The Brussels Post, 1910-6-23, Page 3Hants for Busy UUousekeepers,
Recipes and Other Valuable Information
of Particular Interest to Women Poles,
..we--..�a� � �«.......�..,.�w-.,ted•..
1411, ATS.
FrufU Salad, --One-half punnet ;of
'Smothered • Chicken . Take tvllite grapes, one-half pound of
;chicken and cut up as true ft tc „see: walnuts chopped not too fine, two
Season each niece; ra'1 in 110,,,' l ,pc'unds of apples <hopped, one
ay in double pan. Then lay c,n small can shrimps in small pieces. serves; it is out of the question to
lay
in three or f ttr s,ie n +,f salU -;Dressing-Six , yolks of egg, one- do 'so and yet have them perfect.
elnPork and carer wit)luster, Put half cupful of vinegar, teaspoon- Don't forget to 'rub Ilk bottom
on cover and leant nutrl tender, NI of mesterei, one teaspoonful of of the preserving kettle freely with
Cheaper Outs of Moat,Now. salt, popper, black and red and olive oil to prevent sticking.,
since meat is so etipenirve, it is about a quarter of a teaspoonful,' Don't pare poaches, pears, pine-
wise to buy enov;.ei' cuts., (+1 are one pint of sour cream; cook to-, apples, ereve.n apples with a steel
ribs -are not no s+ser n lure good gefher egg, vinegar, mustard azul knife; it darkens the fruit; use a
1 g salt; - prix all when cold. silver' knife,
When made aloe, Here is a good Dandelion and OrangeDon't, rte Teat to. drop apples,,
way to prepare them, Have the
Salad. — g
ribs out 1 short lougtbs; oo k an- Crisp three cups of dandelion ptai'e, poaches and all light color -
til lender, cooking slowly. 7:henleaves. Cut into shreds with sets- ed fruit in a bowl of sold water as
remove from brine, dust with flour, scrs. Cut the quarters of fourForel do them to prevent diecolora
I
salt and pepper. Place in a bek• sweet oranges into small pieces. l ti< n before cooking.
fug pan.; add one onion, sricecf, a Rub the salad bowl with a bit of;
cupful of the brine in which ribs genie, add.a leek cut into tiny',J'JI:i (jIiIIt_t,Y AND GEOIiGI: II,
were boiled, and a cupful of rings,f s.with a level teaspoonful each'
strained tomatoes, and plane in It and pepper, in the bottom Gow!tigo, the Only Virtue the Au -
of the bowl, and oovered with a
oven and brown; beating frequent- tables oonful, of French wine vine- then Allowed the Ring.ly, Serve with potatoes tilt liars p
been parboiled and browned_ingar. Now add drop by drop two One' of the. most entertaining
oven with ribs, tablespoonfuls of olive oil, then a. `things in Thackeray's "Four
Meat Economy.—In these days ;,f hard boiled eggcut into rings, and Georges" is his description of the
"h-gh priced meats perhaps e.cale of last of all the orange bits and clan- circumstances in which it was an -
scheming may help other families delions. .Toss all together lightly nc,unced to George II. that he was
,f two. Buy two pounds boiling with a fork and epoon, This salad now King of England, Thackeray
beef, lean chunk; 10 cents per mold. be served as soon as mixed. tolls us how ono June afternoon in
pound, and three-quarter pound • o salad has a beter medicinal 1727 a broad -faced, jolly -looking,
pork chops, 15 conte; and hemvalue than this, as it a. splendid and very corpulent: cavalier" rode
them have meat for six meals and spring tonic. up to Richmond House, and asked,
stock for soup. Three-quarters to see the owner of the mansion.
pounds of the beef and two chops THE LAUNDRY: The mistress of the house and
(we get seven to nine chops to the her ladies, to where our friend was
pound, according to a;izo), Put To Clean' Corsets.—Corsets often admitted, said he could not be .in-
chi ugh meat chopper, taking out get soiled, especially around the teoduced to the master, however,
enough of the ground meat for waist, when they are perfectly pressing the business might be. The
three pats, which with minced on- good every other way, Get what is easter was asleep after his dinner;.
ion, salt and pepper, make Ham- called art gum at .art stores. Rub lie always slept after his dinner;
burgs. The remainder of the chop this on the soiled part and- the dirt and woe be. to the person who in -
P. ear.
peel meat is made into beef loaf by wiTub1Drpesses.—To r ter'rupted him. Nevertheless, our
tickling tiro eggs, a little sage, preserve colors stout friend of the jackboots put
minced onion, salt, pepper, milk, in fine gingham, lawn and linen the affrightened ladies aside, open -
and breadcrumbs. The first meal dresses wash them in flour starch, ed the forbidden door of the. bed -
is the: boiled meat at noon. For use no soap unless there should be r•octn, wherein upon the bed lay a
supper that evening .the Homburgs. seine obstinate spots, then rub a little gentleman; and here the ea -
The next noon the beef loaf; that little white soap on them. Five ger messenger knelt down in. his
evening the pork chops. Eat about tablespoonfuls of Sour make a dish- jackboots.
one-half the loaf at one meal, so panful of starch, by adding a little He on the bed started up, and
the following day you :can reheat cold water to thin and cool 't, with many ,oaths and a strong Ger-
tbe' remainder, cover with tomato which is sufficient for one dress. man accent .who was `there,
sauce, and serve: Then the left -
mixture
on washboard and rinse in new and who dared to disturb him!
over boiled beef is made into dry mixture of starch made same as "I am Sir Robert Walpole;" saidw
hash or Irish stew for supper• that first, Requires no other starching. the messenger. The aakened
evening. When boiling the meat Dry . in the shade. Most delicate sleeper hated Sir Robert Walpole.
take -out just enough broth to make •shades can be safely laundered in "I have the honor to announce to
gravy, thus saving enough for this way. your Majesty that your Royal fa -
foundation for sou p• Use of Lye.—Many housewives aro afraid to use lye to break the ther, King George I., died at Osna—
hard water for the weekly washing. :burg, on Saturday last, the 10th in -
scant >
TOMATOES. The reason for this fear is that they "Dat is one'big lie!" roared out
Rice Tomatoes.—Take cold boiled do not know how much lye to add His Sacred Majesty King George
rice, add some tomatoes and to the water. If they will follow ,I1. ; but Sir Robert Walpole stated
:enough onion to flavor, butter, salt instructions they will be amply re- the fact, and from that day until
and pepper; to suit taste, Bake in paid. Have ready a real large gal- three -and -thirty years after,
•oven one-half hour. ve-nized tub, also a large ten gallon George, the second. of the name,
bucket or water pail. Two large
Green Tomato Mincemeat, — One peck ruled over England.
tomatoes chopped fine, buckets of hard water require one
pe'• green teaspoonful of ,lye. Let stand over Courage, by the way, is about the
two pounds raisins, four cupfuls night. Next morning take clear only virtue which Thaekeray al-
eupfulated sugar, one and one-half water. from the tub, but do not stir lows the second of the Georges.
cupfuls vinegar, one teaspoonful of
the contents in bottom. Plato the L'
any kind of spices you would like clear water On the stove begin
it and a pinch of salt. Cook about g
ten minutes, 'bottle and seal. trashing, and boil your clothes in
Stuffed Tomato Salad.—Six ripe this water. You will have beauti-
tomatoes, one-half pint cream tel white clothes and your hands
dressing, two cucumbers, lettuce, trill be uninjured.
salt, and pepper. Scald the to -
Flatiron Help.—A•nv housewife A tour^t-martial sitting at Glu-
can have smooth, clean flatirons. gan, in Prussian Silesia, has sen-
maso that the skins can be re- Buy 5.cents' worth of pumice stone, tented a non-commissioned officer,
sen -
move'.
•easily, Cut a slice from the k -e it in the kitchen soapdish; Franz Libowska, t0 two years' im
top of each and with a spoon re -
there
move seeds. Peel the cucumbers there is_where it will be the most prisonment and degradation foe
and cut into dice season highly, convenient. Before beginning iron- :perpetrating 260 acts of cruelty on
and nrix with half the droning. Fill o
the batom iron wellith the e ironsheated, members of the Fifth Battalion of
the tomato cups with this and put
another spoonful of . dressing pu n,144, 1 ttlstone, then have a cloth The evidence showed that Lfbo-
tcp. Sprinkle a lute finely chop- a 'rem" on it tc wipe wska h t a recruit s ]lead fifty times
_ecu parsley over and serve on'a bed
the iron. You will find the iron, in succession and then struck his
of lettuce leaves. polished and free from sticking, victim in the face with the flat •of
Tomato Macaroni.—Break two his sword. Libowska,
also mal-
ouuces of macaroni into short PRESERVING DON'TS: treated the same recruit by kick -
lengths, throw into boiling water, , tug his head with heavy knee
ord boil rapidly twenty minutes, Dont make a mistake and wait -boobs.
rub the hard boiled yolks of two until the special fruit in season is Another recruit received thirty
eggs to a paste, add gradually four nearly over and then pay the high- blows in succession on the head
oc five tablespoonfuls 41 cream, est prices for it. ane face, and Libowska dug his
then Felt one tablespoonful of blit Don't think overripe, soft. fruit ,nails so deeply into the unhappy
for and one of: flour.Adel the egg makes good preserves or jellies. s'ldier's cheek that blood was
and half a cupful of milk, stir over Dent ever use anything but the drawn. Many recruits and young
hob water untilyou have a thick best materials for good results. ,soldiers had to submit to having
golden sauce. Add halfa teaspoon -.Don t use what is called "A" or their hair pulled out of their
„
ful:of salt and a dish of pepper, soft white sugar or Brown; use heads.
Chop the macaroni fine and add to granulated white sugar for all pre- . One of Libowska,'s Habits was to
.the sauce, cut a. slice from the servos or jellies. throw bags of cartridges, swords
stem ends of good, solid tomatoes, Dont use granulated white eu- ,and other .similar missiles at the
scoop out the centers, -stand the gar for spiced fruit; use light men's heads while they were clean
tomatoes in a baking pan, fill the brown only. ing the barracks. He once cone:
centres with- macaroni, dust with Don't make spiced fruit too polled his men when -drilling to hit
bread crumbs, and bake in a mod- sweet; four pounds of light brown ,erre another on the head, while lie
crate oven for thirty minutes, un- sugar to seven pounds of fruit is a looked on and enjoyed ,the combat.
el the tomatoes arc soft but not •good proportion. ;After a hard day's drilllie would
broken. Serve on slices of toast, Dont use an overabundance of compel the mon to get up at night
either plain or with cream Settee ; spices; too much makes it taste bit- and sing to him. .Those whose vo e-
ehcese may be added to the macar-ter , es or songs displeased him were
oni, which will give it a greater Dont cover preserves orjellies beaten and systematically ill -treat -
food value. while cooking; they are apb to boil ed on the following days.
over. In many cases Libowska forced
re�i
Don't use cold sugar` for jellies;
SALADS. his men to lend him money,`which
measure the strained fruit juice; Ire never aid.
Orange and Date Salad. -- Re- f o each pint allow one pound of
movetho pulp and inner skins froin tee bust granulated sugar; put it
rix oranges and onegrapefruit and en a platter in a warn oven to heat GOOD PLACE TO BUILD,
break the flush into small portions, and add it: to the boiling liquid.
mix with ono pound of dates, sten- Don't put hot preserves in cold Our house should bo on the hill
od and cut in bits; small quanti, glasses 'or jars and not expect ac- tops of cheerfulness and serenity,:
• ty of figs, three apples cut fine, eidonts; have the glasses or jars 80'high that no shadows rest on
paean nuts cut fare. Serve on in' scalding water, rinse well, then them, and where the morning
blanched lettuce leaved': with the till as quickly 09 possible, comes so earl and the evening
dressing; Salad Dress- Don't allow preserves to stand tarries so Tato that',the day has
ing—To the yolks of two eggs beat- about after they are cold; put 0101t- twice as many golden hours as
en light add one-half eupfiulof pow- el paraffin on covet with lids, wash those of other people. He is to be
tiered sugar and one cupful of off every trace' of stickiness, and pitied whose house is in some val-
wine, or of orange juice heighten, put in a cool, dark, dry place forley of grief between the hills, with
ed by a dish of lemon and grape future use, the longest night and the sho'cteeb
junco, Don't expect to make good pre- day,
serves' '`bit or mise"; they require
great care oumbined with the best
materials and 01iaet rnoasur'enzente
to inaltr'0 0000ess.
Don't expect preserves to cook
over a hot fire and not expect them
to stick and scorch,
,Don't lot them cook without stir-
ring, even when the fire is Blow,
Don't cook preserves on a gas
range without an asbestos mat.
Dont arse a thin agate settee pan;
an old-fashioned porcelain' lined
iron preserving kettle is beet.
Don't think you can hurry pre- Verse 24. A man that sowed—'The
outstanding feature of the parable
throughout is the personality of,
thin sower. He is the antagonist of
Satan, the householder, the master.
of the reapers, the Son of man, the
Lerd of the World, the absolute ar-
biter of the destiny of all men.
Good seed in his fielct—Tile qua-
:ley of the sower's seed is the same
as in the former parable. but here
the soil is presumably all good.
25, While men slept—Not all the.
details of a parable yield to inter-
prctation. Only a discriminating
judgment is able to decide which
are significant and which are not,
and it is easy for the imagination
to create supposed references which
do -not actually • exist. In the
sower, Jesus explains about every-
thing; but in the tares, several
things, such as the enemy's going
away, the servants of the house-
holder, the binding of the bundles,
are left uninterpreted. So, this
sleeping of the men is not said to,
have a speoial meaning. Certainly
it is not condemned; sleep is na-
tural after hard toil (compare the
slumbering of the ten virgins). It
suggests, at any rate the subtle
aye unseen ways in which Satan
makes themost of every opportu-
nity presented by human nature.
His enemy came=This is the eon-
sietent New Testament teaching,
from the fourth chapter of Matthew
to the twentieth of Revelation.
Never is there any tendency to
minimize the force of evil, as di-
rected by a cunning personal pow-
er. The scattering of the tares is
not the work of an unfavoring wind
but is the carefully executed act of
a malicious agent.
Tares—More accuratele the
bearded darnel, a weed which in its
early stages so closely resembles
wheat, in the midst of which it
commonly grows, that it is well-
nigh impossible to distinguish them.
Often it breeds a poisonous fungus
which produces dizziness, convul-
sions. and sometimes death.
Went away—After the seeds of
poison have been sown in the heart
they will develop with little en-
couragement.
26. When the blade sprang up—
Referring to the entire grassy crop
of the field, including tares and
wheat.
Brought forth fruit—Referring to
the period of the. heading of the
kernel It was then, and not till
then -on account of the resemblance
to the wheat, that the tares appear-
ed in their true character.
28. An enemy hath done this —
This kind of revenge, so far as can
be learned, has never been known
in Palestine. It stands as an un-
exampled outrage.
Wilt thou ... that we . .. gather
them up—Jesus offers no ir,'.=rpre-
tation of this zeal of the servants,
But there are always those who are
ready like the apostles who would
"What's your order sir?" asked
call down fire from heaven, to the waiter.
bring forth drastic measures to "Bring me," said the wild-eyed
suppress real or imagined wrongs: customer, "some medium boiled
29. Nay—Weeding out wheat must
take plaoe either before the period pacon and some eggs with the
of the formation of the kernel or k-etets s
after the kernel has fully matured. "I don't know whether Iof that
It is not a question here of pulling richt or not, waiter," aid the
up wheat by mistake, because the
wild-eyed man, "but do the best
growth of the field -has reached that
stage in which the tares can be dis- Yo,: can with it. A big red automo-
tinguished. The danger is that the bile had to jump .out el my way
wheat, whore roots are intertwined about two minutes ago to keep me
with those of the tares, should be from running over it, and I'm a
disturbed while it is in the forma- bit flustered."
tive state. From the point of view
of the practical farmer, therefore,
the question of the servants was
0110 of folly. The liyes of good and
bad are so often closely bound up
together that the violent removal
of one is sure to cause harm to the
other.
30. Let both grow together — The
hastiness of human judgments is
condemned by the patience of the
divine. Whether the bad may be-
eotne good is not hinted at, But,
that the rooting up of any is pro-
hibited, is a merciful provision in-
dicating that God is willing to wait
till every mans chance is exhaust-
ed.
t will say to tho reapers—In the
explanation (verso 39) we cliseover
1. r the first time that these are
clfTeeeirt from the servants, der the married woman's sarcastic ear,siclerably over x,00,000, and con
'rhe tares would be separated c'sym ath "Let 7118 see ;
it ik Stitute about 5 per cont. of the male
£Fon,-tie wheat either by weeding, p y•�
ur by "carefully picking out. the just fifteen years -since yon roar population of over tett years of
stalks of darnel one by one from .l'?ed him, is it net?" age.
the cut grain," Altogether, five and a quarter
38, The field—Thom has been eon-
As young Smithers moved out the million people 1 1 the 100014 ware cm-
tinued controversy .,here over the card-tab1, he asked, casually: pioyed in mining work, and it is
question of church discipline, Tlut "Where is the bright red table- estimated tlia!t within five hundred
it is ruled out entirely by Abe fact (lever we used to have?' l always years the coal supply of the world
that the field: cannot be interpret- liked that," "roti ivnnldn't like e ill 110 ;exhausted. After which u -c
ad narrowly es the otiureb, but is it now'," interposed little Tummy, 811131l have to,frnoze in winter, and
the world, "Tommy," said his sister ('lana, eat raw beef and apples, unless ra-
The sons of the kingdom --•'.Pilose "run away and play there's a ilium, +rr Burne other friendly min -
who treasure up iii theiv hearts r.Tonr." "1 won't,'' answered lil- era I, comes to on aid.
manifest in their life the word of i le Tommy, ' Sietcr's -..:+' • •lfiush,--
trete. Of course those ase a part Tumtuy, 'latah ]" "WW1 0, ' en. \('ill Fon rternr gine nn enruldei of the world of men, which Jesup s vcred Tommy again. And as hn dear :1dol elms !" No1'' '
1 replied "Do yon plead gtsrlty or not gni'.
theme rightfully his kingdom (41). was .hustled from the ro0nt hr (he cfepra;i•ed smoker and punster; tt ?„
to the parable .tlie word "king- ,v011ed, "Sister's made a petticoat "1 shalt surnke just as keg as 1 Tl 'y-• "Vies ie. eior ollee tto t
s e
den is used somewhat loosely, Life
ou*, of that fable -cloth, ' thews." .
THE 'S, S. LESSON
IN'.1'EltN.tTION,IIr LESSON,
J (TNI'1 20,
end must not be too narrowly inter.-
'meted,
nter.preted, In verse 24 it is brat surra
of' divine truth embodied in life
wlifcli Jesus encleavors hy the par-
ables to define. In verse 43, it is DEATH IN ENGLAND OI'' SIZE
THE GRAND OLD ADMIRAL
C REIGN OP 01.101V-001.101V-0a,lf,^,I. 1,
ging WasUnable to Speak the
Bngllslz Linguage,
the perfected and finally. established George I, had an excellent 0011
kingdom of glory.. WILLIAM! LCARD . sou for not wishing to preside at
40. Burned with fire.—A figurative_ Cabinet meetings. He could not
description of the awful door. of speak English; an•d. Walpole, the
1;esseu XIII, Lesson of the `Paras, :the wicked. IIo Vito a most Stirring surd Ad. Prime Minister, could not speak
41. .All things that cause stumb- vepzttireus (Yarecr tat ilio German or French. - When they;
Glatt, 13, 2d-30, 36-43. Golden ling This is to be understood in a spoke to each other they talked :fa-
J'ext, Matt. 13. 43.
BRUTALITY IN GERMAN ARMY.
Non -Commissioned 0111001' Guilty
• of 260 Ants of Cruelty.
personal sense. British Navy. tin, but both of diem were so poor
_e.-., The death took lace in England
Latinists that it is said they found
pconsider'a'ble difFicnity in under-
ci11I0LTS P T r r a fortnight ago of Sir Wi11ia n standing each other, At all evorrts,
I 0 aI(L 110G, Luard, rise Grand Old Admiral."Ring George soon gave up the at-
c`[oar-footed lu:i ,, Su William had a must stirring and tempt ,to master the intricacies of
S. a lock Iloutes adventurous career. He entered the 1)011±105 of a county which was
Brings '1'liiel'es to Bay. the Naval College at Portsmouth utterly foreign to him throe h the
Tref, the famous St. Petersburg in 1830, at the age of 13, and two medium of WLatin and he
police dog; was taken to Vuronesh years later was appointed to'the left Cabinet Walpole's
meetin s sevei'e1
J South American Station, h n
from Moscow and successfully alone, The right the the Sovereign
tracked down 'the murderer of one While at Valparaiso; ]raving ex- to preside over Cabinet then
of the employes on the property of changed to the Semarang, Mr, lapsed, never to be revived, -
•
prirtee Vasiltolrikoff, in the boron h Lard walked the 36 miles to Casa Thackera , bythe way,found
v Pavlovsky. On the train by Blanca, euvering them without a Ge 1•ge 1.'blessing.
likeGeor e em,wor-
which Tref travelled a passenger stop in six hours, Then he walked thy el hips bl•essin '. He wrot:—
p g g
back, k and, after e a ate a short rest,ov-
cov- robbed -
of
a pocket -book -The days r
boo cone over '
k
ain England of
p
y
g
taming about $250. The' services eyed the last eight mils in an hour that strange religion of kingwor
of the four-fuotecl Sherlock and twenty minutes. At the same ship, when priests flattered princes
Homes,'' as he is called in the station he had a marvellous esoapel in the Temple of God;, when servil
pa-
pers, were at once brought into re- rom death while engaged in a ity was held. to be ennobling duty;
quiaition, and, after smelling all dare-devilwas promoted feat of cliff -climbing, Iu ,when beauty and youth tried eag-.
the passengers, Tref went for one 184E be to the rank erly for royal favor; and woman's
of them as he left the train at the f mate, and the Semarang was or- -shame was held to be no dishonor.
next station and was entering dared to Chinato take part in the mended morals and mended gran -
•cab. The stolen property wars operations 'there. On the way the ners ;n courts and people era
found in his possession. Hardly a ship was among the priceless consequences.
week passes but that some fresh CAUGHT IN A TYPHOON, of the freedom which George L
exploit of Tref is recorded.and young Luard behaved with came oto rescue and secure, He
- r such gallantry as to win warm ap- kept his compact with his English
proval from his captain. subjects; and if he escaped no more.
DON'T KNOW KING IS DEAD. In the following year he was pre- thenvicesrof his nage,oatrchs l astro e
In these days of cables and wire- sent at the storming of the forts of may thank him for preserving and
lose telegraphy it is almost impoe- Tycoktow, and, for bravery, was trasmitting the liberties of ours.
sible to believe that there are por- prom-Odleoted to servingbe anithe Isist. In the Isle I" our free air, royal and humble
tions of the British Empire where homes have alike been purified;;
the news of the lamentable death of France, Lieut, Luard jumped and truth, the birthright of high
of King Edward is not known. But overboard in full uniform after a and low among us, which gtii'te
in such far -away places as the Pit- sailor who had fallen from aloft. fearles ly judges our greatest per,
cairn Islands and Tristan d'Acun- The crew of the Isis drew up a tes- sonages, can only speak of them
ha, British Islands; rise news may timonial, and, although the regula- now in words of respect and re-
nd reach the inhabitants forer- tions of the service forbid officers gard. There are stains in the per-
haps .a year or two, unless some receiving manifestations of regard trait of the first George, 'and traits
presents from oho men, the do- in it which none of us need admire;
tion, and by that means acquaints cement was forwarded by Srr John but among the nobler features are
trading vessel drifts in that diree- or
the people. 'there is one spot not Marshall to the lieutenant ' -s father justice, courage, moderation --and
so far removed from the British at Witham Lodge, where it is still these we may recognize ere we turn
edthe
,islands wpr
here there is a large com- picture to the wall.
•munity unacquainted with the great In serve1855. ho was serving
as Cern-
The Byronic view of the Georges
event which is stirring the world, mender of the Indefatigable, and has hitherto largely held the po-
Th.at is St, Kilda, off the Hebrides. ^facia and sthe life- ing what his reign gave to England,
,pular imagination; but, consider -
THINGS
orthen whoeffort hatod faavellen over
'—.-4.—_____
beard, He jumped into the sea, de-
:George I. at least scarcely desert -
spite the fact that sharks were seen edByron's naming hate.
THINGS ALTERED. n the vicinity o£ the ship. e
Later on Luard was decorated .e
It is customary for parents in the
mural districts of the south to help with the Order of the Southern DRINKS AND—
DYSPEPSIA. cut the teacher's salary. This is Cross by the Emperor of Brazil,
and he subsequently was in charge Take Soda Water and Iee Cream
done by giving meat, meal, pota- of a party that attacked twenty-toes—in halfact, maSepuntte.
hve. In acetain community there three piratical junks at Chiu -a -poo. The thirsty season is here. With
ued a large family. All the ohil- Of the 1,800 men who manned the hot weather most of us take more
dren were in school, but the parent pirates' vessels, liquid, take it in copious quantities
never gave anything toward the 490 WERE KILLED, then wonder why indigestion fol -
salary. One day the oldest daugh- and the remainder dispersed. lows.
ter, Mary, came up to the teach- In 1863 Captain .jjina•rd had There is less harm done by over
et's desk and said : "'Fasaor, pa's to the Crimea, but seas refused, chinking in summer than by drink-
gw•ine sou' you a pig." "Tell him and he was given command of the irg the wrong things.
I'll be more than obliged," said the Star, bound for the South Ameri- Water is healthful, provided it le •;
surprised teacher. A week or two ca.t station. The crew of this ship germ free, and it is hard to drink
passed and the pig did not gett;-ere in an unsatisfactory state of too much of it at the proper tem -
around to his house. "Where's dscipline,eand very unwilling to perattlre. This is not iced. No -
that pig your father was going to .sail, Alter a "harassing fort thing more quickly induces dyspep-
nd me?' he asked Mary. Oh,night" at Sheerness, the ship was sic than pouring ice water into the
Mary replied, "that pig got well."taken out to sea by the officers iu
stomach. If water is bottled and
"_1/4,- the early morning, before the erew kept in a refrigerator it is better
were on deck. Once at sea, their and quenches thirst more quickly
RATTLED. captain had very little trouble with than if iced.
the men, and the Star was favor- Hot water is a better thirst
ably re
Ported en when she reached quencherthan cold, Nor is it as
Rio. heating as people imagine. It is
In 1853 Luard applied to be sent especially valuable if one is owe- '.' ""�
charge of the Conqueror, and took heated, as it averts the risk of in -
a battalion of marines for the war flammation in the stomach.
',
in Japan, The captain assisted tri Ice cream sodas are breeders of
the bombardment of the forts ell dyspepsia. A well-known stomach
Yokohama, and received the Order' specialist advises to take ice mea08
of the Legion of Honor from the,' arta your soda water separately. It
French Emperor, and was mado i is the mixture that is harmful. Un -
C. B. less any soft drink is to work trou-
se
ble, let moderation be your rule.
Do not get the soda water habit,
COAL FOR 500 YEARS. It will save money and digestion.
After That the World's Supply Abuse of tea and coffee. is a Ire-
willgeent cause of dyspepsia. Tea
•8 b0 Exhausted. taken with meals is apt to so dilute
ELECTROCUTE RATS. The united 1 ingdam is
not, as the gastric juices that power to di,
manysuppose, the world's great -1 gest solid food is impaired. The
One 'f the latest ideas fur killing est producer of coal. Although tannin which tea contains acts in-
One
tA '
rats urrot
is trap t - I o s r
p ata which the animal Croat Britain turns ant between J t 1, on the digestive process,
walks, attracted by an electric light 250 and 300 million tons each year, The effects aro especially bad when
end a display of food. Once in he valued at the mines atsomething tea has been boiled, is tory strong,
cannot get out, and an electric our- like 1130,000,000, the United States or when it is creamed. Iced foe;
rent kills him in fifty or sikty sec- beats this by a good million tuns. the favorite summer luncheon bet -
ends. Tire total annual prochietion of coal erage, acts unfavorably on the kid-
-4' in the world is over 1,000 million; net's.
A sharp-tongued merriest woman, tons, the value being estimated at� ("offer is less injurious titan tea,
she lied been openly commiscrat- about €300,000,000, cartrary fa general opinion. when
ing nn elderly -spinster on her love-
With file exception coir of a. rf-� taken too strong or in too great
less state, went on to talk volubly culture, building and works, and gnantitics it has an irritating ef-
fect et her husband's health "Foci• thc various food, tobacco, drink fect on the mucous lining of thin
man, he has been a great sufferer and lodging inclustries, mare poi- stomach. Wholesale condemnation
fir fifteen years,'' she remarked. Plc in En
lib
end Wales are en- +!f it is felly, but inocleraiion .is the
I can quite believe that, dear,' gugod in veal -mining than in any Title'
said the spinster, still smarting un- outer industry,' These number