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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1916-7-13, Page 3isewite THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON JULY 16. 1 � Lesson III. -Paul At Athens -Acts Dainty Dishes. want ourhousehold to be in danger 17. 16.84. Golden Text - Beetroot Salad. -Slices of cold hard- of ptomaine poisoning; but in hot Acts 17. 28. oiled eggs, beetroot and cold potatoes weather we must redouble our vigil- ,arse 22. Areopagus-The "Bill of riled the mixture. Sooaon with salt thee.Area" is west of the Aero olis and. and pepper and add a sauee made of Itis most important that fish should p whipped cream bo which one table- be fresh and you will know that et is north of the market place, from which bpoonful of vinegar has been whip- if the eyes are prominent and full and Paul would be taken by a flight of pq:l in gradually. Garnish with par. the pupils dark. This, however, is not steps' eut in the 'rock. The ancient siey, an infallible test, as the eyes become and digin is t court which took its Strawberry Sherbet. -Here is a gray and shrunken long before the roma from rte meeting there is be - cooling drink for summer and it is fish is unfit for food. .;cued to have invited traveling men of letters to lecture leefore them, with Wady prepare], Use a tablespoon- The gills, should be red, not Cray, a view to engaging them for regular ful of good cider vinegar, sugar to white or greenish, and the scales taste, and a handful of crushed straw- should be firm and bright and riot eas- berriee. Have a glassful of water ily rubbed off. Beware of the fish and a little °racked ice at hand. Pour that is soft and flabby to the touch the strawberry mixture into this. The and comes easily away from the bone, vinegar gives the drink a delightful for most certainly it not as fresh tang. as it might be. Strawberry ,Parfait. -Crush .one Another beet is to hold the fish be - quart strawberries through sieve, cook tween the finger and the thumb and one cupful sugar, one-half cupful wa.t- press it gently. If the flesh parts 4r instil in soft -ball stage, Whip three easily it is not sound. egg whites stiff. Pour lint syrup over Choosing thickens is another task berry pulp and cook thick. Then that requires Bare. The eyes of a pour gradually over egg whites, whip- fresh chicken should be bright and ping constantly. Cool. Then fold prominent/ and the feet limp, moist, in one pint whipped cream, sub freeze and pliable, The flesh should be same as ice cream. firm and plump and the skin clean and Rice Jelly. -11:011 a pound of rice in white. throe and shelf pints of water. When When the chicken is decomposing, ready beat through a sieve and it the flesh becomes dark and greenish, then should be, when cold,a solid' the feet hard, Stiff and dry, and the clear jelly. It may be warmed up eyes sunken and dull. with milk or cream, but.a nice way is Healthy wild ducks have black feet. bo mix milk or cream while the jelly Any duck with soft pliant legs and is hot, then when nearly cool fill small feet, bright prominent eyes, and molds large enough for each person. fairly firm flesh is in prime condition. Sugar and sliced lemons may be Stale ducks have stiff, dry feet, dull, served with the dish. sunken eyes, flabby flesh, discolored Fig Pudding. -A quarter of a pound necks, and a greenish tint over the of flour and a quarter of a pound .of abdomen. breadcrumbs mixed together, a quar- Meat wants a great deal of choose ter of a pound Of suet chopped very fine, a quarter of a pound of moist sugar, six ounces of figs cub into small pieces, and a teaspoonful of bak- ing powder. Mix these ingredients very thoroughly with a little milk and two well -beaten eggs; if no eggs are at hand a little more milk will be re- quired. Put the mixture into a greased mold, tie it over and give it throe hours' boiling. Grape Conserve, -One pound sugar, one pound grapes, one cup walnut: meats, one cup raisins, Juice of two .oranges. Wash the grapes and re- move the pulp. Put the pulp in a preserving kettle and cook for a few sure that they are fresh. Pass over minutes, and then remove the seeds, showing signs of decay or rot by putting them through a sieve. Put Pea -pods should be crisp, awe beans should not have a faded look or be limp when broken. Helpful Hints. lectures, This may have been the. purpose with which they asked Paul to speak. Very religious -Though this word is capable also of meaning "superstitious," the choice of the other meaning is dictated to us by the sim- ple consideration that Paul was a man of tact, incapable of starting with a rough word. That the word was am- biguous, and true in the other sense, is probably irrelevant. 23. Isaription--The existence of such altars in Athens was attribut- ed to the counsel of the sixth century sage Epimenides of Crete (see verse 28), who when a pestilence occurred that they could not trace, advised a sacrifice "bo the proper deity," leav- ing the name open. What therefore -Of course Paul was adapting their words to a new purpose: he never meant to add one more god to their crowded Pantheon! In ignorance- see verse 80, Paul is going to tell then the little oversight admitted in that inscription is nothing less than that of the one true God. 24. As a Jew, he naturally drops into Old Testament language (Exod. 20. 11; Isa. 42 5), ubt the assertion ing, Good meat should be firm to the could be matched almost verbally from touch, and should show distinctly the the inscription of the Athenians' great branching veins. Beef or 'mutton antagonist, the Zoroastrian king of should be a deep rose color, and the Persia, Darius; and Greeks like Eur- ipides had declared that God could not be confined in temple walls. Made with hands -That God's true temple must be "made withoub hami4s" was a declaration of Jesus (see Mark 14. 58) which is guaranteed as a true re- port in this respect by the echoes in fat a rich cream. Ifthefat is hard and skinny, it shows that the animal was old and tough. The best veal is of a pale color, and its kidney is enclosed in firm white The rind of good pork is smoobh and thin, light in color, and firm to the the Acte and Epistles. touch. When it is cut through, or 25. Neither is he served -Compare warm water poured over it there Psa. 50. 9ff. Needed -An acceptance should not be any disagreeable odor. of Epicurean doctrine to match the ap- When purchasing vegetables, be proval of a Stoic poet (see verse 28). In one of his finest passages, Lucre- tius declares that Deity is "mighty in its own resources, needing us not at ale" 26. Of one -Greek as well as He- brew story recognized the common parentage of mankind. Seasons - The ages of their rise and fall, and their entrance on the lands they were to make their own. the skins through a coarse meat grin- der, mix with the pulp and sugar, add raisins thoroughly washed and halv- e!. Cook until nearly thick and. then add chopped nuts. When -She fruit jells pour into sterilized glasses and seal, Cucumbers in Winter. -Buy as many cucumbers as desired now, peel and slice as for immediate use. Soak in An envelope with the corner cut off is handy to fill your salt and pepper boxes. Rubbing shoes and boots well with 27. providence in history was to be castor oil keeps them from cracking, the great prompter in the search after salted water over night. Drain and making them soft and pliable " Golrl�. It was the clearness with which' Figs are delicious baked several Israel's instinct grasped this lesson put in glass jars same as those used hours, with lemon juice and lemon rind , for preserving fruit, covering with a to give added flavor. that qualified him to be Gods mis- good vinegar. Stir with a fork, fill- sdonary to the world. Ten cents worth of skim milk has ing oven with the edge, and screw the more nourishment in it than the same 28. A recent discovery tells us there lid on tight. Use two rubbers in- money's worth of steak, are two quotations here: "A grave stead of one to keep them airtight. Three of the cheapest foods we have they made for thee, 0 Zeus, These will keep perfectly, retain their Ore - have are hominy, corn meal and rice highest and greatest, even the Ore - shape ani color and be just as deliei- and there are many ways, of using tans, always liars tete., as Titus 1. out as the fresh"ones. If they taste them. 12]. But thou are not dead, for to too much of. vinegar when they are Allow one level teaspoonful of salt eternity thou .;vest and standees; for used in the winter, drain the liquid off to flavor a quart of soup, sauce or in thee we live and move and have our and let the cucumbers remain over- water in which vegetables are to be being." The verse in Titus is attrib- uted be Epimenides, who now appears to havo referred to the Cretan legend of the burial of Zeus in Crete. Cer- tain -Namely, Epimenides for the ear - Tier words, the Cilician Aratus (B.C, 270) and the Stoic Cleenthes (third century) for the latter. That there was a tinge of pantheism in both the quotablons, .Recording to their author's thought, does not prevent Paul's us- ing them for a higher purpose, 29, Paul is enforcing the- second commandment, which had a supreme justification in the Abhenian degrada- tion of that which is divine (margin) into nothing more 'than physically beautiful then and women. 30. Overlooked-"Sufl`ered all the nations to walls in their Town ways" (Acts 14.'16), The words do not pre- tend to give a full account of what time. Never allow the arms to ba- re ant whldowith than- of are "ig ser- likely atne to t es 12e r Georged with e the Stroiw come crossed or oramped with turn - declaration ant" through no fault of their own,. bride. g ing, and where both hands are used They anon that God's p to the de-aSome "safety first" hints frn the for a quick turn, handle the wheel in do is now God's plan of sawil novice may prove more than an ounce the same way es you would draw tion is now should ta, and it is his will of prevention, In drivingmotor car yourself up a rope -by a hand -over - that men should all hear of it and ac - concentrate, both har�3s, as well as both' hand mot{att. cepb it. Repeat -The wane does not concentrate, like the English, on mere feet, and the eyes and ears are in Never look down ab the gear shift sorrow for the past: a wholly new constant use, and must be in alert ser - attitude of mind is the point. vice. Some drivers learn safe mani- 31. Appointed a day -"To fix a day" h� lath of do,r Buchbhs more ptai ily was the ordinary Latinnterm for an- thing to avoid when learning to drive al announcing a legal inquiry; bub Paul is to keep from learning bad habits. was doubtless thinking rather of the "day of Johovah"" so prominent in the The right way is always the easiest. prophets. Judge the inhabited earth More accidents are avoided through in righteousness (margin) -Quoted' skilful steering than by any other from Psa. 9. 8. In a man -So liter- means of control at the command 01 ally: in is a regular Greek idiom for the operator, and a. driver who is the judge before whom a ease is tried, clever at the sheering wheel has, Bub Paul was more probably using his therefore, a great advantage. As long own "mystical in' -whether in re- as the ear is in motion the operator demption or in judgment, "God is in t b steering. This is the one Christ," Ordained -The word Paul uses in Rom, 1. 4 (rendered declared). 3.2 Paul had no chance to develop his argument, of which he had only delivered the opening; "a resurrec- tion handling of the steering mechanism. surct dead men' was a sheer wasteeh- Modern motor vehicles are equip- moretti and it was useless to • ed with what is termed "a balanced time listening to this t Oriental steering gear" Such a steering gear fanatic. Those who were too polite g to scoff promised to renew the bore dem on a more convenient day -pre sumably Feb. 30! 33. Thus -Luke's restraint here is wonderful, only surprassed by the yet C R moreal tragichoverse ofn Luke could What THE COST OF WAR Paul thought when he could get no further hearing we shall read in the lesson for July 30. 84. Dionysius-So there were some "wise after the flesh" (1 Cor. 1. 26) who accepted the heavenly wisdom! Damaris-Read the glorious stanzas in Myers' Saint Paul. The von:y pre- sence of a woman hi this meeting, in PAST TIMES a town where respectable women wero shut up • mei debarred all public life, suggests. her previous character: "Then I preached Christ; and when she heard the wiry. - 0, is such triumph possible to men? Hardly, my King, had I beheld thy glory, Hardly had I known thine excel- lence till then." Fortunes in Ships. night in water, Orange Marmalade. -Take four large oranges and one large lemon; wash the fruit and wipe dry; then cut into very thin slices, discarding the dry, and will wash off easily. ends one the seeds from the lemon If a etal spoon is left in the and the seeds from the oranges, Put the fruit in a largo, porcelain -lined saucepan, the contents will nob boil saucepan and ark. eighb cups of water. a dbeal of the spoon carries orf Keep in a cool place for twenty-four., great deal h heat. Glassware should always be washed hours. Then boil gently until the in a wooden bowl; as there will be peel is very tender. Measure the far less chance of its getting broken. fruit, add one cup of sugar to each i Needlework should be ironed on the cup of fruit, less one. (That is, if l wrong side in a piece of flannel, and there are six cups of fruit, add five !should then be kept long enough under cups of ruga./.) Boil briskly far; the iron bo thoroughly dry it, cooked. The best time be clean the meat grinder is immediately after it is used, The particles of meat do not Driving Hints for the Motorist. "How does safety first appeal to motorists?" If only from a selfish point of view the motorist must be interested in this. For wero he in eoilision with a pedestrian., he is as possible for this purpose. The proper resting place 101r the right hand is on the wheel, where it is ready to assist the left when neces- sary, But both hands should never leave the steering wheel at the same or pedals, as this is an especially bad rives have made a brave attempt to habit and one that is likely to cause overcome the difficulties of their trouble. My advice to the beginner situation, Dee in the ground they is to thoroughly master steering, as a nothing will do quickly get him into have built cellars,, or serdabs, and trouble or disclose his inexperience these serve as cooling chambers, The as not being able to properly handle cellars aro kept pretty dark. "The the wheel. light enters,"says one who has lived Another important pedis well to there, "through small windows, or openings, where, instead of glass is corridor for safety's sake is to Dees- placed a' lattice of palm filled with a sionally pull up on the hand brake prickly camel's thorn. Several time when stopping, instead of always us- these day the ocupants sprinkle water on ing the foot brake. For this keeps these thorns, and the moisture cools the motorist familiar with the location the hot wind as it passes through the rooms, and gives a comparatively re- freshing breeze. But toward night these cellars bec e unbearably close, and then the entire city mounts to the flat roofs, where it dines and sleeps." Any man or woman who has etayed for any lerl,yth of time in Bagdad the foot can rest on the pedal at all brings away something else besides times with perfect comfort. De-, spurious antiques and unpleasant clubching is one-half the operation of: memories, namely, a good, old-fash- stopping, and a fraction of a second ioned, torturing boil, or what remains in stopping is often important• of it in the form of a sear. I reticent - in bent' once asking a man who had just come back from Bagdad what he thought of the place. For answer he pointed to a pit in his cheek. " That's all I remember of Bagdad," he said? "and I don't recall that with any joy." The "Bagdad boil" attacks men and women alike -men usually on their legs and arms, and women, un- fortunately, more often on their faces -and it lasts long enonigh to make life a misery. The disease is common elsewhere in the Orient, and is known also as the Aleppo button and the Biskra boil. IIAROUN AL RASCHID'S .CITY. Travellers. De N'ot Speak Well of Bagdad, Bagdad, the famous capital of the caliphs of the " Arabian Nights," is not to -day the city that poetry and romance paint it. Mr. James Walter Smith says : 01 Bagdad before the war a lot nonsense has been written, Most Of it has come` from the fervid pens of. people brought up on the "Arabian. Nights,' . The plain truth is that Bagdad is a dirty, common, Un- inspiring Eastern city, A friend of mine once described it admirably in a single sentence t "It took nee four weekse to get ,there, and one day to (get out." A Bagdad house in the summer .hi a fiery furnace, and no one, unless his name be Shadraeh or Meshach o . Abednego, could live within its lou walls with comfort, and yet the na• mus e s carr of this control, so that when. neces- dled.that must be constantlyf ban- city for its use arises it is instinc- Bled. The operations of steering hive., found. rt, t of wabehfulness in the diree- co pis tion in which the motor vehicle is � Remember another thing. The left proceeding, and constant, skilful foot has but one duty; it must rest on the clutch pedaL If the driver finds this uncomfortable, some sorb of a heel rest can be arranged, so that operates freely, and as a general rule one hand is all that is necessary to control it. The properly trained driv- er should use his left hand' as much IS MOUNTING UP Civil and other Government expenses are about 19 per cent., and the rest, something under 1. per cent., goes to buy food for the destitute refugee population. Added to the above are the sums paid to allied nations -Belgium, Ser NO ANALOGY IN HISTORY OF bra and others -which raise the ex- penses to $18,000,000 a day, 3560,000,- 000 a month, or 36,700,000,000 a year. England's Expenses At the same time England's ex- penses have risen from 317,000,000 a day to $22,000,000, and are soon ex- pected to reach 325,000,000 daily, or $9,125,000,000 a year, A British es- timate of the exclusively wax expenses of the allies gives the following up to June 80, 1917 :- Great Britain $15,250,000,000 France 14,175,000,000 Russia 14,000,000,000 Italy 4,200,000,000 Belgium 2,700,000,000 Serbia Montenegro Portugal Romantic stories are related at Cardiff, Wales, of the huge fortunes amassed by shipowners and coal-ownr ars during the war. One ehipowning firm is reported to have made profits amounting to 315,000,000. Many other firms have also made vast sums. In- stances are also told of young clerks who, earning about $15 a week at the beginning of the war, saw their op- portunity and invested in the purchase of old steamers. As a result of their enterprise they have become compar- atively wealthy men "This is an odd way girls have of getting into society." "How is it odd?" "Why, to get in they first have to come out." A man advertises for "competent persons to undertake the sale of a new medicine." and adds that "it will be profitable to the undertaker." HOW TO OPERATE THE GASOLINE ENGINE Told by C. W. Jakes, of the Ontario Agricultural College. iNo. 8,] The operating troubles df the geao- us as stove. -fllein minutes, aremoveenfroeolll If you are in the habit of lending the starting troubles for ife engine are not so thelatter stove, g books it pays to keep name of boolts, cover with paraffin and seal,. Tlue th f name of person who has it and date are Irotecl, then there is not over, marmalade is especially mads from of loan. Then cross out the name clanger from the termer. However, oranges in the spring, though it can be iwhen the book is returned. there are a few that are of common made at any other time of the year. I occurrence and they will be dealt with It le quite inexpensive. The quan- now. Sometimes while running, the quantities of dense black smoke from Another A. S. S. One, b!ty given here will make six or seven engine will miss fire, that is, the trip rho exhaust indicating the presence of hisses, It will jell beautifully and I A schoolmaster once wrote his ini- rod will trip the spanker but there too much fuel. A normal mixture of g rials, A, S,, on the flyleaf of one of is ns pretty as it is appetizing.• will be no explosion. This indicates gasoline and air is indicated by a thin Strawberry Preserves. -This very his books, On of the boys, who got either a weak battery, loose mimeo- blue, and almost invisible smoke from novel recipe for strawberry preserves hold of the hoo c, added a second S; tions, or a shirty spark plug. With the exhaust. White, dense smoke hi - but the master discovered the addiion, is invaluable, I have never seen it in ; an engine that is being used daily the dicates that the cylinder is getting too print, All my friends are delighted arid,, knowing who had made it halidespark plug should be removed once a much oil, Sharp, hard explosions ac- 1 ed the book back to the boy with the with it, It's so easy, and so sure. „ month, the j''epasit opt Gabon on the companied by frequent explosions in t words I with you would not write When pipe almost as book." points smoothed withsand- -gettingenough gasoline, paper or a fine file. An accumula- Occasionally the engine seems to tion ofcarbon onthe points causes run all right when working without a the intensityof the spark to be lost . he clutch is thrower in an occasions miss - firing. i n k down, an finallystops, uncommon to have the electric current Thus, especially in old engines; is duo s o. c ecu e , is is, some pointof to the fact that the power of the ex - cooling. This scale prevents the water from cooling the cylinder and should be scraped'off occassionally. When to Regulate the Feed. Sometimes after the engine has made a few explosions it will seem to smother and then stop. This is due usually to an overdbse of gasoline, Another Year of It Will Make the Total Expenses Reach $100,000,000,000. One hundred billion dollars will be the cost of the war if it lasts another year, according to Mr. Jean Finot, who makes an interesting compara- tive study of this subject in an article in the Paris Revue. " If this war lasts three years," he says, "the losses will reach a total un- heard of in the past. They will a- mount to one hundred or one hundred and twenty billion dollars, The losses occasioned by the present conflict have no analogy in the history of past times. " According to the calculations of economists and staticians armed conflicts from Napoleon I, to our day, all added together, have not caused one-half the sums absorbed by the present war. The Napoleonic wars, properly so called, which are consid- ered the most sanguinary in the his- tory of past times, cost only about 315,000,000,000. They lasted twenty years. "The Crimean War cost the coun- tries taking part in it about eleven or twelve billions. The civil war in America did not cost more than 37,- 000,000,000 or 37,600,000,000. The war between Prussia and Austria in 1886 necessitated an expense of only about 3500,000,000. " According to the estimates of Mr, Matheu-Bodet, Minister of Finance in 1874, the war of 1870 cost France the total sum of $2,499,000,000. In this figure are included the losses to the State, to the departments, the come Total Cost to Teutons On the other side, Germany's ex- penses, which to date are about 310,- 000,000,000, it is estimated will be at least 313,000,000,000 by the same time ; Austria's about 310,000,000,- 000 ; Turkey's 3600,000,000 and Bul- garia's 3520,000,000, or 334,120,000 for the Teutonic allies. Then, there is Japan, who issued an internal loan of $26,000,000 at the be- ginning of the war, and whose ex- penses in the capture of ]Kao -thou and the German Paeifie archipelagos and their occupation were about 3100,- 000,000. San Marino, too, has spent several hundred thousand dollars erecting anti-aircraft defences a- gainst Austrian aeroplanes. The Al- lies will thus have spent about $52,- 000,000,000, and the Teutons 384,000,- 000,000 at the end of three years' war. These sums give a total of about 386,000,000,000, somewhat less than the estimate of Mr. Finot, but agree- munes and individuals, The cost of ing with the calculation that the cost sarin for German troops after the of the present war is more than double g p all the wars of the nineteenth cen- eonclusiott of peace and before the tury, from those of Napoleon I., plus complete evacuation, amounting ; to all the wars of the first dozen years $18,600,000,li also included, of the present century. " An English statistician puts the direct expenses of all belligerents from Napoleon L to the war of 1914 Germans Eat Whale Meat. 336,000,000,000 to 340,000,000,000. Whale neat has proved so popular Considering only the allied armies among the inhabitants of the Solingen the carbo -hydrates are useful, but. in the present war, it may be noted" districb in Prussia that the district au- man does not thrive by starch alone. that the number of combatants on our thoa'ities have taken ever the greater Starch makes very good paste but DON'T BE A FOOD FADDIST. A Prominent Medical Man Says to Eat a Little of Everything. A certain amount of food is good for a faddist. It keeps him from wor- rying about being one. If he doesn't get this food, however, he suffers from 700,000,000 acute faddism, and is only two jumps 650,000,000 I ahead of Nemesis, says Edwin F. 50,000,000 Bowers, M.D. Now, man, from the very nature of $61,726,000,000 his teeth and alimentary canal, is omnivorous. Ile thrives best upon a little of everything -and not too little, either. For with food a little too much is just enough. We need it to make hay with. That is, to furnish bulk. The alimentary organa and the peristaltic muscles of the bowel re- quire bulk to wrestle with. We need excess -in moderation. But this excess must not be more than the system can utilize and eliminate. This is one reason why a full -heal in a capsule will never be practic- able. At least not for human be- ing. The system demands, for purposes of nutrition, three varieties of food, in balanced proportion. Proteids to supply the material to replace tissue waste, carbo -hydrates to furnish heat. and energy, and fats to prevent ex- cessive waste and help maintain body heat, Proteids are most valuable for their nitrogen content. Fish, beans, peas, grains, nuts and other foods contain this, of course -some in even richer proportions than meat -but it cannot be converted into digestive pabulum in the alimentary tract of any or- dinary man, woman or child so readi- ly as can properly cooked meats, or that predigested food of a chick known as the fresh erg. The starches and sugars comprising side now amounts to about 14,000,000, part of the trade in this smoked food If we admit an average daily expense product, which may be sold on "meat - of 34 a day for each soldier, including less" days, and are disposing of it in ammunition, we will have a total ex- large quantities, reports the German pense of $1,680,000,000 a month, or press. The retail price is about 70 about $20,000,000,000 a year. cents is pound, very poor tissue. And fat can only be utilized as an exclusive article of diet where the temperature is 80 low that the tre- mendous quantities necessary to sus- hen ftnirhgl the berries aro a, trap- ' , plug cleaned off with gasoline, an a the inlet i e indicate that the en- contact Nodi life can be properly oxidized, your came in my o c ' Nuts would be splendid if we had slueent rich red and are ed tl d d gine is not en g stomachs like squirrels to convert Constant Increase The Intelligent Cat large ter before they were cooked, The Won't Give Them an Opening. For France alone the budget a- their highly concentrated molecule, flavor is incomparable. Put two and « t' b its a sae mounts to $6,193,200,000 yearly, ac- Two gardeners were swearing von- and on exclusive milk diet would be one-half 'quarts of sugar in a kettle , 1 don ask people how they are load, but when t t cording to Mr. Almond, who recently' sense on cats. with one pini of ;voter and bail inti.' any more. d fi It s of it balks, slaws d t d tip made a repent to the French Senate "It appears to nit," one said, "that superb if wedaycould drink the several sugar is well melted. Then add two Why not? shown the tothcredits since they seem to pods out your choicest gallons per per required in order to "I've decided it is better to telco itAugust1914 ; following plants to scratch out of the ground." gain the proper amounts of proteids, heaping quarts of strawberries ,nil h rt i it d that t ' 1, a big tomcat,"rho other rat and sugar, That is, providing boil from seventeen to twenty. minutes. for granted that ••they are web than the wires becoming bated of insula- Last five months of 1914,$1,8.17,886,850 There's 1, o the kettle and to give hem a chance to spend half an tion and touchin sone metal part of Year 1915 .. 4,483,819,702 said, `that fetches my plants out and that it didn't fstomaehuwalls.produce Don't stir, just onelt t hour of my time telling me about their g h 6 870 thou sits and actually defies mel dilation of the s slim. When daub remove from fire, the engine, cause Clic current to be led I nisi hall of 1916 .... 8,086,60 , Therefore it is incontrovertible pour'ifito pans and shape occasionally ailments." off into the ground instead of reach Why don't you Burl ee brick at ' till cold, It cools better in small vies- ing the spark plum To prevent this Total since war began$8,897,113,422 him asked the first speaker. that a human being will live longest Qualified to Judge; tlue wiring should be examined, He calls special attention to the " That's what makes me mad," was on swell -balanced dietary. Also, he eels. The shaking is the secret of success, It causes the berries to ab- Belle --Do you think women should Frorn various causes the engine may constant increase in expenses :- the. reply. " I ain't. He gets on top will be much more alive on it than 1 p become over-lioated, This may be due engine troubles is to prevent thorn by $ ,000 $4,4331310,702 of my greenhouse to defy ms." one who makes a fad of foes.. sorts the syrup ami remain plum and Have the ballot? y � � Year 1015. 8,083,400 ..._ whole, Can When when cold. Cover Jaclt --Oh, sometimes . 1 do 01111 to the fact that sufficient oil is not giving the engine the case before the First quer- �� 'With paraffin, The preserves may bo sometimes I dont, They are so vacil- reaching the cylinder, The average; trouble occurs. Ie requires hilt tt for 1916 1,082,400,000 1,585,506,870 ' Favor. • Government. /cpit in small jars or glasses, ,Never latnig, you know! site farm engine with gravity feed; small percentage of the tithe then, Sec. quare Would-be Slacker (to recruiting, ser- Pol{tical bass -I can land you a felt cools more than two quarts at once, should get from 8 to 10 er 12 drops of; that is necessary to coma Clic trou-t ter 191.6 1,158,000,000 1,501,000,000 geisnt) But; sir, I have bad eyesight payin' throe thousand dollads a year Once tried, always a favorite recipe, \Vise Girl, oil per minute on its cylinder,- Over. ble after it has occurred. In other At this rate tate total expenses for and cant see any distances -.twa to you and este to Me,' Misud---Woul,'1 y0u object to a hus- heating tray also bo due to all eetlnn-! words, old ns elle .hills, yet es tree the year would be about 76,200,000,- i "Dont wrorry about that, my main, Worker --And do T have an assist - Select Coed Food, 1 band who smoked in the house? elation of scale on the water jacket: as gospel, "an ounce of prevention is 000, of which the Army absorbs 73 the will put; you in the very front ant, Who does all the worlt ? At all times we should be careful 1 Marl 0 -.,Most decidedly. But I shall of the cylinder, caused by the deposi-' worth is pound of rrn•0"-t,, w: -Japes per sent., rind the debt, also r.onstant- trench whore you will have a good Boss --Sure, and we 'split half a to soleei, good, fresh food, unloa' we keep quiet about it until I get ono. tion of line front the water used inr in Canadian Countryman. (ly increasing, more than 7 per cent, view," his salary between us, plosions, instead of being utilized to do work, is lost through the worn pis- ton rings, bearings and connections., or wasted in overcoming friction in the shaft or bearings that are not in alignment, The best way to overcome gasoline