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The Brussels Post, 1915-11-11, Page 3rIC.SBfPife c?oriter New and Timely: Dishes. •Sauted Fillets of Salmon •^-Oloan end ' pick a s'inall salmon, Sprinkle small slices wi h salt and -.pepper, Saute in a hot blazer, rising enough butter to prevent hurting,' Season with lemon juice aid sprinkle with finely chopped parsley. • Cinnamon Bun Pudding. -Soak four rich, stale buns, unbroken, in cold water for 10 minutes. Press out'wa tet• -carefully, then add two beaten eggs' and a pint of 'milk, stirring all together, ,Bake. ' Serve with milk, or any sauce. The buns usually, have sufficient segs', butter and spices. Mutton Ragout. - Beat, currant 'felly that it may be easily measured. Put three tablespoonfuls jelly in hot blazer. Add one teaspoonful lemon juice";and two tablespoonfuls butter. Wheii butter is melted reheat thin slices of ,cold boiled mutton in sauce- pan. Season with salt and paprika. Egg Balls for Soup. -Egg balls form a great improvement to a clear soup. Boil four eggs very hard, drop them into cold water, and when cool remove the yolke, poundiig these in a mortar until quite a paste; then beat them with a teaspoonful of salt, a little pepper, and the white of one uncooked egg: Form into balls .th8 _size of 0 walnut, roll in flour, and fry a pale brown. Beef Bulls. -Cut one-half pound. beef from top of round in one-third- inch ne thirdinch stripsand scrape with a rather dull knife. Remove all soft part of beef from freshly cut side. Turn and scrape other side. Season with salt and pepper and shape into small' balls about the size of filberts, using as lit- tle pressure as possible. Drop balls into a hot blazer, generously sprink- led with salt, shaking pan constantly until the entire surface of the - ball is seared: Serve on small pieces of buttered toast. Oyster .13isque.-Two cupfuls white stock or milk, one cupful cream, one egg, two cupfuls oysters, one tea- spoonful chopped 'parsley, two table- spoonfuls butter, blade of mace, salt, pepper and cayenne. Cook oysters in white stock until edges curl. -Strain, reserve liquor and chop oysters. Press through sieve. Add butter and -flour cooked together, •seasonings and cream. Cook five minutes, add to egg lightly beaten;; and serve. ,Baked Call's Heart. -Wash heart well and wipe it. Fill with good dress- ing made of breadcrumbs, herbs, but- ter and seasoning. Allow : dressing to eke out the meat dish where the supply has run short, ' Never put too much food on an invalid's tray, but serve 11 with the most perfect daintiness. Add a.little minced celery and parsley to the filling for. chicken. It will have a delicious flavor, 'Too salty soup can be saved by adding a few slices of raw potatoes and cooking a little longer. Many people forget that grapes can be made into delicious cobblers and pies just like any other fruit. Cold lunches pave the way to in- digestion, so wherever it is possible let the children have something hot. When making cheese dishes, it is well to add a tiny pinch of carbonate of soda, as it renders them more digestible. When slicing bacon from the piece, the knife will cut more smoothly if it is dipped in water before cutting each slice, To preserve patent leather 'shoes. and boots clean with a .rag dipped in milk, then polish with a piece of old velvet. This prevents the leather from cracking, Scrub the inside of the oven. once every week with hot water and soda,. and scrape off any burnt matter with an old knife. A dirty oven ruins the flavor of food cooked in it. If when making soup or beef tea for an invalid it is necessary to cool -it at once pass it through a clean cloth saturated with eold water. Not a particle of fat will be left in the beef- tea. Most housewives know that sugar will dissolve more quickly in hot wa- ter than in cold, but very few know that, salt. will dissolve in cold water just as quickly as when the water is boiling. When the oven becomes too hot place a basin of cold ,water into it, but do not leave `the door open. This answers the purpose of cooling the oven, and the rising steam prevents the food from burning. If fish is found to be slightly taint- ed a good thing is •to steep it for a short time in a weak solution of per- manganate of potash, or boracic acid, which ,destroys the tainted particles, and leaves the fish perfectly sweet and wholesome. WEALTH OF MONARCHS. Czar is Richest of Old World Kings - EMBROIDERIES MAKE CHARM- ING- HOLIDAY GIFTS. There is no more sincere way of expressing one's appreciation of an- other's friendship than by making some charming little garment and adorning it with dainty embroidery design. The illustration shown here- with offers some valuable suggestions in Ladies' Home Journal Patterns, No. 14743; which contains 9 small mo - showing waists No. 9090 and No. 9086 tifs. as they would appear with the below described transfer patterns, No. 14741 is developed in braid, cord, out. line -stitch, rope -stitch or ehain- stitch. These motifs make an attrac- tive trimming for suit . No, 9090, There are 22 motifs in the pattern and 3 different styles. Negligee No. 9086 is finished at the bottom with scallops No. 14786, 3 inches deep, 2 yards long; neck and sleeves are fin- ished with scallops and eyelets for ribbon, No. 14740, which comes in two sizes, lira and 1r/a inches deep, 3 yards of each. The birds are from Patterns, 15 cents each, can be pur- chased at your local Ladies' Home Journal dealer or from the Home Pat - tan Company, 183 George Street, Toronto, Ontario. THE GREAT GRAY SEAL. Sir Ray Lankester Relates an Inci- dent With a Pup. The great gray seal, which may of- ten be seen on the west coasts of Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and Corn- wall, where it breeds in caves, is, says Sir Ray Lankester in the London Daily Telegraph, a much bigger ani- mal than the common seal, Its hairy coat . is silky, and has a yellowish gray tint spotted with black and dark gray most abundantly on the back. One September morning Sir Ray had set off for Pentargon Cove in North Cornwall, where common seal abound. - ed. At low tide we climbed down the cliff with the aid of ropes, he says, and found ourselves on the shore. My companions hastened clown to the wa- ter's edge. I, was about to follow them when I saw, lying on the peb- bles above high -tide mark, what I took for a white fur cloak left there by some previous visitor. I walked up cal Gardens when, after three days, I left Bocastle. He travelled to London in the guard's van in a specially con- structed cage, and was as beautiful and happy as ever when I handed him over to the superintendent at Regent's Park. SCIENCE FACTS. In the Falkland Islands there are five men to every woman. There are more than 3,000 domes- ticated elephants in Siam. Scientists estimate that there are 19,000 species of fish in the world. A shoal of herrings is sometimes five or six miles in length and two or three in breadth. An electrical process for drying lumber in piles or even unbarked logs has been perfected in France. Designed for bakers, a new electri- cal machine will scour 2,000 pans an hour and grease them for use again. After making more than 2,000 ob- servations a Swiss scientist has de- cided that snails have no sense of to it, when, to my extreme astonish-jsight. ment, it turned round and displayed al .A telescoping tobacco box which pair of very large black eyes and a I• may be diminished in size as its con- tents are used has been patented. A novelty for fishermen is a hook threatening array of teeth. It was a baby seal, covered all over with a room enough to swell. Tie strips Of Britain's Ruler Poorest. splendid growth of lemon -white fur equipped p g q pped with a clip to hold a living salt pork over top to keep dressing Tha Westminster Gazette of Lon- three inches deep. He was twice as , fish as bait without injury, so that it in.. Put in pan with a little water, don, says: `big as the fur -covered young of the] can swim naturally. one sliced onion, one carrot and spray ++We have heard something of the I, common seal -more than two feet! The seeds of the tobacco plant are or two aparsley, . Bake two hours, dimimiation of the Kaisers private long; his black eyes were as big as so minute that, according to an esti- basting often. Remove from pan, and thicken gravy with .paste of flour and water. Add a little kitchen bouquet. Dish heart on platter, pour some of gravy over, garnish with boiled onions and serve rest of gravy in boat. Rice and Bacon Tasty. -Rice and bacon for breakfast -Cook afternoon vete estate, yielding about ten million before one cup rice in quart of water dollars a year. Beyond that his 'sal - until soft, drain, cover tightly to cry' amounted to another ten million dollars, besides many profitable in- vestments abroad. "There were small expenses to be deducted, such as some 214 million dollars a' year to grand - dukes and duchesses. But when everything had been taken into account, the Czar re- mained the richest monarch in the world; far ahead of the Turkish sul- tan, with his 71,4 million dollars, or our own King, who as. the poorest_in Pelf and palaces of all the Old World potentates." fortune owing to the war. But even with his fifty royal residences and in- terests in all manner of businesses, he has never been the richest monarch pennies, and he was lying there on the mate, a thimbleful will furnish upper beach,far from the water, . in an acre of ground. PP enough plants for the full blaze of the sum, as dry and i Peruvian balsam, known the world as fluffy as a well-dressed robe of , over for its excellent properties, does in the world. That honor has always polar bear's skin. [ not come from Peru at all, but grows belonged to the Czar, who, on his ac- We were indeed well rewarded for along the coast of Salvador. cession, came into the Romanoff ori- our excursion in search of the seal's An angry ostrich is a great fighter. cave of Pentargon Cove! For this He strikes out with his feet, and his was a new-born pup of the great legs, being immensely strong, he can, gray' seal, entirely unconnected with with no great amount of exertion, kill the inferior population of the inaeces- a man. sible cave, laid here in the open by The butterfly, like the bat, invari- his mother at birth (as is the habit of ably goes to sleep head downward on her species). Not knowing that the the stem of the grass on which it young of the gray seal refuses to en- rests. It folds its wings to the ut- ter the water until six weeks after most and thus protects its body from birth, when it sheds its coat of long the cold. white hair, we cautiously rolled the Artificial flowers were invented by little seal on my outspread coat and nuns in Italy. In the Italian convents carried him to the water's edge. Af- the altars and shrines were, up to the ter the hissing with which he had end of the eighteenth century, decor, greeted my first approach he was not ated with artificial flowers, laborious - unfriendly. ly put together, made of paper, parch - We expected him to wriggle into anent and wire. the water and swim off, but, on the ' contrary, he wriggled hi the opposite RECORD PRICE FOR SHIP. direction, and made his way by sue- - German Steamship Valued at $275,000 Sells for $600,000. dry ie oven for few moments. When ready to use in the morning chop one green pepper and two • medium-size onions, very parboil for- five minutes, add torice, seasoning with salt and pepper. Mold in cakes size of codfish chlces, fry as many strips of bacon -as. there are cakes, lift to hot dish -then dust cakes lightly with •. floor and: brown in hot .bacon fat. Lift on hot platter with strip bacon•on top of each cake. This makes a tasty breakfast dish with fruit, rolls and coffee, Savory Bread Pudding. -This is a pudding that may be eaten with mut- ton, pork or duck, and any odd pieces of bread may be used. Take half a pound of stale bread, two half -boiled onions, two tablespoonfuls of coarse :oatmeal, three ounces of suet, half a teaspoonful of dried sage, an egg, a England in teaching poultry farming quarter of a pint of mills; salt and to soldiers wino have lost their sight, pepper. Soak the bread in cold wa- A group of fifteen blinded soldiers ter till soft, then squeeze as dry as who have been receiving instruction possible, and crumble it fine. Chop from a poultry expert were taken tine suet and onions and add, with all recently by Capt. Pierson Webber, the dry ingredients, to the bread, sea- who himself lost his sight in the Boer soning to taste. Then stir in the egg, War, to a big poultry farm in. Kent. well beaten, and the milk. • Grease a There the blind pupils identified vari- tin, pour in the mixture, and bake in ous breeds of fowls put before then' a hot oven till it is done, probably l by examining; the comb, general con - about forty-five minutes. Cut it into tour and legs of the fowls and by test squares and serve it with hot gravy ing their weight. They, also identi poured over .it. fled the various poultry foods by the sense of touch, some of the wounded. having lost the sense of smell as well us their sight. The poultry raisers expressed the opinion that there was' no difficulty in training blind soldiers for' the work which could not be overcome and the superintendent of the farm 'offer- ed to train ten men. A 'course in Poultry raising will be printed in Braille for the use of the men. What He Used Them For. BLIND POULTRYMEN. • Soldiers Learn to Identify Fowls cessive heaves up the beach. Iie was Through Touch. not more than a day or two old. Experiments are being _made in On the following evening I pro- cured in the village two men and a potato sack, and hurried to Pentargon. Cove. As we approached' the edge of the cliff the sun was setting. A weird sound rent the air. It was the little seal calling for his mother! I Hints for the Houle. Crushed bananas spread over cream toast make an•agreeable dish los an invalid. 11doesn't seem .possible .ever to have tco.many pickles. stored away for winter use. - .As cold weather approaches give the chickens. hot Water to chink; they will thy better. No fruit in the market has more possibilities than the grape -either cooked or fresh, Customer -4 ,want another 'lire- A charming crib quilt for a child extinguisher. Used the lost one all is made of squares, with a letter of ep last night. the alphabet in each. Clerk -Glad to sell them to you, Put glycerine on watermelon stains sir, but aren't you rather carelese at and leave it a little while; then wash your place? This is the third one I've in clear water. sold you 10'0 week, Put stat in the oven under your .Customer -0, I don't use them for baking tins, and the dish will not fire. They are the greatest things on 10o1•eh on the bottom. earth for chasing out your daughter's Du tgri liens and dumplings help late eallere, could sec him from above, a little white figure all alone in the deepen- ing gloom of the t:liffs-raising his head and with liis cries helplessly m- viting his enemies to Come and de- stroy him. In a few minutes we were by his side, hadplaced him in the potato sack, and brought hint to the upper air. On the way to the inn I pur- chased a large-sized baby's bottle with a fine India -rubber nipple. We placed the little seal on straw in a large open packing case in the sta- bles, while the kitchen maid warmed some .mill: and filled the feeding bot- tle,- 'Then I brought it to him, and touched his nose with the milky India -rubber teat. Withnnerrieg pre- ciaion his lips elosod on it, his nostrils opened and shut in quick succession, and he had emptied the bottle. I gave him a quart, of milk before leav- ing, him and getting my own belated meal. IIe slept comfortable, but at four int the morning his cries rent tine air, and threatened to wake everyone. in the hotel, 'I hod to get up, descend to the kitchen, warm sono snore milk for him, and satisfy his hunger. He became fond of the bottle, and also of the friend who -held it for him. 5 arranged to take hint to the Zoologi- The steamship Maritime, 5,536 tons, which was the North German Lloyd Schliesien before she was captured as a British prize, recently brought at auction the price of $600,000, an in- crease of $275,000 over her price of six months ago. A profit of $276,000 on a ship cost- ing $825,000 indicates the extent of the present shipping boons in Great Britain, Even a half year ago vessels were selling at a premium, But the present boom breaks all records in the history of shipping. There have been other sales as re- markable of late. One steamer, which was bought for $225,000 at tate be- ginning of the war, changed hands at $500,000. A Copenhagen owner who last January bought a 4,234 -ton steamer for $41,500 resold her this month for $200,000, Those vessels are freighters and not THE SUNDAY SCHOOL 'NEWS FROM ENGLAND INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOVEMBER 14, Lesson VII, - Daniel in the King's Court (World's Tem -:ranee Les. son) -Dan. 1. Golden Text: 1 Cor. 16. 13. I. Daniel's Test (Verses 8-13). Verse 8. Purposed in his heart -No from 108 to 38 in the week has met resolution for good is strong enough if made with the. intellect only, It with approval, must be buttressed by the heart. Mr. Ebenezer Flenous, of Leighton King's Dainties. Foycl and wine Buzzard, who has just died, at the age from the king's table might have been of 85, was a local preacher for over NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN BULL AND IU$ PEOPLE. Occurrences in the Land That Reigns Supreme in the Commer- cial World. Small subscribers to the war loan through the post office number over 1,000,000. In Liverpool the reduction of the hours for the sale of intoxicants THE VALUE OF A $10 BiUi1ill)ING MALE. By A. P. Marshall: There was a time when it would have been considered the height of folly for anyone to pay: even $5 fen breeding male, and to the inexper- ienced the prices paid seem unreason- able, but, as one through -continuous effort for improvement sees the great care and skill required to produce the most- valuable breeders, the amount asked becomes a minor item dedicated to the heathen divinities, 60 Years• as compared with the service ren - and partaking of them would be an After 14 unsuccessful attempts to dered. This is not primarily a. ser, vice to the fancier, but in many eases is in a larger way a development that gives to the market poultryman im- provements that mean the supplying of a better product at a more satisfac- tory price. Breeders of poultry for market pur- poses probably secure more of their act of :compromise. Or a part of the enlist, the son of Mr, C, Denby,. a food raigh`t consist of the flesh of ani- postman of Cobham, Surrey, has been mals unclean according to the Jewisli accepted for the army, ceremonial law (Lev. 11, 4-20), The men employed at Ashford 10. See your faces worse looking.-. (Kent) Railway Works have been Showing the effects of insufficient granted a rise of 72 cents per week nourishment. and 16 cents on piece work in lieu of 12. Prove thy servants - An easy a war bonus. way for Daniel to escape defiling him- It is stated that more pit ponies breeding blood Prom producers of the. pelf and at the same time commend ace to be withdrawn from the Man- highest quality stock than from fel. himself to the fairness of the eunuch. ohester coal mines. These ponies, low market poultrymen, who may be Pulse to eat, and water to drink -A many of which have not seen daylight more or less indifferent to the real vegetarian diet. Pulse: peas, beans, for two or three years, are being su- merit of their breeders. In many lentils. Ezekiel and Daniel, of the ten perseded by haulage ropes. cases men of wealth who fail to se thousand whom King Zebuchadnezzar An extraordinary epidemic of bur -cure just what they want, grow large carried off to Babylon, were the only glaries has broken out in the district quantities of chicken of the particular two young men to become prominent, of Atherton, near Manchester, sumer- type and quality that meets their re- ous houses having been entered and quirements. They find it essential to IL The Outcome of the Test valuables taken. call on the known breeders of quality (Verses 13-16, 19, 20) A return before the Metropolitan for stock to keep their flocks produc- Asylum Board recently shows that ing the type their household require - 20. He found them ten times better over 100,000 refugees have now been ments ask for, -A high tribute, and one not only dealt with by the board. If these careful discriminating peo- deserved, but easily obtained. In view of the possibility of raids ple have discovered that the breeder Magicians and enchanters -Belief by Zeppelins, Rahere's tomb in the can supply them - breeding males at in the occult was so strong that every Church of St. Batholomew the Great, $10 so as to give full value or better king of ancient times had his follow- Smithfield, is now protected by sand- there must be a reason or reasons ing of sorcerers and wizards. To -day bags. making these males worth the price the ruler of state covets men about During her visit to Eastbourne, in possibilities in useful qualities he him with clear minds born of good Lady French decorated Qrmr: Sergt. can transmit to his progeny. As one common sense. Only such can face Bond of the Middlesex Regiment, now travels through the country seeing difficulties and avoid calamity. The at the convalescent camp, with the the flocks of mongrel birds at many occult can play no part in matters of D.C.M. farms, the eye occasionally sees a modern statecraft, It has been decided to utilize the flock of uniform color, shape and size services of women as tram conductors that pronounces the birds at once to WANTS TO BE A SOLDIER. in Nottingham, and a trial is being be pure-bred stock, or the result of made with a limited number. selective breeding. Italian Brigand Petitions King for A further magnificent donation of One of the biggest factors that Release. $100,000 from the Lord Mayor of make the $10 breeding male so vain - Melbourne's Fund has brought the able is the fact that ,he comes from serving sentence of 30 years' penal funds of the National Committee for a source where blood lines have been servitude, has addressed a petition to Relief in Belgium to over $4,300,000. working in the same direction for the King of Italy asking to be allowed So numerous are the foxes in South some considerable time. The breeder to fight and die forahis country. The Beds and North Berththis season has found out the very greatest pains King received the brigand's request' that the famous Biggleswade pack of are required to produce the best re - harriers will hunt foxes this year in -i sults, and in consequence his stock among a number of State papers stead of hares. matures right, and as vigor and sta. brought to Verona to be laid before The National Egg Collection for the mina are absolutely necessary to de the King on his way to the Tyrolean wounded, of which H. M. Queen Alex-; anything, he keeps vitality before front. andra is patron, has to date collected, him always as the greatest essen- AIusolino expressed his grief that,and dispatched 7,000,000 eggs since! tial. Breeding continuously along his imprisonment prevents him from the movement started. these lines, culling always very close - wearing the King's uniform, and asks The farmers of Bucks have held ly, he is fixing only the best qualities permission to fight, not, however, as an enlisted volunteer, but on condition severs] successful jumble sales in aid, in his fleck. that if he remains alive through the of the British Farmers Red Cross When these qualities are desired by war, whatever deeds of valor he may Fund and a total altogether to accomplished, date 1 sompriceeoneand else, itisof it wealcannot worthbe tse. he of $116,300 has been secured. (, more have p he shall return to The death is announced of Mrs.' cured for less. the penitentiary and serve out his Paston Brown of Wimbledon, one of I If a man desires depth of keel, sentence. The Italtan law absolutely ,I the best known social reformers and l shortness of legs, width of back, prevents the acceptance of any such!pnblic workers in the county of Sur -;length of back, breast eat, great proposal ripe, egg capacity, vitality, ormany other i Windows were smashed and doors' desirable attribute or quality, he must VISITORS ON BATTLEFIELDS. ! blown out as the result of an explo- I took kito the aas who is producing r•odaucin tthe 1 sion in Lloyds Bank, Andover branch,, q y y Only Tourists Begin Practice That Threat -1 Escaping gas is said to have caused!. there can he be sure of getting any — ens to Continue. ; the, explosion. ! deftnite good. Outside of the securing I. adv Scott, the widow of the great i of a number of good birds to bring The stream of tourists, who will'- 1 in the desired qualities, perhaps no travel unceasingly over the battle-', explorer, is known as "DI's. Scott in P p the munition factory at Erath, where other is as immediate in results as in- fields for scores of years after thei hs in the electrical depart-troducing the $10 breeding male of European war is finished, has already I she works known breeding. obtains a . suitable - .4. ( w�-It permission can! � PRICES FOR CAT MEAT. now take a train from Paris to Meaux; THE MEN \'4'110 WIN. in the morning, drive in an open car- Hungarian Authorities Fix the Maxi siege all day over country which was, Usually Are Men of Great Physical mune Price. the scene of some very important 4 Strength. fighting nearly a year ago, and be' Three kronen per kilo of cats) back in his hotel in Paris for a late I It has been said that great men-; This is the official . maximum price supper. ! those capable of mental work beyond, fixed by the authorities of the district Hundreds of �voodeu crosses mark: the average are almost invariably - of Biharkenzteser, in Hungary, for the places where men fell and were ! men of great physical strength also: cats offered for consumption in the hastily buried. White crosses mark I Whether this be true or not, we find; public markets. Grimalkin thus has the graves of the French dead; black;innumerable instances in which the,' come into prominence W the great posts with a rectangular stamp on; theory is borne out in actual fact,war. The Budapest correspondent of them mark German dead. ! and Isere. axe 0 few actual and indis-, the Frankfurter Zeitung has tele - There are still shattered churches' putable examples: ;graphed the interesting news to his and houses which show the marks of ; Napoleon was capable of sitting a newspaper, as follows: - shrapnel and . machine -gut fire, and I horse sixteen hours at a stretch, and I "The official organ of the Hunger - some of the smaller bridges over the . was able to work for days without; len Butchers' Association announces IVfa ne are not vet replaced, One, rest. ! that in the district of Biharkenzte- roadside hostelry which was struck by 1 Gladstone was always muscular. At ser, where Italians in Hungary have a German shell has changed its name, eight years he chopped down an oak been interned since Italy entered the and now boasts a signboard inscribed four feet thick. !war, an enormous consumption of in French "The Shell Inn: Bismarck was a giant, He fought, cats takes place daily. The prices twenty-eight duels, receiving only; have risen and have mounted to enor- Wu Trade, once a scar, caused by the breaking of !mous sums. The local authorities \\ ur 1 rices in Drug his adversary's blade. He stood 6 have bean forced to act and have fixed If the average housewife wants to feet 2 inches. a maximum price which at the ora - know just where the tear in Europe Cromwell was a football player, I sent time is set at three kronen per hits her, let her go to the nearest fond of boisterous sports, )•Ie stood! kilo." drug store and ask for moth balls, nearly six feet in height, and hada Just think of a fine hassenpfeffer Or let her ask for citric acid, carbolic strong, compact body and well -knit of fat country cats! Or a filet of acid, alum, Epsom salts or a hundred frame. feline, a la Maltese! Goulash of cat - other drug staples, more or less coo- Robert Burns was a strong matt, j tails, smothered hi onions, or served mon. Also let the man who doesn't with a firm grip, gained at the plough ,cold in aspic might tempt the jaded want to give diamond solitaires for and flail. I paints of a resident of lliharkenzte gifts next Christmas watch out for sen. As the meat pie mins in "Pick- gifts perfumes, They will be a1- ! wick Papers" had it: -"11's the sea - passenger vessels, Except when let moat as expensive and perhaps as Evil In Suspicion.scum' as does it_ to the • Government on charters as I rare. To be suspicions is to make oneself -A q transports, passenger ships are snot .. �..,.. N-,.....- the Mend and intimate of. evil. It is' The Music Teacher -"Johnny is im- P particularly profitable, But the crag- The Fly in the Oini.mmtt• ten ally oneself with all the aril forces" Proving daily in his violin paying. Berated price for :Freighters, often far i m last n s id in the world, Through thinking so Joinntvrs mother (gratified)-- Is that exceeding the cost price of super-�" "At y la place," a a cook, I should love been very comfort- much of evil, through being constant- so 7 V4 a didn't know whether he was aimuated ships, is due to the expecte- ly on the 'watch for it, the suspicions i intpt'oving, m we were just getting able if the master hadn't been a t more used to it." ti Inge rofita I people make observations that are, t t ro crisp e . p P "Wh what difference rook, that times, seemingly amazing in acute- A petition which has been dnrawn up Y, eke 2" ness. But even here they do thein- for presentation to the Chapel -en -le- at the dinner' table I'm used selves 118010 by gaining twee and, Frith, Englund, Beat•d of Guardians, 1 more enslaved. Their loss niay be protesting agn.init a German woman to photograph to eci itc eninre they uttdo•stood by all of us by retleeting! being retained as an innate of tho were remould tt the krtrhen. on what they would gain if • their I 'Workhouse liter it had been pros tnituls had taken the direction of good posed to repatriate her, has received I1. is found that 100 male dogs go allyingthent to all the wholeseme [ the support of about 600 signatories mud as compared with 14 females• forces. in the district. begun in France. The traveller who, mens, on o g p, • The clean Sweep from the seas of 1 pl t h r ' German and Austrian vessels, aggro - Inn gating more than 4,000,000 tons, }oft" "Wh an unprecedented chance to rivals.- y Neutral countries, especially the Scandinavian countries, have had the advantage over Blighted and France, owing to theirr comparative immunity .from submarine attacks: