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The Brussels Post, 1914-5-7, Page 3Household --esee) With bet me. Lettuce with Salt.- The inside leaves of leaf lettuce aad 1l Old CP table leaves of the romaine iu lettuce are ,gieed 851*Vr(1 With nothing but salt. Thiel is the ivies the English eat them, with cheess at the end of a meal, just as they eat celery and other crisp things tints. ett ne S Lealad (1 arnishes.--Just SS lung 110 there is more mated ie l)leace than anything else it is a lettuce salad. We tomato does not neees.sarily make e tematosalad, and when served with cimeiderable lettuce it is a garnish. Other gar- niehes for this salad are hard. boiled eggs, eliced, quartered, ur grated., sweet pepper, fresli herbs, and chopped chives, Instead of terra - gen, a bit of tarragon vinegar is used, and laeking this and possess- ing absinthe, a few drupe of this in the dressing is used to get a flavor like tarragua. Chillonade 8:ibid.—Lettuce cut up like cabbage for cold slaw is called chiffmade. It may be used with almea any salad dressing as a plain salad, or lettuce eo cut is us - ,e a3 a garnish fur other salad ; par- ticularly thes it been meet to make a 101 t nest for stuffed egg selects. CeitIonade is frequently used as a eemelement for soups. it ahOlad to, pia in half an hour before the earl) 11 to be taken up, su as to be well cooked, or it can be cooked separately in butter and eddied. (00111(1 Chilf011atle.--tettuce eta in this julienne fashion is put over a low 'fire in the moisture remaining after it is washed and cut —hold a handful squeezed up in the hand to tett- end some butter. 'Phis is sometimes celled melting it in but- ter. When iti is to be added to a thiek sirup it is best to coil: it tor ten minutes lo title wae. A puree if lettuee, which is used for many rierte of garnishes, being put around 0 dish ie 0 horsier or in little balls or molds, sometimes alternating e ith rieee or ttlaSt, la always put thveugh a sieve, and goes through more easily if tut up chiffonade be- fore being tiooked. A frying beeket instead of a. sieve will be fine enough to strain it through for most 'itemises. Ii'jt me Puree.— Le Untie cooked and put through a ,etrainer, to be seared on tenet, Lir thinning to make a cream of lettuce soup, ur for plating into moIde for nr, end of garnishes, can be cooked either in meat stuck or water, stewed gently in these. The secret of emking let- tuce is to cock it gently. Stuffed Lettnee.—Head lettuce of the cabbage tyne, which is not blam.hed in rowing, is most used for euuking. The heads are par- boiled es. tooked in boiling water for live minutes, cooled, and the water pressed put. They are then cut hi halves, and a thin layer of minced meat or minced egg or minc- ed vegetable is spread uaun them. They are then made sup into balls or little scrells—pauplettes—put in aesaucepan with layers of bacon, a little chopped onion and carrot, and perhaps some other flavorings, covered with stock or water, and cooked slowly in the oven, some- times for as much as an heur. Bs - fore :the liquid is added these may be set in the oven, eovered for ten 'minutes, in order to draw out the a0 that lees will need to be added to cover. Lettuce Bralserl.--Parbuit five minutes then cook in water or stock sfowly, with or without sea- sonings. Lettuce so cooked is pub to a great number of uses, and by cembining it with various oiler vegetables—peas, miler/Tea points, many vegetarian dishes are made as macedoine of cooked vegetables, , eggplant, etc. A pile of vegetables surrounded by a rosette of cooked let:thee iSeonsielered an ornamee tal dish. A seieette made by cutting each lattice leaf in half, folding ib once, placing the Points all 'together and the wide parts eat, 50 as to form a wheel, then surrounding the whole with alternate rounds of cooked earea and beets, is erne - mental. It may be served with any good sauce. A greet variety of sauces, even the Hellandhiee, is served with braised leblemil, jlltd fpr Everybody does not know that nine out of eveey ten babies who die in their first year die through wrong feeding—that is, through their own mothers' end misers' careleeeneao er ignorance, Raw fruits ace ,exeeedingly bad for baby, Any raw fruit will eauee inflasemation of 'the bowels, result- ing in diarrhoea, and most likely death. Bread, eornflour; biscuits, rusks, doe, sego, potatoee—all theee are very bad for baby, beemse they t ordain :starch, And it imby's etinnac,h has no meene of digesting etarele If you give yper baby any of the above Mentioned foods you will metely be giving it aspic—and • eerehably very , dertgerotte—intliges- tiort. Sone rnulk1 if enly the least.bib l•)ut.is vpry bw.1 in1d for baby. That is why tier bottle muet be t oughly scalded out caeh time it is ere (I. IL is thie tal.0 of 3oor an•ilk iili earriee off s.o iletey hairier in hot weather, y vIVI, blvs are very bad t,,r Laby, Cleliager, eucumbea benat me, peas • - Oiseare eSiln:ally liarralta all clarinet ustder ;ere IT Id Needless to say aleehel le tank peleie to babies, aid the nureine inether who Wee: ale lee is .1 her child very sereete Men. Even when the fast effete,' ei wrong filiig as m ly cm:eyed duriegalethyl, iiel there Ls esery 'Teem ti belisve that the harmful effects are istyaviably felt in after life. A Hound, healthy cen- stitutien emenot possibly he built up on indigestible fund taken dur- ing the first and most perilots year of existence, :Home Mote. Black stockings should be rineed in blue water Le give them a good color. Clean nickel and silver pieces with ammonia applied with a flan- nel cloth. Vegetables which grow under the groued should be cooked with the Ltd on. Breaded veal served with tomato sauce 'and spaghetti makes a deli- cious dish, Let potate.e.s lie in culd water a little while before paring if you stunt them to be white. If a little zine is burned in the strive it will prevent suet from form - Mg in the chimney. Diseolored gilt frames etin be bright-ened if rubbed with a eponge dipped in turpentine. Try adding a little :chopped pars- ley te the maehed potatoes ; it give3 them a delicious flavor. When mixing pie cruet or baking powder biscuits they will he much lighter if a fork is need. Windarws •should never be washed while the sun is shining en them or they will be clouded and streak- ed, Fish males are easily removed if hot water is poured over :them on - til the scales curl, then scrape quickly. • To remove the smell ut fish from cookine vessels wash them with soap and vinegar, then scour with ecalding vinegar. The white -fleshed- fish such as halibut, cod, flounder and white 'fish, ere more easily digested than other varieties. Yeast cakes will k.eep fresh for a week if the tin foil is removed and the cakes are covered in a cup of water and put in a cold place. When milk is scorched while boil- ing remove •the pan from the tire and place it in cold water: Put a pinch of salt in the milk and stir it up, and :the burnt taste will dis- appear. Ceilings that look very rough and manifest a itendeney to peel should be gone over with a solution of one mince of alum to one quart uf water. This will remove the su- perfluous lime, and render the ceil- ing white. Always sandpaper the soles of ba- by's new ahoes before they have been- worn. This keeps her from slipping on the bare or polished floors, and prevents many a bad fall which eould easily result in a sprain or a .broken bone. Curtains will hang straight and look much nicer if a small lead weight is sewn in each end of the lower hem In thin curtains the weight will prevent them blowing about, and they will hang, as they Should, following the eine Of wood._ Work. To save the umbrella stand piece a large sponge in the bottom of a .cetins, unibealla jar and you will avoid ariking the bottom and breaking it. The sponge will also absorb the water hernia an umbrel- la, and may :afterwards be wrung out, When washing and rinsing color- ed muterials add a teaspoonful of Epsome mile to eaoh gallon of wa- ter, and ,even the most dotage shades will neither fade nor run. Serge or merirte &eases, which .have been dyed black, ca,n be safely washed in this way without any riak of the dye running. , Sager Cure for Drink. To CUM the dirialk habit, Stilled. - tube Sugar. This is the gist of the adviee, offered jo the cuseent num bee of ithe journal el the Anierticen Medical Askieciation, Which calls the idea "A new eed logioai trealtinenit of a1ieoholiern.1' The article Says: "When the:body cella are ewe:Alec:1 with a piySiiiillogic balance of eathos hydrants, there is no fuetheas des mead kir alcohol, At ibe ineee, tion ,of teepee -tent the diet is modi- fied to oontain 80abtiodance of sae gar, Cereals withcane segue eiweet fruits, paserieS, thocolatee and Inc oreetn are advised, In oonee easea, owing itie a distaste for au - gars, this ,change• must he gradual to prevent xebellim." Neale. "Willie, cam you neme u big city in Alaska V' , "Correet.:" Many 5, mart who poeee 415 Ililee& or is Merely a &neer. [I: SliVDAY Sgiiii0L LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MAY 10: 1,ensoa Y 1. The OJ 11111 Steward /like 16. 1-13, Golden Text, Luke 16.10, Verse 1. Said also mile the dia. cipless,Aftev delivering other di - 10111103, Pc :11(1 5150 spoke the \vents which follow. Tee disselphe wosid no doubt inelres others berild.:3 th 1-1 elve. A certhie rich. man—The (»veer of the eatate. Pussibly he lived hi beim. It' is not easy to see juat what the owner represeats ie the parable, Wry likely he ila3 110 special meaning. As in many par- ables„ the lesson is to be drawn from the whole story andthe de- tails are used merely as a. settieg. A steward—Or, manager. 'the position ef this steward was high- er than that of the man referred to in Luke 12. 42, who was a clave or freed man. This steward is an em- ployed man, who has entire mail - agement of the estate. The same was accused unto him theahe was westing hie goods — Some one reported to the owaee that the steward, either by theft ar mismanagement, Was robbing him of his profits from the estate. 2. Render -the account of thy stewardship—This would show whe- ther or not the charge was true. The expression might also refer to the final account, preperatery to the surrender of his stewardAip. 3. The steward, knowing himself to be guilty, does not Wilab0 time trying to disprove the charge, but begins to devise plans for his own future. To weak to dig, to proud to beg, too guilty to expect another position, his immediate concern is his own food and shelter. 4. They—Hie lord's debtors. He endeavors to put these men under ehligation Lo himself in the hope that they will feel in duty bound to care Inc him when his Position is taken from him. 5.—His lord'a debtors—Probably tenants who had aot, paid their rent. It was customary to pay thie in "kind," the owner furnishing the peed and reeeiving a share of the products. He said to the finite Howimuch ()west thou unto my lord 1—Calling the debtors one at a time, he re- duced the amount of the last pay- ment to be made under his steward- ship, whereas on previous occasions he had doubtless taken more than he had put down in the accounte. As the debtors did nob know the extent to which they had been rob- bed in other years, they consider- ed themselves highly favored, by the :s te ward. 0. A hundred measures of oil— The :measure equalled about eight and three-quarter gallons. Olive oil was an impertant product of Palestine. 7. Hundred measures of wheat— A measure of wheat equaled about ten bushels, and a. hundred would be worth about five huredeed dol- lars, The arbitrary way in which the steward dealt with his master's property shows how unacrupulous he was. There were probably other debtors whose accounts were re- duce,d, Mit these examples are suf- ficient. 8. It was for the steward's prua denee in providing for himself that he Was commended by the owner; so the sons ofthis world aee shrewd and far-sighted •in their transac- tions fur .the promotion of their tempotal welfare. The sons of light should be equally alert in promoting spiritual good. 9. Make to yourselves friends by imams of the mammon of upright- eousness—The expression the Mein - mon of unrighthousnese is used in the book of Epoch and later became a, common rabbieical expression. It does not necessarily refer to wealth unrightemely acquired.; but tether to "deceitful wealth," as we Poinetemes use the expression "filthy lucre." Jesus meant to urge upon ids hearers the wisdom of making friends of the poor and needy whom they could assist by the benevolent use of money, When it shall fail—When earthly wealth shall pasa away, They ---The inhabitants of the eternal tetheroaclee, including, of course, :seine of the :friends gained through the wise dispensing of charity. The eterhal tabernacles are contrasted with the temporal Isimee of the friends of the *weed, 11. Here again menee is celled onrighteme mamnion, as if tainted because :so often the instrument of evil ; bat its possession is certainly .here not tendenmed. And POSUS suggests tbat from our am of the tempavol things comnitted to our charge will be judged eur fitness to heve ietruste.d te us the true etches. 12. Earthly wealth is net merely temporal ; it is eiMply leaned to u5. het if we are uefeithful in that whieh is anotherleaceD webeetruet- ed with a pe:heaneet .i»heritenesio thee is, the 'kingdom prepared from the: fonndation 01 bho -werkl" 1 18, No riervarie tan serve two mes- tere—As each master wishes un- •clivided service, it would be helms- eible for it servant to be loyal to two inastera. The whole perable MIAS SYLVI 1 PANIiii 111141' AND ILER CIIIEIA/F-STA FF. reareeeeteretreeeet=erreegeesee.""eeee e'emee"""'""'"' Officer; of the People's Strifragette Anny. - Mho Sylvia Ilankhurst, ee.ated, leader of the Pecuele's Army,East En.d -Fecleratite 1 IVIilleanit Suffragettes, end Miss Zelie Emerson, the :teens; American militant from. Detrsit, will.) is Mies -Penkhuret's thief lieutenant, Thie photograph WWI 108e. in. Idies Pankhurstee boudoir in her helm ie the East of Landen, whore the enilitaest leia.der is oleo- velles•ng from the .c.ffe•ces a the etreie of her recent five -days' hungor and thirst etrike in prison, has empliesized the thought that earthly wealth is but temporary; that it is another's, and nub our own; but if lent to ue it should he used wisely and made to serve the higher purposes *f the Kingdom. Certainly this could nut be done if a man became the eervant of his money. Compare Matt. 0.24. MEXIteiNS ARE NOT LATIN. Population Ineludes Millions of In- dians and 11 alf-Breeds. The Peels Te,mpe recently pointed out 'that Mexico 'n-53 in no sense a Lakin republic. Of the three mil- lirem whites, many axe not of abes- Itutely pare blood. The Spanish cenqueet has sca.ree- ly e ineanorial in Mexico, he atiele, and Eunopean Spaniards are cle.teett- ed there. To quote the writer "The first tiling that sbrikes, a traveller on his firse, trip through Mexico is the surprising ste,sectee of a..11 memorials celebrating the ,Span- ish oonqueet and occupatiotft "The marvelous epic of Helmer:a- do Oentez and 'his knights—their wild a,dveniture, a very poem of romance, Imparalltile,t1 in the his- tory of the world, and which even mythology emits' not have inyeedeal —shows us the conquist.selor, with his seventh:eel "captain,s, his fear hundred infantry, and seven culyer- ines, travelling the .tiroPicat lands and awaimps of Vera C!ruz, elirabing mountains res formidable e,s the,y were unknown, and ateactking the Aertee Empire with Its army of a handred thousand men. Of this epic what: vestiges are fotend in Mexiou of to -clay? Some names given to planes and rivers daring the Spanish domination. Not an sieription on stone celebraitee their memory "Bat id the middle of the trIusn- pll which leads hem Mexi- co City be tate presidential cantle of Ohaptiltepee is eet on e monumen- tal pedestal the bronze statue of Cuanheeneac, the Iset Aztec Emper- or, whorm, Centez put to the torture. He ,seancle up, in colossal proper- tictes, in the gra,nd eceitirme of an Indian chief his head eurmourabeel by a feathery plume. Bassreliefis show the comipanaotea lief his struggle and his misfortune, and the insomp- tion sst the bites of 4t4e, monument rune ea fol Lows: To tee memoirs' of Cuertheemoc a.nd of his warrione who fought heroically foe the defence of the cc'TugutherYTean',pis ooficludee !that Mexi- cans cannot be judged by American or Europeam sitendaeals, and that Pri'sident ehoold bo Wier- aste. THE LOESS OF CHINA.. Strange Earth Vhieh Covers the Greater Part of North China. Some of tale. meet Charaoterisittle impre.s.eions of ethina, ere cenn.ecited with the great loe,es despicerie that covers the greater part oE north China. In some places it reaches a deeth of fifteen hundred or two thousand feot. It is probably a wind-borne aocumulation of dried mad er fine desert, sand owning from 'the and interior of Mee, - uniform in :composition and etructure, unetratified, splibs vert14 tally, and contains lased ehelle, bat no waiter Shells:, The streams have cut down through tam loess, rend iare all deep- ly e.itibined with its eimeacteristie brown -yellow. It Ss the loess thet gives 118 Yellow River, Yellow .858, Yellow Emperor ; dioubtlesa sug- aged the kropeetel, eater, ,The tef :the Pelung- Ilankow Railway peeeee theoligh a vaet yellow eountry, and the leas yeller ecavereily $4.03 41 stone, a: hill, oe a tree, The aoil and the waiter- coursee thee yellow, the flateveofed houses ate yelloete the Wallis of the 4.5 __Lc°tIc),._1'. .1111E MOJERN SUBMARINE Pees Will 13e His Own attoternwer. ehe mite or ster1ler...1es annetinees tar he eel e. 11 small 1r, rt of Ms v111 Tut; 11A11 LI,, 1t0Ait ;arm-dom.. Ala,: 6. Ills proi- runt intention Is to uct tar Is own stu, tioneer, but 11441 11148 1.1, been drlinitelY settled. The Prolierly to 1 VOW. whieh co1n- 1,1,18P3 leSS thillt 16(1 11300,7,14, 11.1 ).,,7 d 'W 4,1 anoodstuek. Thu reasoo „ Why t dke a uwants n ts to et as hie n Mile Of 11)' 11312,1 '0 1141 alletioneer is not given. it Win InvolsO the pc relent or see ise 1111 0.1.1,41011.WH T00 of DILLIIntgiit+ 1 11101111008 that A 130 AR 1) T 11 E BO A T. of a Navy In Time of War and Also is Time of Ptsiee: , lit'f;;;Yigs aril l's11.011.31Zolle 'Lott 'liasa1t1:eti(u'3310.4171`11tret . They can it ,a hue,t; hitt it i4 (1 n. PHU11,43 L.0111Prigios 2.4w'r i-oi irt CIng her %Ault I 0 the Fre.pM (.aolt.al some At n : ret 't ,i-selea ti 1,, . n.,,t,litlg 11131133 1i,teagiz• =v.- ,, , 111.8:21B;101riari.e.117:11 Lpleii.cueSfil, lilt, ...Inv btiqlt that a Ai. 1+1;:.. r Isuititi. „ • . pwrelq.teletlIessgonldaia:spii,ltt,eeg,i.1t,ehit::.Veg.tatzdh;ei 1. ,1,i be Queen Vietu:iapa:t of wit b- 11ad1b",Ll'I'',1(1011')) ,(;:lh1a.3:-' io,ig,diit.\rmnett,..ui.ertu;1a1v eeet;neTi-e It 1tt nately the lace has bcea hot in u Par- 11,1, ,, . tieuiyi:nnringi::n14:ii ,.313.11an)€2„),1)seilog. uenliiittPiI !,.You have 11 .shout 1:r he bersieds (y tile royal 3)110,1 of art needlework, 11, nee t the submit i • le ,(.1.'VF • , an or•ganleatIon in wiliell her Majesty so,,,,,,i is reo te, eve., .e. esit on tH17 .1,(, ,'ei.n. Minit:1171t.1.11*. 1,'o was srru old to Et. cogiateu seen r‘y...4, AVIV 11, i „ , a :1'ilhaeit°1ralYr°ell'iaSs7e8t: 'av•Ialles ilaiRforilPigiliele7111111:1 tie::::ier: ()II:. ,,t.111: .1'111'''Cl' ' '1 13” ''''...11 real value, apart even from lis historical hull reverberates weleio like a associations. aetsr .o.11. v. 03 lbs3 all efforts to trace her haNe failed. Thievee Respeot Sportenton, brx,:tadg buzz of electric fans and The valuable watch stolen from Lora Maul% and the "pop,poppiug" of lig-,uoulmlart`rl:e ilts, LI, iatop:.inAiherndoefeillintiurt re7t7proel jAngg'N: nise htin as tl. member of the brother-gaertle;;: 114,1.:,ai.r-drive veTicii.ii1tery exnatnts5538lolA1mzol „ hoed or sportsmen, Wile, aceording to : YOUr anteelpiltiOn8 are completely IniTtnlivieeLriotnis nriicctiltescilitligoti the ethics of the pickpocke0:,1111:15t. athee ',5,51,OlUll'fi'S:Idi hIsre.csroltehdavianeuxfi eae'litecsibtlesnbildy most conspletious patron of $port in furiously whirlino• machinery that althreigifaLniallitlit 48cohn"vleatais.a sopel in iiihelpitre,id. threateas at each' rev.0.10,1.m to b A.bi A that the plckpdeket who got the „„ , . , , , .,..i. watch was hauled over the goals by his 011 0Tbe 01 yalle qiillt.. .55 IN...i. .1., brothers in crime. stead, you see before you a perf;i.ol,- attentions of pickpockets on English ly clear little deck, or wirkrets i3.,orceoc‘i.reern,, trtiro:n wetlhle. racTeht-eoume:ensTio t°ronl; space some seven ee thretv fti,tit known patrons of the sport. but extends , . to racing reporters and telegralth (Mee- square. alarm. Recently a racilig svelter's The machine; and C8 1.13 you crassee were stolen by u. nIcknoeket and white waiting for Itis train he was ask- have been looking fur are 8,1 th.3 ad by a pugilist why he looked so glunt. The 11.WS110.11P1' Ina,' told hint of the loss • stern, far in 1.1). backgmound. You pugilist remarked can demiry them now—a maz.s of , of his glasses and the that the piekpockets should have re- , . . cognized him as a sport. That night. or -ening foal and glitt•rin,-..; ora,A, the glasses were lel't at thne writer's ofs - It is all so compact, ,...) eitif,,?13" j5111- fice wrapped In paper, owilleh wa scrawled, "Please excuse Mistake." med, that. it seems impoesible the Make Small Saints 0115 01 Little Sinners. various parts should tied reem, a, A. most dashing experiment in the t urn wi tivout obstruct ine each nianufacture of small saints out of young sinners has Just begun to sue- other's Metien,---imposeellelea 1,i,•?,, ceed in a surprising degree. The ware that human hands should ex 2r sues • , of experiment Is a Dorset farm given byGeorge IVIontagu. reed in squeezing •tairettgh thee Lord Sandwich—who Inc a nephew. are sent Lo this fiarm. where they are acinlg tengle to el the lyerke 1 Small criminalsbot h110)11 h boys and girls, Inc n taught to govern themselves in their , , The very walls so MV,un.di ng. 7.rlt bellaret tanks, which cam just ju eo' •ts. SOME iriOtst stdrh-ty dges be 6.3,4' wish weer frc,,....n i2,'l3 q Will , ,Parligavol Luck their awn law Eli‘ huge have been discovered, proved an almost instantaneous ‘mre in s 4 compressed air The effect of self-government has e,acks or emptie:1 some recent Instances. For example. bn feign within. As theee are filled, BI -dressed and dirty boy was forcibly the 111111 (.4 the submarine eieks till clothed at the expense of the commun- iand the scheme pv roed so suceess- only the peri ty. scope is visible ; ea they paid back to the Poor aw guardians .igh. . see emptiest, the beat: liezein.aa ful that he worked like aLTeojan till he Agaithe n, it was decided by the manager tt, ane its eanning-tewer, mix - the cost or his outer. that boarding expenses were too, roundrin.g euspenstracture, use a por- eigh. A council of boys and girls at teen of tha hull, appease above the once sat on the subject. They deeidecl ,,,,,,,,,..r. to buy margarine in place of butter, and in."-.` by cutting down here and there they soon ru edced expenses to the ProPor III Many Directis. on margth•t° their own g'ent delight and This periscope, a tub:e eoisse fif- the benefit of the communitY. The first year of 1120) "Little Renee tem feet in length projecting op- tic" concludes in June. and the success . has been striking—An the opinion of the welds, lathe submarine's eye. 13. 50 _that a great effort la to be made to a kind of oembiarttien ef a tele - a police court commissioners and others extend the republic. cope and it eantera obs.cura. At the Hobbies of Crowned Heads. top of it is fixed a peiverf ill lens, cities a.nd :townie are yellew. The wit. is yellow with duet; everl"bbing that grows is yellow ; even, the yels low people. .and their clothing are powdered -with the yellow dust. The loesa slices like cheese. Most af th•e mountain people house them- selves by digging a °aya in a bank formed cf this material. When plas- tered it .makes is, clean, dry warm in winter mid cool in sum mer; its only eirewback is in the matter of veutilation. Some of these d-wellings axe tax, or three aerie% high, have framed windows and deerwaye, end ere well. fur- nished. It .staatles you to look tiler a becod, prairie -like, :country, divided into fields highly cultivated, aesi. see n(5 highways, houses, people, or dome.stic animals. The roads have eat their 'way into the keep, 11 d run ae the .beitiboun of eassone .eenetkoes seventy or eighty fe.st, deep, The people ha.ve sing out 'their dwellings and •etablesin the cliffs that line the roads .a.nel artaans. ELEPHANT'S BATH COSTLY. Tidos $300 to Bathe Jumbo When Tour. Jurnbse is very fussy a,bont, his beth end in his native land takes King George is an ardent stamp rol- the Queen of Nor - and iaside., at intervals, all the way lector, and his sister, way, Is sald to derive much amusement down, is a eeries of :Mirrera, whieh pia.ols ansl 8155414. Neture has bee.n giving inaccurate accounts of her own carry the refleetion till it. reache.s great joy. in splashing a.,boub in from her collection of press clippings -especially kind to him, inasmuch as the has endowed him with ,i. eihower bath, whittle he carries about with him. But whether he bakes the same pleasure in the babh that its given him sehen—ecer shawl parposte—h,e in captivity iS .zonottlier miater. In any ease, it moat be a I:roue:muss business, aa it econpiee a, wee,k, Also it regal:nes the services of three mac, and coots '$300! The Breit thing is to gee over th.e, alo- phant' ,with ithas best possible as11p—ewe:1 as the amount of eciap uecid is eromeithing Me- a, litundred and fifty peenecire this is not a small item. 1V1ien, ha ha a been dried, the ele- pheadi is well 581l11-paperee—which does not sound particularly enjoy- :11,We. M3 send -papering being finished, Jumbo is rubbed all over with the very beat Indian oil anti' hisenouse-oolored elan is euppluand glistening. This is tih.e most costly pant of his toilet, as alma thirty Pounds' email of oil has to be need. Mr:letting Day in Japan. The true Japeniese 5101850 is very clomeeticateid; she e.c.oks, sews, arrimges flowers., a,nd entertains he.r numesious vie:items with, 'a stele*, dig- reity a,nd leisueely politeness, iwhich forn111 geealt eentraist to the 1i1l,01 111 western life. She ale> lia,s count - leas magazine,s, and books, end to the ketio, or Japaneiee harp, is now added the piano, organ, God violin, a ud in every department of life the horizon of the Japarte,ee woman has been enlarged. The housewife has no settled. da.y far washing, bat a,e need .eriees, and •wieether Delimits she - unpicks her kimone, washes it, starches it in search ma,da front flour, 'and plaoes it on a long boaed to dry. This method of drying re- quires no ironing. Out of 800 applicants who answer- ed 4D11 advertieeme,nit in a London paper for :twenty beautiful girls :only sixteen We.l'e friend to meee the re- eptieements of the advertises'. Over $5,000 was raised for schools for inc LIiei' in leen-don recently. when a e•core of prominent, society womeet ;nerd as slate:women in a, cleParitmerni: ;here. London lifts gover 500 women wh map 'their living bY ramming the .sluns'af oitheed. is imit 11. firofes- sion you ran letten— obs for elvie /met reniseeeil ky hind or the 011 RIO "juices" are a no 1151 kr .piekling. The 01110113 8,1112 rilwaye peeled it weber, which pre - Wee keeps, Oielin white, doings. a, prismatic ki:rtg aii: 181-2 Istotem. On King Edward had a most curious hob- by, the collection of the avoirdupois of thiS the picture of what is going On go the ordeal of the Sandringham scales, outside is 1.11117VIVII in full view of his friends, all of whom had to 'under - records. the host himself keeping the book uf the navigate?, eh'? wee:rhea over it Queen Victoria's hobby in collertlens end naVigat.'26 a'cc*Tdinik• was a rather a melancholy 0110, taking The steering of the eubmerene is friends and relations. a sinsch more intricete entstiter 'than the form of sepulchral memorials of her The Kaiser, of eoursehas innumer- the steering of the ordinery boat, able hobble.s In art. mush. and letters, tion of uniforms In the world. LOUIS and left osity, but the eubmaxine The ordinate' ship eteers to right lie has the fitteet eollec- and In addition XVI.'s tastes ran in the direction of finest oollections oe swat boXes eVer as- boo. eiteers upwards and clown Weide, cloaks, and George IV. made one of the semblecl, in addition to 304 whips and 500 pocketbooks, whleh were found at In the noee of the :beat, Iseleiw tihe ereaotthee Cattle Breeder coming'. . tutl-lioxes and hinged hanks in hisved. s. MacWillicon. the King's land IV,'„1,4441 the „..crelv ,,ele,ep, are tucked steward at Windsor, has accepted, with nevey toe veatasucaeng iterpe..cleee, his Majesty's assent, an invitation to 1,ashed end to end ho pairs, Hare, act as judge in Ole fat stock chamulon- ship classes at the international Show too, are the steel tubes out of Whi,eill at Chicago, is the seri of Bffshire the breeding and exhibiting shorthorn and gunner sends his prnjectilas termer WhO has arhieVed a an sticress in crossbred cattle. eeething under the waters at a rebe eoreon's farms, including the famous , • of a theuzeitd feet a 9200,ncl agaentet incliati\wiaecr Pileanirnwiktsoff°113.'ir"irm"o5nd"aanrcl Tait In the management of the royal •NiNtnitilgiiixi et1111L113,1:1311S11171116d115.g. `..1)1111.e."111iisettpouflas tfho,r5 discharge is teetered from oomp.ress- eouthdown Sheep, at Clooiltvoetl, years age sacceeded the late ie. ed aix-flaeks. Torpedoes, e-ery in farms at WillaS0r. SERVANT WORRY IN EGYPT. _ feet lolls, twenty-one inthee in isize, but th.es; mayi be ovdeir sistedesn All Manner of Devices Adapted to raster, wedge a, tentea,n, • pounds , Meet Domestic Shortage. end attain a speed ot fifty miles arn hour. In appearance trh,ey are .noit ancient Egypt, a.nd all manner of unlike a min iair3butnhereamielel of tih,e The servant problem has iin,vetled boas tha owr there bo meet the domeetie Alert.- Air in Reserve. curious devices are being adopted age. The meta E,gyptrian has not In va.ree it 5110111411 be compelled to been slow to profit by the white period remain ander water for a, longer residents. hurtle troubles, 41A witoms than is usual , the submarine the folk:ming ativer•tieement that carries an emergency supply of air, luta just appeaired in a Cairo n,ews- steel sylinger, 2,000 pounde per This reseeve air is compresped ie a ' "RITREACT OF EL AMAXIII. square inch. it is difficult for the paper ; "For servants, 13oth Male and Te- Icarrtirwanitictian ‘rielhailia zTige-ithefiet.:..rriBfictstek31111; "El Sheikh Ali Amen El Eskene :Mil grasp •eomeithing of the reality he is told +that if ehe cyhatter inale,•Telephone No. 3583. when El Amelia:le which is found in Mo- of esoaping stir weee, to alike a Nlit.veprieiti>112tel:illaS•nda liefaltchrt:eotlibilgye:tate1a4ant dareni, -the osimer of the Bureau cif hammed Ali Street , neer Shaangir- traon, ilt, wenlel puncture him through Ea, Lane, in the Establishment of the public of the followings and through, anel evem drill a. hole 'Any Mieraleer of the public who is 'him: through am inclijihick board behind Ibrahim Zake, Rey, Xo. 30, 111t01815 in want of either it rata(' or female ses6ouoefileii; •11X11.0;itIllt7;(1117ent'si&irlet:biliiillai'tertf 78. servant ef ans- nationality can ask navy ill i11111.0 Of 1511.1`, rind by fax the him; he min bring them already. moist daingeroust unit of ,,a navy in "And if the, beetapeople ell i are time of waxes:, me repent disaaere totanlgsdfeurr :1517•Wcisliti:Ica. 41e4a.slentL,P1 lige t'innse: ha." all l'o' 3 PI a ie141—IY (1'2't""Iralv4. pitioed a, teleplume, No, 3583, in the Bureauthe. She Can: ltelp, "Time of worlc, 7 am, to 7 p.m" "He's making more enemy than . a., elr .^-' '"' he knows what to do with!' lielliborly. Anyway. "I know, bat he's gob a wife to • "Is he an -apostle of humanity 1" 11.0141 fli!ri,i, .a.,;41t,b,., tha_s_n't h:1" 'Is ho1 He kas 12 thii.drep, And Entertaining ft 0150 1,1s101% 180117It let ono of them bake music Itr, ataylale--The ether night I Troubles of InkAt, Men a're' tett- Stftas bruoltboreel.,...1 wial 1 knon,, 1116:70.iis.” 4°' ik,.. Iturti ts, story ftiet gave mo resell a 3 I r '