HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-9-7, Page 7v
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Was Caused By
Change et My Etc.
. Diarrhoea arises from many causce
such as, change of diet, chatige of water,
change of climate, catching cold, the
eating of unripe fruits, or anything that
will cause or induce an excess of bile.
cn the first Agri of any loeseness of the
bowels it should not be neglected, but
phould be looked after immediately, for
if not diarrhoea, dysentery or some other
serious bewel complaint may ensue.
f• Mr. Geo, Snaith, Victoria, B.C., writes:
"It is five years ago since I first tried
Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry.
I was then on a timber survey, and suf-
fered greatly from diarrhoea, caused by
change of diet, etc. A friend in the
party gave me a few doses which gave
me great relief. Since then I have been
in survey work, and would as soon think
of starting out on a trip 'without my
compass and blankets as without my
supply of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild
Strawberry, which I conAider the woods-
man's best friend,"
Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw-
berry has been on the market for the
past seventy years, and is 'universally
known as a positive cure for all complaints
arising from any looseness of the bowels.
When you ask for "Dr, Fowler's" be
awe you receive what you ask for as
there • are many rank imitations of this
;telling remedy placed on the market to
try and fool the unsuspecting. public.
The genuine is manufactured by The
r. Milburn, Co., Limited, Toronto,
Dnt,
Price, 35 cents.
CONTRABAND TRICKS.
Many Schemes Are Tried to Beat the
Blockade.
Rubber is by no means the only sub-
stance which the exponents of contra-
band tricks endeavor to get through.
Germany wants copper • badly, and
there are always people trying to sup-
ply her with it. Some of them hit upon
an Ingenious plan -which seemed to usually requires two day's time) lay
promise certain success. Instead of on a board to drain over night. Next
being hidden in the ship, the copper
was clamped to her bottom. Apparent-
ly the consigners thought that, how-
ever closely the British navy might
search the interior of a vessel, no one
would have sense enough. to think of toes m a big sbone jar; then a layer
examining the outside of her below the I of sliced -onion, alternately, until the
water -line. But they had. One sailing • jar is nearly full. Heat one-half gal -
vessel when intercepted and over-
hauled was found to •have a great
quantity of copper • fixed along her
keel. Into laarbor she Went and the
copper was seized.
Going through one ship the search
Darty noticed that her bulkheads were
abnormally thick. "When in doubt in-
vestigate" being the principle upon
which the examination service is run,
the bulkheads were ripped open and
quite an extensive arsenal was discov-
ered inside them. Rifles and ammuni-
Tested Recipes
Pieleled Wainuts.-One hundred,
walnuts, salt and water. To each
quart of vinegar allow two ounces of
whole black peper, one ounce of all-
spice, one ounce of bruised ginger.
Prick each walnut with a fork. Pre-
pare a strong brine of salt and wat-
er, fteer pounds of salt to each gallon
of water, into which put the walnuts,
letting them stand nine days, chang-
ing the brine every third day. Drain
them off, pub them on a dish, place
it in the sun until they become per-
fectly black, which will be in two or
three days: •Have ready dry jars,
into which place the walnubs, and do
not quite fill the jars. Boil suffici-
ent vinegar to cover them, for ten
minutes, wibh spices in the above pro-
portion, and pour it hot over the wal-
nuts which must be quite covered
with the pickle, and bie down and keep
in a dry place. They will lat fit for
use a month and .will keep goud two
or three years.
, Watermelon Preserves. -Rind of
one large melon. One cup of unslack-
ed lime. Two lemons. Ten cups su-
gar. Peel the rind and cut in squares,
oblongs or any fancy shape. Put the
lime in a jar with a gallon of water
or sufficient to cover thoroughly.
Soak two hours. Wash and drain.
Boil the sugar with three cups of
weber. Slice the lemons thin and
drop in the syrup with the rind. Boil
until transparent. Fill into jars and
pour over the remaining liquid and
seal while hot,
"Whole Ripe Tomato Pickles." -
Secure large ripe tomatoes, whole,
solid anel smooth. Pick with a fork
in several places; lay in a tub of salt
brine strong enough to bear up an
egg. When they taste of salt (this,
morning put in a tub or other large
receptacle, pour enough vinegar over
them to cover. Leave in this about
three days. Put a layer of toma-
lon of good cider vinegar with a bag
of all kinds of whole spices in it; lay
bag of spices on top of jar; pour the
hob vinegar over contents of jar, as
far as it will go; then fill up the re-
mainder of jar with -cold vinegar. Tie
a good thick cloth over top and
set in cellar. If at any bime the
vinegar gets white, turn off and put
on fresh vinegar.
Fig Marmalade. -To two pounels of
fresh figs add one and one-half pounds
tion galore had been secreted there.
Upon another occasion a big stock of of sugar and bhe juiee and grated
rifles was found packed just under a rind of three oranges and three lemons.
tramp steamer's decks, and so cunning- Cook until smooth (about three-quar-
let stowed away that detection seemed ters of an hour), stirring constantly
impossible. Really, the only way of to prevent burning. Figs should be
peeled. This recipe will prove a de-
lighful surprise to those who have
never tried it. A delicious fig
pickle is made by washing and drain-
ing fige and cooking trill tender in a
syrup made from one quart vinegar,
one quart sugar boiled with whole cin-
namon and cloves fifteen. minutes.
Plum Conserve. -Select one basket
some others that are improvised -
blue plums and cut into small pieces-.
such as, for example, the hollow furni-
Take three oranges, cut the skin into
ture and bunks like a conjurer's trick -
making sure that some vessels carry
no contraband would seem to be by
pulling them to pieces.
Hollow masts filled with gasoline
were part of the "find" in one tramp
"picked up" in the blockade area, and
her double bottoms were also stuffed
with contraband. Double bottoms are
frequently used as pracee of conceal-
ment, though much less secure than
syrup when it thickens and eook
until they look plump; then add toma-
toes and cook only a few minutes.
Take out and pub into glass jars and
cover with boiling syrup.
Hosp:tal Grapejuice.-Put grapes
WAR TO LAST MAN THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
SAYS DR. SUDEKUM "-
INTERNATIONAL LESSON
SEPTEMBER 10,
OOP NOT THINK A VICTORY OE'
THE ALLIES POSSIBLE. .
'
German Socialist Believes Adver
saries Will Exterminate
Each Other.
Lesson XL The Arrest of Paul. -
Acts 21. 17-40, Golden
Text. -Acts 22, 15.
Verse 27. The seven dayse-A dif-
Aealt pharse, since ear Jewieh ,&h_
ed. The Wend here used --the Latin
word to- "4e," derived frorn the
39. A possible alternative punctua-
tion (see paraphrase) Connecte in
Cilicia with the next clause. No
mean eity-Tarees was a famous seat
of learning, and justified her citizens'
pride in her. Citizen is emphatic: he
was a full binges; as was his father
before him.
40. The daring of the man, turning
to face the mob that had nearly done
for him, combined perhaps with as-
tonishment at his rapid rally from the
(males imply that a Nazirite vow state to which: they had reduced him,
Antonio Munoz of the Heraldo of ier A great silence -One thinks of the
o as thirty lays - • ' t
over the fire, with just enough water Madrid, being a neutral has been
6. 9 has some similarity, but our 'great calm" in Mark 4. 39. The
to cover them. Heat slowly until visiting Germany and made a special
knowledge of the ritual usage is not same God was working upon both
the juice oozes oue ani the fruit be- point of studying the role of the So- point. tempests. Spake unto them in the'
hours. Turn the fruit lath a pointed difficult to reconcile their attitude
found, it exact enough to clear up the
cognize Trophimus. cal language, which was extinct for
Hebrew language -Not the old bibli-
comes soft. , Takes two or three cialist deputies, as he had
The Jews from Asia- Who would re -
jelly bag and hang it up to drain. To previous to the war with their atti-
28.. Isreal-ComPare what was said , apoken use, but Aramaic, wide Jesus
the juice add one-fourth its measureitude since. Dr. Sucielcum received ' lest week
on 2 Cor. 11. 22. The ap.
of sugar, and heat it until quite hot him in a room in the Reichstag. Senor ' and the disciples usually employed.
for one hour or more, without boiling. Munoz thus reports the prominent Peal is made to Jews who really have
1 at heart the sanctity of the temple.
Seal in cans. For a drink, dilute one- Socialist:
"You cannot imagine the enormous ' Against the 'people -This count is ad -
half with water and serve ice cold.
Small Imperfect Fruit. -When pre_ amount of work thrown on Parlia- ! ded to that which had proved fatal to
serving peaches there will always be ment by the prolongation of the war. I Stephen (Acts 6. 13). It means that
found small er slightly imperfect ones Germany had organized for every- , Paul was always libelieg his own peo-
which do not look as fine as the rest thing, for the diplomatic tension of pie, indorsing he universal Gentile
of the fruit. Set these aside for the preceding two years had forced 1 verdict upon them. We who have his
sweet Pickle. Scald out a fruit jar;: us to be ready for the eventualities own letters know what to think of the
wipe the peaches carefully, do nott of war at an eary date. Neverthe- I charge. Greeks -The generalaliz-
akin them; then 'stick into each peach less, and I do not believe there is any ; ing plural. The story that Paul e
whole cloves, four or five to a small, reason for concealing it, the duration been, seen with one Gentile could be
of hostilities has surpassed the mien- :"relied upon"! Hath defiled -The
peach. Pack the fruit as tightly aans
lation of the most pessimistic of my 'tense is changed to the perfect. Which
possible in the jars. Then in
enameled ware preserving kettle put countrymen.- The blockade haa seri- , implies a permanent profanation.
on the fire either ceder or white wine
vinegar with sugar in the proportion
of a pound of sugar to a quart of
vinegar. Be sure to use an enameled
ware kettle, as any other metal will
darken the vinegar. Let ib boil up
hard and skim carefully. Then add a
stick of cinnamon and a little mace.
Pour over the fruit in the jars and
screw on the bops a once. At the
end of a fortnight open the jars, pour
off the vinegar and scald again. This
time there 'will be a good deal of
scum, which must be carefully remov-
ed with an enameled -ware skinimer.
Let the vinegar boil up once after it
has been thoroughly cleared. Pour
back on the fruit, screwing down the
tops of the jars very tightly.
GERMANY'S BRAVEST MAN.
Cannot be Silenced Despite Prison
Terms and Bullets. .
To mention the name of Herr Lieb-
knecht among Germans is to bring
down every kind of abuse on the
politician who haa. been described as
the "bravest man in Germany." Liebe
knecht is a Socialist, and has alveays
been an. implacable foe •of Prussian
militarism, against the dominance of
which we are now fighting. Although
ously embarassed as and although we The verb (that of Acts 10. 15) sug- in the Reichstag -the German Perim -
he may not have a single supporter
are by no means dead yet, the Gov- ' gests that the bemple thus became ment-he never' hesitates to trounce
eminent, on the announcement of the "common," its awful aloofness de- the system which is bringing ruin
characteristic of method which be- , This Ephesian was a very intimate to his country. He has been shouted
tightening of the blockade, 'was ob- , stroyeel.
longs to our race, to take up a ques- friend. However libtle Paul now be- down and assaulted in the Reichstag,
liged, according th that excellent , 29. Trophimus-See Acts 20. 4.
tion which if we allowed ourselves to lieved in "holy places/' or in any dif-
be surprised might result in victory ference between man and man before,
losing its route and in our being God, he was not likely to trample on
Things to Remember.
Serve fish for dinner twice a week
in place cif mea+.
forced to sign a shameful peace.
German Hatred of England.
"My political ideas have not chang-
ed; I am still decided to collaborate
as far as I possibly can to reestab-
the intended murder must not be ac-
lish peace, but I cannot accept Ger- the
in sight of the sacred
many's being crushed By a country
building, any more than the "price of
like England."
blood" might be pub in the treasury
To a direct cmestion whether he
within it (Matt. 27. 6). The priestly
considered England the cause of the
conscience is always very particular
European war Sucleekum gave an in-
direct reply. about bechnical sins, and never more
so than when busy with crime.
"Suppose," he said, "that a people
31. Seeking to kill -Here clearly
has been pushed into war by the ex -
religious sentiment by doing such a
thing. Supereitition is never to be
sbroyed by insulting it.
30. Doors were shut -For, of course,
set about killing"; the beating had
Lemon will remove match scratches Pansive force of its race, and the
. nothing less in mind from, the first.
from paint. needs of its commerce, should a sin
' This passage illustrates John 7. 1,
A little green sage placed in the of imprudence interdict us from striv-
ing for an equitable, peace?" where no mere plot is suggested.
A bit of alum will keep starch
pantry will keep out red anbs.
To another direct question whether , sCoamase buop-coTomtahned ftoniet temple, during he admitted that might comes before '
fresh for use for several days.
The finest eider vinegar should be right, Sudekum replied that there are i feast ttimn ebselieesvpeercsialilny. regHioonwtohuim.eaild-
questions that it is useless to discuss , iating
chosen for all sorts of pickles. - so often. in history that the civil pow -
To clean mirrors, dip a bit of soft
chief impression left on the inter- i or must
under present circumstances. The
I brea specially watch against
cloth into alcohol and rub lightly. ches of the peace at times when
viewer was, the strength of German!
If eggs that are to be boiled are men are offering special worship to
hatred to Englaaeck England had
first wet in cold water they will not God; Military tribune (margain)san
come to be looked upon in Germane*.
crack. , . I Literally, "commander of a thous -
as. almost an ally, and in the begin -
Borax will. remove the leather
f the• thepress repeated and," ten times as many men as a
stains made by shoes on light colored
stockings.
Cleansing with mustard Is said
to remove the smell of fish from
cooking utensils.
Remember there is a wide range of
food, as yeb inexpensive, from which
to choose the daily menu.
A cloth dipped into soda and water
e, will quickly remove all stains from
tinware and brighten it:
Add a little salt to gasoline before
using it to clean spots on fabrics
and no ring will remain around the
spot.
When boiling rice add a little
lemon juice to the water. This makes
the rice white and separates the
grains.
Never leave the lettuce leaves soak-
ing in ,cold weber. If the leaves are
young this process makes them fletbby
One ship which was intercepted car- and tasteless.
un plums are tender, add an equal Cold chicken left from the roast,
t'l
ried what parported to be a cargo of
quantity of sugar, and cook' Until it cut into dice, mixed with cream dress -
flour. Certainly there was a great deal
of flour in it -and a great .deal of cot-
ton as well. Some 'Of the first sacks
examined panned out correctly. Then
an officer kicked One midway. The
sack yielded- oddly to the impact of his
foot. No dust flew ouVand it seemed,
as he expressed it, "like kicking a pil-
low." At once the sack was emptied,
and what a revelation. The middle
part of it contained only cotton. All
the other seeks gave up a like secret.
bc5x, which came to light in one inno-
cent -looking old trader.
Since cotton became contraband all
sorts of ingenious dodges have been
• tried to get it through the blockade.
tiny clice and the pulp up into pieces.
Add one-half cup chopped walnuts,
and one-half cup chopped raisins.
Parboil orange peel in a little water.
Add to plums, nuts and raisins. Cook
thickens. I ing and covered with grated cheese, is
Economy Peach Jell. -After can -1 delicious baked.
ning peaches take all the parings and Ceilings where blackened with
pits and pub in stewing pan on stove ' smoke can be washed with common
and cover with water and boil till house soda dissolved in water -about
mushy; drain off juice, and to each four ounces of soda to a large pail
cup"' of juice add one cup of sugar. of water,
Place in kettle again and boil until it Curbail the quantity of meat used
is of proper consisbency to set firm. (meat once a day is sufficient, lead -
While the juice is boiling take out ing scientists tell us --some scientists
"Mere was flour at the top, flour at, from time to time three or four advocate a meatless dieb.)
the bottom -and cotton in the middle tablespoonfuls and place on saucer in Extend the flavor of meat by serv-
e
of them all. cool place, preferably on ice, to cool. ing with it plenty of gravy and
If ib does not set firmlf at the first dumplings or vegetables in the form
test, repeat until sample shows the de- of a stew, salmi caeserole, etc,
sired thickness. If ,,you desire a A good cleaning fluid is made of a
tart jell you can- add the meats of bar of castile soap elissolved in boil -
about twelve peach stones to every ing water. Add one pint ammonia
quart of juice, the meats to be boiled and two pints clear water anel shake.
with the juice In naakin ored dresse for IDA'
Never make the mistake of thinking
that a man is incapable because he is
uneducited.
Had Weak Back
and Kidneys.
iletuLD HARDLY MOVE IN RED.
When the back becomes weak and
starts to ache and pain it is a sure sign
that the kidneys are not performing their
functions properly. •
On the first sign of backache Doan's
Kidney Pills should be taken and serious
kicitsey troubles prevented.
Mr. Francis McInnes, Wqodbine, N.a.,
writes: "I deem it my duty to let you
know the wonderful results I have' re-
ceived from the use of Doan's Kidney
Pills. For a long time I had been suf-
fering from weak back and kidneys. I
used to suffer the most at night, and some
times eould hardly move bed with the
pain. I could do no bard labor on
accoutit of my back, A frierid advised
me to give Doan's Xidne,y Pills a trial,
atid I am glad I did for the pain itt my
kidneys is gotie; my back is strong, and
can perform any hard labor mid get
my good night's sleep. I only used three
boices of the pets."
Dcian's ICidney Pills are 50 cents per
box, or 3 boxes for 11.25; at all dealers, or
mailed direct en receipt of price by The
T. Milburn Co., Limited, 'Toronto, Ont.
,• When orderitig direct specify "Doan's."
..ettetteesealeesseseensesee............
g g
Canned Vegetables for Soup. --One girls, stitch a long strip of selvedge
material down the bias skirt seam of
peck of ripe tomatoes, two heads of
cabbage, one dozen carrots (medium the back, and the skirt will nob sag.
When a screw becomes loosel, take
size), one bunch of parsley, one-half
it out and fill the hole with bits of
peck of onions, three stalks of celery,
sponge packed in tightly. Replace
one dozen ears of corn. Scald, peel
the screw and it will hold as firmly
and mash the tomatoes, chop the cab -
as ever.
The whitest stain left on a mahog-
any table by a jug of boiling water or
a very hot dish may be removed by
bage, parsley, onions and celery fine,
scrape bhe carrots and slice crosswise.
Boil the corn on the cob for ten min-
utes, then cut off and scrape, Mix
all together, add a small handful of
salt to each gallon. If the mixture
soems dry add water as necessary,
Boil until the carrots are thoroughly
cooked, then seal while hot. Add
this bo soup stock in the winter and
it is fine.
Green -Tomato Sweet Pickles. -04
up a little more than a gallon of
green tomaboes place in a stene jar
and sprinkle all through with a half -
cup of salt. Let stand: twelve hours,
then drain off the brine. • Make a
syrup of four pounds of sugar, weber
enough to moisten and a .pint of good
vinegar. Spice ;with a teaepoonful
each of doves, allspice, mace; add
severnl sticks of cinnamon and a A successful man is one winatnakes
pound of raising, Add raisits to more money than his family can spend,
rubbing in salad oil, and afterwards
pouring a little spirits of wine on the
spot, and rubbing with a very soft
cloth.
Use vegetable substitutes fdr meat,
such as combination Iclishes of nuts
and cereals, lentils ,and rice, dried
peas, dried beans --which, although
advanced price, are much cheaper than
meat.
When potatoes are inclined be turn
black in cookitig add a few drops of
vinegar to the water in which they are
boiled. This is excellent aS it makes
the pobatoes beautifully evhite and
neealy.
and shot at in the streets of Berlin.
Kart Liebnecht.
1HE BOWELS NEBULAR
AND AVOID
CONSTIPATION.
Wisea the bowels are not kept regulat
they become clogged up with waste and
poisoaous matter, causing constipation,
biliuusnees, sick headaches, piles, and
all kinds of liver troubles,
Milbunies Laxa-Liver Pills will rep -
late the bowels so that you may have a
free and easy motion every day. One,
pill every night for thirty clays will
cure the worst cases of constipation.
Mr. John J. Smith, Elginburg, Ont.,
writes: 'I bad been troubled for a great
while with constipation, and tried many
different remedies which did me no good.
I happened to try lVfilbunns Laxa-Liver
Pills, and I have found them roost bene-
ficial,"
Milburn's'Laxaelsiver Pills are 25
cents per vie!, or five vials for $1,00; for
sale at all dealers, or mailed, direct on
receipt of price by The T. lvlilburn Co.,
Limited, Toronto, Ont.
From Erin's Green Isle
.14011111.
NEWS BY MAIL • FROM IRE-
LAND'S SHORES.
Happenings in the Emerald Isle of
Interest to Irish-
men.
A cock -fight between Carlow and
Dublin birds was watched by several
thousand persons near the Curragh.
Dublin Corporation, with a few
dissenting voices, passed a resolu-
- Con demanding. the immediate with-
drawal of martial law.
Dublin Metropolitan' Police are
agritating for a substantial increase
of pay as well as a war bonus, to'
date from the outbreak of the war.
Nothing,. however, daunts Lieb-
knecht, for he comes of lighting
"centurion." Of course this like ,co- stock. His father, Wilhelm Lieb-
with satisfaction how many English knecht, fought for Bebel, the fam-
Ministers or great personalities were hart (margin), is a Greek term for
ous Socialist, almost precisely the
good Germanophiles. a Roman institution, and is only ap- same battle, during and after the
proximate. Claudius Lysias (see
As regards France, Sudelcum said,
"We have no hatred against France
Exterminate One Another. 32. Forthwith -For a sufficient seand as there is talk of peace, why not *a
ll a suered confinement for 18
ff
so ? Yes, we want peace." ImAcotrse.23„, 26 for his name) commanded
division of six hundred men or
say
intentions." Herr Liebknecht him-
WiThen after a short silence, he con- force was always kept, under arms : ' months in a fortress for refusing to
tinued, "But even if we admit that the policing of such a turbulent city stop what were regarded as "sedi-
we are tired of war, could we be ex- was no light task . tious" speeches. His imprisonment
pected to surrendernAlsace Lorraine? 33. The reason why Lysias put him merely resulted in his being returned
The French are crazy. If they want instantly in a double set of irons ap- at the elections of 1908 to the Prus-
to take back these two provinces they pears later on. A notorious brigand sian Landtag, one of the Parliaments
will have to conquer them at the chief was badly "wanted," and the of- of the countries constituting the Ger-
point of the bayonet.. ficial description of him, circulated in man Empire.
"So far, no one can say that we all likely places, contained something A still greater sensation was to
have been conquered. I, as a German, ' which Lysias recognized in Paul, come when, in 1912, he was elected
have confidence in the great resources There was accordiegly the evidence of to the Reichstag actually for the
Franco-Prussian War of 1870, and
was sentenced to two years' imprison-
ment in a fortress for "treasonable
At the meeting of Athy Board of
Guardians, it was stated that there
were twenty patients in the Fever
Hospital from Stradbally suffering
from enteric fever.
All business was completely sus-
pended recently for five minutes in
Belfast in honor of the men of the
Ulster Division who lost their lives
in France the previous week.
The fruit crop in the orchard dis-
tends about Loughgall, Richhill and
Kilmore will be, on the whole, a fail-
ure this year. In many orcharels
scarcely an apple is to be seen.
About fifty young men who were
deported from Ireland as suspects in
connection with the Sinn Fein rising,
recently arrived at Kingstown. They
were chiefly from County Galway.
,On the arrival of the s.s. Corbet, a
collier belonging to Belfast, it was
reported that the master, Captain
Hugh Montgomery, a native of Is-
tandmagee, had. disappeared during
the voyage.
Through the brakes failing to act,
an excursion train at Ennis, Limer-
ick, crashed into two wagons and
carried away the supports of an iron
bridge before being brought to a
standstill.
The heavy and regular import trade
in German peat -moss litter to the
United Kingdom having been in abey-
ance since the beginning of the war,
the Bog of Allen is now coming into
its own and is doing a tremendous
of our industry. The intervention of a prize, and the prisoner Prussian royal borough, the.Potsdam musz be business.
At a meeting of North of Ireland
agriculturists, held at Belfast, a reso-
lution was passed calling upon the
Government to give to farmers in
Ireland a price for their hay equal
to that given to other farmers of the
British Isles.
No settlement of the dispute be-
tween Dublin coal merchants and
their employes has yet been reach-
ed, and coal for the poorer classes
is said to be costing $12 per ton,
and the closing of factories for lack
of fuel is threatened,
Under the Defence of the Realm
(Consolidation) Regulations, Gen-
eral Sir John Maxwell, commander-
in-chief of the forces in Ireland has
made ai order to come into force
immediately in Ireland, prohibiting
the carrying of firearms, except by
members of His Majesty's forces,
neutral countries may naturally modi- ' safely kept. The description would
fy the result foreseen from the war.. began with name and age, and would
But even at the last extremity, I tell , then mention shape of nose, kind of
you sincerely, I do not believe in a hair, and especialy a scar somewhere.
crushing victory of the sillies. The It this scar was on the head or face,
adversaries will exterminate one an- we can guess from Acts 14. 19 (Gal.
other, and go to the last man and the 6. 17) how Paul and the brigand had
last cent, and yet it will be impossible a mark in common.
to finish by a war of conquest. Whe- 35 Paul was very possibly almost cialist Parliamentary group has ex-
ther people like it or not, we are a unconscious after the savage beating, pelled him from its supine ranks
great country which claims its rank and unable to keep his feet as the mob meantime, there is no doubt that
among the great Powers of Europe. surged up behind. The rapidity of Liebknecht has a tremendous follow -
Moreover, can we live forever in the his
recovery reminds us of Acts 14.
miserable cbiedition in which we are 20. As we might infer from his sur- ing of sympathizers. These are
growing stronger every day as the
and which England has imposed upon viving all that we read in last week's people recognize what he has in-
ns ?" lesson, Paul must have had an iron.
sisted on telling then time after
constitution: his "thorn in the
time, viz., that Germauy is waging
flesh" and the alleged "weakness" not a defensive, but an offensive, war,
(that is, unimposing figure) of his
"bodily presence" are not in the least
. Spain inco6nAway
wthhi
t witihtlusm.
3 -A vernacular i
Phrase found in a rude papyrus let -
Before its discovery by the Span- ter, compare Luke 23. 18; Acts 22. 22,
ards, Mexico was occupied
by "ve and in a still harsher tense John 19.
eral Indian races, the Nahuas, known 15.
as Aztecs, predominating. In 1518 37. Dost thou konev Greek -In
the exploration of the Gulf coast by the official description of the brigand
Grijalva was followed by the Span- (see above) it would be stated that he
ish invasion in 1519, and the capture knew no Greek. He Must have come
of the Aztec capital, Tenochtitean, in from an out-of-the-way part, for the
1521. The Spanish colony thus form- papyri show us that very uncultured
ed was created into a viceroyalty and people in Egypt could write Greek.
became the richest European Posses" . 38. The Egyptian-.Tosephus tells
sion in the new world, with the ex- us about him -:.how he collecbed a
ception of Peru. The Spaniards ex- rna.se of people on the Mount of Olives
tended their conquests even into what , to gee the walls of Jerusalem fall
is now the territory of the :United 'cloWn, and how Felix attacked him, he
States. The viceroys had full sway escaping, but his people being mostly
over all the territory, which was from
; e
; killed or wounded. • Luke's independ-
the southern boundary of Costa Rica enee ee jesephus iwell seen here.
and Florida as well as the West /n-
, The lather brings to the Mount of
constituency, where the court and
military naturally constituted the
greatest social forces.
An excellent speaker, with a tem-
perament full of enthusiasm and
fire, highly educated and well read,
Liebknecht soon became a leader
among Socialists. Although the So -
EARLY MEXICO:
Conquest of the Indians by
Was a Gradual Task.
dies. However, in the eighteenth
centmy the East Indies and Guate-
mala,ar Central America, *ere sepas
salte. With the exception of a few
Indian wars nothing inoleeted the
lives of splendor led by the viceroys.
Great fortunes were amassed in the
silver mines and in the East India
trade,
Drink often brings a Man so- low
that lie ean't raise the price of a
drink,
Olives a horde which m one place he
estimates at thirty thousand; but in
in another at no more that one dicks -
and Lukes takes cert lato the desert
four' thousand praeticed cutsthroabs.
The tWo episodes in the brigand
ehief'a career are evidently distinct.
The wilderness -Compare 'Matte 24.
26. Assassins --In one of the chap-
ters just referred to Joseplais tells us
et banditti found even in Jerusalem
who went about with coneealed dag-
gers and coinmittecl Murder unimped-
and that all the misery which has
been brought to the country is the .
outcome of Prussian aggrandizement.
It is interestin'g to note that Lieb-
knecht, like his father, is a passion-
ate internationalist, and three years
ago he visited Paris, London, and
Brussels, holding forth on the neces-
sity of combatting the machinations
of militarises in every country and
of preserving the world's peace.
Lar gest Teapot.
The largest teapot in the world
was made at Shigarki, 200 miles from
Tokio, Japan. It measures three feet
three inches in diameter and without
the handle is three feet six inches
high. When the wicker handle is
raised the teapot is five feet six
inches high.
•••••--44:4 '
The Use of Gossip.
"People should never gossip."
"No," replied Mies Cayenne. "And
yet everybody wants to be a little bit
entertaining. And so many of us
can't sing or retite."
•
.Tust Let Her Ge it.
Never ask a woman for her tea -
sena. If you will only keep still and
Wait awhile .ehe wil lgive them to you.
The :raSer a Man's gait the sooner
misfortune overtakes him.
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