HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1929-10-24, Page 7Lesson
Sunday School
October 20, Lesson I11- ,Jsefut Work
a Christian Outy Genesis 2: 15;
Exodus 20: 9; Nehemiah 6. 3; John
6; 17; 9; 4; Agts 20: 33.36; '2 Theis-
salonians 3: 6.12; E.pheslans 4; 28.
Golden Text -4f any would not work,
neither should he eat, -2 Thessaton-
tans 3; '10.
ANALYSIS.
I. WORK AND RBST -ROWS PLAN; Gen, 2:.
15; Exod, 20: 9; Jolt 5: 17,
IL EXAMi'LE8 OP UNSIILPESEr AND USE-
FUL LABOR,
SEFULLADOR, Nel., 6: 3; John 9: 4;
Acta 20: 38-35; 2 Thees: 3: 6-12;
Eph, 4: 28,
ITI'FROou0TIoN-Note only ..does the.
Bible demand and honor useful work,
but it represents the workman as
-celled of God, designated. .o See' task,
and rndaw•ed with the spirit of God for
the performance of it, ust as truly as'
priest, or prophet; or apostle, 'Inds, d,
'God's work, m which' roan called to
have a share, is represented as very
wide and varied,'includin,; many tasks,
each honorable in its place, and all
.serving the divine will and human wel-
fare, When Josop'h, the slave, un-
ustly imprisoned, did faithfully the
work that was 17u, before him, "the
Lord was with hun, and that which he
.did the Lord made to prosper," Gen.
.39: 23. 0f the twochief workmen en.
the wilderness sanctuary, Moses said
that God had called them by name, and
filled them" with the spirit of God in,
wisdom, in understanding, and in
knowledge, and in all manner of work-.
rianehip," Exod. 35: 30 to 36. 2. Hi-
ram of Tyre, who was engaged in the:
building of Solomon's temple, "was
filled with wisdom and understanding
and cunning, to work all works in
'brass," 1 Kings 7: 14. Tha sons of
the prophets In the days of Elisha
built their own hour, to dwell in, 2
Kings 6: 1-2. Princes and priests
shared in the building of Nehemiah's
wall, Neh, ch. 3. Isaiah says that the
knowledge and skill of the farmer
"cometh forth from the Lord of hosts,
which wonderful in counsel and ex-
cel#mrt in wiedom," Ise. 28: 23-29. 'he
book of Proverbs abounds in com-
mendation of diliigent labor (chs. 10:
4, 5, 16, 26; 12: 11, 24, etc.). The
children of the good housewife "rise
'up and call her blessed"•Prov 31: 28.
Many of the parables of the Lord re -
fleet his approval of honest toil, and
Paul's judgment regarding work is
made abundantly clear in our lesson.
and might have gone to lbs death, iiia
answer ss worthy of sty place in holy
scripture; "I em doing a great worts,
so that I cannot come down, Why
should the work cease" while he par-
leys with the enemy?
There are some among us who might
well take pattern rem Nehemiah's
exmple. They give ti' e and labor to
endless, and often futile discussion;
while God's work 'Scene in -their
hands. We, too, are doing a great
work -should we not instantly carry
it on?
In the preeence 04 suitering Jesus
finds oliportunity to work the works
of God. The curious question asked
by the disciples concerning the rea-
son's for the man's blindness (Jelin 91
1-4) can wait for an answer, Human
need cannot wait. To heal the blind
is to do God's work. Jesus felt that
necessity was laid upon him, and the
time was short, He staid, "I must." Ts
not the same necessity laid upon us in,
presence ofthe same need?
Paul more than once tells us that;
on his missionary journeys, wherever
he carried the gospel and founded
Christian communities, he supported'
himself by his own labor. So he had
done in Ephesus; as he declares in his
farewell address to the elders of the
church of that city,' Acta 20: 33.35. So
should they, as Christian men, he said,.
"That so laboring ye ought to supped
the weak." The word of Jesus, quoted
in verse 35, are not found elsewhere.
It is quite evident that false accuse-,
tions of selfishness and self-seeking
had been made against Paul in Thes-
salonioa, and he answers these in his
lettere to the Thessalonian church, 1,
Thoss. 2: 3-6. Here in 2 Thess, 3:
6-12 he refers`'to disorderly persons in
the church, working not at all, but are
busybodies, How often that is true,
parade:deal though it may sound, that.
idlers are busybodies! .By way: of con.
trast Paul recalls his own behavior
among them. We did not "eat any
man's bread for nought," Compare
his exhortation in the letter to the
Ephesians, 4: 28,
Dominion "Ambassadors"
E. 96. 0'D. in the Jrhannesburg
Star: He (the South African Minis-
ter) cannot act without instructions
from the Union Government, and, as
General Hartzog has said ?Empire un-
ity is safeguarded; the Union Gov-
ernment cannot act without ocnsulta-
tion with Britain. Hence all the
British Ambassador will have to say
'to the Union's Minister will have bean
more rapidly and authoritatively said
to the Union Premier by the British
Premier. In these days of rapid
ormmunicationall ambassadors tend
to become-anachroniems, but the Un-
ion's Minister in 'Washington will have
the odern touch ofthe gramophones,
The enormous diplomatic prestige of
a British Embassy makes it simply
childish to suppose that the Diploma-
tic Corps in any capital will take the
Union's Minister's seriously until such
time as lt'is expedient to use them as
chisels to break .the Empire. What
is said here of the Union's Ministers
applies with equal force to the Cann,
dian and the Irish, Snob. Dominion
needs as exist would be amply served
by the appointment of a Counsellor
for each Dominion la British Embas-
sies. These' men would be members
of cue diplomatic service and would
rise to the - rank of Ambassador in
the ordinary course of events,
3. WORK AND REST-00D'S PLAN, Gen. 2:
15; Exod. 20: 9; John la: 17.
in a great poem in the book of Pro-
verbs, ch. 8, Wisdom, personified, is
represented as God's architect, his
master workman, Prov. 8: 30 (Rev.
"Ver.), sharing with him 'ee And
taelr of building the world. And this
same divine, Wisdom, whose "delight
was with the sons of men," Prov. 8:
31, having brought his groat task to
completion, gave man his work to do
in the world, "put him into the garden
of Edea to. dress it and to keep it."
Man's work, therefore, is not thought
•of in the Bible as an accident or a
penalty. It is a part of God's wise
and well -ordered plan. The honor is
put upon him of living in and caring
for God's created world. And God
-ordained for him not ceaseless, un-
relieved toil, but alternating work and
rest, as though he wo-tld make man's
work as much as possible like his
own, Gen. 2: 1-3; Exod. 20: 9.
The law of the Sabbath seen.s in-
tended to sanctify labor. The setting
apart t,f one day of rest in seven is
really a recognition that all our time
is God's, The day of labor ia'just as
certainly God's day as the day of rest,
and should be held equally sacred. He
who is Lord of the Sabbath is also
Lord of the week day.
Some such thought seems to be pre-
sent to the mind of Jesus when he
answers those narrow-minded, carping
fault-finders whe put blame upon him
for healing a man on the Sabbath day.
"My Father worketh hitherto, and
work," or, as Moffatt renders; "As my
Father has continued working to this
hour, so I work too." There is a' sense
in which God's work never ends, and
to those who enter most perfectly into
the mind of God, as. Jesus did, all days
are auks. There are tasks that may
be, and should be, laid aside on the
day of rest, but the work of feeding
the hungry, and healing the sick, and
ministering to the souls of men in
spiritual things, goat on. See John 5:
17-19.
II, EXAMPLES OP UNSDLPisx•AND USE -
rot LIMB, Neh. 6s 3; John 9: 4;
Acts 20; 33-35; 2 Thess, 3: 6-12;
Eph..4: 28.
Nehemiah was being tempted by a
persistent, a cunning, and an unserup-
ulous enemy, who would, if he could,
have prevented thecompletion of his
work in' restoring the wall of Jexu-
saleiri, Had he not been so busily oc-
cupied he might have been deceived by
Sanballats invitation to a conference,
Labor and the Australian
Government
Sydney Morning Herald: (The Aus-
tralian general elections wilt be held
on October 12.) Though Labor will
endeavor to cloud the isaue, there is
only one pcint the: electors have to
settle -the whole future Legislative
control of Australian industry. We
believe that the people uaderstaud
the urgency and importance of reform
and that the Government will return
with an undoubted mandate and freed
from reactionaries. within .its owe
ranks,
"What time Is it?"
"I'11 ask my dog."
"Asia your dog?"
"Yee -he's a watch dog."
Will Solve
)eking Troubles
THE WORST' 5 -IAS HAPPENED -COLLAPSIBLE CAR
Berlin inveuter, Zaseha, has constructed little enotrr ear that can be tom.
ed up la seven, minutes and carried home if a breakdown amours. No garage
is necessary.
ing for about 45 minutes Longer. The
Tasty Recipesappearance of the pie may be im.
Curried Lobster
Take one tin lobster, 2 oz, rice, 4,/a
pint milts, one dessertspoon curiae
powder, one tablespoon flour, one
small onion, lentos Juice, salt, Boll
and -dry rice carefully, Melt butter is
atewpan and fry onion until lightly
browned. Add, flour and curie pow -
dor, :gook for two or three minutes,
then pour in milk and boll for a Cow
minutes, stirring gently, Divit a lob-
ster in Dight pieces, then put them
with rice into the sauce. Add 'emote
Jule and salt to taste. Let stand by
the side of the fire until thoroughly
hot, then serve,
Curried Oysters.
Melt 2 oz, of butter in a saucepan,
mix with it one tablespoon of Capt,
White's curie powder, one dessert
spoonful 66 flour, and fry till brown,
stirring all the time. Add, the liquor
foe a tin of "0 & 13" oysters, a squeeze
of iemon•juice,, atui a little cream;
boil up, put la the oysters, and treat
again, but do not quite boil. Serve at
once with a dish of boiled rice.
Cheese f=ritters
Ingredients: Four 1 08. portions of
"Csilvern Oottage" cheese; a few
slices of stale broad, a little milk,
flour and seasoning. Method: Mix
the cheese with a little milk to form
a paste and spread with it half the
slices of bread. Place another slice
on top like a sandwich, and ut into
four triangles. Dip each in mitts and
titch oat with seasoned pea flour. Pry
to a golden brown in. hot clarified but-
ter or pork Eat. Drain on paper. Dish
up neatly an dserve hot.
Cureled Sausages
Peel and slice one onion and apple,
and fry kr a golden brown; also fry
1 ib. of skinned sausages, Then add
hale -pint of good stock, thicken with
Bisto and a teaspoonful of curiae pow -
dor. Simmer gently for ten minutes,
Servo with betted rice.
Preserving Beans
Slice young beans thinly and pack
into clean dry glass jars with salt in
alternate layers. Leave overnight
and it the beaue have seek add more
beans and 'salt, the last layer salt,
Cover with three thicknesses of
greaseproof paper and store in a cool
dry dark place, When used they
should be wel washed In running
water, and dulling boiling the water
should be changed to remove salti-
nes,
Glbiet Pie
Ingredients: 1 set of goose giblets,
1 lb. of rump steak, 1 onion, a bou-
quet -gate -18h parsley, thyme, bay leaf),
Pug, flaky, or rough puff paste, salt,
pepper, Method: Wash the giblets,
put them into a stemma with the
onion sliced, bouquet-garni, pepper -
urns, es a teaspoonful of salt, cover
with cold water, and ,of
gently
from 11/2 to 2 hours. Cut theh steak
into email thin slices, put a layer of
them: at the bottom of a pie dish, add
the 'giblets and the remainder of the
steak in alternate layers, and season
well. Strain .the stock, season to
taste, pour over the meat to about
three-quarters it8 depth, and add the
remalader when the pie is baked,
Cover with pasta, bake in a brisk oven
for about Ye au hour, then reduce the
temperature, and continue the cook -
Preyed by brushing it over with yolk
of egg either before 'Lakin gor when it
is three -parts done. Before serving,
pour 'n,tl:A retnainder of the hot
atock, Time: To bake, from 11/t to
late hours. Srttiiciant for 6 or 0 par•
eons,
Ships and Stiu a
As soon ae I began to name a star,
Or judge a ebip by rigging, mast or
spar,
I, seeking more with eyes than with
my.mind,
IladAare that I wculd soon go beau-
ty bund.
But now, not caring If the ship that's
5000
I acbooaer-rigged, a barque or brig-
autiue,
I look beyond my eyea to where she
rides
Under a rainbow,.beautifal; or glides
Before the wind, oa rno side of her
belie.
And as young iambs or sheep all
white and wholly,.
C see the stars in one flock nibbling
go
Across the Heavens, whose names I
will not know.
-W. at, Dan -las in the Now Statesman.
Tipsy Cake
Ingredients: 4 sponge cakes, rasp-
berry jam, 4,A plat of boiled custard,
bSt a glass of sherry, cherries, auger•
Ica, almonds, Method: Split the
sake's, spread on a good layer of jam,
replace the halves, arrange them con.
putty in a dish, giving them as far as
possible the appearance ot one large
cake. Pour over the sherry, and let
them soak for about 1. hour. Make
the custard as directed, and wheu coot
pour it over. The cake may be gar-
nished with cherries, angelica, or
baked almonds. Time: About let,
hours:. Sudlient for 3 or 4 persons.
An Olive Sauce '
To add An
to your roast
lamb or pork, roast duck or fowl, or
'grilled steak, serve this sauce: Molt
two tablespoonfuls of butter, add two
(tablespoonfuls of flour, stirring until
!smooth. Dissolve two meat exthact
cubes (or whatever bouillon is liked)
in two cupfuls of hot water and add
to the above. Then add two table-
stSoonfuls or chopped olives, four
tablespoonfuls of chopped celery, two
tablespoonfuls of chopped pimento,
and a quarter of a teaeoonful o2 pep-
per.
Devilled Olives
Stone some large olives and then.
stuff [Seas with anchovy paste. The
way to stone them is to get a small
sharp knife and out Lute the olive until
the stone is reached. Then begin to
pare the stone, being careful not to
break the flesh o2 the olive and to
keep near the stone. When all the
flesh has been removed from the
stone the olive 'willcurl back into Its
original shape. Spread some toast
with anchovy paste and a little butter,
and place throe or tour olives on each
piece of toast, then serve hot with a
apr'ig of parsley.
Olives and Blankets
Here_ is another way of serving
stuffed olives, with bacon this time:
Choose large, stiff olives, Wrap each
in a thin slice of bacon and put under
the grill to cools until the bacon is
crisp. Turn once during cooking, Re-
move froin the grill, and serve two or
three together oa rounds or toast.
Rabbit -"t -tear you have a new job."
Turtle -"Yep, I'm a washboard at
the Clean -lam -Quick laundry."
When I an married, we shall have
children, and I will 'rear them in the
English way -brave boys and graci-
ous girls: Lya de Patti.,
Bringing in'the Hay
The 'glere of the sun on tiro hard,
stoop road,
The scent of the sun-dried hay;
A. Olow•moving team, with its Loose-
The
load,
Which ?calls on the dusty way,
ft is home by the read in the noonday
heat;
The Clydesdales are slow but
strong;
The sound of the beat of their iron -
shod feat
In time to a murmured song.
The switch 01 their tails, as they
deeply breathe Wyoming; it has beauties all its own,
Andifioker their nostrils wide; Loots clown ie. the depths made dur-
The sprays of the heather their necks ing many ages by the passage from
bewreathe, the mountains of the drainage that
Uptossed with a conscious pride always has followed copious eltowcr'1
!See the colors on the ridges and the
pinnacles! CAN on the green knobs
that acentuate the minarets and the
spires! 1 Over these mountain goats
tempt the hunter. Stand at a point
indicated by Sam, and measure with
the eye the twenty-three hundrod.feet
depth of Waimea. Turn and gaze on
the mouth of the canon and the sea
beyond. There are but ten miles of
this great gorge, but it winds about
so that there are few spots where the
whole can be viewed. One of these
shows not only the canon itself, but
the rainy mountain, Waialeale, and
waterfalls far up oa opposite cliffs,
'Grained Canon contains about
twenty-five square miles,and is about
a mile wide. The highest point oc: ttte
rim is four thousand feet above the
sea. Since the water is such a dis-
tance away, the full extent of the
height is appreciated at once.
The vicinity of the canon is deli-
ciously green by reason of the tropic
vegetation. Perhaps the most inter-
esting plants in the 'collection are the
common cactus, or prickly pear, and
Winnipeg In the first eight months the aloha plant, which is valued be-
of 1029 a total of 10,4,84 homestead en- cause of the fibre in the stem. Once
tries have been made in the provinces each chief had an alalia plantation of
f Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta his own, whose product was used for
and British Columbia, an increase of the making of rope, seines, and fish
1,806 over the corresponding eight nets. An iudIeailon of the value of
months last year, These free home-
stead
the aloha fibre is the tact that once
stead landa,in quarter sections of 160 upon a time it was used in place of
aortia each are offered to settlers who money. Frequently taxes were paid
are British subjects or who declare with it. -Soho T. Faits, int "The Para -
their intention to beome British sub• d4,se Of the Paeifir"
jests, in the four western provinces.•
The total acreage taken up in home-Tlae Imperial Conference
stead lands from January 1st to Aug- Colombo Daily News: If the Col -
with"31st, 1929, is 1,077,440, compared onial Office were not so exclusively
with 1,389,560 acres in the first eight preoccupied with the affairs o2 the
months of 1928 or an Increase this self-governing Dominicns and with
year of 298,880 acres. The province the ways and means of placating their
of Alberta leads in the number of en- exacting peoples, it would have notic•
trios with 6,013 for this year, Sas- ed long ago. that in contrast to thein
katchewau next with 3,480, then Bri- there is little or no interest in the
Bait Columbia with 541 and Manitoba Crown Ccionies in the Imperial Con-
with 450. Terence: The reasan is of course that
These homestead lands, although le- the Crown Colonies are treated as if
cited mainly at some distance from they had no will or opinion of their
railways, are of very great fertility. own. That this treatment sh ntld, bo
A registration fee of 510 is required meted out to fifty-five millions of pee -
from eaclt settler and he must also do ple is not a little strange... Is it suer
a certain amount of cultivation- and prating that a country like Ceylon
fulfil other requirement; within three which during the century and mote of
years. British rule had the honor of a visit
• from a Colonial Otliee official only the
'itish Settlers for Canada other day should remain profoundly
uninterested in questions relating to
Manchester Dispatch: Recent hap- the "Colonial Empire."
penings in the Dominion (of Canada) g«
have shown the dangers attending Foods That Go Together
the dispatch of British unemployed to Bisque of clams, cold tongue, potato
that part of the Empire just now. It salad, lettuce sandwiches and straw -
is asad Ching to know that, with eat- berry short cake.
pty spaces across the seas and an p Lsh cutlets, sauce Tartare, scallop-
ed of workers at homo, we cannot ed potatoes, cauliflower, watercress
find atisfactory ways and means of salad, snowballs with custard sauce.
bringing the .two together. The tion- Baked shad, sauce Hollandaise, boil-
ble, to a great extent, lies in the fact
ed potatoes, asparagus, dandelion
that we are a manufacturing station added and cornstarch pudding with
and that our unemployed are. town- strawberry sauce.
bred. It is no use sending such to
the open spaces, But • what or tiro Breaded chaps, potato souffle, string
Youngsters who have not yet found' beano, cucumber and lettuce salad and
their job in lite? With suitable prey fruit blasts mange.
1lminary training there is no reason Stuffed sea[, brown sauce, Hoed po-
why they should net form the finest taloea, scalloped tomatoes, spinach,
typo of emigrant, lettuce hearts with Creole dressing'
PRINCESS LINES
Acharming adaptation aP Princess
lines in black crepe satin that empha-
sizes slenderness through panel £cont
and back of skirt.
The clever cut of bodice with slighb.
blousing at either side and swathed
effect through waistline, is especially
lovely for woman of larger figure. The
round neckline shows new lingerie
touch in ecru Alencon lace collar, and
is completed with tie that cues the
dull side of crape. The sleeves are
ever so smart wibh flaring cuffs that
fall over wrists.
It's an opportunity! Style No. 706
is designed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years,
36, 38, 40 and 42 inches but. You'll
find the making of this practical smart
dress the most simple thing imagin-
able-
There are many other fascinating
fabrics quite as suitable.
For office, classroom and general
occasions, a featherweight woolen in
plum shade with collar of self -fabric
finished with. plum shade faille silk
crepe binding which is repeated in tie,
is captivating.
Transparent velvet in tobacco
brown, silk crepe in black with egg-
shell collar, printed velvet in wine red
tones and midnight blue crepe Maro-
cain chic,
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
%alma Canon
No one was prepared Ear the exo.
cited voice of the guide tie he said,
1"Close your eyes!" And, a minute
later, "Now you ;tray open them!"
And what a surprising vision was
lIdiseloeed to the eyes that opened in
obodionco to the call!! Could this be
on the little island Sana!? Or had
there' been by some mysterious means
a transfer of the travelers to Arizona?
• Surely this wee a bit of the Grand
Genoa siretolring far down below and
reaching off into the Mountains! Or
was it the Yellowstone Canon? No!
The Waimea Canon is unlike anything
to be found either in Arizona or in
At home at long last, and the clay's
work done;
The teamster is stauding by;
They whinny their joy for the goat fa
won
to tho iltusir of she twilight site.
He 'walks in between them and slaps
their sates,
And lingers that he may got
The feel of taro ripple between their
hides,
Alt keine .t with their toll -grimed
sweat.
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20s in
stamps ac coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each number, and
address your aide•• to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St„ Toronto.
Patterns sent by{an early nail.
Films showing the hunting of wild
animals in Africa with full sound ef-
fects are to be shown. We suppose
they will be known as "the Standee."
-"London Opinion,"
So horses and masa at the Long day's
end;
In wordless but heartfelt ways,
irspres t0 each other, aa friend to
friend,
Their mutual Iove and praise.
-Donald Bain, in Christian Soieaco
Monitor..
Increased Demand for Home-
stead Lands
and rice casserole with apricot com-
Inter -Empire Trade pore.
Perth West Australian. , There are
two lines of hope for better fiscal co.
operation: First, the fuller realiza-
tion by the Britian people of the great
possibilities of dominion markets, es-
pecially now that America and the
Continent are endeavoring more and
more to exclude British manufactures;
second, the £ustraltan recognition that
tariffs trust act as encouragement to
efficient industries rather than as ex-
pensive stimulants to inefficient ones.
MUTT AND JEFF -
By BUD FISHER
Mutt's Certainly Getting An Eyeful To -day.
The Australian Elections
Sydney Sun: Out of disaster may
come salvation. Nationalism has
lacked inspiration and magnetism is
recent years, and Labor has been
divided. The time is ripe for jettAs.
oniug the makeweights on the Duo
side and the extremists on the other,
and for the formation -of an Austra-
lian party free from complacency and
a party that lacks tete doctrinaire
,crookedness of the Bolshevik wing,
•
ASSOCIATION
Everyone knows the power of as -
sedation. All have experienced this
truth, that a perfume, a flower, a,
strain of music, some lase tiling even
than these, may have power to awak-
en a crowd ot images whose connec-
nett with the trifle that has called
them up edit be anderetood by him
only 4,u witose mind they are thus rer
awakened. How natural and backs
ing then, to attach a thought. of heav-
en to that hour when daylight is at
once glowing and dying that hour of
twilight wide!' brings labor's close and
gives leisure Eer tong, sweet, perhaps.
dangerous reveries; Who can wonder
that the evening prayer becomes a
safeguard?
ABILITY
I have never known ,a• case of bit•
dlscoverod merit, and I have never
known a case where merit failed to
achieve success, I nava known many,
mengifted with great ability who
failed miserably to life, but In every
instance the failure arose from, neg-
lect to develop natural talent into
trained capacity,--l3outko: Cockran.
-
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The Australian Elections
Sydney Sun: Out of disaster may
come salvation. Nationalism has
lacked inspiration and magnetism is
recent years, and Labor has been
divided. The time is ripe for jettAs.
oniug the makeweights on the Duo
side and the extremists on the other,
and for the formation -of an Austra-
lian party free from complacency and
a party that lacks tete doctrinaire
,crookedness of the Bolshevik wing,
•
ASSOCIATION
Everyone knows the power of as -
sedation. All have experienced this
truth, that a perfume, a flower, a,
strain of music, some lase tiling even
than these, may have power to awak-
en a crowd ot images whose connec-
nett with the trifle that has called
them up edit be anderetood by him
only 4,u witose mind they are thus rer
awakened. How natural and backs
ing then, to attach a thought. of heav-
en to that hour when daylight is at
once glowing and dying that hour of
twilight wide!' brings labor's close and
gives leisure Eer tong, sweet, perhaps.
dangerous reveries; Who can wonder
that the evening prayer becomes a
safeguard?
ABILITY
I have never known ,a• case of bit•
dlscoverod merit, and I have never
known a case where merit failed to
achieve success, I nava known many,
mengifted with great ability who
failed miserably to life, but In every
instance the failure arose from, neg-
lect to develop natural talent into
trained capacity,--l3outko: Cockran.