as ' i ii .'i if .13 ,v 3; if Mays-.â€" _ 5....“ .. . -â€"....c_.._/ , v i.__._..._ .1-.-†gm 3 - r’ï¬x HOUSEHOLD. In the Spring- Softly the western breezes WArc Sighinz among the flowers, It mr, as if new created in this beautiful world of ours, The Violets blue and fragrant Have wakcd from their winter sleep: The cloud shadow; flit o'er the pastures, Where grasses are waving deep ; And over the thorny hedges _ A qrucmus band has thrown A mantel of fresh green leaflets. With starry blossoms strewn. New leave thy sad communings. “Poor human heart. and say- If God so clothe the meadows, Will he turn from my sorrows away '9" Ei'ich trial and pitiful weakness . l‘hy heart so keenly feels Each shade of dark despairing That o‘er thy spirit steals, Are like uutoclouds that have gathered '1_‘ rough a life-long winter of pain. And shall break in showers of blessing Vi hen the springtime comes again. Happy Birthdays for Little Ones. _ ‘ ‘Now we shall have to. give one more party every year,†said a mother, looking fondly at the tiny black head of the new baby. “You see,†she went on, “we have neither time nor money to spend on very much society for ourselves, but it costs so little to make the children happy that we give each one a birthday party every year.†Happy the children whose parents never fail to remember the birthdays as they come round. Even a baby of three or four years generally has two or three favorite tots whom he or she would like invited. The simplest entertainment is sufï¬cient. A few p‘ain cookies cut into fancy shapes with cake cutters, with a stoned raisin in the center; aplate of thin bread and butter cut in delicate slices and spread ,with a very little jam ;cups of cambric tea, that is milk, with warm water and sugar in it, and the real birthday cake, with candles in it, will make up a feast that will send these tiny ones home happy. Even the birthday cake ‘liould be a plain one, but there may be. a dee on it for each year of the child giv- ing the party, and if you stick the candlc’s pin through a tiny red,whitc,pink or yellow rose, made of paper the cake will presents. very festive appearance. The candles are the kind used on Christmas trees, and are sold by confectioners and bakers. The cutest and most healthful little bon-bons can be made by icing the tiny crackers, shaped like an elongated egg. or the little sticks about an inch long and as thick as a lead pencil now kept by all grocers. Make plain white icing and chocolate icing, color some of the white pink with cochineal and coat the crackers with the different leings. Older children will require rather more substantial entertainment, but one must avoid stuffing children of any age with food not convenient for them. Most children will like creamed potatoes and chicken in white sauce. This is a convenient way of serving chicken for children, involving no trouble of cutting by guests or hostess. \Vith this, tea or cocoa With cake and a tiny cup of lemon or orange jelly made from gelatine Will make a supper nice enough for children between the ages of six and ï¬fteen. Make a plainlight cup cake and when cold cut it. in slices and these in fancy shapes ; cubes, diamonds, stars, crescents and so on, and ice them with plain and colored icings. I No matter how simple the party, to make it uncomplcte success their should be a son- venir for each child to carry home. Pop corn tied up in a bag made from a pretty Japanese napkin, or from coarse-meshed white lace, the seams buttonholed with gav zephyrs, or an orange wrapped in bright tissue paper with the ends twisted like motto candies will please the little ones. I At a party given by a boy of ï¬ve, toy whips, costing ï¬ve cents each, were presented to , the’youthful guests and as they were all boys it sent them away happy; for his sister’s doll party the souvenirs were very small Japanese dolls. Girls of ten, or older, may have pretty little cups and saucers for sou- vcpirs. The little Japanese blue and white affairs, costing ï¬ve cents each, are charm- ing, while very dainty ones may be bought for twenty-ï¬ve cents. Better than any sum of money that you may give your children during your lifetime, or leave them after- your death will be the remembrance-s of all such sweet and simple home festivities as shall have endeared home to their childish heart-s. A Plea for Memoranda- “ The horror of that momentâ€, exclaimed the \Vhite King, “ I shall never forget.†“ You will though,†supplemented the Queen “ if you don’t make a memorandum of it ;†and the White Queen was wiser in her day and generation than many lesser personages’who have been born and brought up on this sidetlie “ Looking-glass.†It is hard to tell why so many persons are averse to memoranda. Perhaps they think that it weakens the memory. They might as well eat all the dishes on the menu in order to strengthen their stomaclies, as to lead their minds with things which might better be left to paper. Dauilet’s hero, Tar turin, remembered so many things that- never happened that his biographer was forced to confess at last that he remembered nothing about anything. . \Vliat a contrast was lie to' Silas Lapham's carpenter who never forgot his instructions because “ he wrote them on a three-cornered block and put it in his pocket and it was so uncomfort: able he couldn’t; help remembering it.†Hi... .1' u as .anin-‘l‘ ’ do not use the desiccated cocoauut. .__..._..__._._\,.___... Poor, smothered little brain, and the mother’s pride in his memory 2 She herself never indulged in a memorandum. The numbers of her friend’s houses, the dates of her second cousin's children‘s birtlidays,the perscns to whom she is socially indebted, her church and club 'and society engage- ments, are registered only in her brain. “But do you never misdirect an envelope, or send a present on the wrong day, or omit some sensitive friend from your dinner list, or forget an errand at the store?†I asked in amazement. “Sometimes,†she confessed, “but that teaches me to be more careful in the future.†And I, with my tiny memorandum book in which my days duties were set down in con- venient order, felt for the moment as if I were ‘mcntally and morally disabled, that I ought not so to pamper my mind or to re- gret the painful process of revision ; that perhaps the wrinkles on her young face were the lines of wisdom, and that the meat was more than the life, and the raiment more than the body. Some Candy Receipts- ' DARK AND LIGHT CANur.â€"Half a pound of-chocolate, two pounds of white sugar, one tablespoonful of butter, one tcaeupful of cream, one teaspoonful of vanilla. Stir this all the while it is cooking. This * will be brown. Then butter a flat dish and put a layer on it, let it harden a little, and add a. layer of white candy, made as follows : Three cupfuls of white sugar and one of cream, flavored with orange or lemon, and boiled for twenty minutes. Do not stir this very much. After the white layer hardeiis a little, put another of the brown. Mark, ofl‘into squares or long pieces, and cut so as to show to advantage the alternating stripes of color. Instead of the brown, one can color the first with poke-berry jelly or other coloring that will give a red tint, and if vanilla is not liked, pineapple will make a nice contrast to the flavor of the white candy. . MAii'aooxs Gmcus. ~0ne-half pound of mix- ed nutsâ€"alinonds, pecans and English wal- nuts. Divide the English walnuts and pecans in half. Two cupfuls of white sugar are put in a. stewpan with one cupful of water, or enough to cover it well. It would be ad- visable to use a stcwpaii with a lip, so that it will pour easily, and a handle for the protection of the hands. Do not stir with aspoon. In fact, do not touch it with a. spoon, except now and then to dip onta lit- tle to see when it’s done. Drop a little into very cold water, if done. it will form into criiikly little wireS, which will sound hard and clear when struck against the side of the bowl. It ought to be cooked twenty minutes. After it is done, pour in drops â€"thc size of a silver quarter of a dollar~on a. marble slab and press into each drop one almond, or one half English walnut, or pecan Two persons can make this candy far better than one as the nut must be put in as soon as a drop is poured. Cocoxsur CANDY.â€"FOut"cupltll3 of white sugar, one cupful of the milk of the cocoa- nut only in case it is perfectly good ; other- wise do not use it. One cocoanut, gratedâ€" Cook the sugar, either with the milk, if good, or if not, with water, a little less than candy that has to be pulled. Try by dropping into cold water to see if it is done. Take it off the ï¬re, pour in the cocoanut stir un- til thoroughly mixed, pour into a dish, and when cold enough, cut into squares. CnocoLA'rn Damsâ€"Dissolve one cake of chocolate in a bowl set in hot water. Boil two cupfuls of white sugar and one cupful of new milk twenty minutes. Sea- son with one teaspoonful of vanilla. Empty this into a dish, and beat until it is a good consistency to make.into balls. Lay the balls on buttered paper, and after they are quite hard, dip one by one, into the melted chocolate. Use a fork in dipping and replace the balls on the buttered paper. One can also use nuts with these balls, taking half of an English walnut to a ball. Children take special delight in nut candy, but it is rather rich, so it might be very well to make both kinds. In the Kitchen. Butter is'morc easily creamed if the bowl is slightly warmed by dipping it for a mo- ment in hot water and then wiping it, but it must not be hot enough to melt the butter. ' Try the oven with a piece of white pa- per. If too hot the paper will blackcn or blaze up; if it becomes a light brown it is {it for bread and heavier kinds of cake; if light yellow the oven is ready for sponge cake and the lighter kinds of des- sert. 1 OYSTER LOAF. â€"â€"Cutalong loaf of bieud into slices about two inches thick ; (a bak- er’s long five cent loaf will make six). Now trim oil" the crust and make each piece square. Dig the crumb out of the centre of each piece, leaving sides and bottom like a box ; that is, make a square box out of each slice of bread. Brush each box over with melted butter, and put in a quick oven until a light brown. Fill with creamed oysters and serve. ' COFFEE .MlhiLâ€"Pui‘. a toblespoonful of ground coffee into a pint of new milk ; bring it just to the boiling point, and let it stand on the corner of the range for fifteen min- utes to infuse; then sprinkle into it a little half to five and six yards around the bottom. ’ An Italian lmpostor “110 Is Known all Over Russia. An Italian, who can not be other than a steamep the Lucania (with the exception water, lct boil for half an hour and press through a colander. Put a quart of milk on to boil, add the water in which the celery was boiled, with the Celery and a slice of onion. Rub an ounce of butter and two tablespoonfuls of flour together and stir into the boiling soup ; season with salt and wash and cut into pieces, covar with boiling pepper and serve. Fashion Hints- Some new skirts have a very wide box- plait at the middle of the back. Spring garments for outdoor wcar have pointed capes and large balloon sleeves. Bonnets for spring are extremely small capotes, and many crownless little boniiets are also shown, while theatre helmets are scarcely more than head-dresses. {ouud hats are of medium size, and in- crease to very large shapes. All crowns are low, the undulating brims are retained, while other brims are much longer at the back than any yet used. Flowers,aigrettcs, the Alsacian bow of ac- cordion velvet, jet, lace, guipire, and chip, with much jet and gold, and ornaments of jewels of all colors, are used for trimming the new bonncts and hats. Capes will be very popular for spring, be- cause they can be worn without crushing the large sleeves. Cloth capes will be most used, and tan and army blue of grayish shades will be the favorite colors. Jackets will be popular for morniu g wear and traveling, and are made with a Simple turn-over collar and revers, stitched like the garment around the edge in tailor fashion. The graceful clinging curves of the bell skirt are being somewhat supplanted by the full skirt whim measures from four and a Kilt-plaited skirts have reappeared, and, in fact, the tendency is toward floating loose effects, the form being no longer in- cased in sheath-like coverings. Dresses that are slightly soiled at the neck can be made like new by cutting the neck V shape in the back and front, to be worn with a large silk handkerchief in the old style of 1790. m+._ ' HE DIES ONOE A WEEK. most remarkable impostor, has been play- ing wonderful tricks upon the good people of Tiilis, in the Caucasus, Russia. His name is Tagarelli, and while he can not be termed an Italian in the strict sense of the word, having been born in Russia of parents born in the same country, it is known that lie is of that extraction. He is known all over the land of the Czar as “The Dying Prophet,†his ability to delude the public depending on a queer faculty he has of dying and returning to life once every week. A person who has viewsd the situ- ation on the ground said: The audacity of his pretensions, the skill with which they are maintained, and, above all, the profound affect produced upon all who come in contact with him, have no parallel in history. He is a most extraordinary being, and if he be an impostor then he is the most marvelous impostor of the age. †He dies, Europe about the year 1400. \ The most successful men of our time have .__.________.._â€"_____. w- _.â€"--,. _ LOOAL ser-eovsssnnvr IN â€' v CHINA- The Manner in ‘l’lil-d-lrl’llbllc Affairs Are Administered in Celestial Villages. A recent writer in the North China Herald of Shanghai describes the manner in whicliï¬local self .government works in China. Every Chinese village is a kind of little principality by itselfâ€"the theory in regard to the head men or village elders being that they are chosen by their fellow townsmcn and conï¬rmed in their position by the district magistrate. In some regions that is actually done, and for the good. conduct of the head men in their ofï¬ce the leading landowners are required to become security. They are not necessarily the oldest men in the village, neither are they necessarily the wealthiest men, although it is probable that every family of property will in some way be represented among them. They are not necessarily men of literary attainments although this may be the case with a few. In those regions where the method of selec- tion is most loose the number of head men has no necessary relation to the size of the village ; the position is not hereditary, neither is there any ï¬xed time of service. A man may act in this capacity at one time and refuse or neglect to doso1 at another. The head men are not formally chosen nor formally deposed. They drop into their places by a kind of natural selection. The qualities which ï¬t a villager to act as head man are the same which contribute to suc~ cess in any line of busines. He must be a practical man who has some native ability, acquainted with the ways of the world, as well as able and willing to devote upon oc- casion an indeï¬nite amount of time and at- tention to the affairs which may be put in his charge. The duties and functions are many and various. They may be classified as those which have relation to the goverih ment of the district, such as taxation ; those which relate to the village, such as repairs of the wall, fairs, and temples, and those which concern private individuals,and are brought to the notice of the head men as being the persons best able to manage them. It is noteworthy that (the govern- _.;_._'m J.) USEFUL INFORMATION. Stereotyping was knowu in 1701. Russia. possesses over 300 female doctors. Women were ï¬rst employed as telegraph operators in 1854. “'eod engraving was introduced into The French entertain considerable anti- pathy for the Italians. There are about 1,500 theatres in Europe. Italy possesses most. Asbestos is found in France, Italy, Cor-- sica, Cornwall, and Scotland. \Villiam Caxton learnt the printing at Bruges, in Flanders. Holbein, the famous painter, was born at Augsburg in Germany. Sea slugs, sliarks’ fins, and hairless dogs are favorite dishes with the Chinese. In Ceylon «the Roman Catholics out- number the Protestants by quite four to one. > ‘ Fine examples of the ruby are more valu- able even than diamonds of the same weight. ‘ The church in the monastery of St. Bernard is the highest place of worship in the world. ' The oldest periodical published in Spain is the Madrid Gazetteâ€"founded in 1662, There is no record of paper having been manufactured in England until the end of the sixteenth century. Dr. Herz, connected with the recent Pan- ama Canal scandal, fought bravely through the Franco-Prussian War. known how to harbor their strength by judicious relaxations. The cost of establishing a. nutmeg planta- tion is very high, and for ten years at least there can be no return. In person the late General Gordon was slight and short, and nothing could be more unassuming than his manner. I / The astronomical calculations in regard to the building of the Pyramids exactly coin- cide with the latest modern discoveries. Of Sir \Valter Scott’s novels, three are assigned to the sixteenth century, seven to the seventeenth, and thirteen to the eigh- teenth century. In some parts of the world sponges are obtained by divers who weight themselves with a stone and tear the sponges from the rocks. The greatest travellers in Switzerland are the English : then come the Germans, the Americans, the French, and the Italians iii the order given. About 5,000,000 ounces of quinine are produced annually. There are seventeen quinine factories in the world, and six of these are in Germany. A death-dealing machine almost identical with the guillotine was in use in the reign of Elizabeth, and twenty-ï¬ve pcrsans suffer- ed death by it. l’aderewski, the celebrated pianist, in spite of the extreme delicacy of his touch, suffers from a muscular affection of the arm, caused, undoubtedly, by his excessive prac- tice. This is, perhaps, surprising, as he never thumps, and his playing is marked more by a. soft brilliaiicy than by more noise. Paderewski had recently to undergo to all appearances, and the ordinary death .a course of massage treatment for this mus- tests declare that life is extinct. While in this condition he declares that his spirit visits “ the unknown world †but which of the two he will not tell. All that he will divulge in regard to his doings while on these “trips†is that he examines the book of life, and that he can tell the spir- itual standing of every person who cares enough about it to make inquiries. __._â€"â€"-.â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"¢~ What It Costs to Run a Steamship. The cost varies very considerably accord- ing to the tonnage of the vessel, its destin- ation, length of voyage, and whether it iea cargo or passenger steamer. There are also steamsliips which work ferry traffic across rivers or harbors, or are limited to service on rivers or lakes, and therefore it is neces sarily impossible to lay down any rate of expenditure which would be applicable generally. Taking the case of one of the larger Atlantic liners, it has been estimated that the cost of running a steamship, such as the new Cunarder Cainpania, or its sister of the Great Eastern, the largest vessel ever built), will be about $90,000 a month. Amongst the heavier items, the salaries and wages will total up to something like 551.2,- 500; coal about $7,000 and victuals for crew and a couple of thousand passengers, about $535,000. tepairs, insurance, stores, and depreciation add largely to tho debit side of the account, to say nothing of occa- sional accidents to machinery, loss through meeting with heavy storms, icebergs, and' other perils of the seas. The cost as repeats other steamships ranges downwards more orlcss quickly; that of running an ordinary trading steamer of 1,000 tons being about $2,000 a month, while, in the case of river heats the cost becomes rapidly smaller as the boats decrease in size. The fleet of the Peninsular and Oriental Steamship Com- pany consists of 531 vessels, and the work- ing expenses amount to nearly $12,500,000 annually, or over $245,000 on the average shredded gelatine, bring it again to the for each steamer. boiling point, and set it beside the fire to - fine; then pour it off through a strainer, and sweeten it with pulverized rock candy. For persons with weak chests or disposed. to affections of the lungs, coffee prepared in this manner is an invaluable breakfast beverage. OAT Mean (‘.\I{ES.--'.l‘lle following is an ex. ccllcnt way to prepare cold oatmeal, rice, wheat, or any two of these things. To two cups of cold oatmeal, or one ofcold oatmeal and one of cold boiled rice, add two tea.- spoonfuls of milk, two of flour, sifted with a tewspoonful of baking powder, and two well-beaten eggs. Mix well, and fry like corn fritters. lie sure and cook them until done. - POACllliD Elmsâ€"Take fresh eggs, break one at a time in a saucer and slip from it into the cgg-poacher; or, have a pan of boiling water in which to poach the eggs; set over a moderate fire;as soon as the water beils, take the eggs up carefully and \built by \V. Doxford & Sons, of Sunderland, 1 Eu zlish Whalebacks- One of the novelties of the past year in shipbuilding is the turret deck steamer England, which is practically amodification of the whaleback type now largely used on the great lakes. In the only vessel of this design yet built the hull is shaped like most other vessels from keel to water line, but. from the water line the shell is rounded off upward and inward until it terminated at the upper deck level in an upright structure, misnained a turret, running fore and aft. The vessel has no sheer, the deck reaching in a perfect straight line fore and ' aft. The plating, running inward from the water line to the turret deck, is thick and strong like that of the hull proper, so that the whole skin of the vessel above and below is of the same thickness. The engines are placed aft, as in wlialeback steamers, so cular affection. DEATH FROM_FRIGHT. Authentic Cases in Which It "as liccn Known to Occur. ' “I have interested myself somewhat in looking up unusual casescf death,†says Dr. Elder, “ and have met several well-anthem ticatcd instances where fright was the cause. The English Surgeon General Francis tells of a drummer in India across whose legs a harmless lizard crawled while he was half asleep. He was sure that a cobra had bit- and he died. “ Frederick L, of Prussia, was killed by fear. His wife was insane, and one day she escaped from her keepers, and, dab- bling her clothes in blood, rushed upon her husband while he was dozing in his chair. King Frederick imagined her to be the white lady, whose ghost was believed to in- variably appear whenever the death of a member of the royal family was to occur, and he was thrown into a fever and died in six weeks. “But perhaps the most remarkable death from fear was that of the Dutch painter, Pentman, who lived in the seventeentliceu- tury. One day he went into a. room full of anatomical subjects to sketch some death heads and skeletonsfor a picture he intend- ed to paint. The weather was very sultry, and while sketching he fell asleep. He was aroused by bones dancing around him and the skeletons suspended from the ceiling clashing together. “ In a {it of terror he threw himself out the window and though he sustained no serious injury, and was informed that a slight earthquake had caused the commotion among his ghostly surroundings, he died in afew days in a nervous tremor. I could cite many other cases where the shock to the nervous system, which we know as fright, has produced death.†.W I ten him, and it was too much for his nerves Seattle’s Pride- Nothing galls the natural pride of a true- blue Scot more than to have Scotland over- looked. A striking instance of this feeling occurred at the battle of Trafalgar. TiVo Scotciimen, messmates and bosom cronies, happened to be stationed near each other when the celebrated signal was given from Admiral Nelson’s sliip-â€"-“ England expects every man to do his duty.†,‘ “ Not a word about poor Scotland,†dole- fully remarked Donald. His friend cocked his eye, turning to his companion, said : “ Man Donald, Scotland kens weel eneuch that nae son needs to be tell’t to due his duty. That’s jist a hint to the Eng- lishers.†‘ Envy Rebuked- Wayside Billâ€"“ Some folks that’s as good ment of China, while in theory more or less despotic, places no practical restrictions upon the right of free assemblage by the people for the consideration of their own affairs. The people of any'village can, if they choose, meet every day in the year. There is no government censor present, and no restrictions upon liberty of debate. The people can say what they like, and the local magistrate neither knows nor cares what is said. There is in every village unceasing supply of matters which do not belong to the public, but which must be adjusted by some man or men who are in the habit of , transacting business, and who not only know what is to be done but know how to do it. There are always Chinese who like to engage in these matters, such as -.the ad- justment of domestic quarrels and differen- ces between neighbors and the like. The head men of the village will be frequently called upon for services of this sort. But such labors, onerous as they often are, will 1be acknowledged only by the thanks of those interested and a participation in tin inevitable feast.__, “irons TURN NEXT †and the Tragequ That [’01- ]oweil It. Dream ol'u Lady It is related that a. Waterville lady, Mrs. J. M. Cook once had a very remarkable vis- ion. In her dreams she met a man with a very peculiar phisiognomy, who said to her, “ Your turn next,†and then disappeared. The next morning she remembered the man’s face perfectly, but could not recall under what circumstances she met him. Again she dreamed the same thing. For weeks and months after she would occasion- ally have the same dream, without the slightest variation. She began to be serious- ly troubled over the occurrence and at length decided to leave town. She had been in Philadelphia a few days when she had oc- casion to go into one of the large buildings. Upon the second floor she noticed that there was an elevator, and decided to wait for it. Just at that moment it came down, and as it went by the second-storey landings. voice from within said : “ Your turn next.†This startled Mrs. Cook, but she thought it merely accidental that these were the. precise words of her dream and resolved to repress her fears. The elevator came up and stopped. She stepped in. \\ hen the door closedshe looked at the man in charge. She almost fainted when she saw that he was the perfect image of. the man of her dream. I-lcr terror can be better imagined than described. She recovered herself quickly, and ordering the elevator. to stop at the next landing got out. The elevator went on, but when a short distance from the third story something gave way and the car crashed down to the basement, killing the man instantly. One Can Die of a Broken Heirt- The late Sir George Pagct, in one of his lectures just published, says that in the vast majority of cases popularly described as broken heart there is nothing like an actual rupture of the heart; yet he admits that mental afrections will not unfrcquently cause real disease of the body, and be men- tions an actual case of broken heart cited by Dr. J. K. Mitchell, of the Jefferson Cob lege, Philadelphia, in lecturing to his pupils. In an early period of his life Dr. Mitchell nocompanied, as a surgeon, a pack- et that sailed from Liverpool to one of the American ports. The captain frequently conversed with him respecting a lady who had promised to become his bride on his re- turn from that voyage. Upon this subject he evinced great warmth of feeling, and showed some costly jewels and ornaments which he intended to present as bridal gifts. On reaching his destination he was abruptly informed that the lady had marriedsonie one else. Instantly the captain was ob- served to clasp his hand to his breast and fall heavily to the ground. He was taken up and conveyed to his cabin on the vessel. Dr. Mitchell was immediately summoned, but before he reached him the captain was dead. A post-mortcm examination reveal- ed tlic cause. His heart was found literally torn in twain. â€"â€"â€"-â€"~â€"â€"4-â€"â€"â€"--â€"---â€"- ’8 Bow She Cornered Him. that from the engine room to the forecastle Wifeâ€"«“Before we were married, didn’t you frequently promise never to let your v; love rim cold?†' J Husbandâ€"â€"“Yes, my dear." ‘ Wifeâ€"“ Then when we nix: having such cold weather, how can you refuse me a an.an skin sacquc.†as the best of ’em I notice is always hard up. Things ain’t divided as they ort to be in this world. o some on 311965 “f butterefi‘toafl' there is a long continuous hold, interfered BAKED POTATOES. â€"'1 use potatoes of '; with only by the necessary bulkheads. The 1 uniform Size, wash and rub until clean, put boat's accommodations for engineers and . Rusty Rufusâ€"“ \Vot’s eatin’ you pard? ' crew are all abaftthe engine room, but the , E5 everybody wuz rich how could oversee“ in a pan, set in a very hot. oven, and bake unlil the skin breaks. lcaptain and officers are placed as usualiof the pore make a livin’, I’d like to know 2ԠCuLnuv SOURâ€"Take four roots of celery, underuthe bridge forward- «t 2-» u. 1" p‘J‘ .. ti- '- '- e.____________.________ . anmmmmmmwwwmmmW-W;Ww