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The Brussels Post, 1912-5-2, Page 7NEW DISHES FROM ITALY. Although French cookiat>„ is tra- ditionally regarded as the bes•b of any c'.,unihy in Europe, there are those who cherish a weakness for Italian dishes. The following re- cipes were culled by the writer when she was on a visit to Italy, •and made the discovery that many new touches were given to our ewe familiar feeds. Some are well worth duplicating at our tables by way of achieving the especial sauce 'of appetite—variety, Spinach, fur instance, is screed in a ring multi, the vegetable being tender in the usual way, drained, chopped fine and when hot passed through a wire sieve. At the point a little white, thin sauce, with the white •of an egg, is added, and the mixture pressed into a mold, whish is set in hot waiter until needed for table. Thin, hot slices of tongue are laid in groups, of two and threes on the top of the ring. Of celery, the ..green stalks are cut in pieces two inches or .so ill length and stewed until tender, and served like asparagus on toast, with bettered sauce—a delicious dish, more especially if grated Par- mesan cheese is sprinkled on top before the celery is sent to table. Plain boiled Hee, cooked tender and well salted, becomes a dish of consequence if served with a cream cheese sauce. A riot white sauce is rade and grated Parmeaa:"t cheese stirred in thickly while the sauce is very hot. Serve with this <minis° oblongs of dry thin toast. The following dishes are oven more typically Italian than the fore- going, aancI if the recipes are faith- fully carried out will be found quite excellent: Pizzella--Add to rather less than three-fourths pound of flour three potatoes rubbed through a sieve and a pinch of salt, Dissolve a piece of fresh yeast the size of a small, marble, in a little tepid water, Make a hole in the center of the flour and add the dissolved yeast, working the paste lightly un- til it comes away easily from the baking board dr slab (a marble slab is the hest). Put the paste in a basin and place it aside in a warm place until it has risen (about three hours). Heat some oil in a frying pan, dip your hands in tepid water, tear off lumps of the paste and fry, rinsing your hands each time to prevent the paste sticking to them. Place a little thick tomato sauce in the cen- ter of each "pizzella" and servo very hut. Rolle of Rice.—Boil a cabbage. Boil some rice (do not overboil it), and when ready add two well -beat- en eggs, a little butter, pepper, salt and grated Parmesan ebeeee. Spread a small quantity on a .leaf of a boiled cabbage, and roll it round and tie it. When as many as required are prepared, fry them in boiling oil, Serve very hot, with tomato sauce to which some butter and grated Parmesan have been added, CARE Ole THE DISHCLOTH, During the last few years scien- tists have endeavored to awaken the people to the vast importance of bacteria, To -clay every one is be- ginning to realize and to recognize the'important part which bacteria play in home sanitation, writes an experienced housekeeper. Bacteria comprise a small class of law plants which are possessed of wonderful powers. There are hundreds of clitferent species and forms, all of which are extremely minute and which are newer visible to the naked eye. The fact that they are so universally found in nature, together with their great powers of multiplication, renders them of the greatest importance in nature. We shonl•i not get the idea that all bacteria are to be condemned, be- cause seine of them are our friends rather than utir enemil's. Bow-- .ever, low-.ever, there is a class of bacteria, called pathogenic, 'Or disease,prn dueling bacteria, which are barnitttl, and it is against three that we should *age Our wee. To must people the care of idle dishcloth weans a vrl;y c<iniple and ummpeetalnt phase 1n 0111` 1h<luee- hold defies, and yet the dishcloth is a very important factor in the kitchen and cony be the cause of serious trouble, We all know of a honselceepci (uf. emirate we never do suds n thing), who is really very cleanly and cen- siclercd a number one housekeeper, who, after washing icer dishes, washes eft' the gas plate, the Bildt and probably. a little, of the Wend work With. the same cloth. S'hir throws <nL 'the dishwater, ciliate out the lagan and doth and hangs it overt• the pen or over in some dark corner to dry. • Then after` each meal this process ,is.continited,. until the cloth iS simply in strings, I know a iv0)1.10') who slays that, she "always makes it a •rugs hover to use her dishcloth after it gets to be ever e yard long, " Now, when we stop to censidot• the seriousness r,f pettlwgenic. bacteria and the die - eases which they cause, we realize that a slangy, greasy dishcloth woad. be very likely to breed disease, A noted physician relates an ex- perience which he had in a family where a daughter was taken ill wil;h diphtheria, After her death two other members of the family were taken with the same disease. As there were no other cases. in that town and apparently tocause for s it, he began to investigate, He searched the whole house and sur- ooundinga and found everything perfectly sanitary. He was about to give up his investigation when he caught sight of the dishcloth. Upon examining it he found it to contain millions of microbes. Se the cause of the diphtheria was at- tributed to the dirty dishcloth which the mother had thoughtlessly used; We should always wash the dish- cloth thoroughly with hot water and soap after using ib, rinse it and .:hake it out and then hang it ie the sun to dry; never using it for anything excepting dishwashing, And do not use it until "it is a yard long." We must realize that "it Is the little things which count," even in saliitation, HOUSEHOLD HINTS, When bread making, do not use too much salt or the loaves will not be light. Sponges will not get slimy if rinsed in clean water and putt in the air after using. Save every spoonful of gravy or stock, for a small quantity of ei- ther is a great improvement to made dishes. If the oven is too hot, place a basin of cold water in it; this will speedily leaver the temperature. Suet puddings must be boiled for at least two hour, and if _cooked from three. to four hours they 'will be better. - To Remove Varnish,—:first rub well with sandpaper and then ap- ply spirit of ammonia on a soft rag. To Clean Paint.—Dip a flannel into powdered whiting, and rub the surface of the paint, and you will be pleased with the result. Steel table knives should naves be used in the kitchen, for if any- thing greasy is stirred with thean they iminediately-become blunt. • When cake tins are worn thin, scatter a little sand over the oven shelf before putting down the cake: tin, and it will not bun in the bak- ing. Where moths aro troublesome scatter powdered bitter apple under the papers of drawers and cup- boards. Turpentine, too, is useful for the purpose. If you wish to keep books in good -condition, have open shelves. Glass doors certainly exclude dust, but they are apt `to keep in damp •and harbor moths, Tar stains may be removed from cotton fabrics by covering the spot with butter, and allowing it to re- main for a few hours before wash- ing. Fat and suet will keep for a long time if finely shredded, nixed with flour, and put in •a cool plaice. Great Care should always be taken that fat is chopped very finely for pud- dings. • To Stain Chairs—Scrub the chairs well and let them dry. Then paint with a -solution of permanganic -of potash and water. If not• dark enough applya :second coat. Next apply a Boat of thin size, and; last- ly, a coat of common varnish. Leghorn hats may be cleaned with :telpher a.ntl the juice .uF a 1emee, Stir a teaspoonful of sulphur into the juice of a leucon. lis'nsh •aha mixture well into- the hat with 0 toothbt•ssh, Hold under the tap For a minute to got rid of the sul- phur, then dig' in an airy place. WISE SAYINGS, A rolling stone gathers 001110 hard kiweks. Small men reel big when standing 011 their dignity. It's his running expenses that keeps many a man behind, A professional politician is a man who has no candid op101011s., ff you want other people to look down on you loop up to thein. There are times when as good binl'f is as effeetla'e• as great riches, ire the game of hearts, when as nesn is in doubt he should lead 11)011als, , 1.)encltlg would be" awfully 111rc1 work if it wasn't flt' the 1011 of: the thing, 1(501yirl with. money looks like g a gel -rich -quick proposition to so100 youeg 111aa1). No man can profit altogether by the experience, of o(hers. He 10051 bey some of his own. A man'cen remember to his <lying day all the (shines he leering' at eul- leg;r••outeide his textbooks If a leant is tui proud 10 be,; ;led tee brag(SL to ideal he S1101114.1 leave politics to those who .arc fitted fur it. rC girt is awfully disappointed sliortly aftermarriage to ddsemver that bel' husband ds merely an oral - may roan like her, brother. STORY LIKE A PROPHECY TALE 01" ;1 (111l'k('l' 14111P)\'.1l1:('1( BY AT ICEBERG. Autho'r's Realistic iDetails Might Be Narrative of Admit Event. The current number of the Popu- lar Magazine, issued a Etas days ago, contains a .story of a great ship wrecked at sea by collision with an iceberg. In its essentials it •fits with such uncanny eaxa:tncsa, the sparse details yet received of the Titanic disaster that cn,&:xvuuld be ltd almost to believe that the au- thor, Mr, Mayn Clew Garnett, was endowed, like Cassandra, with a gift of dire prophecy, Some of the moat striking paragraphs af Mr. Garnett's ,story are given below :— Tho Admiral was o: giant liner, a ship of eight hundred feet in length, and the snoring u1. the bow wave told of a tearing speed. She was doing 221/, knots an hour, or more than 25 miles, the speer} of a train of cars. • There was a puff of colder air than usual, A chill as of death it- self cane floating over the silent ocean. A •nasi on lookoat stood staring straight into the Mist ahead, and then sang out: "Something right ahead, sir," he yelled in a voice that carried LIKE THE ROAR Ol3e A GUN. Capt. Brownson just seized the lever shutting the compartments, swung it, jammed it hard over, and screamed : Lunnrl,a' cs' ns the response, "Nearly up to the grates now That was all, The 11:11 left the tube to rush un cleclt, awl the cap- tain knew the ler ward bulkhtad,i lead gon0; land eiders jr.nnned or burst u11de1• that terrific impact, TI1r ship was guing clown, The Admiral had sttau•k stralght into the wall of as iceberg that reached as far as the eye could see in the haze. It towered at least three hundred feet in the air, show - Ing that Ile depth was colossal, probably at least half a mile. Brownson stood calmly watching the press gain and lime places in the beats. The ship was sinking. That was certain,. Site must have struck su hard that even the ship bulkheads gave way, er were s1 twisted out of Place. that the doors failed. The chief engineer came below him and glanced up. As he did so, a tremendous roar- ing blast of steam blew the eupes'- structure upward. The boilers had gone. The elecks ,;row more and more. stoup. Tise liner was settling by the head and to starboard. She leas even now twisting, rolli'ig over; and the motion brought down thousands of blocks of ice from the berg. The engines had stopped long since. She still held her head against the Me wall ; but it would give her no support. She was slipping awlay— " AWAY TO HE]L GRAVE BELOW. :Brownlee gazed back over the decks. He watched the crowd im- personally, and it seemed strange to him that as, much valuable fabric should go to the bottom su quickly. The paint was so clean and bright, the braes was so shiny. The whale structure was 50 thoroughly clean, FIG IIil.TS. IN HO HE 7iULE IIIS'1'ORY. Premier Asquith and his illustrious predecessor, the late William Ewart •-Gladstone. - "Stop her ---stop her—hard oyes your wheel. --hard over -'-- , His voico ended in a vibrating screech that sounded wild, weird, uncanny hi that awful eilcsice. A .hundred men stopped in their Stride, 01• work, paralyzer) at the tones turning from the bridge. • With ea grinding, smashing roar, as of thonsends of tens eoming to- gether, the- -huge liner - plunged headlong into the iceberg that ruse grim and silent right ahead, tower- ing over hoc in spite of her great height. The .shock was terrific, and the grinding, thundering crash mf falling tuns of ice, coupled with the rending - of steel plates and ,solid planks, made chaos of all sound, The Admiral bit in, dug, plowed, kept - on going, g-uing, alic1 the whole forward part, of her ahuost disappeared in the wall of white,, A ,thousand stone of huge flakes slnlgvnad and slid down her decks, burying her -to the .fere hatch in the 'smaller, A thousand Irons more crashed, slid, and plunged lime the slopes 01 the icy mountain and. hurled themselves into (110 sea With giant aplaehes, minding ter- -rents of water ae high as the bridge rail, The mon who had been forward were swept away by the avalanche, And then, with re - vented rugines, she (1.nma113' came to a dead stop, with hes' bows Jammed a hnrldved feet deep in the we wall of 1lic berg, llruwnSen tied town the siren cnrrl, and laic 10111' shook the atheist. pinnies • THE TREMENDOUS TONE13 5050 iabove thee elle of evreatinieg 11)011 and e0 rallhg (:c1) 11(1) : and then the master called deem i•a the heart of the ship, the engine roomy "Is- she. going?" he 11515(11, "Wa berg cumin ,f in like 'through a neat,- and in proper order. It was absurd. Tho lines' suddenly shifted, lean- ed to starboard, heeled far over, .and her bows slipped from the berg, sinking; down clear to her decks, clear down until the seas washed to the foot of her silperstruCtnl•e just below }lruwnson. Masses of ice, fell from leer into the sea, The grind- ing, splashing noise awoke the panic again among the remaining passengers and crew•. They strove with 101111ae fury to got the rafts and other stuff that might float over the fide. Two heats drew away full to the gunwales with people. The air below began to make that peculiar whistling sound that tells of pressure..—pressure upon the vi- tals of the ship, A w111151ling roar arose above all 0010r sounds. The siren had ceased, and 11r0wneon knew the ail' was hissing; 1'1'0n1 below, The ship would drop in at moment. He dreaded -that lasb plunge, that dhop into the void below. The thought field hint a little. The, oceans wee always su 11110 001 there, 50 ,nicht and apparently bottomless, a 5•reRt void of water, He wondered ate (he depth, what kind of a Clark bed would receive (gut( giant fabric, ,the week of so 105111y human hand.: The silence w'a••s coaling (1ga:in, anti" the eouude on the sinking ship were dying out, :Plicn, suddenly, came a cracking;• and banging of ice blocks) and the •ship raised her store! higiser, Then she plin.ged straight dime 5115:1, 5)relight, as ae plummet 101• Clic bottom of• the Atlantic Omni, The 3,(can Man - ":is there ;ley - deep; more heartrending titan to ha•vn n wife wbe:1 ran cook but won't do i14" 1)yspeptie---'hest t-1 have one that eain't cook and will, do it," THE SUNDAY SCHOOL STUDY IN'l'J'1IINA'1'IONAI, LESSON, :DIA Y. 5. - L5:8se11. V. --Poverty :ant1 riches, Luk!'. O. 20-2(1; ltd. (9.31, Golden Test, Luke i'3, 113. - 0. °30.20. Verse 20, His disciples• --Jesus fs speaking to a larger group of his followers, including but not tun - fined to the apostles. ;It is quite possible that we have befoth es in this part of Luke's narrative a shorter, variant accuunt of the same incident described in Mat- thew 5. 142, though in all pmoha- bility Jea115 1114y have repeated the substance of his bcautitudes on different occasions. This wuukl account largely for the ,iiffere:ece in form and wording between the beauLitudcs as found in Matthew and ill Luke. Ye pour ---One of the chief differ- ences between Matthew and Luke in their accounts of the bcautitudes is the personal application which Luke makes of each blessing to the disciples immediately addressed by Jesus. (Compare Introduction to Lesson for April 28.) This differ- ence in the two evangelists may be accounted fug.' by the character and habits of thought of the tw'o men, Matthew. the tax gatherer, ex- pressing himselii more naturally in impersonal terms. while Luke', the physician, reveals the more inti- mate personal touch. The prfnci- pal thought of the first beeutitide as here recorded is that those pour in this world's geode, while shut out from many of the privileges which wealth and social standing offer, 111ay, through the acceptance of the gospel, come into poster `0a of the best of all things', the king- dom of God. 21. Ye that hunger now'There 13 to be a reversal of conditions i'u the kingdom of heaven, where the ob- stacles of accidental social positio:t shall not interfere with individual advantage, - 12. When men shall bete you --- 'entertain bitter projudides against you. Separate.yon—Excommunicate or ostracize you from their ounlpa:.ly. Reproach—Speak evil of, 23. Rejoice in that day—An ex- ample of such rejoicing in the face of dine persecution is found in the• •onthnsiasnl of the early 111artt•rs. Their fathers u11t•, the prophets— The persecution which Jeremiah suffered at the Mantis 'if his 001111- trymen are an outstanding example, 24, Woe—This is not merely a denunciation 'or p1•unotteedi10nt of doom on the rich, ns such, any more than the promise of the see- ond 'beantitude is an 'assurance of reward for poverty, in itself: The four expressions of ,wee must be taken together as constitetillg a lay - mentation over the. existicsg un- fortunate and n sie1 social distinc- tions and conditions. Ye have received your c rneola- tion—Such as wealth, taken by it- self apart from the other blessings of life, can give.. - .15. Ye that laugh now—Laughter and mirth in Jmius's day were sel- dom met with apart front the ease and luxury of wealth and social position. Jesus well knew how Much of the prosperity •'f this day came through the acglus:Lon of ill- gotten gains, and was followed by sinful self-indulgence, meriting coneldmnatien. - 30, When all men shall Speak well of you--LTnivers+.tl popularity is too often gained by surrender of deep convictions and of princililes, fig an effort to placate prejudice and win approval. Against such popular- ity Jostle wants Inc t'illuw'cl's. 1(3. 19-31, 10, Now there wag a ertrun rich 111a11—=The, parable which fellows is taken from its context in Luke's narrative and inserted at this point in tiler steely, as ill ' nstnatin vile of the leetu11(ttdcs boil., on its positive and its Negative side, leering sumplueusl•--Or, livin in mirth mid splendor. The. name of the rich plan is not given, the popular title, "Di\es," beieg only the Latin for "rich." 20, ].agarum --The. Hebrew Elea- zar, mrnn1'1g `-he - whom - God \Vaas laid at his gate --.A emenein Oriental custom among hegg.ars was to solicit alms .at the gates to the glomes of Of, lvoaltln•, 1+111.1 of serve- 711(` vnetnn Of chg- eal1<., ae It ell 111 poor. and thus 117 a doubt' pitiablypitiablyplighplight,21, The 0rumlhs that fell from the rich man's thtble--'l`ho weld crumbs, is Supplircl in the lluglish transla- tion. The reference in the original is simply to Dist WAS left over end waisted, The dogs—These still roroamroamin droves about the etreet j of Jtn'usn.- lent and other Syrian (dace.(dace.26. The angels --Relief in angels' was 515111(11011 11mim1 t1ie. 3.0,1,133.0,1,13at glias liner, 'i ecpt for the soot of the Sad7vee's. Abraham's borne The figure is taken front the custom of reelini011 g at table and Lazarus is thang;h1 of as. occupying tilt place of (honer next iu Abr'ticun. 7'lu• imagery of the parable is 3<'wislt throughout. ee.t. Hades •- ('ompare Introduc- tory paragraph above. Seeth Abraham afar off The language is still figurative. We Mote, however, that even in the figure used Lazarus is net in Hades,. which, in the parable, is no lunger a realm fur departed spirits in gen- eral, but a place of punishment for the wicked only. We must clic- tinguish clearly also between the. ethical use which Jestts makes of things referred to in his parables and his clectrinal statements or more direct teachings. 24. Send Lazarus—The despised outcast of further years fs recog- nized by the rich man, who now becomes the suppliant, 25. Reeeivedst—the verb in the Greek has an intensive ncaning of. receivedst to the full. So far as the simple statement of this verse at Chicken Lake, is eoncerned it shows merely a re- In Penticton the price of trade vernal of fortune, leaving; the mor- licenses are to be graded acteed'i ig al reasons for this reversal to be to the amount of flour space used inferred by the hearers in thr light by merchants. of the entire parable. Two men recently walked from 2(1. Beeides all this --Or, in all Tete Jaime Cache to Fort George. these things. It took them twenty-one des* to A great gulf fixed—The barrier walk the three, hundred and fifteen between the evil and the glad is miles down the Fraser River. discernible front one side only. The wicked matt seldom appreciates why he is shut out from the fellow- ship of good people. None may cross over ---The gulf NEVS FROM SUNSET COAST WAIT THIE WESTERN PEOPLE Alii; DOING. Progress of the Great West 'Told In a Veit' Totaled - Items, In Nicola pigs are ,selling for ten cents a pound live weight. It is reported that the C.P.R. will built] a tourist hotel at Savona. Ranchers in the Bulkley valbey are selling their eggs for $1,50 at - dwell, Near Nelson the paper mill com- pany will have a town called 1Yesb Nelson. This spring a sawmill witli a capa- city of 15,000 feet daily will be built Within the corporate limits of Merritt the a-seesment roll shows that the land and buildings are val- ued at a little over a million Find - gars, cannot be bridged in eitherddree- The Trail City Council .has grant- ed the Board of Works $3,500, tion, It will cost the City of Merritt 27. Send helm to my father's $45,000 to instal a water system and house—In the heart rrf the mal electric light Plaut. there was revived the epark of so- By Alas the Rocicy Mountain Ce- lisitudo for others, which had al- mcn.t Company at Blairnore will bo most been quenched.making 1,000 barrels of cement 29. Moses and the prophets -•--The daily. law and the writings of the pro- Robert Marr is building a sawmill Ousts. These were the well know'i en China Creek, two miles from ered sufficient guides to right loan. Princeton, that will cut, 35,000 feet 31. Neither will they be persuad- of lumber daily, ed, if one rise from the dead—A re- Recently M, Harrigan washed buke to the Jewish craving fur the $100 in gold from one barrowful of manifestation of marvelous signs. dirt which he dug up opposite the • e• RETURN TO SIMPLE EATING. old town of Granite Creek. This summer there will be eight steamboats running from the head Getman Journal Bids Society bead- of navigation on. the Fraser River, ems Saye Nation. Tete Jatene !-'ache, and Soda Creek, a distance of 175 miles. The Lokal Anzeiger publishes an Buffalo COWS 1n the park at Wain - urgent a4lpeal to German society wright have become very fierce, a'nd lcadrrs to re.burn to "riml;,le eat- in all probability it will be 110001-- ing,'' It states that the luxury era eater to shout them. in Germany has caused an extrava- Among charges made against gance ie dining which threatens Vancouver General Hospital was financial nnpoceirshtnent. and diges- one that dead cockroaches were lice ruin. C'arlsbacl, Ilnr(enbacl, ,served in thefood of one of the pa- - Kisshlgen and other spas, which tien(s, while the live insects were cater to the needs of "penitent described as crawling about the gluttons," are, says the journal, plate. visited by numbers, annually in- In the last eight months Esteem has added 000 to her population and -' with five, and a half miles of splen did granolithic sidewalks already laic( proposes adding three miles creasing, who go there- in spring and summer to make amends for over -eating and over -drinking in winter. "It would be a genuine public service, on the part of lead - this summer. ing .society personages if they would The ore production of the Koote- begin by practical example to wage nay and Boundary districts fur thewar on the sensual luxuriousness of past year totalled501,370 tans, com- pared with 478,647 tons last year. The Kootenay Indnstrial Sc11ooI being built by the Department of Indian Affairs, at St. Eugene Mis- sion, is now being rushed to com- pletion. ompletion. Mr. Carney, ney, new timber inspec- tor of the district bounded by the Okanagan water shed, states that the dumping of American 1nmber modern entertaining, as far as the Culinary end of it is concerned. Only by a return to simple and sensible dinners can we avert genu- ine economic and physical perils." MILLINER'S' 1DEVIC'Is. -- Artist iDraw:s Customer, and Sketch Sent Honu' With Hat. Some of the leading milliners of has made, the prospects for the eons Paris, France. have introduced a ing Beanie dull. He Says 300,000,000 • new device fur paying a pretty cone.feet have been thrown in the prairie' pliment to their best customers, market by L.S. manufacturers. and one that i, well calculated to The Okanagan Lake district is please them. When a clidal of lis- soon to be served with a telegraph tinction deters theshop atl<l pro- line. At the pigment time the gee - needs to try on the various new "creations" w11ieh (Pc fashionable 'milliner precl.uees, all unknown to herself trite customer is sitting, or, rather, standing. for her portrait to an artist in concealment behind In Furt George un February 24 as a scrern. :\bsorbed in the fare'(- natdng .ecr.upatirin of trying oil' a dozen fresh eggs sold for there dol - new hat whole attention her +1 }- ttentanh lars. They were brought from eent telegraph service ends at Vernon. A metropole to care fur the thou- sands of homnjeis 'and sumetimes workless men in Calgary, will be, erected by the: Salvation Army. to Quesneanal apparentarc, an fixed on the reflection of herself in l ly the glass, she is quite 'oblivious of valuable than whiskey or real es- the artist's presence. Meallwhac tate. inurcar he swiftly transfers to paper the \n �of over 400 per erne. • fratnte of his unconscious sullject, a year fen. _1 years on the original What is her surprise, therefore, oil amount paid, ur a total profit of receiving the next day Cita hatbox! 30,000 per cent., for Regina lots, 1s containing her purchase, to finda record that has been made h, W. Sibbeis, one o purged upon the bee an original f the early Settlers of drawing of het'se?1 wearing the new that cit,. chapeau! GRAINS OE OF GOLD. 1111 THIRSTED FOR. HOME. The wealthiest kingbolt can show An I ngle:Innen recently formed fa nothing su beautiful as a virtuous 1 poet c+pullu0 0f Canada because of. home, the liquor laws. ,Arriving at a Ridicule, is nut the teat. of truth, Western hotel on a Saturday night because truth must always be the he asked for something to drink, test of ridicule. - but was told—,'.Bar eloee1 at Se1011 Time is a eutrtinttal over-di13(1ng u'cloek Saturdays," On Sunday of moments, which fell clown one to<lrntng be tried flesh!, but was upon the other and evaporate. told (!sat thr bar 'yr" clos0d,. So happiness su0519(5 .in activity a hi+ wa115)1 1111. the hoer at which Stich is tile. cons(itu,tiult of 00) nag'- 1 hags up5n un Sundas•s in England, tune; it vs n, t•nn.ning stream, mid ' but was told that in Canada the net a stagnant pool, bars are closed all day Sunday, Nothing is rich but the 115111aus- Iris hnsitwss .toil! hint up country+, tibia', wealth of nature She sho7t's and 00 at w•ems-day he asked to got- u50111,- surface, but she is a. million fathoms iat lams drop. The true man is one who will evither met en indhrct advantage 11y a epecione word, nor take stn evil path to 5c1050.a. good purpose, "Yes," said the veteran, "at one Lime we were within an inch of faceting to death, Luckily, how-� eVer," and he gazed reflectively at the ceiling—"we had the. 100155nce a drink "("ant; get it,'` was the answer. "We're under local op- tion." And here is what he eaicl; "Veil, if this is Canada, I wish I lied money eneug)11 tt1 get hack int England." Manager -w "I'M verb' sorry,. Bence, bet I'va ht/TI (o dilieha1g0, your sun' ta-day, He WAS too. slow. far'me," Bones—"Slow in every- thing very(ping'," Manager—"Well, not it g of m(01 to Fail into rti lrr.atcd 411'3 eyerytlling; for he wa.s a,l Pa we s 1'tb eltsgi)n,'/ (tO get tiled,"