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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1910-12-09, Page 3%04ebooto. LESSON X1,—'DEC. Ft, IUD. The Cru cif ix len,—Matt. 27 T. uI50. Comment art. --L •J viers dellttrid to el. i.Ltlicifi'4 the 1.132). From the. c1 L.ini OL tour dew's to r''t'le'a'e a pzl, dobe" .4t the .t'at:sso'vet' Pilate had 'hope of eeting J(r+u.s free, lla nibides wets to \ce11-krnaw11 prisoner, who lta1 mused an inaurrect.on eguinst the Roman government. auirl was guilty of minder. 1''ilate hoped that oho. )peop..e, being given a rhote<r between deti.oletati and Jesus, would <:hu:lse Jc;us an the one: do be released, but in ttr t he was ddsappeiatcd. The chief pekoes and <*iders 'had so fat' :trouvzed the populace that the insisted that I3arabbns be re - bayed a:ru,1 that Jean•; be cart 1 5• red. Pilate, in addition to here own judgment, lied. been warned 'hvhis wife to du rr •.h- hi'g against Jr..as• and in vie"'ding to tire, utob attempted to declare his anon 1tt-to- .ec:ucy by waashin4,:' bis hands before :help. Pilate knew- .woat was right ibut ores afraid to ao it, 1c,.+t he annuld lose his position. ale was shortly after this ban ;shed and died in disgrace. The 4)eupiets ery, "His blood be on res, -and on oar vuldre.n," w.s fulfilled. forty years litter in the terrible destruction of Jur:t.:ftc:u by the Roman armies, Pilate art mored to appease the people by lsuoiirging :les {ls, but nothing short 0f his death would satisfy them. Out:e fully in the hands u hie enemies the rno'at cruel 400411111k , were heaped upon Jesue. 1.3ee:Luise he had auknawlodge., his kingship, the 105)11 in derision put a robe of royal color upon :him, a thorn crown upon his lfean, a reed in Iris hand for a seep+ta'e. and .rnu,:k- ingly hailed him as a yang, and st.ru,:k him and spat upon him. The cross, upon which Jesus ,war, to suffer was. ncs•nrd- big to custom, laid upon hint. On the way to Golgotha. Jesus, weary with the walti:hing, 'tire agony, the sufferings at tho hands of his enemies, eank Ileneath the weight of the cross, and Simon t'uo Cerenian was rornparlhed to help hist bear it. IT- Jesus pla'rad on the emits (vs. 33-39), 33. Place called Golgotha--'C.`':tllt'd in Luke, Calvary. It is not definitely known, where it. woe lut•a:Led, some residuee fix- ing it east of the walls, of Jerusalem and others north. The lather view seem), more 'probable, sines. a s;ku114ike ruorrnd •i:l 'there~ which amtaiers the deseriptioe. "A place of a skull," :i4. Vinegar. , , mingled with g:a'1 •-'1':il• same as tho "wine, mingled with myrrh" menteorneel by Mark. It was a wtullefy- ing draught prepared for those who wore biting ermined. to deaden the sense of 11a3D. Would not drink -••-772e offer may have been made in kindness, and, if ate, Je,stU3 crcoognixed the act, by tasting tild draught, but 'refused to drink St, be c tore:. he wished all his senses to be set>ve while Ire was . undergoing hla .sufferings fur the ,sins of the world. 33, Or uelfied him -2 -Crucifixion was a Roman mode of punishment, and only the vi1'cist wtze thus executed. The victim was fastened to the crass by .having spikes driven tlrrozegt the bands and the fent into the wood. -This was done before the cross, - was raised and. fixed in the•ground. 'The pain was excruciating and death nema)1v came slowly. Parted his garments• -.-Th„ exetltritioners were entitled to the o:lts• garments of the victim, and in this ease. as Jesus' robe was without $4'a11) tats were cart 't;r determine 10 whom 11 should 4)e ;iron. 13y the 1)rlr:Int -Tae, tdutit.atio'n is from Tsai. 22, 18. 311. They watched him-- Ivr four Ro- man soldiers were in official charge of the execution. They saw His eonduet and that of his revilers and heard His words. 37. His accusation --'This} tablet. „placed above the cross declared the dime for which the prisoner NMI executed. In this case the charge was that of treason, but the accusation was written Bolt in mockery. It, wee written in tt-reek, the language of culture, in Latin, the lang- uage of pourer, and in Ileba'ew the language of religion. 38. Two thieves, . with dint -Ire was counted nmang the criminals, although he was innoe.•rnt. and He • w.'a.s numbered ed atnong tr.ns;rressors (Din. 53, 1 ) w h' n Ile. came 10 rOdenm, TIi Jesus reviled (v't, 39.44:, .1!l, lie- viled--Those• who passed rllen;tr tsar• mall In sight of the crus: saw the lnseript irn1 and railed upu'1 Jesus with'( 4('napt, 'their words and gestures expressed t.beir exultation over a fallen enemy. 101 they regarded ;lilt). 40. I)cstroyessi the tem- ple, and Wildest- They took op he false charge that was presented n;:!lin t Him at the trial before the conn'il, They did not understand the import of Christ's phophecy of His death and resurre'etion. Save thyself--ln their mockery they Said. r'I2 you east destroy elle temple and rebuild it in three days, you earn now save yourself." If '.Chou he the Non of God -elle had declared that He was the Son of God, and He had power to "come down from the cross," but He bid to bo taunted and misunderstood in order to complete Itis' mission. To have come clown from tiro cress would have been to fail of the great end for which Ire enure to earth, 41. Chief priests., with the scribes and eldrls---'there triumph sroru- ed complete. The 'Jewish leaders mutt have : had a s"'cret fear. that Jesus :would yet, defeat their purposes. 42. himself 'stn c•annet 1.n\'e- -They ennellidet that Josue' work.' of • mercy and power were but piaccs of detention. Wo will believe :flint -,-1f they farhrcl to believe in His mission hefrsre Ile was crlmified. neith- er Wendel they believe, oven 1bouc':t shmtltl save Himself from the erose. for they refusal to believe ween }le arose' from the dead. 43. 'Ie trnated in (:reel They had their own wary of lear!oni)'g, which to them appeared sate fact pry, but they could not understand • the Being With whom then were • den 11npr. ,.Terms nq t)t(r Son of G'o1 eorld nor, c':'c;t,pn the :cross. 44. 'l'he thieves also --Both now rosy lave joined the revilers in deriding Jesus, but later one •of them sought and obtained mercy from flim. rv. Jesus gave up his life (vs. 45.50) 45. there was darkness, -.•'three hours of raging-llnrnan passion, endured. with Godlike patio:we. blurring mortal hatred into silence, and perhaps contributing to the penitence o1 the reviler at ids side, It was a supeenaturail gloom, shove in eclipse of the :.un was impossible during Cho full moon of Passover, Chad- wielt, Jesus was placed on the eras, at nine o'clock, rho hour cf the morning sa.<srifice. The, darkness began at noon tnd continued until three o't•lock, the hour of the evening sacrifice. 40, why bast thou forsaken me—On the human side Jesus felt that he was forsaken of God in the awful agony of soul that he was suffering, but "the forsaking was a feeling, not a fact." 47. calleth for Elias—They mistook the word Eli for 1'.lias, yet it mate ]taco been spol<eti in mookery. 4.9. straightway ---In Flolm's .account we read that .Jesus said, "I t3rirt," This untied forth (lir offer of drink. a eponge-.'Co absorb the 1lhtticl as a drip .ng cup sou}d not be• used. 'int gar • herr wine mixed With \water•, the ohid;t it drink of the Romain sol- dier. The es:aruelating agonies of cruei- fixinn were "all gathered into ono cen- trad tee -tint, in which they were lost .end epi that of devouring thirst." —Sto:l.r-., on a reed ----So that with it the lips of .fetus eot11c1 be reached. 49. 1 -he rest safes. --'rhe others 111 moekery call upon this one to desist, and see if Elias will come to save him. --.Alford. 50. cried again with 11 •lond volve_.- i t 401(5 the last of the seven words of Christ on the erosss. The first. was, "Father. forgive 1 -bee; for ibex know not what they do" (Luke. 23:24). The second, "'To -day shalt thou be with me la para- dise" (Luke 23:4:3). 'file third. "Woman, behold thy l -ort!" enol, "Behold thy moth- er!" (John 111:20, 27). 'rhe fourth "My God. my God. wiry- hast thou forsaken Inc?" (vs, 401, The fifth, "1 thirst" (John 19:28). The sixth, "It is finish- ed" (John 19:30). The seventh, 'Fath- er, into thy hands 1 commend my spirit." (Luke '23:40). yielded up hie spirit (It. V,)----I3e: had power to lay down his life. The vici"in,s on the cross usually suffered sever01 days before. (learn came to then:. "lie was really dead. His hu- man soul departed to the world of spir- its, and his body was a breathless clove of clay."--llenry. "None of the even- gcliets tout the words. 'he died.' but 'he breathed forth." Ile gave up lois life be- cause he willed. whee he willed, Trow he willed."-- Farrar. Questions • \There. was ('hri41 cr001- fiod? When? Who were ermined with him:' What w1(11 dune with his gar- ments? \Vho derided hip? l\'stat was the in'rri)rtion placed over him? .In what languages? Why in these lang- uages'? I1•ow long slid the darkness con- tiune:' flow long wn,s ,Jesus on the eros before he yielded op his life? IIoty many and what were Christ's sayiugs upon the cross? \Vicat is the signifi- can0e of the' words, "Yielded 119 'the ; host?0 1'd1ACTI('A.f., APPLICATIONS, "Golgotha, , a place of a skull" (v. 33), the place of ignominy. ".Even the death of the cross" is the last, the low- est step ire the descending degradation; there could be nothing worse (P011. 2: 7, 8.) Jesus was crucified without the city. Here the criminal was put to death (Lev. 21: 14.) Here the s i.offer- inf; was burned. (lixod.29: 14.) "Let us go firth therefore unto him without -the camp, hearing his reproach" (Ileb. 13: 13.) Jerusalem was the holy city, a type of the dwelling -place of Jesus, Ile came from a sinless heaven to a sin - touted earth;; from the brightness of the Father's glory to the darkness of uttermost shame. "Let us go forth therefore; from light to darkness, from happiness to rniser;y, from safety to dan- ger. from sell "unto him;" forth from the pleasant home into the dreary plat - se of the <'ity shim;, reaching an out- stretched 111111(1 to drunkards and lost toles, weeping with those into whose lives has corral no gleam of sunshine, and sending tip earnest supplication for the outcasts for whom Christ died and for whom be offered up his last prayer. "They erueilied him" (v. 133,) t'ho ,1,;'w•ti were obstinate and Ungrateful in their hatred. Nothing is so bake as in- gratitude. At 111e battle of A)ma, a wounded Russian soldier called piteous- ly for water, Calst•au•, Erlclington ran to hint and :eve hire the refreshing draught, The wounded man revived. The captain turned to joie his regiment, when the mon ,just restored by his kindness fired and shot Trim, The Je1vs were guilty of the same perverse ingrati- tude. Christ 'pr'eached to the poor, n'eal- ed their broken-hearted, delivered their captives, restored their blind, 111(1(r lame, their cleat', and 'they crucified him." 00, the perversity of sin: They <rawified hint," the prophesied Christ, their pro- mised S:wronr, "His aeiusation" (v. 37), written in three. language'." WAR e, proclamation of grace to 1111 classes and conditions of people (.lul111 19: 20.) The _Hebrew who by works of righteousness would earn salvation may know by the cross that the gift of God is eternal life (Prom. (i: 23), than whichsoever will may take of the water of life freely (_rev. 22: 17.) The (:reek who would seek by wisdom to find a way of reconciliation may know that Christ the Crucified is the wisdom of God (1 Cor. 1: 22, 23, 30), an<l the way to (.,test (John 14: 0.) The Renton with dominant j)nwer atnct stub- born will is taught, by the cross that the 44'r' of selint1Xsirm is the way of salvation. A deaf alod dumb pupil wrote, hi. do not ser how' Jesus •saline should be able to die for n1) mien," Cher - lotto Elizabeth thought as moment how she' could melte the blessed truth clear !.o the child's mind; then went; out and brought in a, quantity of dead leaves and: ))l))0011 therm: on a table beside a dist. ]mond, The mute's c}e brightened. " see it now," he wrote. "Jesus; is as dia- mond worth morn than all the leav1'$ of of a dead world." ' "A4.y (:od, 11114 (lnd, Why hast thou for- salon 'rno?" (V. •40.) .1'h;, ontraga earth was its nothing to the desertion 01 )wavcn. The angels; 1;'ho sang at los birth (Luke 2; t2), who succored hint after his teinptratiou (\1at1. •l: 11), who strengthened lune in his airway ( Luke 22: 43), are trot tirrihi<. in 11w derlcuc:4a of the 01055, The "voice from heaven" that approved 11)01 :it his baptism (Matt. 3: 17), and acknowledged him 10 his; glory (Matt. 17: 5), and comforted bleu in his 9111.11. trouble (John .12: 27, 28), was silent: while he Lure t e world's sin. Let us adore, Christ a1, our hedetuttcr our Saviour, our (10d "mighty to save," and strong to deliver.—.41 ,C. 50, iikaMEIWEAPS(S. <tt `' 11111 tr TORONTO MARKEr'S. LIVE STOCK. The railways reported 64 car loads of live stock at the city market, for Thurs- day, eonsistintr of 844) c:att:)c, 4:300 hogs, 1,470 sheep aril lambs, and 50 calves. The quality of cattle was the store as has been coming all week. Trude tris steady at unchanged quota- tions. Exporters --T. Connor bought one carr load of export bulls at $4.40 to $3. Butchers—Prime !deiced lots sold at from $5.00 to $5.85: loads of good, $15,30 to $5.00; medium $5 to $5.30; conumou, $4 to $4,110 cows $3 to $•5: cambers, $2 to $2.50; bulls, $:0210 to $4.60. Feeders ----Feeders of hest quality for short keeps, $5 .25 to $15.44': good, straight steers, $4.75 to $3.10: stool:ers, 84 to $4.00. Veal C'an'es --•There was no r-hange on the calf market, prices remaining steady at $3 to $8 per cwt. Sheep and T„tmbs---\'4resley Donn re- ported prier's for sheep and lambs as fol- lows: Sheep. ewes. X14.25 to $t.60: rants, $3 to $3.50: lambs, :5.50 to $3.7.5 per cwt. flogs ---Prier's for hugs to -day were un- changed. Selects fed and watered •k7, incl $0.05 for hogs from drovers. f,o,b at country pcint4. The prospects are reported to be for still lower prices this coming week. iLnu' (birder said that they would be 15e and portions tare per cwt. lower. I''AL{ 1i'..lt AiA1't!' 1('1. The offerings of grain lu-u:1y were fairly large. with prices steady a. a rule. Wheat four, 200 bu.•hel< selling at 85 to 580. Barley unehaug':d, with 55151 of 700 bushels et 60 to 112,1, C)atts toilet and steady, 300 busshcls selling at 37e. • Hay in moderate s;cppl,•, :with sale':; of 18 loads at $17 to;$I0 a Tarn for 1.Moitay, atnd at $14 to $10 for (44:1(0 :and thre .. tL'IlW Ie. nominal 4(1 tiitttkitlane. Dressed hogs, art easy, With (Pota- tions ruling at $0 to $9.59. Wheat, white ... ... 0 85 $ 0 88 1)o., )'ed ... ... ... 0 83 0 88 Do.. goose ... ... ... 0 83 0 09 Oats, bushel ... ... .. 0 37 0 (10 Peas, bushel ,. ... 0 83 0 83 Burley, bushel ... .. '0 00 () (12 Bye, bushel . ... 0 237 0 00 Buckwheat, bushel ..... , 0 48 0 01 :.fat', timothy, ton .. .. 17 0(1 1!) 00 I)o., clover, ton - .. - - - 14 00 13 OO Straw, per ton . ... 17 (MI 18 Oa) Alsike clover -- Farley, bushel ... .. 7 5() 31 00 No. 1, bushel .. , ... 7 00 7 50 No. 2, hoalrel ,-. ,-, (3 50 7 3.0 lied clover,_ No. 1 .-, ... 7 00 7 25 Do, No. 2 . , . ... .. , 13 00 r, 25 Do., No. 3 ... .. , ... 5 00 5 50 Dressed )logs ... ... ... 900 9 50 Butter, dairy ... .., .,, 0 25 0 30 1)o., inferior ,.. ... 0 21 0 23 Eggs, new -laid, dozen ... 0 50 0 55 Ducks, springy , .. ... ... O 14 4) 1(3 Cbiekens, lb. ... . „ ... 0 13 0 14 Turkeys, 10, . , . ... .... 0 )8 0 "3 Geese, 10 . ... ... ... ... 0 12 1) 14 Fowl. 1b. ., ... ... ,. 0 11 0 32 Apples, bbl. ... 3 00 4 50 Cabbage, duzeu ,,, .,. 040 0 50 (.'unliilower. dozen ... .. , 0 75 100 Union's, ban ,,, ,,. ,,. 1 00 1 20 Potatoes, hay , . , 0 75 0 85 Beef, lliudqunrt�ers .. , . , , f) 50 in 50 1)o, f01rquat'ters , . . (3 50 e o;) Do., choke, csrrcasr SFA '1 14- D0„ rn':. rlllilll, 0441 '.(».' 7 M) 'i 77i Mutton, per c•\rt, . .. S 01) 10 no Veal, prime. pnr <•wt. .. • 10 00 12 ern Lamb, cwt. , , , ... ... 10 00 11 00 Slt(tATl 14M1 K l;'1', St„ Lawrence granulated. .$L73 per owl.. in barrels: No. i );"Iden, :$1.35 pet cwt., in barrels, Beaver. $4.50 p'sr in bags. 'Chess price.: are for dehverw here. Parr lots. Sr. lost. In 100.10. hags, pekes are rte' less, OTHER MARKETS. WINNIPEG WHEAT MARKET. \\'beat- i.:eccn111f'r 911.fac. May 9594c. Oats---1)eerrnbc:r ;121M4t, May 37e. T3IiI`rT+5.f1 (A1 J F, iA.dtKL l; . New'York.- T.ondon (abaes quote Am- erican cattle Ilt 12e to ):31(;e per 1b.; re- frigerator beef, at fills per lb.. • WOOL hAlE . Landon ---The offferings at t -lie wont auetion sales to -day amounted to -13;333 bales. Bidding was active send prioe-s were- first. Cross-breds were in limiter snpply and good sorts 11(11 aneed .5 per cent. A fine s:,leetion of merinos was eagerly absorbed' by eentincrlt:ll tied home buyers at hardening priara, '1'lrn. 1:8105 follow: New ,Smith. Wolfe,- -2J 4) l,ttliis; 'ent1• eel., le 10 to is 4.11 greas.)V, :134(1 to 11/20, (,)u enslencd---•;3,001) hake; scoured, Is 321 'En Is -9d3 greasy, (3d. to• Is 201, Vietoria-- 4,200 bales, sanlited, llrl is 1a 10(1; greasy. 70 to 1s L:. • South Austlaliur 100 hales; greasy, 7t/(d 54).111%0. • New 7.calancl-. 2,400 bile ; 4c,ol.tr•)'1, Is - ' it �tri�F ete �h Is Your rc 1 ofe g bo s iar Connected ii ected b 'Phones? r�L rr it is. we know yon will be )ntcrested and will want to hear about our No. 1,317 type `Telephone Set,whirh 11n5 soon spe. daily d,'veloped at cost of 510.000 to inset the conditions under which your local system is operatln4. and we therefore want to send 14.10 our free book, which fully described this telephone, IF N•)T you will bo interested in our book elrtr:led "Slow to Build 1. ural Telephone Lincs." This book tells all about sok• to organize a Telephone Coln pany which can to owned incl operated by your own eornr,ri i l -- hen• 10 piaci:ea about lire c::., v -- tion, poles line wire, istthln; cf instru.^-..ts, etc, let „re FAf Qd' WY NOT send us your name Rnd address and tell us Cult you want Bulletin N:), 340 and w' 14,',) lo:•ward it t o 100 by the fast mail <5 x)zl~ \Vith the facts that ibis hook awes you, yon w.t1 I A »ar' p:.ded to leant how little 41:00 a tc)cphon4 system would cost. 120eirEX .: MANUFACTURING CO.tln;fur Manufacturer cad supplik: of 4,11 :apparatus lard egai1•rrent u:rd in (be comtru(t179, c peratirr, and 44(1:4431' :ane: ok i(iethow. Fera Mann endEletlria laanv.a Y 1':zr.._. . . o,1r ne.:.1Cat houec. MONTREAL TORONTO WINNIPEG REG.'(A C.3LCIt22.Y VANCOUVER ae Rityr 223 It4d ten Is Sifrd; gutsy, l!?:id 1,1 1• 1:). t flog. were easy, with sates of s,•le text Cole of (11(0)1 Dr' sand Note, ---7441 ; tote at. $7 to `07.25 per 100 1b•., weeti:.es•t hetes; scoured. 1' Sd to 1s lOd; grea-v. i off ears. l)?<t t.1 9d.�a►-- MON-MEAL, LIVE E STOCK.. 2)Jont.reul At the ('an'tdien Pauelfiu live stock market this morning tl:of- ferings of live stock were 11311 cat tie. sheep and lambs. 1450 hug. amt _nu calves. (donee steers gold at 5r!_e; (toner at 5 to 534e: fairly geed at 4142 t•) 44 e: fair at 4 to 4x e. and eumoto0 at .31,E to 33.14' per lb. 3'e ws brought. from :112 ts) 4e, and bulls :134 to :391e per 10. The trade in sulal1 me ft" wa• Ja'.71r active. Sheep scold at 4)ji', ail 1111104 at 6 to We- per lb. Calves were 5.::roe and brought from $s to $1.2 each, as to size and quality. S1leeted bets of lutes sold at $7.25 per 109 lbs, w e'gi e l of; ears, and a few lots of store hogs for feeding pnrpuset were solei at 87:40. Al the tlonar('a1 Stnek Yards west end )market there o wert' 5Sa cattle, 375 sheen and 1101)' . 72:1 hoe,: :111.1 73 calve,. FREE FARMS, But the Water Rights for irrl�r7attrll Will Cost Money. \\'nsitington, Dee. 5.—American c t r r« r;r h:l•uuti r,i .'11gatg1Ug in taming may a t.- tl,i:r an irrigation farm lunging in vii:.• ait,n1 :10 to 311 eterrs free: front 11,1010 Sr1.(0. rilumt four hundred farms are open :.• entry all along the several irrigation project:: controlled by the <4overnntent. eller chid expense ineurre0 in obtaining 41,r: of these tracts being tits payment or the cost of water rights, w)ti,•!, amounts t at nd1ru�S0 to 11C) an acre of 3rrigita!r: l,ln -The crop season of 39)0 in the west cr:'phasiecti the, value of irrigation ars ak are ( sop producer," says a 1)0114.406 by the reelamalion ser•viee. ".t was t}:e 11011. Year the far•niers have ku'\V1) 110 no' ldg projects of the fiaov- r-,•1,1,13(1, 0nd many plinrlolnenal cr.oa, • a eric , ,.. , •nr•.fnrr•' .rt,varlur�sw,•o.. nn 'xs-are . yr •.•..r � /+r _w� +.N�r . w3• as CHRISTMAS GIFT MAKING XS made very easy by a • I RYRIE" Catalogue. Q You can purchase from this just as satisfactorily as by visiting our store in person. QT, We guarantee safe delivery—prepay 4111 postal and express charges—and refund the money i1 the goods arc not perfectly satisfactory. CATALOGUE F will he mailed upon request. This contains 132 pages, in colors, of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware., Chinn, Novelties, etc. RYR-i EIE BROS., LQFIS1L IED 0iarnonc4 Merchants, Jewelers aced SUversrniths 134-136-138 YONGE ST., TORONTO JAS. RYRIE, President. HARRY RYR)E, Sec.-Treas. s� pac"[r A � ..' .,�....s+ �v(x a •ear r ren• y err a, _ -, M a ,•Y .r,�►R�[TVA. A'"..'tyP:f11Y ,.CeiS !$dT.Cltl6\(Jia3 hc 119 1oNtlA , " �„"• ry Your Clothes au a le ° {' hdaY with a New Pc1rfi(irctl kn OI.11 Eleaaeir When clothes can't be hung outsides and must be dried in a roolo or cellar, the New Perfection Oil Heater quickly does the work of sun and air. You can bang up the wet clothes, light your Perfec- tion Oil Heater, open the damper top, and the heat rises and quickly dries the clothes. Do not put off 'washing to a'tvait a sunny day In order to avoid mildew. Dry your washing any day with hot air from a 31' SI G� ante rr l r" rye' •+^ e^1 ° 1- �rr+•e.4!e •r� scene �+ n-" �1'��w'"''�`e.+ Absolutely smokeless end oeelL?dess tt ificc Vst"sti s cheat as yoti desire. It is s21r''ey odor!ess and smokeless. ,p it hiiia an <ui ltriO r�a9 1rt5 ci.leC, DL1T ((`j flame spreradier, which prevents the wick fror',i being turned high enough to smoke, and is easy to remove and chop back, so the wick rtlni be quickly cleaned. E i l;'ler body or gallery cannot become wedged, i~)(•r'- cause of a new device in construction, srrtii 4 ..•. «ai\"vays be easily unscrewed for rewicking. R Are initicator glows the amount of oil in the font. Fille -.. rp (loos net need to he screwed down, but is put in 1i1:C a Cori in n t'0( e, .tnie.' Itac ceii to teen Font: bye chain. Fini;bed 211 japan or nickel, 0t1'anl,44 1.2ch ', r., .tell-0w(1c,01412 tarservlce and tote light and ornamentali, it has a cool ha OJe ama la damper t118. I:.aiers Ea-?ywtere. If iao1 at .Pars, u,ri??e for acsc0p:,v_ c:'dAhn' to the clearest egency ci 35: • NOW' AntiW' rn'.i i The r, mut �Q°i�tQa, CO Cry y „ „„ af't `'t'`t .'b°.kVYu..-. s•�71 rl{.+Lt wtr.i Wr d•JeL4 t iA err.:. o,k \0i '� 1,ir.Lltaa. i4`�%"r+'l't'�y,•., , ,' �''t�G'P 5`tj i2:.'hedt4:teti ItoiGtrfn'a 7\ i8jit.