HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1892-2-12, Page 6--.......sssa'S''SSOSSOSteess,.....sisssassso"m•
HE il-LTH.
An ArIstooraoy of Health.
' The tendioney of man is to separate, no
seeding to natusal affinities, into thins sto
blesses. We haVe hal, 11'0111 HMO ininiewor
al, existoetateies of in glory, of politica
ewer, of landed estates, of wealth, of illus
lions ancestry, of empty take, of "
families," aud of many whet, oliatinetivo
bottom, Even tho most rural totalities its'
ot altogether free from persons who had
retentions aspirations to aristecratie exele
ivenese and privileges. To say that this i
11 wrong would, be perhaps, to make an at
ack upon Minoan nature in geeeral. W
• nly want, to pinto ant wit onlY R hermit -a
•nt vastly benefieent eleumel into whici
this tentlemy of our outwore may be dived
ed. We wish to propose the estaltliehmen
of an aeistocrecy health. What 0 gran.
thin it is to be wellborn -to come int
this world with a sound peystque and an tos
clouded intellect: What a sinew:lid ambitiot
15 to liv S, that Oleintegrity of bite b I
may remain unimpaired, end the power to
mind may increase until advanced age
Imagine iu the distant future the Revon
of a marriage in " one of our most selec
circles," The perfect symmetry and ex
etulsite complexion of the bride and th
noarolystrungthand bearing of the groom arts
tain their daimsto (leaved from families the
for many gonerationshambeen free 11.0111 Ili
lighteat taint of syphilis, scrofula, tuber
tenets, Maturity, nervous debility, rheunie
tism, and all organic weakneae or constitu
tiOnal tencierwies to dievase, but the mom
tors of which always die of alt! age ; families
whose rosy-cheeked women never wore
corsets or tight shoes, never suffered
Imprudent exposure ta the menstrual epoch,
nor indulged it, unwholsome forms of
sosial dissipations ; whose men never
weakened their nerves with tobacco'
Bred their tiesues with alcohol, or
clogged their systems by gormandizing or
indolence; whose husbands and wives did
not spend thole physical capital faster than
it accumelated, but reserved their vital
forces to contribute to more perfect health
and higher and nobler forms of mental ac-
tivity.
What a, blessed promise such a union
Oyes! Who would not like to marry into
mon an aristocracy! Who woull not be
prowl to be a deseeudant from it! What a
Power sueh a race would have among their
fellows -fax beyond that conferred by
Wealth!
And yet such a desirable eondition of
things is not at all Impossible or
oven difficult of attainment. Simply a lit-
tle intelligent study and daily atteution to
plain laws of health will accomplish the
object. Esteli husband aed wife may begin
aom and resolve that henceforth their daily
lives shall contribute to this glorious cause.
Each young person may prepare to become
O partner in establishing an illustrious
:amity in this wonderful new arietocracy.
And each victim of incerable disease may
at least resolve to spare himself the pain of
mein& group of siekly children around his
aearthstone.
By joining in this movement you do not
;tint and deny yourselves, like the miser, to
eavean inheritance for your heirs to tight
wer and squander after your death ; you
onjoy the full rich benefit of it yourself, and
stave them o wealth that no man can take
'ram them.
Then all hail and all hasten Coe glorious
lew order -the aria toerney of Iteelth, whose
ocutoheon shall be the erect, athletic form,
he blooming cheeks and ruby lips, the
moldy teeth ant, gleaming eyes: ot a happy
see of healthy men and women !--Dledieal
Redd.
Belt -Control,
'I" .51
BRUSSELS POST,
through the moveless habit of le Wing Buell! YOUNG FOLics.
things Ito their Itiouthe Casein) parenta
will inetruct their tshildren in bet tee habits, ,
but the greet majority at children are not ' .
observed with eufliciently care, neither
1 are they sullidently well inst
• to prevent the frequent oecurreove of cases
; in which foreign bodies, of more toe lem
harmful and 1111,1101.01113 1111/111%1 haVO been
swallowed, The best method of :Waling with
•
came of litho sort was dimevesed hy s. GOV.
a man surgeon, SO1110 )‚'1V g. A case well
, illustrating the yahoo of Otis method was re-
, candy reported by Dr. Silver, of New York.
a 1 A three -year -oil by, while lying on his
. g with a ltrge
a shawl•pin, whin, he was treating as a cigar,
a : suddenly swallowed the pin. His mother
heaeti Molting s011ndS, alIll On tal'Iling to-
. ward tlo• boy and asking what he had thme
t with the shawl -pin, be promptly replied,
" Me eat it tip." The mother, of eourse,
• was very notch alarmed., but on ex.
• 1 Pe Vhl'oat nonil eec
•
• no tram of the pin. She took the
child at once to 0 physician, who also made
f1 a, careful exammatent but could find no trace
of the swallowed mantle. Tho mother was
O directed to give the boy undoing but poto-
t, toes to eat for two days, but to allow him
to eat freely of Oda vegetable. Your days
after the pin was swallowed, It was passed
without difficulty, the head downward, and
t Was felled to be imbedded in a thick, possty
a mass of undigested potato. The pin was
three inches on length, and the diameter of
the head was one half inch, In eases in
which articles with ragged edges or sharp
„ corners have been swallowed, the same rem-
edy has been employed with equally good
51100558.
: An expert and experienced official in an
osane asylum said a littla time since tbat
hese institutions are filled with people who
aye: given up to their feelings, and that no
ne is quite safe from an insane asylum who
floras himself to give up to his feelings.
'he importance of this fact is altogether too
ttle appresiated, especially by teachers.
e are always talkiog about tho negative
!duos of discipline, but we rarely speak of
le pontive virtues, We discipline th e
ohools to keep the children from mischief,
.
) nountam good order, to have things
fiat, to enable the children to study. We
,y, and say rightly, that there cannot he to
ood schuol without good discipline, We
o not, however, etnpliasize move should the
.ct that the disciphne of the school, when
ghtly maintained, is as vitab to the future
owl of the child ELS the lessons he learns.
'Diacipline of the right kind is as good
ental training as arithmetic. It is not of
se right kind unless it requires intellectual
fort, menial conquests. The experienced
Halal referred to above, was led to make
following remark by seeing a girl give
ay to the ' sulks." That makes insane
omen," she se:narked, 0.11i1 told the story
woman hi au asylum who used to sulk
Oil she became desperate, and tile coped
id, "You must stop it. You must con-
ol yourself ;" to which the insane womati
plted," The time to say that ems when I
as a girl. I never controlled myself when
was well, and now I cannot."
The teacher has a wider responsibility, a
eightiec disciplinary duty, than she sue.
sets. The pupils are net wily to be con -
'oiled, but they must be totight to con.
Lel themselves, abeolutely, honestly, 0010-
1 etely.
--
For Sleeplessness.
Per many years we have been in the habit
recommending, in cases of sleeplessnese,
I e wearing of the moist abdominal bandage,
what the 0erme11s call " Neptene's
dile." This was one of the favorite roma.
ses of Pressanitz, and we have demonstrat ed
I virtues as a sleep -producer 111 litm-
•eds of eases. We quote from the Dietdir
=rile the following translation front a
anch medical homed, RS evidence of the
hpularity whits!' this simple remedy is
ening in higher inctlioal eireles
" WaT111 bathe, uo 1 won 1,nown,puoiluo0
.36,1ming effect, awl tend too bring nu sleep,
Alldorfer hoe attempted to Ithply melt
method to patients where a setlat ive effect
desired, and yds where a bath is inappli•
ble. }He metuod consiste in wrapping
o lumbar region and belly with lilted
11111S Soaked In Warn/ Water, an/1 11)01
oaring them with oiled silk nr slobber
011, eo 14•4 10 prevent evaporation, whit -
,o whole is kept in piece and Was or boat
evented by a flannel eleth. Tide Knee -
ire leaf reaslyperformenee, awl the author
,ye that by this simple memos he has ob.
Med most astnuishing molts in the
lament of insomnia, By dilating the
stes outsets of tho intestinal tract by. tho
arnoth applied, a condition of 0111010110rnnea of
Sin is produced, favoring sleep. These
'go intestinal voseels have been very pro.
rly termed the wado•gates of the coroula-
ry system,"
JI5l/n151.3 Remedy When Foreign Bodieti
EaVe been SWaDowed,
Children not infrequently swallow pins,
Sodium pennies, and even larger objects
Dickens to His on.
With the exception of the firstthorn, my
brothers were sent to school vary youttg.
And RR they grew up, and were sent out on-
to the world, my father wrote a letter of
counsel to oath, writes Mande Dickens in
an article on " What Itly leather Taught
Us" in the February Garth,' lloote Journal.
Here is one such letter :
" 1 write this note to.day becalm your,
going away is much upon my miud, and be-,
cauee I want you to have a few parting
words from me to think ot now and then, at,
quiet times. I needmot tell you that I love,
you dearly. and am very, very sorry in my I
heart, to part with you. But, this life is,
half made oip of palings, and these pains:
mus0 he borne. It is iny comfort, and my 1
sincere convictionthat you are going 00 0)'
Ole life for whith you aye best fitted.
think its freedom and wthluess more stuted
to you than any other experiment ilia steely
or office vsnuld ever have been 1 and without
that teaming you could haro frollooved no,
other suitable occupation. What you have
always wanted mail now has been a stet,
steady, sonstautpurpose. I therefore exhort
you to perseverein a thorough de:ermination
to do whatever you Mee to do as well as
you 0511 tlo it. iws not so old as you are
now t‘b n I first had to who my food, and
do this out of this determination, and I
have never slackened in it since. Never
take Et Inean advantage of anyone in any
transaction, and never be hard upon people
who are in your power. Try to do to others
as you would like them to its to you ; and
do not be discouraged if they failsometimes.
It is notch better for you that they should
Bailin obeying the greatest rule laid dow
by our Saviour than that you should. I
have put a New Testament among your
books for the very same reasons, and
with the very same hopes that made me
write an easy amount of itfor you when you
were a little child. Because ibis the best
book that ever was or will be known in the
world : and beeense it teaches you the best
lessons by which any human creature who
teles to be truthful and faithful to duty can
possibly be guided.
" As your brothers luwe gone away, one
by one I have written to each such words as
1011 writing to you, and have entreated
than all to guide themselves by this book,
putting aside the interpretations and in•
ventione of men. You will retneinber that
yon have never at home been wearied about
religious observances or mere formelities.
I have always been anxious not to weary
my children with such things before they are
old enough to form opinions respecting them,
You will, therefore, uneerstand the better
that I now most solemnly impreas upon you
the truth and beauty of the Christian
religion as it came from Christ Himself, and
the impossibility of your going far wroug
if you humbly but heartily respect it, Only
one thing more on this head. The more we
are in earnest este feelieg it, the less we are
disposed to hold forth thout it. Never
abandon tloo wholesome practice of saying
your OWO private prayers night and morn-
ing, I have never abandoned it myself,
and I 'mow the comfort of it. I hope you
Mil always be able to say, in afterlite, that
you load a kind father,
.01 IVIII11 IWO you thinking my little lad, \VII
101 000 ry9,4 of Swot,
A, yoo 03000 the V0,1sLOS lini RIOWIY glia
tier the levet (Wean 1100V 1
ltesutlf,l, graeeful, silent as dream, they pa13100)' 10111 (Itt' s
And 1.‘;11'7'1.1.i. world 1110)' so,
I seek 1101110 fal1Jtr shore.
They 1100111 I,/ he seat I eyed abroad by chime
In move so the Meese,' MP,
I .t s - •
Mileb tos ted:wing hither ann yen, art
melting In (lIstailee gray ;
iint Peon one 11100'eR CO R 1111 V /000 drie, and th
winds t heir sails Heil. 11 1
Like faithful servants speed them all on the
appointed wtty.
Por each la, to redder, my dear Hale lad, wit
a stanch num at the wheel,
And the rudder le never left to Itself, bu
the wilier the mon is there 1
There is never 0 moment, day or night, On
Otto vesset does net reel
The terve 01 0,' purpose that shapes he
course u»d the helmsman's watchful car
Some der vou will Intineh your ship, my bo
Be sure your redder is wrought of strength
to stand (Mistress of the gale ;
And your hand on the wheel, don% let It Alneh,
whatever the tumult he,
For the Will Of lunn, with the help of Cod,
ehall conquer and prevail.
" Stop that, Willie!" he said allarply I bra,
W1.111311'‘toplidt 1111autil, 11tto‘e111You'll have tn leave the
table!" he exeltohnoil, Still Willie did not
$11:11krow, 1 IWO$111110 yon w.tulti give 111," Ile
511 0., 1110 Wife, "1/110 that isn't llly way,
s Weal fight it eight out on this line, and 1110
110S1 111110 1 111101/10 he'll know that, 1 mean
o business."
She said nothieg, and he got up, took
0 Willie out uf his high chair, awl put, hint
'1 'it''•viY111l
neotyo
ole floor,
eri
'ttop crying," he said, se.
0 -sorely. "111 pot you ltt,,l 111 yonr elude."
But, Willie kept right 001 110 faet he yelled
tr louder than ever.
" Willie," said Ills father at last, if you
11 don't soop that you'll have to leave the roam
1suppose you tItink that's tired, Jane, be
t , , I re
atntelI, eel IL We ligtot, it, eut now ove'll have
0 no further tronble. It's the only way."
She made no reply end he agide got up
end carried the struggling, screaming Willie
into 'mottoes room.
y, " When you tan be quiet, Willie, you
may come back," he said,
10 WLIS 3 or 10 minetess later that Ise look.
al up from his after dinner coffee toid tent-
ed o
" 1)o you mppose the boy will melte him-
self siek by his cryittg
bile shook her head.
" 11e stood 10 for a for minutes longee,
and then he gave in,
" Peshoope, Mrs. 13ritiker 1" he exclaimed
as he opelied the door ancl brought the boy
hack-. perhaps you are headless enough
to let your son ery himself into a tit. Per.
haps yen have no lierves to be unstrung by
suult lufernal yelliug-Hush, Willie, it'S all
eight now -but I tan built on a differeet
plan, Mrs. 13inker ; on an entirely different
plan -shut up, you imp I"
13nt a Intle bemuse, James
-
"Mrs. Binkee
"11 you tight it out once, you know-"
Ile put Willie down on her lotp, grabbed
his hat, and started oat, and as Ile was
closing the front door he hoard her call soft-
ly after him o
" lienever you have any valuable ideal
en the management of children, James--"
Then Ile slammed the door. If he had
waited be would nava Wend that she had
Willie quiet in tie° minutes and asleep in
ten.
Little Maud Hood, of Sydenhant.
Maud Hood is only a tiny mite, of 13,
and, therefore, not capable of doing anything
on what the world would call it great. scale ;
but nevertheless her name merits a place in
tloe large " Book of Golden Deeds." There
are seven inothariess little ones in Mand's
home, in • Lower Sydenham, all young.
Their father, a working watchmaker, has to
earn the household bread, and one brother
helps in the process by adiug as a green
grocer's errand boy. Another is an invalid,
confined to hod, and the cares of the house-
hold and the oversight of the younger ones
•alt fell upon Little Mother Maud. While
1st) e Was attendieg to the invalid, Arthur,
!four years old, severely scalded hinoself, by
upsetting a teapot at the fireplace. Maud
and her elder brother got, him into bed and
dressed the wounds with oil as best they
could. Tloo gram grocer's customers were
waiting, and the erraed lad had to go, leav-
ing lois sister in sole charge. She decided
that the burned cluld regWred better treat.
mem than see could give, so she maroon:1 off
to the Home for Sick Children, to ley the
case before them. Yes, they wottld take
him in, but she must eel a, letter of admis-
sion, Wham? They gave her the names of
several subscribers. 01.1 she wont to canvass,
and wfw happily sum:misfit!. How to got
loin to the hotne I She borrowed a peram-
bulator, carefully placed the injured child
upon the cushions, and wheeled 0 herself to
Ole timutatton, where the fevaltd WaS at
once admitted. 1,11 this energy and devo-
tion were of no avail, foe the burns were too
severa-Pali Mall_0_alefle.
Profession for Boys.
A. Dog T.hat Loved a Oat..
Here is 0 pathetic little story illustrative
of the alreotion that may be cultiveted ne.
tween a dog and to eat, and being a, true
story makes it all the more worthy of
telling.
A certain family Mot a dog about four.
tee» years old and a eat ',bout uhm, both cot
which they had reared. Between these
animals the moat marked atrestion sprang
up, and they were Inseparable friends.
They ate together, 'slept together, endplay- <1::
ed together, (111,1 if by chance they became
separated they each showed in the most -
marked manner their diecomfort and un- A.
happiness, If tho cat got out of the house
the dog whit ed most persistently and (tele.
fully ttntil she crime book, and if the dog
happened to im absent the cat acted ho a
sturdier manner,
A short time ago the eat died, and it was
then her soon potion manifested the most
unmistakable signs of distress. 115 wished
her body Itround with his nosv, apparefttly
trying to a ak...ti her, all the while wit hong
iio the most woo.liegonit manlier.
A little hey in the family, wit's con:omit
1.110 ILTIIIWIIS hail 1,0011, decided T
Is bury his (lead frit ti, and, evolving a box N.
put the lowly in it, and, after nailing on
the lid, carried it into the garden, dug a
hole, and after pladel it therein covered it, t
01 he supposed,
In the meantime thedogotoopsl abont 'r
the house, to:Boeing either to eat tor drink,
and looked eo distreseed that It Was pale:fool
to see hitn.
One day the bey modeled that the dog's
nose atol head were covered with mud, and 0
the thought at °tot:a ostruelo hint truth be fool W
foundItis friend's grave mud had tried to t(
natured the body, 10
We went into the garden end found that,
his euspicioos were correct, The clog had 0
at:Welly dun g dowand uneovered the box, w
but, RR the lid was securely nailed on, he 11
could not bri»g the body to tho eurfaoe,
Tho dog folloteed the hey to the grave, foul ,
whined atiol howled piteously While the boy rt
made arrangements to reinter the cat
After n, good many days the deg gradually a
come 'reek to his appetite, and, although it
sf ill snore or Irma 1 'lend, has apparently ree '
gained
his normal munition, a
When Walter Besant wrote his most fa-
mous book, that was Llm first inspiration of
Ohs great People's Palace in London, propo-
sitions for the establishment of industrial
schools for the poor of all ages and both
sexes agitated the active British tongue and
brain. Industrial schools, according to the
thinking of every philanthropical matron
and squire, are destined to be the salvation
of that groat unfortunate mama huwoonity.
the British poor, and itt truth very splen.
did results have rewarded benevolent
founders and patronessess. In the little town
of Ascot a number of buys are employed
under the aupervision of a ntost wise and
clever benefactress, lies. Thornton, in the
manufrotturing of the wonderful popular
wrought iron work. So prefluient have these
ng
earnest youworkmen bem
coe, that,
through Mrs. 'Moreton's influence tool en•
ergy, they were commissioned to furnish
houiging lights for the little Ascot church.
How well they acquitted themselves of
the task is proven by the admiration all
visitors express for the great, black Iron
brackets, formed of deitcate stroll work,
which, fastened high on the Aural; wall,
suspend over the pews and rending desks
lamps of blitek iron modelled on artistic and
(6ppropriato designs. From their workshop
re sentient numbers of the q mot little bed-
room night lights used in every English
house. One of the prettleat of theee has a
lelic,tte iron bracket to be fastened with
crews 011 the wall, and suspended from tee
braeket's hook is a tiny rose colored glass
lateen, into to !doh a taper is introduced
hed a inedest rosy glow over 0 quiet nur-
sery,
What the Bohool Bell Says,
11 15 wonderful what unlike tio Inge
seboot boll says 1.5 tho boys, when it rings/
For instance, OM:laggard, who drags along
On his way to echool, haws this most of them :
011 -sus: -hum I
Why did I come 1
Study till four -
Books are a bore
0 how I wish
im
I eld run oft' and fish t
8ee I those's the hook.
Iteee's line and hook.
What's I hat, you ,ay
Hurry un-eb
011 -hum /10 I
101000must go,
Study Lill four,
"looks aro a bore I
Then the bay who loves totes faithful and time,
Whodoes whet hIs parent,. think best he should
o,
00100 bravely along Will satchel and boolca,
lie hrceze in hie win ..t the nun in his looks,
and. 1110A0 are the thoughts that well up like a
song,
O he helve too old hall with 10:4 fnAthful ding.
dong
thing, clang, ellsg
tan so glad I could sing t
Ileaven so Mao,
Dull' to del
lilrila in the sir,Everything fair.
Even a boy
Moil,: atty a 10Y 1
11,11on 0,01 work's done
Pm ready for run.
1,:temer tttY o '0Y
loor the task or the (ley.
Cling, elan.; Ohm'
l'tlo.0 glad l could sing I
aro the snags whieli the I Ivo boys boorrl,
bun thr uolmol 0,elO 11100 ringing, word far
word.
Vliteh do •you lh1uol syn., the truer song
Vlach do yen hr
ea, its ;.0,0000 trmiging along?
>claim lagraril I far better, 1e.,y,
u wort: when you work, and uley when yea
play.
Row to Manage Children.
Hhe said that silo was utterly worn
ut when he wiled her how elm was feeling,
rites the Etcher, that that bny wise enough
o drive a saint distranted, awl that she did.
I know what to do to make him nhey.
Ole eaid that the boy Was 1101 tiotIoS 3 years
Id and might to be cosily managed. I
as his opinioe that, she had bob sullielent
rinnesto that sloe gave in too oddly who
ho boy began to cry,
And then and there he and •rteek to give
or a lemon in the handling of children.
Willie was in the high chair at the table
ood Willie wanted smoothing, Willie Wee
1f011110,1 that, ho coidd not have it and
Hilo Logan to yell, The father ittonedi.
tely became deo.
Something for the Table.
COEN BnII1D.-0110 mop of sweet milk,
one 001 001 sour Jilt, two cups 01 (00110 meal,
Dee cup of Hour, one half cup of sugar, one
half ctop molasses, one teaspoonful of soda
diesolved in hot, water, one teaspoonful
molted butter mid a little suit. Bake in a
deep pen.
MOIST 0 1NIIIIIIIIRS.1n.-Two ceps of floor,
one oup of molasses,one tablespoonful of
lard, one teaspoonful of salt, ono of soda
and two of ginger. Allot the flour, salt and
ginger, and stir In the molasses. Put the
lard in the cap and fill with boiling Avatar,
When the teed is dissolved put it into the
mixture, and add. the soda dissolved in a
little of the water.
WRITE CAKE. -One cup of white sugar,
the whites of two eggs, one -hall cup of sweet
milk, one-third eup of butter, 0105 teaspoon-
ful of baking powderoue and one-half
cups of flour. lie sure to told no more flour.
PlIA011 BLOSSOM CAKE. -..One cup of pow -
(land sugar, one-half a cap of butter mixed
well together ; beat the whites of three eggs
quite stiff, and add to the butter and sugar
one-half n eup of sweet milk, tom teaspoow
fuls of baking powder, and flour enough to
make an ordinary cake batter ; flavor Ivith
extract of petteh ; hake in thin cakes to two
shallow pans ; put between the cakes finely
gratod c000anut and pink sugar i frost with
clear icing and spiinkle its with pink anger.:
STEWED LIM% MAI/S.-Soak dried liman.
over night in plenty of water. In tloo morn,'
ing dram and parboil in water to which 0,
bit of Sella 1000 been added ; dry again and ,
put in fresh water. Cook gently till :mit
but not broken, remove the cover, let the
water nearly all evaporate. Season with
butter or milk, salt and poppets
:Nutt' Caxn,-Two cupfuls petvdeted sugar
one cupful butter, one cupful cold water,
fonr eggs and the yolk of another, three
cupfuls flour, quarter of a grated inttmeg,
the grased rinds of half a lemon and half n.n
orange, juice of the orange, one-quarter tea- '
spoon of salt, two teaspoonfuls baking pow-
der, one pint hickory nut meats and one cup
of raisins. Beat the sugar unil butter to IL
orsaool; add the welblmaten egg yolks, and
the water gradually, with the flour in which
the baking powder and salt hove been sift-
ed ; add the flavorings end beat thoroughly ;
put in the rrisins and nut meats, through
which 000t y little flour lets been mixed;
add, the Imo thing, the welbbeaten whites.
13eat hard for a moment and hake in al
eteady moderate oven for about forty 100111-1
Ithes. l'his makes two eitkes. When they
arc cold make an icing with the white of the
extra egg usal ; flavor with orange juice and
spread on the cakes ; they should be as close
and flue es pound-caloe if properly made.
8.ousatie Rota,s,-Clook the sausages until
about half clone either in frying pan or won,
awl then allow thew to stand until quite
ooltl. Then roll op, separately, in a moder-
ately thin pied: of good potste, and bake in
the 00011 or drop into boiling lard taut fry
like doughnuts. Serve very loot, on a fold.
ert outpkin,• tool, if you wish them to bo
extra wee, garnish with elices of fried apples
premixed in this way : With a tin corer
extract the cores of a couple of fine, large,
tart apples, and then peel them. Gut each
apple into horizontal slices, of moderate
flockness, fry to a golden color. As you
tithe them ottt of the pan, dna, os hill ovhite
sugar over ouch, awl layaroued the sausage
rolls, etteli slice overlapping (mull other,
The Three Ages,
My clears, when I hvas young 101,, you-
th days that long ago took wing 0--
11 Wei your wit, your MOW 0010, 100,
And loved, like you, the Spring.
Fotelly .10 1 remember still
How to 01' 000u, were fields end ilowere ; a
flow dear the hearta ioo litsliter hours
Miele a motive in the gay quadrille ;
A merry child ake you, my dears,
Aol 1111011 Wail I at 11 I' teen years.
Litter, toy heart, leas wild awl gay,
To one devout espowed moved ;
And wedded joys, hoov eweet aro they,
'1'n love mod to toe Meal I
Otto 1 smnot I Meg pelISIVO anti apart,
I prayed in meson sighs to teetotal,
That mine dear /lege] might be given
'ro stir 111 mo 0 mailer's head :
Wife arid fond mother, too, !by clears,
Acid each was 1 at, thirty years.
THWFIK PASHA.
011 Eel 0 Nal ming 111001011, 01'1110 114110 1010.
Ti)014111 Te11111.1 110114)(:11,., 'teem
of Egypt, W 110SO pate life gl stuttered int
gloom reeetilly, mut a follower .of the 1t0,,1
hot Mohammed, there is a raut 100 ouo of 100
commandments handed down to t loe prophe
Flo. 12, 1892
BEAD 11E11 TWIN IN A NOVEL.
A Setiolisslio Voisin 1171;11 rp by Realistic
Ltterat are.
Y 'rile possibilities (4 the 1 been-Tolat 0111?..
0 1'001 in literature alrecting real life were
0- illustrated reenteltably in the lb:dila Olin-
elnal court of Leon 41(Istadt, Vienna, 011,wo weeks ago, The complainant was krk
MOLIOS Of Whitll 110 doubtless realized th
verbal inspiration. 10 1, thal 11 Olen 001eprke
the whole intubsrii theory Of 1) no th
words; which " vieit upon the Windmill th
sine of the father."
Papa Ismail had yachts :and 8110% 011111.13
and visits from Eugenie, Empress of Franc
not alone, Empeess of the world or heacct
and fashion ; and operas by Vevolt-theonl
thing or Isnall'n ordering bysthe. way, wide
will survive in the music of Aida"; un
A mericen military (Iflicers ; aud to high cum.
of high-priced jurists from all over tft
world ; and the 10100 of his people ; and tit
weederisg totlinivation of Nile tow late 0 an
everything, in fact, that several Wiliam
million bOrPOWER1 (hollers, at fifty per sent
discount, could buy ill the hands of a now
whose Oriental imagination had been botl
stimulated mid educated by a long Pedalo
residence.
Son 'Powillt had his people's hatred, on
wi ito colors, no metals, too 'military stall
Ito polygloot Jurisb. staff, visits from 141 Malid
Instead of Eugenio, leesoned territory, int,'
rowed revenues -alb that the yi.ung
whose prodecemor on tho estate htte been
splendid spendthrift, in the hands of usurer
has end loote not.
110 wto leek at him in this light 105 11 plait
matter -et -fact son of a gorglacnos sae, wh
settles down to pineb himself in order to pa
oil the mortgages and free the estate, we oiti
lind something admirable in los thirteet
yours of sovereignty and lois forty years o
life. His very taking off was in lteepin
with this rote. An Oriental monarch wh
ehould by preocilent have died of essaseinit
uon, cholera, bowstrolging-or old age, lik
lois fames great.gratulftother-he periehet
of thess eentially unromantic and rathe
bettrost.is malady of grip.
It is a short lout memorable dynast y Mlle}
is nw orepeese»ted on the Khedive]. throne
by Abbas Paella, a lad of seventeen, whos
disposition to talc° or not to take his 13ritisl
medicine may plunge all Europe into a
the sure participation of England and the
crippled condition of Russia making it the
beRt. C11111100 that the Driebund will eve,.
have to teltninister a crippling blow to tht
hybrid union of Ainscovite and (Saul. Me-
hemet Ali, f °nutlet. of the Egyptian dynasty,
left his little tobacco shop in Cavala, Al-
bania, to march as a subaltern von entsa
against the renalo invader of the Sultan's
vassal state cl Egypt. The French ievadet
wits ;Napoleon, then about to found. his
ie
It was (tett a little while before
another stirrer -up of things, 13olivar, set
the South American pot to boiling its
Spanish lid off,
Tewfix Pasha wots not born in the purple.
Mehemet Ali, when he croesed the isthmus,
and masted the Sultan's Asian possessions
from him, and was only restrained by the
combined powers of Europe from transfer.
fog the seat of ;Mohammedan empire from
Constantinople to Cairo, had seated his line
on the throne of Egypt, bit t had not adopted
the Eel °pool custom of primogeniture. So
when Telefi lc was born, on November 111,
18111, of a 1,11'eaSSILL11 slave, his father had
three lines of musing and uncles between
him and the lihedivate. Ono was Abloae,
the Khedive, a tyrant, Red, like Ismail, a
grandson of old Mehemet. He wits mys•
teriouely assassieeted in 1834, mill no 000sought to clear up the mystery. His uncle
Said succeeded Ilion, mod then another uncle,
Achmet, having been killed in a rattly:ay ite-
eident, Ismail became Hie heir.itplarent, and
in 1803 the Klititlive.
° drY-weelis inereleou 1, August, !Shen, Itis
O wlfo had low forced to her rain six years
Sill110 by 01,, prisoner, to hotter Wile
i, 1104 gaoled 0.00088 to 11111. 110110'her hos.
Woven absence, The dory of the wife'a six
o yeara' eilence and the lorealthog of it Were
W
O IO1111IS 111 0001010 Judge (to \vim)! 00
Y meet eit)' yen have taken a long Limo to come
y your confession. Having hold your pewee
h Until 11010 00 30010 better had you neves spok-
en," Mrs. Klein: "I was silent foe thm
ee."
Judge (to husband): "HOW M11105110 10 0011'
a fuse to you?" Mr, Klein: "We torero vottding
a a novel, a realistic+ novel about divorce. le
d it to libertine displayed the lending pert and
1 forced to young wife to ruin. The duff was
• Inot, to my butte and 1 threw dou,n the book,
11 !retying to my wile "Shush things happen in
1 (week, but never in real life, 1 looked at
:m)' wife andw sathat she was trembling
Ileum head to foot and 10011 Ing bads the
o tears. " Yes yes in tell life," al ail
No, never," I said. l'es," aloe cried, and
1 foil to the floor, clasping my knees. ''Yea,"
":shis sobbed, it, happens in real life, for 1,
1, wretelial woman, 1114111 experienced it," I:
1., thought she had lost her eenses, and tined
s , to pacify her, but mho clung to my knees
land made her whole dreadful confession,
1 Tho next day I began proceedings. The law.
o yor for the prisoner acknowledged that his
Y client was gitilty, as alleged,'but moved for
acquittal on the ground that, under the
otateoo af lheioatbotoo,
crime ovas outlawed. This !notion wee
5 granted by the judge. With a shunter rage,
0 ,Klein caught his wife by the shoulders,
- throw bour b0000'oord tboo I • •
• ,
, .
o tolaimiug ; " Take her, you renal 0 take her
1 and her children," and then hastened Irons
r 'the room
Bravery of Bad Women,
81 011 bios Ond of November lest there reseed
, :over the Adantan Islands, the Rest Indian
'penal settlement, a cyclone, which caused
immeese damage to property and great
lose of life, Lying off Port Blair cm that
, day was the steamer Enterprise, caught
o by the eyolone with her anchors down and
no steam up. At Lilo height of the storm
:she been to drag, told in a abort time she
!was clashed broadeitle nowt tite rheka, im-
Inediately opposite the female ems vict
prIson. A treinentlousiy high seit was run-
• ming, and soon the Enterprise slogan to go
to pieces. Sloe had a crew of 83 men, and
one by 0110 they wete swept by the rushing
'seas 1 rout the places they had sought for
'safety, aud found their death in the wild
waters about them. There were no life-sav-
ing applituices at Port Illair, and though the
meek 1VaS seen by the officials and a num•
ber of the conotcts, it, was seemingly fill -
possible for any effort to be made te stwe
the unfortunate from the wreck. While the
men 'stood silently by watching the steuggles
of the drowning rime, one • of the
W01/1111 proposed to soine of her fellow-
conviets that they try to rescue 0011/0 Of
the shipwrecked seittnen.Hueliit• aperotpotosituiohiat
was that the convicts ,th,
shore, and there form a human liTo line from
the beach out to the sea. Leaving their
plitees of shelter, they crept on their hande
and knees, holding to whatever offered it-
self to their grasp, and in this moonier they
sueueeded in reaching the shore in the very
teeth of the gale. The female convicts,
mice they retteheil lite shore, linked hantle
and their leader, followed by her equally
1 nix° sisturs, plunged into the sea to
save a limn who could 1m seen atruggling,
wera dashed from tneir feet in the
helplessly the water. The women
first attempt, and hurled violently upon
the shore. Again they clasped each
other's hands, and again they sprang un-
danntedly bolo the raging ',raters, '17Ins time
they were more euceeseful, and the leader
grasped the drowning man. Then they
tinned, and the alinoet dead sailor WU car-
ried safely to the shore. Again and again
did the heroic WOM011 enter the water till
they monad six mon, the only persons of
the 83 on the Enterprise who reached the .
shore alive. It has mit been officially an-
nounced that the 'cader of the gallant band
would be released from imprisonment, and
Ilutt the terms for which the others had
been sentenced would be materially shorten-
ed.
One of his first steps toward the European-
izing of Egypt, Itt whieli direction his pred•
ecessor Sabi had proceeded more emit musty,
WW1 00 prevail, with an intwease of idioms:,
upon the 00,0 1,001 to allow him to horothwe
primogeniture into the auccession. This WaS
1101 fel' rewilk•s benefit. Ito had loin' boo -
there -fone not of slaves, but wims-and as
these were educated in Europe, while Tw-
ilit was lef 0 to n.ttive breeding, there is no
reason to believe that Ismail ever intended
the Ciecaseian's son to sit ripen his throne.
So his youth was passed in a Cindorellan
oliseerity, from which be only emerges in
1807 -when Eugenie opened the Suez Canal,
in her lament, whitreflounced lavender
dross, and her futt with it big black feather
-to be dubbed "Prince Toothpick " by a
jocular British tar. Then he manied the
Peinoess Emineh, tily 18, 1173, and deolin-
ed to marry any one in addition -a stand
which probably stirred a hearty contempt
sitiirethe bosom of his august and uxorious
The Princess lilinineh made her friends
tunong the Eng•ish hullos of the European
contingent. The Prince Tewlik had been
brought up to native, and was supposed to
be populat. o ith natives. These aso easy
likely the principal reaeons why Lord Bea.
conslield elected that lois good Mend and
beuelinary, the flulten, should announce
Prince Pewlfic as Ismail's successor shortly
after the 16111 of June, 18701, wheu the con-
sulstgeneral 01 England and France waked
up his vice,royal majesty at three o'clock iu
the InOrfling, and eurved the dispossess
notice of the English and French bondhold-
ors. .1=0 had seen it coming, and doubt-
less; would have bowstrung hie heir if Ile had
citli'n.ed.NVILS invested Angina 14, 1879. No
monarch ever lived W110 Was less a part of
the great. events of his reign th 011 Towlik,
after lowing neeessatily aucepted tloo 'British
up, at !hot, Britieh and Feeroel) aontrol.
Arabi rose and fell in 1581, El lottohdi, in the
three following years, buried in the sande
51 the Soudan Hocks Pasha, and Gordon -
the army of one, the prrison of the other.
Tho echo of the fall of Khartoum crossed a
sea, a continent, a channel ; reverberated
nourn fully In the dome of 80. Paul's; struck
tho Laureate's; lyre Mao the last high strain
of 111 111iie 1 finally beat engrily into the
honsea of Portion:mut, and howled the Mad.
torte pediment from thew state,
But Tewfik, of the Imo of Molioeoet,
through it ILI/ moo 1 i 0011 mod t han apt ism o f
state in 10 pslitce, guarded from the wrath
of A rabt's devotee:4 a hedge or Britioth
lonyonote He hos ham blamed, and will bo
slivered at as the one abeoluto weakling of
ttie dymosty. llut it Wee not Towiik who
pleyed melt tIl miloingly pion, It WW1
the consequenees of bedsit, The igno-
mini/ to whielo he wile eonotemned was loose-
ly o he visitation of the gins of the father.
His Son AbIlitS, who enceeeds him, was
born in July, 1874, and is theectee nots
eighteen years old, If ho be !Wed by tlso
example of another youthful occupant of the
throne or a great dynasty, thorn inrey be a
beat of over drums front the Pamir to Now.
fount -Hand,
0 tater 1 Onward Still ttIlfl 011
Time Ilies, like an advannipg 1111VO,
A11,1 810111110S, A110111111, IX/111 0.1'0 gone,
\Vith all the Joys they gave
el, whilo we (troop with age and pain,
The heart, float 0,0 011r ballefi we givo
Ito their sweet innocence luny livo,
And with their babes ho young again I
And such am I at length, my dears,
With my full span of eighty years,
-ItSeorge Cotterell, 100 the Argosy.
It takes a Mall of booed ;judgement and
liberal views, nod a calor), stateemanlike tow
trot of his features, to lonow how te.give
citizen Om right kind of syrup in Ins soda.
water when then the ositizeo'ss wife emys hho
will take those= as loon husband.
Dogs of "War.
A French paper has published a roll of
honor of celebrated dogs ovhieh have distin-
guished themselves in way. Thin is not in-
appeoprinte, considering that the dog has
been pressed into military seevice.
For instanee, there WaS Bob, the mastiff
of the Grenadier Gussets, which made the
Crimean campaign with that gallant corps ;
and also White -paw, Pada 13Ittnehe, a bravo
French ally of Bob, that made the same
campaign with the 1 IBCt of the line and
was wounded inalefending the flag.
A nether, Mustache, Wee entered on the
strength of his regiment as entitled to to
grenadier's tations. Tito barber of his
uompany (wilds bo clip and comb him
once t. week. This gallabt animal reeeived
to bayonet thrust au Marengo, and recovered
a flag at Austerlitz, Maishal Lames had
Mustaohe decorated with a modal attached
to his noels by to red riblion.
Corps de Garde, a Werra] among doge, fol-
lowed a soldiee Marenson, Was W01111,110 at
A enteslitz, and perished in the retreat Nom
Rust1114.
'iloth of the Guar,l had a military
mastiff named Misese, which wore three
white stillest newn no, his black hair.
We have also to name Pompon or the 4801
13telonins, the best sentry of the baggage
Lnutou te a Crimean herei ne ; 111 trest-
le, killed at Inkorman by a othell ; Mateo,
who saved his master in Ressoin,, and was
lost or lest himself, Mit fonnd his way
along from Moscow to Milan, lois lirst
Illg'illi1olmounn at remarkable, however WELS the
Mal:, :el Erigliall Interior named Muslaplut,
which wont 1000 nation with his English
yonosteles at Fon Lenny, we are seriously
told, " remithied atone by a field piece tater
the death of the politer, his manor, clapped
the match to the touch hole or the c(0nnon,
and thus killed 'i()soldiers ;" tun! it is further
added that Muelooloa, WILS presented to
King George IL ttIld rewarded With a pen-
sion alimen tam.
Allovanos,
Mind " But father, you should make al
tomatoes foe George."
Neighbob " Not mooch, 0 wo»Is. After
you have merrier' him I expect to have to
double youra."
Bangs will soon bo out of data Many
who have high torelicads are hrns1,/LIg tlootui
hair pliunly bask, and it la very becom.
ng,