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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1901-7-11, Page 6ea •• woonfort , • •ehei(lialaIeN'ataIWRONeaM8414',44N,Will*AaPeit,*.eleeteia,'eleteleVes'OeleVee0: A despatch -Bev. the followina ter encouraged he that him that 7, You of eneehanism hand, ono mechanic; other will chieel, it, antil the prophet olden them another gold -beating four ployed, Leger' 011001110111 that smote inet, they end they it. It ness; it an insult have thought Ancourage sngaged a honest words bheir own while they trials in Every end every sst. I the trials ier encouragements. One S physical ethletes et six lig and es when :heir 'ergo or :onie That is bleed that or six man :oat sleeve sits down solved be the lion to ales he wed out 9oul, utterly the morning the toil, any perfect he gets is the man thoy frosted it taken laughter? spring from your half the first put and your morrow, ten, and the hiss of the shutLle-a nor of of an says: labor will give Remember toil, over. them 011, that get to sweating 01., those ture und upl I come low stuffed wing remains 1 wonder there thousand? thousand out with foot and are people rest to there who excite the sewing ios. chines it is not. :nen the hardships May the needle and have der the Another taste chanies homes robes, and meats their libraries. tion. people creamed great boods live but do not painful painting and glorious of the to get or to Way lute seeting ens. a88100110 kinds unable buying foot, SOMe raisereble having yet get could ee . f rom Dr; Tabnage text:-"Srs sinootheth smote have seen peaeing and from will will flatten Lena the work describes times as by one hand, hand. • comes styles of "So the the goldsmith, with the talked helped was a very was making to the if each other, in honest mechanism of ..good work liardships reananlze anybody man'e burden woman's think I evill of mechanics, great trial exhaustion. who go or seven come back they started, back upon the rising away elastic the exception. when o'clock, wearily puts and in to make means of his children; is sound -strength exhausted. only Indeed, rest into one only perfect body in this call it a the color the spontaneity Has from your eye, until man your foot on in your you will of the furnace foundry and voice the task -master, all-sympathetie "Come unto and aro you rest." also, that this Have is a great home, 111 011, toil neceesary deep no heavy wish this and put your with of all God's a rest for how are in the More people the life, back and more than here today, be in luxury are any people my women You say, "We and our trouble I see wearing of God comfort and compensa. fatigues great and sentiment. who / who who have of the table. They But A great of our country abodes, hardships, where they where know of than and sunsets blue sky, the dollar get a pieeure, the country sun and While there who heve of luxuries to appreciate their their pictures artist who Minh no appreciation the atepacity Musk:, an1. antenna the 'Trials Life, artists of heeven every mid Oa. let inlierieance theni, a hanging all the garden heavens to your your time ana with devell the reward ranount subject others. things sorne is thatth When country, go dust of who among hands doors taverns. one pure and very idleness. the fact walls, in which and night, God are opportunity to on, areyvery eine c,ut, years is no no struggle seupidity, and tens great year, grasping. money father the been Less all the of the reckless; that gets and lux-uries them renown and of starting than give them are not adventrige. of only as so many from until more old physiologists, about philosophers. have out tin evening nations of 0 encoure.gemente aro by. heaven. tidings Christ is the get his working wall : in the the the on shipwill Jesus of hove give will give he will mantle that, the cry the throne?" beck: of the their robes in the 4. _ e and ' , delicate W0111011 and -Will reign as aitists, picture and every musical ine Cheer sath them to look up that Gan The king or garden that ages, but yeti beLtor than are yours. leather, and Father belougs longer to dwell the trials of hand end foot, upon the fact is dIspro- of work, or necessarily to I win not for I must go grand and glor- and the first one of e against evil is men sin against were do to find thena? factories, not have on their those who in their poe- of saloons and AeLlve of the greatest upright life. few men with enough to en- Be en- that your your an- which you may you may fight of your life, Sundays, for plenty to t Is the fact . golug to ha-ve for clevel- That may but the chil apt to turn cases out of 1.00 if a, fortune is of age - he necessity of struggle, and goes into dis- . There of th ns nds cities wQhcia ere themselves all toiling and What for? to spoil their was fifty years together. How boys to get rid brought up in than five work of fifty. wealthy parents world, insane, or they are in- while the son kept the gate, a robust phy- achieves high stands in the and state. They until after affluence and as a reward Remember, h you may -v- a e small means your children, under bet- though you had • 'Hardship a damage to And the toil may rise to and moral trust God. and •a encouragement, opportunities There are seven o'clock six o'clock at about ena- and aetronomy 011, re- opportunities of before You, your che er at lamp, you can aind see the dee universal day. your only intended which you shall "Behold 1 i of great joy," the carpon- working -man's love once in -man, and you in the midst ot shop amidst plane, and down plunge of the 1 0 31 you belong Christ, he will sweat on your every ache and sulTered in your Are you you rest. Aro you health. wrap around of his eternal ray friends, that all thiS is 0 see a great throne of God. out, "Who aro and the "These aro they great tribula- washed and blood of the CHINE$E lea( JOHEBS. _. A Writer Tells of Their Xdalle Of Honeety and Practinal jeleani .4. writer in the Lender) Sketclii who sPeakel et heeener spent several yeans in China, writes 04 011inese servants nnel their iaeas a honeety and praetical jokes. "The most mailman alga precedleg tha Present outbeeek," Bays the vert. r "was that the 'boys' le nen '.1'?* leeoelit,,bein mesterei: as they_ aro 1 also 'A' Creeeinamia'? is"autrhalle°1- ful servant and whe i ne leaves hie meat, , ' . 'le' - - r foi no case° teem is sure to be mischief abroad,zonal allv ^ moot see. - ---L- - with " sety at the bottom of it.„ If a master in China trusts hie 'boy' illiPlicitly, the servant generally m- sponds by being absolutely honest ; bit if the master thinks he can take care of his own valuables he finds that he is mistaken. I had at Hong Hong a flest-class 'boy,' Whom wen- e orations of subalterns had nicknamed 'Scamp,' the only name I over know him by. 'Scamp,' if trusted with money. would always account for it to the utmost farthing, Ono day- it was just before tho Chinese New Year, the only time at which the Chinamemake holiday and spend n their savings -I brou,glet home some bank notes and put them in a, draw- er. The next afternoon I looked in the drawer for the notes. but thee, et had vanished. I called '-camlea who appeared with on absolutely fm- passive face. Ilts knew nothing about the notes, and instead of al- lowing ine to lecture him, read 1110 a lesson. 'Master' he said, 'go this side, go that side; he no savvy what he do with his money. Moro better next time, give Scamp take care of.' I took his advice and never lost ANY MORE MONEY. "The Chinese 'boys' are not at all averse to IntyLng a joke among them- selves at their master's 011.9011130. Sit- ting at dinner one day in the Hong Kong Club, I noticed, a gentleman who had come down from some nor- them port become excited. 11e hal been brought a letter by a solemn- faced Chinese butler, and he saw something on the outside of this let- i downstairs two tor which sant h ne el t a Lime to mterview the lea 1 6 "6 a 1 porLer. When he came back he told tl tt r The hall us what was the ma 0 .. porter had inscribed on the envelope i CI i for 1.1 ' f . teen of n ,i nese, see en mum, 1 the butler, "This is for the old ba- boon with white fur.' Unfortunate- ly for the hall porter, the little gen- Gonna was a first-class scholer in the Chinese language. He discovered later a fine joke which the chief sign painter of the island had played on the European residents. All the of- ficials and the professional men had their 110M0S ill English and in Chine ese, inscribed on a board at the gates of their bowies. The sign paintet had used his ingenuity to make the Chinese letters which represented the sound of the English name mean something insulting. Thus, a dimila utive doctor's name was twisted to mean to a Chinama.n 'Shrimp near the ground,' and so on. The finest joke of this kind was the historical one /steered on Lord Elgin, who, when he sailed up tbe Pei -Ho to Pekin as a. conqueror, was given sails, with on them, so the Mandarins said, an honorifie inscription. What the in- serIption really meant was, 'A bar- barian bearing tribute.' " Ili el 1 'I I Ii bUNDAY beITOOL, l: MeNaCie'Vaa$14iIIMK4Kelag;440'71:461.)WIE4iK4a00W4He'rWeIONIV1Har , t Canada , ' (Spaniel It is noW that the °utterly the fineet of American. J, Davis, Commissioner aands, and to, Director et Ontario, nomie mate oh a scale itom of obundanco Province. taken from sent the theSe mines, .13' ' A" Sea, poieted superintendent the collection this notanto the right man understands deservee the results tho are well displayed gr"P6d-Jefferson Occupying large map It is geologically prepared by and executed Toronto, tion of tan its of the Province mamma by artietie decorative leg. A second 15, shows in and forest gion of Sault of communication orcd incandescent was prepared Ciergue, General Lillie superior Sault Ste. , rho nickel ore from the mine The weiabt - 10,000 pounus entire pile ore. Every of the reduction from the ore Ples. The duction process pies from the N. Y., thus the manner copper are The Nickel-Cpper have attractive new French average visitor tails by the is illustrated. north shore shown on a being represented. weigh from the pile weighing is evident that must bo raise and transport ses• The- Company have iron ore from and nickel sides building and pig iron; ment of enlarged tog 1110 work pany. Porro electrolytic form ot bars, attention of value of nickel As a central stands the of the Mines a COLUDIN from the Black frew County. three large Ing 5x5x4e three feet cellent quality ry, St. Davids, by that company. tat is Canada, 33anks, of pose and created universal exhibition Canadian the largest ia.1 ever made plete line of from Canadian exhibit of company company demonstrales importance ad a ee a. The other the divisious gold, silver and ornamental 'I ' 'I le -use to is put and boilers Lima scale Company tract for covering Majesty's ship most modern struction, There Ie a this and Talc, gypsuna, and peat are Milton Pressed Company are which is an progress made Terra Cate The excellent Preview Chicago is progress ma Since that , gi fuller v the Pan-American est Ire ti - Gi overnment, n ar o 0 t i thin copies aie ..enrcete tilo catelogue further ilifOrination 1110 euperintandost, ler, at. his . ing. I 1 i by , generally that Prennee P, W, of the decided and that the of those All working ordinary Ain, of and exhibit. in his to attained, a prominent of Ontario, the by The map principal artists map particular resources Ste. Power Marie.. -copper Sudbury is . ranges per contains stage is final Oxford illustrating in which extracted exhibits process lucid of Lake similar 1,000 used Lake collective Micleipicoten. ore are :and also and nickel process and steel -steel. most building OP SOLID blocks, feet high from placed executed Toronto. excellent sculptors Corundum display and tebeasive the and of this and and 1 i w 1 c in covering is well by the of battleships was awarded great for also represented excellent in work, in the well 0 d i date a .. , m iy ampere • mineral of of of office Makes le a • Martha Cecilia) acknowledged mineral exhibit is class et the Van- Ross, Hon. II, of Crown Gibson, of Tonne* Bureau of XilleS to show the oco- minerals; of Camel," woula annvince Vie- real importance and resources of 11)0 the eerie havo been mines and repro- • run of ore a om Frank Ne Speller, Toronto, WEIS an - - ' • ": in charge of installation of Mr. Speller is the right place; he work thoroughly be congratulated on : The exhibits and artistically place is a 18380 'fedt. colored and was Bureau of Mines =lett & Sons, of shows the loco- mineral dopes- and has been pro- the finest piece of work in the build- of Ontario, 10 X the mineral about the re- Marie. The lines are shown by col- lights. The map by order of le. H. Manager of the Company, of exhibit shows the • region. Every represented here. from 1,000 to specimen. The about 17 thns of of the operation of nickel and copper by sane - illustrated f i operation o the re - is shown from saaraf Copper Co., To complete y the nickel anod f rem the or . Co., of Ontario, showing the in detail. The appreciates the de- manner in which it Copper ores of the Superior are scale. every mine laecea The 1 to 8,000 pounds, . 18 tons in all. It modern machinery in these, mines to such. great mas- Superior Power exhibits of Copper also shown, be- ornamental stone a. large assort- photographs show- mills of this com- made by the new is shown in the is attracting the men Who know the point in the display remarkable feature in the form ofaccounts GRAPHITE Donald Mine, Ren- It is made up of the lower one be- in size. A base of limestone or ex- Queenston quer- Ont., was provided On this pedes- a statue of . by I• •W - •-• Its dignity of treatment have adsniration among and artists. The Company have of this mater- have also a com- materlal made corundum. The fine Crown Corundum Imperial Corundum the increased industry to Can- more prominent of represented aro the iron ores, building stones and mica. 1 t 1 s a er mator- 1 I i I tt t steam pipes shown on a prtte- allea Boller Cover- Menthol. The con- the boilers of His Blake, one of the under con- to this firm. deld for rniea in electrical purposes, salt, mineral water in evidence, The Brink ee Terra Qatari by an ai•ch, sample of the artistic decorative record made by the • Mines building 01 remembered •and the ligh Otiteo n m n.n 1 n i 18 evident by the and iluportanco Of display. It is the y o n ar o dbthOti Thoso interested in resources can ob- . • the latent roporte of Wino, tho derserlptive the 051111)11., end anY by applying 10 aqt., v., vi, spot- In the tastes build. s ee..-.,,,.-,.....--,iiese.....,..e. 'UNIT= The 0-ernix iet:(1 till° Stete, ture, n"htgl ted 33nliding, eel and which street, and icipartment al draft pendence son, handwriting Benjamin fashioned wrote bronze Washington the master to America Houdon, eeiving have however, was only the &able Scotland, ton pair Lafayette, tees Washington the of the hendsome the Plain unsheathed ei the fought equel Rum', James rid Q A per tile derives sent try. read, Chan yards embroidered. also A displayed, ton General didly ceived to command superb presented to the tion discovery rests that Is a to this tee, and Lerest in one ed Lyons, their coln collection The wonted taxies , 1 1 le ment somest the There in th% 19- teL 1821, at which added. A the the Among are: France tares Robespierre, tion Republic, There Bonaparte, from Denmark, Xing gium, rem perors including from Dratil and Central el exico. mans of Persia, Sultan Madagascar, Hawaii, the hibited the The and imPortallee by Photogrealls• ler• Clerk who finished laslory tedmimstra ton e . vim all 10 all ning present beef,. -- - From of the ea PL11' educetional oxiiil,i Trto has x r 1 , I :. Ontarioie Alining , Eallibit et the , PrelleAlllerianne „ - , sTArrEs rmaiDrr. various Department:I of ti order QM their° erleation, viz: Treasury, War, Jantio, Post 1$;0, :vet, sinG:701:, men:itd tAnuegil:ettl: TheYworkings of the 'Depart - nee shown in the ePace allot- to them in the United States Many objecte oe histora anientifie value are diepleyed, cannot fail to intevest and An- Aanong the many historicel instructive articles in the State exhibit aro: The origin- of the Declaration or Dula- written by •Thomas Jeer - with interlineatione in the of • John Means and taanklin, including the old desk on which Jefferson it. Then there is a small' equestrian •statue of George by Bron Marchette from original study and model of his , M. lloUtion, This was sent from Paris when Thomas was alinitter to France, by with the expectation of re- an order from Congress to it cast in bronze. This was destroyed when the Capitol buened, and this statuette is the survive'. It was presented to United Setas by the Right Hon- George Young of Edinburgh, Many relies of Washing- are exhibited, including a quaint of eye -glasses given by him to all of Washington's let- to Congress, the sword which wore during the war of Revolution and other souvenirs Father of his country. Many swords were presented to First President, but it was this old blade which Washington when he took command Army, and with evhich he throughout the long and 1M- struggle: P1ie naPere of Pelle Franklin, James Madison, Monroe, Alexander Manniton 1 many others aro also exhibited. ' ' ' I curious specimen of a state pa- from the Emperor of China to President of the United States special interest from the pre- status of affairs in that coun- This letter, which nobody can was brought ovoi. by Li Hung g wrapped up in about, two of yellow silk most elaboratelY This "envelope" Is exhibited, number of historic swords are but after that of Washing- probably comes the sword of Andrew Jackson. The splen- jewelled swords and proents re- by General Grant cannot fall admiration, Another article exhibiLed is a medal by the Sultan of Turkey United States in conanemora- of the 4.00th anniversary of the of America. This medal in a wreath of golden leaves glitter with (1iamonds. 1Inn '1 11----'e fine display of other medals sent country by foreign potenta- some of them being very artistic costly. Another object of in- is a large silken flag woven piece, and given to the Unit- States by 25,000 weavers of 1 Prance, as an expression of sympathy when President Lin- was murdered. There is a fine , of foreign coins exhibited. Walls of the section aro orna- I with portraits of the Sore- of State and photographs of occupier by tho apart - buildings' 1D of State with some of the hand - , interiors. Portraits of all Presidents aro ale° displayed. is a, collection of maps show- the extent of the territory of United States from 1789 to , including the dates 1803, 1815, 1848, 1853, and 1867, dates new possessions were • laxge collection of letters from heads of foreign governments to United States are exbibited.I the most Interesting of these One irom Louis XVI Xing of and another from represents- of the French people, including conveying the 10(01010" of the formation of the French are letters from Napoleon from Queen Victoria, the Czar of Russia, the Xing of the Queen of Portugal, the of Greece, the Xing of Mi- the Xing of Sweden, both the William,a a tun. many oalers one from a large collection the Emperor 0111 Empress of and tam loading dienitaries - - statesnien of our South and American Republics and a . 1. sere al e pane at spec - ' TI • of chirography from the Shah the Xing of Siam, tilde of Zanzibar, the Queen f • the Xing and Queen of etc., etc. A fee -simile of recant treaty with Spain is ex - aud is of special interest to Spenish-Amerions, workings of the Diplomatec Consular Bureaus, both of vast O1'0 fully illustrated official domunents, letters and Willhan 11, Michael, Chief of the Department. of State, is arranging the exhibit, has the compilation of a brief of the DeperLment from the e • , „ Lion of George W milling- to that or William MclCinley, 1 • . / , . ' 1 wi II be d is le, 1)11ind gl (ills to who desire the pamphlet. To add • its at tee vonesS, pot Linite 0 the Secretariee of State, 1209111' wide Thomas Jefferson, to the incusnliont, illusteaLe the ' brief inventory ot this, onc smallest of the Ilnilese Slates t i 1 ii 1 i 1 : 111011 11 ( SP Llyn, all C on, of t lo value of the Government 1 can' lie formed, ----,,---- rtwonno, of 1:nropmn na lions Inn] (11111011 55 Limas since 1689, xtA llErNIST'l xa wl-m ' A.T.* caraline,vian Gives Pi of the Beere. A landieg Dalian provinel Pednts en inteeViely evith engineer who has a. long mate acquaintance with It front his remarlon "No 7ii:0 henaounillirsol:ginatrlsie Ts10,07:ei ' enough to undemtand the r -Lions of things will ever 1 Pialug with the Boers. ' acknowledge their love 0 we have eala all that le r thY•of them „When Europe and foremast the English, 'tile Trallsauel, it was a stricken that it could bare' few hundred pounds tbe had, in salary. Then the Englishman took up the me capital, machinery, Dent u ability into the work, and i country from poverty to We Meat not imagism beater individual or a single eoliele) a fortune that all do so, few places whore ono 1111121 hard as in the Transvaal - are few places where the: 'cussed' a Government, ane liable a population. The r Government has for examp opoly in thedynainite inch the shares are in the band Paul and tea setellities of eminent. Tais company ,h ed the prices of explosiv such a height that ninny 1/ lying unworked. Envy i have placed every sort of in the path of the ITitland the Boers are greedy ae others. Glee can buy thei Just an in Russia,. When goes wrong, or when one d favour, ono has only to ir WHAT IS THE PRI and if one is willing to wiehes can always be met. "It is characteristic of t vaal Government's adint that it was enter with endle ty a lam prohibiting the spirits to Xaffles was weer it, The Transvaal Govern no wish to rob iLs friend: I; profits. The 'demand for which woulcl give the .11etli . hand in the adininisera sweep away the old rotten - 1 i I 1 1 1 of the item famine datitifesd tho t f votr: cite 1 r al 0 izenship for tlitlanders, children even, born and ece the country, have not a That is pretty toughl "It is said that Enirland rob the Boers of their ind( Certainly notl I believe Boers, after the conclusion war, evhIch will end in fi England,ill be gra tad 1 but laie will be oblieneed to edge 110ascitizens. Engle is capable of colonising a; Mg heathen lands, Tiles country can hold m 001111 But they can ell envy her t and try to trip her can all do that! And hear about an 'assault' Transvaal, the huge count ing 1800 00 the little. Ili utterly wrong. The Boers prepruing for this war yeans. They have import) after cargo of arms, am cannon, guns they have p up in magazines to have hand when the time was strike, and they have had i ity to build a fort in the ire of our beautiful Johe to raze the city at pleasu haps you will 11018 seo 1111 that knows the actual sin fairs Can SYMPULili80 W:i 111 ' - w 1 .1. laugh 1 en I hear of 1 Denmark sentimentally 01 of Boer piety all of Psalms, etc. Ono nil and far after such sys 1111C0115010119 hypocrisy. TI: " certainly come when Ete thank England for her South Africa." ••••••".........., LESSON Ili THIRD GUA/111e:DI NATIONAle SERIES, AU 14, and Hope for the Disappointments of Text er ine Leseeni Gen. Ilia leeti, Manual. Verece, ie, is-aeiden wext, nem, vi, ne-Commeniary reeparea by the Itev, p. 1411, stenenra ..... . ..... e n ne ay. ee.ifil le eer Introduetlee '. lio the great enemy of God and run, that old OrPent, the devil and eaten (Rey. xii, 9; ex, 2), the priuee ef thie wined, the Prince et the Pewee of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of die- °Ialdien° (Jahn iv.' 3C4 13°1' il' 2)* Ila would come between God and man, he `v ould break up their folloevehip and roe men of his inheritatme, and 0 do thie he comes in the guiee of a friend, using the wisest and perhaps the fairest of all the beasts of the field as bis medium, foe it is eyident frem verse 14 that' it •was something new, ana the result of the curse, for the eament to go upon his belly d • t d t le. thl li t . t Itor, an La les . tom s e ap ei o el, easixd'n'QutsneeQytiltetedlaeTiiiiiteld 'clnota Vntitilre Lime 511015e= to 9111 him in in the it and later In the(' lace 1 0/ red for hiPm-the lake of fire. WeP04010Qtaught to resist him to give him no place, to stand ageif nst him (I Pet. v, 8, 9; Eph. iv, 97. vi, 11), but we cannot well do this ir W3 are ignorant of his devices. • 'Therefore we nee here and elsewhere made an- quainted with him aud his ways' that; WO Luay recognize hill and resist hire and overcome hen with tho shield of faith and the sword or the Spirit even as our Lord Himself did in the wildernees. In bis first recorded utterance, "Yea bath God said?" we see that he questions the word of God, and when any one from that day to this questians the word of God he is for the time being in the service of the devil. Ho questions tho love of Cod, suggesting to the woman that le God loved them He woula not keep from them even the fruit of one tree, me. In the comet= of and listening to the adversary the woman quickly bd- :onies deceived and blinded and lel astray. She adds to the word of Ged verse 3) mid actuallY seems to think that her evil counselor is riget and God is wrong, and she desires the fruit, which now seems to her so pleasant and she took It and ate it and gave it also to her us and, an e ole it. us y one h b d h' Th b • man sm entered into the world, Rile death by sin and by the disobedience of Incme many w made seaters mere, v, 12, 19). Their fellowship with God was broken, they were afraid of Him and sought to hide from Him, they lost their glorious garments of light and made for themselves as a substitute aprons of fig leaves. As to their being clothed with light, they were made in the image of God, and Ps. en', 2, says that God covers 'Diesel r with light es with a garment. • This does not conflict with Gen. 11, 25, for as to putting 00 clothes they were naked. How seemingly small, but how great and farreachina, iitheir sin, effect- ingoaolil man,l,r4d, for '1 Adam all die" 1 : ( 0. "aux(r'the Lord God called unto Ad- in and said unto 'him Where art thou," 1712he first recorded q'uestion of God 'in Seri ture shoevs Han to us seeking thepower . losrPthat He may forgive and restore them. It was evidently His custom to ;walk and talk familiarly with Adam and Eve in Eden, but a change came over man because of sln, and we have the sad and sorrowful sight or the creature seek- Mg to hide from his loving Creator. Man's sin only makes more manifest the love and loveliness of God, and we see Ilim who afterward came to earth as God manifest in the flesh to seek mud save the lost (for every manifestation of Geri is through His Son, John i, 18), lov- ingly seeking His erring ones. He is still doing this, and His,question to each one still is, Where art thou? Happy are those who can gratefully reply, In Christ, redeemed by His precious blood. 10-19. The man, the woman and the serpent each are brought before Him, and He pronounces judgment upon the serpent, the woman and the man, but in His word to the serpent He tells of a coming deliverer. In this Terse (15) we v have the new birth (enmity with the dev- lit the conflict between the unrighteous and the righteous (thy seed and her seed), Cm humanity of the Saviour (the seed 08 the Woman). His sufferings (thou shalt bruise His heel), Ells. divinity and glo- rims victory (He shall bruise thy head) -at least a fivefold abundant statement ef the great redemption. In the sentence upon Adam the earth is included, and thorns and thistles grow. as a result. of the curse. Thus the creation was made subject to vanity not evilliagly; it had no voice nor choice in the matter, and it shall yet be delivered and made to re- joie° in the liberty of the glory of the children of God (Rom. vile 20, 21), for our Lord wore a crown of thorus, and the curse shall in due time be removed from the earth (Rev. exit, 8). As a re- sult of the work of Christ the whole earth shall yet be filled with righteous - bees and peace and the glory of the Lord (Num. itiv, 21; Ise. xi, 0; Hale 5,14; Isa. xii 1 17). If we would see and entre xx- , , this glory, we must be able to say from the heart at least the first four clauses of Ism Ix!, 10, and we cannot do this unless we see the significance of verse 21 of this Gen. ili and profit by it. See then the Lord God evith His own band, by the shedding of the blood of the sacrifice, providing redemption clothing for Adam and Fre typical of the gartnents of sal - - ' . ration which He has provided for us by Iris great sacrifice, taking oar place and dying in our stead. Adam and Eve, with their fig leaf aprons, represent all sie- nem in their sins, having nothing but their own morality, if any, or fancied righteousness, which if they cling to are like those In Rom. x, 8. The Lord God Himself without any help 1 rom mortals provides the righteousness Ire demaads and etters it freely to all who are willing to drop their fie Jane aprons (Rom. iii, 24; viii, It li 4/. Ilden was Preserved after man was theme froth it, and we have every reason to believe that It con- . tieuee till the deluge. ,Thea flaming sword pointe oil to Zed eill.7 et: , ,,,,. ....... ...,Fi ...0 Paisilte, Whore thrt.tavord was Battened ella the Way Opened to enter paradise. The theritlam tell of the 8011100 glory of e e hole earth thrin he le/0MA when thw he an Eden, flee their song in Rev. V, 0,b 12' Billee Mein wee driven freln Eden ne 0110 Ilne bean born in Eden, and the Only Way Into It lo bY Ulm °genet whom ' tor lo we have he nand na eke, Iii chap , 1110 two tionglos set forth ie Crau anta leheleemante 'we1 of sell righteousnese ilteehm whet he cells be beet and lli COO) Vey el patting away Sill 11 WW1" Mae Which latter wey Abel accepted (Ileh,b1.' 221 ti. 41, Washington Sayre pretteh)d from the criaPell- the goldsmith, and with the hemmer, the envie"- Isntah In factories re piece frora hand to room to room, and smite it, and en- le, and another another will polish be done. And so the idols of being inane, para of part of them by Carpentry collies in, in, and three or meebaniein are on.- cerponter anomie- and he that the hemmer, hill) anvil,'" When they over their work, each other on With bad kind of busi- Idols Malan was Lora of heaven. 1 men in bad work can ought not men artisanship and to spool, cheer. Men see in and trials, no hardships or else's occupation. is the heee test, task is the hard- speak of SOM0 of and then of- that you will feel There are out to their work o'clock in the morn- at night as fresh They turn the shuttle or the wall, and theyworking and whistling. I have no- the factory bell tapsee the hard-evorking his arm into his starts for home. He the family circle re- himself agreeable. ta culture and educa- but in five min- asleep. He is fag- of body, mind, and He rises in half rested frora he will never hav-e in this world until narrow spot which rest for the lm- world. I think grave! Has toil -- of your cheek? Has from your it subtracted the step and the lustre it has left only you were when you hand on the hammer the wheel? To- Place oi teili lie- hear a voice above and the groan the Wetter of the not of machinery but the voice God, as he me, all ye who heavy laden, and I men and women of work wilt soon be you not heard that holiday coming? and no long walk to that bread and no to earn 111 wells of eternal rap- bucket to dnELW morning voti would •,if head on this pile the down from the promises, There all people of God. many tired People house today? .A than that. Two who are tired, tired tired in hand and heart. Ahl there two thousand tired supposing all the and in ease. If in this world commiseration, it is of our great cit- have sewing ma- is gone." No, re great many woe . themselves out amid the sewing machine. all who toil with the sewing machine, tlon On those un of life. trial is privation of There are me -MI hey° their beautiful have their fino ward- all the best fruitsIng earth brought eo have thole elegant- they are the excep- • many of the working are living in struggling timid living in neighbor- do not want to they have to live. I anything much more to hove a taste for sculpture and 3/111Sin and the expanse and yet not be able for the oratorio, or to bey one's to look at the at the bright heave are men in groat mound them all in art, theniselVes the") ;routnidm, books by the sgertre sent to them by is gln,d to get the out of his (studio- of fine net to get art and to rat. warythag that sone, them are mule eitudes of refined, who aro born in the kingdom who are denied every sweet song instrument. persons by telling and behoicl the has reserved for Babylou had was famous in have a hanging that All the They belong whet belongs to to you. But I have no upon the hardships those wit° toil I cannot even that so often porLioned to the that you are the whims of mention those on to offer you Man encouragements, encouragement greatest safeguards plenty to do. the lew of their the police detectives Not amid the among those "oveialls," but stand with their kets around the restos:slants and employment is sureties for a There are but characters stalwart dere consecutive coura,ged by shop)), your rising vile are fortresses hide, and from against the temptations ill°011109, noon. week days, thank do ' Another encouretruen that their faraill the very best opment and usefulness. sound_ strange dren of fortune out poorly. In the lad ends ensuing, by twelve finds ont there toil, and he makes a life without sipation or into are thousands of men in our toiling on, denying luxuries year tater grasping and To get enough children. The getting the property long will it take of it, not having prudent habits? years to undo You see the sons going out Into nerveless, dyspeptic, corrigible and of the porter learns his trade, sical constitution, moral culture, front rank of church never had any awhile Goa grte-e usefulness and for their persistence. then, that though poor surroundings for tho education they are actually ter advantages a fortune to e , tutu privation them but an 8011 of every man het hts of intellectual g he will keep busy. Again e offer tint you have of gaining information. People who toil in the morning night, who know tomy than the who know more 11101) the old joice that you information spread d that seaed and home, by the look over all scending morn Ono more tosis in this world to be a discibline be pre ared for bring you glad and tell you that , ter of Nazareth, Christ. You your heart, 0 can sing on t he the storm, and the shoving of in the 011 ne amid crow -bar dboard , an climbing the ratlines. to the Lord count the drops brow. Ho knows every pain you worldly occupations. weary, he will vou sick, he Aro you cold, you the WEin111 • love, And beside you must remember only preparatory, multitude before And the angels these so near answer came which crime out time and had made white Lela." _.--4. SAGE ADVICE OF A FATHER. — . Counsel That All Young Nen Should Heed. "My son," said the fond but wise parent, "you are leaving me to go out into the world. I have nothing. give you but it v ca. eve'. e to ' b d i la • t 1 1 In If 3,011 WIS11 '10 P111 0110 ill eir- a l' ' - - • eulation, get it published. A lielong cannot live, but it takes one a blamed long time to fade out of print. "Always read your contract. A man might consider in was getting sinecure if he wore otTered a posi- tion picking blossoms MT a century plant, but, you See, he wouldn't have a remunerative occupation if he were paid on piece work. . "Be not overcritical. Even the most ordinary sort of il. genius can tell when the other fellow is making a fool of himself. "Remember that the young man like the angler's 1801111, is rather bet- ter for being visibly alive "Ba careful in the choice of your surroundings. Environment will do a great deal for a man. For ex- emple, flour and water in a chino. jug is cream sauce; in a pail on the sidewalk it is billsticker's paste. .Ton,t, forget that there's a time for everything and that everything should be done la its proper time. Never hunt for bargains in umbrellas 00 a rainy day. "You may make enemies. If you y aro don't mention know who the- 11 in i nc is goldan; i 1, c . S le e g on, 1 saves the Money that might otherwise be spent ia defending a libel suit. If you don't know who they are -well 1 ' abuse lavished on a concealed enemy - a charity indiscriminately be- is Mr ' ' stowed, It's a ood. thingg wasted. e BRITISH ARMY SUIIG The anomaly in the laws land which prevented col goons rom obtaining positi British army end navy, is be remedied. At the su sion • f cll s of the Genes al 3 e cc 01)0001 in London, Sir WE ne, the president, referred matter. 11e 1)011 that as i the important services 11 the empire by the colonies South African 11011' it wns t e Zisrs' e the ins o'climent mn.Qvof eolonia.P1 surge( sitioin% in the army Se 1 .. ' i goons of h gh etand lig is had applied to the Was: their servicee could not be '' • because the Medical Act ol not norinit a surgeon 01 -- . - , qealifications to attend 1 troops in professional General Laurie has intro& tho British House of C bill to remove this clualific OUT Ot' IIIS SALA The Presideet of the Uni who receives a salary of year, must pay for all the slimed at the Waite Hoes expenses of getting up an Stele dinner are not mai and wines the President I they must be the best. 3 maintain his nwn erplie Government., howcVer, all+ araea also a clerk, who or • lettels. All other peesont must be engagea by the i 'sir ss of the "White I-ToU 111 ea WARR/AGE LAWC.1. -- Blessed Is the bride on whom the suu Shines. Never road the marriage service en airelY over. A bride should use no pins in her Wedding clothes There is an old superstition agnenst May 1110Vniagos, December 81 is a frevoriLe wedding day in Scotland. A bride muse wear nothing green- flint color is emblematic of evil. To change the name and not the an letter fa change for worse and not for hater. 'In YOrkshire the Cook used to peur „ hoL water over the doorstep alto le had gone to 1 the camp man the threshold warm for onother bride, • — i THE MOST EXPENSIa Probably the most expo enown is that which the ArglianisLaa has promise Shah of Persia. It is a ' copy of the Xoran, the bi SO , in. lie a 1, lidgold, eia ti . 1 • le wheal are the work of goldsmith, are incrusted 010us 0011es-167 nearer- ' and 109 dInexcnele ai Water• WORTHY. And did yOu find the Chinese a brava nation? We asked of the re- turned soldier. Indeed, he replied, casting a side- Jong glance at the 180.90111)11 of loot whieli was being unloaded, they Were loan= Worthy of our steal, +nod Of a hundred Irish peoPle 24 ore nmerted., 59 unmarried, and 7 Wid- dowel.,• ST, Is Views gt paper a, Danish and Intl-, Lo Peers. extrante Uitlancler eat long eal condi- ream of Then sve freedom, ralsowor- as, first ont into poverty 3' pay the President energetic tter, put nbounded rased the affluenee. o single ny makes There are • 1011 eo ncl them "0 is so so unre- ranseetal e a mon- stry, and of Com the Gov - 0,5 5011011" os up to tines aro nd greed hindrance or. For well as • officials anything sires any quire CE; pay one's le Trans- istration a difilcul- sale of ted from merit did of their a reform nders a tion and. methods •an. They g 0111 of and our dated in tizenship, wished to pondence. that the of the your of ome rule, • acknowl- d alone ul civiliz- e is no e to her. his magic • up-thoy then we on the ry declare t this is have been for many d cargo munition, iled them them at ready to he brutal - very can- nnesburg, eel Per- t no ono to of at - he Boers, eople in oved with 1 singing st search emetic or 10 day will eme will work 11. ONS. of Eng- onial sure ons in the about to 01. SOS" .1 Council, 11001 Tur- to this result of ndered to , in the high time to the eel - ns to po- Meal sure Canada office but recopied, 1858 ltd • colonial o British 08.91101 1)'. iced into 1111110115 011011, 11Y. tan States $50,000 a food con- ; and the • elaborate 1. Cigars uys„ and has to age. TI10 WS him a . one all his 1 servants aster rend so, 111 11001t, lsive book Aincer of 1 to the ennumeript uling is of carvings, en Afghan with lire - 92 rubies, the pueest