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Flesherton Advance, 28 Jan 1915, p. 3

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m Hints for tbc Home ^Ss Salad, Suggestions. Romain and Anparagus Salad.â€" Wa»h andi oTaU tender romain leaves, place three canned asparagus in its hollow and pour a few tea- epoonfula of chiffonade or piquant dressing over. Wax Bean Salad in Onion Rings. â€"Parboil the wax beans or use can- ned ones. Skin and slice large Spa- nish onions, tbeu steajii or boil care- fully in flat dish. When tendear drain and r«nove half of the centres of each slice. P!u..c:> on plaites or on salad pJattn-. Dress the beams with French dretsing or mayonnaise and pile in centre of eadi rang. This is nice with cold meats and Frentih fried or sauted potatoes. Potato and Onion Salad.â€" Pare and cut potatoes into thin slices, parboil until done but not mashed. Drain and pour on a shallow dish. Now take centres of the boiled on- ion rings from the wax bean salad, iEa.sh with a fork, add a sifting of 6«alt and jiepper, then mix witli enough boiled dressing to make a smooth, rather thick emukion\ Sift salt and pepper over the potatoes, then cover with tihe dressing and let it stand for an houc-to ripen. This is a nice lundieon dish a.nd can be served witli rings of hard boiled eges, curled bacon or boiled ham. l-'lowor Salad. â€" Separate, wash and drain a nice white cauliflower, drop into a kettle of rapidly-boiling water and cook until tender. Tiake up carefully and cool on a platter. For each helping have a blanched cup-shaped lettuce leaf. Place as many of the little sections, flo'wer up, as will form a pretty imitation of a flower, sift lightly with a little salt and pas-s. a fancy dish of thick boiled cream dressing to pour over at the tabic. Boiled Cream Dressing.â€" Ingredi- ents : Two tablespoonfuls of flour, two tablespoonfuls of yellow mus- tard, two tablespoonfuls of .siugar, one teaspoonful of salt, yolks of three eggs, one cup of milk, si.K ta- blespoonfuls of cider vinega.r. Mix all dry ingredients, adding the well- beaten yolks, and when smooth add milk gradually. Cook in double boiler until smooth and thickened. Add vinegar gradually and cook only until at boiling pwint. Remove from stove and beat witli a revolv- ing beater until partly cooled. Hed Wine Vinegar Drewing. â€" In- gredients : One teaspoonful of su- gar, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one teaspoonfuil of onion juice, two tablespoonfuls of olive oil, four ta- blespoonfuls of red wine vinegar. Method : Rub first four ingredients together until smooth, then stir in the vinegar slowly, beating all the time. giniuing and draw until the edges Ue fliat. Thia makes tihe hole ap- peair eioalW, and it will be much easier to mend. When washdng scrubbing cr hair brushes, if they are put to dry witih the bristles diownward they will last twice as long. If turned the other way the water soaks into the wood and rots the bristles. The be«t way to wanm up a T>oasit of meat is to wrap it in thdckly- greased paper, and keap it covered while in the oven. By having it cov- ered the steam will prevent the meat from becoming hanxl and dry, and it will become heated throu^ in less time. WAR Ts. INVENTIVENESS. Useful Hints. Beans are tiie laoist nutritious of all vegetables. Whiting and ammionia are beat for cleaning nickel. Every cellar should be aired and rtunned often. As a rule meats containing, much Eat are not w^holesome. Dates can be stuffed with cream cheese ftLled with nut^. Potato water is good bo remove mud stajiis from cloth. Good mutton should be bright red ID color, with firm, white fat. Fine net of the sort used for cur- tains can be cut up for boudoir caps. If you sprinkle salt on mushroome before they are cooked dt will bring out tlie juice. Nice little rounded aprons may be out from the good back of a man's worn out sihirt. Tlo keep white piain.fc bright, rub k with a clean kerosene cloth after the ordinary cleianing. Sprinkle the top of the pie with o&ld water before baking; it will make the crust nioi-e flaky. Water in which potatoes have been boiled as the best thing with which to sponge and revive a silk dress. Remember apple jelly can. be made at any time thivugh the win- ter, and is particulairly good itt the children's scihoal sandwiches. Tongue for sandwich filling ahould be mixed fine and rubbed to a paste with mashed boiled eggs, seasoned with vinegar and butter. For milk that has become scorched the taste may bo restored again by standring it in a pan of cold water to which a pinch of salt has been add- ed. The quickest way to stone raisins is to pliaoe the iraisins on a tin iii , the oven until they are heated through, then split them open and the stones are ea,3ily removed. When ironiing circular centre- pieces or tablecloith® see that the iron moves with the straight gi^ann of the oloth, for it is in this way only that the edges A«ill be perfect- ly flat. To render pork sausiagois more di- gestible, thoromgihly prick the sau- sages and plunge into boiling water for five minuifces, alter wihidr they may be fried in the usual way. He.re is an exoeJilent way to keep vamisihed painit bright and clean looking : Fill a oheeaockiith bag with flaxseed and soak it in water for a few WuTB. Then wipe the paint with It. When darning stockings run a thread round eaUdh jK>le befone be- A Frenchman Perfected a Proces.s for Making .Margarine. While war is undeniably the greatest curse to civilization, it is not without some compensations. It acts as a decided stimulus to in- ventive effortr not necessarily in the interest of destruction, but of eco- nomics. One of the greatest boons of to-day, synthetic butter, or, as it is more commonly called, mat- garineâ€" was directly attributable U> war. Napoleon III., realizing the position of his numerous poorer subjects, and the fact that they could not afford to purchase but- ter, concluded that it would be bet- ter for them bo consume a whole- some and nutritious substitute in preference to a dangerous and adulteraited article. Tlie outcome of this was. the concentration of the efforts of Mege Mouries upon the solution of the problem, wihich cul- minated in blie perfection of a pro- cess f<jr tlie manufacture of mar- garine from animal fats. To-day one is able to appreciate the signi- ficance and economic vakie of the illustrious Frenchman's discovery. Margarine is in favor throughout the world, and its production is one of the most pi-osperous industries. The manufacture has undergone ex- tra,ordinary development, and has led to still further remarkable con- quests of science, especially the su- persediing of animal fats by nut oils, which have been rendered tasteless and odorless. Xt the pre- sent time there are possibilities qui<e as golden as those in 1870. The man who succeeds in reducing the Cost of manufacturing 'sugar, even by a cent per pound, will be appreciated by humanity at large. If he can evolve a practical and inexpensive means of manufactur- ing this commodity from the oom- mion root vegetables he will have achieved a greater success; while the discovery of a synthetic sugar which can be sold at half the price of blie natural article will bring him a tremendous fortune and an im- perishable recopd en the roll of fame. The discovery of a n<m-in- boxicating beverage that may be sold profitably at one-half the prite of the ordinary beers, and yet have the characteristic flavor of the lat- ter, will aliso bring undying fame. Mercerized cotton has wrought a wide-spread revolution in the tex- tile trade, and an equally striking effect will be produced by the man who perfects the means of produc- mg a cheap artificial wool. The margarine of to-day is as dissimilar from that jrf 1870 as chalk is from cheese, a result due to the wonder- ful concembration of energy for which the achievement of Mege Mouries was directly responsible. CLIMATES CHANGED. How Some Countries Have Altered Their Weather. One of the difliculties in blie path of new countries is that very often the cLima/te is not just the sort needed for successful agriculture. But science is altering all tihat. (Jlimates are being changed every year, gradually but surely. The most common difficulty is usually too small a rainfall. Many countries have such severe droughts that if blie tiny a«iiu'al rainfall were just an inch or two less the soil would be impossible bo cultivate, and the whole country would be- come a desert. It is in cases like these that the climate-maker steps in. Where lock of rain is the trouble, he is usually the Government's botanical or for THESUIIBitYSGHOJLSTODY INTERNATIONAL LESSON. JAN L AKl 31. Lesson V. The Birth of Samson. Judg. 13. 8-16; 24. 25. Golden Text, Judg. 13. 4. Verse 8. Let the man of G\xl wihom thou didst send come again unto us, and teaoh us. â€" Manoali is particularly concerned about the visit which his wife received from the ongeJ of tlie Lord. He is a de- vout man. HLs faith is stirred. He has a real desire to learn more about the wonderful tiling that is to estry expert. His solution is to | ^f.PP*'>: ^e does not doubt that a plant trees. For, strange as it may seem, trees increase the rainfall. They do this in two ways. The leaves of trees are always â€" owing to thfir chemical make-up â€" cooler than the surrounding atmosphere. child will be born unto him and his wife who will take a prominent place in the his-tory of his people, and he wants to know, long before Che coming of tihe child, h«iw he is to be taught and what particularly and so help to bring down what ' ^» ,*" ^^ <^'"?« ^^^ '^^ may properly CLASS DISTINCTION. What the War Has Done to Make Britain Denioeratic. One certain result of the war will be a more democratic Britain. Con- stitutionally we have heen suhject to the will of the masses since 1882, but the class spirit has survived to an amazing degree, and this war is going to end it, writes Ella Hep- worth Dixon. An army in which everyone has volunteered, from colliers and shopmen to members of the Bache- lors' and the Wellington, in which all these heterogeneous elements are fighting side by side and shar- ing good and evil alikeâ€" this army is not coming home again with quite the .same ideas as when it started. The poor will assuredly lose some of their absurd preju- dices about the rich ; the rich will be more understanding about the difficulties and temptations of the populace. You cannot lie shoul- der bo shoulder with another man in a wet trench for days and nights on end, facing hourly death, with- out finding out his good "points." The classes and masses, Britain and India, the home country and the Dominions, are toeing torought together in the hour of trial as they have never been hefore. There is now hut one Empire, and we should be ahle to forget our class distinc- tions as well as the divisions of col- or and race. It is the same with the women at home. They have given of their best, and have shown a care and sympathy for the women of the low- er classes which would not have been possible a few years ago, when charity and district-visiting were the only form of social service which we practiced. It is not too much to say that in 1915 we shall find ourselves in a different world. moisture there is in the air, much as a cold mountain top brings down rain. Then, too, the roots help bo keep the moisture in the soil when the rain has actually fallen, instead of letting it be sucked up again by the hot sun. The eucalyptus, or g^im-tree, is the great weapon of the rain-maker ; and it was recently announced that the Central Pacific Railway, which passes through a huge, flat desert east of the Rockies, lias had guin- trces planted for hundreds of miles along the line bo lessen drough/bs. Malaria and mosquitoes are two other phigues in hot climates. The eucalyptus tackles them, too. The tannic acid in tlie roots drives ma- laria away. The mosquitoes just disappear. TBie planting of treesâ€" afforestia^ tion it is called â€" is done by the cli- mate-maker for oblier purposes. Trees make a climate milder and shelter exix>sed regions. Spain has for centuries recklessly^ used up its freat forests till it is now bare, with the result tluat its oliimate has become very extreme, Spain being nowadays scorchingly hot in the summerj like the Sahara, and very cold in the winter. Drainage is another weapon of tihe man who makes climates. The draining of marshy ground nob only adds great tracts to the agricultural wealth of the country, but raises the temperature of what is other- wise a moist and unhealthy region. The reason is that water or marsh does not heat up under sunshine as dry land dkjes. The object of a large scheme of drainage is as often to make bhe climate healthier as to benefit agri- culture. Marshlamd means ague and malaria. There are exceptions. The bogs that cover so large a part of Ire- land are quite healtliful, owing to the aniouiUjt of tannic acid ithey oon- bain. So experiments are being made in different parts of the world as to the effect, on undirainable swamps, of injecting huge quanti- ties of tannic acid. But if Ireland's bogs were sciein- tiffically drained, tliat country would, according to an Aufitralian climate-adjuster, have summers five degrees hotter thaan she has now. NAV.AJOS FEAR THE DEAD. Two heads are better thwi one- Ln a kissing matcli. Bodies arc Got Rid of as Quickly OS Pomiblc. A practioe of the Navajo Indians that promotes health among bhem, however repugnant it may be bo us, is their disposition of the dead, says tlie Christian Herald. In tihe I'iesence of the living the Navajo is wJt-hout fear, but his terror of the dead is abject and unreasoning. The dead are believed bo be pocsceaed only of malevolent feelings towards the survivors, wibh unlimited pow- ers for working evil upon those who carelesalfv place themselves within the power of the spirits. So wlieii any one dies, the only anxiety of blie surviving relatives is to get rid of the body as quickly a» possible. If Uiere are amy white men living in the neighborhood an effort is made to induce tliem to perform the o^Soee of uodiertjikcr. If not, the ddspoaitdon d the body depends some^sjfcat uixMi circum- stances. If bh« feogaiiâ€" the modern wigwam--i« built of wood, it is set on fii-e and burned with the body in it. If of stone, blie body is usually taken outside, bhe emtrance to the hogan dbaed up with stones or sticks, and a hole made in the wall opi>osite to permit the evil spirits to enter and depart, and bo warn passers by bhat bhe structure be- longs to the de.id. It the death otx^urred in a rocky cou'htry, the body will likely be ta- ken to some crevice and thrown inbo it. It may be left iMicovered, to be- come the prey of wolves and coy- otes, or sticks and stones may be cast over it. If the family lives in a sandy part of the reservation, with no oonvenient crevices or chasms nearby, tlie body will be laid upon the sand, a little earth and some stones thown upt)n it, and a pile of brush laid over all. 'The sun is all very well," said the Irishman, "but the moon is worth two of it, for the moon af- fords light in the night time when we want it, whereas the sun is with us in the day time when we have no occasion tor it." fulfill the functions that are to be his. Tftiis desire of fche future father to be thoroughly informed, so that when the time arrives he will be ready immediately to begin the training of the child, is a splendid instance of the importance which the Jewish father placed upon his duty to his children, and also sliows the implicit faith the ancient He- brews had in Gtxi. who is the crea- tor of all human life. 10. Aind the woman made haste and ran and bold her husband. â€" The wife of Manouli did not desire to be alone when the angel spoke. She knew the concern of her husband and also the importance of the duty tliat would be laid upon her ; hence she w-anbed Manoah bo be presenb, so that lie, too, could hear and would be able to help her in the days of preiwration for the coming of the child and his proper nurture. 11. And he said unto him, Art thou the man that spakest unto the woman ? â€" Manoah wanted to be sure that it was the siome visitor. He wanted to have the same message direct from him as liis wife had re- ceived it. 12. Now let thy woi-d.s come to pass: what shall be the ordering of the child, and how shall we do unto him ' â€" Monooli insisted that tlie whole story should be retold ; blie instruction should again be given with explicitness, so that he, too, would know wihat liad been said in the first instance to his wife. 13. And the angel of Jeliovali t^aid unto Manoah, Of all that I said un- to the woman let her beware.â€" The former message is here assumed, and the warning given that all that the wonnan had heard in the first in- atanoe she should take heed bo ob- serve. 14. She may not eat o<f any thing that oomebh of the vine, neither let her drink wine or strong drink, nor eat any unclean tiling.â€" These are the outslanding things that blie an- gel had oomnnanded and wliioh he again emphasized particularly. These were not all of the things, however, which he hod said to the wife. He addt> again, therefore, â€" all tha,t I commanded her let her observe., Samson was to be a Nazirite, as Samuel later was (see Sann. 1. 11). Naziritism was ithe outcome of reac- tion against bhe disastrous influence which Canaanitish iieathenisui hod exercised against the Hchrew reli- gion. It was particularly a reaction against the wonship and customs of C'anaan. (See Num. 6). In later times the prophets looked upon tlie Nazirites as a class of men wliom Jehovah especially raised up to keep lalive in Israel the true religion of Jehoviah. (See Amos 2, 11). 15. And Manoali said ... let us detain thee, that we may make ready a kid for tliee.â€" The Hebrew instinct of hospitality shows itself sti-ongly in thw pastage, as in so many other similar passages in Old Testament history-. 16. Though thou detain me.--It will be remembered how Jacob wrestled wibh the angel, trying to hold him, and succeeded to the point of suffering physical injury. It would seem as though lieiv agiiin the angel of bhe Lord iudricated that he might be detained by Mano- ali, but even tliough Manoah <i^d press the prcrogaitives of .the liost Iaj their limit and detain the guest, yet he would not eait of the bread which shoukl be prepared. If thou wilt make ready a hurnt- offering, thou must offer it unto Jeliovali. â€" It would seem bhat a cer- tain seal of authority was to be, placed upo'ii the words which the stranger had spoken by the words which he now spake concerning the bum/t -offering ; which wouikl indi- cate to Manoah that he ha<l been entertaining a heavenly visitor. We read in verse 22 that Manoah became fearful when ho discovered that he had been in bhe presence of the amgel of the Lord, and he said, wiith great trepidation to his wife, "We shall surely die because we have seen God," But the intuitij>n of his wiife led her to show more judgment, for she said, "If Jeho- vah were pleased bo kill us, he would not have ireoeived a burnt offering juid a meal offering at our hand, neabher would 'he have allow- ed us all these tliingis, nor wouJd at this time 'have told such things «« these." , 24. And the woman bare a son, and calleth his nwine Sams<m.â€" The Hebrew of "Sa)m.«ii«n'' is Shimnh Prince .VIbert. A new photograph taken just before he rejoined H.M.S. Collingwood. GEIiMilNY'S GREATEST HOPE PLANS TO INVADE ENGLAJTB IN THE NEAR FUTURE. No Sacrifice WUl Be Too Terrible by the German People to Attain Their Ends. Oharles N. Wheeleo-, staff corres- pondent of the Chicago Tribune, has written a review of the wajr situation from Aachen, Germany, in which he says : Military experts, aittaches, jour- nalists, autliors, sliort story writers and "Tommies" ba«Jc from the trenches have discussed the future of the war. As an American reporter, one who has observed the change that has taken place in Germany in the last few weeks, permit me nob oaly to discuss bhe new objective of the German army but to indicate about where the first great battle may take place and whoit its immediate results may be. This forecast is based on thingpa I have seen, movements of troops, change of bases, preparations for mesh," and means "tlie sun." This name given to Samson would indicate that he was of a sunny and happy disi>osiitiou. All Hebrew names, as indicabed in a former | the big ba&ble, and the new domi lesson, have appellative meanings, i nating motive of all general plans of Jacob means "supplanter" ; Benja- the German empir- â€" ^the all com- min means "the son of the right- prehending motive of terrible hate hand'; Jerubbaal (Gideon), "Baal for England. contends." Seo also 1 Sam. 25. 25, where bhe foolish husband of Abi- gail is named Nabal, which means "fool." 25. Mahaneh-dan. â€" Mahaneh means "camp. ' Malianey - dan, therefore, means bhe camp of Dun Pluus to luvade England. Germany plans bo invade Engf- landâ€" a plan that will be supixirted by a public opinion in the father- land without regard to the hazard, the ultimate result, or bhe slaugh- This camp wae between Zorali and ' ter tliat must reach a bewilderinj} Eshtaol. These two places, Zorah total. and Eshtaol, were two of the towns The data, based on personal ob- of the tribe of Dan, and tJiey were far from the sea THE CREUSOT WORKS. Guns I'urued Out Are Mo^t Deadly in the World. Tlie gums used by the French army are turned out by the hundred at the famous Creutot works. The his- tory of these works, as well known as those of Knipp in Germany or .Armstrongs in England, says Pear- son's Weekly, reads like a romance. serrations and inberviews through- out Belgium and in the fro»tier towns of Germany, and a certain alleged intuitive sense suggest that the supreme battle of the conflict, beside which the clashes already occurring will be secondary, b«>th with respect to tihe number of men engaged and the casualties, may be fought simewhere witliin the tri- angle described by Ostend on the Flemish coast. Calais on the French front, and Lille as the ape.x. Plans No Longer Hidden. To the so-called military experts The first mention of Creusot., un- ! . . . der the name of "Villa de Crosot," 'â-  'â- '"•'* forecast may appear presunip occurs as early as 1253. It was then ; t^<|ou8. Yet it may be here set down a simple farm" It is now a town of ; "''•'' perfect propriety that the »ver- 30,000 inhabitants. In the sixtetMith centurv coal was age reporter's prediction of events not far off in this A rmagedd«.>n is disc-overed at Creusot, "bhough it ! »'""»t as g<H,d a guess ;is any. Mili was not until 200 years later that a company was forir.od to mine it. Gradually iron work ; were erected there and blie manufacture of guns- sba.rted. In 1838 bhe works were bought by the Brothers Schneider, and it is a significant fact that bhe German name of Schneider was "to become bary science, as the exjierts would understand it. in a measure has been thrown to the four winds by the German war leaders in the last three weeks. That is, the general plan is no longer hidden. To unders^tand this one has tt know by per»<uia! experience the awful hativd that has turned all the great rival of Krupp. the great [ I'"'"'"' "P^"'*'" >" Germany inbo one German gun nuikers. Emm that h'^""'^' *"^ "'I'' ^"t one objective date down to tlie present time tlie i -England. Creusot guns began to become fam- After New Subuuirine Bam>. Germany ous. The great superiority of the French in the .,^„ „„„,i, ,„ „,.. oua.iu ^--a- ,, , , , , x, breine hard wear. To show its won- ' l.^J'^u LT""^,*"^' *"' ^"-""ix.""'' derful sbabilitv. gun lies in its .stability and : V'"^ \' w'ill stake e fact that it will stand ex- ! 'v**" '" ^ "• *'» ","*' has announced boldly everything on a Dunkirk from it may be men- from bhe north wilh tJie avowed in- tioned bhat a glass.of water placed ' ^e''^.'^" ,"f esbab ishing a new sub- on the rim of the wheel of the gun '' T.*".'"* . ",* ''^ "^'•.";«e''t point remains unspilled after the shot has "' "'^ «'•»""«' «"!' which to attack been fired. This extraordinary feat, impossi- ble in the' caM? of most guns, has been made possible by the clever the English fleet to whittle it down. Germany will not fight the Eng- lish fleet with German battleships under the present relative arma- applicatiou of a .'ii)ecial recoil brake i I"*"'-' .^«^''"'a".v «l'"li»it<My intends which Krupp alwnvs declared could ! h' ^,'\ '*^ " "<"'â- '*««;» craft against not be fitted for field artillerv It ! '^"K''*'' dreadnoug'iibs hoping for such .successful raids in time as will seriously cripple the naval power of the hated antagonist and bring about a more nearly oqua.l strength. was adapted at the. Creusot works, however, ai;id t-hat is one point where the French guns are superior to bhe German. Another feature of the Creu.sot guns is wha.t is known as the recu- perator, which causes the gun to return bo its firing positi<in. Tlie force used is ccnipressied air. pi;s- 1 , "" " i â€" â- ' -,""," ' . ' humanly po'ssible. To cros-8 the English channel, de- stroy English shipping, invade the island, raze the co.ist towns, reduce l.A)n<Jon- to do this the Geriiinn na- tion to-day would iiiak? any sacriiiee sesaing the advantage over iianV of ! •"""n"l>' Possible Such a program the Krupp guns, in wlikh spring.-. ! '7^ \l ""*â„¢"'^1<'- b"t it wUl ex- are used, that it never wars out or I fr'" ^^^ jnoveincnts of the last loses its "*.pring " | three wceeks and movementis that Creusot guns were u«ed in the i )"" ''^ '>i«<l^'Jn the next three or Balkans, and armv officers declared I T,\ ^7 However, a recurrence afterward t-hat the guns were as ' "' ' , ^"'"'"K ""^ â- '^"*"<^*"'-*^f"'''>' n'"^'' good at blie end of bhe campaign as "" ,"V:., ''^"'^ ^"""»f' «* S<;arl.oixjugh before it. Only a short time before the German c.\iK?rts had criticised the famoius. gun as being too oompli- cabed and delicabe for uee in actual war. and Whit.by may be cx|>etted or at least .iittemptpd. Hatred is Extraordinary. The hatred felt toward Eng's-id the Geijiiaii people passes be- The accurocy of fire of these guns ' youd tlie mere meaniivg of bhe word is simply marvellous. Once the I as used in the oiviin-iry conversa- aiigle is set the giini continues to | tion. This feeli\ig t-owa^rd CJreat belch forth death with unvarying | Britain per\ades the fatherland and aian. French oflicers, too, arc fxi , finds lod-gnu-.it in the breast of all expert in their use that they can ' tin- people in t'le great faanily of 70,- split a tree three miles away after 000,000 souls, a couple of shots to get the range.' Taken all around, the Creusot guns nob only five more quickly than l-hc Krupp wc.aiw.iis, but bhey are ligliter and easier bo ni-ove about. They are far nioie iu-curate an;l they laS-t longer. There are four Creusot guns in a battery, each gun firing a.n average of twenty rounds a nii'v ute. Oceasi(mally we meet a man who looks as if he ha<l tried to preserve his dignity in alcohol. You can't always tell. Occasion- ally the toughest boy in the neigh- borhood grows up and beconu's a minister. ("1, which comwi from the word ' â-  Slie- ' atiU undrawn. About three weeks aifter marriage a woman discovers that the cajiital prize in the matrimonial lottery is P(U>TL!» P.VIlAtiHAPHS. Optimism is a go-od thing when not overworked. But a note never falls due at the proper time. A cynic ii a person who laugha while pretending to shed tears. The more rela'iv<>s a man has the more he a.i,i>rcC7nte6 his friends. A man isn't necessarily even a near-genius because ho wears his hair long. The ids;al hunbahd exists chiefly in the minds of women who never married. Rich relatives are used by poor men as objects at which they can point with pride and expectancy. Before a wise girl attempts to manage a husband she first acquire- the art oi managing a kitchen. > ^. .n ,1- -U«J

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