Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1907-05-30, Page 31 NOTES AND COMMENTs IT IS WICKED NOT TO THINK THE SUNDAY SCHOOL The toe things which have afflicted Spout more than any other have been the bull fight and the lottery. The bull light is a demoralizing and disgusting t-peetae•IP, unworthy of any civilized na- tti( n. When people from other countries %setae* it they go away with feelings of unmixed contempt for the 'Wien that tolerates it. The poor hull, after he has been worried almost to death by pica- dors and bnnderlltero., and is scarcely able to stand on his feet from fatigue, is dispatches! by the matador, who, if he Thr acts on a great occasion at the capital. is thereupon hailed by the populace as one of the greatest heroes in Spain. Tho p..or old bull and the wretched horses_ which have been disembowelled at an earlier stage are dragged from the arena and another fight begins. The people of Spain are able not merely to stomach this sort of thing but to enjoy it. The bull fight is the great national pastime. Fortunately there is no other nation so degenerate as to tolerate such "sport." The next worst thing in Spain is the lottery. While the principal prize, amounting perhaps to half a million dollars, can be drawn only on a full ticket, the price of which Is about 8200, there are infinitely small divisions of the tickets, so that the meanest beggar who walks the streets may have a chance in the lottery for 10 cents or even loss. Next to the bull fight the lottery is the chief national diversion of Spain. The shops where tickets aro exposed for sale are always crowded, usually . by people of the poorer class. Many a peseta that should find Its way Into the market place goes into the capacious pockets of the dealer in lottery tickets. The whole nation is impoverished by the lottery and it ill becomes the king to offer an additional 8100,000 in prizes, or to give "a gala bull fight" on Sunday to celebrate the birth of his heir. If the prince recently born lives to manhood and succeeds his father and in the course of lime is carried to his last resting place in the Escorial, he will have been more fortunate than any of his predecessors it it can be recorded of him that he hus had either a happy or prosperous reign or that he has n►nde any substantial contribution to the wel- fare of his people. We may be drinking less alcohol of yore, but we are using more. increas- ing attention has lately been given the possibilities of obtaining power horn al- cohol by means of the internal combus- tion engine. From tunny points of view tho advantages of alcohol over pelro- Mum spirit, which hitherto has been in chief demand, are clear and pronounced. Of course, foremost among these is its comparative freedom from combustible vapors at ordinary temperatures and its great cleanliness. Moreover, it does not to the same extent as petmieum attack and impoverish rubber and metal ves- sels. its relatively high price is proba- bly one of the main obstacles to Its wetter use, but fl has often been shown that in point of price it ought to be able to compete on Invertible terms with pelrnleurn spirit. Alcohol can be made cheaply from residual mn)n.s_ses and cane crushing products. and three gallons of refuse molasses will yield a gallon of alcohol. Some time ago there was a dis- cussion of a projected manufacture of Morel l from sawdust. There are also ninny vegetable and plant productions, now of little or no value, which yield sugar or starch and Ihnt could. no doubt, be• utilized for snaking WOK)). in lonk. Ing to agriculture for future sources of pewee it is to be retnensl•erd Unit the soil would be constantly In n p1(igition to itmvide fresh stores of raw materiel, the oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon of lite alcohol being mainly derived from the dlmosphere, while the a•he.' and mineral products would return to fertilize the ground. than --'t - CATS kIL1.I\G t ui;. Pnrtridnes and rein i►rer 1►e•slroye1 by Them hi Canadian Cores's, rat,. aro` el ''11 grunt 111111111W in the rnnndinn 5 ..,i- and the mmpininfs 0n the subject which re/whet! Quebec' settle time ago from the (oriels of Maine are new being repeated from every- pert of 1.1* the rounder!' forests adjnrent to the bor- dering State's. Partridges are Icing completely le. de- alroyedl by' these snt•nee !west% in ss,rne purls of the country. the cats 1"euneing upon therm on the grow in winter ami algin .devouring 111(111 Wille the Leal. nee 8llling on their nests in the spring. \nt only do 1110) rlestioy t'ird• of n11 kinds. bill they nre nrtnnily telling deer. especially in the forests of Nott' Ibruns• wirk enol Quel ee-. The rata grow to nn enormous size end nn' fn►niliarly kne r1 herr ns 111, Canadian lynx, wikirnt will kill a faun al nae lees. end where other fnwns or mune; art plentiful they wilt kill ninny more limn they ran possibly consume. There fisc 1'•'en an enormous increase in 1110 nnni- M'r of thein' animals of late ieseh,;se their fur is of ai little %nate that very few hunters nIt.m)sl to lake them. 1t is thnughl Ih:11 the (' V''r 11111. III. 11 it q•j!..11(ts to per, rte the lid deer (11141 1110 ppaHrdge. e.,lt have to oiler a bounty tvf the killing of iyr,t. \ Thought and Reason Are Needed Parts of Religion Come, now, Ict us reason together, suith the Lord.-lsaiuli i., 18. The greaitst of the Ilebrew prophets puts these words into the mouth of (id. 'l'lte Almighty is represented as bewailing the luc.t that men du not think enough of their religion. "Israel doth nol know my people doth not consider," sn rims the divine arraign- ment. According to Isaiah, God wishes men to think, and Ile wishes them to think with Ifini. The weakness of re- ligious people in all generations has been that they have not thought enough. It is wicked not to think. A man gives up his manhood who does •rot think. We are unworthy of the Chris- tian name if els are too timid to scru- tinize and investigate and reason about every doctrine which the religion d f Jesus teaches. Suppose that thinking does lead you into doubt. Doubt is oftentimes medi- cinal. 'There is more faith In honest doubt than in a creed about which you ere afraid to think. Doubt is an experi- ence which belongs to a growing life. A man must fight his way through dcubt to the clear and sunlit spaces which lie beyond, Ile can do this only by HARD AND HONEST TIIINKiNG. "Come, let us reason together, isaith the Lord." This has been the exhorts• tion of the Almighty from the begin- ning. In the fullness of time Jesus crime and in Jesus we heard God say- ing: "Come, now, let us reason to- gether." Jesus was always reasoning. !t has been said that Ile never argued and Utat is true If we mown fie never argued in the form of occidental syllogisms. But in the deepest sense He was re - ways arguing. Ilis whole speech was a reasoned argument. His question; are mightier than syllogisms and help the mind to reason. "1s not a man bel- ief' than a isheep?" "What think ye? If a ►null have a hundred sheep and one of them be gone astray, doth tie not leave the ninety and nine and gootll into the mountains and seeketh that .which is gone astray?" The priest, the Levite. the Suivaritnn: "Which now of these Three 4hiukesl thou was neighbor unto hini that telt among the thieves?" "When the lone of the vineyard com- eth what will he do unto those husband - men?'' "11 ye. being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give the holy spirit to them that ask 1lim??" THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION is God's voice saying: "Conte, now, let u, reason together." Many a num is not a Christian be- cause lie is not willing to reason the matter out with God and Christ. 1f our convictions are becoming flabby, it is because we do not think. if the old distinctions between right and wrong are fading out, it is because we have erased to reason with God. if the serse of sin is 4o -clay disappearing from the hearts of men, it is because they are too busy to sit down and n►editate with God. I have heard men bewail the fact that they had no time to get acquainted with their wives and children. This, indeed, is Tragic, and it is also tragic lo have no liine to got acquainted with one's self. \Ve never knew ourselves until we think about our life with God. Let us. then. spend more time in reasoning with ilini. Let us pick up the things which we have lost. Let us sit down and think about that man which we fully intended to be and which, alas, ire have not yet become. ************ HOME * t***********# SOME n:\rv•1'1' nfsHF:s. Children's Pudding. -Mix six ounces cf flour, two ounces of treacle, four ounces of suet, and four ounces of sul- tanas. Flavor all with ground ginger; snake into a light dough with ono egg beaten up in a little milk. Tie loosely in n cloth and boil for Three hours at a gallop. Cheese Toast. -Grate three ounces of any good cheese and the same qunntily of stale breadcrumbs ; beat the yolks of les) eggs. and mix all in n mortar with two ounces of bulk'r, some nlnde mita- turd, pepper and salt. Bruise this to a soft paste, and spread on small squares of toast. Brown before the fire, and serve very hot. Fruit Sago Mould.• -Souk four ounces of sago in cold water (after washing it thoroughly) all night. Next day boil one pound of raspberry or any other red jnnl in a pint of water. pass 11 through a sieve, and add the strained sago. Stir all, over the fire, Minn enamelled sauce- pan, till the sago is dissolved. and Pour into a wet mould. Serve cold with cus- tard. Turnip Pie. -Cul olxeit n pound of lean mutton in neat slices and place in a pie -dish. Sensor. with pepper, salt, a (10511 of curry powder, or. if preferred, n tablespoonful of mushroom ketchup. :SAW enough thickened gravy to cover the meal. 1luve some turnips reedy conked, drain Them very dry and mash with a 11111e butler. Cover the neat with a good layer of turnips, brush over with run butter or beef dripping. and hake in r► moderate oven to n nice brown. Isla Paulding. -Mix a tablespoonful of sugar with a quarter of a pound o: hiendcr•(nnbs, rind pour over them a ten - cupful of (roiling milk. Bent up two eggs, squeeze the juice of a lemon into than. end add the peel genteel, then stir (hese Into the milk and breadcrunlhs. and add nn ounce rind n half of huller and n little grated nutmeg. Beat the in- gredients well together. Butter a mould, pour in the welding. cover with a cloth, and Loll for an hour. Sever) Pork. -Cul some cold tenet pork into small slices, dust over with flour, seneon will' pepper and salt, and heal In a sauce made as follows : Sim- mer in n saucepan leo tablespoonfuls of minced onion. a gill of vinegar, is o cloves, a blade of mace, and n bay leaf. Remove the seasonings when the vine -- gni' is 0140111 half evaporated, and add n pint of trot Lr0111 or water. Place the perk in this. simmer h r Mend ten min- utes. when 11 will be ready for serving. Baked Means. --Take one pound of hie -tete Leans. pick thea; over and soak for tw cnty-font• heirs in cold water. Next dny set in a stewpnn with cold water and n bit of butler or salt pork. \\'(rile on Ihe lire nrkl cold water 10 se,flen and prevent their boiling tan fast. When ne:lrly isielo:I, drain dry and set in a rotered pie -deli with some highly Ilatr,n'(1 palate. pepper er ane) salt. 1'II) the ester on the dish and let 111e Contents Hike for halt an hour. S. eve in the s•,nre dish. and lintel some testiest chee'so repo raid). 'a,ssnge' in Potato 4 n-es.-(tnkn. as !early largo potalcese, and one er two .,'• is as yuan have snusag.'s. Stew 1!ie r-,g.' u,eanwhile in graty fir a few \Vhen the polabies are cne,14.e1 . 1, ;1 piece off the top and se(w)1) Ctrl t11r 1114144' without hreeeing the i•kin. 11:hsh the rotate with tetter. chipped enreie. pepper er and salt. rul,Ling it Ihn•ii !t te,arse 5510 51050 1(4 4'nsurr IIS le••:I11,; e, the po�ie+ line. Put 11 thin c •.a:ng of potato ins,d•' seems di'elosee th.• skins. place 11 sausage in mill nn.l V. pulr'). with frozen lift up edit mashes! potato. Replace in -.._._ th. oven for nl•ote twenty tontines. rind The Tr•ae 1fe,u of the 11'. •5inet (inspire serve very 1",t. have demnnde.l the theism:Mien% of all (:thicken Motile. -Boil a Targe chicken It►e Jews In the eoiintry. until all the bones can bo easily re• inoved. Separate the dark meat from (tie light, and chop each separately, but not too fine. Season each part with salt, pepper, sage and chopped celery; add some browning to the liquor that the chicken was boiled in; beat one egg well, and add one-half of it to the dark and the rest to the light meat; mix it in thoroughly, Then arrange in a mould first a layer of the dark meat and Then a layer of ttie light, and so on unlit it is all used up. four the liquor over the whole, cover with a plate and weight, and put away to become very cold. Serve cut in slices, garnished with cel- ery tops and slices of lemon. HINTS F'OR THE IIOME. Waterproof for boots is made by mix- ing a little suet with beeswax. Rub Ibis over the soles of the boots and lightly over the edges where the stitches are. To Mend Broken (:hind, -'Enke half - ounce of glen arabic and dissolve it in a wineglassful of boiling water. \\'lien quite dissolved add sufficient plaster of Paris to form a thick paste. Apply this to the edges of the china with a brush and press together. For insomnia try drinking a glass of hot milk after gelling into bed. Sip this very slowly and as trot as passible. (lot milk has tt very soothing effete on the nerves and lends to induce Sleep. An excellent grenee eradicator for fatnily use is made thus :-Boil ono ounce of soap cut small In one quart 'd soft water, add a teaspoonful of salt. pelre and one ounce and a half of (1111- monia. Keep this fluid in a tightly corked bottle. For a Good Toilet \\'nter and Done - trice, --Taken quart bottle and put into it Thirty grains of ltiymol, one hundred and hilly of carbolic acid, Iwo ounces of glycerine, and :w•enly ounces of alcohol. Fill up the bottle with hotted water. Shako it before use and add five or six (hops to a glass; of water. String and 'Tw'ine.-When parcels are unpacked pick out the knots in wheel Ihe raring is lied, twist the string round the lingers and fasten 11, put nsieie in fi. lax ur some place specially kept for lite purpnw: there well then be a supply of different strengths of (vine and string for any p creels or for (household pur- pxlso:. 'i'o clean your sewing machine lake out Ihe screw that helms the footplate. rewire it. and you will find there Ls a lot of ilnfl accumulated there. Take nal the needle before you begin In clean the machine; then with n penknife clean the little grooves and under the whole of the plate. After this cleaning you wilt find the machine will run quite smoothly. FOn tutu) OWN(•:IIS. If you wish 1•' k,.pe your pet bird in grind health nn41 -' ng the following ad- vice will he well Berth remembering : levet leave a bird in ar room which is tieing 5we'pl ; dust injury; the voice. Dent hung the hind in a window. Don't hung the herd in the sunshine except after the !Alb. and only long enough to dry his plunlnp4', Don't hong n bird where them are drnughts. or in kitchen where !Lie Ls steam( nr dnnlp nir. Don't give it figs. sugar nr sit•• !,. hu'n't a11ow• Ile hir,1 to fly ne rut the rs.Inn if )011 went itis beet songs. Don't fail to Change the wnler in the cup leen which n bird drinks every day. 'PItINi; PO(•:\f. II:,w• th , Ire, i. . 11..ng`1 Pr Ir • .cs • (;.fie us rv'l& nri•I !b'I1e s n••ezes, rine• s. INTERNATIONAL tIJESSON, JUNE t. essirsee ^- es Lesson IX. Moses tatted to Deliver Israel. Golden Text: Exod. 3. 12. THE LESSON eVORD S't'unt:;. Rased on the text of the Revised Ver- sion. The Angel of Jehovah.—The angel of Jehovah, mentioned in various narra- tives of the earlier portions of the OM Testament, is to be regarded as a thee - phony, or self -manifestation of God. To Moses at Sinai the manifestation was given in a flame of lire. In Gen. 18 Je- hovah appears to Abrahnr►>< `n human form, and in Gen. 31. 11-13, RL "angel of God' appeals to Jacob in u dream. in every instance God communes with the person to whom the manifestation Is given. Everywhere also lite angel iden- tifies himself with God and claims to exercise the power and the prerogatives of God. 'Those also to whom the angel appeared identify him wiln Jehovah (compare Gen. 16. 13; Judg. 13. 22 Gen. 48, 15, 161. It is to be noted also that the Angel of Jehovah reveals him- self chiefly in what may be called the rdetnplive history of the Old Testament, for which reason the older theologians regarded this manifestation us a pre- monition or antitype of the incarnation of the second Person of the Trinity. llut it can hardly be said that the Old 'testament writers themselves under- stood these manifestations which they recorded in any sense which involved such distinctions in the Godhead. Tho only clear distinction brought out by these writers is nue between Jehovah and Jehovah' in manifestation. The An- gel of Je)rovalt so fully represented and expressed Jehovah himself that both those to whorn he appeared and the his- torical writers who recorded these mani- festations had the assurance that when lie appeared or spoke among mien it was Jehovah himself who was present and speaking. Verse 1. Moses was keeling the flock -Tho habitual occupation of Moses in Midian. 'the flocks referred to consisted, in all probability, of sheep and goats. Jethro, his father -Called also Reuel (Feed. 2. 18). The priest of Midian-The \lidianites were kindred people to the Hebrews, and sworshipers therefore doubtless also of Jehovah, though from their situation and relations to other surrounding peoples it is probable that their Jehovah- wonship was early corrupted and at last superseded almost entirely by idolatry. To the back of the wilderness -Beyond the desert wastes on the foothill slopes the bottom, thou ,h they of the mountains. In connection with this the some mag -g J have nothing The mountain of God ...Horeb -Tic azine has the following interesting para- radically new In their lines. This taro names "sinal" and "floret)" are used graph: may be obtained by overlapping small ch - practically Interchangeably in the Old The librnry at Buckingham Pi11t„''' renal foundation, orset on a itisdproduced und i by Testament. As in our present passage, c;,nloins all the reports, bawd in t'. ' t, idrning flounces sot upon the skirl by so in 1 Kings 19, 8, the mime "Horeb"Iltnes. which Queen Victoria rec• a' ,, PanS of Insertion so the effect is that is used following the designation "the from the leaders of the (louse of 1, a one- piece skirt with the trimmin mountain of Gori." In this and subse- mens during her reign. The writers . t P g quant ie, -ons we shall aesumo 111111 Mount eina1 Is somewhere near the southern point of the peninsula between the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aknbah, itrmdolph Churchill' \\', tl. Smith' Sir Thr ,nof n skirt Thal can only t,o William Hare/erre and Arthur Balfour. nrhi4'veiuIl41 01 by fioutiir►gs. either wide or What interesting reacting they must narrow. Princess and empire lines are make. these descriptions of many rnan- muchsM n o1 while frocks, hut they are orahle eights in the (louse fit Comnrons scarrety feasible for the home dress- N i' tit /sired .tti states and countne` with 5%111, h n,• 111.0[arnrlinr. In IIS most pros presets time the United Kingdom ett- hra..•d an urea of from 1111) to sixty thousand sgh,are mikes. or almost the size of the state of New Hampshire. Canaanite. Hittite, Anuurtle, Perizzite, three. and Jebusite-Thr inhabitants o1 Palestine. Ostially, as in Gen. 15, ten peoples, or nations, are enumerated, of which only five are here given. The Hi - vacs are not mentioned in the other lists. 11. Who ani 1 -Once Moises had been a prince in Egypt. Now for forty years tic had l ct'n a lonely shepherd of lite wilderness. That 1 should go unto Pharaoh --The years of desert seclusion had wrought i•n Mases a rudical change of character, and had brought with them the spirit of true humility, quite different from the impulsiveness and ardor which he had exhibited in earlier )tars. 13. What is thy name ?-The Egyp- tians used the word "God" generically, mune a special rne for each particu- lar deity, such os Ammon, Ito, Mentu, 0si is. With this fact Moses was cer- tainly acquainted, and he seems to an- licipato that when he brings to the He- brews a message from the God of their fathers they may conclude that he too had a proper name. and may wish to know what that name is. 14. i urn that I am-M(u•gin, "I am be- cause 1 am," or "1 am who am," or "1 will be that. I will be." The idea ex- pressed by all these renderings of the Ilebrew original is that of perfect; un- conditioned, independent, existence. F WHERE THE KING CANNOT GO. Admission to the (louse of C-ommons is Denied to the Sovereign. The King of England labors under one curious disability. He may not listen to a debate in the House of Com- mons. Admission to the legislulive chamber, which is open to his lowliest subject, is denied to the sovereign, says 1140 Strand Magazine. The King is the head of parliament. According to the theory of the constitution His Majesty summons parliament to meet in order that it might advise hirn in tile govern- ment of the realm. Indeed, tie is sup- posed theoretically, to preside over its deliberations. Yet it has come to pass that the actual presence of the Sovere- ign in parliament, except on ceremonial occasions, would now be regarded as un- constitutional. He only attends in the House of Lords to open parliament, ,to give the Royal assent to bills which hsve passed both (louses, or to proro- gue parliament at the end of the session. floes it not seem an extraordinary thing le say that Queen Victoria, during the course of her long reign of sixty-three years, was never 111 the House of Com- mons? Not once was it given to her to see "her faithful Commons" at work. 1 Fashion Hints. Plt1•; I'll Tun DREISLS. In planning the summer wardrobe, whatever else must be omitted, the sheer white gown should hold an tin - pe taut place. Nothing is cooler look- ing or more generally becoming to old and young alike, while from point et service a while gown will outwear twoor three colored cotton or linen frocks. Net long ago some one admired a white lawn gown worn by a young wo- man who had the reputation of always being well dressed. "This is its tousle summer," was the laughing reply, "and 1 really think myself it looks quite re- spectable, though I couldn't count the tunes it has seen the wash tub." That Is the :secret of the really useful white frock. It must be made with re- ference to laundering, Though some wo- men len wear summer gowns (so-called) that can only be cleaned by professional methods, and are as elaborate and com- plicated as a hall dress. they prove ut- terly unpractical for the average wo- man. A while dress. 10 meet the require- ments of laundering well and easily, de- mands fairly close retention to materiel, cut and trimming. Though most eines c(,Iton fabrics stand careful washing, some look much better afterward then dc others. This is true both of expen- sive and cheap materials, While hand- kerchief linen and sheer batiste may to bought for almost the same price. the former never pulls or gets sleazy, as dGes even the best quality of batiste. Organdie also rarely looks well after a tubbing. while Paris muslin, which is almost as sheer, may be laundered again and again. Certain inexpensive lawns get thick and coarse looking af- ter the first time water touches then(, while dignities keep fresh and sheer lilt the last threads go. Dotted swisses as a rule launder well unless such an in- ferior quality is bought that lite dote p1111 out. The woman who makes her own clothes has long ago discovered that she can fashion almost every variety ct white gown over one simple, well - cut shirtwaist patters. Even the omni- present long -shouldered effect can be obtained by skillful manipulation. The skill Is generally more satisfactory when eel over a five or seven gored pattern. es the circular one is bound to sag. It :s well, each season to buy n new end stylish pattern, as skirt. lines change f cquenlly, The skirls this year flare decidedly at the reports were great parliamentarians inserted. Fmrn Paris comes word that end statesmen -Lord John Russell, Sir the new sunan1'r greens are marked by Robert Peel. laird Pntiaerston, Disraeli. the absence of alt ruffles. but over hero Si, e1 tflonl Norlheobe. Glndslnne. lined we cling to the fluffy. billowy look at and not far from the northern end of the Red Sea itself. it has been suggested by some modern scholar's Iliathe mountain, the exact location of whichi has never been determined, should rather be located farther to the north- troni Ihe pens of the leaders of the as* ranker, as Ihe► require caro ul ting. east in the hill country of Seir, north of, senility! The writers would naturally ��ell oser,ny of the skirts ey do nol are are cutish chigh the Gulf of Akabah. The burden o[ itY aim at making their reports bright and al Ihe bark to give empire effect, never lies with those who descriptive. and conveying to Iter Ma- proor,not jest} Incidents which she would look question the traditional site which still fir in vain In the newspapers. At any hes the support of a majority of the best Old Tesl0me•ll sehnlnrs. rale. the few glimpses we have been girdle. Y. The bush -One of the shrubs on the g:s•en of the contents of these volumes g„ . show Ihnl Lord Palmerston and Mr. Trimmings must be ennsidered in the mflurnens)de, nlsrneti, al tens(, sent pictorial sketches gown Ihnl is In minder well. Forte - Disraeli. with (ire-Ilnd the appearance' of scenes In the House, nately, the extensive tree of cluny inser- of bein+l; on fire, the divine revelation lion, even on the sheerest lingerie Int). airs. simplifies !lie washing problem. 'I'he narrow- real dime beadings are in great demand In outline seems; so are the tiny ernrhele.I insertions. The new Swiss and batiste embmider- les and conlbtnntein lire and embml. dery fnuneings -are very lovely. but somewhat perishable. The Irish and filet lace re/nein:diens wear end wash better then liver which !ewe heavy embroidery designs fitted In wllh va- lenri4'nncs tare, and the whole d•.ne up- set the finest lingerie mntertnts. !lend embroidery, which is more used then elver. has the merit ',1 Inundrrtng perfectly if pressed on the w•n.nu side 91141 several tiirkn4'sces of blanket, In the easily copied metiers sent as from i'tlris for to -(lav, Jeanette !lope slr.w's the unruffled Frcneh skirt. 'fie n nrkcel flare el the belloin is. evident, °'':. 1114' sweep. The revival of the sash, rithi r lir flowered or broad soft kiwis• Inc ribbons. is likewise noted. The eni1roid• ry and lace are all •et Ill. and the rtnut.'rial is rut awny from The place . . . Is holy ground-Sacn'ei Il uted of a porlrait painter 11101. underneath. Joined lends of lace In- -hallowed by the manifest presence of say •ng r.•rently [minted the portrait of redeem around the arnih•.les give the God. Compare the similsr ct iii nand a lady. a critic, who had just dropped Inevitable king br':ping shoulder effect, given 1n J(.shua : "Pal off thy 5)104' from in to see tkhnt was going en 10 the y,•t are east• te launder. oft the fool; for the place whereon thou studio exetnime(t:- A striking morel of floe while hand- slandest Is holy" Uosh, 5. 15). "It Is very nicely painted; hut why do kerchief linen, trimmed with wide bands 1). I•'nlher--Ancestor. yr.n take such en ugly model?." '1'111' God of Ahrahatn . . . Isnar, end "11 is any mother!' cahnly replied the . . . Jacob -Who had revealed himself artist, esp erinll• to these chosen men. Jesus "Oh. pardon, a Ih m and times!" in on argument with the Pharisees rotefrom the rrilie, in great contusion, "p row c of hemstitching. The skirl may rerning the resurrection of the dead. r,r ought to have perceived if. She re- fx made in rnunel length, though in rather the immortality of the stunt, sr•mbles 3011 completely!" Paris mind of the skirls are long. quote, the. t et•se Lc imp. Mall. Zit. 321. ' On n strnilar nceosien a hierli ns Sheer white t.attste, trimmed in t;n• Iliel ! - -Ali Instinctive action in. trend. Inspecting a pr.rtrail, said to rhe letielennes in'ertion one and 41 halt ineh. (beats..: n, t. tense. So Elijah on the artist:- es wide. f.rrns the next gown. The sane. 1 lihrgs 19. 13) and the angels "Anel Ills Is Teen, Evens, is il" near. tllrend Tucks en the blouse nre run by Risme I •'I .rr the throne 11+n. 6. 2.). deer! And 1 remember hint. Steel n t end. while 111,' simple motifs of 1!nnel 7. 1 -4(4.115 •ern . . . heard . , hteulsom4', j'•)l••i.4 king chap a month enihrr,idery nn Ilse waist rind sI eves n.ew \!, r: 1 •,n ,1 ai•''„opo• ag'. Hear. dear!” Circ' n guile 'nen Inu(11. The 1.445(! ,.rpt 1 111/I' -' Ih;e + _ Lett sleeves nre very eneily copied. The t., h,1_ .1'0111- F e,..1, •,111. 1l1 r1Pf'ftltTt'\lTtE' . which is certainty ntlrertive on slender figures. This can very often be achiev- ed by the arrangement of sash and taking the form of this consuming and purifying element. 3. 1 will turn aside now and see -Tho natured curiosity of n man not super- stitiously afraid of even n very unusual and awe-inspiring, as well as inexplic- able, sight. 4. Moses. Moses -The repetition of tine call implies urgency. links Jehovah speaks lo the boy Samuel, calling hien twice by name (1 Sam. 3. 10). 5. Draw not nigh hither -Moses is re- tuinded of the natural unhltneess of men t > abide in the immediate presence of Jehovah. This truth ('hod patiently as her hushnnd, ohterved to a visitor: - sought to leach his people by such conn- "\lv husband Ls forty; (here nre just mends ns the one,given to Moses litter in five years between tis." the presence of the people near Ibis "Is 11 possible?" was 1110 unguarded came mountain : "And thou shell set reply of her friend. "1 give you my Lound; unto the people round nisiut, word, you Zook as ynurig as he does." spying. 'fake heed to yeurscl•es. that ye As unexpected must have been the go not up into the mount, or touch the reps) of !tie husband whose wife said: -- border of 11" (Emit!. 19. 12). The un- "'t. n have never Taken the to the te- ndererl mind and heart easily falls into n • '• • y." an altitude of irreverence. "e dear." be answered: "that Ls n Thv shoes -Sandell. p' • f have yet in nntteipalion!" i'IYI'I'iNG ille ('OOT IN 1'1'. Some people are perpetually giving offence In the most unconscious way. "Now, do let me propose • you as a member of the club." says South, "But suppose they blackmail nre?" te- piles Brown. "('ooh! Absurd! Why, my dear fel- levy, there's not a man in the club who knows you, even!" A lady, very desirous of concealing inc nett') tact thnt she is the same age of embroidery. crncscd in it novel w•:y. Lire could 1.1 substitited. or hands • t the males inl. hand entbreiderel, would be Oven ¶,n llier. The yoke is trade of c':. • 4•""s ihepMe t • " NV to 71 your brother I - Sul ,u•l.u;,Ie 0'' 1)44 (_5 camping nut (1141 he kill anything?" or 1 • - -• Meese elec. nearly rt•,'rylr,dy. tin S. \ h e -.a 01141 nrl(1 a h.rn;e' ... 11115• was the costa' 111g with milk *11141 h•,hll -'11(e s..it of Palestine in many place•% is Exceedingly F:Ivira was dressni for the bull, when hi, h and pr•du••live. and its n1n$mtiirr- bet g,rl churn dr,g,pe'rl in. "lion 110 1 red.-, nisi niimert us pewee. especially • khat: in !t s i4•ew gown. Stein?" she ask- ea5lward of the Jorelnh, in he'r'e, (1(4' eo. ..Nerivety hnndeoioe!' nnswored weer 55,•,.1451 'villi 11144' t1''. -. I' .'11h1. "Why. I lenity didn't reerienize nl..un:lcel in lu> ut iMil 1,,, 4.:•, .. 1 r e,.e s• • 1 first!' MO fsHOS were ruhivalnl 111 also•idnnr.. hil l , •nn141e•ss 11giche ant (1 (,I. ' I• -nua Inc bi a ratite of Brie still 1.e .44 n moving eie e ly 14111, r b , 1 • , , , 4',n k,err.a1 of (hob nut bears thither over 11s Inng•negle'te,l 1n 1 /-. , is ;. resemblance to a coiled Nicotine proper wart very 801;111 , • ,„ ;esti .11 peinpnrintr rihlr,n is knotted al Ili' bark tt•itherit a t. fit•. 1.•11 ha; emls r' nclung utin►n ( to Ile I.•'tom of the was gown. A\\•rt•t. Pr m t. Chap!nin--'this is your third terra in this preen. Are you not nshamed !n (.ave your lrien& see you here? Abnshlel (-envie! mere 1 1 ant. The prison i. di.grn'efut. The rerepticn room smells like lap room, IIx x1115 are dark as envrs,' the greener 1s no gentleman. and the fable is tint fll tis s11 4.1551 In. Ashnrnel lo here my iGeniis crime there' 1 ern m(.rtifl',1 (v- ery lime 1 ser them; Cul what can t trot