HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1904-6-23, Page 7INIEG ITY OF THE HOME
Advice Which May Help to Dispel the Clouds Wliieh
Overhang Some Households.
Aft Mersa According to Act or tho Ver.
'lament 04 cap- la, in the ye er UnSil
Thousand tee , iinedred clad Four
by eVee. aney gat Toronto at the
l'erneekrder4 Or AZrieelter0,.'.0tt91.1711 0
-„,----- ' •'
,
A desPetcli from I,os AngeleCal.,
saYs ;--liev. Frank De Wilt Talmage
preaehed Siena the following tdhheee-
Eine ve 25, "Husbands, love your
Two stertlieg facts about Paul's
Personality have always vividly ha-
preseed me. Tb e one the estimate pf
his physical personaliteneforteed by
his enemies in the Corinthian church
who had sat under bis ministry and
therefore knew WIRT well. Paul bini-
ffell tells, us the!, they sent, "'us
bedzi,y presence ie weak and bta
sheech contemptible."' Chrysostom,
according to Albert :genies, declared
that "Paul's stature was low, his
buck crooked mid hie head bald,"
According to Nicephorus. Feel was
a little Mee ivith curvature of the
shill.0 and a Pale ceuntenance, long
end wrielded, ami with a head liht),
JoUVIS c%tsar, rioted for its scarcity
of heir. Whether these deecriptione
ere true, we linow pot; but, 4t., IS ii!r,
tle nicely that the Corinthiene \voiles
have spoken of bbrt Os they did, eed
that writers so mar his own time
• as ObrySostom and Nicepborus would
have so deecrilied him, if this )ntel-
•hefteel and epirithel giant INU1 P05=
SOSSed an imposing personeity, And
Tot, el through the/Pauline writiugs,
figures of speech bristle with the
symbols QC the athlete's arena. The
renner, the fighter, Vie gladiator, the,
struggle with the beast of F.,pheSus.
A11 have their inspirations and goe-
ac lit g..
The eeeond feet, which etneds Fide
by side with the first, About the per-
sonelity of Paul is this : Paul wils 4
hath4101*. 11. Ilas been contended Unit
he \yes a member of the eenhedrin
and, if so, 11111St have been married,
but the expreseion in -Acts Nevi, 3,0,
ou which the theory of his member-
ship is based. is vagao aml limy
have amousited to no more than the
testiniony of a witneas. On the
other hand, his erguinent in I. Cor-
inthians ix, 5, clearly implies that
both he alai Bereatme were unmar-
ried. This condition, however, by
eo menus indicates that he was de-
ficient in the affectionate eitie of his
peewee His teeters show that he
lavished on his children In the faith
the love that other men give to
their effepring and that he waS an
exceedingly affectionate. waria heart-
ed men. Ile taught parentS that
they should love their children end
children that they should care for
theie parents, wives that they ehould
'mime their husbands end husbands
that they should love their wives. It
is in reference this last command -
t Alleete wou/il elewa lc ,,tiheitiel., e
------telea
,
stead of believing that the old faeh-
hand. being truly devoted and loving
ioned idea of love should be done
old fashioned idea or a family home
is gone and gone forever. But in-
to his wife, because there seems to
be a popular theory abroad that the
time for showing the need of a bus -
There is a speeiel reaeou at this
MARITAL AFFECTION.
aWay with, X believe that, like the
el garden beds which used to be plant-
ed in Onl, ancestors' front yards,
they should be cultivated more and
more. Marital affection may be one
of the noblest, finest most beautiful
things in life. The Holy Book de-
clares, "Whoso findeth a wife findeth
a good thing." it is no part of
my purpose to tell yourig men how
they should proceed in trying to win.
the affections of the girl they desire
to marry. My design rather is to
urge married mat to show their
wives the same ,Ileference, the same
love and devotion, that characteriz-
ed them before the twain stood at 0
the marriage altar, hearing and say -
leg the solemn words -which made
them ono flesh.
Why is the true wife's value above
the price 01 rubies, as King Solomon
declared? She is her husband's bus-
iness partner; her husband's' equal in
brain as well as in heart power. She
fights with him, in a financial waye
• the great battle of life; therefore,
like her husband, 'she has it right to
expect the same rewards for her la-
bors that he has for his. It has
been the habit of some utiles to re-
ef the noblest, 'finest; most beautiful
hanger on, a clheging vine, a barna-
cle' or a limn= leech sucking out
tho • life's blood of her masculine
partner. ' Polygnatus, the great
-Grecian artist, painted her 426 13.
. C. as a four legg•ed beast in "The
Rope of °elms," devouring all the
labors of her , husband, • while he
works on and on, weaving out his
life work in a rope of straw. But
that is not my idea of the true wife.
The true Wife is a COI1SUITIer ,as man
is a consumer, but she is also a
financial producer as man is a pro-
• POWER BEHIND THE TIMONE.
"Oh, no," says • the masculine ego -
list, '• "women is • not the breadwin-
....._ eier of 'the •feinily. It is the h u sla an cl ,
avb 0, as •a lawyer, wins fees in the
• courtroom; as a ...physician, gains lie
motley from patients; as a soldier,
flotits his •country's •battles; as a lee.- if),
is ator, enacts avt s, which le Inalo
executive enfoftes; he is the mer-. '1'
chantineut, who -sells the goods; he is "'
, tha • foundrymalt, wito manufactures
"Y the st eel rails. Mao, man, every-
• where' is men the breadwinner. We
find that men tills the fields and
• 3I-2:1-rtlies the Money_ markets and
man eits upon the judicial hench and
the professional ch al rs . ' ' is that a
Otet. my beothee? 'Tis true, Ma 71 IS
i,1,1.0 ri Si 'WO bretedwinner. But. when
• y011 '1-t 0 looking for 1110 driving force
whieb Teoduces results in society do
not make, 'the misteke of supposing "
that there is no power but what, you it
:lee. ,•el
T was taught the 01)110 tionshivisich oi
• a true )11114bal1C1 • 0110,5 to a true wife h
• emee sears ego by an eastern minis- ch
i r ,ehheln s • sOnsider, '• olie of ' the *i
1'
greatest pulpit geniuses of his age. I
was about to be married, and was
telkiug with him, when he gave to
me this eharacteristic adviee
ways love youl• wife. But more
than -thee, always learn to respect
and follow her judgment, because she
can be your best adviser. When
wits a young man I started out with
seine success. I hnew.I could speak,
and I could also write. And often
often when I would write something
ke D E HAB•Lamm Th_peter ehaia'ssen the over the top of the first layer and
t.
Christ (Mark 27418,20); aart0idue: tsie2,ceoitthdirlda,71a' nvd.'itbhakbeu.ttern, ievoidee:r with
Text Matt. xvi., 16,
't
say that.' With that would
and
s-`
gtist, 'Why do you say that?'
would ask, •Tio you know how to
preach? Are you a better judge of
preaching than myself? Haven't I
Spent four years in college and three
years. in the senduery? What besi-
nese haVe you to tell me What to
do? You are nothing but a women
anyway.' But after a long experi-
ence 1 found that my, wife's judg-,
meat could always be depended, up-
on. When I followed her .4141130a
•always came out right, and when
followed ray own against hers I al-
ways enme out wrong. Ana, though
1 ant. now an old man and one of
touch experience, yet whenever am
in doubt about anything I have
OW Written always go 14 her, And
when she says, *John, don't Say
that,' I take toy pen and scratch out
the whole page. My success is due
in 4 greot measure to my wife's
judgment end Bet to my own."
SUSAN TALMAGlil'S INFLUENCE.
Men, liusbands, friends, bOW are
we going to repay our wives for all
the erierilices they have niade for us?
"011," some beanies:I says, "I do my
• full duty to my wife. I provide for
her 0, gwal home„ give her all the
money she needs." You do? Oh
that is %cry kind. As far as f ea
enthe out you give your wife nothin
but her own property. She earns he
support, just as you (lo, and she ha
right to at least one-half of yea'
income. If from a mere cold-bloode
standpoiet you had to lore a house-
keeper to do the work she does, yot
would have to pay Inc more for he
wages than your wife ever (mends fo
clothes and entertainment. "Then 1
that be the ease, and it is the ease,"
some man says, "how am .1 to pay
my wife unless I pay her in meney?"
Why, give her the same rewards the
apostle has commanded in the words
of my text, Did Pala ever speak of
money in reference to the husband's
duty. to his wife? No, he takes that
for granted. He says, "Hushande,
love your wives." But that is not
all. IR gives his commandment in
the surerlative sense, 'enesbands, love
your wives even as Christ also loved
the church and gave himself for it."
Ah, could there be any sweeter or
more devoted or more intense mea-
sure for a husband's affections than
that? It is love the true wife longs
for, as it is love the tree husband in
the home should long for. Not money
so much as love, intense, devoted,
loyal, self-sacrificing love. Timbre/las,
pey your wives for their sacrifices of
life in the golden coin of minted love.
MARRIAGE'S PROMISSORY NOTE
They
Stand
the
'Tost
Known in every euarter of the
globe for reliability and dura-
bility
DUNLOP
I thought very lane I would ta.
it down to my wife and read i
Sometimes she would look up frm
ifer sewing and say, 'John, don
throw down my raaneseseht an
stalk up and down the room in di
ITIE S S I EsSON
INTERbTATIONAL LESSON,
jUNE 2.
Text of the Lesson: Quarterly
Review, Golden Text,
Phil. B.., 0.
Lesson I.—Jesus visits Tyre and
ors0.00** eir),,st,epsego 1 WHERE CZARS ARE CROWNED.
•
I! FOR THE HOME
4
40 eyCgi reense faonrd 1,011 Other
tNc tot rk.
OS ter the HousekeePer, `4.e
setoegoe ,a,is,e0008.tot eo
Gum) rriarcos TO EAT.
Sidon (Mark esii, .24-37). Golden
Tet, Hete oWithout faith it Strawberry Sauce,--Reb halt c
is impossible to pleese Ifirn." A dee' uf.. butter and ox e oup of sugar to
mon possessed girl mid a deaf and ereasen add the beaten white of an
dumb man Sealed are tite great egg mid one eup of strawberries
events of this lesson, but the Golden th°r"gillY. mashed -
Text refers mainly to the .ffret, WO Plain Straieberry Shortcakes—Sift
cannot but associate the great faith two teaspoonfuls of baking powder
Of woman with the great faith With a quart of flour, add half a
of the centurion (Matt. viii, 10) and, teaspoonful of salt and thick sweet
the dieciples Shiatt. viii, 26- t • c tion reg.' out, rub
contrast it with the same faithx:, 80) .f Inreoanitti%xeelre portions,
dough. Divide
Ti RES
stand the test—ca n be removed
or rep/geed with the two hands.
A twelve months' guarantee,
goce with each pair,
The Dunlop Tiro Co'y
1.1M1TE0
Toronto
Cen1Q3 (1'4111 witnessieg the tether'
c n triipt for the mother, Lott)
likely is a child to reverence th
mother- after hearing the blame an
vituperation burled at her by he
husband. 11 a brutal father eyeterna
tically centinnee to find fault witl
Ns wife, if he neglects her and rich
tittles her and sneees at her, he set
Ian exaumle which his children are oil
lv prone to follow. Ilis eetimate 0
?heir mother, often coarsely aud
bluntly eepressed, is likely to become
theirs, and their natural affection for
her turns to ludifference and ingreti
tude Oh, 1r friends, . tis -
bands and fathers, you know how
sanctifying and purifying is the indu
puce that has come to yeti from your
Christ, the Son of the living cod? rover each layer with sweetened
alle 014 Testalueht Proclaims suffer, strawherriee.
ing :11-4$.51411, and whoa our Lord ex-
ponzuled the Scriptures to the per-
plexed ones after 1Iis death He saki,
"Ought not Christ to have suSerea
Boiled Sided Dressinee—Beat three
est,es very light, stir in a cap of
t
1 eat. a tablespow 1 of siege),
two tablespoonfeas of Felt, dash
-ese things?" (Luke „xxiv., 23-2,74 04 PaPracn and 4 sInall teaSP00111111
ut wraell in this lesser,. He spoke of rot Freed' mustard, Beat herd, turn
His stifieringe Peter, not knowina the • ipta a srs•°"114° and stir f'teLulilY un'"
$crIptures. .50„1 It nnist not be. 1 e m x me begins to boil, then
. e .
1
add a teespeonful of butter. When
(Dior!): ix„ 2-13). Golden Text. the fire, beat. herd for eeverat mime -
lien set wane" 10 get VC'1';`, e°141^
It will keep in the ice-cbest for some
S traa berry Put' cl ings—hfahe
pint of pineapple jelly tied thre
o thQ powers of darkness' Like Abrct" 11;<=41.1toh: oftlftesile,"rutsizo)re,
l'e5s04 IIL—Jesus U.ausLigured this melts remove the dressing- from
Mark ix., 7, "A voice came out of
lie (loud saying; 'Ibis is My belove
Sen, Hear Ilim." Only as '91'4 hy
faith see the glory of His Ifingdor
can we endure atientl i h d 11
* &Mai of self and in tle) condi t with
ham and Idoses sod Paul and Chrlst juice and gelatine. Deaorate bot-
lijulsAro wQ 1111/3t 111"11 C)CCIPjed 10111 1110Uld with erystalled fruit
with the glory Web. xi,, 10, 201 and blaneheil almonds. Placing a thin
xii., 2; Rom. 1S). layer of strawberry jelly in the hot-
s Ioeeeon IV. ---The mission of the Sew^ tom end chilling on ice; then mid
ersty (Lure 1-16). Golden. Texte more, aud NLIIN1 lir01 place a layer of ,
lattice x., 2, "Pray ye therefore the halved strew het ries; thee peer over
I.ord of the !tersest, that Ile 1SQUIVI a layer of pineapple Jelly. edding the
f send forth laborers into fis rvest " )11•'s to hee
I. . 1 ,, a . 1:1 il alt I le 1 Its ae 11. tk4. .
They went forth Wore face to come firm, ;alternate these layers un -
prepare His way, and they went ,tile the mould is filled; then set in a -
preaching Peace,. and yet, as !emits:cold piece over night When rawly
- among wolves The world' still Hall ;to $erve, dip into hot water a
in the evil on a the wolves still • ute, then elaee Ifiecepeper doily
abound. He win wee, again s„on„
the top, preseing down into
- end we are here to pre.para His way, he lelleh and invert onto a
T,esson Va.-Prayer and Toiniee
(Liao Ooldcn Text, Luke
xi., 9, "Ask, and a &WIZ be given
you; seek, alai shall find," To
know our Father is to Unfit Dim
(Ps. ix., 10) anti also to be strong
to do (Pan. xl., 32j, To Luow Hinz
means delight in His seri ice, His will.
Ilis way.
Lesson VT.--Watelif9liness—tempere
mice lesson Melte silo 8r,-18). Gold-
en Test, Luke xii., 37 "Illesned are
those servaets whom the Lord 'Magi
lie cometh shall find watehingd.
When we turn to God from, idols and
become redeemed by the preeicare blood
of Christdit is that we imtv serve the
•
living and true God ena wait for Ilis
Son from heaven (T. Thess. i„ 9, 10).
LPIA0/1 V11.-7110 ill'Odigtd Son
(Luise se-, 11-24). Golden Text,
Hos. vi, 1, "Come tied let us return;
mite the Lord." This chapter must
always be studied as a whole to se
a mothers, graves. Your love and rev -
g erence for your mother has kept you
✓ in many an hour of temptation. Lee
s yoer children have. the earn() betted-
. cent influence. Never by look or
4 thought or Word weaken the influence
Your wife may have OWL' reit' chil-
1 dren. When you are untrue to your
✓ wives, you are untrue to your 0111-
✓ dren.
f RESPECT AND DEFERENCE.
How shall we love Our wives?
giving them a •few' complimeets?
01), no! Not that. A wife is guick
.to detect insincerity In eueh inanities.
But you can show her your respect
and deference, You can prove to het -
by
yonr pleasure in her society,. by
the little attentions that when you
were a lover came naturally to you
and by your preference for her over
yminger women that vete, heert is '
still in her keeping. The Irttee pre-
sents the consideration of her tastes
and the desire to give her pleasure
whith used to eharacterize your
treat/ilea of her would delight her
better now than ever before and
would bring to her weary face the
gled smile of tender affection. Hus-
bands-, love your wives., We should
leve thein in making :them one with
us in all our thin:milts and hopes aed
joys. We should love Mein no that
the brightest hope of our leve would
be to lighten their burdens and to
ni-
ways haVe them by our sides. .Wo
Should lay° and continue to love
them. even as Christ loves the church,
when, in the eantidles. we read his
beautiful blessing upon it: "As the
lily among the thorns, so is rey love
among, the daughters, As the apple
tree aiming the trees of the woods, so
ie my beloved." 0 hushend, do you
love youe wife as Christ loves His
clineeli bride. •
•. SORRY HE spown,
Mr. Wilkins., wandering aimlessly
down the street, met'. his • old friend I
Peatly. Peatly!" he called,
cheerily. "Where ' -have yau been,
this long time?''
"Serving an a jury," said Teeatly.
"Well can sympathize with you,"
said ;Mr, . Wilkins. "It "must have I
been a good ..deal of a bore. Isn't it
eitrieus by .the way, that they al-
ways -seein. to want. ignoramuees on
a jury nowadays? They 'never take
anybody that—that, of, course,
mean as 0 general thing—for they
de once in a while get:a mail of in-
telligencerin not speaking of, you,
pf eourse—I don't know 'whether you
,get.exactly What I am driving at or
not, but-e-hutthe fact is, .1.—that'S'
a mighty fine. stick -pia you're wear-
ing,' old man. Where'd You: get
it?" • -
This swindle in reference to prom-
ised affections which a husband some-
thnes practices upon a wife is the
more contemptible because in one
sense -the wife is absolutely helpless
after the perpetration of the fraud.
Say what you will, argue as you
may, talk glowingly and poetically -
and graneiloquently about woman's
pportumties, a wife's opportunities
have always been and nearly always
will be circumscribed nby the four
walls of her home. Thee husband has
his outside business relationships. He
has his mercantile friends as well as
his store friteris. He meets men on
the. street, in the cars, in the office,
behind the counter. He can get
away and does get away from the
home. But for the most part the
wife is anchored to the kitchen, the
bedroom and the nursery of home by
the children. Therefore if he fails
her and defrauds her of his promised
love she is absolutely helpless- and
must suffer more than he can realize.
She has practically no redress, for
She hos gel% en up her all for him. If,
however, on account of her husband's
neglect a wife turns her back men
him and goes forth to meet the world
as an independent woman, then the
world itself will turn its back upon
her. Just befOre I begen my Chicago
pastorate a very prominent Pittsburg
lady who was divorced said to, me:
'On account of the neglect end the
111Mani tjeS Of a bretal huseemh, for
the protettion of Anysele and children,
I got a legal separation. •But if I
bad it an to do over again I would
hear any injestice and suffer every
brutality rather than get a divorce.
The outside WOVICI (100$ riOt look into
the canses of a 'family disruption but
artless people will always look up -
n, divoreed wife as on one who
as a black mark upon her brow.'.'
,,ye fa!thiess, enlo,-Ing husbands.
111 you not be lienet.t to „yourselves
end hon-st to vonr es and pay
the pjomissory note of lave which
you. mad,, when the ininister pro-
.
nounced you and eonr "Ull-
1 death do you part?"
11DoKEN lleAllTED eS,
ti
• ]n the 'death' htfell dr a hAlsband's.'
love ,also hear the sobs .of the 'brelon.
en heart. of a mother as won as of e
• ,
wifc
Tne great deaeiatiet •wrote,
(1h, sharper than a serpeet 's • tooth
is to have " a thankless child!".
any a. •inother learned this ., by
eSee ; exeerienceh theaugh.' her
bus-
ands:66.11&IC'e"The lore that .the
ild. naturally'feels for 'the, mother
therS. &dies under the poiscnr-tha,t.
53
•
NUMBER OF COWS IN EUROPE.
A German journalist has just
published the followiiag; figures, as
representing the number of cows in
the principal countries of continental
Europe, with the estimated produc-
tion of butter and cheese in 'metric
tons ; Russia, 10,000,000 cows,
850,000 tons Produce; GermallY
9150,000 cows, 300,000 toes; Aus-
tria, 6,000,000 cows, 170,000 tons;
Prance ° 000 000 cows 145.000
, 0, 1 1.1
tons; Belgium., 800,000 cows 60-
000 tons; ee Avi tzerl and , 800,000
COWS; 707000 tons; Dennnark, 1,050,- a
000 cows, ) tons.
I X
plate, when the pudding
Wit unbrohen. Garnish with 0
choice berries mid foliage, If th
latter cannot bo secured, tif-0 rob(
Fresh' Fisk Cehese--linve ready •
mashed potato, either hot or cold.
and to two cups oi this al/ow two
tablespoonfuls of better end ono
egg, Pat with the potato au email
quantity of flake fish—baked (Nei,
holled—and Mix thoroughly. If
there is no fish Ratio 'meth in r
moisten the mixture and il stems
too stiff, seiten it with a eery little "
milk. Form. into calo.e. elleor of
bacon in their own fat, and offer ,
taking them out fry the (likes in •
the fat that is left in tee pan, Keep ;
the bacon hot white the eahes are
cooking, unit serve it on the same ;
disIt Wi t cakes.
Chorolate Breed Pudding.— Ind ;
t lmto a, bolsi two cupfuls of etale
forth On the One hand the love o
God, the Father, Son and Holy Spit
it, arid on the other the wayward-
ness, the indifference and the selfish -
Pees of sinners, The woederful love
of God is Mast beautifellet seen in
the welcome given to the erring
son and also in the father's word to
the older brother.
Lesson Via—Jesus teaches humil-
ity (Mark x, 35-45 ). Golden Text,
Mark x, 45, "For even the Son of
Shin came not to be ministered un-
to, but to ministere' In Lesson V.
we wem taught to ask told receive
to ask importunately, but here 1
some asking amiss, and that on th
part of two the inner circle 0
disciples. One has said that ser-
vice is true ruling and humility 1
true greatness; be humble id you
would be great; be faithful if you
would. be rewarded.
Lesson IX.—The passover Watt,
:xxvi, 17-30). Golden Text, T. Cole
v, 7, "For even.Christ, our Passover,
is sacrificed for ue." In his life of
humiliation every item was prepared
for Him, and Re accepted all as
from, His Father. It was all written
beforehand, and lie fulfilled all.
From His baptism onward it was
prolonged suffering. "Suffer it to he
so now would seem to cover all.
Being effectually sheltered by His
precious blood, we must eat Him
continually (John vi, 57), not dis-
daining bitter herbs' nor unleavened
bread, showing Ilis death till I -le
come.
Lesson X.—Christ's trial before Pi-
late (Mark xv, 1-15). Golden Text,
Luke x.xiii, 4, "The said Pilate to
the aid priests and to the people,
I find no fradt this man." Having
hut one lesson on rlis trial :Ind ac-
companying events, all must be if
poseible ineluded. Note His face
steadfastly set, then note cell He suf-
fered from His own as well as from
3 -lis enemies, the Jews, and from the
gentiles who cared not.
Lesson XL—Christ crucified (Mark
xv, 22-89). Golden Text, 1 Cor.
xv, "Christ died for crer sins ace
cordieg to the Scriptures." Ire who
knew no sin was enade sin for ns,
delivered for our offenses, woreided
Or our transgressions (H. Cor. v,
1; Rom. iv, 25; Ise. liii, 5). 'Around
lie cross we see every phase of hu-
manity, and the carnal mind is fully
liowzieto be enmity a e'ainSt God, but
breadcrembs and pour oVer Meat
One quart of stabled milk. While
t is coolieg put two feeeires of
chocolate in a .stetivepail and melt it
over hot water. When the bread
und Milk aro cool mix with then
two-thirds of a cupful of •sugar, two
eggs slightly 14044 ten, the ehneolate,
one saltspoonful of salt and one tea-
spoonful of vanilia. Bare in a
tered tin an hour in a moderately
hot oven. It is to be eaten cold
with creme..
Canned -Corn l'at ties.—Talie one
, can of best sweet corn and chop
s fine hi a aoppingetrey. Add' two
ebdeatVo"gtgasi)lots0po%.111)iletillis haosf
tablespoonful of salt, a half table-
spoonful of pepper and two even tab-
s
iespoonfuls of flour. Beat well and
fret on a gridle in a tablespoonful of
mixed lard and butter, dropping one
spoonful for each patty. Pry brosvn
on bath sides and serve hot.
TITE MOON.
1 the croes we see the love of God
s nowhere else.
Lesson XII.—Christ risen (Matt.
Xviii 1-1.5) Golden Text, 1. Cor.
v, 20, "Now is Christ risen from
he dead." Not 01700 a. year, but
very day, we should magnify a risen
larist at God's right hand for us, we
,.ould if we understood the signie-
once' and power of this great and
lorious fact. Not only is there no
madenmetion to . any who are in
Jim, but, as He said to Mary, ITis
other is our Father, and His God
our God.
From regent photographs, the cra-
ters. and- craterIets of the moon are te'
estimated to number more than two "
hundred thousand. hut less than a
million. White patches 10 some cra- g
ters and tee bright lines radiating ..‘.
in some ceses Inindreds of miles are
thought by Prof. Pickering to be
due to. ,S II 0 W , and the less conspicu—
ous lunar 'canals. which gradually
ippear, increase' and fade away in
the ,lunar day, are attributed by the
same authority to Vegeta ti on A n
thin' atmosphere of carbonic acid end is
water vapv.eviayn feed the plants, 8,
irrs"Wedaerly;--Yee, we ve been
mrried five yearsi, anfi my husband
still in love, Miss DeTlypp•--Aned
teue't you jealous •-,o,f her, deer? •
11
Al3OUT YOUR HUSBAND.,
If he is honest, honor him.
When you marry him, love him.
After you marry him, steely him.
If he is traitorous, watch him. .
If he is generous, appreciate him.
If he is selfish, shame him.
When he is sad, cheer
When he is cross, amuse him.
When he is talkative, listen to
When he is quarrerSome, ignore
him.
If he is progressive, spur him)
Si he is slothful, spur him,
If he is noble, praise him.
If he is isolable, shield, him.
If he is confidential, eneourage him.
If he is secretive, trust him.
If lie is jealous, enre
11 he is indifferent, pique him.
It he cares naught for pleasure,
coax him.
If he favors society, accompany
lf lie does you a favor, thank him.
When be deserves it, kiSs
Let him think how well you under-
stand him; but never let him know
that you "inanag•e" him.
A HINT TO MOTHERS.
In artificially fed children the bot-
tles should be -boiled daily, and the
tubes and other rebber parts should
be soaked for one hour in water con-
taining. 25 per cent. of pure glycer-
LA RG ElF.4T MAP .
Tlie largest map in the world. is
the Ordnance Survey map of Eng-
land, containing over 10.8,000 streets
and costing ,,c4-1,000,000 a year for
twenty years. The scale varies from
ten feet to one-eighth or an inch to
the mile. The details ere SO MIX tit.°
that maps haying a seele.of -twenty-
five inches sh OW every liedge, fence,
wall, but ig, teid even to ae. &tat-,
ecl tree art the country. rlele. plene
show not only the exact. ehape 01
every building, 1312t every porch, 'eree,
door -step lanip-posst, railway, and
fires le
Ail the czars of Russia have been
crowned in the famous Kremlin, in
Moscow, and in the treasury there
are the throws of all the emperors
of the past, as well as the ostolic ,
jewels end the eboicesteplate :now
owned ley tile Poiesian crown, There
are $600,000,000 worth of gold and
silver and Precious stones in tbat
treasury, and there kt.r.O besine of
gold there eel' big as a baby's bathe
tab, and. two card tablee of •solid
er.
dEANT '10 Kra,P.T.
A. sharp Practitioner was negotia.t-
iinse, for e horee. The price was $100
"I'll pay you ,575 on account and
we you the rest," lie proposed,
Ills oder was acesehed, and he got
etlie horee. Some thee after, the sel-
ler tts11.eti Iiiin"to ray the balance,
k "No, nep'' he replied, "that Wellid
,be a breach of contract. I was t
,pay you $7h eod owe you the rest..
If I paid you I shodd no longer OWe
It,
OR GIN GUNPOWDE
de is traced by Dr, Rich
ter to tbe fifth ceittury„
1,1 eseelly aesigned to the foler-
Olempiodorite records that
Sdbetnie, an Aeiatie mahiden,
3 hrought the eecret to Constantine', 151
• A.D. 421 for destroying the barber
. • ) len anus vies Ruse-
ouently put to death for league with
the evil one the eecret pedslied with
hire. -
Gwen.
Are
lIe—Not,' 4 I'4111),V5110o/ft. kliBruatj'(43.024
1 or -
get, how "ictihe You 41%1
P.SNGE1101.1S,
had better hut
'e's thuntlerstori
BANK OV ENGLAND NCITES,
The lieek. of Engletiti twiceere
entitle front new white linen euttiags
—sleeker front anythieg that has Wen
worri Sht earefully is th )
prepared 111.11 Oros/ the 191141ber
dip e into the pulp made by each
rkrzzan is registered 0111 dila by
inery.
FAMILY IA F/71 rae.
are Preface has greatly,
ia recent decades. It is
Ustomary than formerly to
hake ;fighters brought up inetirely
In convents or to send the children -
to live with their nuree in her come'
try house.
!merit b eli before the courts mon
0 hx.trnol two :,,,,,iwmy..-::,--"Then i
(ion is
Old steer resodilket's all, I be .,
ly in a oreliminary st. '
Mrs. Villadole—nWhy do yell went
to vall on the Poreins to -night'?" Mr.
vinadoin-o.ileeeree if Wt. don't
11.11.tribren colit.,.tiooll.nttoo t2:it•,e13.:41,e111(4):.,,,Ni.:141,21ezel,veIrtt
tired of them than 10 use. them to
go home."'
Needed in Every Home
Alway,Is
Up to Date
7.fizt*:
INCTIONAILY
WEBSTER'S
INTESMATIONAL
DICTIONARY
A Dictiorkary of ENGLISH,
Bioeraphy,Geoaraphsenotionorte.
The N'ew and E,niarged
Edition Contains
25,000 New Words
1 New Gazetteer of the World
with mare than 25,000 titles, based ou the
latest census returns.
New Biographical Dictionary
containing names of ovcr10,(100noteweetllY
persons, with nationality, occupation, date
of miens, date of birth, death, etc.
'F.:tilted by W. T. ITARD 211.13. LL.D.
-United States Comnaiseioner of ildrieettion
New Plates .* 2390 Quarto Pages
Rickllindings 5000 Illustrations
We also publish
Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
with alossaryof Scot tislaWordsandPhrasee.
111101'Aps. 7200 Illustrations, Sizo 7s7 012 8-8 inrhes.
"First-class in quality, second-clats in size."
• 'LET US SEND YOU FREE
"A Telt in rrormuelation" which affords a
pleasant and Instructive evening's enter-
tainment. Illustrated pneapidet also,freee
G. 6' C. /y1 E COMPA.NT,
Publishers, Springfield, Mass,
caramInact..ammtserosnsm.,..,
BRW
A
SECURI
Ceritoirle
-Qadet7.:. •
Lit0p.14ver.Pills
Must Scar Signatutro of
-
$ee Fars:Semi zapper Delowe
FOR REARACREs
FOR RIMSES14,
FOR 81140041tEtt,
FOR TORPIO UYER4
FOR CORISTIPATIOL
OR "LWOW SOL
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CU
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ADA
Th e pills cure all diseases and dis-
orders arieling frozn weak heart worn out
nerves or watery blood, 'veil Ate Palpita-
tion, fdkip Bents, Throbbing, Sraothenng,
Dizziness, Weak or Paint Spells, Anaemia,
Nervowmess, Sleeplessness, Brain rag,
General Debility aud Lack of Vitality.
They are a true heart tonic, nerve food
laid bleed em,richer, building up and
rerzewing all the worn out and wasted
tissues of the body and restoring perfeet
health. Price 50o. A box, or 8 for $1.25,
at all druggist.
A BAD CASE
eF
KIDNEY' TROUBLE
ei9RED BY
DORN'S KIDNEY PILLS.
Kidney Troubles, me matter of -what
hind or what stage of the disease, can
be quickly and permanently cured by the
use of these -wonderful pills. Mr. Joseph
Leland, Alma, NAV:re recommends than
to all kidney trouble sufferers, when he
says was troubled with dull hes,c1-
aelies, had frightful dreams, terrible
pains in my legs and a frequent desire to
urinate. Notichier DOAN'S KIDNEY
PILLS recommended for just such annoy-
ances as mine, it occurred to me to give
them a, trial, so I procured a box. of
them, and was very much surprised at
the effectual cure they made. I take a
:Teat deal of pleasure in recommending
heza to all kidney trouble sufferers.
Price 50e, per lion, or 3 for $1.25; all
er The Dean Kidney Pill Co.,
-aronto, Ont.
se
' TIRO('
't
11,
NtMENT
Sprains, Strains, Cots, V7otincls, IJleera
Open Sores, Bruises. Stiff joints, Bites and
ings of Inszets, Coughs, Colds, Contracted
rediettmatisni„ Neeralgia, Bronchitis,
Croup, Sere Throat, Qeinseye Wecoping
eleugb arid fd-ainfel
p g,
it• Eds,k-ZE 1191.TLE.
TO
NAIL
YOUR
FAITH'
BURDOC• K;'•'
BLOOD BITTE
As a spring medicine it has no foils.
It purines and enriches the
blood. Acts on the Kidneys, Liver,
Stomach • and Bowels. Cleanses
,and invigorates the entire system '
from the crown of the head to the
soles of'. the, fe.et.
• Don't be sick, weak,
and weary.
THIS SPRING
TAKE.
51