The Blyth Standard, 1908-03-19, Page 7LESSON XII.—MARCH 22, 190
Review,—Read John 6: 41.51
daunt: I ,at 1, Topic: C'hh
his l it ons Place: we: I phesus. J
go „a I was written be'lw et 80 a
.1, 1). John was the only apostle
s (
at that time Jlo refetw to Ola•1
r th IPurd 04 Gail; all 1Jnings were
by ba; he was the :life and the
of n it; referes 0 is made to Joh
Ji:1) t,. t, the forerunner of Christ
"a, 'that daft Light, but 1101s 150
1000 r It tarees of that light;" Jesus
tha tial) Light,
11'Topic: The believer's life -pot
al of his 11,00101, J'latce, Betluuba
crisis had arisen in John's m11115ay'
hut,htdrin sent a deputation from
.valem to ask ,Juin) w.10 he watts;
sail 110 11918 mit the (lhtist, nor' 1
11)1 the 1no11Lct about when) lloses
n'rit.:.cu tart. he was increl ' a vofoe
fag le the wil)1) ac00, "Make s1)'a
tine 11 a.y of the Lord," Joint bap
with water; 110ist would baptize
} the Nol'y 53110)1.
1.1 I. Topic: Secret of soul sur
101n,t: Betlialmra, John pointe4 J
out to (wod'!s.yancs who followed Je
Jesus turned old 5(2)1 "What seek
P'hcy^ asked Christ where he dw'
Jesus said, "Caine and bee;" And
fogad los brother,Simon and bra
hint to Je.sots; it is ;apposed also
.Bohm found his brother, ,lances; Jo
found Philip; Philip found Nathan
0'!rm 1"tulip told Nathaniel that 1
lied fn,u(l the Messiah., Nathaniel 1a
4' i objection; NaiJou11l 10(10 0)0)0
-'10111,0,1 that ,Jesus was the Alessiah.
1.\'. Topic: Lessens from the teat
idea) mg, lave Jetty,)11J0nt. Jc
went up to Jo')tstulem at the time
the Passover, and found thetemple c
e 0)01011 by the traders. He drove
sheep anfioxen and .overturned the
blcs of the money changers and ,
111(11 011 tlueoi not to make his 1'ttb
house a house of ncaeh0ndisc The J
asked hint'by whet authority he
11,'-' things.
1', topic:. Jesus, the Saviour' of
world: Pkjew1 Jerusalem. Niwclr,ni
a ruler of the Jews, had a1' intcrvi
viii testis; Jesus introduced the
jest of the now birth which Nicode'1
cold mut understand; the Saviour th
spoke of the brazen serpent which AI.
ea shade in the wilderness, and said 0
a(4 the seipent wits lifted 111), "even
must the Son of man be lifted tip; th
wluotocver belieoth in him should n
polish."
�h-1, Topic: Ilse way to lila salvatio
Y
Place Jacob's wells Jesus go
through Samaria; stops at Jaoob's w'c
meets a woman; (asks of her a drink;
cxpre sea surprise; Jesus speaks of t1
gift of God ---living water; she' esiu
it; J00110 arks her to call her • husba,t
ch says she has none; has had fir
('1(114 :teems a -prophet; asks about. pkv
of worship; trate worship mush. be i
sphft and in tx'tutlh.
VII.topic: A study of itld1h. Place
Canal In Galilee. The Gndileans receive
Christ gaudly. A nobleman of 01)0',
mum heard Haat Jesus had 001110 int
Galileo paid hastened to him to 01143eaa
11111, to C0rve and heal his son; Jeal
told Idle to return and that his Mot writ
1)e,110d, the 170111 110110004 Cn14's 0.01110
The son began 10 ree0Vea' n.t the ver
lion' Jcou,'s hod said, "Tiny 0000 licet :.
VIII, Ilwpie: Jesus sating rho sit
new'. Place: Jerusalem, Jesus went t
Jerusalem to attend the feast of th
Passover; Jesus saw an infirm mann a
'IP Pool of Bethesda, who had beell sic.
this y-dy iit years; bolted h3in' if ho de
sired to be made whole; the mann re
plied that he hal no.000 to put him into
the pool, les00 toll 111nt to rise, tak
up his bed and walk; the man did as
commanded.
1X, Topic: The gospel feast. Piave:
Near Bethesda on the northeast shore
of thy! Sea of Galilee. Jesus and his
di.sci:10s went into a de et place to be
alone; great nuultatndes followed them,
Jesus taught them and healed their
sick; fen the afternoon the di. crples aug-
goste,1 that the multitude should be
sett away t0 buy food; Jesus decided to
feed them there; a lad was found with
five loaves and two fishes; five thou
sand sten were fed, besides 000711011 0.1;4
S. Topic Jesus (hyfst too food of the
soral. ]Lae : Capermamu. The multi-
, tildes seek for Jesus; he againn heads
"their sink many follow ' hint for the
Maims 0,111111410.;" we should labor for
fhea.t which eahu'eth, 11°tat aro the
works of Cod? �1nowor, '1'o believe on
Christ, They desire a sign; think
31)050es greater than Christ; manna in
the desert; their error; the bather gi0-
etlt true bread; they desire this brand:
Jesus the bread of life; will receive all
who eomte to Lint,
X1. Topic: Christ is light of the world,
Place: Jerusalem, Jesus 0)110 0 blind
Horn; disciples' asked Christ who had
sinned, this elan or lits parents; Jesus
replied that neither this man nor his
parents had shined; makes clay with
0pittle; anoints the'blind plan's eyes;
counn0nd9 the 1111111 to go to the fool of
Siloam and wash; 1 obeys; comes back
suing; his neighbors are stirred.
T'P'ACTICAL APPLICATIONS.
s.
•
ist fu
elm's
nil 110
living
st as
010(10
light
of the
lie
of to
was
tray -
,a, A
• the
lent -
1 aim
has,
had
my -
igen
tiled
with
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e ;nus
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1''
eft;
Dew'
'trot
that
Ines
lel;
They
hied.
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out
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Golden text: "In. him was life; and.
the life was the light of mei" (John
1:4).
1. Christ the true life, 1. A life of
the highest knowledge, a knowledge of
the moral Nature of God; the spiritual
nature of nein, and the true nature of
the relations between God and man. This
knowledge is threefold in its contents,
and is the blended result of the percep-
tions of the intellect, heart and con-
science. Neither alone can reach it; for
to obtain even glimpses of it we must
be elevated above the uncertainties of
the intellect, the selfishness of the heart
and the hew'ildennents of conscience, oJw?')
This is life eternal;” ' and Christ
sassed it 10 its fulness, because he
this knowledge in absolute fulness
certainty, and mune, to bei witness
it, and thus to bridge over the
which the greatest geniuses hall fa
to span, 2: A life of perfect love_. 11)0
r
edge the most perfect is only oe
meat. Love is the grandest form of 1
because it includes 011 the other virtu
width without it are nothing. Consi
the infinite difference between the se:
nrents we cherish toward Shakespe
and Christ. We admire and wonder
the one case; we admire and worship
the 0th: r The one added immensely
0110 literature ;and our knowledge;
other created a new religion awl disc:
ered a God of greater goodness than t
world 11414 ever known, because the k
note of 10) lift. 10110 sacrfree and
crown the eros 3.- A. life of melt
doing The greatest life is that in whi
the ua11104 ideas, emotions and actio
are perfectly blended. Such was his li
Human nature is ordinarily so pooh, th
0!1'11 the urn with large emotional r
lures have a difficulty in keeping Hien
selves pure, and are not great in ride
Ind vice versa. Consider the life th
must have been in Christ. Not to IIsi
on the wonderful quantity of work th
Christ did! look at its transcendei
quality, the nature of his acts and the
motive.
Ii. Christ the life and light of men,
Christ's life was a divine revelation. It
is not .peculation that can teach ns the
highest religious truth, but that troth
embodied in a life. Christ is tate light
uf. the world, the revelation of the char-
acter and will of the Father, and of
what man may become, Chests life is
the :neatest miracle of history, ureat-
ness and gentleness, holiness and pity,
strength and sympathy's are perfectly
blended. Nis life was the light and life
of men in that. 11e. delivered men from
ignorance, unbelief ;and vice, and from
the nein and -misery which are their
invariable attendants; and brought
them to the knowledge of divine things,
to faith and holiness, and to that teat -
poral and eternal happiness with which
these the inseparably connected. This
change Ile 0ffeeted 1. 13y His doctrine,
w9m11 is divine efficacy, not rule for
enlightening, but for purifying and
transforming the soul, and imputing
consolation and happiness, ?.,13y Ills fI
carnation life and death.. Tor these
Were the clearest revelation. of God, the
benevolence of His uatiu'e, and His
paternal love to men, of the Saviour,
and His great and glorious work, of the
dignity of mum, and the' certainty of a
state Of immortal existence beyond
death and the grave, 3. 13y His example.
The example (1) of His holiness, which
gave evidence and efficiency to His doc-
trine:- (2) of His sufferings, and the
glory that should follow," ill which He
15 our pa tiara (II Tim, 2, 11; Rom, 8,
17, 29). 4. By His institutions, Shed-
ding down the Holy Ghost upon the
apostles, institutingbaptism, the Lord's
supper, the Christian ministry, public
worship, and other' religious exercises,
which are the most effectual means for
banishingignorance and -unbelief, iur•
piety and misery, front the earth, and
for the diffusion and establishment of
knowledge and faith, virtue and gen-
uine happiness ' anong men.
p05-
lt0d
and
to
gulf
Bed
1w'1-
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ifc,
nes,
der
iii
ire.
in
in
to
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it
11I, Christ's influence known by its
fruits, What is the evidence that the
sun is active? The fact that every root
fs sprouting, 1 -Vint is the evidence that
the can has brought summer? 'Che
fruits of hammer. What is the evidence
that the sou has been shedding down
upon the earth its light and warmth and
ripening power? 'I've flavor of tate fruit.
Bring me an apple. It it is 1111111 and
acid, 1 know that it is the product' of a
rainy, smiles summer. Bring me an-
othei, :and i. it is midlow- and full of
sugar and f voila, I know that the sugar
and aroma do not cape otut of the
ground but from where there was light
end Bent. And 1 cut ledge of t110 influ-
ence under which n1(1.30 have been un-
folded by the nature of the fruit they
pr educe, Show mor a nation developing
0011000 animation, and l will show you
a nation Clint has not been troi to the
light. On the other hand, chow me. an
II:dividnnl, a (1110111 a rotn:uunft,y that
yields the products of n higher moral
nature, and i will pronounce that Maher
moral nature to be th.:,'sult 1'f the -life
and light of men. -And the work of
righteousness shall he peace; and the
etfak of righteousness qui:411095s .and
issm'nnc'e for over."—From 13iblleal Il-
lustrator.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take LAXATIVE ItR0:010 Quinine Tablets,
prnggfets refund money if It falls to cure. C.
W. OROVL'S signature is on Oath box. 25c,
WISDOM
Nature seldom hides a massive
brain behind a plett)• face.
IL must hen great relief to some
men when their wives' become
widows.
The man with a. wife and several
11,Iwn up daughters seldom hoards
1.4 nu110y.
Don't think because a man buys
o volume of poetry that he is going
to read it,
It's up to the chap 0(1)0 is unable
10 ser any good in the world to
consult an oculist.
The average nun will stand
without hitching a good deal
better than if tied with an apron
string.
' Ever notice that almost every
One you talk with gives' you some
information that isn't of any
'earthily 0(90 (0 7'O0?
„Alb V`
COW TESTING ASSOCIATIONS.
Dominion Department of Agr;cnittsre
Branch of the Dairy and Cold
Storage Commissioner.
'fie roc irds cf .,va asocial in the
Province of Quebec are full of interest.
lit Ont a;1(10(1un the highest yield of
:wry 000 m a rlttaiu herd during six
months, Jeno to November, 1vas 132 floss
fat. 1 I 0 neighboring hei-,
I the hest
yield was 2011lbs. fat, 01' a difference of
(18 )hs, fat, This :s a difference in the
earning power of these two cows of at
least seventeen dollars in six Months.
This i;
not a contrast betty 011 it good
and 11 poor cow•, line ovtweriO 110 best
0010 ill each 110011, In this case twenty
cows of the ono hind equal forty-four of
the other, as regards value of product.
Why should not the returns from
(000(5, yes hundreds, of our dairy rows
he increased by seventeen dollars? They
could be 'reit' taffy, if farmer'swere
fully alive to the posisbilities of system-
atic 1mprovomcnt, We must rim higher.
in another association a more startling
difference is de;cernible. Tit one herd
tic- best t cote yielded 430 lbs, Gat during
the full period of Iactatiu,, 1011)10 the
best: cote in another herd; gave only 141
lbs. With butter fat at 23 cents per lli.
the 000 001 is (aedited With $1 2.70, and
the other with on:y $35,92. This is a
difference of $8130 between these two
1111 1V11, Assuming that the cost of feed
is the seem in both ea 500, and is $30,
we find that 12 cows in the one case
would equal 188 of the other,
C. F W.
Care of the Farm Well.
(London Free Preses.I
.1 Der)' important service tendered
the Chemical Section of the Expernucn
Earn) at 1)tlawa is in the free ex,unl
tft0a of well water', from samples st
nftted,
'rhe fanner; of (')nada int not only
have their seed grains analyzed at this
re.11 e tabli.hmeut, and obtain all
available information 000(01003' vege-
table and Ilmitcrops, but the quality 01
the water which they drink e supply
le their live stock i0 carefully inquired
into ,e mi reported on, wino they have
teaser) to think that it is not as it
hould booted send samples t0 he, tested.
The report before us contains 9)111)'
valuable information '011 this pofut. I1
time of extensive drought, as was the
((sero the .senmre' of -19011, over a grey
part or 1)Otr'io, the emulate' of th
water in the farmyard and back dot,
well frcqucntly becomes a serious men
ace to health. Fortunately, by its offen-
sive taste, oder or appearance, 011(111
water, as the chemist i11 his veinal re-
marks, cr8r,0s its own condemnation.
The absence of such indication, of
pollution, however, is not to bo taleeu
its evidence of purity, lit most eases th
wholesomeness of a water can only be
determined by a chronical process,
1)2 281 sample:: sent to the department,
only 00 were analyzed, the remainder
being set aside for asutfiCieley of quail
tit). for the purposes of a proper test
or dirty bottles or corks.
The ninety waters upon being nu)
Iyned were repotted or this follows: Good
and wit:Ile soon 28; suspicious and p10b
;1)11,0 dangerous, 21; omit:min:+ted Mad
totally elpdeI, 10d, 31i; saline, 11.
110 samples credited to 1.31100, Oil.,
narked, "(V. 1:, 5.," are returned as
uspieious, Snwplos Lone Forst and
Winchester as "sertonsly cuat,nunatcd."
line front the littler was feud 'serious,
ly polluted," Oiia sent front London,
,out,, mated ':1..11 1 ' was returned
as "decidedly. suspicious,"
Perfectly pure water is at rare excep-
tion, .111 11111 lly iustauc:0 wbere the sup-
ply is thought, to be absolutely beyond
luestion, tae chemist's report in a
ictus lie ela tent it imsplaced cat
int owe.
1V'hile the work at Ottawa is e0ecllcnt
and truslaiutllry n- far as it hots, it is
folly to suppose titan id goes far enough,
or 15 adequate to prdect the vast balk
,,I pe„p11' dependent upon pure food sup -
hes from the farms of the country,
As the li1100t before 'us points Mit,
the health and. thrift of the stock de-
pends on the quality of time vrater sup-
ply to 1,hfdt they have acess. 11 is 140
1)010s0a,1 to 1111 13! par water for faro)
animals as for man, and intelligent, pro-
gressive fanners recognize this fact.
In the dairy and cheese factor;y pure
water is essential, if the pr•odeo:s are
W be pure p1, fil'r't-class quality and
flat or, awl keep well,
It is said that an aetf,e movement is
on foot for the inspection and analysis
01 the water supplies of all farms,
dailies, clic., in Ontario, supplying dairy
ptodnets to the public, and 011011 a
measure is tube commended.
11 is toeless to expect pnrc food in
!mat, 01' mill( from .)11110 s wllera tl)'
water used fs "polluted,' -00111a11)dnat-
c11" or "suspicious." The water in farm
Fells, or in urinul conduits, should be
as far as possible ibot'e suspicion.
Blending Wheat.
Opfaric farmers ought to be vitally
interested in the process of blending
wheat. 'Blending 111011118 not only better
flour, it also means a growing demand
and higher prices for Ontario wheat,
`,tripped of all technical terms, bleed-
ing is the process by which the millers
,:rind Ontario wheat with a little Alan -
Holm 'wheat Just how much of each
kind, has been found out by ,t series
of careful tests rinmhtg back (00 years.
These tests show. that in blend of flotuS,
by
nal
ua-
110-
This woman says Lydia E.
iPinklraut s Vegetable Compound
cured her. Read ler letter.
Mrs. J. A. Laliberte, of 34 Artillerie
St,, Quebec, writes to Mrs, I'inkham:
" Por six year's I have been doctoring
for female weakness, heart and (001'005,
Livor and kidney trouble, but in Lydia
E,-1'11 1 ha.m's Vegetable Compound I
can 0.-f01y say I have found a cure.
"Iwas continually bothered with Ove
most distressing backaches, headaches,
and bearing -clown pains, and 1 kept
growing more and more nervous,
" Lydia P. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound relieved me of all there distres',-
ing symptoms and made me a 'well
woman. I would advise all sufi'ering
wclnen, young or old, to use Lydia L,
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."
FACT'S FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink -
ham's 'V'eg'etable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ill;,
and has prnitivelyenred thousands of
women wilt) have been troubled with
1 isplacenen ls, inflammation, ulcera,
tion, fibroid tumors, irr131134 it it
periodic ,tains, backache, that bear-
ing -down feeling, flatulency, mdrge:;-
liou,dstnnena or nervous prestra lion,
\V'hy don't you try it
1,6 rc, Pinkhalun ltry ite.s :;11 sfek
lVOlkOr nal yrrita, Sec. a' (.0?'
Shn has guided tloit,n;'ads to
health. Address, Lyliln, plass.
containing ,just the right proportions
0J
Ontario and lbnituba wheats, has
the good rtualflfes of both, and is best
for hath bread and pastry.
The good housewife.; of the 31,11-111(110
Province's were not prejudiced against
blended flours, l'liey were perfectly
willing 1,1 give Ontario flours a. Lair
trial against the western wheat floo:;.
:As a result of impairtial tests, blc:ulid
flours are used in pimt.ieally every
home in the far east Why dei not Ori
farmers see the exiraagaeo of enrich-
ing the western wheat growers at the
expense of their own poekets? More ;u•1'
our farmers, raising little wheat—and
spending what money they make out of
their crops, for wasted n'heat flour. It
certainly 0001114 that all this money
should be kept at hone—acid it can be
if our farmers will stop using. 3fnnitoba
flours and buy blended flour's, made
of their own Ontario wheat,
Marvelous case of Leo Corrigan
wi. cl1 shows that stun diseases hetes
1' - considered hopeless can 1,0 01);71.
(,acre childhood, Leo Corrigan had
been tortured with the bunti 4 agony
and !felting of Eczema. His parents
had spent 0 great deal of money in cons
sulti n;) physicians and buying medicines
--bat all to no purpose.
Ai he grew older he sought other
doctors—tome of them specialists. Ile
was eleven weeks in a Toronto hospital—
eight weeks in bed. At times the irri-
tation and pain caused by the iiczema
were so severe, life was a burden. He
would get so bad he could not walk.
Several winters he could do no work,
He wrote, on February 20, 19°6;
"In November, tom, I bad another attack,
and was advised to use Mir. Ointment. (I
thought this would be like the other remedies
I had tried, and of no use to me). But, to my
great delight, a new hours after the first
application, I felt great relief.
I have used it, now, two and a•half months,
and unhesitatingly stale that it is the best
remedy I ever used. It has worked wonders
for me. Since using Mira Ointment I have
been able to work every day—without irritation
or pain—no stiffness of the limbs or soreness,
1 feel a new parson,
Proms state of great irritation and some-
times excruciating pains to freedom from all
such, being capable o1 de!ng hard work every
day, is a marvelous change, Mira Ointment
has effected it.
"I strongly recommend layperson afflicted
with this terrible complaint—Eczema—to ase
Mira Ointment."
What this wonderfully effective Oint-
ment has done in this extreme chronic
case, it can do in otherseemin;tly incur-
able conditions. If you stiffer from any
form of
skin -disease, don't e se, d delay,
Certain relief and cnre is wafting you in
Mira Ointment. Get a boo to -day. 50es
—6 for $2 5o. At drug-stores—or from
'Ihe Chemists' Co, of Canada, 144.1.,
IIamilton—Toronto, 15
•
than[ NYR Ra1STUUD.
VELYN THAW
WANTS DIVORCE.
PAPERS ALLEGE THAW WAS
CRAZY AT TIME OF MARRIAGE,
Evelyn Asks for Alimony—Murderer
Will Contest Action and Former
Actress Will Take Stand to Testi.
fy Against Him—Is There Col.
lusion?
New York, 'March Id. --1 helm Nesbit
Thaw:, 1111)1)1)11e r 00011,:1, 1)114 0101101y,
will file suit in. the Supreme 4-'ottrt to -
'marine for the annulment of her mar-
riage with Marry li. Thaw, row i0 ALat-
teMwan 51110 1-10sp:tal for the (.riutiuul
Insane, 011 the grounds that he was iu-
s110 of April 4, 111051, the date of her
marriage with hint,
Illicit the case comes to trial, 41n41 it
trill be contested, according to the 100r1l
of A.ilbussll Peabody, That's attorney
in the action, Evely',, '1'hato trill hike tit,
stand in her own right to testily 1131)1nst
her husband,
The annou100ment of Evelyn That';
determined action was made to eight by
1)1111 O'lleilly after a brief consultation
with .lir. Peabody, just after the latter
had stepped off the train that hroq;ht
him back from Mat1ea00am Asylum..1f0.
Peabody denied that he had gone to
111trry Thaw with an offer of compro-
mise front his \rife for a conside'ation
)f financial settlement and that'l'haw',
refusal to entertain such an offer had
forced the issue.
On the contrary, said \L- Peabody',
his client lied ordered ]rim to make a
determined fight against the charge that
Evelyn '1'10nr is to lodge tuanorrow,
I bore was 110 :r'rangefnent between him-
self and .lir, 0'110111,y hy' whfoh a nominal
defence should be put in, he said, Both
counsel agreed in the statement Cult no
counter -suit would be filed by tate pris-
oner in 110tteatan,
"Evelyn'1'110w will institute 0 suit for
the annulment of her olu riage with
Harry Thaw in the Snprene ('curt to.
Iulu'ut'," said O'Reilly. "'Che grounds
will be that he was )nine at the time
that she mar, aid bun. Thee will be no
regnest for alimony fn the complaint,
1111101gh under the law alimony can be
,,ought fu 1(113' action for the annulment
01' marriage on the grounds w'e vtill al -
tat uce,
"The summons and complaint will
erred 011 11o1'ry what' et, -Morrow
t.11)saux tune Gain •letioll is 0ntered
the 1Ieprame (')1111. 1'iliec t1ie suit.'
10 he defended when 1t gees to triad,
Harry 'thaw will be 10.00311, dawn b0
attendants to go on the stag) in. his
own (14111 11,(1. 'Bite testimony 11)04 he
will in11040 n will, of course, be chiefly
of experts, ,nd Evelyn :Maw will take
the stead' in her ow'n right,"
Air. Peabody then made a brief state:
went, 1 10 said: "(('11011 1 welt to Mat,
tetv;ut this m,mnaa 1 knew that this
action (1a0 pending, but I was not cer-
tain that it acts to he brought as soon
1's it tvild be, 1 till fight lLc case.upon
instructions 200111 my 0hfent. 1t will be
0 'call defense, but he will enter no
Qom:ter-suit, 1 wi l represent Henry
'Thaw 1h 1 p:.r5mrailly in his defense. Aly
limb know, of course, that his wif
ead, considering this course of w'tfol
1 cannot say that lie seenu'd to tose1
it or tient he was apatin.'tic. 110 '1110,10
lftlle tonuaent upon the matte: 1 can
say that thia suit was brcmght entirely
111 Airs, 1t011;, '311(1,: 01)11 t):111011,"
1111, 01 OW 11111;tar-1 reit)-rd 70 -ay
1111otl1T or 1101 any tivannfnl ,rTalgO-
119'nt had tet loam made between
Hairy Tints family and \i1'= Evelyn
Thaw in 1:eu a the 310k of t r'quca
for alimony fm 1 h c ulr'laint 11 be riled
tu-001,1'ru tv.
111 aea11rr to a question, 3h'. O'keitly
made it statement, which h1,0 nuim-
podvnt bearing upon any future at-
tempt that 1)113,0 be mode by (lu'rt'
Thaw 0 Ilnwcrs to hate bite released
ile
at
Proving Christ's Divinity.
1 1 were 10 lltlenlpt to prove (110 di -
Amity of Christ, instead of 11,Onning,
ttRh mystery or whack. or the history
of the atonement, 1 should simply tell'
1,
you the 01.00y 01 His life and how lie
lived and what 110 said and did and limy
hilt
ile died. and then 1 would ask you to
explain it by any other 1Iieory than that
110 is divine. Reared in a carpenter's
shop, having no a00ess to the wisdom of
the other races and pimple, He yet, when
about thirty ,years of age, gave t0 the
1004,) 0 code of morality tile, like 'of
whi,b the, world had never seer befor,c,
the like of which theworld :has Hover
000n since, Then Ile was put to death.
Ile was mailed to the cross in slwnieand
those who followed Him were seatfOreil'
t or killed. And then, from this iittle
beginning, Jlis religion spread until hun-
dreds of millions h511.taken llis mune
upon( their liths, and. millions 'have been
ready to dm rattled' than surrender the
faith that. Ire put into their hearts, 'Co
nm ft is easier to believe IIim divine,
thin to explain in any other way what
Ile said or did.—Ex.
(%g6
The Stranger.
1:1)1 Eastern Legend,)
An aged 1:1;111 emit late to Abrnbam's
tent.
Che
sky was dart., and all the plain was
h0te.
11,' asked to mead; his strength tins
500!imi h spent;
Ills haggard look implored the leoderest
eine.
Tile food was brought. Ile sit with
thankful eyes,
Bat spate no graft., 1101' h00'0 ! he to
t,ud the Oast.
inferslu•lt:-red here from dark sod angry:
skies,
The bounteous table seemed a royal
feast.
But erre his Land had (011,1 4 the tempts
ing fare
The Patriarch rose, and leaning on his
rod,
"Stranger," he said, "dos( thou not. bow
i11 10-113er?
Cost tool not fear, do.,t thole not tot'.
ship 1304?"
Ile answered "Nay,." The Palrfar,1
sadly said:
"Thou host my p!t1-. Go! eat not my
bread."
Another nom1 dunet11'
est wild and fearful
night,
The fierce winds raged, and darker grew
the sky;
But all the tent was filled with won-
drous light,
And AM-alwm knew the Lord his (10,1
was nigh,
"Where is Hunt aged matt?" the Presence
said,
"That rifted for shelter from the driv-
ing. blast?
RVho rondo thee Master of thy'Master's
bread?
\Fiat right (10 dot thou the wanderer
forth to ensu"
"Forgive mc, Ion]," the 1'alrinrell all•
steer made,..
\l'Ith downcast look,' with hotrod and
trembling knee,
"_111, nal the stranger, might with me
have stared,
But 0, my Cod, he would not worship
Thee,"
"I've borne him long;' God said, "and
still I wait;
Couldst thou not lodge him one night
fn thy gate?"
hunt 3181tenwaan,
"n ,I
1 t film event of ,e :}' urrwr being
141 e Ir fur the nelea• e. of Barry Thaw
on the 'ooaod that h0 (1 00 1107 111341111/
eL
1.1111 lino of Leis ingaremotion in the
0.1.'' tui he. "Malt'llaw will
ane to his aid 10 testify in his lic-
hen. Phe wt ill int 140 w,1y staml in 1411'
vyew Of whatever' efforts may he made
n the future for the release of Harry
haw',"
--- 4 0'
MOVING PICTURES.
Murder and Suicide in Pictures
Held to be I;nmoral.
New York, Alarch Iii.-- \la istrote
(. 1'u in, in 'Jefferson lhtrket Court,
yesterday, decided that murder and
suicide aro fnuum'al despite the pre-
tests of counsel for the proprietor of
moving picture show on 111-001:0)'
street, arrested on a char;, 01' ❑flotMg
children to eater the place.
I uhu'n1eI Flood and Noonan said the
lir.) seem, of the show was Ii 11111 with
his 311111 11 1'01111(1 a 1.01111511'0 waist, Later,
they said, the w'onu11r met another man
in a tunnel, and the first Imre shot the
othr and himself.
Alaybe the woman was the man's
wife)" said eou,nsel for the defence hope -
after the police had described the
first scene,
•12 she was his wife," replied the
Vfagistate, after the climax luta' been
related, "that !nukes it all the' woyse,
for she evidently had a date with the,
second non. No, '1 think murder ittal
spud • .ire Motion', 3tithin the meaning
of the statute and 1 will hold the de-
1)udn01 lo.Spocal Sessions, _Bail, $500"
The prisoner said his Marne lvas Ennl
`;tern and admitted pinprietnr:hip of the
shote in question, at 137 Blecckcrstieet.
The Derelict,
I once passed a derelict im the Bay of
Biscay. She bore signs .of having beau
on fire; cable chains dangled from the
haysepipe, the, masts were gone, the
decks were green with marine grass,
there was no life, only the cargo of logs
gave forth a grinding groan. Where had
rho (am gone? Perhaps 11 passing-
ship picked them np; perhaps they
took to the boat and were lost, sd '
often have we to say "perhaps" in
this life, 1\'e squared away at
nightfall, and lin our sleep p drouncal of
deserted ships,
'Ile sinner is a derelict. Adrift, car-
red away by foul winds, moving tar
winds a rockbound shore. The derelict
wits once a goodly ship, well formed,
well manned, with a capable commander,
but storm, 01' collision, or fire, made her
as we found her, So man was 0000 noble
and happy, but he has drifted away
from God and happiness, Ever')' dere-
lict grows 000090 11114. not better, every
gale shakes her frame and ultimately
she will go to pieces, So the sinn^r
grows in badness, deceiving mid
ing dec0ived Every derelict is n
to navigation. Governments have been '
moved to send out suitable Vessels to
blowy up and destroy these floating ob-
stacles. The sinner is a menace, 110 is
to be dreaded and. avoided. "110 not
in the way of evil Wren, Who dors not
pray, "gather not my ,sou! with sinners,
no' 111;,' 11f11 101111 men of blood," Dere.
Bets aro sometimes taken in tow t0 got
thew out of 1:arm's way, and bremu'
t11ev 010 011pa1,1' of being repaired, and
laeennie they have a vabm.ble
Pove'ful tug, and strong cables are
despatched (for the purpose, and they
are often successful. Alan is ea) able of
being saved, he' may be rescued, he has
0 valuable cargo —0 soul het 0 3)1 pros'.
11 lint shall 1 man give in exchange for
his soul t'!,tphe redemption of the soul
is p10c$fits."Believe in the Lord Jos113
Cbr1.10 `11114 vin) shalt be sawed." -11
'P, hiller,
A +
A Wandering Kite.
little Jo Bei 1,. has bl his kite.
Aid done know while to find it;
(, 1 it .1 lone, and it II came ]home,
.And bring it, tail behind it,