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Exeter Advocate, 1912-5-30, Page 3DAINTY DISHES. Broiled Finnan Haddim—Seal twenty minutes in warm water, Drain and dry -thoroughly brush with melted butter and broil until browned on both sides. Transfer to a hot platter on which has been, poured a cup a cream, or white eauee, slip in oven an instant tar re- heat and serve. Frieassed Veal—Select a light shoulder or fore -quarters of veal, Simmer till tender, then cat in pieeee suitable for serving, salt and pepper them, roll in flour and brown on a griddle, Serve on toast, -with a gravy made frem liquor in which veal wee cooked. Canned each and Nut Salad — Select a large half peaeh for each person, letstand thirty minutes in a little French dressing, drain and fill eenters with ehopped figa, datea, or Prunes mixed with a little cream. Sprinkle with chopped ea- eheia, nuts, place on lettneo leave and eerve, Lemon Rice Pudding.—One and 'one-half eups rice, three eups !talk O ne egg, juice, and rind one-lialf le mon, one-half cup sugar, Mix Order givea, poor in battered pad- ding dish, set in pan a hot water 11043slowly' till firm in the eon- . ner the spread of contagious disea,s- es May be greatly checked. It rs an impossibility fr, have the heine, strictly sanitary. Thia would mean sacrificing it artistie beauty, Carpets, ..draperies and papered walls, long oonsideretl a menace 'to health, would have to be dispensed with. Vera' few families have the CoUr- age to run their homes upon a sani- tary basis; therefore the lovely draperies and upholstered furni- ture remain, With the word "home" ie associ- ated all that pr. -educes comfort, beauty and enjoyment. A etrietly sanitary honse is pot beautiful or conditeive to cheerful- ness. It reminds oiler a hoepi- tal, and the desire to live there is never longed for bv normal persons We eaa, to a eertam extent keep been published in England, in which • - the home germproof. Here are a it ls shoaan that infections may re - few euggestions which may prove main active aPen tiles which have helpful; -Window draperies eift all -the gm -laden dust from the etreets and vein, quickly heCerne a delight- ful reeting plaee fer an unbelievable uninber of bacilli, If the draperies are a washable material thee aim 1 where ii- was found that narked aa u requeat y 4 GRJAT DANGER FROM FLIES CARRY INFECTION FOR LONG DISTSNCES, suggested a almilar eolution of the fly Problem.. Mosqtees, breed in stagnant water, and it is generally easy to drains fill, stock with fishes r oil, the Imola of a neighborhood and relieve it completel f the y o e mos- quito nuisance. The tdy breeds ehiefly in, stable manure. but -will breed also in almest any decaying Intelligent Cleanlineaa About Al 1 filth, animal or vegetable, and Premises Should be Rigorously - eniv ten days are required for eggs to hatch and. nlatnre. liniforeed. Netwithetanding all that has been said and 'written, many people continue to ignore the conetant danger from flies as earriers of ins fection. Everywhere food is ex- posed to the visits of thesedistri- _ _ lautors of dieea.se series of • ports on this enbjeet has recently been expeeed to them—and their habits thus expese them continually —for from four to ten days. An idea of the distance to which infeee tion may be dispersed by Mee i given by recent investigations a Poetwiek, near Norwich, England, dipped in a weak solution of elder- flies travell°4 nearly a mile from the ide, Year druggist will tell yea the P°t949145 4.541's 1161P that served right preportien, as their breeding ground. The dour-knela, turned by eunt M long as the fly was known ess gereneoaerea 1144(1s, shoal rner0,' as an aantayiag nuieanee hare an antiseptic bath as often 45 there was little ehance of enlisting poseible. Infeepioue diseases are spre very orten by the seemingly hiu, lees. doorknob, • While the telephone is a wonder- tex, Serve hot or cold with currant ful -invention aild ib werild be a atilieel a difficult matter to exist eomfortab, Tapieca Pear Soup—One-fourth ly withent one, it is a breeder of pound dried pear, half to three- disease. To prevent. the, to a eer- quarters sager, one-quarter pound taiu extent, an antiseptic shield dried apricots, three tablespoons should be placed over the mouth- atapioca, oae-quarter cup eurrants, pima A good idea would be for <few grains oak, ono quart water, aeh mereber of the family to have one -bleb piece cinnamon, one his Own Wield eonveoiently Pear epeen lenion jiiiee!, two elOVCS. Soak the 'Phone, and use it when slieakh fruit over night: in the water. In ing„ he morning add the spiee and tap- Combe and hairbruebes should not a and simmer gently till both are be negleeted. They should have AR done . Then sweeten, add salt and antiseptie bath at 3ea once a week. canon juice and Currant Jelly Sauera—Boil one mapof granulateel sugar and one- third min ad water, wit out stirring, four minutes; add four tablespottne of currant jay. Aa soon as the eat= baile again, add two table - epos of lemon juice and eore. Potatoes Goldenrod—Three cups These artieles used in the guest hamber ehotiki be subject to this eatment after the departure el, eh visitor, %Wren, when using a penell, sten it with the mouth. This habit should be broken if possible. The danger ef contagion is prevent- ed by labeling, the pencil with egeh diced eooked potatoes, two table- owner's name. This min be done spoene float., three hard -cooked , by pasting a strip of paper en the eggs, two cape milk, cant tablespoon finely minced Onit)11) one teaspoon salt, three tablespoons butter, one- quarter teaeprion pepper. Separ- ate egg whites from yolks, cut into dice and add to potato. Fry °pion • an batter till softened, add flour pencil or cutting the initials in the wood. WISE SAYINGS. Never stop work till you have to. I have seen so many good men re- tire—and go to pieces.—Dian, Pi - and seasonings ard gradually the gate milk, stirring well. Let boil; add Work is the very salt of life; not potatoes and when very hot turn only preserving it front decay, but into serving dish. Put egg yolks, in also givine it tone and flavor,— potato ricer and rice over dish. Hugh Blael, Serve at once. Providenee never intended that Tax, cocoA AND conEE, any State here should. be either t 1 1 tamp y lappn or entirely miser - Making Tea.—Fill the kettle with 'ablc."—Pilair• fresh cold water and: set it on to If all men had to earn all they lived upon they would know better boil. If eoft water can be prom: - Never ,how to use money and how to save ed, it should always be used. Samuel Barrow, make the tea with water that has Eschew wiokedness. Be truthful ben . long on the fire, simmering or in speech, faithful to your engage - that has been twice boiled. The meats, kind and helpful to your re - natural aeration of the water is lations and neighbors.--a-Mahomet. drawn off by long -continued heat - This world is full of fools, and he ing, and the hardness ol the water who would not wish to see one must is- increased by the evaporation that not only shut himself up alone, but , takes place. The more rapidly the else break his looking-glass.—Boil- ,att rhatiter is heated the better the tea 5' 5' eau Warm the teapot. Put in the tea , If men would wily be as consider- , , . in the proportion of one ounce to ate to wife, children and servants as six or seven persons, or a, teaspoon- • they are to acquaintances and ful for each person, and a teaspoon- strangers their homes would be in- ful over. Pour on the bailing water. comparably brighter.—Canon Hen - Cover the that and allow it to sley Henson. stand from five to seven minutes to The unhappy are neaer pleasing, --Zraw. Take care to use a teapot and all naturally avoid. the contag- in night proportion to the size of ion of misery. To bear complaints your party. If the teapot is not is wearisome alike to the wretched filled the tea cools rapidly. , If tea and the happy. . . . Who that is required in haste, while the is struggling under his own evils water is toming to the boil put the will add to them the miseries of an - tea into the teapot and stand,rthn- othert—Dr. Johnson. side the oven until it is thoroughly For two women to love each other hot through. Pour on the boiling all things must be clear and .fair— water, and in a minute it will be there must be no mystery and noth- ready to pour, out. ing hidden. Between a man and a Making Coeoa.—Two tablespoon- woman it is different. Some baa - fills of cocoa, two eupfuls of milk, i•iers should never be broken down, two tablespoonfuls of sugar. two some things left --undefined, if a capfuls of boiling water and &pinch man's love especially is to continue. , of salt. Milt the cocoa, sugar and —Mrs. W. X. Clifford. salt together ; add the boiling water a. gradually; when smooth, boil five minutes; add two cupfuls of milk scalded. end beat with an egg beat- er or chocola,te stick until frothy. Making Coffee.—One cupful of coffee end six cupfuls of coid water. Put coffee in cheesecloth' bag. Tie, allowing To0111 for coffee to swell. Place in scalded coffee toot, cover with ,cold water and boil 10 minutes. Remove bag, let stand -two minutes on back of range, and serve with hot milk, sugar and cream. THE CLEAN HOUSE. Modern seienti,ets have tried to inapreernizpon the minds Of the gen- eral public the necessity ,of keeping the -borne as free from germs as . possible. Every disease has its beginni,ng traced to these destroyers of life. Therefere we should take every precaution in turn to destroy them. The mother in the home would be wise to form a crusade against all warring germs. Each member of the family ouelit, to aisist her in every way possible „thia man- , THE BURSTING OF BOILERS. The naval correspondent of the Eenclop Morning Past has some- thing interesting to say on the anb- ject of the bursting of the boilers aboard ship, of which, so much has been heard. When a steamship sinks it is inevitable that reports should get al3out that the boilers burst, as she went doWn. There is a roar and a great expulsion of steam from the funnels as the boilers be- come submerged, and it, is assumed that this can only he caused by their bursting. It has, -however, been proved over and over again that this effect is merely the result of the water suddenly reaching antl put- ting out the fires; that there is no violent explosion within board, and that the bursting of boilers in such circumstanees would be im- possible. Moors are forbidden by their re- ligion to deposit their money in banks; instead, they hide if, in the ound: !)? concerted effert for its euppression. We eannot too stroagly advocate intelligent eleanlieess, but even if all stable and barnyard aceinnule- tions were plowed into the fields weekly, there would etill remain, in the cities, the gutters, sewers, dumps and all sorts of accidental a,eeumulatioes anvNvliere • and in the country, the, miles of roadsides and acres a barayards and pas- tures, All this inearis that the breeding places are an imposeilale field of attaek in ease of the filth fly. In feet the plan has been be- fore the country now for several .ars and we thealat whether a single City, town or even home has tried to follow it eoneistently for an en- ' ;-, 'FLY NUISANCE lichee every home, awl since ne leehold ean breed enengh flica cover at least a half a mile sgeare, positively every famil, umet eo-op- erate. This means that wo must, firat of all, have plan which ellen THE SUNDAY SC11031. SEJOY INTERN,VTION,11-3 jr-NE 2. Lesson IX. Hypocrisy and sneer itY• galt, 6, 148, Golden, Text, Matt. Verse 1. Take heed—The exhor- , lives ef others and beeoinee social in its nature itemest be chaeteried and lifted w'nolly above the "Pane of self-seeking' ostentation by a sense of sacred communien with the Fa- ther. AN IMPORTANT QUESTION. Canada's Duty Toward the Bahama Islands. The que,stion of the entey of the Bahama Islands into. the Qoaf.eders ation -ef (lei-m.4a is once again to tation which followe as a ertheisre the front< There are at present lin- ed pharasaio religion anti an ruses_ ?atisfaetory trade cooditionre existten- i7loingTrItaelhfer coess;eintYta°tfi ostentation. PTi nee 'unegc e in s a rtYli e thatislands l i-Owf'11-.4nielni renderh 1 e ,s s o paasage may ho divided inn, cured frere some source. There are three parts, as fellows; Vereess 1-4, two alternative -e open to the people devoted to almsgiving ;--versea 5.45, of the islands, either to throw in th prayer, and versee 10-18, feat- their lot with Canada, becoming one ef the provinces of the Domiri- Ilieliteousneee---Alinsgiving pray ion or to negetiate with some elements in righteousness as under- ment. In regard ta the latter, estor,(xainbdy tfahsetiisnegwsw.ere emespnaoah. couatry a reciprocal :trade arranges there are only' tWe countries with To be eeen—Or, to be a speetaela which any arrangement of the kind to; that as, to ina,R4e an ostentatious °laid he made?, the Domonion of disnlay, The word need here ie the Canada and the 'United States. Greek word from whieh the word The Bahama. Islands produce • theatre is derived. Jesus is warn_ goods for which there is a- market ing against ineincere play-exting in both Canada and the Uaited vlig4on States, while Canada and the • „Reward with year Father who as in heaven -'-This is granted only to these who are coritrite andeliumble it epirit. Gi'eek phrase, meaeing “to trade baiTiere 01Q way ef cies- United States prodeee g,oeds which the people el the Bahamas must aeeesearily import. The entry of the Bahamas into 2, Sound not a trumpet—There eOnfeeleration would remove all ay one's own pipoh,. whieh inJ WITIS dutiee between Canada and odern eolloquial English lute be the islantia, and -would, therefore, oree "to blow one's own hornh afford the relief for whieh the let- 1-Typoerithe Litorally, plateaet- ter are looking, Of course, a reel- , or Pretenders; that is, those Proeal trade arrangement with who pose and net upon the stage Canada would to a large extent before an aduairiag audience, la serve the same anarpoeiet but there both Matthew and Luke this epithet is this difference, that 7,a he eaae is frequently applied to the Pharie of negotiations °f this nature' United, States influence would I'm - ave received—That Ls, din full," turally intrude itself, for it can he They halaTthereforo no further re- taken for granted that thee,A,13104- gnition or reward to expeet, us wetIld not lose the possible 3, Let not thy left band know vantage of a trade alliance of thia 'Hide your charity not only frum kind without -a struggle. Cortese - he gaze of others, but from the too 310115' might be °Itered 14bieh it aument recollection of it in ',,1;'our 'WOuld be difficult to resist, Were, .flconseiousness." however, the Bahamas to become Yl'hy not put the fles i Now that . tile bearer it stow1 1 , eted of being bearer of all manner of germs of dieease. Its extermination has be- eome the moat argent next step to- ward eleanly living. How to do this, is the problem, TL1lIALN FEATURE n our solution of this.problem the past has been the invention Of fly eereen, with which te shut our- seivee in prison, while we yleild t the enemy uudisputed possession of the out-ofaloors. Then we halm de- vised other disagreeable accessor- ies, Jike tanglefoot paper and fly spatters with which to kill those that slip into our prisons. To cap the ehmax of stupidity we have sup- plied food at our kitchen doors and unlimited breeding, places in our stable cellars. In recent years our SU00e3S in dealing with mosquitoes by atten- tion to their breeding places has 0 alVe feetive, an elv OA list Universal support, The pubUe is an enormous MOS ef t,gpoloa §eflSe,and nothing short of real eosnnion Kenn, ertn move it. A pair ot flies begdoning in April may be 1 e progenitors of billions by Aug- ust. The one thing needfni is in- telligence enough on the part of ',zey member of the COMninnity to realize how rnauy files rimy breed from a single .pain it has been computed that a pair of flies begin- nhig to breed early in April might, if nil lived, be the progenitors of 1. 010,000,000,000,000,000, by Aug- ust. The first nation or community in -which this degree of erne intelli- gence is attended will be free from llies from thet time on, and we DeCti to develop this intelligence with reference to a good many other na- tural enemies. JEWS IN DANGER FROM MOBS. Old Accusation of "Blood Sneri- flees" in Ignorant Minds. A danger now Menacing the ,Tews of Kieff, Russia, is causing much anxiety to their eo-religionists throughout the world. They are being accused once more of carry- ing eut "blood eacrifiees," and tile unreasoning passion of the mob is being worked up against them_ And the usual results of race hatred against the, Jews in Russia are known to everybody. A year ago a boy named Andrei Yusehinsky was murdered at Kieff, and on very slender evidence a Jew has been arrested and changed -with the minder. The inquiry is now in progreas, but whether the accused man is guilty er not is not the! point. The crime has been seized on by the mob orators, who assert that the boy Yusehinsky was mur- dered by Jews in order that his blood. might be taken and used for ritual puiposes, in obedience to an alleged Jewish religious law. The hest -known 'Russian scholars, au- thors, and artists have made a ve- hement protest against the spread- ing of this dangerous fiction, and now the i0VCMOSt Jewish ,people throughout Europe have joined their protests to that of the Russian intellectuals. The accusation now .being made at Kieff is a direct 'descendant of the mediaeval "ritual murder" charge which has been responsible for anti-Jeiwsh exercises. In the newspapers photographs of the murdered boy are being shown with the legend: "Orthodox Bus - Sian people, remember the name of the youth Andrei Yuschinski, the- tured by the Sews! Christiana, watch your children!" It is against this dangerous and infamousPropo- gandathatthe Jews of Europe are now protesting, and in GerManY particulaaly the movement -Of indig- nation and protest has taken large "I:hear Arthur has bought a mo - ter ear." "Yes," "Where has he run with it so far i" "Principally into debt. During the last ten years the to- tal number of depositors, in the British Post Office Savings Bank has increased by over 3,000,000. Women generally have-alelicacy,, good , taste and admiratiou for thingeottia 'are gracefuri,,aficlil?.e211- ., FAMILY OF ii`RESICS. SPilniiik Peasant Taas Twelve Fin- gers ou Each Ilan& — Spain _possesses two f.amilies at least which have unique records. One 'was brought to light when a woman tailed at Bilbao hospital with her on, 'who has enormous bands and 12 fingers on each. 'The most curious part of the case is that all her sons possess similar hands. One has 21 fingers, another 23, and the other five children 24 fingers each. All are living and enjoying good health. Many doctors are studying these cases. At Zarza- tano, a, town in the, same province, a child has just been born, while his fatlmr, grandfather, great- grandfather, and his great -great- grandfather are still living. His name is Urriticoeehea, and the fain ily are Basque farm laborers. The great-grandfather and great -great- grandfather have acted as god- fathers to the latest arriVal, t'The united -family constitutes ncarty a whole village. WOMAN JAIL GOVERNOR. Mme. Jenny Porchet, who has charge of the prison at Aigle, in the Canton of -Vaud, Switzerland, is now fifty-two years of age, and thirty-one years ago she married the then prison governor. At his death the authoeities advertised for a sueceSsor, and among the appli- eants was his widow, who- had man- aged the prison during her hus- band's long illness. Another point in her fayor was her physique. In height she wants only an inch of six feet, and possesses the muscles of a wrestler. The Prison Commission doubted her fitness, but when he offered to try her strength against the most powerful gendarme, all doubts subsided. The prison is said to be the best managed in Switzer- land. AIRMEN IN ITLOCKS. As, many as 120 aeroplanes will ing was to be performed, Jesus ac- r,vititin a. comparatively fee- years take place in the 'coming , 1912 tually does away with tale practice that vessels, heve numbered t,licif . , . -, French arinY .niariogavres along ill 7,,t, '01(lcr .,-.I.(..,,v1s13. form; $.1111Q peteneess itisal ermw ri‘ the thette with the unPrecedente,t1 numiser of without' the outward ,ostelitation sand. 7.he titanic, tem efore tal arinv. The aerotilancs corn- a public obervance and relicriolis reoerd 1-4 carryitin. with ii,i” in'te prise • t,-iventy sectiolis, or ',‘`.,c,sca.- 'ma l 3'. 140,000 inen, or one-fifth. (if the lo- fasting lost its historic character of .eitae;,..,:Tiotmhil:li..i.)ii:he,fladi;„foIrreilillael:::seltfi,),?t,i.lie .' nb drilles," of eight, aeroplanes' c:'1.C.11',^ j,-• -;r3r1I.L. of,l-llY'F.11{","-V-1,‘ •-• ' .,, .At present the "War 1)epartanent is sectret---YeSits' eitiplia,sizes the ...pi disastei" aL.- - engaged' In .aying out the plans for i persoug, side of re igiotts It 0, and . , the manoeuvres, in which tlic acre.- i makes it <Ilea,' that personal rah- s Of thejotal planes will ,malco all tli(t).,'.goinbina- 1 gioa must be a matter of the inner ,efertd t 4 tions avliiplieappeam, to ',beilaa efill..' -1 life., In so far as it fonches, the :iiii,/, " steed and prayenstaening part •13f Canaala, there not , 1-1‘;:yeit,1„Iewrchletsrtecr.era Zst,',1,7,,ife°,,r `t'iitielTishlaerlidrseeadn7 t°1-ifistrettent)r4yt,webeunt tote, ,.tovillaietorimthreagthlieruerti tfialart prayer the tolbicrigDa,°tiionninioteon wportiold4vide1SCImbeearle orE latMe thisposture. The point. ,Te- transaortation between its present ;sus makes against the, pharisees is Mill:die ports and -the euggested that. they. ao arranged their daily added territory, something" which it routine ot work as to be in some is possible the United States might conspiemene place when the hour offer as a concession in <connection forprayerelaboratearrned, s(eletvti f4nitoini. ls1migelit with any tradarrangement with etheir that country, reiciaagvneitto,eneoiovredat(imteiirrartiztardo—f e Ttte AS the situation stands, arid as already 'Minted out, the islands popuhtee, , , must secure relief either frOM Can- e). Inner ehamber—The private ada or the United State's,: Irnin )l aco:lii3eiTIilwaslslalls1: n"13'eitlertbr'3ughc(rfeleralint:etipperPartatlithouse. tn0; b'nealaafa reelpeea ao:4inesbeingasnallroonbilt upon the fiat reef. United States through the latter, trade arrangement, and from ;the 7. Vain repetitions—The Hebrew unless absolute neoessity should. Talmud contains this promise, force the islanders into renuncia- "Everyone that multiplies prayer tion of the British eonneetion, and ia heard." Jesus teaches that the the allying of their political as well mere multiplication of the verbal as their trade interests with those pant of prayer is not ia, keeping of the United States. with the truo spirit of communion The question, therefore, becomes with God, one of Imperial eoncerna Canada rEeaatdh, e la, o—d ySoounri eiz a coal erlry in tide matter could render a mgreat service to the empire by either ad - it uselir"oiplir te wielicitlefftoeilioslti.lsisinsiainnateenrd—emahetoplbeieyeta„, mitting the Bahamas into confeder- ation, or by entering into seell a model of simplicity, directness, and trade arrangement with the people , is found in Luke 11. 2-4, lief, from their present unsatisfac- of the islands as will give them re - brevity. A ,slightly variant parallel In heaven—Literally, in the hea- tory conditions. The entry of the -yens. This was a common introduc- islands into 5)11f-ederati°n wnuld tion to Jewish prayer, intended to settle matters once and for all, express t,he thought that the place whereas a trade arrangement might of God's abode was invisible. not in the end prove satisfactory, Hallowed—Considered ever sac_ and might result in doing what it. red, is desired should not be done throw 10. Thy..1:ingdom---Compare in- the Bahamas lath the arms '81 tile trocluetory Paragraphs to this and United Stales. It is hoped, there.. the following lesson. fore, that the Dominion Govern - „shall give the beet possible an Our daily breasi—The suste- ment nance which our physical needs for attention to whatever advances in the day demand. the direction of confederation may 13. Bring us not into temptation he ma -de by thepeople of.theBaha- (James 1. 13), but he dees permit c* mas--Nelson Daily News. —God does not tempt man to evil trials to come, upon all (Heb. 4. 15). DISASTERS TO SIIIPS. The petition hero is for strength to _ overcome the evil one. The Greatest Loss of Life Was: Ori Many early manuscripts, though the Tit vatic. - with considerable variation, add a,t The tale oftoe logreat disasters to mer_ this point the words, For thine is oh ant kingdom and the power and the tehaalrilt shipsgiatic_eis atlgt tiniociadomoredestile glory, forever. Amen. 16. When. ye fast— sesus takes buAustria atsteam emigrant vessel' Lor granted the emnpliance of his involvincl g a loss of nearly 500 lives ; followers with many of the custom:a the ss Res.ai, charter wrecked off ary religious observances. the Welsh coast in 185, with a loss Of a sad countenanee—Hypocriti- of 446 lives and nee -1 800I 000 • I Y , in eally so. The Pharisees fasted gold; the s.s. London, lost in the twice in the week (Luke 18- 12). Bay of Biscay in December, -1805, Disfigure their faces—Face and wit a lass of 220 persons; the bead were left unwashed and un- kempt, as indicative. of. the serious- ness of ;the mood which the fast- ing Was perferined. The Whole at- tire of the one thus fasting: was in harmony with his facial appear- ance., Their reward—In this case the, mere notice of their fellows, either with or without commendation,' as the case might be. 17. Anoint thy head—As if for a' glad festival. By thus radically approach to that of the Titame, the changing the manner in which fast- obvious reason being that it is only , White Star s.s. Atlantic, on her way "to Halifax in 1873, with it loss of 560; the Great Queensland, in 1870, on her way to Melbourne, with 569 personson board, supposed to have caught ,.fire off 'Cape Finistere, and the Princess Alice, which ,NY'`XS 3:1111 1111,0 bY another steamer on Thames in ..1878, and went down with botwoen 600 ,and .700 'persons., In none of .these, nor -in any other" instance since. did the loss of life' 7f, ,41 4 al 4 '4.