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The Brussels Post, 1910-11-17, Page 74. 1 • Hints tor Busy Housekeepers, poeieve and Other V*Noble Information if Particular Intermit to Women pews, TESTE,D RECIPISIS. Puff Paste Block' Houses.—Ilake a good puff paste aiscl roll it out in a thin Sheet of about three-quar- ters of on hush in thickness, Cut into strips three Mabee long and half an Molt wide, Bake in quick oven and form bloolthouees by mak- ing squares a three poetry strips to each Side, everleterping the eorners (make fence ,fasition). ?arisen and blanch 'one ;mend a sweet- breads and cshep or eut into half inch pieces. eleam and drop into small pieces, a leaf pound •of fr5sh mushroems. A cau of button muffle rooms ean be used instead if de- siresl, Rice au Grades—Wash one „cup of rid, cook slowly in slightly salt- ed watee, When done shake it lightly into . a dish to separate the kernels. Then put into a baking dish sufficient olive oil to covesthe •bOttom. Also oil the sides of the , dish. Fill with layers of rice a,nd grated cheese, using Ulla pound of eheese to this amount of rice. Pour ever it a tablespoon of olive oil and bake forty-five minutes.. , _Italian Crean—Two tablespbon-• fuls gelatin soaked in one oup milk; eet soak two hours; one pint cream whipped,. one cup pulverized su- gar ; whites of two eggs beaten stiff and stirred in cream; one teaspoon- • ful vanilla,. Put „milk in double boiler until milk is dissolved, then . 'steak through Moth; let it cool and stir ingredients all together. Caramel Coffee Selly.—Soak half a package. of granulated gelatin in half a cupful of cold water. Cook three-fourths of a, eunful of sugar to caramel. add one cupful of boil- ing water, andsleb airnmer until the Parker House Rolls.—Take one pint of sponge, one cep of tweet milk, heat this just lukewarm; 031e cup of sugar, one cep of lard; one- half teaspoonful ef salt, Add enough flour to stiffen, not quite as stiff as you malte bread. Mix.the sleeve ab • night, let stand until teeming, cut thin, roll out, aas.cl cut With biscuit ender, spread each with better, and fold together. Pled in pans and bake when light, CANNG, Green Tomato Pickle.—Take about four quarts of greets tonne toes, pick them ever carefully ano slice in large pieces. Peel Ono (Dart of white onions and slice fine hall. O dozen gxeen peppeeseput togethes in a stone jar or crock, putting them in the crock a layer of s.alt and a laver of vegetables until all are in. Let stand over night. In the Morn- ing drak off 'every bit of liquor, pour over them about three pints best vinegar, half .., cupful of white sugar, and a teaspotneful of cloves, a few sticks of einna,mon I put on the stove and watch carefully until they begin to boil; remove to a cooler part of the 'stove and cook gently for a quarter of an hour; when cooked add an. ounce of mustard seed, put away in a jar kr a meth, keep in a cool place; at the end of the month pus them an to boil again, adding as much -sugar as de- sired; about half a cupful is plenty; let it boil well, put into jars, and seal. Green Tomato Chutney.—For each peck of tomatoes allow eight large • onions; slid them all; sprinkle freely withs. salt, and let them stand over night. Next day deamel is dissolved then pour over strain -off the liquor, put the vege- the softened gelatin; add also one tables in a large pan, add a quarter cupful of strong black coffee,- half of a pound of whste mustard seed, a •cupful of water, and half a cup- a quarter of a pound of ground fal of sugar, Stir until the sugar mustard, one and a half pounds of is dissolved, then turn .into the brown sugar, one ounce each of mold. Serve cold with whiened black pepper, cinnamon.allspice, cream.. A boiled custard made of cloves, mace and ginger. Add • a pint of milk, three egg yolks, and enbugh vinegar to cover and heat one-third of a eunful of sugar may slowly almost to the boiling point, replace the cream if preferred. • till they are tender. Then seal, SALADS. • - TASTY DISHES. V flaY0 t0ASIMen101 Of powdered IRE S S LFSSON Paste for paperhanging Should alum _added te every pound of ileur, When ineking jelly with ftesh fruit, the juice should always be al - caved to drip into a ehine, or glees dieh. A tin une will spoil the colo?, A simple remedy for moths is to place whole cloves among the clothes, or pieces of dtton svool or lint saturated with oil of cloves. Keep old kid gloves end use the finer tips to eaves the cerks of bet- ties when trowelling. tied on sightly you add have no •tear of leakage. Tie baby's eovs with sat strings to• the child's chair, and they will be easily replaced without any ef- fort on the mother's or nurse's part. Never leave a metal spoon in e %bedpan if you wish the %intents to boll quickly, for the spoon is the means of darting off a great deal of heat. Potatoes ;Mould always be first boiled a little before- being put in- to stews, because the first water in which the are cooked is of a pois- motet geality. To clean cake tins and strainers that are greasy, scrub thoroughly with hot soda -water, and then semis them -with a soapy flannel dipped into fine sand. • Fee gilt frames—On no account use ordinary dusters, for they wear off the gilt and deaden the bright- ness. Instead usp a feather Or light dusting -brush. • ' When boiling peen vegetables add es xnuch borax as will lie on a dime to the water in which they are boiled. This will improve both col- ey and fia_v_or._4,__ INTERN 41110N/tit' IJESSON, Noy, 20. Lesson VIII,-4esns in Pethsemauti, Mast. 20. 36-50. Golden 'Peet, Matt. 26. 45, Verse 30. A place—Literally, 031 inelosed parcel of groettd. Ware au olive grove, AS 10 name, Gethse- mane, or "oil -press," signifies,. uerstens had to maintained, by those who were able, outside the city, as there Waer 40 spare ground within, and eeremonial objections made their proper <are impossible. 37, Peter and the two sons of Ze- bedecAs en the mount of t.ranslig uratiun Ic teolt them partly for the comfort and support he, would re- ceive from the presence orhis most intimate friends and partly that they "night be eyewitnesses of this remarkable scene. Began to be sorrowful—His soul seemingly was toe overwhelmed for aim to pray as he had intended, and it' was necessary for him to retire into a. deeper privaey still while the ,desciples (remain watching at a rev- erent distance. 38. My soul is exceeding sorrow- ful, even turbo death—The interpre- tation must be sought in the fact that our Lord's death was absolute- ly without parallel, • He himself so regarded it. His death was not the result of mere accident, but the re - mat of a moral necessity laid upon him by the divine purpose, accord- . ing to which he was thus to ransom sinful men and open up a new epoch uf grace. He had felt the awful burden of his approaching death ("straitened") a year before this, and on the previous night, as he ate with his disciples, "he was trou- bled in the spirit." Our clue is in the meaning of "this cup," and thie is friend in the weeds of the cross, "My God, why hest thou forsaken me'?" That was what death was to mean to our Saviour. He was "made to be sin on our behalf," for, going down into the blackness of death for us, he experienee,d, as only a sinless soul could, the stain and doom and loneliness of death in its office as God's penalty for Sin. Ide was sore troubled because the "strong crying end tears" of the gardep were simply an anticipation of the cry of the cross. . 39. Let this cup pass away from me—Was this possible 7 Not II he was to oomplete the work necessary to human salvation. In that re- spect the prayer certainly was an- swered. If lie would save others, it was impossible that he Should spare himself. ' • As thou wilt—Recalling his own words, "I do always those things which are pleasing unto the Fa- ther." This is the true submissive- ness ,of obedient Sonship. In fact, thaswords, if it be possible, are equivalents to "if thou be willing," the form given them by Luke. 40. Findeth them sleeping --It was late, and therefore their natural powers were exhausted: There is a strange irony in the fact that it was Peter who had confidently boasted only a short spaee before that he would be willing to die for the Mas- ter, and now in the supreme crisis, he cannot watch one hour. Bitt the question of Jesus is hardly a re- buke. His own sympathetic state- ment (41) about the spirit being wil- ling, but the -flesh weak, shows that he understood the drowsiness • of sense which they felt alter their sorrels/ (Luke 22. 45), and which made them incapable of doing what he had bidden, inue.h as they desired to do so. es... 41. Thet ye el -leer not into tempta- tkn—Was not the lull lord of a terrible temptation upon him at that; moment If he needed to strengthen his soul by prayer, how much mote did they! 42. A second time he . . prayed —He has made some progress. Per - hops he did not feel himself wholly sumitted to the will of his Father at first. At any rate, the "let this cup pass away" has Income if this cannot pass away, and the only petition now is that he may be in perfect accord with the will of his Father. 44. Prayed a third time—Not a vain repetition, but an'exhibition of insistent moral earnestness. ' 45, Sleep on now—The suggestion in the wording. of the margin is easier of interpretation, especially in view of Arises let us be going (40). Reproachfully he turns to them the third, tame : "Do ye sieep on, than, and take your re st ' "You have slept through iny agony; will you also sleep through my be- trayal I" • • • Let US be going—Out of the .stress of prayer he has gained perfect soli control, and is now in readiness for the conflict with eleeth. This illus - hates one of the highest ofaces of prevailing prayer-41ml it fortifies the soul to receive the wiliest God. 47. A greet multitude—Evora mi. eus sources we learn that the crowd was made tip partly of efilmirs the temple, Roman soklices undo; a tribene (a debacle -emit granted by the governor), and eavvants of the toreple,,and then some of the mikes, illslmling high priests mul elders • THE,-,,SECBET DRAWER. , Flew Open When Ohl Desk Was Roughtly Dandled. From the _village of Breamore, Rants, England, is reported a dis- covery of some yaluable old coins under very singular circumstances. A rummage sale was recently held on the rectory lawn at which articles collected frons the large hoeses in the parish were sold at very low prices. In the evening the remainders were disposed of by Dubois auction, and this lot includ- ed an old writing desk, which was secured for is. 6d. The purchaser took the box home and took little notice of it until a relative happen- ed to take it up roughly and a sec- ret drawer flew open. The drawer contained thirty gold coins.; gui- neas, 11011 guineasand quarter guineas of George III.'s reign. The box and its eoatents have since been returned to. the 'original owner. IIINDISIS31 OLD, BUT sTno-s.G. -- Practised Before Christ, Ifs Has 200,000,000 Believers To -day. .48, Gaye them a sign—They heal no design upon the disciples of Jesus, a fact which nettle a sign nete essary. 40. Kissed Itire—The word rs,ally 'signifies that lie kissed the Master in a demonstrative, effusive way. This of course added to the atm% ousnese of the betrayal 50. Friend—Rather, ''001nradQ." lades had forfeited all right to be called a frieed. The et -Weaned of Jesus whites fellow, in this verse and Obi, 53, '64, are peculiar te Matthew, showing that his chief interest is in the manner in whieh the Master de- ported himself under these trying eiretunstomees. 51. Oise of them . . drew his sword—Probably a knife ef large size, We learn from Luke (22. 38) that they bad two such weapons wide therm Who the servant of the high pried was, and who smote him, we learn only from John. John would knew the servant's name, Malchus' "through bis intimacy with the highpriest,' a,nd the reticence observed by the other cliscipMs with regard to Peter would be needless at the late date when John wrote. 52. Shall perish with the sword— Doubtless this would have been ful- filled instantly in Peter's case had not the Master intervened and heal- ed the servant's ear. Compare the accounts in Luke and John, who both give the edditional detail that it was the right ear. 53. Legions of engels-Jests was fully resigned to what the scriptures (54) declared must be, and he would use no help from heaven or earth. 55. Note the stingieg irony of these words, . Why did they not take him when he sat quietly teach- ing in the temple i Beeaese they feared the multitudes. It was a confession of cowardice that they thus came at night armed as against a robber. 56. All the disciples left him—That is (as in Matt. 24. 41), left him to his fate. • The reason for their flight is not entirely annarent Mayonnaise Without Egg. -- Few Escalloped Potatoes.—Pare and people know one can make a per- slice thin one quart of potatoes; fed looking and perfect tasting stiff put layer of potatoes in baking dish, mayonnaise without an egg. Place seasoning with pepper and salt. Re- a teaspoottfel • of plain mustard, peat this until all the potatoes are mixed with .s, few drops of cold used. Then take reek, one egg, and eater, in .a small bowl. Add oil, heaping tablespoonful of flour, beat not necessarily drop by drop. but all together, pour over potatoes, still rattles' slowly. etir vigorously and met thin slices ot bacon and all the seldk. A., it thickens- too put on top of potatoes. Put in oven. . nuteh to hendte comfortably, thin and bake until brown. ' with ,lemun juice ex vinegar. A Stephanie Omelettes—Two ounces little tarragon vinegar is away' s a granulated sugar ends the yolks of • great sidditsiois to any salad. After tour eggs beaten to a fozun; the the mayennaise is finished season whites of four eggs beaten to re- • according to taste and discretion. semble snow and very light; one Tb.er.e is hardly any limit to the coffeespoonful of granulated sugar quantity of oil that may be used. or syrup. Place in a well buttered Less or more must:Ara may be used, pan, then place pan in hot oven. but it meet be borne in mind that Fruit • or confection can then be it is the made nru.stard that' holds placed in the pan and pan overturn- . the oil Legether. Make a larged. In the plates can be placed quantity •of mayonnaise let once, us- citron 0/' Varlina *0 the taste. The ing a dessertspoonful of mustard omelette mild be served immecli- and us much oil as ems can afford —enough for several meals. It Icesepe most; excellenily in 41 Covei•ed jar in S. 004)1 place. New Sale/Is-CM off crusts of white bread (freshe out iit diamond shape and West; a light brown. On one-half a .piece grate the yolk of ' hard boiled egg, on the other half white of egg minced fine, and then place on the slice 0 sardine; on this lay three strips uf sweet green peepers, evosse.d, petting over the whole 0 nice mayunnitise dressing; the tweed Is then placed in a nest of crisp lettuce leaves, and a thin, keine of lemon ie plated on each • plate. This is a most appetizing Ivey ni serving .sardines. Try it. Philiepigte Salad.—Cut tomatoes, large white onions green and sweet red. ;peppers, ales cuctunbers, in very thin slicesand is good French dressieg and let the salad stand for • tin hoer at loest on ice hi a cool place. Clarssish u th oritip lettuce leaves before serving. This makes a melee dish I1 the difletent vego- fairies user) arc laid 10 separate 'cir- •cles, alternately. The seeds of the t it „i„g be %irefully eemoved before they isre mid the eu- • cumbers peeled. ' --se-- BREADS. Boston Blown Breed, —Mix to - ;tether OW VIIPS ef rye -meal, ene owo granulated:yellow cornMeal, and tem cep of Whole wheat flour. Add teaspoontel of salt and sift, Thsselve a level teaspoonful of soda • in aboet tWo tabkapoonfels of warm 'writer and ischl to it one and one- half pints think sour cream at bet- • terroulle then Mid to this gee cup of mulasses. When thotoughly blended peer it over the dry ingtedients earl mix thorousddia Poste into e greased twit mettli brown, breed pee on 'the lid tightly, end Megies tmetillizeusly for fees bees, • Lifr .he lid to allow' die bvtiad to v.s.1 'i•xl at serving ii1111 bake.thirty, ately. Stuffed Tomatees.—Take fresh' to- form or another they worship almost Mathes, 'scoop out the middle, mash everything under the, atm. e They and put through colandee. • Putinto long for salvation, and they live a bowl to make a stuffing by adding in daily fear of hell and (Manna - chopped nuts, hard boiled eggs, don. This is especially so of the finely cut paesleye celery, flaked or common people, and to a large ex - boiled rice, salt and pepper to taste, tent of the Brahman. and stir into a paste. Then fill your tothatoes and bake. May be PIGTAILS le 1311ITISH ARAIY. served without baking upon lettuce Pigtals which aro threatened leaves, gartished with mess and ,na- with extinction in China, survived sturtiums. ••in our sexily instil well into the nine- teenth century, the Welsh Fusiliers USEFUL HINTS. being ,the last •to abendon them, Never slice apples for making says the London Chronicle. Sir Al- • pies; quarter them and reill()V0 gernon West relates. how he heard cores. - an argument *nee as to whether The courtesy of thanks for kind- the Bled clid ot did not weae pig - nese received should never be neg- tails at Waterloo. One of the dis- looted. • putants, who had seen thein on A kitchen golden rule is to clean their way to Dover, was convinced aa you go, and so save unnecessary thet they did. The other. who had labor and fatigue, . been a midshipman on the transpose Sift 0 tablespoonfid of pulverized whieh conveyed them to Ostend, was sugar over pie crusts before bak- equally certain thee; their hair was ing than • shot. The giver JV the dinner at To get en obstinate glass stopper whiek the dispute arose referred the gat of areceptacle tap St around matte); en' the following clay to a with /mother glass slimmer, friend who had served in the Blues An enamelled saucepan that is at. Waterloo. "Both your friends brrnt can he cleaned by rubbing were right," he Said. "We WOTO with damp salt. Then well tins° it reviewed at Windsor by the King on and ds -y. • ea? departure svith our pigtails on, Deem using it new sanespan boil and at Dover we had them cut off it well oet with soda water to whieh beforeour embarkation." ag few potato parings have been ed- giest, • FACT AND FANCY. Wrought iron arteries should be Boma; 00 wegese meek, invent. cleaned with 11 cloth dipped in ed glass in the fifth century, sweet all and allevwards polished When wo contract bad habits our with a Hamlet incomes need expanding. In Germany it is illegal to have A locomotive consists of 5,416 sin infaut sleep with an adult, and parts. the wisdom of the regulation dm Women ere good gardeners by in - not be tmestioned.stiect, having from thee hummer - To freshen s,alt fish soak it for a ial bean 70norbed in husbandry, Short thee in sour nsilk. This will Genuine Reside leather owes its be found 'more effective than using delightful anslenduring theist to the water for the purpose, birch bark used in its tanning. When meeting potatoes ender Freedom is net doing whet we the meat, they should first be par- want, bet doing what we ought, ls'oiteel, and then lightly sprinkled Quicksilver mining is the unheal- i mete." With Pewee sea Lame setmea, The Hindu religion is one of the oldest on earth. It sprang from our Aryan forefathers, and was practis- ed thousands of years before Christ. Frans age to age and generation to generation it has been the faith of hundreds of millions, and to -clay two hundred million people, one- eighth of all mankind, rest upon it their hope of selvedges. In India its believers form two-thirds .of the whole populatioe, end most a them ere so earnest that they will suffer pain and death rather than re- nounce their belief. • The Hindus are naturally religious. In one FROM BONNIE NOTLAND OTE S OF INTEREST Flt lit DF,Ii BANKS AND ARABS, Whet is Diking Ou Ilk the Highlands and Lowlands o'f Auld Scotia, To eombet plithisis the peblio headth rate at eSreenock is likely to be ativaneed 14, • Paisky School Board have reject- ed a motion to supply free books to Be 0, schools, The lamplighters of Hamilton have petitioned the Town Council fer an increese of -wages. • Haddington Town CouneR have resolved to tar macadam the roads widths the burgh. It will cost $3,- 500. tliiest of ell ertieles. • There has been formed the Scot- tish Mexican Oil Co., with head- quarters se the Leven Shipyard, Dumbarton. Illustrating the activity now ge- Mg on at the Greenock torpedo fa% tory there are between 70 and 80 111611 employed. The inhabitants of the royal burgh of Lochmaben are thinking of erecting in the burgh a memorial to the late King. • At the annual Bakers' Exhibition in London, Norman D. Robinson, Greenock, was rewarded the silver medal for brown bread. • The lock-oet in the ship -building industry affects the Ayrshire yards. At Troon, Ayr and Ardrossen, work has been interrupted. Fleming & Ferguson, Paisley, have received an order to build and ship in pieces two steam barges for South American owners. While the Royal Italian Circus was visiting Dumfries a large ele- phant, which was sale of its attrac- tions, 'dropped down dead. Two Dumfries shop keepers wesre each fined $15 for keeping a larger supply of explosives in the stores than are permitted b- the Ad. A. statue of Lord Kelvin to be erected in Belfast, his birthplace, is now nearing completion in the studio of Albert Bruce -Joy of Glasgow. Largs Town Couucil has agreed te replace the old wooden bridge over the Gogo, which was swept away, by a handsome new steel girder erec- tion. Good hauls of salmon have lately been obtained in the Esk, as well as sea trout, yellosv trout, and her - ling. The salmon ranged from 8 to 25 pounds. Quite a sensation has been caused by the resignations of seven of the members of Falkirk Parish Kirk - Session, whose congregation is the largest in the town. A new route on the Glasgow Cor- poration tramway system from Hyndiand by Great Western Road, Sauchiehall street, and Parliamen- tary Road, to Alexandra Park, was opened. A further batch of torpedo -work- ers fr0111 arrived at Goe- the mists of antiquity. It is.found, rock, and were all blleCOSS 11 111 THE ENGINEER'S HEART. The British Amalgamated Society of Engineers has new a membership of well over 100,000, and is probab- ly the largest trade union in the world, or at least the strengest fin- ancially. The vital statistics, there- fore, in such a laage and widely seattered body should prove of par- ticular importance. From the table in the latest an- nual report showing number and cause of death, with the average age, it would anntar that affections al the heart carry off more members than any two other troubles com- bined. • Old age, 91; bronchitis, 93, and pneumonia, 98, for instance, provide the largest figures in the •thble until we come to affections of the heart, when there is a jump to 214. The enginees would seem to be liable to heart trouble, which appears tcs terminate fatally in his cese at an average ago of 60. $10,111,11RS. Some Good Storlee of Theme Worthy, The Eriglish"elet:flle men were trained to the service m the sers vice itself, Their tomes were those of duty fame the sank ealen-boy to that of master. Such rt school Was likely to turn out elms of Mae (Jimmy but not of exteeitive Meru- lonlgtheiOnetuasliti,'s' billotoek James Euniunon has gathered sense stories of these e.orthies. A nsan. who could neither reed nor write would take his vessel " withoet RI 1Stake teem pod to port. The lights un the •coast were his only Musks, and his ene intellectes al exercise eoesisted in calculating the set of the ebb and the flood. With all the phenomena that he was used to observe in Isis oedinary life, he could deal promptly and saga- ciously, but anything new tended LC) disarrange Ins mind. When steamere were first ordered to carry s'ed and peels side -lights, with a high white light hung kr- ward, en old sea-eaptain saw the mysterious colored circles coming down upon him. Re did not under- stand this new thing and his Maul - ties became confused. He shouted, "Hard astarboard 1 We'll be into a chemist's shop." Another master •who happened to have a leisure evening went to,hear a popular lecture on astronomy. He was much troubled by svhat he heard and explained hie perplexity with great feeling. "The man told the lot of us," Ise said, "that the world turned round and reund; but I cannot understand how that can he. The Hatter's Rock ha,s been there ever since I can mind." One skipper who could reed a,nd use a chart was despatched to Rot- terdam. After going over the bar and well away to the east, he pro- duced his charts and made a learned inspection; but the eharts had been O long tine in the locker, and dr- eumstances combined to alarm him extremely. He went up on deck and called to his mate "Put her about; the rats have eaten Hol- lansl 1" One old captain bored away through a fog for several days un- der the. imprespion that he was go- ing north about from Liverpool. Af- ter a long time a vessel came past, and the lost ca,ptain. inquired, s'Are we going right for the Castle foot I" The stranger made answer, "What Castle foot I" 'Whereupon the incensed skinner said, "There's only one Castle foot; Tynemouth Castle," The answer was discouraging: "I1 you go es you're going, you'll be at; Newfoundland in a very short. time." Thoef opldassihnegrosii_fleill)ts isa swigahytebdacskt,. and after many days and much hail- ingAbb's He.1._then said, with pride, "Ale here'is England! I thought I would fetch hey." LAWYERS' VrES elKED. He is Also Pelee—um to Atlyertise • In Newspapers, The German law fixes the exact fees which a German attorney has. to -claim. for all kinds of peofessioneI work and, the rechtsanwalt can charge neither more nor less. These fees apply to all matters ot the Cave Code and of crinsinal eas-. e.The amount, according to the Green Bag, depends exclusively an the value of the object of conten- tionIt is an old though still unfulfill- ed wish ef German lasvyers to have a, new fixed list of fees—not mask after the old and low standard of the year 2879, but 'made with con- sideration to the changes—the num- erous decided changes --which have taken place since that year. The reehtsanwalt is attueney and counsellor at law all in ene (in England solicitor and barrister). The rechtsanwalt can never be e business man as is the ea.se in the United States. The exercise of the law is not to be considered a calling or peofes- sion but is to be looked on 1110re as a public office. According to the lawyers' code of the lst jely, 1878, lawyers are enarged publicly with certain duties. He is obliged to have Isis resideece in the town or district wheve he is appointed (so-called residence duty). Further, he tnust conduct himself in and eut of office in a way befitting his prefessional and social primitive methods, In winter a hole is eat in the ice, a scraper attach- rstasinsike)lin$ThI(iiette Itid,\uvrtyer disnefortthicktiunli: to adve.riaec in newspapers, by sate vaesing, etc., ov to bey or telts over O practice already made, sus 1/Clag unworthy of his pains,. His position in 'society is bet, soot officials suet schemes and through enstein awl law he is compelled to keep the position to the lad de- gree. This compuleices to keep ore's rank ha,s given rise to the existence of -committees ;called anwaltshane 'morn, whose duty it is to keep a strict watch that no lawyer disho ars his calling. These emismitkee have grid eotle of punishreent, ranging to eoreplete expulsion hose office. In this "way the lawyers Germaily haves a good arid honored positiot in fad there i$ settecets tenth, but what other one is theroa urea` rstPett aret ektiNence. GOLD LEAF HAS HISTORY. The origin of gold leaf, like the first use of gold itself, is lost in for example. in connection with the securing accommodation. Altos most ancient known mummies, has, gather, about 200 of the mechanics ing been used for covering teeth.; have come north. . . tongues, skin, etc. Sometimes it is Newmilns is a place of consider - also Sound on the coffins. Gold leaf able but unknown antiquity, for it was, also used on the tombs and .eidsted as a country town long be - monuments of ancient Egypt. The fore it was made a burgh, which Process of making gold leaf has thus was in the year 1490, or snore than been known since the 8th century four centuries age. - • --• B. C. In the Ilth century it seerns The question of providing dinners to have attained as high a degree of for nursing mothers in Paisley was perfection as to -day. The eold leaf again' considered at a meeting of on some ancient Grecian pottery in. the Council. An appeal is to be deed is as_thin ase.that now used. •support of the pvusect. made for public subscriptions in HIS INDELIBLE weriew. • The tete William Thompson ' Brown, of California, has left We "There's nothing really the mat- No ee his native town Musselburgh, ter with You," said the PbYsieian ; Miellothean, to establish a dental "all you need is exercise and—and parlor where ell poor inhebitants "Yes, sir," responded Mr. Wine- ment. may rece_ive skilful dental treat- -ado you bathe frequently 1" dunks; "ever since I was a boy Pre made it a practice to take e bath IRON ORE FROM LAKES. Nvunst a sveck, reg'lar.". et --- Swedes Reap Crop from Isalte Beds SUNBlsAMS. Every Thirty Years. Don't put your trust in money. Tim button's of many Swedish Pat your money in trust. lakes are covered DO is thickness of The new color photography makes six ot, eight inches with fragments no appeal to the man with the red of iron ore of the size of peas. This The prudent resemble hatpins. lake are consists chiefly el ochre or 11050. Their heads prevent dime from go- hydrated ovido of iron, mixed with silideeand phosphate of iron, clay, Ing too far. •sand and other impurities, and •-----*--- tnelde pig iron of vety good qua - RESULTS NOT EVERYTHING. lity. The ore is obtained by very 'only thing that dent. Results there's any shadow on the way you It isnlrue tesults are the aren't worth anything. to you if got them. He—Yon know that it isti't your money I want to marry yes'. fot, don't you dear'? Silt3—Yee; ttiet's what I to'ld papa. He ---And what did he 990 • Sho—Ille ;aid if that was. true you didn't have as much sense as he thought you had, • . PROOF, Forst Stranger—"I say, that's 1133) umbrella you have!" eand Stranger ---"I don't doubt it, sir—I don't deubt it, I bought it at a pawnbroker's." "Wall, the snore money I etin give her the longer she can stay." ed to a long pole is Inserted, anti all the ere within rea.ch is eolleeted into a heap beneath the hole. Some of the mud which has been seraped together with the ore is 1.ernoved by stirring the mass with poles, and the ore is then Scraped into bags, which heve been sunk, anti is hastleil up. In. summet this curious mining operation is condueted in a similar mannev from rafts anchored in the lake. Two minors can bring up abont four tons of oro in a day. Steam dredges lets'e sepals?' been installed in a few places. About SO yeavs after the removal of the ore, tt new layer of the same thickness is found to helm been predeced by neteral themieal processes. A lie is a, poor sebstxtute for the cometey whieli the lawyer enews