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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-11-22, Page 2 (2)_2 „.„ •••-, CUR -RUNT i OP1C3 it i).21 Ling teen itereod the Gement" ties no nicee inetient enit ittepre.etive eticittacie to miltitin to the witeitt than He setany • came. Itverietthing aOilt him tem' mustaette te his sword hif iiimeed, end ThecU gazes neon him at ditto own. pethl. When en etony cap- . faifl. emnpleto ii ll mile:rains, come vaaridceeed detachment of infantry, held. up cos) Noepeniclf 'totem., hall, placed the burgontestee melee Digest and ale- Azicoutled with Sit,000 of town funds a few weelis age aleGermany latiglied, but tho jolie was not so rentirely on the army. Emperor William condescended t� offer the burgomaster a public insult which dine the poet* man to nesign, and then, when a careen investigation had• proveciettlat there was itne defect inthe offideeta malte-up, namelth, that he wore a cap instead of a helmet, the emperor sent the burgOmaster, in his eapacity of officer of reserves, before a court of honor to punish him ferther for his stu- pidity. The burgomaster was the sole scapegoat, and the army rather Plumed itself on the fact that its prestige was so great that even crime Could be com- mitted openly in it name. But the German secret police have been busy, probably with a joy all their , own, and now they have proved that the T TRANSIENT. MUM ' rue Inspiration Is Found in Genu. ine Religion • • 1 ihe it known unto thee, 0 king, that ll n we wiot ,serve thy gods., nor "wort ehin liteii golden imae _wincth. thou bast at um -Daniel iii,,IS.' Religion le not for show, but for use. ft Ls for being and not for tmeining. If it fdirehhhicharaeter and conduct it is not •gentillee. It "flay have the name, but it is not the thing. • No one can come in contact with the genufne without experiencing uplift. No on Can look upen the matchless statue of The Atiellettelvidere, With -its rneIrkal figure and commanding attitude without unconsciously drawing up aim - ,self. Suith is the influence ol perfect hen in the realm of art. • A genuine treligion has precisely the saene influence in the realm of morals. The moral grandeur of the youthful heroes here referrea to is uplifting and inspirational. They display a sterling genuineness. In them creed anti con- duct ant beautifully blended._ Here is principle arrayed in appropriate protest Skin. A great festival is being. held in cele- bration of the world coaqueror, Nebu- chadnezzar. Out ofthe' Plain- of Dura - is to be lifted a colossal gilded image. When the orchestra plays the all must tali down and worship the•huge iniage which the mighty conqueror shall have set up, or, if they refuse, be flung into THE FIERY FURNACE. - The pageant is accomplished. The im- age shines resplendent in the sunlight. • The king, surrounded by his mutters, is gorgeous on his throne. The music bursts and wells. The plain is filled with •prostrate worshippers. Have all fallen? Yonder three men stand erect, they refuse to (*bend the pregnant -hinges - of the knee that thrift might follow fewning." criminal.• was not an army officer or even a retired army officer, but instead .a. mere shoemaker, with criminal ante- • cedents; a man, indeed, who had el - 'ready done twenty-seven years in prison and who bought his uniform eecond- hand from a peddler. Ir f the shoemake shad been a noble specimen of physical •' manhood -even •yet the disgrace of the • army might have been forgotten. 13ut • hmittittWeiaisiemi ictereemetenenememsneat . nose. Item, two sunken eyes. Item, • horny hands. • Item, a dirty face. Item, spatulate fingers. • Item, broken finger- nails, Item, a jail -bird's shuffle. And It . is this wretched figure of a man that • filled all the requirements for an army • hero in the eyes of the whine town of • Koepenick, burgomaster and town coun- cilors included. Militarism has thus re- ceiyed in Germany „the most hitter blow. . ' • • They have heard the supreme com- • mand: "Thou shalt have no other gods before me. Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them nor worship them," But has not the king commanded? Yes, but the voice of God ie higher than the kings. Is there not danger of the furnace? Yhsebut no fire is hot enough te burn away their filial ftar of God• ; Surely theirs is a genuine religion. It A It has been made universally ridiculous, is not a transient enthusiasm; not a and thshoemakerfrom being acom'emelt sentimentality; but a deep, cont •hmehe e , ' - trolling, ammovableeeprinciple of. life, mon criminal, bids fair to, attain to the proportions of a national hero. • Coal bears testimony to a great south- ern continent which at one tune existed; and inclnded „South. .Anterietto SOuth Africa, and 'Australia. The Brazilian movement to find the extent and yelue • of its coal deposits have developed con- • siderable scientific information about the southerri hemisphere. The report of the • commission, headed by Dr. White, add- • ed, largely to the paleontology of the • world with nein- species found in. Brazil. ,t There were included antopg the vege- table fossils collected by the commission ' three ,distinct genuine and many more new species. The vegetable fossils, as well as a new reptilian fossil; show that the formation of the, south of itBrazil Identical with that of South Africa, the south of India, and Australia, and is a further element of, proof of the existence during the period termed the permo- ciirboniferous of a Ina continent which Suess, who formulated the hypothesis of • its. existence, called the 'continent of ' Gondwana, and which was cornpoeed of South American:, South Africa,. eouthern , India, •Austrtilia, and the .Anterolic . islands. The study of the geology and paleontology .of Brazil hae been so in- complete hitherto that the present dis- coveries are of rare value. ' A floating fair shortly will embark from *England fotha twelve menthe' tour of the world. A sinall steamer has been ehertered, and is being fitted out se as to display the samples of Great Britein's leading industries. It is beiteved by the ritianegers of the floating exhibition synt dicate that there will be provided .e. scheme whereby exporting houses may „ consolidate intereste abroad and give. a general fillip to their overseas trade. It is propdsed that the steamer will 'go ,• first to Montreal. The tone will timbrinie forty of the leading ports of the British • ' empire, Ciiina, Japan, and South Amer - Ica. At each port the exhibition Will be opened, hy pretninerit official; the members of the local chambers of com- merce, the leading traders, and others, will be invited to visit the Steamer. • —t SHIELD* YOUR -NERVES, A beautiful woman gave the following aavice to a girt adnineero "Shield your, nevem and don't lett them become to0 sensitive. Make yourifelf take life' calm- ly If you lose a train don't pace line platform wildly, but Minified when the., next conies In, and dit down calmly to wait for it, That's We What most, wo- men don't do; they sit down, perhaps, but they tap thelloor with their feet, clinch and unclineh their hands, and are apparently in a.tever heat of excilemerit mier the torlidal 'or every train that eomee int even thOugh they have. een hemmed that theirs :le not due for ano- thee WU hour. That half hour or wait- ing memo to them a frightful wear and tear 0! nervere end' they are priteeiciily ,weets older for if. Tre to cultivate eigin Wets, hut if you rennet tin that , alt at weal you Cart keep. yoter faett Stith" holding these young herpes true to their conneOtiens and guiding them with the martyr's heroism. Hthere is in all tb,e wortit a sacred right it is the right of every human being to have his own moral connections; if there is in all the world a sacred obligation, it is the ob- ligation of every human being to be true at any cost, to his convictions. Ile who is willing to surrender theta lightly is not to be trnsted, for he who is false to ,Ininself will be falee to others. A, genuine dreligion is based on right dextrine, Flight preetieeele right 123,,c)," trine in operation. • Right life is rigid creed lived. A man must learn the truth before he can live the truth. He must rnhSter the doctrine before he. can illus- trate the religion. • • BUT SOMETHING IS NEEDED. Many who are erthodox In creed are hotrodox in life; thought well taught they do not well; right in creed, they are wrong in eonduct. With. the right hoctrine, ;most go the determin.ation to practioe it at whatever cost. • These youthful heroes not only. know the will of God, but. they resolved 'o uo the will of God, "Ile it known unto thee, 0 king,. that we will not serve thy .gods nor worship• the golden image which thou hest set up." Right doctrine and right resolve are On foundations on ,which genuine ..e- ligion stands unshaken and unshakable. Genuine religion' asks Cot is it expedi- ent, or popular, or lucrative, or pleas- ant?. It asks the one question, is it right? Genuine religion will do the right though the heavens fall. ' To have a genuine religion, a religion of principle should be the supreme de- sire of every heart, Is there such a re- eligione---Yes—Where can it be found? Jesus Christ is God entempled• in 'hu- manity. He Is the supreme interpreta- tion of diyine truth to man. Christ Jesuss is the truth clothed in lituntinity. He is truth In articulation. 'The word became flesh and tabernacled among us." Christ is truth speaking with a human vole, looking at us out of hu. Man eyes, touching us" with human ,hands, loving us with undying affection. The one who learns of Hint learns the • truth. • The one who receives Him re- ceives the doctrine. The man who builds on Him will be genuine and inn movable. ********* •.41 , 11010********* SOME 'DAINTY RECIPES. Apple Shape. -Peel, core and stew one pound of apples with a teaspoonful of grated lemoft rind and half a pint of water; when quite soft rub them through a sieve. Dissolve a quarter of an ounce of gelatine in half a gill. of water; add it to the apple, and stir in two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Fill a mould with cold water, let it deain, and put in the apple mixture.- When cold turn out and serve with custard. • Parisian rice is a very good way of using 'up remains of poultry ,or game. 13o11 two ounces iff ripe, drain thorough- ly, and place in a saucepan into e quart ter Of a pint of good gravy. Itet this • corne to the boil, then add two 'ounces of poultry cut into dice, some chopped parsley, and -half an ounce of butter; season with pepper, ealt, and .b. grate of nutmeg. Let all simmer for about six minutes, ,place in a buttered pie -dish, cover the top with slices of temato, and just bionin in e oven the ovens spread a ,little *raepberry jam - os er the , pudding, and on it pile the stifilYtheaten whites of the hggs. Brown , slightly*. in the Oven and 'serve. i • • , , • ' . , . , THE BEST 'HOUSEWIFE.,• • The be.st housekeeper is not she who spends the whole day slaving in the house "doing the work," as she terms it; muddline is the correct expression. oil R 0 top, matte en inehoioas in itte •ei ei a ., thet the eteiiiit relay 1 esoens. til'IA.tt'ol3it fl . td.a.ints the first meter that Nines front the tap, for it hes tatten in the impending tteitiment of Jehovala. a lead cm trim pipe all night, and le is„)ide gp,m,--Or, teletit. The form therefore unwholernmet •mitt iu the text has been called the Prot To CGOI an Oven While Reinke- , plietie perfect. . , Keel) thedoor hut, Put in nle danTer Into captivity -Tile only specifie men - of Ill° oven nue, and 11 Ole oven 15 SIM tion ed the exile in Isaiah. too hot, eemeve one of the rings of thh Their honorable men are famished, and IttuortepcilautiecemyTtautstthyoilltr(Inteiettlineta iceomIdlieraair- titeeibetallititpuodoer a.srituarsculitfeetir Nalitlk„ile,Uiliir tti; to,. the oven.- • time of famine 'to mine. ' To Stew Fruit Perfectly --Tal a 14. Shhe eol-Tliebreev *word "Sheol" stewing jar with a cover, Place the fruit corr(sponde in the Grote: "Hides,' and i . sufficient smear to flavor. Place the jam 'Inti lust wag the name given to the underworld in it with a pinch of salt li with tb.e cover on in a pan of boiling "Hrtietah!aenolfal°*gfthde edl.sdaLeLaire, and opened water, and let it boil till the fruit is the mouth without measure -This under lender. Do not uncover the jar till the world in here represented as elsewhere contents are cold, or the flavor will be (cOmp. Prov. 1. 12; 30. 16) as a devour. lot. hi Mg, insatiable monster. ' ...---entei—.---, e Descend into it -Into Sheol. The T su A 00 ,n4 t ie per of thouniu !dude will not HE ND y. sun L and off tylie verse is ithat the pomp „held them from death 1 rlie latter part, - -it hit ' ' r • ' - i t. • - i tiote -- - it ete•of „Una fourteenth, yerse lees been „reset. INTERNATIONAL LESSON, - tiered in another translation as -follows: "And down goes her heruselenes) pomp, . • NOV, 25. • e and lieu tumult and her uproar, and (all) that is (so) jubilant in her." This mattes the prophecy of destruction refer .more particularly to the city, including, of not tIWCAFI,V3 ef ilio tliMP5q YMP ' ToucHING spEGTAGLf einizedue i'dL41;!",i of the events which are traimodonte amid them mid Witieh ere indieative uf i Lesson VIII. The World's Temperance cows°, her inhabitants. The whole city shall•be destroyed. . s Sunday. Golden meet: 1 Cor. 9.27. 15, 16. This severe judgment which is THE LESSON WOAD STUDIES. to conte upon the capital city will hut reflect the justice and holiness of Jhot is used as- a basis for these Word Studies. '• vah, who thereby compels the recoesitt ihteousnees and reveals11s -1 truer nature as the Holy One M Israel. Note. -The text of th•e Revised. Version tion of his rg Historical Background. - I• saiah, Ile 17. The waste places of the tat ones greatest of Hebrew prophets, lived °aut tshall wanderers cat -The cleft with its labored. at Jeelem during the last glory having vanished into the under eru- forty yettrs of the eighth century, J3. C. world, its •foriner site n,ow affords scant His publio career was nearly coextensive pasturage for herds which grezo amid with the suceessive reigns of Jothaine the ruins. The picture intepded emits to be tha Aliaz and Hezelciain Kings of Judah. that ot awful desolation rather than He was much influenced in the earlp y oet that of "idyllic peace." The word "wan - his prophetio activity by the spirit and tlete,sre,,rs" may be translated also "sojourn of - earnestness of Amos and Hosea. earlier and refers, possibly,. to nomad px•ophets of the Northern Kingdom. To s•hepherds. 18. The third won is uttered against • rightly understand t•he mission and pro- those who, skeptical of th phecies of Isaiah a knowledge of the e' fulfillment of political situation of the -time ifleece s - the dire prophecy against the city, hard - eery. The greatest political fact of that pn themselves in sin and increase the Measure of their period Wag the steady westward exten . iniquity, thereny really sion of the Assyrian einpire which en- hastening -the day -of him make speed -A mocking dangered, the independent existence of 19. Let Ahecy against the city king- pchallenge to Jeliftwah to fulfill the pro all the Smaller nations of western - Among these the two Israelitish king- . • phical position, ought to have been the notineed against those who confuse 'nor - 20. . The woe of this verse' is pro- dorns, because ,of their favored geogra- ian power ; but the shortsightedness of el distinctions; that is, against the class last to come inte.conflict with the Assyr- the kings of Judah and Israel dictated a of moralists and philosophens "who ern - political policy which involved them in played their subtlety in melting out a premature and compromising relations case for abuses condemned by the un - with both Assyria and Egypt the two sophisticated moral sense." • great world poverS on. eitner side of 21. The fifth woo is against the self - them, and this in both cases with disas- - satisfied astuteness of politicittns and trotts resats. u is siso,importoot to re. sataaaitesnsintenmeomd thatiperiod. , member that the historical period just ,22,, 23. The sixth and last woe ie uttered preceding. the time, ef Isaiah', had been thet are mighty to drink one'of Unusual prosperity for, the north- wine, the carousing and debauched aria- tocra-yys and against the corrupt judges vho aistif the wicked for a bribe. A woman with method gets t troug her domestic duties, even without the aid ,of it served, by midday, or soon after, and is ready to take a walk, make a call or two, or rest 'comfortably with a book 4 her needlework, her home is tidy, and she is always neatly and consistently dressed. Although no one 'enjoys a pleasant chat more than she does, she avoids anything like idle gossip, and no one can tempt her to waste the early morn - trig hours in talking over her neighbors' affairs. A geed housekeeper also avoids debt: She insists n paying for everything as she gets it, sees that she gets good value for her money, A fussy woman may be a prim old, maid, but she is probably ,en untidy wife, always very unpunctual, for she has , "no time", to do anything,' her • th • faculty 'for fuss retarding her iactions, hhhhhe,en none form of a sirtiPle Palf a small ,vegelable marrow- steep' it, tn. monients and thinks nothing, cid ' take out done so *ell by anyone .as by heraelf., salted water for half an hi:little • able or story the prophet has adtiressed- Hence she te quite unnecessarily over-. and drain. Cut as many slices as You require to fill the 'dish to be used. Men, some 'butter in a stewpan, put in the hlicest season with sett, pepper, and a little spice. Let, all fry for a few. min- utes, shaking constantly. Place on a buttered. dish, .sprinkle grated cheese on the top, over this scatter bread- erumbs and a few bits of butter. Bake in a good steady•oven for ten minutes and serve hot. To Make Pink Apple lelly.--Cut up seven pound's of apples (do' n.ot peel or core (hem), place •in a pan with five pints of cold water, the rind ot two lenions, and one inch of cinnamon. Cover with a flour and water paste and bake for six' hours. Strain the juice' through a cloth, place it in a clean pre- serving pan, and allow a pound of loaf eugar to.„every pint of julee; bring to the boil and cook feet for twenty min- utes. tihnt the jelly intd pots at once and cover with paper. Lemon' 'and Vegetable alarrow Pres serve.---eaViien the fruit is perfectly ripe emit its and put it in a dry place for a fetv weeks so that the sap will dry out al it. Peel the marrow Thickly and take atvay the seeds. To every six pounds of pulp, cut Into 'squares teen inch, al lot; twelve pomade of sheer and Iwo slieed leinone. liet these ingredientet used for all purposee. IWO gathered ` of an abnormal iippetite, drinking mull carouoine heing generally astoOciated in ernotritigelern under jeroboam II: as well, righteouswees -of the Take 'axv.a..ti the me for Judah under the long reign of, U,eziah (or Azzirfah). The boundaries of, both kingdoms' had, 'during this Perla"' et* prosperity beere otice'more extend Unto their uturdst limits and great, Wealth flowed into the national treasur- ies of both kingdoms. ("And their land i • • , ' her is there any end of their treasureset their land also is full of horses. neither is there any • THE DEPARTURE OF 800 IIARNItItlit1 CHILDREN. — The Future Citizens of Canada and thf • Manner of Their Leaving do 'rlilieeyts° uoenhell n ggir471:11e1(tie:aenti:°in tot Engiand for their future homes in Canada es told by a London paper. They were gathered in the station to hear SOITIO parting ads vice from the officials of the Bernardo Tho girls at on one side of the room,, the boys on the other; the girls wearing blue or grey woollen caps. Tam ch. Shanters, or caps that hung down bag- gily, and dhe boys' •comfortable blue peadaacts with brass buttons, • Was it .not Reolie Steveaon who remarked that • theta is always something touching in launching* a small boy out of his home intelhe beginning of his schoorlife? fl was far more touching to look at those, 300t faces, many of them belonging tty children who. seemed mere •babiea ((hough the youngest; was saki to ba eight years old), and to reflect that in a few hours they would be swinging or• i - tumbling seas, that many of them would be abominably ills that not one would have a mother or father at hand, . and that when they arrived in Canada they would separate from one another, and begin • their lives • each among strangers, to • do • and become -what? Well Canade is a generous ample „ countris and the 'answer, happily, will DEPEND UPON THEMSELN'ES. Perhaps the meet, touching•thtmd alt Wag. the cheerineee, ef thosedelfildrent they were still arnoog friends-hthe part ents by proxy who had tended them,' not with mere care, but with affection,, in the homes. They answered with jolly' selves the quostions which Were put to them; they' were Without misgiving; theth , rollicked into tho 'unknown NAdith a slats °•,,, ple-assuranceiethat imustmhave given•; pause to every. older person, however! little reason he might have to complain( of fate. All this uncertainty and all this( simple confidence side. by side -it Was ai "revolution," indeed. ' A. hymn 'was Sung ; "Jesus Loves the chorus, Almost at ioncia.Mr. Bekaa - (the new Dr. Barnaudo) stopped the sing -I ing with that, informality 'tench everth one with experience knows is the Welt! for holding the curiosity of childretth "Who is 'nip'?" "Me!" shouted the. chit- , drat. • "Wells touch yourself," said Mr. Baker, "to show that you'are quite sure. Do not touch the other fellow." After (his all th,e otaldren ahvays touched their, breasts . at the Word "Me:" The Werd recnrred. Their hands moved backwards and forwards in front -Di therp. Thee listened eloiselys and shottled "Yee" when they were asked if eabh. would try -to beat( thc record by -being the beet child.- even 0 sent, to Canada. *ler righteous from him -Tempt the eighteeu4'• foreake the right and employ shinier tinrighteatus Means to obtain desired ends. In the Sticceeding verses of. the chapter the prophecy of ruin which is to -canna is repeated. end of their chariots" lea. 2. 7.) But THE 'HORSE QUESIIION. 32. 9), the rise of great lirfided estates material prosperity was, attended by an aggravation of social evils already griev- ous. Debauchery and a. general corrup- tion of Morals among the wealthy upper biasses (Ia. 3, 16-23; 5. 11, 12; 28. 1-8; (Ise. *. 8; Mic. 2. 2, 91, and the consct. quent oppression of the poor (Ise. 1. 23;' 3. 14, 15; 5. 23; 10. 1, 2; 29, gl) called forth the sternest rebukes of Isaiah and his contemporary Micah. Of their de- muthoiations of the oppression, avarice and drunkenness prevailing in the higher ranks of society in their time our lesson passage is, an excellent example. The scathing rebuke of tome' which it con- tains really embraces the longer pas - age, verses 8-30, which in turn is in- separable from the introductory' parable of the refractory vineyard contained in verses 1-7. The entire chapter should be studied. . Vegetable. Marrow witimiCheese.-Peel She nev ',snares hereon', •never . meme, Worked, overfatigued - and frequently' fractious. • The husband goes out; theiehildren ore so accustomed • to continued scolding that they become either hypocrites or unusually unmanageable and heedlees of rebuke. To some extent they• deserve' pity, for they are teased about, their • food, • clothes,' health, exercise, games and lessons. • Nothing is done without plenty of fuss and discussion and many -harmless pleasures are lost. ••••••••••••1,11,.... FOOD IN PAPE11:11, It is a very cotnmon practice to put away food that comes from the shop in the• brown paper in which the dealer wraps it. While this may be conven- ient it is certainly open to serious ob- jection on the score of health and ' oleanliness, Most of the cheap papers • are made from materials hardly up to the standard of,,,the housekeepeee ideaa of neatness; and although a eertain doh gree of heat is employed in theft pre- paration 11 13 by no means sufficient to &Amy all the disease genie with which the raw materiel. may -be filled. %Viten. it is taken into consideration' that waste papers of all sorte and thoee nest Methods of Improvinb the Quality of Our Horseflesh. The frierids of the horse, do not feel inclined to allow the noble animal to be side-tracked by -the automobiles' • The action of the Government, in instituting investigation and inquiry to discover the beat methods of improving the quality of cmi horseflesh, is simply the „concrete expression of the sentiinent of a lerge part of the public in regard to the horse. Whatever• may .be the results of the work of the horse commission, there is one thing evident. Una a set -back, if knock -out -blow, Will ,be administered to the practice of employing scrub sires. The experimental work, with grains at the Agricultural -College, has demon- strated in a striking -way, that good cops cutinot be sue/0041111y 'grown from defective :med. Neither tan geed herseet be -bred fritim ibrotten-dodin,-dif- crepit and unsound darns ,and hires, of etralin and no 'bregding. The beat The boys streamed 'out of one doer, •' the girls out of another, The officials cheeked them off, giving a friendly thump here, a teasing word there. Dist cipline never throve so well as in these jovial , circurnstanees. The children marched to the station below. • Mr. Baker, was carrying a tiey girl; who affectionately •rubbed his top hat the wrong way. • A Bernardo band was on the platform. It struck up, and the children,' with quickened, danoing steps, going to the throb and rhythm, streamed into 'the train, The eyeiejovial officials chaffed them through the win-, dows; one sparred with a small boye another . 4 - • DANCED A HORNPIPE. Ancfnow'a few spectators carne to the platform, These were relations of the children -in two or three cases a father or mother -sand their interest in the children was di.stant compared with that of the officials. One washy looking out who had left. his child destitute (or the child would- never thave' been in that • oeu) ri Lilted .0 Ist, etilvtei Esn ean stehty ouptehrsilt(el last moment, but perhaps -it Was the rnoeh wholesothe neontribution he had* ever .011 ASSeAll )14, • US, .cottn ryme , ape . stock, &tn. only reetfit front the employ- .reade lo the upbringing (;)1 ,son. Mr. 'Baker -massed ethrouith elle train, The children attached themselves to him like barnacles. Ile shook, them eff gen- •tly. The whistle Ittew, The band played "Auld Lang Synch!. and the (fait of the music quickened to the quickening •puffs of the ertginet A storm of handkerchiefs itvliitened the air. The dismiaceful rela- tions compounded rev their sine bytteitt- ing in tne dramdtio benediction. Ilea - von forgive them! It was only an inci- dent, privately managed, in the admin- istration of the Empire and in the daily business of „Paddingten Station, In three minutes the small °migraine were pro- bably being mistaken for a Sunday • School treat, by preeccupied persons coiling In from Acton or tVestbourne Ilut th'e t.rain held Caesar and all, his tortunes-perhaps. The future 'Colonial Premier rimy ilaVe been there. Ninety- eight per cent, of the Bernardo children (I) well, Eighty per cent, of the old Bermuda boys of the necessary age in Canada are now landowners, • To prepare farmonachinery for pitint- intst sandpaper it to take off • the old Uteri Le any left on If it 6 paint is sound and ha h any gloss ieft, )ani sandpaper just sufficient to take oil the gloss; then mix Into' pounde ot *Venetian raeldtlioir7titilitnitiet:taonf dbleied iltaiikletwoof ojuntpiacties. • (live the work a coat of thie. • When dim, make the same mixture of oil, tur. pentine and japan and put in 2ethpounds ef Venetian red; then give hie tvork a. • coat of this mixture. l'his ehould be foirly heavy coat. If too heavy, add mere oil; if too lights add more red. If. fitrinti$ 0111 Wijih an even glose It la enough; if not put' on another coat pealing -to themi to judge betweeti him t f 'Ube ' dd and his unfruitful vineyard. alnewere of the rhetorical purpose of' the riarratiVet they readily assent to the eondemnation of the vineyard, not perceiving that in so doing they are pronouncing. their own .condemnation. Thereupon the prophet suddenly drops •the figuratiite, ianguage of the parable (v. 7) and with tremendous force• drives holne the charge of &so- bediencee and rebellion against ,j_ehovah Upon his hearers. , "Isor the vineyard of Jehovah of hosts is the house cif Israel, and the men of Judah his pleesant plant: and he looked 4ori justice, but, beliold, oppression; for righteousness, but, be- hold, a cry." • Woe -A simple interjection of threat- ening. There are iteverat different lie - brew words thus translated in the Old Testament, In Prov. 23, 29, "Who bath' woe," for example., the Hebrew word translated "woe" is not, the same as the word so' translated in this chapter, be- ing rather an interjection of lament. The threat against drunkards contained in this verse is preceded in verses 8-10 by a, similar threat against the avertcious •aristecraey who "join house to tome, neat lay field to field." Mee eerly in the morning - The eet *a It II e mornin is `woof Staid for twenty-four Ileum then put and worked over into new paper to ii.to a preserving 'pan with tswo Onnee5 Wetip oar food in, it- behooves the hour,est of briiised ginger. Take otit• the ginger wire who haree for the health of hert after one houris boiling, and boil the family to tee that articles, of food re ret slowly !ill all le clear, etirring fret main in contact, With Snell wrapping quently. Then- place perfeetly dry the very shurteertime.poseible. It is not unusual to see meat, butter, pais for use. A. tepid:lea pudding is very goed if cheese ' and other eetremely susceptible carefully made. but it is so often merely, arlicleit put await in the very cheapeet, a gummy stuff which is far front tempts •Conimoneht, brown Palter. Man Tahe a teacirpful tapioea and:t ufetin the 8rielcootlidt,io, jet soft soak in water for' two 11011rj allotting, itroaerieti or leas they ithd eurneine, einfep to coyest and amt. • into, earthen dishes, and under eir- intf mote emon that, 15 otenehed, pour• cumete wee ehould they be allowed to into thie a quart of and bell in a remain in the PaPerit in %filth they drift donble ealieepan till netts etir in the delitterAt- yeltio of three eggs and ttV0 OtInC'S of sugar, flavor with gratadd lemon rind. Plata" in a buttered pieelielt rind cook 111Xtri 14411 THE IIONIEt 1 gontiy till the egg is set, remove from El, - thought with the late hour.; of Me day' :and night. 'Ibis veme reminds US or the word.; sponen by Peter in defenee oil the disciples on the day of Pentecost:write:et, are not drunken, as ye iti'uppose; seeing that it is but the third hour of the date' A le 2. 11 Strong drink - Fermented liquor of every kind. 12. Lute -An instrument Ifilongieg to the guitell family, no linger in cominnti TabrittimArcheic forie of tali4 or tat bmir. a small drum or tainhoprine with. out jingle.); tithed eepecially to accent pany mune 'form of pipe or flute; a tine - Regard net the wink. 3" hu. all, 'holikt caLe ba'Ited too Wilda, neither, ... the operation or his tiendste , • It is, besidele, Tar easier to ikeep a geed. animal hi:condition, during his -growth, than it is to bring a scrub along till it reaches a saleable age, and even when, In its ease, that age is reached; its sale- able quality riis far 1.1ifeirlor to that of a well-bred 'colt. • Stipposing, however, that in both cases, the tante troubletand. „expense are anvolved in bringing a colt to a rnarkaitable age, the .value of the well-bred animal is so promptly' and praetically recognized by a shrewd buy- er, and the disabilities of the scrub so promptly taken into account,* that there becomes no question of Willett is the more prefitable animal to handle. The commiseion, it is a pleasure to know. had not much reaeoni to •find fault with the horseflesh of the .district, for there are perhaps few sectione of the province in whioh so many good horses can be seen, either on our city streets, on the highways, or on the farms.. Still, there are ia too many cases, sires kept and empleYed, which, in place. of looking forward to Suture generations or horse- flesh, should be !Molting forward to a peaceful life in front of the plough Or harrow -their only place.Of real useful- ness. -I etsrorottgit Examiners ' During the German army otnenotuvees the Kaiter'e temporary quartere .conolets of a cammliouse of woeti. In addition to eleeping and bath romn, the Kaiser has a large working room, winch Serve tiloo as (lifting and reception room. Sev- eral smaller apartmenta complete this inaprovieel house, from which the Im- perial at andard When i'Vellinft fella a. 'huge fite hill rutled before iiiPo thajeettde door. l'ino it; kept Nirvana all night, and , the, 'Knitter Mete to eit beolde it and tall: to In; frimods. thew onamiom all eeneenew i. fergett Another of Hie alajeelthe' evening- plervoiree in 10 Walk P011101 anilli)fr 64' 14`21iliera' livouatte anti AViii1P9S, their tough temp joking and pewee. , a • 't i„ , Cut maidenhair fera will tweet let ender if the Math are put into a jug tositine walee, and then allowed ti semi tin (sad. Affer tide arrange tht fera with flowers in the usual way. tte ' '