HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-8-14, Page 6NOTRS 410 CO4filaNTS,
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The serious conlliet that is now
going On in S'Neertee over the elOsin8
of the oongregietioniee echools =est
hnve beet' anticipated t nMonis
able development of the oneration of
U� aseociation's laW by its nutti-
er% These schools wore earth:Melly
Obnoxious to the Republican Coo -
eminent, the prime °bled of its
attack. In. his Toulouse eneech,
which eontained foreeast of the
Waleleek-Rousseau clonounced
what he coneidered the usurpation 01
the teaching in the seminaries by
the irregular clergy cis a grayer men-
aCe to the nation Oven. than the
estenelon of mortMain. PieLuring, ite
consequences be Said :—"In this
country, whose moral unity bets for
centuries constituted its strength
and greatness, two youths are grow-
ing up ignorant of each other until
the day whetti they ineeL, so unlike
vs to risk not ecomprehendieg each
other" T1e Inct, he added, could
be explained "only by the existence
of a, power which is no longer oven
oeoult, and by the constitution in
the state of a rival power.", The
Congregationists were thus arraign-
ed as traitorous institutions which
were educating children to be en-
emies of the Republic, but it should
be understood that a clear distinc-
tion was made between them and
eho French Catholic church. The
then premier protessed his earnest
desire to live at amitywith that es-
tablishment according to the terms
of the corstordat which determined
the relations between church and
state, but be held that the church
itself was being mem-teed by the
chapel, that the religious orders
.were creeping into the control of
schools, mapits and missions, that
they tended "to hitroduee into the
state under the specious veil of a
religious hietitution a Political car-
Portaion the, object or which is to
arriee at complete independence and
the at the usurpation of author-
ity."
Furthermore, the speaker urged
that they stood without the concor-
dat, aud this brought a sharp an -
ewer from the Pope, who declared
that "the religious communities, form
all integral part of the apostolic
church as much as the secular
clergy." They had, he snid, his en-
couragement in their resistance to
the bill, in their efforts for right and
liberty, a fact which is probably not
without influence upon the present
course of eveuts. At the same time,
while warning France that her politi- energy and bravery and r consecresf to his own heart -and life. Peter
cal prestige Was largely due to her tmioelancdoniewillwm Imou aisnlitell kanced Astaire t71 became gospel fishes:nen
poeftien as defender of the church in make you fishers in the great trou- soma the Sgs' teitjr faceelveasnillaodbefty'el
the near end far East, he indicated bled sea 01 hemseity arid will call his voice when he said: "Follow
his own attitisle toward the republicyou my gospel fishermen." me, and I will make you fishers of
'
The true gospel fisherman is a one inen."
ae follows : purposed man, whose life is dedicat- But the true gospel fisherman is
M. Waldeck-Rousseall in his Tose ed to the single object of saving always working under the Master's
souls Every sportsman knows that eve whether Christ's face is visible
it is an impossibility for a success- to ltim or no. After Peter and And-
fut fisherman to think of anything 1 row became Christ's fishermen he
else but his fish at the time of fish- never left them. One night when
these brethren, with John the he -
loved, who was also a, fisherman,
TUE OFC11.
"Follow Ile and I Will Make You
Fishens of Men."
oo1�rd8 t. A( 004 0 o 8110 7.1hth OiltilfemPrir
thadxgATZAtbti.t0l 01
Vglitilil,Y. Tw°1"*.
, Nimrod
deenetth front Chicago suys
Rev. lerank Be Witt•Telinage preftch-
ed front the following text se -Mate
thew iv, 19. "Follow me, mid 1 Will
make you Miners of men."
Aro you a neherman ? "Oh. Yes,'!
You. answer; "I have boon a fisher-
man all my life, As Isciak Waltoe,
the father of angling, used to say
thet, tree fishermen, like poets, were
born, not made, so I Nous born With
Lt lova for the root and tho reel. As
a little boy, many and many a Lime
I have been late for school became
I loitered on the way under the
fehaclow of the old wooden bridge to
east a crooked pin used for ie hook.
Now that 1 ant grown I love to go
back to the scene where I was
born. love to take a boat and
pull out into the river which flows
through the valley where my father
Is burled and try to coax to my
hook the black buss and the timid
perch."
There is just as much difference
between the man who makes his
living by fishing and one who fishes
for sport as there Is between the
man, who farms to make a living.
and the man who farms for recrea-
tion. It is the difference between
work and play. lt, is the difference
between the 1111111 who sets sail Le
the fishing %pack from Nantucket or
New Bedford and spends six long
months off the banks of Newfound-
land, tieing 1110 dangers of tempest
and collision, and the man who
paddles about in a canoe on a
quiet stream. It is the difference be-
tween the man who is ready to defy
the clang3rs of Lake Calilee—the
most treacherous inland sea in the
world—and the man who stands up-
on e rock on a sunshiny ulternoon
and casts his expensive line into the
brook for
A FEW PASTTIV13.3.
Now the two brothers, Peter and
Andrew, to whom. Christ spoke the
words of my text upon the shores of
Lake Galilee, were real fishermen.
They were not dilettanti. They did
net „go out into the country for. a
few days with a hundred dollar pole
to catch a dollar's worth of fish ;
but they made fishing their life's
business. They belonged to what is
Perhaps the bravest class of men on
earth—the fishermen. Christ, when
he saw them mending their nets,
turned and said: "Come, leave your
nets and follow me. Give up your
work of catching fish and I will
teacli you how you may use your
steersman can hardly see the prow
of the boot from the stem Yes,
the true fisherman's life, whether it
Is 1001181 on Lake (=millet or off the
ousts of Maitland or bi tho New-
foundland logs, is a life of OVer"
WhelmIng danger. liseve must be
the mein who would follow ,
SO PERILOUS AN AVOCATION.
So the gospel iisherinee, too, must
be bravo meat They unit be as
eourageoue as Peter and Andt.ew,
Who, to become gospel .fishormon,
leld down their lives Inc Christ..
'rhey muse be as brave as the he-
roic Father Damien, who le order to
minister to the sick and tho dying
went to Molokai, the Loper island of
the PacifiC, and himself became a
leper and died, They must 'oe as
brave as that Salvation Army girl
who stands and sings and prays Up-
on the street corner amid the scoffe
and ridicule of passersby,
and who penetrates the dark alloys,
humanly unprotected, to seek out
souls for Christ. They have td be
as brave as that young Christian
clerk who goes from. saloon to sa-
loon giving out gospel tracts and
leading hi prayer where the proprie-
tor will allow him to pray. it
takes courage to be a gospel fisher-
man! It takes courage to launen
out into the cleep and to let down
the gospel net and become fishers of
men when the hurricanes of persecu-
tion are strewing Lbe rocky coasts
wILh the wreckage.
The Christian believer must be
spiritually inspired if be Is over to
become a successful fisher of men.
My mother used to impress this
thought upon me all my life, and es-
pecially did she try to do so after
I had entered •the gospel ministry.
There wits hardly a letter that she
sent me atter my ordination that
did not read like this: "My dear
boy, it is important for you to be
mentally equipped for your church.
But, remember., a true gospel min-
ister is essentially one who is in-
spired by the Holy Spirit. You
cannot lead souls to Christ unless
you have been much in communion
with God, unless much upon your
knees in prayer. You must, plead
at the mercy seat in your own home
if you would plead aright far Christ
in the pulpit." The mother cannot
become a fisher of men, and lead her
children into spiritual lives unless
she herself IVO experienced
THIS DIVINE INSPIRATION.
The Sunday school teacher calmot
load his class to the feet of Christ
unless he himself has first been bap-
tized by the Holy Spirit. The min-
ister cannot truly preach Christ
unless he has first taken Christ in -
louse speech spoke of the moral
unity of France. -Who bus labored
more than 1 for it ? Ihtve I not
energetically counseled Catholics to
cease ali conflicts ageines the in. ing. He cannot ellen about business
and eased to his line. He cannot
stitutions which your comitry has
freely choeen and to which it remains read a book and watch. his bait. He E and some of the other disciples,
attached ? Rave I not urged Calm-
cannot dream of the woods arid ! were tossing about on Lake Galilee
troll at the same thne. When a realthey thought they were going to be its lahollord Mark Lemon, the foe
fleherman fishes, he concentrates Ins , drowned, but Christ was will:ening mous leummist, who in after years
entire attention upon his fishing midi their struggles, and in the' fourth became editor of Ponch. At the
excludes every other thought fromi watch of the night. or4just about 5 Globe Theatre many chanters of
his brain. Because fishing is so i o'cloth in the morning, Jesus was modern theatrical history occurred,
fascinating and absorbing, some of ; seen walking toward them on the The Globe is best known to modern
the greatest men of the world have I waves ot Lake Galilee. And after theatre -goers as the scene of Mr.
found their recreation in the sport. I the crucifixion, when Peter and his Penley's triumphs, urad as the birth -
The tru0. gospel fisherman fs al brethren went back to their old aye, place of Mr. Pinero's "Gay Lord
brave man. We have been taught to 1 cation of iishing, Jesus again ap- uen." •
" Almost opposite the Globe was the
gigantic Olympic Theatre, a house
tinted foe Intving reshape more rues
of bad luck than any other London
theatre. Its great size and its un-
fortunate position gave it little
chance. In recent years it was rare-
ly occupied. Charles Dickens was
associated with many revels around
this street, A mere tragio memory
lies in the fact that Bishop Hooper
was takee from. the .Angel Inn, then
at the bottom, to his death et
Gloucester.
ford to give it em for Obriet," Like
the South Nen islander, Intve you
such love foe Christ, thee you are
ready to consecrate your life to tilt
Master's service regenellees of roamer
erntion, so ehat you luny become one
Ot his fishers of men?
OAVY:i DWELLERS IN BRITA/N
•
Troglodytes Not Yet Extinct 44
the United Ringdom.
Although there is nothing. inher-
pally itm:robable in the eiroumstance
it is not geuerelly known that the
raeo of the teoglodyles is not yet
extinct, itnel Vint there are et the
present: time quite a number of
cave dwellers in modern Britain.
The inhabitants are by 110 Menne
aro t.(te iwiloive8048501ogT nnmd
leLr-
ern villa residences, formed mainly
out of the "Immemorial caves hole
lowed out, ef the bill." with stone
front prejectIons. These dwellings
are Raid to be efar More ceinfort.-
able and luxurious than the less
original residences to be found • in
more pretentious neighborhoods."
The rooms are "specious and , rain-
proof," and the people of En.ville,
we read, "as the village formed bY
these houses is called, me justly
proud of their quaint Minnie, end
speak with patriotic afeection of
Holy Austin Rock, the stoma'from
width their dwellinarvrn
gs o he,"
There are several renuirkable cave
dwellings at Rnarciaborotigh, In
Yorkshire, the "proprietor" of one
of which has adorned the various
levels of his hillside cave home with
battlements, arad oalls it Volt Mon-
tague. At Areley • Trings, in Worces-
tershire; Seaton, near Exeter; Sea-
ham, on the ..leurhani coast; Stour -
ton Castle, Caetle Hill, Dudley, arid
elsewhere are other homes of modern
troglodytes, and at Lodaig, near
Oban, is a cave fitted up and for a
long time used as a place of 4804'-
51)111. The writer of this interesting
article avers that "It is no exag-
geration or perversion of the truth
to say that there are many. caves
in the United Ringdom which are
ranch better fitted for human habita-
tion, and, would be far healthier
and roomier for a family (aesuredly
"roomier") than are some of the
modern jerry-built erections that
our crowded towns and villages are
So familiar with at the beginning of
the tweuteeth centery,
JACK SHEPPARD'S HOUSE.
Recently Destroyed on Historical
Thoroughfare.
Wych Street, a quaint olf thor-
oughfare at the city end of the
Strand, has now finally Passed out
of existence," says the London
Daily Mail,'
It was in the arca of the 'Strand -
Holborn improvements, and its de-
struction had for Some time been
decided on. In a, few months' time
gigantic buildings of the most mod --
ern type will Lake the place of the
quaint old. houses, rich in historic
memories, that made it one of the
points of interest in London.
On Wednesday Jct.& Sheppard's
110050 in
d handed over to the house-
street
street biiet,mamewiaswn tsf nhceacalkl.ly;
c0rpente
Iilmsel! - 014 18
anow being trans -
where it remained until a few daysgo. The beam is
femd to the Muslicon of London
brealcers, Jack Sheppard lived there
when serving an apprenticeship as a
Antiquities and Curiosities being
gathered by the London County
had many other asso-
tohen.
eddobs-
ed any.
this. The Sha,ke-
eta:Lions besides
spear° Head, .31, at one thne had
tics to serve the republic instead of
combating it 9 I have encountered
warm resistance among them, but
believe that their present weakness
ariees from their lack of union and
their imperfect deference to my ad-
vice. '
It will thus be seen that if the
schools aie hotbeds of treason it is regard the soldier as among the1 peered unto them by the shores of
110 etefiance of the papal authority, bravest of men. True, it needs a Lake Galilee and told them to cast
which pleads only for the rights of bra.ve heart to stand unbtanthed 'their nets upon the other side of the
amid a storm of snot cued shell and boat. Thetrue gospel fishermen
the religious orders as such. But
the law, which was passed by large
majorities,has been clearly violated
by the schools because they failed to
come in and seek recognition and
authorization, as it demands. While,
however, they are legally et fault,
it is a grave question whether the
bourse of the Government fe a wise
and politic one,
GAMBLING- ITEN PRECAUTIONS
The uses to which electricity can
be put are well illustrated by a dis-
covery which the New York police
have Just made. It seems that 801110
of the gambling dens in New York
are proteeted by cut extraordinary
net -work of electrical attachments to
proVido against an unexpected raid
on the part of the police. All the
passages and entries are lined with
seceelt push -buttons, and there are
overt cross -wires by Which the en-
trance of anyone could at once be
signalled to the gambling rooms.
Bet most clever of ail is the fact
'that the rooms are lit not by elec-
tricity, but by gas, and the connec-
tions aro so arranged that, Should
any unauthorized person enter, the
gas would at 01100 be cut 011 and the
high ti extinguished.
Fitt—P,Since yonr friend 1,1141 -
Ides married Miss Bolide he hes
.been leading the life of a 'dog." Mr,
Peinia-"I'm sorry f or 111111. "I'M
t.' ' • 'Don't you sympathize with
hint ?" "Not at all. Tre has no-
thing to do but to eat, sloop ait'd
amuse . himself, it's the life of a
„pet doge he leads." .
rather,„(left in eintege).—"No, you
cannot have arty more cake," (Very
seriously) "Do you keew what
Shall have( to do if you go on mak.
ing ant dreadful noise ?" Little
Girl (sobbing)—"les," 1)44,1114 4'—' 'Welt
what is that ?" Little Girl --"Give
me some more cake f" And elle
Wee Mate 11(11111.
to walk up to the cannon's mouth
when the bullets are falling amend
like hail pattering upon the pave-
ments. But the soldier never has to
face great dangers continuously like
can feel that Christ is always ready
to help him; that Christ will always
come to his rescue when the waters
of trouble begin to roll too high and
the mists are settling too thickly
thethe fisherman has to meet. I around the gospel lifeboat.
suppose that among all the different Christ's care for the gospel fisher-
clasees of men there is not one men is a constant and tender eare.
0111Ong which the destruction of life In the Scotch fishing villages the
proportionately is so great as mothers and wives and daughters
among the men who nmke the har- iffustrate by a beautiful custom Wych Street, ot quaint old film -
vest of the sett their avocation Or which prevails among them their Drury Lane, of which it was . a done
I ife work. care for Omit; sons and husbands and Lineation. In old titres the lane
DURING A RECENT JOURNEY brothers who have gone off to fish. was known as the Via do Aldwych.
IVhen the fogs setLle CIONV11 01)011 the Among other houses of amusement
across the Atlantic and after we coast tuul the lighthousee can no which in the pest have centered
had been out a. couple of days from longer be seen, the women go out there Was Astley's Amphitheatre,
New York harbor 1 saw two men and
pointing to a dark cloud ahead. I
heard one of them say: "We are
going Lo have n bad night. That is
SIT UPON THE ROCKS.
When the returning fishermen begin
the Newfoundlartd 1 og bank. Soon to approach the shores and while
the thick mists began to settle yet unseen, they siert a fisher's
around us. All that night the song. The loved ones waiting upon
gloomy fog horn blew, 1 said to the seeks listen until they heav the
the colnenander ot the Cunarder : familiar notes wafted through the
"Captain why do you blow that fog, • '17hen the mothers and wives
terrific fog horn 7 Surely the and daughters and sweethesirts also
danger of collieton witb a passenger begin to sing, and the fishermen
steamer Is comparatively small." hearing the voiees of their loved
"Ah," auswered the captain, "we
ase blowing the fog horn chiefly to
warn the fishermen. All about these
waters are hundreds of little frehing
smacks. The fishermen come here
and author. They stity month in
and month out Amin they catch
tilde cargo, and 8001.08 ed seores of
these poor • fellows e re 11111 down
every yeae. We wind, to warn them,
if possible, that We are coming
along'," Go lo any of the little
fishing totem: along the rocky const
of old Scotland. There yo(( Will
find women Who hare lost fathers
and brothers end 1(ee1100de and
80118 10 the. awftit dangers of a
fishertue n' s 1 f. revery seaman will
tell you that the periel of a. etdlor's
life Eire comparati vely no th ing if
there are only sixty fathoms of wa-
ter 1111(101' the shilee Reel. But the
fishernein ritrely puts out to Lhe
deep sea. Ile muet fish emnpitrative-
ly neat' the shore. Then the Monne
come up end threaten to drive the
frail emit 111)011 1.110 rocks. Tben
the fogs settle SO thickly that the
S,:gseitetenoceessess"
(JETTING OUT OF A DEISFICULTY
Recently, during the hearing of a
charge of felony, a young man was
called lo give evidence on behalf of
the accused, and was about to be
sW(wn, when the inspector informed
their lordships that the witness
had disobeyed the order: "All Wits
1105008 0111 of collet,"
The Bench was almost inclined to
ones, kricre7 which way to steer. So refuse his evidence in consequence,
when the gospel fishermen in Genes i but the witness, in the most inno-
cent manner, Calmed n, bUrSt, of
laughter whic15 even the dignity of
a whole l'ONV of J. P.'s was not
proof against, and the poeition was
saved.
'rho 'Inspector, addressing tho
Bench, said: ":111 ordoe that there
81101:1(1 be no mistuke T distiectly
said, 'Ali witnesses on both sides
Muse leave the court. unlit they ere
" arid then, Writing to the
witness, he said, "Yon musl, have
heard the order,"
at onee responded the Wit -
nese, "I did: lint 1 ft 10 not a ;one
flees oe both sides!"
5011,700 Scots speak fleelle,
Of the 101) enthodeble in the Unit-
ed Eingdom 4 9 owe Roman Catholic,
treathee forecaets have been rear
limbed in London dallies since 1870.
The 13ope has .85 80Crottcries „ea
sewer his daily average 0(.22,000
totters,
of trouble call to Christ he always
answers their call. And the Sav-
ior's voice sounding clear 'amid the
-voices of the loved ones who have
gone beyond, will ulthnately guide
the gospel fishermen from the trou-
bled sea of fife into the great !turbot'
P1 eternal peace.
Are you and 1 willing to beeome
gospel fishermen? Are we ready to
be one -purposed Christi:ins. ready
to be fearlees, ready to be spiritual-
ly inspired, to become elite:ere fish-
ers of men. Are we ready to sur-
render nurselvee, body, mind end
soul, to 1110 14008110 Of the Lord?
When Dr. Nott, who for yeare Inher-
ed emong the South Nee Wanders,
Was one dily asking native to give
his BM up to the service of the Mas-
ter, the missionary explained: "I
ene telly nitord to pay you 11-) 01(11»
1(14(18 Month foe your services."
With that the native Said, "Sir,
cannot afford to ghee 011111,1- time for
15 shillings a. month, but I can af-
0 08 ceps fgeo (1) wee • et 0609 00009
FOR rlIM 'HOME
.0.11 •
0
0
9
e Recipes for the Kitchen, 0
• illyglene and Other Notes
es for the Housekeeper, •
0060e0.00•0199064,0009001
APPLO VARIATIONS.
Apples with Sweet Potietoee—Boil
0 Seed -sized sweet potatoes, When
cold, serape and cut into slices!
lengthwise, After dipping each piece
In melted butter, lay Inte a baking
pan, Pare and slicat 4 eotie apples
place on top of the potatoeo end
add a sprinkling of singer. Then
pour over the appleS and poteloes
1 cup milk and Melte in a slow oven,
AnP10 Salad -I -Form baskets of well
shaped rosy apples by cutting off
the tops and Wil,f1 11 81)8(1111 seraning
mit the inside 00 Mr 110 leave only
the shell of the Ample. Refill the
apple 4811111 a salad composed 4)1
equal paste emplee, eichory huts cold
cam/ chopped flee and. seasoned
with salt. /Jotter the tops of the
baskets with salad dressing. Ar-
range on small plates, gernish with
celery loaves and red neets cut in
fancy 81111.1)05.
A Novel Way of Bilking, Apples—
Place a layer of thinly sliced apples
in the bottom of an emtlien ware
pudding dish. Cover with finely
chopped 'raisins, walnuts, grated
nutmeg, tt genemes amount of sugar
and 48 tablespoonful of water. Con-
tinue the layers until the disli is
full with the apples on top,. Cover
and cook in a moderate oven until
soft, turn into a, glass 'dish; lend lot
become cold, Just before serving
pollr over the tnixture a custard
made of the yolks of 3 eggs, 4
tablespoons sttgar, 2 ceps mine
thickened with a little cornstarch.
Flavor with nutmeg.
Sour Apple Juice—At any tinie
during the year appleade is a de-
lightful drink. To mole it you will
need to Wadi' and out into thick
slices 1 doien seer apples, cover
with Nvater ana allow to simmer un-
til soft. Strain, sweeten to taste,
bottle and ice before serving.
Quince and Apple Pie—Line a deep
pie dish with flaky ',leeriest. Cover
the bottom with a thin layer of
quince m.o,rmatade and spread. apple
sauce thiekly. on top of the quince,
then another liven of the marmalade
and so proceed until the dish is
full. Bake slowly, and when done
top with' a meringue made of 4
tablespoons powdered sugar, the
beaten whites of 2 eggs Iliworeci
with lemon essence. Spread smooth-
ly and brown slightly.
Apple- Cake—Three. eggs, 1.. cup
sugar, 1 heaping cup flow-, 2 table-
spoons hot water and / teaspoon
baking powder. Mix the dry ingre-
dients together and rub through a. 1V11atever can be served without
sieve. Add the eggs which have
been beaten, and lastlY the water, a still ferther economiziog of en -
atter cooking, even (3110 (1111) before, is ment confessing that Jesus was the
and turn fro
appreciated. They
rather hot oven. anti Spread whilb ing raw foods that MT 110t always mid the nest acting as Satan's
Christ, the Son of the' hying Ce(410(1.Beat well, littke in layer tine in a ore-.
gy Nuts are one of the nourish-
Pare and S1100 (i large, firm With
maSticatod, so never eat pity hiethpicice to totilpt the Lord to
warm with the following filling-- , must be
oug
Put into a saucepan, Cover WW1 wa- them when in a heiTy. Nothing 15 cross (Matt. xvi, 16, 23).
mself m the
32. Ana it shall be, if thou go
with us, yea, it shall be, that what
goodness the Lord shall do unto us
the same will we do unto thee.
:Moses now talks more correctly.
for 480 are fully authorized to offer
all the riches of God's grace and
glory to all who will accept Mtn
through Jesus Christ, but. we aro
not authorized to seek either help
or guidance from those who are not
IIis. It will help us to remember
that Jesus said concerning His own.
"The glory which Thou gayest WrO I
have given them," and "as Ttmou
hes. sent Me into the work], even no
have 1 also eent there into the
world" (John :evil, 22, 28), See
5.aslso John xvi, 15; T Cofe. in, 2.1-
:is. And they departed' from the
. 1mount. of the Lord three driys'
pies, 8 tomatoes, 3 onions finely when her shoe became untied. she minced, and 2 red peppers. Put stuckout her prettytele into foot 11(4 ojorufinieeyL, °arida and tho abrelcroorfe tthicieleitoNiTi lAn
ttnt
a porcelain -lined kettle with 1 lb n
a MOO, looked down 0,11 it, end lie three &Lys' journey to search oilt a
brown sugar and 2 qts vinegar.
Cook until thick. Turn into a pan
and add to the mixture chopped
raisins, 1 oz each ground mustard,
ginger, salt and 1 teaspoon popper.
Stir thoroughly and when perfectly
cold put, into wide mounted bottles,
Seal and keep in It cool place. This
recipe makes a 'dolighlfel accom-
paniment to mewl:, and is just the
thing for many kinds of salads.
f shionSil wooden one le bee113.
every galloit of grapes add 43 fils.
Water, lend p•tit, 'all together in OP
earthen or granite 18011 vessel, Net
on the book of the stove, where it
will get liot but not, boil. Stir 00-
ensiorially and keep hot. OW from
two to three lieures Pour into a
nnielln bag, let drain,but do not
squeeee. Sweeten the itiieft to teete,
tie a thin cloth over it iw.1 set la m
warm place until it fernlente, then
batik: and cork, and !Seep ill a, cool
place until wanted: 'Pitis Wine Is
excellent, especial!), le 810141085.
144$11 the grapes and put them
tbroegh, a cloth; pia, Life skins in s
tub after. squeezing them, witle bare-
ly enough tenter to cover Olean
Mullin the juice thus obtained into
the fleet pertioe, pue, 8 tbs sugar
Lo one gallon of the mixture, let it
stand in an open tub to ferment,
covered with a. cloth, for 5, period of
from three to seven. anys, Sichnn1111g
01.01'Y .100141111g, (110 j1.1100 in a
cask, leave it open for 24: hours
eover
through the wilderness nothing' wee
THE S. S. LESSON.
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
AUGUST SEVEINITILEN,
Text of Leeson, Nuns x., 1143 end
56-86. (=olden Text, 1'i.seed., 8,
31-18. An(1 they first, 111)018111)018their
Journey to:cordite; to the contented -
meet, of the Lora by the hand 02
41410508,In' the third 014)111111 01- the first
year they came to Sinai, and on the
first day of the first month of the
eeco5800(8(1 year the tabernacle 0108 ere
oeteel and neeepted by God end filledth HM
wiis Glory x, xis, 1; sl, 17, •
84e, Notie just fifty (1(83'S litter the
cloud lifted, and they journeyea from
Sinai to ehe wilclernese of Paean in
the °Mee described in title e011(11)104',Whether it, 48101 1,110 taboreacle and
its oreetiOn or the priesthood and
the sacrifices or the JourneYin
them Ming it up, and put °ley S
the bung to exclude the 4811' Let It dwle
remain until Morale when it should and no step was taken except
t
be 81 41.480 off a
wn nd bottled, A sellable tPsillGato•dofe°01nietnielaltlidlleCidfiTe'
,guoldnedtkbeyptalruit
of Moees and Israel it woes simply
reCipe.
The following recipe is for. enter-
tnented grape wine for church (or
home) use, Whieh I helped make
last fall. -'1'itIce half a bushel of' ripe
grapes, stemmed, arid washed, put 111
net agate kettle with water enough
to keep eroin burning, cook till the
granes are done, .strain, then add
more water to the nein and etrain.
Add the secondmixture to the first,
with 8 lbs white sugar, Simmer
slowly for three-quarters tif an hour,
bottle and seal.
A COLD DINNER.
Really, a dolt! dinner Gan be eaten
with a. relish very netton on warm
days, especially when we stop to
think of the saving of labor and un-
necessary heat that it brings about,'
Gook vegetables enough thb day
before. 'You don't need to have po-
tatoes, bet peas, beans, beets, cab-
bage, onions acorn and tomatoes
are all good eaLen cold. Of course
there are numerous meats that are
frequently served cold, and any num-
ber oi drinks.
The only difference between this
sort of dinner Snd anj, other is that
everytahing ie served cold instead of
,mily a .few things. And, aftee. all,
it is agood deal matter 01habit,
this eating so mu.ch hot food. We
can taste food that isn't smoking
hot from the %Ave, and IL will taste
good, too, '
After one begins to eat all oc-
casional cold dinner, it will be sur-
prising how many palatable .dishes
the list of cereals that are delicious
are to encamp in the wilderness and
can be served in'that way. T1101.0 is thou mciyest be to us instead of
eaten 'cold with milk or Cream. They It looks as if, for the moment.
Moses was . forgetting Cod and ilts
cloud' and His unerring guidance. ;30
unstable is man even at his best.
We thinlc of Simon Peter one mo-
a maLter. of obedience. Concerning
the cloud and its guidings and their
obedience, see eanfully chapter ix,
15-28.
29, Come thou with us and eve
Will do thee good, for the Lord hath
spoken goon eoncerning Israel,
Thus said Moses to elobab, the son
of Raguel, or Ravel, or Jethro, the
feather of Zipporah, Moses' Nvife
(Ex. li, 18; iii, 1). The Lord had
truly spolcen goon concerning Israel,
as. in Ex. vi, 0-8, that wondrous
sevenfold, "I will," beginning and
eeding with "1, Jeliciva.h.". Moses
believed (he word of the Lord, and,
basing respect unto the recornpenee
of the rewo.ed, he forstook an his
prospects in Egypt and fully identi-
fied himself with lsreel as their lead-
er under God (Hob. xi, 24-27).
80. And He said unto Hies I will
not go,„ but X will depart to Mine .
own land and to my kindred.
This was what Naomi afterward
desired. Ruth and Orpdh to fo00.
she did not say to them, Corffe with
0110 and I 071.11, do you geed. Hoban
SOW ne such peospeet 180 Oppned • up
to the mind of Moses; and' as far en' •
appearances wont lie felt that he
would be better off with his own
people. It is difficult to many •be-
lievers to esteem the approach of •
Christ greater riches than the vislbbo
treasures of this world, yet Josue
and His sufferings now, with eter-
nal glory hereafter. Is the pro-
gramme for the Christian.
)31. Leave us not, I may thee,
forasmuch as' thou knowest how we
can be potrred Into a pretty mold
when first cooked, so as to appear
in. an appetizing linemen
ter and cook until tender. Then
rub through a, colander.. and add I.
teaspioon butler, the white of I. egg something different at the end of n.
beaten to a froth. Sugaran- a n
--arbe I dinner. We hardly need a great
t.o taste. Cover,the top of the cake , variety to make tot appetizing meal,
better than plain fleet, as it Is in
seeson. for dessert—if ono must bave
with frosting.
Sweet Apple Pickles—Take 4 lbs,
sweet apples. Pare bet leave whole,
and stick in every apple 3 or more
cloves. Steam until tender but noG
soft. Into a preserving kettle pour
pts vinegar, / oz mace, 1 OZ
green preserved ginger, a sliced
lemon, 11 111) sugar and 1 tea:small
mei' allspice and cinnaraon, tied in-
to sepastte bags. After the syrup
has boiled 15 minutes put In the
apples and simmer five minutes
longer.- lein cans with the fruit and
seal.
Apple Chili Satre—Pare, core and
Out into small pieces 4 lbs sour ap-
MADE EASY.
The diffident young man had want-
ed to propose to the girl, but for
tho life of him he did uot know how
to go about it. He react books on
the 5115jec11 end sought information
from men '0,110 had had exPerience,
but while the theories were mdmir-
able in every instancee he found,
to Ills seemly, Unit the practice
thereof was quite a. different thing.
EIe was walking' with her one even -
thinking over these things,
HOMEIWA11111 GRAPE WINE.
Bruise the grapes, which must be
perfectly ripe. To each gallon of
grapes put a, gallou of water. Let
the whole remai(1 aweek without
being stirred, let the end ofthat
time draw off the liquor very case-
fullY, and put to each gallon of
liquor :3 lbs granulated stager. Let
It ferment in a temperate 8 11,41011011.
When fern -muted, stop it up tighL.
TIm tbe course of six months it will
be fit to bottle. Film results will be
foobilloawn
iecTed if directions aas
re eefully
When the grapes are just half rine
gather, then poetnd in a tub, and 'to
every (inert mashed fruit add 2 cite 1)011 wish 1)014 (14818 0 111111,4
511,1 (>011
iwtok ronf;
water. Let this etand for twos weeks 1 th,00 (50515 (111 min
ltohaelt? Fidnisamwr. ofs'tilleicilittliciileaneedgLauadie8 dlibtf_s away for the morrow. After your
eank it; und when done
working, bung it down, In slic
months bottle and wire 0011:8 Lfght-
ly. This wine will be found equal
to fine champagne.
Pick the grapes from the stems
and pound them to a pulp Nyith
008.1;10, In a Liege onotte jar. Let
them remain for 48 hour% .witiMorit
adding any Neater. l'hen strain the
juke through a cheese cloth brefe,
end add 8 lbe sugar to every trillion
of juice, in a Nvide-nenuth jar, tied
over with cheeSeclolli. Skim the
ferment, every flay for one week;
keep the jar covered with the
elteeseeloth, and continue to Skim it
Laden a week for Rix weeks longue.
Then strafe the Wine cloths, threitgi
a, flannel bag, width Will Make it
perfeetly clear, Bottle up, eork non
8011.1, 101 if fermentation le °vet
when bottled, tide wine will keep for
20 erettes and 111.010.
Thie reelpe 1E4 fOr wild grapes.
Pink off the grapea, Measure and
mash with a Potato Weber tan old -
roil 018 hie knees and tied the lace.' resting- place for them.
Then he walked on with her and
the shoe became untied emelt). The eyes or the evis(1om of Bohai). HOW
This MIS infinitely, better than the
third them it happened he was asi could Moses forget or seem to that
ready (18 before. .
"See if you can't tie 11, Isla that 1 Getoncleiyhaitlealdecitktelimeina °telt:, &wily 7wlerici,lletv
4)11>-
048(1)' at
sha &ad. as -lia wat'ked beautiful and all sufficient the Pro -
Hs looked up at her tMulerly. Hie moll lann atxgelx'xbielifo' r200.th'e'lle(Ithoc)1thiteeliC)
chance had come. "Tf 1 (7011'1 I thee in the way and bring thee into
know a man who can," he 0.1 once the place which I have prepared."
"V,'' he replied. 11pff0d11. Aun,edratliry OdlOaylld
WhfetnimthLeyord 5'C111se td.
"no you want hint to Go IL?" she
asked, emillettishlY, out of the camp.
"It's the minister," he 868181, and and He .I.y it was their guide, their
of the T,orel's presence with them,
The cloud was the visible. symbol
She jerked her foot aAVtly.
he smiled to hhnself its he finished 11(111 (1, their shield, their oracle,
the work, their avenger, their covering (lex.
It wits CaSy after that.
xiii, 21; Ate 19, 20, 24-2S; Nem
--......-4.—es-- ix, 15-23; x., 3.1; xis. 14); in fact,
all they needed for all their 3041»
1148'.
CHOCOLAS'le VIE. 85. And it came to pass when the
Did 1111y of you ever eal, a real ark set forward that Moses said,
goad chocolate pie, one that would Rise up, Lord, and let Thine en -
fairly melt in your mouth ? Firm, mites be scattered and let them that
line a deep pie pen witli rich pie hate Thee flee before Thee. .
crust, and %Ste in a, quiek oven, If David, by the Spirit, afterwerd
eniliodh1c1 this in at leael, two of the
I'salms (booth, 1, 2; exxxi, 8). .la
Josh in 113 Ithe ark 114 called "the
ark of the Loecl, the Lord of all
1 he (1841 11'' 681811 before i t .1 0 r dna
88118 1hiC(1 UP and the walls of -
'Jericho Jell clown. When the people
0548(15ate naked, gent° olte-half tea-
cupful of ch000lele, and put into a
pee with one cupful of hot. Water,
butter the i,ize Of all egg, 0110 table -
800001111 of vanilla, one cupful of
sugar, the beaten yolke, or fey() eggs,
and two tableepoonfuls of teem,
stareli dissolved in a little water 1,
nilx nail cook on top of the
stove until thick stirring con -
stonily. Pour into tie Ple-Shell, tnd
it, cool; beat the whiten of ewo
eggs to a stiff froth, add two
tablespoonfuls or powdered Anger,
epread on top of the pie, and brown
in the oven. 1 prepared correetly
it, will be thick and firm, like jelly
when „awl, (10(1 Will not run '91(041out, 'Phe chocolate Mixture, can be
used in tarts.
—+------
"Smyth, the, Amateur poet, has
disehersed his houeemaid beeneree he
wits jealotis of het." ".Tealoes of
her I Why ?" "Well, yeti Nee, she
appears let print every morning, and
he doeteret,"
relied upon God, who dwelt between
the cherebitn, their (menden fled be-
fore them, bet when they velied up-
on the Ark (whIch was only the sym-
bol of Ills presence), then their mi-
en:lee entrained the victory (I 114,1111,
iv, 8. 11).
86. A1151 when i1 rested he said,
Return, 0 Lord, u n 10 the in a by
thousands of Israel.
Thus, whether 011 the tentrelt oe 511
rest, the great earthly of rotten:int
life MIS .1.0100N,1111 ill (11014' 1111C1A. 11>
proportion tee they realized thie
and acted *14011( 811(3(111) they pro:stor-
ed, but when they forgot Ifitn, they
failed. It is so wlib 1114, Tle seem,
"1,0, 3 em with you tiltertye," end
W11010 'we believe this teed thee 8e-
1111418 3.118 T11,0801110 (for the only Way
101 reallee nnything 111 the spirit:ell
life is to believe it) anti 8011111 On
TT1111 480 lease loy ntul patine anti vice
teeyeliet, when WO forget '1315 1)10801800
failt