Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1888-12-13, Page 2A CHRISTMAS DIRITHR. HENV. Celery Soule Roast Tnrey—Qrauberry Seuce. Reef Tongcte—Chicken Salad. Mashed Potetoes. Boliee °atone, Bqueale Beets, Rice, Sweet Poteesee. Blum Pudding, Niece Pie,. Christmas fleke, Coffeo. memo sour. One head of oelery, one Inert of milk, one ouion Sliced* one tableepoon eede of Grandmother.• TIM Itlitheelees Beim. mg, aud, eeity. The forns of beauty Tfiteout graddreother—et least one—no When ta' ither belongs are huthed to thole and grandeer Whigh matter its on Chrietneas festival le complete. If there are bailie e The aelPh aOd bet MilliOns of are OnlY elothing fart:tithed by mind. more than one. ge much the better and aunty, er cousAedee ere tor freeey granu-uame, &borne till thee& combines them andetempe atilt lmttee if there la 4 greet*greteedneother, Wha enteda. laet 4u* lenelye ette naehedy She, indeed, ie beady tell°, to he proud h?, of at this jeyeue ttme of year; but ;she is a Vie the peir doited loOnle—the Mitherleee rarity,. and we must not bomb of her too bairn. freely in the hearing of then; who, per- „„ olmuce, Wive net even a grandmother e no mitneelees bairn genes to his Itexe bede crown end bleee th.e eannal fielaile:Ignete No'ne covetable eeeld, took. or /IAN, bare lbe idea graedeeethert the N1;1114001 heed. lady eathroned in her geseeheer, with a gin Wee haeirit beelles are hard an the idrut %mit of ehildeen abeett her keeee is a .4.14! litheless the tair o' the Mitherlees beim. oherseeter deer to geed hearts in all 144da. Sins toey boa grendatether ef the antique, Wetly kind, with eoxeme old face and folded kende, aveverend person, honored elect beloved, She sneY he a genial. men'Y eld tenele with eemfortable, large figure, and SOMITIFE. SOO* TliWegAD OF 00A. To. At the Baldwin 1,00M -11947a Werke the re on em the conception he ehedeetieg a in ceurae of sheetraetien four 19QOAk hill*, Nisgara is a mash of water-dreme w4leh are 4salgsed t' "n the soul puts %tole thet sweep et moues, which takee the place of fire Reeler tle Fewer Which the beholh- r feels. The betler. Sada, hes meth the eente pow ar a (mean, wave behind wnw. is 941y eenee, cotd, sari the Philedelphie RscortI, wltbeti when the spirit ee„ leme,thed he any of the A-a:MAYO PAacia whieb i4 idea a immeesity. If we nea4xe per. amit4. The engleee ewe now norlyduishe feelihes we shed lied that thenaghe ?led KO to be !shipped with two *eats z meets ne 'wherever we turn. The real Totkehhelfe. Mimeo awl swe to he eon wanderer. of the world is ia the mot which tut' streets of the drYa where 04aW "git) Q• onder tremg c444MatallOON, ten') the engine rimner bee to ride in the nioet dangerous s prof ti e train, take eearge of A Eteam IA)Qt0342Sier,tanil 419741E:lbilld:r ;nth% thir7e4:41)74* d aod kill lane, emi try to keep up A 71044 9 Whtch OnaY being more than onmaa oould 4 antedAtLPY emitatehe. He meet he 4 telek- ee ably ekallel meeheniet—he eannOt be too gotsi—and hare nerVea that Will reel** t !Steady metier the mot trying eirmietetae. in gee- If emaieg Nat expose ougla nid- night aoltrin: pvetecheirvoiceo 5 beether rupee: killed) by tee% wreckers the t? whot hefere, he melte desh forweed with e the serer) c-Dtifidettee 004 he wettlel feel lo 4 bread 4aYlight PA an open Prairie: 'Ale he dine ne; "144rnieally gras, the throttle n in tee fae0 'Niger, whea the throttle hoe in been AreedX,Sbut, per dem he " whiede ;owl eiemeoe te the reporter's. tale„ ?rhea by the see, !neglect the air beote he can, with re turn el ere. hie Imod, epply gem. %eke in the trate My with the meet of a vim leee time then it tee would Peke tahn eo tewth the whietle poll, ezn When there iedenger *heed there as _gen- E4t: roalEpFaalriaL°14;11.ph-.144411AT4Ae. dA°*n4itileet'il*Tat el;eet iir f r ehettleg Or the *Mere ead ApPlyine the eh brake. W alb mann train% i.e ell AO le teeeehary et' vex be done. Rennin the magithe re aSe'ssery reetty esteem, eud set fartneely wee en at; a* Weald, fsetik dene seetiectively. by old sunitere, in any me, but thie saw }e 4=0 in SeePlid. After taking tie Inenviires there its lecithin tor the vegieemen to do but leek it for Me ewe estfety. Mae c;rettaititetaggi, 44 in the cene of pertielly learned bridge which ethY pereeibly sapper; the train even lea woken - ed eenMqoa, it may he Wee to put ore oil eWarte. Who runner le thee In a dilentratt‘ A.mi I right ileeielota le 4 matter of monsen. tat,' laspiratiOn. Maw lino Italia been waved by quick witted =nem in well 'moos!, but there no ground for ceneere of the engineer, who in ehe excitement of the Meals mate decide* to 41,4011, bleteed of quicken hie peed. The rem owe Of Mk kind see. whet slum the value of experience. and el en of ttte eight meneeraineet degree°, intellimenee to acquire experieme le044411. readily, Rem of The Rail. The teeentetive engineer ie the pope*. "hereof. the raite" and the Powder mtimate thie rospeet eabstentbily jest. Other* hove to heave dangers mad perform tier &meth hie esautd beow siccan eir,eams hover w loh neen Wee ceneeptem of 4" fcrbOgeo. Tbe " $14P4 t'se4 ib there, IM own reflected from the mirror emend it, sIsle sPflesms4 ss Ps4e4ger °sr* 0' henele that want landly kni4„4 het oaeo fer naind ie Pat only living bite lite-heehle ist abeeemetwu bee loeg, entieely hexed heir - s atid heat reeelve4 from its Maker a portIon With he mad* emekeeteek er pieee. 48, better and flour, OV3A tga9p9014 of eat, pep, Eut morning brinve eletebeerealm and Of His cresItive pewee it breathesinwaeo tinge is an exhskad. .0r ref448e4 The leen and cat %U. inch pieces, 1”i1 in one Piot of energetic, with :snapping dark eTeN aed a 9 eat' the leeks the *itherlea4 11.4134 8"1* avzz her to team. Wath, and swipe the t nodding broWe le her eel); er way awi That ieb:on,,, , n a geeing§ a feo long, toes xtmurivg tbrougil Salted water until very adz, licit the 444011 j'46t pride in her ability to eurpaee laer wow esooe goo. ea in ea. in newel boilers. loide the better wii tem etery matter the breath of life a 1 of eopeer Whoa iet diameter and 1 in the milk for tell reunites, and add it to be planed five tees of emie, upe Yon steter, thee bang o'er 'Jae oftly reeked an WOOS* hiSet. Mica the 41;14 is daughts in the acoompliehmeets of the celery; rah threugh 4 flee etreirer and lboUsewife, She may be tiny =el wrinkled, boil swain; wimp, boliteg, add the butteet,,yith meowy hair and dim eyesight, and an ana flour, which ha,ve been cooked tegether endless neck of Ageless of the pest to tell ,)2y reelijug the batten and he: ot bell- to her loving listeners, tug stir itk the floor, and stir till enmesh aria mr en a these, gone WOWIldare saY Which well ceeketl ; add tbe Efaa0alogr AP4 wm the best; tall or Ahem, net elle but ralateteeeed *trete, holasher bettered piece in thoweends of heaxte; mono ehe.esen. whether she nal presidee moiling tetra her a char over the festivities! of atonement, or the 'IA the turkey ttsVe """ emir istetule ereeset hy the Amide, washed and wiped dee- ittelde asd esdxil.shis heehaw the too Was of Ormadmothere ouly the first Via ih the lege. Melte A dreaegag.4 bread,. veroo, eels, pepper aho fresh 01M044 eliced a batter, ehe whew, eoftened with hot tateO .- Wet se Muffed slew U p with, as Mout card, Poi) ever lightly with deur, eprinkle litUe owl Welter es it. Vet; o belting pen, peer owe mint ef hot water, tuad, hehe 4 Mee brown; bane it becl OhMtlehart Net OircUllitanee3, beteg damped by a jet of wheel, produee Jehnseti once remarked, with Rd Now reeta 444 the meets where her manim a 4 roan moot get to beano ie The faither toile sr their we henemck to s grsY 110 14 net 14617 to reach the4 earp, longed-fer goal in a green, or a MIA 41' yd. An' kooks no the wrens( *se' bee tadtherleas h471' eee.' /3A th°4-e et se whose "411 sra Her Writ, that weed mei hoer of hie bleat whontgremienilaren, theyoueeeroneeespeei- Stilt watehee hz wearEeeQr'e wal'A 4'gs c' elly,nenstrefteafeeeprosentain the two. es- earth ; Wile el:QV-alb deal wr the nalth'41see beiree Oh / epee,: tee him herehly thetutdee the lieble old 'lame whet Memel the chadhael of Peter -Pettey, ehilellemd e faced and toolmr. thee wee et, etetely dame, tad and fond of fteesordem le heaven the 'amines they eent metling Wile, whets wooer towerel add- go benWhigte your 1444, me, ble2ext .vour Emile ; 4 In their dark hour o' maguiele, the heertleee shill teem Time Gad (itself! the blew for the mItherlese Wmrr bike. Timm ren tree lued end gentle, hut eomewhet elteh with the water; thlekeo the flrsVe lofty, She &Aug eueleat bellede, Ohl when ready to serve, with item else:items= serve, Two esspe of oratherrive, one cep of weter ; hell tilt Milder, etreith odd ewe eepe of esegar and bail to &thick syrup; turn into an.ould to herden, XtUr TeNtitig, histerm mute which the remembered, sted eleted inter -eating eteriee mad teaditioes of kir own fatally end mighbore, The other wee short, lets effeetbeete, and a prectiel rather than, a remnant% or digelfied choo. aeter. Of harbor worthy gratideete SVC; Weed f sheave, she pee me breed. till Metier, aud while WarM rooter 4,1hsette_ te.niouIdaee of PeetrY, the fed kin; when wad cut tato thie the..Th" 4%4, NVer, w.as 4/Mettle' S4.1041). arra onvictiora chlidrea mune-he/0i art o mere pear teey ; ace PAU 44 beet meat of ewe chickens! &vetted and What allA heINVOC1 ehe ?moth:red.' twice ea much IniAcita celery, Are haul Thet ie sue excellent hied of grauelteether; eggs, four tepleepeom of melted hut, neverthelect, the other es at leak% 114 lead 1).W with the yellte, stud the whitee deetrable, The “Tsago (444 GraUdeaether" C1110; MIX thereggilly With 0414 wadi Itlehlde NO much that Can 1;4 pined !rem IRO roost of emetarel• seat apeicrpper other them, oeither front Unita mar from *4 a little Omar, in itasenee obbage. MASHED rirrater% est and drain and 44414 tl Crean% with, *geed eized piece ash the potatoes, pet in the hot ter, Mate vilte fork Until then poen threugh Sieve With her, letting thenefell lightly into h h. Via1410 ONIONS. Waal% and peel ; teed 4 Wend time d win; pair in more boiling water ; add aele aud bolt MA hour or longer if uot tender then. Then pine in A ealender, turn a letterer over thecae and preset firmly to drive off all the water; put them into ; mid butter mad per mei eerve. wiertm SQ moisten the W1;010 with lam men. She earthy* the inneedleto pommel Mae world or aim to where she emetic& She Inmate with poetry or with comedy the boom of the olden time thee yet nand he dingy eimplicity amen their red.roof and, peaked. neighbors!, See melte whet %tweed in them long ago torn dove to woke for the naw. In cue, rehoolmate of here died el A broken heart for a lover Ion at sea and was heeled in the dress the should gove been married In. Its mother, lived the old meld who, after being melted every aliening for forte" Yeah,' idted her patient lover became she tta4 beccons "ton sot in her ways to chose." Cutup and take out th testae; pare the pieces to ea little water al possible; cook an hour; math end if watery let staled on the fire until dry, dialog to preveut hernias; Iteleen With eselt, pepper seal butter. ettnere, (germ stua wash well and boil till very tender; when coal peel end alba, melt some butter in a stewpan and sprinkle with salt mad pepper; add a little butter and flour rubbed, together and one Ida of vinegar; simmer twenty =Junto, then peer over the beets. Santa anat. Boll one-half cup of rice in water until well done, atir into ono egg, well beaten, one-half °up of auger, one oup of milk ; mix all well vogetherbefore stirrioginto the doe; pour out In 4 dish and grate nutmeg over the top. SWEET ZOTATOES. Ch00110 them as near of a size as poesible, wash and. bake until tender. ITEM 2170=0. One pound each of curionte, raisins, suet, chopped fine., and brown sugar, ono and one- half pounds grated bread crumbs, ten eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately, mix to- gether suet, bread, fruit and &little mit and nutmeg and let stand over night; in the morning add one and -half pants of milk, sugar and eggs; work all together. but in a a floured cloth, tie it firmly, allowing room to swell, drop in boiling water and bail three and one-laalf hours. Serve with mum IdiNCIE To three pounds of chopped beef acid six <parte &lopped apples, and one-half pounds suet, two pounds ofraisins, seeded and chop. ped, two pounds of curt -mite, one-half pound_ of tamed citron, one emu e einex of cinnamon, cloves, ginger, two outmegs grated, 0/le grated lemon, one resift auger, boiled eider, and molasses sufficient to moisten. OnlasTMAS CARE. One-half cup of butter, two cups a sugar one cup of milk, one cup of corn stareh, two ohne of flour, one teaspooe of baking powder; max corn starch, fieur tted baking powder 1. together, and butter aud auger alternately with the milk; lastly add the whites of seven eggs ; flavor to taste. COFFEE. Grind fine one tablespoonful of coffee for each person ; put in a thin main sack and pour slowly over boiling water enough to make the amount required ; let stand ten minutes, then take out the sack containing the grounds and the coffee is ready, for use. --stestess-- ' Remorse. 0, the anguish of that thought, that we can never atone to our dead for the stinted affection we gave them, for the light an - ewers we returned to their plaints or their pleadiegs, for the little reverence we showed to that tweed human soul that lived ao dose to us, and was the divinest thieg God had given us to know l—[George Eliot. • Rie Tlirkey. Tt .1 best practiol joke 1 ever kepis'—geld Uncle Will, In the nary -telling hour After That dissolvte in filo moruirg mkt in Weigle the mot) pare zsUgb Haw ;tweet the beck look el our worldi frenialer Ara weeder the eprieg bursas Tho wild brook werbied to a !sweeter Through Summer *bow* that mooned heighter ems ; The hem gelttered and the brown out fel ;per mad viper to the aluteem %mode; 54 whatee driftiog en mare glorious, oar Shed purer MIOWn or shot interser froate The young were merrieo when am life woe houng; Dropped mellower Trieste= teem the Mope of age, 4154 loveandirleaciehipweeehurnortalthinge; From fairer Ups divieer rnmio liewed ; The song was mond, mad the poet too, Nob art, but inspiretion, was hie mug. 1104141:47) MUCIIANAN, Pate, "Xis the plau of the ohild, kie the seream the youth, That deal never develop reelltre truth; 'Tie the cattle man bungle in the wombs Mir (sinner—wee one I played, yore ago wheo I lived at Ilempeteed. I was working, at the oarpeeter** trado,--It WM before I got the start I have now,—and a lot due were jot entshing old Simpkins's 'barn Simpkins was the doheet and stinidette ram in town. One afternoon, several deer.* before Christmas we got talking about lam, and 'leery Bewles saa " an Old meow, bet Ilan hell leave the decency to give us ad Christmas turkeys," We laughed et three and told Jerry he mighb take it ant in betting, for though Simpkine bed given as it long job, he wasn't in the least bound to consider us permanent workmen, But Jerry was obetinate anti greedy, and he talked ana blustered till we were tired of the whole subject, and I made up ray mind that he deserved a lesson. I didn't say anything at the time, but that night I geve a hint to Tom beeowles, a crony of mines and he quite agreed with nue Welaid all our plans, and the evening before Christmas, Knowles cams to my house, bringing a pair of large yellow turkey legs. I had arranged a knobby bundle of sticks and ahavings, and we tied the legs firmly to ono end of it; then the whole was wrapped in atont brown paper, with thee° tell tale feet sticking out and any one would have declared the Imitate contained a big turkey. My wife wanted me to go to the market for some purchases whirl had not been de- livered, and aboub which she was getting anxious, so that gave me it good excuse for driving down town. I harnessed Mb into the light wagon, put the mock•turkey under the seat, and Tom and I started in high glee. When we reached Jerry's house, he was standing in the door, and we drove on to do our errands. By the time the market -man had packed apples, oranges, a big squash antl a turkey into the wagon half an hour had passed, and we thought it safe to venture on our joking way. So we drove to the comer next Jerry's house, and Tom, after pulling his hat down and his coat - collar up to (disguise himself, went to deliver the turkey. When he came back, he was overcome with laughter at remembering how pleased Jerry had seemed; he hadn't recognized Toni at all, but lust took the turkey as Tom said, and ran in to tell his wife. I don't believe Ie have laughed so much since I was it child be I did in thinking how Jerry's face would change when he opened that bundle. I dropped Tom at hishouse, went home' and carried my parcels into the kitchen. Then, when I had unharnessed, my wife and I opened them, and—my friends, Tom had made a mistake. He had given Jerry the real turkey, and I had brought the clammy home It served me right, I suppose, but those turkey, legs did not make a very good Chrismas dinner. Curious though ib be, it is not uncommcin to see aecold water man boil with rage. A. miniature balloon ot pearl, entwined ingTilitet. rTahdieerasgf°orTraibudnisea'; piSoiliteolynt,PrwePhaern- by a serpent studded with small djampnds, the result of the census of 1890 becomes forms the head of a gentleman's sesrfPhn known. It points out hOw unreasonable it How limited is human reason, the pro- wouldhe to expect the Western States to foundest inquirers are most conscious. We make the same increase in the present de - are not indebted to the reason of man for cede as in the former. In the last the tide any of the great achievements which are the of settlement on Western hornestead land landmarks of human action and human pro- was in full swing. The present 'decade has gress. It was not reason that besieged been marked by nothing so much as by the Troy; ib wag not reason that sent forth the rush to all the great cities. The '"Tribune" 'Saracen from the desert to conquer the shows by calculations based on the recent world; that inspired the Crusades; 0 lat vote that Massachusetts hal gabled 22 per instate sed the monadic ordere ; it was not cent. since 1880, while Illinoie, exeiusive of reason that produced the Josuite ; above all, Chicago, has Otliy gained 15 8 per cent.— it was not xeason that created the French not more than half the gain in the preceding Revolution. Man ie only truly great wheti decade. The same condition will be found he acts from the passions; never irresistible to iedet in all the Mississippi Valley States, bub when he appeals to the imagination.— where the principal increase was recorded Disraeli. in the eensus of 1880. ' 'Tie the thing that shall happen we do not expthe ; "Iis the seller thetht saved, from theshi is wreekel; Twee the train thee wee!! down Bridge of the Tay, 'Twits the lover who stepped from the train on that day; 'Tie the lives that shell =edema far distant shore All unhemiede moonlit for, unknown he. fore, But Whom Love he his bonds shall unite evermore; 'Tis the man mad themaid who shell moot and shall love, But whose pleuets decree from the realms above That their spirite forever shall separate move; 'Tie the mystery of myaMriee envelopicg souls; 'Ti* the cloud from whose hoecon tbe future unfolds; 'Isis the sunshine and shadow of Heaven's awn breath That is breathed upon mortals% life and% death; 'Tie the will of the Being supreme over all, And whose judgmenta no measures of man can recall ; By whoa° voice of omnipotence worlds were evolved, And the planets in oircumeoribed circles re- volved; And our souls like the Veneta by circles are bound, Like the waves on the depth of the ocean profound; And we may not surpass, tho' our spirits be free, What the God of all power for man shall deoree. Like the leaves from the trees by the au- tumn winds blown Like the pebbles on shore by the ocean - waves strewn, Like the clouds that arise and are drifted on high, Like the storms and the tempests time dark- en the sky So the deeds Of our lives seem the clebtors of chance, And so man seems the prey of unseen cir- stance ; 13ut no leaf ever falls but by Nature'* de. cree, And no pebble is drifted by Chance bout the sea, Andthe clouds never rise bub by their own cause, And the tempests and stomp haveimmut. able laws ; ; And no mars is the measure of Life's circum- stance And the thing we call Fate is the absence of Chance. BY E. J. l'oerhose, B. A. Mind Above Matter. It is the presence of life, above all, of intelligent life, which gives significance to creation, and which stands like the positive digib in arithmetic, before all its blaok ciphers. The most beautiful landscape wants its chief charm till we see, or fancy in it, the home of man. , This may be charged as egotism, but it is the law of our being by which wemust judge the world. We must look out on God't universe with the eyes and heart that lite Maker has bestowed upon us, and we muse believe that they were meant to guide u truly. Theeerap of geology receive their in tenet as they become instinct with anima- tion, and as they foreshadow the entrance of the intelligent mind, which was at last to appear among them to be their interpreter. 10 14 the reason of man which hap reconstrect- same reason wht gives to the present ed them out of tht dead ashes. It that living world all that it hes of mean- grty, are imlinedt to lesir very longingly:— at the ides* thet Chriet le ready to awe us bezel end were joist as we ere, Ea our own onside, senereted, whiett will Deo.= boo deem beakee ' le ehder to add a eteig geberet SiX telir, the teetiete neaSee aed t it le nem*. ary rentor e it to ila orig. State by forcing throes!) the beller igre et euperiteeted !steam !rem eletlea widele drive* the moisture math forst the smile, when it in again ready um. The exhenet Meads femel the meting hareem laneeleiths tehanrence, and glen but— is need to eaterette the eeda, and lay eh .4113414 twh8.9 641evaatir:otkL14:t7f qldsar4tiVor: elinrafieef cltfretirir k4isaar&thet gh4ce.48114"h4 Vere;I lielghlt44 the red ceet ef Pine greet in thee country, eod ere beteg west -suet coatt'44thtl(ge sitYae5t*lei ter wilt -Y:14 :suer 1;hte17°g111:‘rri, Uwerdnvire,Volaugtreer41,1R*Wiate Glee"grfueeiCw411141 ha fied hem ele mirth. Thies whe ms,y have the neme pewer thew) en ;see Now Yo 14 of the notion of eilvetion by end by, ae.hhted. roeh, heal, eogieee are ushe ni h re Avor4 IAN nt3,4PINg) tOt'ofce34 4444 and other Eteropeee ohne very Joule fde4 Pet thy would he loiter F theY eueemsfelly, era they aber traverse tiatt Sr. mot sPreeavorehlY 44"14Z041 44 t'le.hrenht Geteewl reee4, melee the Alpe, where them Bet wither mate PU ecoztit4-lenS enn rIctu urciuu upa11ugng4.1,4Qt, uft9a, bgcAue PATO VA or dteersee en Am we in eXtrettie thu leogth of the tunnel renders it laipea- Vetvex41 th.i 944-4 alV he the hinhdone 'ef eible t detiee rfin,Y44,CM vesatiletioa which ecovee. Aro we ;kb?Cod it Able to 144V44 carry off the fohdgeenh manerateei by e and to Wen ewe the deh. Iheatertiay wee logoinotive, 8)eirer,19Wering wu.jtj thee* oliCie a today, anal to.morrow w111 he is te'• g3,314 he4eale that eyebolt= woad day twenty bur henna hence. Neither et memo then, Write% bv we ; but rich tar poor, k or well, weak er etroeg. haTA thA MOMATIti and we hove Chriet. Sewed Wpm Faniga. Motley* the tete EugIih merchent, the Newts cornea from Bosoms Ayme th membeoet Perliereeide and cariettien phil- ems end reshot of th lowleude of antbt0?jst. hew =better &deb° to his 444 due to urge hire to "attire to tame aro adepted to 'MINI; rea444f4kettlren. an hourly abedimese to lila lone hats WU% Isamu for some rime that ancti that he Weald atrengthen you la the raw meteriel wield be nude into paper, but a A Weetthitig Akeaaetieefetneet 14 UeW 4411.414 te tv01 l whetever he hate*, eel to do wha. rta* le aveilehle for goedefor tine clothing, weohl be planing in hie etelet Never foto Te. claim it thet febehte new he mann- got, myeere to eile thee loviug F•44.ber even bettered .ceptel to the lievet woolens and to be neer you, mad to ene for yen" alike, reby, mye hie beeorephsr, was Mr. Wills following extreet from a Bethe* M.uley binned, whom "fete nee o Arne paper will %Moto how the iprese of bettedietlem" ebb 46 te preserve hie child, tan; erenatrY reckard the metier "The an. liketesee anti In All thine te wooden of Mr. Newnien, by which wool seed the teed, Wealth, icehouse, potation, *ilk Are Fliade irMA mode, retake not a Jot bonen!, bed 410 power toe .rept (vette; , below abet of electrietal developrems, We Pieced in the midst tereptattion of home examined %soy geode for overmaster, commode] and peaked UP, ho*J mead- blanket!t and gentlemen's weer, feldep and feste urtmovehlet, alwaye ohounding in the blade eille drool goods!, all Insole QM of the ork of the Lord." We a omega ebound In flier of them ruthee, which for teeter*, for e work of the Lord u,utie we became sere duleh, fur strength end for heisting cetera we moats of Joins Cheht—net Sundays, not in could not dietieguish from shutter goods the morning maly, not when uneempted of mede ham well eu4 eilk." r eorrow„ not when we %Twee to think , but "elwaye, even unto the cod of rid," Chriet and his follower* wave tut a thoua*tzd oonenele toward perpetual A correspen4eut of the " heertinWeetere etti ng, eQnatant wetehfoincen eternal nth Relireeeler " advisees* a curious theory for thee ; but not outs tovrard fitful, or "Qom. the itscreseing prevalence of flogs and rate, fermi oonformity" to Ks mission end matt- sienna lie says that there ara over 30,000 dotes. leo:motives in use in North America, end thanes timt front them atom over b3e. Barka Of LOYes 000,000,000 °ebb yards of vapour are seat Into the atineephere every week, to be re- turned in the form of rain, or over 7,000,- 000,000 gable yards a dey—"qeiteeeougb," he eve, "to proeuon a good rainfall every 24 hours," Estimating the number of other nonmendenetug eugints In use as eight times the number of t000motives, the total vepour thus sent Into the air every week in chii country antennae to more then 470,000,000,- 000 cable elude "le this not," he hake, 44 teffialeat for tho nooas of terror? Is them any mason to wonder why our storms are so damaging?" •1111MIMIMI, Do letteeXelle'ra CAX/Sit STORRS' riocbore is the test of that true maaalluese into which we are brought by the liberty of sonship. A Lavery who is the alive of mom petty thief or of some base super- stition:is alveoli a tyrant. Ho merriest it wife that she may wide upon him Ile loads her with all the burden* beeves° 14 14 weak, while he Wm %manse he ia strong. He le too proud to give that weary :gnaw either help or aympethy. But how different Is the conduct of it true husband itt at. mcephere of Christian civilization I He hes leerned from bis divine Lord the great lesson of I. me, Ho has the spirit of lam who came not to he minlatered unto but to minister. Be tolls harder than any slave to serve thoee who are dear to him. And he Linde in this service no sense of degrada- tion. Hey, rather he feels ennobled by it, He rejoices in it as &privilege rather than a duty. The highest ooneeption we have of crea- ture -freedom ia that of the angels. They A Poor business. "Ilium! written stove]," mid a journal- ist to it publisher. "1 am sorry for you," aid the publisher. "Yon would have done better to have apent the time it took by tak- ing a fishiug trip. Novels—that is, American novels—don't pay. We get all sorts—good, bad, and treahy—from Eogland and France excel m etrongth. They fly as swiftlI' y as ' such Plantir end so °heal' 112t a 2124n Who out thought,. yes, street as they am they uses his pen to get a living had better devote at to any week rather than novel writing. Same recent American novels that were real- ly !strong and excellent bave not netted their authors above no° or $310 Mr. Howells himself could not live on what hie novels bring him in. If you have written any ex cept a meet extraordinary novel, you will not get p. id for the time it vreuld take a man to copy it at the prices a good copyiet de- mands." are all ministering spirit/. They serve and wait upon the heirs of salvation. They keep wain &Ilene were They hold us with thew angel hart& lest we dash our feet against a stem. One of these angels came down from heaven to prepare it breakfast Lor Elijah in the &met. Duke think thie it degrading service. Ne! It was not serving MIA but serving Elikilee Lord, God sent him, and there can be no higher haler then to obey bhe conunand of our heavenly Father. If we want to be like angels we must cultivate the anglio idea of service. We must learn from them that no work is menial which is dam for God. If Christ should °me to any one of 115 111 a human form and: ask us to serve him, would we not obey gladly? Would we not feel that he honoured us by ceiling for and accepting our services? If he wanted us to toil all night for him, we would be so proud and glad that it would be impossible to sleep. And as r e toiled on hour after hour In the presence and cheered by the smile of the eon of God, we would feel times we were already in heaven. Such service slavish? No indeed. 10 10 as free and noble as that of the archangels who wait around God's throne. If °lariat should send for us at midnight saying, lam sick in a hovel in the suburbs, come and minister to me, who of us would not arise at °nee and .go to him ? Who would care how ppor the place or how cold and stormy the night if we might be Mr. Gladstone does not agree with Mrs. seith our Lord? But just so Christ comes to Caird—who, by the way, has concluded in us or sends for us daily. He tells us to feed the " Westminster " 'her dissertions on the the hungry, to clothe the naked, M visit the marriage question --that husbands and, wives sick, and adds, inasmuch as ye do it unto ought '14 be able to divorce themselves. He the least of these my brethren ye do it unto "holds by the law of the whole Western me. Sothis love service is fullfilling the Church, whioh teaches marriage to be, India - law of Olirisb. It is the Cluistian freeman's soluble." Ib is refreshing to fled that on manifestation of loyalty. It is theiproof to one question, at ell events, Mr. ',Gladstone himself and to the world that he is not the remains immovable as a rock. If any Radi- elave of self, but has entered fully into the cal member of Parliament, say Mr. Labouch- glorious liberty of a gout of God. Let no ere, attempts tepees a bill to make divorce Chrietian ever doubt or forget that in the more easy, he will therefore have to cemoun. kingdom of Christliberty and service always ter the formidable hostility of the leader of go together eh the Opposition. Mr. Gladstone's amendmeet tif the m. tion for the renewal of the Ashbourne Act Was defeated in the Imperial House by 330 to nen. "Do you mean to tell me, Miss Guaira - way, that you popped all this corn your- self ?" "1 did, Mr. SPoonsernore. The work was dime in a ,good cause. Beside*, I really enjoyed it." (Tenderly) The sound of popping is—is not disagreeable to you, Miss Gushaway ?" (With cold, business- like manner) "Mat when it comes frora popeore. How many bags will you have, Mr. Spoonamore ?" A Story of Uncoil]. Stories of Abe Lincoln always pasa as coin everywhere, and it is not too late for one told by his son to a friend ia Washing- ton. "My father," said Robed Lincoln, "liked to stroll abotit Washington without any escort or show of diatinetion, and he sometimes strayed into curious company. One day, as a led, I accompenied him down a hack street, where we Gateau aterod a regi- ment of soldiers marching past. My father was curious to learn whet perticular body of troops this was, and 50 5000 as he came with- in hailing distance he inquired without ad- dressing anybody in partieular. Well, What's this?' Quick as the word came a reply from somewhere in the detachment, Why, ies a regiment of soldiers, you old fool you!'" Gladstone and Divorce. God's Fatherhood. God is a loving Father a,nd a loving Friend to the children of men and not their arbit- rary Sovereign. He who realizes this truth has a freedom in his grateful service of God which isliot possible to one which lacks its comprehension. It is said of a tlevoted mis- sionary that "in hid eye all life WAS a coven. ant, and every aet a oonseeration.'r Such it. life is a lifeof joy and a life of peace. There is true joy and true peace in no other life. , The Marquis of Queensbury and his rules are in New 'York, PROCABILI71133 0? itteielLera Bet she terrible cloud conataetly Imaging be eogiceer mad fireman of a fest toain 1* 014 chessce of meoeuntering an °Wools which otheoe posably be emitted, sud which leaves! Them ipi Attraletive hat 10 jump for their live% if indeed it dots not ;site away even that. To the feel; that this cloud le no Urger thau Is lo, and that theea men hove sturdy and courageous natures muse be attributed the lighttsees with which It rens up= therm Ono= xoad or another, from a weehcen or letifident menagemente eaueed by an eperator'e forget.- tame, or *me one of a score of other - ceases, there are oonetantly oecurring oasaa. men heroically meeting deeth under the, moat heartreedies oireuinstencet Every oath moral e, number of en sh, though p Ily they tare not frequeut en LEY oats - Oa a:chested' rode a freight trate wrecks ed, by a broken wheel ruttier 4 boreowed cer may lee thrown In the peal: of a peseangeee trent au another treek pert as the latter aps pros*hes. This has happened more than ono. Lately. No amount of ieelity or fcireh thought (exottoe in the maker of wheels) cam proven: this land of disoster. Where Isom - stout danger on most roads of rumens oft the tower et misplaced switches, many switch - 611 being located at points where the runner cau see them only a few seoonds before be is upon them ; but the chance is so small— perhaps one in ten or a hundred thousaud— that the average rumor forgets it, and it is enly by severe self-discipline tbee he can hold himself up to compliance with the rule Mach requires bint to be on the -watch for every swatch terget as long before reach- ing it as he poesibly can. Ile finds the switethes all right and the road perfectly clear so regularly, day after day and month after month, that he may easily fell into the snare of thinking that they will alwaya SO. Rut, like other treenmen, the engine - man fiaCs enough more agreeable thoughts to fill his mind, and zeflects upon the bazar& of his vocation perhaps too little. Mind -Cures. Them is no doubt of the frequent enema of "mind cures," " prayer -cures " and "flitwh'icanereapli;sioian always backs up his medieirte by ministering, an words and, tone ard manner, to the hopefulness of his pa- tient, a lack of whichis often the attest unfavorable aymptom. For the physical system at ahnost every point, is either nutter 'the absolute centrel or under the dorninent itfleence of the mind Even the child knees that the infra de. termines every voluntary movement of the body. Ilow it does no is it mystery to the wisest roan—as great s. mystery as is the influence of emotions upon the involuntary muscles, and upon the bodily botith. A thought ei shame brings it flush to the face; that is, through the proper riervete it disteeds the superfiaial capillaries with 4 iblood. A thought of fear blanches the cheek by audd Ally con t meting the capillaries, and crowding the blood back on the heart. Sudden bad news takes away the appetite by arresting the action of the geStric nerves; sometimes, acting on the bear; it may eau% a dead faint, or even result in instant death. In all these cases we have only carried the procees back one step. We know that the face flushes with shame, and we know the physical cause of the flush. We do not - know how the mind firet acts upon the body and gives the impulse which results in a Mush. But the action itself is it fact, and science may properly take advantage of it to effecit cures in cases where medicine would be of no avail. Experience gives many hints how the fact may be employed, , The writer WWI once cured of a hard toothache on pulling neleutist's door bell. Hope seimulamo the netvors and the ar- terial system; eteepeir depresses their action, often to a fatal degree. Hence, among rude netiona, in :11 ages, the power of charms and incantatioes, acid the methods adapted by artful, priests and conjurers to work on the fear or hopes of their dupes. Numerous ex mnples might be given to I 11- storing sick persons to _ health? and even in lustrate the power of the imagination in re- overeomiug ph, that ihfirmities The only miateke macre by the siecembelievera la any system et mied-eure, 14 111 supposing that they or any one else understands the philes- °PThYhe°0fetrhe'A, tIntr-'ortrPera:1, and they result in some wav from tete actino of the mind on the body ; but th,, hew awl the why are as yet t. an unfathomed mystery. ;