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The Brussels Post, 1916-6-29, Page 3'''''"'"es""'""'rerefreeslvses—e—ve- • ---- • ••••••1- b • •%, • 4016 Mrs. Julia Henshaw asen) e IT th1° not often is elected 4 at a woman earo.er Wallow of the adieu Rockies stick bound together in the center, WI Id efla0Wrg obyf crosswise, with a cork fixed on the top Mrs, Julia Han- d each stick. Shaw deserved ex - Corks also polish knives melendidlY. ceptional recogna Put the knife polish in a saucer, tion, Her book dampen, it and dip in the cork using it "Wild Flowers of as a rubber This method never the North Ameri- scratches the knives and soon bright- ,aInth Mar n btheianusg ens them fully oolored Tableclothe eut clown into small plates should be- trearclotlis ofheetts can become dust come a classic, sheets and shabby towels make good with the further dishcloths arli household cloths gen- advantage of be - orally Old stockings and vests make ing a popular good metal polishers They can also classic owing to be cut. up to line homemade quilts, thareranmeth arrangement, id t:, r ict1;,, Old newspapers polish glass and are a flowers are group - chops or gtalc in bottom of covered good eubstitute (rolled up tightly) for ed by colors, one baking dirh or casserole, sprinkle with firewood, a capital pad for stair ear- section being de- salt and pepper cover with loyal: pets and are of manifold uses in the voted to White, Green and Brown flowers, another Pink and Red flowers, a third Blue to Purple flowers, and a fourth Yellow to Orange. Mrs. Renshaw, in addi- tion to ber botani- cal studies is ate of the leading spirits in the Daughters of the Empire, and was seat last December by Sir Sam EU ghes as a Captain in the Canadian Army on a special MISSiOD to England and France connected with the distribution of Christmas gifts to the troops at the Front. Our tration shows the authoress in her mountain costume with her favorite pony' at Lake Louise in the Canadian Pacific Rockies. Royal Geograplea oat Soviety, but the explorations made in the Cam Selected Recipee. • Sardine Sandwiches,—If sardines are mashed to a paste with their own oil and a taste of lemon juice, they may be made into delicious node wches. This is much more enjoyable becaun they are easier to handle than the split fiele sandwiches. Strawberry Fluef.—One cupful tgrawberdies cut in halves, one cupful marshmallows cut in four pieces each, one cupful heavy cream 'whipped to stiff froth. --Fold in three tablespoon: fules sugar, one-half teaspoonfulmean- ila with fruit and marshmallows. Chill therm:m.111y and serve in dry glasses, Smothered Mutton Chops. —Put of sliced potatoes, Sprinkle with kitchen. flour, salt and pepper. \Repeat layers No fruit jar that has been stand- ee potaton, slicing onions in through ing for weeks is free from germs. Be - the layers if liked. Almost cover fore putting fruit in them they should with hat water anti bake one and one- .bo thoroughly sterilized by boiling in quarter or one and one-half hours. soda water. Uncover the last half hour to brown When marking linen handkerchiefs top. Veal or pork may be used the 'with hectelible ink, first starch the same way.handkerchiefs and iron them smooth. Parsnip Croquettes.—Season one 'Then you can mark them clearly with pint cooked and mashed parsnips with, ease. one-balf teaspoonful salt, one-eighth When making egg custard pies, al - teaspoonful pepper, one teaspoonful ways heat the milk to the boiling table sauce, two tablespoonfuls melted . point before mixing it with the eggs. butter and dash of cayenne. Add two If this rule is followed the under - beaten eggs and enough rolled cracker crust will always be criela crunthe to make stiff enough to shape; When. you have no one to hold the form into cones let stand one-lialf Yarn while you wind it, place two flat --- DIFFERENT KINDS OF FENCES. hour, dip ine:te beaten egg clluted with irons the proper distance apart, on one tablespoonful water, roll in fine the table, stretch the yarn to them crumb, and fry in deep.' hot fat. and wind * conveniently. Serve with tomato sauce. Lean meat has nourishing and re - Baked Spiced Ham. --Freshen two • building qualities in diet, but we pounds of ham, cut three inches thick, should not neglect fats in our foods. two hours in cold wateie if salty. The best and most Keener digested Drain, place in baking dish arid pour way to take fat is in the form of over it one-half cupful grape juice, olive oil, one cupful boiling water. Add two Be sure that the kitchen table is Moves and dpe-.inch stick of china. the proper height. If it is a little too mon: Cover and bake gently until low, or a little too highe the position tender, about one and one-half hours, in which you stone to accommodate Remove from liquid, add to liquid two ; Yourself to its height will cause your, tablespoonfuls chopped raisins, and heel( to ache. thicken with one-hailf tablespoonful Never put the sl-gai: from lemon arrowroot dissolved in a little cold peel into cakes. It is likely to make witer. them heavy. Save it for sweetening Fish Loaf.—One pound and a half milk puddings or custard, to either of of white fish, half cup of bread' which it is a great improvement. crumbs, two tablespoons butter, eluee- Food carelessly exposed invites quarters cup milk, two eggs, one tea- germs. spoon chopped parsley, three-quarters teaspoon of salt, one-fourth teaspoon It Makes a Difference. pepper, time drops onion and one tea- —To a milk pudding if you let it, spoon anchovy sauce. Boil fish, re- stand between cooking and serving, move shin and bone and ehoP. Mix for an helm on a rack in a warm place 1 with Mead crumbs, butter (melted), and well covered with a cloth. It, pearsley, seasonings eggs well beatenI makes it taste creamier. and milk. Turn into buttered mold. —To the shape of a boiled pudding if it stands for a minute or two be-, fore being turned out. It makes it' less liable to break. Casserole of Lamb.—Fry one onion --To anything containing baking in butter and dredge while frying with powder if it is put into the oven with flour. Have ready one pint of cold, lightning speed - after mixing, The cooked lamb, diced and free from fat, poedder begins to work as soon as it Add this to the cooking onion. When touches the moisture, and the quicker 1 well mixed and seasoned turn an into the cooking begins the lighter : the 1 casserole. Add one tablespoonful. puddiag or cake, batter to pan and two tablespoonfuls —To any cheese dish if grated stale ... flour; brown andelield enough water, cheese is used rather than sliced fresh, lamb broth or left over gravy mid no matter how thin the slices. It is water to make sauce for meat. Sea- more digestible and more delicate. thyme, one-fourth teaspoonful sweet —To the success of an omelet if a son with ono -fourth teaspoonful little fat i' melted in the pan until marjoram, one-half teaspoonful celery smoking, then poured out and the pan sale, and pepper and salt to suit. rubbed with soft paper before putting Slice two good-sized carrots over meat in then It makes the omelet cover and steam one hour. Decorate with shrimps and serve hot with Dutch sauce. If Proper Care Is Taken the Wire Fence Will Last indefinitely. There are many kinds of fences, but they may be divided roughly into four lcnds; (1) stone fences; (2) live fences or hedges; (3) wooden fences; and (4) wire fences. All these fences have their good and bad points, but there is a growing tendency with up- to-date farmers to go in for wire fences. Stone fences are of greatest use on hilly rough country where the stones are plentiful and it is difficult to drive in fence posts. Where the stones are large and heavy they do not need much repairing or ettendiug to, but if light small stonda 'are used the cattle or sheep very often break through. Live fences, or hedges are a eharac-' teristic featore of BritishI espeei- ally English farming. Nothing will beautify the landscape more than to have the fields divided by hedges, and it is these more than anything else that make the rural districts of the Old Country so attractive to Ameri- can visitors. For a variety of rea- sons, hedges, however, have found comparatively little favor with Can- adian and American farmers. The climate in America is mostly contin- ental, that is to say, there are me- tremes of heat and cold, and this is not favorable for the growth of the kinds- of trees and shrubs that make the best hedges. The chief fault with hedges is that they require alot of attention to keep up, and unless they are pruned and the weeds and grass that accumulate around them are mowed constantly they become a fertile breeding place for all kinds of ests Where timber is cheap, -wooden fences can be profitably used but the INTERNATIONAL LESSON JULY 2. increase in the price of good lumber makes them almost prohibitive except' in a few cases. The old zig-zag rail, but wherever finances permit it should fence served its purpose in is dant Lesson L—Paul At Thessalonica And be ripped out and a modern fence put; BERCEA.—Acts 17. 1-15. Care of Car Finish. Carelessness in washing and polish ing a car is responsible for a great many cars getting to look old and run down so soon. In washing your car be sure firet; to use plenty of water and not much pressure. Don't rub the mud and dirt off, but wash, it off with water. Thoroughly soften it and allow it ! to soak soft before trying to remove it at all. Do not allow anyone to rub fingers over a surface covered with 1 dirt as the small particles of !.1-ust will cut the finish. You should have two sets of pails,* sponges and chamois for washing. It is a good plan never to use the s,ame sponge or chamois on the body and running gears. Grease makes a smeary appearance on the body and should be kept off as. much as possible. Keep sponges and chamois clean and free from grit and dirt, Use a good body soap and lute warm water for the last wash for the body. If you can find a good body polish, et is good, but never use too much or put it on too heavy, be sure and rub it thoroughly and leave the body tree from it; or after a while yon will notice it malting a coating over the body that is hard to remove. It is a good plan to go to the man who sold you the eat and have him wash it up and show you how to care I for it, if convenient. The nice ap- pearance may be kept on a car for a year or two with proper care. Never allow mud to day on the body if possible to prevent.—R, A.. Brailey in Farm and Dairy. Don't Travel ou Deflated Tire, A tire agent says that many motor- ists give so little care to their tires that the Wilt intimation of their im- proper condition comes when a muf- fled sound or u jolt, caused by one of the wheels coming in contact with dis- the Imperial PhysfmaTechnical Insta. some hard object on the road, doses the fact that the rim is touch- tette, and the Health Institution of Bonn on food equivalents and food, ing the ground. new tube fitted and a sleeve put on "The envelope is then patched, a. substitutes. These are nee synonym.- Moteerithee ee cjausivtahlee ritto"o d has for the puree.* of increased str, ngth. eaAmie'oovdtilu" The driver then proceeds to the near- replaces. For example, margarine is est garage, where a new raing is ob-lan equivalent for butter. A "substi- tained, the damaged one being left tut" merely imitates the taste of , for reear. Nearly always it is feline; what it replaces, as saccharine does ithat the trecol is the only part of thelsogar, but it is valueless as food. totally de -1 But, in addition to these, there is casing that has not been tote Istroyed. The beads are found to be " an intermediate class of articles 'broken or torn away. The walls of vihich are called "war foods," in 1 the ' • score and scraped ! which genuine food is "stretched'" by side and out. The canvas is torn , adulterating it with a certain per - and frayed and has broken away from , tentage of substitutes. Prof. Neu - the rubber. The tire has lost its mann, of Bonn University, has some shape. entirely; its aeveral parts are interesting things to say about 1 number of foodstuffs. White bread, disintegrated. "The tube, replaced on the road, ; he says, has disappeared aleogether, which was perhaps new or nearly ; and its place has been taken by the new when the journey started, has . well-known le -bread. Among other been torn beyond all hope el repair,' kinds of bread which have arisen owe fend scraped and scored all over, some ing to the exigencies of the war the of the incisions being almost as deep , best known are "Cologne bread," 1as the thickness of the rubber itself. !"straw -flour bread," ad "blood "All this delay, tronhle and ex- i bread." "Cologne bread" is made of ;Dense is the direct result of travelling a mixture of maize, rice, and barley. on a deflated tire, whereas periodic "Straw -flour bread" contains from 15 inspection of the air pressure woula to 20 per cent, of powdered straw; it have entirely prevented the damage." is very moist, rather sour, leaves a !HOW GERMANS ARE STRETCHING FOOD RASPBERRY LEAVES AND THYME SUBSTITUTES FOR TEA. "War Butter" Is Made by Adding Flour, Milk, and Eggs to Ordinary -Butter. We are indebted to the Berliner Tageblatt for much curious informa- tion gathered from learned authori- ties at the Ministry of the Interior, bitter taste in the mouth, contains 1 much waste matter often produces erous and too universal to be killed, irritation or inflammation of the THESUNDAY SCHOOL afri. Troubled—As elsewhere (for e , bowels, and is in generzil not to be in its place. At the resent time when a new I Golden Text, Acts 5. 21 x- recommended. "Blood bread" is ob- ample, John 14.1), this word is much Minesi by mixing 20 litres of fresh too weak a rendering., iblood, 10 litres of water, and some 9. Tho actual accused being out c' I . salt with 1.20 pounds of rye -meal and reach, they could only exact bail, pre- 15 per cent. of potato starch meal, sumably for their being sent away. mixed, with the addition of yeast and 10. Bercea--Some forty miles leaven. Dr. Neumann describes the southwest. result as tough and leathery to cut, 11. Readiness—A strong word, of a "neutral" taste, and difficult to suggesting eager attention. assimilate in digestion. 12. .-us influential position of th ladies of the upper class is character- "Stretched" Foods. in* of ten it is a wire fence. There ginal verb suggests travel along the population the trend of public opinion tinctly suggests that among the Gresk which the process of "stretching" is fence is being put up in nine cases . Vern L Passed-through—The ori- Butter is one of the articles to ' via Egnatia. Apollonia was about depended largely on them. As so applied. After being stretched it is are many reasons for this. First of great ROM= road from the west, the kinds. With proper care 11 will last southwest of Amphipolis, which was often happenet they were more vie ously disposed toward religion than is done by mixing butter with flour, milk, and yolk of eggs. This is nour- all, a wire fence is a good deal cheap- called "war butter." The stretching er to put up than any of the other halfway to Thessolonica, thirty miles sheep -proof. 1 Thenalonica, still called Salonika • the men. 14. Throughout this narrative we - ishing enough, but it does not "keep." Other mixtures of starch, milk and a lifetime, and it is hog -proof and 'near the mouth of the Strymon River.1 Although a wire fence 0000 it is put is,: see the effect of the MTo stay aster's com of course, a very familiar place to- Ix"- (Matt. ' ' d mashed potato contain so very small a every six months or every year at : synagogue. Verse 10 shows how, face the danger would have been fool- hardy: Paul could do more for the be recommended even for frying pota- toes. With regard to fruit, the ex - up needs practically no attention, it owe y It seems to have been the only proportion of fat that they can hardly should be made a rule to go round . one of the three lilacs to possess a even after such terrible danger, Paul ,istic of Macedonia. Thie verse dis- soine definite thne and tighten up the gospel at Berma by leaving for ming- cellent harvest of last year favored to the synagogue. He must at any principle of going first er field and so saving his life. the production of enormous quantities taken up in making the repairs, and by loyalty to tha Old Testament, Such gospel sea—At a place called Dium, probably.e 15. Paul's decision to remain at to give mit, and "stretched" or "war wires and do any other little repairs ' clung to leis necessary. If this is done regulerly, a day in most cases will be all the thne cost find men prepared for theof jam. But the stocks are beginning be twice as useful.—Canadian Coin- prophecy, would be mature and zeal-1Timothy had quickly responded to ; Athens alone for a time is referred to in I. Thess. 3. L but this implies that the "stretching" is done by adding beetroot, carrot, and turnip. An the fence will last twice as long and when convince i that jesos fulfilled jam" is taking its place. In this case tryman. cu leade f r the infant ch h Paul's reguest, Silas presumably stay- , : • "equivalent" which had a great vogue HOW TO OPERATE THE GASOLINE 1,11 Told by C. W. Jukes, of the Ontario .Agricultural College. INE s rs o 1 an enuren. i 3. "The Messiah must suffer" was * ing on at Bercea, unless the "we' in . for a time was a curious mixture of i that passage is to be referred to Paul the one great doctrine which divided ; mashed potato, ground herrings, and and Silas, instead of to Paul alone, I the Jews instantly into two camps.' various spices, but it was finally pro - I which is perhaps more probable. The royal Son of David was the na- hibited as being dangerous to health. a, P uPs craving for companionship is tional ideal, and thereeognition of In. -e- For whipped cream, so beloved by strongly marked throughout; ther 53 in such a connection was very bit- ter German women, a "substitute" has p, s a , hi n g this I was something in his temperament, y r to the jews. In been found consisting of sugar, water, en,,his circumstances (of health, fovea doctrine the disciples were only vanilla extract, and gelatine—a most stance), that made solitude pecu ar- forcing the Lord's own "must" (Luke,: hard to bear. deceptive thing that cannot "take in" [No. 1.3 fumes get mixed with a certain pro- 24. 26). Psa. 16 was mainly in mind 1 IY a sale& girl. To the farmer who owns a gasoline portion of air that it becomes a pow- ' as the proof of the resurrection. ItI Of the numerous plants either ai- m casserole, pour in gravy, and cook less likely to stick. engine, and never has had the time or erful explosive, and this is:the sauce LEECHES ARE "UP." one and one.a.sief hews, Add was a true application. how could Gail I ready used as equivalents for tea or ;can drained peas, cook fifteen minutes tale —To alI batters if they are let ppoatunity to make mach of a study of power in the gasoline engine, "allow his Beloved One to see core; — strongly recommended, dried rasp - longer, arid serve. stand for ae. least an hour between °of the troubles and trials of his will- Assuming that the piston is' right euption 7 An we 1 inig t tie epos- ' " d 1 ' h 1 • 'They Are Expensive to Buy Just Now, .. berry leaves and thyme are far away Potato Salad.—Cold meats and.po- Mixing and cooking. It makes 11 ing If there is to be stifely beat- 7 ing helper, we hope to give some in- up to, the eylindei head when the fly leech, v._ of the minds its readers that in view of the the prime favorites. "Germania" ree fo motion gained from practical ex- wheel of the engine is revolved, the tles apply that first to the Beloved,1 and through him to ail whom God 1TheBecause of the War. tato salad make a typically deheates- en evhite of 'egg in the mixture, perience that may enable him the piston is drawn outward and acting loves.scarcity of tea there are loony "na- sen dinner, and nothing tastes better thougb, it MUSt TIAT: be added until the batter to' understand the Afflictions of like the piston of a pump, drawsair I worm tribe, is both scarce and dear. , last moment before cooking. 4 Th lar e followine of proselY- TI : ao the vastl ' t ve teas ve c , thoughlucking le " hi h the on a very hot day. Real German potato' salad is delicious, here is the recipe; Cut boiled potatoes into slend- er slicee arid mix with tbern two raw onions, minced, and a tablesoponful of chopped parsley. Season with salt ancl pepper to taste, and tevo tab)e- spoonfuls..ef salad oil mixed with a deissert spoonful of vinegar. Toss Lord Newton, Under-Secretary Lor and satisfactory service , the clearance chembee in the cylinder I 1 t' • el th Id d 1 t bl a 1 ft and turn, and put into the salad boevl. Foreign Affairs, hos no quarrel with .1that it depends on the taste of the In- his of t ie gospe , which s nee e nee a arge ee ac eft .10 was , his almost human servantt for in across the surface of, or through the fes it to be noticed everywhere. They increased demand for them, but more alkaloid theme, are very agreeable many ways the gasoline engine bas gasoline in the carborator. The air drinks. Among these are the young carries the gasoline with it partly in were of -necessity people who greatly, to the fact that in the pre-war days human tendencies—unless it is fed it hungered after a Living God., for the , nearly all the best medical leeches dried and chopped leaves of the cannot tend will not work unless its form of a mist into the cylinder. them small encoura smut. ' a f . m Hamburg, and that source health receives the careful atten- Gasoline is vaporized and the mixture J strawberry, blackberry, bilberry, of, air and gas forms the charge which it was a very secondary place -the' , , of supply is now, of course, entirely mavibbeery, cranberry, black currant, British Official Shows Germans Have tion oe its master and ills or accidents proselyte had to fill. Being without closer.... ' holly, cherry, birch, elm, willow, wild Lost Vaet Territory. to which gasoline engines are subject stroke compressest this mixture in the JCIVS' great hindrance, their raciali , Turkey also used to send out occa- trose, blackthorn, and mountain ash. operates the engine. The return • tnedied it is unable to give ffeicient ,a1 clattracted bythe universal-' ' 1 ' 0. i Tho announcement naively states Set in the ice for two hours. Jus e Chancellor von Bethmann-Holleveg In doing this we than treat the head or that part of the cylinder far -I Jew to , naturallyhighly esteemed by the medical feta, ts Si r ail/ideal whieh leaves he prefers. id • in three short separate arti- then removed :from the fly wheels. , , "ealously " they 'a - 1 the • "WAR MAP" FAVORS ALLIES. before serving stir into the salad ,a foe the latter's suggestion, recenly half cupful of mayonnaise and pour mado in an interview, that the war cies, intimately connected, because one the met e the' dressing over the salad., map should be used as thee basis for naturally follows the other. in this one, first of the series, let us then clis- The mayonnaise may be omitted with peace. no difference in the quality of the dressing, for th 1 of The mixture cannot escape because • P ovon . • the valves are closed and held there . world. Chief women -Compare verse by the pressure of the gas against 12. In Macedonia women had a far them, and it is squeezed info a small better social position than in Greece, , volume, Just as the piston almost 1 l'' ' . • reaches the end of its inward stroke 6. Jason—A well-known name in an electric spark., caused by the auto- Greek mythology ream the Thessaltan . . "/ am 'Muth surprised at the Ger- man Chancellor," said Baron Newton fiest become familiav with—the, pnioo- is "for on MY WM' map founa elples of operation. Perhaps the • ' t in of is to have that Which cub operator must tornity Naturally, now, this supply1 Gypsum and Sawdust Flour. has also ceased. tura. At two years of age he does The leech is a slow-growing ern- I The municipality of Charlotteoburg has informed the Lokal Anzeiger that not overawe more than au bah iii1most "reprehensible" methods are be - length, and it takes front three to ing practised for adulterating 101 - foods. m en' foods, and gives an instance How to Do Housework More Easil '1 five years before he is fit for attee- I ' ' It Y. 1 two Pointe which 1 e mulct judge ' of this in a prosecution they have be - thorough ktowledoe sad under- male breaking of the current from hero JUSM1 (see William Morris s tell- talon, as a fully qualified medicinal To accumulate a lot of old rubbish, woulei bo highly distasteful to the Ger_ a igun against a number of traders in standing of Met what to do to start the cella, lA PrOdUCCel right in the ing of his steer). But sometimes bloodsucker. that town. It seems that these trade up the cupboaeds, is a thing d "I theii • t 1 - m, 00 n Is p a e, m y NI, M. may the -engine, and why it is donei. So midst of thM highly -compressed gas, ; Jews named Joshua (Jesus) used thie True, there is the British leech, still ; letting it lie emdisturbed and Minima moue. ees have beeo in the habit of powdea- :housewife win'approve, _ But tho wda shows that in Alsace,' Turkey, Togo- many engine operators know what to The result is, e forceful explosion, 1 les a Gentile substitute, and this /ono to be found in fair abundance in and , may have been a case. wed In' ing the top crust of their bread with do all right, because they have been and the pis•Lon is shot outward at ter.. around the Norfolk Breathe taught: us to make instant Ilse of Africa and Galicia, the armies of the told rind shown by the expert at the rifle speeel, due to the rapid axiom- i 6. Rulene of the city—Th Greek pert; of Kent, Surrey and &mem "%weed henna" which is simply !tools; : ggouud sawdust and with 41enzine has made us all more thrifty and lend, the "Kama -runs, Southwest things we used to throw aWay--.not to allice are oecnvying 616,000 square thne of installation, belt it wasidt ex- sion of the -gases ignited by the spark. ,politarch is a title uhnost exclusi,eily, But he is practically union from the plained to them why euth a thing was It /creches the cad of its etrotte, and . connected with Thesealonica, several' doctor's point of view, and other forms of plader of Paris." hoard them up, but to turn thein to miles of Teo emic tent oey, of a i ofwhose insciiations s ion 11. Turn-: Pure Air Blue. This stuff until lately has been sold s account as soon ns possible, meet six times as muck as the arm - wrong they haven't; the elightest idea bon rod to the crank shaft and fly eel . . . upeicle down --A colloquial 1 done. Therefove, when anything goes the impulse, transmitted by the pis - although in some cane it 18 probeblo in. shops all over greater Berlin, and. 1 wnere to start to look for the muse wheel carries the piston back Etgain, , Verb, Wited IV Paul in Gal. 5, 12, and; Pure air is blue, because, as New- ' '' Old lace curtains, too ragged to use les of the Central powere; are occupy- . that bakers nee onawrere of the in - make fleet -tete window poliellers. Cut ing in territory of the allies. rotund to travel* fraying. shows the sea and the Alps upon it, . valve which is mechanically opened, Greek; it is characteristic of the New: fleet blue nye, When the slty is not thev have known all about it The. 6 culpable, and in far too many cases 1 .1 . , 1 and elle 1500110 outward steolee draws Testament freedom from arilfietality.! perfectly pure the atmosphere ia -. .. • .- - ' chamois leather, . "The late Rear Adnnral Mahal, emintity,, rIveee. , Odd bits of old velvet polish furni- of which 0n1Y nn exignus tare, silver and plata as well as 1 observe, ate German. Gasobnc, as n iquu , is 'my vo a.municipality in its note snys that the Small seraps of nen should never made it plain in his books that com- b() thrown ewer. Collect them in is mend of the ;lea 10 war times has u jar, add water and stand ler iii oven permanent effect, while command of until emir is melted. On washing day the land has en effect width aumifest- tilt jar is a welcome friend, Soap- ly is trnrIAI:"Y''' suds are 0.. good fortilizors fin cab- * bagee and.othee vegetable:a ; Nutehells, drirri 0renn 1,300,1 and Him—"I cloria know how to tell you with nntill coal, foe fires. Capietil lire, Itil ----°(:, about theta -I'll tare it' as it comes, how I love you.' . Ilar_aationte worry burnt meta ends are thieful, mix 1 lighim mil, bo made, from twn thin ',oat you wane to get nerveue about is how' to telt napa about it" tl 't dt tem in o squaree an ac the edges "In the sewn p a a ce my war map !of 'the trouble, and an eXpeneivedlelay This time it forces the bornt gnses out in vernacular document. but appnr-1 ton tons els, the molecules of the air , is fortheinning before an expert ax- of the mdinder through the exhauet ently beneath the dignity o.f classical have the thickness necessary to re- g redients ill this flour their ignorance in a fresh charge of gas, the next in- The Woeld, as in Luke 2, 1, 10 term , lilendeal with perceptible vapors, and tile, that is, in the peceence of air it numerous complaints which have tweakiees1 ;tirtioelecerticlodmilpilemsaseetisonits, riogpioadttieedri 1...tvoorrithcwRasomhtailn.dclyinipoilio'eu;mthe test of the au. diffused light is mixed with a will cosily mod -mate intoveagnedi emonix. large proportion of white. reached them of execrable flour show ton open 7. Another king --These :ft.sThi aro • reviving the city that emit the MaeterMeerschaum.i and then a match stenek, an ceplosion Made engine. because it takes foar to the crest (Luke 02. 21, If the ein-1 Meerschaum, out of which pipes, . of on intense heat would mem- that strokes of the piston to perform tae pire had reallectl•the riealty 1? this' cigar and cigarStrategy ette holders are cut, would prebaNy destroy the budding, complete cycle of operatiolis neees. , 'other enmeror" as soon ss the lea's is a mineral found in irregularly Mrs, Fdtee-leou always have made due to the moot teem eke easolinc Far:v to PrOcincc 000 explosion, Olds did, Chriellanity might 11.,01 hes to rounded lumpe • scattered thdough wonderful success in getting people to coenbining with the eb. reel ereating type, for various reasone, SOCUIS to quencher in blood berme P. t,:t;t more ib ift material washed down -from 00100 to your parties, en exceedilitelY emeddleilde mixture, 10' preferable to the two-eYele elision' than ti Coo sect. Bel Peeedleree mouneains, The largest deposit of Mrs. Wye. ---Oh 1 always tell the (hemline in itself le not more danger -1 for ordinarr farm uso.—Caliadimi deferred the War 1, t V. CCU 111: to, em- :1 ie in the gains ot Eskishelle, Asia, men that it's not to be a dress up af- 0 theli cosi oil. it is (oily When its Cu enare trvreI piree mita thurch vat; too num e ch. Mnor. ( i fair, and the W0111.01 that it is. all over again. This is called a fourestrolte, or four - thinitig gasoline were exposed to the itis In a email room for some time, that this disgraeeful traffic has been widespread.