HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1907-02-28, Page 3A
CURRENT TOPICS.
One at the toil( Atlantic steamship lines
has anneenced Mut a maw vessel it taus
under constrttrtwn will b,, equipped with
a tomes court on the upper deck and
ttiltt a swamuung pool, 75 by 25 feel. on
ow of the lower. decks. This is an inter•
coling development that will result, no
doubt, in rivulry in supplying such ac-
commodation, but it sugeesls that a lino
rtvatry might spring rp til: , ria tint' toro-
s'isi)ne fur the steerage. Iluw would i1
do to turn ever 1.875 equate feet extra
Space to the stterage I And what a
viaurible thing a swimming purl would
be for the steerage 'meal -leers. lh•ofeaur
Steiner, Aimee story of lite dual rant
mud.: une uf the important looks of the
past eeasooe, and elle !IRS creased the
ocean in the• s oonrise a duzell times or
more, Las g,seu Incas and flgurts to
prove that the sfeerago r3 men are'
shamefully cliental by the.. atttunship
Companies. 1:e dais not make his plea
for teeter treatment on the ground of
humanity, though tie might well do so.
but on the ground of fair and square
dealing. Compared with what the firs
and second cabin pasvngers get fur their
.musty, the steerage lusssengcrs stet only'
a small fraction of what limy pay sur.
After such n sltowang us 1'roleseor
Steiner makes it would seem that lhcto
was an exceptionally good livid for
&' unpe'tititn in steerage iulpr)vt ntertts.
-sF
The world to -day has no means of
kun\rng how well the operatic stars of a
Century ago could sing, as compared
with the great singers of the present
generation, But the world will be wiser
in another hundred years. Recently
Tamagni), the Italian tenor and the
greatest singer tit the age, desiring to
leave kw his childreu some record of his
genius. had mad.', upon specially pre-
pared plates for reproduction in the
phonograph, several trio) s of his most
exquisite : on •s Two o hese records'
lite a beat ptrsrrw eel iii a museum in 4 # ZC # #. T X71 �+t
WHEN RELIGION IS VAIN
Muff; Whole Life Is Affected By
Control of the Tongue
"If any man offend not in word, the
sante as a per.cct mutt and elite also to
bridle the whole body."-- SI. Jnnlar, iu.t:.
st James ',rescues tho duty of ruling
our speech us one of the grtaiwt mo-
ment. 11e ea)s that a man tubo can
govern his tongue cull goero his whole
trey, encu us the bits control the horse
ar.d us 1h0 rudder guides the skip. 110
says that if any ratan seem. le be reli-
gious and bri.11etlt net his t. uguc, that
mails religion is vain. And, waxing
fervid with tit., tttetue, he declares ea the
ungoverned tonduo That it ,eleftleth :hit
whale holly tied sc'ilcth 011 Ilrc lfie-curse
of teatime
In considering some of rho most cons-
train forms on the offense to which the
apostle refers we must surely name ex-
travagant speech as open to grave ob-
jection.
b-
jectori. Tho possibili•ies of language art'
pressed to the utmost for strong words.
The simplest things are declared to be
"'terrible" and "awful," and people con-
stunlly assert that the most ordinary
events are the greatest or the heel, or
the worst that they ever knew in all
their lives.
Aside from the utter absurdity of this
habit, it begets carelessness in other
things and keds to general
LEVITY AND FLIPPANCY.
S, that it is not a supeufous Idling to
ley down these precepts :
Be accurate in the use of language.
Guide your words with discretion.
Do not say a million when you mean
fire or six; be thoughtful; be exact and
you will avoid trouble for yourself and
others. And wheat you do have occasion
to use strong words people will know
That you mean just what you Say.
Irreverent speech is another very cont -
THE SUNDAY SCHOOLI
l'.:1 \1ile►\\I. LI"', \,
0.I.\ It1 11 :3.
1,.•s•o1i 1\. Witham l'Iradintg toot d1 tout.
Cola •u 10%1: l.ul..• 1•. 1.
T111: 1.3`'-"1 •\ \\ ORD 7'11 1►i 1. ":.
111011 stn. There are few nth'i do not al s mLateen on Ito text of the Revised \
times meek lightly of sacred things- r(utt.
tierging; e:oltlICCIi tt with religion has
'strict, them ao comical. Oie they hese
devised some brilliant pot on a pues:ago
foto lusty writ Or a child hags innocent-
ly u►tidc : ome blasphemous remark, a I'
they know a spry w*iat, us they say. is
very wicked, but which they still proceed
13 relate. And so, fur the sake of he+ng,
u., they imagine it, witty or enterianing,
they make a jest of their Maker or of
the artful verities of w•orltl-. unease.
Cf1AR:\CfERS RUINED.
And how much of siatttt rusts speech
there is among us., \\'e bear no malice,
we moan no Intern, bol we say things
Mat teem(' and seng. Or, it we have 110
umpl•.ee.uit conte. les of tint* Own to
make en others, we repeat something
that has c(if10 to US. Me did not ori-
ginate it, we only alto what we "11e01','.
but the story, like' the roiling snowball,
gathers as it goes. The little lire creeps
and spreads rust "kindteth a great mat-
ter." And some fair thnraclrr, perhaps,
i; ruined.
\Vh►vreter we have an opportunity to
spread an injurious report about another
let las tisk ourselves these two questions :
Is the report true, and is it our duty to
smite! at? And if the answer to both or
1 either of those questions be a negative
one let us drop the miserable business at
once.
Thele an; many other classes of evil
spea'cing that might be natlled.Thew/
are angry wools and deliberately mali-
cious wools and profane word' and
false words. Itut if we aro 011 our guard
with reference to the three classes just
considered we shall not be likely to
speak amus in other ways.
HENRY M. BARBOUR.
Pari.. The plates Isere made with great
care and are sealed in metal boxes. cern- 4
Mining also chemical compounds for ' L
their preervatiwl. The texes are labeled a
and dated. One will be opk'ixetl filly
y.•ai-s from n..w and the other et the end
of a century. Long alter the singer is
stead his voi.'e will be heard and the
111uSteiais will be able to judge if it
maity is true that the tones of the human
Voice he'cwnte beo' exquisite as eivihut-
llen advances. The greales t tenor of the
year tc'O6 may listen to Tainag no's voice
and thus judge his ort n genius.
el'
A vegetable milk is prepared by the
Japanese from soy triers, winch are
soakAl crusted. and boiled in water,
thr nzsultitt Reuel resembling row's
intik, bud ddfering much in coutposII4 I1.
11 tsonlains !2.5 per cent. of water, 3.ti
of protein. 2.13 of fat, and Istel of nitro-
gen freed esti-ad. A condensed milk is
now male toy f: Kahayana by adding
sugar mei a little dipolasaunl phosphate,
and then estimating. The yellowish
prattiet, hating un ag,recaht( taste of
craws milk with a slight odor of beams,
1. rr'eonmtended as n cheap s ut`•titute
lot wttinary cendete e,l nuik.
NEM
%\I) tiln\\Gr.
Son►ething %l...ut the \rant things en
the \larket.
Far m,:- tette t :; ting; is tieing
eroded of glees: aria 0 framework .>f
steel ginkrts iii the 1.•411 a•f Des Mentes.
PmfRssur Flammmarron, the iseninanier,
seye that e%er\ 1i'ts will live in
glass
toruses in tlto near future.
flu' naLet dee is That fishers talk In
tare another by actual s,valet s. These
soinels arc made In servos. ways, oar Leel an aokl the spite•- girl sugar.
.•1 w?ie•h is to grate a ntotat'ic bone \Vnrir alt these into the rensainrler 0f the
ages•:► t the air bladder or aga111a a thane pounds of dough. then till the lined
teuath ptirt of the tk' t. tit. and put it to the toe crust. pricking
'ilie leteeset comtdnalacn 15 a tenet- 21 all over tt.11e a k.rk. ter the knitting
t're'k or R i-gtous manual sang art ar- pans rut 11 unto t1 good solved) oven Tad
lisle -ails -deserted cater that Reis as n bake for there et* four',aur.-. Atter ibe
purse in which to hotel the e'unlnMnintt.
The t.).a crieinated with a lady who
is as worried about carrying;' a ere:" in
her glove. ---
11 ssp'pxarfng paper a a n: trate for
tee-1.yt throe whose tee nepi:mkt le fors
let to burn the letterer after their ulli-
it has ceased. 1t ,s -..._ eft to slit
LIOME.
SCO'IlISH 1)F,ClPE,`;.
Oatme :1 i)iscuits.---Pill into a nowt 1
1 t. lloer end ;i Ib. of oatineal. Rub in
Ib. butter, and adds ins. sugar, and
teaspoonful carbonate of soda. Now
add. two fresh eggs, knead lightly with a
little (lour, roll out, rut into rounds, and
prick with a line fork, or with a biscuit
stamper. Rake half an hour in a moder-
ate oven.
Ileal Scotch Shortbread. ---Stake a bowl
warm, but not tax) hot. Put in it X ff.
fresh butler and two tablespoonfuls
castor super, and bat to 0 creams with a
wooden spoon. In another bowl rut 'y
Ib, flour, and a tablespoonful of rico
New. Mix anal *lir it gradually and
smoelhly into the enemies! butler. Knead
as little as weeibte. Four two 1'1etxu 01
oleic paper, divide the dough in two,
and place each piece on a piece of the
flouted papier. Roll out, pinch aha edges,
prick the top ttith a fork. and bake in a
quick oven for lwenby minutes.
Scotch Ilun.-The ingrdientr required
are: Four Its. dough from the fakery,
2 tbs. raisins. 2 bbs. currants. t 1t,. pow-
dered sugar, I lb. butler, '- lb. blanched
alininds, ', ie. candied peel, 1 oz. cinna-
mon. 1 oz. ginger, X oz. Jamaica pep-
per, and tone nutmeg. grated. ?rix the
bolter tt:th the dough. and tt. rk it with
the hand_: then take tete pound of the
d.'ugh and Hill It with a little flour; cut
of! as tmrrh of this as w ill tern) the k'p
di ui'I of the bun, Igen. .eeth pie olhtr
part tf the pound line a battered taking
tin; clean and pick over ihr r ter
antzt
clone the raisins, Manch tire almonds
le pouring: bending water over germ and
removing the skl1: miner the candied
dol` is 1 -rooted a little hruoh it over with
lunetrn egoe to glare 11.
i OMIO3LADE a _A\DIi ' .
(ereoauut e:rrat►s.--%tett twe sten tea•
speanfuls of butter in a granite seism -
pan, add a cupful and a he't el sugar
pbtttse *cal. deed. and glatsal, tee and unt•I,:llf cupful of melt, and llir um
reel being neutralise! 1,5 ammonia 111 the etre-at as d►stttetted. Ileac tc the
vapor'. It falls to pine; a!'Cr a given toiling p+•ine and then 1•,:i to te•lse
lube. nllnukes. Remove the >;aucepen traria the
A•t invite net hat jus' tern tested f .r lire add sine -half kaspsohful of sandta
making pap.' oat nt nester; it sa claim- and tw►t.thori cupful of ,herd t' 1 se -tea-
ts, that, when treated with a !chas sl,• nut. lase; the mixture uvea: id testators
thentioat to utien met subjected to the ermine- an:1 tepee to sugar eel:title
s w' sal Patwai ss Wire t le the stlt.jftt 4 arsenal the edge .1 rhe sane -even. l'o'ur
Itte insentiOn. the plant :Hake= a ei od g St e'nt'er Into a teetered pate coot shgt►liy
Yltee paper that .ten h' used far aljines%
a' purposes'.
A machine has. been deveciet f, r coat'•
balee' tttareeies is) •,tutrwc 11 0:.11 'prat,' it
t•' finish evading.
\Vainul Cn'ttun'.--Cut Ilse white if an
i,4 pre -els -len leaner: M rut a certain egg with one -haft tataleepocinfort of .'mkt
seeia'tst of e?.*, -ser aa;•thrately. The tura; rater to a Iowa and (laver with 'smile,
geig ht (►f t!ie eacee' and ,' ! lemon Pt a teest retract. Beta orea the
ttoeasomnlent are. ao" ,boned. !'•. e .., mixture is wee t'kmkd. herrn Ftir m
apparatus is attachnl. atxl i1 gradually metes tintC4Iicltters sugar
Irielyer ran out pf'tr'irt'Iy what is a. •.,l to make it sIUI erieugh to ttaralk. Atwell
ly the euttemer, fit. infer nO'ort. 1-, a pound at sugar eel be ;rgcnn'.1. Shape
Am.eng the novtl+k's nems sell.' s T Mee mixture into balls (8 dates. and place
la) totnttain. wh..h can M p•: -i r.n haisetirt eatnut meats .,n tn. aperAura
the ranee tar ivantieestwett, and 's: • N. We.
.. t+nt jet of a akf twirls•.• in: ts." \\ bite Pulled Candy. ---Tc= Deets -• t -
g r i p the f a rt' ! e'r a n tour . 1 • .
1,Alltafn is th,n A't<ti+'d :it the at .:1
lretal�r, whets tt Rt tea+t: c ite. ;f :'riot
!tilt a,1,on kr 'lnunt incivAre l to ti . Tees en
se ne t
ree ial+i! tits is the ewe% •e, e:. _ Tae
41
h)l11tl knls Iher pi(ttare rf roar( e'
%este an &hetet is roads to dr'g it for-
e oat
ar-
t•_aatwhen it Brew s Las whites el its
eyes, unease lark its cars. aud atwevis
tuts tt sugar adtl tine halt tat +• •p.. t a
of %Meese, eine-belt it►p•la'
seater, and .incgtiarler i ea -poi tee: .-1
emelt id tartar. Boil all Mgeether a ilT-
tit asrrutg . nu,h:
Ashen lead e n creed
1.• ;Vet U* msstarr art' t t'ct<;tt %eerier.
Tern on to a teetered ptetter t•. :sue Af
%tee edges :iron. eel k n ftnts lire more.
t,. sitien as 1; can M handled. tuft snail
the :ands iS *tut, and g rots. i.re, the
eat ,ts tend 'T' in a +entre M ts:1411 pwol'agt bre *ewe it nth bps .d forcers acid
kek& A toy antes ;' losr'rlete s e seM shun ' . and rest ts) .'at ee'J'11 in the
se. tee -
and utltl'tt"y 'gets Most.. Miele p 1 f1sn Inset settee!. 1 tit
. , \ lhgs t5 donee tot caw., nal*.o.rtragle el
firer sir. to meanie fix enema }'n Ml!W41/11 p+rts"-
?(:e i+ cenPty tWt $' 1r) t., ant*
her peel n e=t a cent.
epn t13d a R•!t tone ledge ie tat larval,
swallow a piece of bread crust al
once. it will remove the obstruction.
If glue is soaked in water till just soft
and Then dissolved in slightly healed lin-
seed oil, water or damp will have no
effect upon it.
Before drinking boiled water as a bev-
erage, pour it several lilies trent one
i .,. her to another. This will aerate it
and remove the insipid taste.
11 is said that great comfort In the feet
is se curies by weekly sponging the inside
of one's shoes with a solution of equal
parts of ammonia and water.
1f you get a piece of cinder or older
foreign matter in your eye, aloft rub it.
Close beth eyes and gently reg the un-
affected one. Tills will cause the other
tt water in sympathy. and the cinoler
will probably wash out.
A good remedy for a sudden chill is to
inhale three or four ereatt..s, expanding
the lungs to their full extent, hokling the
emoted air as long as pcnsibie. and Then
slowly exhaling it through the nostrils.
Thn effect of this is to set the blood ht
motion as if from rapid exercise.
Broken china may tit mended by
brushing the edges with white lead, sueh
ns painter use. t'rres the pieces toge-
ther and tie thou in peace. and heave two
o" three days to dry. -
Doughnuts are very apt to tectonic
hard it few day after eteokung. if they
are put in a dish and placed in the oven
taint iter to ,sten niinuta•s ono will Md
theme as delirious as when first cooked.
Do Dot 111015 t'tl thein, tor tit n They will
bcct Ire soggy.
An easy way 1e stake a riffle is Ie. take
it very- long stitch on the machine. then
draw carefully the under thread, after
which stitch acreee the top with small
stitch Ie stay the ruffle.
soft
USEFIUL. III\Tr ADOPT PASTRY.
1. Make it in es creel a placer as µes•
2. Pro flour of peel quality. &tete goad
s'.•ot gutter, tard ar atl'p;p.irtg.
3. t'se r► thin. dry. snx+otiile-grained
i'estry beard and rolling pan.
4. Peat -ere wafer as cold set p oseibl,'.
S. Add Iles watt: somewhat freely to
the fla sir when teguwning the mixing,
but with gnat eau'ien a1 the else,
C. It the revelry centahir deakntf fries•
der put it In the (011 It careen as pee.
edge after mixing it._
A\ 0111.
1. Rul.hing iter roiling• the tuner. tete.,
int., the !hour faintly,
2. Adding toe mud: w ser.
3. Using toe moth flour en the 1.sard
aixl gen.
1. 114.11y arid uneven rellerigf.
5 lea. int: the pastry in toad °tens.
4 \per baking. putting the pastas at
ewe ;uk. a C -VM pk:e't', it ehouht graduate
'y reel.
Intervening Gvenls.--etcral ruin of
iu)porlae a uttervenu let\teen the narra-
tive p creche covered by this and 1110 pre•
eeding 1. -sons. Chapter la describes the
eircmu„tatces 'Mewling the, birth of
Ishutael and is inlpx)1tant chiefly as ex-
ptninitg (o Jews.-: of it later day the
'edema! characteristics of a group of
tribes closely- related to the llebi?ws
though lining in separation front !tient
;veep. Gen. 25. 12 -Ire). Abram was true
scores aid reit years old when Ishmael
was horn. Thirteen years jitter, et the
'age of ninety-nine, Ahrnm once more
receives a special revel:itton from Jeho-
vah and a renewal of the promise to
him of a rimier sus p osleril). Two site -
clot signs ore given the patriarch Indio
rating! that Jelin% n1,'s promise to 111111
shall surely l..e fulhtb0.1. The gust sign
is the change to none Irmo Abram,
meaning exalted frillier, lo Abraham,
meaning father of a inullifiele. Storms
name r also changed to Sarah, Mean-
ing the princess. In addition to this
significant change of names the eat c•
rant of circumcision is established as a
perpetual witness tit the special relation-
ship which the descendants of .Abraham
are to bear to Jehovah as his chosen
awtt'tuet nativi). Ishmael ileo is to be-
et
wet me a greet nation, but the special and
olt-l0I)a'aled promise of Jehovah lo
Abraham is to to fulfilled not in Ishmael
but•in a sun to be born to Sarah, wlio
ie to be thaos heir of these special pro-
mises (romp. chapter 17). ht the amour!
o! the visa of the angels to Abraham and
tit strese'lpient Glory of the destruction
of Sodom and Gomorrah (chapters
and 19) we have "one of the most gra.
phically and finely written narrative; in
the Old Testament.' characterized by ease
and pilure41ut'ness of style, as well to
grace and delicacy of expression, and
especially fascinating bemuse of iLs
charming anthropomorphic language.
The put'irayal of Abraham's character in
this passage is especially fine. His dig -
%lily. co_ urtesy, genernsity. hig hminded-
1,ec5 end oli!ailing mist in the justice
rind rogid'a tsne:s of Je31oseh are attrac-
tively dept tel. 1t is because of these
oharaeler traits that God deeins trim
worthy of his confidence. revealing him-
self especially to him and disclosing to
Imo his purposes. The character of
Abraham as thus portrayed is in strong
contrast tc that of his weak and timid
nephew, Lot, and still amore markedly
en eontraet to the profligate inhabitants
of tine ciliac of the plain. For the sake
rat eimlpletiili is chapters 1R and IV
should be studied a'. a whew* u1 oonncec-
lion with the shorter cleaen pnrti;n tit
chapter It: what► terms the text for our
t)r'es 11t lesson.
THINK Literri.Y (1F- rr.
The read to t'.'tnw h3('inss..t said to
).;•. over 5)1)311 '•'f+pertg! cranes. 'matt
.mt(-bhtr-' an, lee canner of (.sir unhap•
penes wet we st.4Idsr the rt*-nsrqurnc'e's
ran be so great. (lire greed palliative ke
the eseermmatrcan la every member of
the famil) tx'I to (Pori: rel the eilt'erm-
staisoes, whatever they Inas R• which
are slake Sad to all.
If at tit peverly. pet it bit ctrrerfu+-ff and
orates tern: is 4 to the til -temper , f
grandpa. try to seek., a joie of it. If a
1.' c tie -Rutty trda-rttel) wort-, and also
Lop/leea, accept it trasety-; de n -t lath
of tl.
Try in that• Sarney cr)-1t to igtio)re it:
antevt e%t•ty tette tali -testing eitrTrllt-
slarlt'ee: '*1 in all the sun sod air• arae;
0'l trt,4 'r L) anti tiiri.e(o1 s • lan't) ii4 Mat
its+•ry its rte• ray of s.lnahitree stione0►twe'e
mei has only to lyre heed kir to to
Setae!.
rider V%i itll -t4111F.R"
"y .;r.,it:-rand . es sl %1:-1 leaavy_
That to;-' 1. kt seer 1 tufts mrd ):i,e tt-r (dh. r
gee he tea Rees rat the ens."
"Nerd r este t it. deet. v.(Mo a \arta
pre: "et eve. sea eery not ;AO etit
gels' he bsd Hort here.'
Verse 11. The men -Tile three torn
n:entirnexl in venae 2. in reality. as tolls
the preetelinp; ands sute'quenl pawl:ons
of lite narr'ntite show, Jehovah uud two
tiigc•ls in Minion form. wham Manhunt
,,:,sl enttrtaunsd in his lent neer Hebron.
From thence --The tent of Abraham N-
oe (taks .4 Mance. ne•.tr Het ten. The
'a.rmediate ernrisi of the Cei•:•hai 1 t-stur'l
t.t tern to aranteince 1, ALIAholtt and
:matt the neer fulfillment of the promise
.f a eon ai►c1 heir. This errand �
they ail►e:tte their intention (•f prr.crt-
i:ag 00 111.-,1* way. tthteI) Ch..i)CCs to be
toward Seale e.
1:. Jtdioaah Fail -In his. heart. as it
were. spt-ah:ng ni s, h{Denney•
shaft 1 hide bunt .Ai'ralu.ut that wt:;+ h
1 de --The apparent htttti►lir.n on 11.e
3 art ret Jeehr,vati testa -ales nett the sae
4 the rnen to .AI rattan] and their %ase!
1' Seekom %etre tae prfirilr and tltatiflt'
errands. and that at lint it was not the
nitentioo of Jehovah t.' reveal the pur-
pPees e.t it!' etcond Praha to 1 ' • cities
tet I1.• 3.111n1 In Al•tal,arr..
It'. Se , to g • -lir.: At'rateen that surely
l+r+ynhe a great and 'nigras. tit. ion --
these and !bee rai'seluent w ents of !itis
sere' *tpiaht rhe songular mirk "1
Selo .% ah s regard Par AUn,M nu naif u-
tt sit .t 011 tit'• dire tte,:)re 1., o
Ain ta.t • oans•'1. J.•t.o%141 reason, f.er
Ale epi ►nn is lowed up it tee unique pose
eon which the leder heeds beth as Ow
.Mp•sae:e td a blessing for all nations.
amid as the ft -tinder eta paruitar 31141
.•iw.s('tr nati:orl. the chief :tie) di-'otguiJt•
ire trait of *lien wee to be righteous-
tees
tghtteous-
t ees awl ,,tedience toe Jehovah.
19. For 1 have i.n•a*n time Teton sp e -
.:al C..ge.iran- a o1 htrt.
To the trot that he tufty e•rominan./ lits
children . . . k, keep tho way of 1•'hre
tat. - %I„ahan s thus counniarwting ba)'
chit4,n awl homett oat
an Ili her 'lle
le
device tee Jetts-Ash, t'.
Ihr e, ne:tern of Jeticeta!ts fulfilling that, 1't+ cases hating been areeeetairies) 10
wheel he 1>s_s premised to .Abraham and! base tako n pacer on that day. Between
his descendents. 1 10 a cie'k and midnight is the tasorite
`:O. Jatec,tab `god ASJrtsttng tint_self tante for the a.errtmaesen est the crime.
e.r4i0 nose M Al.s•ahan, T)ee majority of the murder; appear to
The ens of Soden. and Geniterrah-Th. •v• eetnntitled in densely populate,'
esti re:A:ta 3o o. lite sran.bt!.
tl. 1 alll gr. Ikon new and mese-Naive
Anttncv-prlt!torl hie lan}i:age. morns et.ting
/:tat as sul•ject JO human itmiteesn'
and tender the nehesaly of traieing. a
2.1. Fifty rightenues - Really n small
t►uulber
Ili a city of any size.
25. Shull nut the judge of all the eartlt
d) right '- - Uri jutgnient. We note the
deeply implanted human iuslilut tit Ulan
much requir t ju,tico of God. 1t Le
ea:'ethaw':, keen sense of justice which
recoils al the thought of the Innocent
perishing with Iho guilty. Ile thinks of
Lut anti of others who possibly Inke hire,
(lough selfish and thoughtless, are not
eteep ed in guilt as the outer inhale:ants
ti' Sodom, hila prompted by his eon)pa,-
SMlt (Or them, he ventures with great
d►Ilidence and hunliltty to httcieede tt+I11
Jehovah to spam the city.
2K. Wilt thou destroy all rho city lir
lack int Ilve?-Note Ijte subtlety of the
argument in this appeal.
32. I will not destroy it for ten's sake
-Jehitah has yielded at every
print to the lkelillon of his servant,
Abrahutn. But Abraham on his part
either door not think it nave:sury, or
does not venture lu ::.'1:-f'!rther that Lot
and hi; imuu'diule tinnily alone is)
sparest. Yet Jehovah here, as always,
dots exceeding abundantly above all that
men can ask or think.
33. Left off communing -Conversing.
Abrahtuli returned unto his place --Itis
tent at Uebt.tfl, by the ter'eleettts of
Mumre.
THE CRIME OF MURDER
t:RI\MINAI. STATISTICS OF ENGLAND
AND MALES Folt 1905.
Sten in the Prime of %igpor Commit Most
of Them -Women the Com-
monest 'Victims.
A remarkable analysis of the crime of
nturder for the last twenty years by Sir
John Macdennell, Master of the Supreme
(burl, is the principal feature of the
criminal statistics of England and \Vales
for 1905, which was issued the other
day. The number of people sentenced
to death for murder fissin 1886 to 1905
was 488 males and 61 females. In the
last decade the actual number of cases
which execution followed the death
sentence Is shown in the following table -
Year.
191.15
1904
1903
1902
1:101
1000
1690
1898
I h97
Send. Gua d.
32 17
28 16
40 27
33 22
28 15
2e) 13
2'.) 15
27 11
11 6
33 20
A CRIME OF \IGS.
Sir John writes : ''Tho first fact to be
noted is that murder, as might be ex-
pected, is a crime of men. Murder
means murder by men in a great major-
ity of cases. Out tit tele sentences to
death since 11x6, 4$s were men. The
figures aro more remarkable because as
regards women they include cases of
child murder, to which they are, of
nurse, much more prone than men.
The proportion of persons executed to
those sentenced is ale° much higher in
taco.
"The ne.Y1 ncticeaale pond; which is
rarely nienlioned, is that a great major-
ity of the persons murdered sn' w•0n1en.
They are as three to one. Murder mean, was the son of a mech.tnkai cnseneer
to a %cry great extent lata murderutg of
FATiIERS OF RIGII MEN
flOel 01' 1111 -AI Ni:itt: (.O\1PtI:•
leen.% Pewit Mee.
:iuhty l'ei ('end. !kin et- had an tremolo
e'I (Iter Ibte n Dellal. ler
Meek.
It is an interesting anti instructive
tae! that at feast hour out of live of
American ►multi-uuil Dairies are sons 01
mon who, in their most flourishing days,
probably never knew what it was to
enjoy an income of t:i u week. Indeed,
to the majority of them such u modest
revenue would have ficest d riches, says
London Tit -Bits.
Tho father of Andrew Carnegie,
though he toiled ear:y and late as a
damask weaver nl Uw►fermitine, was
barely able to supply the humblest Of
necessaries for his small family, and
when steams looms came to !supplant
hand weaving he was coinpelled to sell
his looms and his few sticks of turns•
lure, and take his bcys to America,
where he found employment as a weav-
er in one of the cotton factories of Ab
legheny City, and where one of hie
snn, little (hough he dreamed it, was
lo amass one of the most colossal for
lanes the world has ever known.
The father of John D. Rockefeller,
%%twee tv alth lo -day is said to be al
let,.t dreuhle that of oven Mr. Carnegie,
Cultivated o few han•en acres In Tioga
county, N. Y., and added a little to the
family exchequer (scanty enough at
the best) by sending out Ids boys to
hoe au•1 plow and husk cora'
FOR NEIGHBORING FARMERS. -
W. A. Clark, the "copper king" of
\i mtana, whose fortune is variously es-
timated at from t8,0i)0,000 to fabulous
figures fa otne even credit him with an
income of 1:6,010 a Day), is tate son of
a small Pennsylvania farmer who pro-
Fabiy. never cleared .£10) in any single
year of his life, and for shoot the fu -
lura millionaire did the hardest of farm
labor until years after he had reached
manhood.
The father of W. S. Stratton, the Col-
ored-) "gold king," was a small boat
eui'der at Jeffersonville, ind., with s o
many children and a purse so ill titled
that he was conmpelleed to lake his son
away teen school at fourteen to ape
prenli:'o hien to a carpenter. C011nno-
dore Vanderbilt, founder of one of the
sicallhies! families in the world was
cradled in the direst poverty', and be-
tw.en the ages of Si‘ and ,sixteen, enrn-
cd his own living by performing odd
lobs that ca1110 his way, from selling
newspapers and heeding horses to farm
labor and porter's work; and Jay Gull,
who accumulated a fortune of J:13,rif*),-
it00 before he died. at the age e,f fifty-
e:gtiieewas the sort of a etruggling funn-
er, who found .so much use for his
son's services that he practieaily recce: -
et n:, schooling at all.
Sir Ilirant Maee.), the mlllinnoire
iciten'or, had for n father a small
rr. whose bisintes was so unprofitable
ere his sun had to eke out the family
income by faro work and wood turn-
-'ng before, at the age of fourteen. tie
tva.; apprenticed to a coa'h builder et
Fast Corinth. George Westinghouse.
tehts,;-a`_rbrak,' has scolded such
A GOLDEN HARVEST.
\senna -n try men. It is a curious tact.
nn the other hand, that the number of
men kiting ty manslaughter exceed-
w omen i•yeewo to one."
A great majority of the murderers arc
committed by persons between the ages
of 21 and 40. that is, during the period
of gteate t physkal vigor. This fact is
illuetrate.I by the following table shuw-
ing rho ages of persons uo_nwicted of
murder !veru Itke.6 to It►i5:
1e. to 16
16 to 21
21 to 30
30 to 40
a) to 50
5)) to 60
Above CO
No.
1
56
19(1
141
9,
51
31
"A furlaer notable point in regard In
murders cremated by men is the very
large proportion of metrders of wises
Out of a total .'f 4£8 murder. for which
mens v:rre sentenced to death in the
twenty years under con'' leralirn. no
fewer than 121. or about 1 in 1, were
murders of w.vb% by the=ir hust'ands.
Most of the men convicted of taunter tee•
longed. like the w tuned,
TO THF. LABORING
CLASSES.
"T tie pnlr+:ipal causes or emetic es kor
niuelers during this period acre : Jeal-
ousy. and intrigue':'. 92: Drink. 90; quar-
rt'13 or raga'. ep. revenge. i : t':,tib► rt'.
!it; exit. C,t,t f*.%' 1 ty. 31: illegal ot'-ra-
bions, 12: and for insurance money. 3.
Sit Iuniay is a favorite day fete murder,
urtari dietrlc!s, eeeports. manufacturing
teens and coining; di4rcls."
Sir John \la_donnel) makes this r"-
•.'eereah(e dee iarate n of the relation ..1
drank to crttna :
:near dinette tiereena1 toque) to *seer. "IAunke muss is ne doues lee ...mese f.2
lams the aotttal tvrstiholt of aliens al many crimes arid ns the acrnrnpsnrrrrent
Matt., of many other's. tent the theory of the
re o) i:t rir:u runstitr.'' the rieet4 oris elr,*ie0e as•rresp ereklla-f et tr,rue mei
drunk. -congas reuse I•e tiee et with tau-
lio+t:
a int: the w k eret !-T r' queen si. sNg,-
g,)15!' 11.'
envied prad•a.n1 in the nerr*•
ante's n+it*i aria tar sheet le- es elates
itatasee.t Wel this story st•-'til•t the: t
Vane :great. Att.•.a)G the are -series to 0 Ire-
stn etre are. cent' n hest sr6f l of shell
lit.,rot• !call tet a oaten et*' paste, Wee
et stales. The- 411•1441 antves reel b a•Y
cfaept'r t;. email' (Qi liars 14 Wa
teal tg w14), c fmn:oy , a ygrner-1'01e a
estw ..r .Fn A lir•• 1'!"'.''''•, takt•s 1*' ai-
e-�,1p}s-st af.•htiitr+tt' e•r 2.11110 greens' e.t
ii- 4:t 4 x: * , rend one ;4 Ile'~ t t rat Sae
were :e a, i the grate resten :-t tee rate
t':ier*. 1. tuAki 4, .i &.11/811. 41V tante
ase seat tart ..,. t,•:lahy cerise fee sod
sae. 15 ee ;r:Jti seed (*t+.44 1.111..e 1)1
r.444110readsse144 a..t tol'rde+tle'` 14 JO
To Parte Iru!l is Pr `'r 0.4.`t%
the nee "settings at able
sit l.sr+!r , ltre*n n( triter t'iansd, ataenl tIa► dal fbeyr earn'
pars)b'• '•'.1ea llec Iran. '4 .\:. :stet ..tn.* t tier sla_�r Js a iCA.H7
Wats USA t r a. pee f i paces.
#-
' f flti.l' UNDER THE 5h:lN.
11 is 1ttit at ...1 urecimess.n for aoOkit
who cies to gust at ne44h4' un tete the •hut.
The .light asaYsiti soul generally makes the
w.'ltan mvc lit PAWN" nm stns than she
meted he. 1f the needle dle een tae Peon tit
detk•r eat !triers (se "-Mere i -e deaden
no akin (.ser ll. cut Jor*n •'tg to it. and
resume it. If it c: goer tl t.e ,ern tins wo-
man must gra. to Itee hospital and ;ante it
krd►tsf fen" et tbe light et the IMoritg ra
gess•,
".4044311". .:nett needles et44•srep err
anene-ther $.4 )0•1.5'. a►•d ate quite frt.
seetorls: Dee .%1 stens caws is raceme alwsr.
Ly art* fit .d the ;n.1-0• inset fns• sitte *-
.t: a small way -of business. John W,
Mackay, the "sever king," was the sun
:f a destitute Irishman who emigrated'
'o Americz with his family in ',term!)
t•I fsrtune, and after Iwo years of ter-
rible struggle, died. leaving a petuti-
lees widow to support herself and her
young children ass best *he e:nuld.
The f.'ttter of !eines Gorton Bennett,
the millionaire, proprietor of The New
York Il• rats), reached 11,st•:n a goad
many yeers ago with ttcarsely a cent
an his pocket -indeed. he was 50 peer
that for two days he went w:lhoul food,
until be 'vas able to relieve his hun-
ter toy picking up a min in the street.
ftus-ell Sege. whs left a fortune uf
over JtO.O4th)rl, w•1rs the youngest of
six cA.!rnen of very poor .arelf
a. end
was letting nn a farm te1-re he was
ten. The parents of Mr. P►dtsbury, lbe
"flour kin:; of North .America," were in
boor eirrumstanrra, and his Naito -id
w a's passed in a Very hunih.'e home. and
O'tes. Mr. Leiter and Potter Pal-
mer were all sons of small farmers, and
served their apprrsifi•'esltie to work as
fares, )at* r e e. John \\ atlnetnaker,
lc hose stores ant r:• -tare are famous
lee yr •rld over, is the seri and grand-
son of brickmakere, and the tether f
Mr. Heinz. who has male miilk•ns out
c t h:.s condiments. made a modest in-
c'•mt as bncknrakrr and market gard-
ener.
inti\T SFi)VL \W.ATS t.UKF:\\'.Alt\f.
11 ,w -giver simple a ureal may to tfd: eR
_dived be m half -stay taork ubtut fend
heat is to be aersad hot. F:"i, tike soup,
cannot be semi.' too 3) 4, and roast enter
.houkt sink as tit knife :mikes the feel
incision, N.ithing is elle_ tszna *hen
lukewarm. Among ni.aJs irrnh suttees
m :t 1;) basing! rarer'.•!) •rued. It to
comply sleeted unless serve,) cra:k:ing
hurt.
GIitl. FI*IE\De;.
Nell. `fed y. u tel ter 1 n)u:'ir.'t
yeeer
Pare: "Yee and she ,e*'m..l s';r.
ptiew•l.
Sete -reit (Joint yr*, explain le, ter
t sl
Eli. gra the tire:km-petit te
11e1k : "Yes. that's what eouvreed seer,
ph^ •ant Bast sett were no eIiirk.n.'
1)IFIEI1I:'1 F-fit,t,l o-
"1 -m surprised." oast \! - \ . -t Lived.
. hear you fields et J:.. , 34 s 'reel
nese k410w, 1043 at* ed to else hewn."
"Yes-- menet! Newhited: . (.ea the
eon frthzw i met Aimee *i' a ' eels :eons
,qtr t543e'ytrsa,n Wh.) 4111'+113 trip ate
twee i_S I'0.' ruse rest. lleoft.eow do yoga
tyke melted ale l'y this limo • '
AllafW1PIt1teTf: STEED
'TL3 )"*3 kivat 1 ^AIC trastdle.J -"rites
i•' r-1 drt were.'
"1 sin it. mast late teen <n a a ji,Ae
seer..