Ontario Community Newspapers

Whitby Chronicle, 5 Aug 1909, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

-NOTE~S AND COMMIENTS1 ethw t ae enterim into. the mnodern formula for sueceas and the question cf methosi andiVays ansi mean. t Ssaving lu open Vo discus- sion. 1f "keeping" every possible pie-ce et money coming into one> s possession may ho misenliness, there must be some phase c! savixig that la reprehensible. I lu one of thse concomitants o! business that a certan element o! isk is involved. That business man who refures to a.cept the gage ne longer classes with the. modern man o! business. t..ompet:on for entranc Vo buai. ness opportunitie5 is sharp enough to make risk inevitable in the ven- ture. WbaV, t.ben, is possible for thbe young man who bas just cnough tW frighten bini1 -*rhe young man who through the bard proceRsaof saving succeeds in acquiring money beyond bis yoars and experience o! lîfe, is more handic..pped by it t-ban bencfited. Vcnt uresomnenesa l'y na- ture belungs to you Lb. h. is the im- pulse which, exercised and modîfied~ and dîrected l'y experience, tenîds txo deveiop indîvîduaity and char- actet In aIl men it bas bern re marked that posse>s>îon o! weaith h&8 a tendcncy t-o inspire conscrvat- iispi. The rich radical is aimoat un- known. If possession in t-bis matter a.ffects men o! aiready ripcned age a.nd experience, l'ow mnuch more influence must wc expect o! it upon t.he yung mal, precoclus bcyond bis yers 1 Moi st mnen grown Vo maturity and looking 'ack on thein boybood and early manhuod are agrees t-bat t-beyN "didn't make t-be most o! their op- jxrtuniti.i-" O! course tbey djdn't-, beîng normai. They t-ook occasion to learn t-be lesson o! foui- ishness whIlîe youing andi wben ixi a business sense it cost tho ieaet. On t-be t-ber hand observation bas show n scores o! young men, obsess- ed l'y thue dosire te save, "makii this most,' o! their youth, with the rffluit t-bat tb-ey never experiencesi ti-t- yout-b which nature intende-d andi which ini the endi ieft them t-id andi fossils caricatures o! mcxi. That capacit-y for savi-ig, even for a cer- tain fixesi purpese, is sometbing to l'e inculcate.d in iie normal boy l'y the slow procesa o! discipline. To save on the widc, general princîpie that some day bis savings îmay l'eL necesaary, la a lesson that the young maxi bimiscif fin)l s bard te lear)., Tisat normnal 1OuUg inan, 4mï andi optirmîsticiî bis youtis, id. XV isard te anticipate a "nainy day.>' 1 Te the extent tisat it is fonced uipont bum, ho must sacrifice youthib ld. '1 Can you imagine a neighbonhooc of boyis, achooles i t caneful savýing o! eveny penny fanding it. way te %bem, baving social relations in Vthe jense that youth seeku theni1 It IV Impossible. Howsvcr sociability may l'e possible ansong normi chilsiren without thse ne-cesait>' o! a penny te spensi, iV is a siarfesi, distonted, unreal thing when amoug tlieinthe prinoipîs' ôf1paiseriness la tise nule. It requires a aouad, rip- enosi jusigment in a man Vo decÎde when andi viere- andi how muoh to lave, even alter thse necesst>' for saving bomethiu3 ha. been force-s sipon hlm. For in the' hast anahysia tise vhole principle o! aasving in modern lite -4s a terce measure, growing out of! mm selshneas. " Can I attend tua? " is one o! the. commonest e! ail pensonai inquisii- iens ansi at te aime ime oee-of thse bandeat o! aIl questions te anawen wiseiy. "«Wasting at the apigot ansi sving at the bung>' la one o! the. old, oldsismille- whieh approxmmates thbe meut et thse whoWe question o! saving. Each man inuat a.k iimseif iow much and when andi ansi where b. Ïaal save. But via- dom and expenlenoe inust dictate thse satisfactory anaver. BULL FIORTERS SUFFER lspanixh Besson Rai Bees Va*ua- Il Diaatreua, F rom the commêaeementi et Vhs ourrent bull-figbt season, Apil It last-, tu tthe pretent tuino, Ove bull- figiteru bave been killei and oee hundresi and elsven qaert'otaly - juresi in Spai. Tises. unpreede-sted figures ha", anoused ihoated discussion ini ma"> ne-w-paSea, thse opinion 6eu *- pressesi that tb. admision ot ~ouh and inexpenionesi pertflI*1'I - the arguaiala laïgely te bisis fie thse f requency ofut accidenta. Ititlt usbLd thet IJua >»e# anediesi b>' Vie e.tabliahusent iot ý achool of bull-Ogthters4 buwé argue- ilus to*g4 t Ïat-eV'- â mot Co.k aed msa"sio*mk a BozàitA, Macih.qui4 'd, have lein a*aong the TItsOses I inte SrwC*s becoaing morlor5tWoe bulI4ùglt.rsleu.S deratood i4U - turouo e»M, UMkT j,' The Mea.ning of ,"-The -Bhadow of Book" Pointed Ont. As the shadow o! a great rock in a weany land.-Isaiah xxxii. 2. Tii. mtaphor expnessed in theze words wau very vivisi Vo tise dwe.,, lers in Palestine. The sun duriag th. dry season blazes 'cown day after day unc>asingiy without a clousi te veil its brigbtnesa. Ve-ge- tation witbens andsi prings ansi sîireams go dry. Traveleris puais aiong iistiessly in tIse parching beat. Yet, as in ail tropical countries, the heat is net oppressive in tise- shade, eut o! the direct raya o! the. sun. Surh a shade- may be founsi in the ahad.ow o! tise great rock," w hich in mountainous sections juta out from tira. to ime frein the sur- rounding barrennesa. Sucb grnati rocks are always most welcome Vo t-ho traveller. la the long sisadows cast by them then. is refreshinent ands reat. O!t-en A SPR1NG 0F PUREST WATEIR giushes f rom the rock. Vegetation to-urisbea in Vhs'rock's sbadow. 'here us safety, too, la the. cavenu ' f tho- rock againat the. susiden at- tack o! maraudera. So Davidi sang "Tbou are my rock andi my bidiu,; place" Safety, refrosisment ansi irgpirat-iun are founs in"latbe saa dow of a great- rock in a weary la nd. " An honorable man in business, in 1-l1tics, in social life, la a great. i(cck in the circle in wbich ho n-oves, affording refuge, encourage. mîent- and inspiration. A man e! 1t nor in business whose word t-s as g,>od as biis bond, who scorns triik- vry, who gives goosi measune, wh îsa sýervice is honeat, wbose work is tir to standard, in sucb a rock. The inêueace o! uis character jr fot confrned merely te those wb'o corne in contact with hlm. Tbe shadow o! bis infuence reaches o muultitudes whom h. coca noV know n-bo observe hum, take notice o! hi;1 îîîtegrity and uprigbtness andi kxow tbereby that bonor la noV yet 'Iead among men and are encouragosi in t-hein own place ands phero twoimi- t-aVe bis pxample. [ME S5 S. LESSON INTERNATIONAL LESSON, AUGUST 8. Le-son VI. Pauls JaIstructions te the Thessalnians. Golden Toit, I TIes. ~ ~ I. pbCaractenistie e! thse Firat Episile o the Tissalonians.-Note tise facts in "Tise Lesson in Its I.Review tise circum-i ttanot--io! tise Tbesaonian eburob as giien la Acta 17. Be-e Le-amen 111. o! t-bis, Quarter. Three rais- sionaries basi coinethon. frein Phulllppi, twe of tisem, tom ansi bnuised l'y terrible flagellation &t Pisilippi, e-merging f rom t-be 'owest dungeu(n o! a prison, their visole aspect bespeaking "«tbeir poverty>, thein wutfeningu, their carthi>' in- signifie anc.. A famine, says Fanrai, .wasi ragiag ln thse Roman empire, ansi the comaienet neceasaies of life' bas rime-n te six Limes tlieir prpnvalue." TIse pool' per- seot-iwanclerers supportesi Viçm- selves ly weaving black gpatte haîr into Vent cIoth. lier'.1 tIey preaciesia te-w veeki, feuadesi & churcb, andi ver'.drives ave>' by persecutien. 1 2. Paul longesitôvo nit tsem &gain, andi made tires' vain at- tempta to do se, ftemn Bere-ra, treis Atbe-ns, froinCoilth- li eti ths'in neesi o! traing ansi et mors kuowiesige of the truts, cf cointort, e! guidance. 3. Tùnethv bai juist coma bac.l f rom Tisessaonica, ansi lai broughi a report conccmning tIse church, <lviii; a favgrablc aceouixt in #on- crai. But two tacts ver ma&s knovn by 1dm. on. vas shat th"e- were suffe-ring severe perseutloas fi-ens oth Je'.a and Grntilles; the other thât they weres' Scura«e andi troubesib>' Vhe death of some lie-fore tihe second COuSin et thei Lord Je-ai. 4. The Eplat4e la yve r u"isn anwxortre.ye, b iso ai*1fe oofao naadZof e U. ita el falberly spirit brestbi n e~3w a lett*r col entS!>. wnto . a chaut foue4ed b>' Psit'lesu tiiae a s Matun'y o tkhinfant ebyarc-b vibes w. comporei# viii the. Ïios SucIs, ikewîae,,ia tiheinfluence -et -, noble-WoÏnan in thse social lita of' tIse-"*yin thse midat cf tI.he ea dal i cf hyetime, surroand<ed l'y the- 'malijeous Çossip of a commu 'iity, fer gossîp la Uauaily malicicui anti hau littIe connection witb tha truth. Sncb a woman puts thse viciôus tr silence, the scaiidal-mongers Vo shame ansi re-n.ws aur faitIs -n Vh3 irnate purity cf womnanhood. Rer influience reaches fan beons thse circle o! ber acquaintance. LIse ls ai. a "IGREAT ROCK IN A WEARY LAND. " The. great namnes li Istony view- cd. f romu ths point e! view are great rocks o! safety, refreshmnt andi inspiration in a toilixig, struggiing world. Serene and immovable, like giant peaks, they live their lives li à bigher atmosphere, li Lbe midat -of petty, sîei!-t;eking, meaxi, ambi- tioua andi cnînging selfisbness o! their day. lui their pnesence moral dstinctioxis, wbich in the- hazy at- niosphere la wbicb meut o! us live hecome obscure ansi bluntesi, grow dlean ansi plain. The grace o! Gosi cari -make us rocks o! influence i0 the inidat o! circles in which we live. Consider St. Peter, Lthe "manri o!rock," whose name Simon waa changesi te -Peter (wbich 10nVIse Greek meaxus rock). Originally vaciliating, un- stable andi impulsive ini disposi- ion, Christ aaw li hlm qualities t-bat were noble ansi rocklike and riames i hm what thr-ough bis grace ho would become, Peter, the "man ( rock.'> Se witb ail o! us. W. can overcome faults ansi faiiings in oun ives; there cao l'e developesi in use new graces ans i vrt-ues un- k.nown Vo us, se that standing four square ansi immovable i the midst cf! the untoward infl;uences o! this world, we, toe, may l'e rocks o! re- fuge, encouragement and inspira- tion, casting a sba.dow o! blessesi influence upon multitudes ln this weany world. REV. DE WITT L. PELTON. The same ia true o! h! e. Eveny young person should know definite- iy and decidedly where be wanta te go, what he wants te become, wbat is bis ideai. 23. And the very Gcd o! peace. Betten as &iV., "the God e! peace bimseif," the God who bnings peace-peace with himse.lf, thnougb sini; forgiven, and natures ln han- mony with bis; peace in the. sou!, peace of or nacience, the. peace. o! 'trust iii (l eur Fathen; peaee o! righteousnesà, for it la only ýwben nigbteousness is "as the. waves cf the sea" that "«peace ma flow like a ri ver" ; peaco with nature and providence; peace with our fe!iow- men. Sanctify you. Make you holy, pure, f ree f rom sin and im- perfection, f rom eveny taint of e-vil. Wbolly. Unte completenens, Vo fuil perfection, in aegtee and i n kind! Tii! we ail come in the unity of the fu.ith, and of thse knowledge ot tb. Son of Gosi, unto a perfect man, unto the measure o! thbe stature cf thse fulnesu et Christ: -. . andi grow up inte hîm in ail things, wbicb is tIshe as, even rChrist (Epb. 4:-13, 15). r Whole spirit andsi sul andi bodly. 7Everyp art of your nature,'- the - pWnttIMa allies us te God, the s kiZhest moral nature. Ansi - soui. rOur re-ai selves, our immaterial wnature, ineluding ail the fa.eulties ot y ur being. Andi boddy. Tb*. home et tse seul, which shoÏuld ble aé purt a sa temnpleetthe llely boît. Ns eon. in premerved biamoe., iLe-, awithout spot or iwperfe<ctior o twhkh on.eamlie blaesi. Ne -0» elI perfect till hie body ia under yer' teet control of hit moral- andi ma- tai nature, a peret in4rumeIit 01 kthe. spirît. tIntoe tii osnin <3 r.ek "ii (or at) thse coming" o0 1, ur Lord Jean.Christ. As.in xtatthew es, that yen May lie *'=00 tLoe. on lit i nght hansi, beIoulins y te. h"a7n a P&et lu hi$ everlastins ,kfr&gdoiu t agbteuaueaand love. ( DRANI U Fi#r$ PA8T IN Y4GLAND. T~hé OId Leather Drnklng Vemsel - "Black Jack9, REmembled a Bout. -t *Vla reeorded that certain worthy F'renchmen, who visited England in "ii suite of Hennietta Maria., thse Queen o! Charles IL., returnesi Vo tàeir homes witb Vthe travelle>r's tle! that the Englisb habitually '<drank eut o! thoîr boots." .Certainiy the. olsi leather drink- ing vosel known as Vthe black jack eassome c9nsiderable reseni- blance Vo a boot. Indeed, an ex- ample in existence in thie present day is tradit-ionally saisi te have be-en madle f nom a boot wonn at the batt!e çof Marston Moor. The jack. in question bears tIse !ollow- ing inscription:, "Tiie gift o! George Earteram te Abigail, 1683."1 OLD-FASIIIONED HOMES. Thene are aVili some good oid- faahîoned homes where home- bnewed aie us served in these curi- oua relics o! the past. At Stone- leigh b A'ey, at Castie Ashl'y, and at severai bistoric houses of Vhe .Midlands they are yet to e metni with-and drunk eut of. At Chelsea hoapitai the vetiran iseroe aIse use smail jacka fnom which te refresh tbem. Whetber or not desirable trom a sanitary or epicurean point of vîe'w, the. black jack bias certainly intenesting aspects for the anti- quany. Many specimens are indeec handsome, siiver-mounted orna- ie.nts, decorated witb -the an:E a.nd menegralna o! the owner, and evidently articles o! importance ti l'e set before an honored gue-st and migbtiîy proud, no clou bt, war' their proprieters -o! such posses 81008. Whether we may stili quaff._ouj draft o! "'spicy nut-brewn aie.' pnovided we l'e visitons at Powers court Castle-from tIse very jacl wbich Oli'ver Cromwell used, mai bo a debatable matter, but 1V i quite possible that the great leathe, drinking vessel presenvesi ther4 formerly belongcd Vo that import ant persenage. 1V- beara the inscription, "Olive Cnomwell, 1653, lord' protectoro England, Scotiand andi Ireiand.' la addition, a la decerated wlt' the arma o! the commonwealth, an is heaviiy m-ointed lin silver, aný stands 20 inchea in height. Som years age a specimen very simila was disposed o! at C'hriatie's fetcl: ing $180. I8TH CENTURY JACK. At South Kensington is a goc specimen of the îSVb centq-ury jaci whlcb ut wihIll'be een, -is maAt 1f aetîÈtireda.- &«"E; -the' body - aii tbandle are concerned, f nom cm piece cf leatben, 'shilat the, bette: and rim are sewn on. 1 It us decorated in colon with tw -crest s and the iseimet ef a knigl tor l-arenet, ansi may poaaibly ha-N .once been in the possession o! & 1Johin Sylvester Smitb, a Yorksbii PBaronet, who married, in 176 r Il s Bui tii mm , Wb* "«IMW Tl ÏIGRTING DUEL$ FOR FUI Hiave Fiou,'uled a*t Certain ut man Unlvermitie-s. SometIsing '1k. consternation b be e au" in luGermais edwmUti circlea - by the. conviction chargeae! duetling 0o! Ove at-meni Who have been Sentenesi to, inca oeratiou n trts- or unnuniheresl ye-ar. t "<menaur,"e or student's duel, i Dqusished at certaka univeraitîo notaisl'At Heidlberg, wbs're- oritinated. Bub no thie lab tus» determWèetUs" it #haltlies presse-s, ansi ha. isuesieiders iV viii be veil tor- huan mueeda, tui bmom re b s cuatoui à il imposible t.con.. of. 'The. youmegmnare racticu =onolIed tae0», tvith -oei tier, ansi-for mneïsrthl>'- ret exoepVte absow tbier mLLe. of exceednt 1:lixbtsei a",' alis PS* and in m>reidherasby a leige tract of land for pnac- sddig ehaItetupfu of Creîa » tic al démonitration. -More recent- betten Vith 8au egwhlp., Creau oetE AUNU I y ah. hagtakoz a & feah step oy temate in oe o e @t ti* mme Black Qoês-In a nndeins bl»k av.di ng -en"ftii. larg faeina où are*liea4.,parWate,the latter>»be oli 4fU&m"4 dyixiznff in j'Ouly afacto fau acre, othera, ~hth ~ . orei~toet aces.As 'dl' a i coorei 'an atÏa n -A bi ýf. i;1 t4 6 i S.te n o ç n aae 1V t V*VS&. &5>8 W4k5#It~ ~P~P~ an ~e-»>'Wtaasjw.lae farms bM.ome: vcat aiare ii- PM4batter t*>»vtieOd en ayhave t- ePrIVIlee rdi ; i.* ~ ni.sà ~ ~ . -*I-lV 1 r oùg - - 'TII' 144*~4'gI4a"EI4 egtale spcs Bol h.~ T-FUNERAL 0F ENPEROR =als(one or several) ai carrots beets, celery, peau, string and lima bent saragus- ad .when. coId jj~,,,ut.them into dioe, seices, or fancy GORGEOUS DISI'L.& IN THE ,L ~ 5 ~ 1 K shapes. They can be arranged in IYOFDKX ' layera and covered with the aspic, CT FPRY l etting each layer harden a litti. befQre arranging the ne t. When >covered with the aspic set aw&y to Spectator Telle of Slght Whlch COL DISIIS FR WRM AYSliarden. Chioken, torigio, and Marked Clîlnese Einperor's COLDDISES FR W.RM AYBother meat aspics are delicjous. Emancipation f rom serving bot, With a littie experimenit, one can Funieral. héaVY meals should ho the bouse- become expert in <kcoratiflg a-mold 0f the Oriental display that wife's declaration of independence witb designs of bard boiled eggs and marked the funeral of thd late during the summner jnonths. if ber vegetablea, arranging the slces <of Emperor of China in Pekin, a spec- farnily bas not yet learu-ed that chioken or meat attractively and tator writes: "The procession wau- sumumer should be motber's vaca- covered with the aspic, so the disbheaded by a body of troopa, cavai- tion time, too, let thema begin les- will corne on the table exceedingly ry, mounted infantry anýO :-nfantry sons at once. When possible it ià pretty.' Next came sonie two dozen ctimel a pood to fOllow the custom of women Leftover Meat7 AttractiVelY and a m.ob of white pack prniea. in amaller towns and serve the bot Served.-When one bas just a fewwihtcocad b- meal at noon and a cold supper, sices each of chioken, ham, and neath c1cths of imperial ycilow. generally witb creamed potatoea tongue, and wishes to serve these, These were followed by men mount- and tea biscuits as the bot dish. an attractive disb can be madel'y dothsagiqeofpn- n, Cold sliced meat, sals4, and f resh garnisbing the platter with little d ed - n the haggito p o c an fruit complete this sensible menu. equares or molds or aspic bard boil- ssed at lin e fed c loa ar-h 3 Many housewives bave their famil- e e sBliesOf beet pickle, and a ing red bannera with devices whicb' - eu trained to eat eold rice or mual' border of parsley or creas. Every- 1 wished I understoeod. Dand mlik, or merely a dish of berrie; thing here is good and nutritious. or otber f resh fruit, and cake for the Aspic disbes are just as suitable for LAMA PilEih1TS. evening meal. This plan is more the company luncheon and Sunday "Against this was contrasted a. di.fficult for the city or suburban nigh*t supper as tbey are for the great splash of yeliow as the body bousewife, whose men folks cat a family meai. Since the stock, whicb of lama priests moved Past us ini basty luncheon ati noon and depend is rade l'y boiling the bones and their yellow coats. Then camne- on a hearty dinner a.t night. Many lest Adesirable pieces of meat, and bearers dressed in red like the men. women ro induce their busbands the gelatin used-if tbickening is on the ponies, bearing canopies of 3Vo take a chop or steak witb tibeir neeessary-are inexpeIlaive, "Pl purpie, yellow, red and white and- i noon meal and eat lighter food at dishes are to be prepar»ed the even- bannera of the same splendid col- -night. Borne allow for this extra ing befo)re or eariy in the moriiing ors, and behind them two large tbeavy meal at noon out of the and set ini the ice box to cool. With yedlow chairs, clos.eiy Toliowed by ,s bousehold aliowanoe, so the hua- one "hcarty" vegetable, as l'aked more caxiopies rivaîîng those that h banda cannot ol'ject on account of stuffed potato or escalloped corni, bad pre-cede>d thlein.1 After these. the. beavy meal l'eing t.oo expen- a vegetable saiad, and fresb fruit, drove Prince Ching in a closed car- i sive. a meai is satisfyîxîg and easily pre- rig- u oone yalagboy )f The dishes which custom bas rmade pred. Cold l'oued fish are delicious rige urhaotnesees dairyeinodh- Yus serve hot, but 'wbich caxibe 'lien covered with jellied mayon- gstretsuof s Pekin. ctsta oin t.e -served cold anid made just as tasty, naîse andPcoaed, itsh oedo there was a short gap, and th-en, d are legion. 1V le popular and sen- tese ces, wberes, br 'udwhite disks of paper, cut Vo resem- - sible to subst.itute fresh fruits for eg. aes wtrces nastur- hie copper cash and flung high into- ks a first course instead of bot soup- tîums, lern points, anid80ofln the air, announced the approach of d f resh bernies, mixture of fruits One formula for jellied mayon- the hearse. It was born l'y 128. io sweetened and kept on ice for an naise for fish sa: Add on. and oneC-bearers, whose re.d dresses con- 1;hour or two before serving, pine-ba! asbe soonedfuso!gan whchd atrasted vividiy wi1th its brIlIliant. e appie, orange, banana, and melond. bas ben o ake fuor cla r and aryellow, and after it came another s- With a big spooxi "eggs" may l'e bal! V oc hcupfo idas efo body o! troops and then a crowd of' scooped f rom the pink pulp of t.he chce~sokwib bas bn carta. r watermelon. The effecti of those heat.ed. When tiia as cooled, stir - pink eggs on a bed of ice or grape into iL a haif cupful of olive oil, a BRILLIANT PROCESSION. sleaves, as a first course, with pink tablespoonful of v 1negar or lemon "So the procession cndcd, and, k flowens in the center of the table, juice, sait, pepper, and the beatoen pasred, and thîs bald description of LY is pretty. yolk o! an egg. . iL can give littie idea of its brilli- is Cold Soupa Thickened with Gela- anqfe. For, as in the case of the r tin.-When you get the habit -i! SEASONABLE SALADS. arrivai of the dalai lamna, so in tuis, e serving coid soups you will neyer what fascinated and overcome on& >set a dish of bot soup before your Cabl'age Salad.-Take the ten- was the spiendor and the blaze of family in dog days. The cold soups der wbite center f rom a head of cal'- colors, and these the pen cao not, er are really aspic> made of aoup stock bage. hred fine and crit§p in ice produce. But I think I oouid turn of and vegetabies, just as you make water . M ake a cooked dressing o! fanatic, in my insýst.cnce on thecir »any soup and tbickened with enougb ithree egg yolks, three tablespoon- excellence. They moved me 1like bh gelatin to give them the proper con- 1 fuis of butter, five of tarragon vine- music when wave after wave o!' d sistency. Cold soup is served in gar, one teaspoonful of gî'ate sound toss and dash againat the- 2d ctîps. Chioken cornes firat li popu- horse-radisb and the sanie amount seul. I dlo not exaggcrate when 1 ne ianity, then tomato, then beef st.ock '~f mixed mustard and a good pinch say this. The colora o! the proces- ar 0f course in preparing soup to'e 'f sait. Cook over hot water until sion wcre magnifloûnt; they were î- served you must l'e particular Vo crcarnery; wben coid add an equal worth going a hundred miles to see. have it weli seasoned, for you wish Portion of whipped creami and stir "Those canopiea and flags, thoso. your family Vo hke it ins3tantiy. through one pint of the shredded chairs, that haarse, they were won- Parsley, celery, and l'ay leaves cabbage well drained, one cupful of derful, a nainl'ow fit indeed to cir- id give chieken soup a good flavor, and chopped peanuta, and haif a cupful cie an eniperor journeying te the- a bit of red pepper adds piquancy. of diced pickled beata. Fil! thbe darkness obie grav. I deny, too Rec pppr i u~p taexes ii b-çabbage abel and garnisb witl,,-wht t bndled roippe wu i counrie testimlat th stmaeh4ley pume&andci1Ie6 of,~betesay t 'tse colora are 'ba.rbarie.' ne a fgu4i Theé;be are right. They bury nd ailiver, but a&bit used oc«as'on- e~~elreha fitne h rts.~o .ends ihte alis an addition Vo any disb and et ag bI-o e cth rtsp X irda ihte TIi.neeesariy evrstiulavn.t.wo amali grape ruit, one-quarter greateat o al earthy pedr 'oTewater in whicb vegetabies are cfa pound of shelled pecans, one- the colora cf the sun.'> ý' boiled and the. creamed vegetables quarter cf a pound of black wai- ~left over. may be converted inte sum- nuts. Take cuter leaves f nom let- Wmer soupa, crain soupa, by tbe. ad- tuce head and place wbole under EIÇGL1SHI WOMEN FARMINO. re dtionef jfl~aad st,<~kthic cod wate-r faucet diip until leaves fint nopoi toomutoi Luay »te - ocourred i attrieîg Te rw 'HA PT "Have yo Mn. Lyma BronIey. "~None at Bay, madaM mnarriesi son andi I confe present ge when shue us tIse gentiem huakiness la "day,'> b. cc ernfg h-un-s in thse open heurs toget 'denstoosi ye i. Allison Md inquiri "Then 1 asidreaber thing in e memery wh mant."' "Yes, y saisi Lady juat then h fore the* tensive gro "This ia ley,>' ho ma n, ansi t ther about LayB spoke, te fore an e-I houa. waa 'iasà ,a grounada, 1 in tIse whole- esft Meana. "Thauk Slow. . 1 unexpeotesi cnnects Iadyahipr amuie. " able te o for there wbiohI171o dear g1r; apeaki.ng, invahid -- .&gain th amlesice ,w as ail ab' maobbing a The fair tien; a . she put ox laid it carç -one restti home." Lady Ri andi presaÀ sxonately brow. home, ani nurmuned alirÀptly - back to6 th she --wem 4#uv s -40,1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy