Exeter Advocate, 1906-01-25, Page 7PM IS NOT 118 OWN 111
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DAINTY La:cilia-a '
, i„tfiyai t4:c.i_ilingcr,W(:4 ill nscNi3y wile
'fruit is tic:fro,4 Taiie li'llf a ikanal ,
broLi4Viliwij;,,, half a teeitet cif boe
eliteaped eery finc3,, two Gil',..',-; of sugar
in u half of 1:',.„, half di+
well oi iite.—t'rov. x. '2.. ,
Tate meta of righteeits inan 'is 4,1 tire bfflidinrg c..:q wi.,:1that eviry eaten ,ataattei aiad of. a _large toteeei elet ich
t - . ' 01' the univeree wortee with' vou, wialatt '1:°7-J''' '112N ail I1. t1 i','i1r nito '
,,i hole water 1ift annot be. lahel yODn' 131;€1,T,703. '44110anty i3 itS iit.VIL 0%.,, k-:'-'",°-'f,i gm -'10 and ottani for 0.141 hour
weeer from the earth antrtha ievehe Of cuse fateaeing." Bisitteousness as ite (rem; anti a hall- ', e
elteilli lean- •their tires: te ' ., ,
justilication. . , * Herd B&F,,cuits.-,Wc.igh one pound )
Where, deserte blight, a Well-ef vt ate: Who:teller, the eyes of •men, sfic. ornote flout', ai-14 a liftle Fait; citai malt(' it int'
as 4, poteseseion beyond price. -•.-114 the the jot, in ewilielia God 101.'i'S Cififl 1.iVe?;
ebrew of the 'laetrile' and 'Prove:bet Wave:Into the heart of the rlialltaouta
'therefore, who Iteiew the heat and the :Within the soul of the righteeee is life.
elietrees of scorching ,,santia. Who anew '10 that life is thcauhundant good fortune
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HOME.
A Career Built On integrity
Best Welfare
f,J citic,,k, siii." fJ2Ev.i) t,:,., -s, ri.1,-6)1,,),4-i.,..iN ‘,:,; fiio eate liir0 •i,,titi iiete ea,,te.eed
To Cere 3 iiauee The (FT;iiii,vies ,i,-..-0 7( an') it Vva=i; deeliired it 'was iiiiti4' ilit !woRKsHop To GABINET
fi iNilit, 1116.1(Q1(2,C,C ix,i7:1.'',4;a, 1.-.-4-o rii.N.':i ,.f lie. ta,ii'n ui;')ii thi! truLii, 1
(,f i'',4,,,i saVt, oni Fiteeet A AieeiteeK; TeciaN„
, ()are e aill a filril (-4 ,01.ii,ei"
11.'6Iail thi'vl,_6:1'0,ri,',?. ef i it was si.f:iiVil thet May wee a fi^,,T
ate:e. Bea eZ ',Ir4._,0,,,h,:it,.. raw!, SV11 F.Y31,'-'i frau tegt fee' a Ficlr ill'iii '''-a(i' ii
ly c _.-),. , , -:,:,%' 4-,:i'r e‘e. ieteet, Tee eelieges, tioie, ifenee, it vies et etee.i. la:" tied
, : iseet laeaveie- eeeei iq4,,, (,-,Ii-wrfa.---vi-r4.1 sirrrong -.1.i..-4:',.i fro seeitieg te raiee nice
q)0,•i? ritet, it et the ciat t I te 'set tee -geed
thaiy for thece weeles. i(gi cut off he iielt itettait
t taeatirea. The csFiii:---,fon holt] wbich agauist
ing :Illurtt etaitd, Tet, reilwaY tiatiliaatae and iiat vv4-'4 re'
; twws 4ze enei real teeee'; ii tar tea reet of :"•Th, hefeve,
lemip ercrk rpacy 6i14 sevi ere -ye s of wrelge entee
) aeitaten them it is'enly ne',-_,;,,ary to hid roved to' le the, WA-W.1y Cr4li-
(-ow, solted,watc,7 Leak?, hod Fcen fi0;Y:eratoy "earagea
thcati .I111 1O_ eftet, outang thein Jo partfe tla ery thee the, loas of -
CtIRFER Ole JOHN 111.41Ns, BAT
TaattiLA LONDON.
Ile 'IN 1 ed Lomita' Jealraels iste Simi&
of Work tor 'Seven
Weeks.
Whetlier the Liberal Ministry has a
ieng life er a sliert erie, it wilt be nuts-
eee foe the eeeeeien, Int4 John Burns•
a 51- kjtiont. iwen t will net eamd Ail thatteeteeneeteoef the eeee wet; f-430Batto2C,i'a 111,! lirefi workingmen to no
the .sudden Felten of the wilt, alai' Lea the noel- puzeling whNt time' has', Oat -a e- it a Pala, 119 111 UK= IId
f lighting it, or the-preesllare of teo,tigitta'ever,heen melee upon 3.1''4' 1l. It ;$ tv-l0 rag -HI -tete ''3a);..1-3 Londlin M17
a' nice-, snioothestiff (lough,. with ineee;
e •
mita. Boll out very thin, • divide ina
biscuit.% and Lake in a balsa oven at
tin minutes. Place on a sieve till cold
ava.er ,15 the synenym of life, no in iie with which righteou,enese reward?, its i a ' I store.1a, Pa -
powerful language could be used to set own. When. he expresses that righte- Stewed ttotatoesee-Put into a frying
forth the value a righteousness then ousness it is like the hills expressing pan a small -piece of butter, or clariliel
the bald sentence which says„, "The themselves in streams which run eaniong sbaeletf; pileaDiPplteilli,ga,fiad alittie chopped parsley,
mouth of a righteous roan is' a well of the valleys, giving life to bird and beast, gill ter millte,thicken-
life." posse, ed with water. Lea this come to the
to grass and tree, making farms
He speaks the truth always and ins ble and the human life.free of the aevere boil, add cold boiled) potatoes cut into
of death. There is nothipg "so fine as
A DIGHTEOLtS MAN,
• clampe Wet hold it in pleiee.
it SVCIS first arofiglit disegreerla It ie eor- John„thlreie has been hefere the leuhllu
prng that. another jury hae, •ageecell. aittae Yeaa ISTS, when Ile 6pent
'Leon a e-eatgea, and oriti, thanyo• Ilie police. cells foe the crime of
people will continue to think is thteely ii.oblieesaealiing on Claphani Conn -non.
I i
small woralar, titet the jury• Lefore wheal Mal- • •
•
r, MAN WITH IRON NERVES
• PLACED IHS LEG ON TRACK TO
ICUT OW BY A TRAIN,
word Is like water from cool wells. It eliees, and let all eoole gently for ten . .
,refreshes. It vitalizes. '• minute, ' Add a little bit more butter Jury Heckled That He Had Caused Mine
Mao builds nothing that is not build- and serve very hot,.
01 on truth. The hands of hfee daily
toll move in truth. This is the reality
from ore to engine, from quarry to
houses, from forest to furniture. he
'dealing with things he is dealing with
BE
No beauty can equal the beauty of hall-
riess. It has a loveliness more gra.cious
[ban flowers.
It ties eldrin beyond. the enchant-
ment of birds. It leas a grandeur -out-
Novel Way of Making Coffee. ---Take
One .ounce and aehalf of ground coffee
and one pint ot cold water, place both
In a clean Pan on the. fire. Saratill'it Seldom, even in -courte of law, ha
-truth. If he deals truthfully, eae uni- doin• g Mohntain axid sea. No sunsets are - sPoonful of cold water. Boil up again, whic• has just- ended t W
achievement. If untruthfully, gravita-
self to be Thus Horribly
• alutilated.
comes to the boil and then add a table- extraordinary a case been heard as
verse 'a conspires to bless him with
lion, iron, Wood, water, fire,
-• THETRUTH bla THINGS,
;presses the bitter cup of failtera' to his
Lips.. In map's relation with his fellow
man, great civilations, aS' great wordq,
An be built oxilee upon righteousness,
upon every raan's speaking truth with
les neighbor. , -
Every great etate is builded on truth
and goes to ruin in falsehood, through
disloyalty -to its moral ideals,. Notwith-
standing apearaneee to the contrary,
- this- waloh the universe in
-its atom sanctifies. • '
• Through tlee. mists of the apparent
s
that
•
,s,1 splendid net sons, nor stars, nor add a tabieepoonful of kco31
ld • water end .a •verdict against Edward -May
avy
dawns,•not mueic nor Sha.kespeare; not holt up once moret4 Draw thepan to the' colliery, laborer, who claimed be
built by man. • utee so that the liquid clears. Strain for tire loss of hi 1
;
any
canvases, nor cathedrals; nor anything side of the stove,,,let it stand ten min- darnaees against a ..railway comp
s egs. Exceedingly
'The thief -pastor' of the soul should :through a piece of annel carefully, impr ba 0 is a mild term to apply to
' ft o bl • ''
ba ' the passion for bolinessa for in its To make sugar icing smooth go over the defence out forth by the comperea.
beauty all other•beauty is hallovved; in it. carefully with a .large knife dipped *The suggestion that a strong,- health
it- spirit all •other achievement has irtto boiling water, Smopth the whele man stiould, for the sake of what cora-
werth and' in the soul ef the achiever surface in this way, working the knife pensation he could obtain, deliberately
the eternity of God is` awake,. in one direction, and -constantly dipping, place his two legs on thealine for a train
Things pass. A brief wane and the lt into the hot aasate. - to cut off imposes a severe strain en
pieces of earth we' Imow are no more For Soup .Stock.—To every quart of credulity. But the jury found, after only
forever.' Even while here things cannot water take one pound of shin of beef, an ,hour's eteliberation,,, that -it was true,
satisfy. They disapoint. They enslave. ditto knuckle, of veal or mutton., two"' One recallein ,this' connection •the, ee-
The greatest good fortune anyone can c,arr.otst, two onions, a stick of celery,lfrairt of a once popidarnautioal sopg:
achiev is integrity of heart: The divin- six cloves and Six peppercorns. Sim- . • •
est weiteae is that conscious reetityde, met' fro six' aotirs, skin -luting carefully all "For what's the odd if you -lase your leg,
the peace of which never forsakes a So lang as you drub the foe?"
. ,
the time, strain, and when cold remove
Build,. your -career on the inteet,rity of The imperishable rialte$ Clad are. ,flis Cekl -rlde 4's an excellent wear a
by the *integrity of' yourselL Theo, Yon Pitting .of flaked fLeh. Mix twe cupfuls of the fish
look wit•h clear eYes ,into the reality, rnan throligh all . years and all words. ' tb4' '
theeuniverse, mastered ail frienly 'wise t good fortuna whose youth is a welV up the remains of 'eald cod, or alai'
HESUNDAY SCHOOL litgivanyniPilesOl'*2a'rthetrr°Frdi11)11t31.1?
• • . • kept in _condition, When, ' how-
ever; a prince or other person •of royal
'dignity deaires to make a journey her-
alds -announce the fact sufficiently .1,1i
advance to give the inhabitant & of the
country tarough which th.'e 'Preece, is te
pass an eepportunity -to put the, highway
into condition for travel. In like man-
ner, in a figurative sense, John the Bap-
tist -Was to announce the corning of the
Messiah', arid for.his corning PepPle were
to prepare themselves,:
4. Johneearriee-Verses 2 And 3- haye
have beeneparentheticaa; canitting thas
Parenthetical reforatte to -th Prophecies,
and joiriing this .fourth veree to the first,
the significance- of- our -comment on
verse 1 becomes apparent," "The -begin-
ning of the gospel , of Jesus Christ,. the
Son of Ged," constedt so far as Mark's
narrative was concerned, in the coming
Of John the Baptist. -
.13aptized—Jahn'o u$e of the baptismal
rite was unique,:and -fa to be carefullet
distinguished from. Christian baptism.
he had started with them as thetr with Windt, it was not identical, It was
tendant (Acte 13). But.in the Epistle a baptism Unto repentance, and signifies
to the Colossians ate -again appears -as ehe- itievard 'purification of the person
.the companion of Peal (Col. 4,10, and. baptized. "It tack eip into a symbolical
is mentioned -also in Tithe 4. 11,, and in rite the figurative eveshings of such Phileme 24. a -Peter. aaso, in' his ,secondisages as Isa..1. 10; 4, 4; jer. 4.,14; Zech.
-.epistle, speaks of Mark, palling him his is, 1; Psa. 51, 2. Outwardly it had its
son in the faith (1 .Pet. 5. 13), and it is -eomiterpart in the Levitical washings of
Jo the home of Mark's mother eiri Jeru- the law (Exod. 28. 4; Lev. 44. 8, 9; 151
Galena where a company of -disciples was 8, 10, 13, 16, 2a; 27; 16. 26, 28;.1.7.45,
hat Peter has erica b
INTERNATO04/Al4 USSONO
• 4
:IAN. 28.
LEisoir woRD,§TuDrEs.
latoiee---These: Word Studies are based-
. ten the text of theeReviaed Version,
Jolla Mara, ,and His Life Sketch of
jesus.--taar btu, $ebond Gospel -has been
given,not the.ffebrew nametof ite-atithor;
which . was Mini but- his Boman eur-
.. . I
• name, which was Marleaaa"John whose
,auroame was Mark" (Acts 12: 12) was an•
etedaneeofettarnaleas' and Saul on their
first missionary journey,' artd 'past pre-
ceding (Acts 12. 25; 13, 5), -and .a little
later a source of contentiore between his
superiors (Acts 15. 27-39, because of his --
having' left them -before the completion
of their first missionary tour on vvhieli
tga hered in -prayer for lets 'deliverance, etee„"e-Geuld.
p pg maieeen-
leaelet set tree „faorei prison (Acts'12. 12).
ltilarlq toaPei. is distinguished from
those ofaielatthew and Luke by its breve
ity.. On him the lip a Jesus' *seems tee
lhave rnade the iin i
p ess ort of a swift
anarch of- • important events tot:yard.' a
tragic enaaa -4 Omitting all 'mention. oft
the battle:and ehildhodd Of Jesus, and
touching but briefly on thet 'events of
resurrection rriorning; his life sketch of,
Jesus is devoted • almost wholly' to the
period of -his public ministry, "a hoot
and terse narrative • of ;a three, years!
campaign:a'
-•That Mark wrote for Gentile rather
than for Jewish readersis evident froin
the feet that lie constantly explains Ile -
brew terms and 'customs., The factethat
he refers to the destruction of Jerusalem
as im event still in the future; though
imminent, necessarily places the date ef
the eomposition a the gospel before
A, D.. 70. Tradition points to Beane as
-thee- place of its writing, and certain
Latin words peculiar to this gcespel give
support to this tradition. ,-.
'Veree 1. The beginning ---.m5 verse
eeems to be intended, as a title or heading'
of the paragraph in regard to the 'work
el John tlid Baptist, whose annOtince-
motet of the craning of ono mightier than
himself Was the beginning of the gospel,
61 good news about Jesus Christt,
JCS118 Cluestealesus is the persenal
name of our Lord. In Matt. 1. 21 ite
descriptive meaning is pointed out to be
,that of Saviour:, 'Thou shalt call his
name Jesus; for it 10 he that shall save
his people from tlieir aalle Word
,Christ ig the official tilre of Seale, and
meane literally, the anointed, oa Mes-
siah. The expression "the gospel
jesue Chriet" ratty mean either the glad
tiding; eoticotaing Jolt's Christ or thoee
'Preflight letablin to the world,
J. ,gninta the -prophet-?Che king
;-:cfmion in.ith rendering "in the,
prophets" follows a small minority ef
the older manuscripts, ,The quotation
which follows iS really /alien from two
prophets fitt part being from Mal.
2. 1, antillie radoral from Isaiah 40, 3.
Bea tro thy face ----In the original pas-
sage from Malttela, Jehovah himself is
pealing and nape "Behold I send my
iessengee, who ,shall prepare the Way
°fore me," lie for whew, the way is to
0 pa -eared i'4 none other than God
nettle Meth: "And the Word be-
lie lathe and dwelt ainong US" (John
. 14). hi Matt. 11. 10 ;teens himself
atte 04,a that ire the coming of John
e proplielly of NfalaChi wir4
lfllIl(l: iS he of whom it is
ritttn. 1149.old. I send my iiteettger
for, twee."
Mal -;e ye ready the way of the
Bepentaoce—The Greek-. word means
eup of butter, add otec cup cif peklered
Inerally . ',Change of mind, especielly
sugar slowly, then aeld tevo egg yolks,
auch conies from an afterthought. one at a time; •and beat well each time.
iTtitte to•reconsider One's action, and '0 I3eat all until'aery agate then. add orie-
turn from a life of,. sin to one of
righ eousneas and holiness, Is to -report
e 5.: MI the ceuritry of hidaeaaand
"they ofaJeruetalent-e-A hyperbolical, e
pressianajust as if we should• read in
eity paper Ilia the whole eity -had turn
out to see or hear ma Prestdent.
e Clothed With camel's huir4Cloth
made of , ,boaree -010.th WlYsten fro
camel's hair.
A leathern girilleLataorripare .the CIa
criPtien of -Elijah' s raiment: "He Was
hairy man, and giet with girdle
leather about his loins"'(2 Kings 1. 8).
Locusts and; wild • honey—Sever
gleecies of Iocoets furnished food foreth
common people of 'Palestine, especial'
itt times of famine. By wild honey
meant the honey ° Of the wild bee *store
ID bellow tree trunks and In eaves an
crevteea In the roCks. The Greek wor
seem's' also to° have designated the see
'of certain trees.
Latchet—The strip ,of leather tha
fastened a sandal or shoe; 'The di:Deals
word COMO. frOin 0. F. laS, or 'eget
frioolea," from which comes also the nom
`lace," ,any kind of card -holding to
gettier pierta. of .a garment or shoe.
8. In the Holy Spirit—Or, "with th
-Ioly Spirit."
9. Nazareth of,Gaillee—The plirasduo
Galilee* is* one of the many little ex
lanatory phrases found in Mark's gee
el whleb, inchoate that the circle of
eadera- ofor which the gospel 'was* in.
&Idea was Gentile and mitside of Pal -
stifle
10. 'Straightway—A favoeite word of
le author, whone narrative might he
ppropriately called "the /straightway
ospelen
Bent asunder -an the Greek. Um pre-
ent participle, is used, indieatiog pre.
ent action, being rent asunder.
But Edward My has lost both ..his legs
'And been drubaed by the railvviry ,com-
Panet into the bargain. 'lie has not ob-
.
justified by lite evidence. Sofenutiaal areal that moment he has progressed
tion is common enougli. There are ie. aloaalaa steadilY, not always with, the
litnenS fanatics who do it for the good
of their souls, and there are eane people
who do iteethough never in such a
frightful fashion 05 May is convicted of
doing—to escape conscription. But that
a man—no matter of what iron nerves
he may be composed—should dE-eide to
part with his legs to see what price they
would fetch from a railway company
and a few enterprising publishers, must.
be set down as one of the strangest
freaks to which the thirst for gold has
ever yet compelled mortal man.
AN ARGTIC MISSIONARY
CIERGYMAN RACK INENGIAND FROM
NORTHERN STATION.
'Dependent Altogether on Stores From
England — Prst hurch of
Sealskin. ''
The Rev, E. Se Peck, wife has return.
ed to England trona rr rragia frfrebrdlu
ed 'to England after t.coticlucting .inis-
ssionary•work in tele Arctic regains for
30 years, gives a vivid accoant ha -life
-among the Eskimos.'
with an equel quantity of' hot steamed tamed so Much, as the atriee -of the flis,missionostation ona of the mot
rice; acid/al 'pint of Milk and letto well several pounds of flesh tliatale has lost: lonely and inaccessible -in the world.
beaten eggs. - Seaeon -to taste With salt, MI that he has -gained -'by his horrible. The headqiiarters are on tae South shore
cayenne and -anchovy esseacee form into Mutilation is the sobriquet of The Man of Cumberland • Sound., at Blackleaca, is -
a mould distlawita fine breadcaumbs, with the Iron Nerves. Perhaps that may land, a little. spot two miles .bong and
and 'bake for half an hour in 0, ateady enable him to earn a little money for a
700 wards broad, roupd s pos-
e allele to walk in a, couple of, bours.
•
oval. brief while as • "There are n,o trees end vegetation
Salted oncis.—Shela, blanch and 1
dry tbe alrriandse allow two teespoonA EXHIBITION FREAK, exeept moss and very light grass, and.
of butter*for each eup of almonds; u-----------------------e,Ay's story, in Febroary 'THE LAST PLACE ON. EATITIL
* no Meta' Mr. Peck says. "it seems like
. these ain, a frying pan and eookgvidan last he vvas a pa•ssenger in a aeaental-clese t'There as no food 'in the conntrY &-
moderate heat, until the Almonds „are a coinpartmenLoi. the Taff Vale 'Railway Cent seal, and for, alt, our stores eve aaete
tlelicate hrown„ stirring frequently for Company of which he Was the sole oc- 'to he, depenstent,upon what we tak.e out
about a gearter of` an hour. Then sprin- eupetit. Fle said that he• aw4ys travel- frorn England. Our only conmaunica-
kle with salt, poannts thily be sattea ,the. ea seeend-elesseorathet line beeense a a ' witle-thaeoutskleeworld Is b3 means
•parrie• veay; flret removing. the shell third-class compArtmorits were, aleveys of a tr,ading shtp, which, especiatlyecher-
brown . Skin, a • • ' . ' ' . : :dirty.. Just °Weide Cardiff," he declaaed, toed, visits -as ,once a
'boiling het tia pour over theme beat two 0 n a ' i
I
'- Stale Bread -Gricalle-Cakes.—Sottle two his umbrella•feta arid is he -was picking "Our little eettlement -coneiste 'of- a
,cupsestale breaderumbs for ane -hour in it -up theateain euddietileaswervect„ throW- chtireh;.a tiospital And two dwelling
..,. .
one quart of milk .which, has beert-made ing him against tbe door,' wlueheetvullett houseseeone.ior :the two traders arid one
On 0 ne. fortiny _colleague and eny,self. These
eggs until light yolks azed white separe He lost consciousness frorn the fall, he
ately, into the soaked breadebatter, put stied, and -recovered' his seoses just first the beaten, yolks, then three 'Oancea time to, see another train bearingedown
of flour, qne tablespoon melteil butter; on him. •Its wheels passed over his degs
one scant teaspoon salt; heat- thoroughly some diatarice above the ankles:
and then stia in two tea'spocata aeking He shouted for help And ,a railwatt
poevder and the beaten whites. Grettee
the. griddle and' bake quickly in small
Orange Pudding -a -Seek .one cup of
breaderutnbs in one arida half
of milk until soft, then beat well with
a spell.; „Add the waited rind ofeone'
orange and the juice oatwo rather mall
oranges. Add the Not yolks ofete
-eggs and one-half cup f sugar, filen
stir in the whites beaten stiff,' 13utter six
cups, fill with the mixture and -bake un-
tie -firm in a slow oven, gerve with a
sauce made as follows: Cream onetthirel
•
Miele Chatlete 61 don't know. as you
will thank -me for interfering, Ellen, but
they, bit Inc this Mr. Cashman you are
golf* to marry utterly worthlese."
Ellen: "Why, Uncle Charles?" Miele
Charles: "Not in a pecuniary 'sense, you
know----he'e got money eneugh—but from
1111 intellectual point ''of Eneee
"Oh, Uncle Charles, you don't know what
a turn you gave met"
"Fattier," laid an inquiring youth,
"when a hen SitS an an egg for three
weeks. reel it' don't hatch, is the egg
spoiled?' "As an Adair! et diet. my eon,
it 15 iltlinefortil a faileree hut tee politi.
tat „pulipoees bao 114 no's,"
third cup of cream and two teaspoons of
flavoring. Set over hot Water long
enotigh to melt the batter, buteno longer.
Pour the sauce round -tlie little puddings
•
and .serve at once, •
,
HINTS FOR - T14E ' HOME.
The insects in yotir piano will arobably•
disappear if you open the case --and wipe
Ilia woodwork on the inside with a little
paraffin. Leave this open tili the swell -
hies, passed off. Produre some naphtha-
line, sew it up in ,smell muslitiabags,
and put It inside the piano, taking care
that it will not interfere,'wille the action
of the instrument,
A simple cough mixture, which would
Miley() the children, is: this: Place in a
Jar six ounces of treacle,.seven ouoces of
honey, and text ounces of vinegar. Stand
the jar !in a saucepan 'of boiling *able;
and stir till all.the ingredients are mixed
and warmed tfirough. Then -add three
drachms of ipeectouahha wine, and bot.
tle tor use. The dose i$ one tablespoonful
every three or four hours.. ; ,
Your -shirts, collars and poeketehand-
kerehiefe will be beautifully white if you
soap them in, and let them stay twenty-
four hours. When boiliag, use plenty of
clean water,' and rinse several thnes° in
clear water.: The whiteness of linen de.,
pends greatly on plenty of rinsing watee
being used. The glose'on Shirts and
collars comes from. much- practice with
the polishing -iron. Firm, even pressUre
with. the "heel" of the iron is neeeSsary.
To Remove Tar from Clothing. --Apply
to ,the stain with a piece of flannel sue-
ceseive applications of turpentine, coal.
tae, naphtha, and benzine. ,If- the statue
are very old, they should be well rohhea
with a flannel dipped lido salad oil.
This 'softens the tar, which will after.
wards yield to the other treatments.
To ineke milk digestible, 411 that 10
neeeesary is to shake ih well, and to Sip
it nlowly. eeliake the milk violently foe
a few minutee in a covered g(iblet, and
then drink immediately, but not haetily,
be -fore it liar; time to separate again.
After etandiug, for ramie home, no, for
instance, all the city milk has done on
Ile way to town, the perfeetly honer- i been confronted with proof that all melt
geneoue, article that came from the e0WI,eariaip. ozi, that particular train ilo„t
15 reearated, first by the rising of the several paesengere. it Ms .131town. that
eam froin the eaeeeee f)r •lieff,y ii!R1 his fetal (toe% of handkerchiefs consist.
1„,
ea later hy the tendency h divide into ea of only four and it wan maintained
whey or Land. , Although tli,';! latE r Pro. it was improbable that he would have
cioe ie viee-eptiole only in tenting milrc. taken three 0/ them math hhn untess tie
tho &ilia tualeieeee ettelt eonetant had in Mind POMO itteth devide aa he ro,
ipmc,,!; ILO it .,1r-fuld niswAlyn FA shat e le , ,rted -4., to prevent the nenmajoke mem,
1,4,,r, dt,.:Iki:1;4 i', 1:1114 if, ';'.i taInfjii ing fatal. Both test had beet aevered
quik wank" from tin') co*.
porter •earne•to his•assistance, He (ril
had taken a course .otlessona in .flrst
to . the. injured, and made twe tour
(fuels, employing three handkerchiefs
wielh he had in hi's. pockets, arid then
directed the porter to twist it -around- nis
thighs to, stop the bleeding;
"I Would not' have had my feet cut
ff," heeprotestedeaforathe wealth ott
railway cprnpany and all its shar
holders. I ern a man who could 'alwa
�p a day's work, and if I could not a
tam work At .one thing; I could always
turn ney hands to another." 1
Mar was tasked whether he had told
his friends several days before the train.
crippled him that he eva:s goingeto meet
With tin accident Ape. that he Watild lose
his legs; below/the knees..
• "I 'dreamed," he said, "that,f met with
a serious VoidentAo my legs and I told
my landlady . and scene other people
about 'the dream. I -believe it was a
foreshadow a what happened to tie
My landlady's mother once dreamed of
terrible disasteit that earns true. A
sorts of things have ,been foretold
drperaombsa.b"ly' many meml3ers
of
tth
Psycilic Research Society would hav
agreed with •that last statement, ,ba
none of them was sufnmoned to give his'
views 'on premonitions and preeenti
ments, and thet defence made mileh o
the -improbability et May's vision and th
far greater likelihood that, having
are, of eourse, all of the rudest deseripa
lion, being ,feshioiied out ;of Materials
Shipped from- home.
• -"Our eeriest cluireh was- made seal-
skins, but had to replAced by a, vooden
structure, as it was •. devoured ley'. lite
aa),
dogs. The scene, from Blackleacl the
id most desolate one "arnaginable, nothing
ni- but now and ice being visible in any
(1' 'e fen, ,
"The tritierfraing timrwe have known
a ,
Was laet *inter, when' the usual. 'relief
ship ,
FAILED TO BEACH US -
ha It cath . to, within 45 miles:of our sta.
e- tion, and,yeas within range of glass -
Ys es, and yet It was not- until ten- months.
b- afterwardethat she reached. Blacklead
"For 14 days we *watched her etrege
gling amid, the toe -barriers, and, despite-
tbe most gallant attempts to afforelaus
the needed reltef, sale wee. eventtially
driven back, ea -•-, • - •
. "We suffered coneiderably fram .cold;
M- our new supply of coat WAS onboard
the miestrig vessel., thetel we, had to bury
our, houses ' in snow -to .keep, out • the
cold. t -
1 the Eskimos were not the only suffer -
d. •ers from want- of -food, for orie night in
1
4 , January a, pack o! hungry wolves sur -
11 rounded our -house and attaeked the
n doge, .eventually escaping into, the dark -
nes, -Afterward they devoured one .an-
e other.a .
e
t- ' 1",i1GLISIIMAN HELI) AS. SPY. .
cONCOCtTED -A PLAN,
to get money out of the railway- cern
panyeehis expectations had led him to
make incautious statements. There ;
no doubt that May's dream tory weighed
againgt him with the jury. ,
The. bulk of the defence Consisted at.
the aumenative evidence -of small fin
probabilities arrayed agalost the exeeed.
ing improbability that a,inant would volt
untarily place Ids legs on a railway
track to get his feet cut off ,by a train
for the sake of what coMpensation ,he
might obtain. He weikhed over 210
pounds. The train from which he al.
leged that he had fallen. we:3 going at the
rate of twenty mike; an hour. Yet the
only injney mild show as proof that
he had °rally pitched headlong out of a
train moving at fleet elpeed was a slight
seratelt on the cheek. It was argued
that it was well-nigh impossible that the
door of the compartment-, would -have
eiven way, °vett had he been &been
against it. iteeveral, witneseee swore
that there was no ewerve of the train
such as would have eauged him to be
thrown against the door. It wa,s im-
probable that a man occupying his poet.
tion would !MVO to:Veiled reCond-eial.
On the other hand, it was contended
it Was natural he should have pretended,
that he had ridden in a eceond-ciaee ear.
Nage, as he had alleged that lie rode in
a third -elate; carriage he might have
•
Was Arrested l3y Russians and 1190(pir
Every Morning. e
Joseph Ernest Geddes, a British mer-
chant at Hong Kong, arrived at Grims-
by froth, Ihniburg and -watt to f ondon
- to petition the Foreigo Office relative to
leis arrest -by the Russians as an alleged
a spy in manehuria, chare,:ed with selling
plans of Port Arthur to the Japanese, -
He states that having obtained aer-
mission to trade in Manchuria, he left
- Tien -Thin Dee,ember„ 1,90a, and upon
reachitag Mukden. he was arrested, alt
though Port Aram was a place ,he nev-
er visited.. The papers were torn up,'
and his (editing was cut up in eearch
for any inerfaninpaing* documents, the
only reply of his remonstranCes being.
"Oh, you British- are all the -same You
eyelid help the Japanese,"
Lightly clad, he wee placed in ei smell
room, preparatory to being ehot the, menthe. NooPing ld4,1/("ad and his sav-
1neet morning. Ten deem peered', and ing grace of 'humor he came out of' gaol
r t
leach day he was fold, that the next moro POPular PctoPle than
!swarm et, aie giee He managea to wrao ever, and two years was elected to
so.eral letters to Oen. Kuropatkini ask- m -at the thea London county Count:el,
ing for an explanation,. but no ripiy firt b -ear's work at *living Chirdencl
brolivn by 1116 great doek radial af
1U\ 1'- 1,11'0;11110, roetrum,
end the nuffering wives en& Children of
the doek-laborere bie ntoet powetfut
eepaponte• of Wawa, It wee a luuntine,
When a
railtriety, talf-eaeritiee cie the eteentiel
neopone of a fieht, it ie difficult lo aet•
ewe hire ofedoeiehag to promote reveille
top and dieeraer. So the doek etrii
pageel witheut and Buena
leadoe ju.-Thied hie Oahu to tree
poeeeeeion of th4t, quality efeeoderetion
ethieh eeee tail wiling of a states140111, -
-
at We seas distal* blow Ow lows
goodwill of the, majority, hut- always
with the goodwill, of those who know
him for what he is—honest, strong, self-
reliant, unswerving in his adherence to
what he believes to lee right.
13orn forty-seven years ago in Wanda.
worth, 'the son of a Lowland father and
an Aberdeen motherelohn Burns started
life with more vitality and more brains
than pence, and more butI.dog, hold.
fast courage than the *average.
FOUGIIT HIS WAY.
0 Alwoys ready to fight his own battles,
Burns went to work in Price's caridle
factory in Wandaworth, ,at the age of
ten.
As a rivet -boy at iron -works at Vaux-
-hall he. soon found occupation bettor
suited to his physique, and a chance, at
fourteen, -to , apprentice,- himself to a
Millbank engineer. °
In 1877, being out of his apprenticeship
and ready for any adventure, Burns went
as forejnen engineer to the West Coast
of Africa. For twelve Manthe he stood.
-the heat and braved theeperils of the
delta of the Niger.
Still ,bubbling oyer. with vital/tat,
which no African sun could exhaust,
Burns returned to Battersea in 1878 and
Made his 'first *acquaintance with the
police on Clapham Common. Burns.
married Miss- Charlotte Gale, the pretty
daughter of a Battersea Shiparright, who
stood in the crowd, and after a short
honeymoon made the grand tour orthe
coati/1011am search of the material upon
which -he' was to- base his , theory ahd
;practice of political life. -e '
READER OF MANY BOOKS.
'Frinar his boylieoct's elays Burns read
and assimilated and adapted to his own
circumstances. the teaching of Robert ,,
Owerealehn Stuart Mill', Carlyle, Ruekin,
teerledetauleillty4ammoenlig%\tthh°e gwiaetiretsl:gefki,Qiine'endlnirei-: *
teenth century.' 4 • '
" To -day, hb ,library in, the little house
.on Lavender hila -fills the walls of two-
raarrig. and there iitiaoteaeatapitteoreue ,
'less' book -ire it.- On these vvalls you may.
Tend "the -story -Cif John Burns" life, and
the evidence, of that .remarkable faculty r
for acquiritig 'and' Using • knowledge
.which'haseeall along been one' -at the
mainstays of' his- political Career. .-', '
e - AT HOME IN BATTERSEA.
, , Battersea has been the herne,,l)oliticea,
ly, as well as socially,- ot turns. In Ms
park ;Burns became -a Power,, working
his brain, his- body, ,and his. lungs to.'
persuade his fellow-war/mien to take -in
hand the regenerafloo of theenselve's -and
their class. Then he:suddenly, • ade
,mark on tile world outside,
ett the industrial ,11.ernuneration Co ere
•e'nee- In'1884,, he electrified an mid* ce .
whieh included Mr. ,it: j. Balfour y the
. .
, vigor, picturesqueness, and febrinnan,
se se of his views. "Merali0 capitalr
Alger," . As the', direete conaequence . of
6%,
a„, Burns. t'You MeteekiteaSeweil ley- to
eno Ifee a,' bea-eediestrictor ore...tame a
leaving his work'ta.attendr thia confm-
erice, John Burns lost l'es jab 55 an en- „
gineer. He was -at that time 28 years,
old, , . , ' ,,,
. TIIE,BLO6DY SUNDAY. a,
, -, e -
Suspended between a sense afewhat
he -ought to do for himself arid 'what he
ought to do for his class, Burne' fend&
himself out of employment in the critical,
daye of 18883 Menewere shy of employe
ing an engineer who had at this time
faught unsucceesfully for a .seat in Par.
liaraent as the Seeial, Democratic no i-
nce for pest NOttingbarn. For sey
weeks laz tramped, from "amp'
"shopneeking for workeeympathizii
every step he took with thejhousands o
lesS :et -melee men 'Wilke plight,with
self.l• Then came Trafalgar Square. A
meeting convened for the purpose of ad.
vOCating .fair trade, captured by the
Sedialiste for theptirpese of expatinding
their gospel, was turned into a riot. For
hie share in the meeting' realize Was. are
rested, • and -a speech saved him—the
speeciewhieli he delivered from the dock
.peioi, to his acquittal. ,
Out of this prelimniary actaftle arose,
the evente of 411lootiS/ Sunday," Novart.
ber 5,1880. •13urns held to the right'of
the'people to meet in Trafalgar Square.
The, pollee denital it, and prepared to de-
fend the equate. It hecerne a Wile be-
tween lialkaterted amt unarnied men,
Two men •tvertalcialed, many injured, and
Burns and a Curiningliamee Grahame
forret! their Way to the haee of the Nett
son Column, ,
THBEE, moNims IN,3AIL.
Tried at tlx Old Bailey, John Buren
made another great spefth, and went to
Pentoneille to meditate over it for three
cont. .
At the end al ten (Jaye he wag pin un-
der escort, to Um military prison at liar -
bin. There he remained for six montlet.
Thee. Me. Gethlee AWN placed among a
gang of forty orinanale,, the but. Awing
'mend into the prison wagon, oath
three eolaiere watching eneh mandrheir
deetination, he loarii,,,L, v,,,a9 irtalmk, in
Siberia. From iharperiod up tO the
time he reached Ware= Alai horeibih
joutney amid the ewe.: ineluded halt.
ing at fifteen pawns ea route.
At Wafitiaw, -though- euffering ftean
t
expoeure, lie evao plaeed i$1 a ,, r- .11011
m d
rooevoid ikef .fmoittfehe 4 id witiaput
snfileient warmth. Etta Mewninp, an
racial camo ,iin, “lid giving hint halt Ln
flOtOn lutiee 'with hie belt, reale
lea, you are a goo" He refueed, and
the whipping eeeoteehay eeeeel.
ultimately? Mr. civiLlt-1 'w,c.i set fr.,
but so sixgogy was offered him*
TO CMIE
'Fate a keoen end eta it in half, hat
at the eeede pleat the half ageinet
ena Leo 4 i; titeetetetile -eat!, Ite
flannels when -going 44'10611: Rae et It
two 01' three, nightie