The Brussels Post, 1913-9-25, Page 311
eh id
M tiseen ten eo u Recipes.
Toasted Seotta Scones. Wit
ene millet of flume wee teaepoo
a Up r, 4 }De- 1.1 a f tertepoon sale, fou
teaspeexie bakiug powder, one Ur
bhispoen sir lard, two eggs and tin
pint of walk make a smooth duugh
Roll to one-half inch thiekneee ae
eut; with eirvutur or triangular cut
ter. Brown en both sides on he
girdle. Split and toast. Butte
arid Korvt: hilo hut. The scone
baked previously may be toasted a
the table err art electrie toaster.
Olire andl Walnut Sandwi(ttes.-
Chop repel parts 4.if olives and wa)
nut menfe tether, mix with may
onuaise end spread on thin sliee
oI Buston• brown bread. Plate tw
slices togetire.r with the ailing be
tween, trim and serve.
SI liffed alreen Peppers.--,Sele-c
mediummized peppers, cut e site
from the stem end of each, remov
eerede and pfirboil peppers fifteen
reinute'e. Fill with equal parts o
finely chopped eooked chickea o
veal ad etiftened bread crumbs
seasened with own juice, Salt and
pepper, Put a layer of buttered
erumlas an tem of each and bake in
moderate oven. Serve hes.
Waterereers Sandwiches. — Wash
the erase carefully and ehop fine.
Mix eine Ineyonnaise and spread
between than elices of white bread,
shaped a8 desired.
Orange Oehelia Salad.—For each
Person Rem's, On Ft bed of nice crisp
head leetuste a slice ,of Spanish oni-
on between, two slices of oranges
and peer French dressing over all.
Fruit Stmt.—Boil together Line
cup each raisins, primes, cra.nber-
ries, canned peaches, and juice of
one /armee, one lemon, outs tea-
spoon eap, two cups water and
sugar to taete, Strain, add one cup
canned cherries, heat and serve
with enuelons.
Stuffed :Raked Potato. — Balm
large, smouth potatoes, cut in
halves caesswise, remove the in-
side and mix it with salt, pepper
and enough iream to moisten. To
this may, be added finely chopped
hare, in the proportion 'of one part
of ham to eight of potato, if pre-
ferred. Place the shell on end and
All with the mixture, brush with
egg white and browain hot oven.
Serve at onee.
Fringed Celery. — Cut tender
alate stalks ijt elery in twe-inch
pieces.. With a sharp knife cub
slots three-fourths ineh deep and
Close together across each and,
throw the celery into a dish of ice
water and allow it to remain until
the ruh edgee curl, thus forming the
"1. ringe.".
•
Some Meatless Dishes.
Altheugli meat furnishes heat for
the borle,„ and therefore is neces-
sary in eold conntries and cold sea-
sons, a reliet from a meat diet is
welcomed ny everyone and afford's
a variety to a ebthat gives ktene-
&lel
The contesnation dishes fit in very
well, ineeaceliing in their double and
triple far o a more appetizing and
neurishieg fare. These allow the
housewife to ring the changes on
one dish and to use left -overs in an
attractive form.
We oai . resnet to European cowl -
tries for inspiration. Preece, Italy,
Germany give countless recipes
that aro essetiornical .ftied unutsual.
They are geed to cal, too, a very
important fact to be considered.
in Italy there is a wealth of
Amalie nourishing dishes. which
every housekeeper gives when meat
is not required. One of the eavor-
ite dishee ef the Italian is maca-
mei and eggs combined in numer-
ous clevent ways.
Maigre Disites.--The Ma-
caroni, boiled until creamy and
thick, end never hsaderted in the
oven enell the uppermost layer re -
,'emblem pieces of bark instead Of
flour paisite .is Mixes.] with shoed,
hard boiled cps and cheese, with
tomaterse.deliceously fried in butter,
with poached .eggs sprinkled with
grated cheese, wieh fish or with
chestnats5n manydifferent ways.
l'aL4t Alia Provenzale.—A Ea-
vorite potato disk—to be served as
Ix dish /;:n1 itself—is known as .`ps.,-
tete alle, provenzale." The itelian
cook phsees 0 lavge-lump butter
in a saneeptm. She .aelds to it si Sew
spoonfuls or the best cooking oil,
fi may prepared lemon peel, finely
ehoppect shallots, it little grated
nutmeg, salt, pepper rma minced
parsley. She thee pude and slices
•scene- petatees and fatrIla them tete
the trying pan. She ecioks them
nail 'nieely brawn, 'bat, not hard.
The fire it•I not too quids, Finally
she sprinitles lemon juiee OVar thorn
gml hands Elies a lemon with the
dish.
Rietatitrinath. They make, be-
sides, another maigre dish in Ger-
many or spinach and rice, 'While
the spinach IS 11001i.'ing, a quarter et
ponna ef viee is boiled in milk ---
o ieely sreee ,seinaeh being
then strnieed and finely ealuccia. A
beeeen (sag in.44'd lo the raw with
sprain fel iif thiek, 'suite eream,
beltvr, salt n l pepper. Rice end
sipienth are then alletnately earieed
in a initieto<1 pit AA 1 nel versettaile
Aka-. some or the epinech mixt'
--poured ever the top, The whale
is covered with breadertimen eitd
melted butter and bruesnrel in tie
even.
Household Hints,
No matter hew numb dripping
need fieh when being fried is apt
stick to the pan's bottom, if a, to
spoonful el dry salt i5 put into t
pen and rubbed over 11 if wilt
found eatidactory,
The white satin .collars that a
so fashionable now eat he cleent
by rinsing thoin out in ethes P
a little ether in 4 small bawl nn
equeeze halt the collay at a tim
It will cuma out perfectly white.
When olive oil dressing will DO
thicken after the necessary anima
of oil has been used, beat ie a seta
quantity of emelliiig, and the dres
big will not taste of cornet:troll.
Instead oi melting outtar whe
you want to miss it with saga
piece the batter in a doable bone
and allow it to get warm, It wi
then beat up very eaelly with ili
sugar, and will not cause the oak
to Inc heavy.
The tip of the wings and the nee
of a fowl boiled with a stalk of cel
ery or an onion with 0 little riee,
pinch or two of parsley and a tea
spoonful of cream added alter the
are Cooked, make a cupful of deb.
Mous soup.
The most .suecessful way to softe
a hardened paint brush is -to dip i
in vinegar. Heat the vinegar to th
boiling point, allow the brushes t
stem' in it for a few minutes, then
remove atal wash thoroughly with
soap and water.
Try wiping a greasy frying pan
with a piece' of newspaper before
washing it. Michof the grease will
wipe oft ancl can Inc burned', there-
by saving snap and labor.
_When 'sharp knives are kept with
other articlein kitchen drawer,
.each blade should be protected.with
a sheath, which may be easily made
from heavy wrapping paper.
Dry bran is an excellent cleaner
for dainty velvet flowers and wool-
len fabrics. Rub the soiled spots
aad then brush it off thoroughly.
To prevent the window ffhade
from flapping when the window is
lowered, place an 'extra set of
catches fur the shade about a foot
lower than the regular plane,
To remove soil front a rubber
raincoat dissolve ,soap in. warm NVO.-
ter and apply with a soft cloth or
sponge. Rinse carefully with clean
water.
If you put brass pails into boil-
ing water with a good bit of wash-
ing soda and let them boil for pens
haps an hour yen will find them al-
most lean.
Fine laces should never be starch-
ed; they will generally be stiff
enough if ironed while very clamp,
the ironing being continued until
they are dry.
Salt should neves remain in any-
thing rubber, for instance hot wa-
ter bottles or syringes. Rinee them
out thoroughly or the rubber will
ken not.
TO FIND IF PERSON IS DEAD.
Remarkable New :Method Announc-
ed By Frew+ Phyatetan.
A Temarkeible newt method of teet-
ing ,absolutely whether an ,apper-
ently deed person is really dead
and thus exoiding the ;possibility of
premature burial, juet annoence.d
by Dr. Ieard of linaeseilles, bee been
received with great interest by 'his
colleagues in Paris. '
Dr. Ioarde eysteen depends on
the question wheithier .the blood is
still in ciroulation ox not, and con-
sists of a subout,aaeous injection of
a small quantity of flueresoisin.,
which is quite harmless, but one of
the most violent coloring matters
known.
If there be the elightest motion
of the blood 'the lieserescein, carried
around .the' body, deals it a, vivid
golden yellow, while ahe eyes be-
come a deep enieraM green. If, on
the other hand, thero is no move-
ment et the 'bleed the.00loring neat-.
ter is not dispersed end peochreee
no .effeet. Half an hour is stated to
Inc enough to make this testi,
WILLI,31.111 In KEMP ityriatEs.
eetland Yard Loses Inspector Who
Solved Crfneen MYSterY•
Scotland Yard Jost its meet. &igen-
ic and pictureeque figure When In-
peeter WiUia.n B. Kemp retired
ast week. Kemp was the biggeeb
7681 physieelly in tho atethropelitaa
olio() force. He Weighed over 300
ou.ncia, end tide, too, without an
line°, of fait. He wasaivee 034 feet
all end WaS buil1 genepally on a
tank ;soak. For many yeatte he
ad elterge 02 from of the to.ughest
istricts 11.1 lestition, He 'hasi. the
redie of the arrest, of Chapman,
le af tho famous poinetiers of Eng -
'care Op.. He twee afterward
to of Supt. Ifroeetns right 'land
an in solving the reyStary of the
urder ef Belle :Elmore by her hese,
and, Des. briPpen,
In recent yews Kemp has lessee
epeetoresecretney to the aupeein-
relent of Soothe/id Yard, enclsalee
, eminnittee fer the teeciptaen
foreign police officials, Illvery
Teign pohessimni who has visit:eel
cotheed Yard knosvs „Kemp and
st n them:tend remorse tea,thank
111 for kitabieseens.
The Sequittea Poetess Assisted to Court by Gendarmes.
The trial of Maclaine Alice Crespy, an a charge of murslering the
Abbe Chasening, caused a great eensation in .France on affe01111t Of
the position and attainments of both the victim. and the accased.
She Waa finally acquitted, after a 11e/1,A-breaking trial. The above
picture -shows /ler b6tig assisted to the court by We gendarmes. Sha
was completely broken clown after the trial.
1
EUROPEAN GOSSIP I
King George on the Moors.
Both in Torkshiro and at Balmoral
e
King has been fully un to his mark as a
ehot this eeason, ad has made heavg
bags. In fact, he Is one of the five beet
;Mote Su the Itiugdomi, and is noted for
the quickness and precision of hie aim,
His average is about eighty per cent. of
the cartridges used. At a right and left
shot he is exceptionally good, aud_he eel.
dora misses 6 rocketing bird. Ho shoots
with hie left emu out praetically ebra(g1)t,
and this gives lint groat control over the
swing of the barrels. But he likes it long
walk in search of outlylag game better
than the hattues that have done so much
to spell real sport.
A Secret Ally of the Turks.
It, looks .as though the Turks are to be
loft in undieturbed peeseasion of Adrian
ople after all. Europe is too Mred oi
crisee and too sick of the very name of
the Salaams to start another weary and
dangeroae wrangle. A diplomat of tuY
acquaintanoe prophesied thle -to me some
weeks ago. The Turks, he told 100. have
an all-powerful ally on their side of
whose existence they are no doubt un•
aware and wduslo name Itais never appear.
ed In an anabaseadorial despatch or a
newspaper telegram. This ally my friend
gave the luintoroue title of "Monsieur
Summer Holiday." The Chancelleries in
all turopean capitals, sae now almost
empty, Ministers and officials aro scan
tered, the Parliaments are not sitting. It
ls au unwritten law in intonational dip.
lomacy that the Onturner vacation shall
be saerosanat, and at the present mo-
ment that unwritten law is working to
the benefit of the !Parke. But had the
Turkish reoCcupation of illbrace taken
plate two months earlier or later, we
ohottld have lied the ampere fuil of it
The armies of the great nations might
have been on a war footing. Atrobarea.
Sons would have been busy making "re•
presentations" or preeenting "notes."
Reuter and nahas mud' Wolff and the.
other agenoiee would have _been publish-
ing "communiques" daily. The movements
of our shipe in the Mediterranean would
have been a zuzaber of world-wide ima-
portaime. In the long run the malt
might have been jltst the Name—that is,
Adrianople svould still have been. Turkish
--but diplomacy would have done its beet
to put atm nerves on edge.
Lord Strathoona and the High
Oommissienership.
There le good reasou to believe -that the
statement that Lord Strotheona 'Unmade
to reeign the High Commissionerebip of
Canada soon after the New -Year le well
founded, The announcement le an inter.
carting, if • somewhat premature. disclo-
sure of what I have ground for believing
are his LOrdehip's intentione in khe at.
or. Nonagenarian though be le, Lord
Strathcona, will relinquish :with reluctance
tanise ditties. dovetion whielt. hae 'won
ihn the title of the Grand Old Man of
Canada. For sconu thee he has feltde.
irons of giving place to a younger man,
and the only question Lae been the choosi-
ng of a eonymileat date for troneferring
he reine to other halide. Whoever sue.
cede to the oakie ivill find it hard to live
m to Lord Stratheona'e standard of in-.
ustry. Despite hie. advanced years, lie.
ammins a glutton fer work, and he is
ndefubigable in bia attendance at the
Mee in 'Victoria Street, London, 'where
vita that thoroligliness which has mark.
d eareer no detail, is too Inman fon
le personal su.peevieion.
(The above was written, of coarse,. 155.
oro Stratliconies agrival In this' country,
aving he has no intention -of resigning.
'The Embassy at Vienna,
Tho diplomatio changes now officially
nnouneed, have, of course, been fully 415-
011(1114 ill advance. The retirement of
ir Palrfax Cartwright la the main Invnb
f the diplontatio movement, That -he
ad to go sooner or later If Anglo-Ger•
all wart+, to be placed 'on a
ound footing was patent to everyene Who
ad followed bie career in Vienna. Ife
afi Several thnee guilty of indiscretions
' distinetly ttoti.German• charnoter•
nd he once permitted himself, to pre.
Wm that the Ilastern Cieeetion «mild
nly be waived. if England were to obtain
udo, Bay. Our -relations with Vienna
aye alwaYS, :witit the exception of the
w 1.nontlis of Vie Bosnian Male, -been
f (10051151 1105,107, but it obvionaly was
disadvantage to be repreeented there
71 a diPlOTha4,10 WhO WOUld not or eould
ot 'conceal hie strong dislike for Vien-
a's mily. So long 0601(1' reintions,With
ernianY were still of a dotrbtful 'tent-
er, 60 eotild tontine ottreelveti to halt.
earted disavowate of our ambasendoeti
1:0e16514,50. The woment, however, our
()reign Office decided to abandon the
ruler taloa tele moaner! of Sir Fair.
x CarMvaight in li'ionna hae been a
aucflot,p ilisyilteCeSSOr, Sir Maurice de
ttneen, 10, on the contrary, lotown as Itn
tivimato of Atiglo-Oerman ht.
g leaver e member of tho great, Hun.
n diplomatists and tudentIsts,
le appointment will, no aolibt, be deep.
regretted in Madrid, where he knew
o present as baby and \there
o servicts lie rendered to Spain during
e Franeo.Spattialt litigittieli over the de.
imitation of their tosaeotive sallarre In
()yearn Will long he reinambered. Con-
derinto hew seems IVO $1,1`0 (,q 050 0101,
1)1 of Madrid we mu enly rejoice if he
iy tratisfers' even eteieeteta tact
Vienna,•
vhs i<abaka and the Optoseope.
The yound !Stamen, et remand/1. a back ,
ft t b
In varioue parts of Bngland and Scot.
land, Ae a sequel to hie vieit to Cilaa•
"ow UnlifereitY, he paid a call on Almost
26 at tile workshops of Urillin anti Sons,
Hingswity, London, to inspect the 11815 gY•
roseopes of Dr. Oray as applied to work-
ing models. As it memento of his vielt
Glasgow University the Habaka wee pre.
seated with a model of a gyroacope mo•
tor car, a remarkable mechanical
trivanee which runs on two wheels in
tandem in plitee of the usual four. The
diaieulty of stability is eolved by meivas
of a single gyroscope, whic15 6110 is used
to steer the car. The King and his suite
were greatly interested in the invention,
which though stIll in au experimental
etage, may have farreaching results in
the near future.
, The Vested Interest.
The aeroplane manufactuxers constitute
at Ws moment about tile noisiest yeeted
Interest in the world. For nearly a year
SI) "air scare" agitation has been run.
Ding in this country, and the Mirden of
the outcry las been "more ordets" for
aeroplane constructors, whether the Gov.
eminent 'wanted the01 or not Otte might
have imagined that Prance, with its large
air fleet woold have been exempt from
tide nuisance. No so, however. The
French constructore hove stavted it fere.
clone agitation against the Aero Club, the
War Office, and the Ministry of Maaine
for not giving them sufficient "encourage-
ment," and they luvr got a popular news-
paper, the "Malin; on their side. The
arguments have a familiar ring. Anna.
melts firms, large or small, have one
thought, itt common. 70, Marone, the well-
known airman, Writeti indirectly on be.
half of the Bleriot ann. "I tell you," he
says excitedly, "that in six months no.
cording to what' I know of the organis-
ation and progrees of flying in Germans,
where they are beginning to make light
machines and have copied the Gnome 1110.
tor—in Six months we shall he outclaseed
er She Germans." There We have *nee
more the familiar (lemon easy( As for
the remedy, it is, of course. "orders."
wrhe Freneh Government.' Marone
comglaitts, "orders from the aeroplane
1111118 only forty maohinee in six months,
whereas our fuotoriee CILTI turn out 300
machinee in that titue." And, of course,
he will not be satisfied until the Stale
orders that number. By that time, hew.
ever, the aeroplane Arme will probably
bu able to turn out 1.000 or more ma.
ehtnes. Then the clamor will begin again.
'London, Sept. 10, 1913.
s55
ELECTRICITY ON THE FARM.
It Is Reliable, Safe, Clean_ and
Flexible.
The possibilities of the use of
hydeo-eleteric power in connection
with farming and ageicultieral work
are many, era% The Engineering
Magazine, and offer one of -the most
-promieing fields of the future. The
unqualified ;success that the appli-
cation of electric power has bad in
this line at work indictates that it
has became a factor of so much im-
portance that it mast now 'he Leeri-
ouel,y eonsidered as affecting both
the cost, and qualiby of the products
of the anedere foam. Compreee4 to
other forms of applied power, the
chief ,aelvantage's of electricity aee
veliabiiity, safety, eleamlinees and
flexibility in application. Power
can be readily and economically
distributed to the ,scatterecl loca-
tions of the varieue buildiags,
where the *est of providing eepa-
date engnes would Inc peadieelly
prohibitive, Fire risk is reamed, to
a minimum, which is ef the greeted
importance on ieolabed feries where
fire -fighting a,ppliences are limited,
With a, number of metiora inetalled
for the various classes of eerviee,
tbe operseeng periods oan be se or -
ranged as to ,secure 0 Tory good'
load feeler, thus melciiag the cost
of power a minimum,
of .vetgl:teat,brilecikYSrnfwwta.' )ijrobimuiabjon s
now being exteheively itivestigated,
end ib is surprising to note the
number of ;experiments thrie lieve
been made, the prominence of the
men toed -acting them, end the re-
sules which have been attained, al-
though as yob, on a. very small
scale. The lead oii Eurepe is. being
followed to SOBIB 81de/11 in Amer-
ica, and the results, obtained abroad /
have been duplictited here. In the .6
nem feture we will undoubtedly ii
Mime:mon about this subject, era( tl
be 11) 84, bettee positiot to determitte $
Nvhether ee not these printiples, cnn d
e ittilizen to men tid t I; a
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
INT,E111549..TIO3i.ki, LESSON,
SElt"l'EMItillt 213.
Lessen XIII. Deliverauee and Dia.
obedience—Review. 0 Alen
Test, Neb., Zell,
(Questio118 for Pupils.)
Lesson T,—The 'Child Muses Sev
ef from Deatle—What happened to
the Isra,elite alter jeaepil'e death
How did Pharaoh fieek to prevent
them from inereeeing too rapidly
Who wee ,born at this time'? Hoev
was Moses saved from Pharaoh's
decree? Who was set to watch
what should become of Min'? Who
discovered the .13aby in the basket?
What, was done with Mull
Lesson IL—Mosee Prepared for
His Werk.—Where did Moses re-
ceive his early 'training 1 Where
did he go when he was about forty
years old? What eiid he see? What
did he do to the Egyptian'? What
was the result of his hasty. ect 1 To
what place did he flee? How long
did Inc remain there 1 What :was
his occupetion while there'? 'What
did God teach him during this timel
Lesson III. -.-Moses 'Called to net
•Isiven Is raei.—Wbere was Moses
feeding his flock when he saw a re-
markable sight'? What was the na-
ture of .this sight?' 'Who spoke to
him from the burning bush? 'What
*did Goa tell hirn he had eeen 1 What
did God' say he was about to do'?
Whom did he -commission to be Is-
rael's leader? Whom did he say
should be spokesman for Moses?
Lesson IV.—Moses's Request Re-
fused. --How vas Moses received
by the Ieraelites 'on his return to
Egypt 1 Tor what did he eell the,m
God had sent Min? With what re-
quest (lid he go to Pharaoh 7 What
did Pharaoh say e.boat jetiovah?
Henw did he .enswer Moses's re-
quest1 What clicl Inc order the task-
masters to de? How were the lee
bore ef ehe Israelites anacle more
clifficultl Ageing ahem did they
complain when their burdens were
increased 1
Lesson V. --The Plagues of
,Egypt.—How did God punish
Pharaoh for his disobedience?
What was done to the waters of the
Nile'? 'With what animals ancl in.
sects eves Egypt infested 1 With
what diseases were both animals
and men kthrfaellted? W' at natural
phenomena terrified the inhabit-
ants'? What aid Pharaoh command
Moses to a° 1
Lessen — The Passover, --
What was the final plague 'aith
which Egypb was visited 7 In what
did it result1 How long 'dice this
Israelites have t� prepare for
their flight 1 Whet did cash family
kill fox. a sacrificial feast? 'What
was done with the blood ot the
lamb? What pnepose clicl this
blood eery° 1 What happened et
midnight on the fourth day? What
message clid Phanneh theu send to
Moses 1
Lesson VH.—Crossing the Red
See.—Where did 'the Israelites
tarry in camp for a few days? What
did Pharaoh do when he heard
they were there? How were the
Israelites affected when they saw
the Egyptians ooming after them'?
How did God prevent the Egyp-
tians from attacking them during
the night? How did he make away,
of escape for the israehtes What
happened when the ligyptians at-
tempted to follow theml
Lesson VIIL—The Breand irom
Heaven.—Where is the wilderness
of Sin 1 .What kind of a -region is
it? What did the people fear when
they reached there? What did God
then promise Moses 7 What did
they find upon the ground in the
morning? What instructions aid
God give for gathering the manna 7
Leeson IX.--Isreel Mount. Si-
nan—For whet did the people pre-
pare when they .eeaehed Mount Si-
nai 1 When heti God told ,MelseS
that he should meet him there?
With what signs did the presence
of God descend upon the mountain 1
Whet. did God from the eloed ecu
open Moses to dol Against what
did Moses warn the people a he
went up the mountain to meet Oocl 7
Lesson X.—The Ten Cemmand-
melees, I.—What did Gucl give Mo-
ses while the people waited at the
foot of Mount ISlnai 1 Wilk what
reminder .God preface the Ten
Mesea do with the ertir when he
returned ler the (tamp? .Itiow were
the people punished for their iittils
etry 1
CORONA.TION
An Interesting Fianna el Queen
Vietoria's Emotions.
In Queen Vieterie's account
her eurcrta Mae abetracted
Cherabers's Journel from Lor
Beher'e edition ef the young reler
41.947, we have an interesting pi
'Imre of the girleuenarchar motto
and impreseions on the great de
of bar life. ,
"I was .a.wolce feur o'eleek In
the g-uras in the Park, and eould no
get mutth sleep afterwards on ac
count of the noise of the people
bands, &e. Got up at seven, feel
ing strong relict well; the. Park pee
senteel eurious spectacle, crewel
of people up Constitution Hill, so
dieres bands, „ . ,
"At ten I got into the state coacli
with the Duchess oe Sutherland foal
Lord Albemarle, rtaid we began our
progress. It wee a fine <ley, and the
crowds of people exceeded what I
have ever seen; many as there were
en the day I went to the City, it
was nothing—nothing to the multi-
tudes, the millions of my loyal sub-
jeoes, who were assembled 30 every
sPfil% SX'44.nests. 't.110 P1'000a111011,
e-
ne
FROM RONNIE ,SCOTLAND
NOTES OF INTERF(ST FROM IIER
BANKS AND BRAES,
What Is Gotng oft In the Highland*
antl Lowsiononidias, of Auld
Ayr ll'eennanry 'have again wont
the 'Inter -Regimental Challenge
Cup ab
pafirs: foe! the Clydesdale fruits geow-
ers have had a profitable eeason.
Plisses are.better than. fox' 20 yepera
A freak of nature in the shape of
- a. white !swallow is reeorted ftena,
- Ballot Fa,rin, near Belfron.
. Motherwell has deeicled to build
1- public bathe and a awisaming pond
et an estimated rivet of $26,000,
Drummond Gardens, f.'rieff, bay()
been 'closed against visitors, in ems -
sequence of the misconduct of some.
Damage estimated $125,000
wittS dove by a fire Viet occurred at
Carron Grove Paper mials, Denny,
Sterling.
The good people of Falkirk think
of changing the designation of that
ss.:o .<.ifka the poor-
house,
..... o tiag own a num-
ber of tramway "islands" 171 the
vicinity of the ITeher Hall, Lothian
Road Edinburgh.
David Newton and james Kings
surfacemen, were run over and
killed bY an express train. neat
Curriehill, Midlothian.
A waterspout flooded a number al
heuses and shops, and 434 considers
able damage in. the
of the Lothians.
t, Mr. Hunter Craig-, M.P. foi
the Govan division (if Lanerkehire,
bean 900 ee 1906, has, just died suct
cienly in his seventy-fifth year.
The
new enginee.ring laborators
at University College, Dundee, it
to he opened on October 14 by Sli
Alexander Kennedy, Leaden,
Mr. John Cowan, aged 58, corn.
mercial traveller, who resided in
Prestwick, died -with sta,rtling suci-
deaness when eyeling front Stewa,r-
ton to Irvine.
A Blairgerwrie beekeeper lias thin
season taken 686 sealed sections or
honey off Isis thirteen hives, sale of
which has DOW yielded him 140 lbs.,
and another 121 lbs.
Milngavie Town Council have; de -
tided to proeeed Nvith the prelimi-
nary steps of a ,town planning
scheme to include abrent 1,000 acme
of land seaside the burgh.
Kirk o' Muir is claimed by ira.di-
tion to Inc the spot where. the Lord's
Supper was celebrated for the first
time in Scotland aecording to the
Presbyterian rite.
The Secretary for Scotland inti-
mated in the House of Comments
that a site to repleee the Colton
Jail has been obtained on the Lan-
ark Road on Laughton estate.
limes ehildren, playing in 4. yard
in Bridgeton, Glasgow, found
bettle of belladonna and drank
'same of the contents. 'They were
taken to the infirmary in a serious
state, put it is believed they
recover.
Another link with -one of Sir Wal-
ter Scott's famous charactere
been vemoved by the de.a.th in Edin-
burgh of Miss Jane Patersoe, who
was the greet granddaughter .
Robert. Paterson), the original of
-014 Mortality.'
T"ii‘ i.6..t!!'.2(;"4 4.7it,"=17".
loyalty was beyond everything, an
I realla canact ales, how proud
feel to- Inc;the Queen of such a na
tion. I was .alarmed at times fo
fear that the peep/e would b
erushect and equeezed on aceaun
of the tremendous riveh and pres-
sure.
'I reached the Abbey amid deaf
ening cheers sat a little after half
st el e yen. . Then' falowec
all the various eeremernie,s, and las
of all the Crown was placed on my
head, which was, I. must own, a
most beauatful anti impressive mo -
She was deeply impressed with
the ceremony, but it was done
somewhat awkwardly. The Arch-
bishop had put the ring on the
wrong finger, end the eousequence
was thee I had the, .greatest
catty to .get it off ,again—abiell at
lest I (lid with great pain."
After descending fromethe throne,
the Queen proceeded to St. Ed-
ward's Ohapel, where Lord Mel-
bourne obsereeel that Natant was
called tate altar Wag • covered with
sendwielies said bottles of wine.
The Archbishop eiame in, and ought
eo have delivered tli.e orb, but the
Queen bad already get it. She said
that the crown hurt he* a good
deal; but nevertheless she oet, it
down that the day was "the proud-
est of my life."
10.
KAISER. RAS OF .SHELLS
New Place at. Potsdam Contains
Many Other Maryeas.
Am English teeveller whe hes re-
cently retaireed from Berlin give.s
an, interesting amount in one of the
London papers, of his visit to the
, new palace of the Kaiser et Pune-
; dam,
There are many things -which
make the palace, interesting to the
privileged visitor, nob the least
among which is the kitchen, Nvhicb
ebands in 4 separate building.
FredeTick - the Great hated the
smells of the kitchen and he had
that most necessary adjunct te
every household. moved givaly from
the palaee. The estea.bke wetseeon-
veyed to the royal dining -hall by an
underground .paseage. Emperor
William still keeps up t•he eastern; of
his predeeeseer.
The dining -room of the palace is
small, as palace dining -rooms go,
and eontaine, some very ealuable
paintiegs, but for formal events
and even for family affaies, now
that the Kaiser's famile is getting
to be so large, the great marble Mal
.upstaire ie used. Three hteadred
can dine at on.0 time in this hell.
Here have gathered nearly all the
sovereigns of Be rope, and on those
occasions huge candles axe need for
lighting instead of the snore modern
,electric light.
Other remise of interest are the
Kaiserns smoking -room, to which
seine Ni,onderfill vases have recently
been adder', the gift of a visiting
Chinese prince. The private palace
f the theatre holds above 350 per-
m anti the .stage is arranged to
Commandments What la the dif- 's()
ferenee betweee the sem forbidden '
by the first and aecond eon:inland-
meats 1 Why shouicl reveee
God's namel How oia is the in-
stitution of the Sabbath?
Lesson XI.—The Ten (Sornmenn-
merits, II.—With what; slutiee do
the last; six. eommantlynentff deal
ILO W should we treeti our parents?
Vhet does God premise those who
minor their rierents1 How should
ve regerd 'lumen life 1 Why shoeld.
ve refistile from wronging eur
eighbot evert in thmight as well
in wovd and deed/ What. dist
lie peoPle peomise when Moses
eat? them ±118 '['en Commandments
nd the vest of the Book of the
ovenant
Lessee XTT.—The Golden Cle1 Fs -
few long elia illosce tarry al the
Op of Sinai? What was God teal ra-
nt Meal .What (lid the ; people
link •when Inc.prolonge.d his 3113-
ence from them? What did they
einem) ot .Aeron Eow did
ec6do theirs:461mnd 1 What did (1
1
17
71
ft
in Loudon, a or it moo onjoye.
rodnee. all the late,et ,seenic effeeta
The Keiser prefers light C(1711CCIY,
and 'this is the lcincl ,of enteeesin-
meat he. gives his guests.
The, meet, 11) 511510041113 apartment
in the entire palace, however, is
releubted 1,y the Hall of Simile, Tam
room is meat beetitifel, tee walls
denied With thousands of of
1 kinds, l!hey have. been. arranged
ertly -111 ,elearening patterns, while
titer iTi grottos give h. 10011••
evtul effeet when lighted by (ace-
acity, mem in 'niers room that
01, Roosevelt when ex-Prestidente
as entetateined by the Kaiser. The
1. famous, Yialperint1 chrihIrn-
ea is (set up in thia.ieloni.
The Kaisee his own rralway
etion at 'Wildpark, 54 hid/ 10 0111Y
0114111 anaemic. from, the palace,
'110 freezieg
minim. wine them eff with a dry
oth, with /1, o10111 enthral -NI
e kerosene, Polisti 'with a clean
eleth.
11
.41
11
0
TI
11'
01
a
e1
AN AERIAL LINER.
Biplane With a Sheltered Cabin for
Soma Persons.
Sheltered cabins in aereplenee
were bound to come sooner or
later, end a, Ituesian inventor if/ the
first to succeed in this field.
In the Paris' flying journal, L'Ae-
rephiles there is a description with .
photographs of iho Sykorely
"Grand" aeroplane, which 1131,e
macle a flight of 04 minutes with
S.01,011 paseengev .
machine is an eedinary bi-
plume except f.ar ite• size. In front)
of the plaelee a cabin with a roof
end glass sides projects, in which
the pilot and the passengers (Au sib
Or moire about alt will.
Doubts were at Blab expressed by
.he Russian authoritiess as to the
priatticability ot the machine, bob
facial trials were carried mit, says
L
,'Aerophile, in the presence of a,
opmissioa of experts, and the 1114.'
b1110 Was acquired foe the Russian
Tarty. Recently M. Sykorsky Was
eaviniandett te fly the machine be -
ore tins Ozer, and reta the concha,
len elf -the fliglae, the Emperr oeix-;
tared the 'cabin, and examined the.
181015.010 .with grm
greet eave, reaining,
n boardsabout quarter el an.
tour, .
Unfreexable.
"Can ahyone name 4. liquid that
("can't freeze 7" asked the teachers
There was a moment's; sileuee,
hen a voice in the real. of the room
nswertel, eagerly, "PletSee, 1550011'
r, hot water 1" '
"Now, ifehrtnse" said the tench -
r. "II you had sax penniee end
harlie lied fomeand.yon took his
nd put them le, years, whet would
hat make 1" "'Trouble."