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The Brussels Post, 1903-12-10, Page 7c t i t t 11 n r i a b t 1 0 tl 2 11 tl li 5 d 01 II kr 0 t1 vt to al tt 0 01 111 tV (v r0 1'e 00 'VO et) 011 fLY' th yn ub :._os:s-- _... ist•ygv q l �j �a EAT '�C�d �e People Those]Vlore Eaton according ltaa,aat Gt Canada, Tho hoop!!! Nine Sy Win. Bally, 'LLepai•tmont of A tics 11,-, 1 from I ;0v. Frank De d from the following Bear ye one (Ln0t.1ieI''a ralilil the law ons d., 12. 1 take it that insistent• • or hilt North while g Lw, unless it !early understood, 1it11Pully adhered 10, that ao tandable unless erf0Ce and discover 'bleb law behind vetytg hi*ig 0t mpulse, the, Ohlist's life, hrough everything Add incident to o each, and what 1 that Jand felt that 0th the oto which Ito vent His way, orfs and conditions, 0th transferred lid cares and el f, L7 Peter's house, alms, in the lade the burdens ITis 000, By a, 11,0111 all who 1 Ppant and careless, ecogtdzes that ansae a deep concern teal condition Itis concern. hat galled galled humanitychafed earoi'er1 It eater that Israel's bought of Dint Lord bath laid t us all," eater that Joho 1 Him, "Behold wOm boaroth away vorlcl." The law ear others' burdens. o tho will of Ti1E BURDENS When wo speak 011 of man we opresennttvo mon. peaks of Him To Meana that f Cod's intention Tho will of God o the will of 1 His life must very lite. Your God's metliennn, ower and bear nw of Christ. wade it, and ennity, which air --a crippled Core. Br{ng mVden(•o with it ;John to neat lid ssenrbled abernacle, 'ado, 'Ivo (hapten IliClt 10 ., ...s.:.,-. _- ri e (oi _. 'r _.__,.._ - v • I9 -• Burdened. plw'01' Christ. $ aro goy (110 1tte. of those lila not measles. in it, their thom find character centro? not and stunted. of centres of glorify tho good dull Thele Dickens' when cripple for is service into make of which are own for help be Christ's ,vote" infirmities yo n Q +DENs ®�82� t f'�fle of Lha beauty and which you (inti uncongenial, w11011 along wItIs people, ; o ,you-bh5000 you your onvIt•oninnno Ask y0111'FOlf fulfilling 011l'lst a Aro you bearing 1)00110? I um," you say. a burden for ole." the question. Thera in bearing burdens thrall 111 pitying tax- Are you fuI- the sense which voluntarilyand Penetrate tltr'eo unhabtvn burdens, a114 ode has 10v1� that whore you aro that1 the aw of your to our lll'o y lies behind it. Hole 7f it centres obeying tin law o your !oust be Your bv5tn055 into a SORDID THING,: to any high honor selfishness will not contemptible. But 1 in others, if it Christ, there is no and little that that it, of your life bench or to the of others, it you they may be free, if under burdens may 1)0 lightened, and uninteresting g aced into a holyband. is nothing ro- the blundering, half who works for "Christmas you are introduced un his home and Tiny Tim that old starving and ireez- patiently and cheer- of his miserly poor little man is a hero. ITe is bro- who set his Ian m the cause of the others' burdens is wo find our ()Nn people so engross- Minions that they others more henv- then they. It is a thein bear their to lighten their law, "Takein -tile burdens ei and sorrows shall find rest." aceoptitg Jttdg. vi., olid no doubt Lord ac[vopted verse (i(} (1)511015100 Uncle t0 of heart Ines• Let hilnsclt kit„„ what glad of !react, - It is told Itonaymotvlinq the Iirst arrived, open ono "Certainly "But "sure! y any secrete married?" "1 shall y011, bus said. "That I shall tor I havo^, that I Phyllis what she to know." Still, confidence her letters "Not at is shown demands This WAS Crant sank amused unebnsoiousness good thing. Present!, "I toldy thing Phyllis know," "7'11 • me?" "I'm nottui. is. You something Out." "Phyllis remarked. "And to know "To Radcliff," "I didn't "But ,you "I -Tow she--" Is? alight 0.5 ter." KING Se Could King Bal., and losing his right to and gown and practise+ fact, enerall• generally his attondanco ono of Temple in blit as 0110 to say, •of the Tun last king Tomplo wile married IT.T., subs0guetrtly and dying Queen Elizabeth dine at record as formulae on another ball (herr., King Edward the history a full-Recigecl there aro graphs of Prince of wig and ter. "emperor gree of doctor member stands alone 15, Soo oleo Lev, 21; L Kings xvlily in thr, salon Na Abel's offering. wo lotto tie moque' to iu iL grateful 1(001)!11 !.heir trade joyful itzld lweuu$u of the l urd'H un.V believer fully to this Lord, (1)111((s it 1s to 10) joyful ix„ 24; ;it3, tho in tho gain),fl,)a glad gond- dedicate will and were \vbatt boon!( to firmly. to 1110 WO are from his wife aline, it af- am sun but you lack show SIr. with perfect said 50010- you to to tell what there pros- Grunt aro not bus- when ,you let- Practise of the of his perfect wig This byaliout Middle a guest, that g body The Aliddle Denmark Gcarga• Ixis wife to is on on Feb- wllilo while Lord Hatton. in as and Photo- lie was in tho barlis- the de- tiot Edward 001000090e1000(,"i'r� VeW®4�dt° 1� , 1( 4i 1)s' THE E ®jr�4 l}i FOR HOME '� Sl ,d t, ppy d L1AJti s A 0 ed togl•tJior, oriel a dash of popper and when e hue boiled up, yua into a palatable Fide cllall lot rlif»ler. Dough 1Vuisrll7alca a (laugh will! two p0111010 flop!', o110 pound two oltues water or 0(111(, 01)11 egg, one- quarter hound, butter, ore quartt'r 0 - Iflaund $ngur, and two a!urea Gf yen5t.; 14d1 the butter into tlo ! flour and matte the wllu'o into Floft irlvuj;h, 1.et ii i,•rlornt for two ur, , tllvoO 1U)')('55, 1111')) 15 r'I[:;'ll .into twC' ! n)utce ph,,,,, cu11 rotut4, prose thumb uliil'lle, put into 111110 one-11u1C trur,pbonfui of {u•o�nrvn, r1,,F,r, it l 01'el• by pinrjl{nq tightly the �l0I)ldl In1) over old u, I ,4 it.. 1 ,t, it I)Lot•o fur 551(0!5 Gn0-c n,lrtnr 1(0)10, i I then kava lrarly HOttle. 15(1 bo}ling fat, tout drop the burin into it, and Cook until light; blown; tale oil(, droll(, Hud 1011 in (ou)ter sugar. Tu test 1f theHfai 111' t is 0t 10551,enoufdh,1s splash i LO it a j 1 ) e Of t 11 . enough }t will tpnll(nr and Mahn L noise. it must be boiling yr the goods will absorb the tat and taste 11) Brea . , welve morPuddles, Plain.-ingrntljeuttsx 1`s mortis of bread crumbs, ofi, six tr,minces of sugar, two he. cis of but- ter, a punt of 1]lk, the 1unr1 of a slx10,1 rubbed 00 11 j,101 Of sligar, six y01IcS of cftgsr al,d two whites whipped, and a little salt, Put the crumbs into a basin with the sugar, butter, .'mon-sugar, and salt; then 1001' ill the 101111 boll!!! q' cover up tho whole and leave it to F'tenp for about ten minutes; the eggs may then he odder!, and after the 001)010 }las been well 1111x04 together,societyboat. poor the melioration into ,L mould, or pudding basin, preciously spread with butter. Steam the pudding for 'about an hon r, and w•I)Ol1 clone, dish it up with crane arrow -tont Sallee made as follows: Mix a dessert spoonful of arrowroot with twice that quantity of saga(', half the juice of a lomall, a little nutmeg, and a gill of water, and stir this over the ]ire until it boils. (y p p� p �j p j �1 WAS 'Nj((�b(1 IS. AS 1JliJ1, MA11,11 a14q It I EASY LAWYERS SAVE TiIM ZR012 !� .9100,000 SWINDLE. - Confidence Nan is Convicted and Sant to Prison for Eight- g een Months. 11111 pranondingH of 'tile London late collie550 lllal'1i011 uormtheally by the nppearance, of young Iiohleno,u in 1110 h•ksulne role of nmin of bnsinel;s, A trial which Milled the other du in the 8l.!111'.nlleC t0 eiL''11tnC11 n2n11ti1H at bard labor of Arthur 5i.b1•iglrt for swirldlio 511)' Marrone of i)bw'nHilil'O 1111 of veru (10G 1 t. • t in n OW ( 1(5 p 1017, etil.Flblisl,r.S a new rl!C01'd ]A ]C1iOtt'I1011p1n''1• . 1'110 Alar f lla of ItOwltsbll'C is 32 yr1a1'S old gill!!! (\V11H 110,(1()0 acres. Il(! has hold the title since his in- in - holey. SebWIla i who !s. b oqueial- ly related, won an honorary equerry 1(h l' ince Christian's household twee- tY years ago and 01001' then 1)00 ic- cupted chiefly the law courts with varying degrees of discredit, 130, has hien four tames a bankrupt, thrive will gedte nil, and A 11ner an undischarged bankrupt. A sister of ex -Countess Russell obtained a decree at nullity of marriage him on the ground of his fraudulent. concealment up t of farts. Ho has Brea mixed up at bthnr times in litigation over bills of exchange .which ho was fond of planting upon the gilded youths 10))11 !sae case of lthis Ork nd in which the Marquis of DGwnshira was the viatiln that calmed his dGtanfu,ll, DOwn3hf[' was rlinin with a woman g 111 a restaurant what Srbrlght, who loot her, but not -him, came up and started a conversation. Tjio rest of the story followed the regular rule. It is best told in THIS MARQUIS'S OWN WORDS. Sebright, he said, got from ]losses to companies. He said he was bringing out 0 bign r g g ole of 5'''000'000 mental called the ('reclit Fancier of England. About a week later Seb rightround visited Downshire and told him he had sold some shares in Ins norma and that he had w011 $:,,000. Tho Siolojuia was rather pleased and when told that he should sign two papers before receiving his winnings he signed them without a word. They turned ant to be bills of ex - change for $30,000 each. The Ain_ quiet mot and paid one of them be- fore his lawyers learned the story or his friends could stop kiln. His cross-examination elicted ad- m1551005 that he drew hundreds of checks er a year, but did not know the difference between a check and a bill of exchange. He thought the two documents signed for Sebrigh] ware Checks, not acceptances. His performance on the witness stand was so (501n1dfi that the jury had 110 difficulty of finding that the case was a barefaced swindle, Sebright's method of capturing his man is a form of confidence trick, whit! is becoming rather 1amilier among flash financiers in London. It recalls the story of the alleged nn_ willingness of •membars of royalty that tVXIITAT.i,ER IVISIGTTT be prosecuted. The circumstances then were that 11e, when at the zone nth of his fame and success, with the llarquia oP Dufierin, Lord Pelham- Clinton and Lorrl Loch among the directors oT his company, soculrcl an introduction to the Mike of Con- caught, who visited hitt on iia •yacht at Cowes. Ina brief talk ho referrer! in complimentary terms to Wright's financial genius. A fort - nigltt afterward the Doha of Con- tau I g tt received a check for 8100,000 fiom Wright with a note spying that it was his roots on tho investment pst nt mentioned when Wright had the hon- or of meeting him. The 'Duke wishod to return the check, but the Story goes that Wright wrote 01 tho tones of in,ittred cltgnity that, of course, tf the lnvrgtinent had turned out badly he would havo expected tlho Duka to meet. his los4. Tito Duko fa s0 •of ignorant of company buauness that ho does not know until this day who (her he wont into (110 deal. ] n (( jJ TORPEDO p p q }�I DOM ABOARD A .LQ.iD.LEDQ llll'tJ.� ABOARD 7YfARVELLOTJSNIQi T IYJ4lIVOE,U• VILES AT .SEA, ,•-_ The Bouts 121tutso About in the Davie With Apparent Recklessness, 41'. Tt. ,Tait vc'tltos in filo landau I'Szpr •4H I ' • nF the raccnC T3ritisl>'naval 1)10 1)1)155, Ho acevmpanied one of the noels on a torpedo boat.' Ire says: It was a we[•li Of very heavy work, such am few landsmen would ,caro to facie. Cruising all night and every night through 550001 Baas the men 1, g Y OfT duty tal(illg H»Ch .• ti Q.S they c:0uld On w•ot decks beside (din 1110 KU 10/13 ware a$ Cheery' a$ sand-, 1]O,y3, 0.17(1 when they grumbled- it Was out Of 110173( rather than Of CoA' vietion. Whflo we were, in full chase after the, destroyers a signalman decle.rod that 110 saw a cruiser ahead, On. the after her, leaving the w0 destroyers einemy's enemy's destroyers he amuse. thom- Woselva badlycbrditeng to their own fancy: er, wanted to torpedo ta rpedo Cr, so wo called our Own torpedo craft into line, This was One of tho neatest and smartest bits of work of the night. Although in the wind and rain wo could only sue two of the flotilla, they were all in touch with each other, and they came Plunging back under the wings of the gun- The signalling was an ingenious con contrivance-aslnmp with a very long snout, showing a tiny flicker of light to the object at which it was aimed, and invisible to evciything else, Tihe torpedo craft tumbled into Ileo in obedience to the click$. VALUE FOR MONEY. Tho signalmen were ordered to re- re- port on the suspect every few sec - ends -what they mado of her, and in and now ing, fit which direction alto was were incessant orders to the oenn t ore wcra and the flotilla, and a g e room quick glance to see that nothing had Leon g overlooked. All this time, in the midst of the roaring wind told splashing sons, we had to keep a bright lookout for merchant ships, for we were on the steam ]ono to Liverpool, right in tho path of the trattdc, without a single light showing.. And the cap-. tarn had his Singer on every detail of the complicated business; as for aught he know some entirely fresh difficulty might arise at any mo- Ment. For work like this, responsibilit y included, 1110 commander gets L1 8s. 9d. a day, and has to pay his own mess bills. lie has probably been at his trade since 110 was thirteen; and he 1s no longer stimulated by the Captain Marryat atmosphere which appeals to the casual pass0n- ger permitted to spend a night on his bridge. The Baty cannot be recvtnnlended as a money -making profession, but it is a clean whole sore life, and its officers are d0vot- ed to 15. `LEEPING' QIJATST7 RS. I called on another commander -a sub -lieutenant in charge of it torpedo. g boat. He had just come into har- bor after a night's scouting, and he was a gloriously grimy object, You 111 explained, with a totally apolo gyp "you tonne( Beep clean 011 these things. The deck was under water most of the night, ht,, and the funnel turns smuts y the bucketful. U1(, yes, no end of 0. good time, but a rough night makes such a mess of the boat. But we can't clean up, you know, till the men have had some sleep." T knew the men were asleep. Tho fact was made clear to me the =- moat T scrambled into the boat from 1110 thwarts of a tossing dinghy. There are not many retiring rooms on n torpedo-boat, and the seamen •had lnad0 more or less comfortable couches for themselves on the crowd - ed deck. One funnel, two torpedo tubes, a un, a chart -table and six g sleeping men filled all the available space, and above them the clothes wait hanging up to dry. "It would not bo so bad," said the commander, as ho proudly exhi- bited a cabin about the size of a wardrobe, "but when (taro is any sea on -anti the can slake bad wee- then of anything -the fo'c's10 is 8 ft. deep in water, and the bodding gets saturated. So the mon take their rust when tea conte into harbor.", LEAST ONE IS SAFE. "And a this is the sort of tiling you take up against a Uig battle ship, i$ it?r'r lea, but we'ra not expected to go alone. They would probably send Com of us, so that if (licca wel'0 sunk the fourth might get home," "But what hi the world do you. Hold on to," I asked, with vivid ro- collections of a flotilla tossing Lilco corks on a choppy tide -rip. "Oh, that's a matter of practice," he replied. "Tho funnel is a pretty good stand-by when there's nothing bettor. You can't always be suro Of the rails. Sometimes you've to bo very strict with tho men when they come n p tor a breath of fresh air without knowing quite how rough it is." Whatever the ma110000ro9 have provod to tho expert mind, thorn) is one thing they havo proved tom lett P ly to over yUo(las that ode For nix ship of rho flotillas is good. For six eights 100 torpedo craft ware erniq 1118 about the Irish Charms]. in eight tepal•at0 flotilla.4 on one of the most orowdod $toalli411109 Of the horns wa"' tors; they showed 110 lights, : tho Weather WAS Often dirty, acid 1110 y 1001( tildes WliIcl1 Would. be 20010 leckdeSsness in tlm0 of 110000;. Sot there was scinmeIy an accident to speak of, When the :reailty Of a tor - is taken into:ransidorntion, -sailors say that if you throw a plum -steno at 0)10 it will pierce tib plate -this r000rd is distinctly good, .�,,..,._:.,.,_.4-:•,.,..-.•_ :.... P0101llall{)' 111'00 8 nothing. ie lega1y is, so. 1•.ich ds 110110515'. -Glirist-has turned eNar) 55)000 into a garden, p �{ Thought Have ® ll + Heavily dr J Recipes for the IfitcI, n, 0 Hygiene and Other Notes m 0 for the liousel(oepor, 4 0 'S!�;` 1,00000oC9o0SO0 0110®a DOblh;S1'L0 R1 C11'1415. Salmon Toast. -A deldrunus break -'11)1'0 fns(m bo made b 11110th, a cup- fat of thin cream to 19ltir}t has boon 1lo s one opnonfuj butter and a 115-' tie Halt. Stir into this one tau salmon ,icice 1 u) Jine ,our Hoot 1 I ' ! LG(1Hil'<i bI'(.Ud 0.114 eel' w'l:i1a VCl• tier. Y Stewod 0y}14008. --Put a quart 0t OyHtOt's 01) elle 1110 in 111(111' ow11 liquor, Ti:O nlnlnent tl:ey l,egin t0 boil, skim Them out, and acid to 1110 ldt tun• a half plot of !tut cream, salt, t 1 11. o ll, trso pepper to ta', 11 Skim it well, tithe it oft' the fir, add to t1111 oyster) an ounc0 and a half of butter broken into small piecere. Stave imltrur,lately. Cottage Pudrlin .-CrG n 1 one- g 021 t fourth cup of hlittOt' With half a clip of Hngal•; a(1(1 OCG w'1`"ll-Beaton egg and, alternately, half a cupof milk'Utood of and a cup and a half of flour sifted with tt00 011(1 a half teaspoonfuls of bakng powder. Bake. Some with a grape -Juin sauce made as follows: he Boil a cup and a half of grape juice and a cul) of sugar !Ivo minutes, stir a teaspoonful of cornstarch o1' arrow )Poet into water onongh to pour, and (t lrJ to the grape juice; conk rix m' a eight minutes, then add the junta of half a 10mon and a teaspoonful of butter• Chocolate 131ano Mange. --Dissolve a 'it ounce of chvxolate over hot water Add ono -third of a cup of sugar, and. gradually, ono -third of a cup of boiling water, and stir and cook un- 511100th. Soften hall a two- it ounce package l(ago of gelatins in half a is cop of cold Nater, and dissolve in a cu of hot cream or rich m1Jk, Adtl the cllo0olato mixture, a socond third 01 0 cup 05 sugar, a tenF7)oonful el vaui111L extract, tt Tow g)'auns of sal 1, and one ea and a fotn•tIi nl' ctotLm, p Stir ocea ienally until 11.0 mixture begins to thicken. ' Custard Pie. -Beat four eggs until a spoonful can be taken op. Add ha11 a teaspoonful of salt and two -'mean thirds of a cup of sugar and boat again. ]teat in, gradually, two and a hall cups of Itch milk. Defm•eIoften turning into the paste -lined tin, brush the crust over with beaten white of egg to prevent soaking. Do not have the oven hot enough so'perpcudicular that the custard will boil, A Dainty SOndwich.--01101) fine • English walnut cleats and seeded. 00111ns, 111tx \vith a ltttle sugar and the white of an eggto a thick paste. P Add a little vanilla and spread be- tweeze saltines. Put the sandwiches It1 the oven for a few minutes to brown. Use about equal parts of nut meats and raisins. The while of ore egg toil! wet enough paste for 18 or 20 moderato! thick Y at sandwiches. Crumb Pie, -For a quick pie, quick baking as well as in Makin this gg' is Is a prize. It is also well liked among our children. Lire a pie tin \vit]i o god crust, fill half full (a good big pint) of nice bread, cracker or cake crumbs, grate nutmeg ovnr, then fill tvilh swecte100. cream. It is !lot or col.!, (rash or old, Whenunnecessary goodNew eatco crumbs are used, the cream hood not bo sweetened, 1 ex -ay-Tho while of ono egg Ueat- on to a stiff froth, one cu) sugar, I 1 a17d ono cup fruiter-, either lh•oell m :squeezed canted. Something a little tart is'H more pleasing, int any kind hill an- a &wen If they should be reals or Poaches they (!!olid first 1•e mashed with a fork. Tl,is can be used as a dessert along, or used as a frosting for puddings. The rule seys, "Boat it for an hour," but less time will do. Utilizing Waste Colery.-Out into inch pieces, the green celery stalks, and any othols that are unlit for tho table, thOn boil in salted water a 20 minutes or more. Pour off the water and add a littlo milk; stir in a teaspoon of flour and butter rnbb- to !let at the Petr in the year mooned atm Three, of Toronto, at Agriculture, Ottawa.), One the. :- and bo a it, the is lito of in- It 130 all of dis- lits the to to the the Ten tis, of in and the talo on something d1l)'"niv an (. in the life of When thio ghappy you cannot When they irriL find fault With 10o11 wi5111)1 yoursolt. whaler you law fol• your the burdens "In a sense; "The make Y But that is IS no tnoro virtue you cannot help es or catching filling this law Christ fulfilled Sympathetically? lives, gob at ;got tulriernnen.th are you will dent! put ,you you nliht fulfil g life, g ivies Is the law that dors your• life in self it is Its notate, dwarfed en(1 is dragged down MEAN AND You cannot climb that this law maks) that honor if your life obeys the law y business so poor law will not is bound to wheel for the aro a slave that you are struggling 'that their burdens then your business i,s transfi sacrament. mantic about starved bookkeeper Scrooge in Tale." But to the little see how it is Bob Oratcbett ing and boating fully the hard employer, this transformed thor to 1110 ](night in rest to weak his own. The bearing the secret by lives. Thera ed with their hnvo no egos ily burdened pity, for to burdens would own. This is -111y yoke upon others, their and sins -"olid _ TOLD AFTER ALL.Y how a ha)) couple Y l do the Count"i;y packet of !otters (!Poll. I and the husbtna proposed arldl•OSs04 t0 Ilia wife. not," (11)0 H)5111, Philippa," he rolnonstrnted, You aro 1105 going from me 110W that not Have any secrets .Phyllis might," letter is hers, not probably let you read but not till T has told mo nothing would 1111 willing for doesn't it imply a when a wile wont to her husband?" all. The lack of confidence by the husband when to see his tvifo's letters." unanswerable, and back in his chair delight in his if of having oho added:- you sol Moro is wouldn't want ore you going going to tell you aro only to know you can't know -•at is angltgecd," Mr. what if sho is? You to whom." hazarded her say so." don't say she isn't." could I say she isn't I really thinly my dear, well let mo read that _— Chico o soya g %Vitt Talmage preach- 10x6: 1)111'[1PL1S Of 011rlst.-Galli- no Mao's life can can accomplish any- unless it follows obeys some principle, firstly grasped, to. I take man's life is under- you go bcl:oat11 this law. It and character atoasthooes. dominating ruling principle mauufesCing itself ]le said and did? incident, examine is apparent Himself standing burdens of the world had comp. As meeting people of His quick syn- all their sorrows infirmities to Him- in the house home at Batllan, .lie V of the household Jacob's well He finds seems to us at first But our 'Lord the light laugh about her spitus and He makes that Every yoke none as a burden great prophet } when He said : "Tho on Him Llle iniquity It was as a burden the llapted spoke the Lamb of God, the Mils of of Christ was Ho Caine God by bearing, 010 MIEN, of Christ as 100011 that He is When 01. John as the !cord of Cod, Ho is the expres for each of far flim, then, must Clod for us. Tho law bo the true law 1('o is fitted, to grow and fruit only under this tk'ny that law, you must suffer comes from broken and Unified axis- your life into mores- and San lira must USEFUL I1TATTS, Now that the cold weather is creeping on, towards us It behooves to look to our stock of clothing for the winter months, Want of sof- ftrienll•v warm underclothing is a fro- R (pent causo of Indlgcstion. }Cain stockings and stunt boots are a p1'evelltivo of dyspepsia ill win- ter. l Worm c10(511ng does not necessarily heavy clothing, People who wear vary heavy clothes, heavy flan- 11g1s, heavy coats and skirts, are as much tired by tloir weight as by the exorcist they have taken. One of the secrets of swooping a carpet is to hold the broom almost and take short strokes Do not lift the broom t ime than two inches from the floor. If the carpet Is very I )y dusty tear into Somali bits and soak it in• water and winkle the paper over the carpet. The damp paper will absorb t1'e dust. It improves a carpet to wipe it afters 00(510b with n clot!! which has been wrung out of =anode avatar eve tablrspoon 0f household anunonia to a quart of water, Set a dish of vinegar on the stove witdla cabbage is (0014ng to counter_ act the Odor. lffaertication is the real pietist of eating and dyspeptics do not Inasti- cafe their food. Warm dishes for the tablo by im- mors'ung them in hot water, not by standing thorn on a hot stove. tins should be set over the file with !Toiling water in them for sevelnl hours before food is put into them. 1f you aro Iloasec lemon juice on to soft agar till it is e a syrup, au(1 a few drops of gl11 cerino addcii, relieves the hoarse- r.a s at Duce. An nttack of typhoid lover, of p):euntol.io, or of erysipelas• that would be milt! in a sober man, will gl'l,i1' I,f11 ore addicted to nlcollolic (mink, Handkerchiefs which have been usod when cold and ieflaenxa aro pr0valeut should be sprinkled with boracio acid powder, or, bettor still, should be steered in a strmtg solo- icon it a d Nater, before being sent to the wash. t is stated that tho banana as a form of 1;ourishmrnt can clnhn first pion among vegetable products that are food for maui,dnd, for it is 25 limes as 211lt)1110U$ as tho ordinary white bread eaten, and 4.) times as nttt,ilious as tho potato. A slue and simple method of toot- ing all tinned foods is to press the bottom of tho tin with the thulnb, If it makes a nc,i50 {ince a machine oil cads when it is )re.4sod the tin 1 is not airtight, and tho contents, therefore, unlit for nae, Whon boiling vegatebles be sur the water is nt boiling point before o Putting in the vegetables to bo cools- ed. :11 it is cold or Iui(owarin tho freshness Hud flccnr will conk Gut into tho valor, Place the saucepan oter over the hottest part of the stove, so that it will boil as quickly ns por- sable., and be carotid that the boilingcoiffure, does not cense until Cha contents aro thoroughly cooked and ready to be dis]hod, 4 ---' EDWARD IS A LAWYER. — If Necessar y,paper as a Barristorr. Edward is a member would, in the event crown, have a don the white horsehair of an English barrister, law for a living, ignored, is recalled the other night the dinners at the London, not as of the benchers, as one of the governing & of Court in uestion. q who visited the was that King of gsee," the s}stn'r oP divorcing insane and under restraint, g f used frequently t 11,0 Isliddle Temple, and having been (hero 1602,nutty of"TwelfthiNi ht," 8' occasion she attended dancing with her Sir Christopher is the float monarch of England to attend member of the Bar, still in °oilstone° him 'taken when' Wake, showing him gown of an English 'mutant holds of laws, but is of tho Bar. Ifing hi this respect. 'c��(g � g1) �y LESSON, JtA9r o La AeSwA rt r [HE --- ay INTERNATIONAL LESSON, DEC. 13. — ext of the Lesson, I. Kings viii, 1-11, 62, 63, Golden Text, Ps. cxxii., 1. The Lorcl having given Solomon )55 on oCly Olde, ucithcr aclver5017 or toil being occurrent, ]1C began in 10 fourth year 01 his coign to 'build to ]rouse of tho Lord and was 1\'011 Scars 01 built}ing it (1. Kings , 4; vi, 1, 118). Tho ark o1 Noah, le 10heruacle of Moms and tie 'nlplo 0l' Solomon were untquo term- 1 buildings, God 1iimFelP being the lie architect of each, the one thing 'quioocl of the imitates being 0110- iu1LCc, as the Lord ropeatedly add Moses, "Sec that thou mnku all liugs accorcliug to the pattern short- 1 to then in the mount" (Hob viii, ltx. xxv, 9.•0; xcvi, 8(1). The 101( ! Noah was to preserve all in it 0111 the waters of judgment, and 1t SCAn1U a safe vessel bo being pitch- 1 within and without with pitch len. 11, 14), tho word "kollphar" Ing only hen tranolalad "pitch" 1c1 o10awhore ransom, satisfaction, enenlent. Tho Loi'd Jesus Christ 1.51111se11 is 10 ol:l'y a:ric of safety and (110 true inernaelo and temple (Heb. vdii, Y, p 11, 19-21), and the buulding oto growing unto a holy temple iv Lord is built upon Him and Iris atonement (01)0. ii, 1.9'22). Bo- 00005 are living stones (I. Pet. ii, R. V.), Wide world is the quarry, God is by 1110 °telnts Of ouru ail, Info premixing I7'us redeemed y les for our respective places in is temple. Every stella was pet- etly fitted for its place befo•O it as brought to the building, so that ten was neither Moaner nor an nor ny tool of iron hoard in the house hile it was in building' '(I. Ifings ' 7). 111 thugs being toady, the elders Israel and tho .leads of the tribes and brought . u to the g P niplo the a•1( of the. Lord and the hm•nncle of 1110 congregation and 1 the dol vesaols that (veto in the y and the crit was sot in $ 1)11110 ill (,110 hely OJ! 1(01106, er Under the wine 000 Of the groat wood, golf! canted cites b vi, 23-28),there belt Hath- g in it but the two tables Of stone •Otll 3.3)).6 put thele 05 10 Horeb OL'Sl: ir9). What hall' become Of gotten pot of manna and Aaron's d that budded '(l:Tob, ix, 4) is not milled, anti therefore: wo do 71bt ed to klnOw. 4i71Ito Ill 1110 holy F)8r•1H of LI10 taberna[:,lo were gnpol•- mete 1104 ill the (01101)10 by larger Vessels (]...lore, of (lien! (]tore was no new I: 1 t.hn covenant, 1)11( tho sono at, end nh'eady sowed, for i f10 arS, with Its Morey seat old eller- in, neve 'aan waver be ai !Tose Christ or way oT righteousness, but there is alw•c s a lar et nul`uhliu of tin' g g Zits great pvrlemption, To oto ono of the greatest truths of the ark of the covenant, with its mercy soot, and the law within it is that Christ is the end of the law for righteous- Hess to ev0l (Rola. es a.) 1' one that belfeveth When the priests had set tho ark in its place and were coma out the tor, of the Lord filled 1110 houso so gloryChancellor, that the priests could not stand to minister (versos 10, 11), It was al- a0 thus Nhen the ti1bC1'11AC10 tVA$ dud- feared SIx xi., 8J, 35 ( x. ). It is our Privilege as the temples of the Holy Sp„'it, to he so filled with the Spit- ,t, that the self life shall not bo manifest, but only the life of Jesus made manifest in our mortal bodies (I. Cor. vi., 19, 20; I ph• v., 18; (4n1. ii., 20; II, Cor. iv., 11). Al- though we have only the beginning and the mil of this remarkable chap- tor assigned as our lesson, Ne should notion that the temple is called "auWOMAN 1 house for the nauly of the Lord God of Israel, that His name might bo t110ra, that all p0op10 of the earth might know 7'116 7101110" (verses 10, 17, 18, 10, 20, 29, 43). Notice the eight times ropontod "Hear thou in heavon" (verses 30, 82, 84, 86, 39, 48, 45, 49) and the lin Limos " Maven th, dwelling place" versos 30, 89, 48 49); also! the sevenfold natur(1 of the prayer for the tresp(rss- er, the defeated, the drought smitten, Liv ,pia tie smitten, 1110 stranger, g g those goingto war and thoso 01 car 1 tivuty (vors05 81, 38, 85, 87, 41, 44, 46). He had boon ]irtLyiug 13ofo'o the altar of the Lord, dneuling on his knees, with his !lands spread up to heaven (verso 5d• ) Our Lord Jesus Js both altar nod sacrifice; we can come to God only in LIis 110,1110 and by virtue of .:Ila resits. After prayee ho stood and blessed all tho congregation, remind- Ing than( that not One word of all GOcd's promises had failed and ex- hottingthem to walk In the statutes of thoLord With a porloct heat (56-61), Comports Josh. xxiii„ 14; )(zits, 14. Ho relies upon fhb• Lord to Maintain the causo of His People P p at all bine$, as the matter shall re- galla (verso 59); margin, ".`1(c thing et a Gley 111 his piny;" et, ee "Aa every day shall mantra," Jer,. 111., 84, "71;1'01'50 day a portion 1'Cl ..' ..ng ua Haat too 100 to live by the dopy and. bless the Lord Who daily'- 130151 Our 1)tll`de11 (Dent. Xxxiil•„ bis Pa' lxvnt., 19, It V.), Tho ]i.VGS' Of boliovors should. so Magnify the L01•d that all Others may know that ell otters May know that the Lotrd is 00d. After the prayg alid tho blessing 'the king and all Israel offered a great SOerific0 t0 the Lord and SO darltcRtecl the Ilntaso of the J:,oi(1 (verees 62, 613), Witon the sacrifin .Vas toady flro CRMO dawn (rani hes,- volt and rlolieltmod .it; the Lord thus „a ! /5)v,( % ''''r - "You eye. Are "Not ! + r-- I ,'. _' _ _ - fl f - ' tthe Py .. '^ �-_ ai l R ,a? e• f a 3 `iv," )'"" 'ACOOrdillg ]11(10 the �^� eotnitry the chic!' 'both vial „, < � •• - not 1 m this itt8h s saving to nieith , highest .b-- LIKE BEGGAR. _ A Fashion writer from Paris thus describes the state into which fringes and pendants Intro brought us: "The silhouette of the w0111010 of to day is that of a beggar; totters and rags, bobtails and folderols dripA'1' from ev- 15 torn into her getup, The skirt is torn tatters by its fringes and slashes; her arms at the alight- est mbvnmmit shako off chops of sparkling jot, or flutter frayed edg- es, while ata large g gesture a form- less mass of chiffon lops in a weave, dreary line that drscends despondent- ],y Iroln the neck to tto finger g tips without a single cheerful tutee, Her h0r het, her scaf repeat 1110 fascinating, 1f 151111), appearance, which is saved from being abject and forlorn only by the dainty movement and smiling graces of 'the being that animates filo rags." •I O • rel. p �a� (), ( ,�-n v ( ,. _ . ) y i" ' � �' -e,,, �,• .. `;; O . \\ t l a ti% ,.;.-... 1i1nb1'alla belong �, f j ` ('- $, L f ��t �.. 1�-E.1 0 "'" L - * t ^ y. . nl11 �� ✓ )S t 1 V 7 Y ,. r`� c. n "' ' 1 �V�' �& (1 3 d <�','. }7 v :' ,;,t a 1410 yon guilty, r: A. --=-- ) t aeoused guilty TIIUSY HAVE NO LANGiTAGE. Amon the oo ilea of the world g I• . i the Swiss aro alone 'in having no langungo they can cal their own. to a recent visitor to the country, alien( three-10111'tllS of 1)((01)!0 of Switllanituid ellen.( (l Cr_ Mal, while tho ramaindor divide foot oilier languages ninon{,+ thattlanguagly French ELnd Italian --the languages varying, as a rule, acooh•ding to the proxiiflily of the people to earl. vyhas0 tongue thoy speak. P1111110 400)0210018 and notices are mooted in both Pre11C10 aid GOi'nian. In 1110 Swiss National Pn.vllemont 111em1.1005 1110.1(C their apcachea in French or German, for meetly all the timbers understand 1101g0R is The o'dets'of tho g g' President aro translated by art oat-pedo-boat iilterproter, and furnished to the in both languages, ' - -"� WITTI THIS PHYSICIANS, .:examination of tho records of the Characteristics of European royalty by I1, Frederick Adams Wood shows morally aupezior wcra the bettor' widowed mentall V• In few of tho Cities of the world are school children examined to etc- torn 1110 Whialt aro defactiva with ref- erotica to applying the re,nedy, Contagious Cye disease 111C1'OasCd among the children ill the schools' of NOW 701'1( City'1111(.1 the number at- footed 1 was ostiltlat col at 50,000. Theft a strict quarantine teas placed on Rll the schools. The disease tow has boon almost stamped out, 1 . ` P I :. 4 y {L ,f Y,,,,,�,' 1�'i 1 1 The eco age girl •1101Ovee the pro- per time to 01(101•y Is the Bret time 9116'0 asked, ''What do 50t1 ]lift Oil your taco after sltnving?” netted the tial who sntolltd of bay rum. "Court-plalltor usually," replded t110 'nervous 111ap,' gloomily. . .4. A. went can be het out, ha It Call be drawn back, • If you lvould 1.10 wanithy, think Of lis well of gettdug. Borrowed trouble c011ttu,utde the rate Of Micron, ---lt "• of 1•umtilrg the end )f Ali or not guilty?" Your honer; the =bridle, doesl'i't