HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1916-5-11, Page 3aseii'fe
eomer
Dainty Dishes, Old nightdresses make excellent
Rhubarb Fritters. -Cut the stemencovete for dresses hanging in the
of the plant into inch -long pieces, closet.
Simmer until tender, remove from the; The ginsprid in which roses are
;dove and drain. Dip in sweetened planted , sgiould be fertile and well
fritter batter.. Brown and roll in drained;
powdered sugar. • I Potatoes are fattening, therefore,
Cheese And Celery Salad. -Mash they are sometimes good diet for thin
iaquefort cheese with a little butter parsons.
Or thiek cream. Mix with one-third. Pure alcohol is more desirable than
as much minced celery, and arrange gasoline for cleating white kid esti.
on lettuce leaves for individual soy -,cies.
vice. Dust liberally with paprika and ore peeling fruit, always pour
serve with dressing and toasted crack-' boiling water over it and let it stand
ers,
until cool,
Bread Pudding With Orange. -Soak Save time in washing spoons by
a half cupful of stale bread in a keeping old teaspoons in the node and
quarter of a cupful of sweet milk, and baking powder cans,
when it is quite soft beat lightly with! Water which potatoes have been
{t fork. Flavor with -the grated ye]-; boiled, is the best thing with which to
low part of half an orange rind and sponge and revive a I silk dress.
the juice of 'a whole one; Add To clean coffee .or tea pots boil a
sugar to taste and the yolk of one egg., little borax solution in them twice a
Beat again, fold in the white of an week for fifteen minutes and it will
egg beaten very stiff and turn into Purify and sweeten them.
individual custard cups, Cook 'like' Needlework should be ironed on
bread custard. the wrong side in a piece of flannel,
Cheese Straws. -To one-quarter? and -should be kept' long enough un -
pound puff' paste take ten -ounces' der the iron to thoroughly dry it.
grated Parmesan cheese and a tiny' To save your stockings, sew apiece
dash of paprika. Roll cheese into of chamois leather on the inside of the
paste as"if rolling in flour. Roll out heel of your shoes and by so doing
thin, cut into strips four or five inches` delay the appearance of those dread -
long and one-fourth inch wide. Twist ful holes.
each strip and bake in moderate oven' If your alarm clock rings too loud -
ten or twelve minutes. ly, slip an elastic band around the
Fish -•in Potato Cases. -Pare pota-'bell to diminish the noise. The wider
toes of uniform size and cut thin! the band you use, the greater the
slices from one side of each to pro- suppression.
vide good base. Bake until partly An excellent substitute fob knife -
done take from oven remove inside board is made by folding a newspaper
of each potato, leaving wall all round. lengthways and sprinklingthe bath-
Fill with creamed codfish mixed with brick on as usual. Knives will have
chopped hard-boiled eggs or any oth- a better polish than when cleaned in
the ordinary way.
To keep the bread jar and bread
box sweet rinse, after washing, with
boiling water in which a little common
soda has been dissolved; then set
them out of doors:in the sun for a
few hours.
Tumblers that have been used for
milk should be filled first with cold
water and rinsked; then use a little
warm water. Putting the milky glass
into hot water first has the effect of
clouding it permanently. -
When a velveteen dress is done
with, the material is still valuable.
It makes excellent polishing cloths for
mahogany and other woods with a
high finish and is good for use on silv-
er and plated ware also. When soiled
the velveteen may be cleaned by wash -
ter, seasoning and a couple of ripe ing in soapy water.
tomatoes, sliced thin. Add any When you want to make lemonade,
gravy you may have left over, or dip hot or cold, try boiling the sugar
each slice in flour before browning. and lemon juice together before add-
Fill the dish half full of this mixture, ing the /fifer. This will do away
then cover all over with a top layer with the stirring difficulty, and the
of mashed potatoes. Put the whole taste of the beverage will be improv-�
thing into the oven and bake until ed. The same applies to any drink
brown. containing sugar.
Creamed Cabbage. -Spread one If you include your cut glassware in.
the head cabbage in kettle, with general spring housecleaning, here
piece' of butter or drippings size of
egg and a little water enough to
keep it from burning and simmer.
Stir once in a while. Wet small
tablespoon of flour in small bowl and
when smooth stir in beaten egg and
full bowl half full of cream and milk.
Evaporated milk is good to use in
place of cream Mix well and add to
hot cabbage, continue to stir until flour 'F
is- well cooked. Add four or five
tablespoons of vinegar, stirring to
keep from crudling. Season with salt Problem One of Hardest for Kaiser's
and pepper. This was mother's cab- Subjects in Berlin.
bag° recipe. She was famous for it.
Cabbage With Lemon Sauce.=.Cut How to get a quainter of a pound of
one small cabbage into quarters, ray butter is a problem which every B
in cold water for thirty minutes, liner has had to study. Lack of bi
drain, cover with boiling water and ter has been one of the most din
boil fortyfrve minutes without cover, cult of the many problems with which
Lay in rhallow serving dish and cov- the Berliners have been confronted,
er with sauce made as follows : One says a despatch from The Hague.
cup boiling 'water, two tablespoons A young lady who served in abut -
butter, two tablespoons flour, one ter shop was a power to be reckoned
tablespoon lemon juice one teaspoon with. A customer would approach
grated onions or a little grated nutmeg, her with an ingratiating smile and
one-half teaspoon salt, dash of white greet her as "My dear Fraulein," 'or
o et more soft]
+
n
Rub flour and butter t - asPraulein
pepper. o Y y when,
gether, add to boiling water and boll and then speak sweetly about the pur-
three minutes, Add lemon juice or chance of many things which were
seasoning, boil two minutes, pour over hardly wanted, then disappear, only to
cabbage and dust with paprika. return the next day with a little pres-
Creantcd Frizzled Beef. -Shred one- ent and more smiles and then at the
half pound chipped beef with fork, critical' moment:
and pour boiling waterver it. Let "Can,,you please reserve ,for me a
;stand a few minutes and drain, Put quarter of a pound of butter, my dear
two tablespoons butter in pan, and Fraulein?"
When hot toss beef -in it until it looks Young men deelared' that the only
frizzled. Sift one tablespoon flour in way to • get butter was to ' be sthe
gradually while boof is frizzling and sweetheait of a butter-Fraulein. It
add one cup, or as much more as Piked, is even said that married women urg-
of liquid composed of equal parts of ed their husbands to the same -plan for
boiling waned and evaporated milk. the same end.
Cook for five minutes longer, and Butter scareiey reigned in the Ger-
serve. Browning flour should be man capital for three months. Linos
omitted if eggs are added. In that of people stood for hours, often only
er creamed fish or meat mixture pre-
ferred, cover with butter crumbs and
return to oven to complete cooking.
Cream of Cheese Soup. -Put one
quart milk, one blade mace, one table-
spoon grated onion and a bit of red
pepper on to cook. Cream two table-
spoons flour with two of butter, strain
and keep hot in double boiler. Add
one-half cup grated cheese and one
teaspoon salt and heat until cheese is
melted. Pour over two beaten yolks
of eggs, stirring all the time. Serve
et once in bouillon cups.
Left -Over Roast. -Lino a deep bak-
ing dish with mashed potatoes, to
which you have added a bit of cream,
butter and seasoning. Now slice your
beef into as many slices as you can
get out, and add a bit of onion, but -
is a simple way to make it sparkle:
Immerse the article in the dishpan, or
sometimes large enough to accomod-
ate it, Use a soft nail brush, so that
there will be no crack or design left
unbrushed. Warm water, white soap
and a few drops of ammonia added
to the rinsing water will do the rest.
Try it.
SMOOTH TO GET BUTTER.
case, after frizzling beef, add liquid
'and thicken with ono tablespoon flour
made into paste with "a little milk,'
Just before taking froth fire, add beat-
en yolks of two eggs and dash of
white pepper,
Useful Mints.
Ca•ratd and peas are an excellent
dish when mixed together.
Thr young, tender leaves of the
dandelion aro very good in n salad,
Strong ammonia water is said to
be excellent for removing iodine stain
To clean yvhite enameled wood-
work. use Clear turpentine and a
loft 'gut's,,
to find the supply exhausted before
their turn came. Confectioners who
also dealt in butter would only sell
to their regular clients.
But now this reign of terror is to
end. Butter cards have come. The
authorities are to try and provide n
weekly ration for each person, 'whir
the public will be able to get without
the sugar -sweet; ruffles and expen-
sive tricks of the past,
At a largely attended meeting in
Glasgow a resolution was adopted de-
)handing that the rents, ratos,:taxes
and insurance premiums of all men
serving or about to serve in the artily
should become a state charge durin-
g
the war:;
. lJohn Hays Hammond, Ir., Inv
-A recent photograph of Mr. John
In the office of the elder Hammond.
wireless contrivances. He has invent
controlled by wireless from the coast
more than one hundred patents cover
and foreign countries. Hammond is
achieved a reputation in the inventive
long and varied career.
entive Genius, and His Father.
Hays Hammond and his son, taken
John Hays, jr., has invented many
ed a wireless torpedo that can be
fortifications. He has applied for
ing the system in the United States
only twenty-eight years old- and has
world, Mr. Hammond, sr., has had a
VERDUN FIGURES
OFTEN IN :HISTORY
— Y
HAS` BEEN BESIEGED A GREAT
MANY TIMES.
Became the Centre of a Vast Ea -
trenched Camp After
War of 1870.
A semi-official despatch dated Paris,
April 10, reported that the ;:German
Emperor, addressing his soldiers be -
"BREATAND BE WELL." I THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
There Is Health, Wealth and Wisdom'
rn Proper`Breathing,
What can you learn ;from the horse? INTERNATIO AL LESSON
William Leen Howard, M.D., says you'' MAY 14.
' can learn to be well, to be beatuiful '
and to live to a ripe old age. In his' --
bask, "Breathe and B,e Waled recently Lesson V1I-"Lo We Turn To The The Best Season to Get the Best
n
breathe through watching
issued; ho says he learned how
to a horse.' Gentiles," -'Acis 13, 18-52. Chicks,
"The horse goes out into the open air,
from bis stable and snorts. Ile does Golden Text -Acts 13. 47.By A. P. Marshall, Niagara Falls}
not take a deep breath after that, but; Canaan,
continues to • blow every particle of Verse 13, Paphos --On the west' _
stable air out of his lungs. It is only coast of Cyprus, where Paul's senna -1 This is a question that Puzzles a
after this is "accomplished that he tional confounding of the Jewish many particularly in viewuof the
commences to take in ah• until his "Magian" had convinced the Roman great
chest veins and arteries swell with proconsul It wa•i hers on his first fact that some are strong in the as-
every effort, sertion that there is a set time each
' definite entry on the Gentile mission,
Most of us are stabled animals and season when the best results can 'be
jump from our sleeping' stalls to put that the historian begins to use Soul's expected only, So many use every
on tight neckwear or confining waist- alternative name, always naturally, effort to hatch in April that one won
bands before we have had a good applied to him outside the stria: dere if they can possibly realize the
snort in fresh air and a run around Jewish circle, It is noteworthy that
the paddock, ;the mis=sionary group is now "Paul's real value of later hatched birds. We
"If you will recall the lives of fam party"; he swiftly and naturally took; believe mare good birds and parties'-
sus singers you will be surprised to the lead which the gentle Barnabas.
notice how long lived they are andarly breeders are hatehed in May than
earlier and June, July and even Aug-
how full of energy never grudged him, Perga in Pam -
how and charm are ust produces each year its quota of
those who have passed their three board -This province lies on the sea- birds that axe Brawn and matured to
score. One of the first things a singer basic' next to Cilicia on the .vest, the best of specimens for exhibition
has to learn is to breathe correctly, Pe•ga is on the river Oestrus, some.
and breeding paperer. In fact we
"About one-third of lung capacity' seven miles from the mouth, John
is unused by the average person. This departed -His Jewish name i_: sign can recall miry cases where buyers
third is the lower portion of the lungs l.ifiicantly used when he makes tha of eggs seemed to secure better final,
where you get that stitch i the side. great refusal and abandons the Gen -!value with late purchases than those
This segues when you attempt t to run who must have everything early.
some distance. It is a good sign, be- file •ministry. Long after, when he' Given the same good care as the
cause it means that you hava opened had repented and served in it for carper chicks those hatched in May
lung
up some new cells in the lung that years, he is "Mark' again (2 Tim. 4 'and June especially should have bet-
have from long disuse stuck together, 11; Phnom. 24; Col. 4. 10). It is
"The woman who eats rich, nitro-' useless to speculate on Mark's reasons, ter natural conditions and make inn interrupted food, is tightly laced and never for running away from home: enough interrupted growth from the start.
more than half breathing, leaves a lot Less neglect as to cleanliness must be
to say that when Barnabas's easy good
of unburned fuel in her system. When observed but more freedom for the
attacked by indigestion, and later on nature would have given him another, chicks can be best
finds she has inelastic arteries -hard -trial, Paul felt it would be disastrous,'' green food in its given,Theral
state is
ening of the arteries -she blames the, and preferred separating from Barn- Ule and better natural varlet
food and starts dieting, the very worst alias. An impulsive temperament' y'
thing she could do. like that of his master, Peter, en-' with lens trouble can be secured to
"What such a woman needs is free•, thusiaistic and timorous by turns, ex-: the full advantage of the growing
dom to breathe way down to the bot plains it best; compare his own; bird. We would venture to assert
tom of her abdomen, to
allow oxygen; autobiographical reminiscence (as us -
it's
more good breeding stock gets
set fire to the wasteo material and, it's start in May and June than at any
release energy for abdominal muscles
ually understood) in Mark 14. 51, 52.other time of the year. The chicks
0111,-71.12Y
/ ltt%.�
c"¢: tea �' —+.•
to work. Under these natural condi-; 14. Passing through -See note on
only Metz, Tout and Verdun, with tions she could eat anything within travelled (the same word), Leasoin• are sure of steady growth from hatch -
their territories, and Calais, reason and preserve her figure. i Text Studies for May 7, verse 19. ing time to maturity and make those
Verdun was besieged by the Prue- Fashion for women makes the super -!Antioch of Pisidia, like the greater big vigorous breeders that are ready
suis in 1792, and ryas defended by liuous necessary in clothes, but it also'_9ntioch in Syria, was built by Se- just when eggs and stock are most
Nicolas Joseph Beaurepaire, lieuten- causes a superfluity of flesh which is 'ascus `'the Conqueror" in memory e- just
after.
ant -colonel of volunteers of Mayenne an abomination, To attempt to show his father Antiueror three ,and •a 1 The ter. and August Chicks.
and Loire. Although badly support- how necessary it is to dress so ,as to .
ed by an undisciplined and disaffected j flint islike trying in to bore a holemanner as to eEn halt lf centuries
i rulersbef-The Theis small com-� tionf isalmostcontinuous at some . the produc-
ed
national' guard, Beaurepaire resisted. y ge
with energy the demand of the Dunce! a cloud. Doctors, diet and distress' mittee responsible for the upkeep ofI round, but where the producing of
g , are kept away by the woman who uses the building and the conduct of wor•-I chicks has not been made an exact
of Brunswick bo surrender. But dur-,to the full her breathing apparatus, ship. Any rabbi or other person of science continuously for commercial
ing the bombardment the royalists "The t, the too lean, the se-, distinction might be invited to preach, needs natural conditions'nplay a very
and the a part of the population to re- dentary and the physically active each, gsynagoguesg part in the possible result. For
volt, and Beaurepaire, unable to con-; needs different modes and methods of j So Jesus taught in the bi
time his valiant defence, blew out his learning how to breathe properly. Tine I continually. If Ye have -Literally, I this reason July and August will re -
brains, and Verdun capitulated Sept girl who works in a shop, the woman r if there is among you discourse of j quire a little more .particular atten-
ember 2, 1792. 11n the factory, the woman of society, encouragement to the people, speak, tion to care in feeding, watering and
, all need: to know how to utilize breath-; ye." The invitation gave free scope : cleanliness, all of which are really
Siege of 1870. nano Nervous instability, the craving for any of them who grad something necessary fax the biggest results at
for drugs, or stimulants, infernal rest- of prupose to say. !any season, but the neglect of which
During the Franco-Prussian war ; lessness in the young, lassitude; ea -; o
sieging Verdun, said: "The war of Verdun was again besieged (October' aches, sleeplessness, are many times 4-, They besonght-The subject is are more serious then on account of
1870 was decided at Paris. The pre- 12, 1870), in
the: due to wrong breathing habits. : quite indefinite,and the Jews are pre-: the greater heat and especially at
sent war must end at Verdun." h d d't• the defence was , "When Russia needed men of en- sumalily included, a; in the next verse, nights. But with lots of shade and
Verdun has been compared to Fried-
land. Napoleon forced the Russian
army to battle at Friedland in 1807,
with its back to the river, with the
object•of occupying the bridges, which
would thus cut off retreat. Mackensen
would follow Napoleon's manoeuvre
in 1807 -by forcing the French army to
fight, its back to the Meuse, while
Maekensen, attacking from the north,
wret c e conn ions,
maintained with energy, and surren-1 durance it was the open-air breathing 44. Almost the whole city. -A com- cool fresh water, plenty of green food
dered only November 8, 1870. I Cossack she called to her aid. Wild-; mon hyperbole; so for' instance Matt.' and sensible care the July and August
This country of the 14feuse depart-:ness is only harmful when it is licen-'3, 5, (chick can often run the very best of
sed. Governed wildness is power. You, 45. Jealously -It is the same run- them close for rounded out birds of
ment, foimed by a part of the Cham- cannot et this wildness or vitality Y, ing passion that made the mission to quality and size. Birds hatched in
pagne and the ancient duchy of Bar, !from vitiated sit:"
has its prefecture at Bar -1e -Due 254 he Gentiles .the breaking -point in the September will have a better few
kilometres, or 159 miles east of Paris, ' slowly and a completely before bound- : Jews' attention to Paul's story in Acts months to start in and provided they
The historic River Meuse rises in ing out of bed, giving each muscle aI22. 22. The,book of Jonah is the Old, are given specially good winter con -
the Apartment of the Haute -Marne, I complete limbering up, and when that I Testament condemnation of the na- I ditions can be made to mature into
is done thoroughly to -go to the window tional eagerness to monopolize their) valuable birds for use as year.old
passes th1•ough francs, lsergtum anis
, and snort the air out of your lungs. i God and his gifts. Blasphemed -The stock.
east and south simultaneously, would Holland, passes Verdun, Sedan Me -
l inhala-;
occupy the bridges of Verdun. zieres, Namur, Liege, Maastricht, Rot- tionHe ; hold'1± for Invent Now take a pseconds. Blow' word need not mean this -coarse, Why, then, should so many be set
The difference between Napoleon's terdam and falls into the sea ib is' !outwardly! head P abuse of the missionaries is quite as' on securing, their hatching eggs so
manoeuvre and that of Maekensen isyour lun • With held u fill likely as the other meaning. It may,' as to get out chicks in April? It
578 miles in length. von, ]wigs, then let them empty them-+ !seems unbelievable that a man with
manifest. Ney took' "the bridges of The country presents another in -;selves slowly, Reheat this exercise I however, imply reviling Jesus.
Friedland, while the kronprinz has tensely interesting side, M. Vidal de . fifteen or twenty times. Now take 40• Boldly -The verb is very char- an ounce of experience should write
la Blache says on this head: "All the ;Your Gold plunge or shower • acteristic of the first preachers, and in Marsh and carelessly make the
For your nightcap expel all the their uncompromising declaration of statement that the hatching was then
geographical vocabulary there is im-�
pregnated with those old Gallic names i air possible from your lungs. Pay l central principles. First -As Jesus practically over. And yet to try to
of waters and of. summits; Bene sorb , move attention to exhaling than in- ordained (Acts 1, 8). Compare Rom!snake him see that the best season
' haling. The latter movement wi11I 2, 8, 9, Judge yourselve =For' had really not begun would be to
souse, dun," For example, south of take care of itself. a create a suspicion
not taken the bridges of Verdun, nor
is there probability that they tan be
taken.
Verdun was first mentioned in the
"Itinerary of Antonius" (44 B.C.), un-
der the name of Verodunum. After
1870, Verdun was created a first-class
fortress in the centre of a vast in
Verdun there are Dieue, Somme-dieue, "When you are in a crowded placeIJesus declared (John 12. 18) that his that we were after
Nast -le -Grand, Nant-le-Petit, Nan- breathe lightly; do not try any lung word when rejected would judge men business at his expense. Year after
tois-dans-le-Barrios, Consume, Cous- expansion. Wait until you get out in this Last Day. !year because of early ill luck in
trenched camp, destined to bar the once -aux -Bei , Dan -sur -Meuse; un- into the open" 4 47. In I. 49. 6 the reference is to' hatching a great many discontinue
Champagne road to an enemy coming known or forgotten places until the the "servant of Jehovah," the central just when they could, depend on the
from Mebz. A line of intercepting war, but destined henceforth to pub- . WAR SCHOOLS NEAR FRONT. conception of the prophet who wrote' very biggest results and more sure -
forts connects the entrenchments of licity because bhey have become the chapters. Starting front Israel as:ly big results for any investment.
Verdun on the Meuse with Toul on stage of the drama which is still be- Soldiers Instructed in Sniping, Trench God's people, he rises to an ideal' Time and again have we supplied eggs
I I t J 1 h ] 1
the Moselle to the south-east, ing enacted.
It was at Verdun in' 843 the sons of Dun is a Celtic suffix common to a
Louis the Pious signed the treaty of number of ancient places; Loudon, Is-
soudun, Chateaudun, Sivordun, The
division of the Carolingian Empire.
Louis of Bavaria took Germania
Charles le Chative, France, and west
of the Meuse, Lothaire, Italy and the
Rhine. The latter finally was prey
to German and French ambitions,
Louis d'Outremer took Verdun, 979;
Othon the Great recaptured it. Ver-
dun was created the property of
Digging and Bombing. I•:rael, and ultimately assigns to this as a e as u y ate ted a o in
;lad sol- servant what even a Jeremiah could i August "just as a flier" in the words
a
The spectacle of officers
diersplaying at war within gunshot not accomplish, and only Jesus could' of the customer to have them raise
fulfill. Bu
h operations which form a part of • have ever secured.
Latins converted dun into durum to the greatest conflict in history might the fulfillment in Jesus could not deny
indicate a fortified castle. Verdun in seem to be an unusual sight, and ye± that these words gave Israel a mis- Late Breeding Best.
the time' of the Gauls was thou as now this is actually taking place daily • ionary destiny, A light of the Gen- To secure year after year some of
an obstacle in the way of an enemy basic of the British lines, writes the tiles -Simeon caught up this thought, our best breeders hatched late in the
t even Jews who denied to their surprise the best value they
approaching from the Woevr'e, • Associated Press correspondent. One Luke 2. 82,
The new names of the front in
of these schools was for the training 48, Ordained -By their own choice,
the valley of the Meuse show, too, how of snipers. At one point a line of?f any passive sense is to be sought
great is the participation of the names trenches was laid out just as though in the verb. There is no allusion to
of men in the designation of places- for battle. At this school any new , any predatination.
season of course confirms the know-
ledge that at no time can the pos-
sible product be better with well kept
stock than when natural conditions
bishops in 1347. help the reproduction that naturally
From the fourteenth century.Prrenclrplaces destined bo have apeculiar in- ideas pertaining to this method o£ 50, Devout -That is, proselytes. follows. . So many breeders depend
influences prevailed its the valleys of rarest to those who will be attracted warfare are experimented with, and They artfully achieved their purpose on getting good stuff' from their best
the Meuse and Moselle; the inhabit- from afar to visit battlefields cense- each man learns numerous ways of ,'through the upper classes of the na- birds late that many buyers diel they
ants of Verdun claimed' the protection crated by the blood and heroic deeds retesting himself Eros the German
population. That they had such realize it would take advantage of
of Philip IV., "the Good,"' son of of their soldiers, fire. At another point a group en nnen' a hold on them is very suggestive of some of the plums also at that time.
Philip UL, King of France, and sign Auguste -Bussu was a fortress of were firing from behind sandbags at the hunger for a new and pure faith Some of the old reliable breeders are
ed- With him a treaty of protection August, Bezendurn, Loudun, Yverdun' imaginary German loopholes a con -'in those days of dead religions. The at their best then and some of the
and Philip IV. gave to Verdun a Meudo , y , sideiable Instance away. When a man
French ,governor 1310-1330.
Captured byFrenchin 1551.
The annexation of Verdun to the
royal domale was one of the eonae-
quences of the rivalry between Aus-
tria and France. Charles V, prepar-
ed to invade France in 1551, and 'im-
posed a garrison oh Verdun, Henry.
II., King of France, captured Verdun,
also Toul and Metz, and the treaty of
Cateau-Cambresis ,(1559) confirmed
the possession.
In view of the present conflict the
treaty of Cateau-Cambresis is destia-
od to be ,.frequently mentioned, and
its conditions should be clearly de-
fined.
The treaty was signed the 2nd of
Apr11, 1550, between the pienipotei-
tiaries of .Henry 1I., King of Franey,
on the one part; those of the Queen
of England, Elizabeth, and Philip It,
Ring of Spain, on the ether, That
peace put an end to the wars of Rely
and to the first period of rivalry of
the houses of France and of Austria.
01 these conquests France retained
n Lyon Leon are names form- .ladies of. the town bad evidently been
ed of dounos name's associated withhas perfected himself in the art of largely won. by Jewish propaganda;
those .of persons. Douros is the name sniping he is sent along to the front and they in turn urged on their huz-
'of'a fortress; Aballadouros,1zernore, line trenches, or wherever needed. hands.
a fortress of Izarnos, Tonnere of Tor -
nos, etc.
A great numberof names of place
names thus: ".Bois -vert," "Bois -noir,"
"Bois-enhache"-greenwood, blac••
k
Wood, chopped wood,Bois-noir in the
Roman epoch was caled "Nigerlucus."
Indian "Moons."
Time is calculated among the
American Indians by moons instead
of months. January is called "the
hard moon"; February, "the raccoon
moon"; March, "sore -eye moon".
April, "the moon in which geese lay
eggs"; May, "the planting moon";
June, "the moon when the strawbe-
ries are red"; July, "the moon when
choke cherries are rips"; August, "the
harvest moor"; Septembe', "the moon
when nice is laid up to dry"; October,"the Pico -dying niorm" ; November,
"the deer -killing moon"; and Decem-
ber, "the deermoon."
The second school was one for ex 51. Snook off—Compare Acts 18. 8,
pelrimenting in the building of and Gospel passages. It seems to
trenches. Trenches of all descriptions , have been proved that the symbolism
are carefully laid out, dugouts are , was not as usually uinderstoad: the
built, and . machine gupositions. are ! dust which had been on the apostles'
constructed. Wire entanglements of , feet or dress was to be "for a twit -
different varieties also are experi- tress' at the Last Day, when the
mooted with. angels would recognize it as evidence
-..a.--- that the messengers 0 0 in teen
Cost of British 'tensions,,' there. It is told of a Saracen war -
Tho .British War Office estimates war-
rior that he asked that the dust of 111,
lo}hea should be buri,,1 •with 1tim
very best product are the result.
Kept back by cold and wet the early
crop has had less chance than in other
years. Likewise breeders will be
best hater perhaps than in other year,.
Tho wise grower of poultry will figure
on this and no hesitation vvill be mads
to continue to hatch until the sea -
sot is very well advanced.
Breeders reduce their prices and
often better value can actually be
secured than earlier.
Importing Chinese Labor,
c , to The Russian Government requires
that the cost of pensions it out witness of the fields on which he had about 20,00(1 more coolies to replace':
of the war for -1915-10 will ll beb0 X13,. fought for Islas I501(1001, naw call- men who arc serving in the army, and
00,0000, and for 1910-11, assuming
year, the h will ed Konieh, is still a fair-sized town 1s arranging with the Chinese con -
the wan to last through y it. tt • r Iva c ays Ions nay
be $50,000,000. lin addition, there is southeast of atntioch.
a charge Of nearly $25,000,000 Tor , J'
pre-war pernsianna. _-.........-. Z:.w .._......
• fou t • 'ti 1 ' •• tractors at Harbin to simply theca'
workmen. One inspector is to bo
employed for every one hundred
collies. These coolies are needed for
doe's work in Vladivostok, foe work
.lilafi. Staying.
e r non' roils
Wlaiirc vat living sire 1 P. , ro
gers?"
"Nowhere, Boa Minn at 1ha soar
old place."
A Marked Difference.
'I euebe - 'l'onnny, what is the dif-
ferrnce between angling and (islting?
Tammy- Well, i:he rich (00(1 angles
;and the poor ratan fishes,
j along the Russian railways, in the
n,irnes, and in agriculture,
politician is ore nvh
A clever ria s is
able ,to cover it» b'4, (necks.