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The Brussels Post, 1913-1-16, Page 3f 10) Unsightly finger -marks on painted doors are a great annoya,nee to the tidy housewife and should he re - health of nand and body, But we moved with a soft flannel wring out meet be cereful to vary the mono - in water in which a few drops ef tons, of labor wisely. Dissipation ammonia have been mixed, and then is not roorontion. Expert. Patient-"Doetor, have you ever Geed china cement may be made at home of ground glass peal the white et ail egg. A ?sue of fluit glass should he ground to a flee es) pleee of stone. The wbite, of toe egg should then be wh.pped to a, light froth-iet nut too saffly-a,nd sufficient mixed with the g.a.se to make a paste. Wooden spoons and chopping - boards should be well scrutmed with bath brick or sa•rei in prefer- ence to soap. This treatment will 071110LPpowder limner or on a llat Dainty Dishes. Cabe-01411rd Destieva-Dip each ru niece a cake (if stale) in fruit nae or milk; then pour soft custard over it. Place the slices namely in the dish or all will be moist. Apple Dessert.--Htie the pulp of a baked apple or two grated raw apples sprinkled with powdered sugar. Beat the whites of two eggs until very stiff and mix them in lightly a little at a time. Fruit Salad. -Stene and halve white grapes. Add the halves of English walnuts, sections of either oranges or grapefruit (the outer skins being removed), choppod eat- ery, raisins and pour over the whole a French dressing. Serve on lettnee leaves. Potato Puff. -Put a pint of cold mashed potatoes (left from the pre- vious day's dinner) in a saucepan. Add one-half cupful of milk and beat until the potatoes are hot and flaky. Take from the fire and fold in the beaten whites of two eggs. Heap in a leaking dish and brown quickly in a hot oveu. Plain Marbled Cake. --One cupful of eugar, half cupful of butter, one cupful of sour milk, ono tesspoon- ful of dissolved baking soda and one beaten egg and two and one- half cups of Oyu?. Mix a teaspoon- ful of coca in a tablespoon of the batter in a cup, and clot the bat- ter at inteavals to marble it. Tomato Sehip-Put ink, a setae - pan one tabllespoonful of butter, a pinch of satt and a (Irish of red pep- per. All two tablespodefuls of flour ane.stir until blended. eked three eelpfule of stewed tomatoes and addato the contents. Put in a pinch df sugar and one-half tea- spooniful of baking rode. Bring to a heffl, stirring constantly. A. little (eaten juice or bacon gives a fine TH si J]AY scua I pent, the woman, and.the man, Jo -'Haig GERMANS aan; mem. TSS), JANUARY 13. hovah metal uut plinienamet, cola meneertite 15':' th., deeree of guilt. Eels Declares That Commis - 11110 woman finally, ;shares with her slon fts Event Clod. blithe ad the pmethmeat Lige tee! upon him, and tegether hen TliTGermazi people have not (le- is expelled' from the gardee. val. Pod netts a liatien, they hate d ;nauof a. religieue tent a -these tif these ver bee queezed ;has the uld omitted froze our prieted text is in '118dia". The nation is not for the Lesson III.--i1's first sin, Gen. k lialinc41Y w`th wh" e INTERNATIONAL i people Os petite, are for the nit. kaow mudern tittles concerniee titn, •'-ayt Qttiliaa 8etih- 3. Golden text, John the relatienship between s:n aaa S. 34. sorrow, between disregard of the if(ibi-4:,:aoirers,ea,ndinmouirste,erbyn:to7ct tilsedna,ie(its ditiee order ad iecliv.dual aed n by efficials. That is as true of Am - effectually whiten the wood aod Verse 1. The serpent was more ....idistress. make it smooth and gloesy. If the Subtle -Crafty. The pecuLar lethal, en2. As one of 1113 -An emphasis stigaesod epee the fact that, matee itkee,„ mental difference is that with us 'erica as of Germeny. The funela- surface has been stained with gleate and gait of the serpeat eofficial lemoare executive in his , water before it is scrubbed wije' tertous and supernatural. It -wee power of discrimiaation aatilt:era onlythe real captain is the nd choice, sand. I for this reason regarcted as the eel- 21. Cherubim -In the OW TeSTA- 1.)ap!'a i while in Germany these offi- . e Ladly discolored brass shoulti , bodiment of subtle wisdom in a bad ment the choral:him appear muddy 01C persona:are threal governors pe.p , tfirst of all be washed in hot soap.; sense. Our narrative does nut , as guardiees of the throne of Je- of the esubject o the. crue- ands suds, to which a little washing aide' specifically idsetify the derpea hovah. Thus two cherubim guard- !Lof one who repeatedly and has been added, and then seoured with Satan. This identification be- ed the merey-ssat, Jehovah's vis- Pablialt' asserts that his commis- sion is from Ged and not from the with paraffin and whitening li longs to a later period, appearing ihle ciwellieg place on earth (Reed. . . THEY HOLD A Oil AL TAI3 PLAN HAS BEE.N TEN YEARS IN OPERATION. L'olglan Town Devised Original Pfau for Marrying Off Spinsters. Ten years have passed now, says a Belgian let.er, since Ecaussines inaugurated its Bridal Fair -the plan of Mile. Marie Ghende, a charming village girl, to get hus- band s for the unsought ma -dens of- Euauss:nes. The Br.dal Fair has become a permanent fete day. "Why laeguish when the world with all its possibilities is at our call?' urged Marie Ghende. "Let's people. puts whole classes of put up the 'posters in the capital afterwards polished with brass ' first in the Apocryphal Book of 25. 18-11e), There were figures of o , an. paste in the usual was' a beautiful Wisdom e. 24; "Nthe community permanently intandather 13lgian eitLet's make everth.less cherub on the veils of the taber- , s s:" lustre will be the result. through envy of the devil came nacle and the walls of the temple ureformand the wearerof these our eae knewn proudly. When running brass rods through death int e the world: and they that (Exact. n.0. 1; 1 Kings 0. 25). 0 heruniLrms are almost afraid to laugh, Soon the walls ef Brussels, Liege, , , window curtains, put an old gloye-ido hold of his side do find it." Con- references to cherubim are 1 Samand would cors der it sacrilege to AntwerpGhent and Brugesnot . • finger ;seer the end that is be eg versely the devil is in the New Tes- 4. 4; Ezek. 1. 0; 10. 1; Psa. 18. 10. r•car P. to speak of Bois d'Ilaine, Souvret, pushed through the hem. Unless tament, though perhaps figurative - I Can ion is a very pent, form of and Rimquieres, bloomed with pos- this is done the material is apt to lv, called "the old serpeot" (Rev. -HENRY FLAGLEIL. tear12s)The old ernenthe that i , wind shall net sow • and lie that ground of oa d thelcstial roseand baby . . , " s, s ' When soda is added to dish water called Devil and Satan, regardeth the elouels shall net blue announcing the extraordinary Kenry M. Flagler was one of four I reap.„ It is as true politically as matrimonial lunch of Ecaussines 'morality. "Hs that oleterveth the ters with orarige flowers on a back- - er of the whole world." remarkable figures destined to be Said unto the woman -The ser- beaten in the forge of toil and pov- ; Select lamp wicks that are soft pent begins by addreesing the wo- erty and to go into the fire of dis- portion of it choose his plan of life and loosely woven ; soak these in man, who had not herself netwillv aster ere they could be weldea into for him has no need of any other. vinegar before using and dry in a heard the prohibition. This lied a union which conceived and creat- fachlty than the npe-like one of imi- very cool oven. This its the sureetp been elven to Adam alone (tom- ed the Standerd Oil Company. He pare Gen. 2. 1G). nee prohibit'en the serpent therefore first dieterts, "Yea hath God erticl Ye shell nit eat of any tree (marein, all the no soap is needed, and there is no of other spheres of life that "he or for Easter Monelay. "We want to greasy rim roiled the dish pan. she. who lets the world or his own be wives." were the words in the tions. big letters. "The only way for us to begin," And Bridegrooms Came. said Mr. Bradley, "is by eneourag- Bachelors came. From Belgiuml ing a taste for blighter colors. It is one hundred saved the Golden no good talking of changing the Book, an act of registering their form until brighter ideas are ac- presenee merely as was carefully I cepted; once men are accustomed to. explained to them. Twenty-four ' seeing colors on their fellows they registere,d from Paris, three from will be prepared to see radical Bordeaux, five from Lyons, three ; changes of form, and such changes from London, A Mexican and two I would certainly follow in time on white planters from the Kongo were. the adoption of more cheerful col. in deadly earnest, wanted to look qrs. If men once accept pink as a over the girls instantly, and actual- color, for instance, they will in time see that trousers are not a imitable garment for the employ- ment of pink. and will therefore adopt some other form of nether covering. TO BlIOHTEN MEN'S CLOTHES LONDON TAILOR SAYS Rue. LuTioN Is comm. Antieipates Swing Backward to Brilliant Blies and Fashions of Earlier Era. A movement hes bean initiated which has for its object the bright- ening of the otethes which men wear. From the tailors' point of view this is a dull age. Men woar only sombre co.ore, a reflection of the grey things; of life, with none of its beauties, The SMIDOXI, say the tailors, tread the right path. Their dress to -day is a,s beaut.ful a8 ever It was, ad just as expensive, But the men' eay the tailors, are depressing, and in ne way korthy their title of the "lords of 'creation." So a revolu- tion is coming. In the van of this movement is Mr, H. Dennis Brads ley, of the Lo, don (England) taster. ing house of Pope and Bradley. He has every hope of seeing a Merry England in which men will not be ashamed to wear colors, and when the black or dark coat will be ne- glected to atrictly gloomy fun*. way to obtain a good light without, smoke. A fire is soon caused by the over - !turning of a kerosene lamp which is now reputed 16 be worth $300,- on. nis s John ,.. mixt what else can said of be 000,D00. tMhell'ialand itinal activities of the Ger- Flagler, who, in addition to be- inane? What jeurnalist or what ing a power in the oil industry of water has no power to extinguish. trees) of the garden I" and then the country, is one of the greatest - majority that has no power 1 Vilma In every hduse where keros:oce is fere-ens surprise at the proWb'tion hotel -keepers in the world, was people can call itself free to whom burned a bucket of sand should be as thus distorted. D•oubts.and sea. born in a small village a few m les its rulers are not responsible? The kept in a plata accessible to all the picions are eti W71 in the heart of thn teeth of Rochester, N. Y. At the Social Democrat's, at the moment inmates, for it will instantly ex- woman, end she is reedy a little first opportunity he roamecl west of welting, have won 110 seats in i tinguish burning oil. later to hear veal -mut protest the and located in Republic, Ohio, at the Reicheta,g, but the army and Paint stain when fresh can be re- bold &mini of Ged's command by which place he arrived with a 6 navy estimates are beyond their moved with turpentine; old stains must be first softened with butter ; and then rubbed with benzine. Tur- pentine very often leaves a mark, ; though it takes out the stain. To remove medicine stains from j. Bread Pudiling.-Soften one cup- ful of dry breadcrumbs in one quart of sweet milk; add the beaten yolks of three- eggs and the stiffly beaten white of one; then two tablespoon- fuls of dissolved c000a. Sweeten to taste and flavor with a teaspoonful of vanilla extract. Bake in a slow oven until the pudding is set. Guyer the top with a meringue made with the extra whites and a tablespoon- ful of powdered sugar; brown light- ly , n the aven. Original Recipe for Bread.-Paro; anti slice five small or three medium sized potatoes and boil in one and a laalf pints of water. Cook them Fslowly until they are soft enough, to put through the ricer. By then.' there should be three pint cupfuls of the liquid, potatoes and all. If you have not SA much as that, make up with enough cold water to fill the three cups. Then measure an- other pint of cold water, in which soak two cakes of compressed tieasai To the potato water add two tabled spoonfuls of melted lard, half a 1 cup of sugar, ani a small handful! of salt. Lastly, flour enough for e' thick batter. Beat hard with al wooden spoon until light and, 'bubbly.' Next comes the water in which the yeast has been thorough- • ly dissolved; mix in a little more ; flow- and beat again for a few nth- utes, and add flour gradually until the dough is dry. Work it with the wooden spoon as long as you can, then knead it with the hands long and well, being careful not to get it too stiff. If, by some false calcu- lation you should get it too stiff, soften it with a little cold water. When you' have finished kneading 11 rub a little Teed or butter over the bottom and the sides of the pan to prevent sticking and to do atvay With the neaeesity of using more flour for kneading far the final ris- ing. Set it to rise and let it gain about twice or eve', three times the original bulk before kneading it down again, Set for a second tie- ing, and when 11. 18 light again make into loaves and pet into tho pans in which it is to be baked. Tho whole process should not take over five hours from start to finish if the dough is cared for right. It should be kept warm, but never hot I Bet- ter too cool than too hot. The yeast should be crumbly when broken, but not hard eruntbs. Never use tough or 'rubbers' looking yeast. The above recipe will make six large loaves. If fewer are desired; use less, water and yeast, in pro- portion to the number needed, Household Tips. • the temper. -2. The woman said -,She corrects the ternent h way. showing that she is fully ',were of the strictheas of the prohibition. • • 3. Neither -shall ye touch it -Eve spoons rub with a rag dipped in could have known of this prohibi- some of which money he saved. He political,. and the strongest party pentant bachelors" made such pro- "I think that, there is no doubt sulphuric acid, wash with soapsuds tion only through Adam, who held is himself authority for the sate- I in the Reichstag is merely an ener- gress that the matrimonial regis- that within the next few years one and polish with stilt chamois skin. possibly exaggerated the command meet he never earned more than getic political mangonel. Their ter, kept by the Abbe Auseau, dress will undergo considerable All milk puddings intended to Ise to her, makine it stricter than it $400 a year when working for some leaders moult °pintoes, they do not shows ten marriages as the direct changes in style, color and mater - really was. The *omen -and as given one else. Flagler moved to Belle-trnould them. a,nd could not trans- result. • ial. The manufacturers are syrups, - to Adrm Feld nethitig about not vue, where he entered the grain late them into action if they did. Succeeding years have given bet- thetic to the idea, and already pro. touching the fruit. A later Jewish butiness. legend explains that in correcting ; John D. Rockefeller was then a 1 ..,,,....,.., .- ' fete and the quasnprivate lunch whose only fault is that they are a ter organization alike to the general cisme materials in bes,utiful °tilers --....A.-___. MAKESA GOOD TALKER for those who sign themselves "re- little in advance of the courage of the woman mulct not refrain from the serpent's misrepresentotion commission merchaot in Cleveland. "Lt.'" Flagler sent him any carloads of pentant bachelors." men. What we want is pioneers, in - a slight extegeration on her - own i wheat, which Rockefeller sold in Doctor Johnson Named Four Regal- No one is bustled, -no one is in- dividual with a little courage who account. Then the legend con- the capacity of agent. Flagler also sites of the Art. timiclated, and the phrase thrown will not shrink at the idea of wear - trines : Hereupon the serpent took a ninterest in a. distillery, I A man may have the gift of gab out by Mare Ghende in the first mg a green waistcoat simply be - pushed her hand teeniest the tree; pester ; "Every man in the world cause it is green. Pioneers are al- sheehich gave him -an outlet for con- ' wi.hout being a good talker. Of touched it, and, of course, no- siderable grain, but he had sdruples this order was Macaulay, who had . who wants to marry is welcome!" thingh d 'S ' 'd h Ino restful spaces of silence. has become the motto of the under - 1 "I wish," said ..s.,..claiey Smith, taking - who coukl listen erwell as talk- Plan Vastly Approred. if you only think of it. Take such "I wish that Macaulay would see Well, of the 20 girls who signed things as socks and underelothing, the difference between colloquy aud soliloquy." the • • 1 ' ' • ' engine invitation in 1002 every the garments that are hidden. Ten one was married by 1905. As year I years ago they . e t the o l And one another othasio•n: "Oh yea, we both talked a good deal; gen falling short just as the bathe- I i•te-e, succeeded year the girl material be. wool" • 11,1:e a °, a I- vis,t,riztylo.oakitantoust co.or of any socks and un- lor demand was Idergarments-they are produced in Ecaussines, therefore, eas g. wftne"sed the most beautiful colors. Go into a strange spectacle -a monster the chambers of any well-to-do matrimonial fete in which the wife- baeheler. and you will Sad that seekers earning from afar alone out- his bath gowns and dressing gowns number:el three to one the mar- are of the most delightful oiler riageable girls inscribed upon the schemes. Men are fond of color Golden Book. But for two years only. Then Eeaussirow enjoyed its sec- ond triumph, A strange immigrae tion had begun. ly earned off a bride apiece within franc piece -representing about a reach, the taxes are fixtures, a con- two weeks. dollar in American money -a nickel etitutien is a.dream, and if they are From that hour on the multitude and four pennies. To this day eartankeroua or truculent the made its own fete in the cafes of Flagler has the 5 franc pieae. IR ichstag will be dismissed by a-Ecauss:nes, but around the matri- i He went to work in a country 1 wave of the hand. Sara what one monial table, in the presence of the Change Already Begun. store at $15 a month and board,' meg, they are a rnamnaary people mothers and good women, the "re - eaten at luncheon should be pre- pared as soon as breakfast things are cleared away. TUE PANCAKE BELL. Bung on Shrove Tuesday in Some Parts of Lancashire. Concerning church bells, Mr. Frank Hirst, in a remarlmble serial publication watch he is ecktng, called Lancashire Stories, tells of the quaint customs which are still observed in some of the parishes in the County Palatine, Before the Reormation the great bell of the parish church was rung on Shrove Tuesday to call the peo- ple toge:her for the confession of their sins, or to be "thriven" ; hones! the name of the day. "This hell," says Mr. Hird. "is still rung In some parts of Lama -shire. and is etill called the "Pancake Bele' be- teg new regarded only as a signal to the people to begin frying their pancakea. "In eons° aillages a bell rung p, 'you have broken the command not to tone's, and yam have not died ; I now you can be sure that you can' safely eat the freit.' " Lest ye die -The common nation of Jehovah's word,. "For in the clay that thou entest thereof thou shalt surely die" (Gen. 2. 17)1 is, that this expression is Intended to mean "become mortal"; per- haps in the sense. of not being per• milted lifter his 'transgression to ent of "the tree of life."The or- thealox Jewith eeplanation ele.,n in the Talmud is that with God one day is as a thousand years. seal a.s the cungregetion is leering the that sumo Adam actually dal die church after the molting service. ellen he, was only nine Shundred and thirty years old, the threat was carried out consistently , with its intended meaning. 5. Ye shall be as God, knowing good and evil -The tempter h ildi out the hope of a great boon to be secured by disobedience. "The im- mediate reward, adroitly though mayhap net large, bet true dowries, Iluences of the Republican move - fallaciously put forward, thus sets words; ie the third place, there and nach girl With a full supply n COM - of reent in Frante Personally I think out of sight the ',meter penalty." _ , must be irn.agination to piece things bed and table linen for 10 years that the great industrial a. d We. note also the suggestion of , against the business. which he fin- as they are not commonly seen, and This is known as the Pudding Bell.' it havnig been firmly believed for many ge-nerations that it, rung to wan! thetas at home to get the din er ready, The origin of the ringing- of this belt is net known, but, like many other old custom-, it Ail! lingers in the remoter parts of the country, announcing to the village that the service is over and that 'pudding time has come.' So late as 1870 the eurfew bell wars rung at Burnley, Colne, Bleck- burn, Padihain, and in many other towns and villages. This. perhaps, iS the meet remarkable instance of the persistence of an old custom centurie.s after it has ceased to have any reason." Egypt's Debt to the Engineer. The Assomun dam and other irri- gstion aorke Ettypt have toot about $53.000 000, -bet the increase in the value of land in Middle and this -imagery n,re Jehovalas eery - Lower Egypt and the Fay= Pre-' ants, appointed to care for his vinees has been frena W5,000.000 garden'. to $2,440,000,000, The total rent of 3. The suggestion that Jehovah this land has risen from $82,000,- did not know where Adam was IS 000 to $100,000,000. This le what the engineer has dono for Egypt, in loss than two deendes. ' Change of Work.' • ways hard to find, of eourse, but they are coming, There has been an enormous change to-vard bright- ness in the last ten or fifteen years but I -don't believe Macaulay ever did hear my voice. Sometimes I when I have told a good story I . have thought to myself: 'poor Macaulay ! He will be very sorry eeme day to have missed hear:11g that!' The difference between the two Men writ that between the cle- ver talker MCI the brilliant bore. But the elements .of stacess in conversation will be variously de- fined. Dr. Johnson, who must take rank with the foremeet of the , world's great talkers, had his own 1 theoriee •on the subject. "There must, in the first plea% ' be knowledge," he said; "there must be meterials; in the second place, there must -be command of jest as much as women, but they do not like to show it to the world. Clothes Became Utilitarian. "From an artistic point of view Into the .eantonal division here the eighteenth -century • fashions and there quiet families inoval. were almost perfect. To what they They were ef the class of the fami- degenerated during the Victorian lies of the girls who signed the e, mi we know only- toe well. Lecky Golden Book --girls of the snug in the 'History of England' ascribes tower middle class with dowries the change to sombreness to the in - 111r. Henry M. Flagler. Jealousy or envy on the part of God ally abandoned with a bank no in the fourth place there must be contained in the' temptar's words. i count as $50,000, I presence of mind, and a resolution 8. Jehovah God walking la 11-101 With this small fortune Flagler that it is not to- be overcome by garden -Both the name and the, went to Saginaw, where he atte.mp- failures; this last is ees.ential, for anthropornorphisin are character- 1 ted the manufeeture of salt. At want of it many people do not excel istie of the primitive narrative, of the end of three years' time he had in oonverealio-n."-London Chroni- tvhich our lemon passage ferule a ' not only lost his $50,000, but had ole. pate In, the imagery of the writer - gone $60,000 in debt. From his re - the garden is the home of Jehovah, leaves by marriage and a half bro- an.d, like 80.1110 wealthy I ti h Id , ."----43----. titer he borrowed enough money at er, he ;strolls in his garden to en- The Egyptian -s have many curioes 10 per cent. to pay his debts, after joy the cooling breeze of the eve castauts in connecti•on with time byr- P- which lie weut to Cleveland, where ial Of their dead and the healing ing hour. The man- and woman in , he engaged in the grain and produce of the sick. At every Moslem fen - Egyptian Burial Customs. Change from one kind of labor •ito another is refreshings change from work to play is pleasant twat health-' ful ; change from action to perfect rest Is agreeable and invigorating. Al! these ehanges,. made at proper times and seasons, are conducive 40 rubbed with soap, Having remov- od the otains, the paint should be washed with clear water and theta, toughly dried, /1 mitim, be vory tete end treated a patent for loss of mem- speckled, the following' method la orn excellent,. Take a small portion of The Dootor--"Oh, yes, employ 4 bill collector quite often." whitening and add seffieient eold thea to make a paste; rub the glass with warm tee dry with a soft When it's failure, triarriage al - cloth ; rub it tide of the paste well ways gots the blame, when nine en the mirror polish dry with times ort nf ten it's the married tissue neater, folkel own fatilti. commission s s . eral, for instance, there are hued Tho Rockefellers hied started a mourne•re, varying in number ae- small oil refinery us this time, and „teeing when it, was apparent that their to the wealth of the de- ceased• Mete funerals are always business was destined to grow, Ste- hetieled by old blind men, cari•ying in keeping with the general anthro- phen Harkness, Flagler's father -in- long stale in their hands mind wail- poinovphism of the narrative. In. law, invested $100,000 for libel and ing They are followed by the deeper religious significanco.. or, he was taken into partnership in the relatives and. frionde of the de - the narrative J•ehovah's "68'1" the concern that has since develop- tarts el, and then comes the engin, ed into the Standard 011 Convene. This is sucticed.ed by two or three of The story of Flagler's progress the native flat carts commis' to from this point on is practically the Cairo, filled with wen= inommers. Moerning, in fact, is quite a pro- fession among the women. Every day the ground outside -the hospi- tal at Cairo its the plea* where wo- men wait to be hired for a funeral. illuatrates the voice of conscience which, after every sin, challene,es the man who seeks to deceive him- self and others concerning ,his sante as that, of Rockefeller s, onj wrongdoing. a smaller scale. 10, ;I. was afraid, because I W4te Fleece made much of his fortune ; naked --The man tells only half in the hotel business, Sieve his truth in his continned atbeinpt he had deemed of some day hide his disobedience, the chief Yalith owning a hotel, He realized on that cmuse f i fear, told thee? -The man's drama 10 far great" PaaPPrtions then lie had ever hoped. To -day he 11. 'Who answer showed that he posseeeed owns twenty-five hotels In Florida, i new knowledge, such as could only hay°. come to him 1,,,om eating of and it is said he owns most; of the, State besides. Far the eenvenience the forbidden tree. 12. The woman whom thou gayest of his patrons he has built is rail.' --The implication is hat the Mita eonsiders Jehovah himself to blame. Even so to -day, man still blames God and the existing order a things for his own shortcomings. 12-$1. Like her husband, the wos maoseeks to evade responsibility for eelobedienee end shifts the blames. To ottolt in turn the see- cum • road with a traokage of 600 which serves only his hotels. Seems Likely. That report tc, the effect that wo- men's drosses are to be tighter will, if true, necessitate pushing a'ern around on wheels like all the other New Electric Pencil. A novelty is -a penholder permit- ting one to write in the dark, since it is provided with an electrae light. The tube. through which the point of the pencil goes is fitted with a small accumulator and an electric, lamp, The latter throw a disk of light over the point where the writ - rug as being done. This luminous pencil has been iarvented for the %use of doctors, reporter*, detects Matas, eto., whose ivork tece,ssitates the baking of notes the etre a. nod in darknese. ahead. mereial development, the coming of Only a few weeks ago, the fotin- the age of steam and chimney der, who is now Mme. Wantlrin, stacks, had more to do with it. wife ef the famous aviator, baptized Silks and satins and laces had to go, as they were not practicable for a business life, and something more utilitarian had to take their place. But the change was far more sweep- ing than it need have been, and we are only just beginning to recover. Should Express Temperament. "The pendulum has started to swing in the right direction, but there still remains a dullness in. European moil's fashions whieh does not truly indicate the tempera - her third son an the Ecaussines Church. lire Hader Pressure. The heel ef the Arctic seas is very fine staid plastics, whil-e in the other zones of the Atlantic the bed is covered with reddish mud and an accumulation of the remains of ani - malt; that lived in the surfer -a wria tars, died, and -slowly sank. The Proseul•e of the -sea increases about one ateneephere to every ten me- meet of the people, and the leek of tars, so every additional hundred individuality le all elasees renders meters adds the pressure of ten the mode of teeday eharneterietie atmospheres, When deep -tea fishes only of the eommercial mind. And are brought to the eurface, they lotto though the present age is termer - their •scalp, their tegnments he- o'al. it is neither inartistic nor tame brittle, and they are so in- Puritan, so time day is almost ripe flitted by internal distention caused for the evellition of a more spirited, by the lessened pressure that in a inert, cheerful, and a more.attrao- many eases they burst steamier. tive garb than the vogue of the moment compels ns to adopt. We Splendid Ieelandie Ponies. are only waiting for the bele] man Icelandic p"ivi, which are beim, who will sielc Wif-eonscioustitsti and impressed into the serviee of Veil arrny himself in the brighter and more artistic tones which the wool - Swiss Army, aroused the admire - Lae of the groat trat•eller, Mite. Ida Pfeiffer. "In epito of ananty food ," ,s t,...'5-.. "they have mar - len rind tevtile masmfaeturere can now pr i duce better than in any pre - reeling nge, itonly they coubi be villous powers of endurance. They 801(1' And. above all," concha est Ms-. can travel from 35 to 40 mule e per diem foiseveral eoneeeutive daye. ti:;..,•1"318aY1;(.1a `,Ietplite' aforllelwhatladcrswe toc'dutsheadt They know by inetiuot the tionsar- ous apots 111 the stony wastes and in the moors and swamps, On ap- proaohing these places they bend their heads toward the earth and look sharply round on all miles. If tjecer calinot diseover 5 5va testae!, to rut! the Virolve.i.' and what is now the 'mit.' We .want color and brightness, but we want it all in harmony and taste." Sro now for the pioneers of the new nmetnent. , pin, ., f,,,, their 1,, t 0.0,- gt.up :A.1 * el . ,1.11114 be literal forward, i jinTylleto..,11,e,rvoe. men ktaassa the Ileite V 4 L i kisi , t tz14113: b o l'141,