl; leueletz in " lehe Pick- viet1 1?:.Pitt" Qiesie Bishops ro ten, • o eva fo .m.. , y r neenes eouosel, has lately been ap- minted a Judge, while another is one f the leading solicitors of England. As it. young man Bishop Bompas bad before htm the cagy life of the average Church or England olergyman. and was curate in several rural parishes for he five years following Isis ordination s a deacou in 1859. But in 1825 he waS Hauled a priest; in London, in order o sent cot to the Northwest 'rerri- tory by the Chureh Missionary Soviety, which ha.s been engaged in work on the Canadian frontier since 1823. The sig- nal success which rewarded his endeav- ors earned blue promotion., In 1878 it was decided to out off the apareely etled 'country Northwest of Manitoba Tito second diocese to he known as he DIOCEHE ATHABASCA., end he WaS selveled In be its fast Lord Bishop. His consecration took Ware at ele. Mary's Chapel, Lambeth Palace, on May 4, 1874, during ins first esit home. Archbishop fait of Cane erbery >5155 the coosecator. Ten years afterward' It wan resolved o create a new diocese, that of Mac - reams River, and to leave the old see Buell territory as had been settled grad - gaily by Europeans The illehop con - eluded reinaint 'wall his Indians, his Eskimos and his trappers, and forth. with departed to lVfackenzie aving Athabasca to .90011re FL !IOW 10p - stops) head, There he found i broad I 0, Every one sprang up, 11 was hurry, sourry, jump anti dash. Hrs. Tompkins who was up stairs putting the haby to sleep wondered le she would have any house left to say 1 nothing of the furniture. It was over an, hour before quiet Wila I h and was presented with a ohine, doll reetored. Da,s. Turner was the winner two. inches in length, and dressed in °tweet) cloth to match the peanat sacks. 1 lrhey ate peaauts, told stories and sang sonlgs, a There was sabdued. exeltem.etet ; when Dora Little, the name of the coinpauy, preeented Prue with a fine now muff, Prue was delighted. II; was just like Dora's wheel she had so 4 much admired. They . finally took their leave in high spirits declartng a peanut party ahead of anything for ° foe. Dear me," said Mrs. Tompkins, the next day as She and Prue swept ap peanut shells and restored the furni- ture to its accustomed place. think, Mary Anin Prudence, that this is your last peanut party," a 0 Yes, said Prue gayly. "Next year t' 1']! leave a cobweb party." But We Will have to wait another year to hear about that, EASTER REBOLUTIONS. . These wars studied out by Theodore ae Parker shortly before the day of his vedding, They took the form, of 10 t beautiful resolutions, which he insorib- d in his journal. They are as follows: 1. Never, except for the best reasons, o oppose my wife's will. 2. To discharge all duties for her sake may, 13. Never to smell 1 4, Never to look erase at her. 5, Never to worry her with cons, ft Mends. O. To promote her nietY. To bear her burd.ens. EL To overlook her foibles. 9. To save, cherish and forever defend or, In. To remember her always in my le reyers, Avoid garishness in color and deco- ation in your note -paper. It is exceed-. sly poor taste to use rector green ink, r orangeseolorod notepaper, or paper any other strong color. Answer every note or latter except uoh usa may be impertinent or insult- ag: these are not worthy your no - co, Nitrite legibly; if you cannot, you hould learn to do So, .Praotioe makes rfeet. 131 vethebiolo•nownreete:iyvtgaue. in toln ett iolurnemer,ho of whom, there are 1,000 alone along the river Yukon's 3,000 miles of curves, have Christian names. Thus it is it sur- pre1n1an.a1iiztec1,i1tinBIs ane:.r:the11nnblg )1i,rh,lti amt,1 nl,,txert ie.10::k,o hear him respon,1 in very good lingloilh " The paleface brother sleeps ton much in the moonlight; but if be will pro- cure a proper introcluct Mu he will "Ireienrioethtei'mjeotrlizne.i,•Bil brother's name Le Shortly after the mention of the dio- cese of Selkirk, Bisltop innupte reported to the Hnglisli missionary societies the disroveriee of gold in the valley of the Tulon. At the Keine time he predict- ed that a great influx of miners from the 'baited States would meta, 11:11"n the 1,110w1OFIge of the rielmeas of the became general. 11 never on- vurreal Lo ltiiu, mparently. Itt profit by the riches eithin his grasp. Indeed. tbei r OXISleace ecus 1,115 1:e a 1,0Uree of regret, for the accession of thousands of miners actuated by the steal. am- 1 tive of greed threatens destruction to the stork he has built up with pat lent toil and rare. For years absorbed iit traeliime the Indians, and Eskimos. the rush of /Mixers has created for him an entirely new atmosphere. But he has, nevertnelese accepted the chartg,e, rad - Mal though it is. 1301 has ;crepe ved, u,s extensively as the limited means at his remanent will allow, to provide for the spiritual needs of the recent com- ers. 'rho Biehop has always worked on , broad lines, and is in close touch with the missionaries of other churches, numbering among his ecclesiastical as- sociates, the Jesuits, the Sisters of the 03511110114, unesions \chi/M. are seattered along the Yukon River, the Presby- beriana, and Bishop]. Rowe and his Ep- istoyal Merge:mem Some time ago oue ofLIle Catholic priests was Injured aot fltse aIm•m. B froishop Bm opas m s'ission . where he was welcomed and at- tended by the Bishop mail ha had ful- ly recovered. AP.R111 15,1:R98 HYPNOTISM CURES BA.BY. CHILD'S WILTS REMEDIED WH1LE INFANT IS ASLEEP. Siriinge 1.09wer or A Illothooto Illro, Charles OM, !lot'u's Vill P111110 Igor (llaltA fraimullt)- 1111Flatta4 — Anyone CAA On OM Aire. Charles H. Kerr of Glon Ellym (11., has pikt. In jorttOtMO tt new scheme of hypnotic suggestion through which children are cured of bad habits by merely talking to them in their sleep, Mrs.Kerr has onred hor small daughter of sucking her thumbs and other (hit - siren of nailbiting, stammering and such unpleasant habits as some ehil- ctren seern bear to. Aa she herself observes, 210 medtelno is needed, no punishMenl, nor the re- wartt-ot-merit system, That tho euro La Wirt and lasting M.ra. Kerr etatmsz and this is how she works it, proceed- ing upon the premises that natural and bYlInotio sleep are so allied that the patient:may be similarly approaeli- ed in either. "h'Irst," she says, "I tail to my lit- tle girl when 13511 is awake, just to pre- pare her mind for Llie experiment and to arouse her to the foot that there Is a subject I want Lo speak to her about. 1, tell Ler that I do not wish her .t0 suck her thumbs, and add, ' Now to -night darling, 15h314 you are asleep, mamma, is coming to you to talk zioutit ht, YOU axe. not going to wake up, but you are goirag to listen, and then you will net Want Co suint your thumb anymore."Ohat night just before 1 go to my heti, 1 go to hers, when she is aleelling, and /Lay ; "Now, deur, you clo nut like to stick your thumb, It is not a nice thing to do, and you are never going to Like it any more. When You grOW up you Want yo0r thumba 1:0 lie two strong little belpere, and you must not hurt them now, So you re going to Sleep and wake up in 1 the morning, and not want to stick the thumb any more, not at all.' In that, stay 3 give the suggestion Le her tender mind. "flow does it work 1" Admirably. Alter three trials the little one was oured. ShO has never eared te such: her thuitia atone." 110r, (10 3.04 cure tnalishiting?" 01313111) OF NAIL BITING. LOST HIS CASE, ••••—• And Then Ile illnaged Putty Lawyer roe ft. "My first caso of any importance," said the lawyer who went to grow nip with tho country and, then repent- ed, "w5S a damage suit for $10,000. A can of powder exploded in the hose - maul: of a hardware store, mad my c tient, who had just purchased a jack knife, was trying. it while °coolly- ing a nail keg on the floor above. He mina out of the wreck minus part of ene eye was "jest a leetle anbit eoarrif.,and the entl or a finger, and he elaimd that o "On the day of the trial 1 almost fell of my chair when my inata entered. knew that the day before he heel run a foot rave, pitched horeeehoim and gone swimming. Now he tolt)rect into ijourt with two canes, had ins neck and head muffled like a man with neuralgia,' sat down slowly and with the greatest care and nettled I Lick witlt s groan that !Louie' be heard itt the elate.. 'l'i ni've,Thiztatskiend 'creation's am te atter, " 'Mowed -ape lie grinned. 'Don't you think I know nay buenessi 'there hate% nothin' on earth that ain't the matter with, me till this here (nee is tried. I'm the worst exploded feller you. ever saw, You ask 11110. questions and look alter the law pints, 111 tend to my end of it. Alt '1Ni:tat's worry - ire me is that T didn't; have 1031,0111 - tion enough, to ask for $20,000.' "Two men luelped. Bill to the witness stand, he groaning his best. Front Itis stoey of the uteielent yoe'd believe he "WU blown half a mile straight through the roof and hadn't a sound spot left in his anatomy. He. was in the midst of lila story, and pity rias written on the faces of the ju,ry, when Bill's woolly dog fell foul of a foxhound belonging to the Court, They worn knocking furni- ture better skeliter and tiilhmg the air With yelps tied hair, when Bill let out ti whoop, jumped over a table, dame ed around encouraging his dogy want. ed to bet he would whip, and shoved the judge over u ohatr to prevent his xiarting the brutes, "act a verdievt 0 Case was disirdstsed, Bill was fined 222 for contempt, and was in jail three weeks before Teoult1 get him out. Then he told around that: I won no lawyerY' KNOCKED MANY.' 4 TITAN atrr, Yes, said the pugilist, this is my fa- vorite mincli. And, setting down the glom, he smnoked his lips, " in just the same say, 1 go to the child in her sleep end tell her that biting the nails is not a pleasant hale it ; that it is .lirty, and elem. she wak- ens mei will not want to do it. 1, be- . tor. unguents. ' rote ' and punishment have utterly failed, and It certainly is 'Imre Pleasant loth ter parent ond "And docten't the patient wake nor "No; our litt Is girl would move rest- lessly at first., but children sleep sound- ly, 1111,1 are soothed by the vines of the mother, winds They eo well know. That is is hy it 1ee5115 10 um highly de- siraale thalmothers should treat. their eon ehildron, it is all 'suggestion,' and the idea is not Mine. 1 got it from Sidney Flower, Mid have merely Fta, opted it. When you, think in it et 1111 Suggest e0111-505 of conduct to people —especially to childrem-every day. Yon retnamher the story ot the mother, who, upon leaving her children to bike ed to the piano and began co siter. in Care 01 thelltSel.VOS for a while. said: ' Noe don't ithey with the fire, 110r put beans on your noses,' and fount upon her return that they had all played with the fire and each child had a beau up its nose. Well, that was a, ease o faugg,esLion." ANYONE CAN DO IT. Mrs. I'err its a little lady, ri1.13 can- did brown 0705, 1141115r features. Anti hands that are like satin to the totteh. Amyone eould aeeree that she arenas highly magnetic, but she is a modest little person,' who is no professional hypnotist, but en earnest mother wilt] is anxious to bring up her darling in the way she should. go. The ehild is a particularly lovely one of a little 0913C 3 years old. wilt Mowing, red -gold curls, bright hazel eyes and ruddy dim- pled cheeks. She some as strong and sturdy as it is possible for a chilcl of her age to 10, but Mra. Kerr tells hoar a short time since the small Katherine was seised with Orottp, and during the agonized interval efeer the (locator had sbaeyanLagse;ne for and before he 01016 Mrs. Kerr tried, thpow on poer of suggestion, Darling, you can breathe through: your nostrils just as mamma dons; now you must do it," And the astonishing iltieg is that the child did, and whou the {Meter cams he found lettle to do, POWER, OF A MOTHER. "Mr, Flower claims that Mere is no limit tat the educating which oun he done through euggeettori given dur- ing sleep," :eve Mr. Kere, " so that a, mother may have her ehtle whatever she wills it, Thab 1 haven't. tried, ex- cept once suggesting to a girl friend that she would. sing when she waken- ed, and 11317 95011. As soon us the clock etraelc end she awoke, she not up, 'goes - better voLetz end more charmitgly thou she ever did before," Mrs, :Kerr is the wife of a publisher and herself n writer. Recently alto pen- ne\dvothmesttizstwonioeltaakay itt a obila, you are a naughty girl," bot suggest, "You want to las a good girl," or, " You tiro a good girl, and yott want to please ine because you. love me. By suggest- ing to her "not to stand 013 till.,1,111101.1C and talk to the boy/11151f an hour after soften( " you make it easier for her to adtomitit str: 80001,Lni thl itzu:s1101,, cabst: ant to tell you," oe " for yoa L0 do when you come home to-ntglat." ]lass she a habil; of biting bel' nails, or of walking with, her toes turned the wrong way ? Does she deceive you abou things'? Talk to her whet she is asleep. It can be done without waking her i21 properly done. Suggest to her that she does nob want to do snob a thing; that, she knows it la wrong; that she wants to be good, and become a Verfill,0 whom everybody will love, and after it few suggestions like that you will notice .an improvement; a few more, "l NrVeithdeolvtlidith6Viemlr 91e15>11 05>1' 051r girls to he deogy, to elliew grun, to Use slovenly. Engllsh, to walk ungraoeftilly, to be headstrong, or unladylike, or decalitre4 or nervous, Or Attpiod, and they need be none of these if tangent:ions to the contrary be properly omptayed,