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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-1-7, Page 6it 0 U b wt in & re to. P? St E. p1 to at Cr 4? be pn 01' p.l au 00 ru w hti to cu frc a:11' Sill japai glt se f1'u a'€ ane b'bs Lha ire or an+ lid ore in .•,bore tin gra an hal 'tits an o'er ter ttpfuls tg ltls ell • 'then i. , _ • r s. sauce, add t� nt� tit a e,xn whipped stiff, Star lightly, pour in- to a mould, wet with old .water, set it on.lee'und serve with whipped cream rl'hi's must he made ver a earls' in the'morning if it is to be used four .lunch or tea. If a fruit cream is desired substitute fruit ' jtdee, stewed and strained, or the juice from canned fruit, fur the milk, omitting, the grated chocolate. Both rer_ heir • and Breit Barer- "tine creamy delicious. t tea are 1e t t:.. - e • ; ' (� ( ( ��j % 6 UUUtE: �UiJ - ' . • ••--^ • tr,'r ., r, .. t, - ..,. � x\iL1tA-1.11Q1`,1lc,ltl,SSQ,, JANARY 10. Lesaoll IT. Beller" and llaralt De liver I jrael,—Judg, 4.3-23; G.1-22. Golden Text. lea. 84. 17.ie res 4. The wife of LaP ldatdt•— Ve p Deborah was a.marri'ed woman. Site, was a wife in the home, maid, un- lroat'btedl the mother of. clx!Idren, t Y,oleo phis is a very early evidence that o ieederohship in the state is, not inconsistent with wifely and d attention motherly faithfulness an tet to the duties of the home, Mu 1 has been easel about the particular -here of women with the implicate n, Iran that this sphere is the hone alone, No wife •or mother has the right to neglect either her husband other children, but woman's sphere is any lace of service which will n• p help the cause of humanity. This was Deborah's sphere., e Dwelt under bhe palm-treeofemy. Deborah between Remelt and Beth -old el in the hill -country of Ephraim.— Becaurse of the incursions of the Canaanitee, it w•as no longer safe fur the Israelites to have their seat of governsuent, se it were, or, re- ther, the place •of judgment, in the northeastern part of their borders, ahcl hence they went up into the hill -country of Ephraim. The judges sat in an o en lace usuall under P P • Y the gate of the city or in the mar- ket-place, where many people, could Ue gathered together for special an- ❑ouncementP. The earliest seats of Csrael•s worship, the earltiesure- Lias to hex patriotism, e e no, Mount Ephraim' (George Adaan 6$mith) 8. And she sent and called Barak. . -Deborah •saw very quickly what the reates, need of Israel was, and she ulna discovered that the +lima was ripe for a decisive Ulow. So she sent for the man on 'whom she tltoteglat victory would rest, •Barak. msbiltze,d his troops on Mount Tu- bier, Kebesh • in Galilee ti the old, important and very often mention edc city of h'e 03c1 •Testament. Re- ference is anade to it in tit... Tel el Amartna letters and in the Egyptian inscripbians. Other references in the Bible are Josh, 20. 7; 21. 32. The inhabitants in B.C. 734 were captured and taken away by Tiglatlt Piles•er. Josephus says that the cit 1•o, between Galilee and the Y, Y the ha border, and that it was in the hands of the Tynans, who were fighting with the Israel- ices, 7, The river Kishan.—This river flowed .at the foot of Mount Carmel. It wee poetically calledi "The wee fere of Megiddo," (Judg, 5. 10). The TCishon was aswift-flowing, turbo- lent stream. 8. Barak said, If thou wilt go with me, then T will go; but if thou wilt riot go with ire, I will not go.—It s that a warrior, used to bat- tie, should be afraid to go into the conflict without the presence of a woman who. presumably •knew meth- ing about warfare. 9. And she said, I will surelyo g with flies. Doubtless there wits considerable argument between De- b,orah and Barak lefore she finally agreed to go. She could not sae whyBarak of ht not to lead his army to victory. Notwithstanding, the journey that; thou eakest shall not be for thine honor ; for Jehovah will sell Sisera o , into the hand of a woman.—Deber- attention to the fact that all calls alt Barak was less great than he might have been, and that, although he would, win the victory, it would not be his ulster it would be the vie- Y, tory of Deborah who was his inepir- anon, his real leader, 10. And Barak called Zepnhtn and yaphtali together to Kedesh,— family These tribes were very- quickly illy rallied, for we read that there went up ten thousand men at his feet. lap At his feet is a very picturesque into expression to indicate the eager- remembering nese of ,the Israelites to follow the lead call of Deborah and 'Barak, They came in such numbers and were so, for the fray that the virtual- y of ly crowded round his feet. in 11. Now Heber the ICenite had se- did paroled himself from the Kenites,—at his Tilde verse nems 'to be introduced dell tri chow how it was that Sisera (see Jove, 1r -I •• I7) could flee away to the tent statesmen of Heber the Kenite for refuge. unconscious 1". And they told Siserss.—Tie neabh news of the movements among the could Israelites was brought to Sisera in impediment bis headquarters by his scouts. placed 12, fiisera gathered together all 'I/he his chariots, even nuns hundred to chariots of iron.—These were the ander awful implements used by the lies- his then people against the Israelites. cavalry They were instruments of torture. As the fighting between the Israel- laievitch Ides and their enemies was hand -bo- hand conflict, it is reiadil seen how Y terrible these iron chariots, which his were arranged with teeth and other to g sharpout.professors Protuberances, appeared to -combat Israelites: agents From Harosheth of the Gentiles, ed unto, the river Kishon.-libis was the far-flung battle line which Sit-, of era threw out, reaching from Mouiisb Talar. over to Mount Carmel, sale in though it is evident that this forces her were massed at tha'River Kishon, . , 14. And Deborah ,said unto Barak distance ' affairs et Barak, As Barak loevidentlty was depending entirely upon her, lie died moves when she commands. Ills i oonanuz.i d•.,}ro`re' eri."biiti ~the' , , S thousand Israelites miter hien, 1tt.' And Jehovah d:scom'fted sa•a.•-Me Israelites were, Fighting for Jehovah, they were fighting " medrabel' um•tler' hos leaolerslttp, When a battle went in favor of Israelites, it was because they Bayed Jehovah dieeomiked enemy. 'Phis fur't'her evidences how close the tie was between the raelites and their God and how, after all the entire God„ given to hint" With t'he .edge of the sward, -As already stated, 'the fighting, of Israelites• with their enemies hand -to -hated conflict, It ~rivet have been farce fn • its contact. Sisera alighted from his chariot, and fled away on ha feet,—Sisera a Aidentl • was aeawaaad, ere rift m to their own das•ecrmfitlt e. enx himself waulcl flee'to safety. This fact relieves somewhat the awful- nese of the manner in which he his death shortly afterwards at hands of a mama~ (Judg. 4. 17, 22). 10, But Barak pursued after chariots, and after the hosts.—Evan the c�harriote were put to confusion, so that he footmen of the Israelites couldpursue the horses of th•e `Not a man left," is the eat- phobic way in which the writer des cri'bes the awful loss that• bhe enemy suffered: , GRAND 1)TJEE NICHOLAS. Victorious Leader of Army I9 Pk- Guilty "Dictator of Russia, A Jupiter or a Mars in appear- anoe Mali feet six inches in stoolCm s leant and hale as a .race g ^ .horse, towering above ibis fellows with the ems isacid's Y, grace o'£ a prince, but +alert, •saspi�ctons, self-reliant; the bead ton end marrow with delicate li,nies of ancestry, refinement, and the .extreme idealism which is lige- try, • -covered now with th•e sparse grey locks of 58, remnants of gold- en curls of ehildhord ;the chin bold ons ar•>ldtandacr el ebobbs s ,tnstrd softened to ...e oasp:al judgment by the cloak of an ,nm,pla beard send moustache, the tthiri.Iips tnansf rtnad at ear tervals by am; ingenuous smile; ••the nose beaked ilk a. Cb»s ar'e -tire hives a{ es silent caicuiatin es wifth ix;telli ace ancL quiet wibh command, and yet the eager eyes of the ,adventurer embarked alter many struggles upon (the quest honoran,d power—such is the Grand Duke Nicholee Nisholadsviteh, Gen- eralissimo.of the Ru_cia:n army, vir- tually dictat�o�r'since the war b'e'gan throughoutswarmed the empire of the Czar of all the Buuaiuus. M•oulde.d in .the physical likeness of hie German mother, whom, in his unhappy boyiood, he adored, dos- ten Srs,. axn the be the Is- was the,.. was hie lee met the the en- -tions his an_ cf arrangements eats were iaumraua ed to w g the women he had eeeretly uong•'e4 far years to x?t'olesitis wife, take Prim- ceps Anastasia of Montenegro. - A marl, wife, ct lexattdaxr ITI, shad brought :l tee 4f the d'aixgh•ters cF ribs i( 'i pf AR•ontenegxa room lcl,e.xt fa!her's mounts~~ home to, be ecm at,'c'd to his ltouseli'ald. 'Ilhe vera hootages , C , Pc,r cm e•ttegre s pohhe 1 sub'mr- shin, The yau'agest, Pr]naees H.eeenn Queen of Italy to -day. Her two sisters, Alexander. III. settled .in accordance with .ills 'M'ishas; P•ri;•i- cess Militia the wife of the Grund Dolce Peter, beoeler,a'f Nich Niobolaievetah. Princess ,Antis- tesla wins m�ax•ri,ed to .the Duke of It •lyes when she was gpA.governmeutSnrvey the wife of 'another man that Ni�cho- las Nieholinievbo1 ivoced venni west his reheat �itfe. Patieml hikev p' y' waited until she could persuade the Czar Nitslt'olas to er'mlt bhe,cUivaree p and until the wias Ihi:m'ee,if fres to marry. An abasia wars forty wdh'em ,she be -demotion carie ilia Gitand Dnohess Niciholaa, She has the vigorous frame, the g tar siglrtecl inteldagemce, and ileus emotional devotion, to the eause of the Slays, whack eaveracteeize her Eatlter. She was endowed with the barbaric veli tootle b•e'auty of ,bhe Orient, anctat the Court of Sit. Petersburg she early` learned the arts of fascination and political in- •trigu'e praotised there witbh Orionbal finesse: She is a firebrand in spreading the gorpelof the brother.- hood of the Slays lased unscrupulous in the methods employed, to Further her htusb:oatd s ambition Gas• the no,•- tura leader of the Russian Slays, Bio•s Grand Duchess NfdhcliII,s has long canes heoome 'a.Ruts fan of the Russians. Regal m beiaramg, rma,gm- flcently gowned in bhe costume of the ancient Czarina, ishe ha.s more than once crested is furore at the Eancy-dress halls. Anastasia has, however, thwarted her husband's • cihemes—if hhey ex- seventyears,t elle nal nota resented P him with a child. Seized Raiaa. of. Power. From ttbstbegi zeiing to the end of the Russo-Japanese Wiaa, I1tiobo!ty N40h0La vitchctna at s ari•aus ••issues PI'omived •to the gemer.ads-rind rite saldie•rs +as theor -commander-in- clue£. Borth believed that dieaister overtook itlhem because the Ozer failed to keep that premise, actu- ated by jealousy and fear of 'his cousin's popularity, At the close of the war the Russian capital wiilh revolutioniabs read Y to strike at a: given signal. ChAO,s reigned, land he vest machinery of Me police availed mobhing. 111te Czar was ready for flighb and abdi_ na,hi•on'. Nicholas Nicltwbaievitolr took up the reins of goverment in bis :strop:g grasp; iudiffesemt to the attempts trade up+oa his own life, he went about line streets nnpro_ leered, and aihasted etre ton sic- g pro- ceseicn of political pxiseners be the mines of Siberia, Peace was' res- Gored. life~ Czar Nichrola,s the Little, safe once more, atxspped au thor_,ty from Guard Duke Nicholas the Great When the plasant wax be.gam•' Czar Nicholas aspired to 1e¢d, has troops in' person, to be his own gen- eraltssimia. The Grand Duke Melt - etas assumed the supreme cemanamd by force, en one hears. lis issued mani£estaes to ithe Jerre ••and to he { Poles without a msn'1tin,g the Czar, this one knews. The Cabinet Coma cl of the. Empire holds daily sat- tinge at Peterhof, Save when the Czar is at 'he'a•dquertars in the West, an•d its reeolutiaxus •are' sub- united bo• tibia Autocrat fox comfirnn,a- tion•. But bks a^e,al executive is Grand Duke Nicholas, since every rae,mber of 'trine Cabinet belongs to the Count Military party ssekniow- 'edging the Grund Duke as its leader. The Czar does nab dare defy his Cabinet during a state of war, and the Cabinet olieclie'ntly alleys the •commander -in --chief. People Are Ignorant. The people know almost ~•ebbing concerning the progress of evenbs. The •socialas.tie Russian papers sand those printed in bh•e Getman tongue have long ago been suppressed, A double oensarcei is in force for p the papers atilt in existence, all re- ports of bhe war ,and political coma- rent going twice iia the censor, first in an,amuscrap't and then in printed farm, The Rust¢am people who .are loyal to the Czar ere disturbed ,and resit less over the problem of the soccer- si•an. The little Czaseviteh, Grand Duke Alexander, ten years old last July, is hopelessly lame 'end, fnagile; a sturdy, perfectly formed infant growing up to robust boyhood ruin- ed in health by the accident on board •his fabher's ya•ohit ;two years ago, due to ,the tmadhem,atiom•s of the revolutionists. A dozen pots to kill 'him had failed, The'm'e t•o cripple and torture by lingering disease has 'cuccceded. No one be- • Heves he will live to axralnhoiod, The Czarina is forty-two and is not like- 1 topillow. y give a ,sec'omcl heir to'the Im- pexial Grown. i Phe Czar's bnathes Midhael Alex- andeovibeih the heir' to ,bhe throne until the Cza;r's lam was bonn,1t-�world, steadfestay refused to give, the Gov- ernment .any hope that he ;would over ,a,coept:hiho; crown, He is now in the field fighting for Russia, but has leftt.his:i mor go, natic,.wiffs: ,axed.. young family basic in I;n land g whore he writ u�ndoub�tediiy return, tvhbtxevelr peace cornea again. Thos mixt in entooessiovl" are the i sons of 'title Wend Duke Vladimir' 'the brother ofAlexander- III. - b .Grand Duke Dytii, who i& tearaie,d to tins s'atislat, stw•ug'hter off the Eng- llevtt Duke of Edinburgh, mid Grand Duchess Marie, Alexander IL's o2ily ia.ugihtai; Gru,nci 1)u•lco Boris, and razed Duke Andrew, Grail al'o'ne: of the Hires ltt'ci£,srs is mar- r1id, snit , has 'CIO gni only two nt£amt'd+aut$ltit�ets. .Wil Ile Czar?soil Alien i•h•em tihe su cession in •this regulear order falls to the Grand Duke ,Serge, anther brother of Al'examd•er III., wdto by this roytil marriage with at ;sister of the Icing o' ro 'c .t r f G e e, Serge .Gas a ton, GrandA Duke Dnn'itra, 'in. -01'0 years old, handsome, cleans% and irre- r, ansible. With him ends the hopes of an heir through the descendants of Alexander II, bt ivotild sur rase few co le at p P P court aE ilio Uetrotlial was aainua'ttn'e- ed of tits Gnand Duke Dilmabri e•n'd tho Grand Duch.eee Olga, bhe' eldest daughter of the Czar,with !the pro - g P *at Olga wars' to ascend the 'bhrone .els sovereign Gzaarina •im the event cif the (loath of her grip- pled brathei, D�ttctxd being Czar- consort, Grand Dttko,NielibNas Caa1 well disregard These elaborate preGau_ to secwrs life twtueaelssiem re the regular line as mere stumbling blocks which can !thrust aisida in his strong, mareerful %allele to Saab li'imieolf upolo ithe ibhro'ne, Td's Bus- Blau people may so wish to reward him if he ils victorious in the war against Germia•ny, •At airy rune he will be a great popular hero, corn- pl'etel over -shadowing bhe Guar. y -- - - A STRIKING N lBIUI'IVE. Theodore Hook's Contribution to , Strike Literature. A strike all too often becomes a serious affair; a general strike, •which involves aL reel or sire e- do trades along with Lhasa snore directly eoneeened, •es •eve•~ more threatennng or diso.atrous. In Frazee, especially, the general strike is dreaded; ,and not long ago, as newspaper renders will +rVaal1, `the' strongest gav"britlnent measures were enipoy^ed to •bfieak one U. Three quarters of a'-oasitury ago, `the matter was rega dei more-dig/ea ly—particularly r by clever gentle man on the other side of"the Chan-mt •n•e1. Theodore Hook,rane of the few: punsbers whose punning was usual ly witty as well as .playful, contra Uuted what is certainly a unique Page io 'strike literature tm lis ac . eerror of the 'affair, "The lalcers, Lein aanbitious to extend their do -malas declared ;g eluat a reyolution was needed, sand, though n•oh exactly, bred up fro .arms, soon reduced their °rusty masters to terms. The tailors called a coven- cil of the board to see what mea- sures should be baleen, and, looking on the bakers sus the flower of Chir_ airy, decided to follow suit; the consequeuca of which was that a cereous insurrection w•as lighted up among the candle makers, which, however, wick -ed it might appear in the eyes of some persons, deve]- ope•d traits of character not un- worth of ancient Greece." Hook could, however,pun with equal gay>etyg'upon matters . that his own pocket. He ee- livened livened th•e usually prosaic and rat- welcome duty of arta his taxes 1o, paying y a word of advice to his neighbors to do lakewisewhich it is to be hoped P the worthy Mr. Winter, the-eollec- found of some assistance: , Here seance Mr. \eager, in.'pector of taxes; I advise you to give him whatever he axes; I advise you to pay him without any flummery, For though his name's his Winter, actions ars summary i a, •y'' • ..., . ., ;• �ry•ai„tr�” fortic, �(nmp 1nts +y'1 l ct 14Mr ISd' ' ®J� i i "*= NOTES OF SCIENCE ..�'—�' ... .. Sugar'beetseatatbegrown success, fully in Ireland, recent government experiments show, Expert Preach butter tasters claim they oa•n perceive the flavor of the over which cattle [feed, The ear r the the more , - t __ td tno to Pidly 1 its a'oouraey impaired by etre erosion of its' bore and rifling. Au for English tugboat of very light draft for nee on sh'al'louv sbreamts is ciitven by,A.n'ae1i:al Propeldsr. I t encliman has invented a lock aontrollecl� b, electro-rttagneks that can be operated from distant points, loss, resulted iii r. inking the Yukon River in fifth place among the great sti,eams of North America, A camera, small enough to be swallowed, to photo re h the inter- ' p g p' for of the s'totnach, has been inventt ed bya Danish surgeon. An Engli h aeroplane, the wings of watch form a ring the idea being that it will right itself if c�apeued, has made numea^oue successful ex- perimontal flights, An ingenious Fren'chm'an has in. vented a mower 4o be fastened to the stet~ of ,e lantmek to clear water cour'se's of vegetates meter. Doeumen'ts, lettere and pictures can Use preserved rong nftely by soaking them in a sttmng volution of alum and then dr ing them All of Switzerland s glaaieas aro I`eoeding penaeptdbly, one notable les leaving shrunk niers than 1,000 feet in the last ben ysII•rs. The government of forest has set 690,000 acres of reserves and will experiment with planting °ural ,fu's for firewood, Per keepinga mauls head cool there has been invented e fun to he so suspended inside .a Drat as to vi- histo as its wearer moves about. A vessel built for the, Italian mazy for he ,purpose 'lues succeeded in raising submarines sunk to a depth of 60 feet in less Mian an hover, Japanese electricians avers Pa' among ,the first eiiperimenters with ii rely rs telegraphy and have perfected arta of the most efixeient systeara Itixo{an. Although bhe United States re - fines rmore nickel than any other y, practically sdl of life ore is imported from Onbario and Nev Caledonia, Experts?Utit there estimated recently ale 0 discovered000 oms of soda in a usefn'1 mimenal in British that Pica- A New South Wales irrigation dam, which will sect $3,s380,000, wild impound 33,3$17,000 'cubic 1eeb of water, backed up in a=lake 40 miles long• To prevent callisions at e:a two Englishmen have invenbe:i npara- tis which collects sound waves end by electrical contacts lights harps on life side of au vessel from which the sounds come. A novel bu,nglar alarm is a phone- graph record to be placed on an in - st'rument so connected mill et r,l,•,or or window as to sound Calle for help should an intruder enter, The mountains of Porb', Rica axe so ma n clic that, they attract rtir veyors plumb dines, and it has been found than some old, surveys are in - correct by half a mile of in are. Toguide a key to the Ic. {lt.ile it the dark there has been pate lei ,r. V-shaped strip of metal to h' las- taned,to a doer with the print sur- rounding the hole. Without anymeatus of tate•:tion p against the reasnu'e ef.. the water, a g p Greek sponge fi:Merman res ntly made a dive to is depth of 202 1aet, believed to be the world's 1'e^_( :d. —. -- Novel Life -Saving Device. The astonishingly lenge percent - age of the officers and crew resau- the ed fromafter p was eters torped edoed insDover :Straits appears to have been due to a most ingenious idea thought of by •someone who evide1itl retained his presence of mind in he face of death, A supply of the live -saving pneumatic collars ordered by .the Admiralty had Veen expected, but the Hermes lad to put to sea be- fore these were received. 'When the vessel was torpedoed no assist - anoe was hand. ,She was settling down, and a ,great disaster 'threal- cued when someone thought the g t of ^.a e petrol tins, of which 00 were on board, The order was promptly given to empty the tins •and screw down the stoppers, and on these bins scores of men who must ether- wise have'heen drowned kept afloat until help arrived. --.1,---- 'No English Spoken. livery allusion to Englis:u nr French is noiv carefully avoided in rrenehGermanani English have y. Nearly all teachersof •f ht o ,the front the •result's thee •no, •seltool in, Germany at ieas.t is with- of ei,u'tan. tut s. The manager the rvahool, wishii;ie to avoid the use of Mediated worsts "English" and "Treacle" has an- ndunced in the papers Uhar, iaashauc• tion in "Math . Amertlean" and "Western S�w•'as" languages.; is sus - pended until farther. sitters, Possibly one joke in ten t hrmeantl makes people laugh. —•—., It' take's a lob of oo tfrdence bo le able a rah to enjoy ,basil, Prom tt Nnt$C s Notebook. Cream TO310.-•-Make thin slides of uld'en brown 'toast Crit: and dry. l? Y lace the slices in a wire sieve anti Bain uni;l coir over hot water. lien butler and lila in 0 ,soup plate ~about three slices, cut in half. ver them pout white sauce. DS'nke de by heating •a -cupful of milk in a th1ei bailer and then adding twogreat gtttstead tbles,pueafuls• of flour rubbed into vo tobles oonfuis of butter, Cook 1 P heatuntil thetl sale over a low n t 1 our has lost its starchy taste. Sea- in with ,salt and pepper and serves. cry but, Buell a dish loses its ap- ebizing qualities if it is not hot then hen served, ae it ahuukl be mare- illy covered in transit from the lichen to the room where ib is to ° served, Jiggaog.—•Beat the yolk of an egg " it is creamy and add a pinch o£ zit. Then add enough mills to fill tglass three-quarters full. Last, ud the white beaten staff, and crinkle with grated nutmeg. This nourishing and, excepting in cases—a here raw egg canner be digested,case easily assimi'labed, Lamb Broths ated.'b broth can be tken by almost every one. Rare is good ree3ga for making it. Bove pound of the neck of li amb . Have mall pieces and put it fn at granite r almu3•num saucepan with two of cu'd water for two hours. ben bring it to the boiling point ad let it cook, just below the boil- ltuint, fur three hours. Strain Id season with salt. This mould ashy he mala in a fireless cooker, ('till lu'n Braili.—This can be made • the same way as lamb broth. Use w neck, the wings and the lack of g sicken and r,serve the other parts u• other uses. If rice can beo, ken, a little rice, well boiled, ,can • added to either chicken or lamb nth• (;lam Broth. --Wash six clams and 1 it them in a kettle half s cup: 1 of ea'd water. Steam until they tee opened, broth end beef broth y both may id Then sellst { crito it the mush o sherbet stage, feverish pa'tieni often finds this c,tU sherbet tempting. i'orntuell Gruel. ---All ingruels must • thereu.ghly rooked, not very Mc. ane free from lumps. Put ree tablespoonfuls of cornmeal to a third of a cupful of cold wa- P Fur. lst to taste. ,f bellinga water. addtwocontinually p 20 :notes, stirring c 'nstantly, or' .,Fe wok is a d able boiler for an, eta Craekrr (;furl.—freak a soda ackrr sir two. battered thin, into rueful of boiling milk and cook, u r:n.g e 'nshanl'y, fur three or er minute=. Season with salt. Atiaral (lrtiel. ('-cele half scup- cf prepared r anneal in a quart le a tg ealtee water. When the :a s cached to pieces, strain anti '•tete to tate with hot mask. Str'wrtl Primes and Figs.—Was!i ems w• figs to be :stewed and then a in c''tas l water for ten hours, •+,1; Fur halt an hoar in the same iter. Sweeten slightly if ~ecce- Spleen on 'ibnst.---Cook some el washed �