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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-06-21, Page 2CURRENT TOPICS atoMMisslon appotaatea by the Drit. t'S.L` moue' council to investigate the af caerettit enetheds of immusetea- tden againea typhoid fever hae been at worla foe WIG ",,'"C011'0; ond. Taas now recede . preliminary ,reporta pregreaa. While • tergee further expeilmentalat- vestigatiens, it resards the present ineS thools, o uniunizaUoi a surinelently • " Valuabls to 'justify their -use on a leirg‘e ecale among eoidiers, The repoit bat egs laasether all thdefevailable dato upon tho Cubjeat and aseerts' that they furnish he Brighter Aspects of Life Dispe LO Sorrows Au things el. it y Enna alt things eansaste-Col: I. 17. Tha teaching oia these' word is 'that were created by Illan the world in 'which Weare is od-Made proof . that• the prtectice• ot anti -typhoid , and God -eared -for. It Le ih,ought inoeulationsain• the array hes ressineu, shonld give a Very brigha that t 1 le t Granted there are .latrsa thi°n°tes' in a eubstaratial reduction in the inci- dence and death rato from enteric fever the drought, the eyclone, the earthainong the inoculated." The protective ditalie. For a full understanding a substances developed from Inoculation, these things we will have to wait until ass into g It says, are identical with those devel. morepa higher room and have light. oped by an attack of the disease itself. Meanwhile weehould see that there Is The method is as successful witim animal., another side to life and that it is much with erg- the larger side. Their° are more spark - as with men, and experiments ling springs in. the earth than trialarial teals can give reliable results of beneat to human beings, The further work •recommended includes experiments for the improvement of the vaccine, and vehelesale tests upon troops leaving .for foreign service -under expert medical °facers epecially assigned to the work, with a view to deterntining tile proper size of dosesandthe duration ef the protection conferred. The statistics pre - stinted with the report indicate that the proportion of cases of the disease and the number of deaths are ooly about ball as large among the inoculated 03 among those not inoculated. So great a saving of life as this is certainly not to be ignored. Sanitation is, of coul.se, the first duty and the greatest duty in the fight against the disease, but° where sanitation is impossible.in adequate de- gree inoculation 'should never be over- looked.. - Pessimistic prophets eornetimes sound sage and logical, but the unreasoning optimist who sees better things despite argument outstrips them. In the days of Stephenson's early experimentsa was predicted that ,a speed of more than twelve miles an hour by rail would be irnpraclicaarle, if for no other reason than that _the human system would not withstand traveling at a higher rate of speed.. In the early days of steamboats it was declared that transatlantic steam navigation would be impossible, mainly because of the inabilitys to previde room aboard ship for the coal that would be • necegaary for the voyage. The pro- phet had scarcely done speaking, when the news arrived that a ship had just .finished a trip across the Atlantic un- der steam. So with transatlantic,cables. Some promulgated the belief that they could never be laid because the density of the water below a certain depth would be so great that the 'cable would not sink to the bottom of the ocean. All the wise folk regardless, however, the cable s promptly descended to the oceean bed at a depth of 16,404 feet, and within the last year a cable was sunk in the Pacific ocean in the :vicinity of the Lukin islands at a depth L. 26,246 feet. .....*1•••••• fOr Comfort .the cabbies is promised - by • the annunciator, an electric device - tor cabs and carriages. It consists of two distinct parts, one a keyboard car- ried inside the vehicle body, -handy for the passenger. On the keyboard eise six, eight, or a dozen keys with direc- tion's such as Horne, Right, Slow, Left, Pass, Stop, etc. On the dashboard a similar keyboard with directions, but swamps; more flowers in the fields than nettles; more song birds in the trees than croaking ravens. The world is full of good we coold have gotten along without. There need not have been any- thing like the variety of taste there is in fruits, nuts and foods. There need not have been such profuse beauty ea' there is • in flowers, woods and precious stones. There need not have been such sweet sounds as come from musical iii- strunients, human voice or bird's 'eons, ta isiel simply life, but happy life that has been provided for. ,The great thought of nature is not how little will do, BUT BOW MUCH CAN 13E USED. Even things which sometimes do harm often do more good. Electricity does much mischief. It strikes the innocent inmate and prostrates in death. But •what is all this compared with the good it does in purifying' the atmosphere, lighting our streets, driving our cars mad briroging every part of the earth into close touch with every other? Fire' is dangerous and sometimes does much eiil t clestroesevaltiable Property end causes great less di lmlt. But :kern this ewe ailing we get almoet infinite good. Tainit Of whet at does •for u ass felindaY and factory, On railroad train and ateamboat line, in place; of business and place. Of living. Water also is dangerous and MRCS not a little, suffering. It comes down in torrents and injures the growing crops. It, swells the stream and breaks the dam, wrecking houses by the ecore and smiting in death by the hundred. At the same time water is one of the greatest blessings we have. What is true of these thinge is true of others. Under certain circumstances they do great harm. But the good which they are capable of "'doing, and which every day finds them doing, is far in excess of the harm. Many ills of the material world have already disappeared, ana , OTHERS ARE SURE T000. Manual labor is a much easier thing than it was before laborieaving machin- ery was invented. A„severe ,winter is nothing like what it was before the coining of the furnace or steam heater. To be called to live, far away from those we love is not so bad as it once' was, now that -we have the fast mail and the long-distance telephone. The sick -room has been made into a different place from what it used to be, comfortshave already multiplied, and the physician Is aisle to restore to health in many in- stancoa where he was once helpless. Such: facts ought to make it easy to be- lieve that we are in a worhaeChrist-made and Chriet-caroa-for. The belief- should do great good. It should lead to tae feeling that every spot of ground upon which we tread is In the divine domain, that during every moment of life we are in good 'hands. .ammummirmonlownommormow .01".••••• ********rn HOME. 43ff Yh1-4019X**** SOME DAINTY DISHES.. Bananas oranges peeled eliced and thoroughly pounded together, adding plenty, of powdered sugar, make a delicious puree to eat with blancme cream or custard. To use up cold pototoes, chop teemi finely, place a layer in a pudding dish, season with salt, a•little mace, and bits of butter,. sift some flour over, -then put more jotatoes and seasonings. When and and onespint of water. Add the grated pulp and the juice of a fine ripe pineapple, and let the mixture boil fOr two minutes longer. Add the juice of two lemons and freeze. When partially frozen add the whipped whites of two eggs, then freeze until it is as thick as mush. Serve Ili glasses. may la) considered mote noadelaing tiaoa bread. At any eale, th,ey aa•O for stout peepte, whe eheola always oeteet Sash's' anti' eracknels in pram -re° *o toast. ViitO spots on polielSed tables itr. oilier furniture can be removed by-teotue ing on the °spots, a fora drops of opirits lofor etc:wt. nQp0.1 ire r.th r eLee itnhica ?hpearno urbe mwaitia h a clean cloth. The ePeto, otherw'ase- eo W remove, •will Wipe of. IIE SIJNIJAY S01100L 4,4,4-444-44-441444-4-4144,1144. ; ititSe Sitt144*1.-Pk4.1,414*1444+P LINEN ote OM TONS. brotciaaa6, there !a embeoideey deo Nigia upon taa• body of to belt, anti flatlet variety ta achieved through. aueqa • embroidery. .(apen eyelets' are, as in the caeo of the • jj laneee-bagag apelaileled through the de- aagn of the "lett embroidery, and came Of the eacalela ehew complicated and ea. irradiate band, evoela (Jur . artiet hae sketched Several linen belts of uritteuat Cut ',but evittiotat ,ernbroldersie' which are mere novel than the plain belts and nets too, complicated ,ta be topied by, any, 'Waver searnatreas; "- • • t`hiCe'"1:01111; 0%7:014 iteida.,41asPhrt°0114isindnuteir41(3t.eine When One ponies to the taerne of hum • • last fewseeeonee • and, While sheer liu- i mileh°,1clves bewildering variety ear'• there i. aerie stuffa- aava interfered seitlewh" at) biln'''' % 4enaLSSanee Clf the' linen 4ijekretil hae brought out innumerable neer ' • . with the Vogue of the heavier lorms 4; .allinene dtn collar o e ll:alitfd annudff t h:r etsai :INTICINATIONAL lidESS.01% .. , . linen for .eeremonioitsvat, the linen " eamroedetulsrninovtearn ' JUNIO 24. provipee of the tailored shirt vvelist, the gare•turnov'er fad is still - flourishing mightily in. the; collar .of 'fair's; heavy a _ • . i.enatspQlreiestu.b frock and the little dross • • with a little. tie of sheer embroidered lig* linen, embroidered by 'hand, and worn - It is in this last field that a long list linen or lawn or a tiny bowa of lace, is of linen novelties is to be found, and a popular Parisian idea; and front Paris, the summer girl may go attired in linen, from parasol to pumps, if elle desires. I of. fine linon with the snialle.st of frills too, come the turnover collars and cuffs REal'ONsalVE REVIEW SERVICE. The linen. parasols are of all grades bordering in ,the edges and a plaited of elaboration, but the smartest of- the rabat of Mon. Heavy linon and sheer LESSON I.models in the heavier grades of linen are handkerchief are associated. in many of • severe in outline, although heavy hand the French models, but the Arnerican embroidery mew run their prices up to woman is partial to the severely tellored of the ooenwork kind or of any one of , the various stitches in high relief, and very often- both forms of embroidery the goodly sums. The embroidery may be whaae'''seL'supplied a surprising number of p. and American manufatturers stock for use with the tailored shirt, are used in the design,- while the edges a ery tiny buttons of pearl and work - of the parasol are scalloped and worked ed loops set on the back of a stock will in button -hole stitch. be found a much more satisfactory • Perfectly plain parasols of heavy linen scheme than the usual Pins or hooks and scalloped and buttonholed around the eyes. edges or simply hemmed have for their One of the clever things in a perfectly Leader ; At that thne Jesus went; on only ornamentation hig embroidered plain stock is a close fitting model whose the Sabbath day thraugh the corn ; and monograms in self color or contrasting ends pass one through the other in the. his disciples were an hungered, and be. color; and nothing More chic than these back after the well known fashion and models has been shown fo gan to pluck the ears of corn and to eat. r use with are brought ' back ' to the front. I.iere the Boys. But when the Pharisees saw it, the morning rookoflinen or other wash. s the case vvhen 0 model of this ples matype is , rounded ends come nearer meeting than they said unto him, Behold, thye disciterial. . i do that which is not lawful to do upon With dressier frocks of sheer cottons to be held by ribbon or scarf ties. yea the Sabbath day. . more pretentious parasols in lingerie they do not meet and they tie as in other Girls : He said unto them, the Son cf materials finely embroidered, inset with mT°dheels.ends alnioat meet, and In each man is Lord even of the Sabb. , lace, and much befrilled. are charming end is worked a button hole. Link but- ath day. ccompani LESSON III. u -aments; but the severe linen tons like those used for cuffs are slip! parasol„axe "a place all its own in the ped through; the buttonholes and how Leader : And a certain centurion's modes Of the -season. In one of the soft the ends in place. The trim neck finish servant, who was dear . unto him , was blues, greens or rose shades, with mon- with collar link of cabochon stone set sick and ready to die., And when he ogram, scalloped edge and stick all in. in a gold, rim and matching t ufrbuttons heard of Jesus, he sent unto him the, tractive, , ijuch a parasol is eminently at - is particularly effective upon the tailor. - elders of the Jews,. beseeching him tha especially if warn with a frock . he would come and heal his servant. Boys: When he was now not far from. the house, the centurion sent friends to ming. dainty touches of white lingerie trine - of linen 'of the same color relieved by made waist. GIFTS IN ABYSSINIA. . — him, saying, Lord, trouble not thyself : More daring in color scheme, and, per - 'experience of a Stranger Who 'Wished for 1 am not worthy that thou shouldest haps less '.generallypractical, but sug- a. , . to Do the Right Thing. entet'under my roof: but speak the word gesting'delightful costume effects for all n agent of the British government, only, end my servant shall be healed. that, was a parasol in linen of the na- . A wished to return the favor of a native Girls : And they that were sent, re- total hue, perfectly plain save for a huge Glacial by some suitable present.' The who Visited Abyssinia some years ago, turning to the house, found the servant bunch df natural -looking cherries em - bestowal of this we whole that had been sick. broidered in high relief upon one of the tar quite beyond the • . LESSON IV. divisions of the cover. The stick was up. in the court circles of West. brought 1, however, a mats knowledge of one which had two debtors: the one owed Pharisee, There was a certain creditor Leader': Jesus said to Sirnort the bunch ef cherries on the handle, 'Which one of the cherry wood stfbks with a t . have been familiar for many seasons. . The linen. bag is practically new this . rn civilization. His experience was in. structive. led ,» h " ' 'he arrangement was badly band. five hundred pence, and the other fifty. summer, though a few models were sold .ere • , . era persons besidee the high official Boye : And when they had nothing lest year, and the makers are turning were preeent. After a few lieht topies , e says, and when -1 arrived sm. to pay, he frankly forgave them both. out sotto eaceedingly pretty things of t. Tell me therefore which of them will this sort for use with costumes of linen. _ obeen discussed I mentioned my ob, led in makingthe • • had b di t' - love.him most? Of course such a bag has not the wear- fer wasa made to dismiss the b sten Girls : Simon answered, I suppose that ing . qualities of good leather and is ers, 1 exhibited my donation Y e visit, and as no of. he to 's•vhom he forgave most. And he easily soiled; but it is readily cleaned . as avlare that I heti . said unto him, thou host rightly judged. and it answers the purpose for which it "In an instant I w ' . • _ is designed, not being intended for surffaise and' indignation clooded ths gerteral use-. made,a false -step, A frown Of mingled ' Here again embroidery is the essential hitherto serene brow, and tones ,ol Lesson XIII. Second Quarterly Review: Golden Text John 7. 46. Leader: A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit,_ neither can a corrupt tree bring forth, itooci fruit. , • ;Boys ; 'Wherefore by their amide ye stela know them. tiris : Not eveeyone that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall: enter into tho -kingdom of heaven; but he that, doeth the will of • my ether which is in heaven. , LESSON I. HINTS FOR HOME LIFE. A little milk added to the water in nshich potatoes Are boiled will make them whiter and taste better. Always scald rhubarb before codka ing it, for it requires much lees sugar and yet loses ,none of its flavor. To polish kitchen knives thoroughly, mix as little carbonate of soda with the- brickdust, and rub them thoroughly. .When peeling'onions place them in a the dish is full, pour milk over, set it bowl and pour hot water over them. in the oven and bake ta nice brown. kl- They can then be peeled without affect - low half afi hour for the baking of this ing the eyes. ' dish. Table linen that has been -stained 'Excellent fried bacon and cabbage is witheink should be at once soaked in made thus. Cut the bacon into mistime; boil the cabbage, and drain it. Fry • the bacon,: and when cooked put it on. a very hot dish. Ptit some chopped cabbage into, the frying pan, add plenty milk and then the stains wilt come out with washing. «It is now said that the,teetotal tuber- culosis patient has a far better chance of a recovery than the one who imbibes of pepper, and fry in the bacon fat, and alcohol. • then put round the betels. Put about When china dishes become discolored a tablespoonful of vinegar into the pan from placing them in the oven, rub the and give it a boil up, then pour over brown spots with ordinary whiting anti wash as usual. the bacon. Savory rice is a most simple savory f a lamp wick sticks and will not dish, and is made by boiling two table- work easily pull out a thread at each' spoonfuls of rice for a quarter of an side. This will often mend matters hour, draining, and then putting it in without any more trouble. " a saacepan with dutacient Mock to coy- A tablespoonful of ammonia in a er. Let all simmer till the rice is done, gallon of warm water will often restore seasoning to -taste. Beat up an egg colors in carpets; it will also rofnove and stir ite into' the rice til 'set, but do whitewash from them. e , not boil. Press Into small cups, turn To beat edgs to • a froth quickly and out on a tarn dish, and serve with easily, make them almost ice-cold by t o Cra s nt. Rolls.—A little time spent on roll- minutes before breakiog them. placing in quite cold water for a. few making for breakfast and dinner always Onions should not be eaten after alley gains great appreciation in the house- have lain about peeled and cut, as they absorb any bad odor or iafectimie con- dition that may exist. ' To clean black cloth mix One Part of liquid ammonia with three paits cf boiling water. Apply with sponge and rinse off with boiling water. To preserve parsley do not put In in - water, but place instead in. an air- tight tin and stand in a cool place. It will -then Iteap fresh fox -some time. To remove jellies, etc., from moulds wipe the bottom and sides of the mould with a cloth wrung out of hot water. Yeti will find they tuSri out beautifully. Don't forget the importance of 'milk for children ff you want them to grow strong and vigorous, Nothing an take fie, place as a builder of blood and bone.- ' Warm, plates and dishes by pouring boiling water over them. Ther e° is not the chance of their cracking and becoming brown as when they are put in the oven. To keep your fowls healthy they should have all the vegetables left from the house, either boiled or raw. Give' them also any scraps of meat and bones th:rigicricelifkle patent leather, first .rub with a linen rag soaked with on/ minus the keys. This has a glasa covd hold. This' is easily dope if a good re - and is in plain view of The driver, so that cipe be at hit,iind av thei ovenheatsrep- without effort his eyes are constantly i ;Lynn Soamne ge0071 lass wwi hlebneafrraarne: 'upon it. The tem keyboards are con- d mb:sas 1y -mad. Many of the prepared pastry nected with a current furnislted from fleurs now sold have very good recipes a set of dry cells carried beneath the for cakes and rolls printed on the bags. seat. A pressure en one key by the _passenger lights a miniature electric , light below the corresponding direction on the driver's keyboaed so that the par - heeler command is while the remaining ones are dark; and simul- teneously an electric bell rings. • TO SICKEN HER. "There is a certain young lady deeply interested in Inc, and while I like her, you know, still i never could fata Is, of courrse, greatly reduced; so lr the fish be quickly removed to the sec - lost her. I want to put an end to it . without breaking the poor girl's heart. ond pan, the work of frying will be Can you suggest any plan?" • speedily completed if the fat is boiling •, fast, and Um mutt, so far as crispness She: "Do you cat). there often ?" and color are concerned, will be far .311: He : "NO, indeed; not any oftener perior to the Ordinary method. than I can possibly help." Cornieh Cutlets.—Take some slices of She: "Call oftener." Haricot Salad.—Soak for a, night in cold water a teacupfal of haricot beans, and in, the morning place them in a saucepan with sufficient cold water to cover. Cook slowly till the beans ere done, drain, and set on a. soup plate. Dust over with chopped parsley, -add thin slices of beetroot, and over all pour a salad dressing, made according to taste. This is a good salad to use when green salads are scarce. In,frying fish it will be found a great Improvement to have two panfuls cf boiling fat. When the fish is plunged into pan No. 1 the temperature of .he .apoSsas,S11* , THE POET'S HARD LOT. Mls Coyleigh : "No, Mr. Penwiper, manima doesn't allow me to accept pre - seats from young men." Pet.: "And I had so wished to pre- sent you with a copy of my poems I" "Oh, I thought it waS something of value." At an elation meeting recently the candidate wag somewhat, troubled by a man 'In the audience, .ileho at length became offensively personal. "Is i true i that your mother washes - --" he egan; 'but before ' he .could add th word "clothes" the witty candidate °tilled out Smartly: "Of course she does; ' why, don't yon?" This raised a loud laugh tit the diaturber'e expense; butS otill un- daunted, he returned' to the attack. °Yen can't deny:' he. Bald, "that your father weer, a rag.arid-bone man. 1 bought SO1110 old clothes ,off him thirty yeare Aar,O." "And I see you're stilt cold meat, either beef or mutton, trim -or milk, and polish with a.dry, ',soft dus- . them into neat shapes. Dip eack cutlet ter. ' Cream and linseed oil in equal into ketchup, sprinkle with cayenne and parts are a good polish for patent lea - salt. Boil' some nice floury potatoes dry ther boots. and Mash them, mix with a iittle chop- at walnut, stain is made thus: Take ped lemen peel or gherkin, pepper and tave parts of permanganate of potash salt. .13Ind With a evell-beaten egg. and thirty parts of water: , Mix well. cover each slice of meat with the mash,- Paint this on to the floor two or, three 0 'potato, smoothing It into shape with. times until the right shade is produc- a knife. Fry like cutlets 'to a golden' eds. iniAnfsterownarwdhsitpoolfinisini ntoviells.ro hard to color. . remove, The beet sirti9 is to mix equal , parts of the yolk of eggs and glyeerfne, apply R to. the stains, • and allow It to goal( for half on hour or lio before the;, article ie seethed. , It boiled water Is 'used for dritiking purposes, care should he taken that the v.ater boils for te.ii or fifteen minutes e 1. by a (Motor that this time fo necea- 16 b fore it, le pared out., We arei inform - eery to kill the affirm. I Do net let tea and eoffee remain in the paper bap they come in, or these will lose their flavor. All stores should be taken at °nee otit Of their piper has Arid pia away in their different) romp - 'forties in the store etinboerd. * Biscuits aro a whOleecuree, forin (At PINEAPPLE DAINTIES. Pineapple Saildwiehea.,—Cut the pine- aPle In thin slices, and these again in email dice. Dust with powdered sugar, and arrange between thin slices cf spong,e cake or buttered bread. Cut into atinall dainty sha 06. These are very .[nice for afternoon tea, and must. be eat- er fresh. Pineapple Geri on one cup Cetell of sugar e, d water until it will thread, then add on* cup grttted pine- 4ple and"the juke of two lemons. 1; Md sugar ititti iced water to suit 'MI6; taste before, serving. , wooing' thorn!" Wet5 the carididete'si imPeiltiwtrple Ifrapne),—Iloif togothor for r.ghining retort. minute's one pint of sugar and LESSON V. ' these pegs very beautifed hand work is fathomless integrity decliried the mot feature of the design, and upon some- of lavish.ed. There may be a- single bold .fered gift, while strong inward feeitag . design embroidered upon the side of the found vent in a rocking motion of 1114 bag or little sprays or garlands may body. wander all over the linen surface, "'you have utterly misunder a esei 4' The fatter idea is the more popular of me,' said he. The, friendliness which the two, and open work eyelets are fre- I have shown you has been extended quently scattered throughout the designsolely with pure motives of kindness te Manse of the shapeseliked In leather are the strange r In the land. Devotion . te reproduced in linen, and the setting of my sovereign and country is am ely ret the bag may be as elaborate as one paid by the internal consciousnees 01 plase,s, although a plain setting of silver' rectitude. Your intentions s are doubt, gilt is the usual thing and a very pre- less good, but greater happinese will tentious frame seems out of keeping await me from the knowledge that yell with the linen material. 'will now recognize"- how disinterested •eThe envelope bags and purses, intro- my conduct has been.' duced last season in leather, and still ,"My offering was firmly waved Away, and for some period his frame cone tinued shaken by inward. emotion, to the great edification of the bystanders, whose eyes remained fixed on . the ground. "It was undoubtedly very discomfit- ing, arid my apologies for so great a mistake were profuse. I declared that I could not quit his abode until resters ed calrfiness had given me the assurance that his feelinghad recovered their usual serene tone. As fortunately, this soon happened, 1 left, properly enraged at the miserable management which had occasioned the awkwardness. "Naturally, 1. consulted a native aus thority, ,who had witnessed the trans- action, and the mistake which I . had committed; but he was so tickled t y the circumstances that 1 extracted frone him for some time little but laughter. His evefitual view of matters was cone fided in few words: " 'Tryeagain; but take more, and have no witnesses.' ' "On the next occasion I found the governor alone, and when I opened the subject on which my visit was founded his eyes twinkled, and he stitch "'From the first moment When 1 saw you I had a presentiment that we were • ' ordained to be great frieenda. 1 do not Istidw if Europeans have these supersti- we do not find them deceptive. You tions, but with us they are general,°and may have heard—and I am 'aware it is generally stated of us by foreigners that we are deceitful and -avaricious. Do not, aelieve this; all- countries cone tain bad Men„andlrour .experience hae what% been unfertunate. Btit we shall remain always friends—and what art presents. after all, but external in. blems of esteem?' • "There were nos difficulties o• n thig occasion. He was obviously mc if please& and finally said that: the 1,1 ss, ' Ing of Providenee ewould be sure to t fend the exertions of a man who was thoughtful of " the itiddened circum, Them all. , stances of °them; and he was poor, vets' thris : And they did all eat and were. came and fell ist, his feet, and besought LESSON XII. ' .'" eald, Tliou art the Christ, the Son, of the poor livingGod. .....................4*.t......./ filled, — Leader : A 'certain wonian, ,whose flesh and 'blood, hath not, revealed' it unto unto' him • , Blesed art thou, Simon; for „SPEECH AT ,TtiE WEliDING FEAST, • ' LESSON X. t ° Girls : - Mid Jesus answered and said young daughter had an unclean sprit; thee, but my Father which is in heaven him that he would, cast forth the 'devil Iseadier:i Ile took Peter, and John and Out of her deughter. Boys: -AnTh d`lie eald, e 'devil is gone p*ay, An as he prayed, thhio e fasn of , Slilies, an 1 went.up Into a mOuntain to out of thy daughter. hisi countenance was altered, and his Girls : And when she was gone to het raiment was wbite and glistering. ', house. she found the devil gone out. Boys,: Mid, behold, therentalked.with , LESSON Xt. , him twO men, whieh Were Mous and Whom say ye that r am? the cloud, attying, Thi 14 my, beloved glide. Leader : 3eeue saith unto his disciples, ' , ico ame a , n °isle : And there cvpout of San; boat I Leader: Behold, there went out a sower to sow: and some fell by the wayside, and the fowls of the airecame and devoured it up. Boys : And seine fell on stony ground, but whe.n the sun was up, it Avagascorched ; and' because it had no root at withered away. ., , Girls ; And some fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked it. And Other fell on good ground, and did yield fruit that sprang up, and brought forth, some thirty, some sixty, and some an hundred. , - . • LESSON VI. Leader: The kingdom of heaven ,'s likened unth a man which sowed good , seed in his field. But while men slept, 1 modishre now made in embroglered , e his enemy came arid sowed tares .among linen, add a parasol,- bag and card case tae wheat. • .. - . or purse en suite matching a ,frock of Boys: But when the blade was sprung amlinnednisheoanas.titutes . the last word of up, and brought forth fruit, then ap- peered ..the tares also. The shoes, too, may Match the linen • Gras : He said to -his servants, -Let frock, though many- women -even when both grow together until the harvest; they tan afford to indulge in whims, prefer an all white shoe of canvas or kid together first the tares, and , bind them to any other for wear with the tub and I Will say to the reapers, Gather ye In bundles to burn them: but gather frock. Colored footwear has, however, obtained more favor this season than seivi;rp obresf oarne d, apnudmiipost sohnol wy na rien I iows ths ero eos oh,f the wheat into my barn. LESSON vim. , Leader : And when the demon saw all the popular colors-, but linen and e anas and duck in the modish Woe Jesus, he cried with a loud voice, What cv:-, ings are also pressed into service by have I ,to do with thee? (For he said, the shoemakers. • Come out of the man, thou uncleme Sometimes the material is combined Boys : And all the devils besought kica or with patent leather, but, spirit). with . more often., it is used alone. It may be him, saying, Send us into the swine. plainly •finished with the conventional Girls: And forthwith Jesus gave thent stitching, heels of leather or of leather covered with linen, eyelets of white and LESSON VIII. lacings of White or of the color of the .seader : And when the daughter of' shoe. Or,' perhaPe the model is em - Herodias came in, and danced, and broidered daintily by hand on the toe and possibly along the top of the shoe pleased tiered and them that sat with of the vamp. ' WM, the king said, Ask of me whets°. or the top ever thou wilt, and I will give it thee. Concerning linen belts, little remains to be and, though thOy ore more Whpopu- -oys : And she said to her mother, before, and mels Blar than Over at Shall I ask? And she said, The .o.re constantly appearing. Onewne moday tin, head of Sohn the 13aptist. an embroidered belt at any price from Girls : And tho king was exceeding twenty-flve cents to ten dollars, but it orry, ; yet for his oath's sake, and;for le needless to say that -the cheap em - their sakes which sat with him, he sent an executioner, and commanded his broidered belt is a coarse, machine - made affair and is by therneans so de - head to be brought. sirable tee a plain stitched belt of finer LESSON IX. Leader: He saith unto them, How linen. Eithet the narrow stitched model or many loaves have ye? And they said, the wader crush belt is correct, and, Five, and two fishes. And he command- though' buckles of silver gilt are used, ed them to make all sit doWn. the pearl buckle of good shape is per- haps the best hubltle for the linen belt. Boys. And when he had fatten the he Sorne,,models hi plain, linen have edges five loaves and thg two flshes, • cut in tiny scallops and embroidered, blessed and brake the loaves, nand ONO them to his disciples to set before them; but more often, if the edges are em- end the two flgliesdmg __ ded lie aon _ — .. , food, if not too rich. All plain bisGults Boys Ana lnuun Pek'r 011w/ere(' and 41E -- Very few persons acquit thensselve( nobly in their maiden speech. At a wed" ding feast reeently the bridegroom wa°4 called upon, as usual, to respond -to the given toast, in spite of the 'feet that hi had previously pleaded to be excused. Blustiing to the roots of his hair, hi " rose to hie feet. lie intended to imply that he wtts unprepared ipr .spseclu •making, but, ,unfor 'fiately, placed hf hand upon the bri e's shoulder, an looked dosten at her tea he stammer out lAg opening (and concluding) word has really Wait tspOit 014),)" CI