Exeter Advocate, 1902-3-20, Page 6F•77.7
11SRMO.N FOR GOUNIRY ROP
Rev, Dr. Talmage Preaches on the Divine
Art of Siraphoity.
Egutvrol acvordins. to Act vt tho Paii.linent vi reody to •pluegs. there are- elaWS. Of ,
Cami%. in the xv4r One Thunsand :Owl nee- alltureMent ready to .clutch... Nis* I
‘Ire.1 nrza Two, br Walian rennet Torontv, Az
nu) 1/44.rtinvat vt ApkvaVre. Ottm‘l . • • see the peril. • Now I uuderstand, the
A despatch- from Washington says: gurgettedi- Now 1 dee- -0111Y daietY-
-Itev. Dr. Tali:Mom preached • from W°n1(1 that Christ might this doy.
-the llowing text; Mathew xxiii. take our sons and. daughters into los preparing for everythined that noted abuntlance a •Ius heart. .In .Col. in,
shelter, is a he gathereth her , come end so aVoid being classed ,•16, xre, . hare the salu4 result front
.37. "littou as a. hen gathereth her
.chielieas under her wingS, alid die chickens under her wing." among those described by -the clos-il the word of Christ •dwelliag richly in
woulsi net." But we all need the protectieg ing words of my text, "es a, Iwo 1 us ; therefore, eccording. to an
Jeruseleux e -as in • sight as Christ wiengd , li Yon had known when von i„ztvailtlahesr.eatiend 1;reerweohnicilaueninsgtt!der her 'axiom. which pays that things that,
,
.caute to the crest of Mount Olivet. a Zen'ere" uo'--no manhood. or wouleen ,i are equal to . the. same tiling: ere
height of 700 •feet. •The ephaeors of t hood what was oheo,d of you, would., When re good man oisked a, young '.equal to czoe another, there is pro -
the religious vapital of the whole iy...eu have dared to undertake life; .
, woman who had abandoned her .; nably emee coretectloO between being
earth Meer:Bated the landscape. There I Ilrew much have Yon been throng"- hozne and Who was deOloring her tilled with. spirit • and filled with
is t he temple. Yonder is the Iting's1W" nc•°st' life ims bee. n wretchedness, why she did, riot return ' the word of Go1.. lee nnow
:palace. Spread out before Ids eyes i A DISAPPOINTMENT. i the reply was : ''l dare not go ; thee the Spirit' hes written
,a.re the pomp, the weelih. the wick- i TheY tell me sch They have , hoMe. My father is so. provoked . he the word. and the Spirit. is the
edizeis arid the .coming destruction of I not attained that which ti
nth , svould not receive, me home." ' word, and the Word of -God, .. the
pected to attain. They have not i"Then," said the Christian Man; ".1 J..ord Jesus, is the emboditinent and
Jereselem, and he bursts into tears .ex
at tho thought a tho obduracy of a i hod the phYsiral and 1dent0 Niger will test this." And so he wrote to neeelfes. teflon of the written word.
have they expected or they have met with : the father and the reply cana0 back.. If we would be filled by the Spirit
Place tho.t he would eladly
saveU and apostrophizes. seednit. -0 d rebuffs which they did not anticipate. and in a letter marked outside "Ile- and used by the .Spirit, let us lay up
Jereeeleat, Jerusalem. how often ridrou are not at e,rty or gite or she- ;mediate" end inside doli-inu. i'Let'llis word diiigenttly . in our hearte
children ity or seventy or eighty yearS of age i her come at once ; all Ls forgiven.", (Ezek. lid, 10,„ 11).
Wonld 1 have gathered thY
together. ea as a hen etetiteretil iter .vinsr''' Ynn -thought gotz would be. So Goal's 'invitation for pin/ liS xnarlt-1 20. "Giviing thanits always :or all
anyone eimeiet aue-self ' ed hinunedittee" on the outsiele. wed :things unto God iioral the Vather in
chickens under her whigs. end yet 1 'do nkrt 141°It'
wouid pot!" to whom life bas been a. haPPY sue- :inside it is written. "lie will ahem- , tee mune of our Lord Jesus Christ."
Whei did Christ select hen and 'Mid°, 1 never exPectted anYitidnith and :datintly pardon." Oh. ye wanderers 'In f. Titcss. ie, 1S, it. ie written iien
eteeians as a simile? Next to the V:0 when anything came in the Share front God :and lieppinees arel home ,eseeFtlzine give thank's; for this is
appoeitenees 'of the comparisora. I ioi human favor or condortidde Posit and Heaven'. eonie under the stieltetn tee' will a God io Christ :Jesus cone
thee; ir was to belp.-all public teach- tient or widening rield of work. it was dug whin'. Some of on haw bean 'etioriag you." How -earnestly we
ers in the /natter tit illustration to 0.0 nie IL surflriSe• 1 was tetti in the :a long while drifting in the tempest lebould covet to be filled with the
get down off their stilts and use li,, theological eminent- by seine or my of sin and eurrote and have item Spirit Once he alone can live this
gellow students Goa 1 never would intaliing for the breakers, Titlark. holy and beautiful he in us i "Ile
compatrisons thee all can understand.
to bear me preach un- i God. the title has teriwd. Do you ,whO spared not His own Son. but
Tie., pluinest bird on earth is the iget, allNb°4'
60 that not feel the lift of the billow ? The delivered Him op 'for us all. how
tarnyard, fowl. Its ooly adornments ;less 1 changed mt: sisle,
are the red comb in its headoiress onion 1 found Haat, some eeople did grace of God Hutt briugeth ealvation . eh41 lie not, with ilim. also freely
wes a haPPY has appeared to your eoul, ant. in deive us all thiags" (limo Yid. $2).
and the watttles under the throat. It .4.'tnne t° heur *Ile t
has no grandeur of genealogy. All dsurpriee. But Most Peolde, accord- the words of Boa? to Rah. 1 row, and tenea --elee ie•hteeei and hoe eu
W( !wow is that i•ts aucestors come One- to their ,own stale sent have mend you to "trite Lord Cori of :loved us. Ito minuet give us any -
disappointment. Indeed. 11er-eel, under whoee wings thou hest kiting that is not 101(e. SO WO Will
from India. some on them from a fellutl life a
height of 4.000 feet on the sines ,,g 1 we all ited eheiter front its tendiests. come to trust*. 'thane Mtn for all things it we he -
the Himalayas. It has no pretension i The wings of my text suggest,F : /leen this. Mrs. Bottome tells of
of tzest dee the teigle's ee-rie. it has :in -at -nub. and that is what most folks Mt; w jaisters whom she saw accident-
tio lustre or venue" nee, the gala, i want. The fact is that this is a THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. tai,. • -,, tio one another.. the one
reerh. Posebeeing enotOmY th„t ea i cold world whether e-ou take it liter- • • -, - . .. i ..
TIPITIMTAIMPL.1 ' . Illitrehti sPilling 601110 hot. water on
it wants to do is to fty. atel lin re- iCreidace rnlled the mot. and iti has d • INTERNATIONAL LESSON, eirever niind. it is all in the. will."
re other. who meekly replied.
treat ewes foot almost aq upzilx x4 ,3...!:'_ry hod tre. and -the stokers neep NAB411 23. , A Lady whom 1 hnow told me that
Wiz•Jg. 'Aitt4efoos Lave writa.e •out tee 0& 15 Well tittrred up. but mutt ! ha!Ling spilled! a bottle of ink. on her
yet the hm ,k,.c zny text bath eetbeeg ,eil. The world's extremities are coldi te.;-..-5,:onir
iu musical 'ale the song of leek '•'.
of the year WC cannot get near . ell- ,.„,„74 ei, the z Eph. v., 11.21, ramp', she was aide to take it Meek -
oral robin rednreast. and nightingale, 4)11-4:111 to' this li,reilluri' Iu gc`t worrit'h 44.c. Golden Text h. v 18 '
- ny c.tult as pert of Ills with
•,, • . , • n n n
q L I, Submitting yourselves one.
time. Forget mat that it is'l 11, 12. "Iltlece ne fellowshin withn, to another in the fear of God."
that could be taiien for a enrage but :tlia l'Iw'
-"colder at the south pole than at the., tlee unfruitful WOrkS Of dertine5e." nee,an, ore hos sad that sohne4ssioa
Only
deep snowbanks.and hear the village stupor and drunkenness, and the
bed that celled you to worship Arad manifestation of the flesh es God
seeing theehorses which, after pulling only can give life, so God, only can
you to church., stood around the old lire in tie the life Ile desires. and
ehapboarded meeting house and lie is pleeseci to do this by 1iie
those who sat at either end of the Spirit, therefore the necessity of be -
church pew and, indeed, all the ing filled with the Spirit by whom
scenes of your first fourteen years, alone the life can be lived.
ond you think of what you were 19. "Speaking to yourselves M.
then and of what you are now, and psalms and iagmns and spiritual
ell thesis thoughts are aroused by songs, singing end making melody in
the sight of the old hencoop. Some eau!: heart to the Lord." A drunteo
of you. had better go ba.ele. and start man is apt to make himself known
again. In. thought return to that by his noisy tolk or ribald song, but
place and hear the duck and eee a Spirit tilted person, having true
the outspread feathers ated Come wo melody in his heart, will sing mite
der the wing and make the Lord the Lord. Each proclaims his mase,
your portion and shelter and warmth ter by that which comes from the
lows night. yet atenit the eat thhel ally or figuratively. We hate a big
ztaoseozzra.ziz
[101JSE1101.0
OZZWZZO9660649
VARIOXIS CAKES.
Afeileeses aee.--One cup 'each Of
stager and molasses Awl e, quarter
cup0- 1- n eutter warmed togethernetis-
•selve one-tialf eep ot strong cellee
awl add to the mixtere, together
with teve beaten eggs aud two give
of sifted flour. at while fresh.
Dreekfast titekes.--Soalt ente-balf
cup each et tee -twat flakes awl stale
bread crumbs in PIM pint. of emir
Add one teziepci.onfel dot soda.
one of .sugar and one-helf teaspoon -
fed -salt, a. beaten. egg 'ood flour to
make a, better that will dip nicely
Onto the griddle. ' •
leo Cream Coke.-Thie is .also a
western' recipe arid' is a good con-
trast to the devil's food. Cream
one -halt cup of butter, add two cups
of sugar and One.cup of milk grade
, -
ally... Sift four level -teaspoons of
taking powder and three cups of
flour together and add to the first
mixture and the etiffiy boleti whites
et. Peer -eggs. • 13eat and bake in two
layers. ,. Cut a Very thin SliCe Vein
the onteide so -that no brown edge
Will show through the frosting.
Make /Aided frosting. Coak two
cups of Sagar With 61N. tIbleSPOOON Of
sceiter nntil it threads. Pew grade
trolly over the stillly beaten Whites
of. two eg.ge; ilayor with yanilla.
Nut Spice Catte-Cream one-quar-
ter cup of 'hitter. add gradually 0325.
hall sup of ground -sugar. one-quarter
cup of nidlasses, the yOlkfi of two
eggs. well beaten, mid oneehalf cup
Of eour milli.Min and sift one and
ontequarter cum of flourone-half
level teaspoonful eaell Of etittit and
cinnamon, one-quarter teappoonful
each of clove and grated nutmeg.
When welt mixed 'stir in onedudf eon
eaCh of seeded relents and Unglish
walnut meats cut in bits. oleo once
quarter Cup of currants. Sift aver
aU threeeptarterS teaepoon of baldege
powder 'and beat. thoroughly. Italie
in a shallow pan aa to 40 minutes.
Chocolate Prostingegittelt two
squares of chocolate It& one level
teaSPOOn of hotter end three table -
*poems of hot water. Cool slightly
and add confectioner's or eowdered
sugar unfelt of the right consisteney
to spread. Flavor with vanilla.
north pole and that the Arctic :9, This week's study In this epletie and ..s the highest mission bn earth. ,ShreWSlalry Calies.-Creem togetle.
CLUCK' AND CACKLE.
'Yea Chriet in the text uttered while
0800 fit a While the Arctie will Itztl, not inecesearily break the continuiteni and, that. kontles9 one hate learned le 130 %aster sugar. then work in ontellalf
,not destructien as the Antarctic, the next ort the resurrection :teed '! higher then liotne or foreign omeltalf ound each a hotter and
looking ttl'en dimmed aerniFitlern 'ler 'explorers come backbut the Atilarte" of our study of the II,CAS Of the On06- ;IN not fit for monerv eervice pound of fine sifted flour. inolStening
it with one whole egg; roil it out
V313'7 thin, cut or stamp it out in
loienges, rounds. etc.. ornament eaCh
wIth two or three earaway comfits
or finely shredded candied peel, and
talte In a. moderato oven. A very
nice variation of this Is made by us-
ing one pound of flour. one -halt
pound of butter. two whole eggs, six
ounces miter sugar, Iwo ounces
grated chocolate. or one and one-half
ounces ground cinnamon. an*1 enough
milk to make re nice dough. Finish
as before.
elittes tbdt 'what he Ihul `lush°, fur 'tic II (11'. ever. When at the F,0114 h Hee, for In all the Scripturee we 1335'. 33 In UM illet at, Nazareth,
tient eity was lihe what the hen does liote hilip intlie door of iee? have the things concerning liim of fit His baptiem. public Mule -
ter lig ehicliena. jin almost same to lie shut against ;1 %Atom Philip tipahe to the eunueli , try anti In Ills sliferingo our Lord
'11111." is nnt 8332013 Pt'etrY Own' .11ti,1 return. So life to Many/ rail-; end whom wo I11eu.4 see as, the cen.. freely manifested this grace el the
1 tre of every lesson. In this epistle Spirit. As we can only show inir
1100 are. as one has said, taken intO love to God by our love to ethers.
the presence cluttuber of the Kiwi so we can only manifeet true sub -
anti made acquainted with' Ins ece. mlesion to God by suotnnenon to
cret counsels and purposes concern- others,
ing un. Gully as we by faith enter
into Ms love and purposes will we • TX NEEDS A SUAVE.
be delivered from the works or dark -
nese mentioned in chapter iv. ill; I.
tlos wniged creature ot God meoe llions of people at the south ond
tizesed in my text, but she is more "many millions of people at the
praiitical toid more luotheirly and ,uorth is a prolonged shiver. But
More eungestire of good tiongs than When I Sn'y that this le a. cold world
reetny that higher and wear A chiefly mean 'figuratively. 11 you
hrheilter colors. She is tun. a nrtuln'ewaut to Mum what is the weenier:
tionna Of the Ades nor a strut, of of the ordinary terra of reeeiving
beauty in the ttisle of the forest. She the
aloes not cut. a circle under the. sun "COLD SITOUT.DEll "
1.10.••••••
like the Rocky Mountain eagle. but !get out 01 money and try to trots (*or. vl, 0, 10; elan v. 10-23.Intente Has More Star on Mis race Than
staye at home to look after fondly Any Otber IrInn Alive.
,:row. The coraersation natty have nerance, au generally understood. is eeee re,..,,e.„ ,....a. e sdeed Iso,„,
unities. She does not swoop lite the
lentilor Of the cordilleras to teens- been almost tropical for luxuriance , one of the many Werke of derliness, 1,...."Z"thhe"e"ieve";, ieditirlrei; itivitieis mee. yi
of thought. and epeech, but, suggest but the child of God should be free ""
nil -• the itieur necetsities and see the ther- Vora all IC he would know the joy of his strength lay in the length of Ids
port a rabbit front the r e.‘ to
top of Ihe crags. but just watches .morneter drop to SO degrees below being a, child of the LoreAhnighty hair, this Vrenclunun would be a
for a living. Vow vigorously with zero, anti in that which till a now (II. Cor. vL 14148). very liercules. His beard measures
, :meet before had been a warm recant. 18, le. "Awake thou that sieepest 10 feet, 106 inches in length, while
her eiaws she pulls away the ground '
'Meet lire breakfast or dinner hour
wbol ix "Wen beitental ,Talin what is an unpopular positiOni and arise from the dead and Christ
'on some public question anal sec shall give thee Ilgbt.'" 111itisitziltooztache is over a yard aud a
says the London Express.
to Iwing up
'your friends fly as chaff heforsr It apostles. heavy with eletl:Pheo.11/litre, 3 * .' • • • • • - -
arrives. she begins to prepare the ro- Of couree axe MAS ttLI:Ott MS ulna to
past and calls all her young to par- , windmill, As far as loy,,,elt is Con- liana of Transfiguration and actual- celtivate Mime aenazhig adornments,
take. eerlied. 1 halve no word of complailit as von -may gather front the fact
i em in warm sympathy with the 'but I look off day by day and see IY sk•"i"4 in aethseninne' 11130". "9 that Ire is reventeosix year's or ag0.
unpretentious old fashioned hen lie- ,communities freezizer out men and ere may
how the most highly favored %dime- it, is eery proud of thew, omit ties
cause. like most or us. she hs to ‚33033108 of whom the world is not he indifferent to the great ty
things of God and how this ery, is perhaps Ono reason among many
screech for a living. She knows at worthy. Now it tallies after one "Await:0 thou that steepest ." rutty why he does not permit the vulgar
the start the lesson which most peo- and now utter another. It becomes /lanai to us an, to gaze on his grandeur every. day
-Vent. the gaining of a livelihood im- of
nititlicuclovueekin aej"Dephiarbtatbnier osi Al!
t ,
pie of good eense are slow to learn popular to depreciate and defame ere 10, 4.„S'ae. then, that ye walk
and. execrate and Ile al-mutest:tithe, circumspectly, not as fools. but as ,
Plies work and that euccesses do 1mt people. This is tite best world I wise, redeeming the time, because the
lie on the surface. but are to be up- ever got itzto, but it is the meanest days are evil." The Revised Ver -
turned by positive and continuous world that some people ever got sion has on these 1 wo verses eit her
effort. 'Phe reason that society and . into. The worst, thing that CVer in the text or the nutegin "Look
the church and the world are so full happened to them WaS tbeir cradle, therefore carefully how ye Walk."
of failures. so full 'of lowers,. so full and the best thing that will ever "buying up the opportunity." The
of deadbeats is because people are happen to them wil1 be their grave. life of the believer is spoken of as a
not wise enough to take the lesson But notice that some one must
which anv hen would tench them take the stornit for the chickens. Ale,
that if they would inal for them- the hen takes the storm. I have
selves and for those dependent upon watched her under the pelting rain.
thein anything worth havintr they I lutee scan her in the pinching
must scratch for it. Solomon said. frosts. Ahnost frozen to death or
°Go to the ant, thou sluggard." I almost strangled in the waters, and
say. ga to the hen, thou sluggard. what a fight she makes for the
In the Old Testament God compares young under her wing if a dog or a
himself to an eagle stirring up her hawk or a man come too near I And
nest, and in the New Testament the so the brooding Christ takes the
Holy Spirit is compared to storm for us. What flood of an -
A DESCENDING DOVE. guish and tears that did not slash
but Christ in a sermon that began upon his holy soul ? What beak of
with cutting sarcasm for hypocrites torture did mot pierce his vitals ?
and ends with the paroxysnL of pa- What barking Cerberus of hell was
thos in the text compares himself to not let out upon him from the ken -
a hen. nets ? Yes the hen takes the storm
One day in the country we saw for the chickens, and Christ takes
sudden consternation in the behavior the storm for us. Once the tempest
of old Dominick. Why the hen should rose so suddenly the hen could not
be so disturbed we could not under- get with her young back from the
stand. We looked about to see if a new ground to the barn, and there
neighbor's dog were invading the she is under the fence half dead,
farm. We looked up to see il a And now the rain turns to snow,
stornicloud were hovering. We could and it is an awful night, ana In the
see nothing on the ground. that morning the whiteness about the
could terrorize, and we could see 80- gins and the beak down in the mud
thing- in the air to ruffle the feathers show that the mother is dead, and
of the hen, but the loud, wild. ai- the young ones come out and cannot
frighted cluck which brought all hem understand why the mother does
brood et full run under her feathers not scratch for them something to
made us look ' again. around and eat, and they' walk over her wings
above us, when we saw that high up and call with their tinYvoices, but
and far away there was a rapacious there is no a:newel-Mg cluck. She
bird wheeling round ancl roiled mid took the etorin for others and per -
down and down, and, not seeing us ished. Poor thing l. Self sacrificing
as we stood in the shadow, it came even unto death .1 And does it not
nearer and lower until tve SaW its make you dank of Ilem who endured
, beak Was emend from: base to tits all for es 7 So the wings under
• and it had two Claims of fire for eyes which eve come for spirittial s&tfety
, and, it was a. hawk. But ' all the are blood spattered wings, are
• chickens were under old Dominick's night' shadowed wings, are
wings, end" either the • bird of ' pron. TEArpnsT TORN WINGS.
caught a glimpse of us, or not able My text has its strongest applica-
to find the brood huddled ender wing tion for people who were born in
deeded back into. the . clouds., So thecountry, wherever .you inay new
OhriSt Calls with, great , earnestness ,live, and .that is the majority of
to all the yoeng. Why, what is the' yell, You cannot hear my text -eith-
matter? It is bright sunlightand out haying all the rustic scenes. of
there can be no dariger. Health is the old farmhouse come back to you.
theirs. A good home is 'theirs. Plen- Geed old deys they tvern. You hnew
ty of food is theirs. Prospect of long nothing much of the world, for you
life is theirs, - But Christ contemes had riot seen the world. By hew of
, to call, calls with more emphasis, and a.ssociation you cannot recall the
urges haste and Says not a second brooding hen and her chickens with -
ought to be lost. Oh, do tell us out seeing also the barn and the
what is the rnatter. -Ale now I see; hoe-Or:Low and the Wilggon shed and
there are hawks of temptation in the the ho 60 and the firesidewith the
bid' baCklog before which you sat and
air, there ate vultures wheeling for
their, prey, there are 1 eales of death the neighbors and the burial and the
.1•11.1.•
DOMESTIC RECIPESt''
Curried Eggs -Melt an ounce of
butter In a frying pan and add a
small onion, sliced, and fry for ten
minutes, tahing care that the onion
does not brown, then stir In a table-
spoonrul of dour and a, small dessert-
spoonful of cttrrle powder, and fry
all together for flee minutes, add a
pint of milk, a half teaspoonful, of
salt, and stir until Um sauce is
smooth. Pour this over hard -boll -
ed eggs, which have been sliced and
kept hot ou pieces of toast.
Tomato Sauce -Slice two onions
fine and cook for five Minutes in a
saucepan witil one tablespoon of but-
lier where Coulon resides, are very ter, add to the onions one-half can
proud of hino and by way of ao- of tomatoes, one cupful of stock, a
knowledging their appreciation pinch of thyme and laurel; cook one
the num with the unlimited beard hour. Silt, through a sifter. and to
exhibits his luxurious growth to till the pulp obtained add two table -
and sundry who care to C01130. and, spoonfuls of butter, u. half -teaspoon -
see him any Sunday. Indeed. it may 1151 ful of salt, a saltspoonful of pepper.
I
be said that for him. the Sabbath is and when ready to serve add two
tablespoons cornstarch mixed with a.
little stock or water.
Prune Whip. -Whites of live eggs,
beaten very light; beat in two-thieds
cup oS sugar, then one cup stewed
prunes chopped line, chop meat of
one-half of prune stoees and add.
Pile in a. buttered dish. Bake ,seven.
minutes in an oven not too hot;
serve when. cool with whipped cream.
Cocoanut Pie-One-balf cup shred-
ded cocoanut soaked in one cup of
milk, two eggs, one-half cup of sug-
ar, butter the size of an egg. Bake
with lower crust. OTice with merin-
gue on too.
Boncel Turkey. -Few copks can bone
a turkey properly, but with a proper
knife it can soon be accomplished.
The bird must first be neatly sawn
down the back, spread it open, and
then remove the bones. When neatly
done they are easy to carve. and nice
for breakfast; boned and glazed tur-
keys are seldom eaten hot. The bird
must be Illfed with a rick forcemeat
and neatly pressed into shape. The
bone may. be left in ihe top part of
the leg. The forcerueat should con-
sist of chopped blanched oysters, fine
crainbs of bread, minted veal, shal-
lots, parsley, finely chopped. 'rho
bones from the bird should be boiled
down with the nemgants' to a glaze
to screen the bird when cooked and
r
'cold. ' Shoeld , the gavy not be
strong enough, little isinglaSs and
-
beef gravy must be used. - If any od
the. gravy remains when 'cold. it caid
be chopped and arra, nged in little
hillocks around the bird with
bunches of parsley here andithere.
.Cream' Buns -Put one pound of
flinty in a.basin, mkae a hollow in it
with your knuckles, potir a ta.ble-
spoonful of yeast dissolved in a tee -
cupful of tepid Milk into, this, mix-
ing into it a little flour from the
sides, then cover and let it rise near
the . fire. Meanwhile cream six
ounces of butter or use five glances
or six ounces of clotted or thick
cream, beat' it up..lightly with four
whole eggs and a little flavoring to
tfl
eete. and add this to, the our when
well risen. Work the whole well to-
gether, again let rise for an hour or
so; when well eisen pet little balls of
i his dough on to well -buttered bak-
eng tins, two .er three inches apart,
contintraltdying to self, an overedru- scarcely a. day of rest, for when not
ing, a. conflict, a. race (IL Cor. tv, on view he is carefully dressing his
tunazing appendage and moustache.
During the Weelc he rolls his beard
in. a sort, of bag, so that he may be
able to go about, his occupation the
more conveniently. Those of the pre-
sent generation WhO are inclined to
envy him need not despair of emulat-
ing his achievement, for they must
remember that Coulon's beard has
taken seventy-six years to attain its
present remarkable growth. From
the earliest times the beard has been
considered by almost all nations a
sign of strength and an ornament of
manhood, and has, therefore, been
carefully cherished.Some nations,
indeed, regard the board as sacred.
These include the Arabs and Per-
sians, among whom Coulon ought
to be held in exceedingly high es-
teem., The Moslems, who are wont
to swear by the beard of the Prophet
and by their own, might take to
swearing by the Frenchman's if he
could be induced to go among them.
Unlike the Easterns, however, Cou-
lon does not constantly carry a
comb about with him. nor ,does he
carefully pick' up and preserve for ene
tonOrment with his remains when he
shall come to die those hairs Which
fall out or break off when be dresses
his venerable beard.. Nor, like' these
same Arabs, and Persians. does he
dye his beard, for he prefers the
whiteness of his own to the redness
Which he could don by using paste
atter theOriental fashion.
11: I. John v, 4, a; Eph. vi, 12;
Neb. ,di, 1), but in this epistle and
elsewhere it re also called walk."
In the climax in Isaiah id, 81. the
walking -that is the steady plodding
-is more difficult than the mounting
on wings or the running-. We aro
entreated to walk worthy of our vo-
cation, not as other gentiles walk,
to walk in love, as children of light,
to walk worthy of God, who hath
called us unto His kingdom and
glory (Eph. 'iv, 1, 17; v. 2. 8; r.
Thess. ii, 12). As to buying up the
opportunities, if we had the zeal of
-unscrupulous business Men, \sem for
their own gain make corners ev-
en in the necesFaries of life. how
much might be accomplished in the
service of Christ? If we walked as
Christ walked (I. John ii, 6), all
would be well,• but who is sufficient?
Our sufficiency is of God (II: Cor.
iii15.);
7'Wherefare be ye not 'unwise,
but' understanding what the will of
God Is." It is not the will of God
that any should perish, for Ile will
have all to be saved and has made
full provision for the same (II. Peter
iii,:)); I. Tim. ii, 4; John iii. 16).
When sinners are' saved, Ee desires
that they should be holy and so ful-
ly •yield to Flim that they mew
prove in daily life hOw good and acs
ceptable and perfect Des will is (I.
These. iv, 8; ltono. xii, 1, 2). Our
blessed Lord could truly say "I
seek n,ot mine own welt." "I de-
light. to do thy will, 0 my God"
(John iv, 31; v, 30; vi, 38; Ps. xi,
t3). •
' 18.' ''Be not • drunk with wine,
Wherein is excess, but be filled with
the Spirit." Drunkenness Wenger. to
the unfruitful works of darkness; to,
be filled with 'the ,Spirit ne the privil-
ege of every child of light. Wine
stimulates and exhilarates unna-
turally, but the rffoly Spirit stimu-
lates supernaturally ; the One is for
self, the other for God.. Tbein is' a
dru n ken n es s that deee not. come from
Wine or strong drink (Isa. xxix, 9),
hut is just as much, t,he work ot the
adversary. Only that which is of
God through Christ gives light and
ide;all that is not 01 God cosmos a regnar ciisLOii 01
THE DEVIDeTDAN'r'S PLEADING.
In a rural district in the West of
England there lived an eccentric old
farmer who Lvas continually appear-
ing before the magistrates for allow-
ing his cattle -to 'stray on the high-
way.
During the hearing of his case for
a similar offence, upon the last occie
Sion, he elicited much laughter from
the pres'idi'ng dientlernan on the
bench" and others.
The chairman, addressing the de2
-Pendant, asked:- '
"Do you plead- guilty or not guil-
ty?" • -
"Well, yer 'mom:, I expects tee 1
be guilty. But don't be too hard on
being light, these drop into bun
shape, brush each over witie egg ad
intik beaten up together, dest- with
roughly crushed loaf sugar, and bake
in. a, raliKierate oven.
•011ILDREN'S. BATTIS.
The old-feettioned habit of elivelon-
ing the .child's head en a thick emit -
Should he eheneloned. "It is a good.
plan te, let the little one run .ahout „
naked 'with only a little shirt on, for
0. while every..day in. a Warla„.• sunny
1•90111. A bare wooden 'floor or a
square of closely woven • matting,
that :can be- kept s.crupolcieSlY Clean,
*a much to be preferred to dust -col,
lecting enrpets.
Front thetenth to the twelfth
Month peep eltoeld accustom the vhiht
gradually to cold, natns. The best
way to begin is After i10. daily warm.
hath to rub the child a few, times,
with the bonds dipped in cold water,
and, then wipe it re,pidly. By and
by one may begin withcold spong-
ing. :and lainr ote veltlx a little
douche. In the use of eold water it
is absolutely necessary that the re-
action should rapidly follow.. Tbis
reaction 10 manifested by a. nlea6ent
Warinth perceived by the child; end
eNterna,lly is ntede visible 1311a red-
dish .1iPPearauce a the skin. Amu.
ever cold water is Applied to th*.
siiin one will notice first s cere
pain • whiteness or palter, which is
caused by a contraction of the ex-
ternal blood -vessels. The return of
.the blood •te the external surface
catmes the reddening of the skin.
Wiretterer reitetiOn is Welting or teen
ty. the advice of the physician should
be sought.
ITOUSEKEEDING NOTES.
'Ile best way to use old bread is
to set in thin slices and tiro or toast
in a tireing closet, then passing while
W51'111 through a clean meat ellopper.
hie is called tusk, and cart be eaten
in milk or cream It costs 11111011 less
than cereals 312321 133 more palatable
end Is highly recommended by physi-
clans.
We saw some very good rugs inede
of two colors of carpet 11198 wove8
alternately with warp left to be tied
for fringe. They looted neater than
anything 1 had O'er seen made front
rags. They looked much prettier
than the stripes or Itit or miss car-
pets. Another way Might be given
to weave at the ends of the rugs
(which are any leugtg desire(1) enough
warp to turn under arid hem.
A good way to cook old tens is to
simmer thent until nearly done and
then fry in hot fat. They will tasto
lihe chicken, if not better.
%Then making entire wbeat bread
if two measures of the flour and one -
measure eaCh Of rye and wheat aro
teied the bread will be lighter.
NURDERED SYIlt,A.TCM-BEAPSf
Crimes Conunitted Nally Cur -
1.0118 Ways.
A mu named Cross Was found
dead in the loeked-up eellar of Ids
cottage near Belfast ono winter
morning eight, or nine years ago. 1115
wife. with WhOra he was Anowxt tc
haVO been on bad terms, was sus-
eected of murdering hint by Want
But the doctors disagreed as to the
poleon and she was acquitted. She
disappeared soon afterwards,' and
other Lomas took the cottage.
Some months later the favorite dog
of the nOW tumult WaS found dead in
the cellar, and -what nets most pe•
culler- no cause could be assigned
for its death, for it had been per-
fectly well the day before. This led
to an investigation. Next to the
110115e WaS a Bane -kiln, and it was
discovered that the fumes of poison-
ouS carbonheacid gas leaked through
the wall of the eottuge and at, times
settled heavy in the mbar -especially
If the place was left closed for n day
or two at a time. It became (rimiest
certain, front evidence afterwards en
earthed, that the wife of Cross bad
discovered this fact. and had de-
coyed her husband into the death-
trap, and left hiin to perish.
'Equally cold-blooded an this crime
and even more terrible, Ws the plot
01 33 man named Feteaud, who had a.
long-standing quarrel with his bro-
ther-in-law. Ferjand bought a cou-
ple• of what are called bass -doge -a
cross between a mastiff and a wolf-
hound. These he trained to attack a.
dUminy figure. Then, after starving'
them for a couple of days, be
LAY IN 'WAIT FOR HIS ENEMY,
and, when he passed, set the two
great brutes at him. The wretched
man was almost torn to pieces. This
insane piece of revenge caused, how-
ever, the immediate arrest of the
murderer,
,Murder by matcheheads is the crime
for which on Englishwoman named
Ilaine was sentenced a.boet a year
ago, She had married a second time
unhappily. So, ne her misery, she
cut olt the heads of o box and a
half of inates steeped • them in
her little girl. The child died. Then
the mother.' tooka larger dose her-
self of the same gruesome compound;
but it failed to kill her, and she was
arrested before. she could renew the
attempt.
eSeveral poison -by -post crimes have
come to light of recent years, but
none -more mysterious than that at
Paris in August, 1900. The Euro-
pean secretary Of the Chinese Mints -
ter received Edict:ter from a Polish
lady asking for monetary aseistance.
From the letter 'dropped a -flower red
scantling an, ox -eyed daisy. The sec-
retary picked this 'up; and, as he
was looking at it, fell back fai nti age
Doctors found that. he had beenpoiss'
one& ''Bet what such a noison could
bethat a mere whilf ofeit so nearly
killed a strong Mall WaS neyer as-
. -
eel:tamed. 'rho lady who sent it. de- .
dared that she was detested, by a''
certain countess, who possessed the ,
poison secrets of the Borgias; and
that this countess must have placed
the, deadly blossom in de letter af-
ter it was written.
litre . Gad ebo ut-e 'What sort of
P01605 is Mes. Blildinan:, who haa
moved in the next' house to you
Mrs. Chaffer -'`I don't think much ,
of her. Between , you. and me,
think she is ,*ext door to an idiot.''
Mrs. G dabout (innocen tly)- ''e
.think so, too, nor deer,"