The Brussels Post, 1913-1-2, Page 7.?'
•
=rezemeerrommeeimeme-mmeim
(
II 0 til 5 Ell 0 IP
1 he Systematic le omen.
meehee areed how she nemenpliell-
edo much work VA) easily the Nur.
(hr of A large family replied, "1
work hy sehedule."
1
u1 is the wet :I 11 ce 8 work
80( ) y .
If you live in a nerve reeking rash,
try what keeping aschedule will do
CANAI)A'S PREMIER LUMBER
MERCIIANI IS JOIIN R. BOOTH
UM First Dig Financial Stroke was.
Buying ot the Canada
for you. Atli:AttiIt:inroad.
Now Forme for Ohl Bedtime. Bee a notebook and head ePP0-
ey housekeepers: who do not realize Before going to bed plan Herd writs J' 13°`411' Among the friends
tiler he made his fertune in lumber
mule with evitioh they already ere the evening sum up what, bas been
Canada's premier lumbermen is
New recipee often are demanded ;lite pages with the :bey and slate.
down the work y.
of Booth there M a question whe-
elie possibility of making eome ler. of the next, daIn
I t
lemiliar take an °Mere]or in railroadieg, buM M the
) new form, ecoomPlished. general belief that his estate is
It doors not take long to keep this
Let us theeider the quick biscuit,about equally indebted to these two
temple schedule, but it is surprising
often called Poda, creamof-teirter
b 1' 't f • th how quickly you learn system frena eolleeee of revenue.
materiale weed in making them 4; f3n4Y "nem' go 4° far as IA)
light. M qafte pian certain duties for cortaba
an art to handle
these without meme, hoers.
d , Do not plan to de boo emelt in
?no day for then the opposite page
:recipe can supply the dexterity that
tomes elle he leech Practice. Un -1 is a disappeintment winch spurs the family was e, boy of 15 years,
you to unwise efforts or needless he lose all of his money and thee
irained Mande may be more emcees-
• • dmcouragement. What is left uu- compelled hie eon to depend upon
Booth was born in Ottawa, Can-
ada, in 1841. His father was pos-
seesed of more than the average
means, but before his death, which
occurred when the present head of
NI, (I. . y done one day may be -carried over
combining weth. each cup of uoer, te tee next dey,e
planning page as
tWO level theffleecafele of baking a jog against procrastination.
1 Reading over such a notebook is
f 'II TI e h uld b ra -1
powder, a Ittele salt and one -had.
eup idly mixed, pee at once in muffi)a
housewife who works by fits and age built a lumber trust on the old -
pane
object Msson to the shiftless thyme and at a comparatively early
pane aad baked quickly. The quaa-
starts, gets nothing accomplished, fashioned lines from a tiny sawmill
tity of liquid may be varied slightly
has no time for lemure, and ends on the Ottawa River. He did not
*wording b the particular brand
by being a nuisance to herself and capitalize, but paid hard cash for
of !lour used. One trial will show
whether they better be made soften a burden to her family, all that he bought.
Ris first big stroke in the world
of 'finance was when he bought the
Canada Atlantic railroad, an in-
different sort of institution with
few visible assets and fewer pros-
pects. Booth was not dismayed by
the haudicaps the project offered,
but set about his task with the con-
fidence and determination that have
boon his chief characteristics. The
road extended from Montreal to
Parry Sound, and covered a dis-
tance of about 450 miles.
Booth had no associates in this
deal, Out of his lumber earnings,
which had been reasonably large up
lurnself.
This enforced independence
brought out all there was in him.
He saved and worked, worked and
next time. :Nee we learn the na-
ture of the ingredients and the
effect ther have on each other, we
Household )(lints.
When mice trouble you, hunt
may yeu•ure upon varieties of a their entrances to the pantry or
luedamenta,1 theme. The same pro- cupboard and plaster them with a
portion already given are suitable mixture of soft soap and red pep -
kr dumplings for a stew of meat per.
or fruit. The mixture should bo A square piece of cotton, pasted
rather etiff•ee, so Mee milk is used at each corner of the 'table oilcloth
than when i1 is to bo baked in the, before using it, will prevent the
muffin pan, here it is to be drop- corners from wearing out as soon
ped from a spoon over the meat and as they otherwise would,
gravy or freit arid syrup, and will j Soak a common floor mop in coal
not keep Rs ehapo unless fairly oil, it will make a good dust ab-
istiff, When at ia added to dump- wither. Soak the mop thoroughly,
lings they WC likely to be ;soggy, then hang it out in the air for a
and a einilar :emelt is reached if few days. It will then bo ready to that time, considering the day
They aro not 000lced rapidly. Most for use. and age, he attacked railroading on
good cooks prefer to have the kete I A muddy skirt can be washed his own responsibility. Analyzing
Me clowely covered for ten minutes easily and white, if You will take the situation with hispeculiarl
And then the dumplings, if nee too , eorne sour milk, dilute it with
analytical mind, he puethe rail:
large, will be ready to serve. Eight , water and soak the skirt in it over metes k
stem in a vault in the Ot-
ar ten dumplings may be made from I night. Then wash in the usual
one cup of flour and will cook more way.
uniformly theta U made larger. I Sometimes hamburg steak is dry
For dessert use the same dump- and tasteless. Put two or three
dings over Mowed fruit, such as tablespoons of fresh cream or milk
manned etiactetelstewed apples or and a kw bread crumbs in with it.
erlinberrtoe, Be sure there la aut. You will find it juicy and delicious.
ficient juice to avoid danger of 1 No matter how carefully a frock
:burning. Theft may be cooked in is laundered, if hooks and eyes are
A chafing dish. at the table while used for fasteners, the dress bears
the family are disposing of the tell-tale prints whenever a hook
previous oouece. Sweetened or has been ironed. A way of getting
whipped cream is the best and around the difficulty is to reverse
simplest theme. Again, a portion the position of the hooks and eyes,
of theM may frube put in a but- putting the hooks on the under in-
tered oup-like come of the little stead of the upper flap. After be-
coming accustomed to it, there will
not be difficulty in fastening.
me
EMPIRE'S POSTAL 311111SINESS.
Japanese 011r that are pretey
enough in whish to serve the pud-
dings at tihe'tai)10-a spoonful of the
latter la put over the fruit and
the cups permed in a steamer for
half am how', Any gooe.. pudding
:sauce may be obeyed with:these.
Eggs, batboy and sugaM often are
added to such a foundation for the
muffins, dtunpliage, etc., but do not
Improve the qttality of the product
in propoetdo* to the added ex-
pense,.
The baking powder biscuit usu-
ally is made be this fashion: Flour
is sifted, them measured and sifted
Great Inereases in the Various Dee
partments Aro Shown.
The, report of the British Post-
master -General, just issued, states
that the Imperial penny postage
system now embraces the whole of
the British Empire, with the exeep-
eion of Pitcairn Island. Following
on a reelection to a penny per half -
ounce letters froni Australia to the
, reet of the Empire there was a.n in -
Again with tete baking powder andcreaseof about 33 per cent. in the
vale From ono to two level tee. 1 amouht of correspondence from
apoons of baking powder arenecellAuetralia to England, as compared
with each eop ei flour, according to with an inerease of about 11 per
the degree of lightness desired.. 11 cont. in the five preceding years.
The weight of newspapers, maga-
zines and trade journals sent to
Canada by magazine post during
1911 is estimated at 4,747,000 lbs„
eomparecl with 3,836,000 lbs. in the
;shortening bi used, it is then chop-
ped or rubbed into the flour, one
teaspoon to oath cup of flour; for
bread a Lamer &lucent, up to M.
ounce to each eup for shortcakes,
Then the dotsg11, sti formed by cut-
yeArr
ting iuto the lbur about one-third. previous,
o
as much milk, or milk and water. Money rders to British North
America, while remaining eta.tion-
The dough le then tossed on the
ry as regards numbers, increased
,bottrd, which is first sprinkled with ?Y
in Amount to the extent of 230,000.
Ulm The wiling pin is used gent-
, Orders from the Dominion show an
ly to pat the dough into shape un-
merease .of 298.000 in number and
til it is half the thickness desired
2780,00 in amount. Tho increases
in the biscuit alter baking. Twin
were mainly in remittances from
biscuit and Individual :shortcakes
are made by lipreading soft butter
on ono layer and placing aother
on top. keteir baking they separ-
ate •readily for filling. Or some
thick jam rtme be placed between
the two layers before baking. Such
"jelly bisouile" are a delight to
children.
Try makiug very thin erisp,shorte
lakes with baretna,s sliced &
syrup of the joke of a lemon made
thick with auger, After cutting
minds for bieinite there are many
ragged edge*: left. Here is one way
to use there, which often is bettor
than shaping mere biscuits: Bring
thein together and sprinkle with
grated ehethe and fold over and
roll out,then outripe in narrow st,eeee tome to an end?
A fifth of the people of France are
bout 6 Imhof: leue: and bake until
crisp. These aro best served with famine".
eoup or salad. Thus at one time ,ifieele, man Pete his money and
might be pecpared enough dough his telt') in a selecilleelon, and later
for a Mule elmeteake, chicken pie on draws out his faith,
end cheese steelos, but, of course, It takes a month to weave one
they ate tee much alike to serve et wee" foot of 'Persian ellif•
eine meel, 'flet fruit shortcake meg Reif teethe melee whole teenblese
serve Inc dinner e4 night. ]for the VelPereeto bee female oonduotors
next eley's herielmon reheat the on its trolley cars.
others and 11E with creamed Odom Ttei easy multleh to Phut up
ea, while the chem eleeks may ee
crisped in the oven a few minutes
to serve with the next day's saind.
The ordimmer mew beg may be
trustee to hoed eltese while they
are heated In the OVello and they
Canada and Australia.
Estimate of weight of matter
despatched from the United King-
dom to Canada and Neweeendland:
Letters and posteards, 713,000 lbs.;
printed papers, commercial papers,
eaMples, 6,999.000 1108.; sent from
Canada to United Kingdom: let-
ters, 544.000 lbs,; printed papers,
ate.,1,742.000 lb.s.
Te number of parcels despatch-
ed to Canada in 1911 was 505,151;
, received from Canada, 209,405,
agahist 410,898 and 184,760 in the
year previous.
Purls and Fancy.
If the, world is roiled, how can it
chielteet at nieht, but it's another
:dory to shut them up in the early
merrieng,
Watebes were invented in Nurem-
Mire. The first; watehee were egg-
temp.^d
Moodie*, veer nest -but. thee roll
tawa, bemire. Re was peering into
the future when the Grand Trunk
ee'e'eeeimeeeeeemew., ieteemeenefoe ...
yi
Ilk &WWI 31111(
INTERN A T1 fl N A L LIMMON,
JiNteille 5,
Lesson 1.- The (Mention, lien. 1. 1
to 2. 3. Golden Tet,
(101/, 1. 1.
13 115.)2V4311 4114.1 earth (vertu
1), r .11,, ferniatew of et/regimes
;if() •2•••ree
et Tf WAS very get+41--The final
yereee
3)25 12241111l)11 1 p112 111
whole stork of ere:Ate:re wiri It'
4114)1 p.ri.bn tram in 1)21,11 3t
mene with the rest.
..........meameemeeweeme-Meeteeeemitefe="e'realteeli
IOW E 1:COTC II MRS FIN
THEY A.BE ALMOST AS 11A11DI
AS TUE MEN.
RAZOR ENDED TOOTH 4 OHL The 'Women Are "ifeliwineetieli
Dietreeted Stew tied Among' Shetland Wend Fildiee
Little Blind SOU. roik.
Verse 1. In the begiuninm-The Toeihemlle-ealled he the' Peet
.beginning of the order of things Burns "the hell of all (Hee:lees"-
which we see, and in the midst of soOlusi tK) have been responsible re -
which human history uefelete. cently for a terrible double tragedy
God-lelohim, the erdinary Re- in the East End of Loneon.
brew word lem Mod, thougn not Startled by the words, "Dedely is
quite as common in the Old NS- dead," .muttered by his little eon,
tomcat as Yahweh (Eng., Jehovah),
the personal name of the Mod oe
Israel. The imam here occurs in
the plural, though used with a sin-
gular verb, created (Heb. singular).
This usage of the plural, which is
very common in the Old Testament,
is best explained as the "plural of
majesty," tilted to express great-
ness or dignity. The verb "cre-
ated" means, in the -uriginal,
.shaped, fashioned. It does not
necessarily mean that Cud created
the heavens and the earth out of
nothing. But it does denote "the
Mr. J. R. Booth.
railroad, then a struggling organ-
ization, woul•ri be compelled to buy
him out. Ho kept the railroad
stook in the bank, unpledged, for
five years, when the Grand Trunk
first made overtures for their pur-
chase at a price many hundred
times in excess of what Booth heel
paid for them.
No one knows' how much Booth
made on this deal, but it is believ-
ed that the amount gave him his
long waited for boost toward great
wealth. Re is now one of the di -
rearms of the Grand Trunk Rail-
road, while his attention is chiefly
devoted to a chain of lumber mills
located for the most part in Canada.
ADVENTURE ON TUE STEPPE.
A. Correspondent Describes a Terri-
ble Experience with Wolves.
There are still wolves on the
steppes of Russia, as appears from
thia story seat to a Swedish paper
by one of its correspondents who
was travelling in the winter
through the wastes of what was for-
merly known as Lithuania.
It was a bright, frosty winter day,
the snow was excellent, and the
mail -sleigh glided forward at great
speed. A troika with three Poles in
it followed behind. Toward sunset
we emerged from the dark pine
woods upon the ;steppe, which
stretched away in front of us as far
es the eye could roach. Soon the
stars made their appearance, and
the moon rose. It was bitterly cold,
and the snow crackled beneath the
runners. The horses' breath rose in
the air like thick smoke. The songs
and shouts of the Poles died away,
and profound silence reigned.
Suddenly one of the horse whin-
nied, then another, and a third
shied violently, uttering that ter-
rible cry of which the horse is capa-
ble only when in extreme fear,
could see by the light of the moon
the shadow of an animal about the
size of a dog flitting over the frozen
surface of a marsh pool which lay
some twenty paces from es on one
side of the road. No animal can
travel more silently than a wolf
when in aearch.of prey, and none
can attack so suddenly and unex-
pectedly. I was slowly raising my
gun when a second wolf rose imme-
diately in front of the horses with
crest erect and green, phosphores-
cent eyes. At the same time points
of light appeared all over the mere,
and the howling of the beasts rang
out.
A shot was fired; revolver in
hand, Lesoek, one of the Poles,
atomd on the driving that of the
troika, Then from the mail -sleigh
I discharged both barrels of ely
gun, and a savage howl announced
that they had taken effect; two of
the meet daring of our assailants
lay rolling in the snow. The three
Poles kept firing furiously, although
elm attack of the evolves was direct-
ed more against our peoba-
bly because it was drawn by double
the number of hornet. Our driver
had no other weapon than his load-
ed whip, but with it be dealt tre-
mendous blows.
The horses threaded madly, and
tried with all their 41,renxth
break the hatmess, At each shot
from my gen the wolves scattered,
only to collect again immediately
and renew their attack on the
here's. Soddenly there arose a
edict yell behind us. •
Tho three Poles were rolling le
the snow by the side of their oyee.
turned sleigh; Lescek's badly
driven home had torn themselves
loose from tho troika in their ter-
ror, and were careering wildly over
tho snow-covered steppe. pursued
by some of the wolves. They were
soon pulled down, and in the still-
Mtfig Ot the night their death -
strews were therible. The Poles
wallowed aboet in the snow, sheet -
will be as good as if treehly baked.
Often oold biemete may be relicaM the other hi-1'deing, weeping and lamenting by
i V1118.
111 in the grtloVY (if. 0 81004 and if
ettieoy served mrees emetemetere A.`ellaZV 11131,0 can renembet elleo situation wasm.
eeedauff-
Itis dumplitem lecetthly made, 11Virell he used to be ambitious, cielitee teiriotts, for only Lesock had
had enough presence of mind to
hide himself beneath the sleigh, and
the mail driver and 1, surrounded
by wolves, could give them no help.
I looked upon them as doomed, and
felt sure that we should quickly
share their fate.
Suddenly our pursuers disappear-
ed, and although bleeding badly,
the horses became calmer; the
gleaming eyes of, the wolves were
seen only here and there out on the
steppe. A shot rang out, then a
volley, succeeded by yells of pain.
A dozen dead wolves lay on the
ground, and two huge beases actual-
ly •expired beneath the hoofs of the
horses as eur revellers came up in
their tinkling sleighs.
was a landed proprietor with
his servants whose solitary farm lay
only a couple of verses away. None
of us were dangerously wounded.
The wolves had treated the Poles
worst, for their clothes were nearly
torn from their bodies; they were
bitten. too,. bub. not seriously. The
following morning our host, Herr
Stansid, came throes the skeletons
of the three troika horses scarcely
half a verst from the scene of our
struggle. The poor creatures were
still bound together with the ham
nesse
Grains of Gold.
He is an optimist who can believe
in the coming of the best while look-
ing at the worst. -Dr. Jewett.
Rope always strengthens to the
performance of duty, gives courage,
and clears the judgruent.-G. Mac-
Donald.
Reputation is an idle and most
false imposition ; oft got without
merit, and lost without deserving.
-Shakespeare.
Riches have wings, and some-
times they fly away of themselves,
sometimes they must be .set flying
to bring in mor,-Baeo.n.
When one-half of the Sabbath is
given to pleasure religion is not
likely to share unteh of the other
half. --Sir Walter Scott.
So long as we leve we slam; 80
long as we are loved by others
would almost ray that we are indis-
pensable; and no num is toeless
when lie has a friend --R. L. Ste-
venson,
Censure and criticism never hurt
anybody. If false., they cannot hurt
you unless wanting in manly eller-
:toter, and if true thee, show a man
his weak points end forewarn him
against faillire and trouble.-Oled-
stone,
Above the A.Yerage.
Mira Wayupp--"Trow mue11 sleep
do I need, doctor?"
Doctor -"Well, the average per-
son needs about seven hours."
Mrs. Wa.yupp-d"ffiniti 1 shall take
about fourteen, 1 consider thee
am that touch above the average."
In the Market.
"Dors Maud like dewing?"
"She does."
"And skating?"
"Oh, yes; she likes anything that
may possibly lead to a proposal."
---
Not one man in 0 hundredhas
retnee entree!' to take care of nimmy
aft, , T.:. Inherits it.
In the smith of Sootlaml, 48 48 CIO
&he elsewhere, fishermen fern 111
dialect Math. Perhaps one of the
most noticeable features of this
011181 i)XCIUH1Ve, iti<leede
as almost to be reckoned a caste--
ir the extensive participation of the
house in Fern Street, Devons eideed, their men -folk are engaged. They
neighbors rushed upstairs at a womee in the industry in winch
Bromley -by -Bow, and found Henry have not, it is true, as yet invaded
Agar, a laborer, and another of his the special domain of the men -the
children -a blind boy of nearly two handling of the boats and the catch -
years, named Oecil-lying on a bed ing of fish. The arduous toil a
these operations, with all the ac-
companying hardship; and dangers,
is still loft to the predominant part-
ner -if the phrase is now permicial-
the morning to have his tooth ble in thee° feminist and sex -equal,.
extracted, but the authoritiee, it is ity day,
said, thought that considerable
Do Ashore Part of Jab.
danger would attend its immediate
with their throats out.
It appears that Agar had suf-
fered recently from violent tooth-
ache. He wept to the hospital in
removal.
production of something fundamen- Agar accordingly returned home
tally new, by the exercise of a sov- in great pain, arid went upstairs to
ereign originative power, alto- lie down in a room, where his baby
gether transcending that possessed eon, a. blind boy, was lying.
by man."
Nothing apparently happened to
=poen arouse t e susp one w ri,
expression, signifying formless mat- and at dinner time she sent another
ter, or cha-os. The expression 00- son to tell hie father the meal was
curs again in Isa. 34. 11, where it ready.
is rendered confusion and empti- Tho child came down hurriedly
ness, and in Jer. 4. 23, where it is with the dramatic annotmeement, The employment or girls or women
translated as in our lesson.
The deep -Primeval, undivided f'o‘Denlyboitshdrhed,m"ana:'adrid ntehieghhbaobres• in this particular task is by no
waters, conceived of by the writer lying with their throats eut. Near means universal. however. It is
as enveloping the chaotic earth, by was a blood-stained razor. pretty general in Shetland and in
Spirit of God. -The Divine En- Agar was a middle-aged men in the silliest's that fringe the western
orgy which creates and sustains life seaboard and dot the islands along
regular employment, and he is de- that coast, the men entertaining
2 • Waste and void -A c d i i of hisif
But the women, nevertheless, axe
employed in many tasks incidental
to the fisherman's °mimetic:lit
which, though deemed subsidiarm
are none the less essential, and
they learn to take their share in the
work at quite an early age. Young
girl:: gather the dried herring nets,
which, owing to their size and
weight, require no little skill and
involves conie•derabIe labor as well.
(Job 33. 4), end to which are at-
tributed the .supernatiral spiritual
spiritual gifts and extraordinary
powers of man: "1 am full of power
by the Spirit of Jehovah, and of
judgment, and of might" (Micah
3. 8).
Moved upon -Or, was brooding
upon.
God said, met there be -Note the
conscious and deliberate purpose
as well as the omnipotence im-
plied in these words. We have
here the earliest foreshadowing of
the personal sense in which the
term "the Word" is used i ,Toho
1. 1 in the New Testament. 0 •ni-
pare also Psa. 33. 6, "By the word
of Jehovah were the heavens
made."
Light -Here thought of as a
thing in itself, independent of the
heavenly luminaries. Compare
Mob 38. 19, 90:
Where is the way to the dwelling
of light?
And as for darkness, where is the
place thereof,
That thou shouldest take it to the
bound thereof,
And that thou shouldest discern the
paths to the house thereat
4. Good -Suitable for the work
for which it was designed.
5. One day -In the mind of the
priestly author unquestionably a
period of twenty-four hours.
7. The firmament -The vaulted
dome of the sky is thought of as
something beaten out, or pressed
down firm, and forming a
as having been very steady the not:on, it is said, that their and respectable respectable. bore on the the absolve thin from
labor on land, or, at least justifies
DEMOCRACY OF GENIUS. them in devolving all the work
ashore on their women. Elsewhere
—
Only Two Hundred in Every MU- the nets are spread by the men
lion Reach Real Greatness. themselves but lent of work is
men compiled by Sir Fran- i .
The dictionary of the names of done ler the women, who, as re-
eminenta.strength and endurance, and prove
suit develop great physical
cis Galton listed 2,000 persona who
as hardy as the men.
reached eminence in the various
fields of human achievement, and Tillage Works as Family.
indicated that barely 200 in every
million parsons were entitled to ap-
It is in the prosecution of the
r.o clinary "line" fishing that the we -
pear in his roster of greatness. A I
render the greatest aid; in
study of these lista seems to show men
some of the smaller villages the fish- .
that the world's famous men seldom
ing is very much a family affair, all
have left sons capable of the mea -
the grown-up members of the family
sure of service that might have
co-operating in some way or other.
gained equal honor for themselves.
The women collect the bait and then
Only the members of royal families
fix it to the lines -and neither of
are spetially environed and
elide': these tasks is so light as it looks,
eated and mated with aelected
while the two combined make eerie
bands and wives to -day, yet the
ous inroads on the time that other-
kgieengast misount:turacillywposho sfonsusnelabay line asnor-f
wise would be devoted to household
duties. With the return of the
iea of mediocrities, often good and
boats another branch of the wo-
faithful Metlo, but without the splen -
his father, while George Stephen-
son was the son of a miner, and•the
eId abilities which created the dyn-
asty.
shows that among English inven-
tors James Watt alone may be
father of Thomas Telkrd was a
rated as inheriting hi talents from
shepherd. Of the poets,
Upon the other hand Galton
Soott was the- emPloe
Ing idustry so far from curta,iling
splitting, gutting, salting and gen-
eral preparation of the fish destined
to be "cured."
men's work begins. They assist in
the cleaning and peeking of the,
"fresh," and they also help in the
Ilkdern developnients of the fish-
' More "Fishwives" Now.
the sou of a Scottish lawyer, Tenny- have extendedmelit i9et, wanmdenvearsyselteliregr:
son of en obscure clergymen, Shel- numbers of women are now em -
ley of a country gentleman, and ployed by the wholesale fish mer-
chants and fish curers in the big
towns in the various processes of
cleaning, packing and curing. In
Aberdeen, for example, that city
haring become a very important
fishing centre, over 1,200 women are .
so engaged, the detailed report of
the last census enumerating
among them 117 married women and
199 widows and more than 900 girls.
Net all the women thus employed
belong to the "fisher" class, of
course -the business has swollen to
such dimensions that workers have
to be drawn from other sections of
the community. But "fisher -lass-
es" still form a large proportion of
the women employed in the special
work of cleaning and peeking herr
ings. "Immediate dispatch" is the
keynote of the herring trade, and,
accordingly, the herrings have to be
prepared with great rapidity. Ex-
pert operators are required, and the
Mier girls who have learned the art
ean find ready employment at the
leading "stations" of the industry,
slid bar- Southey
Southey of a Bristol linen draper. t was a barber who fathered the
rier or partition between the waters
which were above it and those on I
the earth's surface. The earth it- artist Turner, and Romney was the
eelf was conceived of its flat and son of a builder and cabinet maker.
round like a disk, supported partly Sir Joshua Reynolds offered the
by the encircling sea and partly by studio of a great master as an ee-
the vast abyss of waters constitut- viromnent for his kinsfolk, but not-
ing "the great deep" beneath the ther he nor 'Wren, the architect, nor
earth. Up from these subterranean Sc°rt' nor Wordsworth, nor Rom -
waters hidden channels conducted nee left descendants whose powers
gamed them recognition.
Blaine the Geographs.
Ask any hundred English men,
women or children what is the name
of a capital in Russia and every one
of thein will reply, "St. Peters-
burg," says the London Mail. It
may he a email matter, but in point
of fact the proper name is "Peters-
ment is now gathered together in- burg." The English are the only
to seas, The Hebrew conception of folk who insiat upon the "Saint."
the earth as relatively same, flat,
and round must be borne in mind.
12. Grass -Or, tender grass.
the waters to the surface of the
earth, while through openings in
the solid firmament the waters from
above descend froni time to time in
the form of rain. (Compare Pam
24, 2; 136. ; Job. 38. le).
9, 10. Waters . . . gathered ±0-
gether unto one place -That part
of the chaotic waters still'envelop-
ing the earth beneath the femme
The city was founded by Peter the
Great and is named after him. It
is quite true that, Peter was one of
Herbs -Larger plants such as the meet extraordinary mon that
Yegetables..and cereals. ever filled a throne, but no one
Yielding seed -Capable of sell would have been more astounded
propagation and at the same time than himself ite being dubbed a
producing food for Man. saint. Ile neither lived nor died
Wherein -That is, in the fruit
iL813.
11'Two greet lights ---The sun
and moon Those, with the stars
itleo, were for signs end *masons,
They are not, as ,i 20emitemporary
Babylonian mythology, thought of
AEI diction or the ribodes of deities.
21. Seamoneters-The Hebrew
ward is one teat is applied to rep-
tiles, eroomliles, and other agnate:
moneters.
Every living creature that mov-
etb.-lloth fishes and other crea-
ture:: that glide through the water
or emep along its bed.
25. Cattle -Here referring more
especially to domestic animate
though sometimes denoting wild
animals.
27. Created -The repetition of
the; word adds to tho solemnity
With which the creation of men is
introduced. The author! the- ern,
phaeiths the fact that winnet rem -
tion le a more wonderful reveletion
of God's ornuipoteute even than the
10 tho odor of sanctity, and it is
hard to find out how it beta= the
English fashion to miscall the splen-
did town he founded.
e .
"Was your husbend annoyed
when you had used his razor to
sharpen a teed pencil with?"
"Annoyed? Ho couldn't have
said more had words lf rd told him
the furniece fire was
Rard Luck.
Ahfred-"Your wife has e pri-
vate fortune?"
Friend Parker' -"Very private;
I've never personalty been ae-
queinted with it."
"At whom are you loolring?" de -
mended the young lady of the
young men who obstructed htm
path. "Atelloo I" replied the hay-
fever victim, and he:Mee away.
Against Animal Nature.
No dog or 'horse or eat ever finds
it according to its nature to jump.
through 'flaming hoops, roll barrels,
walk a tight -mope or do score- me
other thieme it ;z Torsed to do by
fielinere, Tlee lump of sugar or the
bit of meat given deceives no one
who knows anything about aniroalre
Refutes' to applaud, persuading
children not to &Mend those exhibi-
tions, became of the ertteley that es
behind them, Mut:mine ene'e
friends against tee whole thhenle ex
making Money irough trick wee
neale---these are tome of the way*
in whieh we may help,
If you don'e like your bed, dot'
lie in it. Get up and make it espies
Oisl Gerieleinane-PSo you'd like
to beeves my ton -in-law?" Mt',
efardume "Yee, eir, if you VW 414
ford itee