HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1916-5-25, Page 7ii
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Simple hints on Upholstering, head and fins. Wash well in cold
Upholstering is a task from which water, sprinkle lightly with salt, let
most of us slrrinlc• We imagine that stadon -h if hour,
theSwipe ate d la
it is impossible to the amateur or that plate
ieee
it is of such enormous difficulty that, of cloth 'under plate, and place in
we should be afraid to run the risk,, large kettle of boiling water, in which
As a matter of fact, it is not such a rot and one or two tablespoons of
Stupendous task. If the springs are and pass stiekr have een put.otigh tonot cloth
in prevent
good shape and the hair does not ' plate from setting in bottom of ket-
croger•n i be i retried, the actual re- tle.Count ten minutes for every
covering v simple; but often the sus- pound of fish in cooking. Flesh will
kions have sagged either from the
crushing together of the hair, from ! flake when touched with fork when fish
the limpness of the springs or the, i� done. When taking up, slide on
stretching of the webbing on which towel to drip, then transfer to platter.
they rest, and all of these conditions Garnish with parsley and serve.
complicate the undertaking. But even Pot Roast of Beef.—Wipe beef with
at the worst, upholstering is anything damp cloth and sear in hot suet in
but impossible to a careful, handy frying pan until well browned, turning
"worker. often. Round of beef is best for this
The first step is to remove carefully dish, though brisket may be used. To
the old covering so as not to tear or every pound of meat have one table -
pull out of shape, as it will be needed spoon cut onion, one-half teaspoon salt
for a pattern for the new. Then, if one one-eighth teaspoon white pepper
the hair is to be reteased, take off the ready for seasoning. Put these in
inner coyer and take out all the hair, pot with beef and as little water as
putting it out on a big piece of cloth will keep meat from burning and cook
or paper. The'springs will then be meat until tender. Tnurn often.
exposed, and very often simply revers- While meat is cooking parboil peeled
ink them will make them very much potatoes and add them sufficiently to.
more efficient; if they are broken, it ward end of cooking pot roast to pot
is better to have none at all, if you roast in kettle, that they may take on
Cannot get new ones. a good brown. Serve roast surround -
The materials that you will require ed by browned potatoes and with
for upholstering are covering muslin, brown gravy made from contents of
stout webbing, tacks, twine, upholster- potnot roast add after potatoes have
We needles, brade, a long, sharp _
shears and a small hammer. Press Useful Hints.
out the old covers so as to take obi
all wrinkles so that they will be used Raisins added to the nut salad will
as patterns. If you are using ma- make it taste better.
te•ial that has a decided pattern, see To roll a jelly cake successfully the
that you get .a complete unit of the edges should be pared off.
design in the centre, as otherwise the Muffins, biscuits and griddle cakes
effect will be lopsided. are appropriate supper dishes.
It is best to begin with a chair that Sauces and salad dressings can al -
has only a seat to be covered; but if ways be made in the morning.
the back and arms are to be done, Rose bushes will thrirve if soap -
finish them before attacking the seatsuds and diehwater are put on them.
'as thee, are easier to manage in that Warm water and a good white soap
way. When you get to the bottom can be used for cleaning almost any
begin by fixing the webbing in a bas- carpet. -
ket weave, pulling it as tight as you After an electric iron is overheated
can and nailing it down firmly, leaving it will require more current to make
little space between the brads. On it hot,
the way in which this foundation web- Most any objectionable weed will
bing is done the success of the whole die if it is cut off close to the ground
work largely depends. Then put the and a little gasoline poured on the
springs in place, stitching them stead- roots.
ily with the twine, and over them draw Spinach is very good if cooked until
a piece of the muslin and nail down tender and then put through the col -
to the frame. Get the thick layer of ander. It should be dressed with
_ stuffing in place now,, using either hair drawn butter. •
or the moss which comes for the pur- Bread should never be kept wrap -
pose, and then fit the muslin snugly ped in a cloth. The cloth absorbs
into place, taking great care to get moisture and imparts an unpleasant
it quite smooth and tight, to prevent taste.
future wrinkling. The chair is then Stubborn marks on white paint can
ready for the outside cover, but be- sometimes be removed with gasoline
fore putting it on mark where the in which a little plaster of paris has
centre comes and get it, squarely in been dissolved.
place, fit smoothly, draw tightly down A good way to keep the cellar • or
on the sides and tack firmly in place dairy from having an unpleasant odor
with the brads. Cover the raw edges is to whitewash the walls with lime
with a harmonizing gimp, using small that contains carbolic acid. One
• gimp tacks of the same color. ounce of carbolic acid to a gallon of
••• It is best to experiment first with whitewash is the proper proportion.
some inexpensive material, but make When stitching chiffon or any such
Mire to have it of a firm, close weave material on the machine use the finest
that will not drag and pull. • After possible 'thread, and put a strip of thin
the first chair is done you will feel paper under the goods and stitch them
greater confidence,' but do not let it together. The paper can be torn
tempt you to any relaxation from away when the work is finished.
your first care. A good diver polish is made with
______ one-half pound of prepared chalk mix -
Selected Recipes. ed with as much household ammonia
Frozen Pear Dessert. — Without as the chalk will absorb. Add•about
four tablespoonfuls of denatured al -
opening, pack can of fine pears in ice cohol; put the mixture in a jar that
and salt, an for ice cream. Let it re- will seal sufficiently to. keep out the
main three or four hours. On taking dust. .
out, wipe carefully and cut open A good substitute for stair rods
PERHAPS the
beat known
Of the youn-
er literati critles
in America is
Archie Bell of the
"Cleveland Lead-
er." For that roe,-
eon his tribute to
the work of a C.
P. R official is
Well worth atten-
tion. That work
is a wont of lie-
itlon, "Hearts and
Faces" by name,
and is as remote
from Canadian
railway life as
anything could
possibly be Imag-
ined, Here Is what
Archie Bell has
to say:—
John Murray
Gibbon was born
in Ceylon. le i s
father 1s a titled
Scotchman. H s
ls..a graduate of
Oxford, and he
has taken special
courses in philos-
ophy at various
German universi-
ties, And despite
some of these
things popularly i.
Considered handi-
caps to "gutting
on In the world,"
he came back to
London and was
soon editor of the
well-known illus-
trated newspaper,
"Black and
White."
Realizing that
he did not know
as much as he
wanted to know
about art, a reali-
zation that came home to him eacb day as he sat at his editorial desk, he
resigned -and went to Paris to become au art student.
He lived In the famous Latin Quarter at night and spent the days In
Colarossl's Atelier. Then he went to Italy and Algiers, Japan and China,
and to many other countries.
Then one day, an official position was offered him by the Canadian Pacific
Railway. At the age of forty-one he has achieved distinction as a practical
railroad man, despite all those years of preparation that were spent in pur-
suits so popularly believed to unfit a man for the practical life.
The busiest men are the ones who and the most time. In the past two
years, John Murray Gibbon bas been attending to his railroad duties with
FROM OLD SCOTLAND
NOTES OF INTEREST FROM lIER
BANGS AI`ll) DRABS.
What Is Going On in the highlands
A Few Simple Rules, ting to the corner. Going around a and Lowlands of Auld
The owner who wants bigtine mile- corner at fifteen or twenty miles an
hour puts a fearful strain on the tire' Scotia.
age can get it, and big gasoline mile- fabric and invites early blowouts. A ten per cent, advance in wages
age along with it, if he will observe The man who does this is simply
is being asked by Lancashire cotton
a few sports t ofs, and one iofn the The
for the tire companies, al
most important of these lies in then gp ' operators,
way he stone and starts his ear. Jnsttthough he may not realize it• The Bedford carpenters and joiners have
note how one man will shut off his small atone cuts in the casing should, come out on strike for an extra two
power almost a rod away and just be ]rapt filled with some good tine cents per hour,
coast up to the curb. He saves gas, filler, Thin will keep out water and Lady Mabel Smith, sister of Earl
his tinea and his car all at once. An- 011., two of the worst enemies to tiro Fitzwilliam, has jest taken up work
other man will drive right up to the fabric, and put hundreds of extra as a farm hand.
curb and then jam on his brakes, miles on every casing. Oil will ruin Great Britain has prohibited Danish
His car will slide several feet am an inner tube in a week. Don't throw owners from making contracts to
in that one time ho put more wee the extra inner tubes in promiscuous- carry oil in their ships.
and strain on his rear tires than a
Wrap them carefully in cloth, or ton, the mining and manufacturing
ly with the spare tools and oil can. Smallpox has broken out in. Ather-
mile's ordinary driving.
better still get a couple of a good town near Manchester.
The matter' of starting the car is strong cloth bags for them. But the lahe Harrow
another important feature, if long real big rule of all is, keep the tiros SchoolThe shtest ows that list issued by b
wear is to be obtained from the tires, blown up to the proper pressure res have been killed in action.241 Haxrovians
Always start away from the curb commended by the maker A good Great falls of cliff have taken place
slowly. Just ease in the clutch an,
pressure gauge that is accurate during the past weals at Abbot's Cliff,
glide away. In this way the back should be used.
between Folkestone and Dover.
wheels do not revolve uselessly two If motorists would observe these Lady Jellieae's Sailors' Fund hass
or three turns and grind the rubber few simple rules and occasionally read despatched 100,000 comforts, repre-
tread off your rear tires. Sudclet some of the literature published by senting about $100,000, to the Grand
starting and stopping is not only the tire companies, they would find Fleet.
hard on tires, but it is bad for the that their tires would last them a Lancashire colliers are returning
whole car. whole lot longer and that most of from Australia and New Zealand to
In going around corners care should their tire troubtles that have been the mines in the Manchester coal -
be taken to take the turns easily and taking the fun out of their trips fields.
smoothly, and slow down before get- would disappear for good. Nearly400 and
past present mem-
bers of University College, Reading,
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL but they were in the Law, and we are now serving with the naval and
S maxi not expect from men whose military forces.
spiritual growth had been quiet and Northampton Corporation tramway
normal the complete emancipation employes threaten to strike unless
INTERNATIONAL LESSON. which a cataclysm had produced in lost time is paid for the curtailment
Paul. Finally note that the Decree of four hours daily.
MAY 28. concerns those regions only through Scarborough Watch Committee has
which communication with Judaea was decided to take no steps ab present
regular and free. in regard to the employment of wo-
The Council At Jerusalem.—Acts 15. 29. Things sacrificed -1 Cor. 10. men as police officers.
25, shows us that meat from a Outbreak of measles at Burnley has
1-35. Golden Text Gal, 5. 1, sacJificed animal was likely to be of- prevented attested men leaving for
Verse 22. Elders—The term was
fered to anybody who went to market, the army, and has stopped all visits
taken over from the Jewish church. It or a dinner. Paul treats this with home by active service men.
is found as a name of a religious of- indifference: he fears no demons, and Henry Oswald Johnson, a York
flee in pagan Egypt, as well as for only cares about not hurting • timid, chorister, who has won a commission
one hand, and- with the other band has been writing a novel, which has secular officials. But ft does not seem consciences. But Jewish Christians from the ranks, .is to be presented by
foci been issued by the famous publishing house of JohL Lane in England to have lost its 'original connotation of, like the author of Rev. 2. 14, 15 clear- the Dean and Chapter with •a sword.
and 9, e. Gundy in Toronto, g clear -
Although h situated in the heart of
"Hearts and Faces" is the story of an artist it treats of the artistic age (compare the name Senate), for ly retained the old horror, though they!g
temperament as It sallies forth Into the warmer world from the somewhat I in I. Pet. 5. 5 it is contrasted with the' would not give the same reason for it.
the Midland coal field, Nottingham
Unpromising environment of Scotland. "younger," The word presbyter, com- Bload—The Jews still adopt special, is experiencing a serious coal famine,
George Grange is found amid rather commonplace surroundings to ling into our language through French,' methods of slaughtering for food, to; chiefly due to a scarcity of mine la-
the first fey lines of the novel. There his character, or at least the took the form priest, which usage at-' drain all the blood away. Thing: borers.
foundation for his character, is being formed. He never escapes from this i teched to sacerdotal functions. Some Strangled—The •idea was that the The flying of kites has been pro -
environment, because he carries Its effect with him wherever he goes, of the most important officers in the; stopping of the breath retained with -
controlled
at the parks and open spaces
Delightfully true pletures of Scottish ideals are sketched in the earlier p pp controlled bythe L. C. C. except
chapters, and then with the first fling at the biting satire which frequently Presbyterian Church are known a:' in the body all kinds of perilous influ- p
Illuminates subsequent pages, George Grange throws aside his university elders. Bar-Sabbas—Another un- ences. It was, moreover, a method when authorized by competent nihi-
studies• He longs for freedom and life, and falling in with s lovable old known prophet (compare Lesson Textl of killing which retained the blood; tary authority.
character, a Scottish painter, he also learns to paint, Studies for May 7,verse 1). Silas— Fornication It is a good illustration' At a meeting of the Essex War
He goes to London• in the great quest of success and gradually climbs Paul's later companion. His name is of the way in which nonmoral taboos Agricultural Committee it was re-
'
the by discouraging and dlligent toil, until a committee watts upon ported that the county education com-
wroungly regarded as a contracted worked out moral reforms. There
him and offers him a commission to paint a portrait of the king for a fashion- mittee has a reed to release bo
able club. Gibbon draws a steady and grim picture of the intriguing London form of Silvanus, by which he is axe many examples of this working of, gboys of
society folk—whom he knows well enough—and occasionally he pays his known from 1 Thess. 1. 1 and else- primitive religion in J. G. Frazer's 13 years for farm work.
respects to the American "climbers" In the smart set. There is no venom in where. The latter is really a simi- lectures, "Psyche's Task." I Cambridge has had seventy -tinea
his satire of his own people, nor of the foreigners, but he paints portraits in lar -sounding Roman name chosen like 31. Consolation (margin, exhorts -I `blues" killed and forty-four wound -
words that are carefully chosen and forceful. Paul as an alternative to Saul. We tion), or better, encouragement. The ed; Rugby and athletics have each
His hero is thrown into this pulsating, human pot Penni, and "keep his cannot, however, explain why the Ara- verb in verse 32 is th4 same. I given thirteen; and Rugby and rowing
skirts clean" up to the great moment of his lite, when he falls a victim of a 1 male form is used in the narrative of 32. Confirmed—We can hardly ex- have both had ten wounded.
designing woman and loses all.
Again Scotch pluck to the rescue, however, and he goes to Paris, where , Acts. Chief men—Or leaders. The aggerate the effect of such Tighten -I It is proposed to establish a Na -
many of the scenes are doubtless somewhat autobiographical. It is the Latin j word became later on a technical name ed instruction on tht minds of mere• tional Organization of Leather Goods
Quarter life of reality. Not that musical comedy version which we too often • for church officers, like leader in' who had been haunted by a great un -I Rlauufacturers to safeguard the inter -
mistake for the reality, and not even that fascinating life sketched so In- (Methodism: see Heb. 13. 17 (rendered easiness since Jews had told them of sets of those who have been trying to
Wilily by Henri Merger, which did more to popularize "Latin Quarter life" otherwise). la God-given Law without which they replace German leather goods by
Steinean , itfis livee d byrthe studees ever ntsnofdart¢and the tgirls fe whohknow ne o other of the l 23. With the rendering in the text,) could •not be saved, Even Paul could British.
world. I brethren, unto the breatren, we have. not altogether allay it. But Judas' The Ring has accepted a vellum -
Sometimes these pictures are gay, sometimes sordid; but they are never l an attractive collection of like terms; and Silas, coming officially from Jeru bound copy of the roll of honor of
vulgar. Through them move many characters witb whom the reader has ] but the margin, the elder brethren, is salem with the judgment of the per -
Old
College, which has over 650
become acquainted In the earlier chapters. Amid these scenes, as in London, better. Antioch, Syria, Cilicia—Not-' sonal disciples of Jesus, could set all Old Boys serving with the colors, 3'L
and later in Germany and Italy, George Grange moves as the most important their doubts at rest and so "strength- having won honors and 47 been
ice how rer.tricted in local range is,
figure It Is the adventure of a soul. And each adventure is traced with a 1 en" their faith. mentioned in despatches.
canny knowledge of life as it is, rather than as made, writers would like i this Apostolic Decree. It was meant Exciting scenes were witnessed at
to believe it should be. i for the special conditions of the coup-+ s a fire in Cranes Park, Surbiton, when
And It was written by a railroad man! Still, there are enough examples try between Antoich and Tarsus. A SECONll JO�iAh.
i Mr'. Charlton, the occupier, with his
of versatility in the art world to prove that such an achievement is possible.. Paul's letters never suggert that hist wife and two children, had to escape
A merchant of Russia composed music that Is now sung in the opera houses addresses knew of it. Thus there_is' 'd
of the world 11 does not lessen Pad irewski'e ability as a pianist because ho ; no abstinence from "flesh offered toff rt British Sailor Saved From Four by way of the verandah, from which
is a hotel keeper in Warsaw. ,ohn Alden Carpenter, of Chicago, Is a "buss- :. they jumped into the garden below.
idols" enjoyed upon the Corinthiane,I Notable Shipwrecks.
nese man," yet he composed '•Adventures in a Perambulator," which caused 113r. S. H. Renshaw has intimated
the staid music critics of the country to prick up their ears in the last two . unless for the salsa of a "weak broth -I The proverbial cat with nine lives that he will give $10,000 to Bury In -
years, Caesar Franck was a school -teacher, even when he was writing his ; er's" conscience. cannot claim more honors than one firmary to endow two beds, one in
around m eldle. - If frozen very hard, when brass ones cannot be afforded ;s most famous symphony. 1 24. Troubled—A much stronger Charles Dunn, a seaman; though while memory of his wife, and one in mem-
wrap with towel dipped in hot water. word than the English. Thus in John the former is regarded as a charm ory of his son, Lieut. A. Renshaw,
Content93' will come out in this: Buy some thin canes which LIFE-SAVING A CRIME. I refused to oblige him to the extent' 14. 1; 12. 27, etc., dismay would come against evil, the latter is not looked who was killed in action at the Derda-
rounds. Slice and serve with spoon-e1can be purchased cheap, cut off the) ! he wanted, so he rejoined with avol- nearer the meaning. Your souls— upon as a mascot to the ships he fav- nalles.
ful of whippedibent part and shorten them to the Amazing Punishm- ent Inflicted byi ley of insulting expressions concern- Unemphatic according to Semitic ors,
cream on each slice, length required; then paint each piece reg the I�tir.er. That did the trick, ;diem, and meaning little more than A recent case brought by the Ad -
Sour Cream Sauce.—Yolks of two H•ith brown paint When fastened with German Authorities. . and he was rewarded with aaentenc ,owgavecomman.,
eggs, juice of one lemon, one teaspoon staples these rods look tidy and wear The weird and. wonderful laws of 1 which kept him in "quod" very nicely moat—The churchwerepudiates them as failing to 'join his transport n portmiralty against Dunn at ¢dixsclosed ool for High Finance.
sugar, one-fourth teaspoon salt, one- quite a long time, thus saving ex- Gtrmany, which render the simple' till the spring, j no repr¢r.antatives of the Jerusalem the fact that the sailor had been in "You awe me $40,000 which you say
half cup rich, heavy sour cream, mine- pence and labor in cleaning, civilian's life a misery, have often you can't pay,"announced the finan-
ed parsley as needed, Beat yolks and --.--.-•k--_... I brethrox in any sense. four notable shipwrecks, and though
been dilated on, but the most amazing alar. "Why don't you marry that
sugar until thick, add lemon juice HAVE A BANANA ? 25. Having come -The unanimous others had suffered a watery grave,
of all punishments inflicted by the au- eldest Knowall girl; she's worth twice
slowly, then salt and cream, Mix ANIMALS THAT NEVER EAT. yetI , vote was a very wonderful thing, for he had come up smiling on each occa-
sion. cities of. the Fatherland bus to that amount."
well. Serve either in sauce boat,or It. Is As Much the Fruit of the Poor , both parties gave up a great deal,
sion. Both the ill -Fated Titanic and
be related: I "No, I can't do that; but you might
pour -over fish before nerving. Prs- Scientific Applianc- es Have Been This dire offence was committed in. as the Bich. Note how they indorse the teaching of the Empress of Ireland carried Dunn marry her yourself and pay me the
lay is sprinkled over sauce on fish o Baxrmbas and Paul with the emphat; on their last voyages, and he also
used to garnish fish when sauce is Named After Them. a town in Alsace, where a schoolmast , The banana is one of the great', testimony as to their devotion„ and served on the Lusitania and Florizan difference," replied the young Adonis.
served separately. A mechanic puts his work upon a er, who had caught cramp while bathe' curiosities of the vegetable kingdom.' then appoint actual it devotion,
r of their when they were torpedoed.
Ginger Pudding,—One-half cup mo- horse, or buck, and ho pooches or ing, was rescued, by he onlooker, at• One cannot call it a tree, a bush, a own number to enforce the same Charles Dunn, consequently, is Solved,
lasses, one and one-half tablespoons bends it by a convenient bear. Hoist- the risk of his life. 7. German t shrub, a herb, or a vegetable, but a teaching. There is no half-hearted- shunned like the plague by the super- "Now, Johnny," said the teacher,
melted butter, one-half cup sour milk, nog is done by a crab, -a convenient thorittes decided that the rescuer had herbaceous plant with the status of a; nese here, stitious sailors, who have on ossa- "suppose you wanted to build a $1,000
one teaspoon soda, one and five -eights eat is part of the outflb of a shop committed the unpardonable offence tree. 28. To the Holy SPiriL-This takes Mans flatly refused to sail with him, house and had only $700, what would
cups bread flour, one tablespoon crane, and a kit of tools is ever at of bathing in a prohibited place, •and Though there is no woody fiats ee u verse 8: the S nett had shownt that and his luck in this connection has you do?
g j p hand, imposed' a fine with costs -
,any part of its structure, it sometimes p p proved his greatest misfortune! "1 'spore I'd have 'to marry a girl
orange juice, one-half teaspoon salt,he made no distinction between dr-
one -half teaspoon A crow helps to straighten work a In Viena a young actress not long grows as tall as thirty feet, and the There are many similar cases. worth $300," answered the young fin-
e ginger, -grated rind p g. ago committed thee rime of wearin cnmeisod and uncirentnaissd'daring;
The
one-half orange, Dissolve soda in jack to lift it; a mule pulley helps to g g bunches of fruit are so prolific. that combination and to us seems darin A remarkable coincidence that bears ander,
sour milk, then add other ingredients, drive machmer which a donkey -en- correct uniform on the stage. For they are often heavier than the stalk, g> p
y out a sailor superstition occurred
Beat ell thoroughly, gine turns. A fish connects arts this act, whish was held to degrade, that supports them. Of all fruits, the j but they only meant that their deci-
g y, pour into well- P the di not of the Army, she was fined sion was a registration of one which some while ago at Belfast. A firm Exactly.
buttered mold and steam about fiftyend to end, shells are used all powerful
b g Ybanana yields most food per acre. Itbuilt a ship that left Belfast Lough
While a worm does quiet but powerful a sum equal to m8 This must seem yields forty times more by weight, they clearly saw to have Ueen. al- and was subsequently wrecked. A "Would you---er—,Marry me,
Minutes. Serve with orange cause.read determined byGod. Burden—q V4nutiw3
work. strange even, tn the :Huns, who de-
, than the potato, Red as =eh as 133 Y second shipbeanie the same name
Cream of Vegetable Soup.—Dice•r h was indeed the keeping g
mond that, when a uniform is won !For etch p' g of the"Ohl Al
three medium-sized carrots and five . Again, a cock shuts off the water;times more than wheat. j law as Petei• em lxaticall dowlared in suffered the same fate, The buildersgY+'you surpy ileo m¢ Cer-
crisp stalks of celery and simmer in a ram lifts it. A printing -press , has on the stage, it should be correct to It is :imno its from disease of any verse 10, Necessary—Why? The thea gave the name to a, third vessel fainly Ill marry you,
a little water until tender. With one a fly, the first locomotives • had a button• sort, and no insect,wil attack it. !they had created.
"But—ran not serious, tlpnchwr
large tablespoon grasshopper valve motion, and butter -
the
justifiable punishment, in Nereus people often reject bananas, answer seems to be that all four were The shipultimately left the Lough know! Cawn't you accept a joke 1"
g a spoon of butter, two table
y valves are common, the opinion of many .playergoers, was the h ave become brown and mushy,' to the Jew taboos Were and simple, and has never been heard of since. "That's exactly what I've done!'
table-
spoons milk
flour malce and
saucaone and oneS one-half fl Herring -belie gears are used by the imposed in the neutral country 0- fearing microbes. But such fear is. clue to a long-estabhringd belief that __
son and let cook thoroughly. Add
best builders;turtles fit printing -press Groote on a lady, who had to undergo needless. The tonnes. is fit to eat as dentomc perils attended them all alike. Se
Vegetablescy tinders anti fly -wheels ere numni'fourteen clays' incarceration fol• ob- soon ns it has lost all the green Color,! Sexual impurity teas not banned for „ 1 I'll m t. f Foregone Concl.uaion.
autf when tendon and the small y g structing the view of a guardian of and remains fit no matter loon black , moral reasons, but just because it in- 1 tell you, be master o . my Teacher—If a farrier sold 1,475 "
amount of liquid in which they were all over the world, In drilling, even, < v house when Ito a man, said little
am old mot is celled into service, and the pence by weming a matinee hat it may b;. so long as the skin is ne-'volved the sante demonic nc'.hity as "That's bushels of wheat for $1.17 a bushel.
cooked, also --one-half hard-boiled
rice, at an opera in Athens, broken foruntil the latter emirs eating the flesh of an animal unprc_,Bennre. what your father what would he get?
chopped white of one Bard -boiled egg,' doctors prevent faulty lathes-work,thought tvhxen he was your age,en-
Strict laws have; however, their there can be no admission of cur an perly killed. The abstinence :franc Boy—An automobile,
and a few thin shaving's of lemon rind, comfortable side ellen ,you me ane oua s I, these taboos was a neees my condi- pie," replied' the boy's mother, __
no d.0++rnpasiSion' , Lion to be observed byGentile Ohris. "You three; that ettlaminn very
if latter flavor is liked, Vegetables She—"No, George, I like You, but to get into prison, 1 .. ..-_ u r g
may be put through colander, if pre- I stall navon' be weir wife. Ilse A aetnewhat cut•inus method of oh -1 Sn t : bails if They were to eat with Jewish. She--` heats all very pretty, Jaek, renpoct ally, "Yes, Tip hi one of our
fext'oel, and the'soap strainotl after haughtil "Never mine, Thee Snubbed. `Christian.--'h+y would otherwise be. but do yott think we Can live on love earliest settlers," "An early settler's
( y)— . tainting this end was employed by a I
adding them, are others." She ---"I know there ere, destitutr. wolcmRn of Strttsburg, wha,l lack Blunt—Shall we get married 7 infected, as it •inure. It 'sanitises ises u- and kisses?" He. --"It's mach the; Why, man, lto'S net more than 40
Boiled Fieh. -Ci¢an tinct orswhite- I accepted one of them this yeas deeirous of ('iridin flicker in nisi Miss Illight—I shall. 'Mat;vnu talo that J:wt who land received ('luisilsafest—eve thin else is either ad-l,veats altl,' "No; b h
lash thoroughly and remove scales moi•nin . tip is of no interest to ate, Y , uta o ti's his
f 6 � son, Tho representatives of the law � lhuulh nY.t lnav � rtlt,Fr tvw :sorb tnhncn; ulternted, or poisoned, or tinted," 'trilla on the first of awrymolttlt,"'