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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1904-9-15, Page 71416-11TY LAW , OF SEQ11E C • There Is a Time to Reap That Whioli Plant and a Time to ,Is Planted ak.Interea rtecaratne f,e Stet of ;,110 Itearient Canikdo, la the year vnq ThaunaLd Ise liundred and Plur, Wn" 13N ;1Y, of Toronto , tee asepartateat itaricanture, ottaw 'aa deepatch. from Los Angeles allS'st Itelatle' De Witt; • Tannage • preached Sroin the following text z slilecleSiastes hath 'suede evezeathieg, beautiful in his time." The Solonde writings are often ' epigrammatic in style. Like price - lees jewels gat mid polished by the lapidaries and colieetecria caskets, ir- respective of size or color,• his verse* as verbal gems aro cluetered into shaptees, with but little attempt at consecutjtee arrangement. Indeed, King Solomon for the most • part seems to me to be like a writer of notebooks. In the king's judgment hall or on the street or out upon the hillsides under the blue dome of the sky, wheri a, great thought is divine- ly inspired within. his brain, he jets served in the Valleam• Michael An - that thought clown in memorandum. gel°, as a sculptor, nsed to study Then at the end of 'the; day or the that leg by. the daya the week,. the week .or the enceith or the year 1111 ,--- month nod the year, ."becanee," said collects thee ,clithaant „thoughts,. .3r- the great ,Italian master., "1 eon - respective of their /ogical sequence, ' into a chapter or a book and has the sider that piece of stone the most perfeet for court stenographer write them mation of physical ana- agalri in full. In other words, Eling t(3111 -Y ever carved by the thisel of. Solomon's verses for the most part are like. freight cars that can be inetry with hie thoughts and with Christ's life, • Oh, the heaotas blenaing eolorsl From thebrilliant pictorials of an autumnal leaf let "IS learn the spiritual lesson for man that God bath made and eau make everything beautiful in its time.. EXPRESSED IN SOUND. The symmetries of straight lines and curves in sculpture and arthitee- titre • also form analogies for mares spiritual beauty. 'Wandering among the farneue buildings •of Europe, I find that, ar1i1tucLuraUy. a great building „has a symanetrieal unity, just as .a perfect statiee le chiseled after the physleat formations of Perfect. man. Many yeaa's ego tli1re was exhumed froth the Mahal ruins of Old Rome a marble leg, broker' from off one of the statues of old. That brokeu fragment is still pre. man". So , symmetrically perfect may the lines and the curves of a side tracked or uncoupled from one 8.1.01 group of statuary be, that car and attached to other cars. Each when you; look at some of the best verse 'stands out as a distinct entity. examples of sculpture in the louvre, An average verse is as appropriate in the Vatican or the British museum, the sixth chapter ef Proveirbs as in the figures almost seem as though the twentieth chapter. The verse is their lungs aro breathing and their • the car. The chapter is the freight lips are ready to speak. trail). They are often as unconnect- Let us loiter for a little while in ed as the definitions of Webster's Die- the' "poets' corner" of Westminster tionary. They change their subjects Abbey: .As wo listen the sweet • very often. They are like nuggets of bards of the English language seem gold sernetimes lound .by the Austra- to lift their heeds from their pile lien miners in the dust by the road- lows of dust and begin to sing, and :Ades or in the river beds, entirely vie find m's spiritual beauty in the separated from may gold veins, They analogies of poetry as well as 'in aro like great round bowlders of rock ,painting and music and sculpture imbedded in the sands. These bowl- and architecture, For as painting is der verses in a glacial age have been rhythm in color and music is rhythm earrieLl by the ice front afar and. hese found a resting place andct en- tirely different elements from those • among which they Were created. • The moderncritics tell us that l•Cing Solomon did not write the book of Eeciesiastes, that its and iliCtiOn belong 10 a Tater date. It appears to me, however, that its depressing refrain are characteristic in sound. and sculpture aid arciiiteca tura are rhythm in stone, so poetry is rhythm in words. Aye, poetry is more than mere rhytlun. An Eng- lish writer mite well said, "Poetry in the flower garden of human langu- age is the blossom and the fragrance of• all human knowledge, Tatman thoughts, human passions and =n- ot a man who led such a life of eaeeI ti"s*" It is auxins most transcend - and self indulgence as Solomon led, ent hopes and noblest ambitions, and that at the end Of it, satiated Nvitll the highest pial.k of the Mount • with pleasure and study, as be most of Ascension for a footstool, or 11 is • :have been, .it wan precisely the kind mart's wail of eternal despair when, of book that 'woli/d come from his as the results of his sins, be is pe»., and the conclusions 'uttered in heading toward it Dante's "Inferno" , that book, just such as would be or he is compelled to join in the likely to be reached by a man who,. means of it Milton'S "Paradise having strayed from God, was dis- Lost." ' aPPointed and dissatisfied withhis lne. In the absence, therefore, of TPIE REDEMPTION OF JOHN. definite knowledge 1 shell assume Are you and I ready to become that• the first verse of the book in- part of God's beautiful creation? ilicates elm as the author, "The son Are we reedy to become beautiful in ourselves by becoming beautiful in him? Even the lowest and vilest, saved by his 'grace and redeemed by his blood, can become a true part itual beauty in the painter's brush of Christ's beautiful life. Many years and the artist's easel. According to ago when the yellow fever plague Samuel Coleridge, the English poet was raging in Memphis, Tenn., 'a and literary critic, the true definition ,, rough looking man applied to the of "beauty" is `anultitude in unity. , relief committee and said, "1 When standing before a great pie- (.4-- tv . tura like that of Leonardo da, Vinci's wish tonurse." It was at a time "Last Supper," or Murillo's emir_ when most people who could were aele Of the Loaves and Fishes," or fleeing from the stricken and deso- Raphael's greatest picture, bis •Iatecl homes. The death costa tine "Madonna," we find that there 'seemed to be ,going 'everywhere. • At the hinny lights and the shadows, the 'first the physician declined the . gold anal the silver and the green and rough man's services, but as ho the yellow and the blue and the saf- ;could get no one else to do the Iron end the violet and the purple,:work this man was sent to one of all blend in one comnion purpose. ithe most filthy hander:td.angerous wards Thousands, perhaps tens of thou-; of the city. ee'. he went he • sands of times, Michael Angelo, with I was a inee.seng,er oflova. He would Ads brush,nifty have touched the not tell his • name -' he said sim1Y • wall in the 'Vatican,. where to -day is i"nCall ine John." Tire° passediPon: seen his "Last Judgment." But not 1ndafter awhile John, whose name , oee of all of those thousands of kvas:. 210W famous ,through the city, • times N'aien he laid" on the paintclid • sickened'and died: While Iiis body he do so, without ha,vingts one groat ;was being prepared for an -unmarked idea in his mind. "Perfection is e.,,,rave, suddenly upon. his arm was composed of many, trifie0/4• wrote he, leotard "but. perfection in art is not it a livid mark, which proved sthat Johnwas an ex -convict. Joha trilleat. A great picture is always 11 d been one of the most dangerous "multitudes of different colors irian - h. Onclie e blending unity." That unity is the criminals of all the sout of beauty, was a murderer, but now tivough cameo when sem:upon the the blood of Jesus, he became a ministering angel. Onco lie was hor- rible in his depraved malformation. Now lie was made beautiful by bringing his life in symmetrical touch with Jesus' life. My friends, will you not let 'Christ fill you with 'his spiritual beauty? Will yell not only in the futere• be spiri tu all y b eau ti f el , but beauti fu I now in your present life? Will you not • become transformed as was john, the redeemed nurse, laboring for his Mester in plague strithen Memphis? of David, king in Jerusalem." COLERIDGE'S DEFIN.ITION. We find an analogy tor man's stall--; eanvas of the masters of old and the • rnasters of the present day. "A MULTITUDE IN UNITY." :An artist's beauty is it "multitude • in unity." We know that Samuel .•'7 Cokridge'S definition in reference 1,0 t,he painter's easel is true. We see a "multitude of Colors itt unity" when Turner, the most brilliant ar- tistic colorist England ever peoduced, makes the sea, a, creature of We. Now it is a beautiful boulevard of goliT, paving its mays to the throne of a settles sue; mew a perfect pandemore- . tem of furies; now it is a .burial scene, when Sir David Wilkie •finds sepulcher in the mighty deep, evliose ;waves boat themselves into piores on the Glbraltee cregs. Wo we an et- st' a "mill Mud° itt n ni ty" pOl'trC3L8 of a, Sir Anthony Van • Dyck end in the mighty mountaa n " peaks. of a Bierdel aft and in the pas - Until dreams of a Millet. But, though 1 here m y be many different tints, landing M MIA colola of a rainbow or in 'the lieetie flush of it rose, did you ever • stop to realize that alt tethers 'come from but three Palatial colors? just the same as all eeture. . All the animal and vegeta.- , bee arid mineral eingdores have but Feely -six different bash: elements, Of Whichthey- are all compeeed. So in the artistie woeld no end the 1 811 relore originally come from but three printery a olors-l.he red, the yellow .and the blue. Now, 1 God call form the artistic beauty of the sky, She roe, the land, out Of the Sint - p)0. rarl tho 8in.tploye1oand Cie eimple violet, is it absurd to ell pp 0 ea that od n spi ritually SoM1'rmNc IN A NAME,. Soma of us are proud of an un- common surname, but occasionally it brings diseomfort, A gentleman, whose name is Pyne-Coflin, had been invited to stay aE a friend's house in •the country. Ile foend that he would not be able to arrisai until late at night, and, not liking to turn his friend's horses out at so ]ate an hour, wieed to the town expressman. The opeaator at the other end mis- read the telegram, and the exprese- men wee ecivised •th'ust-- "Maait 11.40 tvain-pine coffin." Imagine the disgust of the teat/el- ler when, instead of the expected teats he saw the village hearse awaitiag 1118 arrival. But be good- humordaly put his bag inside the gloomy conveyance and got on the bot himself, rive Per oriel. of the Mersibers al make us attielically beentoul, no trades 'unions .„111 Great Britain are Toni ter n0W crtIda and Si..ah.11 We May /Mt of wark ,n 1 tito .:prosent tirao, Aro pat.'s allow oily thoughts This is the higheat tor oVer tan WW1 11104 to ba combines in ssiee ,yertrs, " ,,,,Teereirreer e • DAN YOU Mg YOUR PO]? • 3fi LEss OXW IN POIJIt MEN HOM CAN DO THIS, Some Feats Vehicle Are Easy to Sines,• But Xrnpossible to Others. It you lie flat one your 'back end Ilona your leg bac le 'upon .your body You • will Mut you ethemet possible straighten your knee, 'Fite moon Of this is tbet. the lower pelt of the leg Is werked bY the mune mneelee--- heMOIY, the •ham-strings---;Whieh, con- trol the upper, You are already use Mg these museles to bend the %Mae' pere ef your leg, and they are Rot iong eeougli to perform both 'operee tions at Mice. • Aek it friend if he thinks he_ can stand still without moving his feet for Rye Minutes, bliedetelded: It Sounds easy, but if the blind -folding .is done thoreteghly it is fairly safe to 'wager that he will Move his feet 'before the liVe minutes are half up. If he does not he, will prohable top- ple fOrward, altogether, Diflicult the feat is, it has been doec. suecese- Ilt is an old trick tor one person to pet the tips of his forefing•ers toe gether keeping the elbows on a level with the shoulders, and then • Challenge any other person to separ- ate them by a fair pull. A man must • be a Hi:weeks to 'accomplish the task. • A. more striking Utustration of a Weiler. kind is the following :Gat a lady to place her right hand, on the top of !Mr bead,. and then erideeeme te remove it with one of yours... tine lose, your, strength is tar above the average end here equally below you Wel tail entirely. Can you smoke a, cigar right through in steady consecutive .puffe without once taking it out of your Mouth? Probably any .avcrage cigar smoker would smile at the idea of there being ani diflithlty in the task. Yet the. fact is that a smekeresarely actually =ekes more then 'half of a ciger. A considerable part of the tinto it is OUT OF HIS MOUTH, laid on the ash -tray' by his sole, or held en his lingers. At 'any rate you are pretty safe in wagering nny- one, however hardened a smoker, that he cannot perform this 'appar- ently simple feat. R. has often been tried, but 'unsuccessfully. ' - To carry- tour .bricks half a mile sounds absurdly easy. So indeed it would be if you were perriiitted to carry them in any way you pleased. • ,14-• SONG Ole THIS 1IlleleS. The green, 111115, the eleen hide, with- out e stale upon, them, • When litlee vernal, whispers breath, • and woodsy attars pass,- Welliinacillectiheingeloisryoont titeemefriec's re - The ben u ty of the bee zigeoned boughs, the gain:tour or the grass. The fele hide, the rare hills, what sight JIM'S blither seeming, Than they reveal when summertide sots seal upon the earthl-- The meads below them gleaming, the iSky above them dreaming, And not a tune save those that throb with melody and mirth! The old hills, tile gold hills, with orient autumn o'er them , - The autumn with her wonder -loom whereto ehe tures her hand, And lo, strai Emmy upon them and about theni and before them A web no mortal skill may match; not e'en in Sammareand! )1( The white hills, the bright hills, with Winter skies above them, The nortli-wind roaringeround their • crests, -how saga -like its song! Although, the wild storm CoxnpaSS them, heal: o' mince we love '• theme - The cold hills, the calm hills, the stanch hills, the strong! Tile glad hills, the sad hills,---liow joy and sorrow blended Engirdle everancre the paths where boyhood's feet ha-ve clontb! Ah, how affectien clings to them, •and will till life is ended, ' Tlat grand hills, the free hills, the dear hills of hoine! -The Housekeeper. ' USEFUL HINTS. • A very good tea punch without li- quor is made by boiling for' five min- utes a pint of water,. a pound of sugar and the chopped rine of a largo lemon. Add to this a quart, of freshly made tea, a rather strong infusion, the juice of four lemons, and half a teaspoonful of almond ex- tract. Cool and pour over a block A friend recently bet a travelling of ice in the punch bowl. Add to salesman that he could net carry the last stoned cherries and what - the bricks for the required distance tWO in each hand,grasped between theatub and fingers and with. the • fine gars pointing down. ever other fain is desired. Most refreshing on a hot day is a glass of ice: tea, to which is added two or three• bruised mint leaves. "For the first hundred yaeds" said For the sick room a pleasant dis- the traveller afterwards describing, infectant is made by. puteher in a Itis sensations, "it was easy enough. But then my fingers began to grow slnd lighting a piece of camphor gun 50.'120 freshly ground coffee Soon m tired. y thumw bs ere aching horribly. By the time I had cover- 00 (01) 01 It. As thie' gene...bikes it ed half the distance the cords of iny emits the odor of toasted coffee, an neck began to feel -stile and strained. iireelna that is agreeable to most “When I was within it hundred P,er7tagle.e or-F2iibsei/Z•Chami urenohicaus,d s tabnoSr ai•: yards of the finish I was dripping Ia 1,0 be preferred to, 'the pastilles and ivith perspiration ancl felt as though incense powders, which to some are I had been stuck all over with pies. I was trembling like a. leaf when I got in and it was the most expen- sive five dollars I _ever won, tor I e 0.3 hardly able to move next clay, and did not eat over tee Waits fer a, week." It is said that the feat of throw- ing a triple .somersault has only been accomplished three times.' In the first place the gymnast has to leap much higher in the air than for the ordinary double somersault. Second- ly, after the body has turned twice the perfoymer loses control of him- self, and the law of gravity over- comes bodily dexterity. A couple of years ago an 'American named Robins undertook the feat for a wager of $550. In his first at tempt he turned three times, but lighted on his hands. Everyone was satisfied, and the money Was tender- ed to him. ' But be refused it, say- ing that he must alight on his feet. He took a fresh run, a megnifleeet leap, fell on his head and, . BROKE HIS NECK. To come back to -tasks less traleg to the bodily powers. Tuck your hand under your arm palm outwards and then attenept to place, the thumb in the palm. .An artist or pianist, with long, flexible hands, may suc- ceed, latt the average person will certainly fail. The man who can kiss his own toe may pride himself on the fact that he is mare flexible than most of his fellows. Less than me in four grown men can accomplish this feat. Women aro as a rule more flexible than men in this respect:. • Excepting gymnrists, only about one person in two Inuadred Can put one leg over the back of the eeek. , Here 10 a good trick to try on a strong, maa if you have one aMoree your acquaintance : Make hint stretch his arm out straight, hand pahn downwards, and then, laying an ordinary wooden riatteli across • the roots of the 'first and third fiegers, suggest that he shall break it •by the pressure of the second finger. nomentber, the impartant point about this trick ir that the arm be absoultely straight. The sligbtest cereeture gives a great increase of muscular power to the fingers'. 4 • CARNEGIE'S SUCCESS SECRET. Business rivals of. Andrew Ca,eilagle were at one time helpless to aethunt for his ability to undersell' theia ite whatever merket they tinned to, They sent expoets quietly to look oVer bbs work and report. Mr. Carnegie, it 10 anal, heard of their presence. He vitccl 1,hem to an inspoetion, with asguide, end at last effete(' toshow them the secret of his sue - Wee. Ile took them Into o MOM lined with hooks and reports, where o dozth clerks were at work .on ,d0C- 01neb is and 'figures. This room re- presented an expeediture ef $80,000. n year', "31 i14 worth that," 8aid Aar, Carnegie, -.tor a beSinesseman to imoai a12 any moment; all the' detaiie of his haelaeSet"; vary sickening. The odor of the coffee will counteract any bad aroma In the room, and the fumes of the camphor aill hill ordinary disease geeens that may be floating around. Lamle is best left alone until it has imarly fisnis-hed roasting, simply being placed in the oven, with a light dreadgeng of salt and pepper. At abnost the last stage, sprinkle it with paprika, nide a little lemon juice and :minced thearte. •Use grated breaderundis to thicken the gravy instead of flour. • To make huckleberry soup and ber- ries Must be geeely breised and put on to simmer, with- a little more wa- ter than the quantity of soup re- quired. To this are added ground cinnamon and cloves in equal parts and two sliced lemons to a quart of fruit. Seger "to taste before set- ting- aweee to eoel, and serve next day with slightly .toasted croutons of White bread. - Lettuce should be prepared for the table several hours before Serving Pick it over carefully, discarding ina perfect leaves, but leaving the hearts or -centre untouched. Wash leaf ' by leaf, daintily and tenderly, so as not to bruiee, and leave in a dish of cleat- cold \voter foie -Come little time. About an hour before usizig, lay the lettuce gently in a wire salad bas- ket, in the refregeeator near the lee, but not, on it. thicumbere should be sliced thin several liours before us- ing them. laid in a. pan of ice water with several pieces oe ice laid on top until time to serve. In slicing tlie eueumhers reject the end pieces be- ginning the euttieg .where the seeds first appear. Corned beef stew can either be made froth thc. round- or brisket. 11 the former is used it should be well larded, as othereviSe 111 is apt to be dry in spite of the most careful cooking. Tim brisket on the other hand, is al ways juicy and tender. Throw away- the fir:ea water, in which the boiling is begun after fifteen minutes, .and in the renewed eupply put calibrate, turnips, potatoes and parsnips. Let all simmer gently till the three latter can be mashed up With a spoon. Stir • well till the gravy -is crearoy, then add a gener- ous teaspootifel ol prepared mes- terei. Put the :meat in the platter and use eabbage ae garnishing, poure Mg gravy civet' all. WITH THE lealAttS. Pat' rich -nave (nee pthes. Pare, core, and cut them into dice. Cook in n, little rich sugar eyrie) 'until tender. Line the bettor!' of a deep glass dish with layee of spoage cake or mecaroot ceumbe, pow' over a thick Jaye:. of the pears end syrup and cover with another leyer of the crumbs and the remainder of the peons and spelt", The dish ,elioalci be about tese-thiede full. Over all, poor a pinin. boiled 1 euetard aratdet with tit e yolks of 1,11eee 1( eggs, plait of milk, hialf e• temente- I ful oi graintlated sugar, and halt a teaspoonful of lemoa extract. Malce o ineringee nith 111.0 Whit:013 Of egg S and. three ta,blespootifula of pow- dered sugar, and heap over the ten P1S.t berOre eveving, Serv, . all very cold, 11 preferred, sweet:ea whipped cream aear lee heaped over the top jtp.ttttI if the 017513.1 (1. .. Peer JeJossee-Fare, eore and iniece finely sin ripe pears. ellx with them if:me-hall of a grated nutmeg, two maemee of clarified butler, segar to make quite sweet, four evell-beatee eggs, end euiDelent limey greted,- 'bread to make etie ;Ind eamenle 'efold in eggaliaped,lealls witli tee bowl Of a large spoon, drop in boiling water, and eiromer for half an hour, eyhen done, sprinkle lightly with cinnamon andtreneclered sugar, aad :nave with lemon sauce.. • Peer l'arfalt.-Boat the yolks of three ogee until theale and add slow- ly three-ftierths of a eepful of eyrup drained from preserved peers. Cook in a double boiler to a thick eus- tard, Remove froan the fire ancl whip uirCil cool, Whip one pint of THE SUNDAY SCI1001 INTERNATIONAL LESSOg.a srx.. 18. Text of the Leseon, Anecis Yet 41: 15. Goldea Text, ,A-Inoe Seek ye Me, and yo shall nee; setae the Loid, and ye shall live; meek geed arid not evIl that ye MAY live; auct so tile Lord, the thed of bests, "'hall bo with you, fo' thus Saith the Lord unto the house ot ISeael (tverses 4, 6, 14). This seem to be the central thought et our les- tsl°1en' Loirtd lb.eori)iGn'closel, titSol°14WF.Tilianel"' '11:1II. ii Eitegs eviii,, '21). arid of deestiugeef farewell exhortation, "Choose you - this cfay whom we will servo" (.Toslie =My., ,1 5), and of the words of MO.Sr, CS: "1 have set before you life 'Med' death; therefore choose life. Lore for He life c cream to sistiff, dry froth, fold • in the Lord, thy lod obey His voice cleave , is thy " gently intot the peas custard, arid pet mite Hine into a plain 12701(1. • Paok in ice and (1)-e-nt' we 19' 2° . Whether it Ito for }steel or the chteren or the salt and let stand three or four hours to ripen. When time to serve turn oat carefully on a shallow cry- stal Welt end heap sweetened whipp- eel eeetun matted it Pear Cuetard-Stew four large ripe pears with a very little water uetil perfeetly tendoe. • Then press them, through: a coarse sievo and sweeten - to taste. Tina thern into a glee% dish, and pour over them -a plain boiled custard made with cam pint of milk, the beaten yolks of three eggs, two tablespoonfuls of sugar and half a ' teaspoonful of alremed extract. Whip the whites of the 4gs to a firm snow, with three tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar, and heap it over the top. Serve very cold.- The Housekeeper. MAKING VINEGAR AT HOME. Tim wise Ifonsewife melees, her awn vinegar, for though it is probably cheaper and certainly much less tea -table to buy it, she knows that the home -eau -le article is not only health - rid" vi (I eat te ere 11 no life apart( from Him who is libe, who "3. am the life ' (Joon Aie, 25; 'Leen 6). Dead in trespassee and sins, without God and withoet hope, is the coati-, tion of tdl. others (Epli. ii., 1, 12)., In the days of Amos, as now, 311,9a woulki do anything rather than rea eeive freely from 'led His gilt of Wee They woval, tinder pretense of wor-1 ship, transgress at Bethel and (iil- gal and at Beersheba, awl their mac- rifices or thai*eirivng were, full of' mil; therefore the Lord said, "Offer a sacrifice of thamVsgiving with lea- ven, for this liketh you," eine. 5), lea- ven being significant of evil every- where in the Bible, even in Matte aiii„ 83, where our Lord in describ- ing this present age, the mystery or, the kingdom, -that is, the condition' a affairs while the kingdom is re- joeted and postponed -told us that( the woman (the church) would thora aughly leaven or corrupt her rood.: Never was the food given to thw cameh more corrupt than nerve, when nearly every fun:de:mental truth,' ier and less injurious to the stom- is denied by many preachers, and our ach, but also much superior in qva.- Lord Jesus Himself is not counted lity to that she can get of her grocer. a sate teacher, much less the Son of Cad; so we know that the age 19 The vinegar of commerce is made deawing to a close and the time of by pouring a very poor solution of Isla -era restoration draweth near. alcohol over beech shavings or birch' twigs that have been soaked The word of the Lord the -ouch Amos in strong vinegar, to which eulpinuic and every other prophet shall be ful- or hydrochloric acid has been .added. ffllcd.“I will plant them, upon their land, and they shall no more be These are two ef the strongest acids known in chemistry. Pure, they die- pulled -up out of their land which33 solve copper, tin, zleave given them, saith the Lord thyl inc and brass, and 0,6d,, (A,„ 4 s ix., 14, 15); J. vinegar into which they enter will , t Ezoe. eat the tops of fruit cans and the '''' e xxece-ii„ 21, 22). • glare° on the inside of stone jugs aud They make- a inan an offenider for jars. Pickles g,et, soft and musty, it word and lav a snare for him that and lose their sour taste, but, of course, the most and the worst dam- age is done to the s-toniach of the !pickle eater. 1 The old-fashioned cider vinegar is !at once the cheapest and best and 1.3;t°1Y C41,•6 ,bef Isra eel to cease from ebee-.„` the most easily made. Fez -mere do eotese oTsheyt.eknsaeowealmecteth4; t; 111:1:17eertseout, 1 • ;:tt' i3t12 aitr srinnItpuoessilsnilcalnit'onsobfntarlinnnriYii t4.11. -Le). Lord; nei t le r understand they in almost city neighborhdod. The leis, counsel Mee.; iv., 12). 'Phey are "Shaking the cask. to ad- ;full of werigheemeTi„ urged them to turn to Him that Bee ess and eppees- ' calcicalorthis tsijedmPoivYjetiltminbetnigichosleini sion, yet -Lae Lord laved them and mit air, and similes is hastened by pitied them and by His prophets: frequently might have mercy upon them, He vintgar is made more rapidly -the an oxygenation process beihad compassion on His people raid ng reales./ of the Cider-byputting it in large on His dwelling place arid sent them His messe crocks, thus exposing marc surface .ngers, but they mocked the Messengers of, God and deepised His to the air. A cloth must be tied words and misused His prophets un - 1 over the top to ex -ewe() dust and in- til- the wrath of the Lord arose i sects. in cold weather keep the ves- against His eeople till there was no, 'sal containing it in a warm place. remedy (IL Chron. mere 15, 16) - When tee "mother" -the membrane that is,, there was no remedy or wi which. forms eventually, and which -is sometimes called the vinegar plant- in the ixiaxgin, "healing” in any -tieing that they could do. Yet He cries, js formed ziew -vinegar can. be Made "Deliver from going down to the by simply adding sweetened water. pit; e have 1 eend a ram= (Job The eater should be soft, as the lime meetea, ejet) in hard water is detrimental. • There are a member of ways of iniquites After He had visited upon their (Amos iii, 2), and allowed =king vinegar when cider is not them to return to their la.nd from, procurable. Thus a good- vinegar can the captivity in 'Babylon He in due be made from peachor apple Par- time sent them the Ransom, the Do- ings. Fill a, jar half hill -of pax- hearer,. the Lord, their Righteousness hies, add half a cup of molasses, fill the long promised • Messiah, bee up with soft water, tie a cloth over what is the record? "He was in the jar 'and set, it in the sun. e* the world, and the world was made An excellent vinegar- can be mule by Him, and the world knew Hinz from corn. Put a, pint of shelled not. He came unto Ris OW/I, and corn end a pint of molasses into a Bis own received Hine not." (jolet jar, 1111 with water and proceed as 5, 10, 11). Now, is there still ate directed above. In about three weeks you nrill have good vinegar -- vinegar thet will not rot your pick- les and that is the least •iejurious of any that can be made. reproveth in the gate and tura aside the just for .a thing of -naught: They' say, "Prophesy not unto 178 right things; speak unto us snroothl things. Prophesy deeeite, cause the TO COOK OATMEAL. The best way to cook oatmeal, ac- cording to a cooking teacher, ie to cook it the day before. so as to be sure tee allow time etiough. To one cupful of rolled oats allow half a tees/mound of salt and two cupfuls of boiling writer. Pour the water hope for such a people, who becaust of such great sin and crying blood be mien us and upon our child' ren" have been sca,ttered a byword . and a a-cermet:h among all nations! We eould not belreve eit if He bee not said it, but slime He has said that for His own Name's sake will fulfill His promise to Abraham! Isaac and Jacob (Mie. vil. 18-201 lisaek xxxel, 22). He will do it, and we inapt boleieve it. "The gifts and calling of , God are without moan, ta.nce. Oh, the depth of the eichei both of the wisdoan and knowledge of God ! How unsearchable are Tlfi judgments and llis was -s past finding directly upon the cereal,' in Um top ont!" (Iona. Ni; 20, 83.) of tie) double boiler, and allow it, to But those who are meek enough te boil for live =dilutes over the „ full believe what, life has said by the flame of the gae range. Then place prophets. ltall Snow Iles ways anti the cover on the boiler and let the Islis purpoSes, which are sure to bit cot eat stein fee 'three or lour hours, performed, for "surely 1,110 Lord Coe or longer. if possible. The tea,eher will do nothing, but He revealete referree to cautioned her clasp Ills secret unto His servantthf against, stirring the oatmeal while il psopliets" (Amos 111, 7). Tilt • wee cooking, on accatint of the pas- Spirit through Petrie says that prop, eseess matieee, and she emphasized heety le a 110( in a dark place Mt, Gte isetossity of enakieg the break- to which we do well to 'take lieed faeteas nourishing and appetteing as our hearts (Ifs Pet, i, 19). BM in. the faniii,y who had to etert aut pmeibie, especially if there were meie Ittiv1,43h:Iot•eityltall:LreealuiaFfipn.c\;90:iisi,stratehaincilitietrhtsiej. oiii,ntootit,adtar,s04-sicatsier: in 1.110 niertting fm. their rla3i's.beet-wee they will not be work. The close couneation that has .been proved to exist hetareeri ara 113111.78:11tt,tastilteil;,10)%ap:11,7188 properly prepared food and the 11(Lko 1511111 - quer habit, makes it important that 25).• No- matter what the Wise of thie eversr article -Cleat appears on the world may think a 05, let ilf; by all table should be as h,en cooked as means- give earnest heed to the sine poesible, end no amount of lime Or thought that is expended on making wc)-vd.ol Pv°01m,Y, for "liic testhli(Thil of ,J esee i t ha Spill t, propbecy Ilia table attractive and wholesome oiouujitie rosardad as tritstod. xix, 10). 13y all means read often the book of Wevelation, for it is the otly one ot all the books that tete a very special blessing for OA --reader aed bearee (Ilev, i, 8), +.1 Slie-"Maud 8111(1 74110'C 80(111011*80(111011*.4....f *lb tql Ote Si)1ge," elsWe mistaken. She's mere noiliks*Iklevi *heft she isn't ttsk,od t4tA" • • • —+ Jones --"I notice that yoer •uncle 071 au imitate Of hall 11 11111110fl,'' wee not his fault that lie jones--"Vilifet de von meall?" 11'0wit--elee would have takati 11 With: hit) 11 bd.cotild.,", • 1