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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1902-8-21, Page 7Ot11 MAN P1KD III 10,1 The Difference Between Their Testimony IS Da Between Knowledge and Supposition. nmeieseeneesecessesienerseeseies theteire ereereem to t tee eerier:fent et forget. Whee, shepties assail cooge, tee your h heel :eel Two ex lee tieeeet Tomei% *A tee neeeneeett et Agn,*inner,, 04inea deseateh from Gilicago eaye -Rev. Prank De 'Witt Tolotage Preeehe t hem wt b doulets. they will be able to eay. "My father mat Gotre promise to the Proof, and he, declared Oita be bad Tetanal them_ trac's e Tile aged Ct rietien ingueocee for" good those who are near to bias. be- et!' front. the followleg text 7-Pealm muse im is be to lavish mime nen. 14, "They steal bring forth thetaA weelth of haundless. fervent, Reit in old age." tender Christian, affection. While we, Old hge to a baoutiug SPeethe- It are ,youog and even middle aged we tiaS terr(MIZed the generationa pASt, *peed most of our time in doing for more than even the fear of death. others rather than in showing tbe The most hated ond feared. of all tbe sweet. maulfestation of our ogee - Grecian philosophers was he whe: terms, the are like Martha.. who' 'used to stand open ie street cope went luto the leitelien to cook Jesus nem of Athens frightening the passeir a dinner. rather than he Mary. who ersby with these eolemn words io sat at the fe.et of elitist. "Youewill be an old man. You wW fThe statement thot Gm aged Chris - nn old woman." Re frigiitelieth tinn can exercise a mighty influence the egas.e.ersby bee:wee most people', for good over the lives of those we do not waot to leecooneo4Thee- are reerest aud deorest to him. are afraid of coomeg to the tiie. eepeeloily tree if those dear one* in when they AVM be a burdell to "their turn have children of their owto 1 +children and their Mende. Tlie,y are do not ittellete a man ever fully op - Afraid of the the 'when their earnei,:, preelates the love of a pareut until iog copoeity shall ceaeto for then. be Igimeelf in married and hue behies in the race of lifethey will be Lou. iwu h"1 Jostled and left far heltiud by the only after a man who has had the „ shehti and tile htreogth of the Youngo worries and the all-NietieS oi hin own I genereltion. lhey are ;afraid of„ home troublitig :wart. it is only the years when they will have to ofter he has &toed by the side id walh with a cello or crutch or sit the cradle and nursed his haliy boy in au invalid chair wng for the through the awful sichnees diph- team 'when the eofiln nuttier Will 14F -i theria. it is only after he hoe got islt their caeket and the undertithe*i. his own Nattily burial plot and has e' wilt order their grave to tui dug. Tot dog therein a little grave for eve show how depressed emote people' his Own babies. that he hegirs to . perpetual wernipg that we meist be .graeehoPPers. In our eonflicte with. .44ehehthohinhelnhifhloohe:eth•h•heh About our rother's business or the the eneoty as we ease torouee title ete ee•h? deeth se:nu/lona ehall come, and we' wildernees or sojourn in the pleitertut ei. .-. 44LnielQthifi7 O'neri of our eget]. Christian front. our staudeoint, the gioat4 and ..:., 5 !point of vision. If we Sc things *5.....:' ou OL ..... shall fine that we hove Accomplish -Jai -id everything depende upon our fo friends ere width* for 41. little While . waned eities will seem very real, but •.1 te oe in order te cerry the latest gospela if, like. Caleb ani doellua, we stand itlethrhisohhonehrhie;'":":+4.÷:eleh• a news to the deer ones on the other , with, God all ditilettlties will seem the_ehr h.0 DO thmh vIDA(awS, ettle of the Jordan, wbat will they as teething. When Daeld, went to be able to tell our fathers and neo- meet Goliath, be did, net censider his We are premiaed a the peach crere tbers„ our brothers annel sisters,. our own weahmes. Wives and little children. who have. six, 1. Awl all the cengregation 'fit% fanner :tare, dpeelelleeldallur euilti gone beYoud and are awaiting our lifted up their voice And cried, end up and served with sugar and cooling? Will they be ebbe to etell the people wept that night. eream. But in these doe's when Pihee our beloved, oues that they =WO ice! WOnde ' I . (, MS When sicians -deem uncooked fruit un- eeceo a place by their side for us in they were so uttlielieying mid reliel- W alcome., the flavor of tine peach °Ile of their lleareulee MansiOlas? liCem against God. They were with-;een be preserved by adding tte fruit Oh, my brother and sieter. I see her iri.eight and reach of the good land, 1 to "Various desserts. For evample, the tears, in your eyes that you. are inte oceupied svith themselves and 1 Peaela Bavarian tream. is denclo anxious, in reference to the message despising the promises of God end In preparing the peaches Peel a our aged Christian friends will have (teed Iiimseie Se 1 • • cut. them up and stew gently w tc) bean, Shall We plead with Ged previous '414.1.piug in Nunn xi, $, SA little sugar until teader. item that our dear friends may be alloW- 1.3, 18, 20, and a later oue in Num. from the lire and let thein co ed to live just a little while longer XXV, 6, and note that, it, was An be- Mash the peaches and rub Vim a, so that we all may, here and now, cause of unbelief, as was the weep -'the juice through a, sieve: add no c give ger hearts to Jesus? Thee, Ye ing of Diary lelagdaieee at the tomb ful or sugar ono hole 0. box or ge aged Cbristlext friends. Carry tlub on, tine resurrection morning. joy tifl. which has been soated in c news as soon as you might to that and Feace conie by believing, lent in iwatee for two tours. Place bright and happy land. Cort7 tho eue other way Mom XV, 13; John'saucePan after ctiolilog the keit ems that, by the bleoct et Cluist. oje,„ 1, 27; ea, eaeeke ,few' ralnutee in a pan of ice wa we h eg It ile I a . ' _ - - o. 3. And all the children of Iee anti heat mall the Mixture hehlus ti Tell them that we have Olt hken met nunlnured egetast moses coo thicken; then ‘etir in erne pint purged with hyssop until we aro agalpst Aaron, eremet wliiich Ines been whipped to a . eleven. 'Met we hove tem Wasted 1114- They even reeeed they wee deed (art MIN thoroughly and pour into til we are •or Might die In the willsieriteae. and tl. glo.id: set away to itartlen, Nerve WRITER TITAN SNOW. , :teeny of theta got. their mien. Their il with witipped eream. us. 114 ith quarte water, three potmds coarse s'oy: sugar, half palund raisins cut. smell. 1.41 0110 ounce bruised ginger, a, little eee mere, cinnamon arid tuntreeg, bell one hour then p r le into e tar ' 14.11 ow jar without straining. and when au, cool omit& a.del one compressed yeast Cake. Wher. it has fermehted ter ltQlit a week. stroin into etoue jugs and set in a cool place. tie a. piece of muslin over to keep out the dust, end keep tilled up every day with some of the liqUor until fermenting ceases, then put in tte cOrliS VIVA^ -they do not need to be tied Iowa, It ke then reedy for we. 4. three quart basin ef steal:weed berries. nria4h ail line. Polar of/ hike, then pour etiough tot water over ar P to intake one gallon. working peachea are put ie Cie syrup thee should be thoroughly rubbed with 0 flannel cloth. Frozen reathes.-Cut the peaches quarters and sweeten with eugal hYruP end Peek in, lee and salt foe an hour, but do not leave them lona e*olgz to lieCOMe reachee cut in two, their stone; : removed carefully, the whole filled with powdere4 sugere caa be served for the fire* course of a luacheee. poasible, place them anmeg gree0 leaves. ELDERBERRy WINE, Ikk tbe berries cleen and put beio. in a. jar, piece them in the cot or beek of the stove to draw et. all the juice, then etrain, and o every, one quart juice add four And NO. any aged Cluistion friends thelkqht wets to get rid of their trouel read) ice cream._ ) quart 0, nt gs, e$; well with epeon to extract ell juice. ogles. Y000 ere the Chrietione who Sire that Clod might be glorinied in et sugar. the Nome or three, eg 1 believe that You are the fahorea 1de- TheY hod no thought or deel cream. ooe pint of peaches. one pi will carry the meesege to our dear the:r death. Contrast .Tolua ord. 1th p' W,:kter. Lob the sue' ores as well ae to ewe own, 11'14cti 1 tab i. ed. "CO records of other ii!iinel water together twenty irdnut 0. , you go. I wont you pereonelly to nehrueltrings in Ex. ev, tle; evi, .. tub the PC ICI* which have teen c :eta+ 40 my Juather and tether my xvii, fl; Nem 11. 41. Thee did tint line. just as my father sea ilea i0Ve CC/10141°1er that their weeping was in suupgePrit;tiastildlgjeals% 1.b(lieev;41110,7teillillY4OtiliSttole te his boy. Tell them for lee that, the ears of 4110 Lord aull their tour- the eggs and cool; for 6is Milinton. by the...grace of God we all Want to "Wing* ligiqat-1 MO Warn- NI. 1$; Airring au the tvbffel oho from tbe, , , .008. fieha - .4 27, V•Th.. XVI. 8). nor that are and place in a pan of cold w Thus ye aged ehristiarte. 1 want Wilell tIloY eololdaincd It disillhaehd ,ter. Peat the mixture 1,44 111.111Ut on to reelize that the words et the Lord Chinn. id. II. ilf cold :a the end of thee time a Uy text were written for jewel 4. Awl tizey add mai to another, the cream and freeze. 41 hey shall 5011 bring forth knit Let us lnotw a rillitaill fold let us Peach Fritters. --One quart 0 their old age" means that youtorethra into l'ke-Pt. Otiour. One COP of milk. orteethird c work and ueefulness will not he fin -1 The Lord Bitueelf wits their otp- of yeost. ttv0 tablespoonful, a so sited until you drew your last talon as Ire also ie ourn (Josh. r ar. four egg5. MO tOblesp0Oils bu teeth. until yott tate Your gloriousa1h: II f hron. aiii. 2; Ifeb. li. 10). tot a, little eato, ripe freesto oor aged parents oweetoeco your 48(WWU soys tinat in their Ineerts 'ewer into a, bowi, work in mill; o do witen yam WeVe yount. s'enn by they tunied Not agoita into 1egente ,,regrst, end let it ries. for fit -0 or e he blessing of Clod. iwe sweetening' end Ndie4441A4 SitN5 that. in their re- lemete thee beet the ehge and sug ROM May .your work be to you a Wilma they aigloginted 0 eelnain to lilglit with better. Fait and stir unt appy work until ot :eel. Abe mewl velure to tit& botolage (Acts vil. e), risme dough; Ineati well with yo f the reeurreetion eannee to yell 80- Nett. in 17: Lel 09 CO `i i ,: 444( S. 1 4411 001 NILS Dearly as large ou to your etertioll rewaral, May INliat itl written ohu* looking batik 'as an caw. Oaten and put in the e to ;tbe faithful to our yeast as;in (len. els. 20; Luke IN. Mt XVIII. centre of eatla a peach pared frOn-ii oo, who ore 4.411) Seithrosi3y bear- 02. null colltrUst !noting forward which the etone lies been elipped out nee fruit in your old age. avid upward in Prole iv. 25; IIele. through o 'ht he one eide; dote OM .................+, ii, 2; Phil ill. 20. dough over it. make into a round ......... et. bull and lay upon a floured pau for ITO DIEN NEED AP the emend rieinge the balls toast not touch otch other: in an hour they ehoulti be light; fie, es you would A Country Where All the Butchers doughnuts. drain in h ,eolehder awl AreWomen. eat hot with brandy sauce. Of all ocegoiettions. that of a Peach Pt -lading. - Lill(' the bottoin buteber VMS one of the !Nest allit."' of a putiding dish with six SliCeS of able for the fair ees: yet there is 4sponge calm soaked in eherien, fill t least one country where this' the dish with peaches elieed and well trade is entirely monopolized by wo- sprinkled wIth fingar,- Spread over 1-8. And the Lord spoke unto moo owl "114) ik" 1141 IIPPIY." the top a. illoring‘10 Mado Of the Diono. seeing. Sold tillal Inell that That eountry is Patel/play, where white of au egg beaten lightlY with they may ocurch the land of vow. many oecepatious which among us oiugar in proportion of a teaspoon - eats, which 1 give elite the ehiltiren tire invariably assumed by the sterne"ful of sugar to one egg. Put it in of Jerael. er sex fall to the lot of the wo- 'the oven just long enough to brown: When they came to the borders t0 things The cause of this state of ifiet the dish on ice nod setae very ttillieemlantedorWr eleast4°41011:layd ePiercieeredda:: 1 Ptuairlolggsualoy tinizteorehe"ittlharthirty years I reach Meringue Pudding. -Three ivaged by 'cold, with cream. journey from Horeb to headhehome_. ago against the wterwbelltning forces, doZen ;tie peaches. one and a third near, Moses said; "Behold tile Lord of Brea, the Argentine Republic, ctipfuls of granulated sugar. six thy God bath set the land iheare and 'Uruguay combined. Ills war, htahlespoonfuls 01 powdered sugar, we. (30 up and rossess it, as the which Meted five Vars, hove many „one quint of milk, three teaspoon - Lord God of thy fathers bath said eingular points of resemblance to 'fills of earn starch, Nix eggs. rat unto thee. Fear not, neither be die- the recent Boer war. It. ended lo one cupful of the granulated sugar eourtnged.*1 nee teo people tame to tile almost total annihilation of the land one Mut of water on to boil. Mosee and asked that Men be sent to search out the lama! and briug back ut strain. then odd a small piew ot giuger root or other whole epicce suit taste, four, poueds granulate s oar and half a yeast cake sen - a( water. Mix well io large a- emelt and set away in a cool picKe es; to Work. 04 ream eight onierts boiling water ^ 10 quarts elderberrieS. let stand offrom 10 to 12 hours, stirring Pow up And then. streim preeeing coot all g: the Niro; then to every foor quarte te juice add three pounds sugar, one OunCe powdered eireiforton and halt lie ounce powdered clovee. Let titie ore over the fact of growitoo old 1;1 laity appreciate what hie father and Would read a letter WhiCh ereceived 'mother in their time have done for EQ14e Chile ago from one of my Adm. people „ to 1 So, my oged Christian friend. if a Pear Mr. Taitunge..-1..aet night in ht'Ou have children WIIO hare v your eertnan s'enn Sita4tAl thee this fie reit of their own 'your work on earth V the age. for young men. You tilt: le uot yet done. Now thole your not bow+ tinle to fp(^at One vvoi'd io.owle children fe4 tO grateful to :X-014 0 favoe of the uwfulli.le,s aff Ilt;41 4A11911en. fleet:MAL ,your past and prerent reopie. 1 woo Force.. 1 lenew tetatee love, you eau mould them end ine rating over to ice who would Le Miocene() theat eard "fe . heaty toll 004 oesonient of theile 04.4t FilANO 110A0 betWir th:ATA OVer w member td 7,4:01101' rhumb called upon ewe inligiertee them even ;more feeI hie, Ile start he Wafi Vitt driliesFv,i1 ettliSt aud eternity now teen when over yORil' Ifelitilarlifi 'alit night that they were eaollog Men olidlo young could net sleep. With tem lit W04444 )4 Mending upon hie eyes. lie said. "I wonder if old "filTe IIIRESITOLD Or LIFz. people will he Wanted in henvett...: The 4ged Christian is able to oe„ _Now. NV' dear Pastor. 1 Would 011ie :Nike the spirit of' reverence in the -1111,011. ff Porsible. 10 Preach a (*molt heart!. of many with whom he eoltieS upon the bleosings of old age. 1 in contact. Tn49 ATtlehl Yee to Preach a herlooll . growth, not an act. It is a germ to Cheer 11P thaw. who hove 444*'.cdeetti witielt often takes Naar5 laud the Zenith of their earthly lift% ann. yearis derejoth and not an entity are down tile other hiur an" whieh epriugs into being at it 1111011, nearing the landing place of eternity. .0*. a bound, genpeumy Gtorts You will. will you not 7" 14 , away beet: in the natreery. If the hi In anSWOr to the rehtiest ,chilat ltnirri to respect his mother. hie letter that I alig Wong to then It Is 1.-ery easy for hint to Speak this wonting to Gm old follot. ',ern hs h bo.h to respect thh tmebe 1 will gladly try to refute epartiere. So. Aged ClaristianS, atelgot, tileY 1744041 no Mara Of Ifflo, Jleavhes pared and stoned- Nift led boll rive nilinites, awl tnen set it IN away in a. stane lar in a warm. ploce, or with o, cloth thrown lightly OVCV thlt tela to ferment for three weeks. ur When it Zs done. rae4 it oh' care. folly SO OS net to cliFtueb the lees, Bottle and eat wen; quanti, wili Auntie over thiree gittions wine. old age. Tiii4 morning an aged Wm. Perha by that low you ees, then it is very easy for him as TUE POPULAR FALLACY a. young man to kiarlO to respert his ameititt old age for the Christian Is Christian employers. If a young merely a, time of tears. for Nap*h al intin resPects his Christian employ - end mentat rano, one for oef0000lg ors, then it IN very easy for Iiim its lielplessness. 'The words et my 401(4 11. nilikne aged Man tO learn to re- do not, state that an aged Chris- peet the timed Christian servants times twilight of mc )111011 earthis who for :Ceara bilVe been living nt gloomy 44114a sullen enneet, They the divine Master's feet. if the einplutticallY inilder that the last middle aged Man respect God's aged days of an awn ohriotiongs life ,; Christian servents, then it is very should be among his happleet „and *easy for him to lettra to respect the nuint useful days. Thome eets God whom those Christians serve should let compared to the time land to conommicate that respect to when the orchard's branches are .others. bending under the limey load of I Thus Clod UR% your phyeical weak the ripened fruit. 'inesses and your mental helplessness My egad Christian &rend. there ,lar a purpose. When he Nee0 you may be other brains just as keen as an aged Chrietian parent, being ten - Yours. There may be other hearts ,IlerlY eared . for in your old age by just as willing to make sacrifice for „ft laving nazi; when he sees that their Lora and master os yo um but Ison giving to you the best room in Tao Christian Can aa powerfully testi_ the house and the easiest, arm chair iy of the protecting care of a and the softest Led; when he sees Heavenly Pother as you can testify „that son trying to make your last unless he can truly speak out of his !IdaYs upon earth happy anti peace - own experience. The saint who is '11.„°1- then Wo can imagine Ilint Say - nearing the cud of life 11(19 the e:ng: "That young num who is ear - Clearer view of heaven. you eon lug so tenderly tor his aged Chris - speak about the goodness of God tian parent is capable of great love from. personal exTerivr.cc, as my for MC and my children. 'rhe young father spoke to me a few years be- man who is true to his old mother sore his death by telling me this re- markable incident --When he was a youmg minister, he used to keep a diary, in evbich he made r, record of all the requests he made to God Ten Conunandments. "Honor thy concerning Matters which were then father and thy mother, that the days we'ghing upon his heart. By some may be long upon the land which ishap he lost that diary, and he forgot anoint those prayers he had olTered. Sonto twenty or thirty years later • he found that diary. When he opened it and read the many requests that he had made nearly- a quarter of a century before, he found out that God had answer- ed every one of his prayers. God aged disciple. When the young phy- had answered them with better re- sician respects the Christien phy- snbts than even his faith at that sicken, then the Lord knows that time had dared to hope. So the the young man would like to be as aged Christian opens the book of the old physician is. What we ad - memory. As he fingers the many mire in others, that we would gen- soiled leaves of that book he testi- erally like to reproduce in ourselves. fies how God cared for him when TIM AGED oirrusTIAN he ' was a young Irian.. He testifies is a living evidence that for most of how God cared for him. when he was us earthly life is to be very short. middle aged, and he testifies how Therefore what we are to do for 1. -love of God is protecting and Christ we must do soon or we shall caring for 'him now that he is an never be able to do it at all, Sixty old Irian. testifies jest as- the or seventy or eighty years are aged psalmist testified of God's long, tinae to lie -e, but most of us goodness when he wrote, •el have will never live so long. Aye, ntost been Young and now am old> Yet of us will never remelt even middle have 1: not seen- the .righteous for-, lifo. If You speak to an aged Chris- saken nor his seed begging bread.' tiau, you will find that he is like a He can testify, as did Joshua when November loaf, hanging ai‘naost soh_ ho assombled the people together at tars- and alone atter the thousands the close of his long life and said, and the tens of thousancle of auttun- "Behold, this day I ana going the nal leaves have been torn from their way of all the earth; Of an the branches by the equinoctial winds. good things which the Lord spase You will find that most of his con - all are come to pass, and not one temporaries died when he was Com - thine bath failed thereof." Be lensti- pareeieele young; that nearly all lied as an honest witness carries the rest died when he was in middle conviction ix) a court -room because life and that only a very few come he tells of that which he has SP0 Palli011S of his youth are alive to and personally experienced. He tee - titles as ONE ,HAVING AUTHORITY. ,ISTever let any man tell you that the aged Christian influence is a useless influence. The Bible dis- tinctly =- 40, "They shall still bear fruit in their Old age." No better it can it bring than the per- sonal. testimony of Qod's', faithful - nese, which your children will never THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. Te INTERNATIONAL LESSON AUG. 24. t of Lesuon, ZAMA* 1- .15-33, and MY, 1-4. Golden Text, Es, xi., 4. able-bodied male population of the country, mai the results. may be read In the following figures ropulation weed as 1.4 tho way to go and what peel. and quarter the peeelies; When the sugar unit water begin to boil put in one-third of the Peaches and cities to enter (neut. 3.. 2, 21-23a of ParaguaY in 28157, 1,4387,4a9 ; in simmer eight minutes. Take them 18711 Athree years atter the termina- up and put in another third; con- - The Oleo. of spies therefore oeiginat- „ ed with Israel, and -the LOrd gaVe kt°11 Of 010 war) it amouuted to Unite this until all the fruit is dono; only 221,079; and of these nearly all boil the syrup until it becomes , coannumelment 40 have it so, becauSe oe umnen, e tildrem and eery old pour over the Peaches and they* wanted it go. just as after - weed the Lord commanded Samuel men. When the War was oyer the set away to cook. Separate the to give them a king because tb people had been reduced to the most whites and yolks of the six eggs and " abject imverty. and were on the put the whites in. the ice chest. Beat insisted. on having a king like other nations verge of starvation, being driven to together the yolks and one-tlfird 04 0. a Sam. deih 10-2°h• such expedients as to eat cats, dogs cupful of sugar. Put a pint and a Read Ex. ill, '7, 8; vith8 and consider and horses. Worse still, owing to half of milk into a double boiler; it well and say in the face of such. the destruction of the male popula- mix three teaspoonfuls of corn assurances if the peoplee request'. ^time eerfect anarchy prevailed, andIstarch with half a pint of cold milk, faith in God. for eplos was not simply a lack ofl an tin.. work formerly performed by and when the other mink is boiling searchiug of the land after forty 25-29, And they returned from males fell oir the fair sex. They reistir this into it; stir for three min - built the houses which had been utes, then put on the cover and cook burned down, tilled the fields, and three ininutes longer. Pour the days. They could not but testify that it wine for themselves rough home- boiling mixture gradually on the sgpznelothing from. the cotton beaten eggs and sugar. return• to the boiler and cook four minutes, stir - ON 'THEIR OWN FIELDS. ring all the while; take from the fire, To this day the butchers in all add half a teaspoonful of salt and parts of Paraguay are • women. In set away to cool; this is the sauce. the public slaughter -houses the cat- Twenty minutes before serving heap tle are diepatched by men,' who the peaches in the -centre ef a. shale sever the spinal column by cutting low dish; beat tile whites of the it with a sharp cutlass just behind eggs to it. stiff froth naid gradually seemed to them insurmountable, for the nape of the neck. When the ani- beet in five tablespoonfuls of pow - they forgot the deliverance from mal falls to the ground its throat dared sugar; cover the peaches with Egypt, and the dividing of the Red is cut, and it is allowed to bleed to this; place a board in the oven, put sea, and the quails and the Inttnna death. This is the only part of the the dish on it and cook until a light' so wondrously give% and so they work done by men. The animal is brown. Season the sauce with one - talk of Walled cities end giants etc' e . • by my grace will always be true to me. 1 Will honor him. because he has honored one of ray aged ser- vants," Did not God say in Ms the Lord thy God giveth thee?" When the young minister respects the old minister, and tries to honor the venerable, white haired mission- ary of Jesus Christ, then the Lord knows that the young man wants to honor Him because the young minister has tried to honor God's was as God had said, a, land flow- ing with milk and honey (Ex. 'iii, 8; xxxiii, 3)4 but they had been us- ing their natural eyes more than the eyes of their hearts (Eph. is 18, R. V.), and instetta of seeing only Go'd and Ilia goodness and pro - prises. they SAW diffieultiee which .5111130� an14 prepared by fourth of a teaspoonful of ahnon a strong people, and they seem not women. The carcasees are then con- extra.ct and pour around the pita to reckon upon God at all. They yeyed to the butchersstalls, where ding. The peaches and sauce mus believed not Ills word (Ps, evi, 23., the meat is cut up and sawe(1 by be cold; if the oe-en is hot and th 22, 24). women, who are dexterous in the 80. A.nd Caleb stilled the People use of the saw and knifeit is then before Moses and said, Let us go hP served out to customers, also by at once and possess it, for we are women -not' generally by weight, but wen able to overcome it. by the piece -and the price is so low This was no vain boast or re - CANNING PEARS AND PEACHES rears' --Take 10 pounds fruit. par. ed. halved end Cored. &to pouedt bugar. 000 lemon, teespoor ground einutunon, one teaspoon grated nutmeg and a pieve of ginger root three inches :wig. Tie the eine 11011001/ and outtneg closely in a Ude nutelin hag. Cook ell together till the pears turn pink, then bottle ond seal hot. reaches -rare the peethes =1 cut in halves, or leave them whole, as you prefer. Allow one cup sugar te one pint writer. Boil awl shim. Put in as many peaches as will corer the bottom of the kettle. and let them boll up once. 'rake out with a sib Ver forte Or wire spoon, anti pack them neatly in the jars, rill up with boiliug eyrup, aud seal. It the peaches are hard, drop theut as you pure them into the boiling water, and cook carefully until nearby ten, der. Theo take out on to it large Vales, being enreful 10 teep the pieces eeparate. When all are cook- ed, put them into the syrup for 0 few minutes. 00111•1•11MIMMII TO CLEAR. COFFEE. Always wash eggs well before us- ing, then save the shells until after the meal is over, or until you have time to separate the membrane from each shell, %chicle however, must be done before they have dried. Dis- card the shells and spread the lin- ings upon a plate and place where they will drer-a cool oven or sunny window is a, good place. When you make coffee put in a few pieces co the films. When eggs are high this will be apprecia.ted by those who use them for clearing coffee. SPIRITUAL SPEAR POINTS. Secret prayer brings open power. Gospel simplicity is transparent sincerity. A pure heart is worth more than untold wealth. The soul that pursues a sin is sure to overtake a sorrow. Jesus is not it subject of study, lIe is a revelation to the soul. Do not think to begin life when thou art ready to die. Good men and women are the best a indicators of God's omnipresence. _ Though Els hand seems to be t reached out to smite it is ehually o ready to save. that a pound of the best meat may hoard is placed under the -dish the browning of the meringue will: not heat the dish. Preserved Peachese-Have. ready - a kettle of water, fin it wire be bought for about two cents. basket with. peaches and plunge them uttmed from et heart stayed upon Weenie of all ages att. the part of into the boiling water. In two Jehovah Hca Hear Caleb and Jostrue. butchersesome are young and pretty utes take them out and tile skins into this. land and give it us; * * * and wrinkled, elm Ivo_ will come off easily. Drop the fruit in chapter idle 6-9 : '`If the Lord delight in us, then He will bring us owe are great bargainer9, n 1 1 others old into cold water to keep the colo.3. as mustard to pull a new arrival -lit -'een For three pounds of fruit use one almost to tieces in the hope f SP- pound of sugar and one pint of wee cueing . his custom, These women] 0- -- ter for three pounds of sugar: when butchers earn, good wages, and many the syrup is boiling hot take the of tbose in business on their own fruit from the Water and drop into it, but put a few in at a time, as they cook very quickly. Take them from the syrup with a silver fork, fill the jar and fill up with strained syrep. Peaches are considered nicer preserv- ed whole, as the stones give a richer Try each day to bring some soul nearer to the goal you are trying yourself to yeach. Kind words drew people nearer to God, but cross ones drive many to despair and ruin. liance upon. theraselvese but words God hath so suited our duty to our interest that obedience to will is happiness to ourselves. It, takes only one voleano the earth to show that the heart of the earth is fire, and that some clay it may burst through the thickest crust * * * This is the tragedy el our single sins. * * Down the whieh some one transgression makes in the fair face of a smooth and blooming life, we can see watt Mg for God's judgment -word the 1.1111 before which that life shall be at last consumed with fervent heat. only rebel tot ye againstt the Lord, neither fear ye the people of „the land; * * * the Lord is with us. rear them not Listen to this same Caleb fort3r-five years' later account acquire a modest fortune. when be asked Joshua, for the moun- In the larger towns, tae meat is tin where the giants were, "ned onler allowed to be sold in the pub - now, behold, the Lord hath kept the lie market -place, whei•e stalls (owned alive, as Ile said, these forty and by the municipality) a're let at as:c- ave years, * * * if so be the Lord lion to the , highest bidders. The fl000r. will be with me, then I shall be able p,ublie have every security that the Pickled Peaches. -Allow thi•ee and to drive them out, as the Lord meat is fresh, for all that is left un- eeeee-quarter pounds of sugar to eaid" (Josh. xiv, 10-1.2) 10whole sold at night is destroyed by the seven pounds. of fruit; put the sugar ly followed tine Lord and relied upon authorities, --a needful precantion le in the presore-ing kettle with it quart ) a waien climate. 'the result, is that of vincgaa and two ounces each of 01-33. But the men who went up just previous to closing time there doves and a stick of cinnamon. Do h him said, We be not able to is a great rednetion in rrices, and a not, remove the skins, as they add up against the people, for they crowci of harganohenters alMear en very much to the flavor of the peach, stronger than we. the scene -economical 110 use-tvives, and stick one clove a.nci a small hus they brought up an evil re- keepers of cheep restaurants, and piece of cinnamon. into each one. -t of the land, a slander upon the the like --for; rather than see the i?lace a few at a time in the boil - walk by his eide. The statisticians wit declare that a third of the human go race die en infancy. At least one- ar?, tined of the reinainder die before twenty-one years. of age have been 4)01 reached, and ohly 6 or 7 per cent. oi Ian d (nes, e0). They saw the gi- meat thrown away or deetroyed, the ing syrup and cook them until they s, ond they saw themselves as keeem's of the stalls sell the rein- jook clear but not softened enough , sSh 0 n p ors . 1.4 was a ease of nants at almost any' 1) ri ce • , to fall epart. :When all are cooked e'' and ethey,o; but not .a werd ; -7----",.--.'--- ,, ,, ' ' ' eontinn6 'to bOil th8'61-11O,-oiltil'' it ut God, They are str6nger than! 0n 1111* of the married e•ouPles in is reduced nearly one-half and pour We were in their sight as Feanee have no eeneeen, it over the peaches. Before the the humah family live to be sixty 'eat years of age or over So the mere /4/el presence in this world, of eit aged I "W Christian, with 93 or 94 per cent, abo of his contemporaries gone, is it ' we, "Look tee in. the face, sir." . 'He raised his eyes timorously until they were directed to lier countenance., "Now, sir, deny, if you dare, that you married Inc for my money." It Must have been for 7041' money, he fal,ered. A cavalry sergeant was out of pa. ' tience with an awkevard recruit! "Never approach the horses, from be- hind without speaking," he exclaims, ed. "If you do, they'll kick that - head' of .'y'bitrs, and the .'end of: it willi be we shall have. nothing :but lame) horses in the squadron."