The Lucknow Sentinel, 1915-10-21, Page 3T4)fr4f...77r
•tx.r• st4. r +15,1,
C.,. 0, .• 110
WITH RUSSIAINT MACHINE GUNS
The
• SeleetekileciPes, gently for one hour. :Any Other Meat..
• SPanish Salad. ---four large ciieinn;ruiWb"ged=it--dearear- •.----- -
,_, ,....
1
bers„ .one bnnelt: of celery, three- large . • '
onions, four, •.•.
large toroatoes, twe -
.heads of lettuCe, three green peppers; Use PaPer.11)b5:gf4s1fliorin:osi;ering pitch-
••
chop all senarately yerk be, ;then .,erg with food in -them. •
mix together and season with a table- Medicine. stains Va4 alOteat always.:
. spoonful of vinegar, .juice of one lain- be dissolved by Alcohol. •
an and salt and pepper to taste: • ' A Milk bottle Openera'a,30 a handy'
a a
grapes allow 1 Pound • of sugar., : lb reas. to be tender should be boiled
pint of vinegar, and 14' (Mote eagh Of slowly, with the lid partly off . the ,
mace, cloves and. cinnamen. Boil sn- saucepan. '.• , ' '
A glass measuring cup and glass
lemon 'squeezes- should be Amid ' in
every kitchen. • • ,
When -you can't find. a liedkin; a
minutes. more. -Bottle and seal viriniel •f3af6.ty Pin run. through the end of the
Kat . . .--•• tone Or ribbon Will 'wily:tr. .. '
• • , ., ,
' SweeP Grape • Pickle.-4Allow 4., . Table.,SibleeWare ariffunlined silver
POunds,pf *tiger .0.4.I 'quart -a vine:. nreair bags brin be Cleaned by ecialciag
''...•.,rgar. to :7 pounds of gritlies. Tfe..rabt-r half 44 Ilmt% 9" 111°I'e in s.°11T"'Inilli'l•• i
ed stfices, cloves, cinnamon, Mace and :" To' renliive" ittint 'frent • elatkhingl,
all -spice in a thin bag and Cook with saturate the- sprits 'with 'ammania.
the syrup. Pour the latter, thick and andtturpentine„ mixed, and then wash
boiling, on the grapes. Pour off and out in soapsuds. 4 .
. reheat this syrup and petit again ort Do not forget, when making meat
fruit for 2 successive days; 'then seal. Pies, to put in also raw potatoes,' to -
hard -boiled eggs. This
. Black Bean .Soup-Seak -two "cups matees or .
of beans over night. • Bell until sof saves the meat..t' the boot ter, .stal,e1h,
enough to mash through colander; •
after adding .one quart of stock, half ing cuff*, and collars; •wheat•-Stareh
cUP• of tomato chtsup, one sliced onion, for delicate dresses; rice starch for
fine French lingerie, '
•• Salt and Peri/4r and pinch of summer ,fine
steaming hot di
silvery. ' When the seasoning is coed:-
sh, of baied or -
ed in, cut lemon in three slices and boiledniacaroni dressed with cream
float on top as it is served at the
and grated cheese is a very good sub-
table. , . , _ s t t'tu e or mea., ,
I t f t •
When jam assumes a "sugary" 4P -
sugar, half cup ofhoney, half t' Ione* Frult-Cake-4,-.1'41f mit -4 pea-rowee, Standitin-the oven
, et113 f the sugar has melted, and when cool
sour milk quarter eup of sheig,.`"
• 7
ing, two eP's Of flour, half cup Of [it will be ready for use.
Instead of adding blitilig to Water
a raisins, half cup of" walnut_meats, one
: egg, and one teaspoo 01 , of soda. in which lace has been rinsed, try
.'
• Spices to taste. Do no use too much making the final rinsing in Milk; it
spice or it will spoil the nice honey gives a lovely creamy tone ; to the
.flavor. This will keep along time ,and lace. . .
A' sit:link- Potato- salad is made with
is very, nice. . • .: slices of cold " boiled Potato, some
chopped chive or onion.. leaves, salad'
dressing and a sprinkling of fine
••gar and vinegar 15 munites; heat the
pn1P and skin, let them ceol, then rub
thiough a Cohinder and acid• to the,
.Yinegar and sugar, coking. about, IA
7in fur trade bas passed threugb
the most remarkable ye" in history,"
s414 aolim Hailarn, the Torente *fur.
merchant. "'Before the war 65 to '70
iier gentof all the raw fur caught in
Conada and line. United 'States. was
:0. in C.4n441a
FROIY! SUNSET
.01
liasist- fairing to lay -in their ustial WHAT Tun liVrEsTERN vuorlio .
stochs„ owing to the unSettled condi-
tions then, prOvailing.. Articles ap-
Peered in 0(0 pomp advising trap,
r , .oa,
pers not to :set out their'traps; eta.
ing* that thorn would .be no taarket
for theiraw fursall of which R-
A
., unually,eXPorted te Burov9; tke,t,v/C' -tarally tenc14471 4)
.i demorapzeraragranina
,business,
largest ler marhets of the warm ee" of 01 hinds, And OdPeciallY the' flir
ing-Ypiniden,,--XlagIand„ .0nolf 10 'e .4,440., ,, __ Alarge ereanciery niay ha started
IC
Germany. Shortly after the . War oTho, rahli --- • - - i'''''-' •• iii-'-' truP444*156. W4 --•-----7-------------,r: ---,----,!-
. pi eS Were ower an.; •° ay at Nelson netted thelLa•
brae out the .export of Inrs to Ger-, they bad been ter several years, but ' Z
.. many iron :the United States. was weradeeidedlyhigher than they were Ime has-Pital In rx'aUce C344- • - • •
The Vancouver fire department ext -
rendered very difficult bY tho aetivitY• seine fifteen or twenty Years ago,
of the- 4-glielv flea/ -*Me the.-4ecreo Tbis.gave the general public an op- tikguislie4 73 1)1411 154'esi tu Augl'14''
Some Y"Pi."1;13'*e." 14174 this
against 'trading with the • enemy'.portunitY ,te purchase manufactured produced.4e4.°11
Produced 24 tons pr.. pOtatoes..ta 0.4
prohibited exports to "Germany from furs at . very- roodoaole prices,„ -and aere, , : -, -
Canada and the lgrit1sli POSsessiene- had a --Aim I t` g if t th te- oung,,„,y4h1*._women:_hale.,-...,
0 4 0 , • 0 0 grea s oc s tra 0, us.the Willa were Wire ,...,;
4 a in g ec on . e re it
of rim furs.hx•ILenden, se that there to purchase American -Caught figS At °Palled' a. 1444 '#P'd tub l'iu/34-17 i''' *
from that .quarter, 'Odle many dealer* to pay for inferior itaPerted furs, thug ..°4In'48" licAwr °:nitr'arri "t°3aw' at
was.: M) 4416'4 f'" An(61ean furs PriPeetVey had fertherly been', f9reecl MerrittP.T1;°-. ''• , '
open1m.a.new avenue for the sale of titaii:„.,:r tili::hei'giu°Paszitti IF:i',11,:a.7,1$.$1:::::9::
•
in •the United .States and Canada had
large,..stogits of l'aW'f2Orti ill , their Anierigariurs) *hien' aided the C1.010i "‘""I'''': . ' ;
ivarebnoSes. which " they had feted S.0. lir disposing of his etecks, and the
Ver. non, have a - decreased AttendAnee, '
- shiP.: to "the- London . June sales: .,?;tk #4ppgr. , in Beetuino•reasanal)le: pitice '
1914, : Owirk ,P13:- the POO: olittaarc fo-r for his seat -db. This Wes OSPeclallY.' :•t"4144°44' • ' .. ' • '''''
obtaining reasonable. pries, • WhiCb. noticeable in !Galiada,.. 4s'. the war taX. ' A.'hoclOci, 061 PrisonOr nig rim'
pyeeecled that Salt While the results 'Of : 71,fi, - er Cent. placed On , all furs :,61;:kkeinBg4 a4..41/0, 'rig! 14.'..:1;".•
raw fur on hand, attempted to have
toefaitsbew, June sale ..nat...tnnorpewSedu tgliraotoolegirci, peeptorfteer ..,.,hitockosiCiaartima .ftIo:f-froulltr,aorno 0,041. bre:a:y:77k ..i.ww ..r. Iiii •
• 1y 4verp very heavy purchasers alba- 'iirlileh t0 -,$.0.1j1:4: the Palladian trade.
Leipsic fur -merchants, Wlici- previous- purchase coiediam...canght furs with
•
London sales,. having large steel:a of "The result • of the increased con -
mw. of American -caught furs in Creston Valley is said,--te be tha ',
best, seetten of B.C; in Which to graw .
Owing to -the heavy traffic`the-Ehn.1.-•
.the jUne. sale* of 1914 postponed, and the United States and Canada has
, -toonioreefuostaltillthere'vLeoontd,00n binoeyrecobtatnotfs stocks that were it), the hands
Ilende of
the Twenty new residences have been
tended t° use uP. ' the accumulated erected at ' Columbia: Ileight, a Trek
BOuburb
the members ' Of the Fur Merchants' dealers at the time:in
the war breke out, ',T,',...' •/4- , ' . ' • •
Association at Leipsic was instituted Business has assumed. amore settled; . e"'• ---OPS in. Greenomotl-xlistrict ere
the best aver known in the history of
bar of the :Association who purchased heavily and retailers have bought il'e.,...turi..,ttY"...„ .-'.,3 :1 .3; '• Patriotic
condition, 'manufacturers.have bought
under a, heavy penalty for any mem- condition,
furs directly or indirectly at the their usual stocks of 'manufactured 9"1V " ma.'" " "844'44
.J11Oe sales of that year. ' •• Fund Money le now being Paid out in
furs, iiiooptehoast wtlithe oProesgrenototraoweepinfurus_,
the Fernie district; •
ofttetTritigss foaketiuttsataerind wthieth latehkeolaprugre..
Prince Rupert, 13.C., liaa a lifting -ea-
-Chasers, resulted in a heavy decline an the Market IS practically cleared
itiPrices--C.oranared-with: the 'prices -ready for the new-caught-skinsLto•-
realised for the same class of far%
one year earlier;' the result being that trade, .
absorbed' in the ordinary course of '
lotion . in the hands of the 'dealers, ,,taaTAkhbeeal4d.gtr_414.0t" dry 4Pek illst,61ishattat
:discovery has been made at Skide., ,
On the- ,Bardgett farm. -near '.Cr-anr
brook, B.C, this year the hay' crop, .
^i)•eragect IS tons to the acre. "
gate, on the. Queen Charlotte Islands.
. -What promises to lte.a rich' geld
Queen Charlotte' Island. ' •-,' - . '• . - •
atiredt. wAitinK.Pm 4railKeet1-_
Kootenay 'report a shortage of labor,
supplied over 990 men for the various
pros-
pectors is :shown this year,and a. re-
trains at that point one • day each, -. •
Canadian overseas contingents. .• - •
pounds of salmon\ white trolliug-gff
serve tea to passengers on the ca.P,R,`
iiaeity'a 20,000 tons.
country has 60,o0p hushos of Wheat
and may have to close down for lack
of men:. : : . • . '' " • •
cord number- of ..claims have been
Fern -10;13.C, claims to have already
Sandon, B.C., Red Cross workers' .
One farraer in the ',Peace Itiver
Some. lumber companies'. in East
Unusual activity among 13,C.,*prosi
In lour hours two mea eriught 5,00T
09" acres.Of new land will:
be Soon throtrii open for-.preempatien,• --*
It is situated a feW miles south of '
,-
Castlegar. .•.•,: ' : • . '
- . "-7-•.' •
• . • JAPANESE boos BEEkvE. . WORRIES'WHICH WORKED. The water s.uPPlY of. Vermin, p.a.,'
is none too 'ample this -year. The es-,
. -- • ---• tabliahment of the mobilization cant
creates a heavy demand. - . •
Mk. M. McLeod, of New Westmins-
ter, B.C., 75 years old, has talready ;
knitted 60 pairs of socks for solchere •
fortune; good has °often, come out a
seeming •evil; joy: out of "sorrow. AL, and isstill knitting. •-
g (own" was assistink in his fa_ -A big strike of high-grade pre has .
theei factory at Stockholm in the been mOesantbe-"Barlmf "ffill'-g1-95-01Y-- -
trianufactdre Of nitro-glycerine. One 44 Nine Mile Mountain, New Bezel- '
day he found that:a cask of the stuff ton, B.C. It is . silver -lead property.
It is *might by quite a number �f :. .
had "leaked badly, and its contents got
mixed, with the-sill:dee.* stud ted as old tinie prospectors and others' that
Ittr7e$orisuggestedo preparing
,a -o
. are- allndinlI11:17- 'Karat) will. some day rank among the
'me:61111ot. of big copper Camps er Brititli-Coluplbia., -
.ageahle explosive,' and the result was
dynamite, Says London Answers. '
.It was the burnieg.of a starch fac-
tory. on the banks of the Liffey ,that
first revealed athe adhesive qualities
of ecorchert"starch • wall wiiter,-----and
introduced to the world a ' new and of. a touching:thing -that-the. lonely. •
cheap gift)). ' ' ;• , .. ' women of the nation have done, --Wo-
' A'..• Limerick tobacconist believedmen who have no sons, no husband,.
himself to be ruined by a fire that de- . no brother, no.father in the war; who
stroked; his shop. " Several tins of are ' perhaps too .old or too feeble to •
snUff had been • in the 'fire, subjected i nurse .or to be otherwise aetive. ..No
to great heat. CUriosity prompted • one knows where the,idea started; but
ARRVOING. •
reigress..".or the; Great WeSt el
In a Few Pointed
Japanese Chocolate Calce:L--One-
, half cup of grated chocolate, 11/4
• cups, of granulated sugar, half cup parsley, •
--of butter, fetn••eggs,-1% cups of flour,- • A mixture of half a teaspoon tartar
one teaspoonful of soda, and one cup
, of sweet milk. Cook half of the milk
with the chocolate until it is as thick
--
as cream; cream 'butter and sugam,.
add yolks of eggs beaten light; then
add milk, flour and whites 'of eggs, a'
little at a time. Last add the choco-
late antra teaspoonful -of vanilla, Bake
in layer's.
Orange Ciietard.-juice of 10 or-
anges, 11/4 cups of sugar, yolks of 10
• eggs, 1 -pint •of cream. Put the juice
ancl-the-sugar•-on-to-boil-in a-doubl
-boilervwhen beiting;skim-iteatefully
and set aside to cool.- Beat the yolks..
of .eggs very light and add the juice
Of" oranges; beat the cream rilso to a
froth; then return: the, orange juiee
and beaten .yolks to the fire and heat
-slowly, stirring until thick; addcream
and pour into cups. Serve cold.
•
. Beef, Tomato Gravy. -Put lump of
'butter size of walnut in saucepan,
a
and two miens cutfine, brown slight-
_ Ay., itirringli. lark -vent -up -in -pieces-
two pounds of any good lean beef;
and brown in more butter if there is
not enough fat to the meat. Add _wa-
ter, salt and pepper to taste, and one
-nark of tomatoes-strainedl. boil--,untit
. tender, adding water to make enoug
for al;out six_pepple; thicken with
',whole wheat flour.
Beef Tamales. -Boil (Me pound of
beef and pour over it some hot fat.
'&04 thoroughly one , quart of meal,
' adding One teaspoonful of salt and
-0-one-tablespoonful-of lard '-'••••Cut-off-th
upper end of the corn shucks and put war of 11370 had almormal times;
to boil in cold Water. let scalded meal which lasted about thirty hours, dur-
and shucks cool. off, Chen the beef fine ing which he felt and smelt nothing,
and season to taste with salt and chili althangh his appetite was normal
powder. Put a thin layer of the meal; Dirihg fthese abnormal periods cer- 'IL The Mountain Full of Hors88
on the shucks '(leavIng shuck Iknough-
, tam experiments- \tee •maile - -With . • (Vel --sed 14-171
to turn ends and the sides ; under), him, and one of these Was the writing
then put a small (identity of meat in of an. unseen letter; the writer's hand
the centre,. Put a few shacke in the being hidden by a special semen.
bottom of pot to prevent scorching, .Ten sheets Of paper were, placed
and pack in the tamales, plating a -tinder his hand, and he *opld tom-
, ..
weight on top. Cover with boiling meace to write. As he Wrote the
water, adding One tablespoonful each sheets would be remoVed one by one,
of lard and chili powder. , ,, until only the signature would' ap-
Chicken Tamales. -Take two".quarts. _pear on the last. That is to say, he
of yellow ;dried corn, boil, in water would have written one Page of writ -
mixed with a half cup of lime. When big' oft ten sheets.. Then he would be
. well copked! Wash thoroughly and asked to read. his letter, from the last
grind the corn • ou a na ,
emetic, one teaspoon sugar and three
tablespoon's water in a dish Where
ants congregate Will speedily., drive
them. away. • t
1The water in which asparagus is
cooked should never be thre(vn off,
as it contains a- large aniount of nu-
trition and makes excellent -cream • of
asparagus soup.
fablespoonfuld. tif paraffin
mixed with a bucket of boiling water
with which' tables are to be scrubbed
will; make -them -beautifully white- and-
. , • _
nth.' . •
,To-eleara -doormats, put -Aire -mat.
into a bath of soapy. water and scrub
with. a hard ,scrizbbing brush. Theft
rinse *ell. in cold Water, staziding it
up to dry.
A few drops of vinegar will keep
potatoes white, if put in as soon as
they begin to boil, and when boiling
fish, a few drops of vinegar hardens
the fish and helps4to keep it whole.
- -Every- 'cellar should
shelves for the convenience of the
housekeeper. ' There should be one or
two hanging shelves. By this means
the cellar may be kept in order and
sanitary:
• TRICKS OF THE' BRAI
Experiments Made During AbnOrinal
. Periods. .
A French sergeant who was wound-
ed-in-the-,heaci in-the:Franca-Prussian
o fl•....gitta,
Thie "neuter: was taken in n'Buselan trench nettr. Bra;t- tittrvid. '
....• .---,....- .....................
-
. -•-- ..,. .
HE SUNDAY SC1100
INTERNATIONAL LESSON! -
.a--peeuliar sense of fear is associ-
ated with many -.different creatures
and things. Lord Roberts, for
stnnce, was 'afraid of cats. He would
Lesson IV.- Elisha's Heavenly De- not have a cat in the room whershe-
fenders 2 Kings 6. 8...2a, Golden was sitting. On one occasion when
- Text: Psalm 134. 7. asked out tqdinner, his . hoserather.
_
i doubted the existence of, his fear and
L Plotting Against Elisba concealed. a cat in the ottoman in the
.FEARS OF GREAT MEN..
• "Robsl!-Was,-,Afraid-ef-cats, "and PP"
ter the Great, Water. -
OCTOBER 24.
' (Verses 14-17). ,
; •• dining-roOm. Dinner was announced
Verse 8.. The..king of Syria--Prob- and Served; but the chief guest seem-
ed' in at ease and at last declared his
ahly: Ben-hadad.(inee verse 24). Israel
-inability to go on eating, as he was
Was ,in. grave danger at this time. sure there was a cat in the room.
Syria was a powerful and determined
A pretended search was Made, but
foe. . . . . . disclosed no trace of the animal • Thea
- In Such and such a plate -This ex;
famous soldier persisted inhis de'.
pression is like that of "somewhere'
elaration. Finally the host, realizing
now seen in so many reports of it bat -
that he was causing `.$obe" great dis-
tle-after,the account thereof has pass-, tomfort, "let the cat "out of the bag"
ed the censor's bands. ; and the ;ottoman at the sarne time
A The amen of God sent unto the and apologized for the annoyance
king of Israel -Although the kings catihed. ... _ . . .
were inimical to the prophets, the lat-
ter Ilid.not_foksake their_so_vereigns.. Another famous men who was
e.:prophettltne•w_that_withput God's s'upersensitive-to- the p_resenee-of cats
was- Henry IIL of Prance i , This mon:-
guidance Israel 'and 'her kings could
arch disliked them. so intensely that.
not survive. , ' he was known to faint at the ,sight,
10. Not once nor twice -But several of one. -Two other great generale,
times.. Elisha's advice Was always ,
Marshal Saxe, the French soldier,
good. The Syrians claimed" it was
and the Duke of Schomberg, also held'
based 01. actual knowledge (see verse
12): . them in horror.
.1 •
peter the Great loathed the sight
11. Which of us is for the king of
of water. He could scarcely be per -
Israel? -The tang of -Syria had been
frustrated's'? ;nany times in his plans'
that he thought he had a traitor in
is erurip. ' • ' ------ -.-
. 21. Nay, my lord, 0 king; but
Eliaha-The story' of Naaroan. was
known. It was nataral for a quick-
vvitted, g Idler to remenaber Elisha's
re.,....i_oktai
eii '-'• -relate_thie_pgw_ of the
proPhet to the seemingly miraculous
try-in-whiclrevery-militaryme
the Syrian king Was • antitipated and
frustrated. - - -. ; • •
many Sur ,dealers --withdrew. ie
stocks' from. the sales, and the war
coming on. .hortly afterwards, left
*est quantities of furs unsold en the
London market, while the Aznerican
-clealert3 'well ''stocited .up
with 'Business all lines
was. in a more or less demoralized
candition; glapy men were. out of eat-
ployinent, both in the United States
and Canadd, and the outlook for the
sale of manufacturettirs in An-Jerk:I
was , far from- proinising., so that the
raw fur dealers were at a loss to
know_ whether they worild be able to
find a market for the furs they Pot. -
chased or not."
'Owing. to these facts, some raw
fur 4Iealers withdrew from the mar-
ket for the time being, while others
readjusted their prices as fir as ,pos-
ible •to Meet thenew deprecedented
conditions; and purchased such furs'
as were offered them for sale. 'Manu-
facturers -cif -fur garn-iiiiti" Ind' retail-.
ers bought only 011
'tinder - these -cenditions- we- -can
only look forward to a prosperous
season ler .411- Pta con-
sumer will. purchase S.merican:canglit
furs' at coinparatively low prides,
'this -stimulates the-deinantl. of the re-,
tidier from the Manufacturer, the
manufacturer from the raw fur deal-
er, and the raw fur dealer froin the
trapper., consequently -we expect that
.
the prices which will prevail during
the coming raw fur seasen will he
fully as high on all article, „and eon,
eiderably higher on 'some articles,
than were paid during the past Year',
and while they iniY not -be as high
as. the prices that prevailed for. sev-•
eral years when value's 'of raw ,furs
were inflated; yet they •Will be suffi-
ciently high to amply recompense the
trapper for his efforts in securing the
valuable fur -bearing anirnals, and the
larger catch whieh he Will undoubted-
ly have, will materially assist in in-
creasing" the-.eize ••-• -the -trapper's
bank "aceottrit."'
-
Coming Coronation of •Emperor Coos-
- Ing Reform Among Canines.. • ,
. How Fortunes • Were Made Through.
Indicative of the minute' care taken., Accidents.
Trivial mishalis have,Oftenled to
suede(' to tress a bridge,.\and if com- by the Japanese to prevent" untoward
pelled to do so would sit in his' car-. happenings on the occasion of the cor-
• onation ne.xt November, it may be
noted -that thopolice anthWitWs-have:
decided to kill all vicious • and, - stray
dogs in the prefecturesthrough which:
his Majesty will "travel during the
ceremonies, All the dogsM_Japa,n
• r
• !. • • • 1
13. Go and see -L. -That is, spy out.
Dothan-Mentiotied in-the,Old Tes-
tament only here and in Gen. 37. 17.
According to truditidOtlew-orily
tvi'elve miles from --Samaria, which
shows how far into the country of
Israel the Syriane had penetrated
threetimes until it is very fine. •Boil
two medium-sized ' chickens until
quite tender; cool, then cut in' small
pieces. Mix with the corn enough
water in which the 'chicken, has been
ik-with-the-exeeption of
the signature. This he would do with-
out Missing a word, making correc-
tions where necessarY, and putting
punctuation marks exastly in the
right place as measured by the other
boiled to make it soft, and add about sheets. ,
tvvorenps Of Jar& Season with a little]: There is the case of Scottish law -
salt, and knead thoroughly. ' Remove yer, who, having a perplexing ease in
Itou.lp.,m4.4ekketvAdAy wifo zet
• roast hi a moderate oven for a few up one night, go to a writing -desk in
seconds. Take out and place in tepid the bed -room • sit down and write
Water; then grind en metata several for a ,considerable time. Having care -
times, together with almost a head of fully folded his document, he then
'garlic. 111 a stewing pan place SOMA opened his desk, •pirt it away, and
• laid (about • a- tablespoonful)1 when came- back -to, bed - • ,
' 'dna tinioireutline-and---a • --Next a "dream
-
tablespoonful of •iloun.- let doOlt a to ha g wife, lit the course of which 119
moment, then drop in the ehilis. Then had given an excellent expert opinion
cut the•ehicken, a cupful of seeded .on, the ease at issue, no single point
raisins, a cupful of stoned olives and of which he 'could recall. judge of his
• salt and pepper to taste; let, come to surpriele when his wife led WM to his
a hoil, take .away from fire and cool.
Rave Some dry corn leaves well soak-
,• ed in cold water for. .several hours.
, Shake them,, well and apply a thin
layer of the corn dough on a half of
each leaf. When . the .taniales are
finished, place tlMnt in a large pot Ever notiee hoW, much happier you
• with alittle bOil• :are when.you ;render others happ,y/
14. Horses, and chariots, and a
great host: and. they came by night -
An exceedingly large host to come
after one undefended man. To .make
sure the night time was chosen. ,
151 How shall We do? -Not a ques-
tion for instructions or advice, but- a
Cry- pi despair.
,
16. They that areWith us, -The pre-
sent tense is used by the prophet. To
him the angelic pretecters. were al-
_ .
Ways atma •
' 17. Open his eyes-Elisha's eoncern
for the, young man was so. great that
he was unmindful. of the many men
waiting to waylay him.
18. Round About Elisha-"Dothan
stha Iifiv driiiiiMet; and se the sum-
mit could be thus encireled, and the
' barrier"'against the Syrian -it. appears
SoMPletr , .
• .1.
Tobacco Growing in France.
The en -lava -don of- tolia-cco'in•Priuice
le strictly controlled .by the national
Government. Licenses are, issued to
_eommuneser-disfriets-autherizing the-
.cultivation-,-of-tobaeee on- a- -specific,
area. This -area is then allotted to
certain growers, and from the plant-
ing to, the gathering of the crop every
plant is under the' supervision of gov-
ernment officials. As the government
vvith_clesed_windows, bath
perspiration. Fear ef thelliver-Mb-
ser, which fipwed through his palace
garden, prevented him, ever seeing its
beauty..
Julius Caesar to whom- the-sho
sands,:ei • • , •
wee.t_musie, was_mortally afraid of
the sound- of thunder, and always
wanted to hide underground' Whenever
a thunderstorm hovered over his
- "
a§Cit,Ntitelt, SURGER
"-•• , 1-fecture three kan of -the best raw
Newly 'Discovered Curative, Principles silk, with -which the ceremenial dress
, in the Present War. • of the Emperorat the -coronation this
The one encouraging feature of the fall will be woven. At the Sanr3rusha
the number Of Wounded Who reeover
was, newb that probably will constitute- silk -worm :weaving roomi; the selected
the present conflict is the statistics of c -are. The raw silk was reeled and
a Special memorial in the history of silk worms were reared with ' utmost
if once they are placed in a position Haiisehold Department through the
r.eel room.. Fortklifigviearing White" fausme
was sent recently to the Iniperial hisin
Aichi Prefectural Office. On.Sunday •
the. eleaning work, was started in the every -Other brand! "
. Visitors to the "picturee will
=Ldp. That scorched -snuff ousted gdiries of the regiments regarding
inuor- be an 4n
to open one, and hiefortune was , some wofnen of that sort made in,
which , :ion With thcise soldiers. , • . _.
be ' they begged to be put in commanica- - •
-unavailing to a great degree cadent working, clothes were employed. The ' thoocio ing
vance , in • bacteriological pathology the Morning -rit -6' °Week and finished with -sand from Ar sort of pepper1bOX:1 that' ili6 names c'i. -4144 wiliart AM' •-• .
available. ' did, not know and had .neVer seen!. .
Well, one day' some ordinary paper •
has made sOme very potent remedies at 4 o'clock.
and reformed and repentent dogs are
reported daily in great numbers. , The.
police have ah•eady• killed 374 irre-
claimable dogs in Kyoto -.---the bad
kiyis of Kyoto. • - • '
. ,
The 'Imperial Heusehold Depart-
ment has _olreadY Proearedirmi-lhe_
,Sanryusha at Okazaki -in Aichi pre-
THE VOLUNTEER MOTHERS. '
Strange Thing Which the War Hag
Brought Out In Germany.
Orreeptindent-ift-Germafty-writes
to obtain the benefit of surgical mea-
sures. Infection •prevails in army,
wounds. Antiseptics have been -found
• i• Soldiers who no father or mother;
George's. day, of sprinkling wet ink • The names of soldiers were sent to
. • . •
for superficial wounds, but the ad. workirig. girls began their work in, these women, this strange name and .
•
ern mg mine owes., so muc • or
Sir Almroth Wright, to whom mod- ..„..____17e ..
-- was being made; v.ben a worknian for- '
got the size which ought to have beinl
' mothers sent gifts, and :Sewed and
to be her especial care. The ,childteSs• .
Each woman chose one or two soldiers ,
'.• ,
• whole batch was 'ruined; but shortly i.• i •or
the body to bacterial toxic processes, came, in return, a grateful ,..
dieeovery of remedial reactions within
afterwards the paper -Maker wanted ' Ird'iphen
the French Academy beeriuse of the enough for the purpose, used a piece , post card from the field from tint
recently received one of the. prizes of to write a note, and, thinking it good
i cards.
son,. One: 1 rt.on14retha .i.il
of the sizeless paper. To his , great
newly discovered curative principles
-in -the present war. French surgeons_ Suddenly the ' 'idea of its..utilitv i
annoyance the ink ran all over. ' • t "Many thanks, --ear friend," 1 44-7_
'for criltke, package .i, Cif, _TY,tehrm things.
-ntagnificent -effects 'noted from these
have now followed an his discovery by
liir-itiventiort of -01 polyvalent serum
that. is -eminently: life saving.
' The reports from bah' sides in the,
western. *or area seem to 4n -di -cite'
that by far the greater part of the
wounded not recover butgettial12.
return to service., For some months
the ratio of .such recoVeries to deaths
has been nearly • ad" high as eight to
two, - The statistics of the sui.gical
history of the war is to be one of the
most valuable contributions to the
story O -f human ezierierice with in-
fected wounds. •
•
Old,Sentence Revived in Case of Man
. Who Ran Away. .
A curious ancient penalty was re-
vived in a sentence- Padsed on an ite-
mised person in Scotland, • John -Mc-
--Artirtrir-tr-GlastoW Aleeilid- ---110--
4. flashed dc oss his mind He at once.
.-bissnew-hietting. •••th-o--rb-lyiy,;Drie.-to _
,,rived! I expected nothing, lint I was '
appear with tWe Other defendants,
who wer-e,'IiCeiTaid--rit-ifealing iftelin'rivt."°114"14":1"*"`--
paper, and the demand was so great , receive' a=liarldiedii,4-4-
-Other men sigrendired to their bail, that the mill ceased making ri I gone,. the orphan! 'From you 1'
Jewelry //allied at over $10,000.. The
-paper, and toncentrated, on b°1•To-titrilaing7-1', nleyi17. ge'tilllte--enl,y'13aellage. llvervga•-14 - at the Edinburgh High :Court and
were found not guilty and diecharged. PaZr• , • . , 1 Eight days later the orphan soldier
:fifeir treV6hur-yri, .t7elin"iuriSd4:111carietier,',.--,01er , r.tire ---tenljoef-leirge011t:Qtalli ng_._af -dr: walibetAnnle4btic-OY.,s,:a.,.rind Cr .g.1'17:. nieareirsengl.hit' :rt. e"totz.....,_ ,
eourt, and a 'sentence of outlawry was lattendant at. It spirit -raping
Ile found that the 'table stood on two
sconce. : him', whom she had never known. ite .... '
pronouneed by the Judge. This 'means brits tos rtitining „rot. the oftv,t.1:taidongbeetign ttlieet.:mboioaniti; . jotif im'foorgmioitagtiona ,
that he is put outside the Protection
and at -once suspected clectrieity. .! a woman's silent life with the Mighty .
of. the low, is banished tiemi. Scotland,
and any goods or land he may have .
Taking a' piece 'of insulated wire, i fate of her piluttry, She who luta .
the endki of which were open, he laid, never been a Mother 'had hecoine a
are forfeited. He can, however, at
it across the two brass rails. The volunteer mother. ,- -
any time ' submit to the jurisdiction
of the law that he has defied. . aPtrit °eas'act• to rapt • 'Vora ' attar,
When a signal engeer, this :eitt'ly ex:- '4„ Revenge is sweet, but it often has
• .. • . • • 1 li
mwm...4* 40 '
nioa.i,penment in track -circuiting came to sickening 'reedits. '
• Lord' Itosebery is averse to.
The sight of a. lady ill'a , • •
pink (Tress 1 his mind It was 'then that .he made I ,Ill'ore. fish ore found off, the Grand
bhiass acragnusmca-milt,hini...t:. ilit.7,e1:.t..Ahl...:stpleii.cce,aii,,i a. i.:fieupaif oths.e. principle for th'e' protection i "Banks ;of Newfoundland than , in any -
' ' other part of' the world.
. ..
desk, told him where. to look, ••and the sole purehaser of the leaf when
direeted him to hi a own, dream demi_ grown, it thin 'fttaintains a priictical
ment, where he found the *hi& Mat., control over the amount that may be
ter -clearly written Out and the Whole produced in a• given year, No boun-
ties , are paid for the growing of to
satisfeetory1
• • ' baeco, and the price -paid id' according
to the quality of the leaf • grown and
the requirements oftlic .1441e. •
.5' •
:
Boiling to death used te be a form
of capital punishinent England.,
Eight olive -trees on the Mount of
Olives, Jerusalem are known to be
oVer eight hundred years okl. •
•
1
e nty surprise, e_iraal/ ar-
e•
(53
•-• 1'
4
t.4.'
1