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The Brussels Post, 1916-11-2, Page 7&smile t ea? er When Buying Winter Woolens.. With Spaghetti.—To 1Y0 just the This year the housewife is facing an ' right flavor to spaghetti and rice unusual situation. The war abroad dishes crisp three or foor thin slices has changed conditions in so many of bacon, dice them and 'adcl the boiled manufacturing lines that a totatly new ' rice or spaghetti to the pan containing revision of values and prices must be bacon and bacon dripping's. Add de - made by a prospective buyer, and in sired seasoning to dish and let Mine no other instance is this so true as in ! mer. This is delicious with a can of the buying of woolens and blankets, I tomatoes, a few slices tif onion and a as the immense drain on all woolen ' half a dozen shreds of sweet green mills for blankets and outfits for eol- diers a the warring nations has raised the pricers and made adulteration more common. What, first, is the difference between woolen and worsted? Per- haps many a housekeeper does not know, but there is a real and technical difference. Wool or woolen yarn is made from short fibers, twisted bo give a fuzzy appearance; worsted Is made from long fibers which are comb- ed to lie straight and that are tightly twisted. It takes almost ten times as long to make worsted goods as it dose woolen goods, and hence the worsted is better and also much cost- lier, and, of course, wears better. Need of Information. When the average woman buys mit- tens or sweaters or blankets, what knowledge does she employ? The ma- terial may contain "shoddy." This is "regenerated" wool made from tailors' scraps and old woolen garments pul- led• apart by machinery and combed until it can be respun. A material half the butter and continue. Cover with buttered crumbs and bake for twenty minutes. To Fry Oysters a Golden Brown.— Select laege, plump oysters, drain and place on a board. Dry each one care- fully with a piece of soft cheese- cloth and dust with salt, and pepper. To every dozen oysters allow one egg, the white and yolk beaten together with one tablespoonful of warm water. Dip the oysters first in fine bread crumbs, then into egg, then back into the crumbs. Be careful to keep the crumbs dry and the egg free from crumbs. Continue until you have dipped the desired numbers. When ready to fry have a goodsized pan half-filled with fat or oil, which is best. When oil cannot be had use half suet and half lard or half suet and half oil. Drop a piece of bread into the fat; if it is brown in twenty seconds it is in the right, heat. Put five or six oysters in the frying basket and plunge them into the fat. As soon as they are a golden brown lift the bas- ket and draM the oysters and send to the table at once. If you fry many at pepper. Save every bib a bacon dripping by itself. It is splendid, as shortening for pastry or for use in greasing the griddle. With Oysters. Raw Oyster Dish.—Hollow out the center of a, clean, square chunk of ice. Into this hollow put raw oysters and place on a large. dish. Garnish and serve with sliced lemon. The ice block makes an attractive dish and keeps the oysters cold. Oysters and Macaroni.—Use one pint oysters, three-fourths cup macaroni (broken in one -inch pieces), salt, pep- per and flour, one-half cup buttered crumbs, one-fourth cupful butter. Cook macaroni in boiling salted water un- til soft. DraM and rinse with cold water. Put a layer in bottom of a buttered baking dish, cover with oys- bens, sprinkle with salt and pepper, dredge with flour, dot over with one - containing a good deal of "shoddy" will crease easily, has a "dead," sticky feeling, and the fibers break off sharp- ly when pulled. "Shoddy" is a neces- sity, because there isn't now enough pure wool to go around; but at least a woman should know for what she is paying, and not pay a pure -wool price for waste. All woolens are also adulterated with cotton. Of course, we cannot buy a parb of a garment to test, but if it is any kind of yard goods, the burning test is excellent. To do this, buy five cents worth of caustic soda at the drug store; it comes in small sticks. Place a cup of water in a email agate saucepan, add a two-inch stick of sodium, and when this solu- tion is boiling add a sample of the suspected dress goods. If the sam- ple is "all -wool," it will have entire- ly disappeared in about a twenty -min - ate boiling; whatever remains is cot- ton, generally seen in a mass of tangl- ed mesh. To test endurance of cloth: Press the two thumbs together on cloth and then pull material straight out, first one time the oysters may be placed warp way, then filling way; if it tears as soon as they are fried in a pan at or frays, it shows lack of strength. the oven door, where they will keep To discover if material will stand a e. strain at seams, the threads should "" • be tested to see if they move easily. If the threads can be pushed easily it will fray when strain is applied. The breaking strength of yarn should be tested, and also the differ- ence between the warp and filNeg threads; a weak warp will be broken If a heavy filling thread is inserted in Close, firm weaves are usually en- during; loose, open ones 'are apt to stitch and pull out of shape. Testing Blankets. Buying blankets is a real test of a woman's intelligence, for in no other line are there so many deceptions, so many ostensible "all -wools," or is the work of finding out quality so difficult. Blankets should never be bought in any but the most reputable store, as high-class stores will give a better guarantee of quality from the oubset. But now to toll "all -wool" from cot- ton, or part -cotton and the other pro- portions: First, a certain mixture et cotton in a blanket is not a deception, but makes the blanket wash better, only the buyer should know it is pres- ent. A ninety per cent wool filling on a cotton warp is an excellent grade. A real wool blanket is yellow and not pure white. It will feel genuinely "soft" and smell a real animally smell. Possibilities of -Bacon. Household Hints. Turpentine will soften hardened shoe polish. The perfect Preserve closet is cool and dark. Cold beefsteak makes a very good hash on toast, The work of whipping cream is lessened by half if the cream is first chilled. To smooth an iron plunge it while very hot into cold water with a little soap in it. A novel idea is to flavor string beans with mint and serve them with roast Iamb. When cooking apples a few drops of lemon juice greatly improves the flav- or. Fear and worry cause more unhap- piness mid failure than anything else in the world. Water in which -potatoes have been boiled -is the best thing with wbich to sponge and revive a silk dress. Before putting new gloves on warm them and powder the hands well. Don't put them on hurriedly. When washing clothes a few slices of cut lemon put into the boiler will VALUE OF CANADIAN CROPS. make the linen snow white, All boxes on top shelves should Five Cereals Produced 555,636,000 u have plainly marked labels on them, telling the contents of the box. This Bushels, Value $513,887,690. The homemaker who has not made saves much time, On the hesis of prevailing prices, c missing. great opportunities. It is whereas worn places are apparent. If Old clothes can bo neatly daened, the Dominion Government estimates the'vable of the five cereal crops at use of bacon as a flavoring has been best when broiled, even though served they are darned before the threads 5513,887,690, as follows; in the good old way with fried eggs. are actually worn through they will Production Trice But once the housewife tries the good last a long while for kitchen use. Cereal Bushel oar bu. Total Wheal —108,811,000 51.58 5286,721,380 old standby in some of its various Vinegar will keep the hands white oats „ .84L602,000 .58 1?8,180.180 Bat . uses she will find that there is no need and, smooth and prevent chapping aye ... 1,800,800 1,15 2:382;420 for monotony in hor menus. Bacon when exposed to the cold air. Rub Wax 8,828,800 -10 18,582,180 a furniahes the body with tissue build- ing them and before they are quite Last year these crops aggregated is easily digested and assimilated and the vinegar et the hands after wash- Totals..085,620,000 en and fat to store. dry . 962,760,000 bushels, and the official b Bacon Omelet.—Broil bacon until A new method of cleaning clothes valuation amounted to $474,163,000, or d ctisp, break it up in fine dice and add is suggested:—Dip the clothee' brush 7 per cent. loss than the present to two well -beaten eggs the yolks. and in the yolk of an egg so that the brist- smaller creP• whites beaten separately. Add two les are quite wet Allow it to dry, tablespoonfuls of milk and a bit of and then uee. This treatment has, salt and paprika. Have omelet pan it is said, the effect to make the brush- No Malingering. hob and brushed with pure leaf lard ing specially eftective, It is announced in a supplement or bacon drippings. Pour in the mix- If Iva long to be in touch with our to the London Gazette that no man cl tame, cover, lower heat and let brown children, if WO want to hold them by hi the reserve, from 18 to 41, whert on one side. Roll the omelet and turn the bond oe confidence and love after under orders to report for medical into a hot platter, Garnish with grape the period of authority has passed, examination may malinger or feign e jolly. wem ust offer something for the ten- any disease or infirmity, Any man i Peas With 13acon.--Diee crisp pieces drils to cling to now, while the sym- producing aetr disease on infirmity g of bacon and add to canned peas which *hies and feelings are strong; vvhile in himself, maiming or injuring him s t are to be served with a white sluice. A. the child has the oneness of his life self, or causing himself to be mimed few diced carrots are a desirable addi- with ours. or injurer, , • g ' y 1 cution to this vegetable. Soda water, which is an exceptional- lated to lead to the belief that lie is 0 Oysters and Bacon. --toll a piece of ly good cleanser for most kitchen unfit, will be guilty of an offence, b thin bacon mound an oyster, ware, should never be used on alum- unless he proves that he did not act '14 SUMS evith a toothpick. Broil until intim utensils or they will speedily lose with intent to escape service, bacon Is crisp, Serve on hot dish their bright look. Wash this metal se that the ago can be guaratteed. The healthy and laying fowl has a garnished with smattered lernon and in plain warm water and dry quick- Inhabitaete of the United Itingdont parsley. Canned toinato seep, just ly on a clean soft clobh. Give an ex- in normni times consume an average as it comes, 15 delicious! served with tea polish With a second cloth or piece of about thirty gallons of beer each theee. . of chamois, every year. HIS ARMY New York Tribune THE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON NOVEMBER 5. Lesson VI. Shipwrecked on Itielita (Malta).—Acts 27. 38 to 28. 10 Golden Text.—Psa, 34: 22.. Verse 38. There is no connection be- tween the two statements, as though they threw overboard what was left. The ship was laden with wheat. This lightening process, necessary for driv- ing the ship successfully on shore, was the only thing they could do before daylight. 39. They knew not—Note that in Acts 28, 1 Luke says, "We knew," apparently suggesting that his own knowledge of the place came in; in that case he had failed to recognize ib from the sea. Beach—As distinguish- ed from a rocky shore. Bring. the ship safe to shore (margin)—The reading is identical in pronounciation, but not in spelling, with that in the text. It is appropriate here, as the sailors had formed the hope that they might save their ship; the catastrophe of verse 41 was quite unexpected. 40. Casting off—Literally, "having slipped off the anchors all round"— there were four of them, round the stern (verse 29). Loosing the bands— Two long paddles formed the steering gear, one on each side of the keel. These had been lashed up to be out of the way of the anchors. Now, of course, they were needed for the critical operation before them. 41. Two seas—The situation seems bo be a sunken reef, with contending currents. Those who support the claim of -the present "Saint Paul's Bay" identify it with a narrow chan- nel between the share and a small isl- and at the north end. The Bay ap- parently suits most of the daba very well, but (as with all these identifica- tions) there is difficulty in the earliest links of the tradition. What is im- portant here is that they never reach- ed the "beach," but stuck on a bank some way out. Ran the vessel aground—Luke uses a word for ship which was extinct except in literray Greek; there is a suggestion that he was voting Horner—see paraphrase. 42. This was, of course, because they were answerable with their own lives for their prisoners (eompare Acts 12. 19). • 43. To save—The word used in the passive at the end of verse 44. Colors of Chicks. The poultry keeper who is 'young at the game" is frequently misled by the color of the chicks when they hatch out He or she labors under the mis- apprehension that the chicks will be of the same color as the adult bird of their particular variety. We have ing have been with us so long, and many times heard beginners express have developed by such easy stages, their disappointment because their that even children should be well in - Minorca chicks are black and formed as to their history and meth- Blackwhite when they should be black only, ods. This article will serve a good like their parents, and the same with purpose if it brings home to the owner other varieties. or prospective buyer of a motor car, As a matter of fact, the chickens of some idea of how large a part leather white breeds are usually white or and filling play in the maintenance of creamy -white when first hatched. Valite Rocks sometimes ‚hatch blue or The Ins and Outs of Upholsfe.ry. I because it is more pliable, preserves ' the most even quality and gives max- Aboutautomobile firm put out a small car iimum wear. Manufacturing leather a month ago a well-known that has since attracted considerable consists of three departments, the first hibited at the Toronto Fah., it was, 1 the removal of the hair and the soft is the preparation of hides for tanning, Campfire. attention. When this model was ex- ° --f1 connecting tiesue or adhering flesh, the Trevor Allen, in the London Citron. scrutiny. Men familiar with motor second constitutes the tanning which ice, refers as follows to the singing course, subjected to the most carefull ears looked upon every part, and did I frees the skin trOM any danger of de- l of the soldiers of the British army: say or putrefaction, and the third is Song is the amulet of the soldier; not fail to express any adverse or fay_ ' the finishing process. Barks are the neverfailing charm he (rariies with minds. We remember standing by the chiefly used in the last. respect, and' him to beguile the first day's fatigue orable criticism that came to their . auto one evening, when et least six , when the skins have been in the tan! or the last moment's plonge into a grate,: melody may be facile, the'worcls fatu- constituted- an excellent quality of i liquor for a long enough period, the ' belching tornado of destruction. The splitting process into the of the upholstery. One man made a , moose and the split sections is done' ous; they are merely the instrument, positive statement to the effect that 1 by a revolving band or belt knife. If ' and do not matter. What matters the seat coverings were not genuine I your ear has grain leather, you mini is the vibrant voice lifted in song, for leather. His opinion prevailed until: a salesman of the concern interested ap- I rest assured that the equipment is as 1 through it is manifest the soul of the good as money can buy, but if a! man, and its victory over circum - peered -upon the scene and gave the i positive statement that the goods were you are not getting all that the best I When, perforce, we must hide our moose or split section has been used, stances and environment. exactly as the firm had advertised. service demands. The average per- ! scintillating buttons under . greasy Bets were talked about, arid the argu- son tells real leather by the soft, easy, overalls and take our turn, as camp meat was rapidly assuming a heated feeling it gives to the finger tips; then, orderly or cooks' mate—we don't com- stage, when someone suggested that too, a perfect grain side should never 'Plain. We don't extend our arms in the front seat be turned upside down crack or become stiff and brittle. Per- I studied anguish, lamenting the luxure- and the exposed edge of the covering haps this can be brought home more ous job Ave sacrificed to join up and examined as to its quality. This in- camely to you by stating that atm I the elegant home we've been accus- 1SONG THE AMULET OF THE SOLER SINGING HELPS ON A LONG ROUTE MARCH. The Song of the Evening is Always Beard Around the I tomed to, All that is taken for speetion resulted in an unanimous chairs dressed with the poor brands but a granted in the new armies until it is Verdict to the effect that the goods of leather wrinkle and crack, leather. We tell you this story be- d. similar piece of furniture covered with ' claimecl as a strictly personal prero- constituted an excellent qaulity cause it seems strange that the aver- grain leather should become softer: gative; then it is resented. No. . . age agriculturist who has been accus- with age and withstand every form of I • . we sing. "Good-bye, Virginia" tomed to handling harness and other use without losing a particle of its: fits admirably the rhythm of a scrub - leather goods all his life, should not attractive appearance, and in addi- I bing brush on a latrine floor; in fact, have a wider knowledge of hides, and tion, constantly become softer and it is almost a deodoriser. While as of their preparation and uses. Never- easier to sit upon. You should be- ' for scouring greasy becon pans with theless, it' is a fact that people who ware of leather that has been coveredniud and cold water, all the pathos should be accustomed to the use and with cheap mixtures calculated to give, of it seems concentrated 112 thab plain - the abuse of leather, know very little a level, fleshly appearance but which tive "Long, long trail thats leading: I but the contempt of the soil for mete about it, in fact, cannot be relied upon subsequently will crumble and look' • ." And what means all this, pray, for accarate judgment The mar- tawdry. vellous processes of tanning and finish- It is a far cry from leather to car-Imunity from the grime of the hands, Cool Weather and the Carburetor. I disreputable mabter, its laughing im- comfort and luxury. 1 buretors, but no doubt you have notic- articulate in song? ed that the mornings are getting very Then the route marches.. . . Songs on the March. cool and that it does not take long i Not only do we sing to proclaim the after the sun goes down for the air toNot soul's triumph over physical fatigue; become extremely chilly. Nothing else can be expected in October. The I suburban tendency to follow the over the caprices of an officer with a point of the thing it that perhaps youri over the wistful appeal of The tram- car is not starting easily. It may bop Rlililseis4 Sun thab dawns for us in vain and spit back and take a considerable , and the The Crown and Anchor, time warming up to easy, uniform re -1 perspiring ser - 1 where not even the • • ey color. Buff breeds, though gen- volutions. The trouble is in your car- ; harbourage; over blisters and draw - rally hatching out buff, sometimes The average skin is composed of as usual fails to give the best satis- baretor, and the summer adjustment,1, feet, and that blighter in f rent geant-major may indulge a moment's re slightly speckled with black or several layers, every one of which faction. In cooler air you should 1 ing persists in thinking he is the only ave stripes down their backs (this must be given separatedtreatrnufenett, asrtthu . . . ernleftht eahboouttt oonn:edijguisittienrg 0 fn eariedlien etho, i mwirn in step. Our singing is positive gr a h The Grain Side of Leather, la an d a a 01 b H li b st applies to Buff Leghorns). In lack varieties the chicks are always lack and white, the back being black d the throat and underparts white. Coming to the black -red types of ed as the best leather for fine pur- owl, such as Brown Leghorns, Black- Poses, and is known to the trade as the reasted Red Game, and Indian Game, grain side. The inside portion has he chicks have a maroon stripe down been designated the split and the mid - he black, with a narrow stripe of elle section, for some reason or other, arker brown on each side. Indian is called the moose. Of course, you nadmespeeheikciltesd,arwehaillesto Brown -red tvill readily understand that grain re largely black. Barred Rock chicks are black and .eamy-white like the solid black reeds; Dorkings are stripped and amburgs have a buff or whitish ground color, black specks on the ead, and very often stripes down the ack. hicks hatch out with stripes and thus side the city, Lord Cunliffe, who has . war as that of toy -making. In the Tavern in the Town," "Off to Phila- The original wild Gallus Bankiva he tendency is strong in all its do- been re-elected Governor of the Bank ' last peace year Germany's toy trade delphia," "The Minstrel Bay," "Boys nesticated descendants (for it is held of England—the Old Lady of Thread- aggregated 140,000,000 merits ($ ' '35,- of the Old Brigade " and so on. y experts that all breeds of poultry needle Street—for the fourth time, is I 000,000), of which more than $26,000,- Manifold as those'of the sag' as and practically unknown. Yet it was he ing processes in different ways. That and if you find that this does not bring 1 as well as negative. We sing the yie s in - outside portion of the skin which car- the motor back to its July speed and] toxicating rhythm of feet, and the ries the hair, has always been regard- pep, close the air off about three body's proud strength and endurance, rstehemnsotdc17.1 sing the delicious languor that creeps aly unwavering as a tuneful engine. We eirable,nohesgo Ifovaerlitttloe the es The results you will achieve will be; into the brain from the limbs' consist - easily ascertatned, because even the; ent motion, the blood's warm surging, most amateurish. driver can determine the streaming sunlight, the hazy, when his car is starting with ease and brooding countryside. We sing the when it is picking up smoothly.—Auto gaiety of marching through pleasant villages so intimately responsive to our "Here we are againl"—the whim- sical conceit of marching through the town with its attentive crowd and de- ferential traffic. All these things we sing, chorus fol- lowing chorus until 0.:11* repertoire is exhausted. and we have to concede the beauty of those tunes our fathers marched to: "John Peel," "There is a leather is preferable in every instance • in Farmer's Advocate. A PRINCE OF FINANCE; GERMAN TOYMARERS SUFFER. Lord Cunliffe Was Given the First Nearly Two-thirds of Business Lost Peerage in the War. 1 Because of War. In the City of London he is known Perhaps no single industry in Ger- "The Kitchener of Finance." Out- ' many has suffered so much from the 000 was exportan the largerp the troubadours of old are the songs to America. Since the war this figure within songs that we sing. There is has dropped nearly two-thirds, What the song that leaps like a cataract is worse still for the German manu- ' rom.a hundred, three hundred voices facturers is the fact that other coun- f in unison—the song of the Y.M.C.A. tries have taken up this industry and on concert night. Though it seem to the Germans will find it very hard to you listening by, merely an ordinary recover their lost markets. string of choruses, it is really one In 1913 the top exports to the great song It is the song of respite are descended from this Indian jungle fowl). The more the plumage of the adult differs from that of the Gallus Bankiva the less tendency there is for the chicks to hatch out with stripes. It is therefore the wisest plan to defer all criticism of the chicks, as far os color is concerned, until they have shed their chicken fluff and obtained their proper plumage. f who, in the first days of the war was mainly instrumental in saving Eng- land from financial chaos, and was, in consequenc.e, made a peer, being, in fact, the first man to have a peerage conferred upon him for service in the present war. It will be remembered that in the first days of the war a financial panic United States amounted to nearly from healthful labor; or relaxed limbs and slacks and shoes, and genial threatened. It was essential that $10,000,000, but since thee, owing to every bit of gold should be preserv- the British blockade, the volume of Seesnhtiipn.iental and Serious. Poultry Pointers. ed, and equally essential that the no- trade has sunlz to perhaps less than eomrad Ib becomes quite a study to keep tional credit should not suffer, and one-fourth of this sum. The neutral ullets laying regularly. System in that all great financial houses and . states, Holland, Denmark, Sweden i Certain songs there are, too, which eeding has much to do with it. When firms should be able to tide over the and Norway, have bought more toys, !We prefer to sing by proxy, as it were; ullets begin to lay they seem quite money crisis brought about by the but their increased trade ha a failed to • through the intermediary of an intui- neertain. Some will lay regularly , .enLir e dislocation of the world's mar- make up the loss of the transatlantic ' tive temperament and polished tealii- very other day, and some only twice "'et"' business. Austria-Hungary, too, has ' cue beyond our own accomplishments, week. Moving layers from coop to Then it was that Mr. Walter Cun- taken more toys and the home trade Amotilf,,,thnevinheanre ythoeu'Cado•amvaeni'iosmoneft, oop simply upsets their habits, and liffe, as he then was, and two or has been much better. But in spite of , "Un "Tommy Lad," "Somewhere a Voice they begin alt over again to study the three great money experts, came to all this the total shrinkage in the an- I is Calling," the "Bedouin Love Song"; new situabion, and during this time the assistance of the Government. nual turnover is estimated at between I and they are the most poignant of all, hey usually stop laying, The financial system of the country 60 aed 70 per cent. A poultry publicatika says: "Dont was reorganized under their direc- It is said that 1,500 kinds of Ger- , Though our lips are silent, we sing I them with that inward voice of striae Hon. The money of the country was man toys arc now being made in Eng - once a week &leaning out the pathy and remembrance which is, per- rinkmg vessels is all that is neves preserved so that we were not only land and aro being sold at the same ary. Do it every day." That is good able to carry on our business as usual prices ae the original articles, In ' haps, devout. I Surrounded by the complacencies of choice as far as it goes, but on a large but were able to be of financial help France the trade is beingembed rap I : civilian life, our enjoyment of the poultry plant if the drinking vessels to our allies. idly, and nne factory alone has al - sentimental song might sometimes were cleaned out once a week it would!Son of a hard-headed Manchester ready made over $1,000,000 worth of : have been blest with a little lofty business man, who left a fortune of dolls. A Freeth bank has been spe- I cynicism, In the army, which to the e a good thing. The truth is that the Load Cunliffe spent chilly organized to promote the inter - 1 soldier of to -day is in some respects rinking vessels are too much neglect- ! over a million, ocl the days of his boyhood and youth eats of the toy trade. The Japanese an exiledom we cannot afford this . W' h cleaner1 and leaner,e houses there would be less cry feal'ett' high -brow aloofness, In each of these ot at Harrow and Cambridge, where he remmetition, too, ta greatly "choleett" and mysterious diseases, 1 disthiguished himself both in work especially in the American market, songs there ie a phrate, a cadence in The advice each year goes the 1 and play alike. He took his M.A. de- the melody, that evoke an echo in the 'Pound up all old broken crockery, minds of the agricultural press; gree and won the intereVarsity mile for the Light Blue at the sports at The Prince's ,Answer. i deepest ernotions. Through them wo may indulge a reverie of those -------8' --------- .--- :lilies, etc„ for the chickens, for grit." Queen's Club one year. e a al feelings which the soldier's dignity Ve say, don't. - le the first place com- Ile has, in fact, alwaye been a very A nervoue officer, who evas afraid at other times represses. They ex- • i I grit b b tter and theft keen athlete, and sportsman, his great that the Prince of Wales might be hale into oblivion with the limense of r than the anbor employed break- passicm of late years being for filth- injueed theough venturing into ex- his cigavette. ng up dishes, and, in the next place, Mg and big game shooting. 1712 Pure posed poeitioes, tried to restrain the lazed crockery is iipt to be poisonous suit of this sport he has traveled in Prince, The Prince, howevev, would Use of Captured German Guns. o :Cowie, the wilds of both India and Chine. not be restrained. At last, in despair, The eggs should be gathered tinily "Work is the best of all hobbies," the officer said, impressively, "Think The proposed exhibition of the guns f the fresh egg' is three days. One ever, and he is to be found at his of Queen." Irritated beyond endurance, army daring the fighting on the Som - ad ,egg may lose n valuable customer; flee at the bank nearly every day of the Prince cried, "Oh, rubbish! Isn't me will not now be held, as a large end all "doubtful?' eggs to your own the week. my mother just the same sort of NVO. number of them have been handed num At, every other fellow's mother ?" over to bhe allies to be employed by them in the field against the original citchen. Boob day date the eggs laid Lord Cunliffe is easily distinguished by reason of his stature. Ile is eiX owners, says a London despatch. feet high and very broad, with a fair - good appetite and is a hearty moustache and his inevitable -frock Sortie females imagine that they aro A fowl's condition can well be judged coat and silk hat, For a man of SiX15' KS pretty as *Ores bemuse they're Send is one of bhe important ingre- y appotite.--Parin and Dairy, he is remarkably active and young, painted. (limits in the elixir of allee038. sir, at least of your mother, the and carriages captured by the tritish and marketed twice a week The bee is ohs of his favorite maxims, how-