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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-8-7, Page 3VACATI Benefits of a Complete Rest, Away From Horne, Once a Vear, Ofroe eaereibe to tick ef soahrraps, Christian people feel they canimt• e*las, 0.10 ree env Sketeswe 0*°" leave their home antl church aud h.be W504131 01301,91 Torginit 011115.113051 91 eeetiolatiee, °ewes.) work even ' fOr EL few weeks in a, , year. If they wore rested, they could do much more work for A despatch from Chicago says; Olirlst aed do it much more easily, ;Rom Frank Do Witt Talloaffe Preach- Indeed, the older I grow the more ed from the following text; Mark X believe that most good peopie aced vl, 31, "Game ye yore -selves apart to take this edviee, Most, good pee - (loth 0, desert place awl rest awhile," pie look (leech Go whore you will, A desert placol What does that in the ((10(0 Q)' in the home, and the mean? Is Christ bidding his dis- one great complaint that yore heitil tiptoe follow him over a great sea every spring arid emminer is; "I mu of mind? Does he want his come so tired, awfelly tired.. 1 aro as 131111131311 to lose themselves among tired when I get up in the morning the eattlese dunes and live where as when I lie down to sleep at neither beast nor bird nor fish nor night." Why, most people in the Insect can lige? Deep he desire them springtime look as tired as that lo be terror stricken at the moan- poor woman who came to me one legs of the sin -loons or to 110 sznoth- 'clay and said; "Mr. Talmage, don't wed in ono of those awful desert talk to me about heaven, I clo not whidstolims and be there ae coin- want to go to heaven for a long Pletely lost as the merciless 060011 113210 yet, I am so tired that when ean swallow down a shipwrecked I mime to die I want God to let nie trete and leave no trace where the sleeP in my grave for a thousand waterY jaws have opened and shut? years. Then, after I have become No, Christ is not here alluding to thoroughly rested, X WEL111 10 013011 12 MOSOP01;011110.11 01' a Persian or a my eyes and sea heaven." My over - Sahara desert of sand. Christ is worked Christian friend, if you want Practically sayiug to his disciples, to do your best work for Christ next ivlio aro physically and mentally whiter you inust treat your body, worn out from too much work: hist as you would treet a tired, ru "Coine, let us go into the country. down, exhausted horse which has where we enn be alone, Let us go been worked all winter. You would Among the hills whore we shall be take MT his shoes arid 11.1311 111131 out tepaeatecl from these throngs of peo- to grass. You must treat your pie who are continually following us body as a farmer treats a field which to be phyeically healed and spiritu- has been overworked in productiop, ally fed. Let us go off alone, where He lets it lie fallow for awhile. You we shall hear telly the rustling of should treat your body as nature • the leaves and the singing of the treats the vegetation, 3 eends the birds and the rippling of the brooks. colds of winter so that ail the for - Let un hie away into nature's cos of the trees min lie dormant, As haunts, where we con see the dem a, Caristian worker for next winter, playing in the valleys and where we when you wilt have so ellerele to do, C(211 stumble through the wild vines what you need now to enable you to growing at our feet, Let us go do your next winter's duty is not away to the place where the shop- medicine, but rest-conndete physical heed leads Ids flocks among the and mental rest; the same kind of fresh green pasture lands." rest which Christ gave to his dis- 1VITY A REST IS NEEDED. 0111(0(2 when be led them off into a deeert place. Satan is a great strategist. He GO INTO THF DESERT. rarely attacks Ms euemies in the The fashionable waterilig Nee places where he thinks they are in- are very expensive places 111 whi vulnerable, He is always trying to ma. Bet when „haus bado 11 now schemes and plans. When Sa- disciples to go into the desert phi tan finds a true Christian who is and rest awhile he commanded the consecrated to God's service, he to go into the quietude of th immediately calls together his de- country. One can live very cheap monlac lieutenants and says: "That in the rural districts. It does n must be stopped in lits career of cost very mueli to go into the su good works. Those lips of his must urbs of the city and live for alitt be closed. That hand must be made %chile next to nature's heart, t helpless. That puro heart must, be dwell in some quiet farmhouse $a struck with some poisonous arrow. eoway from the great, busy worl That foot of his must be led along it does not, cost very mach to a th, stony path. of sirr" No isbn sociate for a little while with th of earth can arouse Sntan into such cows and the Miceli, to carry th a, frenzied passion RS the sight of 12 lambs and feed the chickens, to tos good man consecrating his years to the hay and to hunt the eggs. 1 good works. So Salem, when lie does not cost very much to stud sece a, good 3310.11 consecrating. his God's thmeghts in the leaves, t life to good deeds, immediately dis- study God's thoughts in the flowers patches his angels of temptation. to hear God's voice in the music o First, Satan oilers to that good the winds. No soninembulance ea man ail the allurements of Popular so rest the tired brain as the quiet applause and worldly pleasuees. The ude of the woods. That is wher spirit of temptation does not come God wa.nts us to rest. In the deser like a wrinkled old hag, with her place means near to the great bony hands changed into the shape throbbing heart of Mother Nature. of an eagle's claw, which can be To prove that it will not cos used to kill as well 128 tear awaY very much to go out for a few day the quiverieg flesh. But the spirit into the quietude of the country an of temptation comes in tho form of rest, awhile I would liketo ask yo the evil spirit like that wbieli the 5. pertinent question. You hove no artist once painted. He drew the had a, vacation -that is, the kind o spirit of temptation tis a. beautiful vacation Christ wants you to talc angel. Her lips wore wreathed in -001' a long while. How much di smiles. Iler hair had hidden in it you spend in doctor's bilis las the brilliant colors of the setting year ? "Well," you answer, "las sun. Iler lap was full of flowers. winter was a hare .winter for me lier couch was the rim of a cloud, I seemed to be taking cold all th while under the shadow of her flow- time. My thegnit was very weak. ing robes crouched the demoniac and each draft would affect it. One f Orin of death. So Satan tries to week I was in bed threatened with destroy the good man by adulation, pueumonia; another time I had by applause. 33y Ina very successes bronchitis. I was away from the Satan tries to turn leis humble store about ten days. My doctor's heart of love into a vaM heart of bills were very high. I have not ellne paid them all up yet." 1 would like Then if Satan finds that worldly to ask you another pertinent ques- applatise and the wino cup end tho tion, What did your druggist bills midnight carousal do not stop tbe amount to last winter ? "011," you career of the good man who has 0012- (121111201', 57118 buying medicines all secreted his life to good deeds he the time -medicines for my diges- tries another mode. He says: "X mop, Thedieip„ 101 my 0000, moth_ will unkennol and unleash all the eines for headaches, tablets for this bloodhounds of persecution and mis- and that apd the other thing." representaLion ancl slender and turn ECONOMY OF A. VACATION. them upon the good man's track'. X will let this pack of demoniac blood- Now, my friends, you are ready, I 110 ,1111)118 bury their white teeth into think, to listen to rational advice, his limbs; X will let these blood V°°kpow that one of the great hounds leap upon him. (1.11(1 try to medical tenets states that it is far tear out his heart. All, I have bettee to prevent cliseaee rather than made many a. good man On account mire the disease after lc has co»ie, of slander turn end cense Gocil Per- Old nr. Samuel 13. Gross, the great - haps X 0021. destroy this man in this, est si •ngle al authority of his day, way." used to say to his students, "Gen - SATAN KILLS BY OVLIRIVOIHr. tlernen, any stupid butcher with a meat ax Can 011012 off a log, but it 13u1) after Satan has tried to de- often take.% a very great surgeort to stroy 'this good man by both popu- wive ono." Any man can take medi- tar applause and by the hounds of eine after he is sick, but it takes a persecution and slander arid has fall- wise man to look far enough ahead ed Selan has ono way left. Satan to keep his body In such physical says to hiniself: "X canpot make trim that he will not get sick, that man give up his God, but I my friends, would it not bo far bet - care kill him with overwork, 1 can tor for you as Chrietian workers to pile the Christian opportunities Of look ahead and spend the money usefulness upon that brilliant, con- which you might give to the doctors eecrated, youhg gospel ininieter; 1 told- tho druggists in taking a mine - will keep him working during the mor vacation ? Would it not be far day and during the night; I will more economic:al for you to spend loop him working durieg the winter some money it toning ep emer phy- and diming the minima. I will give siert' system by taking a rest ? him a. bigger church than he eau at, Then you can resist the ordinary tend to; I will have the editors write diseases; then you will not have to him 10 send articles; for their pa- be pieced upon an invalid's bed wi- pers; X will have the simmer camp til God says that your work ' is meetings steal away his vacation; X done; then you will save money by will start a, revival in his church; I resting as well cie the precious time will sap every bit, of physleal Which you can ill afford to lose strength he has; X will kin him by Mom your next Winter's work, overwork, as I killed Kirke White, But when the Christian goes 0/7 by offering him a Cambridge prize; into the country to met he can go will 1411 1)120 as I killed tVillitun oil to prey in the same spirit with Paley, at thirty-nine years of age which Christ went, When he gets the most brilliant Christian intele away from the store, the tee:tory, 1001, 00 111(2 day; X will kill him, as I the home, his rested mind will be- hove burned out the brain of many gin 10 Clettr. As lie eitunters mit to a genitis, by 01201120110 before that lie down under the ehadows of the brain lived long allele/ell to light an treee with hie Bible he Neill begin intelleetual torch which Would hatee to rennet) hoW the goodness of Cod east its rays all round the world," has •follottied him all the days of Every physician will tell you that his life. He will begin to. See 311 11 15 an economy in time for tired the quietude of the Woods that Mien men and women to go ot7 and take to his troubles the heed of (led lifts 12 vrteatimi and nest. it is a been /lading eihint, that all elaings surprising feet how mairai aeuly geed wora flettl,ce tow Used tor tioeslt who love the Lord. Then aS he sits there in the weods upon the Mlle eide with the brook gurgling by his Ride he Will think that he is sitting Cariet'S feet, Pet the eame (18 the diselplee of ola used to do In the 01700 air. Then he will hear a Chirp. When he 100103 up, Ito will see a little bird swioging upon the tree branches over his head, Ile will turn end read from. Matthew; "Aro tiot two sparrows sold for a forth- ieg, 040 0310 of them shall not fall op, tho ground without your Father, Fear yo not, therefore; ye are of more value than limey sparrows." As the Christian wife walks through the fields and pielte the daisies and clover tops and the golden -rod and tho bright yellow buttercup's she will ramming, the worde Josue spoke when he eaid that ELS he eared for the lilies of the fields so he woule care for her, There is 110 place on emth whore a man ean get F30 close to Clod as with an open Bible In the quietude of the woods, TARE CHRIST ALONG.. But there is one other advantage of a summer vacation about which I would speak a few weeds, That advantage is the desire which coreee to all true Christian hearts to get back into the harnose to do the work wide]] God has given them to do after the summer vacation Is ended. In the spripg the tired schoelteacher is apt to complain, She says to herself : "Why clic' X over become a pubtio school teach- er ? Many of the mothers only send their etalliren to me because they are too lazy to take care of tho children themselves." But after the Christian schoolteaMier has lied a rest in the country with God she begins to realize her opportunities, and she says : "Oh, how good God is to 2110 1 Think of the opportun- ity of usefulness X have I Perhaps by the grace of God I shall eel; only influence these children, but also the sinful homes from which they dome." Alter the minister has been off aloue with Christ to rest awhile he longs to be back in his pulpit to preach again about the Christ whom he has so learned to loye. The mother, the tired mother, after she has had her rest comesback with a happier heart, a sweeter smile and a gentler prayer. May God pity to -day the men and women who are so physi- cally exhausted tbat they think their religious opportunities for do- ing good are o perpetual burden, By the power of recreating rest ieleer all Chriseiart workers during the coining summer months have their spiritual eyes opened. May they rapturously see that the happiest duty on earth is the opportunity to servo Oho Lord Jesus Christ, TOO GOOD TO BE TRIJE. "I think your daughter intends to elope." Tile olcl man looked at the neigh- bor who was always interfering in matters that did. not concern him and shook his heact. "I can hardly 153110120 it," he said. "I have every reaeon to be - "But that won't do I" interrupt- ed the old man. "You forgtt that this is a serious matter that ought not to be allOwed to rest upon heersay evidence. When one man eomes to another and tells him that his daughter is about to forsake the parental roof under cover of the night, he .eleould be absolutely sure of what he says. Have you suffi- cient evidence to ; shenv that what you say is true ?" "Well, no, I can't say that I have," replied the officious neigh- bor, beginning to Mel that perhaps he had gone too far. as I feared," returned the old inan. "This is the third time I've hail my hopes needlessly raised by reports of this sort, and it is (110 121111) mono ton o us." THE STRENUOUS LIFE. A well dressed lad, the son of 'wealthy pierouts„ thought it would be quite manly to earn a few cop- pers for himself by selling dally pa- pers, Be stopped a tattered news- boy in the street, and said to Mine "130 you think I should be able to eerie money as you do if I bought some papers and came to this cor- ner to gall them ?" "Why do you want to sell pa- pers ?" "I'm tired of being idle." "Well," said the philoeophic little newsboy, with a serious. air, "d'Yer think you can hold thirty -81x papers in one hand, lick three or four boys biggerun yerself with the other hand while yor keeps two more off with yer feet, and yells elevonin' News' all the time ?" "No -o, I don't" replied the well- dressed lioy. "Then yer aro no good in the newsboy biz," replied the tattered philosopher. "You'd better get yer people to 'prantice yer to something light I" COWS ON THE 110010. The funniest thing yet discovered in the management of cows is the Peruvian fashion of keeping them on the top of the house. The big rambling houses of Lima have adobe roofs., fiat as a betted floor, and there are hundreds .of them 111 the suburbe of tbee, proud old city which servo the purposo of a bern- yard. Tho mules 11.114 horses are housed in the lower rooms of the house (for in Spanish America it is generally the fashion for humans to inhebitthe ground (loor), while on the top fowls, pigs, end goats are raiseel, end the cow spends her days there, halting been carried up when a calf. CUSTOM HOUSE RAPAC,ITY. Some 4ee/5 ago a nundeer Of ex- cersionists from Zurich went by boat to Strasburg, and carried with them a, largo cheese, which they ate en rola°. The Met Was noted bY two gendarniee, who were on the boat, and on tho return of the mete, when they Stoped Freibourgeen- Dreisguel, they Were tonducted to the Oilstone House, and were not re- leased until they had peke 400 111113103., A demand for restitution of the amount has boon 13ddre133301.1 to tse k,..0.1208 000913)q+31)0001)40000000044 9 FOR TIM ROME 9 4.440 • a° ptcipes for the Kitchen. 0 e Hygiene and Other Notes for tile fleaSekeePer. o 0008a00(1100.00650130690001 FINDING 01.17 THINGS, The question always followe, "Dow 15 . the young, housewife to lawn proper methods ?" We cannot all have. 13301.11010 Or mothers-in-law, neither min wo have 1100105 and babies to atteml eooking leceuree, even if WO 1/V0+ W11Crti 1233011 t1111150 118 0001.111g sohoole exist, which many of ma do .meto writes Mrs, M. 3, ROSS. Them 010 departments/ in all the inageolnes where vete Men write and 31211)3 out ("after limey days") just how 0. certain cake or eoup is made; but how le tho young woman to linel out, for instance, the fact that keeping an old chair about the 1611)- elien and setting upon it the pail of water with which she is inoppirig the floor, will sieve her beak .from "that tired feeling" which results bending over the pail each tinie wishes to wring out /101' mop., if t pail stands on the floor, unless is bright enough to discover it herself ? I had mopped my kite floor five long years before the I entered iny head, Cooking is smell a mystery to yoting housewife, even if she helped her mother with it at 110 She wonders why she doesn't 11 the same success with cakes wh she mixes "exactly as she did home." It is some time later before she discovers that the more act of putting together ingredients is really simpIe, but where the mystery 11.1111 111 luck come into play is 121 - baking. About the time she dis- covers this, the food which her hus- band partakes of in heroio silence conneences to reach the table with a. little more semblance to dishes of the same name which his "mother used to make." ' The average cook book tells one that meat to be used for soup should be put over the fire in cold water; that a "boilieg piece" should be put into boiling not water -to re- tain the juices. But none that I have ever seen tells one that after the first few minutes the kettle con- taining this boiling piece should be drawn back frone the fire where it will simnier and not boil hard, or the otter part of that boiling piece will be dry and tasteless, while the inner part will edit be rare. This she must discover for herself. Unless she has some one to tell her that a pot roast should be carefinlY fried brown all over before pouring la the boiling water, how shall she know it ? Or that when she does pour in the water it should be but a little, and not drown the roast in water as though she were boiling it ? How muc11 is wasted, even by that same little woman who means to be so economical, before she finds out that for most people, even a epooneul of Peas will add to the taste and ap- pearance of an omelet. rom sho hat she Id' hoe deo. You 12111 120 perfectly =remised and the -willing ever afterward to take each has care of your bromine, the surprise is me. in the /1133011131 of money you save aim in a year, besides always having a ich good broom to sweep with, It not at only seves your broom, but your carpets, mattinge, etc. The wear ancl tear on them by using an old stiff broom is very great. My desire to simply to help my sister housekeepers, und I was so benefited myeelf that 1 wish to ex- tend the good woek. TO CLEAN KID GLOVES. This method will probably please you better than benzoline, As it leaves less smell. Take fifteen 'drops of strong solution of ammonia, and half a pint of spirits of turpentine. Either put the gloves on your hands or on wooden "trees," and apply the mixture with a, Mush, then rub the gloves with fine pumice powder. Apply the mixture again, this time with a flannel. Repeat the process two or three times until clean, and then hang the gloves in the air to dry and lose the sniell of turpentine. TO DESTROY ANTS. from the lire and etlr together, gel124 twO tablesiMonfule of crest= and serve at Onee. eftiCeleNEELED RECIPE. "Iihere le a great deal of difference in the quality 01 work that brooree Will do and the length of time they 'will last, ami this 4iffererice le due usefully totho way they are cared for, It will save marry 0. dollar if a, houeowifo will consider this point .carefully, 0 was simPrIsed 1211011 12.11 excellent manager in household af- feirs showed 1110 the losses I incurred by the way in which I cared for ney bromine, writee airs S. J. 1I, It seemed but a small item, but I found she wag right, and that a broom lasted twice as long by using her methods,, loiret, a. broom sbould noVer be set down in a corner after it is used, it heeds the straws over and makes the broom one-sided. Italie a 50r0I12 110010 10 the end of the handle and ineist upon the broom being hung up when not in use. It will greatly lengthen its .period of useeulness and make the sweepiog much easier to wash your brooms once a week, Pi'epar a bucketful of waxen rale water and diseolve en- ough of any good washing powder in the water to make a good suds, and dip the broom up and down in this studs, until the straws look perfectly Mean and rum. Rinse well and hang it up until dry. This toughene the straws, and theY will ilot break so easily. DOMESTIC SCIENCE, Entire Wheat 33rea,c1, Made Quick- ly.-beald one cup of milk end me in it one teaspoon of butter, an one-half teaspoon each of sugar an selt. When cool, add half a cake compressed yeast, dissolved in on third cup of lukewarm water, Sti 111 dour to make a, dough that wi keep its shape after you stop stir. Witeli the woodwork near their haunts with turpentine and water. Strew camphor about and dust pow- dered borax 'wherever they appear, WOMEN WARRIORS. Many Have Fought Bravely on the Battlefield One of the most remarkable wo- lo men warriors 1211.5 Cluistion Caven- agh, veho lived in England in the d nineteenth century. She was mar- ried and had three children. Iler husband was carriod off to Holland, where hh e ad to enlist as a private pr soldier, His Nvile dressed as a man is and enlisted so 0.5 to be near her 1)1 et husband. She was woundedat the s ell battle of Landon, made a prisoner 11 d h,,Y• the French and carried to St. fe ol Germain-en-Laye, where she remain- ei o ed until she was exchanged. Then 1.0 ✓ she quarreled need fought a duel with pr n her sergeant and was transferred to iv • another regiment. Again she 12125 wouuded, at Ramillies, when her se- wh crot was 'cliscovered. She was how- 00 ever, permitted to remain with the regiment as a cook. Arany English officers recall the case of "Dr. James 33arry.". This woman served in the British army about 50 years ago as a surgeon at the Cape, at Malta, and at Barba - does, At the Cape "he" fought a duel with ari officer, who had called a woman. Mrs. Lindley, the wife of Et sol- dier, went through some of the sharpest engagements of the Ameri- can Civil War. She enlisted in Cebe- pony "D," Sixth Ohio Cavalry, and fought at Fort Magruder, Hanover, Court -house, Bull Run, Antietam, and Boonsboro'. She is ant11 to be still liviag need the mother of sev- eral children. Christina, Queen of Sweden, was educated and dreseed like a boy THE S. S. LESSON'. INTZANATION.411, 7.44SSON, . AUGUST 10, T°2CGteldIntilTee/te,6510T4.4telaes7.71011x4.1, 1. And Nade.b and Abihu, the Sons of .Aaron, " offered strange are before the Lord, which Ile cone - mended them not, The oponieg chapters of this book tell of the different offeringe, all typifying our Lord's ono great of- fering, and of the coneecration of the priests, the Lord accepting tire atonement offerings by Ore SOW - natural (Lev. ix, 7, 22-24). Nov, right at the beginning of the minis- try of the priesthood we see this sacl failure on the part of two of Aaren's sous. "Every man at his 13est state (apart from (Tod) is al- together vanity" (Ps. xxxix, 5). 2. And there went out, fire frora the Lord and devoured them, and they died before the Lord. Thus at the very beginning of the priesthood Jehovah made it very plain that Ile would have a whole hearted service or none, So also at tho beginuing of the church story 111 the eaee of Ananias and Sapphire (Acts v, 5, 10) Ile showed unmis- takably how He hates deceit and half heartedness, 8. Then Moses said unto Aaron, This is it that the Lord spake, say- ing, I will be sanctified in them that come nigh Me, and before all the people I will be glortiled. And Aar - 0)1 d h s peace. That they were to bo a holy peo- ple meth the Lord is the oft repeat- ed requirement from Ex. xix, 6, 22, onward. Jesus said concerning Him- self and His disciples in His great intercessory prayer, "For their sakes I sanctify Myself that they also might be sanctieed through the truth" (John xvii, 19). 4, 5. Come near; carry your bre Oren from before the sanctuary out of the camp. Thus Moses commanded the sons of Uzziel, the uncle of Aaron, and thus they did. But what about Na - da) and Abihu? We never bury people, strictly speaking; we bury the bodies in which they 5010111110cl for a season. It has been a greet comfort to 2153 to think of this since ever I grasped the feet that if my body ever has a burial 1 will not be there that day, but absent from the body rind present with the Lord; with Christ, which is very fax better (31 Cor. v, 8; Phil. i, 21, 23). 6. 'Uncover not your heads: neith- er rend your clothes, Thus Moses commanded Aaron and his two surviving' sons. Mourning has °Mimes a large element of re- bellion in it. This we raust not tol- erate, lest we find fault with God. We must abide on the Lord's side oven though his chastening falls on 1)11050 who are very dear to us. If WO love oer loved ones more than we ve Goce we are not worthy of 7. Ye shall not go nut from the oor of the tabernacle of the coo- •egation lest ye dio, for the anoint - 1(1 oil of the Lord is upon you. Because they were the anointed feels of the Lord, chosen to min- ter unto Ilim, they were to keep . wholly or Hem. The pirit says through Pater that h overs are a. holy priesthood to M- ✓ up spiritual saorifices accepts, e to God by Jesus Christ - yal priesthood to show forth His aims (I Pet. ii, 5, 9). 3n Eph , 80, we read that we are not to. leve the Holy Spirit of God, by om we are sealed unto the day sr,etemapsitiieoiLaor d spoke unto Aaron saying, Do not drink wine nor strong drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee when ye go into the taber- nacle of the congregation lest ye die. The Lord has been speaking to ron through Moses, but Aaron by submission and obedience has me into a place where the Lord niself am speak to him. Some ilk because of this prohibition at this was partly at least the uble with Nadab and Abiliti, but Num. 1-8, we learn that it s part of the obligation of every zarite or specially separated per- m That which tends to muddle a u's brain unfits him to worship cl, and as His people redeemed th precious blood we o.re ta y and wholly "unto Him who ath us" and "do all to the glory God" (Rev. 1, 5, ]LV.; I Cor. x, . A good word for the unsaved =Palate is, "Nor thieves, nor otoue, nor drunkards shall M - it the kiligdom of God" (I Cor. 10), and for the saved intem- ate, "It is good neither to oat h • mor to drink wine nor any- ig whereby thy brother stmubleth 01' is offended or is made weak" (Rom. X1V, 21)• 10. And that ye may put differ - once between holy and unholy and between unclean. end clean. They were, as a whole natieie, severed from other People, that they might be the Lord's (Ex. xlx, 5, 6; xxxiii, 16; Lev. xx, 26), ln legype, ancl tho night they left Egypt the Lord pot a difference between His people And those who were not Hie (lax. viii, 23; xi, 7). In Gen, i, 8, 4, He divided the light from the dart:nese., Coe. vi, 14-18, the division and separation aro very strongly emphasized, lly na- ture and by practice all are sinners, and there is no difference as to the feet, though there ie as to the de- gree of guilt (Rom. iii, 22, 28). 11, And that. yo may teach the children of Israel all tho etatutee which the Lord hath spoken unto them. by the hand of Moses. They Were first to do, then to teach, end this Is always the order (Mark vi, 80; Acts 1, 1), 'Unless we ourselves are holy in our lives end seporitto from the World lying 111 the wicked one our a,dvice to others will not hove ranch Weight, for we Will then be like the Plieri- sees who eey, but, do bot (Matt. 212)113, 8)1; but if, like Lend, we. walk ring. Stir and cut it thoroughl with a broad -bladed knife, but cl not knead. it until after it has rise to double its bulk, and is ready to be shaped into a, loug small roll fo baking. Do not bake it in a Meg thick loaf. Let the roll rise unt1 light and double in size, and bale in a hot oven about half an hour Mix 111 the movning raid it will b risen tend baked before dinner. Here is one way of cooking a lit tle esed part of beef, It is good Ttvo calves' hearts, costing five cents each, weighing a pound and half after trinuning, time furnishing considerable clear meat for a meal sum, These were stuffed, the opot sewed together, and steamed until tender, then they were brown- ed quickly in the oven and served with white sauce, asparagus and toast. The cost of both the hearts and the asparagus would not exceed tho average price of a pound and a half of veal cutlets. To Remove Mildew an'd Fruit Stains -Put one ounce of chloride of lime in a, bowI, pour over it 0110 pint of boiling WaL0r, and strain it through a fine cloth. Add throe pints of cold water, and put it a. convenient pan, 'the articles are email put them directly into the water, and let them lie for twelve hours. If large, gather up the stained places and put them directly into the water, and let the remain- ing poetione rest on the top for the same length of time. Then rinse thoroughly and you wilt find that the Stains will all disappear. This has been particularly succes.eful removing poach stains, which aro usually almost indellible, le the solution is strained and the cloth well rinsed there will be ilo harm ono the fabric. Ham with Cream Sauce -Heat a frying pan vory hot, end into it put slices of raw liana Do not ose any fat to fry it. When crisp take it out and lay it on a hot platter. Add one cupful of milk to the fat in tho paii; W11011 it boils. thicken it with ono tablespoon of flour; season with salt and .popper. Pour the twice over the ham toed serve. Cream of Summer Squash -Peel the squash. Mice thin, put in a seutepan and add boiling water to come nearly to the top of the squash. Wheri nearly tender add an onion, a bay leaf and server& sprigs of parsley. When tendor mash through a. fine Move, return to tho fire, let it 001110 to a boil, stir in a heaping tablespoonfel of butter, a heaping teaspoonful of flouv, season 1211)11 ,50111) end pepper and a tiny pinch of mace, Have almost ae much boiling milk as puree, remove Aa his co Hi thi th tro in 1212 Na SO 33111 0 vid onl from her birth because her fathom 102 was disappointed at nnt having a of son. She Wn5 /110re 0 king than e eri) queen, and after four years of rule' int resigned her crown and went oft to coo amuse herself in Europe. She was her dressed in men's clothes and acted as .vi, uproarioosly as any 113511 01130 OVOT per owned bis clothes by right of sex. dos S110 was only 28 tit the time. thir DIFFICULT DENTISTRY. Tito Nawab of Rammer, which is about six hunelred miles to the northwest of Calcutta., crime down from his home to call oh Dr. D. S. Smith, says a London paper, end brought one hundred and fifty peo- ple with him to see about his mo- ther's teeth. Sho tvanted a set of false teeth, and because Englishe7o- men had two sets, the mnbarima must have two sets, also, The No.- wab of Rampur is a Mohrineinedan, so, of course, the mother could not slime her face. Likewiee on that ac- count Dr. Smith had to go to Ram.- pttr to do the work. Two thou- sand miles to make two sots of false teetlit 005(1 (110 nawab film thou- sand rupees. The old woman lay back with her face covered, and the dentist workee at her mouth through a hole in a sheet. "I have heard that she walks in her sleep," said the gossip, "Indeed" reialimed Mrs. Parvenue, "$o com- mon, levet it 1 I ehould think she would ride.," "I suppose," eaid jolliboy to his friend, "that when your wife caught you dieting WW1 MSS Gofttst, she wae epeechless with amazement '?" "Oh, no, she waso't," said Talkerly. "'You don't hum my wife." OUR 001110101111 RIVALS, TH4 ARGENTINE REPUBLIC IS RxtosP.4gotts, r1.5 Gr0.1,31 Exporte Are Three Theme ae Large as Our Oven and Will Increase, We are accustomed to forget that there another half to the now world besides North America. The opinion is general that the centuries of Spanish domination crushed the vigor and sapped the resourees or South .A.merica irretrieliably. In the Argentine Republic at leaet a mai, velloue recuperation ie exhibiting leant Thaler the alai:aloe of Enge list and German capital the country bee entered upon a period of woe- perity and commercial progress. Senor Moulton Panel°, member of Congress, Preeident of tho River Platte Gae largeat 131 South America -and a. promineet man generally in governmental, commercial, and military circles, who is meking an extensive tour of Elie continent, in a recent interview at Toronto, said :- The principal exports of the Argen- tine Repeblic are oereals auel meats In respect to both those the Re- public is our competitor in the Eng- lish and European markets. With an area, of 1,212,000 square miles and a population a good deal smaller than our own there is every pros- pect of an immense expansion of trade, and already Canada has been greatly outdistanced. Taking the wheat export to England, that of Canada between 1898 and 1900 in- creased from. 5,000,000 to 6,300,000 bushels; that of the Argentine Re- p4ublie from 3,900,000 to 18,000,000 bushels. Great efforts will be put forward to double or treble this output. Signor Panelo's two eldest sons, Julio and Ferdinand have already spent two years at the Guelph Agricultural College, and after com- pleting their course they will teach for three years in their own cowl - 1)17. "We hare two agricultural wheels," Signor Julio remarked, "both founded about six months ago by °or Board of Agriculture. We will teach there before starting ranch. work." It is also probable that noraerous students will attend the Guelph College, IMMENSE TRADE, The meat trade, which is much . larger than that of Australia and New Zealand combined, is largely in the hands of English capitalists. The live stock totals 120,000,000 sheep, 80,000,000 cattle and 6,000,- 000 horses. The Embargo Act pre- vents the shipping of the animals to Longland except by cold storage• Having in mind the recent Cana- dian agitation for a repeal of the embargo, the reporter asked if it hurt the Argentine trade. . a bit," said Signor Panelo. "Om exports have increased. We send c,hilled meat instead of live stoc,k." There are four great refrigerator companies, one of which Signor Panel° is interested in. Since the passage of the embargo, -the com- panies have doubled their capital and now pay out over 35 per eerie. in annual dividends. The process of chilling meat is one that occupies about a month. The meat is Passed on from one tempera- ture to another, uritil thoroughlY frozen. The steamers come op to the refrigerator tvharves to be load- ed. Each carries 60,000 elieep and 500 cattle. English end German capitalist are interested in ahnost every enter- erise, and are welcomed warmly. They are building up the country. The Ereglieh capital amounts 10 OVOr $1,000,000. THEY WILL DISARM. Ono of the most welcome pieces of intelligence received. since Signer Panote's departure from home, is that of the accommodation between Chili and the Argentine Republic. Both had been. eying eaoh other askance and entering 1.112031 military expenditure which finances of neith- er country could boar. Chili to ac- quire once more the navel supremaey She Possessed in the days of Lord Cochrane granted away her eddy Valuable national assets., the salt- petre dietricts. Not being as wealthy as her enemy, she soon dropped bebind in the race. The Argentine Republic last yoer had a navy of 5t vessels, many of them equal to any European battleships, and a military system which could furnish 100,000 capable soldiers in one week. Chili saw herself outdistanced and determined to strike before o strag- gle became altogether hopeless. The result was intervention. The (levies of the two countries are now to be reduced to a uniform si20, and no additions made for Ilve years. LAND OF MIDDEN GOLD, Mysterious forests surround tho uninaPPed headwaters of the Amazon river where hidden gold mines are thought. to be, guarded by a largo tribe of Indians 1.003711 as the Na- pes, who etill cling to the anclout rites of the children of the sun. These Napo Indians heve brought out eignilicant evidence of the tech- ness of the piener mines. In Quito gold duet is the standard currency, which they bring hollow bamboo joints heavy with grains and duet oe the precious metal, which is wash- ed out by the most primitive me- thods, INSECTS AS FOOD. A French entomologist recommeeds inseets as an article of food. He speaks with outhority, having tot only read threugh tho Whole lite/a- im of insect eating, but havirg meet tasted some hundreds of the e0405 raw, boiled, fried, broiled, asted and intellect, He has even ton spiders, HOWever, he does not commend those, Ile states two )jections to spiders -they are not sects, end they live oil animal od, 13e eays "Pound ,your cock - aches in a inortne; put in 5 sieve, d pour boiling water or beef ock." 11 hi ro ea. re 01 n fo with God in peace and equity eve ro sball tarn Many away from iniquity 1111 (Mal. 3, 6). et