Loading...
The Clinton News-Record, 1899-07-13, Page 2Wean. drein and bull riPat vized, ttrawberriee, ratt an. earthen- luediu14- FUTURE IBIS AND ABIIIN8 ware vend, Oak° down occationally, nearly cover with cider vinegar and WILL THEIR PERFECTION SERVE TO eet in a warm Ow until fermenta- tioo begins. one or two attys. Tiring to PREVENT MORE WARS ? .......... OfIBRItY TIME. the scalding point and. atrain as tilt- Any Atniclinis Purdy NOW 4$ 0 Didadvente Ooted for syrup; measure allow one ase-meripsworas oilcan Like gagalalle 404' Oiip Cmstarilet-Bring to a cupful or auger for every cupful of not ilille-The Prospect of frenerel Amiliag point eine quart of rich milk. juice. put over the fire, stir until the eleughtee mid st„votoo*_Auntos greor Add atmely feer egge oreviouely beat- eller iti sliadtolvedie the& simmer for , :,,,,, rote 0 ine iiiikensY Vow hote.iluxttrrulanixtes,8' 4raaltapbe°rri:e all erg! Apamphiet recently publiehed, in the en with tOur teblespoonfols of sugar 4 I' and a pinch of Malt, Stir constantly rim make delicious throbs. ded Pelir over aweetened, !Atoned cher- , e ., _ . • work at Jean de Olean, the Russian Iro. form at a V1201140 and criticism of the ,iteltil it• thither:4e; renieve from the fire , , . Tie% • Serve cold. HAVE SLEPT idAFY TEARS. perial Counsellor of State. is preating ' MerrY Minim -Mix to th ge er OiM pint get thith cream, three tablespoon- ee-- eentievenat of a sensation in Europe. It As a. sort' of scarecrow for the great tele of 4-X sugar and one esupfet of elteniartable and eminent's Caoes;of Peal iv wile Have nom hi Me Arno or - - ' ' , ' military Powers As far as poseible eherry jucts, fieVor.with a drop of P it tends to show the impossibility of eiorpheue fer Lang periods, bittee almond extract or pineaPPled. - We are apt to laugh away the legend' Set on toe OW thoroughlY chillek 1 1., • any great war in the neer futufe, and ob RIP Van Winkle Ms though it Were ' ''' razse4 ti" que°Uen' °Ave the nee - then wilig. !stiff. When wnipPedi turn tin tied tmpeovemente in armament eel/oiled, a Peint where a battle might be like the famous one of the Kilkenny cats? The following are some of the . salient points in the pamphlets Into a mold, oiver,tightlY awl bory •in ridiculously impossible; but one or tWo Balt and iiee tie tor freeziog, Let atand recent oases of catalePsY have 'called A 4 •Peuple 'Of home before terving. If to mind some wonderful instances. of the crown does mot whip aolid; take off . the frOth et. et rises °pa lay oo a sieve liVing Etip Van Winkles who slept for to dram befgre turning into tne mould. tWenty yeare and more; so true to. ' ', 'Cherry Roll,-Alave ready 4 AarrOW, life was Shakespeaie's description Of ' • . "lip to tne present teem, as 4 rule, "sheet of puff paste, spread thiohwith sleep no "Death's twin brother," . petions *have waged was with hardlY Stoned therries, roll up and Piece' in a' . baking pen, dust well with:. rower and modern times is-HerMan• Harries, • wbo. of otie-teoth part of the means of • des - The' most remarkable sleeper truction at their dispporsoagl et.shsiertealtihze0Y4 im With •bite ef butter, Pour one haa been livielg for the latt- thirty Pwatiee.thedaY• The Jableeleoonful, Of not 'Water in the pen • Ind. bake in a hot oven until a deli- ...., Years on a farm • near St. Charles, in in war material belongs to the .come !iate, browo. • Serxe hot with, nerd or 4Linmsc'ta'. Tiarnit has been aseeep. Pon doiniOn, so that • all the • armies 'sherry Mum For the them! sauce, for Vocal& a qiierter of a century; and seand about •cqual- in thatereapect. Xt Dream pow -nett cuptal of butter...with in still alive. • ene heaping cupfot of poWdered sugar. l• .. • is needleire to say that ne one ,power Stir in as many bruised cherries' as tise • fie is a German by birth, fifty-seven can :obeain over :the othei powers a saieee will take without • seParating.' 'Years c4 ag°4 and has a Wife and 'faut.•. superiority whieh would insure success . . • : • ' • The sauce should. be cold' when served.; , ily of eive obildren.. One day oh .c.con-- P4 • . .war. . , • Cheery' Snortcake. - Steele,. sweeten big home Min 4he fields the German eThe recent of, all these improve - And mash ehe cherries. * Heve ready a farmer fell 'asleep in his. obair. That rich *oft deugh, roll out about an ineh ' wen in 1057, and etill Harms' iii sleep,* • mente in anmament constitutes ho sup - thick?: pot en round- or: square . evell-; ing on. .. .. charooterites the general increase of erfority ecet any'one 1)4)Wer. It simply ' t greased paw.and bake in quick oven, I . ,CHIIMREN GHOWH UP. . ' tir . Whezi done split in halyers and spread' His children imee grown up and ere DEADLY. EFFECTS. OF WAR with ,bietter. Place lower large pietist spread thiok with cher- e: half Qn a . Mking mete of the farm, but, authori- fee.. eie nations,. g,he puqu.ral con -se- ries, cover With the other half, • a d -14 es- dectioree:ethat their father„ • if • ever spread with the• rethaining cherriehk 'he wakes, will not knee: them. lie pill I clilaillegni‘elts 'othie•:diascatPrruttielotentsi4ins.. ttbliee spriokle lightly with sugar and serve herdly know himself, indeed, for since at Once with thiok cream or whipped e e h f 11 asleep he has' last seven steno seeking '.out 'of evailable meane•of.pro- ,. Onerryeepetee.e.efiee one pint of etoned. ..a sleeping skeleton, tection, and in a battle la the °Oen creaM. ,in weight, and is. now ,little more. thao Ihellifieri; three tahlespoonfuls of eager ,_ Seoresi. .of doctors ' have attended field these are now reduced to little or and one teaepbonful of flbur together. the ealese of the mystery, and. he will acue ,- • Earlier', but none- of them can explain lit othin4g.re• In the first. place mOdfirn claire the - construction • of military Line tne pie pan ;With peete, titrn in . probably go down to poeterity in medi- . fortified weeks, and •several 'the pheriles, sprinkle over a little •ca Is as one of the most aston- writers are of the opinion that the fu- istiiineir pahenomenas of th:e. nineteenth fidur, ceriee•With the oruet aad bake in . mit — • : . • ie moderate Oven; Another wey is to . my., • ture war 'will consist of a atruggle.for line a deep peeplate ivith ' piste ahd••• Thousandei of People have seen, tbe . • thecantureof a seriee ot intrenched bake. •flave red.d.y ' stoned cherries, eXtraordinery girl sleeper w•ho epee Pesitions. • , az . tti E h body of men thargen well •sweeteued. : When the crutst eis few: years ago on •exhibition• in lettio ' with the, duty ,fo defending pos ons 'baked:eV:the plat's wellewith the cher- .States. She had: been asleep far touree.44,.. e- 4 -- ries, healing . it in the •center. Scatter teen years, her enap" having began•'at, le, ew— er-maim earthworks. and dig trenthes therries over the tine; pressing -theni twelve Years ofage, when she was re•• -'tha u 4 7 , . . seq ently leaving mit the special into the oream so. that •they itre Cart- - . .I cotps Of i'ingineers, all the inrantry . covering from a fever. e ly coyered.:• Unlike the tanner of St. ' Charles, 'and. even the. oavaley will be provided ' -- • • • • hoveever, Miss Caroline Godsey awoke I wi- .1••••••••••• . frequently for ten or °fifteen minutes, ta the material properly belonging THE FLOWER'S LESSON. • •• • • ' and then went ofg to sleep again. She ! to 'pioneers, Each...particular eoideer . . appeared to be rierVous • when asleep; I will seek to cieete fon himself in one. There .ie a story told of a• .certain' and ;elenched her benea tightlY . as ! way 'or another a ehelter from •Whioh .king Whohad a large --garden, end One th°egb ih Pei -e• - " • • . • ' . • . he may fire under coter, The Inilitery ' TWELVE TEARS AGO • ' bee. d . day heardealt the plants and trees .. • • • • chess r of the futUre; thereforb, . • • ., ..,.• • . _ talking together. 'They , were all tied.' • Attention has -also lately. been. giv- : - • •• • • . en ,to the cate of e• girl- in America.: will ee dotted ail over by shelters more . ' The oak: miuniored *because it Coil& who fell aeleep twelve year's sge4,due_ • pr lesi exeensive, Which will, give. it • not.. bear, eweet fleiwers, the •rose la, ing a quarrel • with her seeeethettete the aspect of a vast territory 'dotted . merited .hiseautiii she' did. net bear. lase ant whce on waking recently in leer' - .. • lit over with gigantic mole hills.- - • • , mous. friuttlike the vine, ancl.-the vine up Abe Aware , I ' • ar s p sencee ins ant y teck, Tee. _. . . • •• 1 where,•it hen been ine I • ilia aesallant will also seeks eo put Waa '1394 latanietie it had to eling 'to a leirupted - in 1 ; re s If d ' ' • t b e ' le • . •. •, . wall, and could Oast no shadow Ot jits' thOugh it has been telegraphed eel Er'..1 hind heaps Of stones end trees, end . • reliable nines. agendy„ seetns too: re- 'every time lie•tan'he will dig eor him - men. • , . • • •• • • • merkable to be true.. . , • • : ' I self, by means of his :made, .4. little' " I am ' no use Once :f bonnet add . , Tnere la however an . authenticated 1 bele, team, • whieh he will continuo to gweetness to- life," mid the oak. • 'case of.a womao en 'Paris. who fell ars ! fire up tie the moment When the °pi:late "And I Might as well die, *as I can. ieeP in 1894 on beincelarmed ;by the I tenity arrivee for hine to , eush for- t beat 'luscious fruit," sighed the 'aPPearanee Of a' niegistrate. and tWo ward." : . • '.: • .. , • . : . •,, . • - . - .. . . gendarmes at her heuse; and. who hai I .' M. jean- de Bloch thinkri that theate: fee . sleCt, ot had slept, whenthe case wad tack of an intrenched pcisition wield od the:vine, Molt despendent than last mentioned in England, .ever since, 'be so murderous for • the aesailant• ,. grow:sedentarily- • : . e . ,Thfe women 'whines name is . Kate ':thet . the 'latter would, stone- guerite Bonvenal;feil asleeei ;at Thenel- ly attempt ,lit: Froin 'this opin- " Whae possiblei good den / do in the woeld 1" : ' • • • . " " ' les, a villege near pt...Quentineon key! ion the.ebnclusion seems, to be that. the 25, 18'84; and when the last • repoet defensiee will alwaYs haye an &dyer'. Thera the king looked round,' and 'reached this conntry she had been in age oem the offensive. NO one has the •saw a. ger .11Mo pansy which looked a 'state Of catalepsy. thirteen years: slightest idea of what a future battle iip••and iniired; while . all the other ' plants end • teem were. *sad. . The pont woman has at least one thing' will • bee Ail that militarY.. writer!' to be thankful for; she has never tieee Mid upon the subject is fuel. Of " What niakertyou so cheerfai, when. heard the name Of Dreyfus! • ' contradictions. We find, oterselves in all the rest are so gloomy t" b • le- ad. . e ae- : Such remarkable cases as these belie the presence of *- - ' - .. ' you wanted -me, for you planted me recently • there was a: girl iii a Chel-1 • .' A GREA.T UNE/IC:AWN " ei " I thOughte said the' paritY,' ' at .ti not occuired foi many years, but quite e -. tenha.M. hospital who, slefpt for several geas-it is celled in mathematicia The . here, end because ;you pianted ins, I daYs, end' at Bureenbnelrent a "alert soldiers and Generals ere ignorant of thought Yon Wood me, to I jugt made.' un my mind to try to be the best little. , time ago• a girl slept for four *days, the' fate that swells. them in. any and. was aboill to be discharged, when future .wa,r, . pansy that cenld be." • ' • • . ° • . , • r .: she fell to tleep again; and. reniained • "Modern alma up to the present, • ---T-• - •• . unconsmous nearly a 'week. .'"" t have never been ' tried' under the HOW TO aa'sTral.f1111IT S,.YRUPS ••••'' '. A BLOW CAUSED, IT. , ' eaMe conditions ati they will be tried io Plenty of 'cool end refreshing•drinkir - • A mazninist in Vienna a few months a war • between- two great *Awoke: ago -Slept thirty4ive days after re:. There is reason te believe that With of the right sort are as: eseential - to ceiving' a blow on ' the head, end an, the modern tactics the actionh•of-small health as they' are to comfort during the sumnier months, and the housewife 'should . as cotiscientiouely provide a variety of these a6 slia ',does" thelood for her family. Indeed, nob a now of them are eneep as well as.drink.. iestineineelriade beverage is at once so ,......erbeautiful and delicious as those•made With fruit syrups and shrubs, and every housewife. should provide. a few ;Tye:- I. ,elitlei cefeeach in the season of ;small frulte. Properly made and stored, they keep as well as canned •fruits, and are fine for flaeoring 'ices; dreams, custards, arid varioas kinds of pud- dings 'and. other dessertie :They ree quire more Boger than. jellies, •and. un- like that conserve should be made of perfethly ripe fruit. • Ilse granulated sugar, earthen or granite ward ves- sels, and wooden or silver spoons In all this: varoius operations. When done. they Oan be bottled, but are More cone' venient when* kept in pint-size fruit jars. Currant Syrup. -Wash, • drain on a cle'th and eteni red currants; plade en an earthen oi• &finite ware vessel. Mash thoroughlY with a weeder' maeh- er and Set in it\,.. warm pities for 24 hours, or until fermentation , begins. This .destroys the. pectin contained in Akio) 6 e fruit and prevents the syrup from -"'" flying. Drain the Mee. throligh a cheesecloth bag that has been wrong, , • out of h0 water, by suspending tbe latter over a deep bevel and Occasionalt ly pressing agaihst the sides with tWo woodeh ladles or moons.' Wringing.' or squeezing is sure to make the syrup cloudy. ' Measure, allow two pounds of augar for each pint of juice. set over a glow frie, and stir constant- ly until every:particle of sugar is die - solved. As aoon as it is blunt* hot, take froin'the fire, akim as often as; lowed in the new sanatorium, are m- any scum rises, and when cOld, Pour . sponsible fox the well-being of the in- .. Into jars and. seal. Wrap in heavy mates, A course of hygienic treatmerit brown papere oha store in a cool, dry cerefolly ditected, is presorthed, and place. Make °hefty, raspberry, or a the patient lives the greiter.part of combination of .raspberry and euriant his life out of doots. syrup, in tine:mine way. : 1 The salient features of the treat - Spiced /31ackberry Syrup. - Black -1 ment are an.abundence of nourishing I food, a earefully regulated amount o berry cordial. an old and effecitiVe I exercise, rest and pure air. 1 remedy for eummet bowel complaint, is l' The food, provided is of a simple but objectionable to many mothers' because I , nourishing character, and each is sn- it contains brand. Uted.plentifully to i eouraged ta persevere in taking a cet- tain preeceibed quantity. The owl- -ere! Mous- appetite of the inealid goon Jul- flavOr drinking wtiter. the syrup li given ia en 'excellent preventire and' proves- with this regular mode of liv- reinedy foe euch illneae , and, vontaug4 nig; derepepsia bee,omes a thing of the no MIMS vvhatever. Mash.the fruit,1 /Met, and a cure has begun. A larger gore, and allow +me heaping eoPitti of lotted, the waste 'teases, and an in - 1 quantity of food can now be teesimi- bring !slowly tO a boil and strain. lame sugar fee twee* pint of juice, one tee- crease in weight is soon noticeable. spoonful. eat% of cinnaraon aod . hut- . "Whichever way, the wind. doth meg, and half as Much cloves and gin- • blow." its free ingrees is unimpeded, ' ger. Tie the apices la 9„DiecO of mese , windowa are kept open day and night, lin; put all over ir tilow fire; stir until. and fullest advantage is taken of the the toga lelboroUghly distolved; let fresh country air. boil two itninutet, ekiiii, take out the NO houseinald's clutter ever waves over this original establlehment, for it alike* mid alai et oboe. Spited Ilidithritry syrupe_iiitt this ia /sapiently Maifitained that dust M- I/toyed from One Spa inevitably flkd " IMO propertiee as the above. Make in, to snail*, and cannot be satisfaotOri- • the same inaillier, using: ginger and ly diaported of by the utual MethOds "- trutineg, With rthee atid cloves. practised by good housewives. 'Atli' dust, at everybody knows, is a hal41 ...Lenten Srrpp. - This tyrup makes . hunting ground for bacilli. „delidotts letriOnade. Grate the yellow , eva.trowdino,/ unnatural miter/lent, rind; frOrit slit freer leiMme and atir it the eating of tainted foods, and the with three .toblespoonfuls of powdered / impure And emoke-laden atrootphart of great towns ate all reepontibje for the tutor. SqUseeze the juice from one t dozen legions and attain Oat the seadr. tri"411 " e'n"1"/"1"t °P.Pbthlata* t pore air, othilight and enitame i2Oirt, . relinare the:16111p from the , Skies, holt it five min:0W' iti two ou uls of *or ishiment ore all simple wesions to titil Odin Ao on ,.. Atratil., fight Satoh * deadly enem,y, , ' - eit alto* one and . /1 gar for ,!•• '' • • • • • • „. even stranger case of a eoung Amer- tieneme must become more and' rnore oan was reported a year or two ago, diffteillt en 6'000414 of the great dia- l!), a fit of passion one day the youth tame that must mud between the op - shot his father and mother for oppos- posing forbes, the length of the line of ing him in a love affair, and while battle, Ace. Now this task, in a great awaiting nis trial he fell asleep, and measure, will fall to the let of the of - remained asleep for just over three item.; of the .reserve, whose courage years. and intelligence canhot be doulited, but At the end. of' that time he awoke, who, nevertheless, have not had the but he insists to thie • day that he neeessary experience, It remains, ther- knows nothing of the crime, and when fore, to be seen how these enormous asked. how old be is he invariably re- masses can be led and mobilized in plies -a8 if he had. not lived the three case of a .European war. That is. a years that he was Unconscio'ua ,problera ef which a very imperfect idea There are in various parts of the can be gained with the forces, relative - world several men and women who ly small, that are 'brought into adieu have been asleep for two or three years, and who on waking sonee day will- be amazed to know, that the Czar Nicholas is on the Russian throne, and that Bismarck and Gladstone • are dead. during the great autumn manoeu-• vres, Count von Caprivi was perfect- ly righiewhen he mid. in the German Reichstag that the nation!' of Edrope had become afflicted with a monotnania of numbeis. As a matter of fact, since the adoption of universal mili- tary service the powers. are endeavor- ' AID FROM THE HILLS. ing to call under the 'colon all men • able to carry arms, The forces that the great powers had} on, hand in 1896 Open.Air Treatment tor Consumpiive • wens as follow's: Assp1ed ha England. • Germany, . . . 6 2 5f40 000 •eet le time when the rtttentiori of Austria-H'ungary. 1.'30400 Prince and people alike have -been dir- Italy. . 6 ‘• • 1,281,000 eoted to the terrible mortality 'caused France. . • . . 2,554,000 Russia. .. 4.4 . . . 2,800,000 by the ravages of consumption, it is "By adding these figures together gratifying to learo that a sanatorium has j'ust been established. In England wee i we find that the Dual AlliancephiaedAnii. 5,354,000 men and the. Tri for the express treatthent of patients ance 5,0500 Men. Consequently the suffering from tuberctilOsie. This es- two alliances stand about on an even tablishment, unique in Many respects, footing as regards numbers. 'Everybody in the military world is situated on the top of the Mendip * Hills, in Somersetshire, nearly 900 teet knows that the morale of an army is of the very highest importance; but at above the level of the sea, where fine the present day • we don't know what scenery and pure, bracing air will un - the morale of an artny can be, since we doubtedly prove wonderful factore have rtot had Any great war for thirti the work of healing. years. Since the Franco-German war Teyo fully-q.ualifieu medical men who have themselves been cured by the lystem adopted at Nordrach, in the Black leorest, which cure is to be fel- ereeeeierie , ; e',1 ME Very great changes have been produc- ed in the social 'strata of different pee - pies, both from a -material and' an in- tellectual point of view. The moral state of a people id reflected absolute- ly in its army. Conseouently the morale Of an army is nothing more than the mendition of mind of a nation, It would be interesting, therefore, to know what would be the moral state of the modern armed massea in case of defeat, or even Of vidory if the mon- paign should be Continued for any great length of time. "The armament of the war fleets yield; nothing to that of the land forme as regards material thab it has rorCei regarde miterial•and engines of destruction. The progress that it has realized ia everi more striking, Just now there seems to be a prefer-. enee for fast oruisers armed With ItILP/D-FlItiNG GUNS. Endeavora are also made to improve torpedo boats, whose mission it. is to approach the enemy without being Seen and to fire a torpedo at him nt short range, iso as to strike the veseel below the Water line. If ther manoep- '&6 succeeds, the lots of the ahip is oettain, Bet therm torpedo boats hare tO doent With rapid -firing artillery. Mid it Is admitted that, if they are WU in time, they can be sunk by the projeistiles of 'the latter. Row will naval warfare of ths future be carried on, and what will be the stepect of the future naval hattlet So far as the fleete are ovoiserned, the Dual Alliance and the Triple Allianos are about 'equal. But Dilemma ralZ4Liall and follows with tenscitr her aim, and that is to main.. 6,11. tWo other powert. troy a Gest as Strong tar the fleets of t this ers which at eliornimill ante warfare Waifs of tots ezpoted then ts is a greet tare (iota - be a o - , Will Make a MVO war upon the ishliw of commerce. "But the powers which at ear/Moue peouniery atiorificsee, ars continuing to auguinent the number of thelr-slilpii and to improve' their arreameit are dealiag with teproblera which they can never olive, It ix evident Unit if the enormous mama of worksre are thrown out of employment the retalt will be a gigantic perturbation' in the economy of life. The people wbo live be' imam of indiusty and commerce will suffer the mose from the (salmi - ties of war. Factoriee and Dhow being 'shut up, millions of workmen living from dal to day upon their wagee will be, with their thrown, loto the most awful misery. Supposing that a generel war shoold femur Whieh shellid last for a year, Germany would be out of provisions 102 clays, France 06 days, England 274 days, Italy 75 days' and Austria 7 days." Although the annexation of Aimee- orra ne y Germany constitutes one of the -principal oauses_ of the preeent armaments in Nurepe, M, von Bloch of the opinion that the•question can never be finally determined by war, and that a futuro war would only 9 increasing the pre- sent misunderstanding between France and Germany. Moreover all humanity would curse the inettga'tors of a war that would ocemion to, Europe soon unexampled misery, It is ' prebable that France will finally be obliged to consent to an entente with Germear. DANGERS II INDIGESTION, • . 46••••••• • THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JULY 10. oThe Ineerowe le Sae Flory learsioa," Poo. 8. 11-11e, Golden Text, pas. 0. PRACTICA.14 NOTES. Verse IL Nebuch‘dnezzar, Xing of Bebyloa: We mai thbilt of him as Mt - time in royal etate; surrounded by his courtiers" and gave.% Sieadrath, Mee - bath, arid Abeduego. Young men with Whole We became acquaintectin the teat Leeson under the name of Hallaniali, betlehael, and Azariab. Serve ney gods. In antiquity wailer goveinment and religion were not merely iutertwined; they were practically the. And, as We have already aeon, there was noth- ing aboard to the conscience of the an- cient world to the deification, of eking, or in a royal mandate ordering pray- er to certain gods,. or forbidding such prayer. The golden linage which I have set up. Described the preceding verses of this ohaptet. Eithee an idol, of a etatue of the king, or, as some have conjectured, .a etatue reCresent- ing his imperial power and 'suggest- ed by his dream, 15, The sound of the corbet, flute, harp, eackbut, Psaltery, and. dulcimer. The mono of the Orient is nearly all in a minor leey and harmony " was tmknown in ancient time's. Doubtlees A Pi/YEW/AN GIVES SOME HINTS . much that was agreeable to the Baby - ON THE 'SUBJECT'. ogeeireirseorsaDviesseausznien Lire by Summer woke...modern. lonlan ear would be rank• diecorl to - 'mire. Only antiLfe_railiar with .orien- s tal tantlii0 Call understand the liberty • --.. Use wisdom in Traa-a'S -given to the varions nanaicia•aa4 wIl°46 tribUted to "indigestion" be nee " variations." All kinds of musio. An tuners are . often what we wouid call, The deaths of promin.ent men, at- cationed eome surprise, becanse indi- Ve -'.- outburst of almost every ,sort writes Dr. Chas. E. Naminack. . .' . of instrument, in almest every key, evith almost endlese trilling. The wind in- gestion is: &eight e trifling aiiment, The average healthy ma ia ao !'Wrilet7 and ?finte" Av'el.e. blissfully unconscious of his.:416-stiv-e- 'atr.amenta. :,Tbe eharpf - "sackbut," tion. is a complicated process, rettutr-' adt that ne does not kaew that aiges.. and merits. The- "dulcimer" it is Wpm - "psaltery!' • were string instru- ing the orderly worldrig of a number sible . to ideally. Worship. Bever - of viol °row. , . . once by prostration. A burning fiery Every AO of thee complex pooess. furnace. TO'burwctiminals alive wee affords a chance to go wrong. . The net•.oefensiie to the' morel sense of teeth, if imperfect or unclean, m -a ---y- tne ancients, and, all who ceme under form .neeta for germs wiriat...rja up.. the ban of' royalty were regarded- as set the chemical ereuracY of the, Jobe eri.mlials. 64 . Th °that this 'erne' sentence ,a Failure to thew thormighly may allow the food, to be bolted in luniiese which fwuirthn a ac en . °pew a smtentgobaatb tlyhe leg; t a ao fd abr di cokes; 'defy the chennical power of the rest of at the mouth below. The dootned men . • weee thrown down upon the burning 'the: epparatus. Alternate chilling and heating o the. we's frimi2 f ' above iVho is that god stoMach, as by ice .oream ence hot cof- that shall deliver you out of my handst The confident* of the Hebrews in Xi - fee at the same dinner, nampers the hoyah was paralleled, by the Gonna - stomach. . These are but a fen! a the 1 ewe' of every other *gen in its god, ..a. d tier '' IllieltelicX Irene.. nal; many faults of the indiiidual. ' • • ftt ELS " : Granted that the .ordinary ruletei of uee meciaerno phreames lore° antiquwe facts, personal hYgione ate .foliciwed by a being one, wars between kinge and tut - man, is lie' Still safe frdin eriotent 'at- Vona came to be regarded almost .as tailles of indigestion / EY. nie nieans. wars between gods and religions. In the lood itself may tulle unsuspeet- 16. we are not careful to ansWer the,e in this matter. We can scared./ ed d . • pearseevsLoonfainy,diegxeitilonilg, uonhaasnssoceuktiend ' sthlteffseRnethnrteelY badramveireyoung men. "Caye- the _answer of organs, are cases, of vwi tt tahl ul has its old sense of burden with anxiety." To "a.nswer," Nebuche.dnez- A UT , ear meant' to make -a -decision on the •Such unfortunate results freqeirntly tenets he had graoted, •Whether or follow the eating of food which is or- noiethey wore to be thrown into dinarily harmless. These results mey burning fieryfurriace did 'not detract be due to variety of causes. Certain their minds. • • plants or animals Used- as food con- 17. It it be so. Some -authorities tain injurious substances during their would translate "Assuredly," but If it reproductive periods. /quits or ant.' be eo " ie quite as emphatic. Our God male may absoeb or feed upon sub. whom we serve is able to deliver us., stances which are poisonous to men. • This answers both' of Nebuchadnezzar's The venal onset is marked by vomit- questions:* "Is it true that ye did not big and purging, representing nature's serve my Goiter "Yea, verilye we attempt to get ri,d the offending ma.. serve our God." "Who is that God who tenet and, in unchecked crises, these shall :deliver you out ' of my hands?" are quickly followed by constitutional "Our God; he ..will `deliver us either symptoms proportionate to the sever- from death or in death." - ity of the cage. ' I ,18. But if not. If in hisemystenIous Special varieties of food furnish poi- 'Providence he permits his companions sons peculiar • to themselves. Thus, to be overwhelmed in this world: Be meat is dot safe food for man when it known unto thee, 0 king. Words of the animal furnishing it is infected defiance, We will not serve thy gods with tuberculosis, anthara,k and other nor worthip the golden image. e. These diseases. Various parasites Lhat in- 'men are not serving God for reward.. fest pork and beef set up correspond- I Though he slay them, they will atilt beg diseases in man, hut these para. trust in Win. It has been wisely said saes ca be destroyed by thorough by a great commentator that their cooking. I deliverance, frimi sineul compliance wile Milk y be the carrier of the in- as great a miracle in the kingdom of fiction in such diseases as typhoid, 'grace as that frone the furnace was in scarlet fever, and Asiatic) cholera. Milk, the kingdom of oaten. ' may also transmit tuberculosis from I 19. Full of fury. This absoluM mon- animals to men. -But Beide from theee it arch had never before met. such doter - may contain germs which will develop mined resistance to his will. The fornx pousons at a temperature of BO degrees of his vleage was changed. Nebuchad- Fahrenheit. • ' I nezzlir had been singularly patient Cheese and other milk products, I with these youognien, but now that his such as ire cream, custard, Grimm patience had COMO to an ene, his fury puffs, may he similarly contaminated: shows itself in all his countenance and gestures. Heat the furnece one seven SOME FISH ARE POISONOUS' at certain seasons of the year, • The flesh of other fish may be poisthous on account of the food. upon which they feed. Fish poisoning may be slue to substancee employed sometimes 'tn, kill the fish. Poising from rya is most preral- eat countriee where people live largely on rye bread, and emeoially when the soil is inadequately culti- vated. The eoting.of deranged maize may likewise give rise to Poison symp- . The principal danger of -fuod pole- on.h4 arises from the accidental con- tamination of food with foreign sub- stances, and this Is eapedially , true of articles which are uncooked or un- washed, or which are cooled by putting ice, into them, .All food stuffs which require dboling, including water, should he put into olean containers and tee should be packed around, the containers, not iritroduced late the food or liquid. The inteeior of blocks of ice has been. found to contain harm- ful bacteria, some of which resist freezbag temperature. POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Man once ate the ereiante . bat now they cremate the man. To the deaf and dumb maxi aotions speak louder thah words. In the game of life the one-cirmed man always plays a lone hand. • There is no sympathy 'between a proud mind and a beggerle puree. \ The itexton makes a grave Mistake\ when he digs it in the. wrong lbt. Civilization enables some men tie realize the fact that they are ear - ages, • Amiketion 18 a feeling that you want to doeiomething that you know you can't. A -little flattery taittes owlet to a wise man and a good deal of In tastes 'sweet to a fool, A: man could make 'nethey-withefive fingers if he didn't have ten for it to slip through. The Man who gets intoxicated. at night has plenty of time for sober te- election the next morning. There are sone thinga in this world that Man le.able to find out, but it's different with a woman. When a bachelor and a spinster studiouslr avoid matrimony It is an- other ease of "two %outs with but a single thought," GOOD ItEASON MR, It. You on't seem to be on van" good terms with your brother. No ,sir; I'm not. And 'there's a mighty good reasOn for, it, too, Any- one who treats his brother as ehab- bily ae my brother treated me cannot exotic/ to retain his affeetion and re•• sPect•r 'Whet did ha 6ter ao pint DO te Me Sir, that brother o mins its two years younger than I a end rot by• the din% he was greets he had. the audacity and lack o burly densideration VS so far dW heel Oita SUMO oit t parental roof nte inet fag latu. will tat times more than it was wont to be heated.' Seven is the symbol of perfec- tion. The furnace was heated as much as it could be heated, but the hotter the furnace the more signal the de- liverance. The king's passion defeats its own end. 20. The most mighty men that were • • y. os igoro ES y muscular members of bis bodyguard. 21. Them men were bound in thpir coats, their hewn, and their hats, and their other garments. Four articles of dress are here pointed to: 1, Flow- ing trousers, garments something like , the Zouttve trousers: 2 underclothiqg or tunics, woolen shirts.; 3, outer•robes; • 4, other gannents ; shoes, turbans, gin. dles, etc. .• • 22. The king's commandment wen urgent, BM orders were given with violence, so that the strong men of the bodyguard' lost their own lives in throwing the three heroes into the furnace. The flame of the fire sieW those men, That the lives of the three Hebrews Were preserved and the lives of the frontiers were forfeited was full of meenieg to the by otanders. Fell deem bound into 'the midst of the burning fiery fumaace. Before the flame lied consumed their bands the soldiers Were killed by the heat. • 24. Tee king was astonied and rote up in baste and spake. "Astonied ' id an old Brigitsh word for astoished, 'The dignity of the king had been con-. sumed by the flash that killed his guardMien. His counselors, ilia courtiers or nobles that waited, around his thtbne. Did not we cast three men boulmajes y, Nebuchadnezzar is so eaten- "We" is the neural form of Idea y what he etees that he cannot Cruet ins own memory. 23.11 see four Itlea 100146. Only three had lIsen, cast in, and they were hound. The Original of the speech given in this Verse is made up of abrupt ex- claneetions, Walking in the midst of the rite. 'Why did they not leave it? Ther wers dimply in the hands of God. Illemiracie prevented the fire i-Otri smelling them. They waited his time to teleato them. The form of the, fo rth La like the Son of God, The at ect of the fourth resembles "a son of the gods.' Nebuchadnezzar had n olir theology. Ile Meant a taper,. nitural being, an angel.. .. fil. Nebuchadnezzar came near. We iit p esume the heal to have now sub - e ed. ''Ye servanh of the most gh God. The Ohaldeans believed 1 Malay gods who lived in families ate words of Nebtiehodnezzar show eudden conviction that the Hebrew d Jehovah, was supreme -in heaven. God of godo. We have already not - d that among the liebrevvs "Most Ugh " wart a title of Jehovah. 27. Pritidea goveroors, and captains, Ind the king's eounselors. Satraps, db- -intim, and govetnort, and cOunaelore, fficere of the empire gathered from all quartets. Thesitinen, who had beeo brought to the capital for the pur- pose of hermitic an idolatrous image, are soon to return to their' homeo to spread. abroad the glory of the Spirit- ual God, Saw these Men The niirsole had been openly performed. Upon whoe6 bodies the fire bad no power. See ha. ag 2; Heb. g. A Nor was s, hair of thAr head ditiged. See Lake 12. 7; a, Not the smell of flee had on, t . 846 / Thom. 8. it 23 N bnehadnazzar troaloa POW Nebuoh nazzar now became a shipei Jehrontla, we cannot Styr hier re la 41.. Meerienger i referring' to the form of the fourth. Delivered Ms eervanta that truoted, to blra. This feithfulnese of je- bovah to his aervants is the treit ellet appeale to the beaten king, who doubt- leee sought to *bow forth the !Mine conduct. Changed the kingei words. This is a woble trait in Nelpushadnez- sar's obaraoter, to thank God for mak- ing vain the kind's endeavor to force men into obedience+. Yielded their bodies to the fire. They might not terve by morifice and prayer. Nor worship. By tbroWing themselves on the ground. HUNTERS' : EXPERIENCES BITTEN BY TIGERS AN0 LIONS, BUT WERE NOT HURT, Wounds Are leinness When Inflicted be ailtragl 267;1: tit; r W8 ell:s ani1114Z., Re"' To be killed by a wild lien le peio- less death. This surprising statement is made on tlee' authority of an Rog - lith gentleman who bee oorapiled ac- counts of the sensations of -mores of hunters., of bik game who. have beep in the clu.tches of lions and rescued Where near °death. • ' " re Nature 'Cruel I" is the title of this book of anienal 'stories, coraPiled by J. Crowther Hirst, His object Was to detemenne ethether tbe death ot eni- raaN by the' attaoks of larger Orme is cruel or panefule. ox whether partial unconseiousiNs ..10 caused when the large carnivore seize their prey. The latter belief dates from the cureoue experience of Dr, itvingatthe, •who preserved a oalm and analytical frame of mind while a' lion' was bit- ing • him, 'and set down his sensation; in the order. which. they Occurred*: The animal k000ked him down, Srunch- ed the lower.bones of his Arra into splinters aod left eleven •teetlewoonde in hie upper arm ; yet.the (lector de- clared that he " had no sense ot pain :nor feeling of tereor Fro& •the letters published by Me. Hirst it appears that in the greater number of oases pain, 'and even acute fear; aeri thsent entitely• when the at - tricking beant is one of the larger oar: invert. The rueh and shoek tie a lion Or ttgee Produces a nervous insensibil- .1ty. to. pain. • Matters 'are Bo ordered that the bite of a dog or a ferret • hir niore painful than the injuries inflicted hy the jaws'ilf a lion. • , • PERSONAL EXPERIENCES. . Maier Invezerity istates that • " the °lawn and teeth entering the fleah do not htirt as moth yeu 'woold think," but that the squeeze given ' by the 'jaws en •the bone is painful. When* knocked over he was still keenly eone scions, and felt none . of. the dreamy •Aamsaelon eiperieneed by Liviegstone: , te 08 Mis ag2ooti ren wgS wfmna ueg;tae ssut r,0 nkwd da dos wi dunl. .oytn as kol 000unws- vvlhat: had happened .until he found himself standing 'up after the acci- dent. " I • felt no pain,e' he writes, " not, I believe, owing to any special interPosition of Ptovidenee, but sunply that the shock and Iasi of blood made me incapable ot feelnig it. There was no epain for a few days until it' was btought. on by ehe oe arm on the twelve days' eide tbe waste'. ,Oe his attack by a lion. in 1895,•Capt. Noyee says that he was knocked Aown and his•hand badly bitten, but he "was not ponscioue of any peeling of fear or any pain :whatever, .probably beciuse there was no time, but felt •exaetiy- as .baitiltemtaatdebb:en howled. Over in.!, foot-, A remerkable accident wes one which befell Lieut. 'Vandezee in 1895,' near Beira. The lion charged him down en the ustial way, mangled his thighs 'and fractured one of his arias. aDuring -the time the attack on me bythe lion was ineprogrese," he writes, • " I felt no. pain whatever, althoingh there was a distinct feeling okbemg Intten,-that is, I wan perfectly conscibus that the lion' was gnawing at me, bue there was no pain. . I May. Mention that while my thighs were being gnaw- ed I took two carteidgee out of the breast pocket of my shirt and threw. them to the Keine, who was hover- ing a few yards away, telling him to loadmy rifle, and immediately the lion died and rolled off me. I. scrambled up •end. Mok is loaded rifle and fired at' the. carcase'," • TIGER BITE THAT PAINED. Personal experience of tiger bites are. more difficult to obtain, partly because fen! 110W attelopt tiger -shooting on feet. Out of: eight inatanoes given by Mr. Hirst, pain is enentimied in only enee In' this Oats a tiger seized Mr. J. Han- sard, now a forest offioer, in Ceylon, by slippixig behind him, putting its Paws on hie shoulder, and taking the: back of his neck in its:jaws. The beast bit his Meek twice as it dragged him down a ravine and he felt intense pain wasarth: teeth crunched through at the base of the skull.. The tiger was shot and its e!e'im did not feel pain after- .. Bites of leopards, which are not heavy, are often very painftil. . But this is not inyariable. Mt. W. A: Wil - lock, of the Indian Civil Service, felt neither terror nor pain, as he was mauled by a big leopard; and Mr. tek- tite of Gunyong, North Caohar„ while having his arm •broken by a leopard's bite •felt • a pang like toothache, but oily for an instant. Lient.-Col.giBrow-nlow, R. E., bitten through a hand and thigh, Was un- aware that the tiger had. done more than give him a tremendous shaking, media "quite positive that to be kill- ed by a tiger must be painless ex- tinction for a deer or other animal." WM'S FOR THE FARMER. PEAR, AND APPLE °SLIGHT. This "pocket of blight is due to very minute germ which finite mem; to the tender cells and juicee inside the protecting beikt of the tree. There it ni,ultiplies into untold billion* turning the healthy sap into a pole- onoue fluid, and calming whims in- jury or death to part of the' treet and in extreme rates to the entire tree. What will stop it t Villien the blight is 'rampant In the orchard, very itte tie, if Anything, caq be done to atop lt. The dead and dying branches and leaves are but the natural result of the dieease that has been ravaging - the vital parts within. It ia the -sick- ly portion of a blighted leaf or branoh that contains' the elements of danger. Fighting fire blight can thief be dorm effectively by preventive measures. Nothing will cure it, so fa,r as ie known, short of fire. Nor will spray- ing even check it. 'The disease is too deeply seated to be reathed by outside treatment. It will go from apple to pear er quince trees, or from them to the apple. The wild red haw and some other pomaceous trees are alight- ly affeoted by it. 'Die germs will not multiply • when thee temperature e. is pool. They lie •dorniiiiit doring the winter time, and einder the warming' influences of spring they begin to grone A. liquid oozes out ef the die, eased breathes, which, contains mil- lions of these deadly gernes. This m carried on the feet of inebots and ira other- ways to neighboring trees, 6 NO LONGER CARRIES A PURSE. Tie tailor oxide girl•who wishes to do the xeal ereart thing nowadays no longer. carries a handsome puise in her hand, nor does she wear it strnng about her neck On one of the long chains so lately fashionable. She keeps her change carefully tucked away in Some of the many tiny pockets with which her tailor suit is so plenti- full; supplied. All she is supposed to want in the way of money for car fare, lee cream, soda etc., can be carritd in this way. Vorflarge purchases there is the welt ayatem and the o. d.," arrangethent, so that all the money she needs ,for her daily Me oan be stowed away la her jacket peoket, e "Of what wit are poeketii,' daYs the practical girl, "it one does not use' them?" CRIME, _ Escroquerie is a atlases which has no distinot counterpart in any country bat Prance. An English lady Waa re- cently sentenced tO 12 monthe' impris- eminent for ordering a costume she was not able to pay for, and an Eng- lieh governess Watt SaateaCea tO abt weeke iMprisoninent for taking it cab without Teeing able to pay the fate. The French are erainentty• pritetioal People, and Ate no great difference betVeeetir tom:flag off With an article and a'etting it wilheet paying for it, It often happens that the English fall under the law with regard to escro. querie, ..HAD BEEN STUDVING UP. trather, said. one of thaetype of young men that is likened. to the lily, roa have frequaotly advised me to , emulate the busy bee, Tea tad vrith very imsatisfitetory r ,fea. to tellOW 3111 It er INTEREST Awn. Tim !RAY YANKEE. aisieldisrly Interest is tlio Doings -Mattson et Minuet and tUrth Gathered trom tiff Dons Record. Philadelphia will soon possees the. longest asphalted etreet in the world. • A yelent for the construction of steel - freight oars will be establisned at Chioago. Hawes City, Mo., had lifts" ChritAtiart Endeavors Societies, with over 2,000 member's. Portland. is one of the moat beautifue cities on tne Pacific °east, and. is thee principal, seaport of Oregon. *According to new directories there are in Manhattan and Brcinx more than 3,700 phyansiens, and 7,900 law,. Yers. Joel Chandler Harris, Georgia's farce! the auehor, breeder and poet, is have an exhibit of jerseY cattle at the Paris Exposition. In 113 of the 137 counties' in Goof- gia the saloon is peohibited. The) dis- oerisary system is in operation In six • of them 'counties. Horace F. Barnes, formerly of' Tre- mont Temple, Bostonehas aceepted the plane ofefinancial director of the Cuba* industrial relief fund.. Sta.tistics of accidents sbow that am AA:nerican ten travel by rail 72,000,0904 miles before, in the la.ncl. of avereiges. 'it ia his turn to be Jellied. '•The Johnson Steel Company,- of Lae-. ain, Ohio, will spend 5200,000 on boraes where the germs ruid lodgment. They for Its working men, office employes lairecateeft.felonrabl o have troorgctuabeced, wthtterorueghthetyhe fidaede iteAd Noeffwiceyrostkoffinnthe icsoimetntyli.d t easy access to ate circulating sap. bid. .a fabulous sum for, Admiral, ' From there the diesese Soon spreads . , . +. • . . __ ,, into the twigs and: then into the larg- ... -, Dewey s butterfly collection, an Greer er branches. • They also enter through whith, was promptly •refused, , e' is• there that the disease most cone- ehancellor of New York TJniv,ersity, . thd tender growth of the new Wood; It' John Henry McCracken, san•tf 'the monly apitears, especially on apple and has been. elected .president of West - quince trees • during the warm weather mineter College, Fulton, -Mo. P in June and july, when•the shootre are .,,,,... . . .• .. very tender. Wbere thunder shower!, "L's. Roswell P. Hitch000k attributes are verY frequent •in mid -summer; the her safety during her recent tour of the Klondike to the raesenee of a pair of enormous Great Dane dogs, '• • . The exports from • Philadelphia, . of petroleum to foreign •ports, for the . i r, , As has already been, said, 'prfilVelittAra , measures are the only kind to use. The , • 1 tirst three mouths of this year, shove sources of infection must be destroyed.] • ..„,..: . .. . • a falling 'off of. 22,000,600 gallons. . If the sickly, half -matured twigs are I. zu e original song, "Dixie Liind,;i• cut off, below where any disease exists I was' composed. in 1859 by Daniel Dee..1 , : there can. be *little opportunity. for its I calor Emmett, as a "walk -around" 'for. spread. The great • difficulty is, 1:0 . Bryant's minetrels then performing int koow when we are below the disease. Mechanics' nail, New York. • . No one can -tell' absolutely how. far e: skillful scientist, and withs corn- Co-operative stoles, tried in several • down it may extend,„except, the meet ' , !places in ehe United Statese and gene pound. microscope. It is usually safe, orally resulting in fatiure, are donne . however, to eut a foot or a little more Ward sign. ot any affection. If the out I - • . . • • .•• • • ke a successful busine,se in Iowa, accord- . below where there is the least out, it' net made below :the- dismeed- part ‘10:12, ing to reports recently made. . ee . ' Fred' Eunston has been as - there ie great dangeie if not certain- ' ed concerning! the use of his name ire . ty, of carrying, the germs' on.. the. knife early winter, 'but any time' before :the 1 • ' ' ' ' - • • hi I • carefully gone over in late fall oi t trees bloom will do. • • The Seattle Alaska, Geograp oa 0-- . gift. ofeKaineas.• "le will be time . 'econneetionwith a certain 'office in the ' lenoogh to ealle polities Mee thiewar,e! he, replied. . . or saw to healthy. wood in cutteng ee 1 other • branches. The trees should be • • • •" • - ,. ' ' - . Society, of which. Admiral Dewey hoer e ' Those whO raise ensilage -fed herds e.eteie; . ENSILAGE AND DRY FODDER.. .1 long been hoe.orary president, will invariably, have a' -decided advAntage I 3tanila. i'• • : hereafter hold...Ate.. — meet n o over the farmer who confines his, at- 1st, inehonor o he ba tentions entirely to 'dry fodder and le the, will of eene late iss Mayellioram grain.. But.= the e other hand, ow Baltimor,e, gives 00.000 for the One there down:lent 'of the ask of Celtic in the ari farmer's Who .do not make the et- CatbolieUniversity et Washington foe.. silage a ,success because Oflaole of pro- the presaryation of the Geste) Ian- . per study of economy in feeding or Pfligr* ' . . generally.' pear . menagement;of the ' It • is estimated •that fifty. Million' . whOle dairy farm. •The comparison•of. otthe.people of the United States are • - finch a Man with a first-class' dairye even -churchgoers. It seems almost in- grain is no-Ciair. - There are plenty man who 'believes id dry' 'fodder and oredible that only two -sevenths of thel peeple give any attention . to publie• • of good farmers to -day making a sue- "rsh.ip" , : • . ori dry fodder, meal, 'bran and grain. The A•gricultural -Dena:lomat at Mao With her& that are fed entirely They are too conseeirative• tq take • Washington has iesued a repOrt On dilit • ./46 i plant products of the Philippines. It the silo, or they are willing to let Well I coneeins the 'statement that the is - a success in their present work it dies lands do not yield enough food for their inhabitants. : • . • enough alone.. But because they make even mere profits by adopting the sile. 'thmbination • of his safe, and after •• not follow that they would ' not make -A Richmond, Va., Man forgot tine 0 Let such progressiVe farmers giro' the • give to their present system of feed.. corking ' " ' f r four days to :get silo all ' the •care and * attention' theY w... • - 131 vem 13 justified in casting discredit Ilion ing,, and if thee fat), they might 01: :eery convict, who strived the combine - me door •open, he sent her a peniten- silo. • teen in less than an hour. It is -practical „to mire all the en, Foreign Relations Committee Of the - ' : Robert R. Hitt, chairman of -the silage needed for feeding a dairy herd e of almost any size, and then • if the act Congrese, began life Xs a news:. conditions are just right for the Intro duction and propagetion of the. dis- ease, which has mused some to think that electricity did the damage. • every dairy farm, of 20 or more cows thRea6 cli:Irnadratilr°,17eZtentwhee, certainly coming to the time when will have its &tie, and it may be an ex- ception to the rule not to find one on °Yede'red. paper reporter, went to Weehington an a cotrespondent, and then entered tante, sti e command Orthe So h eilo is properly filled the results will be more than satisfactory. We are a faira. It is on a par with our pees- lee adron had for his last sea. ent system of cold storage for presort- duty the trying out" of the since ing food in the cities for the hirrami famous battleship Oregon. Ile there . race. We find that title not only adds. predicted wonders:for her, to the pleasures of eating, proves the health of the nation to have but it min- Rev. 'Maitland Alexander, D.D., ree tl f New York, and the new pas - green things right through the winter c'eu 7•P whose health awl good flow of milk in the Presbyterian pulpits of that . sheeowulsd ,131 • thears oient,thtoed.Fuoitesdt Cabuartheci,aPedittisnbnuorvga, tiPoane ymecnothensider Wthee amend ssaumemmewra so many of us are de/Pendent. Winter city by wearing a clericar gown and dairring can never be carried on as it bands. The orave of William Dawes, ini should be until the silo 10 built and filled. Now is the time. to consider - , , and prepare for mod winter if the King's Chaps! burying ground, Bristol* herd is expected to give the results de- is to be properly m.arked by the Sono sired. There is no easier way' to in- crease the Winter supply of milk than of the Revolution. Dawes •was the to have arid feed plenty of ensilage. man who helped Paul Revere rouse the __.....- countryside before the. battle of Lea- ' DIRT IN THE DAIRY. ingtone 0 We are very scientific in these days texy white, A. Loudon paper, speaking of Seines- . of the American trabassy, and talk of bacteria, bacilli, micro - cocotte, pasteurizing, eto., and there Is describes hien as "inheriting his for- tune, a fine golfer, well known at the danger that we shall forget that soi- hounds, good at a story or a bird on entific dirt is just as bad as the cora. the wing, fine looking, and especially name Ls just as dirty as IL is in Eng- h There are said to be over 400,00 fit for his post." . mori variety. Dirt under a Latin ailed' haolid wIteurl,teeisortlitirtagt, Inbrilucshh 4 a° na 411 NacerweetEct galbaannddSontaetdosf,"InMalnayndoelf inthth4sio elbow grease as the °Id variety that farm were (retuned. for generatithe our fathers used to wrestle with before but the young people moved to the the day of washihg powders and cone cities' or to the Weiltern States, and eentrated lye. W.d need no epeeial the old folks died. sterilizers or pasteurizers to keep the _ milk tan clean ; leave all these come lanceted macbines to the scientific fel- S CONSIDERATE, lows, and go at the cans and dairy - RE .--WA bacterie and bacilli had never been didn't you offer me back the go /le Cinohly-Look here, old man, wh vessels in the old-fashioned way, as if heard of, use plenty of water,- soda, row heve a Year age badteria afterward. If your butter or heIletierditfliPraPide-ofOhhuritiWiegeulydatilef fteelleite . sunshin.e and fresh air. Have your Milk vessels clean first, and think of cream are off flavor, nine tinfes eut of • 1Wehwy,heltdwidanYtt like td give you ten the trouble is that goer stable, impression that / thought you ne ciw or dairy la dirty, just plain dirt, ed the money. hat doesn't need a microscope and a chemist to find it; only a thorough ..-.......... eleaning and the trouble will vanish. . RE DIDN'T I.A.11G11. k The tenth tinni you may need the heli a of the expert, but don't ask -for it til '167' cantrkialittgrirrLtare ih6 "4 gen14114 you have got rid of the common dirt ; . then you may look for the soientifia. Gursislesin volat way, tit t , , . Stranger-MI*1i I trippnd in the ', donee, and went eprawling on nttentio irgii,!D iiit,Eppo - floor, iearing my fair partiter's a vou were the only one in the reit, At a damns. ratiently given by the wii-i, did see hesgh, "Baehelor Maids," O. isoOlEar of young -Guest-The Iadr la My wife, atid I WOMen at Bryn Mawr, Pa., a prize paid for the dresa. Wes offered for the most brilliant end inexpensive bead dress. It was won by Miss Gertrude Sonaleigh, whose hair was decorated with three rainiature In. condiment light* while a fourth sporkled in her cottage. A ismall bat.; tery, which she had concealed among her elothing, supplied the power, and es the wiree were thickly coveted, the was just as sofe as her Vitale who ehone resplendent in diamonds, MN. De Vitie•-•Herel my ileW hOlibet. hot kir WOrcien I HER SELECTION, , _. _ „ orator, Would MA lha to -a wore It Wiwi*, tusked the female lageratittlisdba 4 Isn't it 4 darling I Only twenty.aight Ehis pouted a moment aril" *Wend the holt, I repeat, - Ifitte-Groat snakes I You mild where would men be to -d Soule bil bought et front three not for troitiont l',"..A.. • MA be in the garden 015•17” :-.Yet, dear. Tilt is out big sirsivbentiee, 1613_1W frOin the: gallely. ., WILLIE'S W/SH. Willie'. Pa, Wieib Yell had a Mk Mote vire and lightning about you. Pa. Why, ain't I spankihc yen herd enough. Willie. Yek but lightning neva* etrikes twitie in. the same place. AN UNEXPECTED RETORT. r • #