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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1902-4-24, Page 3EATEN IS A BUSY PLACE It Is the °entre From Which All Good In'Wei:toes Start. lAtetted omelet; et At et tee lettieeete 0.3 etettele, ie the „leer Oz eteuseed siee nee- dled eee Tee, er InftMere eon a 'forma", At thY neeinalqee 0 Aeeeteene. %twee A deepatela from Washiugton spleen IleY4 Dr, Wow preoched from the following texte—Revelation, vine 1. "There was stleoce ia heaven ahletet the speee of half an hour." FranetII wo can learn it4 ebe only time heaven ever stopped, It deee not step as other cities for the night. for there is no night there. It doe% net stop for a plagne. for the inhabitant men" Se" am sic It doeot atop or bent- ruptclen for tie initaleitenta never fait it deep oot stop for impass- able otinetsfor there ore no fallen et‘ aweeping freshets. Thate then. stopped it for thirty minutes? Groteue end Profeasor Stueet think it wee' at the time of the deetruction of eTeruealene. Nr. Lord thinks it to strike. end the half hour is ended. until the great fulfillment, or nifull- /let how will yeti spend the drst mente of Joel ii,, 23-32, in the xtear halt hour ot yOIF heavenlY eitieen- future. Jews had told- theta that eleip after yeti bane gone in, to the Spirit would bring to their re. stay ? After your prostration before Membrauce what ie had said unto the throne in, worehip of him lelle there, 4,T °ha XIV, 20, and IR( is ilONV made it possible for yam to get there doilig this with Peter. at aR 1 think the rest a your fleet V '�rasowen thee as God. geve hen hour in beepen will be pa.ssed the Ole nee. gilt as Be km mute us, in reeelving Your reWard it yea hese Whet belleveal on the or Jeene been faithful. I hey° a, straogely Olielet, whet was I that I eould beautiful book contatnieg the witlistaree God ? reter 'Wes i tbe bonne of the Lewd the Lorat's messenger, the Lord'e. serVent, and it Wee the Lord who wrought all this, as they peightheve expected fle&JJ hall they believed what lie commanded coecerning giv- ing tta gospel to every creature ond the prophecy of Joel eoocereing lemple and catastrophe. between Ilea, twee ex the medals Armee by the ven and hell. The most tremeiadoes Englieb. Government in Imeor of thine, of your life and Mine were greet battles. These medais axe certain half houre, The half boar pinned over the beat ef the return, when in the parsonage et a country ed heroes of the army oa greet oce Minister reselved. to beeente eaSiene. the rooel family present ond Ohristien thee. and there the halt the royal bands playiugeethe Gel - hour when e deeitien to laecome a mean medal.. the medal of the eon- PREA°11-Eat Qv. Qs°s- 441 loinArcr* m 3 IT I La' first If h PlIrlriAfigneofourte PTesrSaPnwellttheuPoatnher snijoi Ix' your rs a o - • the in heaven in some way you will, be Jewish brethren God did lor the pa - first reelized tbuS ewes°'I honored for the earthly struggles in circumcised gentiles eust what. Re dead, the leant hour when 1 soon on which yee wen tee day. steed ep bad done at Pentecost for eireamele- the top ot nr house in Oeford street before all the royal houses of heaven ed Jews. and saw uur church herti* the halt an receive the insignia whiloi t WhOO they tweed these thew, hour in WI414 entered Jerusalem' are anominced a victer over tbe they held their peace and gloriflie4 the half hour in whieb 1 stopped on drafts and freshets of the farm acid. God. saying. Then bent God also lgouet Womenthe hail hour Victor over the temptationot the to the geutiles grouted repentance which, 1 stood onMnrs bill awl ehmlt Steels Exclieuge, victor over pro- unto Ufa ten or tilweiR other half hews are eeseionat enneeneenea !odor over Tim premise to Abram was that the eblef tienea of ereY life. You a4a.Zr domestic infelicities'. victor over me- all 101011Ees •et the earth should be forget :the °num ef the eexact yearn ehanieee yieter over tbe store- blessed hiee Men. Be,, and it of meet. Of evie impertane events (.1 house. Niet or over bone worriment% was written, by tee, none through your existence. but these halt hontn victor over physical distresses. vie, J TeSOinh that Isietel• should blossom Wee the halt hew et eV text. 'tun' tor over hereditary depresaloca. Was in Use year 8114. between the be imuortaL , 40 not q - tor eixer ala and death aud, hell. clese et the Illeeletiall Perseeutlen Son will do with tito twelltieto "Pi Take the batha dga t celw ebrates the and the beginning of the were. ber eery, I do not query what Yon will victories through our Lord Jesus which eoustantine gained the throne. da with thiA yam., belt what well you obott. Tont the pretotto of 'Put that was all a guess. though a. learned- amt. guees, do not knoW 'When it Wee, and da pot care when it woo, but the !Met that Mach an interregnum of sound tool. place am certain. "There was go lenge in heaven about the epaect et hell an hour." And fire_t et all, we learn. that God and all beaveu then honored silence. The longest and widest dominion that ever existed is that over which stillness was goeen. For OA eternity there had not been a. sound, Wean- nieking wee a later alav oceupatien For urainiaglizable ages it was a mute tiniverEe, Goed WM the °illy being. and as there WAS uo one to speale to. there Wee no utterauce. We say. "torever and ewe- But But that silenee lute all hem tereeen how Wag is ',forever mid neer e 1 1. The Gentilea rase' rezeived the up into worlds, and it has become am glad thnt reel teen puts under word of Uod. do with the next. half hem ? Upon all the gailertee. samtly, angelic aunt that hiunee e'our deshiaYa„end. titIrte divine. While all heaven adman ng that eanne of you wile reCeeUe:, "These are they who Crane ant of the goenet And ninhe eonlitietO Mire' great tribulation and had their render, and during that others of reeeo watawd 41.44 mato white iu you will iezehe ilnel and fatal ranee- the hieod or the tennehea time of the full and free and urgent and illIpaasioned offer a life eternal. Oh, that the nest half boor nitgliU be the numt glorioua thirty minutes of your earthly OXISteitee Again. my text suggests a way of studying heaven so that we can bete ter noderstaind it. The word "eter- nity" that we ran handle so much is an linineesurable woril. Knowing that we egeld nut landerataual that. word. the Bible Wes it cane once. INTEBNATTONAL =SSW, APRIL, 2.7. 11.91,11W117,le Text of the Zeeelen, Ade Xi., 1-18. Geldeu. Text, Ade ze, 43. I . Noisy uninntitnnt. our eeee heaven for thirty ,reitautes, The SpOStICS And brethren Oa As when nou nee a grent picture. I were In Judea beard this, mid it 34 mid bud and lUl the lege et the earth with fruit (Ise. ;eosin fin ORO WOOld thfgrak that in the blee,leg tfe this 'gentile boiteehold through Peter the Jew the brethren might helm seen fulfillment of these thinga and eat beve been surprised at them, 'Vet it le !tree that loony prophecies eta!! awaiting fulfillment when Welled shall greatly surprise a beet ot believer% Ali HOU WITH liNOLE 110W THE BUSY YANKEE SPENDS vat:. uax, Intereeting Natters .of 149. At and ;Meth Gathered FX0114: nia Doings. lexploeions Lave bIkd 172 persons in Chicago in ten zeeere, ellataneend eternities are geleg ezen Vella to settle In Albertaa Gesolan laantecalio ere giving, sat - Worlds ht nitheteheD. worlds in con- you put. a elteet or paper into a bpligent from the context, then it did ieftetort, teenne on western rain gelation. worlds in conflagration. enroll and lame, teranigh it, or loin not. lin thent with Jar. IllOW Waite ways. 'maids in revolution, your toreen.a. to year thumb and our Lord deetelle the meet Ilie dise wino:An not% in tin yniottatone nty text tweenn s,pared thirty look through elm circle between, and , dyke are At one time some or the. net tweet ran; titt urgent body of minute% hut it will never -again' the etenare ineomee more 111111tefiWo SO OPOStleS felt Him hunting a town has- he, „no in $.1„„ spare one Meade. In werehip in." this maeterideee of laeanien hy St.:Melee some et its people would not 'en/noting; t ulteZer Ore. earthly viewdata Where Uteri) are John in more inliphe When we reteive Chriet, and now they event 'to men vohlotl t',..rtt6 were :.5ent to New Many to take Van we have "to cairn- 'nee only thirty leireaten of it at a feel on what Rho burning Peter hen netitod tneeettfttiy tanned. eiel brevity. but how will beaven get time. Now. we haw something that reuse through him settee Inneireunrc ntirittinti :tenon. with nom, deed and forty-four thousand get it is a quiet ileaVen, When we die- 'receive Owlet When we receive the wives. is ot Jen tt ten toteinn then one hundred And forty-four min yen it Miltet elltlest, a nervous a elm* and most reasonable thing ShOCif. tO those who law MI their, to memo with meehltees the word of minted :ewes. ntreindinny Neer New somittataw a quantity of Ines been crowded by num people nod, yet comparatively few do it. mooted, and who want It (Wirt brawn. rate, Wheee who 510 giVe joy to our Lord the Met thirtynive evara have been, as. 1, Ole John vii, tin on rapidly enough to let one bun- eve can canoe nearer to grasping. audj!Cieed people bad received theist. Ito ukases mat &tau three .tt) -thirteen three& %tell With WS WU Story and course about the nualtitudes of heae ' word of God COneernitig IBM, It 151 neteinonty with netnidn is become 1 lug an lneietent IICStiOn in the lion and then Otte hundred and for- ' teefeux 'billion and thee me hundred and fortyefour trellloare Not min ore all the triSMOIS 01 the past to be Bridgeport. Conn.. wooden doom are ' English walnut. Lay lettuce commemorated, but all the triumpho much of the time in crowds omit Mee, 2, it. When Peter was come up to being electroplated with eopper or leaf anal serve with a. French 'tanning tee keeper ga, that ets the idea, it she uses .on a ' rotted clothes ; poor house - to come. Not. only what we know of der public scrutiny and amid mite- Jerusalem. they that were of the eirn,hrnes. lawi thin buttered bread whiele Mu huleh .5°311 it will rot her clothes : Gaul but what we Win lotOW Of Min emits, and 1 have ROUletillle9 thOnght elanlei51011 contended with him. after everlasting etudy of the dente. !for a few weeks after 1 reach heaveni frhough they had ham for years1 The highest of the noted health re- wen browned in the eeen tin env. she rubs and rubs on the ups and If my text had said there was silence .1 would Mae to go down In some with Jesus and bad been illled with jfi 0 u 8 tains. at elevations of 8402A ,ap'4roved. for Perieheons oe tiny oc. dcrior.iss °ilea swoZilbe:ttItTedd. thileTtind, titre sorts in Calitornia are the Jawilete Thi in a. new salad whieh is greatly not ba.ee been Startled at the an. friend% and for a lietle while tree' elguldranee of "whosoever" nor Glatt Tee whin "odes to Europe eas bas an idea the soap rotted that, nomicement, but it Indicates thirty COMPA.RATIVie SOLrriim. 1"in jesus Christ neither oireannel-Intiready set to. end the steamers to too, If she had used more soap and 0;* IP:t0 t.” 0:41 1,,1( 4:0 01.,• t:* I 1:4 II:* • t 11:Ke 4* 1 C. llolls[lloi nneetoneeneee etateeten"tote iete e"8":"Inetn:a. SAT itTeDAY NIG PIT, Placing the little het§ all in a row, Ready for eloireh roxi the morrow. you know; Wenintog wee faces and little blank gets, Gettieg them ready and fre to lie hissed Patting 4,em lute clean garments axial white— That is What mothers are doleg to night. Spying out holes in the little Were. beee, Laying by shoethat are worn through the toes ; Looking o'er garments so faded and thin -- Who but a =other loa,OWS where to begin ? Choegjer,a. button to realm it leek That is is what mothers are doing to - Celljeg the little ones all 'rQWld her cheer. fleariog them lisp Meth their sweet evening prayer Z Telling thera over that story old, new tbe dear Lord would gather t tombs to His fold ; Watching. they listen with childie delight— That is whet znothero are doing to - eight. needed te cover the lost ground, she gives herself work that is tedious and wearisome to the eye and Pro- duces a dere very pretty in iisof, but very ccaespicuous indeed on the glossy eurieee of the linen. Detter far thep either Pt theset presenting their advantegee and inoking their lamina are the soft skeins 1tiax that can be found where lace enatehig materials aro Sold. These threads are Arra, yet eOft, and, being of pure linen ore mere suitable for linen work. They come izz alinerent degrees lineneee and when chosen of the right wade yield the very test melte- After launderingthe reinforcement of a frayed part strengthened with tlx flax is quite inviable, au cl the darn that covers a hole or onee the eoges ot a rent is scarcely nemeotitbie il properly done, ICINGS FOR CAKES. Cielatioe iciege-One eeent table spoon gelatine, diseolved in two tablespoone hot Water; mix with powdered sugar till quite stiff, pread On the cra;:e ead smooth with, koife. dipped in hot water. Cernstarele Icing—Ileat. the "whites • eggwith, 1 lb powdered sugar, aspoole eaeh. ot cornstearch, sitteal arabie and tbe Juice ef 1 ieutae. baCcdata tbe whtes t3 tggs to a ettn troth ; nenealeelly L a teacup white sugar. Veen y hardand add grated chocolate suit the taste oiled Icing for Layer Cates--inoir cups sugar, e pt boiling water bonetl clear no syrup. Pour this minter* ver the whites of four eggs batten o a. etiff froth. Stir it until it is e. Ain cream: then add 1 teeepoon emit tartar and 1 teaelloort 'cad hetween the toyer% Creeping eto saft1r to take peep. After the little ones are all asleep : Anxious to Mow it the children are warm. Tuelalug the blantets 'round each little form ; Kieeleg each Uttl lave, row and bright— Then IS what matinee aro doing t Mellen tneelber down gently besideiDe white bed. Lowly and izeelJ sbe bows dewn her head. Praelug. as only o mother ea pieey— `Clod Kaden and Imo them from go - lug astray. DOMESTIC RECIPES. Filling for Terls,--One-Gaire pound English commas, well washed. ono and teree-quarter cups white tamer and a little water stewed ...lowly tor long time Mehes eNeellent filling for DOES SOAP ROT CLOTHES ? ,ereent cheese roll it into ;mall balls The good hoeneenerer &time there Ily the aafie 114r proress invented at, ltani on coot Kin,/ two ineee 0/139 nothing to show that soap ever AN TINCLODDED HOME, It only Me tenth. might, lite the starlight. been its way. inelstles% into the conselmasnees of every per- plexed emeng wife. that an Uncloud- ed. happy Mce and a neatly attired, dainty personelity have riveting power in holding prc-matrimonlel 1 ideals flemly on their pedeseala. and !! time they will do Inc move inward retailiaing the freshneee and epentaro city of a husband% aneetion than all the chitlings and tears end queruioun regrets could ever peseibly aceme- *dish. To bring Otar lune eVecte and clear lines in the picture et our daily home ' life retedree rather master stroke eor mewing utearective. het Shriply• rani thought. and extreme care in heteineg in the ik‘41.141 of courteey d eoniellines5. not igooring. even in naerat9 of deprinelon wearinene IDe inestimable importance of heap - ng ell ugly ellealovas and failing Lie LISIOnS in the baicegroend. .0111i1110111Ma In heaven for thirty dayS, X would quiet Part of the realm. with a tea% the Spirit, they liatl not learned the and 9.000 net, ; uniqiie otzearediaiilineteymudnistili.es, and IrearS wilt the washboard and then A New Cream—Into the yolks of eight ego beatea light stir a. cup of hot onside syrup. Put. the mixture over the flee in a double holler and coon till it coats the spoon. lle- lateen cool. and add a rear, of thick erealli beaten stuf. Turn into a . I a 2 • t" ' ' ' II" , ,,',. , 11110010. widch ebould be lined to yen, **That must be a great heaven, ; 4-1°. .-10 PIM" ea overflowing', and lave a sheet of r eter rehearsed tbe inatter d Chicago, win occupy la but wbat will become of my poorlfronn the beginning. I Dr, Parker% City Temple, London, oiled paper fitted. on before tho. head ee yes, this beef hour hf my! About the si%th hour Peter feltt.during a. part of the comieg summer. the mould. is adjusted. tot is a stin experieuen ...There was led to go on the housetop to pray! The win or tleorge 11,. Littlefield, i creole; theer mum In equal quantities silence in heaven for half an iraur." i and. being hungry, would have eaten, 7!of Pawtucket. It.i., bequenthee sum I of salt and ice, and les.ve four 'You win find the inhabitantS all but while they made ready he fell ine:estlnenten net nti00t000 10.3.1.00,0,4000,4 hours, without turning, before it is at home. Enter the Xing% mine° to a trance aud saw this vision 1 nen Ito brown univervity, of rrovusence. : terted. and only take a glimpse, for we have; 0. 10). Aro& Broiled Beefsteak—neat n. At that very time the MeS-1 It, is estimated that there ere one frYing pan very, very hot, peppe told salt the steak, lay into the bat, dry frying pan and coeer instantly with dose -fitting cover. Every half minutes' Why' tber° will be So Then there are those wlene baueng sion anciileth anything nor uneirevait- entee this went win carry en tun lose rubbing ehe would not have many friends to hunt up, so ninny passengers. is so delicate thee. they get no sate eNell, but a, now (Teatime" (John"menve 111.101ber ot gone so often to the dry goods store. of the greatly go" and u3e1"1 that. is -faction when you deseribe the crash 14; Gal, 13). The feeilng 1 The pew Irotel Astor. on Louie The renters end surgeons use span we will want to oee 150 many or the inscrutable things of earth we will of the eternal, orchestra 1 IA 0? still exists in some , ana quarters (bat it Acre square, Nen, Vert: city. if, to to keep sores from festering, arid to offielnte or lobe contain many novelties. edie of which .n1 still soap gets only the =edit of need explained NO many g feel like aieluge as a, good woman in4 would 1m wrong rotting clothes. exeltalg Iluds Al ft 1 1 1ne file eenumullen outuld° of ,11.1 an automatic remoeer. . tat t•Or le4W ng earthier experiences we will Want to ' it 188)121115'IDe .1 .US 1 1 . „denomination. , • talk OVOI., and all the other spirits and all the ages will want the same, that there will he no opportunity for cessation. How busy we will be kept in having pointed out to AM the heroes and heroines that. the world nom. Alley appreciated—the :yellow fever and ehOlera, doctors who died, mit Intim from their posts; the fe- -- - ! only thietY minutes for all heaVen„ :singers hetet OrnelilIS wet° twat to minion people In Mango who never male !nurses who faced Pestilel/Ce 111 "Is that Jesus ?*" **Yes." Just und Joppa, and it was necessary that ;go to church. This means more than the ituarettes, the railroad engineers der the buir along his forehead is Peter Should be ready to reeetVO half of the population of the city, who stayed, at their 'Mimes in ordet ---- - ' '' tbe mark of a -wound made by a them rind go with them, which he Seven members of the present Ma- to save the train, though thenethem- bunch of twisted brambles, and his certainly would not have done but „ed States Congress are Canadians. minute turn the meat, coNering again selves perished. The meultitudes of leo., on the throne has on the for this special vision. It is heauti-f,Six of them Were born in Ontario' . nu eery quickly. In about two mites men and women who get no crown " rourd Of his instep nother mark lel to see God preparing Ms eV- ami the Seventh in ova Scotia. put Into the pan 1 tablespoon strong on earth eve will want to see when a wound made by a spike, and a! vents for the good works !winelt Ile i Duluth is a peculiar eitY- Its PeP-I coflee. In three minutes from time aiOf zf,N they get their eroWn in heaven. I tell sear on the palm Of the right, handhas prepared for them. ;Waller& is about 70.000, yet the steak is placed in the pan it is, done you heaven will have no more half- and a, scar on the palm of the left' While Peter was considering the:leagth of the incorporated, town, to a medium rare; if wished wen 4 hOurS to Spare. hand. But what a countenance 1 significance of the 'vision the meSsen-; along the lalte front Is IIS Miles. Its i doneit will require four minutes. . My subjeet also impresses me with *What a smile! What a grander 13 gers from Cornelius Were at the gate; width ranges front one to two miles. 4rno secret of success lies en an ex - the immortality of a half-hour, That What a loveliness ! What azt over- inquiring foe him, and, instrneted by I There are 10.000 men engaged in eeeeingly hot pan and very lively half hour mentioned in my text is whelming look of kindness and' the Spirit, be called the rem in and fishing on the Great Lakes, and the movements in opening the pan, turn - more widely known than ally ether glace 1 'Why, he looks as if he had lodged them, and the next day he total tapital invested is $6,600,000. ing the steak and putting cover on period in the calendar of heaven. The number of vessels engaged is agate None of the whole hours of heaven Turkish Roll—To make these, is measured off, none of the years, whisk together, four egg yolks, four none of the centuries. Of the inn- ans. powdexed sugar, one gill milk. lions of ages past and the millions of To this add two or three ozs. shred- ) '`' ages to come 11,0t one is especially 'measured off in, the Bible. But the half hour of my text is MADE IMMORTAL. The only part of eternity that was ever measured by earthly time- piece was measured by the minute hand of my text. Oh! the half hours! They decide everything. I am not asking what you will do with the years or months or days of your life, but what of the half hours? Tell me the history of your half hours and I will tell. you the story of your whole life on earth and the story of your whole life in eternity. The right or wrong things you an think in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can say in thirty minutes, the right or wrong things you can do in thirty minutes aro glorious or . baleful. inspiring or desperate. Look out for the fragments of time. They are. pieces of eternity. It was the half hours between shoeing horses that made Elihu Burritt the -learned blacksmith, tlie half hours between professional calls as a physician that made Abercrombie the Christian phil- osopher, the half hours between his duties as schoolmaster that made , Salmon Z. Chase chief justice, ' the half hours between the shoe lasts that ina.de Henry Wilson vice-presi- dent of the United States, the half hours between canal boats tbatenade 'James' A. Garfield president- The hale, hour a day forgood books or had books, the, half hour a day for preyer or indolence, the half hour a day for helping others or blasting. others, the half hour before you go to businese and the half hour after you return from business—that makes the difference . between. the Scholar and the ignoramus, between the Christian and the infidel, between the saint and the demon, between tri - redeemed a world 1 But come on„ for our time is short. Do you see: that row of palaces ? 'That is the, Apostolic row. Do you see that long reach of architectural glories That is Martyr row. Do you see; that immense structure ? That is: the biggest house in heaven ; that is "the house of many inansions." Do' you see that wall ? Shade your eyes against its burning splendor. Mr that is the wall of heaven, jas- per at the bottom ane amethyst at 1 the top,. See this river rolling. through the heart of tile great Me- tropolis ? That is the river con-, cerning which those who once livede on the banks of the Hudson or the Alabama oe the Rhine or the Shan- non say, "We never saw the like of , this for clarity and sheen. Pass' down those boulevards of gold end: amber and sapphire and see those: interminable streets built by the Architect of the universe into homes, over the thresnold of which sorrow never steps and Out of whose win- dows 'twee, onee pale with earthly sickness,now look rubicund with nvigo4TAT., IlEALT1e. "Oh; let me go in Slid' see theme !" you . say. • No, you cermet go: in. There are those who :would never Consent to let you 'come ota again You say; "Let me stay here in this pined where they .never sin, Where they never _stiffer; where they never part" No, no, Out tithe is, short, our thirty minutes are almost gone. Come on ! We must go beck ID earth before this. half.' hour' of hea- venly silence breaks up, for in your mortal:state: yoe' camot endure the ponip and Splendor ..ralad, resonance whee this 'hell hour Ofeilence ended. The day will come when yeti can 006 heaven in full blast, but not how. Remember we are .mortal yet •and cannot endure the. full .rell of heavenlyharmonies an th„cannot en - dere even the silent heaven for more thaa half an hoer. Hark 1 T,be clock in nee tower of heaven begine axed six others started with the mes- sengers for Caesarea and the home of Cornelius. This book might well be called the acts of the Holy Spirit in bacco in Connecticut by enclosing the the name of the Lard Jesus. In 11 fields entirely.. with cheesecloth cover - we see Cod and angels atal Men all ing costs $20 1.221 aci'e,ded cocoanut, two oes. very finely working together that num may bacco thus raised sells for more than chopped lemOn and Orange peel, the know the riches of God's grace and twice as much per pound as that grated rind of one lemon, and as many sweet cake crumbs—free from currants, raisins or peols—as it will take to form a medium tight mass. Next take scrap paste, roll into one- eighth of an inch thick sheet, then tut it up into pieces, some fiee inches in length and two and a half or three ia width; lay them out on the board and water wash them ; next lay a finger of the above mixture along the kiddie keeping it an inch from the ends; then draw the paste over on to it, also the ends, in a manner to make the ends rounhiug ; then turn thent over, folded part down, placing them neerly to touch each other and wash wyth a Mixture of three parts yolk of eggs and one part milk ; thenwith a sharp, pen- knife cut a line down thecenter, running nearly, but not chat°, from ,end to end; then make small slanting cuts on each side of the line, like the veins of a leaf, said cuts to be about half the.thickness of the paste; make a hole in the middle of each ; then pan end bake i hem a rich brown. 208 and of small boats 3,300. The new method of cultivating to - His wonderful love. grown outside. 1-8,..14, Who 5132111 tell thee words The etemetil appropriation for the -whereby thou and all thy house expenses of the President's office. in - shall be saved. the President's salary, com- bed sea Sor him this is %that he les, he Vetitidsi,itigen rot, the furnishinge of the White As Cornelius told Peter why his clerks and seceetar- House and the Maintenance of the grounds is less than $300,000 a Year. John D. Rockefeller began to earn money when he was six years old. come from joppa te tell them the His father ofTered him a fee of one ceut for every fence poet in need of repairs, that the boy could find on the bie country place near Cleveland, C. Itis first day's work netted him 13 cents. The building for the textile arts at the Louisville Perches° Exposition will have two fronts with Corinthian Holy Ghost fell on them as on US columns and portals indicated by at the beginning. advanced columns and groups of Chapter x, 44, says, "While Peter statuary above the leeel of the roof. yet smile° these words the Holy The froht runs 525 feet along the main thoroughfare of the Exposi- tion. Rev. Dr. Cuthbert Hall, president of Union Theological Seminary, and his family sailed for London recent- ly. He has been appointed Haskell lecturer in India by the Chicago Un- iversity, and after spending three months at Oxford he will go to Li- the preaching which God bids us dia to deliver the lectures. He will (Jonah iii, 2) the results Fill be all also lecture in Japan. that God pleases (Ise. lv, 11). There are now about 150 vacan- 16. Then remembered 1 the word des in the grade on ensigit in the of the Lord, how that He said, John navy, which number will be reduced indeed, baptized with Water. htli, ye by about forty when the Senior class said that: the angel said Peter Would do; therefore at the time of that Vision neither Cor- nelius nor his house, however de - veld was saved and Peter had to good news concerning. Jesus Christ that they might be saved. How few seem. to feel as Patel did wheii he said, "I am debtor both to Greeke. and to barbarians, soe as much as in inc is, em ready to preach the gospel?' (Rene i, 14, 15). 15: And as I began to speak the Ghost fell on ell them which heard the wOrd.'" So it was while Poter was still speaking and just at • the beg,inning of hie discourse that God wrought se marvelously. There Was nothing in all this got, up by Man; heither the discourse leer ethe testate.. All was, from God.. If is my in— creasing conviction that if we preach FLAX VEFeSUS DARNING COTTON The steady -going "house mother" —to quOte e German phrase—con7 tinues to H split hoe .white darning cotton: and useS it to- mend her fine towels and table. linee, forgetting. that it Le meant for Cotton goods and because of -the roughness. of its. flbre,. she is apt, to tear fresh bolos shall be baptized with !the Holy at the naval academy graduates in ia the worn textile es she draws' the Ghost. June. . It will probabiy take four or (.thread rbatelt and forth. Or, knowing TheFe aseension words (Acts i, five years to -fill up all the vacancies that fele 'French embroidery cottoe lead therefore only a fulfillment at under the peeseat arrangement, by iS smoother, she uses that to recou- Pentecost. Fere is another fulfill- which the nember of cadets eau be, street the broken warp and woof, ment and so it goes on and will increased. ' land because of the countless stitches WHEN I'M FELL IN LOVE. "Joseph." said Mrs. Hunkerly, "I want you to tell me truly when you first began to love me." 'It was at the ball the Upper - tons gave," he replied. "Ah, yes."' she sighed. "I remain- ber it welt. What a nne time we had there! How lovely the music sound- ed as we floated round, and how de- lightful exerything in the world seemed to be. Do you knOW that I first began to really and truly love you that same night?" "1 thought you did, darling," he answered. "Yes," she went on, "1 Couldn't help thinking how much. handSoixter you were than any of the other men, and how noble you seemed. Tell me, dearest, what you remember best about me as 1 appeared that night - Was it the dress I wore that made you fall in love with me, or did you happen to discover then that I was beau ti lel?" "I don't remember what kind of a dress you had on," fte answered, and I ha.d discovered long before that you Were beautiful. But you were so hoarse that night you couldn't talk." HADN'T ANY IDEA. "Mamma, dear," said Miss Daisy Getthere to her mother the other evening, "if Mr. Steadyceller ebould come itt this evening be eure and see , that we have the drawing -room all to ourselves and that we are not dis- turbed by anyone. I. ion morally sure .that he is goirig to propose the next time he comes." • `Aly dear ,chilell!" said Daisy's. mamma, with. much'feeling. 'Yes, I know trot' his actioes and the tone of his tiptoe that he means business, and .1 can't do hetteethan take "No, dear; I am sere net," And when he did 'propose, Daisy • "Oh, lefr...Steedyeallee„ you Must give inc'a little time to think! I had Ile idea, that your ieegeed for me was. other than that of friendship, and I—oh, it is all so unexpected that don't; know what to !say!. if 1 had had any idea that yoer teatioee were seriouS,i—F--oh, what shall I say?" Well, she said; "yes" and : Mr. Steadycaller thinks to this hour that ' he took her "quite by: surprise. - A eittle holda mirror -up be, fora a visitor's face and asked: --"Do you see yourself in it?" -Yes, my darling.'' "Are you sure?'' 'Yes, why should 1 not?" '13ecause heard- mannna say, the Other clay, ! that if you ever peeped inke 21 lookr. ing glass, you'dsmash it all inte tiny 'liLtle bitS1' '