Exeter Advocate, 1905-07-13, Page 6•
1
•
1
C
1
1
THE SIN OF ANXIETY
Tlie Many Things We Have
Which to Be Grateful
"Be not anxious for your lite." -
Luke, xii., 22.
'lb(' great Teacher docs not saY
that we are not to h0 01014011 ill', or
protidei:t: but. he insists that no
event can be provided for by anxi-
etv, by fret'ing over it bcfure it
comes. Half the people on our
streets l.,ok as though life was a
terry business. It is hard to 1:nd a
Po, d 'coking man or woman. 11'ot•ry
is ale• cause of their woebegone ap-
Pettrgtnce. 1Vorry stakes the writi'.►esi
worry cuts the deep, tio%t•n glancing
lines on the face; worry is the worst
dire ase of our nu,derii times.
Care is cortagious; it is hard work
being cheerful at a funeral, and it is
a good deal harder to keep the frown
from your face when you are in the
throng of the worry worn ones. Yet,
we have no right to be dispensers of
deem; no matter how heavy our
loads may seem to be we have no
right to throw their burden on
others nor even to cast the shadow
of the,' on other hearts.
Anxiety is instability. Fret steals
away force. Ile who dreads tomor-
row trembles to -day. Worry is
wen!• nes4 . The successful omen may
be always wideawake, but they never
worry. Fret and fear are like fine
sand thrown into life's delicate tuts-
clitlnismi; they carnet more than half
the friction; they steal half the
power.
IS S7'i{ENGTII.
Nothing fs so well done as that
which is clone heartily, and nothing
18 so heartily done as that which is
dery happily. Ile happy. is an in-
junction not impossible of fullfil-
uient. Pleasure nay be an accident;
but happiness comes in definite ways.
It is the casting out of our foolish
fears that we may have room for a
fete of tier common joys. it 1s the
telling our worries to wait until we
get through appreciating our bless-
ings. 'fake a deep breath, raise
your cliest, lift your• ryes from the
ground, look up and think how many
things you have for which to he
grateful, and you will find a senile
grouting where one may long have
been unknown.
combat the Messiah is to come forth'inarried, a prisoner is related of a
cicteriuus. The purpose of his life of former turnkey. who now occupies a
humiliation tinging men is to bol responsible position in one of His
• gloriously accomplished, fur since ho Majesty's prisons in Ireland. Serve
bare the sin of 'natty, and made Ill- six yeay e. rs utas o a } e young girl onus
tcrcc•ssion for the 4rausgre.ssors once ' f d b sir •� f ,.terry to steal
many w o were lrangresthrough urs She was deleted, tried, and se•ntenc-
1 shall
h be saved.
� HOPI
E•
For
DREAMS OF PRISONERS
'rake the right kind of thought -tor FASCINATE AND MARRY
to take no thought would be sin- THEIR JAILERS.
but take the calci, unanriuus thought -
of )o.ir busines., your duties, steer Parisian Milliner's Apprentice and
c:iflicult les. your alisappoint'moos, the Jailer Eloped
Together.
and all the things that once havo
caused you fear and you %till 1 nil
yourself laughing at most of them. A heck or two ago a woman was
In some you will see but friends in arrested in Brooklyn on a charge of
disguise. and in others puny foes bigamy. She was young, pretty, and
decked out as giants. But begin chariuing, it is said, turd she used
to dread there, brood over them, her attribute to such purpose that
look fit them with eyes }rrejudiced she escaped from custody by eloping
with f:au•, and tho least diftictiltiee with the jailer ttho had charge of
rise like mountains. In winter some 11(1 cell and tins responsible iter her
p• of I: worry themselves into Ila- (1: t:• li ion. And thus another ro-
!ar•ia over the . (uitoes they racy mance has been added to the history
meet n •xt summer. I of the New York police force al.eady
Coming events cast their Oiailows %'•ell stocked with romances. I('.t
L•efuro; they cast their stin.;liiee, too,the case dues not create a precedent,
if wt icul's at them aright. As a since it was anticipated sou years
strong roan rejoices to run a race, as ago by the love -story of a 1'arisien
a young man anticipates with .;(!v milliner's app►-nticc, Lula 1-achacol.
the coming struggle, s.p does the j In consequence of the frequent dis-
bratwe heart face to -morrow, not only appearance of sundries used in the
without fear busin ss where Mlle. Lachacel was
IIU'i' EVEN WITit GLADNESS. 1 employed, and of complaints from
Mistaken ideas of religion are re -
'detective
of being rubbed, a young
sponsible for a great mane of the 'detective arrested the apprentice on
unnecessary wrinkles on the human suspicion, and on irearchiti;_ the
face. Too many have thought it rooms where she lodged lie discover -
14001(l be impossible (0 be happy In . cd a portion of the stolen property.
two worlds, enol so, having elected! there was some difficulty in the
happiness in the one which they !case, however, and the young woman
thought wood Inst longest, they remained in custody three or four
hate no choice but to be unhappy in . weeks before it rivals settled; and dm-
have
one. In fact, some seem to Ing that. Period a jailer saw 'h
suppose that the greater their mite of her, frequently having to conduct
cry here the more intense will their her to and from the prison where'she
bliss be there. 11 heaven is to bo was lodged and the ounce of the Cum -
bought that way certainly many are nfssory•
paying full price for it.I Eventually, however, she was or -
Burdens 14e all must bine; but derecf to undergo nine niotl(hie (rn-
they need not break us- SerrowR we. Prisonment. But on the way from
all must shorn; but they need not tlio court to the prison she and the
unmake us. They will not if we jailer
have helms(' the 'T'eacher's secret of CONTRIVED TO DISAPPEAR,
It ing; he, the man of sorrows, was I
the man 44110 could bequeath to his
and it was subsequently made clear
friends his joy. '1'o bin life lust. its that they had planned to elope to -
anxiety, because the chief things of
gether in the event of her being sett -
life were not food or raiment, or tented to imprisonment, %thick he
ewes social standing, but manhood
endeavored to prevent by appeal-
even
unselfishness to nun, and the ing to the prosecutors not to pro-
and
of there' were ns easily j ceed with the casp, and offering hint-
realisedin need and adversity as in , self to mace full compensation for
riches and prosperity. the goods 14111011 had not been re-
covered. I•'ailing in this, captor anti
captive eloped. Whether the au -
once shunned as unclean, make clean thorilie8 really exerted themselves to
many notions. bring the lovers to justice, or the re -
1. Verses 1-9 of chapter 53 present mantic episode appealed too strongly
n view of the Messiah's career as he to thctr eentimunt8, it is manifestly
appeared to his contemporaries at inrpossil le to sae. But no sorrowful
the time of his great. humiliation- sequel spoils the story.
that is, tho period of his life among It was a French (detective whoop
I The Suffering Saviour. nidi• the charms of an alleged murderess
Golden Text Ise. 55.6. Our message -literally, that which captivated, anti, strangely enough, in
we have heard. The things low !hi{ case also' the woman was a
spoken by the prophet, who, as one milliner's apprentice. She was ae-
among his people, speaks of himself cuing of murdering her lover, tvho
this as receiving with then' this message had deserted her, and the detective
the or report. A negative answer seems who was destined to fall n victim to
to bo implied by the question. 'l'oo her charms was one of the first to
strange and wonderful to be believed susp(ct her of the crime. The evi-
has been the message concerning the donee against the prisoner, however,
h 'Iint" and subsequent glory of though strongly presumptive of her
the Messiahe it is not belietid bo- euilt, was purely circumstantial; anti
cause to none has the arm of Jo- there is little doubt that in the ab-
ho;'ah (his power) been revealed. 1 sense of a strong motive for the
2. Ile grew -The Servant, the Mes- crime the woman would have escaped
si lieftr., him -Jehovah. Susi tomo. On the other hand, the
I deft nee offered was weak, and up to
Asa tender plant -"i 41111 the true the very hour of the trial it was
viae, my bather is the husbandman" more then usually uncertain whether
(.loin lir. 1 ). In obedience tle the the woman would be judged guilty or
Father's will the Word became flesh,'
at first. a helpless child attaining not,
gradually unto strength and uuut-I Very early after arresting his prin.-
gradually
I oner, It. seems, the detective fell in
Asa root out of dry ground -A love with her, and ao s(rem_Iv did
precious plaint in unpropitious soli h' urge 1n the authorities that she
and gurroundings. I was innocent that the case was taken
8. ile was dezpiRed-Note the i nst out of his hands, as it was felt that.
tense used throughout by the prophet, lir was too prejudiced to deal with
who sees all this suffering( unu nu- 1t properly. 'Thereupon ho resigned
millet' of the Christ as already' and devoted himself to
in every case be tido n to have the accomplished. I WORKING UP THE DEFENCE.
same meaning. Others think that Rejected-Iletter, forsaken.
the conception in the prophet's mind Grief -Literally, sickness.
But lie tinct with little succe.c, mud
hecotnes more and more clear and An One from whom men hide their it. was generally telt that the mo-
definite as the prophecy advances face -Or, "he hid as it were his face ('used owed her acquittal more to
iron one stage to the next, beginn- from us." 'l'he reading of the Itevi_ her attractive personality than to
Mg with the thought of the Servant cion in this case seems to give the anything else. A few wrecks later she
soden, advancing to the conception better sense. narrled the ex -detective, and then
of the Ideal personal representative Estee'ned him not -literally, held there were not wanting folks to hint
of that nation, and culminating in a hits of no account. that the delectite had, in his in -
Clear nal 004480• conception of a •"(. 'rho chastisement of our pence-- !situation. .ufprew•d Oita of eel -
tiers 1 Messiah. Possibly the let- The pain inflicted for amoral ends deme, But this ins absolutely dis-
ter view may net be tar from repro- with remedial intent and ne0e)ful to proved when a well-known crimiunl
senting the actual facts. Wo know
that the prevalent view of the Chris-
tian church regarding (his lest and
greatest of the Servant passages is
indorsed in the New Testament
(comp. Acts t3 26-35), and cannot
therefore have been incorrect. And
certain it is that nl) Messianic pro-
phecy of the Old Testament reaches
its culmination in this fifty-third; murmur nor complain. ' a9 nn artistic Ktwindler, hew fallen in -
chapter of Isiah. Written centuries! 8. its oppression and judgment he to th' hands of Continental police
before the advnnt of the Messiah was token away -The 'Hebrew of this forces four timer.. 1t is asserted that
1t1 it us certainly portrays, yet clause is a little ambiguous -probe- she is neither good-looking nor nt-
rending in every line ns if written lily the sense is that. oppression nal tractive, but rhe possesses a rcmnrk-
under the very shadow of Calvary, judicial procedure brought about his able power to captivate mnn, which
it must ever stand ns the nhr.1 death. The retitle! ing of this entire she has used to such mnrked efieet
wonderful instance of divinely in- terse in the Revision gives the pro- that on three occasions she has
spired prophecy of a personal Mes-i liable tens•• of the original and is a (scared from custody with the con -
stab who ens to he the Saviour of { great improwemet,t ever the render- Mt'nnrs of her cuslodi41nQ. elm ono
sinful men. I ing of the Auther':ted �"eesien
Verse 13. Shall deal wisely -Liter-! 9. They ie his grove -Thr sense oecnsinn slue eloped with the police-
nlly. shall prosper. ills enrerr shall; is that of the pateive r.1''structon.
titian who was conducting her to triol
be crowned eith complete success. "His grave was node," the pronoun afterwards inking the earliest oppor-
Exattted . . . lifted up . . . very "they" being indefinllC. 1unity of slipping away from hint,
)racing hi:n to txrlain the affair to
high -The coming exaltation of theI Wicked . . . rich loon-Appeiely ns- 1114 i n ht'ns 1n the most probable
Nervnnt in contrast to his past 'socinted in thought since the rich ore
nhnsentent is set forth in this and frequently nrraigned by the Old revs_ way he could.
the two succeeding verses (13-15), lament prophe(s as especially guilty �h^ Ilton rn?oyed some years of
which versee are introductory in of violence and deceit, neither of liberty. When next she eras nrresttel
character, briefly stating tile Import which were found in his mouth. she boasted that no prison guarded
of the entire passage. 10. When tl-Je!:o1411t. ht men was strong enough to held
14, 15. These lerses are t0 bel He shall res+ his seed -1111 the giving her, and in consequence of this two
taken ns n single compound sentence, of his life many shall be brought to milers were specially detailed to see
as the punctuation of the Revision life. she diel not 0senpe. nntl to I.rotest.
shows. I 11 . ilv the knowledge of himself-, each tither against her wiles. )tut.
As ninny were nstoeisheel--.lnlnt04 apparently referring to the prophetic she esc•nped with the (-minivan,. of
Cnd horrified at the spectacle of 1111- I nrtivity of Christ in which he tnught both of them. 5h•' was. however,
parnlleled suGrrinc. The parenth,- Ween concerning himself and his 1818-, QUICKLY 1(1:-:11(itI*'I'i:D,
viral clause %hid% follows explains she,
more in detail the repugnance felt , 1'2. Therefore-iteenase of n11 that when her costate was enlruvted to
try (hose who belittle the Sermant in he has suliered and done.
THE SUNDAY L
U DAY SCH00
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
JULY 16.
Lesson III.
LESSON 11'OI(D STUDIES.
Note -These Word Studies for
lesson are based on the text of
Revised Version.
The Servant of .iehovuh.-Our les-
son passage for to -day is the last
and greatest of four so -culled "Ser
-
%ant passages" (comp. 42. 1, IT.; 49.
1-11; 50. 4-11). The reference to the
Servant of Jehovah in these pas-
sages, and more especially the refer-
ence (o the sulTtring servant in our
lesson for to -4141}•, has always been
regarded by the Christian church as
it direct conscious prophecy of the
Christ. Against this prevalent view
seine hate argued, explaining the
Servant as a collective idea repre-
senting either the nation of Israel or
• some smaller Conununity within the
rltitiun, as for example, the prophetic
order, the faithful remnant, or the
ideal Israel. Since in atony portions
Ofthis Paine prophecy lsr•r is re-
argued sial
that consistency of interpretation re-
quires that the term "servant" shall
procure for us peace anti pardon cnnfeseed to the crime. In the mean -
(comp. Pros'. 3, 11, t.): "My son, de- Bine, however, the suspect and the
noise not the chastening id Jehovah detective hnd setlk(1 duan in ('anutl't
for whom Jehovah loveth he re- and hnd almost surreeded in f,rg••t-
proaeth." !ling the tragic episode which hat! PO
11. Every one to his own wnt•-Fol- strangely made them) Ilion and wife.
lowing inulla:dual selfish impulses and j ',anguishing In a prison at Rion.
interests. ' in France. is a Belgian woman who,
7. Opened not his mouth -Did not in the course of a reuuarknhie career
1 two women, the result being that
his former object cet.'Itien. 11i11 1 -Jehovah. in whose name the now elle is not nhlc to use her fits -
Sprinkle -The ilei. rendered "to prophet is epenking. I cinntions with any effect on her
eprutkle" means literally "to scatter Divide hint n portion with the jailer,.
(a liquid) In smell drops," es in great-Exnitntton, noel gi,•ry shnlll Probable the miler pntheH; emote nn
1•,•ee I net or digitising (comp. follow his suffering and hunliliatlnn •record, however. in which n jniler
Le. !, 6). Thus rt) •1) the gervant, Out of tribulation, su1Teting, and fell in love with, and ultltnately
et) to three months' imeirsonus't t. At
the end of that time she was re-
lented, and, having no friends or re-
latives to whom she could apply for
assistance, committed another theft,
in order, as she informed the magis-
trate at the second trial, that 8110
might escape starvation by going to
prison again.
The Magistrate, a humane Along,
gave the prisoner n nominal sentence,
and issued instructions that the case
should be brought under the notice
of the court missionary. The latter
was considerably surprised the fol-
lowing day to receive a visit from
a warder who had charge of prison-
ers in the dock, and who confessed
that he had been so inove•cl by the
distress of the girl and admired her
physical charms to such an extent
that ho would willingly marry 'Ler if
Rh. would consent at the cxpirariu►i
of her sentence.
Naturally, the missionary advised
the w•ardeC to consider the 'latter
for a while longer, and to make no
hasty proposal on account of his
pity for the prisoner. In the mean-
time he offered to see that the girl
was supplied with food, clothes, and
work. The warder did not change
his Mind. however, and the upsiiot of
the affair was that he proposed at
the end of six menthe and duly led
to the altar one who had been more
sinned against than sinning.
ELEPHANTS LUMBERING.
'1'ES'FED RECIPlS.
Asparagus Pudding. -Cook three
cupfuls of asparagus tips until ten-
der, then drain. l'ut into a sauce-
pan two tablespoonfuls u1 butter and
one tablespoonful of flour; cook to-
gether one minute. Add ono cupful
of milk, one-half teaspoonful of salt,
and one-fourth tcuspuonful of papri-
ka. Add tho milk slowly, stirring
all the time, and let it cook five
minutes. Take from the tiro and add
four well -beaten eggs, one cupful of
asparagus tips, and n teaspoonful of
chopped purhley. Line a well -butter-
ed baking dish with the remainder of
the asparagus tips; pour in the as-
paragus and sauce, and cook with
the dish in water in the oven for f f -
teen minutes. Serve with egg sauce.
White Sponge Cake. -Sift together
well one cup of flour, one cup of
granulated sugar, and one teaspoon-
ful of baking -powder. Add to (lour
and sugar one-half cup of sweet milk,
the well -beaten whites of three eggs,
a pinch of salt, and one teaspoonful
cf almond flitvoring.
Young Meets. -Tho beets should be
about the size of hickory nuts. If
any of the outer leaves aro rugged
or rusty, remove them, keeping
those that are tender and whole.
Wash well, taking caro not to break
the skin of the beet -root, and cook
in boiling water, slightly salted, un-
til tender. Cut off the leaves close
to the roots, drain in a colander,
Remarkable Intelligence Shown by and chop fine, seasoning with but -
These Animals• ter, salt, pepper, and lemon juice.
Set in a saucepan of boiling water,
•"I'he elephants 1 us were drag- to get very hot, while you scrape
ging the logs to the mill to be sawn. and triin the beets. When the leaves
They were harnessed for this with a aro dished, lay the red bectlets about
broad breustband and heavy chains. thea' as a garnish.
A native looped the chains routed Pineapple Omelet. -Five eggs, one
the logs, and the elephant started cup cooked pineapple pulp and juice,
off with thein and deposited them two tablespoons flour, two table -
on the trolley. Others were picking spoons butter, one-fourth teaspoon
up the sawn planks with their trunks salt. Beat yolks and whites separ-
and carrying therm across the yard ately, and add salt to whites. look
to be piled. (lour in butter a few seconds, but do
"A mahout sat on the neck of not brown. Add to yolks, then add
every elephant, and if the animal the fruit. with a few drops of lemon
picked up too small a plank the juice, and cut and fold the whites in
mahout would hint, with his Iron last. Cook as any omelet, and servo
spike, that two might go to that with powdered sugar sifted ever
load. Then, grm:ting, the elephant omelet. Garnish with a few :sprays
would pick up the second, with dn- of parsley.
finite delicacy of balance, turn, Veal Cutlets.-Trirn off bone and
march over, and deposit them beside gristle and dip small rounds of veal
the pile, always returning for an- into egg and seasoned cracker
other load so long as there were crumbs and fry. '1.11e trimmings
none he would take his 01180 in the may be stewed and served next day.
sun, and wait. Or perhaps there Are good baked in- ramekins with
were heavy logs to be pushed from highly seasoned white sauce.
one place to another; and if pushing Banana Fritters. -Select three good
W01114.1 do, with his trunk curled
against the log, no elephant would
give himself the trouble of picking
it up, any more than a housemaid
will pick up a chair on casters.
"More fascinating it was than I
can tell to see the jungle patriarch
kneel down to a heavy log, twist
his trunk around it, place it un the the orange juice, heat and thicken
top of the pile, and then calculate
with one heaping teaspoon (lour rub -
1(8 position, and push Hurl pull until
ter.into one heaping teaspoon but-
ter. Servo in separate (dishes with
sauce poured over banana. If you have
never used shredded wheat bieceit
crumbs for dipping, you have a
pleasant surprise in store, ms .they
brown and look so much better than
cracker crumbie
woe
lowing in a Pod rule: One ptnt agog
milk, 2 eggs, 1 cup sugar mud flavor-
ing to tuste. l'ut milk and sugar
together. heat eggs and blend all
thoroughly. Cook until thick. When
tried flavor and freeze.
HINTS 'TO HOUSEKEEPERS.
Sunlight and air are the very best
sanitary atgeits; therefore, they
should bo freely invited to enles
every room tit the house.
The best way of treating a stove
which hos not been blacked for some
time is to rub well with a ueespatper,
using u little clean grease of some
kind. It will soon :oke a polish af-
ter a feta treatments of this sort.
Before using a new clothes line well
boil it. This saves it from stretch-
ing, and it lusts double as long.
Dishcloths are quickly made fresh
and sweet by boiling in clean water
with a good lump of soda added.
'I'o clean oily cruet bottles, etc.,
put a few strips of blotting paper in
the bottle with a little vinegar, end
the same quantity of warm water,
and a piece of washing soda. `11►:tko
a few times and rinse in warm wa-
ter.
11'ater is quite Its desirable as milk
in mixing batters; and in many in-
stances cake is lighter if made 44:1)1
water rather than milk.
When you boil milk, grease the
saucepan with butter before puttiug
in the milk. '\'his will prevent the
granules that gather on the bottom
of the saucepan, that are so hard to
trash off.
If you have not a glass for meas-
uring medicine, get ono as soot as
possible. Spoons of all kinds vary
so much in size that it is never sato
to trust to them, and glasses with
the various doom marked can bo
bought cheaply.
TIDINESS.
There is no need to look untidy,
even if you are working about the
house. You cannot be so cheerful
nor so self-respecting when you arc
carelessly dressed as when you aro
neat and presentable, and even the
home -worker who has no help, with
a little good management, can bo
both.
If gloves ere worn to do the d'rty
work, in, they can be drawn off at
any moment and expose a pair of
hands free from dirt. A clean cloth
wound round the head when swety):ng
will prevent the hair from becoming
dirty and dusty, and it can be easily
removed in case of an unexpected
visitor. A good plan for the home -
worker is to have a large overall to
work in, which, when taken off, w111
display a neat dress, quite free from
fluff and dust.
The 'mineworker has a better op-
portunity of keeping her good looks(
than the business girl. She has
nothing of the strain of traveling, in
solid bananas. Peel nil cut into sometimes dirty Car's, and through
helves across. Let stand covered smoky tunnels, and often muddy or
with orange juice and juice of one dusty streets. She can always de -
lemon for several hours. 'Three -gear- pend on a properly prepared and
tens of a cupful of juice required. Dip cooked meal, while the business girl
in egg and shredded wheat biscuit must put up with what she can get,
crumbs, and fry in deep fat. Sweeten but there is no reason why s110
should not pay attention to her
dress, the keynote of which should
be neatness, and she should be as
tidy in appearance as is possible.
it was square in its place. Tho odd-
est, because the most reasonable
thing, was to see the elephant, push-
ing against the end of a very heavy
log, stretch out one hind leg to give
hirnself balance, and purchase. That
seemed to bring him, how•, very
near to us; he was not only doing
our work, but he was doing it in
our way.
"Presently, with one accord, all the
elephants dropped work and moved
in the direction of the sheds.
"'Phut means it's eleven o'clock,'
sold the foreman. 'Dinner hour. Not
for Ding Edward himself could we
get than to do a stroke of work
from now till three. It's their off
time. At three they begin again,
and work till dusk, and they start
about six in the morning, but they
don't understand overtime.' "-I'a1l
Mall Magazine.
IRISH LEAVING HOME.
Emigration Figures Show Trend
of Depopulation.
The emigration statistics for Ire-
land for the yew. 1905, issued recent-
ly, furnish melancholy reading, In
that they show how Ireland con-
tinues to lose some of the best of
her population. Lost year 30,902
natures of Ireland, a number equiva-
lent to 8.3 per theustind tit the popu-
lation, left their homes, the vast ma-
jority to go to the United States
or Canaan.
The total of 36,902 is n slight
falling off as compered with •neral
recent years, and is indeed the small.
est aggregate since 181)14. Itut un-
fortunately the outward Cow has
continued, for since 11450 no fewer
than 3,997,913 of the frith people
have left their name land. A large
proportion of there are among the
flower of the thee, for it is alniest
an axiom 1n Irish history that the
energetic and enterprising go, :while
the more helpless remnin.
ifow the provinces have lost may
he lithely stnte(1:
Munster 1,400,452
Connaught ,,, ,,, 659,741
Ulster 1,121,8; 1
!Allister (199,1 10
Unclassified ,,, .... 1 10,73'9
This tole'
cont. of the
Sun -Cooked Strawberries. -To one
quart of berries lake one pint sugar
mud one-half pint water. (toil the
sugar and water until it drops off
the spoon like jelly, then put the
terries in and cook five minutes.
Iiave n large platter or square coke
•pans; pour the berries on the platter
or into the tins and set in the :right
sun. Do this for two more days, un-
til the syrup is like jelly. Do not re -
hent the berries, but put than into
jelly glosses cold. Seal the tops
with paraflino. The berries %%ill 10
firm, keep their shape, and he ecli-
ciocs flavor. Do not try to (10 more
than a quart at a time this way, or
you will find it very hard to man-
age.
Cocoa Muffins. -Ong fourth cup but-
ter, one-fourth cup sugar, one egg,
three-fourths cup milk, one and one-
half cups (lour, one-fourth cup cocoa,
two rounding teaspoons baking pow-
der. (lake in quick oven about
twenty minutes.
Potato ithlls on Lettuce. -Cut out
potato halls and cook in boiling salt-
ed water until tender. ('are trustbe
taken not to cook until they lose
simile. The trimmings may be cook-
ed in separate vessel and served next
day. Make white entice of two table-
spoons butter, two tablespoons of
flour, snlsponn setts, and dash of
white pepper to one cup creme or
milk. Serve each plate separately,
ns puhlloes look better on single
lettuce leaf with a spoonful of dress-
ing over potatoes. 'Mese are excep-
tionally dainty for luncheons.
HOT WEATHER COOLLR.S,
The 0Potting aro "tried and true"
recipe's for ice creams. 'they aro so
easily tondo tint the fnrrner'n table
should often receive them fur dessert.
Chocolate -Melt 5 tablespoons
grated chocolate and half cup sugar.
Into 1 pt. boiling milk stir 2 eggs TTnskins-"ile any, tvhn arts
which have been beaten light with the best roan youn wedding?"
half cup sugar. Remove from bre Villowhy: "The parson, I think.
and beat the two mixtures togetis You nee, It was all profit for hint
8,997.91:i i(epince on stove and heat until it and no risk whatever!"
is equivalent to 74.7 per thickens. When thoroughly cold odd Ifelen-"Poor, dear George most
average population. 1 qt• cream and vanilla to taste. be devoting himself to business strict -
then freest.. ly." Florence-"Whnl Makes you
SOME COO1) ADVICE.
An exchange offers the following
wholesome advice to fr'nh'rs tthu
employ help on the farm: "Keep on
the right side of your hired innn.
Treat him well so long as he is in
your employ, and if he docs not de -
servo good treatment or respond to
it, (lo not keep hits. A good hied
man will appreciate good usage and
kind favors and pay for them by the
extra amount and better quality of
services. It is courtesy to treat all
men decently. in the case of your
hired man. it is also policy and econ-
omy. Ile liberal wit)) him, not only
at the table, but give hint occasion-
ally a spare day for alhtllsenlent and
recreation. Any intelligent hired
man will work harder and perforin
hire labor Letter when he feels that
his employer appreciates well do-
ing., .
-4
wIIAT CROWNS ARE WOU'I'gf.
The lightest of i•:m•openn ('rowns
is the Stale Crown of Great Britain
which was made for Queen Victoria
Although It weighs only 21b. 7oz.,
its value is 81,500,000. One enor-
mous sapphire clone from the signet
of Eilward the Confessor. In tin
1'opeIs treasure -house are two Crowns
which are valued at $2.000,000. Ono
of them was the gift of Napoleon to
Pius VII., and contains the largest
emerald in the world. The other,
the gift of Queen lsabclin of Spain
to Pius IX., neighs 31b., and is
worth 11,000,000.
111: FELT GOOD.
After asking a blessing on various
members of the household, the small
boy concl'uled his prayer as fol-
lows:
"And, Lord, don't forget to bless
Ilrother Charlie, aid make him as
good a boy as I am."
i -
the
at
HUMAN IIAiI{ MARKET.
Strawberry -To 1 qt. rich milk: think no, dear?" Ilelen-"Why, ho
nd(1 '1 eggs beaten until light. Sweet-' only writes to me twice a day 11044."
The human hair j'olustry Is n very en very sweet, and put in frcercr.1 \'arm manures and other humin
active one in l'eeen+ee, the depart- When nearly frozen add the juice kern! ferning materials 4114' 11) 1 only vnl-
ment8 most (rcquehily visited by the 1 pint strawberries and continue the unblo for the elements of fertility
hair merchants boi,.g '...lose of Cor- process. If the juice were added be -1 which they contain, but also fur the
rete, ('reuse, Allier, Cher, Dordogne, fore freezing the acidity would (cruse- power of making the intra material
and .Haute Vienne. The average price it to curdle. This cream has a very
given for n full, long heed of hair smooth, rich taste.. We sometimes
is from 12 to 16.25 for the very best use pnrt crrnm, but find it too rich
quality and color. The girls of the for some. Raspberry cream is 111o410
(districts mentioned above, which are the same way with the exception of
exceedingly poor, stipulate that their the fruit change•
hair shall not he cut short in front, 1141nann-The base of the cream is
anti conceal the shorn appearance at made as for the preceding. Three or
the back by a drnped colored hand- four bananas nre robbed through a
kerchief. The best shades M light Riese anti added before freezing. Less
nm1 blonde hnir are obtained from 'agar will he added.
(Germany and Switzer' )nd, and for Custard ('reams -For thnR° who
those high prices are glrcr, prefer to cook their creams tho fol -
of the soil more available to silents.
"111iv, (Tara. you look radiant.
'What hag hnpp•'ned?" "I've just
receiw(0 nn imitation to ft wedding."
"Well, there's nothing particular in
that to go into ruptures over."
"Ah! but it happens to t.o rev own."
pledRt, as some have thought, syn.
belie, of the postponement of that.
"night in Which no man con wort"
((loathe which I..4 so nearly over
taken the king.
14