HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-9-9, Page 2Boort So
MILKING WHINES Alia, MILK QUA
Could Nerdy Drootho
aortae*d th is. one of the
first eymptoms a heart tribe, end
whoa tire lieert toChince aetedhe
Aeries weak in sympathy, lie it is neees-
iswy when the heart beeemes Wealceued
awl the neve e =Arun to ate that
tele lueurt le regulated and stimulated
end the .nerves. strengthened and toted.
by using laburat's Ileert and. Nerve
Pills.
Mrs, Sarah MacCarthy, Sheet Harbor,
writods—,q bars been troubled,
for tievee years, with my heart mid
nervea. My heart used to get ao bad,
at times, I cord(' hardly breathe, and
arse so dizzy everything woula tuna
black. before My fame.
One day my daughter *vivified me to
teire
id�h I asa, and after teeing four,
boxes I felt 1.11se a aliferent person.
eamiet reeommend them too highly to
all those who are suffering from heart
or mime troubles."
Price 80e. a box at all dealers, or
mailed aired on receipt of price by
The T. Milburn Coe Isbadted, Termite,
Ont.
IOW
Delicious Cakes Made With
Sour Milk.
oATMEAL CAKES.
Cresau a cupful of white sugar with
Ya cupful of butber to which 7 table-
spoonfuls of our snilk have been
edded. Sift together 2 cupfuls of
flour, 1 teaspoonful of salt. Stir the
our roixture into the albernat-
ing with 1 cupful eaeli of rolled oats
and grated cocoanut. When all, are
well blended, add 1 cupful of chopped
raisins and, if liked, ee of a cupful of'
nut -meats broken into pieces the size
of a pea. Drop from a teaspoon on
buttered tins and bake in a quick
oven.
OATMEAL Fevre ocicacies. e
Sift together 1 cupful flour --barley
flour is best—ea, teaspoonful each of
soda, nutmeg and Cleves, et,• teaspoon-
ful each of salt and ciegianaon, and 2
tablespoonfuls sugar. Mix in 1/2 cup-
ful raisins, then combine with 1 cupful
rolled oats. Mix together an egg well,
beaten and VI cupful each of corn
syrup, sour leek and melted fat. Beat
the hquel into the dry mixture and
drop in teaspoonfule on a greased
baking sheet, allowing plenty of room
for the cookies to spread, B,ske in a
quick oven.
CHOCOLATE FUDGE CAME. 4
Cream together 1Y4 cupfuls of
segae and cupful of butter, then
beat in 1 egg until the mixture is
smooth and add 2 squares of chocolate
melted over hot water. Sift together
three times 1% cupfuls of flour, 24,
teaspoonful of salt, and 1 teaspoonful
each of soda and baking powder. Add
5 tablespoonfuls of boiling water to 6
e tablespoonfuls of thick sour milk. Stir
some of the liquid into the better naix-
ture, then alternate the rest with the
flour until both are used. Bake in two
layers in a moderate oven for about
15 minutes --until the. cake shrinks
from the pan and is filen in the centre.
Put together with plain white frost-
ing, or a chocolate or fudge ichig, this
is delicioes.
............ • .........
Tight Fits..
She—"Stie suffers with fits."
Ile—"That's becaus3 they're
tight."
too
FOR DIARRHOEA
DYSENTERY
AND ALL
SUMMER COMPLAINTS ,
BY A. G. LOCHHEAD, PorszestoN ishareiumeorses
destroying baeteria and methods of
'treating tubes and teatscups, wing
this .ageneg, hews beee most success-
ful heiping to keep the germ con-
tent 'a nuiehine drawn milk at a tirt
figure,
The method consiatg simply in piec-
ing. the tubes in clean hot water and
alleaving them to remain in, the veasel,
covered, until next milking. There
are modificationa of the method de-
pending upon the ineans of heating at
the dairyman's disposal.
If steam is avitiloble the water is
heated to 160-170 deg. F.; in a suitable
vessel (wash boiler, ete.), and the
tubes and cups subznerged. The tem-
perature is maintained for 15-20 min-
utes usieg •a thermometer and then
with the cover on, the contents are
allowed to cool, leaving until next
- milking.
If no means of maintaining a steady
The etiostiter of the sanitere giurlity
of milk is receiving more attentloe to-
day than ever befere, arid the iraeorta
ante of oleari milk n6t only for direct
consemptiona 1:mt 41:St? for the metres
eacture an dairy products; butter,
eheese, eondeneed and powdered milk,
etc.,
in being oonstant,ly streesed en
alt sides.
With the advent of the milking Ma-
chine it was assumed that certain
sources of infection to whieh hands
drawn mint is subject would be elim-
inated and the milk would be corres-
pondingly better in quality. Content
illation from such. sources as stable
air, and diet fat:icily from the coat of
the animal may indeed be avoided if
the machine is handled properly in the
stable, but in spite of this maehine
drawn milk is in a large number .of
cases more highly infeeted than ordi
nary hand -drawn milk. This is due
not to any fault of the machine itself
but rather to the lack et knowledge on
the .part of the operetor of the means
to be taken to keep the machine parts
sterile. •
Most of the trouble with milk of
high bacterial content which machine
ueers have experienced is traceable to
tho rubber parts, the contamination
from which ean be almost unbelievably
high even when the tubes are a.ppar-
ently clean. This is betauee there is
still a general lack of appreeiation on
the 'vitt 'of users of machines of the
difference between a clean and a stets-
anachine. Removing visible dirt or
traces of milk so that the tubes and
craps "look clean" is not enough; it is
-necessary to destroy the bacteria
wh.ich adhere to the moist inner sur-
face of the rubber tubes and cups, and
Which will otherwise multiply and in-
fect the fresh milk. It is therefore
impossible to overestimate the import-
ance of following up the preliminary
washing and brushing of the machine
parts with a sterilizing treatment. The
washing in itself is insufficient, and
the eterilizing, whether it be by heat
or by chemicals, is only really effective
if the preliminary washing has. been
thorough. *
PRELIIVIIN.ARY CLEANING.
The sooner tile cleanieg is com-
menced after milking the more effi-
cient it •will )se. As soon as the last
cow is milked, the teat -ceps should
be placed in a pail of clear cold water,
and with the vacuum on, the water
should be drawn through the unit, the
cups leeing lifted up anddownto allovi
air as well as water to pass through.
The cups and tubes should next be
treated with hot water to which is
added a dairy cleansing powder. This
can be done with the suction on as
before; or by Semi:ming from the ma-
, •
Weed* a National Problem. Do "youll BOWELS
Traleaing through Caeada
summer oso ie struck by the pre-
vaaee and diversity of weeds; Whole
districts., certairdy fiielda, seri be de-
seribed as white, blue, yeldew er green,
—the, green too often, unfortunate:7)
of collch grass rattier than of clean,
vigorously growing crops. The occur-
rence, here and there of exceptions to
the rule, simply clemonstrateri the po
sibility of better things.
Loses to farmers and to C
totallieg many millions of dolOars an-
nually, are represented by this Mot of
color. Axle means, however partial,
,a reducing sech weste, limit there-
( fore eommand respect.
I Much of east,ern Ca d
;•
for a foreat crop Fire and axe have
; exposed` to the incursion of weeds,
nal/ions a acres that can only be a
inenaee to adjoining •lands until re-
, etored, by governmental or inunicipal
aotion la.rgely, to its owe proper use.
In lerge additional areas the farm-
ing cae only be described as very low
—pressure cropping indeed. The land
ies ay or pasture chiefly, and in a
year or twO from the plow, produces
herbage unmarketable as hay. Until
brought under more intensive agri-
culture, or correct permanent pasture
management, returns from such farms
willn.br?solnr:aagrdVaanced farming districts
there is a noticeable decrease of such
conspicuous, but readily (under culti-
vation) suppressed weeds as butter-
cup, ox -eye daisy, and the hawkweeds.
In their place, -according to locality,
appear.various mustards, thistles and
others. Certain weeds are more or
less indicative of over -reliance on
grain crops, others prevail in clover -
seed growing districts, fruit or truck-
ing .lands, etc. Perennial sow thistle
invades the richer espeoially if
poorly drained; Russian thistle the
lighter regions; sheep sorrel those in
need of liming. Everywhere some weed
is ready to 'seize an opportunity. Man's
only hope now, of comparative frenet
chine' and cleaning in a sink or suit-
able basin, using brushes to clean out
the passages. Clean hot water should
he used as a final rinsing to wash out
all traces of the cleaning solution and
thoroughly flush the whole system.
Where there is danger of water get-
ting into the air passages a wooden
plug should be put in the open end
after removal from the machine.
Once a week the teat -cups and tubes
should be taken completely apart and
thoroughly brushed, using a cleaning
powder in hot water, and then re-
assembled when dry.
STERILIzation.
After the tubes and teat -cups have
been cleaned as indicated they shoiald
be sterilized by either the chemical
or the heat treatment. Each inethod
has some advantages and disadvan-
tagis, but if properly carried out
should insure milk oftexcellent sani-
tary quality.
(a)- Chemical. Treatment- This in-
volves4the use of a hypochlorite iolu-
tion which can be easily prepared
using chloride of lime. A stock solution
is first prepared using 1 pound chlor-
ide of lime to 1 gal:on erate', mixing
the powder to a paste with as little
water, then adding the full amount.
This should be kept coveted it a cool
place, and only the clear, greenish
liquid appearing above the white de-
posit used for making up the disin-
fecting solution. For use add 1 large
cupful per pail of c_ea...n water, making
sufficient solution in a large crock to
hold the teat -cups an 0 tubes complete-
ly. immersed. This serration is more
efficient if a strong, brine (1 to 2
pounds salt per gallon water) is used
in pace of the clear water in rreaare
ing the crock solution. trine has the
disadvantage of causing. corrosion of
ekrtain metals, such as aluminum, but:
f some makes of ma.ohines are now
furnished with non -corrodible material
1.for parts exposed to the disinfectant.
The tubes and cups should be kept
in the solution 'wheal not In ttee, care
being' taken in iminert3ine them thiat
air is expelled from the tubes so that
the solution can come contact with
the whole of the rubber. Keen the
Iemelt covered. The strength of tile
solution goestantby diminishes, eepet
cially in hot weether, theeetore, it ii
necensary to keen the sterilleing solu-
tion up to strength by the .periodic
e.c12dition of flesh. stock solution, When
no brine it used add half a cupful of
stock solutiori for eveey pail of water,
three times a week in surnmet and
once or• twiee a week in winter. When
brine is used, less stock aolution. is
neeeSSary, The crock ',elution should
ren.ewed Once a week it summer;
anti sut least eVery 3 weeks ir eiAttter:
Before the tubes 8, liotlld be
rinsed in clean water to temove the
disirtfectarst.
(b) Pleat treatment. float is one
of the best means at our diapcieal for
Gives instantatteous Rend
It liti,T4 boon a hotetiihold remedy for
• Over .80. yenta •Yois. can alwaya tely
on it in tame a need,
lif.aatraeture mike. be The T.
Afifintra CON, Limited, Totonto, Ont.,
temperature are at hand, the water
may be heated on a stove to nearly
boiling, the vessel removed, the tubes
and cups immersed and the whole al-
lowed to stand.
OBSRRVATION,
With the heat methed, there is some
danger that the rubber parts may be
injured, and lose elasticity. The rub-
ber used with some of the modern ma,
chines, however, is greatly improved,
being able to withstand heat with com-
paratively little injury, in fact, some
makers advocate treament with live
steam. Where this is possible, the
sanitary results are undoubtedly ex-
cellent, but the feasibility of employ-
ing -Kis- will be dependent upon'the
quality of rubbers o -f the machine in
question,
With the chemical method there is
the danger of being over confident as
te its disinfecting power, and allow-
ing the solution to lose strength to
such an extent that it is no longer
capable a desroying bacteria„A solu-
tion not Icept up to strength can in
time be an actual source of contamina-
tion, and in warm weather especially,
it is essential to keep it up to strength
by repeated additions of the stock
solution.
The pails, naturally should be care-.
fully cleaned and finally treated with
steam or scalding water, while the
machine tops and check valves should
be kept in proper shape.
In brief, the principle underlying
the cleaning of a milking machine in-
volvea care 365 days a year,. and a
recognition of the fact that to peoduce
good milk it must not only look clean
but be eternized to destroy germs able
to multiply unseen.
Lord Riddell
Who has offered. a prize of $5,000 to
any British -born subject, man or wo-
man, who succeeds in beating the re-
cord of Gertrude Eiderte swimming
the English chansiel.
•
Nation of Singers.
The Welsh people are said to be a
nation of siugers, and the reason is
the wonderful national Eisteddfod
which has been held annually in Wales
since 1810. The object of these great
gatherings is to perpetuate the Welsh
language, popularibe Welsh literature
and afford the people tbe cultural ad-
vantages of good inusie.
PIMPLES UNSIGHTfLY
F:X31LS PAINFUL
ROTH ARE CAUSED Die
AT !BLOOD
When pimples and boils appear on
the race and body. it seems as if the e
ekie were the seat of the trouble, but
the real wage of theso diseases lies
in the impurity of the blood, them -
fore you must ght under the side; get
at the blood aim purify it.
g s reetly to the re f the die
eaae and restotea healthy, eberiel
,
aetion to the different organs, and
cleaareee the blood �f all its inmait
itios,
Manufaetuted only by The T, Mil.
Imre Ode Limiled, Toeento, Oat.
ce
GET CONSTIPATED
There no ailment so Common. to..
day as ie constipation, and none more
dangerous to bodily. health, and one
that. is only too frequently neglected.
A. foe action of thebowels every
day is what you need to ensure bodily
health, and when the bewels are irreg.
rear you *should remedy the trouble
at once.
Keep your bowel$ regular and work-
ing properly by the use of
Milburn's
These Pills leave been on the
market for the past 32 years.
s Put up only by The T. Islilbmsn Coe
Limited. Toronto. Ont.
clam from weeds is to occupy evet7
inch with adapted crops, well planted
and carefully husbanded according to
sound principles of tileage and plant
growth, Only so can he possibly fore-
stal/ Nature's constant effort to re-
place lest vegetation -.'of forest, east
and west, and prairie in the vast in-
terior of Canada.
Mighty-seVen dialects are seeker, in
the Philippines.
To make an egg a day, weighing
1.8 ounces, it is necessary for a hen
(whighipg found pounds or.uncler) 10
consume .48 ounce of protein, .2 ounce
pure fat, and 2.3 ounces of carbo-
hydrates, or their equivalent in fat.
In extremely toad weather more carbo-
hydrates and fat are required.
wm.n mow. omen n•s•••••••••••
A VERY QUEER FIREMAN
BY DAVID KER.
There are few playgrounds as good
as an old English or Irish manor -
house. So many winding stairse_eo
many out-of-the-way o4c1 rooms, 80
many secret doors and heavy curtains
and hidden passages! The whole place
seems made on purpose for hide-and-
eilneeke.—srather too much so, indeed, at
t
I remember once hiding in one of
these old houses, and when I wanted
to come out again, DO way could I
find—nothing but galteries and stair-
cases and dusty old chambers and
moth-eaten hangings, which seemed to
go on forever, tifll got quite bewilder-
ed. And at lea', just as I thought
was getting back te the inhabited part
of the. house, out I came upon the
roof!
This was the kind of house in which
little Johnny Fitzgerald had to live;
but he thought it the' finest fun in the
world. He was never tired scearnbl-
,ing about the cared balconies and ivy -
wreathed battlements, malting voyages
of discovery among the tall oaken
presses and huge, hearse -like beds of
the upper rooms, and wandering over
the at roof with a wooden sword in his
hand, pretending to be Robinson Cru-
soe watching for the coming of the
savages, or Saint George going out
to fight the dragon.
In fact, he would have been perfect-
ly happy if he could only have had a
few other boys to play with him but
his father, Sir jatnes Fitzgerald, had
no more children of his own, and their
nearest neighbors lived too far away
to mite often. g -
But Johnny had one-Pay/nate of his
'own, Who was alWays at hand, and al-
ways ready for a game with him. A
very queer playmate he was, too, as
you would have said if you had seen '
him. His only clothing wasa scarlet!
frock, so stained and ragged that it'
might have served for a scarecrow.
He was hardly taller than a we'd -
grown boy, and alrilost as broad as he
was long, while his huge, flat head
and shaggy black hair gave him quite
a 811obgoblin look. His arms were
much longer than his legs, and the
legs themselves ended in hands instead
of feet. In a word, Johnny's -play-
fellow was nothing else than a big,,
black, African monkey!
However, Coco (so the monkey was
called), having beenabrought to Eng-
land while still quite .ababy, had long
since got rid of his family habits of
breaking everything and biting every-
-body. Indeed, 'he was quite a civilized
monkey by this time, and very peeled
of hie red frock, although he made a
and mess of it by rolling upon the
grass running about among the
b
• It was rare fun for little Johnny to
watch his nimbla companion running
up the ivied walla of the old house like
a lamplighter, or switiging himself
from bough to,bough-of the large elms
in the park, to the great annoyance of
the sober old rooks, who could not
think what strange, ill-behaved bird I
had got in among them. I
Many' a famous tido did Johnnyi
have on his frieed's broad shoulders, I
around the green lawn, or up and
down the sineoth gravel walk of the
And very ate/hi when Sir
raid same to see what
as about, be would find
fag asleep ili a corner
d romp—the monkey*8
rid the child's neck, and
ly head pi:lowed on the
hairy chest,
• Now, all this was very good sport
in its way; but sometimes the two
used to climb into such dangerous
i places that Lady Fitzgerald begau to
i get frightened. And at last, when
Coco amused himself one day by
' carrying Johnny up to the top of the
highest tree in the peek, and perching
I him on a beugh eighty feet from the
!ground, to the little fellow's immense
, delight, she grew quite angry and said
that she could not have her only son's
life risked like that and that the
mis-
ehievous monkey should be killed.
But Johnny set up such a halloo at
the idea of losing his playmate that
'his mother's heart melted, and she con-
tented herself with chaining up Coco
in the yard—which, fend as he was of
running about, was almost as great a
punishment to him, poor fellow, as if
he had been killed outright.
For the next few days after this;
johnny was as dull as a wet day in
November. His only pleasure seemed
to be going every morning to visit his
imprisoned playfellow, and carry him
biscuits And lumps of sugar; iashile
poor Coco, on his part, would make a
dismal grimacing and chattering at
the sight of him, as Much as to say,
"Do get me out of thie scrape sorne-
how." So things went for about a
week, when an eseenlroceunied which
gave everybody something else to
think about.
In the dead of night, the whole
house was staitled by the clang of the
great alarm -bell in the highest turret,
while a fierce red glare shone through
the windows of the west wing.
Then came shouts of "Fire! fire!"
trampling of feet, ringing of bells,
‘bangifig of doors'cries, sereams,-the
crash of falling timbers and rolling
stones, mingled with the long rumble
ing roar of the flames as they rose
higher and higher, lighting up the
whole country for miles /wand, and
making every tree of the park stand
out as clearly as in a photograph.
Suddenly a stream of fire shot up
in the sky, broader and brighter than
any that had gone before it. and down
came the whole side of the house, ind
one great crash, just as Sir James
Fitzgerald sprang out of it, into the I
garden'dragging one of Ins servants,
5:CD g hirith 'him.
But an this while where was Ither
Selmer? His smite was shouted again
and again, but therewas no answer.
Sir James declared that he had
found the boy's room empty when he
rushed into it, and thought that one
of' the servants must have carried him
ante.s Fit
his little son
him arid Coe(
after a g
big arre arot
the little eu
beast's black,
my STOUGE SPA
BY NELL B. N/CHOLS, -
There is scereely one of us but what ice in paper or iii blanket made it lead
atorage spe
it. About the only eonsolation I know elho kept the refrigerator from being
coul4 use newe, ese if we had !longer, This was very teues but it
for home -makers who have crowded 'as cool as itt deeireble. It was net
tChueprviti
beaclrae sammair,e7efadvgdat° boopt
ero
atce ralo kthat an ecoeomy in the end.
dean than there would be with mere this: Cold air is hosteler than wamu
reeM. This philcieophy is net satiss sir. Therefore the ell' next to tha ice
factory in a..4 ways. At least it did) becerhes eo heavy that it faille down
not help reel half ee much as did a "into the refrigerator around the food,
checking -up of my etorege facilities ; crowding out the warm air, which
in an effort to improve them and to ;rises and passes into the ice compart-
discover an easier way of keeping inent. It is this continual circulation
them clean. exrtivairratothratwoiheOPsIftthehe ficeoodisilwri tah;pedee:
I succeeded, not by any sleight -d-
m) exue togoeitigatsaotheyshmeliggesht aboae. Phe
eti any
ytie prevents the ice f men melting
tlharihnaa::innr,gdeofirsePgu:atitrriraneffe:tiabyt'y:1°:::tostbtbiyecuPplaborti.ad: :etehe,e.leVneerniteedair, cTareothrttattbiortit oef4st70
e of pantries. There is no -I• more rapidly than is essential.
sn:hvesg,reater then the hethe ef the pi:nhes,,s caldest part of any refrigier-
jars and utensils te be pineeddienstantheee • ator is the bottom shelf; the warmest
redly on tile ice is not satisfactory,
the top one. Storing food di -
After thinking about this, I found !I -find, bemuse it is net as cold :there
' as on the bottom shelf, and the odors
sapawceayustoefumaake some of this waste; of the feed are carried by the warm
mane to phlog aI f:t"enelarmroyw. 7eZet3:1athiriceiniet, tthile's dicreainehpaimpebear It; there °aril:
I find it
cups, snzlitelpeieste.herTs,herayhold aspites, 1 undesirable odors. When my refrig-
foods there, they absorb some of the
the wide
about ,six inches wide, under some of
pantry congestiora
Then there t.gihint4 rietrri alt4esiclarvIa8-1EuwasaeciteditohleessOi, cIet. hpiltilleeP athr et in; in
atightly stoppered bottles or ,covered
utensils.
glasses, and more small& articall:;
/ knew a household contained,
greatly relieved the clipboard and f
foods. I, confess that I hed not girien
a,:t-ojth_e, 1 cream'on the lowest shelf because they
dishes used for s holdingthe
I keep the meats, milk,•butter, and
Itiliseinngltatreirngm_usiedehdthbootivrgr a. sIfrhe,i reserved (7.1,
low temper- •
A well-filled ice chamber not only dition throughout the refrigerator.
duebenleel; I' aatrnereb.estThife stobepre,saheaat 18 reserved
as the straight -sided utedsils are used. ;tieing odors, so these will paes out
cheese, bananas, and other foods with
without being absorbed by everything
on the shelves. e
Oaring for the refrigerator in the frigerator, I am able to keep it dry'. I
13y using care in cleaning my re-
Oaring
is not difficult, but 1 haee wipe up any railk, water or food spill- ,
found that the amount of ice used and ed, in. it as soon as it is noticed, no
the method of cleaning the litble cold- matter if it is only a drop or two. ,
storage plant greatly influence
efficiency: its This makee for dryness and clean -
Foods spoil when bacteria develop in An occasional washing is necessary.
liness.
them, and these minute , organisms I use coOl. water in which a little bak-
grow rapidly in a moist, warm, and ing soda is dissolved. As soon as a
dark place. The refrigerator is quite shelf oe well is waehed, 1 wipe it dry
dark; sometimes 11 18 moist, and if -it •with a eat cloth. The use of hot
is not kept well filled with ice it is water clauses ite steam to condense
n.oeas cool as it should be, on the walls. This makes a moist con -
keeps the food better but is also econ- I have covered the cupboard, fruit
omical of ice. If the supply is allow- closet, and pantry shelves either with
ed to get low, therefrigerator becomes oilcloth or a couple of coats of gray
warmer than it should be, and when paint. Both of these surfaces repel
new los is added it melts very quickly. dirt rather than absorb it, and they
I used to think that wrapPing the may be cleaned quickly.
'
,
The principle of the refrigerater is
This one little discovery makes my
refrigerator more valuable.
S3„ LESSON
September 12—Gifts for the Taber-
nacle,. Exodus 33: 4 to 36; 7. Golden
Text--Honorthe Lord with thy sub -
'stance, and with the first -fruits ..cf
ail thine increase..7:Prov. 3: 9..
ANALYSIS.
I. THA INVITATION TO GIVE, 35:4-9.
II. eme CALL FOR Mem) Wonieviert,
35:10-19. ,
III. THi BRINGING OP THE GIFTS, 35:
20-29; 36: 5-7.
IV. THE CALL OF WISE AND CAPABLE
, LEADERS,, 85:30 to 36:4.
INTRODtTCTION--Chapters 35 to 40
are closely parallel to ehaps. 25 to 31.
They tell how the instructions given'
in detail were carried out in detail.
There a -re rninor differences, but the
substance is the seine in both, These
chapters abeund in :such descriptive
details' as the priests loved, antl it Is
not without 'reason that they are be-
lies:Teel to be drawn from a, history
written and preserved by the priests
of a later age.
1. THE INVITATION TO GIVE 85:4-9
Whosoever is, AI a, willing heart.
This the Lord's eommand, but the
gifts are to be offered freely. The un-
There is an invitation to give slcilled
labor for the making of the. tent, its
ornaments, and its furnishings, and
• the garments of the priests. Such a
gift is not less precious in the sight
of God than -the gift of material
thinge be they ever soyaluable. (Com-
pare ch. 31:141.)
III. TII2E0-2339178G6IN:504.0F THE GIFTS, 35
• They came, every one whose heart
stirred him up. They came of all
csassese rich and poor, high and low,
giving freely and gladay of what they
had, both of their treasured posses-
sions and of their labor, as :many as
were willing hearted. It is "an ideal
picture of a community ready and
eager to contribute liberally to the
ianctuary and service of its God." The
Revised Version renders in verse 22:
• "brooches, and earring:s, and signet -
rings, and armlets, all jewels of gold."
The words "wise hearted" and "wit-
dom" are used here of technical
of handicraft, and this is declared
the passages that follew to be the gta...
of the spirit of God.
The people brought enough and
snore than enough for the service of
the work. They had to be restrained
from bringing.
IV. THE CALL OF WISE AND CAPABLE
LEADPAS, 35:30 to 36:4.
The Lord hath called by mama. The
wheng are not asked to give. (Corn- reegioneof the 01rd Testament asecog-
pare ch. "25 The gbld was "for nized the call of_God teethe eki:led
those vessels and parts a the sanc- workman as wen as to the prophet,
tuary which were nearest to Jehovah, to the craftsman. as well as to the
the silver and the copper (brass) for, king. Ought we not to do the same
those which were farther off and less to -day? The gifts of the Spirit of God
important." The cokes named were are Mazy and widely different. They
obtained the purple in various tones, f are bestowed upon the leader of a
from violet to purple -red, frons a sheath migrating tribe, upon the shrewd and,
fish' found on rocks in the Mediterran- far-seeing statesman, upon the judge,
ean Sea, and the scarlet from the the, Tawinver, the soldier, the farmer,
cochineal insect, whirl is shaped and . the teacher, the poet, and the seer.
colored like a berry and Is found on Here Goal's spirit endows the workmen
the leaves and twigs of a Syrian tree, with wisdom in all manner of work -
the, holni,oak. The beal,gers Opus, are incinfdlip.
called in -the. Revesect Version "seal- e 1Vioffatt translates h., 35, "Ability
skins." They weie, probably, skins train others, endowing the-na wit: ski
of the dugong, or sea -cow, an-animai in every skillful craft in engraving
In general appearance- not unlike a in decorating, in handlieg violet,
dolphin," common in the Red Sea. purple, and scarlet yarn, hi working.
Another view is that the word used with fine linen in weatisfg and in
nere 75 eirmey the Egyptian word for sorts of trades end -arts." ,
• er. The aeacia or hh'it
leath
, a ten wo d,
limb, t-
eeny tree, tome teen to twerst3h we eink 'them te, the work of Hint
Our of hand, and .strength of
is cermet in the penanstga Seriaig •
"It is," Driver says, "a gnar.ed and Ave net eue ownbut Thine
five feet in htigh , and its wood is
t ' • Who made an life divine.
hard, close -grained, and derable, . . .
away. • I The ozi for the light is descrtood m
• With willing people and wise lead -
•e e for the ers, the sanctuary is built, strong', en-
.
But hone of them knew anyth• ing, ?ihtgg2:7,,'24) as pure ois a en or hbye
about hies, and poor Lady Fitzgerald! ' Thie oil was obtaine.d
. duhipg and beautiful. It is not stir -
was beginning to cry' bitterly, when, tug end aeberweed straining tggang presseg, therefore, to read that when ,
gently poanding the olives in a mor-
al] at once, they heard a queer shatter- through a wicker basket. 'The spices t,p1•14.ett.,w, oi,,r,k... was 4fine.1.2sahencs1 the glary of
ing hi the tree overhead—poor feltota ' for anolding oil ere named it ch, 30P: tb"."-ii.-"r'd—fi'llie-d. t-112"-"--n-rt:terliP'4 osr th'e
—and with his thick, black hair. ahnoet 22.25 and their -nee is described in the
singed off him, but with Jamey, un-
hu
mrrth, When
htihseerfinrees; broko
out, he had
managed to get Loose from his chain --
which had been carelessly fastened --
and flying to his little master's tomil,
had carried him of in safety.
After that, as you May be eure, Coco
had it all his oven Way in the castle ae
long as he lived.
And, years later, when little Johnny
had become Sir John Fitzgerald; ho
used to; show his.guests a stuffed mon.
key, in the corner of his dining -hail,
and teli them how welt poor Coco had
once played the fireman,
verses followpg. , The ,sphod tvas;
kind •c):. waisteent, consisting 'of an
'oblong piece of riclily variegated' rna-
' bound round the body under the
aririSi and read -Ling down as far, ap-
rattly, as the waist." 11 was worn
probably, a$ eseribed by Drive.r, .‘`e.• k Song of Degrees.
xt tsvelve he sang of God abfrist
At seventeen of death and love;
At tsventy-two of seagulls' wings;
But totrhe ehymes of little thinge.
• —Pr er c lc is: amp.
et. gee
It W
ODid 170 better if more broorni
wore worn out in the poultry house.
"Why won't you go to the corn field
this morning, Boblaier "1 wou:dn't
go out there for anything, Didn'i;
Thiele Tom say at, breakfast that the
corn bad begun to shoot?"
y the priest "over a long blue robe
(set ch. 28:31-35). The word breast
p/cao should rather be tendered
"pouch." It 'Was a pouch or small hag
worn lov the ptieet and containing tha.
ealarred lots, the Villa and Thuminim,
teedn certain eates for ascertaining
the divine will (eh, 28:80).
XI. Tile aka Pee estinete WOMagfelet
35:10-19.
EIHAry 4.020d hearievi
a neang