Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 2 Apr 1896, p. 6

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THE VERY LATEST FROM ALL THE WORLD OVBR. InttrMlIng Items About Our OwB Countrj) > QMat BriUIn, tb* United States, and All Part* ol the Qlolie, Condenied and Assorted for Easy Raatllng. CANADA. â- V MxH. Mary Warreu died at Eamilton, •teeit 100 yearti. jLord Aberdtten will oyAX\ the Indus- niil and Brantford Fiiira. •'rioUon aoiunK tlit>. officers threatenB to dcalroy thf usefulueas of the Fifth Royal Scots of Muntrual. The total asseaaed value of the city of liondon, (Jnt., is «15.85K,210, and the total taxable asseeaiueut for general pUTiNjeefi 915,397,780. W. R. Thorburn, a Lonilon dairy- man, has been atuntncmed on a charge of leaving some young cattle to starve to death in an ot>en field. Old Mr. Ca«-nuy. father of the young man in custody at Lindsay on I bo charge of murdering Mr. Jamea Agnew, ia losing his reason tlirougb grief. The attached men of the Hoyal School of Infantry at St. John's, Quebec, who refusiid to do fatigue duty, were found fuiity of mutiny by the court martial. John Nankivell, found guilty at Win- ni(x'g of the attempting murder of T. (ilemwright and Win. h^mith, was sen- tenced to life imprisonment for his crime. A Toronto Aldermanic deputation waited upon the Miniwler of Militia to aek thai a sum bu appropriated for the riding wlwol, for which in 1893 a vote of 940,000 waa put into the esti- mati«. David Stock. Deputy Collector of Cus- tume at Dund^is, Ont„ has risigned on account of a short.ige in his a.<-count8 to the .-unfAmt of J400 or ?500. Slock had l>een connected with the Custom House since 1890. The news h.i.s been received in Winni- peg u( a t«rrible explosion at the gold mines of Roasland, in British Columbia, as a result of which four men were kilh-d and two more were seriously in- jured. Mr. John Craig, heotl of the Dominion htkTtirultural eziierimental work, is au- thority for the Htuteuient that the out- look for next season's crop of peaches is very uiipnuoising. In many districts it will Ix' a complete failure. i An influential deputation from Tor- | onti^ waited ujKjn the Government in Ottawa on Thuxjiday to retjuesl a grant towanls the proixjaecl Dominion Exhibi- tion ti« be held in Toronto in 1897. The rotiuf.st was viewed favorably by the members of the Govemiucnl. Dr. K. R. Ktagland is suing Kerrv, Watwm ft Co.. of MnntrcTil fur fliO.OOO damugnt (to account of the death of plaintiffs wife, allegnd to have Itecn caused by a |K>isonous drug erroneous- ly <l«Uvur<«i in the place of bismuth by clcfi'ndant»' firm. It is runwrnred in Montreal that the Quehw- fi<»vcrnment contemplate send- ing the Deputy 'I'reasurer to Lontion, England, in a few w<u:ks, to float a new loan of fS.fiOU.OOO, which, it is st.-ited, ifl .1 iKiTtion of the loan of ten millions authorized by the Legislature during the Merc-ior regime. l"he money is to be applieil to the p.iyment of obliga- tions alxmt to fall due. \ delegation from Halifax is in Mont- real for the purpoae of interviewing the officials of lui- railways regarding the cotmii<\rcial inltri-.sts of the forijiir rity. Tliey want the )}.")0,0!)0,()1K) or 8(iO,m)0,0OO worth of winter iininirts at nresent oom- ijig iut/» Cariiula by way of Jitjciton and Portland to go through Halifax. They Will .il.su interview the tJovernmcnt on the matter. GREAT BRITAIN. The Queen will return to Windsor Mstle from Cimiez at the end of April. Artificial ice rinks continue to be the rug<- in the liest circles of 7x>ndon so- ciety. Tlie Venenible, Gex)rge Anthony Deni- Kon. archib'acon of Tauntoni is dead, at the age of ninety-one. Qui«u VicLoriji, has created Emperor Francis Joseph Colunel-in-Chief of the First Dragoon Guards, A well-known Ixindon society paper expresses the opinion t hat t he reign of the AmericiLn U^auty in London is over. Air. and Mrs. Booth- Tucker left Lon- don on Saturday for New York, to take charge of the Salvat^ion Army in the United States. An unusual compliment h.is been paid to Mr. .Icisfph ChainlN-rlain in his being named as tlu' Unionist candidate for Gliwigow University. Mr. llaKoiir aiiiienred in the House of Coniiuous on i<riday with his arm in a sling. lie fell from his bicycle and •plained his wrist. .Mr. .Samuel Pliinsoll, the originator of the f.'i;iious "I'limsoll mark" to prevent Wie overlo.ading of ships, is dangerously Ul. He is .seventy-two years of age. The late William Boyne, of Englanil|, BIi.Til upwanlH of sixty yojirs in colli'ct- ing more than 80,000 coins. These are all !• Ix! sold at Sotheby's in two hutches. I'lie IJuke of York has quili' In ken his father's plac* in laying corner- stones, opening public institutions, ore- siding at hospital dinners, etc., and is a very busy man. A bill has biM'n read a second time in the House of Lords empowering judges to oriler evidence wtiicb they think would be prejifdicial to public morals not to be pulilished. It has hwn arranged that the princi- pal (lenHmstnilion in connection with til' centenary of the death of Ilnrns wUI tjike pliuie at Dumfries, where tlio»o will be a grand procession. The health of the Queen has so much impri/vcil that she has arranged t:n go tf> Coburg to attend the marriage of her rranililaiight<!r. Princess .Mexaudra, to Prince Hohenlohn-Langcnburg. Mr. John Morley, on Friday, in the Imperial House of Commtms, moved a want of <onfidenoe resolution In the Governnienr in its Egyptian policy. TImi resdliition was lo.sl on a division of -ifiH to Hf). ' An uiisui!«i8sful attempt wn.R made At Glasgow to float the. new cruiser Di- do, whidi, while lieing launched in the Clyih' on Tiieiulay, stuck on the woys and ninained half in the water and half •II land. Tlie Ma,r<iuis of Snlisbur.? on Thurs- day afternoon, on behalf of >.he aubscj'ib- ers, presented to Mr.MIddlcton, a cheque for ten thoueand |x>unds ae a testimon- ial of appreciation for bis services aa chief organizer, of the Conservative party. Twenty thousand persons attended a meeting in the CrysLal Palace, London, to welcome Gen. Booth home. Mr. and Mrs. Tucker Booth, who are to take charge of the array in the TTnite<l States, were prominent figures on the platform. Mr. Walter Long, President of the Board of Agriculture, stated in the Brituih House of Commons that the views of Canada on the cattle emliargo \viere well known, anil that the Imper- ial Government could not adopt the pro- poeition to postpone the exclusion of Canadian cattle. It is announced that the suit for five thousand pounds damage^ for libel brought by Lady Henry Somerset against the Pall JIall Gazette has been settled out of court. It is a<l(led that thi' Gazette will aixjlopze, and, with twenty others {»apers, will pay the costs. The bill inti-oduced by Mr. Mildmay in the Imperijil Parliament, proposing that all meats and cheese, from foreign countries awl the colonies should l)e stamped, to disi inguisli them from home ca.ttie and £n;glisb cheeae, was read a seMtnd time, and referred to u select committee. It is generally lielieved in wcll-in- fomed Ix>ndon political acts that Eng- land has .secure<l the sanction of Ger- many, Austria, and Italy to her Nile exiwditicn, and that France is only burning her fingers in meddling with the Egyptian question. An Anti-I)re«s League has been form- ed in London, in which Lady Algernon Lennox is a prime mover. The League allows only two dreases for each sea^ son, one for day wear and one for evening, but there is no limit to the wearing of fur, jewellery, and bicycle costumea. The PrixKse of WaJas will be installwl as Chancelltw of I he University of Wales in the course of the coming summer. The locaJity of the ceremony waa left by his Royal Highness entirely Uj the choice of the university court, which has now selected Aberystwyth, the a«it of the oldest of the colleges of tlie uni- versity. The i'rince has formally con- fLrme'l the selection. At Wednesday's session of the Imper- ial Committe<> on the Adnjteration of i''ood, Mr. Elliott^ the secretary of the Board of Agriculture, testified that among the samples of food analyse<l by the Government, fifty-one came from the United States and llurty-nine from Canada, not one of which was adulter- ated. Germany made the worst show- ing, adulteration having been found in tbirty-se.ven out of one hundred and twenty-four samples examined. UNITED STATES. Mr. Lodge, in the United Slates Sen- ate, made a strong »pe«<"h in favor of excluding all immigrants who were totally ignorant. The r(^solulions censuring United SUitea Amba.ssador Bayard for his Bo.s- ton and Edinburgh .speeches passed the U'ftUie at Washiugttni. The strike of twelve thousand Chicaf^o t.ailors. which liegan on Wednesday, is over, the contractors having signed the contract drawn up by the men. The House C<iniinitf4>e on Naval Af- fairs has reroiii mended four Ixittle- ships and fift»;c?n torpedo boats to strengthen the United Stateti navy. The Chi<'ago Council has j/juise<l im or- dinance giving the right of way cm tlie streeta to physicians who display a small b.idge, which can lie ut>tained fur fifty centa. Tlie New York World says it ha.«i uuule a poll of nearly every Btate in ibe Union, and as a result predicts the nomination of .Mr. William McKinley by the .St. f^iuis convention. It is uiirlerstood that Cardinal Satolli will bid farewell to the United States early in .May. and that bis gucce.s.<«or will he Archiiialiop .Vveradi, Titular of the Ancient .S«'e in Tarsus. C<mimander Jl'illinglon Booth has de- vised a new uniform for the revolted jKirtion of the Salvation Army. The women will wear sky-blue material, with lonnets trimni»d to ni.alch. A fifteen-yenrK)ld Ixiy is under ar- rest in .Tockson, Texaa, charge<l with attempting to murder his father, his mother, and the family physician by putting rough-on-rats in the coffee, i (;.inadian lalxirers are crossing the United .Staltw border to take positions on farms in Niagara, Genesee, and Liv- ingston counties. Half a dozen men hired out to aa many farmers in the township of Pavilion last week. A call has been issued in Wu.shington for a national conference, to be held in that city on the 22nd and 23rd of April, for the establishment, between Great Britain and the United .States, of a per- mnni-iit system of arbitration. The Venezuelan Commission in Wash- ington ia in receipt of communicat ions from the Governments of Spain, Holland, and Belgium, offering the commission access to the archives of these countries for data touching the disputed lioundary. Charles Ryan, of Buffalo, N.Y., who ia wanted by the Canadian authorities for the robbery and attempted murder of Edwar Russell, at Uridgeburg, Ont., laat October, was captured in East on. Pa., and is held awaiting extradition papers from Canada. Gertrude Taylor, aged thirteen, of (^\ . Joaepb, Mo., coufiwsed on Ii'riday that she poisoned the food partaken of by her father, her brother, and his wife, causing the death of the first-uienti.m- .ed, bitcaiiso they opposed her keeping an organ that nad men in the house for a year. 'A 'Washington despatch says it ia learned from an official source that it is the intention of the Navy Department to have the fifteen additional toriiedo boats recommended by the Naval Com- mittee so construoted that they may be towed through the Erie canal for US" on tlie great lakes in oase of an •mergenoX- Coimocrcial advices from the United Slates aa to the condition of trade dur- ing the week ended yostorday show pr.'ictically no improvement. Disturbed financial ctmdilioiis, general over-pro- duction, and bad weatnor, aiipear to be the concurrent causes of the ganerni stagnation. There ts nnRcoable activity in lioot.'j anil shoes and women's dre«s goods, but in little else. Buy- ing is also reported more brisk in Mis- souri, Kan., Oklahoma, and parts of Nebraska. There is no improvement ill the demand for iron and steel. Aa a rule, iMd Unctions are re|X)rteil poor, and the tendency of prices la weaker in many leading llnea. GENERAL. It is announced that China wiU ro- f'lse to cede Lappa or Quiemoy to Ger- many. Statin Pasha, who passed seventeen years in the Soudiin, will join the Brit- ish Nile expedition. A jKipular Buljscription in Germany to provide money to increase the navy has linen a complete failure. It ia state<l that King Alexander of Bervia ia engaged in marriage to the eldest daughter of the King of Greece. The Minist.eT of Finance intends toit.«k the Cortes for authority to convert t iv entire Portuguese debt. A large Italian caravan has reached Ka.ssala, showing ttuit communication with that place is still open. Th4 plague continues in IIong-Kong, in spite of the sweeping sanitary meas- ures adopted liy the Government. The Chinese Government is making no headway against the Mohammedan re- liellion in the north-western provinces. A despatch from St. Peterehurg says it is rejjorted that King Menelek will ask Russia to mediate between Abys- sinia and Italy. The DanuU' and its tributaries- are steadily rising,and already several towns along their banks have been partially submerged. The dervish force at Dongola is esti- nwted at ten thousand cavalry, camel men, and sjiearmeii, with a numtier of Soudanese riflemen. The terrible hot wave that (»used so much loss of life in Western Australia, was followed by hoilstorma which de- strcfyid a vast amount of properly. The British and Egyptian troops are drilling daily in Cairo. The English soldiers are enthusiastic at the prospect of fighting, but the natives are not so jubilant. The prisoners who have esoajied from the Abyssinian oamj) declare that the prisoners there are ill-treatod and liadly fed, and tliat numbers of them have lieen garrotted. Mr. Fitzjnaurice, the British Vice-Con- sul to Turkey, has returned to Constan- tinopiu from lirfa, and reports that eight thousand |Kople were ma»aBicre<l during the recent ili»:turl«nce there. Admiral Rawson, commander ot Cape Colony station, and Gen. Goodenougn, (wmmander of the Britiab forces in Cape Colony. ;Lr<' formului.r.g an important scheme for coast defences in South Africa. The Italian Senate adoi>ted a reao- lution th.anking the British Parlia- nnnt for ita expression of Bymi«ithy witJi lutly and h ; > >\ '.i-rs, as expreaa- ed l(y the Under Secretary of State of Foreign .\ffairs in the House of Com- mons. The British steamer Miatadi, which sail43d from riivrr.i I.eoii" on Fehruai'j' 5, liua laien totally destroyed at Bor- na, by an exploeioii <rf gunpowdnir. The whole fore(>art of the ship was blown into the air, and forty penons were kUlod. The pacification of Cuba ie now look- ed upo:i ill jKilrica' .â- ' -I.'... ol Madrid a» impossible unless u supi^me effort is miuin involving the. Hundiiig of large i^- inioroetanuta to that island, and in- stitute a oomplete blockade of its oaoHt.. Ilena Bonheur has just flnlahed u hu-ge oanvos represeiituig a cuml> it lit- twtien t.wo .stallions. Unsa Biinhcur i.s now seventy-four, an<l has to w«aj- gtiiHstiM whun she painla. 'I'he painting IB now on exliibitiim in Loniiuu. The i-niiirn to Rome of the Italian I)t^iult<'.s who wen' sentenced in cou- mc.lion with the Sicilian uprisitig..uid who were rewntly ainneatie<l. was hail- ed with great delight by an iiiinienei' crowd, who roared them-selvca hoarse in cheering for the Marquis di Rudini. II Ls felt in UriiLsh uiilitary circleti that Great Britain is not going to have a walk-over in Egypt. The Klialifa lias at bis disiKusal aliout tliree hundred thousand men.of whom forty thousand are Baggaras, all traintMl and disciplin- ed. The North Staffordshire regiment, numlicriug 900 officers and men, started from Cairo for Girgeh,\vhere they will embark on steamers for the journey up the Nile for Wady Haifa. A Sikh reg- iment from India that is ultimately to take part in the o[ierations arrived at iMomliawil. Fast .Africa, on March 15. A report from Port of Spain, Trini- dad, W.I., says that a war betwe<'.n Great Britain and the United Stativi, if of any duration, would "result in the ruining of the people of the West Ind- ies, and that ibe syinimi hy of the Cre- oles would be with the Slates, and the black Inbabltiuits would follow the Cre- ole. THE HOME- THE LETTER T. FOR THE TINY TODDLERS. Mothers are busy now doing up all, or as much aa is practicable, of the sum- mer sewing. It is a good idea to com- mence this early, for when the busy summer approaches she will have her hands full with other things to attend to, and the pewic^ must be consigned to another who, probably understands little or nothing about how the naother wished her work done. And then when the weather becomes warm, one's am- bition is very delinquent, and unless it is something almost indisiiensable the sewing is apt to be neglected. Mater- ials arc just as cheap now aa later in the season and all the new summer goods and styles are already in the mar- ket. There is nothing absolutely new in materials an<l styles for the little ones this year â€" everything is much the same as in the past year. White materials are always the greatest favorites, al- though delicate blues and pinks and fine slri|>ed dimities, gingliams and lawns aiv shown for babies' dresses. In the Lieautiful light dimities almtjst all conceivable colors and designs which are adapted for these little dresses can be obtained. Fine white muslins, strip- ed or figured, the plain blue or pink cbambray and the soft white china silk are all used for them. Very few of these dresses are without trimming. Valenciennes lace and fine narrow em- broideries are seen on everything. On many of the dresses narrow ribbons are threaded through the lace with a tiny bow tied here and there. Some of the skirts of these dresses are plain, having a wide hem, usnally hemstitched ; some have three clusters of fine tuoks, three or four together ; others have insertions of lace or embroidery, depending on the elaborateness of the dre.ss. The yokes, OS a rule, are tucked or lace trinuned. Sleeves are full, finished at the wrist with a ruffle of lace or embroidery. The neck ia finisbe<l in the same manner. Little cloaks are made of wash ma- terials, usually of duck or pique. Many are figured or strijied, but most of them are pure white. They arc trimmed with cotton braids, very nejivy embroideries and lace.s, and many have blue or scar- | let baoda of the same material as a I trimming. There is not much warmth pint of finely picked and freskeu ;d eod- fiah in a pint of cream ; thicken with a little milk. Ptmr over rounds of toast ed bread and on each lay a poached egg. Egg and Cheese Patties.â€" Cook a 4ea- cupful each of sweet and aour milk un- til curdfl are formed ; rub thp curds through a seive ; add a teacupf ul pf white sugar beaten with the yolks o{ four eggs, a little salli, a tablespoonful of melted butter, the juice and skin of a lemon. Line patty pans mth a nic« crust ; put in e.-'.ch a tablespoonful of the mixture and bake twenty minutes. Let them cool in the pan. Frothed Eggs.â€" Beat the yolk of eight eggs, the whites of four with the Juice of a lemon and a tablesiioonful of cold water ; add a pinch of salt and two tableapoonfals of sugar. Butter a spid- er and fry four minutes ; place in » dish, cover with the whites of four eggs frotheil with a scant teacupful of sugar, and brown in the oven. Baked Eggs.â€" Break eggs carefully in- to an earthen dish well buttered, sprin- kle with chopiied cucumber pickles, a little pepper and salt, and baka t\ventj minutes in a moderately hot oven. Eggs with Onions are a very palat- able dish for those who like oaiona. Slice six onions, fry in butter, put on a plat- ter, and cover with aii sliced hard-boil- ed eggs. Grate the yolks of two eggs, chop the whites very fine, mix with half a teacupful of cream, season with salt ajid pepper, and pour over the eggs asd onions. Shirred Eggs.â€" Break eight eggs in- to a well buttered dish, put in pepper and salt, bits of butter, and three table- spoonfuls of cream. Bake twnty min- utes. Snowed Eggs.â€" Beat the whites of six eggs to a stiff froth, with two table- spoonfuls of powilered sugar. Add half a teacupful of the sug^ar and a scant teaapoonful of vanilla extract, to half a pint of milk. Heat this; when it tioils drop in the beaten whites by the spoon- ful and when cooked, place in a glass dish. When all the whites are cooked, set the milk where it will cool a Utile, stir Ln slowly the, beaten yolks, and when thickened pour (nex the whites. Horsi-radish grated, mixed with vine- gar and a little sugar, ia a nice aauce to serve with eggs. KRUPP AND HIS WORKINGMEN. How Ibe Crrat Urmiau IroB Fouadel Trrals Hit Men !â-  Ilic â- mmcBse Cslab- IliikDteBt. It has been noted as singular that in Iheae cloaks, but thev are always | Krupp, the great "cannon-king" of '"T*iJtiKâ„¢wl'T'i.*f'* fT "">'. P'"«'l'y- 1 Essen, in Westphalia, who has lens Little slurred hata of fme white mus- „, -. , , ^ â-  ^- , • lin. laoe trimmed,, are worn extensive- ' **' tbousands of men m his employ, is ly. The bonnet, too, but. very fussy ' never troubled with strikes or labor with laoe and ribbons, will be worn difficulties. A recent Leipsio journal dn^kl^l^Tque. t^.IheTritlrtw^J.'tlricl^! gives a summ.^y of what he ha« done nessea of goods should be used and . *°° wh:.'. he is doing for his employees, lher« aboiud be three or four rows of i and thinks that these facts, to a great nuichim- stitching near the outer edge I extent at least, explain why he lives at rhe crown is simply around piece ofl„„„,: , .... ,. the material hminied around the edge, | «>i>t"»>ie<l peace with his men : m which tiny butt<inholes can be made | Krupp is the owner of about 1,000 with which it is butto;- ' 'o th< brim, ' dwclUng-houses, occupied by aliout 27,- "^^ but*?rT;tird* sr-^'wid"" ^js^ ' °«« «-«•--- •^â- ^'' -"« "« -^^ •- strings may U- of ribbon or fine mus- i *"" "fo calculated on a basis of only lin. Thewe hats are easily laundexed as I 2 per cent, on capital invested. As well as e.iaily nia.le. A very handsome I the numb«r of houaes does not suffice laoe trtumtul one oould be made for ' n •,• i • r i. ^i. lie.-rt ;ui I two sitiiplor imes for .-ommon- *" '"'' workiugmen, of whom there are rr wear. They retioire thick starch »hout 30000 in all, with loeir families anil if well iromni will lie very stiff, nuniliering lOO.OOO persons, it hae lieeo which an' removed every time the haU "> *"•' employ of the firm for ten years must 1m> washed. They are more, diffi- . can secure such ii house. Krupp has cull Ul launder and -re not so very ' also taken vigorous measures against much pnMtier. \ ^. , ,,..,, , It is U'st to always have white stock- *'"' »»'«"« ''"'I whisky-shops, as also ings for the litl le one so long as the ' other businesses dangerous to his work- (lre.ss<-H touch the floor. The dyes in ingmen. He liought up all the saloons th.' colored ones often produce sk.udia- „„,, arranged for .sn-callp.l "consume" ea«^^s on the tender little feet and legs. and arranged for so-called "consume" Alwavs pnx-ure a soft shoe if possible, I businesses. In these, which are found and have the sole flexible as well as in all his workingmen's colonies, he has strong, riny little slippers of white, ' in store all the necessities of life, and mer wew" "" "^ """' ' ^^''^ ^^^^ '<»• ^^^ =»' "» very low pri-e. The, little tot's underskirts should al- I ^° *"" established special bakeries, wav.s lx> sowed to waists. These waists slaughtering houses, tailoring establish- need not be trimmed at all, and should ments, etc., for his men ; excellent re.s- tually secrs.'^ed at 2 pfennigs a cup, and togetlMT ueeii iioi. uo irimmeu at an, anil snouia menia, etc., tor uis men ; excellent re have straps of the material over the tauranta furnish gixid meals virtual ahouiller. .skirts are made plain or el- x . . , ,t u __ alioratc to suit the fancy and often cor- ** '^^ price ; good coffee can be secr5.r. r<'sp<md with the dress with which they are worn. All tho flannels or woolen i underwear worn by the little one should lie white and soft, and with the excep- , tion of the flannel skirts the plainer and simpler they are the better. AbiI Uow II liiitlraleH I'liarurler, Arronl- lOK lu n i'rriicltmaii, A French graphologist has discovered that character can tie rt«ad from the letter "t" alone. He claims tliat the vertical line represents the fatality of life, and the horizontal liar the in- fluence human will exercises upon this faUility. In addition, he claims that the higher part of the vertical lineâ€" that project- ing alx)ve the horizontal barâ€" has in- dications of the amount of ideality con- tained in the make^-up of the wriUir, and that the inferior port of tnis line corresjionds to the practical and materi- al part of the man's oharaoter. For instance, the optimist crosses hia t's with a line that slopes upward from tho earth to the sky, aa it were. Tho lioet often crosses his t's quite alx)ve the vortical lino; iu other words, in the sky. The iiessimist crosses his t's with a downward sloping stroke. The line, which commences at the ideal portion of the letter, descends little by little un- til it is lost among the sad realities of earthly existence. The practical man, it appears, always steers a middle course, and crosses his t's neither in tho ideal nor in the ma^ terial, but exactly midway between the two. MISERIES OF TRADE. DruggLst (awakened at 2 a.m.)â€" What do you wiahf voice (at the dotir)â€" If you'll let me look in your directory to see how to address this letter, I'll buy the post- age stamp of you. with sugar and a roll at 5 pfennigs. The widows and other dependents of de- ce.ased employees receive employment of some kind, and if it is desired can- get a sewing-machine at cost price by the PasSlBILITIES OP EGGS. ! Pi^yna^nt "' 3 •"^r'" ** «i""*l»- ^rupp bos also erected bath-houses, ho.spilals. Egg tondu.-This >s a very savory I „„,, barracks lor tunes ot epidemic dis- and economical dish. .Soak a teacupful ^ases. The sick-fuad affords help of bread crumba in two scant teacup- really in excess of the amount demand- fuls of milk ; lieat in three eggs, whip- ! ed by the law, the firm making large pi-d very liglit ; season with a table- â-  '^'^''â- '^""<'°?. ^ ^^"^ }'iS,^^J^ '""''^l siHionful of melUid butler, a da.sh of pep- i >«â- "â- â-  }^J ^'"' payment of 1.25 mark IHT, and a pinch of soda .Ussolved ma* y.*"": *''•' ^?""'y. '^'^^. *^!^« ^^ee o«. ittic milk. Mix with half a pound of dry cheese, grated. Butter a baking dish, strew the surface with bread orumba. ixiur in the fondu and bake a light brown. Servo immediately. Egg Croquettes.â€" Mix two cost the service of a physician and the nece.-<siiry mediciue for any member. There is a pension-fund for wido\\ s and orphans to which the firm subscribe each year 250,000 marks. The working hours are from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m., with beaten ' two hours' intermission at noon. Com- ic eggs w it h two teacupfuls of cold mash- i i°K to work too Ivto is punished ed potatoes, half a teacupful of crack- feff^T the^oa^rs^'^^^^arStd aT?, e» crumbs, and a tcaspoonful of salt Flour the molding board; sprinkle with bread crumbs, then with the hands end with H marks. Women and chil- dren's work Is absolutely prohibited in any of the shops. For the workingmen fasliioii talitespoonfuls of the mixture ' who live at a distance, eating-lwiuses into little round cakes and fry in smok- have been erected, and a good meal can ing hot fat. i bo secured for 80 pfennigs. Then ther« Toast Raniaquins.â€" Beat together " » bom*^ for unmarried men and an two eggs, a table, poonful of melted but- ^Lt'nll'^'^X" rr^r^t'^ea^r'^lo "s^ ter. and a small iiinch of cayenne pep- cure protection and rotreshmtnts for per, add three taWe-spoonfiUs of grated tho.se who are engaged in particularly cbe<>ae ; heat in a t casptKiiif ul of flour | hard work. In addition excellent made snuHith with sweet cream and ; schools, w''.^h manual training, etc., work until the mixture .is light and | have been built; and Krupp has shown creamy. Spre.id it thitrKJJr over slices j that he has a heart for his people. The of lightly toasted bread, and brown in ' alJiJtd' is only a brief selection irom the a very hiit oven. ' list of enterprises he has carried out Egg Soup.-Into a quart of Iwiling *°^ ^^'''" BootJ- milk quickly stir four beaten eggs. Sea- son with butter, pepper and saltt and two tablespoonfuls of cooked tomatoes. 8er\'e with small squares of bread crisp- ed and browned in the oven. Eggs with Salmon.â€" Heat the con- tenta of a can of salmon, arrange neat AT THE CZAR'S CORONATION. Queen Victoria, is to lie represented at the Imperial coronation at Moscow by the Duke of Couuaught, who will be ac«oinpauied to Russia by tho Princess ly on a platter, and pour over melted t>f .^^''/wh^ i'i'' J^"i^T""'lf Xi"'*"'''* / ., ., L- u .. u 1- J 'and Maud, who are to go to St. Peters- butter into which has been stirred sev- , burg from Coiwnliageu with the Crow u eral finely-chopped, hard boiled eggs, jprinoe and Growu" Priwws ot D-niiuirk, Eggs with Codfish.- This l" cstimat- and their sons, tho Princes CtxAttian ed highly by lovers of codiish. Scald a and Chanes.

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