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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1910-01-13, Page 6FIRST. DAYS OF NEW YEAR Their Passing Reminds Us of the Possi- bilities of New Beginnings "For the former things are pass- ed away.'' --Rev. :xi., 4. The old is but the soil from which the new springs into life. To -day intent not lie buried in yectertlee, eor to -morrow in to -day. The for- mer things must not remain in their old places; they have passed away; en then, we stand only to build the fairer edifices of the future. The old year must not be carried into the now as a burden, but as an in- sl,iration. The new has its routs in the old, but its fruits are farther on. The use of yesterday is to see it as yes- terday; that which has been passel is gone in fact, is cherished in me- mory only for what it has done for - vs It Bolds our guiding lights not to beckon us back but to guide us o -a It may be fair with memory's pictures, but they are only prom- ises of what is to be. Some feel oppressed by the pass- ing of the years. To them each one sees ns as the knell of a bell that counts itself toward the end. Years spell only age. But the greatest blessing of time is this passing of tho days that some of the pages of life may he t;•rned and now ones begun, that such a thought is possible as this of the past with its complement, THE FUTURE. The passing days teach us to live the forward looking life, to cherish hope, to know that, though we may have failed, though yesterday's page be dark with stains and blot-' tett over twith tears, yesterday is net all; there remains the new day and this we may essay with a noble ceurago, with a chance at a cleaner, brighter page. In the failures of the last year niay have been the discipline that trains for success the coming year. Our old days aro not to be simply ignored; they are to be woven up into the structure of the new. They are to be like the lessons we painfully wrought out on our slates at school, forgotten in *e sense that they have been carried for- ward into the enriching, the skill, and power of higher grades. Here is this new year ; what does is mean to us; He rnust be a doll hind indeed to whom it has no sig- nificance of new beginnings; who looks not forward to its first days with expectation. hope, and some determination fur its totsiching. Lite is full of such occasions, anniver• series that serve as marks along the way, times when we can stop and ask whether we move forward oi go back This is a good time for high re- solves, n time to shake ourselves free from any burdens of the past and to face the days that arc to be with heart nerved for nobler liv- ing, nobler service; higher attain- ments. This is the time to seek for larger meanings in life for our- selves and 1IICHER LIVING FOR OTHERS. Once men talked about a new birth as taking place once for all in life. How eagerly hearts that counted life as a failure. or saw it as sin stained and sorrow burd- ened, -looked forward to such a new beginning. How much better it is to see each day as a possible new birth, each as a new beginning, each as a chance to do better, to move forward, to recover from the past and to remedy the old mis- takes. A worthy faith will never see man slipping back into the dust; it will feel him ever climbing to- ward God. A worthy faith will not mourn over the tracks 'narked in the yesterdays; it will trace with confidence the way that goes be- fore; it will see that way leading it to a clearer knowledge of truth, a closer, keener joy in doing the will of the Most High, and a joy- ous fellowship with all the great family of earth and heaven. True faith will say, as the now days approach: Here in each of these is just the chance to find out what life means, to make real some of my hest and fairest dreams, to do some of the things I have been learning, to do and longing to do in the past. to make some life as fair as I know all lives ought to be, to wipe the tears from some eyes, just another chance to love and so to find life. HENRY F. COPE. TIDE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTER NATION.%L LESSON, JA N. 16. Lessen M. The Beginning of the Galilean Ministry. Malt. 4. 12 25. Golden Test, Matt. 4. 16. Verse 12. John was delivered up --The arrest of John w•as due to the hatred of Herodias, because he had former call, were in .a nearby boat. :And when Jesus called thein, they also straightway left, and followed hirer. 23-25. A general sketch of the Galilean ministry, exhibiting Jest's ie the t}treef.,ld work of teaching, preaching, and healing. After this brief review Matthew gives at length the Sermon on the Mount, and then returns to events at Ca- ro-enure 23. Their synagogues --At this period there were synagogues in every town and in every village containing ten men. They were used not only for worship but also es centers of local government, and on week -days, as schools for chil- dren. The elders of tho synagogues were the rulers of the community. 24. All Syria -Meaning the Ro- man province by that name. meal and no deep channels are burr ********* *** rblack eyed sans with yellow rowed in the hands. Meal, by the 46 petals. Su wad, roust he used with care to prevent clogging the )plumbing of the wash basin. Hot water may be necessary for a time for those who was:i without soap, but after a while the hands may be kept clean most of the time bs the use of meal and cold water. It is cold water that hardens the hands and ea. -shies them to resist the effects of cold air. If hot water is used it should be at night. when the hands are to hese a long exemption from ex- rosure to cold air. That also is the time for a!pleing oil or Baseline and lemon juice to chapped hands. VASELINE 'RUBBED IN. While the hands aro still warm and wet from the use of hot water and meal the vaselin should be Possessed with demons -Disease, rubbed in and the hands rewashed in the New Testament, is looked for several minutes in more hot upon as a visitation of Satan, ex water. Then the emulsion mode in sept in a few cases (Heb. 12. 6) the process of washing r•lr'ntld be removed with soft paper unless you can afford to grease the towels and the man should go to bed. The next morning the hands should be washed in cold water with a little meal. If a week of such treatment does not bring the hands of the man who habitually takes active open air ex- ercise into good condition he may Nervous disorders and mental de rangoment, especially, were re garded as duo to diabolical posses- sion. There was to much truth in this popular belief that Jesus ac coonnodatod his own teaching to it It was no pert of our Lord's pur- pose to anticipate tho discoveries of modern science. He healed them -Much of the ministry of Jesus is given upto the suspect that the water he uses is practical work of working miracles too hard or that there is a general alkaline condition of his system that needs attention. Some men find it advantageous to the bands to go without gloves all winter long and such men are apt to have not only very clean hands, but hands of fine texture provided that they have learned to use very litttle soap. Bare hands are not an unusual sight on the winter golf links, and the hands may easily be mayonnaise and whipped cream. brought to such a condition that 1 Serve on a lettuce leaf and on top Foil of any kind never gets beyond put a whole marshmallow and a th mere surface Of the skin. brandied cherry. This recipe will The doctors are saving now that serve about forty people. This, served with a lettuce sandwich and aa olive, makes a very nice course. Cornbread. -One pint of sour milk. one egg, little salt, lard half of this kind. Through the cure of men's bodies he was often able to effect the cure of their souls. 25. Decapolis-"Ten cities." A region of Peraea. beyond Jordan, containing ten federated cities, of which Damascus was ono. MEAL IN PLAGE OF SOAP SUGGESTIONS FOR THE CARE OF MEWS HANDS. Use of Soap May Easily Be Over- done --Treatment for Chapped hands. Nine men out of ten, say the doe - tors never learn how to take care ban•-:-. inter. It is not only the coal heaver that never has really clean hands from November to May, but almost any man who takes active outdoor exercise using the hands without, gloves. Even gloves frequently changed will not keep sotne hands clean, and a pair of old gloves will soil hands that have been seven times washed with soap and brush. Every man who cuts wood, who handles tools, ng more active rind; the borders of Zebulon were near. laborious thandoeshp aring his nails finds 15, 16. This rather free transcrip- it hard to keep his hands really tion of the prophecy of lea. 9. 1, 2, clean in winter. represents the, northeru parts of ,Soap makers have tried for cen- Israel, which had suffered greatly torics to find the right combination IN 1-10ME. * Limai******** \\•INTER BE('IPES. Graham Pancakes. --One pint of warm water into which stir graham flour to make a ',atter a little thick- er than for wheat flour cakes. Add one-half cake of yeast dissolved in a little warm water, cover, end let stand over night. In the morning add one teaspoonful salts, one-half teaspoonful of soda, two table- spoonfuls of sugar, and bake on moderate gridle. Can be piled up one on top of the other, buttered and served in quarters. Bias Bands. -To make perfect'y even bias stiles mark the goods the desired width. allowing for the seams. Make a pencil mark every few inches, then cut. (.ave n knife the width the strip is to be when finished. lay this in center of strip, mei with a hot iron press what has Leen allowed for seams over the keit:, pass the knife along, and continue pressing until strip is fin- ished. Does away with all basting. CABBAGE DISHES. Hot Slaw. - Chop and cook in clear eater with a little salt Rome white cabbage. Xhcu done dean, leaving a little water to prevent scorching. Pour over the cabbage this dressing: The yolk of one egg, Delicious Potatoes. -Bake good one teaspoonful of sugar, celery sized potatoes, then remove the top, seed, salt and pepper, and a half and scoop out the potato into a cup of vinegar well beaten together. dish. Mash and season with hut- After pouring this over let it all ter, milk, salt, and pepper, ani come to a boil. This will slightly v: hip up lightly. Fill the shells) thicken the cdreszing. with a layer of mashed potato, a Baked Cabbage. --A great many thin layer of sausage :which has people to whom cabbage is dis- been previously fried, then mashed tasteful find it delicious prepared in potatoes until the shell is full. Place the following way. Take a firm oa top a few cracker crumbs and a bite (read of cabbage, cut in rath- bits of butter and paprika, and er small pieces, and boil until tend - place in oven till brown. I der. Drain off water, put in chop- I-Iash.-Four 35 cent cans of slic- ping howl and chop fine. To a large e 1 pineapple, '75 cents worth oil cupful of rich milk add one egg, marshmallows, two pounds English beaten, two tablespoonfuls of melt - walnuts, one quart of mayonnaise ed butter, seasoning with salt and dressing, one quart of thick cream a little white pepper if at hand. Mix to whip. Cut the pineapple in with cabbage, put in baking pan cubes and quarter the marshmal- and bake twenty minutes, putting lows. Chop the nuts, but not very small pieces of butter over the top. fine. Then whip the cream and add to the mayonnaise Have the juice well drained off the pineapple, and, just before serving. put all the in- gredients together and stir in the the skin in good condition is largely self-eieansicg or that it needs at moat. the mechanical aid of such ftiction as meal and water afford. • OYSTERS. Oyster Creams. -Pound and rub through a sieve eighteen oysters, mix with three-quarters of a cupful of good cream, season with salt, pepper, and paprika. add one tea- spoonful of powdered gelatin dis- sclved in three-quarters of a pint of oyster liquor. Fill some small molds half full of aspic jelly. im- bedding one oyster in each. When If any man wishes to learn the rca-' as big as an egg, teaspoonful soda. set fill up with the oyster cream. son for exercising without gloves Take enough cornmeal to make it Turn out when firm. les hien turn inside out a pair of stiff, Curried Oysters. - Fry twelve gloves that he has used every day Braised Liver. - Lard with salt oysters in hot butter for one minute. for two or three weeks and he will pork a whole calf's liver. Put in Chop one onion fine and fry it for find argument en 3ugh for the habit. roaster. Put over this two cups a few minutes in a tablespoonful of Gloves a month old are apt to be boiling water, one-half cup celery, hot butter; add one teaspoonful of to great deal dirtier inside than out- carrots, and onion, one-half green flour, two teaspoonfuls of curry Fide if the user takes any exercise more violent than an ordinary stroll and even the idler's gloves would often shock him if be knew the in- s:de of the finger ends as well as the outside. pepper, all minced fine. Season well with salt and pepper, cover closely; cook two hours. Delicious. Thicken the gravy and serve. Carrot Pudding. ---One and one- half cupfuls of flour, one cupful of oBster liquor. Cook gently for a 4. sugar, one cupful of suet, one cup- few minutes and serve with hot [ul of raisins, one cupful of cur- plain boiled rice. rants, one cupful of grated pota- toes,Chicken Pie With Oysters. --Cut d aifi Introduced by an Engllantrrela by one cupful of carrots, one tea- up chicken and stew until it rs spoonful of soda. Steam three cooked from bone in a tightly dos - War of EGO, , 'tela hours. Servo with brandy sauce. ed kettle, using just enough water The waistcoat -when •''tart It 1• s nice Pudding. -One quart of milk, t•p coyer it. Remove bond and cut half epi fol rice• sw•ecten n powder, one teaspoonful of salt, one cupful water or stock, and cook slowly for ten minutes. All ono teaspoonful of lemon juice, the o� sters, and four tablespoonfuls of. FANCY WAISTCOATS. from the inroads of Assyrians and for cleansing and softening the vestige of the gorgeousness *web r' j unc p t the 'neat into small pieces. Rub Syrians, as first to be restored to hands without rendering them too once displayed to men's drsrl v �* taste. Phaco in a baking dish and together equal quantities of hotter prosperity by the Messiah. The tender for active use in the open Oct- 15, 666, t'epys cbrotnleo.as seallist bake in a tnuderate oven for an and flour according to the amount blessings were to extend beyond • :p_ M•rnc a,,: n'g toilet table appearance on for pe qt Chariest hour, or until cooked down to the of gravy left in kettle -a tnbl±- to 11. The covet garment was: a seasag thickness desired. Stir thoroughly spoonful of finely chopped celery Jordan, into the district of Fernee, shows howhardhe has triePpc l caaacac' a the d'ar'e' tstims R w .n several times while cooking. This Add one cup cream, then the chi, k which is east of Jordan, and where find the ri ht lotion for chs the latter stages of the ministry of hands, which is really another term elute to the body. It was of "bract' is easily made arid is both econom en, and put in baking dish and Ware Jesus were centered. As the (arae- for so:led hands. Dozens of such cloth. pinked with white sok under It ; feat and dcliciuns• ontop one pint of oysters, w•:tl. ort lites sat in the darkness of despair lotions have been insented, and Men will agree that the waistcoat V i - any liquor. Season oysters with because of the incursions of the some of them are effective. hut a convenient and commendsbir gar- I THE SEWI?:G ROOM. salt and pepper and bits of butter Assyrians, so Matthew represents nearly all are expensive .and most moot, the abaeace of which would do-' and cover with a rich pie cru;; r:•!1 ed thick, leaving openings and 'rest., int a moderate oven until ani brown. Serve hot. the condition of the people previous ' 'hem• .l• a • ret the •pends of prtve them. to speak of no other dls- . Piece Bag. --Buy three yards of rebuked Herod Antipas for making to the coming of Jesus as one of those w•hn wish to keep idle hands comfort, of an Invaluable set of pock• i•nbleached muslin, cut into four her his v. ifs. contrary to Jewishspiritual darkness. fin good condition. eta. It appears stray rte therefore, t d t lengths • make fe tr bags with draw - I law, 17. Jesus seems intentionally to UL,.1L OF SOME KIND. a I It should not have come into being at si ring of cotton tape, leave a slit in Galilee -A part of the Roman em- take upthe er} of1 better,' an earlier date. the front kr putting in the pieces; ire, and rellectiu • the, Roman in- John. His corn-, Nothing simpler, or cheap - pile, p b ing meant not only that the work er has been discovered for the win-' Soon after the restorntloa a sle�cr• outline in red cotton the different fluences everywhere. Herod Anti- of John was to be carried on but! tet caro of masculine ha'ds than less rest, which likewise left the waist ti•'es the bags are intended -one for pas was the reeler, having his ca - that his advent was the advent of • the old country habit of using meal open, was worn under the doublet. It silk,one for muslin. one for cotton, petal in Tiberias. But Jewish ideas the Messianic kingdom. Mark adds! of sornekind when the hands air was not a true waistcoat. 'lists style and for woolen ; took tlic bags to [prevailed in the government (If the t of dress was brought from Pruner by the inside of closet dour; will be land. The population was veryto this message of repentance, in; washed. Oat meal is good but re-, , 1 p view of the nearness of the heaven- I;.tively expensive. Corn meal if (,banes 11' F'r•o;n t"•neeth the tannest' f..und to be convenient as well as large, and the people were broadly Iv kingdom, something which John the testae kind is much cheaper and oI •sblrt expn::ed by the open rest "the useful. Intelligent. For an account of the breeches displayed their expanded Care of Sewing Machine. --About hist:•ry, extent, etc., of Galilee knew nothing of -"Believe in the perhaps better. consult Hasting's Dictionary, i gOSpcl." In addition to the lite of Corn meal plus n little fine ;cilrt width." waist andlth bunches ot In a Wattles belowpthe kneesn at e ' oak fly month kerosene oil, treacr- le "Christ and Gospels." 'sliiritunl renunciation he taught •soap will thoroughly cleanse and, The doublet worn ever the test was wheel,. and every joint; remove the ' men to snake reign in their hearts heal the hands in half a dozen 13. Nazareth --It is spa rent, from John's account, that Jesus fee the good tidings from Ood. washings provided seine simple oil did not immediately detach himself! ]t3. Simon ... Peter, and Andrew (..o -ointment like cnsrline is rubbed halm the home life at Nazareth.( ---These two were among the first' in and then wiped off. After such treatment for three or four nights the hands usually heal. if they do not then a few drops: of lemon juice rubbed on at night ' will sometimes finish the healing process. The lemon juice corrects the alkaline 'condition which is often the secret of chap; ed hands After preaching the virtues of soap and water for generations the l electors are beginning to say that the use of soap may be easily over- done. and many men find that the! way to keep their hands in geed condition is to wash them with meal instead of with soap. Some men get on entirely without soap f•.r He attended the marriage at Cann to yield to Jesus down at Bethany in company with his mother, ani (Jelin 1. 40. 41). They bad returned must have lived in privacy long to Galileo with him, and now were enough after his ieturn from Judea at their old pursuits. fur the first disciples to return to their occupations. Nazareth was a city of considerable importance, abort five miles from Cana. Capernaum--His reason for leav- isle Nazareth was the hostility of his old neighbors (Luke 1). On his A ay to Cnpernnurn ho stopped at Cana, and there received the re - Casting a net into the sea - Im- plying that they had already put out into the deep. They were fishers --A lucrative business, since the Sea of Galilee swarmed with fish. It cannot he shown that any of tate apostles were poor men. They are called "un• learned and ignorant men," but quest of the nobleman to heal his this refers only to their lack of dying child (John 4. 46). Cana lay training in the rabbinical schools. in the hills, and Jews descended 19.-I will make you fishers of twenty miles to the shores of the men -"Their earthly employment was n parable of their divine vo- cation. As David was taken from the sheepcote to be t shepherd to Israel, and Paul from his tent - making to be a maker of heavenly tabernacles, so they were taken from their boats to be fishers of men." 20.22. This account by Matthew must be taken together with the passage in make 5. 1-11. What oe- curred, apparently, is this: while they were still wondering at the wonderful catch of fishes Jesus ad- dressed the words to Peter, "From henceforth thou shalt catch men." Upon their reaching shore .iesus said to Simon and :Andrew, "Come he sea itself was of great beauty ye after me. and I will make you tueehahieativ and perhaps watheut As neen s deers Derr sea of Galilee, and took up an abode in Capernaum. This town has not been located with certain - t, There is still a debate as (0 whether modern Tell Hum, at the Lead of the lake, or Khan \linyrh, three utiles lower down, is the site. It was, at any rate, lovely for situ- ation. and mist prosperous. This was clue to its thriving fishing in- dustry, the rare fertility of its soil, and its close proximity to the great highway which connected Damas- cus with the Levant. Nowhere else could Jesus hese found such an op- ppertunity to exercise a comtnand- ine influence. "Speaking in Ca- reruaum, he spoke to the world." richly laced and embroidered. Mn rest- - sewing cotton and run the machine ly was this mode of attire that thetufted ['runes. --Stearn until tin quickly for ta•n or three rnimttes, king resolved to 'tiro the wee toward then wipe off all oil and dust ; next, der, but not broken, enc•-ha',f pour a more e onn;r;lral and sober fashtnn, oil just as thoroughly with the heat' "t prunes. Then pit and fill th Hurl to the tultlllnaeut of this design De againcavities with chopped nut!, rnisin machine oil, and wipe well to hailed donned withf i,.0 e new "m eat, which t'epys ' remove excess of oil. It is a good ed from Chor dates. et fruit toeturn the lhelrrre or t1nch were the eircur;•.tances phi; A pion to place. a piece of absorbent to a boil, and stir in ono -third attended the introduction of for waist- cc'tton around needle bar so that c r oil will not run down needle to the gelatin dissolved in one -f in' cont- it came In ere name of economt ! sewing. A thickly folded nowspa- cup of cold water. ('our this ar'.auc Bid reform. but lour' 11 developed int.,. placed under the treadles will prunes, then stand in a cold p'aco auto as expensive and decorative e e a t;aM1 .o harden. Serve with swcet.ned r: nt ns tiny which man has ever tat. Prevent oil dripping on the floor• cream• en to himself. Gradually it was ex. `A few drops of uil should be use] tended downward 1111 it nlrnost reachedeach day. the knees. It was made of the richest rings and Table Covers. --Use old Cauterials, and the outer coat was tut• dresses. Tear them into strips, shaped to bung well epee to display sew together like carpet rag=. Dye f;n magunieence, ; them n bright yellow, or any pre- Eraganceand lore of fan es' were ferrel color, and have them woven arn c'rnpty transferred' from ono ate to to an stripes, with white alternating. Use old sheets or ar.y cotton good - PRUNE DISHES. Prune Charlotte. -- Stew h,t, pound of prunes tender, then them. Line a buttered baking rti% with thin slices of stale cake, tee, fill up with the prunes. Coser •v•t' cake moistened, dot with Li s of butter, and bake in a steady to en twenty minutes. When •one torr, in a dish and garnish with w�•il:i�r d cream. TWO GOOD RECIPES. Pumpkin Marmalade. -Take one eight pound pumpkin, cut out the ribs, take out seeds, then pare. then cut in thin slices. After all is the hands, hitt that happy state is another, and on the wnlstesta'Was lair. 1 1 tt 1 (.are i it will weigh about 'e r.a not easilly attained and is usually L`;ted all the embellishment which pre- frtr the shite stripes. These cos le meds. Place in preserving kettle, approached by way of the combing• densly had been bestowed on the . only 10 cents for the dye. end the add five ',outwit; granulated surae tion tr•.•cches. 1 hose dowered r td ear price of weaving, whieh is small. fuer lemons sliced thin, five re as 1lfEAf. AND 01L hroldered w•• lstcoata of shee� nattn, 7liev can be woven in nnv sire and worth ginger rr-.ot; mix thoronghl SOAP, used for floor rugs and table eov- le, it stand over night; in the morn - When the hands have once been ers. Can be washed without in- in/ place en the stove, let it boil brought into thoroughly good eon- jury. sloe ly for two hour• and one half, clition by the use of this combina• Curtains. -- Ecru scrim 'an be o, until the sirup is thick. Put in tion the soap may bo dropped or ¢ purchased for 10 cents n yard and glass jars when cool. Delicious. tised only at rare intervals and the 1 p Try it. meol made to do the work. t 1 ch f t ht N t 1 Russian Rocks.- -One and one -bolt Most soaps in their zeal for clean- g q cupfuls of brown ragar, cne cepiul lines* burrow deeper and deeper in c serge I oras ten ^ Ir she tmt t S do t) h o: butter, three flip beaten sep- ti• the hinds until they become aratoly, one teaspoonful of sods cracked and sore. The deeper the n pe dissolved in boiling water, two and cracks the more frequent the nee•s• t ee i c f If d vied three-fourths enpfuls of flour, pinch of salt, one teaspoonful of cinna- mon. one-half teaspoonful of cloves, with raced eses. may erste, aiy hive then lees trnuteei.orrte and rnnrasti.t than the preceding Mahlon, Mut wt•eth• er they reduced the wearer's account with Ills tailor is highly datbtfai. l'Lr Ing anpi.errwatstcont remnlned upw•nrr '. Cut curtains roper ,n taros rr-.:,ny )ears. t u is still worn ons to hang straight. ems ieh uy uobterncu sort genteeneu when one Pirie and one end. Beginning In n : tug one inchInside the c:n, run in reign a somewhat d betel- watrtcoat five rows of colored rope silk. len: - nae prevalent, soda from this tune the in two threnda of the rurtai I• nap began to der•rwase :n ter:4to in• (Aeon f ach row , silk.e 'lead of resrbtr,;, aim.: 1., (4.0 k:•rl it r•onvent.'nal re'ig•.c may he drawn in the co nor with impression paper and dar ed in with silk. The'' one teaspoonful of vanilla. ene- ninke d. ntv curtains. Purchase third ponnrl of nut meats (Enclish tinbleac' ed cheesecloth at fire era's wnlnets), three (Worths p..;md r•f a yards Hem cne side awl cne eetel-d raisins : ft11 tess.peen nr:J end. I or a border stencil a row of drop into butts red pante city for soap and the harder the cleansing pr' cess. Meal a :c- tnplis :es ''onto (4'4 twit, a) ,'%u the ihattn :w n.ore siauplh •1 the "igh,..•ntb vire ural enibcnld 1 the rep d1i fat r.•,trs-l.- London ti:) be. anti a as surrounded with busy fishers of men." Thee obeyer) nnv chemise! action what Soap docs41 lr, " 1 ll".r11 e •i teens. It was thirteen mile* long straightway. Their partners. the n.ainly by weans of the latter. earl eight miles in width. it. lay sons of Zebedee, of whom John at Only a small part of the natural ry weer n;.srdnn within the tribe of Naphtali, but least had rccciied and heeded s eii of the skin is removed by the