HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1898-9-2, Page 7Slee T„ !,1898
IIzs �s THE SON of GOB.
REV. DR. TALMAGE SPEAKS OP
CHRIST'S CRUCIFIXION.
A WIlil nob In Jerusalerll—A Time for 11
4'irlsilan to View The People AMMO
for t1,vI ts' Peat—They :.tribe Jesus Trod
neap Indienwes Veen 111111 ('hrlsl's.
Mother at Die Press --'Arne Pottiest
Tlalentrlor -Ale. Talmage Draws a Me
Picture of the :;lisle..
A despatch from Washington says:—
Dlr, Talmage preached from the fol-
lowing text: And the people stood
beholding." --Luke xxiii, 65.
hero
IS nothing more wild and un-
governable than a mob. Theile of you
who have read history may remem-
ber .the excitement in Paris during the
time of Louis XVI„ and how the mob
rushed up and down frantically. `Co
this day you may see the musks of the
bullets that struck the palace as the
Swiss guards stood defending it. There
is a wild mob going through the streets
of Jerusalen. As it passes along it
is augmented by the mullitudes thee
come out from elle lanes and the alloys
to join the shout, and the laughter,
and the lamentations of the rioters,
who become more and more ungovern-
able as they get towards the gates of
the city. Fishermen, hirelings of the
high priests, merchant princes, beg-
gars, mingle in that crowd. They are
passing out now through the gates of
the city. They come to a hill white
with the bleached skulls of victims—a
hill that was itself the shape of a skull,
covered with skulls, and called Gol-
gotha, which means the place of a
skull. Three men are to bo put to
death—two for theft, one for treason,
having claimed to he king of the Jaws.
Each one carries his own cross, but
one is $o exhausted from previous
hardships that He faints under the
burden, and they compel Simon of
Cyrene, who is supposed to be in sym-
teethy with the condemned man, to
take hold of one end of the cross and
help Him to carry it. They reach the
hill. The three men are lifted in hor-
rid crucifixion. When the mob are
howling, and mocking, and hurling
scorn at the chief object of their hate;
the darkness hovers, and scowls, and
swoops upon the scene, and the rocks
rend with terrific clang, and chok-
ing wind, and moaning cavern, and
drooping sky, and shuddering earth-
quake declare, in whisper, in groan,
in shriek: "This is the Son of God."
T. propose to speak of the two groups
of spectators around the cross—the
friendly and the unfriendly. In the
unfriendly group were the Roman sol-
diers. Now it is a good thing to
serve one's country. There is not 011
Englishman's heart but thrills at the
name of Havelock, brave for Christ and
brave for the British Government.
When there was it difficult point to
take, the officers would say: "Bring
out the saints of old Havelock." I
think, if Paul had gone into military
service, he would have eclipsed the
heroism of the Caesars, and the Alex-
enders, and the Napoleons of the world
by his bravery and enthusiasm. There
is a time to be at peace, and there is 8
time when a Christian has to fight.
Inflammable pens have stabbed Il„ and
innumerable books (lave cursed it, and
that )nob that hounded Christ from
Jerusalem, to "the place of 1L skull"
II:La never been dispersed, but is aug-
menting yet, 1111 many of the learned
men of the world, and great (nen of the
world, come oat frons their studies,
and their 1a.boraLo)'ins, and Iholr pul-
twee, end cry; „Away with this man 1
away with slim I" The. 10051:
hostility which many of the learned
plan of this day exercise in any three -
tion they exercise against J'enue Christ,
the Sen of Clod, the Saviour of the
world, without whole we will die for
a^er.
in this group of elerei66 surrounding
the crass, in this unfriendly group, I
8180 find the railing thief. It seems
that he twisted himself on the spikes;
he forgot his own pain in his eom-
plete antipathy to Jesus, I do not.
know what kind of a thief he wee. I
do not know whether he had been a
burglar, or a pickpocket, or a high-
wayman; but our idea of 1115 mime
is aggravated when' we ](fear him Mae -
trimming the Redeemer, Oh. theme in-
dencribable 1 010, ignominy unsupport-
able! Ilissed at by a thief I In that ridi-
cule I find the fact that there is a
hostility between sins and holiness,
There cannot be, there never has been,
any aympaLhy between honesty mut
theft, between purity and: lascivious-
ness, between, zeal and indolence, be-
tween faith' and unbelief, between
Dight ani( darkness, between heaven
and hell. And when I see a good
man going out to discharge', his duty,
and he is enthusiastic for Christ, and
I see persecution after him, and 6C01•I1
&tier him, and contempt after him, I
say: "1lark 1 another hiss of the dying
thief I" And when I see LHoliness gel-
ling forth in her white robes, and
Charity, with great heart and open
hand, to take care of tbo sink, and help
the needy, and restore the lost, and
I find her lashed with hyper -criticism.
and jostled of the world, and pursued
from point to point, and caricatured
with low witticisms, I say: "Abet l an-
other hiss of the dying thief I" It is a
sad thing to know that this malefactor
died just as be had lived. People near-
1y always do. Have you never remark-
ed that 5 There is but one instance
mentioned in all the .Bible of a man
repenting in the last hour. All the
other man who lived lives of iniquity.,
as far as we Dun understand from the
Bible, died deaths of. iniquity. If you
live a drunkard's life, you will die a
drunkard; the defrauder dies a defrau-
der; the Idler dins axe idler; the blas-
phemer dies a blasphemer; the slan-
derer dies a slanderer; the debauches
dies a debauohee. As you live you
will din in all probability. Do not,
therefore, make your soul believe that
you can go on In a course of sin, and
then in the last moment repent. There
is such a thing as death -bed repent -
Mime, but I never saw one—I never
sate one. God in all this Bible pre-
sents us only one ease of that kind,
and it 1111 not sate to risk It, fleet' our
case should happen not to be the one
amid. ten thousand.
I do not know of a graver or braver
thing than for a young man, when it
is demanded of him, to turn his back
e andquint,and
luxus and
upon hum
ithe service ohis ountry, go forth
to camp, and field., and carnage, and
martyrdom. 11 was no mean thing to
be a Roman soldier ; it wee no idle
thing. But the noblest army has to
it sneaks, and these were the men who
were detailed from: thea army Lo attend
to the execution of Christ. Their
dastardly behavior 'puts out the
gleam of their spears, and covers their
banner with obloquy. They were
cowards. They were ruffians. They
were gamblers. No noble soldier
would treat a fallen foe as they treated
the captured Christ. Generally
there is respect paid to the garment's
of the departed. It may be only a hat,
or a coat, or a shoe, but it goes down
in the family wardrobe from genera-
tion to generation. Now that Christ
is to be disrobed, who shall have His
coat? Joseph of Areamthea would
have liked to have had it. Mary, the
mother of. Jesus, would have liked. to
Bove bad it, How fondly she would
have hovered over ]t, and when she
must leave it, with what tenderness
she would have bequeathed it to her
hest friend. It was the only covering
of Christ in darkness and storm. That
was the very coat that: the woman
touched when from it there went out
virtue for her healing. Tina was the
only wedding garment he had in the
marriage of. Cana, and the storms that.
swept Galileo had di'onched it again
and again. And what slid they do
with it? They raffled for 11.
In this unfriendly group around the
cross also were the rulers, and the
scribes, and the chief priests. Lawyers,
and ,judges, and ministers of religion
in this day are expected to have some
respect for their office. No .minister
of religion would scoff at or mock a
condemned criminal. And yet the
great men of that: land seemed to be
equal to any ruffianism. They were
vioittg with each other as to how much
scorn and Billingsgate they could cast
Into the tenth of the dying Christ.
Why, the worst felon, when has enemy
has fallen, refuses to shrike him, But
these men were not ashamed to strike
Jesus when Ile was down. bo it ]las
boon .in all ages of the world that there
have been meta in high positions who
despised Christ and His Gospel. What
Pepe& 11015 issued their. anathemas 1
What judgment; seat's Wive kindled
their Crest `that inquisitions have
sharpened their sword! "loot this
lean, but. 13arabbas; noty Barabbas was
a Tolstoi'," Against the Christian ro-
lbgion have been brought the histori-
cal gen).us of Blbban, and the polish of
Shaftesbury, and the kingly authority
of 'Frederick of Prussia, and the bril-
liancy of John, Earl of. Rochester, and
the stepeedons iutelleet of Voltaire.
"Repent! the voice celestial cries.
No longer dare delay;
The wretch that scorns the mandate
dies,
And meets th'e fiery day."
But there were rays of light that
streamed into the aruoifixion. As
Christ was on the cross and looked.
down on th'e crowd of. people, He Saw
some very warm friends thlere. And
that: brings me to the remarking up-
on the friendly group that Wars ar-
ound the cross. Aud the first in all
that crowd Was His mother. You
need not point her out to me. I can
see by the sorrow, the anguish, the
0000, by the upthrown hands! That, all
means mother! "0h," you say: "why
didn't she go clown to the foot of the
hill and sit with her' back to the Limen?
It was Loo horrible for her to look up-
on.' Do you not know when achild
is in anguish' or trouble, it always
makes le 11 eroine of a mother 1 Take
her away, you say, from the cross.
You cannot drag her away. She will
keepon looking; as longas her son
brethes she will stand there looking.
Oh' what a seen it was for atender-
hearted mother to look upon. How
gladly she would have sprung to His
relief. It was her son. Her son! How
gladly she would have clambered up
on the cross and hung there herself
if ]ler son could have been relieved.
How strengthening she would have.
beeu to Christ if she aright have conte
close by Him and soothed Him. 013,
(.here was a goodly deal in +what the lit-
tle sick child. said, upon whom a sure -
UNABLE TO WALK.
THE BRUSSELS POST,
1)11 operation of a painful nature must
be pe'fermed, 'l;lhe doctor said: "':That
child won't, live through this operation
nlileHH y0)1 eneouOage hila. Yue go 11)
Mill get his consent," The father told
111111 all the (Motor said, 0111 added
"Now, John, will you go through with
fl? Will you consent to it?" He (nuk-
ed )6('y pale, and he thought a min-
t+ o f
u i, and said: "Yes, father, i
you will hold my hand 1 wi11!"
do the father held his hand and led II]n)
sIraigh(. through the peril. Oh wom-
an, in your hour of tinguish, wile do
you went with you? Mother. Young
the very p1840. Be quick with (hove
nails. Be quick 01111 (hut gall. Be
quick wit!) thea spikes, for 1 see in
the H0)vUw and the wrath of th1)881h
clp)103 a slnrin bine ing that will
buret on the heads of those verse -
o tin's.
'1'11 -day we 001115 and We juin the
friendly crowd. Who wants to be on
t+
Lire wrong side? 'f cainnot. bear to h
in the untriendly group. There in 110)
rt man or a woman in 1.1)i4 hour who
waste to be in 1116 unfriendly group.
I want Lojoin the other group. We
Dome while thy 111'5 bewailing, and juhl
)nen, in your hour of f rouble, who do their lamentations. We see that. brow
,you want to console you? Mother. 1f 1W11 Mad; 11.6 beer that dying groan;
the mother of Jesus could have only and. while the priests ecoff, and the
taken those bleeding feet Into her tap
If she might letve Luken the dying head
on her b0s0lu 1 if she might have said
to Hhn, "ll will soon be 0000,;resus—
l!. will soon be over, and we will meet
rigida and It will be all well," But no,
she dared not oome up so close. They
would have strut* her buck with their
hammers. They would have kiekedher
down the hill. There (1)1111 be 110 allev-
iation at all. Jesus must suffer and
Mary must look. 3Snppnss she thought
of the birth -hour in Bethlehem, 7sup-
pose she thought of (hat time with
her boy in her bosom she Mist enorl on
in the dnrknoss in the flight Towards
Egypt. I suppose 511e though( of His
boyhood when He was the ,Toy of her
A Distressing Malady gored by eke Vas el
11r. Tl'ill)nnts' fink Pills.
From the Hartland, N.13., Advertiser,
Right in our on village is reported
another the remarkable cures that
make Dr, Williams' Pink Pill0 so po-
pular throughout the land, The case 10
Wet of h'it's, E. W. Millar. The Ad-
vertiser Interviewed her husband, who
true glad to relate the oircumeLanc'ies
for pubiiosilo11, that others might
read and have u remedy put into their
ponds, as it were. ",(for Live years,"
Haid j , 11Jillitr, my write NV Linohle
to wally without 1c1ib One physician
diagnosed her case its ooming from a.
spinal affection. Other doctors called
the malady PeTVOUs prostration. What-
ever the trouble was,sho wee weak and
nervous. Her limbs had no strength
and - could not support .her body.
There w1Ls also a terrible weakness in
her back, Three' months ago silo oould
not walls, but as ,a last resort, after
trying many medicines, she began to
use Dr. Williams Pink Pills, Im-
provement; was noted in a few clays,
and a few weeks has dome, wonders in
reetor1ng her health, To -day she San
walk without a481.lanue 'You can Im-
devils rave, enol the light Deere of
God's wroth are twisted 1111)1 a
wreath for that bloody mount, you and
I will join the ory, the supplication,
nt rho penitent malefactor: 'Lord, re-
member me W0031 'Ton 1)0me41 into
Thy kingdom," 01), the pain, the igno-
miny, Llee agony; and yet the joy, the
thrilling, bounding, glorious hope I Son
of Mary 1 tion of God!
Thele was a very touching scene
among an Indian tribe in the lust cen-
tury. It seemed that: one of 1301
chieftains had slain a man belonging
to an opposite: tribe, and that tribe
came up end said: "We will extermin-
ate you unless you surrender the mal
heart. 7 suppose she thought of the who committed that crime." The
Lheusanrl kindnesses He had done her, chieftain who did the crime stepped
not forsalcing her or forgetting her out from the ranks, and said: "I am
even in Itis last moments; but turn- not afield to die, but I have a wife
ingto John and saying: " There is and four children, and I have u father
mher; take her with you, She is old aged, and amoi.her aged, whom I sup -
now. She cannot help herself. Do for 1 aye tort hemunting,570' Ju1Land 1 sorrew to
5 heti/lid just as I would have clone for her that, lite old father from behind step-
Lf 1: bed lived. .Be veru tender mand other
I" She- ed out and said: "He shall not die. 1
step -
Ile with her. Behold ten mother 1" take his place. I am old and well
thought it all over; encs there is no stricken in years. 1 eon do no good.
I night as well die, My days are al-
most over. He cannot he spared. Take
mis." And they accepted the sacrifice.
Wonderful sacrifice, you say; but not
so wonderful es that found in the
Gospel; for we d58e•ve1 to die, aye, we
one of those man who never can see Went sentenced, when Christ:, not worn
anybody imposed upon but he wants out with years, but in Lho flush: of Ms
to help hint. "Wall, Simon, they o -
Ing downuth, to "Save
thp11; .1 amrthe -renen from o nl
cried out, " you are such a friend to
memory, like a mother's memory, and
(:here is no woe like a mother's woe.
There wee another friend in that
group, and that was Simon the Cyt•en-
ian. He was a stranger in the land,
but had been long enough to show his
favoritism for Christ. I suppose he was
Jesus, heap Him to carry the (woos.
You see Him fainting under it." So
he did: Al scene for nll the ages of
time and all the cycles of eternity:
a cross with Jesus at the one end of
it and Simon at the oilier, suggesting
1116)111011 to you, oh troubled soul+•that:
no one need ever carry a whole cross.
You have only half a cross to carry.'
If you are in poverty, Jesus was poor,
and He comes and takes the other end
of the cross, If you are in persecu-
tion, Jesus was porseeuted, and He
comes and takes the other end of the
cross. If yon are in any kind of trou-
ble, you have a sympathising Redeem-
er. 011 how the truth flashed upon
my soul this morning. Jesus at one
end of the cross end the soul at the
other end of the cross; and lvheu T
see Christ end Simon going up the 'hill
together, I say the ought to help each
other to carry our burdens. " Bear ye
one another's burdens, and so fulfil the
law of Christ," If you find a man in
persecution, or sickness, or in business
trouble, go right. to him and any: "My
brother, T have come to help you. Fon
take hold of one end of this moss land.I
will take hold of the other end of the
cross, and Jesus Christ will come in
and take hold of the middle of the
oross; and after awhile there will be
n0 Cross at all."
"Shall Jesus bear the dross alone,
.And all the world go free 1
No, there's a cross for every one,
And there's a cross for me."
But: there was a.notber marked per-
sonage in that friendly group. That
was the penitent _malefactor. Ile was
O 111181, or bad been ; no disguising
that. fact. All his crimes came upon
him with relentless conviction. What
00831- he to dog "Oh," he says, "what
Weill I do with my sins upon me?" and
he looks around and sees Jesus, and
sees compassion in His face, and be
says: "Lord remember me when Thou
comest
Whet did
i ilom. Vh
into ',thy k n
Jesus dot Did He, turn and 00y: "Ion
thief I I have s8en all your Gimes,
and you have jeered and scoffed at
me, now die for ever?" Did be say
t -hat? 013, no ; Jesus could not say that.
lie says: " This day thou shalt be with
1310 111 Paradise." I sing the song of
mercy for the chief of sinners. Mur-
derers have come and plunged. their
red( hands in this fountain, and. they
have) been made as white us snow. The
prodigal that was off for twenty years
has come beak and sat at his fath-
ers table. The ship that has been
tossed in a thousand st0rine floats in-
to this harbour. Tho 11810hed and sun-
slrenok soul domes under the shadow
of Ibis rock. Tens of thousend.s
who were as bad Hs you. and ,l have
been, have put down their burden: and
their sins at the feet of this blessed(
Jesus.
"The dying thief rejoiced to see
That fountain in his clay;
And there may I,. as vile as he,
Wash all my sins away."
Dur there wan another friendly
group. I do not know the]r mines es
aro not fold but we are simply told
there were many er0un(1 the 00055 W1)0
sympathised with the dying sufferer,
011 the wail of woe that wont
through that crowd when they caw
Jesus die. You know the Bible says If
all the things Jesus did were recorded
the world would not contain the books
that would be written, 11 implies
that what we 11008 in the Bible are
merely ' sp5oinlens of the Saviours
m510y. We are told that 0136 blind
Ivan got his eyesight. 1 suppose He
cured twenty' that we axe not told of.
When He cured the one leper whose
story 10 recorded, He might have oared
twenty lepers. Where 13e did one act
of .kindness mentioned, Ile must heves
done a thousand WS do not know
about. l see those who received kind-
nesses from Hien standing beneath the
Dross, and one says: "Why, that is
the Jesus that 'hound up toy braces
s
heart." And, another standing be -
ngino lass delight as well as nay own. neath the moss says: "'Mutt is
1Ye 01.6 her reoovory to Dr, (Williams' J(1sa0 bhai lestol'erl n13' daugh(ee to
Pink Snits and I (recommend them for life.' Another looks tip and says:
any wise of nervous Weakness or gen- "INN' that is ,1 ,,4ts who geve m5 mV
leer. Millar is part 000000 (tad mana-
ger o,f 0.710 of our lumber mills and'is
t.
well ltnlv
an throughout. 11 e country,
t y.
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills care by go-
ing to the root of Elie disease. They
renew and up 6 blood, an
•
disease lions the system. Avoid finita- quickly or it will never take pleat). ° ° '
lions by insisting that every box you '.Chose disciples will seize Christ: and
purchase ie enclosed in: aw.eapper hear- snatch Htm from the grasp of those ON LEAD
PSA BEAG?i8,
eyesight," And another looks up and
says. "That is Jesus who lifited mo 1115
when I was sick; oh, I can't bear to
II
.?ut his (burdens on My shoulders. Let
stripes fall on My back. Take My
heart for his heart. Let: Me die, that
he mo.y live,' Shall it he told to -day
in heaven that, notwithstanding n11
those wounds, and all that blood, and
all those tears, and all that agony, you
would not accept him 5
"Well might the sun in darkness hide
And shut his glories in,
When Christ, Lhe mighty maker, died
For man, the creature's, sin.
Thus might I hide my blushing face
While Ills deer cross appears,
Dissolve my heart in thankfulness
And melt my eyes in tears.
But drops of grief can neer repay
The debt of love I owe;
Hare, Lord, I give myself away,
'.Cts all that 1 eau do."
011, Lord Jesus the accept Thee. We
all accept Thee now. There is no hand
in all this great audience lifted to
smite Thee on the neck now. No one
will. spear Thee now. No one will
strike Thee now. Come int Lord Jesus!
Come quickly.
TO CURE A COLD 1N ONE DAY.
Take nxative Bromo Qnlnino Tablet., All Drug•
glees raluhd the money 11 It toile to Coro. Sao.
BELIEVE.
HARD TO EL
Two D05111n Witness *ho Fijian Fire
Ceremony mystery.
Two New Zealand medical men, Drs.
Hocken and Colquhoun, recently visit-
ed Fiji, where they had an opportunity
of witnessing the now rare fire cere-
mony of the natives. It is so rare that
the power is now confined to a single
family living on an islet twenty miles
from the Fijian metroplis, Suva. These
walk nude and with
people are able to
white-hot stop
bare feet across the v y
pavement of a huge oven. An attempt
was made on this occasion to register
the heat, but when the thermometer
had been . placed for a few seconds
about five feet from the oven, it had
to be withdrawn, as the solder of the
covering began to melt. The ther-
mometer then registered 382 deg., and
Dr. Hocken estimates that the •range
was over 400 deg. The fire -walkers
then approached, seven in number, and
in single file walked leisurely aoross
and around the oven. Heaps of hibis-
sus leaves were then thrown into the
been, causing olouds of steam, and up-
on the leaves and within the steam the
natives sat or stood. The men were
carefully examined oy the doctors both
before and after the ceremony. The
soles of their feet were not thick or
leathery, and were not in the least blis-
tered. The moo showed no symptoms
of distress, and their pulse was unaf-
fected. Preliminary tests failed to
shote that there had been any special
p1'eparatiol. 331111 dodtors, while deny-
ing that there was anything miracul-
ous about• the experiment, expressed
themselves as unable to give any scien-
tific explanation.
MICROBE FECUNDITY.
The fecundity of microbes is pro-
digious, so much so that if 15 drops
of water polluted with bacteria are al-
lowed t,o fall into a ettp of broth, the
germ population would 11008 increased
in 24 hours to 80,000,000.
INDIAN LETTER CARRIERS.
Each letter ce1'rier of India has a
run of six miles, and at the end of
it is relieved by another carrier, who
at once begins his. run. Thus the mail
is conveyers over unpopltlous sections
in e.omperatively tittiok time..
Askin—J undsrstancl that Miss Old
angios, whom young Whimper married
recently, is very wealthy? Grimshew
Nervous People
Are great sufferers and they deserve
sympathy rather than censure. Their
blood is pear and thin and their nerlea
arc c)nsoquontl' weak. Such people
find relief and cure in flood's l-1arsa-
parilla because it purifies and enrich•
en the blood and given it power to feed,
strengthen end sustain the nerves. If
your. are nervous and 40)1 not sleep, take
Hood's Sars11pn1'illa unci realize its
nerve strengthening power',
Hood's Sar ;- parilla
iia C'annda's Grottiest Medicine. 81six for 56.
aiooil'7 '1lis cure all L1 or 311s, 26 cents,
,�',idt'YdlArdve awiwyW14WiW eeaelfd141N WNfdYryJ
�� HSE Rq 7yf
.1.91�� 1J'ffie Affi �A�Do ±�
1MANClaWN/W1W WWARPNe"AMA AJ
PEACHES.
Peach Custard—accompanied. by lady
fingers or white oaks is a dainty des-
sert or course for a luncheon, Pare
and quarter six rips peacbies and lay
M. a glass carving dish 11"it11 tweStable-
spoonfuls of sugar sprinkled between,
Cut the kei'nsls from four peaches in
small bits, -00001 with cold water and
stow fifteen minutes. Strain off the
liquor, add enough water to make two
cupfuls, and set over the fire in a
donble boiler; add one-half a cupful of
sugar and one teaspoonful of put-
ter, and when it boils thicken witbithe
yolks of three eggs' that have been
beaten light and mixed with one table
apoonCul of cold water. Remove from
the fire, and when cold pour over
the prepared poachers. Make stiff me-
ringue of the whites of the eggs and
two tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar,
flavor with almond extract ; spread
over the custard, sift one tablespoonful.
of sugar on the top, and servant ones.
Peach Floating Islands. By dropping
tablespoonfuls of the meringue in hot
milk, then draining and laying them
regularly over elle top, of the oustard,
floating Islands are easily made by the
above custard recipe,
Peach Island. Pare and halve large
ripe peaches; lay cut side upward; put
a teaspoonful of powdered sugar and
tt'o drops of vanilla, extraot in the
cavity of each section, and let them
set fifteen minutes. Meantime make
one -and -one half cupfuls of rich simple
syrup; and a stiff meringue of the
whites of three eggs and three table-
spoonfuls of sugar lightly flavoredwith
vanilla. Drain the fruit and place it
out side down and spaced on
waxed or buttered paper laid over a
board or shallow baking tin ; cover each
piece thickly and neatly with merin-
gue, sift powdered sugar over the top
and set in a slow 00en to stiffen.
When perfectly cold deftly loosen the
fruit with a knife, lay each in the cen-
tro of an individual sauce plate, pour
the syrup around plentifully and serve
with cake,
Poach Sponge, Soak half a box of
gelatine in'half a cupful of coldwaler
until it is soft. Pare enough softripe
peaches to make two teacupfuls of
pulp, 'after they have been rubbed
through a colander, amd sprinkle half
a cupful of sugar over it. Boil one
cupful of water and a half cupful of
auger together fifteen minutes;add the
gelatine; stir till dissolved; add the
juice of one lemon, strain it over the
prepared peach pulp and stir well to-
gether. Set the bowl in a pan of
ice and beat 1v1Lh
an eggbea-
ter
cracked e gg
ter for five minutes. Add the whites
of. four eggs beaten stiff, and beat the
whole until it begins to thicken. Pour
into leer moulds and seem a cold place
for several hours to harden. Serve
cold, with whipped creamt
Poaches with Rice. Wash one cup-
ful of rice, put into a double boiler
with two cupfuls of cold water and a
pinch of salt and cook steadily covered
for thirty minutes. Then remove the
cover and let stand five minutes; add
one half cupful of sugar anti one tea-
spoonful of butter ; stir well with a
fork, then press the rice into a wet
mould and sot in a cold place until
wanted. bte.ke a syrup with one -and -
one half cupful of sugar and half
as much water, add the grated yellow
rind and jui0e of one lemon, and pour
it hot over half -a -dozen peaches that
have been pared and halved. When
ready to carve turn the rice out upon
a dish; heap whipped cream over the
top, arrange the halved ]leaches around
It, Deur the syrup over the( latter and
serve oold (or warm if desired,)
Peach Fluff, Put two cupfuls of milk
four tablespoonfuls of sugar and a pinch
of salt into a farina Uoil51'; dissolve two, Fine Fellow.
tablespoonfuls of torn &arch in and b but it he tells you that
equal amount of cold water, stir' it He IOU e,
into the boiling -mixture and for three any preparation in the world is es
minutes afterwards, then remove from geld ns Yntnam's Painless Corn lex-
the fire. Beat the whites of three tractor distrust the advice. 3.mitn-
eggs to a stiff dry froth, flavor slightly {.tons only prove the value of Putnaen's
with )almond extract, 8nd when the Painless Corn :Extractor. See signu-
corn starch is 000l whip the two to- tura r on each bottle of Poison 831 Co,
geLher. until the mixture is light and Get Putnlm's,"
frothy. 14Iake a golden sauce with one -
and -one-half cupfuls of milk, four table HIGHEST 1NH &Bl'rED PLACE,
spoonfuls of Sugar and a .pinch of salt The highest inhabited place in the
i 1.yolks
a wit the o a
thickened to a meanty world is the Custom House of Anro-
af two eggs; flavor with almond ex-
tract, and set in cold piece. Pare ball 10(1)0a, in Peru, it being 30,000 feet
the number of ripe peaches that you above the sea,
desire moulds of fluff ; fret the moulds
in cold water; press half a pksacb
placed out sid5 downwards, firmly in-
to each mould and fill the latter with
the fluff. Blanch the kernels from the
peaches by pouring boiling water over
and rubbing off the brown skins, and
when cold chop finely. When ready
to serve, carefully turn 4611°h mould in -
the sauce, sprinkle the minced kernels
over this, and pour sauce around the
base of the fluff, Serve very cold,
Peach' Pie. Spread four tablespoon-
fuls of sugar oven the bottom of a
deep earthen pie plate; fill the dish
with ripe peaches pared, quartered.
and cored, sprinkle sugar and a little
water over the Cop, cover with riob
pastry rolled rather thick, and bake
ball an hour, When ready to serve
run a knife around the edge to free
the cover from the dish, turn on a
plate fruit side upward, heap whipped
cream over the topp,, and eat,
ABOUT PRESERVING FRUIT.
The richest and most delicate flav-
ors cannot be produced with'infer-
ior fruit or sugar;•neither from the
choicest kinds unless proper methods
vessels and utensils are employed.
Sugar is used in canning to impart
a more delicious flavor to the fruit,
andehas no "keeping power." (The
thorough expulsion of the air, and
jars and rubbers so perfect that it
cannot afterward force its way in,
are what "keeps" it.
1L is better to pare with a silver
knife, for fruit will sometimes dis-
color before it can be finished and
dropped in oold water.
The skins of peaches and plums may
be easily removed by pouring boiling
water over the fruit, but only a few
should be taken at one time, and they
should be almost immediately plung-
ed into cold water, to prevent soften-
ing.
The pits of cherries and peaches
and the cores of pears impart a rich-
ness and delicacy of flavor that can-
not be obtained in any other tray.
There is more pectine (gelatinous
matter) around the ores and skin of
all kinds of fruit than in any other
part, and in making jelly neither
should be discarded.
Knots, blaok spots, stems and blos-
som ands should never be left on fruit
when making jelly.
After once ooming to a. boil, fruit
should cook slowly,
A more delicious flavor is imparted
to peaches if the syrup is made of
water in which half the pits have been
boiled, and the fruit will be firmer
if it is allowed to remain in the cold
syrup over night, before it is cooked.
Pears and quinces should he cooked
kill tender in clear water, before they
are put. in syrup.
Green ginger, lemon, vanilla or oth-
er flavoring should only be used with
fruit that is rather devoid of flavor,
as citron, watermelon, and some var-
ieties of pearseand apples.
A teaspoonful of sliced ginger root
is sufficient for a quart of fruit.
Large Siberian arab-apples have less
"crabbedness," and so make pleas-
anter jelly and preserves than the
smaller variety.
Equal quantities of plums and crab-
apples make a delioious marmalade.
Peaches will not make jelly that is
when
firm enough to retain its shape
turned out of the mold; but it is one
of the most delicious sorts for °eke,
pudding, oto.
By adding a .few pits to the skin of
peaebes and boiling them in as little
water as will cover them, an excellent
jelly may be made.
Equal quantities of grape and quince
shins make delicious jelly.
Jelly cannot be reboiled without
making it darker -colored and injur-
ing its delicate flavor.
Properly made jolly is sure to keep
perfectly, if the top is covered with
paraffin and afterwards with paper
pasted down closely at the sides.
All that is placed in glass vessels
should be covered with paper to ex-
clude the light. Tho latter not only
causes discoloration, but injures the
flavor of canned fruit,
It should be kept, in a cool, dry place.
When canned with only enough su-
gar to be palatable, it is healthful as
well as appetizing, and so should not
be considered a company dish.
A
--Oh, yea! There were extenuating to Un individual dish'; fill the eavith
circumstances.
from which the pit was taken with
see Him die, 'Every pelt of the hem-
mer their
� through oxer drove0, s ]kd.
]S' {+
p ®A
Is. 11 very groan of ("hrist. opens a
1 build til bl d d now fountain of sorioty. They had . YOU CAN
1181058 thus drivingbetter get on with that. eruoifixion t;
strengthen the
ing the full trade mark, Dr, Williams' had men, and take. those llng100136 s I Q 1'
Pink Dills for Palo People, of the persecution and put them 119 in j .
BUY FOUR POUNDS OF
I3LUE LABEL . , . .
1
LUD LLAT CEYLON TES!
FQH. ONF. DOLLAR.
A plaster which relieves pain, heals
cuffs, burns, scalds, or wounds, is made
by spreading "Quiokeure" on oftener
linen. Cures most violent toothache
w1(11001 injuring the nerve. 'it should
be in every house and travelling sat: -
('11e1, 1
SOME MEN ABJC BRUTES.
Ah, sighed Mrs, Plimsole, we're neve
e' sure of anything in this life,
Yes, we are, her husband replied.
Whenever you're gttiet for half a
minute I .Lem sure that yowl say
something 10001 or bust, and I've never
missed it yet. ,
My lord, said the prisoner to tEe'
judge, 1 'should like to have my Can"
postponed. My lawyer is 111 and un-
able to attend, The .fudge took two on
three minutes to ooustder. The case
may be postponed he said et last, it
you desire it, But I sele'here that' yule
were taken in the act. What can your(
counsel have to say on your behalf(
That's just what I want to know, 101
lord, said the prisoner.
]how's This?
We otter One Hundred Dollars Reward fop
any ease of catarrh that cannot be cured 1i
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHICN30Y & CO., Props., Toledo, Qt
We, the undersigned, have known P. J.;
Cheney for the last 18 years, and believe hlps.
perfectly honorable in all bushman transmit.
Notts, and 8nanalally able to 'Jerry out calf
obligation made by their Arm,
WEST & THnex. Wholesale Drn?gists TotedA
fp11 WALD0NG, b00NNett & MAnnN, W'ho.oeali
Dru glste, Toledo 0.
IOail'o Catarrh Cure is taken internally, sale}
nodi
ingdtreolly upon the blood and mucous
faces o1 hog/yearn. Price 710.50 bottle .80lWW000
by all Druggists. Testimonials free. •
Hall's family Trills are the bosh.
Mrs. Youngline—John, do you sates
pose you can hear the baby from where( .
you are if he wakes up and orimst
John (who is reading the newspaper):
—I dunno, I hope not.
W. P. 43. 983.
M111s, Mille.& Halsted
Barristere.eto., remove
to Wesloy_Bldge., Rich.
mond St. W., Toronto,
'Doln �O eOntsgto oing nal offers
8
le
0ncoug.np 013
3 Cutting:
ST.,TORONTO. PD
PAINT 110 0116AF roc 080 )1 1 nn old .hingl
1 roora or aide. of buildings. you ?C
yanra. with n good grayer you on
DD int a bion In half n day. write un Lot circulars an
'Live ft
information about p0101105. Queen
Wooh Wood P000rrn4
'Live k Point Company, 070 Quoon west, Toronto.
SHIP YOUR PRODUCE,
Butter, Eggs, Applos, Frust, dc., to
THE DAWSON COMMISSION CO., Limited,
Der. of Wont Markel and Colborne ere., TORONTO.
INVITATION to hereby oxls Od to all yyonoe
men end women terested In
practical ado Cation to write for the Neqw Prospsotus of
6he oEN71LAr. B npINE89 COLLlt®e OP TORONTO, . ,l0
0TORN8(511 Orsys POT. 101. E,pht regular teachers us:
excelled (axil ites ler Account og, Te egraphy, e$Crte
hand, oto. Many students scour, iplondid poaltieppe�
oath term. Get partloulare. Address W, A. 81LLWt,
Principal, Yong a and Gerard 815., Toronto.
Td�
p�eia � p�p$��' ,1E,��g � I�g�q®y�
® H'wDtll Ytl11
Only )natItotion in Qoapoda or the ouzel
e6ory phase of ap 000dnare glu*OL Ee1ab11
OS1&In 0 0tA'1890. IIT0-0008 INOTITUTS,
II Pembroke et, Toronto, OenadO.
THE TRIUMPH•w-
AO,TOOTABLE STOVE PIPFO.
Plow n
at u and token down. Can
p
be cleaned, nested,and put sero It
t o . Mep too ated Healer for
them. D1nauLaoturod by
C. B. BARCLAY,
168 Adelaide St. W.. Toronto,
NR0200. 10510_
L. COFFEE & CO., Eetobll. had 154
CRAIN AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
*00:10400.10 Ceara of Trade Building,
TORONTO, ONT.
Tsellos FLoNx. Joan 1. Oaarcd
Dominion Line Steamships,
Montreal and Quebec. to Liverpool he summer. Large
and fast twin screw stearuohlps 'Labrador' Van,
oouver,' Dominion.' 'Scotsman,' ' Yorkehirar
Superior n000mmodation for First Cabin, &m-
end Cabin and Steerage passongtore, Rates of
passage—First Cabin, 8g62.60; second (table,
535; Stostune 1)22.10 and upwards according bo
steamer and. berth. For all information epee,
to Leeal Agents or Devil) ToratiwOE &Coy
Oen'l .Agent, 11 St. Saorament St., Montreal, •
or 2.g,'dr4i . le.
98 8TUR AVA T
BLOW FAN
i in. Outlet, 4x3 Pulley,
Good as New. Cheap.
The (Wilson Publishing Co.
LIBMITED, '
73 Adelaide St. West.
ALLAN di
Royal 6ioil Steamship Cons
0,
A
'Montreal to Liverpool.
per,
steamers salt from Montreal overt' nuncio
morning o arrival of trains from Terentd' nal
the West about 9 s'e1ook.
RATES 01P PASSAGE
Cabin 562.00 and upwards • Second :Ceti&
59i and and 580.80' Stoarogp 10 Liverpool
London, 1183950, Beglfastp,,. Londonderry' so,
Queenstown 892.80 and 020,00.
.e.reduetl0n of aye per sant. is a11oT1'ed
round trip nest end sound eaten tickets,
o lin e 1 abetment or other .Interm it's* 8Y
s 1 gal hertted agent.
" "
to any t g
1R. Bonrlier, 1 Xing Bb, W. TereedeUe,
or a 4r A Atlas. Xostrref.