The Brussels Post, 1902-7-17, Page 6.11,1111,1111.4401111114R11.4.sv,mr,
IIIF NATIONAL HOLIDAY
The Nation is Blessed That is True
to Those Who Are Weak.
(1otoro0 wordlist to IQ 01 on rortIonont or
on0,,do. In 0020 yew gee Tb0000nd Mee
oat End Two, erWflflo Bony, ot Toronto, it
thortoporitsont 4,sanseatuce, enema)
A despatch from Chicago says;
Rove Frank Do Witt Talmage preach-
ed from the following texts Mat-
thew 33, "The field is the
world "
lalvery country has an annnal
' It haS a birthday celebration INTERNATIONAL STRUGGLE,
For banqueLs, fireworks, motorize' He pietureel that evone in the dint
PYrotachnIcs, and for the aronsement future. Ile arrayed every EttroPeall
oe patriotic enthusiasm. But there nation upon one or the other side
lo an unwise as well as a wise way of tho combat. line the night, •before
of celebrating the modera holiday.
The first way is to glorify the past.
The other way is to take a national
reerospect for the purpose of rousing armies. This \ Rotor would stop
our ambitions t go head and win long enough to pin upon mow sol -
the further victories that must be tiler's breast a sign. And when the
won in order to fulfill the missions two e•ost armies would next day pre -
and if any minister tries the latter pm.° for battle and life command.
way hu cannot take in the full sweep would be given to the troops to
of our future influence and wawa un- fire, not a rifle would !lash, not a
loos he discusses them from a world- sword would be unslieothed, not a
wide standpoint. Ile must, attune cannon would speak, because the
his sermon to a world's theme, as sign pinned upon every soldier's
Phillips Brooks, the most beloved 'tenet would be the sign of the cross.
man or Now 'Malawi in has day, Tho plethre drawn by thet imagine -
keyed his ministry to an interoa- tive writer oloy be accepted as a,
tional tone when from a European truthful (me except in two or three
city he sent to a friend at home 0. facts. Ile describes that day as if
letter which read something like In the dim future. I believe the clay
this: "Dear llarry—I wish you is now almost at hand. Again, the
might du as I do every year, 1 wish writer describes the peacemaker who
you would annually spend two will (Much the emblem of 1 he cross
months abroad in trove". such a to the breaSt of the commen soldier
vacation eeaches you tho lunitensity res rt man. I believe that peacemak-
er eiod's providamece and how small
.ere the circumscriptions of our own
individual liveancl how small eVen
the Episcopalian church appeal's to
ee when it is focused from across
the seas." , shall decree that War, bloody, fiend -
Emphatically the most important fish, demoniacal war, shall be no
of all future missions is the. spread- imager : that, war shall forever be aS
Uig of the gospel until it ehall "be Mud as the multitudes or dead sol -
preached in all the world for a diers, whose bodies are now decom-
aess unto all nations." Tho Bible posing in the grave trenches all
Sow not state that the millennial
day BOUND TIE'S WORLD.
SITALL COME CIRADUALLY,
as the sum•iee first tips the eastern
Mils with 1131M, making it appear ao
though the underbrush upon the tops
of the mountains had been set afire
by some careless campers. It does
aot state that the millennial day
shall come as when the dawn in the
beginuing shoots its long, slender
bars of yellow gold across the hea- very existence, when a collection of
yens. It does not. state that the ex -slaves are following their leader
glory of the Lord shall cover the throngli the weary journey of a
ectrth as the waters cover the sea, forty sem tramp through the wilder -
as the flood tide gradually creeps up ness, it is not so difficult for them
the beach. But the Bible does
teach that when the gospel of Jesus
Christ shall be proclaimed in every
town, village and city of every na-
tion; when it shall be proclaimed (Memo comes. they have an especial
the mountain log hut and in the grace given to them. It is dillicelt
ship's cabin; when it shall be pro- to be true to God when the mighty
claimed under the shadow of every fortresses have been builded at tha
legislative hall and by the camp mouth of every harbor to keep out as a sceious check on the normal de-
file! of every heathen tribe; when it the foreign roe and when the rattle i velopment of Canadian trade from
thall be proclaimed in all the world of the factory nod the whistle of the Crumdian ports.
for a witness unto all nations, then steam engine, end the blow of the ' JEALOUSY AND FEA1.
shall the end come. Then the mal- hammer and the rasp of the saw are
!modal day shall be flooded with all playing an accompaniment to
light, even. as a darkened hall' tho tune of a national financial sue-
Instantle- illuminated when the cess, it is difficult for a people to
many different electric lights flash pray to a simernatural being, "0,
out, at the touch of a, single but- God, give us this day our daily
ton. Then the millennial day elmal broad," when the granaries are full
be full of brilliancy, as the black- of wheat and corn and the bank
tiess of midnight was changed. into , vaults are a -Choke with solid gold
the brightness of midnoon when God. and the smen years of plenty have
spoke at the morning or creation crowded out or tho public mind the
the four simple words, "Let there be fact that there over could come seven
light," and there was light. The yeaes of abject and tuirelieved want.
millennial day shall come as sod- I selected this tmet, "The field is
denly as the tongues of fire leitp- the world," for two reasons—first,
cd out of the heavens when the Holy because the five words spoken by
Spirit hovered over the heads of the Jesus Christ to his disciples exactly
praying, Pleading, exultant Polite- convey the idea of the worldwide
costal worshipers. sa•eep of our uturc influence in the
How the different religious clenom- evangelization of the two heinis-
Mations are able to work sido by
side in America, for the scattering of
the gospel seed may be illustrated by
an incident in the life oi George
Whitefielcl. One day the great evan-
gelist stopped dramatically in his
sermon and, looking up as though
addressing the theme of the Al-
mighty, cried out in interrogation,
"0, Lord, are there any Presbyteri-
ans in heavent" "No," came back
the answer. "0, Lord, Etre there
any Episcopal ions in heaven?"
"No," again came the answer. "0,
Lord, are there any Methodists in
heaven?" "No," "Who them are
the denieens of the skies?" "Chris-
tians one. Christians all." So in
the scattering of the gospel seed by
the nation there atre
NO RELIGIOUS SECTS.
In the sight of the Government
there are only Christians. The Cal-
virdsts and the Armenians, tho close
communichnts and tho Congrega-
tionalists, the Protestants and the
Catholics, am work side by side
because these different religious de-
nominaLions bellow) in the atone -
Inca. They can ELnd should scatter
the gosPol seed unto all nations,
The second mission i9 emphaticale
ly the establishment of an interne-
Becogoizing the fact Cott inaey
people aim loolciug forward to the
time when war shall forever be
abolished, an imaginative writer
once described bow the blessed con-
dition Was to he occompilelied. Ile
declared Out the time weuld come
when all Europe would bu convulsed
by a great.
the great battle wa9; to open an
onkel in human shape would Le go-
ing through the camps of the two.
TWO SHOTS A SECOND,
NeW Antolnatio Pistol Patna' Rro.
deuced in .-Slelglan^1.
A, new automatic pistol 18 being
momufaetureci in England hy the
Mars Automatic Eire Arms Syndie
mete, It is made of three differeot
sizes, 0,885, 0.80 and 0.45 inch. Tho
magateino Is contained in the handle
or the different, models carry-
ing, from eight to eleven careridges.
The weight, of the pistol is 2 pounds
10 (mimeo. Tho utechanism is pe-
culiar in that the Meech rentable
closed until the bullet has left tho
barrel, eo tho.t there ice ao ellailee of
the eartiadge bursting by its being
withdrawn while there is still pees -
sum in the bore, consequently this
pistol can fire veto, heaay bullet
with a lat•go charg,e. The weight of
the Mars bullet is 22,0 grains, the
charge 14 grains of ma'am the
oilmen" velocite• 1 ,250 foot FM:mils
(nearly (10111de that of the Colt re-
volver) and the muzzle energy 760
foot pounds (nearly three times that
of tho service revolver).
An expert can fire twenty-four
shots in ten seconds, and in ncour-
acy It is stated that when fired from
a rest at 1,000 yards ',wage it will
keep all its shots on a four -foot
swim* targ•et, wbile its pepetration
is 16 inches of pine, against (ho
Mouser pistol's ten, and the Colt's
eight.
IT WILL BEI1EFIT OANADA
MORGAN'S MERGING WILL DO
US GOOD.
The Opinion of a Former U. S.
Deep Waterways Commis-
sioner.
George Y. 'Visitor, formerly of the
United States Deep Waterways Coni -
(21' pia a sign of mmeeeseel troit from a trip taken from Mont-
er will not be a man, but a nat1on a mission, has just returned to Bo-
real to the mooth of the St, Law -
peace upon every European potion
interamtional arbitration. This sign by the means of a supreme rourt of retire River at the invitation of a
ghlroeanttrea
sitettutsnsshiip1ort cooluncinatyuslng
.y.
Thio
purpose ot the trip was to enable
Mr. 'Wisner to advise the company
as to whether the ship channel from
Montreal to the Gulf could be quick-
ly, easily, and cheaply hoorayed, so
ne to be rendered far more safe and
convenient than at present. There
was no attempt to make an occur -
But perhaps the greatest mission
next to scattering the gospel of Jesus; ate servey of the route—just a. ste-
Perficial examination. Mr. Wisner
Christ is to prove that a PeoPle eani
be true to Cod. in its days of pros- WaS, however, sattiefied that for a
perity as well iu its days of ad- KIM of money that would look tri -
versify. When a people are poor, vial to the interests involved, the
weak and helpless, when a troubled Lower St. Lawrence can be ino,de
and bleeding and suffering people are into a very convenient and safe
struggliea Inc liberty and for their highway of coxranerce.
"At present the underwriters dis-
criminate greatly apiinst vessels
using the St. Lawrence," said he.
'"rhe English veseelmen believe a
large part of this discrimination is
to pray and worship God, but is due to the Morgan influence, and is
difficult for a people to be true to; not based on a, real difference in
God unless when riches come and 1 risk. They believe it woman -Ls to
prosperity comes and unliinited in- an effort which is fairly Eaucemasful at
presentto place a. premium on. ship-
ments from America, via New York
and other Atlantic ports of the
United States. They think it works
"This jealousy and fear of Morgan
is having a great influence upon Eng-
lish and Canadian veseelmen. It is
spurring the shipping interests out-
side of the Morgan syndicate's con-
trol to combine, and it is going to
redound to the benefit of Canada
without any doubt.
'It is rumored about kfontreal
that there will be a great stenenship
merger in opposition to the Morgan
syndicate, to include the Collard,
Allan, and other lines, in all con-
trolling about double tho number of
vessels now included 111 the Morgan
yuclicate. Montreal as 0, port will
become \gistly rnoro important be-
cause of the Engligh influence in the
new syndicate. While there is un-
doubtedly more risk in river uaviga-
pheres. A Christian nation has no ,tion than in open waters of the
ocean, this risk will be reduced to a
minimum by the work likely to be
authorized by the Canadian Gov-
ernment. The present charmol be-
tween 'Montreal curd Quellec is 27a
feel deep and 300 .feet, wide, marked
only by buoys and navigable only
in daylight. The channel is to be en-
larged to a evidth of 500 feet, and
to a depth. of :31 feet, making Mont-
real a Rill tidewater harbor, accessi-
ble to the largest ocean vessels. The
channel will also be lighted with
g•as-buoys so as to be nitvigeible 01
oily time, day or night.
more right to close its doors and
live for itself and let the rest of the
people of the world suffer and die
than an individual has the right to
lock and bar the doors of Ids own
horae and let his neighbors be min--
dered in cold blood or allow his
neighbors to maltreat their own
children. As' Cain was his brother's
keeper, so is every ChrisLian nation
morally responsible for the educa-
tion of
EVERY OTHER NATION.
But the second Leeson why sel-
ected this text is because ie envoys
has had an intense personal interest
to me. This wits the first text
which lily father as a theological
student ever preached upoe. When
ney father 19118 a•ottog luau at. New
Brunswick seminary; he went to vis-
it, my uncle, who Was then a pastor
opope ooe• eseg am I
7. FOR THE H E
9
0
O Reellies kir the Kitchell,. ID
• flyglezle and Other Noes &
• for the Housekeeper. •
11
0041tDdia0001049000160809060
What Slakes Et 1101210.
A house is built of bricks and stones, of
sine encl posts mad piers;
Ilut 1/0100 is of loving deeds that
etand a thousand yeare.
A. house, though but an humble cot,
within its walls may hold
A. home of priceless heatity, rich hl
Love's eternal gold.
The men of earth build hoeses—lialls
and chambers, roofs aud domoe—
But the women of the earth—God
knowsl—the women build the
homee.
Eve could not stray froill raraillSO, rev
oh, no matter whore
Uor gincious presence IR the way, lol
Paradise wits there.
A Di:minced Garment,
11 10 interesting to note that shawls
as articles of adornment and habitual
costume have completely passed out of
vogne. Shawls of white, feathery va-
riety are used semi-oreasionally yet, it is
Due, but only away from the fashion
centres. Shewls have entirely lost their
place in the temple of fashion.
The reason for the paseing of this'
"8027' es:eential garmeut of grandmother's
day is that it is a piece of dry goods
winch is not good for trade. The style
originators 111 Paris, the great dressmak-
ers of the world, tabooed the shawl be-
cause it is ready for use as soon 11,0 jt
eaveS the loom. So far as London,
Paris and New York are concerned, the
0111111021 10021)0 of India iniaht as well stand
This sante garmene, however, has an
interesting history. In bygone days
Lyons, Paisley and Norwich makers
bought; large stocks or Kashmir shawls
for the sole purpose of imitating their
'Minty fabric and delicate patterns,
which thee- did so skilfully that the imi-
tations became very popular, A. good
black Caree from France, oi• a crinmon
Peisley was something which any' lady
night evear, and although not the real
thing, served the purpose, for it was
leeorative, eoinpliant and adjustable to
ill needs.
.A shawl proper, whether worn by man
or woman, was even in the East an at•-
tiele of distinction, something to be
•anked with the robe of honor bestowed
iv the Indian nabobs, or the yellow
:ftekets of Chinese Mandarins. It stood
mon its own dignity, mid whether it ling water, starmg at intervals till
sheltered the heed end shoulders of a 1 warty mild. Squeeze in the juice of an
beauty, or was nobly girded about the orange and atrain for use. •
waist of a, eourtier, or merchant, a
shawl was something by which you Vienna Rolls.
could judge the wearer. Nu tipper gar- Sift two or three tunes one quart of
tnent better suited a comely countenance flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow -
and well -shaped neck and bust, nor Vivi der, and one-half teaspoonful' of salt,
any girdle of leather or silk or quilted
work as comfortable and convenient as elm pint of milk, stirring into a dough
Work in one tablespoonful of butter, add
the twisted Kashmir elbowl. whose soft- of the osual consistency. Roll to the
ness caressed the body while it protect-
ed it.
Where least—ing Alan Health,
let.ttle teen he still, and the goods must
rail evenly ell the floor en to a oleos),
eIettl 85 preeeed,
loimeanr—'10 Mentonadea
1Bsott,1,,ittle, gsestdhers fpolisl 50111 inwitttatustte.,5 orp: tclitips
add the juke a four lamella Mid one
freshly -grated pineepple. this 0°01;
then strain carefully and add about e
quart 03 100 water.
Layer Cone Without Boiler.
Beat two eggs, add two cupfuls of
powdered sugar and beat lead for fifteen
minutes • add ono cupful of milk and
Iwo ' oupiuls of notes, ttlternatiog little
01- oaoli anti lieatiog teen Lostly, add
one teaspoonful of flavoring and three
level teaspoonfule of balcum powder,
beat, and bake in jelly this,
Preit Punch.
Tai one cup each of water and straw-
berry juice, the juice of two °mimes and
two lemons 0.011 (me aup of grated pine-
ellPle, add one cop of sugar and let it
et for half an hour; then add olio
pint of Apollinaris water, half a cup of
brandied cherriee, and a few sprigs of quoted ll'omeDeut. vi, 4, 5, and Lev.
inlet mid serve from a punch bowl into xix, 18, for He honored Lho Whole
of the law, the prophets and the
glasses of cracked ice.
- Psalms (Luke xxlv, 27, 44), never
, in any way discounting the least
-.---..
p9rtion, How very unlike Ulm in
Chicken Pie.
1.1 is respect; are some wise people of
Melt a little butter in it deep baking,
our day who profess to
dish ; scatter over it cracker crumbs,
lowers I See in eonneetion
be Ills fel-
wi tb this
add a layer of. chleken, picked floe, then
a layer of oysters; salt aud ppper mid
111 111 coma] andmen L Prov. i, 8, and
bits of butter, then a layer of cracker
(crumbs ; alternate evitit the ebielcen and tniotstmiht.statat sitoinnialli.idvinterillt, "\i„tititsi .3atirlollencl_
oysters until the dish is full, adding s
The promise had doubtless a
soning with ea2e11 layer. Pour over the iso.
whole the oyster liquor, to whiell add a sT).?tetal„1;ef"reoe to Isroel.
well -beaten egg and a teachipful of milk. .. 11•7•0,i'i.on)",,,siih,saletsnisoitssiictiticlt.ry sh this
13ake on hoar. In Slott • °I `'"l
, ,„ - , ....., lie teaches that
—
anger lies at Ilte root of murder,
' Stemmed Prune Pielliling.
and in 1 John lit, 15, it is writ -
The following, is a California recipe, ,
ion, "Whosoever hateth his brother
Beat the yolks of two eggs with a nalf is th, marcisi,01,,„ reraiThig tack
cupful of tamer until light, add a table- to
the stoi•y of 00111 and Abel. In the
spoonful of softened butter and a ,gill of
80.1110 ne-Telno"1 1'1°1: ,iviielis;edwiogItlter and
dthaint
milk. 8ift. together one enpful et ii)10011,1ir.
with One tablespoonful of baking
Julin viii, 44, our Lord safel time he
der, and stir it into tho mixture. Add
was a inurdeicr from the beg•Inning,
next the well -beaten whites of the eggs
a liar and the father of it. Not
and one cupful of prtmes that have been
only aro 1190 forbidden to hate any
soaked over night, drained and the
101th ft one, but we are forbidden to speak
stones renlOred. Cillep them,
spoon. Steam the mixture for two evil of any ono (Jas. iv, 31; Elph.
iv, 81: I Pet. 11, 1), In. Zech. vii,
hours.
30; viii, 17, we are forbidden even
0„-imeo /min/0 to imagine evil in our hearts against.
--...
This oatmeal drink is a most refresh- a brother or a neighbor.
14. Thou shalt not commit adul-
ing beverage for thirsty chilareu, and ,
has the edvantage of being very ince- 'anY.
That thia sin inay„ be nominated
pensive. Into an earthenware saucepan
pot two ounces of fresh oatmeal, 1;
wo by a look as well as by an act our
Lord taught in Matt. v, 27-32,
ounces of loaf sugar and a thinly -sliced
where Ho also
lemon. Mix this with just enough cold giveo further instruc-
That love will
tion concerning ite
water to dissolve the ingredients, and
while stirring add half a gallon of boil- conquer it is seen in Rom, xiii, 10—
"Love worketh no ill to his, neigh-
bor, therefore love is the fulfilling of
the law." Clod counted Israel guil-
ty of this sin when they worship-
ed idols, the works of meo's Mulcts
(Jr. iii, D), and by tho Spirit
through James He tells us that if
we are in. friendsbip with the world
we are in Ilis sight guilty of this
sin (Jas. iv) 6). It seems to 803310
moral people Impossible that any-
thing, so Vile ai this aim could ever
THE S. S. LESSON,
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
JIILX 20.
Text of the Lesson, Ex, eoe,, ige
17, Golden Tent, Katt. xix., 19,
12. 1191loa• thy father and thy
Mother Shot thy days may be loog
upon tho land wilich the Lord thy
ried givetta thee,
The Ton Conmianchnents, or ten
words, as they axe sometimes called,
are summed 110 by our Lord in
Mark xil, 139-81, 01 these -Verde:
"Beal% 0 larael; the leorel our Clod
Is one Lord, and thou ,shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with 1111 thy eoul, end with all
thy mind, and with all thy stveneth.
This ia the Seat commandment, told
the eaecond Is HIce—namely this:
Thou ehale love thy neighbor as thy-
self. There is tome other command-
ment. greater than these," Jle thus
GOOD FOR MONTREAL.
"This is just what is needad to
equip' Montreal as a transfer point
between lake and ocean traffic as it
will be on the completion of the
deep waterway' between Montreal and
Georgian Bay via the Ottawa, Met -
in Easthampton, N.Y. Tio went to teeva and French Rivers through
where the great L,yman Beecher, the •-r he Cialtaclian ParliaMent will
visit in Use same old parsonage Itake Nipiesing,
fa ther of Rainey Ward Beecher, oval I undoubtedly take action in the mat -
to live, and where many of the fain-' ter of tho Ottawa River route at its
ous brothers and sisters of :Henry !next session. The old charter 01
Ward Beecher Were Dorn. A tot while , the ?mummy expired ill May, and it
my father was visiting his brother-
"The practice of fasting," said a niedi-
ad man who adopts it, "is, when wise -
13, rollowed, most beneficial. I
am convinced that many people
never feel the sensation of na-
tural hunger. All they have is a neer.
bid craving for food, which comes of
habit rather than from any actual need
felt by the stomach. Natural hunger
stimulates the palate, and. is felt in the
mouth am well as in the internal organs.
It makes the plainest food seem do
lieious, and, when being satisfied, is a
source of such enjoyment as the av•
erage well-fed mon has no eonee.ption
of. Some suffer, it is true, from oast&
fleient food, but not so many as those
w hose ills arise from over -nutrition,
their digestions being continually over-
strained. A habit of judicious fasting
would do wonders for them. The sys-
tem would recover its lost tone, and
tin the ease of mental workers), tho
brain evoold work with an 01118 and
lightness thee; would surprise them, 10e
from the practiee of over -eating.
thiekness of half an inch. Cut into cue
color forms, and. fold over once emoistei touch or come near them, but let
ening a little between the folds if neces- I them see it ELS Clod does nnd hoe -
eery to make them stick. Butter the ; estly ask as in His sight, Ain I in
baking pans well, and do not let the ' any way conformed to this present
rolls touch each other. When placed evil world, am IL in love e•ith the
thereom moisten the tops of the rolls world evhich is lying in the wicked
with a little milk, or 'butter melted in one? (Rom. xii, 1, 2; 1 John ii,
milk, and bake hi. a hot oven. 15-17; v, V.).
Put one-half a pint of water and two 15. Thou shalt not steal.
ounces of butter mto a saucepan oe•er
the fire. When boiling, add four ounces
of pastry floura' beat until smooth.
Take from the fire and when cool add
one egg; beat lanai:nixed; add another
and another, until you have ridded four
at least; beat thoroughly again. Drop
the mixture by spoonfuls in a greased
pan; bake in a moderate OVen for forty
minutes. Mien done split them on one
side; fill with. cola soft custard made
by adding a tablespoonful of cornstarch,
moistened. with cold milk, to half a pint
of hot milk; cook for a moment; add
the yolks of three eggs, beaten with
three tablespoonfuls of sugar; take from
tbe fire; add a teaspoonful of vanilla
tool out aside to cool.
Fie of blood Cheer.
The cheerful live longest in years,
and afterwards in our regards.—T3ovoe.
"If rill cannot live on the piazza, every
one may feel the son," says an Italian
proverb, Life is full of sunshine for all
who wish to absorb it, and full of 3100111
for those who take a morbid pleasure
in dwelling in the shadow's. Difficulties
and trottbles, if bravely met, make
strong men and women, but anticipat-
ing and worrying about them make
petty, weak ones.
Why can yon not take your ease anti
be merry now. If you welt until you
Camper f0211 your difficulties, the time ter
lease and merriment will rover come.
Laugh, and be glad 11010, and the
troubles which Inoin so threateningly in
the distance will vanish, as you ap-
proach them, liko soap bubbles.
, Pitt Gltbi.
The compiler of "Englieli RS Site is
Taught" introduees the followieg lum-
inous essay on girls, done apparently
by a. lad of wide observation a—
'"Girls ate very stuckup and digitated
MIS not, thought wise to bring „ii in their manner end behaveyour. They
in-law the Rev. Stephen ithershou. 1 the matter of Its renewal this i think more of dress than anything and
tional court of arbitration er) that the village minister, asked hint to, peeing, as it Would peeb„lay bo I like to play with dowls and rags. They
bloody wars in the ftittlre Shall tic preatela So he preached in the ehelved. , I cry if they, see a cow in afar distance
an impossibility. That a great in- schoolhonse them ln the village of ' "Phis rout m will offer 11100110 of 1 and are afraid of gene. They stay at
ternational cottrt of arbitration can Etistlutuipt 00 hiS first sermon. The 0(2021711113 the Tithand of the 011(
01
0-
1 home all the .thne and go, to Cthurch
• ' 1- 9 , s 13' I
be esteblished by the united action schoolhoese is now used as a, barber voloped coal nettle of Nova. Scotia, to 1 ' y . TI
. of len or twelve principal noticing of shop. 11 is not larger than the or -1 the mineral regione of Canada ly- I Tin n" 'al-WaYa f""Y. and making fa" A geed companion makes good eene
' the world is undeniable, end that dinary 51.0e11 PEtrlOr of an 0, erlige 1 ing between Montreal' and Menthol,'
a,„
i of boye hands and they et' how dirty;)
m pany.
' 1
tabliehed is also UnqUeintonahle, house the unknown theologival sto-I aeof„e well „,.., eb„, „f u;0 111,,,, 1 poor things. They make fun of boys
THE "UNION JACK."
The national flag, the flag of the
kingdom and the Empire, is—to
give it its popular name—the Union
Jac.k. There are various flags of
which. it forms only a. part, and
which are used for special purposes.
1t is a common mistake to take
these for the national flag. Among
these are, first, the White Ensign,
with the Union in its top corner
near the flagstaff tar halyard, and
the great red croes on a, white
ground—the cross that marked the
flag of England in crusading days
and in the wars of the middle ages.
This rod cross Is still the =Arid de-
vice of the 'Onion flag. The White
Ensign is the flag of our navy. In
the mune way the Tied Ensign is the
flog of our merchant marine. To
fly the White or Red Ensign 011
.holise is rather unmeaning. What
one ought to fly 15 tile Union Jack,
more correctly called the Union flag.
4 -
Spanish Proverbs.
Never quit certainty for hope.
Loiters are always in the wrolig.
The book of ildaybes Le very broad.
Who 'robs a scholar robe tile
lle'IV110 hot bat one coat canna lood
R.
such a court will be ultimately ma Pity house, In that little school-, and bringing batik the finished pro-, 1011,y11005,•
' When Ouch a court is established the dent took for his text, 11
"'". 00'1 aincee' 114:Ay beim' consCructed 01 the and then torn round and love them I
United. S.tates, England, Frame, is the world," no little rpaliven Thyse mila,s aro mit under (1011'1 .helent",e, they ever Jelled a cat .or
Spain, Aaistri Gernectuy, I tater, then that there ever wo 1 cl tome ' .the „f 0 co„ihi„0 1,01 of ren", anything, 'J'hey look otit mvery :011,8
Russia, .t alum and China will each time when his gospel field would a a a mid say oh ane the moon lovely. 1 hir
tvamm vontrot •srices, tom (hie
outlet, for them would be a decided
benent to the conl consumers on
both eitles of the line,"
'----5,'---
‚071111) 1>1 1 11 NNI N t t IS A C I 11M113.
In the city of "lot Springs, Ark.,
running 114 11118111,1110a1101111, .4n71
versant going famer than a walk le
arrested and fined. '11118 law Is in
i he in Leveed: of Myelitis, Who
throng the areal R suffer re-
frOM Ilw eXeitelllent eimeed by
the undue Mule of a lateenger. Ono
who mom is eupposed lo be it thief,
murderer, or escaped lunatic,
1")1 1 It the Better go about than fall into Ho
ditch.
Pair a flying enemy make 5. oilver
bridge,
Plough or ilot plough, yeti must pm)
your rent.
The ffieeeee a man dreads, that he dive
of.
Many go out for wool and mono tonne
(Morn.
Ile who solve bramidee must ma go
barefoot.
'When it Mem' asketh, there 3' no in
morrow',
have representatives upon that, tat- literally 00 the umrld. Ile little
Tben When. international] realized that before be died his
ariSe these iliglaulties Will printed sermons would appear every
' he pearefully settled, as the Ala- week before at least 20,000,000 read -
Munn, claims were amicably settled crs, 11, iittic realized hoW (Ind Would
before 01)0 Geneva tribunal Which as- some day bless his pen and lip. lin
sembled in 1 A7 1 , composed of tho could not foresee Me future Wi.ild-
rive reproseMatives which were fere wide power nny mine tI11111 00111(1 or
readied by the United Siattes, Great Ile co 11 foresee the' worldwide DOM-
' Britain, Italy, Switzerboul and intro that Will reeelt from oer Mos
, 211; ns tlio Vnneznein elnims were
settled before a tribunal which met
in Voris in 1900; and as the war
claims tie:Meet the Chinese Govern-
ment by the dirk:relit allied forces
110271 10201111 being amicably settled,
if We WU 1 mite help bi the dilYs
nal Moat prosperity to dedicate the
nation to the service of God.
The only animal besides man found
all over the .world 15 the dog.
is one thing 1 have uot told and that is
they al -ways torav their lessons batten
the boys 11011' thirn."
Should bo SPoogee.
You should never, in home dreeeinak-
ing, out any kind of woollen geode until
It has boon swinged, an cheap material
is often not dampened before 131 18 sold
To (10 thin properly tat 1100)e f;e1 02)1
Ironing:boar/ er Dade the while) or the
gigots and rover with tiglilleastretehed
entice, Spron (I your eloth wrong side
op, cover with a linen Moth that lots
'Mali wiling ollt 111 wRter, atul then
Prone with a hot Iron the lengthwise
oe the goods and do not Iron, Novel
.A, RENARKABil DREAM.
gAIsgr, A ll`AktrCir FROM pgv,,
3:311,Ty TO .ASELUENCE.
4. Clergyman of the CIDerols of
England Tells a Strange
Story,
The follOeving, Whieli our readers
Will Probably admit is the most 20"
p1002100,010 drearn-Stee'y they. have
(Mr heard, lo given In the eerY
words in which it Is told by the
dreamer, a clergyman ef 111311 re-
pute' in the Church of England, of
whose absolute teuthrulness there
ean be not the fainteet possibility of
suspicion, 3.1 is very doubtful wheth-
er there is on record any dream ev-
ery minute detail of widen has been
se .exacatly reprciduced in fart, er
Which has so 'dramatically openeci
the door of wealth to a .fttinily at
the lowest ebb of its fortunes.
A few. monthe ago foil asleep
and drowned. In, my dream I saw
epread before me the open pages of
a book, which a glance showsd nle
was a church -register bootee' and in
clear writing I rend the MAMIE) of
the marriage Of MattheW 11— to
Ellen 11—, 3 seemed in my dream,
as if the register were far away, al-
though T. (mold road it oo distinctly.
I felt a strong impulse to go to
the railway station. Withont know-
ing my destination, except; that ie
woe a country village. I asked for a
ticket, and was told by the clerk '
that the train in the direction I
wiehed to go had left some time
ago, but that another train was due
xne.
in half an hour, and be promised to
I felt no surprise cit. receiving the
ticket tvithout giving tho mane of
the place to evnich I wished to
travel. To my great annoyance,
however, the mon neglected .to call
nee when the train arrived, and
again I had to wait for another.
This time I was more. successful, mid
after a, journey of just under an
hour I alighted at a pretty
LITTLE COISNTRY STATION.
went to the vicarage and asked
for the Viear, but MIS informed that
ho was not at home. 1 then begged
the old servant, vino answered tho
door, to lend nie the key to the
church. At first she hesitated, • but
when I pei•sisted, Haying I WEIS. My-
self a clergyman. of the Anglican
Church, she acceded. to my request.
I easily unlocked the church door
and proceeded to the vestry. On a
shelf were a number of old register -
books, one of which I took down.
and opened. My eyes Instantly felt
on the entry I had. seen a short time
before, and then suddenly I awoke.
For thive successive) nights I
•dreamed this dream, until 1 at last
began to believe there must bo
something in it. I made a few
cautious inquiries, and, without
betraying myself, gained the infor-
mation that there netUally WEIS n
village, not an hour distant by rail,
which answered exactly to the des-
cription of the place I had seen in
mymydrsenonsed.
WEIS 110W mado up. 1
went to the station and demanded a
ticket for I w•as told that
the train had gone, but that there
would be anothcr one in half an
hour, and as it was a beautlfel day
I resolved to take a walk ; unfor-
esvehhost hteviosuolgd tscoortihietsot, taak:
my returning to the station saw the
toltatnydo tunately 3 strayed too far, and on
train just steaming out. Instantly
1 remembered that it was by the
third train that I bad travelled in
my dream.
When, two hours later, I arrived
et St—, 1 hod no difficulty in find-
ing the. way to the vicarage, and
was not at all surprised to hear
that the vicar was not at home.
Exactly as had happeoed in my
dream, the housekeeper at first de-
murred to my request for the keY,
between nian end man, 1013111 have
to plead guilty when searched by
the question, "Will a man rob
God?" Yet God had to say to Di-
rac], "Ye have robbed Me in tithes
and offerings" (Mal. 8). Inas-
much as our relation to God is the
first question and the matter of the
utmost importanee, let tho believer
ask himself, Ant robbing God of
any portion of my being or my time
or my money? He claims our body
as Ilis propet•ty (Roni. xli, 1, 2; I
Com vi, 10, 20), and at leant a. 807-
enth of our time an.d tenth of our
income.
16. Thou shalt not bear false wit-
ness against thy neighbor.
Theic are tongues that. clevire nds-
chiefs, that lotm evil more than good
and lying rather than righteousncss,
but such. do not belong in 1,110 holy
city (I's. iii, 2, 3 ; Bev. xx(i 15),
"Ito that worketh deceit shall not
dwell wilain My home ; he that
telleth lies shall not, telly in My
sight" (Ps. el, 7). False witne.eses
were among tho grievous things
which our ,Lord suffered for oni
as a matter of course, and X return -
sakes, even as it is written, "Foleol ed home armed with the certificate.
witnesses arc riSen up against Ma
But now that I had got it, what
aanado 8,1g204111 'Tpl,31.8e0a ‘1;011.11,,o"tmerrtiktiY,i'se rthI0 t1i1)0xCliostRelp.t11? it ? What was to
u...p;x:,lielynl.itirl to My charge things
that I knew not" (Ps. xxvii, 32 ;
Foolish cis it may appear, adver-
I could think or only one maltase.
Used it in one of tho daily papers,
17. Thott shalt not covet, and by return of post received an
answer from a firm or solicitors in-
forming mo that they heel vninly
searched everywhere for tho certifi-
cate, es it was of the highest im-
portance to family of good birth,
but In very reduced circumstances.
Now that the register had been
found it; would mean afilueeco in-
stead of poverty, rte a large fortithe
depended eolely ort the preduction of
the Certificate in quest-tom—London
Ti
PARC CIE AL 1.1TIG t
A humorous illust en i on or the
ratuou.sness of parochial litigalion
conies from Norway. A widow fat
poor circumstances, being hi Want
Or relief, becruna chargeable to the
reithtm,tialaz1 ttltai0,11•2etititloolliattlti,e (N,11,11y(11 oef
neighboring commune concerning the
question of 1114 liability to contri-
bute. The clifw was ctuwird from
ono court to 11(101 ti)nl Mier much
tables which (Ind had given MM. 14;1'1 Wrang11113, and h"1"1"" (if
11108
they Wine netmilly doing. Tha 11 the final deeision Van recently ,
ite();,;,:lerti11111yin lesyntilf::::,1011gt to what Pounds beteg wasted in costal, IL
1,22(021 2.I,, ('8 le at, When 11 occurred to (hope con -
Snakes have Ito eyelids till mu
1,11 -do no (Inc eyeildm The Intim
nee, J101Vet er, provided Willi LI 11 010 -
Imam! Which can be lel clown (am
the cies!.
BUT lsINALLY YIELDED.
I wont to the church and entered
the vestry. Yes, there was the shell
with the row of nrown leather vol-
umes. T took ono down. and my
heart gave a great bound when I
opened it at random and read "Mat-
thew ES— to Ellen R—." I made
a note of the entry in detail and
rammed to the vicarag•e.
By this time the vicar had return-
ed, and in a matter-of-fact ,way
asked for the certificate of the mar-
riage in question, giving dotes, etc.
As there was nothing unusual 01 my
request or my manlier ho complied
We might infer from Rom. vii, 7,
In connection with P1111, 111 6, that
Paul tended that he had kept" the
law proLty thoroughly except ou
this one point, but be Waimea ns
james also did that, to keep the
whole law and offend 01 only one
poinl, make% one guilty of all, and
in ma' (leen dwelleth no good thing
(Jas. 11, 10; llun(0, 011, 18). "Guilty
Is the word for 01 0270110' Motu. 111,
11), 2(0), Home one has well said
"To do what. the ILIW requires I
must httVe life, 1111(1 to la} 11;11111 the
1101' M(11111'1114 I 1111101 1,0110
i'igli 127(0)5-
21058 but by nature 1 have Imither
and am therefore cereal. Whoe . I
reevive Christ lie hocoinee any life
mid Holt Loouee,eio tied will fulfill the
lam in me," The people foetid tittle
they could 1201 tam this holy and
perfeet latY for hi feW dayS they
found (11111)1110.1 1'011 v1111113 on 10lt1.00
to make theta uu ntid Member
arcalled a golden cal?. '1(1))) Mostia
before their eyis broke tie two
make. two inhirs Tat, 3 lot, 111 1.1 ttml
hring titelli 1111 0,, 1 1 1111 11, 1 111! mount.
;tad 11' would ttrio, Ile, same words
on them, het Aloha also emu-
nionded to mate an orl, 1,11(1 put Lile
ni.di0 21 slori! 111 11. 01,11 Myr 1 horn
1141 5(1(1 1.1 1he111 1,0 (I eel. ix,
Ole! X),
Tie reerelary 1,ird of India kills
011 tut at e1a110 or two makes 0. day,
cerneil to Make inquiry for the poor
old lady who loot been the occasion
of all the Illigetion, It was foona
that, she had been dyad and buried
for years I
The Lake of Neort•hatel is the Meg -
Mit 111 13'l level a ti al, being 'I 11,,1 59
mites in meat and 5 12 feet deep. Tu
ils bed IH a elll'iOUS hillocic of rock
880 feet higIL