HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1936-8-20, Page 66- burt'day. August loth. 1936
THE SIGNAL — GODERICH, ONT.
Wesley for Holiday Reading
�SNAPSNOT CU1L
By A. W. B.
IT'S ALL A MATTER OF HOW
Yee, John Wesley's Journal, to acs,' Ing to Ws eutry of July 5, 17[16. at
Is the sort of book to. have in nand on. Helper, a town where we gut our local
weekly uewspaper. The arrangement
a holiday. One can lilt[ it up and fur IW* servtt'e wag wade without hlx
lay it down, break off and begin ages consent or knuwledge. He observes,
as one win, as could Uot be dobe very -1 was nothing glad of this, as 1t
well with a novel or even a blagrapby 'obliged me to quit the turnpike road,
or the story of a travel. The entry to hobble over a miserable commun."
of the day's doings for the venerable
John 1s generally complete in Itself.
1t may have little or no relation to the
uert entry. A paragraph will often
bluish to for !�--t=- is—'--�t_wW
cause one to lay down the volume 1 r
a spell to digest it. And there is so
much open-air reference in bis travels
and gatherings that It seems most
In the poorest cottage are brooks :
is one Book, wherein for several thous-
ands of years the spirit of man has
found light. and nourishment. and In-
terpreting response to whatever le
deepst In him.—Carlyle.
Think mel about great things: and
know that thought ix the only reality
in this world. lift up Nature to thine
own stature; hnd let the whole unl-
vt•rse be for thew rr, more than the re-
tleeflon of thine own heroic soul—
t'ervantes.
SPECIAL FOR
Saturday and Monday
MEN'S DRESS SOX
25 doz. Men's fancy wool and
cotton Dress Sox. reinforced
beet and toe, all sizes.
SPECIAL ' par
or
4 pain ter tlbt
• MIEWS KHAKI PANTS
5 dot Men's Khaki Pants made
with 5 pockets, belt loop, and
cuff bottom,. Sizes 32 to 31e.
SPECIAL Me
))MEN'S WORK SOX
2'; doz. Men's all -wool Work
Sox, light and dark grey.
SPECIAL Se
M. ROBINS
Agent for Tip Top Tailors
PHONE 384
MUCH LIGHT
Don't 1 know those miserable cumulous
and the hobbling that would be re•
gutted! There are a few left yet.
But Wesley doesn't say, though a large
gathering of people from all parts was
waiting for -him there, that he took
sag-anutstaea ..JL,.�att . strew
that tine mainly soul once in a while
gut into a pet.
For the student of hhltory and social
conditions there is abundant material.
suitable for summer reading. I Wbe would not pause at the rtiatlun
Volume Four of this excellent work i of the incident at Coventry when rain
has been claiming mY wtteation "sal preveuted a service being held In the
last two weeks. 'How tllmt'ult 1t park and application was made of the
would be to eclipse Weeley'e power Mayor for the use of the town hall,
of succinct expression, his forceful ob- which was refused. but later was
servation, and his gift of lucidity ! I loaned 10 a dauclug master? And the
It is •oticeable bow little time he -bad I following ruts), where he took cutch
for playfulness or mirth. Gravity is to Loudon and there were behind him
written large' on almost every page—
but don't eontu.e dullness with gra-
vity. The grave pen makes very in-
teresting reading. and eves[ hamuruus
to the reader. -though there wouki be
no smile en Wesley's face and no point
of humor to him. For instance, who
can read his tale of a bad buy at
Worcester. who having been beaten by
his employer ran away, and wandering,
half-starved. lay In the hay -loft of an
Inn. without smirking at the point
where Wesley relates how the boy to
that bay -loft picked the INH•keta of
two gentlemen who lay there with-
out waking them though their breeches and the general profusion of wealth—
lay under their heads? And who ..every pane of glass. we were informed,
ier eerfy .*J teflon a{el1 t le
net very bright as In the picture above,
on a wide lens opening.
la the vehicle ten convicted felous,
loudly blaspheming and rattling their
chain:, and at his side sat one of the
police guards with a loaded bounder -
buss in lits hand? -
Uf equal interest is his de+erlptlon
of the Laatelle* residence at Harewood
in Yorkshire, now the seat of the Earl
of Harewood and his wife the Priueess
Royal. Wesley speaks in au admiring
way of the building of fine white stone
with two grand and beautiful fronts.
Ile says he wit not 'struck with any-
thing within. The largeasgaare rooms
with costly beds, glasses. chairs, tables,
could forbear to smile when at Lon-
donderry, having contracted a great
hoarseness, he applied pounded garlic
to the soles of his feet and his hoarse-
ness was gone the next morning. To
the reader the way he tells of the pass-
ing of Mrs. Attersall at Dorking Ii
rather amusing: "A lovely woman,
snatched away in the bloom of youth.
I trust It will be a blearing to many,
and to her husband la particular.'
To those who know Englacd the
reading of hie travels is doubly inter-
esting. Through the highway* of Not-
tinghamshire, Lineoln'diire, Derbyshire
and parte of Yorkshire the writer can
follow him with Intense interest as
familiar ways and place* are depicted
by an observant eye and sympathetic
heart as they impressed Wesley nearly
two hundred years ago. Seven or
eight times on horseback Wesley rode
to and fro to Derby. past the great
Intersection of tnrnptke roads where
Its a boy I have stood and watched the
traffic go by. Onee he rode a lame
horse, and from 'Manchester a• that,
some Sfte miles to Derby. and claimed
as be prayed for the beast Its lame -
nese decreased until It was gone alto-
gether. The Reverend John resented
preaching on one of these tripe. accord -
FREE - FREE
FREE
With every purchase Of 25c or over, coupons will be given
. for Kingsley Design English Dinnerware or Rogers' Al
Plus Service Plate table fiat ware.
SPECIAL One Kingsley Bread and Butter Plate and cou-
pons FREE to the first fifty customers pur-
chasing $1 or more of merchandise at
The Square MAPLE LEAP BAKERY Phone 110W
$READ, BUNS, PASTRY, GROCERIES, ETC.
SUPERIOR STORES
— The Busy Grocers —
ials"lor Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Garden Patch Peas •
Clark's Pork and Beans .
Norfolk or Monarch Jam .
Hillcrest Pure Lard .
Z I tins 21c
9 22 -oz. 19c
40 tins
Large 31c
32 -oz. jar
2 I -Ib.
Prints 27c
BEST QUAI .ITY GRANULATED
Sugar 10 lbs. 49c
with $I.00 order of other Groceries
Royal York 'pre= Tea . 1-21 26c
BEEHIVE
COW Set sr ealars
Crakes, least •te
Cern Syrup
Cohoe Salmon
Pickles
5-11. tin
'y -1b tin 1-1b. tin
6', sr lar 13-v. W
39c
15c 25c
1Oc 27c
Palmolive Soap . • . 3 hark 14c
Manning's Biscuits . . . Ib. 19c
J. CALVIN CU TT
PHONE 116 or 216
J. J. McEWEN
PHONE 46
But for distant scenes,
11ke this to the Left,
use a small Tens open-
ing.
coat six and twenty shillings, and one
looking -glass baring coat Ilse hundred
pounds, and one bed rlx hundred"— I
did not improve or please him.
Even with so venerable and famous
a preacher congregations were not al-
ways kind or respectful, pr responsive.
Preachers, please note, if you get dis-
couraged. Soldiers troubled him
quite often. At Penzance, towards the
closing of the sermon in the open-air
service, an officer of a company of
these in the King's uniform ordered
them to marth through the congrega-
tion. What a furore that 'mule cause
In these days; -and whit-'t70rtR1aM`
would be fired' at the- Minister for De-
tente in the Legislature. Wesley had
a better time preaching ■1 Winchester
to 4,500 French prisoners. At I)ar-
lfngton he tells: "All the congregation
in the market place behaved well, but
a party of the Queen's Dragoons." Tbe
interruptors were not always soldiers.
In the market place at Horncastle be
notes, 'The wild men were more quiet
than usual." At one plate at the
open-air service he says the large con-
gregation was as still as the subject
—heath. Not only there but when he
preached at Gwenap In Cornice!. to no
leas than twenty-two thousand hearers,
and everyone beard distinctly without
any sneh helps as our modern age sup-
plies as amplifiers. there must have
been an almost breathless silence. Of
[burse, we don't overlook the magni-
ficent
agni-
S ent robe that Wesley had and the
perfect Il,e he must have mails. of it.
We marvel at an old man In his late
seventies meeting to splendidly and
freshly the physical efforts and strain
of the hard trrvelling• and frequent
preaching, In immense• congrerationa
day after day. Take the trouble to
trace ou a map hi. Itinerary from
lour 1 to August 5 in the year 1774,
and 11,,te the numbx•r of times he-}
preached often three and four flame 1
a day. and as often at 5 and 7 In the
morning at at any other hour; it is
almost unbelievable that a little DONNYBROOK. Aug. 114.—The ree-
men growing ofd. of 120 pounds
weight, could do It. uu his liirthdtiy
he preached at Durham In the morn=
Ing at 10 o'clock. In the eve,Jog be
preached at Yarm /lout thirty mile*
■ was—and mind, there were no motor
BECAUSE modern cameras and
modern film make It possible for
ns to achieve happy results with
very little knowledge of how our
camerae function, many of us do not
bother to Snd out, but we will more
often get better pictures if we know
enough about our cameras to under-
stand what they're up to.
Any camera is simply a light -tight
box or chamber, with a elm at one
end and a bit of optical glass, called
a lens, at the other. Add to that a
contrivance for admlttfhg light un-
der control into the box, through the
Iona to the elm. and you have the es-
sentials of a camera.
The size of the' Wieland the extent
to which It 1s ope SI (ore important.
When the lens oakum 1a large, a lot
of light 1, let into the camera to re-
cord the picture on the Sim. That's
all very well, but lenses do not do
their best "wide open" in giving
sharp images of all objects both near
and tar. When you want sharp,
clean-cut detail from foreground to
distance, as in a good landscape pic-
ture, yon have to use a small lens
opening; when you are interested
only in picturing an individual or a
compact group. as in the dog poo-
Lure above, you can safely use a
relatively larger opening if you fo-
cus carefully. Indistinct detail be-
yond doesn't matter so much. to fact
often helps to accentuate the prin-
cipal subject
In virtually all cameras there L
some means of changing the site of
the less opening. In most box cam-
eras you pull out a little slide at the
top of the camera. In most folding
cameras there is another type of ad-
justment called a diaphragm, with
which a greater variety of openings
can be obtained.
In most diaphragm types, the ma-
jor settings are shown by numerals
•
which have a meaning in terms of
the ratio between the diameter of
the lens opening and the distance
from the lens to the film. In desig-
nating these settings, the letter 1. is
used. When you see that a picture
was made with the lens at 1.11, It
means that the opening of the lens
was 1/11th of the lens -to -film dis-
tance. It happens that 1.11 1. a good,
average opening. neither too large
nor too small. In fact some inexpen-
sive cameras have • Axed opening.
or aperture, of about that ratio.
Smaller openings, f.16 or 1.22, tor
example, cut down the amount of
light entering the lens. Consequent-
ly, given tbe same light conditions,
longer exposures are required.
That brings us to another gadget
which. in terms of time, also con-
trols the amount of light that enters
the lens --the shutter. For most ordi-
nary snapshots, a shutter that opens
and closes in about 1/25th second 1s
entirely adequate. In fact, this abut-
ter speed, coupled with an opening
of f.11, L so nearly right for average
outdoor conditions that it Is a kind
of magic formula Shutter speeds
faster than 1/50th second are seldom
needed except for pictures of rapidly
moving objects, and then with a
larger lets opening; otherwise, not
enough light would be admitted.
Lenses, by the way, are rated ac-
cording to the largest opening at
which they work. You hear camera
Lana talking about L62 lenses, f.4b
lenses, and even 1.2.0 lenses. These
"fast" lenses are wonderful things;
they'll get pictures under the poor-
est kind of light and they do have
that extra speed when you need It.
But even so, they all work better if
the subject has adequate light with
the resulting opportunity to stop
down (use a smaller opening) for
the sake of .harper detail.
99 JOHN VAN GUILDER
DONNYBROOK
ular meeting of the W.M.S. of Don
uybrook United church was held on
Thursday, August 13, at the home of
Yrs. C. Jefferson. Mrs. W. A. Camp
tell prodded. 1t was decided to bas.
a supper and concert in October.
cars in those days and no trains. The flans were completed for the holding
following two days were equally siren- of the churli service on Sunday, Aug -
nous, the going rough over miserable list '28, when Miss Small of Auburn
-roads." to nae hie words. The Itiner-' will glue the address. Service wit!
ary, aforementioned, was from Edin- be at 7.30 p.m., collection in aid of
urgh to London. the W. Mme -•-,rift^- •.. s�-Instng Neje.
Perhaps what a serlooe'reader likes by Miss Taylor lunch was served.
beet are hitt pen sketches of people be 'M'fss Jessie Moss and Mtge Margaret
met and i'rte6 i 15140. - Twa - ea- -BAC ie of t;erterleh spent - tl�-FcoL1d
anodes are before ne lust now: "'ter with the former's parents, Mr. Suri
chant Wert, suatehed away In the midst Mrs. Fred Moss.
. of lila year,. From a child he had Mr. and Mrs. •C. R. Jefferson and
the fear of God, and wee serious and
unblamabie In his behaviour. When
he was a Journeyman he wag
lenc ' ht 1 t' she
with him he was a pattern of di.I-
genes. 10 all things, !spiritual' and tem-
-Silas
••Silas Todd who for many years at-
tended the malefactors at Newgate
without fee or reward; and I snppnee
no man has teen PO successful for this
hundred years In that melancholy of-
fice. God had given him peculiar tal-
ents for it; apd he had amazing sue-
,•eew therein. The greatest part of
thns,e whom he attended did 1:. peace,
and many of them In the.trfumph of
faith."
My last glance on closing this
article at this Journal of Wesley fast-
ens upon a wise admonition 'of this
very practical spiritual man, of title
worldly and other -worldly noble char-
acter:
har
acter: "Rendre' If you have nit
done It already, make your will before
yon steep!" .
'I
w
0
e
"The little buelnlore mat never had
a better chance in btu life than right
n ow."—Henry' Ford.
WI. wljoy ourselves only In our work.
our doing; and our beat doing is our
best enjoyment.—Jacohi.
Rewnlve to he thyself, and know that
1► be
:Who finds himself 14tles his misery.—
l�rnold,
A glimpse Info' the future of avia-
tion will he effhrdcd visitore to the
Canadian Xntlnnel FvhlhitIon. im-
perial Alrwav4 Of Great Britain have
sent to Canada en emitting Mangey of
vale m,wlcl land end ow plan's and
amphibian*.
'1.
•1
Sunday Attalla
liy
ISAIBEL HAMILTON
Goderlch, Ontario
We've a ater) to tell to the cations,
That rha11 turn their bearts to the
right:
A story of truth and sweetness,
A story of plate and light.
For the darkness shall turn to dans- ! Itibie I
Ing, - I . . •
And the dawning to noun -day bright. NORIA) MISSIONS
And Christ's great kingdom shall come' .rbc, ?we White Flash
(lor.ellue of Csesar a. Sarins
coke dlssatlatlrd with the belief oe
tegefathstlat he had come under
billecucy Idaut+e of • man
professed
ewish religion.
wan tried to .prevent his hearing the
silkwtlrm. St. Paul, rightly divining
the charaoer of Blj'luas the sorcerer.
deuuuucetl his in strong language.
laying bare his true nature, and called
upon Gud to show Hie power over
such. Tbe effect upon the Homan
orbital was much that he was led W
believe and accept the new doctrine.—
Itbudenaed from The 1•)zpoaitor's
un earth,
Fur the lto)s and Girls
The kingdom of lone and light—
"- �i4Icbul OJni
! Pastor Uhuautera, of s-alii—'
grrai/ La12 s erwurr *Qo tar "4,44
• • • geed lu Lurhal, winch
PRAYER * lhwru l rt
i* r hilly district d the Asal, pro-
vince in the north -este Corner of lu-
the
to 111. dihole r to prerrh dna. The euuutry was Dieu newly
the gospel to the whole world. la taken by the Government, and it was
Hie name we pray. Awes. eery dangerous fur any furelgaere to
• • travel about the country without a
S. S. LLr.`;BiON FOR. AIG. 3e, HIM strung guard.
Lessee Topie—alegitmieg et Wert lu spite of all the dangers the two
_____ns young Englishmen toured the a,ngtry
i rerchlfg the Gurpel and ringing
Lesson Presage .Arlt 11:1441; li: it v
1-12, `Ihymuy Hearing thew in the streets.
Golden Text—Mark 16:4 the comic came round to see what was
happ•ulug. lis arrlrlug at the spot
A fierce persecution of the Chrlr and seeing two white men singing is
[taus followed lir martyrdom of the street their first thought was
Stephen, w, that they were driven out that theme two white men wort W
of Jerusalem; but they cuatlnutd 10 either drunk lir fool,.; because Lurhal►
believe and spread abroad the gospel ins ne.r slug in the street in (road day -
montage. They travelled as fat north light ev.,rpt wts•u they are drunk.
as Antioch and to the islands of Cyprusw slug ne signs of drunkenness In
and Crete. lu tl.e'lr preachlug they _ _them, and finding no drink of any
ontfined their services to ihr Jews kind, they took them to be fault who
until such time as the w'dy was ; bad run away from their kinsmen.
two opened Ifs by the vision given to Peterwhereby lied taught him the K„'sial I wbuw the I,usbals ,called fools, con -
Fur .sorrel years Ih�
was fur all mkindThen on re- i tiuu,vl travelling round the eOnntry.
turning from ihanr lslx•,nl� to .tuthocb pre a,hiuk awl owe_
hymns of Oue
they included the Greciansht that city I Great who Is the Maker of all
in their servicer. Goal sect Ills seal i things. Ali the time the people
of approval upou their preac:,Ing l'y k,,kesl upon tbeni as fouls, and fn
causing many- to hear and believe. ' nearly every village children were
The ehureh In Jerusalem came to beard singing:
know of this and rent ltanwbas to • 1 ser two holt, I see two fools,
Investigate. When he arrived and 1 Two teal, Mg fesoltt I ere.'
had +wen the work of grace, 1m re -After continuing for a considerable
jolted with them and counselled them I tike, however. the two mleeMnarles
to continue in the faith. From An- rime.
a good knowledge of the lan-
tloch Barnabas set forth In search of i guagc'and were able to make a Lusbal
Saul, who becattee of the opopa„itlun ' alphabet. When reading aytl,--wrlting
stirred up against'situ on his return were drat introduced, t e hasbals
to Jerusalem. from whence lie had would not believe that mere scribbling
gone forth as a persecutor and re- I on a small please of paper could gay
turned alive with zeal for the cruel- auything at all. and many people
tied Christ, had been seat by the came ranMl to nee If It were true.
brethren to bit old hums in Tareua.
bolas-_at._Westfleld after visiting her
,hingbter. Mrs. Earl McKnight.
, The decoration eervlee will be
In Colborne cemetery on Suudel' --atter
u"ou. August :loth, at 3 o'e'bock. • "`
PLA'VOPAUS PLEAT DIJHl'
_— Sy Sett! Barclay
Try ring aaet—to Morass, You
*111 Sn that year family wily appre-
ciate tbe'ovelty. Try the following
reclines:.. ,
Beef IAS -
ll,a....pmtndy_runnd of_.besIL: _
1 quart cold Water
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 tearpeer. rte-• — - .-
1 teaxpoon sage and thyme, mixed
1 tahlewpoon Worcestershire sauce
Salt and pepper
children, Mr. J. C. Robinson and child- ' Simmer the beef In the water with
ren spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. file „alt until meat 1s tender. CooL
Potter of Parkhill. Remote. bones and fat, and chap very
Mr. and Mrs,'Minerc of London hone
ivd 10 turir home after vlsitlug AOS•-_- ifoil the liquid until reduced
relatives here. to one cup. Add vinegar, sugar,
Mr. and ere.AireSnyder, Mrs. Truvmno•l "age• weuce, thyme, salt and pepper.
Mix with the meat. Preen luta a
buttere4l mold and ,leave to become
thoroughly cold. Sense with tomatoes
and lettuce with mayonnaise.
Stuffed Flank Steak
re
and Mr.
visited f
geek.
Mine
day* *et week with her aun , .
t•hamney of E. Wawanosh.
Jimmie Matheson of Renmiller
riends here one evening Ins.
Ruth Thompson spent ■ fr v
t MI
sa 1:
COLBORNE TOWNSHIP
COLBORN E TOWNNFIJI', Aug., in.—
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sprain( of Detroit
are vlalting with/Mr. and Mrs, Walter
Pettman.
Mrs. Amts !Stoll 1s visiting with
friends at Cd111ngwood.
Mrs. B. 1a liurr, Mr. Cita rile l.a
Burr and Miss Stlffler of Toronto called
on Mrs. Earl McKnight on Monday•
*1*. Kathleen Tyndall iA a patient
llsCOoderlch ho.pltel, having under-
gone an operation for appvldlcltle on
Set urday.
Mrs. Wm. Meltwain is vteiting
friends in Toronto and Streci*vflle.
Mr, and Mrs. Thos. Manning and
daughter Lola, of London; 'spent nun
day with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Marsh.
Mr. Brock Apdrews and Mils Shirley
Bennett of Toronto spent the w•eeA-
eud with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mnllwein
ton their return they were a,rrompxn-
led by Mrs. Andrews. who had teed
visiting here.
Mr's Will Clayton ha. returned 10
her home at Putnam after vhdtine
her parents. Mr and Mr*. John
Treble.
illus Mary Feeg*n of Nile 1a visiting
Inc friend. ells* Amelia Mctlwain. thet of ,samples Is summary and effee-
Nrs John Conk hes returned to her }tine! Seneca.
There Barnabas found him ante took
him back to Antioch Where for a whole
year they taught the new dieripies and
formed the first so called Christian
church. "The disciples were called.
Christians drat In Antioch." There
were some strong zealous men among
these early Chrletians-men of educa-
tion and of high position bath in the
('ouneil of the Jews and the Boman
government. Chief among these were
They brought with them ■ piece of
bamboo about an Inch wide and aux
Inches long. They asked one of the
"fools" 10 write something on It. The
fol then would write 'something ■nd
tell them what be had written. The
people then took It to the other fool.
and asked what was written on 1t,
and he would read out the exact words
that the other food had told tbem be.
had written. They were much sur-
prised
urprised to hear that, +and thinking
Barnabas and Saul, neither natives of there muse he some sort of tragic or
Judaea hut being In Jerusalem at the
'therm in the welting, they took it
away and put It in the basket where
they keep their valuable things. This
attracted a lot of people. They came
from many different village*, a good
opportunity for the two "fool." to do
what they Intended to do. Thus they
were able to sew the good seed 10 that
wild hill people.
in course of time the goad 'surd [{own
grew up. isaring fruit Through the
zeal and peroevetance nt these two
fools, and other fools who came after
them, more than half of the popula-
tion of the country Is now become
Christian. And these people do not
call them "white foods" any loafer.—
(From The Church Ree•ord).
time of the founding of the Christian
Church.
From this eh St. Luke in his his-
torical
ittorical *ketch of the Acts of the
Apostle's outlines the work of St
Caul, all others taking an lnterior
position. This 1a only natural, for
St. Luke knew of the earlier history
by Information gained from various
persons, bot 1* knew of the later hie
[spry, and specially of St. Paul's Jour-
neys, by personal experience, and
therefore wben telling Tbeophllus the
history of the t'hureh down to the
year 110 or thereabouts, he dent. with
that part of 1t which he sWesially
knows. The thirteenth chapter of
Acts records the opening of St Paul's
official ml.slonary labors, and Ito earl -
lest verses tell us of the fortral rep-
aration or consecration for that work
of two of the laborers at Antlon h—
' i.rnaban and Saul. This solemn ser-
vhe, In *hieh the 11017 Ghost, Jbe
abiding and guiding power 1n the
('hunch, took pert sayIng, "Separate we
Itarnabas and Saul for the: work
whereunto I have called them," was
necessary et thin time, John Calvin,
to hli commentary on this paasaget
thinks that this revelation of tee holy
Ghost and this ordination by• tbe
hands of the Antioch prophets were
by -S
absolutely neeesear_y to complete the
work begun t. Peter -at Caesarea.
The prejudice. of the Jewish Chris
-
wereegg
were oo strong, that they won lO re-
gard the notion at Joppa as applying,
not as a general rule, but as a mere
personal matter, authorizing the re-
ception of Cornelius and his party
alone. They would not see nor un-
derstand that It authorized the active
evingelizatlon of the Gentile world
and the prosecution of agirt'awlve
Christian efforts among the heathen.
The apostles having been commis-
sioned lost no time. After earnest
and prolonged religious servkea they
left their ('hriwtlan brethren and set
forth for Cyprna, a place with an im-
mense Jewish population et tbn1 time.
Though these men were .penally de
slgnateti for work among the Gentiles,
they ever made the Jews the starting -
point when's. to !Willem* the outelde
world, always used them at tee lever
whereby to move the stolid mass of
paganism.
They lttnernted through the whole
island and reached Paphos where for
the fine tine they came Into ,contact
with a great Roman otfletal—itergi*s
Pa11t11's. Ile was anxious to beer
them. Ile was a Romtn eitisen 11he
Have a Sank !teak trimmed and
scored; that lc, cut all over the sur-
face In erten-suss lines. Mix together
one cup bread crumbs; one small on-
ion, (hopped; one-half cup grated raw
carrot; one-half cup finely diced cel-
ery; nne table'spoon minced parsley;
one teaspoon' sugar; gait and pepper
to tate, and one-third cup hot water
or enough to' moisten. Spread this
mixture over the dank ,teak Roll
up es tightly as powlble. Tie firm-
ly and sprinkle with flour, pepper and
salt. Brown quickly In hot tat. Then
Mine In a covered pin and bake in a
moderate oven for one aid one-half
pours. Beate two or three times dm,
Ing the cooking with two tablespoons
butter' miTteet in one-third cnp balling
water. Whig(done, remove the
utringw. Serve with brown gravy
made from the fat in the pen.
Who 1* the inward among tt111? ZIe
who sneers et the fallings of AtaaMei'
ty.--Afertdlth.
Atotetlee of occupation la we 1111,
A mind quite vacant le • e Iliad
Viet reeled.-- 4'nwpey.
Men trite[ rather to their eyes than
to their ears.- The effect of pterepta
Is. theredore, slow and tedious, while
In■ th it (ifgil_14.:bretbren
"Two words shouldn't he written
when one is enough."—Abbe 14i5t
Dimnet.
It is from seizing the oppertunity,
knowing how to apply the appropriate
met Ilial,. {hat great surrew'see are
obtained.- JalquIh Se'tanti.
As you grow ready for It, some-
where lir other you will find what is
needful Inc you In a Mnk, or a friend,
or In your own thoughts. --George
N acl mosid.
The gpleal of martial moots, marco-
Ing men and brilliant uniforms under
the great lattterlrs of iowerful flood
Itrtlttr.At Ila• Canadian National Lex- .,.
Whitton tattle' never wanes'. It will
to held on one night only as vaunt,
this year nn tlw flight of Saturday.
A1tgn,t 29th.
Low Rail Fares to
Canadian National
EXHIBITION
TORONTO
Aug. 28 — Sept. 12
Is effect from many points
is Ontario
SINGLE FARE FOR
THE ROUND TRIP«<-,-�
Good going August 27 - Sept. 11
Return Limit • • Sspt.mbe 1
Fun particulars 1 any Agent
CANADIAN NATIONAL
RAILWAYS T91151?
HOW TO "WEEP EDUCATED"
Reed Deily tr. scold -Wide Cessiernettive New h
TNB I1UIITIAN B(71[1r(1• MOIf1TO111
Aw I.swrw.tlsw.f Daily ItIoneep•p•r
w els .5 ta...r•..,•11« world unn a,11 g..• .•• o.•nd• Moo nag
W ▪ •t, r.•.•►. •� • wrtw� r,aM.•AM ,••45.11,4',_ •
...r. ,a � � •.•rte =�s • � �•
man 11 On •
Th. Ohr1•tlt•n alel.ne• P1511451ng Omelet)
Ono. Norway sent, an.tea. Y..a.ehasett•
Mame entre .f .ah.erbttaa to 7'h. ()Striation Wow Wolter tae
• }N1M«»
..• ,.oath. 14 Y 1 .mull. N 1 month
w„da.v
11Mwan Including ?Yasin *
asi•rtion / fear .1 M. a I Si 74 W
n.-... .
gags
*..en. r.ev .. 11g.w
h