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The Brussels Post, 1912-3-7, Page 3fri.Y 5E:11 LP s I remove the oder of cabbage or on - tons, which have been previously cooked, Before going shopping make your memoranda on an envelope, and put inside it any samples you may wish to match. The finest of manicure acids is made by putting a teaspoonful of lemon juice in a cup full of warm water. When painting the inside of a house place buckets of water around to absorb the poisonous fumes from the paint, Before giving easter oil, squeeze orange juice over it and see that the patient chills his mouth by chewing cracked ice. Apples and bananas sliced and fried together and served with le- mon juice and maple syrup. make a good luncheon dish. Never put good rugs on a line to beat them, as it will wear the edges, also it is better to sweep them than to shake them, 'All cakes with butter in them need to bo beaten long and vigor- ously to make them fine grained. Never stir after the final beating. Severe pains in the stomach af- ter eating will be almost instantly relieved by drinking a teaspoonful of salt in a glass of cold water. Use borax in cleaning house, It does net ruin paint, whitens the curtains, and does not stain the. carpets, which are washed with it. Pancakes made with cream and served with butter, fine sugar and lemon quarters or a dish of cinna- mon, make a delicious luncheon dish, To slip house plants, ant slips from a young green shoot, making the out slanting. .Put in a dish Ailed with sand, which must al- ways be kept moist. When frying doughnuts have a dish of boiling water on the stove; dip the cakes in this while still hot from the fat. The cakes are ren- dered more digestible, On cold wash days, place clothes pins in a pan and heat in oven. Take number needed for first clothes and put in pin bag so they will keep warm till clothes are hung. If you live in a house where there is a fragrance always keep a .vessel of water on the register, and you will always have hot water. Frozen plants should be placed in a dark place, then sprinkled with cold water. Geraniums, fuchies, and' similar plants may often be saved if care is given in thawing them out. Don't throw away dairy butter that is too strong for eating or cooking. Put it on the stove with two raw potatoes to about ono and one-half pounds of butter. Boil until potatoes are cooked, then strain through a damp cloth. .Add salt if needed. When cold it is ex- cellent for frying or cake baking. CHOICE RECIPES. Onion Dressing,—Select four or five small onions, pare and Dore thein and place them its the body of the duck to give flavor. The onion is not to be served. Maple Sante.—One cup maple syrup, one-half cup water, one tablespoon flour. Make a paste of the flour and water, adcl to the maple syrup and boil three minutes. Serve while warm. Peach Melba..—Two large ripe peaches, ono -half pint ice cream. Pare the peaches, cut in halves and remove the stones. Place each half in an individual dessert dish, with the outside of the peach next the dish. Fill the cavity with ice cream. Canned peaches may be used. Angels on Horseback,—Twelve slices best bacon, twelve large oys-. tars, twe]ve small skewers. Place an oyster on the end of each slice of bacon, roll the bacon', over and over and skewer through the roll. Arrange the rolls upon a wire rack and place in the oven until the be- conbecomes crisp and brown. Serve very hot. Lethtce and Onion Salad.—Four crisp leaves of head lettuce, two small Spanish onions, four sticks celery, half cup French dressing. Place a lettuce leaf on each salad plate. Slice the onions very thio and place upon the lettuce. Pour the French dressing over the salad when ready .to serve. Serve with celery cheese stick. Corn° Beef Hash,—One cup chop- ped corned beef, one cup mashed potatoes, one-half teaspoon onion juice, one egg (white). Season the hot mashed potatoes and heat un- til light, add the onion juice, corned beef and the beaten white of an egg. Mix well, form into balls and fry in deep fat. Serve while hot. This hash may be baked if pre- ferred. Cress and Celery Salacl.—One- quarter bunch cress, one large bunch choice celery, one -hall cup French dressing. Crisp the let- tuce in Cold water. Cut the celery into .two-ineh lengths and cut six or eight half-inch slits in both ends of - each strip. Throw the celery into cold water and let it remain •au hour or until the edges curl up. Rub a small salad bowl with a bit; of. onion, line with cress, arrange the celery in the cress -lined bowl, garnish with bits of nuts and ohop- •ped pimento. Pour the French dressing over all just before serv- ing, , Oysters in Rarnokins.—One cup boiled rice, one-half cup catsup, one-half pint oysters. Line the oiled ramekin with boiled rice. Cook half pint oysters, chop, season with salt and pepper and moisten with catsup. Put this mixture in the ramekins and cover with a layer of rice, brush with melted butter and place in a quick oven'to brown. Garnish with a bit of parsley or cress and serve very hot, Green Peppers Stuffed with Meat. Four green sweet peppers, half cup thick white sauce, two- thirds cup chicken (ground), one - thirst cup pork tenderloin (ground), half teaspoon onion juice. Use the remains of pork tenderloin and chicken previously Booked for din- ner. Cut the stem end off the green peppers, remove the seeds and par- boil the pod. Mix the meat, sea- soning and white since, fill the pep- pers with this mixture, covering with crumbs, brush with butter and place in a baking dish in a moder- ate oven and bake a half hour, Celery Cheese Stick.—Two sticks crisp eeiery, two ounces pimento. cream cheese. Cut ' celery into '4 -inch lengths, fill the cavity with cheese. These sticks are used in place of wafers. r -- CHANGED HER MIND. Mrs, Zuba Creel, a young colored woman who did housework by the day, was for a time obliged to de- vote herself exclusively to a now member of the, family, Miss Lucy Wosb, .one of her customere, called one morning to. find out how Zuba was getting on., "What are you going to name the baby, Zuhal" asked Miss Lucy, af- ter inspecting the tiny newcomer with due interest. "Well'm," returned Zuba, "I boon studying over a new name 1 heard, and I 'spec' I'll name him Rodent," "Rodent!" gasped Miss Lucy. "Whatever shade you think of that 1" "Well'm, one, day las' spring, when I was ening elo'es at Mis' Parlin's, I heard Miss Alice tell her maw she seen some, signs that made her think de rodents was a'coming. "1 didn't hear na mo'n dat, but I 'lowed de rodents was Erica's o' de fambly, and somehow de name kind o' struck me, 1 kep' saying it over and over till it stuck fas' in my mind, and den I laid in up for a time o' need, 'cause, don't you know, I don't never favor names dat's common, and rodent sounds kind o' tony to me. Don't you lak it, Mb;,s Lucy 1" "No," said Miss Lucy, "and I don't think you will, either, when I tell you that Miss Alice probably meant rats and mice when she spoke of rodents, I never heard of a per- son named that, but any small ani- mal that gnaws is called a rodent." "Hush!" cried Zuba, in astonish - ,p CHORED FATHER TO DEATH. Russian 'Sect Which Rills Off All Members at Sixty. To the seven ancient Russian sects which practice self -immolation, self- mutilation, or self -torture ,has been. added , an eighth. It • bears the strange title, "Raskol Shestidesya- tilietnuikh," which means "Stet of the men aged sixty." • Ira main tenet is that all amen who have reached the age of sixty are "'called to Gcd," and that their friends and relatives ought to assist thorn to obey the call, The sesistsnee tis given in the aha a of throttling, crushing the skull, or dosing with chloroform. Tho police the other day aeravted ran6t os. a 'o see' a y®Utl ment. "Ef dot ain'h de cap -sheaf l Wall, I aliore ain't godn' name dis po' little lamb after no varentmt.. I reckon I'll name 'en Beelebteb, Doy'1l call him. `Bub,' anyway, no matter what I names 'im." MEMORY MAKES THE MAN, Memory is an excellent quality, and every bueinesa demands a spe- cial memory adapted to its particu- lar needs. Take the doctor, for ex- ample. He ltaa to know e 'human body better than its very owner, and must 'carry in his mind, perhaps for years, little points that may he needed for future reference. Medi- cal memory is quite es important as medieal knowledge, Every lawyer is obliged to know, as a child known its alphabet, the principles of law, and the judge must carry his train- ed memory even further, Natural- ly, clergymen must allow their mem- ories to rum upon religious matters, and there are many divines who can literally repeat whole chapters from, the Scriptures. Each profession, each business, has use for a man whose memory can be trained for the one purpose of applying it to the particular vocation in which he is engaged. , Meerschaum means sea -foam, and derives its name from the fact that it is sometimes found floating in the Black Sea. "See that Miss Milyuns 1 Before her father became rich they called her long and lanky." "Well, what do they say now l" "They say she is divinely tall." the high p ' a ' la t man named Kabankin, son of a rich house -owner of FJai'etoi'f, en the Volga, Kabankin'e father rethetev disappeared, Kabankin junior Raid he had gone oaa a pilgrimage :to a forest cloister, Neighbors, how» ever, knew that the son was priest of the `Sixty Sect, Tliey began to tall., and finally the police found tinder Kabankin s beet a trap door which led 'to the subterraneien tem: plc of the sect, It was a small, gors geously decorated chamber with ikons, prayer -books, and holy vis- aols; also a case ofsteel instruments made for some my}sterious use, On pressure, leabankiri admitted that he had choked his father, and btu•ied brim in a stable, Tho search brought to light an unrecognizable coruwe, lersbankin is in jail and a search is being made for his followers, whose names he conceals, He ad - snits that the steel inetrutnent$ are for inllietitig death in queer ways, One is to squash in the head, This has the effect of "releasing tee cowl at once," If blood is ,r lied the tont remains In the body and tortures it for ,years; :according to this revolt- ing belief. Tho Iiabank]n revelations have led to reports of missing men being sleet is to the police by looses, Dur- ing this leer four years abnormal numbers of persons have disappear. ed ; nearly all Were easterly then, Five ottb of nine who vanished in 1910 were jtist over edxty, The, po- lice lutes) finished d{p,gllg brouttd Naleenkints hottse bet they have not 00110 11pa01'tlro corragetl, They will now begirt digging iib the vielty a of Debovaa wheys els, Shay peat threes Bum celestmon on the stovo to times met ab night.. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Brown cookies in broiler when using the oven. Cold potato makes a good paste in an emergency. Fill a bottle with warm water be- fore you try to remove the label. 14leltee alum will mend your glass pieces and rho mark will nob show. Boil beans in the funace, brown- ing them the last half hour in- the oven.. Old damask curtains dyed a pretty shade will .stake good piano and couch covers. r A nicely covered bed slat will make a good board far ironing shirt waist sleeves. pet all in When using the oven p It it will hold, moats, potatoes, ap- plcs, pudding, etc. Remove cake from the pan cos soon as you take ib from the even anti cool en a cake rack. If the oven is too hot and your ' cake browns too fast taut a piece of buttered liepea' over ib. Instead of pillows, try a cushion from a morrin chair with which t>o prop tip an indio{dtaal in bed,' , A piece of chiffon or veiling twsr ted is a 'tnuolt boater' rat far a s•lrornpadour than otta Made of hair, MRS, ASQUYTII AND. LARY LYTTON • "SNAPPED'' SKATING IN S1t'I'1'"/,l�.RLAND) Lady Lytton's little daughter, Ltuly Herenton° Lytton, is skating with theta, Lady Lytten, like Mrs, Anqulth, is a keen rates', al- though the latter is net in the urine eats as leer desegfttee, bliss Eli;:e- both A,yquith, who skates beautlfpllf,—Photo to acct at eeron, f}wit- ger]and, b3' special Arrangement WW1 The Tatler, m .4 'THIS IILUE NILII IN FLOOD. Wailer Rises) Several lIoters During lhtl fil]ghb�, When the flood begins in the Roving, the natives of the upper re= Pone et the Blue Nile prepare Inc their journey to the north, with whatever produce Is considered worth taking, In "Five Yeses its the linden," Mr, Edward Fother- gill tells how qu'.okly the Nilo rises, The Blue Nile flood tames down be- tween. the eomparatively narrow banks with tremendows ewiflness, One night we went to bed with Ilio river es visual, The ,heat with lying at the bottom of a high bank, Half- way up the bank we had a thriving vegetable -garden, and from the windowsof our house it wee impos- sible to see even the t:1p of the steamer's mast. When I waked the next morning I fancier.) for a moms ant Haat 1 was the victim of a hallus (Menton, for there, opposite the door of thehousa, swans the steam- er:et her anchor, The floodelted come, and the water had risen elev oral meters during the eight, In oenneotion with the coming of this flco•d, I remember on,e0 boitt,f out on a .shooting t,xpedtioaa about the tune when the, fiord wati eec e,et- cd, and camping In • a dried=stn chant ncl of the rivor .for the night, At daybreak I swag walked tuddt'nly by niv servant+, who ,drool mei roughlys telling Inc that the`Verte.re wet% al, inept upon us. The stamp warn awake, and already the knee were brew loading Site ,esrnlcoyvs ,and eo'l. looting our bellsccn'inga, Away be the with we could cheer a dull 1010', as of many watore gradually 1111 - '(HE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MAItCII 10, Lesson X.—Jesus the healer, Mark 1. 29-455; Matt, 4; 23-25. Golden Text, Malt, 2. 17. MAJU( 1. 29-45. Verse 29. And straightway—Tho scene of the events of this lesson is still Capernaurn, where Jesus had cast out the unclean spirit from the unfortunate sufferer in the syna- gogue. The house of Simon and Andrew —Their permanent home. 30. Sick of a fever—Possibly ma- larial fever, which travelers report is still rife at certain seasons of the year in the plain in which Ca- pernaurn is situated. Tell him of here -Fully convinced that he would be ,able to help. - 31, Took her "Sy the hand and raised her up—Luke changes Mark's wording to "stood over her, and rebuked the fever," This wording in Luke sweeten seem almost to imply that illness from fever was also attributed to spirit -possession. This inference, moreover, is borne out by Luke's wotxls in the verse parallel to tate preceding in which he speaks of Simon's wife mother being "holden with (held in the. grip of) a fever." 32. At even, when the sun did set -After the close of the Sabbath day, which began and ended with self proclaimed as the Messiah at this time. (Compare verse 34 above.) Which Moses commanded --Com- pare Lev. 13. 49 and 14. *ti. 45. Could no mora openly enter into a city—Being fully occupied lir span of existence being nstimnted towhees; and healing the multitudes . b Cuvier at 1,000 years, The nexb h±eb rocked after him into desertl largest animal, the elephant, will, platoon MATTHEW 4, 23-26, ander favorable ennd'.tiu ts, live 400 years, These verses from Matthew's nor- When Alexander the Great eon- quernd Porus, I{ing of India, he took a 'great elephant that had fought gallantly for the defeated king, named him Ajax, dedicated him to the sun, placed upon hum a metal hand with the inscription, "Alexander, the eon of Jupiter, dedicated Ajax to the sun." The elephant sva:s found alive 360 years later. The average age of cats 5s 15 yeara; of squirrels, 7 or 8 years; of rabbits, 7; a bear rarely exceeds 20 Years; a wolf, 20; a fox, 14 to 16, IIOW LONG ANIMALS ZITI . Alexander's Elephant and Caesar's Stag. Undoubtedly the longest -lived animal on earth is the whale, its native parallel and briefly summar- ize verses 32-39 in Mark's account, 23, All Galilee ---So extensive a tour must have occupied several months. 24. Into all Syria --His fame spread even beyond the borders of Galilee into the region of Tyre and Sidon on the northwest and Cae- sarea Philippi to the northeast; al- so to the region of Decapolis south- east of Galilee, and southward into Samaria and Judaea. Possessed with demons, and epi- leptic—Perhaps the comma should Lions are. comparatively long lived, be omitted and the word epileptic instances .having been recorded considered as synonymous with where they reached the age of 70 "possessed with demons," since years. • Matthew elsewhere clearly attri- Pigs have, been known to live to butes epilepsy to demoniac posses- the age, of 20 years and horses to sion (Matt. 17. 14-18; compare also 60, but the average age of the horse Mark 9. 14-29; Luke 9; 37-43). is 25 to 30. Camels cometimee live 26. Decapolis—A region of tern to the age of 100 and stags are very cities east and southeast of Gali- lee. QUEER PLACES FOR .NESTS. long lived, one having hem taken by Charles VI, in the forest of Sen - lis which bore about its neck a col- lar an which was engraved, "Can- _ sar hoc mile. clonavit," Swallows Built on the Curtain Rod Whether or not this stag bad ac- tually aged, tually lived since the days of one of the Caesars it is impossible to say, A very curious instance of bold- but the evidence seems good. nese in swallows was recorded in Engles occasionally and ravens 1886 from Ceylon. In this case, the frequently reach the age of 100 sunset. birds built aver a lamp in the din- years, and swans have been known All that were sick—From all parts ing-room; what made their choice of of live 300 years. A tortoise has Of the city. site more remarkable was the fact been known to Iive 107 years. Possessed with demons—Origiu- that the lamp could be raised or Efforts have been mode to eon - ally the Greek ward here used for lowered by counter weights, and the, nett the rapidity of the pulse beat demon was applied only to the connecting chains actually panted with longevity, but no logical con - gods; gradually ie became custom- through the mud walls of the neat. elueism can be reached, es will be ary among the Greeks to use it with Occasionally the bird selects a Been from the fact that the pulse of reference to spirits, whether divine nesting .site which invites compare a lion beats 40 times a minute; that or intermediary between gods and son with the the boldness of the of e tiger 96 times, of a horse 40 men, and of the lather regardless robin. In July last a pair of swat- times, of a wolf 45 times, of a fox of whether they were geed or evil.' lows took advantage of the open 43 times, of a bear 33 times, and Only gradually was it applied i;u window of an un, ccupind bcdra.am of an eagle 160 times. It has been evil spirits, emissaries of Satan as in a house at Felmersham in Bed- impossible to count the beats of an distinguished from spirits emauat- fordshire, Englard, to be,1in build- elephant's pulse. but that of a out- ing from the gods. In this later .ing their.ne:et on the curtain rad of terfly beats 60 times to the minute. sepse the word, as well as the con- the bed. —Dumb Animals. cept, for which it stood, was taken The return of the owner of the > over by Greek -s eking Jews, and house and the occupation of the bed is to be underst4est in titis sense slid not in the least disturb ur alarm SANDS T11 AT SING. here, as in most • f the passages of the New Testament in which it oc- curs. I 34. Because they knew him --Many ancient, muthoritids add to be the Christ; so also Duke (4. 41). At this early point in his public min - preaching; end res, all had an anx> taus few minute», until at last we Were left high and dry, out of the reach of the highest flood. We must have looked a peaty of fools when the cause of the roar be- came aparent. Instes,d'of a rush of water at our feet, the sky grew darker, and over our heeds, flying in the direction of the river, came millions of small birds going for their annual holiday to the north. It was a most wonderful sight, and it impressed me as much as any- thing winch I saw in the Sudan, the birds, which cempleted1. e. nest— Dia - and brought off three nestlings Mimed \otos Produced by Dis- within seven weeks of the house- turbing Deposits on Isle. owner's return. They took nu no- A lecture given at the Royal_ So - dee of the occupant of the bed when eiety Club by Cecil Carus -Wilson feeding their young; but the sten was devoted to a consideration of bird would fly off the. :nest 11 any the extraordinary sands known as istry Jesus carefully avoided pro- one entered the room during the „musical" ur "singing" sands, says the London Standard, The best singing sands in the world come from the, Isle of Egg, off the coast of Scotland, and it is Requires Courage to Weigh Our comforting to know that whatever Own Defects. figure Britain may cut in grand claiming himself as the Messiah, ! day time.—Bailey Magazine. nor dicl'he permit such proclama- tion either from friendly or un- FORMATION OF CHARACTER. friendly sources. If we think of — those to whom demon -possession is here attributed as suffering from some form of mental derangement, it is easy to understand how any slight suggestion of the.supernatur- al power of Jesus would be aug- mented and magnified in their imagination. 35. A great while before clay—The burden and strain of the day's work was not conducive to restful sleep; rather did it fill the mind of Jesus with'a, sense of his own need of strength and inspiration from the heavenly Father. Hence he hastens away before the house and cies- are again astir and seeks the solitude of a desert place, where he prayed. • 36. Followed after him—Appar- cntly Simon was already familiar with the personal habits of Jesus, which included the observation of periode of meditation and prayer, 38. Into the next towns—The shore country about the Sea of Ga- lileo was thickly dotted With small villages -between cities, For to this •ond came I forth — Jesus may have referred simply to his leaving Capernaurn and not consenting to return at once, even along tv:tltottb st•rn'rng to rrse a.bota, and it was by mesas of ram though informed that all who had the level of those who do trot ease 1 of Lgg, heard of his prase0cc there were Our c vel otr. r lies in our own hands lea et the real egg variety that tiro, 1 the whole ' 1. aures produced musical notes. '2 TOUCHING THOSE TUNNELS. There are three famous tunnels which make it possible far the tra- veller to remelt Switzerland through France and Italy the Mont Cenis, rho St. Gothard, and the Simplon. The first ofthe,so was begun in 1857, and took three years to complete. It is eight miles in length, and it cost over $1,000 a yard to construct. This was thought to be a vordtable triumph of engineering, but the didiettlties encountered in the build- lug *1 the St, Goi,herd were far greater, The tunnel was a mile and a vertex" longer than the .Mont Ce- nia, and, of oouree, cost moro fn proportion. With regard to the Sim - /elms Tunnel, which ds the longest in the world, it was completed in 1905. Fortunately, in its oonstruation the death-r•ato tome very low, as the mu- tltoritie,s had learned tot counteract blao eitceis of the sttoumeuSsir-pros- sero, The tunnel teak over eight Sense t r bu31d, tend is twelve and a q:series miles long, Rlaetric loco- restless haul the trains through it. To nothing in life, perhaps, is opera else is at least preeminent there directed so little thought as to when it conies to a question of sing - the shaping of a career—the' mold- nig sand, But what is singing ing of a character. Thousands of sand 1 Mr. Carus -Wilson went to great panus to le men and women around us live their no doubt on indifferent lives, and the subject, and although his audf- pass awcy ence contained many eminent geo- without doing anything really worth logists he asked leave to begin at while, £Wiling to get out of life its the very beginning and to treat his beat and most beautiful. We need audience "aa an audience of boys." not achieve wonderful things or be- come great personagst high in the esteem of the world; it nnatters not whether we are king or peasant, the of natural causes, chiefly the. tvea- stamp of merit is placed on those thee; how cliffs become boulders, who give their whole -hearted atten- how boulders become pebbles, and tion to whatever they undertake. Whether it be the making of an in- tricate marvel of workmanship or the execution of everyday duties, p.n.-duces a kind of sand which has Whatever is assigned to use should music in its soul; a sand composed call forth the best that is in es.of quartz,' rounded and highly pol- Let ars not be afraid to examine filbert, of a uniform size and very our faults. It requires courage, i clean, And when these are agitated oertamly, to weigh our gun defects so as to prtcluce vibrations, by and look them bravely in the, face ; means of the wind, by being trod - but it is .only by so doing that we den upon, ur b} being trttcic, they men .7vereanee theist and that {hem rreduce musical note, Such per - aside. Shall we he content to drift feet, deposits are, fennel in the isle The lecturer showed how the rocks of which the earth is com- posed are decomposed by the notion pebbles in turn become sand. In the course of time it occurs that na- ture, that must versatile old lady, seeking him (verse 37). Another permissible interpretation is that he refers to the benevolent purpose of. his life mama as a whole, or Curl associates, but ntth our - 39, Preaching and casting out dr,- &elves. lies the. neiferm. moulding et pin abstracted, hr. said, from the mons---Here clearly the expression terpreted to,include the .eating of eer. we era the sculptors, nursery at home, and produced a high nn 'casting out demons" must be m our •carour life is the cl:uy, Wo can mala fiminimal noir. The sand bo aft indistinguishable mass of mater- hared better le the eggeup than in various kinds of diseases. its! or. the masterpiece of a Michel anything clic, In a cardboard box 40, A. leper-i-.T.eprosy was ono of Angelo, Which shall we rltoosel its mated notes remained dumb,. the diseases the evil working of. as it did in it. flower -pot and in the - — s- half ,if a rubber -bald, In half- a ablyhieh could be aeon and mothers I]1l C1 "MISS BLAKE." woualen Taster egg the sand ,from untl e rIbed l ionto leprosy I31,ASSt the Isla of Egg. as the lecturer re - nee, had every loot. of being a bridal p Make me clean--•I)iaenso ofeevery couple. 'The young mon teres t11p surrounding» and emitted a sharp form but es ecially the loathsome escorted the young wornnit to ase,'tt jo}'nus squeaking. + p Musical sands have been known disease of leprosy•, `ryas regarded as svh'ila the interested passengers for 1,000. years, and it is believed punishment for sin committed' either smiled indulgently,there e a reference to them in b the sufferer himself o + :his im- Then extending his hand to the that e e c , "Amblers m el by encoders, Pereone thus supposed bride, be said, in a 'very one of the boles o•f the afflicted were moreover raeremani- loud Yoko, "Well, Miss 'Blake, the Nights," But nature, who mu- stily uapeloan, their teach being pro- train is about to pull otrt, 1 wish duets e �p rimeets on quite a dr hobat �f1i . rituaiitttte rules, you very peasant journey ' and ferent scale from there ' of bd , by. , Beingmoved With' compassion coiling his soft hat, he 1110710d Oft 'night,itrodrrs• umuch i'ittrr results. -These Worth give ns the scoxet of the train, The passengers looked There is the lfoentain of the heli the public nnlniatry of Jesus on its disappulntcd, humn aide, Hie life, lain laver his strength 'net out in self -forgetful service to the needy, regardleaa of their /ease es stance, Touched bine—A. taurh Was ants iicient to reaasttre the faith ulreedy strong, 44, -See thou Pay nothing to any magi. --Another evidence of the en- rvillinetiess of Jessie to' hove him - There is no aur r. sa rn billing, a vtontlen rggettp wttlr world who con make or mar it. \W sand 2rom the isle. of Egg he stab - may ho influenced of course by good bed the sand with a Wooden Witte But the young woman seemed nervous, 13y lead by she called the partes, and in a whisper gave him stone mysterious errand,. Pc canto honk in a moment, and said its se voice nt:dible to every One t. "Yo'ro ail niht, n1a'am, li'e'n 3o p smokin' corn. ete:meet," in Everybody .sailed, and the bride blushed prettily on the shores of the Red Sea, which makes extraordinary .sounds and boomings when the winds set the. connt:lass millions of particles rub- bing against each other and vibrat- ing. . Darwin discovered the "Roarer" in Chile, which also makes tremou- dorts noises, and there arc many other examples in sa ions v a pests of the world.