Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 28 Jul 1893, p. 6

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v i l ? manna“ ‘ er than when clothes are soaked over night. A borax and one ounce of white wax melted in __._..._. being well scoured, have a. dry rub of sand, are the very cleanest and purest ; but in the Northern home, carpets and paper he- neath had best be removed and the floor well scoured when, if matting is not to be afforded, paint the floor. Cleanse the apartment from dust and close the win- dows, putty the cracks in the floor and have your paint prepared by the follow- ing recipe, if you want a rich good color: pying out holes in the little worn hose. One gallon linseed oil, one pound of flying by Shoes tShari? are W0?“ through the I Spanish brown, two pounds of powdered toes. - . . Hooking 0.01, garments so faded and thin__ Sienna, one ounce of lifharge. Mix those well in a boiler, set on the stove and stir Who but a mother knows where to begin? , . into it one pint of turpentine which will Changing a button to make it look rightâ€"- That is what mothers are donig to-night. mng it dry mpidhh Apply to the floor Calling the little ones all'round her chair, Wlth 3' hmad thhi the ShI'Oke?’ “how’ng Hearing them lisp forth their weet evening the grain of the wood. In SIX hours it prayer: I V ' ' ‘ . ' l . Telling them over that story of old. ble :Efiimemly dly to penal w” l a How rfihe (£16115? Lord would gather the lambs to ‘ c o ' . is o ; Watching, they listen with childish delightâ€"- That is what mothers are doing to-night. inbbsnnonn. Saturday Night Placing the little hats all in arow, end): for church on the inorrow, you know; fishing wee faces and little black lists. ‘ otting them ready and fit to be kissed; utting them into clean garments and whiteâ€" hat is what mothers are doing to-niglit. Good Biscuits- The secrct of biscuit making is precision Creeping so softly to take a last peep, ,‘lfiffilfifil‘iffiée warm. not successful biscuit makers. The best ’lluckiu'; the blankets ’round each little form; cooks always say they simply throw their hissing each little face, rosy and brighbâ€" biscuits together, and certainly they are “a” 13 What mowers are domg to'mght' not long about it. The cause of success is that biscuits begin to bake before the efl‘cr- vescent qualities of the powder or soda are exhausted. They are live biscuit and are as light and pufi'y as beaten eggs. The best » biscuits are rather small. The very large Help, in the Kitchen. ones are not likely to be quite so light. They , , _ should be baked in a rather quici; oven, and mehmg Fluld-â€"Tahe 2025- Of aqua am‘ to be perfect are a yellowish brown. They meme, 2 ozs. of salts of tartar and a box of \must be thoroughly done through, or they, Kneeling down gently beside the white bed, Lole and meekly she bows down her head, Praying. as only a mother can pray. “God guide and kcep them from going astray.” concchtmted lye- DiSSOIVG the lye in 1 are the most unpalatable and unwliolcsome gallon of rainwater and the salts of tartar articles of we bread pimp in another, and pour both in a two gallon _.._.__ jug ; add the ammonia and cork well. The night before the day you wash, put enough water in the tub to cover the white clothes, and add one cupnt of the fluid. Put the clothes in and let stand until morn- ing. In the morning wring out the clothes and soap and put on to boil. The water in the boiler must be cold when the clothes are put in. Boil thoroughly. Rinse well in two waters ; add a little bluing to the last water. It is not necessary to soak the clothes over night ; good results may be ob- tained by the following method : Put enough cold wafer in the boiler to cover the clothes ; add a cupful of the fluid and a little soap. Before putting in the clothes soap all the soiled spots. Boil a. little long- Tomatoes Ripe and Red- It is not so very many years since tomatoes or ‘I‘ love apples,” as they were then call- ed, might be seen ranged along the country mantelpiece, dividing the honors with shell flowers and waxed wreaths. They were considered then as rank poison, unfit for the proud position they now occupy on the table. Even after that belief was disproved, they were widely suspected of being the subtle cause of cancer, and their popularity suffered not a little thereby. But now they are recognized as one of the chief of vegetables, and new ways of pre- paring them are being constantly devised by knowing Cooks. To make “ tomato eggs" out three or four good sized and not too ripe tomatoes into halves. Take out alittle of the inside; lay them in a pan containing two ounces of heated butter, and fry them lightly. When nearly done carefully drop a raw egg from the shell into each tomato; watch till it has set perfectly, and than take each one separately from the pan and lay it on a slice of buttered toast out to the size of the fruit. Dust over them a little coralline pepper, and sprinkle a little finely grated ham on the white of each egg. Serve on a hot dish, and garnish with the leaves of the tomato. Here is another way of making a dish that will be a feast to the eye as well as to the palate : At the blossom end of six ripe tomatoes make a small hole of sufficient size to hold a dice-shaped piece of butter that has been dipped in pepper, salt, and grated nutmeg (mixed). Place them in a cup- sliaped mushroom, previously soused in heated butter and slightly dusted with pepper. and set them in an oven to cook. Take the soft roes from six bloaters, season them with oil and pepper, curl them round, and grill quickly on buttered paper over a clear lire. \Vhen the tomatoes and mushrooms are cooked remove them from the oven and place a roe on each one. Round the whole pour a gill of ham coulis. To make tomato fritters, boil, peel and pound to a. pulp four tomatoes. Beat this pulp up with the yolks of four eggs and the whites of two eggs, two tablespoonfuls of cream and the same quantifly of white wine, season with a little grate nutmeg and a A Baggy Bearoom- dash of cinnamon. Bdat the whole till the “I have l“St seen 3‘ mos” eX‘lhlhite hed' batter is very light, then divide it into 1'00!“ for a young girl,” said the Woman small fritters and fry quickly in a pan of who has a genius for happening on novelties. heated butter. Drain on kitchen paper and To Make a Good Starchâ€"Two ounces of a teacup of water. ' Take three teacupfuls of any good starch, moisten and rub very smooth and mix with the borax and wax, a little at a time until it is all smooth. Spread on a platter to dryâ€"keep in a box. Wash and dry the shirts, collars and cuffs Without starching. When ready to iron take the same quantity of this preparation as you would of common starch to make cold starch. Use luke-warm water instead of cold water. Rub the starch in thoroughly. Do not spread a cloth over the garment. The shirts may be ironed immediately if desired. Cement. â€"â€"-Mix together litharge and glycerine to the consistency of thick cream or fresh putty. This cement is useful for mending stone jars or earthenware, stop- ping leaks in seams of tin pans or wain boiler, or cracks and holes in iron kettles, etc. The article mended should not be used until the cement has hardened. This cement will resist the action of hot or cold water, acid and heat. To Take Out Mildewâ€"Rub on soft soap and salt. Expose to the sun. Repeat if necessary. I To Remove Iron Rushâ€"Spread the rusted 1 spot on a plate and cover it thickly with [ stewed hot rhubarb. Another, take cream tartar, moisten with water, apply to the rusty spots and expose to the sun. Repeat if necessary. and dispatch. Laggards and lazy people are l Arrange them on a well-oiled dish , ter, one cupful of white sugar, one and one- lialf cupfuls of flour, yolks of three eggs, nearly one-half a cupful of sweet milk, one- half a teaspocnful of soda ; last of all add the whites of two of the eggs, well beaten ; save the other for frosting. Bake in three tins like jelly cake and spread frosting and cocoanut between the layers and over the top. Rolled Jelly Cakeâ€"One cupful of sugar, three eggs, one cupful of lluur, one- half a teaspoonful of soda, One teaspooiiful of cream of tartar. Flavor to taste. Bike in one long bread pan or two smaller ones. Butter the pans well, and when done lay the cake on a cloth and spread with jelly. Roll up while but and pin a cloth around it until cold. " Dominoes. â€"â€"Bake any kind of sponge cake in a thin sheet. Cut this into small oblong pieces, the shape of a domino. Frost the top and sides. \\ hen the frosting is hard, draw black lines and make small dots with a small brush that has been dipped in melted chocolate. These are nice with ice cream. , Lemonade. â€"Roll six lemons until Well bruised, slice thin in a large pitcher, PM over them two teacupfuls of white sugar ; let stand twenty minutes, Lhen add one gallon of water, and lumps of ice. If there are aged people in the party, there should always be some way prepared for making coffee or tea. _â€"_â€"oâ€"â€"â€" PERSONAL- L'iicius Langdon Nicholas, who has just married Mrs. Bishop, mother of the late mind reader of that name, is said to be great-great-grandson of a Russian emperor. It is not generally known that Queen Victoria eats very little, if any, ordinary bread, preferring in lieu of the orthodox “staff of life” what the Italians called grisini. Gen. Lord Wolseley before he would ac- cept a peerage stipulated that the title should descend to his only child, Francis Wolseley. The favor is one seldom granted to the English nobility. The late Prof. Morse made love by light- ning, as it were. He met his first wife i during an evening call at the house of her father and proposed marriage to her before he went away that night. James Gordon Bennett is said [)0 have ac- quired such a distaste for coaching since his narrow escape from death by being thrown from a drag in Paris that he or- deredhis whole coaching establishment sold at auction. x Dr. Schliemanii’s facility in languages is noted by the author of an appreciative ar- ticle iii “ The Atlantic.” He describes the archaeologist as carrying his part, at his own table, in three concurrent conversa- tions in as many tongues. Prince Krapotkin, who will visit this country in the fall, is, despite his noble birth, one of the most active nihilists in Europe and a bosom friend of Stepniak. The prince is a man of profound learning and stands high as a scientist. Archibald Clavering Gunter, the author of “Mr. Barnes of New York” and kindred works of fiction, is making hay. while the sun shines. He is reported as saying frank- ly : “I don’t believe people will read my truck much longer, and I am going to load them up while they want it.” Mr. Carnot, the President of the French Republic, has been unable to entertain dur- l ing the past winter on account of his poor health. He has decided to devote the sum of$l0,000, representing in part the sum he otherwise would have spent on entertain- ments, to charitableLinstitutions and gifts to the Door. Jerome K. Jerome, whose popularity does not wane, and who continues one of the most entertaining of writers, had been in all sorts of professions, , including a brief experience upon the stage, before he settled into literary work and became famous. He and his pretty wife lead an ideal life in St. John’s l “ It was 3' ‘Ph-nsy bedroom, devised by Ml send to table with the following sauce: I \Vood. The story of their courtship artistic mother for her sixteen-year-old Melt an ounce of butter in 51,0195,“ gauge. daughter. All the furnishing and decora- PM), skim it wen, add Lhejuice from two is an interesting one. the adopted child of lerome’s mother, and tion of the room was white. lavendernviolet lemons, a wincglassful of red Canary sack, the two children played together, always 3114 purple. With infill 3‘ (high 0f sold here and a tablespoonful of caster sugar. \Vhen promising to marry‘each other. But when . 7 ~ . . - ' - A ' . ' ,. . . . . and were' “16 “wet was Whu'e and vm ‘3‘“ 13 thoroughly hf‘lted send the sauce to they were still in their teens an older man, let, and the furnitureâ€"bed, chairs, dresser, table in a, tween, tiny table, ctc., ~ivory enameled, touched with gilt. Wherever use could justify beauty, bows oi violet-colored ribbon were gracefully bestowed. “ The curtains were white, embroidered sketchily in violet pansies. The bed was dressed in white counterpane and pillows exquisitely embroidered 'in’ pansies, and among the lovely blossoms on the latter was the motto : ‘ Paiisies for Thoughts.’ All the accessories of the toilet table “Lore white, decorated with pansiesâ€"a pansy scarf, pansy cushion, pansy pin trays and, pansies delicately painted on the ivory comb, brush and hand mirror. All the little trifles in“ ____. Picnic Dinner- Chicken Picâ€"Joint a full-grown chicken, ‘cut in small pieces and boil with a little salt pork in water enough to cover until tender ; then remove the breastbone. W'hile boiling add finely cut parsley for a pleasant flavor. Season with pepper, salt, and a few ounces of good, fresh butter. When all is cooked well, there should be liquid enough to cover the chicken. Beat two eggs and stir in some sweet cream. Line a pan with a crust like soda. biscuit using more short- ening ; put in the, chicken and liquid, cover with the dough and bake until it is slight- ly brown. ' ‘ Coldboiled Hamâ€"Slice it very thin across the grain. Cherry Piaâ€"The cherries should always be stoned. Lemon Pie. -Juice of one lemon, one cup- ful of sugar, two tablespoonfuls of corn- starch, yolks of two eggs. Beat all togeth- lier ; add one cupful of boiling water. Bake with one crust. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth and add 'two tablespoonfuls of sugar ; spread on‘ the pies after baking, and brown lightly. ‘ Cucumber Picklesâ€"Gather small cucum- bers, wash well and cover with 'good brine â€"""'_ for twenty-four hours ; drain and wash. . p A GOOd Gm3 0f Tea" Pack in a stone jar and coi'er with spiced In China they pour boiling water into a I Vinegar prepared in this Way: To every cup and mm some teaimo it, and when the , gallon ,of good vinegar (cider vinegar is the leaves sink to the. bottom, which happens l best) add one ounce each of ginger root, all- iu‘ra, few seconds, they pour the water ofi‘; spice, cloves and cinnamon, and a little, and drink it. \Ve, on the contrary, let black pepper or whole cayenne peppers. Let the tea “stand” sometimes, even in the ‘cln: \‘incgil-r and Spices, together, come to a bric-a-brac strewn about in the room were pansy design, picked up here and thei'c,tlie fond mother said, even to a pansy stamp box and paper cutter on the secretary in one corner. “ The tete-atete set of China on a table near the bed had pansy cups and saucers, a pansy tea service on a pansy embroidered cloth. 11.} I can hardly tell you how that room impressed me. It had evidently arisendike the delicate perfume of th‘ presiding flower, a fragrant thought in that mother’s heart for her pansy-eyed girl. How ox- quisite life can be made when love lends in- spiration to an artistic mind l” drawing room, while in the servants’ hall il. boil and sour over the cucumbers. Do this is allowed regularly to stew on me hob for three mornings when they will be ready until a brown (leuoctlon of equal strength ‘ for use. 4 and bitterness is ready to be served, to Rugk___0nc pint of sweet milk, two eggs the detriment of the nerves of all who drink Mg tcncupful cf sugar, one-half cupful of it on account of the tannin Mimezeds {0 {0 u better, one cake of yeast. Mix well. Let Spt‘fih. out Of the 3” Wed tea- leaves- how. H- eband in a warm place until light ; work the remedy for this is very easy and 0011- down and let iti'ise again; work well and gists in never allowing t8“, When made, to make into small cakes and let them get very stand for more than three minutes at most, light bean-e baking, ornhcmel‘ 9m“? t° have it made i“ one tell“ Fruit Cakeâ€"Three eggs, two cupfuls of P017 hhdfiuhe‘l 0” mm gnome“ sugar, one cupful of butter, one cupful of . as”: â€"-â€"â€"â€"E‘ Ynol..R.‘I-3!, one cupful of chopped raisins, one Summer *ohgm' cupful of consuls, one cupful of sour milk, Bare floors are a luxury in summer, if six .mrlllls of flour, one teaspoonful of soda, they are smooth, solid cues. The broad c‘ov‘is Md "“LmeQ' phi}; plank floors of the South which, after Cucoanut Calmâ€"Oncth cupful of but- also a relative, married the young girl. He only lived a. few years, however, and died leaving his Wife and baby daughter in des- titution. Jerome helped her as much as possible by giving her work as a copyist, and as soon as possible asked her. to marry him. __._â€"â€"0â€"-â€"--â€"_ The Limits of Arbitration. With international arbitration, says the London Spectator, we confess to having com- paratively little sympathy. If nations mean to fight, nothing will prevent their so doing, and agreements to arbitrate will be of very little service. The suggestion of an agreement between England and the Unit- ed States ioestablish a permanent machinr cry for regulating their disputes is, how- ever, quite different. Nations in whom the same radical characteristics are to be found, who are influenced by the same ideas. who talk the same language, read the same books and possess the same political traditions, are capable of making, an agreement to settle disputes by arbitration a reality. Again an agreement not to fight till the question in dispute has been referred to a body exercis- ing the functions of a court of'law is a step in the direction of that alliance between the United States and England which, we trust and believe, is the destiny of the two countries. If we begin by an acknowledg- ment that we are not in the position of for- eign powersâ€"i3. e. liable to war at any mo- mentâ€"-we may soon rise to, definite race al- liance, and, lastly, to that declarationof a common citizenship which would prevent any Englishman from being an alien in America, or any American being an alien in England, and would heal the breach in the unity of the race caused by the folly of George III and his Ministers.‘ Be Knew Bis Business. It was in a moment of absent-mindedness â€"even the best of us Will be off our guard sometimesâ€"and he had been engaged to some seventeen girls. She leaned her head upon his shoulder and looking into his eyes said : ' “How do you know that you love me, dearest '3” ~ He replied with a. far-away look in his eyes : “Well I guess I know my business.” The folding envelope was first used in 1839. ‘ -lower extremity, the wires running up contemporary English made for use “1 Burger)" Mr3,.Jemme was ed with a small but powerful electric lamp. » shire were “dressed” with flo’ivers'ou a A52. .__â€" on THE- INSIDE Talon. o nu mu :1 Lamp. Inferior with the Electric Aumrcul, Se“ More than fifty years ago {Fm-mes Clark A Prof, Eisberg exhibited about, ten y'em-s Ross went down to the Antarctic seas on a “go one of the ewlier apolications of the voyage of discovery. Ross was in the ser- electric lamp as an adjunct to surgery, and Vice 05 the Royal BrlElSh Navy and 8'“ 911‘ we recent exhibition of an munfinmed thusiastic explorer. When he returned he human head at the academy of Modiéine is PilhliShesl 3' “MN-hive 05 84 voyage in the a furtliur development of the same interest- Antarctic regionsfind canal the athention 0f ing subject. The incandescent light is now the Scotch Whalers to the fact that in the employed in a, varies}, of interesting ways Southern seas the “real” whale was to be by physicians and dentists. One of the found in gm” numbers» 50 tame that it earliest uses of the tiny lamp was for the could he eaSlly captured- He reported seals purpose of (lemming spots of decay also in great abundance. At this time, how- i_i -teeth that. upon ordinary inspec. over, his enthusiasm excited little attention. tion seemed sound, or at, 13",.“ did not, The Autarctic' Ocean was far away, the reveal the exact location of the defect, Greenland seas were nearer home, and the A small incandescent lamp placed in the Whaling voyages in the Noah We” sulfi‘ mouth of a subject so illuminates the teem, ciently reinunerative to dismiss all thought that no defect can escape detection. lr‘rof. 0f 9' longer vovage iht‘)‘ unknown and Elsberg’s experiment was for the purpose treacherous waters. Furthermore, Rosa’s 0_f dempnstrating the value of the electric Statements were never corroborated, and light in explorations of the cheek bones. after a few years IOf idle talk among the I‘hese bones are hollow,lined with mucous masters of whaling vessels the matter slum- meinbrane, and connected by orifices with hered‘ the nose. The cavities, also, lie so near the N05 10118,! ago Capt- DEWid Gray) OfPCteT' roots of some of the teeth, that an ulcer at head: Scotland. EOOh up the discuSSiODi Mid the root of such a. tooth sometimes results in “Vigorous Pamphlet" urged “he impor‘ in the escape of pus into the bone cavity. tahce 0f sending Vessels manned by halle The consequences of this we often grave. crews to test the value of Ross’s testimony. and as no ordinary inspection can reveal the This time the “him” “305in mom Salons presence of pus in the cavity until great COHSidemtiQn' 0&1“- Gmy WAS 3'“ exPeVi‘ harm is done, the revelations of the electric enced Whaler Whose opinion was held in 33' I lamp are of great value, When a small teem,a.nd the fact was staring the whaling electric lamp is taken into the mouth the Will‘sth in the face that the Greenland whole. face is lighted up, and even the bones seas were no longer 3' field 0f Pl'Ofilii that are to a considerable degree illuminated. If the indhsn'y “’33 Waning and that some‘ there is any foreign substance in the cavity Wing mus” he done- of the cheek bone the light reveals it. Accordingly, 1&5” SePl’embcr four Wlmle After this use of the electric light came Ships were filled out all Dundee and “Mt” its application to the illumination of diseas- ed SOUlthMd- one Of these Ships has lug“ ed stomachs. Doctors nowadays use the returned: and “P03 its report, h? is Presum‘ stomach Pump very little, but, wash out, ed, future action Wlll be based. That re- troublesome stomachs with the aid ofa fun- P0” (1°35 “0t deem-1'3 uhmlhlgatedly either nel, a rubber tube, and warm water, much to” support3 01‘ faihu‘ec If: is true shah the as may would wash any cavity; When the real black whale of which Ross wrote was stomach is to be illuminated, such a tube is 11°“ seen: but seals were found in great sent, down Wm, an electric lamp 8", the abundanco andwere easily caughhthe vessel returningwith at least 5,000. As both the skins. and the oil are of great value the margin of profit is considerable, and the chancesare that there will be a rush of vessels to the “ great white wall ” next immediate contract with the lamp The season. This is necessitatedthe more since current is then turned on, and the abdomen the fall‘lre in bObh the Whale M‘d Seal Cl“3P appears an illuminated mound. The skill- 1“ we Greenland 33'“ for 3' year 01‘ two ed medicoelectrician professes to detect has been so pronounced that it has pointed many disturbances of the stomach by aid of to the ,emhcmon 0f the in.‘»lh5tFY- this illumination, but the science and art of , The Interest attached to this first expedi- smdying a mamas insides from the aid of two was so great that several scientists ac- elecbriciw is yet; compamgively new, and companied the crews, and anartist wentalong there is much m be leamBL , and made a series of sketches. Slaughtering One of the most wonderful uses of the seals ‘3 not a very dangerous Sl""1‘l'""3x‘39Pn electric light is in the exploration of the for the Seals-4?“? the voyage is long and bladder. In the case of this organ the sur- hazardmls! and “713 110 Summer (lay recrea‘ gem, passes in a, prism and an electric light, tion to be shut up in ice fields, surrounded and manages not, orgy to illuminate the in. by the huge and threatening white walls. terior, but actually to see its various parts and LOWGPB- Early in the cent/“Ty the Ships reflected in a mirror from the prism. 3]. Were rudely constructed and altogether un- the aid of this coutrivauce the very last {fitted for the Perils ‘30 WhiCh they were Shh- secrets of the bladder are laid open to the Jeeted- In Pmof Of this “7 l5 only necessary surgeon to recall the scores of vessels that have gone The electric lamps employed by dentists down in the Greenland seas. But now and surgeons in the= study of' the human Ema-“3F Precahtlons are til-ken and hhe Ships interim. are tiny affairs, made with the are built to Withstand the pressure of the utmost care, so that they shall not irritate Ice- The bows 0} the VESSElS are not 1858 parts with which they come in contact. A than mm” feel? tillle 0f WOOd, Wibh iron special dental lamp is about scvcn-eighths of Plating- Th? Sides. M6 8180 Of enormous an inch long and somewhat less than three- Strength 1”th Wlth Steam they can no” eigliths of an inch in diameter. It is of one- only reSiSl‘ “he enormous Pressure Which half candle power, and ii, is used to light large flees of me sometimes inflict, but can up small cavities in the teeth. A larger drive into and through them With great one is an inch and a half long and halfâ€"an force- They are 8:11 “fortified” t0 the last inch in diameter. It also is of one-half degree by the appllWhiOh 0f iron Plfi'tes and candle power. The tiniest of all is the pea umber t0 the enema, and 0“ 9' VaSt hum' . lamp, which is not larger than a peg, of her of huge beams and stout stanchions to Inediunx size and pear shaped-in form_ It, the interior. ‘7853618 these can live in any sea, if it is open, and their chief danger too, is of one-half candle power, and is so . , lies in getting hemmed in and “nipped ” by small that it does not seriously interfere ' . . with the dentist as he manipulates his im- an ice formation, which, strong as3they are, sometimes crushes their sides as if they plements of torture. Small pear-shaped were mere eggshells. lamps of one and two candle power are also . rhere is little The course pursued by the Scotch Whalers heat from these small lanips‘aud the effect led tShem at first 50 the Falkland IShmdS: of their light in illuminating human cavit- where they found opportunity to contradict ice is marvellous. the opinion of Darwin. who pronounced The hand, the finger and almost any part; them a dreary waste. Birds and fish were caught in abundance and the general im- of the bod ma be ex lored b lacing it y y p y p ' pression was favorable. Leaving the islands bet-ween the eye and a. contrivance suppli- they followed the track taken by Ross in 1842, and it was iii and around this neigh- borhood they killed the seals. Of the 'whales they were in search of, however, the “ ice- whale ”-â€"-tlie Balaena niysticetusâ€"they saw none. ' Four kinds of seals were discovered by the Whalers, and of these one was very large, averaging 12 feet 4 inches in length, with a head like a Danish bound, with huge teeth and greenish-eyes. Two bullets at the most will do the work. certain day, and a rustic merry-making fol- THE VICTORIA DISASTER. lowed. All this would have been “idolatry” I in the eyes of King Egbert, or of St, Cum. Admiral Tracey Refused Last Yenr to Obey min, who died in 669 A. D., and the practice a SIIIIHM “NO! From Adlllil'al Tryon, really is a relic of “ Gentiliam,” as Aubrey ALondon (Eng) special'says :â€"-The Globe calls it. King Egbert imposed three years says it is authorized to deny the publish- of penance on people who kept wakes ,at ed statement to the effect that all the Cap- wells; so did St. Cummin. But whereas ‘tains of the vessels that took part in the the wake was originally hallowed to the recent manoeuvres of the British Mediter- well itself or to its presiding naiad, in lat- ranean squadron off Tripoli. Syria, are to ter times the wells Were sacred to saints, be tried by courtmartial. According to the and the wake or nocturnal festival went on story which appeared in the Graphic the merrily. There is a little lochaii near the charge to be made against the Captains was Naver, whither the Country people still that they had not obeyed Admiral Tryon’s gather, or very lately were used to gather, signals for the fleet formation, in attemp- and hold a wake on a certain night in sum- ing to carry out which signals the Camper- mer. The consequent frivolities have been 'down ran into and sank the Victoria, the obnoxious to the kirk as well as to the flagship'of the squadron. church. The ancient religion “proved an Tlie'Glo‘oc says that the manoeuvre was excuse for a glass,” or a lass, or both, and just beginning when the Camperdown struck all forms of festive religion are difficult to the Victoria. The other ships did not have reform out of existence. The mass was time to turn before the accident happened. easily “stamped out” in Scotland,~ but the The Globe further says that three years repression of Robin Hood’s games nearly ago Admiral Tryon, who was commanding caused a revolt against the ministers. Thus the fleet manoeuvres, signalled an order for well worship lingered on, perhaps lingers the identical evolution that resulted in the yet, though the pilgrims are honoring an loss of his ship and his own life. Rear Ad- unknown naiad, or a disestablishedsaint. miral Richard. F. Tracey. who is now in - command at the Malta dockyard, was in ' command of the vessel at the head of the Influence of Example. port column. He saw the danger that Fact‘un__u You’d hardly think that such would be involved in carrying out the order, a dumb thing as a hen would be influenced fm‘l rel-“39d to “33"?” the signal' Adlmml by the example of man, but it’s so. ” Fri?“ walled for flue“? mmut’es’ and! re' Pdmi‘ins__‘u vpmt seems strange-n ceivmg no answering Signal, he annulled Fucmm_u I know it, dues, but it’s so" his order, and the signal for1 the evolution Pfi‘vung_.u new do you know 2» was hauled down. Admira. Tryon raised Factumâ€"” From observation, member the other evening when the crewd of sports came up from the village and had a. set-to in my barn.” aniinsâ€"J‘ Yes.” Factumâ€"“ Well, it was only a day or . , ,v . v 1 two after that, I found two of my hens the boy ll’ assistance boo .Iiot arriic- .. clucking around looking for a place to set The will of Jane Nevms, who died at too.” Yonkers, was in dispute before the Surro- gate of Vl'estchester County, “Y. The A tombstone in a cemetery near a small coflln plate was pro'lllCEd, cud its date Vermont town bears the inscription, showed that the woman had died five days “ Sacred to the memory of three twins.” before the will was signed. ’6 through the tube. The patient takes a drink of water before swallowing the electric lamp, in order that the walls of the stomach may be distended and not come in The use of these lamps in surgery is cap- able of indefinite extension, and the pros- pect is that the phrase “ black as the in- side of a crow,” will have no significance for the surgeon of the future. W The Worship of Wells. Early northern Christianity tried to put down well worship without much success. Very recently, if not now, wells in Derby- rcfusal to obey the order. ..___.__â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-~ A vicious game-cock attacked the little son of Thomas Camber, of Hotchhissville, Doom, and would very likely have killed ___._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" AT THE GREAT WHITE WALLVJ?‘ Dentists and Surgeons Now Explore the Scapnunuflg and “s Excuenmnts m the You re_ no question about Rear Admiral Tracey’e, "7“- .. -mh'fily v

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