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The Brussels Post, 1914-4-16, Page 3[ Household - pieces of aliiekee are atranteed ALFRED -NO YES. eae Clilekens in English SI y English methods of mak big chide - en differ sonsiderably from those at visie in this country. The fateirite manner in which fowl is eerved at the flame table is Mal.'cl witb a white sauce, The -cold Few] so fee - q i ine bop Itoetea, fit 11 way res. laureate and tea ramps ie the boiled fowl rather than the meet. There ia reazen fur this, an ex- oe 11 e ti 1tie° in these davit of high pekes, The boiling of ti chicken is probably the least waeteful ina eater in which i1 can be prepared. Every deep nr fat and gravy gas iela -the lig ear in which he ehesken is boil- ed, forming the basis for a geed eo up , ith 1 he addable) of ege ta- b I es, barley, rice, etc. The boiled chicken separates eleauly and easily from the banes, with no waste whatever. For the purne PS of salad, for hashing, for crqueU PS or patties, fur boning or Hand wrehes nu bee ee,i. way ad -cook- Mg. cal be tried. Yet the average Canadiaa hoeskee.per always meets the chicken. It makes a better ap- pearance, it as true., with its brown, 'crisp skin and the flereh may have a more piquant never than that of the boiled fowl, but, on the other hand a great aeal of the juice -of the ehicicen is lost in the roasting p1 881 3, For beating the chieken is clean- ed, stufftd and truseed as for ruaet- Mg. Th2 Ituffing may be any of the many leade that make a guod corn - b ina 11,0 with chicken 08 t urkey, eyeters And ehete gate being anmeg the popular dressings: Small .young chickens may be used if a very delicate dish is preferred, but the larger birds and the capons are more 'desirable and substantial. The thicken should lie firmly wrapped in a floured linen cloth, and the water should be well bull- ing before it is pub in the eaucepan. This. c eoks the skin immediately, which cease ryes and 11 ds the juice& The broth will of retiree be lese rich than when the chicken is Put into euld water, but the flesh ua the fowl will be far richer ie taate. The broth will alweye serve, itattver, With the additioa of liege:. tables, rice or any ofthe various pastes, nude's, etc. French house- keepers alweys eaok the feet of 'the fieel, 118 they ceatain valuable gela- tinous m.atter. For the fivsb half hour of boiling the chicken it must cook newly. Small chickens will ettok through in an hour. A fine Ratite for Wiled fowl is made from oysters, ores pint with half a lemon, iWO tableSpounhas of butter, a tablespoonful of flour, a teacupful of cream and some cay- enne pepper and nutmeg. Croak the oysters in their own juice for a few minutes and add the milk. Strain when it boils and pat the liquor beck in 'the pea. Thicken it eith smoothly. blended flourar cornstanch, naming in earefully to 'DAN Lid 1 nm,ping, Then add the but- ' ter, the pepper, the lemon juiee. Coak up for a, minute or two, ebir- ring le well, and pour over the elvieken. .Some eooks chop the oysters, but; this does not make as inviting came so Inc eye appearance ie eon - 881 ne0. Fresth parsley sprigs may be used aa a. d.eeeration for the dish. An egg settee is made by chopping up three hard boiled eggs and add- ing be a liCh drawn butter saime. ' Mushrooms and ehestnabs ease' make gaud sauce to terve with Wil- ed few]. Large p.erfectly shaped brussels sproues placed about the fowl in -ti large dish, their fresli col- ur preserved by a patch ef Fade, in the water in which they are bailed, ita deeorative, and when cold the eaomaination is an excellent eupipea Flare* dreesing may be ,passed sep- arately lea the brapeels sprouts. When -cold ham aud fowl are served both may he sliced and pass- ed, with lettuce leaves as ai garnish. Pieldee, rea or peeen peppers, cold Staparagus, and all the various green ,salteas are good with thie dish. Brown bleed tend bolter aid oheetee. go well with ' it,; aim celery and elieeis. A familiar and exeellealt, way en which eo eerveathieken lithe 'Trieste ,a , see • which to most households has b Americanized itself into a sort of av . glorified • ahleken dew, ecanetimaia e ; With demplinge added. There aim 80111 ti elevee cooktt who- tail thhe fowl long peat i1 prime, unfit for meeting, and by eaaeful, stela wok- ine, with salt perk, team itt ant at: lightfal ly ,bendeet. For fripasweing the eh1yke-1a is cat Up prefetably inesixtab, eoared with add water and put, en' a very stew fire f,e) SiillitniSr. Ralf it pound of salt Peel< itt atripa as added, arid the (Thicken is; ainaneted etas* calf - mad. The liquoe is eltionned anti leaked and an melon and damped It pansley add.eti. •gOVIO thicken tha . a platter and the gravy as paured' ever, 1.ttinnilinge may made of self- reaing flour and; batber-rubbed well together, maietened 0 all milk and beaten egg, sposmed from the bowl, rolled in fleur and dropped into the ehieken pat, Then !the carer is closely adjueted and in tee1 t wee- ty miautee the dumpliags, acemed- ing to their size, will be found, de- lightfully light eiad feataery, done. theough 'In be tarred on the dish with the eiriektei. This makea an ecemoinieal and appetising dish, Chickeit pie is another English ilea fowl being euoked in a deep dish Reed with- pie mast, The .ehielcen is eta up free from ho -nes and played la ethe pia with pleala of gravy te ratieseei, and aimed liam or kidneys are frequattly added. But there is hardly anything the real English teeek -will net put in a Pt' . Mere rt lservalive taete, woulci c'ajLfor °baleen alene, Chick:en livers make a goad admixture. The top cruet should be raise -d by means ,of an inverted cup played in the pie, which peeyente it from fallieg and hamming soggy. These pies, ofeen made al indivi- dual sizes, practically unknown in this country a few years ago, are now a staple order w:th caterers for the hatches which are taken itt mo- tor cars on calm -ley jaunts. Hints to Housewives. To remove the smell of paint place a few elieca of onion in a pail of water and leave it in ,the roam ter a few hours. When ceocbeting wear a piece of court' plaster on the fingers as a pretection fur 'keeping the needle from prieleneg them. Cayenne pepper is excellent to rid cepboarda of mice. The, floor should be gone over .earefully, aad each hole etopped up with a piece of rag dipped in water and then in cayenne pepper, Always boil a new ;clothes line be- fore using et, as it prevents the line ham etretehing .and makes it last longer. New props should be soak- ed in .eold Water for a few hours, .as this prevents them from splitting. Eveey woman who outs out from a papee pattere knows of the bother of pinnies it flat to, the cloth. Take a het 110 1 and smooth the tissue Paper pattern over the -cloth, and it mill remain flat Without pipe. Ty clean a mackintosh or dark elothee from -mud _stains, brush off all the mud itind rub all gaits', With the eut surface of a raw poteuto,„ then sponge with tlear water, using a piece ef dark material for spong- ing, Befere blavking the above, rub soapsuds on the hands, allowing the soap la dry in. When washing the hands latter the work is done the blacking and ecap come eff 'easily together, leaving no stain on the hands. In sweeping the ear -pets, take an old round tin, 'pierce holes in the bottom, .and fill with COMMOD salt. Sprinkle this *tier the carpet. It preveate the dust from rising, brightens the colors, and preveate motha I1 your furniture hes grown streaked and dull, try rubbing it with flaanel dipped in egnal parts of turpentine and coal' oil. It pol- ishes quiekly and much, marecheap- ly than expensive polishes. When paring any .kind of feesh fruit, if the hands are \lathed off immediately WWI ,00,1d water instead of being wanted in warm water and zotiP, there will be eery little clam gee of Unsightly etsuins. When eoeking cabbage, 08 any other ,sirailar vegetable, put, a piece of dry byead—crust will doa-ie the pan with belling waiter. The bread kills the disagreeable oda which rises from the cabbage, and it will entirely prevent the smell from go- ieg through the hoese. 'te a's: 8 suggeseion for trousers in re.geler wear. The bottom part: of men's tie:mama, jamb 'where they rub againatb the boots, gets sbabby very quickly, aue if you line this part with leather cut 1 rem 'the wrists of eld kid gloves you Will find it, savesethe trovesers a great deal 'of bard weer. For tapioca puddiog soak four ounces of tapioca, in 11, pint, of cold waiter, fleeered bo taste with ebrain- ed lemon juice. Simmer the t a-piota until ie is qtate near, mix 11, with three or feuv tableepoonhas of reel current jelly, pour into &glass dish, nal leave it to become cold. Just; gore serving cover with the beaten- hiee of egg, sweetened and flavor. - d to taste with lemma pace. a Mothees take am -W. -a -Don't feed the baby al; irregular inteteale, Don't jolt batty after feediag. Don't bathe- baby immediately before al' aft ee feeding. If Why mice don't bribe it, tit silence with the breast Or bottle; find out white le the mate tee,- If baby insane on being fed tiotat lob baby staffer foe the sake of rule; after all a naberallea broaghe tiii Why at the beet judge of its own neede, Don't foeget that aothing $C1 merely make a read -Fed baby ill aa ete mothet'e ogle:a to breathe mete 'Aar night gravy of idea ehleken when al; coolte so that the flail softene on the boteest A great cle,al ef batter *MI be added to 4t41/41,rtbilltill.p. Then the mad day. Don% target that too little fresh air And too remeh feed will, ,S0011 kill the meet ratted, of betties, '. alas! (anmitlivit hie' English Poe! Sintes Tostinyalin. Canada .1.1as year is h?lig Jeanette- enriehed by the vielle, stul only Of Britisit neters, but elai 11 Brhisa 'poets .1 11':, tha first reek. A few weeks ago we had Yealets, one of the chief represpatatives ef 1 Ito Irish ee1:4,o1; new comes Alfred Neyee, mho Itis been •ealleel the "rtiomb considerable" Englieh pliet Wove Tennyeon, ia not i mongruotts to diaeuss barber shape while talking (if puel 8, The puiet aheut Noyes is that he patroaizes the barbers as often as tt bueinees 01% Pri:TIM.linitli nate, He (iota not, belong to the lengthy hair variety. 0,1 the coldrary, he la averse to "poette" eceentrieities itI drees And Mailner. Be looks with disfavor on the imeincarity and Flom ihat imerk some wauld-be poets. ah, regrets that; so inaey "men on the street" eonekler poe- try as n ain impracticable thing. For tine he bliante the "wretched aesthetic movemena'' "The petite" gonists of that. movemeat " says "made ft cult of, iesineetity and . naturally they alienated sedeible peopi e " Noyes is by no means: a pessimist, bowever, an4 lm declares that this Clund is rapidly passing away, and that people are beginning to see that thew is a fuadamente,Ily demo- eratio reasoe for approaching poe- try. "The basis of poetry," be de- clares, es the sense -of rhythm, and Ibis eeeee le universal. Indeed, you may .e.ay that, rhythm is the bans of Poetry Is Religion. The •mauwho thus takes :his ar t so ectriously, and who also. affirms that poetry;. is the streegest pert of what is called religion, beetle:lee in the very breadest and grandest: sense .that can be given to .the words, "Poetry is Religion," is a young man, thirby-two years of age. Fey ten ese.are, however, he has been famous. His books aresold all aver the world, and he lives entirely on :the proceeds of his poeteee, and the lectures. on his poetry. He is aina.z- iegly Popular in the United States, -which he visited for the first time last year. So enthusiastically was he welcomed that he returned again Mr. Alfred Noyett. this winter. He has just received, the high• honor of being. aameinted "tinting lecturer" of English litvr- atute ttt Prineeten. The besb known poems- of Noyes are "Drake," "The Flower of 01d Japan," "Die Forest oa Wild Thyme," "Tales of the Mermaid Tavern,' `Radia,'' .and `The Wine- press." The laet, two represent; him in one of his leading chareateristies, an advocate of peace. His latest, poem, '`The press," will be read by Noyes him- self at his evening meeting in Te - route). His place in ihe peace moveni' ent, he describes himself. ` "A seat. agency," Ile eaya, "is at work weaving/meshes of a net around the continents, eonsolidaeing them in spirit, a more potent chain titan thab of new boundariea, In this agency a host of influertees areat work, I have tried to invoke the imaginaLion, alt eleinenb resistless as fire, but constructive, arias de- sire has beenethe laspiratiee of my ye rse,'' The Vilitalifit In the folloWing lines, Noyes euans up ahttb, he ,believee fo be the argent ant ef cifi amicatete 'Mil 'tier - isle :— 'Their dens are always ankle deep, with twietedknives, and in their . sleep They often mit themselves; they say, That it you want Inlive peeee The earest, way is nett° oease 'Collecting knietee, mid never A day Can pass teleee, they buY tt tow And as, their enemies buy them, too, They ,all avert the impending fray And :slam their chilaren and . their wivers To buy the necessata knives" ealeeek South, in Tema(' Star Weekly, • our- t,onclon Lett°, cosi 5881010 VisIt ammoie Poor, maltose tem to tee emulate: ana titan 11"euorted c8111J74-1, IVII T111.14'11.1 itt Rensingnn, where the Pritive 001 Wales 8(1011(1 11)' Demme a landlord or xtuniel dwellings honaing sixty 1 amities. royal couple fleet obsersed an aged ebar- No hint of the Journey wee given. ate, PrOgrese of the Great West Told wooao, oollsoinu the brass lttiob.s el' a "C0111(101 hoe b velleVed lay eyes." the a F e ill ew Poinled (11:an eaid, "Glut they even were cam, - tog near us. A line lady is Queen Mary; ' ' Paragrephs. n odu r by t mait'ilft king and queen. Ascending to the 111'31 floor of nee of the fists, the king tapped on a door in a simple, unaffected way anti maid to (he housewife, "PVC come to tho cot- tagem and flats I've built for MY hen; frau, t mine in?" "Although L recognized the khlg and qUeen at onee," said Mrs. Charlton, who noeuples the fiat, "I remained glued to the spot ror several momenta while they mused through all the roma immeeting At another flat Mrs, Marshall was clearing the table after her husband's lunehenn. On table was It glass and empty stout bottle, which hire. Alarchull endeavored to hide, and, fulling. apolo- gized. The king and queen laughed heartily, but the king kindly put the woman at ease, saying lie Was glad to observe that she attended to the com- forts of her husband. The king, practical In all things, In- quired how the fiats and cottages 0001 - mane woe the 1110011teti Or the tenants. "I am anxious to nutIce provision for the lower and middle classes." the king said. "I am anianus For the welfure of the working classes, but In London I have realized that these ele.sses find it difficult to obtain a house within their means, not too far from the centre... I had that in VieW When 5 decided to have these dWeillegg erected for MN, Soll, for lids Is a SeriMM problem to hundreds in !minion to -day' Man of the,,TwIsted lgoee.e Considerable Interest has been aamused by the announcement' that it hes been decided to re -open the case of Osear Slater, "the man with the twisted 1108e." Who also went by the names of Sands, Mundt, and Anderson: who was conviet- eti live years ago of the murder of Miss Minnie flitch:dot. a wealthy young wo- Man in Glasgow, OB Dee, 21, 1908. Slater was extradited from Ateeriea at the request of the 13rit1sh police, the chief' piece of evidence being a pawn tielcet found on him for a brooch belong - 10 the WOhlell. The pollee descrip- tion emphasizing his Creaked nose led to his identification, Ire was sentenced to death but was reprieved and Is now timing a life sentence, •Sle Arthur Conan Doyle interested himself in the Man.:1 ease and eighteen months ago published it booklet entitled "The Case of Oscar Slater," in which he vigorously attadked the Verdict. Slaterwho is a German Jeweler and lived l'or some years In New York, has never ceased protesting his innocence. It is asserted that new facte have come to light which wilt go a long way toward clearing him or the crime, Recalls Bluff Xing Ileal's Day. wvsTERN. NO. 1)1181,1(8 Qtieon Afary's reeent explora- tion or the old houses tenanted by the lloard of Trade she sass, (Me of the most romantic and least Icnown.scrans of an- tiquity In Whitehall. This is tile Jinn stone archway now filled in by an of- ficial looking door underneath the offices —the Watergate of Wolsey's Palace. Through this gate, we know from the chroniclers, Henry Vitt would come to viSit the Cardinal "In a mask with a dozen other -maskers, all in garments like shepherds' made of fine cloth of gold and fine crimson." The King would ,burst ,In upon the testi% Wes upstairs, and,for his partner in the dance would - single out Anne 13oleyn. • you enter the proay little Mehl where accounts are being.added up you cart still see the Cardinal's arms Carved on what was once the outer side of the arch. The watergate and the cryntlike e.liar are all that is left or the splen- did palace. Nowadays clerks eat their luncheon among the pointed arches ot "Wolscy's bulIdlng The :Board of Trade has some of the best ceilings. in Lendon, and the barrel etling- of -the rem where the messen- gers dwell no*—once the ante -chamber to 'Lord Pembroke's great room of state —is especially beautiful, Prime Zolm 10 a Reel Hoy. Prince John., the 9 year old son of' King George, Jumped on a bench in St. Zanies' park the other day and shouted at the top of his voice, "Votes for wo- men!' A crowd immediately gathered and it took an embarrassed nurse some time to get her charge back to Bucking- ham palace, Prince John seems to ciriOY life much as do other boys of his age. Re has gathered, doubtless from his eldest bro- thers, who bring It from the public schools, university and navy. a lot of Slang, and has horrified his mother 1,5 his apt use of it. Recently, while motoring with the queen he was rebuked for hl,, use of slang, and particularly for his use of the word "kids," as applied to children. At that he thought the thing was over- done and pointed out that all boys talk- ed- about "kids" and "what else would a fellow call them?" Deaf Mute Cambridge MA A wanderfal.story .01pluck and deter- mination Is revealed by the announce- ment that Armand MILekeTIZie IS one of the new masters or arts at Cambridge. Mr. Mackenzie is deaf and dumb and is the first individual so afflicted to take the degree ne M. A, at an English uni- versity. He paid the fees out of his oWn earnings. London, March 10, 8014, VANCOUVER ISLAND. Said to Bo the —Most, 'English Por. Con of Canada. Vancouver Wand has been des- oribed as "a bit of England on the Pacific." It is eerbainly the mosb English porbion of the Doniinion. Settled originally by a fine class of British settlers the ways aad .ens - toms of the old land have been pre- servedte an .extent unknown on the mainland, and this is one of the ealient attraetiene .of the island far GoM and nobes to the yalee of inany of the newcomers, The scenic $05,000 were found in the house of beaubies are malty and vatied, but an elderly maiden lady who <lied weeannot live, however, bIt acenery the other day in an unpretentious alone •find the means of liveliheed dwelling in the east end of Glasgow, is, a,s a rule, the dominating factor Scotland. The ald Indy had lived in a setelera ehoiee of looations, on a very simple plan. She was In this 'very eeeential vespeot Van- friendly with her neighbors, hat couver Island poesessee many ale never gave any indications that alto . tractiona, 'lb is peimaeily a'oottrary watt wealehlet thee Millers in the for the settler with SOMO -capital at same neighborhood, whowere all of Iiia dieposal, and doee nob offer the the workieg class. Sotao of the seine opportunities to the poor man money was found in an old -fashion - at the prairie. distticts 'of Canada, ed purse, and there WaS no miserly *But for the man with a taste for effort at hiding the money, which outdoor life the island is peetaiatly was weltered about; in aifferent eteraceive, As astruit geotaing cen- poets of the house. Sho had Mtn tre ib is making earmiderablealleade eleelAred that she. eliti mit believe way; many retired British army and banks. naval ()Metre have pone intio the dis- trict. in recent. yeare mad here 'en- —ea-- gaged in the very pleasant, anctif Rival Pets. Plaaeal,V handled, remunerative' 0e- "Why this coolneez between you eripattem of Fruit growing, The «ali and Melee's' and elimate ern -kik -ions are mere "Oh, we elleagreed about some - especially neltepteel to the caltivation taimee," of small lattite, and For ,this peo- ((What, was ier duet the -elan of the ieland and the "As to whether her dogav more mainland offer itt good market, intelligent than my baby." Vancouver's electrical staff was cut &tea by rix men, 'Vancouver's fire hies for January Wail slightly over $14,000. The City of Nanaimu will epend $38,000 on its public eehools this year. Victoria parties who wished to engage a singer approaching B.C. sharee by ship, engaged him by wirelests. The first white settlement in Bri- tish Columbia, was made at Kam- loops in 1812. Victoria was first settled in 1842. On account of the steady increase in commerce between B.C. and Aus- tralia, a regular fortnightly service has been insealled. Huge piles 100 feet long are being driven in the construction of a new pier fur the C.P.R. at Vancouver, used, ddnearly 2000,piles in all will be The Vancouver shipyaras are very buey, and are likely to be so for some time. At present.a new power stehooner for the Hudson's Bay Company is being built. The Vancouver Terininal Com - Pane' plans to build a double track railway from Main Street, Vancou- ver, to. Kitsilarto, where the Domin- ion Governmeni will establish ex- tensive dockage facilities. The British Columbia Govern- ment will hold its first sale of public property in Fort George next May. Some 2,300 lots will be auctioned, and it is expected that $2,000,000 will be realized, A new school, known as the Daw- wire School, was opened in Vancou- ver, with 700 pupils enrolled. It was named after Sir William Dawson, for 40 years principal of McCall University, Montreal. The New Westminster, B.C., Re- tail Merchants' Association put themselves on record as favoring a statutory weekly half -holiday and the closing of all stews at 0 p.m., except on days preceding holalays. in ;the. three British Columbia. Fish haecheries there are eight mil- lion sockeye fty, which will be re- leased when ready for distribution. These are young fish, on which will depend the 'success of the season of 10;fnapanese on the B.C. coast make a practice of going home on sight- seeing trips every winter. And the crafty Nipponese generally bring wives with them when they .come back, thns killing two birds with one stone. 118. 0, E. Koch, a well-known lumberman, has built a, big flume on Robson Creek, which will take si8 million feet of logs down to the Littae Slocum River next spring. This will solve the problem of get- ting timber from heretofore inacces- . able sections in the mountains. At a meeting of the B.C, Dairy- men's Assoeiation, ib was stated thab middlemen were making more profit eub of milk than either the producer or retailer. In some caws, it WS eaid, the milk ad- vanced over 100 per cent, in price after it reathed the hands of the City Analyst Birch, .of Vicboria, told the British Columbia Dairy- men's Aseociation that 95 per cent, of the -milk cans -coming into Victor- ia over the railways were unsealed, and the contents .were often tam- pered with by parties who had a partiality for cream. He advised them to seal all their cans. Vaneouver Trades and Labor Couneil resolved to ask the Domin- ion G;overnment to prohibit artisan immigrants from entering British Columbia for sfx months, It was also, resolved to include in the ban women seeking work as domestic servaaits, who, it is saki, arn numerous in British Columbia. • I' $65.000 in Lowly Muse. TIE '5 -0N -114Y ctli0i-81'IDY INTER N.1.110 SA I, LESSON, - A PD11, 111, Lesson 111. The Cast of Disciple- ship. Lake 14. 2541 •ColdPit Text, Matt. 10, 2J.. Once more IVC! pick up the thread of Luke's narrative of the; joueney. The teachialgs of Jesus, en route, (entre largely in his empha.siti upon the valet of dieeipleship nod the seri- ous remponeibility involved in fol- lowing him, His CAVII impending euffering leads him time to lift into prominence the serious side of the Chrielian life, Verse 25. There went With hien— The route taken by -Teens from Ca- DOWNAY THE SOUNDIN3,SEA BITS OF NEWS PROM TUB MARITIME PlieVINCES. bite—rest From Places Lapped by S't'ave, of the Atlantic. John WeDougall, for many yeers stipendiary at; Halifax, is dead, St, John's, -Nfld., eonnuission houses report the smallest Macke of fish there ever known at, this time of the year. Sir Henry Pellatt has endowed a chair of philusvphy at King's Col- lege,- N.S„ of ;the ealue of $1,500 per annum. The fe'S. Meant, Royal, which lefb St. John, N.B., recently for Lon- don, Wok away a nnlhon dollars' pernaum 10 lerteeetem was a tar- weigh of manufactured goods, one - (mama tine. See Luke 13, 29 ; 17,Oh. 1(1). oafec5081111incth omf-assnti:awnabtinlanis piled up at eaeb side. of a railway masa- ing. Vital lamehard was crushed to death under the wheels of an ex- press train. He did not see it coin- illeg' At Port Hood, CalL, a woman named Jessie MeIseeee was blown from the street out to sea during a terrific gale, After a long search her dead body was found out on the P.E.I. ehurch member, who had made a fm -tune in fax famine-, gave the Methodists of N.13, a-nql P.E.I. $2,500 with ,which to pletee an evangelist in the.field fer a year. Alt Cheri ottetematee,P.E.I. , consid- erable exeitern.ent was caused by the allegation that parties who had been getting orders for -coal in the 27. 'Whosoever cloth not bear hie way of charity had been disposing ()WTI cress— Bearing the erass is of the orders and firing up with mentioned anly twice in the New stimulants. Testament; here, where it is; used A number of Yarmouth, NS., figuratively, and in john 19. 17, fishermen had e narrow escape from where it is used lieerally. Jesus being lost when they were eaughb in meant that the disciple must be the ice field white en route for El - willing to suffer martyrdom if ne- lenweods Island. Had their rescue eessary. Putting to death by eatici- been delayed half an hour they fixion was sai coinnme iii C'brist's would have perished. time that his hearers had no doubt At St. John's, Nfld., it is believed often eeen mea "carrying the that the schuoner Gland Falls, from. erost.St. John's for Oporto, fish laden, By two illuetrations Testi% points is Met with a full crew of eight men. out that becoming a clie.cfple is a She has been unheard of fur eight serious matter nut to be entered weeks. Many other fishing boats are inte thoughtlessly er without eon- overdue teeing to severe storms, sidering the probable °Meanie. Caepard Vielettee, bis wife and 28. Desiring to build a tuwer—An four children, of Madawaska, ))tart - estimate of the building material is ed from home intending to ,spend equally eeeential in elatracter-build- the week -end with' friends about a ing. It ie firet of all a question of dozen miles away. They were over - what a pereon ean putt, into the ser- taken by a blizzard, and but for yiee of Christ. stumbling on a deserted wood -chop - :31. King—Local princes, though pers' camp, would have perished. eubjeet to the Roman empire, bore They were all badly frost-bitten, the title uf kings. It was•stated in the county court Whether he is able with ten thou- at Se. John, N.B., that, sine:3;1s sand to meeb him that eomeith last, the C.P.R. has paid $29,000 against him with twenty thousand— for goods stolen from that railway. This was an age of recklees war- Judge Forbes told the grand jury fare. A king with a smaller force "emnething must be done to sbop might possibly win a battle, bub the these water eats from stealing froni case manifeetly calls for careful de- the people who emne here to do liberation. In the Christian life, business." power of ea -durance is as important A young man named Everett Lew- es the building material, is, of Chatham, N.B., was arrested 33, Renounceta not all that he -charged with ripping open Govern- hath—Through all the history of the ment mail bags and taking register - Christian church there have be -en ed letters from them. The prisoner those who haae been called upon to was a driver for the ferm which had actually renounce all their posses- the contract for carrying the mails, sione for the sake of the gospel, All anti is alleged to have made a can - Christians are asked .to be ready to fession, stating that, after ripping do so, that is, to subordinate earth- open the bags he sewed thern up ly claims to those of Chriet when again with thread borrowed from .. the two are incompatible, houses along the route. 84Salit—Disciplesbip; or theeepi- rit ef eelfamerifice and service; re- ferred to ie the preceding verses. Salt which has lost ats savor is here the discipleship which has lost the spirit of self-sacrifice and service for Christa sake. The Duk.e of Westminster is 015- 35. Cast ib out—Tastele.ss salt doubtedly tbe richest landlord in would be absolutely worthless. London. He has two estates in Disciples wibhoub the spirit of self- London, the 'Upper Grosvenor Es, denial and .service cannot exerta tiarteestualnidnstihe.le 13foernevi:.aEs8'etastteallTiS11116-, helpful influence inhuman\ - society. pus, the Norman Earl of Cheeter, ed in the first pla.ce by Hugh Lo - and since then has been eonsolie dated by many wealthy maariages. One of these occurred it couple of hundred years apeo, when a Gros, yeller married a Mies Davies, whose father bequeathed her a great tract of land which wa-s then far in the country, but to -day is a populous district of Lond.on. The name is perpetuated in Davies Street, whistle with Oxford Street and the' Marble Arch ie a boundary of the 'Upper Oreavenor Estate, Vietania Station Needed A (trice. buile on land maned by the Mk@ of Westminster, and the, total Value of his London holding% is estimated Itt 11 eeere Of million pounds, though this is ab the beeb inero gneeswerk. That the I:hike of West - mauler, owns more Valuable real e.state than Amy other man in the world eannot he doubted, Milk Made Eroni bean. 11; 18, 31; 10, 11, 28, The juurney eeerns to have occupied eeveral menths, ending with his triumphal entry. Here, as in ether plates, it is mentioned that great multitudes followed him. Some did ea front idle curiosity, others with Inure or less interesa bat with little under- stencling vr what discipleship Meant. Believing that they elanad know what was involved in casting their lots with hien he toned te them and delivered the discourse oontained in our leseon. 20. If any man . . . hateth nut his own—Jesue here refers to cases in width a choice. must be made be- tween love of kindred and loyalty to Christ (compere Matt. G. 24; 10. 37). Jesus often thus stated a prin- ciple in a startling way. WORLD'S RICIIEST LANDLORD. Owns More Valuable Real Estate Than Any Other Man. Couldn't S'Itimp Barney, Barney Phelan, Father Healy's sealant, was celebrated for his ready wit. • One day, while he was serving at dinner, one of the guests seal to him : "I3arney, Italy is my ankle placed between ray knee and my foot?" •Begorra, chinno," replied Bar- ney; "unless it is to keep your calf from eating your corn." Burglar (holding jewel -ease and speaking to househulder eronehed therifiedly in bed)---SorrY to eroublu yer, mum, but would yet mind helP- ing site eleonee a present for the ads - we? It's her biethday leamovvow, Tt is be.sl, to give linens 11 long aoaking betel* wathing, If this method is fellowed stains will wash oue Israel ZangwIll, the London 111W- elise, once visited the city of Chic- ago. Ameng other places of inter. eel, be WAS ,l,alcen to the stock yards, where laneheon was served for the parV. During the meal 41, pert miss, seated next, to the pen, of hoaor, aaketa him this queation; "Mr, Zangtvill, how do yen like Chicago ham?" The Dreamer of the G'ilet- to raised his sorrowful 1400 and urilcl quietly: "I like it, I like it -- much better than Maine tongue,," Sty milk is now largely it uee in Germany, it beiag an imitation of caev'e milk, manufaeLered from the soy, or Chinese bean. Whi4e/01o11 an exact counterfeit of the laeteal fluid, it furnishes a substitute state- factery 10 1.110 peasant, and is fully alt wholesome a,8 the purest milk. The acre of ground required to sup- port one cow will raise material from whieh far greater quantiblea Of uoy milk oan be readily manufae- lured than the latedeetvatorkieg bo- vine could possibly produee.