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Lucknow Sentinel, 1908-09-24, Page 30 atetetL mony 1rO. ef Wairea s, '01.1`of Be.heed the' Meat Soiled mono Y ' e eoeld ;,,hi taint -front 'reilreade trolley, and, 'theatre etiehet obaces, 1381040, ,cleug'istoree, and.indhAduals. Some - hills were more worn than Others, sofC'eracke,cloandSOiled; with fray- ed e.12Ps.: 'The .numhers' of 9teria it present :in the bus range „frone 14,000 to' 580,00, withean average . * for twenty-one hille ,-,of 142,000, There Seemed to be no connection • e af hetWeen Vimount odirt and the at 4fli-1YU Oyer, Our Ciretimstances Lou.• "And God saw everything, that 111 matte antlehebeld, it was good," --Oonesis 31- It would be a strange world in which, pleasure and piety did not go hand in hand. - Appreciathen •bringdelight becanse it is a duty •and it iSva, duty because it brings -delight Ile is doing good to.tis world who is findirig- all -the good there is in it, who is cultivating the e greater wrong, both, to • ourselves arnlet9 our fellows, than this of.give• jng up hdpeand setting our face •toward despair. These sileunt ehm- tutees We Prononce on our world go a long ways toward sealing its doom. We live according to our •faith and our way of living deter- mines the character of all life. No matter how dark the day it is our business to find some cheer, no emenneeber of' bacteria, present. The power to se the good - where toners matter how our faith in our fellows cisaaest 1.?lll he ,nsed_ had next: to often.see only ill. may be tried it is our dirty to seek g es collu e 4 0,000. e billeven that • perverced out the good in them and 00 mat. ihe• h." h' t 0. ' Th . - • ' Optimism, t ' e'which:.' - : * ' I ' ' 1!) , blinks many of the facts t.er how strange the way o hfe that looked most, soiled had but 30;- lie better for this world than the may seem still to. ho'Pe on° for their pm... When a bill has been in eir- deur pessimism that dooms ' all issue' in good, in the fulfillment of culation • for a short:ht.; enee. and 'her. thrive ficoperditioe, crying out that purposes perhaps to high for our b,eci?,rae. c r a ck e d a.cid yits, ieenifor the race •is in a headlong career to present ,inderataedinge - • : ,-.;e .erla easily - 0 1 :eae 7.0off, Tf,t,.. bea;..ilIt is the duty:, of ' everye man' to ael ng without hoetthe presence of dirt make this world as bright, as 'hip-. •and grease, ' Ile inoculated geeeee py'and as goed a Plate to live in ige liean. 6lit. _a ,-, ., 7. -ft .1-i- --•.,. a...... - • ar, eNo inairhas a, right -to • nurse a ranch -agaanst n'- incliention, of „Oen tenaporary •• g • e- . Terse, for he cannot keep it to him- nese:- Mr.: HilcIritch does not be- self. A sour disposition never is an lieve ethatesoiled money is „danger- individual affair; it becomes sod - ons as a transmitter of disease., He al; •it satiotieii )rates the thinking of • :thinks that money nnnStitutes an -There are r,at- tw° broad ways o f unimPotnt-facoihin-thetransodsethngof life andthe universe regard hisexperimentsas Conde- deivn in a -wholly -had world, 'where eion of' disease. But he does not One is to detertaine that man is set • all things fight against his geed, • -sive. In order -to obtain any con- - ,J . ' where all his fellows are worthless elusive evidenca on this Point • it and his own nature • is depraved. , would be neeeseary to make a care- The other is to find' and foster the ful study of hundreds or even a good in. Iife and to believe that eeeathousandabillsefromehOspitals and thin -ugh all lDni"Penes of good, far pbeyond 'Our -IireameO, are'ivoiking iiVate sick rooms drug stores, , g s mit • and various, oother sou,rPs ces. t tA bank •• teller seed if one sto hi k PROFESSIONAL' RELIGION 0 11 • money eaeet be a common means ee has been, largely of the former type • . • of thinking It has been pess• imis- -transmission, or if it .were there tic. It has seemed to think it nee- , woulthee'lt-he ae-many- of us alive to- essaryoto-prove thegoodness °God -----ttaWthe escape from sure diirttli-Of- -br-establishing-the-rutter-badness- those whose duty calls for the eOltl- or man and the moral character of the universe It his relegated God .8 00 hendling of money is •'certain- ' - - to some far off heaven and left this • STEP 013'T INTO THE LIGHT, - there always is a patch somewhere. Fix 'Your, thought` on the geed 10 others, there is alwaya_ittuch° if we .would but look for. it.. Live as ,though this world were ordered' in love, with law working out purpos- es- of the highest good, and life ,it- self will give you the re -Ward of faith, the giicid you yourself believe DANGER ILBEINGAIi -Faith in God is just faith in good.: nee's; to believe that -there is a -Fa- ther efee-allegiestremoanto believe that ;he is the father of every 'good desire, every high thoight, every .wOrthy purpose, that the best us is but the faintafer off reflection of the good in him, and therefore that this world, the world and home of iti-farailYch-r-iselreingeortleeeeVegove- erned for .the best good we knew and for the good that lies' beyond cur ,knoiving. • . Some people have • a, gOod deal mere' faith in the devil than they hate in their god; they think of.the world• as having been made- good, h-utesomehow--theacteil one got the best of the situation and has ever since eucceeded, in making it vrhol- THEitit is NO PLA.OJE 'OF ALBSO$, LUTE SAFETY. Staying at HoMe kg One_ at the Most Dangerous TIlings • to Do., • 13,' not merely due to chance." •world to, ti a tender ,mercies of the rete heleg plagneal The 'as-. sociation ' hetwe,en the two is an "Incient-OgiervatiWatt-' "-The diStem-i • 1natiOnt9f---plague' by rats formerly ,was repognieedeeyen'ineire,,thale at 'the' Present aa-YJUnd decided 'views • were beide particularly about 'these eininials: closely • associated. with _ ..e_foWls;_otied: pigs,- Were held to be , . >reesentS-71ri .Spreading -disease. When alague••prevailed.,.m. Europe these animals were as 'Mich iernateS of After all,- each makes his owir world. The' doctrine or the 'total :depraeity of Mx:mm*3; is gronnd- ed in the _common yepepsea-o 'We read into our outer world the &dors of the' woeld •The heart tunnel; over iniqul- ty.hroodingg over real and fancied sins, oeks out and the fair scene is changed ,t9 gloom, the cloud of. sei rests ever. a - • Yet 'et -'-would -be-hard to - de a the house as the people thernseltes, :andit was -asereed ai et is pa eoae--sinithern--.0hina-to-daY, Where the same coaditione preyail, that dur- ing. epidemits a. plague . the rats, .fowls, pigs, and cattle sickened and •died,•wh•ich wae.. -attributed• te Believe the best and the best shall be.. The facts always answer back to our- faith. Life abiays bee comes what we believe it really is. The good of all comes front the, high . - - faith ancl high liv-ing of those'rnen and. women who 'believe ever .that goodness is kgreater than • badness, that love is better than hate, that the universe is net :Made to mock us, but to make us and to make -us. after the. pattern of infiinite•affec- tion.•'' • • ' • „HENRY F.. -COP& 111 7--::-411TERNA-i-liONeALe-LESSfiNe -Lessen TeMperanee :tesSon. • Golden Tekt Proi...20. 1. he e•eeseeeaoceeseemaa.-: Verse 11. •ttWoe."4eLT-his- oce.ure as- . ,it has often been said that ' the safest place on earth is not oirearth at all, but in the ca,bin of an At- lantic liner.: 'Unfortunately, we can't make it convenient to :spend our ,timeein the cabins of Atlantic liners, says Londe •Ideas.. What is the use of telling a , thing like that to a ,father of phi; with : $5 a vreele; or .to a nervous, dressmaker Who is subject to seaSieleneas, or to a tottering old 'apple women With 4 stiff , leg and .a, dread of inetoie? ' A local . ceuricillser • recently de- elared'withentliusiaam that the eel - est place in 33irminglaara was, the inside Of in electric -tramcar. Soon afterward there .were tWo electrio 'tramcar actiderits ' in el3irroingham whiehIcilled several peOple. ,This Somewhat We erie,‘Me's eonfidence 1 ha the -tramea '--0,?',..ar--'reffige from •A.: later authority 'claims that the greatestLsen bd limb rit y for ieati is found:Iirebiliali-relleft theeit de- nied by scientists,who find .that 'churches are thronged with the deadliest microbes and are more frequently, struck by lightning than other sort of buildings. And -now soniebetly reemamends the .Bitish -Museimieasere- sanetuary- where • you aro 'least' likely to come to.a violent modera 'life it is satisfactory to ltiOve that 'if„-attY o'Re •ShOtild,h4Pe to conic ia thatact, With. e iyo were there iel no delay. , We are-hnr- ried off- at- to/I:Speed? It is quicker and .more reliable than ehloaeform :;;;--e-ce faet-Viiith-apperentlywae. oot. known • to the . chief attoe of 'thie tragedy, : tCAfter.chloroforming• two cete West Hampstead a,rtistelralledelenne eelf by the same means." • We are not told' why -the -deceased artist 'did ,it. Probably it was 'be - pause this age is an too great•a, Imre icy to 'peter:mu° art. ,Or it may be that he was so wearied by the -clan= ger of beieg alive.' and the endless possibilities of being..knocked dOwn; Mewl!. up,.: or otherwise mit, off' by violence that chose a safe and easy way out of it. Haggard . inquirers, who go euSh- ieg, about trying to ascertain• the .. , safest place' oe earth are cautioned against' the fallady: of.,:staying : at, . A DANGEROUS:, PLACE. :: • tatietica prove..that,.._heene aPregreee-and the faeOie to eqUip ouraelyee.;with...cou •veniciadeS' have ...nrulernainetL home With, deadly wires end Pipes, gas that May explode and and -lioileas' that rev burst.' :And; :agreealale to the: deMencl for,huery, houses are now run up by the jetreebuilder at such speed that .-theye a.reeeapable cc,rning ,down. *ith, elenal celeeity.. :WalIsor ceilings may collapse ata monient's notice, chimney pot -a may, crash through. the roof, or the flo,or- There is something ITO' pethetic ir.-thia eager • anxiety of a -terrified human race to ascertain the safest, place on earth ee'Itindicates the --elettieteeke,,,eeesceoef-- ineereirity-el:efe people ,carryabout .with them; the geowing.Vonstionenessthatthey are eot merely .here and gone toanoie rew, •but, here One Minute -and gone the next.' • The chief factor of the twentieth century. existence Which as' recogniz- by-oVeobo WE A.RE ALL IN A HURRV. haVe. interregateil manY Peoi4 • ere. Pierurgeltaa, . a :1-„,,,etahefageheasa. • which "WO - Opened its •• mouth • 'Without measure" .• • . ' 10: The. mean man::. . , the great leaq'aties7:"D_Toht,' adpipsteilltetii°tIn. ,bef 'Heeleersee: _the :voice of 'progress. - And. it you N. -ah of hosts, . ' ' for ,stoP to expostulate . with progress down conies-theelectrie, and. you are rem:it-ed. _ Makes' existence soinewhat:,uneer7 The need for • hurry, while Jit -words, einaplyetwo syneineins man"' are -used. ‘'..._Trie contrast It between -the -debasement of. all Man- kind and t he exaltetion ' a of3b.o- , * h ut us on our mettle and , 10:Exalted - Itniah -.has.' been tun'. as -13 - . • , .B9OTS•irs • mANR.,4.1, But Fashionable °Burma Couldet Stand the Old We Wear., They are wearing hootei in Man- - delay.-- Not -exactly regalar- $4 quality new reduced to 2,3.49,"•', thoegh these were conartion wheir the boot fever fleet "caineup like • thunder" -the, way things do crime Op_ in. Mandalay; according to But it is a pleasure to learn from • the• -Indian World that there has been a chane in Mandalay, foet- wear. That authority admits that - the Burman -that is, the emanci- pated -end comparatieely well to do Burman who can afford to think about his apparel -hes taken manently to boots. But. he still Shies at the ugliness and the inappropri- ateness in his climate of European A few years -ago it,' Was 'a COMMOIl'-'. . thing at - ceremonies en I3urmese -houses to see men dressed in all the glory '4Of native coetumeasillia, ,of the -eeriest., delleately beantifol: shades and Of the. riiii3St7gorgeolir-t- - hateeequite•disfigiired by:a pale of the biggest, liletketS, dullest bootse and coerse- stockings, .aliveys down upon' the: tinkles; But' happily the Burmens have' eeOlved boot of their own, shapely things in brown. or white beCkskin; whiph ,harmon, ize -very, well • with, native elethes, ;arid they weer finely- knit!, appro- pr'ately colored sthckings kept in place by suspender's.- -• - ing,.may subside and- -latincheyou.., hurriedly into the cellar, quently, et is proved by figures that , you -are a let safer in an express Reared Seventeen Children on $3.75 train than at home. , • This assurance, however, has " been somewhai shaken by the Gift- Curious -customs° prevail in some . . • . e -hialerepert °a the_ Shrewsbury ac- English provincial towne, Holswor- - - Cense.- 'DEVONSHIRE BEAUTY . . cideote Whieh is suPPoed been 'ceased by the driver and fire- el its beauty:prize under the terms . Man being - asleep. The accident tlf the will of -.a former rector of occurred at 2. o'clock in ,the Morn- the perishuig. • , The Will states that 22 -10s, And the question may "Occur to should be given annually to "the, . . . • . • • 00 mquiririg mind; why should some 'young single woman resident in eo • le have foiled it- necessary that •-parish being- under • 30 years. ee, to, be, hurrying o lhnryt § o'clock in the morning?. At the the yetnig as -the, most deserving same Moment, there •waa -probably and the . most handsome. and the most noted for her quietness and • -attendance at eluircli. Mise Bas- sett, the daughter -cif a hotelkeeper, isethe young- woman answering.the requirements-.thie year... ' The -rector also le t sum to be 2C1 i. with the object of finding out • why. another -train, with 200 people bur - we are all in a harry, but nobody rying away from Shrewsbury ; and scow' to.-knowIf you cateliTa.man Similar tertinSe with thousands of and put the question-toWire blank, -, -other people dashing all over the he looks quito bewildered, and to, railways systems • of the countey. tally -unable --to explain. Leaineraa It' seems entieuathat eeepeetable tiler sorry for this.. Theysay every- eitiienershOtild want th"-I-O---eiding , think Ito, a, reason,_ and it is nice about like this at such unholy hOurs to know the reason for :things. ',Wit ,pf. the night, when they Ought to be the hurry of modern civilization in hed. No time to go ,to bed. sems to be -the PrilY thing'for which lir'v,hat'n,--saddening thought ! no reason exists. , A--week-,:or:4Wo ago the sensation- _ .Let us, therefore, 'meekly accept al news was Cabled that the Meure•:, the; faet that for some unexplained ta.nia-had beaten by One minute the 'cause it is necessary -that we should .Lesitania's hest record for the leeg aver pat, Walk fast, talk fast, eat, Atlantic eourse.;-e, • fast, live fast and dio- fast A The extitingevent:.hae been re - stentorian voice yells exit in our Iceited -With°. a chortle of .rejoicing, X4ret -pn or7 get -Lunt.". :it :is but, atidifatelye , ern :not without mi,sgivings • that this sithing-brinin- --.'esoegenerelethatetheyeloiGedea-baSL_ 'the- iiitrOdiiaOrrit'Ord to. sik pro- phecies Against. -varlaus-fo-rms- f.0 • is for certain Orders •in • regard to eighteoue'neee, Takfag. "set% Rene th!... Suppression of . the plageie. d'enunciation in Isa. 10. 1.2 aS Pro- zolda ord-efi-•concerni,ng the checking 'have sel•aCQ ei)fdemicfhitinainhiate.eceeheeneet)eing theabstreet of what :vE7 ti!:,r0Peet0 e0:1.111try- hift itS, _kahlYeoriginally. helonfring„ here we of plague a jbly ,extrded ..Oratioi7. the, inhabitants under certain Pen- ,N(vjosm P:r° aities to:kill' doinestie anfruiils :Matt!' 23e,), esTlfies.' iresn:klisel.25'cltircenethidil te-ke,ep :the* cortfineu":to the, Ct"-cra-e _it -01:- This inectS-zat-drunkards. neglect:- of -:Goil'S-reall ' • vvur WE' SLEEP. Seientist Says It is Because of Daylight. and Darkness. If were. always daytime, We should never sleep. SO says sci- entist. There is no ;particular rea- • son why we, or any other animals, shduld reskron an average, , mght 15.). • values: ,The ether sins:referred to. are:,earicole, "1-1). the background of avarice, indul- gence, and drunkenneSs.. Earl in in the. niornang-,The last , staiee-g zee eleareertte-detakee-tree. translates this "draw. punishment n.orning• brings .no remorse for .the "elth cords of vanity, TAO thisinations of the night: /Peter e3re7. "This figure of sinners, jeer:. testifies ,tO the ineornmonness Of le& the aPtIreach et' .nega.of_ita ;carriage is. striking," TeelletttlikliabSt :regal -of 't o.:;thendoption-of nianv.ingeme ,phpt..**4 i.lds irisionl of j,eliiiize.i_ .0es aratices..- .At: Hanley". the:es-OW aleceylqiiiiieStiC.:riLiid leftflIsia. 6. da an ,errand bOY,...benig anxious 1), Gods elevation mist be a •mor- t° 'get" °Ili. fi'faied ;'hihiseit .-te .the el .9hreHit is in justiee". ' .•,, - hack of n carte he ino,,,n3Peed ;eft, a • meter ran ever him. tte vrat. in a. 10anetifiedThis term ' Was .relig- ious-raitheie than- mor -indeed -in, InirrY.*: :Po NIn!"S'' the 111(46r- ' . ,i3tliiedtiozi viith_thiA6kthoti retesit 7The"Strikinglesson-ef--tbis:-Occur: effete had an Immoral meaning. ,They:r,enceis.thatAlle_passien fe'r SPeedi, ,aaered isolation of Jehovah and his. hasnow become 8° uniYari4-1- tli° elecieshipermist be elieethe: morel basis '''n errand hoYS'• have caught it- -TheYenO -..icingerre-as-of Old-tirii,6; take . of righteouseess. , . • . - 17.. The teXcia7diffitult ilo4ilii- fre-qe-iMi- rests - dining' thsi•rr• innr': verse. e pee ore is o the sue of ne 0,,,,16.7,9„a fig, ',0r -a, leisnrely. -Jerasa-lera-afterdestructien, gePle' et'..14eihieP• The -Y. ielaireltie- used..bY flocks for pastUre,.., ...,"''... ' Iniriortance7of-*ttitoi-there-twielt-,-: falsehoOdProfessor 6. A. 'Smith '-d-if.:that ..bity-had-lived-lie.:Might. hate . grown up to be a champion Smith 1g, DrawillihnitY -with cords. Of hustler and made a fortune on the ...eincla oeechaegee- eelliifortunatelYe 'however", he died. ' ' 7- '-- "7"' In 1900, a ingenious , Frenchman .palculated that' there were 17,060 rdiffefent ways Of ' getting Off the earth.' • I estimate thet the edvante utea edlls tO-the dangee-seofehenag -peid-teteeedeserVing---Spiiiiter-ncit under 00: On the present occasion HOlswortliy has en eligible spinstere, the first for three. years. At Sleaford, in Lincolnshire, set, eral firm' hands have recently re- ceitecUfrem the Lincolnshire Agei- cultura,i Society rifizeS- for bringios.• up families without parochial relief. _The best- ,aeeord wee- •shown -bye George F.ainiery, With .23' Children qaorn and 1:7 successfully becieglit'ea. up. The father ,eever earned ,more •• , t an allibia- weekly,' tyeMtseeEar-rneraahae'hasleta.aa.,iWerLeeo.;_e, alive One 'One of these days the beast-' shoals Of enquiries from - perstne • • ed 'safety that felo-lie found en the' eunous:.tO know his-,tv she did it. , i.cabin. of 44 ;Atlantic' liner Will. be : • • speilt by a -loudand the as- tweaking eariy.,inetee,_dalet4ets t.: i"41,1 -a4 they actually' Wear the` Irar- to nine hours a day. The periodUt - ' --,--rest--haa-been..determinTed -13-Y-the- ,,Strong,:-cirink-A_ mixed honor 19 hat 663'I„ oc_k. fear Te- ef.eivillization and progress has now ,coniposed the fermented -juices- :hoe* h 1,41 ' peeteterobis- r • oses. eeke r-easedttlie-figure.te,-.5,2,900e-Stra of S;refiirfraita ' apd often. 'With' ilotacticalL - skebtieisre•-'et,diSP?7. tisties proVe. that 1,700 &oil:W.:are' spic added -"Io,. ,8ive jt.°j -lute_ecefferaii :deitouneed ' throngh SwelloWing feet that eight- hour -a -la -the- aater-' ege whee . there is. aback Of sufficient tight tO,enable.ut t� move. „ • abent in, bonito:rt. _ • ' • ' .This fundamental ' diatine, • on between ay and night la.ichol, ly--rolatitze to the.'Sonse of, tigSt., effects those types of life Which have -developed eyes.. Pleeta, being dependent 'for.their • gieWth upon the aetion of rays -of . sendiglit which „fall upon 'their "-leaves- • inetionba tweet digest.* the light, and grow • during the hohrs of darkneei.• •• • - -• The let forms -of. animal life the sightless denizens- of .. ocean tientlie-do netlrest regaler ,tervals,' They prowl round incei,‘ • olipt4;, siiairtg prey by the sense of touch When they rest, " I • d " is at irregit at perm s: • a othee weeds; ;they ...heve no tliatinet: --perioditiity Of -their it -soon as yes 'ark doirei(416C1 ,6114-411:01)Anti:041-16 Mei* tealivide theit 0010 hitt. iNCti Mehl portions --"tt • waking, and e• eieeping time While re 18 light they perferni: all Mo- • tive fitnetiohe;' when : .darknese ..toinee they reflect,- to nest or lair • • *el ;rest,' . Too often it 0010, $Vd•tal, It the seat • • . • disectd.,, • '• . elever, WoMan can take auy old th;eg eeet Mei* neeeout. of it. e • ' • strength. • . We-, Frein the juice of the graPes• • " 12. totAlLpickike of the briechana- more pitilessly decried by prophets. a.a.e„e, Terre eia . Ban feaits common atis thile see i4 130th7ifie.• Oiscr,--ancriv Trea-W • "accotnerelaied the .efeasting • and. sense which allowed ;Sin' to' streetectideets per •moiith. TheSe, diiaking, These festive Meals' had enter 'tinclethtted and even to be accidents entirelY from 'once had •a, religiout ateariieg, nOW paraded as -righteousness( Matt. 0. 'the anxiety of the popalace to get' - • cabs; motora, bicyplese there qeick. There 15 no other reta' they were degraded, though le- 22,• 23): , • them. This made the wiekedeess carts, tramears and parcel tans , 20.. The fOUrtk"woe,'.' ..pronOunc,l, ed iieitene!"thene that eall evil good, and.: good evi1,2! No . ediidititin,Wee thifigs such aS pita, needles Studs; buttons,. pieces- ef bone,' tipmasti- Oiled Meat and falie teeth. '• cending skyward, with all hands._ SERPENT ellItE:EFFtCTIVE. 4111--.1PDP-E'SI-WV-re $10 'Woman . Who -Tried 'Titre." '. . • Why, °Ile, Would Not Part Ifitli.`.0 • , Battered Timeuieee. ' Pope Pius X. carries at bus girdle an Old.'wetch of base nietal, 'the face claPped, With a plain teuther-gnard. -He was lo0king-'4°.thia watch the other. day when. a Ronan noble, Whom: 'he had. given an audience, Itirbdiited--h-tarOli-riehlY-ehased-and jeweled-gOld_Wateli_and begged the Novel crimes are oecasionaIly» conamitted in • Paris, .as, for in , stance ::An old gypsy woman called'. ' • On a doctor-. living in the Place daiig-hter;±whor-was caravan on the ,fertifications., near by., "I 2'have tried the serpent oure-,2s---she-said; "but7there-w-aa--ner.--- result If You will allow,tne to Pai .p...epe..te_iiede;_itLaxLexchange., for your_lee ue advance shell sere, the ninch worn tnnepiete, 701tich he- - saidThe P kopeirge-iitly" declined:, was 'a 'present from Amos '6. and. deeding ni,ents than the .Perverajen of the . London atone 'alon• e there' ere. 4-'000; • • , • tht:§S, receives the filth woe. Com - mote intense (cointiare' 06r. , , 13. Gene inte eaptivityteJehovah's punishnierit, took ite •farm in the erophet's mind froni the invent -ling inv.:A:Sion of Judah by Aisetria,• whieh was &tally t� 'reault acteal cap-. To :a. Jew 'Ile:, punishment tould be .. . : • were , done at their drinking bouts. , bone, and the other by a posts , . . and perched witly Evpry .001er ambition was -gone. • , e(eled. cant, friefaired .hie rib.. thirrst--7,An appropriate figure,which ,e3, Jutity-"Acipite,' it judicial' Ileppily, they are bah' recOvo:ting Wirios , mit-the ithrattof-traving--10-h- 'terat-eyetree-..-tea-a-eadiersTt-edeatikee, and-Will-hanbleetealtenietbeeilitet- intexieetieg. drink, Thirst ness isoioW'aPPIied- to drenkea and :floated appoiatinent in. elfeeit elitq' 13:resent enenayeof dwellers judges; taothor of themost wook,o: timo. 'On thP.I.Ordc,i- of the dese.rt, 'd(11111110r .cibieete, of , the prophet's In. order to ,keep tip with tho de- n. ,'Sheol --,-The after' World. It wrath. , ; • . . Irian& triumphant science is alwaYs, torresPorlded in the itehrev's mled brihe;,--The intitained politenees det„ising fresh apparatus . to save, time and aCcelate Speed, " Take. eleetricity, 'f.or example:' Ida.. frequently read in the papers that somebody has died Suddenly thrOugh tettehiog a live Wire:. Poe tors allegree that:this is the geick-, est death eeet invented,' etind plereenty-aed self-satisfaction in the should: go • dashing along hurhug Midst of national and personral &edger caitd forth the lash of the prophet .whose solutien, of dif- ficelties was faith in Jehovah alone. 22. Mighty to drink Wine --- The sarcasmof this is seerehing., : All the -feats of valor of these' Iteroes pedestrians to right and left, cut- ting off arms and legs, and 'filling, the.hesilitale,iWith'seeealty cases.- • I heard the °thee day ortwOintia- hurryina: to keep in appointment in the city: One was delayed bY,a falling wire, which broke his col7 you' toinef,' - 77 "-fife ' • ••The' theete'r cemsented-tand---the :eld wemen.h-anded. him a• $i00note, , As he Was getting ,tite eha,nge out ' lily dear mother, he said. I was of the safe phe agana' mentioned the quiten-smalliloyeathen sheega,ve it. ".serp_pic and 'he, asked her • to me With. this viery samCleather whet it was. 'This; She said, tak- guard I :wearing now, prow ing. ,bei from under her rigs, she ° ,to keep it Until it, was worn turned half a dozen snakes out on - nut beyond repair: It must he the floor. • • • • The doctor wee Startleil'and'ruah- -ed.-out -Ofetliareorae -„Whefe,.Ale re-, • , „ e wOrtia.a.aiid. the snak.es'bad:van,' -ished.,hile sit the nuOnei in 'his safe had .arsUgOne. He' still 'held , the: $10.0 note le •his hand, hot, thia proved to be a forgery: ' • goOd•Witob; fOr .has ,never dieap- '!e'ej.11. . WISDOK,'DRIPPINAS: The gOodveit er young er•grew out Of it. ' • • •, Searie People. Put on their. energy 'into •their • Itte:easy-tothint ofthe-tight- exe 'cuSe at the wrong time. lealOnsY js a tree -which :bea,-ts nothiegbitt,bitter . s' Count your oWn: faUltp: -befOre enuine'rating those of your: rieigji- e the Greek. "Hades" and -was -net- alone the „.place of punishment for the ',wieked, but ineluded the she-, dewy, vague exiStetiee of everyone alto' death. The sharply defined ideas Of, the next lifo-2 which were ctireent Ittlesue's time, had not 'Oa cittvelOned Death is -e-t- the 'East -led te , the 'extensive giving and taking of presents, so that bribery vtas'it :conetarit temptation: • , • Righteousness -Itether "juStice" - Al•rihtcous cease.- • The rights of the poor Were disregarded the sodden representatites o juStioe. ' electricity- now pla›-a-so-lar-ge4,part.A.a.ad440.#01,___ The heeda-61-M of le women :may bc natural', but -that of a man is isually: aegairect. •• . , :Many girls get more pleasure out „ . . . oftaking Of their clothes than in Wearihg ,• It's e, sign of love, When a, young • Man. seittariders, whole inenth's salary On an erigagernent4ing., ?SWISS PLAGVE OF LEECHES. • Switzerland is suffering from a -plague, of leOehes: " •FOR 'THE .,/19.111X Flousekeeping is • • in att. 'every giri who stays at home should study: The housekeeper- Must he able to • handle the. 'money earned firthe bread-Winue-teepreetiei, 6the economy which is, in its way, important as the aetual earning of ' the ineonee. ..4k good houseke4ler slanild hate 6 practical knowledge of "-marketing, aatering, ' washi eg,• ironiug, arid 'ell • other forms of hoeSeWork, She May net have ,ta dti all 'these ,heu stif bitelieenig14 to k110‘. lap* they are; do-ae. There: - are many. Ways. of loOking at Inee•ee . Work. .Sorbe people reser& it as tielgetY...While• Oth eye II olet, , ',the the fish in, the lakes and ris..ers o moist important, ferctareem life. Bete thousands.. In the npper course of th.Cse -nee wtong..• ,To be, a eeeet...4 • the Milne., in the Aar,. the Lekee of .1ohia7ekeCPer: Oteednot mean a 1ht N-cutchatel and Constance, Where 01- littid work but..there ghotild he the plagim is Most acute, :thwisand rnuh'satisfaetion •derived,'Hote the ef - deed fish •ire ,seeti 43,6'4 o'f knowledge that 'everythipg is well the Witter.: •The y are ,'eover,ed With drne, and that 'comfort and horneli, leeches. Seores of men are erigneele hess awaitth.t;r urt ofheWage- • ie -gathering tho dead fish and bury- earner. :1+1tnelunuti , ',good. los theta; Swiss' Scientists earinot .housekeeper does not negle.e Acollint for, the phigiie, which ,has p(tson'l tppearitrr&w. SI tut he • net 'been ekperreliced; in Switzer- a:IWO-a-neat end tidy :done. •