HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1904-2-11, Page 7,
IT
• .4.-LTJAE OF ACTIONing voice, then, by your 9ugvae of mch ake us sua , Od.Cheer" People
The Criterion of a True and Practi.
cal Christian Life
(loitered eccording Ire Act of the -eer-
ieri
-oent of Qa1111,04, in the year Cne
Thousand Nine Bemired . and POlir,
by Win. Bally, of Toronto, at tle
Department of Agriculture, Ottava
A nespatch from Los .4\rogeles, Cal.,
-says :--etev. Frank Do \Vitt Talmage ,
Preaelled from the followipg text :-
Proverbs vi, 13, "Be seinketh with
his, eyes, lie spea.koth with his feet,
be teacbetb with his lingers."
This is the last text and the last
-sermonic cool/oil my father ever
wrote. When I was swot -netted to
Woshingtou durbig his piortaliUnes
found -upon his study desk a plain
steet of paper, :deceit there with
these oineteon words uoon it, just
as he always wrote down his theme
and text hefore betstarted his ser-
mon. That Inlet memorandum prov-
-ed. to me that had be not been
quiekly susamoned away by the sees-
Seoger deith tlio next FernwR
Purposed te, have written would
K
have been not "the las:gone of
tion." There were no itnlications
the manner in Whieb he intended to
treat tbe topic, but I know that the
sui4ett had been moch in his mind
and that' he bed been imoressed by
the mischief that is often aOne by
geres stuond actions without the Ian
toranee of a worn, I wish we could
have bad that Fannon, fey the wOrn-
Inge he would. have uttered need to
bo spoken. I have therefore thougut
Lt tt duty to fulfill, as far as
Ant able, the intention my father
was prevented clamng iout,
A MAN'S TRUE Lira
A nian's true We can nearlY ;,11-
WeeVS be judged by bis eum
rroullegs.
If I enter your Immo ond find 'upon
Your Parlor table •a well used Bible,
if 1 see upon the walls pore and do-
valiug pictures and especially is
conspiettous places such religious pie
tures as Rapnaers "Siatine Madoo
tut" and Rubella' "Descent l'r0111 th
Croes'" and Murillo's "Abraham , an
the Angola" or Oorreggithe "ReOeu
taut Magdalene' if sec upon you
111*rary shelves rationg the wel
thmnbed books such works a$ Thom
as a Kemp's' "Imitatinnn and rat
!nee "Life of Christ!" mid the bio
graphies of Livingstone and Brother(
atnd Gordon and a act of Varner'
"People's 131hle;" if 1 ece your meal
rack lined with the masterpieces o
the great roligious compositions
euch Ilandel's "Afesolah"au
Wagner's "Parsifal" and Flotow'
°Martha" awl nfendelsoolons "Ell
Jah" or "Paul;" if I tee standing it
the cornere tho library the plustm
oasts of such plecos of sculpture
that of Michael Angelo's "David" o
"Moses," I am conpolled bellev
that some mou
o, oble spirit has 'tem
living in aucl dominating that hoMe
So, by 1110 "langurige of action,'
when I find o. man longing to be it
the house of God on the Sabbati
(NY, when seo Out man, week afte
week. sitting in eonspienous place
at the midweek prayer meeting, when
1 Sind him continually seeking the
greilt religious gat wrings whicl
-every little while leke place in i
large city; when I find him, daily
'end weekly and yearly, assoeiatin
mwomen pg
with en isnil oled for
their Christian integrity, 0111. C0331. -
yelled to believe that 'that 311411
Want:5 tO be good and to live u. pure
life, On the other hand, when 1
see a man cOnspieuous for his ab-
sence from all good affiliations his
actiont inform me. es plainly as his
words could do that his character is
just the opposite of what it ought
to .be
JUDGED 13Y ASSOCIATES.
The father of a great English
preacher taught this lesson to his
son, then a very young man, woe
married his father visited him. After
he had passel] through aud examined
the different rooms of the house lie
'My son, there is one mistake
nbout your home. I see nothing, in
the furaiture, in pictures upon the
walls or books upon the table to
lead me, if I was, a stranger to this
home, to judge whether you belong-
ed to Clod or to the devil. In every
room and. upon every wall you
should alwasee have eomething to
prey° your guests that you are a
.fid of God. A man's Christian
sh
ife ould be manifested in the fur-
niture of his house as well as by his
oi:tside surroundings.'' What that
Christian parent said in reference to
a man's dome.stic life is essentially
true in reference to his outside hum-
an affiliations. A wicked man's in-
ner character can nearly always' be
judged by his conspicuous avoidaece
of noble associates. By your inti-
mate friends your Christian life is
to be judged as well as by the words
that you speak.
Ilut a wicked man's actions have a
positive as well as a negative signi-
ficance. If 'be- the absence from all
good associates a man'F3 character
rests under a dark cloud, then by his
bolcl and, reckless defiance of all the.
great moral influences of the day his
wiclied life as to be judged also. It'
is one act to sin in secret and to be
ashamed of your sins, It is a far
more heinous act .to publiclY Parade
your sins' and come to, a depraved
condition, which you do not s.sem
c.are what peoPle may Say in re-
ference to your life or how by your
bold exantple they may. be led astray
through your evil conduct.
DEPRAVITY HIDDEN.
purely upon his ability for mimicry,
till a whole night with sweetest
musie, Upon the tree just outside
his opened window the president saw
aud heard him. 'Sometimes," wrote
Mr. Roosevelt, "he would perch
motionless for many minutes, Ws
Seedy quivering and -thrilling with
the outpour of mosie. Theo he
would drop softly froen twig to twig
until the lowest, limb was seas:lied,
'when, be would, rise flutteriog and
leaping throegh the branches, his
Sang never ceasing for an Instant,
until be reached thp summit of tho
tree and launched into the warMs,
scent ladeu air, Boating in spirals
with otitetreteheel wiugs, untii, as if
spent, be sank gently back into the
tree and (Iowa through the branches,
while bia song rose into an eestasy
of ardor ad passion." Tnat mid,
nignt soog seeres to hove givea the
presitleot o nigher appreciation of
the poworstef the meenteg bird. The
aongeter, worbling in the darksteae
313 zllgnsl, 110.Q'3V31.3 5110.1
it loot more harmooy And melody In
its being than its lieerer had pre-
iowsly Supposed. But, unhappily,
tbe converse is generally' true of
30330,11 beings. It is their better pa,
ture tlult they under observa-
tion It is wnen they think tbAt
their friends de not eee or bear them
tbat their worst, charaeterlstics are
ilieplayed. Mealy a, own wbose life
when under observation ift irre-
proachable shown. when the re-
Streiats of public co -aims are remov-
ed, a capacity for heinous awl
bentaal ern
WORSE TlIn.11 THEY SEM.
As a wicked person Is neerly al-
ways woroo than be 50033334, 1 put this
blunt question to you: "Oh. Weiler,
with froward lips, how dare you
net,1011, you becOMe a Party to Se, that lie shall be gloithed 10 115. It
tan's infamies. As an Monest man, may be that the man was much ter -
speak when Orod bids you to speak, rifled by his ioanner of approach to
As an holiest man, keep silent when Christ and our Lord graciously quiets
you please, provided no one is to be him at ODCQ, as when lie appeared in 40
injured by your far reachiug stlence, the midst of the first resurrection ev-
A wicked mart's evil Actions are , ening and said, "Peace be onto you,"
ogain, manifested in his willingness to For a speaker to know that in the 9
take advantage pi a helpless brother ..atiods of his hearers there is unjust *
or slater through a technicality of ,and crtiel criticism would lie very 0
the law. By that I inean that , upsetting to most popie, perhaps to
through 0, technicality he is willing all but to our Lord Himself, but
itte:4teoShertfitofteeOlitg.t.
THE UOME"
To dean knack cloth, dissolve
outice of hie:tau:Mate Of :anurfouitt (11
one cpairt of warm water; with tbis
liquid rob t be cloth, using 0. piece
oi gannet or black cdoth for the pUr-
Pose. Aftor tho application of this
Recipes for *lot Onnoten, seleitioa, clean the cloth well with
tiYn;ene ottO (Knee Notese1ea water, dry and iron it, b.usiting
for the tioustko •p- the cloth from tine to time in the
direction 0 tha natte,
eginntatilootneocto4ttonnoth„ The O0.-rtataii tatitioo of clezssing I
tvet is vauen, simplor than t222rs
ItENONTATINO- 0,131 ItLtithh• ors much manual labor. Te
oo from n wine bottle,. dip it
the 1i1111b pont'tr;'er---'w.hiclt must im
3 previ tooister.ed. PI ce tim
knife nd rub it with the -cork
In a IOW ecooda tip hnife will hs
.quite clean and polinled,,
irOpire wping tith a duster. To
'clean a Inife On a board in the nsnal
fashion takes twice the timio nod leo
te become a moral crizoina,/, a Usur- iLorcl liven neforct Ills Father rather ur was rie ore woro than
er, a swindler, a destroyer, a vann than before tlie rellgieui; lead-rs of trpresent, thoogle • ie. the way
pire, if lie can only do it and eso:tpe the day, lit was a low nears whea almost
the line tooth comb of the low
A OIESS'AGE OF HOPE, - 1 been teacbable they raignt have said, or edge of fur. Entire tdeces, voats.
„, doetors teseey outer gantlet -it 1 ad itP 130r010r
Vila 2 OShkl0, 5110 '
g re is Ono w o fosgieos sms and 3»C et'- mei c9l/313.5,0.11e s4.011. velecines
Athenian oretor what were the three heals tlie siek. atul la quite undis- eml stoles ond a great: many fancy
most effective essentials for success- . turbed by this unheard et proceeding- 'pieces in the way of neck aearis, etc'.
' fel public speech, Demosthenes an- must be our expected •Ofi-esieb. it,lood inf. is 111',1%1yS enpentive, and
swered "First, action; ontond e.0- :13 t, • ld "
tion; third, action," So let the les- blinded, by unbelieving criticism, Jost As looto as thett-e is- a scrap of it,
u , as v. e $O, 11010r0, they werel onalit to bo prop er: y taken core 120r.
son of the text be translated t'to as many are to -day. Turning agoin is, Illie lace, good for ooteetbiIt
ug,
, your liveo. Let your actions, public to the sick /wan, see itim now carry- :sometjn, Leiortantately, tooktng
end private, be of such a ehoracter ieg that which had carried him, allloYer is 31Wayn on coperitive proceoa.
2that your influence will be one that sins forgioen and his body- healed„ furottrs chereing what ego= litte ex- Titre
ttiontlates, ennonles aud soiritualizes goiug fortla before them all a living orbitant prices for renovation and
,the lives of others, In terret and in evidence of the gree and the power remaking, bet the u or!, is not lihe
tbe eyea Q men ao aet and so live ot tbe San of Man.
rdosary b
owledge.
One may sometimes alter
o collar Or sOote P000r not. taa elattorette
331
'intt how,
113 the tient place,
$03f,SOUS, 001 41
eeioi
ethat your associates, your neighbors, No wonder that iboy glorified Clod,
the cornmunity and the world will saying We never sow it ii1 this rash -
be the better for your having lived. ion. What a. praise meeting. the raan
By your Christiao Ottetunin you loeY owl his friends must Piave ban! Witere '
;teed others to become tharistions By tho faith of throe font' seen tom'?
o
ynr gospel hoodohnhe yett eau 'MO ,Itow unacit of it Is there tn ;cool
'Rowe for Christ. Ily ]I'0331'weleont- we? Where is tho faith that tida-:
. I
cheer up the oppressed and tbe down- will not let thee go oteept thou bless by novices. To cut, 55300
trodden.13 yoey geottiring fieoter me?" Let Us Oat look. eroand and back, with Chan:. the enact Sh
you can point out the right pail* criticize others, but atlt the Lord to (1033100. then ant exactly on t
wherein the sinner coo forsake his 13000011 us* according to PS. CX=1 74, 11110 with t slotrit 10,31153111.,8111 -svolic in hand with God. 23, 24, ilnd bring us tote soft want, out qoito throligh, then gently. pu
My brother, my sister, alwaya let foat union -with thot Ititt the News /wort.
3110y 181 913111 in. US. in sewing hring the edge:, carefully
--- anal closely 1011100, pot -Moot the for
SD -OAR CURING ses.
em, back out of tho way. Sam over 101(1
Th following meama ar sugar eat, over with Been thread. 1.441:43
Items hoe been, used for years *arrow smut. yet oue
th woroeyieg s Aieee 1130deep to imam the E('agli firm. I'm"
re Itilled and pro!iy dresoed,
thetil to hs))( wbero the Air
eve fre- accets to them all
3 bWhi'11 tbeta are thorougnly
coothay matt lte cut op and lbe
healq trintered in good elope, Pot
(with Woe=
41;g' and eutouregtuT eye You eau neni
o ded„ tbo ;a:LI t Iikr3 Jaec.h. anti it (10)1(1(10)1(1
desecrate God's holy Sobbath? Bow
t dant you, without a blush upon
Cc
your cheek:4 be seen entering the SP.-
d loon or be known to pass your even-
- inn in a. disreputable haunt. where
✓ the name of Christ is sneered ot and
ridiculed? Now dare you gleefully
boast of these ains about which I
o dere not speak in public? 'Do „you
- not kuow that by your "language
1 of action" you are not only destroy-
s, ne,' yOtirself, but others also? Ttalo1
30 otivice once given to Thonws
aine. After the noted killing had
, written bis book, "Age of Reason,"
I he took the manuscript to Benjamin
S Franklin to usit for his criticism. Af-
ter Frannlin had rend it he cOrn-
mended its literary qualities. Then
• ho sent; "Thomas Pnine, 1 would
never print that book 1 would
throw that manuscript into the Pre.
011 the lemenn race is so sinful 3103?,
how greatly magnified those sins will
; become if the bulwarks of Christian-
ity are taken away, By that work
you will, not only destroy others, but
yourself. Ife that spits :against the
wind spits in his own face." Like
Thomas Paine, by the "laeguage, of
positive evil action," a man .not only
destroys himself, hut others. Meri-
t
table the world suspects that a
man's 1311101' 1 1 10 18 00011 worse than
its outward expression.
MAN'S IlitSPONSIBILITY,
"Oh," says the candidate for office,
aro an honest man. I never let a
dollar stick to my hands which did
not honestly belong to me. I never
spoke an untruth in my lifo." Aro
you honest, toy brother? How about
that $10,000 subscription which you
made for campaign purposes? How
about that other .$50,000 donated
by your party friends? Are all those
moneys intended for circulars and
speakers and legitimate campaign ex-
penses? If they are you are honest.
If you expect to keep YOur BPS settled
and have your lie.utenturts bribe the
voters at the polls you are dishon-
est. Your , "language of action"
proves it. °Oh," says the merchant,
"I am an honest mai. No cuStomer
ever heard me break my word." Aro
you honest. my brother? Do you
forbid your clerks to 3nake wrong
statements • in reference to your
goods? Do you see that your ad-
vertising, agents prim, within the
right limit short of exaggeration? If
you do you are honest. You are dis-
honest if you allow . other , lips to
falsify in your name. That con-
spiracy makes you a falsifier too.
"Oh," says the capitalist, "I am
an honest man. 1 ant not responsi-
ble for what my agent does. If he
rents my house for illegitimate pur-
poses his goad name is Varnished, not
mine.'' Yes, my capitalistic friend,
ydn are responsible foe what yens.
,agent does. The same clogs that
licked Jezebel's blood licked Arhab's
blood. Sin of allowing others to do
a crime in our name may be just as
condemnable as though we cosionit-
ted , the crime with our OW11 halldS.
Youe. "language et action" proves
it. , . •
I HOW EVIL IS EXPOSED.
wicked man s evil actions are
again manifested in his unwillingness
to -publicly- protest against evil
whene,ver he may s rolt. Silence it-,
self can sometimes make a man a
party to a crime, although personal-
ly he may in no wa3r be benefited by
that crime. For 111 St 01100, a tow
weeks ago the three noted Chicago
bandits, Van, .1 -line atid 113 tedermeler
and lioeski, fled tb 'Indiana and lived
there in a dugout. While refugeee
from justice those three men ono day
This indictiatent against the actions
o art evil moat's iS tho niore
positive because, even, th(3. lowest
fOrMS of outward, -vice, by the "lan-
guage ,of action'' the wicked man
nearlY alwaVs wants to appear a
little better than he really is. Theo-
dore Roosevelt, who lias 1)6011, a stu-
dent of beasts and birds and flowers,
says 1,1mt this chttracteristic tO -Ap-
pear better than they are is not al-
ways true of all the iobetbitants f
the natural world as it is of rnen,
ouoe, Whim, Visiting l'Tosit0i110,
11eard lime:king bird, Whose
petc,tion for ute most pert res
your influence be cast upon the Sao
side of every delhotable moral quote -
tion. Let your "language of action"
Always in Christ's name be a PROF.
$age for hope and never a guide lead'
log toward eternal deatlo
S
YE 0
OS
nett`
Pro
cd three
4' emanating iroos
queStien. Ti -o
roys, wbich
nterial particles
to electric clottge
ry high velocity; the 13001)
betat rat to apporentle' 11
tte cathode rays of
um, tubes, lott trovelliti
tbe third tno gamma 1'011
are very silo -Allot' to Inritos,
addition, spree or the sub..
as thorlupi, give oi'e
entonotion, w121011 ap4sr* to
in Ile ,g..1,001113* rtote ano
,tried along Iv,- air Streatc.'i•
70OS
441:445;t4A
nsplcuos
0334300. 50015113)
V
ratuns
09.
int tr
a: tails
earefut attention to the way tbe fur
lies in putting your edgeo together.
so thet it will stroke down tntoothly
on the, right nide.
An old cep. moth04' 00 8230
may
wily be cut Into bonds f
tong
ThITEllItTATIONA.I. LESSON, them in a. barrel coal pooh 0oto ,or a worn piece tem: 1.10 ('531 35131 34
FEB. 34. brIne preprarad by tlistelt hot ettht, h
tto g.hrtneld and how itittth e""1 141^
Only
Tet of the one reaele oto &Igor ond live maw -11 of Fatty •tre ,p31131130 or roil tim edge` 03; 4=''
,poonds 01 sato, ilese pentads 'brown 44 t0 3313er'rvill 11571
eihtd td. watht This win , piece more than the o
12, Golden. Tezt, Nark 10, enough to e0e0 on,„ 141;v2„, pa„was To trtro 0 garment witit tor bowie,
healing of tbe W
W1 nf mat. it ow 10112353 130,, sthalt, 035I as above, being careful that the
ocerao to follow. in 1120 Order oththey shotod remain onto =toot tutt„ Ifur all lies in ow .53/40 niteetion. or
etents, the Sabbittit (1131,)' 131 (443,11er'l fin all thi„ sewn that thon 10 tht, ; Is eut to mret in the mitre hack of
[mum °X last onekta lot5011, 3410,W3) top 0.1,ry two or tiwv.,(10'Lt.trg,3 tivk garment. In trianrohnt Perluttdi(18 t
the power or God over on tmecl,y hems will moire rib; w,,a7,,T, tit hate elderly' the pile of the for hi generel-
/le/arable diheaSe, Whig% lit 1,1144 Old the that ('1 14"l111. ilvtvc Dy 1)..st Waved to ran up. inSteati of
In. no. liow mighty and NvOIldtatUl tr.h. „ and the fur Wens rather and fuller.
anawer to the leper's (TY. ".1 will; '1,1„„ „ink •SStPed piete oral PIN,"Glla IT the un -
t„, any ttom a owl h ow y
bo tbou clean- (I, :1 1), aud izastaratt - ••••- * -toot me. Haste harrow otripo ot wadding
, ca tom no, 1 te the for
manor. lorer s ictF was so ggrat 1 to ir hams in, awl
Testament is tory maggettive of tin in the firohe boas, 1131 loom your :down. AS ChM 13119 hairs fall apart
. era 1 .17 OF gre,,n :01.7,r_
were those live words of our Lord in or,h, ' 1 #1* t 1 1 - 1
n't. -Where a coin er lo turned cad out a
33
311
13
11
1
SittliOnitt ititt.NNtit
All Qat-buirl, 1111.411ov entleittootood
or 1143 bare brouchon time; 1
0013 „gs put tetide 141513
stireell 1,14.ttainter ogaitot t.
proverlAa.1 roiny tiny. Tiie ntatrala
tit oldelt moth 0.garti,Tgl con-Tit,t 41.0
to the plant ohat T1V111 ore to
the prualeot man; tool 1! conunton
p043310 034" ag the tire zlvsil, 354153-133
or 1.1.0 vegetable worin in Shit r• et 1.
for almost the nhoh, Of the toSer
ifs lillade- Up of etaxelli food, as n
I °gory to the ;%ollor, pla4t% rullre5esit-
ted by the' "twee." 'T/,ls is trite to
'all plant:a -that stiow front twills.
Some go further, 1441* they run ta.
savings nate. in ila* 0134,0 Of C%
root, 'mango left undisturbed,
grout; larger year by tem'. to be
drawn upon in somas:to of drought,
ulien other means of outelotence aro
exitenated. Among these ore prim-
rotet. earrots. beetroot, and tufrnills:
mai with these throe last tido fitetil-
of ;wane: hoe been develnIted itY
2310.31 to sualof• the selanto a source ,
profit. 3
ly he was dean. dust as losnagl„.utill fj!'nl.ewnlattes‘;otl'h-ta.tt/31.1'5Yensw;';',:i.t.•tuiW,:;,,rall tbe wroutt Sidi.% and coven with!
no longer, does it. take to w1'lT. 131121 thlA 133115
that uotwithstanding the, Lord's damp dant pownered 11000.53 tblckly sold in the Moots. itsarame I
command to say nothing to {my over the flesh side of evert- piere.
0
011ii E00 110W the strips are Bo-
man he so blazed abrood the matter 131g socalal care that tho part VL1tsan "go on 3 do Ithewiae." The
that ,1 e:'as could no more openly ens tO the I4onois covered with it. Til W13I1dU3W throws up the for, so it
booty.
ter into tho city. but 'V3334 withoucin borax 1311001d 531513(4 liberally, for it ]0013S thich and
desert places, and they came to will add in I -meeting them from
Hine Irons every (master 1i, 43). As taint, anti tO keep thent meat. It
soo31 as lic returned 10 Caoornaann is used by All the largi peel:big hoot -
and the people knew it they gather -1 cs for the same purpose. ' Sboulthe'S
ed in such iimmbers tiott they not:are cured in tbe Same Ivey.
oniz,, mina the ]*wise, but It 11.1131
pOSS1131(1 to Vt. Lour the door. CORPETS AND INK-STALVS.
113
But only the aiek need at phyaician, tont,. about Lord tonottoto, tent
Troll -costly anal applying fresh
d only the 10st wed 3 '441"313., 110W hiS iorahip, 4141 OSP 11 With patierwe and oat -eta
W(_315. in their own estimation neittier but toe servants t t.
To S tins lianas in ptsrete pot the
heir side of the fur to the inner edge
ot the Cloth and tow over and over.
then tern the for oter and hem the '
other side In place.
71 fur 00in11(1 6101104 mai (.11110,T. heat
fine cornmeal awl with the howls rub 4
penny into the fur. MIAMI; the
and these P13114`,erS 11V41 doet048 his neighbors. found no one at, home. 12, thing in this woy the fur moo he
. , , ,
i 1 • M 1 2 , et , 10 no Icel. a cleated and 1 If
e nen lost att. IX. ; Luke
xix, .10), so they came and heard
and sow and went moot. without the
bleasing that W118 to 130 had for the
receiving,. The rich 119 sent empty
away tItulte 1, 53). Yet Jesus
preacheil the word unto them (vesse
2), nod it was the same word that
cast mit evil spirits, that healed the
leper, that stillezi the storm. that
created the worlds, but it Old tliese
wise and learned people no good, for
they 'did not receive it. The god of
this world had blinded their minds
KIT Cor. iv, 4). There was another
day. when. the People thronged tarn,
but one poor woman touched 'Him tO•
some purpose (ALark v, 80, 31);
others might have done so, but, this
one did.
While tile self sufficient, self right-
oous, Se0 in Him only obe to critelse
and condemn there is brought to
Him a helpless one for whom and in
whom His power can be manifest,
for He giveth power to the faint
and belps those who have SO ,helper
(Isa. _ . a , -), eth tIle
hungry with good things. The four
friends who brought their palsied
friend manifested a zeal and deter-
mination sure to accomplish their
accomplished. Their thoughts seem
to have run in this channel : Our
Poor friend is- helpless, and in that
house is the Man --who can help Win
if we can only get at Him, and we
think we can, and we'll do it
once, for every moment is precious.
-Let those who talk of coming to
Jesus in a very proper and becoming
W03' think of the method of these
men- our Lord's approval. The
People gathered in 'the house, those
Pharisees anti doctors, saw a tnoSt
tinsel:only thing- when the roof was
broken up over their heeds and a
helpleSs man was lowered into their
midst. Perhaps never before nor
since did a, man come to Christ, aft-
er that faehion. The one thing that
Jesus saw was their faith, the one
thing that pleases most, for
wite.out faith tt impoeoible to
please :Ulla (Neb. xi., 6). 09ptrast
the mat Faith" and the 'Little
Fait h'' of Matt. xv., 28;
2(3; xiv., 8., Probably all were
surprised' when our Lord said. ''San,
thy sins be forgiven thee," for he
had been brought 'for heeling of the
hotly. Yet' the, Lord. read tho, heart,
cnt,cred a country sto,, to purchase and it may be that Ile saw before other people's buoiness.''
„beautiful 310W Whil0 ViilVet carpet,
tv.th a design of piok roses, 00 the
noon IVishing to leave a mac for
to write, and in ,some manner lips4
'the al -sent friend, the poet sat down Ti
the ink -bottle over that heal:tit:a •
carpet. The -venerable pot, /it
horror at the accident,, nrei“ ear,rn Oki
'" , hand- ,
kerchief Wiptd atiaty at the inkspOt
until etery trace had vanished; and
the owner never knew of it until the
poet himself, long after, laughingly
told of it. Now that's a nice story,
a very Moe story, considering the
greatness of its object; but what in-
tereated os most watt the fact that
Lord Tennyson was able, with only
pocket handkerchief', to remove ink- '
stains froiu a white velvet carpet,
having a pink rose design. Whether
thet ink -bottle existed solely in the
writer's head, or whether his lordship
had some secret process, we cannot
undertake to say, but we envy the
result. When WO spill ink 911 a car-
pet We press a, blotting -pad over it
as Tacitly as possible, and repeat this
until it will no longer discolor the
blotter. Then we cover the spot
with salt rubbing it thoroughly with
a cloth until every particle of the ink
is absorbed.This, Ss the best method
on a dark cloth, it will seldom leave
a trace; but on white velvet -Oh!
•TElft SALAD.
• Health is said tO reside in the sal-
ad, anti every housewife who wants
this factor of a satisfa.etory life to
abide in her family wild seek to in-
clude a salad in at least one menu
each day. A leaf salad, cress or let-
tuce, :Mould be served with a heavy
dinner.
Nothing is more decorative on the
tttble than a bit of salad served in
the heart of seine lettuce leaves, in
lemon or orange cups, cabbage' leave
05 eceoped out 011i0,11$,'cucumbors, to-
matoes, beets, turniPs or peppers.
Celery salad, plain or mixed with, ap-
ples' 20 'puts' or a plam lettuce. salad.
is' served alway,s with game: •
Potato ' Salad is ,perhaps the most
, ,
j popular the borne table, and no-
thing,- seems to take the place of a
:nice Chicken salad for social 'affairs.
I ,
1 SAFELY -OCCUPIED.
Jerry ---"Your „never try to, manage
some food. 11 'country school -teacher
SaW theta and .1.-.2cognizecl Otani 1.)v.
es, , ta
school-tetteher not tele,,raplied " his
intelligence to tl-tt 2311)113340 police in:
one sense Ile Would have -becoine
part,- to their crirae,; nav tro-
thar', if it: public :‘,1-011 1.16.ar the' name.
d' hi sph errted , if yo see
oung inenhood. young womanhood,
about to be degraded .atul 111101:
pro13St; 11 53011 SC0 an iiljustice al) 0 ft t
to be (10110 another an.d. lift no wiril-
Uiin
one W110 Was rilore troubled
about, his soul illan body, iTe
at least saw •vi eltvote-t sees that
, : ". ' ,
tilt, two -1111g 01 the soul is the inost
iiiiportatit, 16r if 0111,)( WO ',e,re truly
saved :1 pei"fect, body is assured its in
(11123 tiint, (Phil, 20, 21). ,
Tfiere are niany texts which assure
us of tlie forgiveness of 34i2113. Those
tvitich. 1101p ;o1(, inost are L John ii.,
12; ..1Sti. 25. Do ,110t fail to
013501.11e the Lord's ''Be of 31(30c1
cheer" (1V.Ett ix. 9, 22), and let Rini
loo''ing.
Dray oquirrel, nrinuner and other
lieht ;colored furs mny be cleaned awl
freshened in. this way. 'The lighter
volor win slum how notch dirt has
been removed.
Angora fere 1nny suecess-
inns- cleaned in the dry hot meal.
Take the fur rt large pan am/ rub
it as thongh washing with. water,
on'y gently. Do ma 1150 toil Much
we'd thmhe d 101 1.
um( c t end sil
usr;....,r La,
The rainful ailment. a boil, Imo
he ,relieveti by placing on it the whit
lining of an egg -shell
Wet, Tea -leases will Stop 13leeding.
-In all cases of severe bleeding- tha
only thing which can be safely de-
pended upon is pressure.
A teaspoonful or white of egg,
beaten. op with lemon juice and a lit-
tle loaf sugar, and tuken. every hour,
Imes. „.
is an alinost certain cure for hoarse -
A groin of salt added to ervain will
make it whip 11105e easily.
l‘hen baking meat never let it lie
in the fat, hut stand it on a trivet
in the dripping -pan.
Soder is an excellent article for
cleaning tin -ware. Apply dtunp with,
a C1011:, 111011 rub "dry.
A lump of gum. camphor placed in
erour clothes -press will keep steel or-
naments from tarnishing.
A waterproof cement which is very
useful for mending broken and crack-
ed ware, and which will stand 11,,
coesideranle degree of heat, is inado
up as folloas;,- Afix equal parts of
vinegar and milk, turn off the whey,
and mix it with five eggs. Beat the
whole together, and. then add sifted
tinieldime till the niass acquiros the
consistency of thick pa,ste.
11 One's clothing catches fire the
thing to do is to smother the flame.
If the lower garment§ liave ig-nited,
sit on them; if the upper garments,
1.11ert a blanket, or evdu a hearthrug,
may be wrapped round, and one
should roll on. the floor to crush out
the .2 ante 'while 'shouting for help.
'Arany 'valuable. lives have, 1)ee23 lost
by people running for assistance and
thus fanning the flames, instead of
beginning elle work of extinguishing
it for -themselves. •
Whisltey applied to fruit stains
tai)le linen will cptickl Y remove
1,110 spots.
To remooe 1he sto'leaning from a
richer elmir or settle, chalk the parts
mon which the friction falls. The
R111e. adViCO 1.101(1.5 good. W1111 wLllow
h11\n'01'\P'e0117.111)))1y scaP directly to gar -
1 nen ts t a in ed with 0. -nit . :if the
stains are washed in tepid Water they
will 34(3 1(3501131 collie out. It's the
putting them in the suds that sots
the colot.
I, oe,-"No; it keeps Inc jumping to t.311
e -et enough business of my owu to
I '
inanage.''
4 tn
C rtunfy (tvitli newspaper - '1 ..,10/1
I'm at hoine you are for ever liam- E
raerme- at, that piatio or else your
tongue is running like a trip -11a111-
, Dior. 1Vasll'i, so before we were
married.'' 11Irs. (.4. ---'`No, tvasn't.
Belot -0, 11'0 NVOr0 inarried yolt held illy
, hands so I co It 1 cl 111, 1)111.3r, 1113(1 kept
121Y 1-1.3'.; 340 busY couldtt`t tallt.''
It
pleas
lug to
the well
I had a ve
threat anti. tiot
time; when NA'
130't Wattla any
') -wife not littt 3
ItTORViAlt PINE
; prite I found tio
I not be without it
' tie. awl van reeauunto
; bothered with, rt. covigh 0
Priqu (cu
orwetuy
Syrup
Colds, tronoh
Croup, Anthni
in tha
13113
d cold
'011111
00 0, bete,
trgi.
V 'Plitt: runn)1•:11. succELIP
1.1.0w the slow, plotiditles, bOy.
Iota to loft so hard for every
be tithes in advance. enties lato clever
fa:110°1112121e who con, do things with
ewe and (Amity llow WISLCS
lie could soy 010VOr Or ntaster
Ifrobit'llts, with as little difficulty
,s does tins inuchnitiraired youth 1
lie is tonatantly comparing himself ,
with hint, and Alwalys, of course, to I
11113 own tlir5Udr3tnt1'330. Tre, (1009 not
atep to think that this wonderfully
eleoer boy is not to be depended
!upon„ thet he is not loynl or true, ,
1 and that he is selfish to the core. '
1 He only ionas ihr the showy qualin
ties A0111011 be 1101S01. . Ile is <Hs-
isotisfied 101311 11 11111,04/, but, plods 'dog, -
golly on 133 voile of his clinlcultipa.
l'he slow boy leases sehool. The
years go by, and ae he approaches
niddle life ho linds, much to his
anutzemont, that he has far out-
distanced the brilliant eorapanion of
his boyhoou. The law of compensa-
tion is at, work in every life. In the
long run, mediocre ability, backed
by conseleatiousuees 111 making the
most, of it, loyalty to truth, uneel-
fishness, mid faithfulness to little
things will always win,
]3JSTI1.UST 011' LITERA.TtiTirt.
"Yon n.re alwa:,'s more or less skep-
tical about what yoii see in print."
"Yes," answered the man who has
his own ideas about things. -Truth
May PO at the bottom of a well. But
it ist, an ink well."
Mrs. i3hcby-' '11 woma31 goes into
politics, what do you suppose the
leading issue will be?" Bixby-- 'Tile
money queetion."
r.-itigcn..coamormanyc
OM. r21
Eating Became a Dread.
IlOW MANY PEOPLE ARE ALMOST
AERA.ID TO SIT DOWN TO
THEIR MEALS?
YOU MAY BE ONE Or THEM.
IF YOU ARE, THERE IS
A CURE FOR YOU.
BURDOCK' ELO
BITTERS
CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA,
BILIOUSNESS, SOUR, WEAK. AnTD
ALL STOMACH TROUBLES.
Mr. it G. C11'11113, Barney s River,
N.$., tells of what this womlerful reno
edy has done for him 3-lt is with grati-
tude that I Call teFttifY to the wonderful
curative powerS of B.13 B. 1 33£13 so badly
troubled with indigestion, 'that whatever
I ate caused me to much torture that
eating 1)e0130)e a dread to me. I tried
numerous physicians, bitt, their medicines
seemed to make inc worse. I iliought I
would. try 13.13.11., so got a bottle, and
after taking a few (.1034233 felt a lot better.
133- the time I had taken the last, of two
bottles I was as well as ever, alld 11,AVO
bad ito return of the trouble sinee_.
reeemmend yottr medicine to the itt
degree, B.B.B. in -tor 51310ot834
TratiblArtith Kidney T
gior Six loth
igen and Women Ate Trcublea
With Ittidney Trouble, Some For Less
Tune, Some For Louser-1),Te Need T9
Be Troubled For Any Length Of Time,
If They Only Ituew Of Tho Cure*
Being Idane By
DO'S KIDNEY PILLS
Backache Is The First Sign Of Kidney,
Trouble -Then Cerse Complications
Of A More Serious Nature.
DOAN'S -113.7311Ssti
TAXER' AT TIIE FIRST' SIGN OF
BACKACHE WILL SAVE YOU YEARS
OF MISERY. nIrs. William 11. Banks,
Torbroolt N.S., tells the pub-
lic about the .great qualities; of Dormis
Itidney Pills ill the following 'words :-I
eves troubled. with kidney trouble for six
smooths, and, had, such. terrible -retina
aeons my kidneys all the time that 1
couhl hartIty get around. Aftett taking
one box of Dean's gidney Pills I began
to feel better, and by the time I had
token three boxes I was completely
cured.
Price 50e. per box, or 3 boxes for Slt25;
all dealers or Tb.e Doan Ihidney Pill Cot
Toronto, Ont.
Deranged Nerves'
AND
iPleak Sp&1s3
Mr. RAI. Sampson's, Sydney, PLS.,
Advice to ail ilufferers from
Nerve Trouble is
"GET A BOX OF
MILBURN'S
liEA T AtD NERV13E
l -le says "I let 2)02311 a111g for about
a year froni deranged herves, arid very -
often weak spells wt.:old come over me and
be So bad that 3 sonietiotes thought I
would be unable to survive them, 11(81113
been treated by dectors and have ntkeri
qinnerous preparations but none of them
helped me in the least. I finally got bon
of Milburn's Heart and NvePi1l. Before
taking them I did not feel able to do any
woik, but now I can work as well as ever,
thanks to one box of your itills. They
have road* a nett, (nen of tee, and my
advice to any person trOubleid as I was, ia
to get a boa of Ofil been's 'Heart and Ncrve
Price so ets bon,
dealers, or
Te T. MILBUR
,irtn,tnitt
.5