The Wingham Advance, 1919-11-27, Page 2in
- Three times Josue prayed tu the
leather. He we earnest, subiniesive.
truettul and pereietent in prayer.
, Tbree timer.; he Lame to Itie dieciples
rid found them reelect). The ventral -it
between Jenne' acts and those oe the
dieciples, 18 most affecting- A surfer*
ins% agonizing Meeter; and listless,
Couleneutary.—L Chad'sburden telteePtirg diecielest Sleep on now, and
(ye. 3244). 32. Came—A:01e and lier trelfe your rest—Jesus had gainea the
dieciplee, except Judae, left the upper victory, The heur for evetching was
room at about midnight, pawed Ma over, and now they Could /take their
ao eeetero gate ot Jerttsalern and rest, The hour is come—The time
eroseed tae Kidron valley towerd the drew near \Oen the traitor would
Mentnt let Olive. Getteeemane—The come. ;Nos WaS alert toellear the'
name meanie "oil previa" probable appreaching multitudee area to see the
from there baying been an oil preee I
Ikittbrils and torches, 4e, Rise up, let
there to extract the oh from (Awe, afl go—The time for praying was over,
which grew in abundance in that lo- awl the tvay to the erase wan °Poing
ealitY. It WU an enclasure, arid TOY before theeSaviour. He was ready to
have belongeti to tome friend ot Jeeue. meet the nall) and to go with those
At least he wile accuetomed to retire
th twit pine (huhn 2230; haw ithhh who nought, his life, for his hour bad
In the place nOW said to be Geth-came.
Ile, Jeeus betrayed and forsaken (vs.
eeeleue there are Severet'verY °hi 43-54)43-49. The rra 'or of Jesus
olive trees which are thetraht to be 1 ' 3..
was over, and Judas with a crewd
a thoutsana Team old. leboY ulaY fame the Jewish leadere. mum into the
have been ohoots from the roots of garden
Cof Getasemane. .As previous-
treee that were etareclihg in hriet's
tittle. Sit ye here—This Jeeus +mid ly aarauged, audas Elesignated to the
to eight of Hie disciples, laming them mob which one was Jesus by kiesiug
at the entrance of the garden; They hien. Jolts Allowed himeele to be ar-
were familtar with hie practice of re- rested, though in John's aceount _the
tirement for prayer. A mist% if not crowd "went backward," ana reef to
the, great, -crises, of Hie earthly Mine the ground," as Jesus declared to •them
Istry wae -at hand. He anew what who he was. Peter undertook to de
-
awaited Hint, and He realized His rend his Iaster with his sword by cla-
med ofecommunion with the Father. tiog off the, right ear of the ' high
e,3, Taken with him Peter and James ariest's servant. Jesus healed the sev-
andelohn--Tirese three were the in- ered ear and reproved Peter, 50-54, In
ner circleof Christ's diociplee. They this time of stress all the disciples for.
were near Him becauee ot their faith., sook Jesus and fled. As Jesus was
devottoo and capability to enter into led away to the high priest for an ex -
deep empathy with Him. They had emanation, Peter followed him afar off
been, with Him on the Mount of —Peter who had been exceedingly
Tranetiguration and in the none strong in his protestatios of faithful-
whera He had raised the dead to,life. nes s to Jesus. . .
They eeemed to understand, Him bet-
ter than did the ethers, and thie was - QUESTIONS.—Where bad Jesus and
a time ,when Hie human nature craved his disciples epent Thursday caving?
compaulonship. e?ore itumzed—The In what direction did they go from
expression indlcatee both great amaze- there? What doe $ the name of the
ment anda failure to grasp the na- garden mean Why did Rees- go bete
ture of •the new feelings that po.sees- the garden? Haw did He plaee Hes
sed, Him. This ha e reference to the disciples? Why was Jane sorrowful?
human side of Hie nature. Heavy— What was hie prayer? What diel he
The robe. idea. 'of the word is that mean by asking that "this oup" might
of being away from home. 34. Ex- pass from him Why did he tell his
eeediteg, leereowelli unto death—Thie disciples to watcb and. pray? Why
was not phyeical suffering; it was did they not obey him? How great
anguish of soul. It was so severe *ere the sufferings of Jesus in Gethse-
that it would have resulted in death mane?
had at continued long. Tarry ye PR.A.OTICAL SURVEY. e •.
Imre, and watch—Jesus know that the
three disciple's. whom He addreseed Topic—Jeeus' dependent's upon pis
LoHim, even though they were diselpies.
not. etroog, and He desired that they I. The suffering Saviour.
should be near Him.. . 'II. The sleeping disciples.
FORCING BULBS
IN THE HOUSE
P11.041001,04,00**R..~.#10044,1,ppoppoppolp04.44,,
• After the usual greetiage, Admiral
Jellicoe taelt a paper out of las draw -
(e, and handed it to me. It wrie
record of tonnage losees for theilaet
few month. Thin :droved that the
'total sinkinge. British and neutral,
had reached 536,000 tons in February;
'60300 in March, au a that sinkings
(Experimental ream Note.) were taking place in April that lodi.
cated losses of nearly 900,000 tous.
Bulbs when. properly forced make Theo. figures showed losses watch
'Pare three and four Woes as large aa
Mose indicated ey the very inconelto
*doe statements which were then be-
4.ng bublished in the Press.
. To say that I was surprieea by
r„las disclosure is expressing it mild-
iy. I was fairly astonished; in my
Mter the bulbs have been potted the • ed, anything HO terrible. I expressed
!wittiest moments I had never imagin-
next essential is to induce an. Abend, eity consternation to Admiral Jellicoe.
aim of root growth as quickly
possible, The proper root develo4pS- •I'lleHYZ4r.le' he
elecTristiggs rtilliletawlYeattesbetti'rtaliglidi
mot will deterliline the eubsequeat uot the future a the British lemPire:
size, vigor end lasting qualities of the hit is impessible for -us to go on with
flowers. Explicit advice in this eon- the war if losses like this continue."
Motion. is, first, choose as the etoraee
and dampest part of the cellar—or VIhaastkaerde. you going to do about
piece for the Pots the coolest, darkest etes:1;
the vegetable .orage room is very 1 •"Everything that we can. We are
suitable, Second, provide a cohnitioa tocreasieg our anti-submarine forces
which, approximates as. nearly as pee- en every possible W. We are using
sible the condition they would have every possible craft we can find with
Lf 'plantea in the ground. outside. one which to fight submaeimes. We are
thorough watering at the time of pot- !Minting destroyers, travelers, and
ting may be sufficient, but in most !ether like craft as fast as we can.I3ut
case$ it is not, therefore water regu- the situation Is very serious, and we
tarty as often as the top soil shows 'shall need all of the assistance we can
signs of dryness,. Another method is get.
keep the sand motet, Pi:evicted the ,
were winning the war," I remarked,
"It looks as though the Germans
to plunge tbe pees tete damp sand and '
place is not too cool, or they are not "They will, unless we can stop these
proceed eatisfactoray, aryl towards the n
liossea—and stop them soon," tile
!Adi iral replica. .
kept exceetionally wet, rooting. will
end of December the roots should be- IleDGAT CREWS' 130.ASTS.
gin to fill the rots. Third, after two At this period the Generals had
menthe or ten weeks lia,ve elapsed reached a conclusion as to the Milo -
bring the pote•into a lighter place and ence which the United States 'cola ex -
water even more regularly and ere-
quirntly. Allow them to make about erhey know that on the bettlefield we
ert in. the war.
three inches of growth and the would. prove a formidable enemy, but
growth to claange to a good. greeu the obvious fact, to their eyee. 'acts ttlat
color, then bring some of the pots into aur armiee would . never get to the
the full light and warmth, Veey rapid front, The submarine campaign,
and itealethy growth should soon re- thea said, teould finish the thing in
suit. three or tour parighs; certainly; in
le few words or advice as to whet that period, tbe unprepared United
not to do. .First, do not on any occa- States could never mention any mill-
sion place the pots too near the fur- tary power that could affect the result.
nace or near the hot air outlets; dry, Thus, from a purely military stand -
warm air is -disastrous to healthy point, the entrance of 100,000,000 Am -
plant growth.- It dries out the soil erioans, affected them about as much
and liardens the roots; it stunts the as would a declaration of war from the
foliage, and shrivels up tae blossoms. planet Mars.
Seemed, do not over -water at any ,
We confirmed thie point of view
period; the eon should be kept always from the commanders of the occasion -
moist, but never soggy and cold, ally captured eulemarinee. These men
and . do not allow the roots to stand would be brought to London and
in pots of -water. Third, do not allow queetionede they showed •the utmoet
the plants to experience too violent coaldence in the result,
temperature changes. At the time' of eych, you've got us,' they Would
rooting the tempetateire may range
say, "hut win t difference does that
from. 35 to 45 degrees, and after the make? There are plenty more sub -
merino comihg, cut. You will get a
few,. but we can beild a dozen for
every .one that you , can capture or
sink, Anyway, the war will be all three tablespoonfuls of sugar, and a
over he two or taree monthe, and we teaspoonful of salt. Bake on a greased
f • d rith jelly roll and
splendla Louse Plants. and come into
bloom during two of the Winter mouths
which most Merl the brightening ea
ects of their rich colors, "Bulbs" is
a general term, whica includes nar-
cissi, early tulipe and the more recent
Darwin tulips, eeted for their elegem°
of form aud range of rich colors.
II. , Christ's prayer Oa. 35, 36), 35. The elountain of Transelguration
' went forward. a little—Jesus event "
and the Garden of Agony stand. apart
"about a stone's caste (Luke 22:41)
• from where the three were and. prayed from all other experierices in the life
alone, fell on the ground.e----"Fell of Christ in profound and instructive
his face" (Matt. 26:39). He kneeled isolation. They are intimately re
-
down an •Preeeed his forehead to the lated to each other and inseparable
ground. to. Woo of hie deep humilia-
tion an il earnest supplication. prayed
—There are eeasons ' 11'i:human ex-
perience when leeching avails but
'prayer. Jeeris was Immo. as well as
andehe poured out his sorrow-
ful oppressed soul in prayer, "We
are here in full view Of the deepest
mystery of aur faith,—the two natures
in one Peron." If ite were possible—
The b.unran. ,eature of, Jesus appealed
to the Father that, it there eves awe
way to eeocetriplieh man's redemptioe
without the agonies oe tae.t aod the
succeeding hours, it thiglit be so clone.
'36. Abba—The Aramaic wired for
father.' atels .dopatless the very word
that Jesus used e Thee weld is used
only .twice *besides-011ie the Berle
-
"tures, and both times by. Paul (Roin.
.8:15; Gale e:6). all things are pos-
sible -a -This, is are-aseriptiop. of °rani-
potenee to the eetithere yet; there was
.un recognition of 'the divine
:wisdom, and a submission to the de -
Vine pfan in the redeziption of the
evorld. ta:kao,awity this cup—Luke
Nays, "If thole* willing." Jesus was
• not shrinking from las epornaching
death upon the crose.. He knew that
et was awaiting him. The cup that
he mentiened in his ,9rayer, and. which.
even taen was being eprt4esed to his
liPs, wase'ehegtisliitig weight of the
sins of the world that was resting up-
on. Moo., heenan feelings and bit
man aeeign. welt :graving, iellef, 'if
esuch relief was in the divine will. not
-what I will, Mee what thee wilt—Hie
own Will, Wee giadee wielded to the
'Father's Will. This Is the meta satis-
factory attleecleeetor enyone to take,
that of gliedosnenelesistieto the will of
God. R has been Oagested tliet Jesus
leered, the agony of Gettsernatte might
produce death, Q. that be Could not
Oonte to the cros's; there 'to bout out
his life for the sins of the world.
(vs, eeeale.
37. Ihniletle WPM steePing—raetais Jamie
to them toereceeva,*0synwpthit they
iuight,affO,04.„, gtg .cotaing to „them
and the *cede' spoke tep theht af-
forded them a lesson in -Watchealitess
and prayer, which has come down to
ire 'with great torce. They could
eleota. 1 for sympathy and eompanionship in
ecarcely have aeolized the lull
aance of the beetrearef` their •lettiata: the hoer of agony. If any could un-
derstand, if any would eympathize,
were bowed down with grief, for Luke
says; they were sleeping becauee, ote surely it was those who had seemly
i3orrow. It was past midnight and. the passed from the radiauce ot his glory.
+4,0 0+er+0/4+++++++++-00++++
CEREAL
°isms
•+ + 0 * + + + +++++++++++++++.14
In a house where there aro several
Children it eems as if there was
alwaye a bowl ,ef let -over cereal of
HOlilo kind, welting to be used, and
there are countless of most appetizing
ways in which. it may be incorporated
into other dishes quite different from
the usual run, If One only knows how.
One young mother"! as half a dozen
recipes in her card index for this very
purpose. If it is the fine white cereal
that elle lore elle eimply puts, it into
custard. MS, Sometimes with a epoon-
ful of jam or left -over berrids in the
middle, and lets it get cold.- Then she
turns it out onto plates and serves it
with sugar and. cream or a custard
sauce, and, it 'has become one of the
eavorite desserts at her house.
A cupful beaten in with two eggs
and a little milk makes enough omelet
or scrambled. eggs for her family of
four, which is a great saving wale
eggs soaring every way.
BREAKFAST MUFFINS.
Delicious breakfast muffins can be
made with rolled oats. Soak a cup of
them over night in a cup of sour milk.
In' the morning add one egg, a tea-
spoonful of eoda, half a teaspoonful of
salt, a cue) of flour and a tablespoon-
ful oe, shortertiog. Bake in a bot
"AelLgood. company muffin for lunch-
eon or beeakfast is made with grape -
nuts. Beat two eggs until light. Add
half a cup of sugar and one cup of
oink. Sift two cups of flour with
four tablespoonfuls of baking powder
and heelf a teaspoonful of salt. Stir
this ite. and than add two tablespoon-
fuls Of shorteniug, melted. Just before
putting into the muffin pans, put in a
cup of grapeauts. They will taste
quite like nut =Mos.
CAKES FOR TEA,.
Little cakes to serve with iced tea
ou the porch on. r, hoe afternoon eon
be made at home. Beat en egg until
very light and gratually, beating all
the time, a cup of L ugar. Then stir
in two tablespoonfuls of melted butter,
a cup of rolled oats, half a teaspoon-
ful of salt and flavor with vanilla.
Drop into the bottom af a large baking
pan from a teaspoone-Bake in a mod-
erate oven uneil a golden brown. Cool
itt the pan and then take out with' a
thin knife.
Oatmeal pancakes make a very good,:
breakfast. Beat two eggs well and add
them tcOtwo cups of left -over oatmeal,
half , a cup of mile two tablespoonfuls
of. shortening, and beat again well,
Then add a cup of flour lnixea with
two teaspdtmfuls of baking powder,
from the great purpoeie for which he pietas are brought into the light it
eame. On the mount the diene life should amigo front 50 to ' 70 degrees.,
reached its manlination, touching the Higher . temperatures during the day,
very heavens andeenshrouded in glory. due to combined furnace and.sun heat
eneGethsemane we leave the aneipodal may not hurt the plants, but they are
experience in which tlie divine life apt to be materially injured if forced
touches hell itself and moves in await
gloo nttee the final struggles with the
powers of darkness. Our best out-
look into the garden. iefrom the mouot
et glora.
I. '1:110 offering 'Savior. No ex-
perience of more profund and. ea -
erect -Itystery entered Ito o the earthly
life of the Son of eGo.d. This is holy
ground anditebecomes us -with unshod.
feet and. hushed sprit to centemplate
the scene. Ai Jesus (tittered the shad;
owe,* revulsion of feeling seems to
have, otterwhehmed ellen. The calm and
even. JOyOus confideece • or the' "gueet
chanebee" gives plade fc, unetipport-
Ole weight of ePirit, a sorrow "oven
unto death." In the former ber.spolta
of his own death ,as quietly as if the
"mount of sacrifite" worn another
summit of blessing, arid instituted a
permanent memorial of teee. event.
Now sorrow mingles With aiorprise.
In the life of Chtlee It wee the firet
shadow of the eelipse let the Father's
„ogle as the darlettese' of a World's
sin sevelit between (hem. It was "aa
he prayed" that the traitafignratiole
glory enfolded him; and he laid re-
codeso to prayer an •h� biota of un.
eirealeable 'darkness gathered over his
spotless tenet.- The scriptures axe si-
lent couceming the fernier, but die-
deo° the subJect of the garden peti-
tion, The "Op" was the experience
of divine itulighation agalost sin into'
which, as the -Savior, 3(aus must 011 -
ter. Into his experience as Redeemer
Must enter every element of sideman
to welch the race became subject
theottgh transgression,. Paysical, men-
tal and moral .agolaa coo Included in
the sacree, mysteey,
sleeping disciples. It is sig-
niffeant, though not surprising, that
John *omits- the incidents of the les-
expreseen on all hands as to the is -
son and that the eh.esen witnesses or
sue of the campaign, and adds that he
hie glory. are the ioteuled companions'
of his sorrow-. It is .iot belittling to "found the same cheerful atmosphere
everywhere in London." But when he
Christ to reognize his human longing
- went to the Admiralty, he leaent the
gravity of the position. and he new
reveals facts and figures which fully
justify the tone ofd the series et arti-
cles whin The Daily Telegraph pub-
lished throughout 1917. At that time
Germany neaely won the war. Ad-
miral Sims relates the alarming story
of the shipping leases Willett the Ad-
miralty was bound to conceal, as no -
Oiling would have enbeartened the
Germans more than the knowledge
of the exteot of their success. He is
full of praise .of Lord Jellicoe, who
Was then Film Sea Lord. This is the
'story of the fleet meeting, of these
ter() officers:
11
tame:There and the effect that they
lima on aircraft, it le ateueutely nem -
moo to seed teehnieal experte into
a'r to eeandue lei I tete at first
hand and at deo quartere. Tire re -
Otte of eueh inveetigatiort will be of
twofold intereet On the one hand,
the way will be clear for the eIr
pilot. Instead of Ittutiching into the.
Unknown, he will be in posseeeloo of
such anowleige that he will be, at
any rate, on )iodding acquainteuce
with the vagaries and Wbiles et the
weather through which he le travel-
ling. The other pereoa to whom this
intelligence will be vitelly neeeseary
is the designer of the eraft that will
undertalee the voyages. Ile west know
betore he draws the Met outline, of
design what his producte will liave to
contend with, and once in posseesion
of the facts he will concentrate his
energies In building the most Oradea
machine, equipped in every defail to
Combat the natural elements;
Grantea this necessity for maPPing
the air we Dave to consider the hest
and cheapest method of doing it. We
are careatly in. possession of numeroas
meteorofogical stations at home nod
in different part of 'the werld whicle
can give first-class technical knowl-
edge and records. There are also the
R. A. P. units abroad, whicb, although
they may not be able to give detailed
figures, can forward general intonate,-
tioo based on flying experience of the
weather conditioree For the rest it
is necessary., to eena goveromeOt
craft repeatedly over the proposed
routes, and (nese craft should, when'
ever practicable,. carry technical °eft-
cers veliege • sole duty it woule be to
watch aliel note eery detail of the
atmospheric conditions. The typo of
aircraft pre-eminently suitable for the
work is the aireleit, Rigid airsielps,
of the 1-34 class, having a cruising
range of 2,000 miles from their base,
can over a great distance and large
area of unexplored air 'without risk.
of loss euch as is always liable in
heavier-than-air croft, owing to en-
gine failure. They can ease their
speed, and. watch atmoolteric fotina.-
tions, Mid every facility is available
for the technical officers whet would
tilirartalioantst°)Iivere to
bescuaLroloeidngtothceolliencvt
start from the British Isles; Abe east-
ern part of the North Atlantic Ocean
could be thorouglily sounded by flight
from air stations already' erected. in
the Brttish Isles, and would cost the
Government practically oothing, as
the Itirthips would, in any case, be
flying or requiring upkeep if not
employed on such wcirk.
The way would. then be open to
Gibraltar via the (me sea route and
half the Atlantic towardseCanada and
America would have been explored.
The next stop is to erect a meoring
station either in tae Mediterranean
or on the Americen contir ent to ex-
plore the great inland sea, or the re-
mainder of the northera Atlantic. The
cort of the equipment of such a. sta-
tion is a mere nothing when om-
paeed with ' erection of even. a tem-
porary site for airplane oeerations, It
is impossible to conceive a less costly
and more effecient method of charting
the atmosphere than the airship.
This great use for airships natural-
ly brings one to ask: What of Alm
craft themselves? 73ritish builders
have shown what eat, be done in the
R-34, which did the round trip to the
extensive fliglats be carried' out from
1;rtiticohlugldlaringereer
shipasondobtyolib
lint t edbetterSates,
this country,- o' viating the. use of re-
fueling depots, but the risk of loss,
always present in any , forne of aerial
pioneering, would be rninimizect—Lon-
don Times.
shall be emit back home.' griddle, Serve with syrup for break -
to experience several hours o Y, Alt theee captive laughed at the
high temperatu,.3 during' the evening
suggestion of German defeat; their sprinkle with pkweered sugar for des-
sert
A DELICIOUS, PUDDING.
A very good pudding to make when
you are cooking a roast, for it can be
made with any of the coarser cereals.
To. one quart of milk axed a cup of the
cereal, a half cup of molasses, a half
op of sugar and salt to taste. Bake
in a slow oveti for taree-hours, stir -
'ring down two or thee times during
the first trout Serve with v.hipped
cream or hard sauce. This cam be
baked very nicely in the fireless
cooker,
when they should enjoy the resting
period .always provided for them
under natural conditions.
Flowere with little or no stem and
plants with a stunted growth are due
to improper forcing omethods. Bulbs
appreciate the sunshine, and when in
the flowering stage also respond to
and should have abundance of water.
—F. E. Buck, Assistaut Horticulturist,
I, +-0-4-4-4-4-4-4-0.4-e a 0++++
When U-Boatc
attituae wae not that of prteoners, but
of conquerors. They ale° 'regarded
themselvee tte heroes, arid gloried in
the aohievemente of their4oubmarine
service. For the most part they ex-
aggerated the slukinge, and placed the
end of the wae at about the 1st or
July or August.
The Berlin Government similarry
exaggerated the extent of their 611C -
cum This wae not surprising, for
one peculiarity of the submarine ie
that only the commander, 'stationed at
the periscope, knows what is going
on. If he reports oinking a 5,000 -ton.
Nearly Von 'sethip, one can coretra,dict
4.4:. his
o.o.ho :#4.4-tt...+officers do not ece the eurface 'of the
state-111r
ot, for the -crew and other
water.
"At this time it is •netetoo neon to Not unnaturally, the commander
say that the salvation- of- the British does not depreciate hie own achieve -
'empire rested oil Lord Jellicoe's stool- ments, and thus the amount of ten-
ders." That statement is made by page reported in Berlin considerably
Admiral William Sims in the first in- exceeded the attual loseee. Yet the
stalment of his war reminiscences discrepanelee were not important, for,
,which appears In' the October issue of while the Gerincen.s figured that the
"Pearson's Magazine," under the ti- war would end. in a couple of menthe.
tle "When Germany Nearly Won,". the Engliela officials with whom
He etweals in fullness of cletail the came In contact placed it.at Nov. 1—
critical situation watch was produced always provided, of course, that some
in the spring of 1917 owing to toe method e were not found of checking
volume of shipping which German the eubmarine depredations.
-submarines were then a -inking; The Admiral Sims makes a very full
Americun addiiral weeesent by his eurveye of the outlook in the epring
Government to this country on the and (rummer of 4917, and quotes a
• eve of the inteevention by the TJnited memorandum telltale he himeele wrote
States, and crossed the Atlantic un- to Washington, in winch he declared
that, "briefly stated, I consider that
der an assumed name and in civilian
at the present moment we are losing
clothes; he was for the time "J. V. He adds this final refer-
Richardsoa," and tire vessel in which the war.'
he was travelling' ewes mined outsideenee te. the danger which threatened
POoi an ee, ly Intim tion that t e British people:
there was A war on— The fact is that no natioo was ever
of all, Impressed liv tho ewmaifsglarcset "e'oirliraict:dinininsothteresgpithilaigpoaeuldtioenairy Gaurerna!
mer of 1.017. And J think that bis -
tory' recorde few spectacles more
heroic than that of the great Britieh
navy, fighting this, bideous and coal-
ardly form ca war are in half a ddzen
places, with a pitifully Inadequate
forces, but with an undaunted spirit
that‘rernAined elan even against tbe
fearful odds which I have described.
What an opportunity for America! And
it was perfectly apparent what we
should do. '
A few doe after reaching London
I cabled ffie Navy Department to send
immeilately all our deafroyere and
all the light surface craft -which vve
meld Lteeenible, to tbe vital -spot in
tile clubmarthe campaion—Queene-.
town.
Liver — nee •
disciples were l'7eary with the great
events of the preceding day Mai even-
ing. In the etutee of the piece and the
hour they yielded to the desire for
Test. Had they comprehended the real
situat1On, they edoubtleee Wetad hoe
resisted the, tendency to slumber, and
Would blevo performed the service for
eesus which he desired. Simon, eleeP-
est thou—OA the way.to the gardea
Peter had declared In the strongest
terms his loyalty to his Master. In
these words Jeeus administered a
gentle rebuke 10 Peter for so some
becoming nedierareht to him. e One
liour—Jesue `-kad'been, in the aeepest
agony of soul and "his sweat was
as it were great droes of blood falling
(Iowa to the ground" (Luke 22:44), but
tits dieciples were apPerently indiffer-
ent to Ids Offering 404 wera to sleep.
38. 'Watch ye and piety—Mr exhorta-
tion, a,pplicable to that oceastott toed
But even these filled him, and he
'trod the witepress alone." In the
intervals of alleviation 110 returned
only to find them eleeplog. Jesus bade
them "watch and pray," net inueh
for his eake, as their own. He knew
the tee -windier' whielt awaited them,
and which proved too noteli for their
unstrengthened spirits. Peesibly the
eecorcl of deertionmot denial had
remained unwritten, as la many ano-
ther eaperience silloe, ;? the sleeping
hours had been prayerfal. Compes-
eion mingles with teemed in the Mac -
ter' adoress to Simon, weose fore-
most otofessiots of tto•aost loyalty
strongly contrasted with nis presene
end later attitude, In our Mailer
lives titer come hours in which bitter
cups. from whioli we ehrixtk are presa-
'NI to our quiverino, litre. In "perfect
a.equieseence" we find perfect rest.
W. H. C.
to all occasions.. Lest ye enter into
temptatton—If they failed to watcheto„yee„eoe
peare Plus Cerventea.
and pray, they' would be liable to be oua
affected by temptation and ,to enter Thl
There is an old tradition which
neon, the performanee of , what the Unice Cervantes wit Slake:Iene() In
temptation sieggested. Spirit truly is Connection with the lost play "Car-
ready—The. higher nature responded denim," or "C,ardenna," which was
or assented tothe can Of dutyriceh twice tided at court by Shakeepeare'e
is Wetat-:-The 40Ver native has its company in 1613 and was Announced
lholtations. ,The thought of the die- for Publication some forty years la-
eiples steeping at this critical time ter as "The History of Cardenio, by
warns ug of our duty to be constantly Fletcher and Shakespeare." 'rho
alive to,, the interests of uocrs range. publication never took place, and
3
nothing is otherwiee kpown of the 9. Again. he prayed -411e
going the second and third times piece with certainty, but Sir SidneY
,
Lee believeri it to have been a draa
thaws how great wive him burdeit and
matte. version of the adventurers of the
how intenetly in earnest he as.
Christ's heave was aroiwored, end en. lovelorn irdenio, related In the first
owered in the ,liame way that God Part of "Don Quixote," Sheltoteri
translation at which appeared in 1612
removers our prayers. The fact that
the angel strengthened him (Luke Salt has been eee(ribed as a Wer-
e' element of the blood in about the
22:43) was an answer to his prayer,
an moue proportion KS la the water of
Chriet's praying thus furnishes
hum.* to tm 40. elhes were heavy the ocean. 'Under general conditions
dryinot feel ths exiatenes of salt in
They seemed unable to keep awake. we
Neither 'wig they- They did not know 'ler WI" hreatblFe Ite tIlt"
cted by le dee proyortion of •vo.-
wha.t to: any to Jesus when he aroused tera
them from their sleep. They would , ter'
to heed Christ'l s injunction, "Watch th:ls strc :titer kindis n‘ " -elk bid
not trams any excuse for their failure minet hp4 wit
34 and pray." 4I. The third time - edges*,
111111WRIffilr
•-• •
He who eighth and runs away gen-
erally keeps on running.
MUST CHART
ATMOSPHERE
LEANE, TREATY
Tti U.S. PEOPLE
To Be tam Into Politics
in 1920q
Before Cominercial Aviation
Can Be General.
Rigid Airship Best for Pur-
pose.
"kra Room for Vompro-
mieeln Says Lodge.
Washington deepatela. CoinarOinl
efforts to ratify the peace treaty were
thrown into the backgroutol to -day bY
developments strengthening the posei-
bilitY that the enrol° controverey
might be transferred to the political
arena fer a decision by the peeple itt
102,0,
aenator Lodge, eheirrearl of the
Foreiga etelaticMs mmittee raid
Itepublitiaa leader of the Senate,
declared In a statemeta there was
"no room for further Orinerentisel
and Meted that tad kesekvations of
the Senate majoritl be eddied bete
the campaign.
There was no feetnal exieressiene
to determine whether a elite EWA
would be takeo oitintately by ',Wei -
dent Wilsen and the Administretion
senators, Mit it develebed thet the
President's Senate stieetaiefe find
no definite assurances as yet that
he would re -open the subject for
compromise. by resubmitting 'the
treaty when the new session of
Congress, begins December 1.
The declaration. of Senator Lodge
reversed the position he and most
other Republican senatore had
taleen toward injection of the treaty
into polities, and was aecepted in
Congressional and official cireles as
°lathed with an adeled significance
by Mr. Lodge's conference with
Will II. Hays, the TeePtibliead Na'
tional chairman, just before the int.
successful fight Wednesday for rat,
tiftcation with tho majority xeseiva-
Hoes included.
The statement follows:
"I have no especial comment (0
make. , The case is very eimple.
After four months of careful con-
sideration and dirieusslon the reser-
vations were presented to the Sen. -
ate. .They. were purely Americau in
their character, designed sOlely to
Americanize the treaty and ouake it
safe for the United States,
"Tender the President's . orders
the followersof the Administration
in the Senate voted down those re-
servations. et was also shown by a
vete Oat there was a `decisive ma-
jority against the treaty with the
reservations.'
"Those reservations 'as -presented.
to the Senate will stand. There is
no room for further eorearomise
between' AlllerlealllS111 and the 'sit-
Per-Governmeut presented - by the
League. All I ask now is that we
rea.Y. have the opportunity to lay
those reservations before the Amer-
ican people. To that great and final
teateutel alone would I appeal.'
"I wish to carry, these reserva-
tions into the campaign. I' wish the
American 'people to read and, study
them. They are not like the woven
-
ant of the League. They are simple.
I do not .see that there is one of
them to which any American can
object. I want the people to see
Mem, understand them,end think
�t them in every household, on
every farm, in every shop and fac-
tory throughout the land. Then let
them decide."
Weather played a far greater part
in the great war than is generally
Ithewn; it will play an even more im-
portant part in the future. There can
be no great expansion of civil or com-
mercial aviation until the atmosphere
is charted. At the very outset it must
be realizel teeet tadb routes as London
to Paris or the Frock seaside resort
do not form the alpha and omega of
,the scheme. •'These projects have al-
ready been 'undertaken by private
Mins, and no istance is needed by
the Government. Our aim should be
to link up the empire by alt craft on
the linos oe what has been done in
establishing the All Red wireless mad
gable routes.
ePriinarily it means that our aircraft
will bat% to set out into ,unexplored
parts of ,ho aerial world. e Where one
has gone others will eello*, and if the
Governmeot gives the lead private ea-
terprise is sure to come after; but at
the present juncture the unknown
dangere of the Ear on long-distance
voyages form an absolute barrier to
the commercial ale industry.
Exploration of the ueper air can be
carried out to a large extent from the
surface, but io order actually to de-
scribe the dely happeninee in tho
!Piro
110****0 10*
ONO G00% OTIOtaigt
tatok
as Oa
LUT n woman ease your suffering. I weal
you to write, and let me tell you tf
sns'Aimple method of home treatment,
send you ten days' free trial. Poste e&N,
paid, and put you in touch with *W.00
women in Canada Who will *Sr
gladly tell what my method soi,
has done for them. 4
0 you are troubled:— — ..est
vith weak, tired (1‘, tions, bled.
feelings, h e a cl. #V der weakness,
ache, b a ck.cle constipation ca..
ache, bear- to. tarrhal condidens,
Ing downc3‘ pain in the sides, regu.
lady or irregularly.
46, bloating, sense ot fallingor
misplacementof internal or -
sans, nervousness. desire to crY.
palpitation, hot flashee, dark rinp,
under the eyes, or a lose of interest
'halite, write to ttio todai for free trial
treatment.
Mrs. M. Summers, Box a, Windsor, One.
ITSIT "FISH" STORIES.
A00%
DU410/ 1110114040
pAMOOTSIR, 001.0.101% VOL
"1101 140, 11404
R. Ifirendoite
emoorro* 100440016/
Okoalr (10 boa kalos, HO%
Arthur ). twin
D.D.S., t..D.S.
Doctor ot Dental Surgery of the Penn-
sylvoia cortege and eecentiato Of Den-
tal surgery re' Ontario,
closed evere Wednesclay A. fterssOott.
Witco la,Macdonatd Block.
W. R. Hambliy,
. ..8•., C:M,
opootal aatostka paid to diseases •
el Wage* Ind Children. hails* 1‘
tat* Poitiireduate weft in Ctn.
Ott ftotariology and illedaetitlie'
••;' /WW1*:
Otttoo to ths Kerr residenne,
Ore" the Queen's Hotel sad this
Itopttst °hook
44 bows* Oren wogs. oStsott.o,
o. SOX U.
4
Di.Robt. C. Redmond
Imo* mac)
(bend.)
PHYSICIAN AND ItUR01104%,
Oidshove's out $tiout),
RtD GUARD PLOT
IN U.S., CANADA
Some Strange Itainsterms That
Are Historic).
Next ((Inc sonteone tells you of ite
raining fish or trOgn, don't laugh; ,
the story may be true, says Pottier,
Science. There is, for instance, re-
cord of a flea rain in 1666 that (glow-
ered melte, all over Stranetead Parish
in merry England.
At Baton Rouge in le96, it rained
ducks., catbirde and woodpeckers.
We pause right hero to eay that
ecientiete explain these showers by
the lifting power oe the wind Euld
the ancient principle that what goee
up must come down; mad you never
can be sure vitiates up.
Getting clown to 1917, John Lewis,
of Aberdare, Walee, reports: "I was
startled by oniething falling all over
rae. 01.1 putting my hand down my
neek, I was surprised to find they
were little fish."...
:No lees a tenon than Alexander
von Humboldt writes of a downpour
of fiehee In the Andes evhich eeemed
to be aided and obetted by a very
active volcano. rho natives said
they rather counted. On fish showere
to reduce the 11. C. L., lemony hav-
ing eeveral a, season.
Singapore, as aniglit be expected,
hold.; the shower record, with a rain
of 15-inth catfiala which the Chinese
gathered up by the bucketful.
Nine native eye witnesses', urged
by a cam* Sent, ulado 43e40sit1ohe
before a nragietrate Waking the
truth of their tales of a &tower in
Bengal during whleh at least five
kinds of fleh fell from the heavens.
Boston, In the daye )of the "plug"
hat, had what is called (being Bog -
ton) "a pisdatorittl deluge." But in
Connecticut the same year it rained
rheohaotdrulce together, which we call
aph
Deaths Iiirom Gas.
In the war tlto dcatho from gas
were only 5 per cent. of the total
(loathe, or, to put it another way, out
o fevery 100 eaeltaltice due to gas.
three to four died, whereas, out Of
every,400 wortruled with high etcplo-
61V(., bullets, shrapnel, etc. 20 to
25 died, an (lamella the deals from
gam are included those from moue
ramie and other lung tomplieationt
duo tbe patienthaving been
gataed.
We are too apt to judge by aim -
poisons, 'For inetantak, most Ortega
'• teem tame to the fellow oho ie cowing
hie wild oats.
W. W. and Russ Workers
to Arm N. Y. Gang.
"Ring of Death" to Assas-
sinate Enemies.
DR. R. 1 STEWART
Gratteate of "Unevereity or Totentto.
Vacuity of Medicine; Licentiate of the
Onterio college of •Physicians and
Surgeons. •
oirFIDE ENTRANCE:
SEOOND DOOR NORTH O• F
Z4.1 RR RI GOT PHOTOsTo2
NE9.uDio,
JOS:ElilliNE' ST. pII
New York deepatch: The morn-
ing Tribune publishes the following:
Federal and police officials an-
nounced yesterday that they had dis-
covered a plot by agitators of the
T. W. W. and Union of Russian
Workersdf the 'United States and
Canada secretly to arm a body of
"Red Guards" in New York with a
view to starting an opeo revolt
against, the prosecution of Bolshe-
viki, comenunists and anerchlets. It
was said that .evidence had been ob-
tained ihat a fund of $68,000 had
been raised with which 'to purchase
arms,
FLOURY FOODS
THAT WE EAT
Flour Comes From Cereals,
-
With Some Exceptions.
Farina and Hominy Are
Very Nourishing.
Five extreme radicals, whose
names are known, accordiog to of-
ficials, were apointed to act as a
"ring of death," whose duty it
would be to assassinate persons ac-
tive in the running down and erose-
cution of anarchists. It was said'
the first persons merked for attack
were Alexander I. !Rorke, Assistant
District Attorney, who has been pro -
seating criminal anarchy eases in
the- extraordinary grand jury; De-
tective-Sergea.nt James a. Gegen, ot
the police bomb squad, and Charles
la Scully, of the Department of ;us-
tice'e bureau of information.
Three members of the Ilniou of
Russian Workers disclosed the plans
When they made it known that they
believed their arrest was 'doe to
knowledge of the "death plot." The
Men deny that they were members of
"the ring of death."
•••••••••••••••
Do many people know of all the
floury foodi they cat? Just—think of
all the puddings made of floury mealef
Sago, rice, tapioca, farina, • hominy
and arrowroot—all or these may be
put in this class.
Flour ,,strictly speaking, comes from
tbe cereal foods, and these are all of
the race of grass. Of the hale -dozen
substances mimed as flour foods, only
half belong to the eereals, mid tixe.se
are. rice, hominy and farina.
All are mainly starch, and. in this
respect they -resemble each other. Milk
converts thetu lot° nourishing foods,
as it supplies ,the eurd they are want,-
hig. ,
Rice is tae pure grass erain itself,
hulled and sent tothe markets un-
crushed, unless in theshape of rice
flour, when it mixes well with wheat-
en flour to make cakes. Farina is
more nourishing than rice, as it con-
tains the gluten that rice Mad all
starch foods need. It is a prepara-
tion of hard wheat, the best red wheat
that produces the straw for Leghorn.
and Tuscan hats and gives the beauti-
ful paste for camacorani.. Farina, con-
tains all the nourishment of the wheat
grain, all its salts, phosphates, potash,'
its llinty traces that will make Mar
bones, its.gluten, its percentage of pro-
teid. The best whole -meal flour, rich as
it is in nourishing power, is no better
than farina. This floury preparation
makes delicious puddings.
aago is nothing but the °rivalled and
prepared pith of a palm. Arrowroot
is very similar substance, produced
from the underground stems, not
roots, of a West Indian tree, with
leaves of aefow shape. Tapioca is al-
most tbe same material prepared erom
the root -stems of another West lodiau
tree with leaves shaped like' kande,
the manioc. The pith of the tree is
ground up. just as the root -stems of
the other two trees that produce ar-
rowroot and tapioca, respectively, are.
Then the crushed -up material is soak-
ed in water -pans and stirred until it
settles all its starch, Is disintegrated
and settles to the bottom in a grae--
looking sediment. which is carefullY
separated and reveashed, This starch
is carefully dried and the result is are
rowroot be one ease, tapioca, in anoehe
er. and sago In the third.
The only reason that aago has to
show for its round form is that it has
been sieved while the powder was half.
dry. If the sieve it passed througb
had the large, ronn.d holes, then the
resulltant little balls were What is
known as large sago; if the holes Were
tiny, the small grains thee were Press-,
ed through as midget globes -made the
small sago of the grocer's shop. '-
Cornstarch is a close cousiht to hoMe
iny, though the two look and taste very
differently. Still hominy is a kind ot
ehreddea Maize, made from the veri-
table Indian cern we give to chickens.
yet extretnely nourishing for all ite
humble origin.
Macaroni is another true floury food.
Pureet wheaten paste is pressed
througlt a sieve that has long tubes in-
stead of the round tubes, and each
tithe hae tt metal core, no that the lit-
tle paste peva come out hollow as we
know them.
IT GOT A RISE oUT 01? Met
"Wire. Johntria yetree got n inthp 00
your head. Have you wen Mating
again?"
'Parlitin'? Not me:"
"nut unwboll y fitruek
"Nobody etrueo me 1 'menet figetire
ut an. It wee 4111 aeeldctt."
"N. cab -lent"
rnstitter Selfishness.
"I adopted. a French war orphan the
Other day," admitted 3. Fuller Glecon.
"Observing that nearly everyone else
asked for pretty little girls, I specified
that mine should be it boy—the 'home-
lier the better, the rattieet and nutti-
est that could be found, and bowlegged
if possible, or one who had lost his
palate, or something of the sort. M
wy
Iden ail to get one thhavingat, been
shoved back Mid snubbed all his little
me, would appreciate the smelt bit I
was doing for hint out or all propor-
tion to what it really cost, told thus
get myself vastly overpaid in grata
tude. My motive Was an .entirely
selfish one, 1 aesure you."-- Iiansae
City Star.
*** -
GAVE IT TO HIM.
Ola Salt—Yes, sir, I fell over the tilde
of the ehip, and a shark 'e -came along
old grabbed me by the leg.
eVisitor—Good gradous! Awl allot
• , ". !, ' 1411114‘
Old Salt—Let '1m 'awl the leg, o Yu Bee, ne, real : 7 Lanet vei., +191t111. 041
po fl hold hi.;
toUrp. I never argue aith eharke.