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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-07-21, Page 6• ••••••••(•••-•,, • • , . •4• "1 elesner 4$ coleitrileting hi* new *nay. In placing the dower of the force in the northwest, Lord gitrawner, • prOP00e$ to divide the frontier into • parallel geographical divisionie hlaeh e of these will hold a 601feeoiltaine4 . * field force operating on its own. Divine Ilessage to Snob, is One of Warn gs frontier line, and converging in, war 1130* on either the Bolan or the Khyber pass, wind) form the groat reeitee a possible hostile approach to India. The vacated cantonments further south will be oCcupied lev• police. who , aheterea fiecoreing to Act of tee rite, „„ee, aro corisidered sufficient for the gave p,tat 13 /our, Concerning His promise, ae sortie ornment of the stations. Th . "The Lord is not slack In traveling over the country and eta, mint of Vanneta, in, tee year hue -*-- weeUde$14. Nine litindred !siting the dairy farms in the sum - by Wm, Bony, of rroreeto, at the cotint slackness; but le longesuffer- oiraapiezettion will entail an aLitron7- MY or time, nothing has iMPeessed it- hapertment of A.griculture, Ottawa. i i ng to you -ward, not wisbing that a. 11000 men, and the tot 1 a- arinh' self so much on the writer's inind e uz e of the scheine is it li as the neeessity of cleanliness, writes - ° °- eaP'• 111r, j, IL Drown. ,-Itev. Finnic De Witt tl'aloto00 are those who doubt trod, Who de ness. Lord Kitcheuer in plied preached from the tollowing text, iee not believe that the judgments his financial genius to tho nag:3131one There aro so runny ways in whica "Now consider this, ye that forget which IIe has pronounced againat sin an, an a 0., Milk may be infected with bacterial tie fie dia. in the Soud d h b oet of the chancre germs that are detrimental to its God, lest I tear you in plecee, end will bo fulfilled. Jesus encountered heves tlui,t the c there be none you ileliver ; 'Whose elleh skepticism and referring back need not be more than about £76,- Cvsifs•r°' that it keeps 4 dairyman hustling to get ahead of the germs, eiffereth tlie efteriace of thanksgiving to Noah declared that the peoplo et 000 0. year for Ova years. Under •and Offer of Saivation, 41.40.306.300.4i4exhikeelheionenheineeihee that the Whole run wee made at a FORFARMERS See*Onehle 4ad Profitable Hints for the Busy Tiller*, of the SOL • • ISIt*****044(•••Wole:iiime:`,4""i'041(4,.`,*0**4 I CLEANLINESS IN TIIE D.AIRY" • tetiMerature of, $3 to 8.15 degree*. - l'atrons of a. ereatuery huve a'' duty to perform toilet is just as important as that •of the butter -maker. And ' unless each patron doe it his full duty, ' every night and. morning, in furnish- „ Mg good, clean milk for delivery in- to the- weigh. can. he coo not blame a first-class butter -maker if any of the freshly -made butter is off flavor. any should perish, but that ell will be one a 230,000. One mark - 'A despatch frout Los Angeles Bare should -come to repentence.” There d feat • glorified Me; and to Mit that order- that day had manifested the same. oth Ida ltion ef way aright will XPsalin 503 22show the teek less disregard of God's warnings, eileat0 od."-, ,,, 23. and as were the days of Noah, so The realnaist takes peens to . des- shall be the coining of the Son of r - tcribe oft Forgetters. • of God those nu'u• looas in those days which were before the flood they were eat- 'Wholn perhapS goo or X would be presented . as speakien •and , Teo ee, fag in. marriage, until. the day that ing and. drinking, marrying and, giv- last to include as istiell. i God is re- : "Thou hatest instruction (or Nor..11 mitered into the ark, and they correction, ee it is in the raergena • knew not until the 'toed came, and reading), and castest My words ae- took them all oway; so seall be the in• thee. When thou sawost a thief, colnina of the Son of man," And u consenteast wN him, and hast Peter, baying declared that God • is n partaker with a ulterers. Thou not slack concerning •the hilallment giv. t . a. .,..s....;;44. t evil, and thy , of every 'promise and every ijudg- •tongue frameth decit. Thou sittest ment, goes 'oo to say that "the day and speakest against • thy brother; 'of the Lord will come as a thief." thou slenderest thine own • inother'a He holds up before you, as we son, , , , Thou thoughtest that 'I have tried to show you, the certain was altogether such a. ono as •thea •awful jutignihnts wbich will. full upon self." As we examine oarefully and you mar tear you in pieces if you critically this •portraeal tee find that the positively wicked and • had . •are not racintionecl. The psalmist did not go fishing aroune in cess' - pools. of sin for his specimens, he did not trot off to tho corrupt heathen • nations aboot to find his man NV11° had forgotten God: He found him right near at band; an among those who perhaps atood highest in tee - community. He was the mail who recognized the authority of the law; who took a pride and satisfaction in his moral rectitude and his..cleforcit- ' feeesenten who hold his 'head high and was ready to preach, moral, standards •. :Leto others. The Psalmist' speaks • of his going sefar as to declare God's statutes and 'to take 0.04's -- covenant in his inouth. That IS ho. was not irreligious. Ho recognized *hed epa LW law. • And yet he is charged with hating instrection .and with casting •God's wcnals • behind. him. This .I take it means that he Wee heady and high-ralacied, that he • had a vain self-esteem which -made him unteachablo. And tho Omega of, . mating God's words, behind him' wetela jmply that,• be gave them a ' -eubordinate place in his life and put his own judgements and. thoughts before those of 0 od. , - Moro, than likely,. intellectualism and • :igher criticism wore barriers that. prevent- ed God's words having duo weight the new plan the chi• in th d ef generals who i ese etys 0 f past eur z fq n DOW •bavo \ their headquarters AO there are. some dairymen and hired Boniboy and Bengal will men who think that it the Milk is Macros, command field arruieS on the fret).- -.going. to be pasteurized anyway., tier, oech ready to move actively at when it reaches the crerunery or a day's notice, As previously re- city dealer in market milk, it makes ported in the Expres„s„. Lord 1<itchen- ne difference whether any good care er is also reconstructing both the is glyph the milk or not.. ' traluilig and the equipment of tee • The writer- has actually seen on men spit • on his hands right over the nett,: pail, while sitting on the Milk steel -arid ju t bolOro in at milking time.- Ho was chow - and " • INFLUENCE IN HIS • • . • • And new we enter. upon another phase of the character of the For- getter of God. He Is 'a compromiser with °hit,' for when he saw theethief at work -oh, not the thief wile. breaks into houses and steals 0:Vetere • Indian Army, •1 NAKING A GOOD IlYIPRESSTOlt. • • Your Chances ,Are Greatly Decrees- • ed Thereba. • The -first impression is always the most lastillg. and the most., effective in results. If an unfavorable. prassion be created at the very bee ginning; it, will teloce a' long time to do not hear and, heed; and on the. efface it, even althoegh leter events other hand Ife shdave you whet bless-"• . prove that it Was incorrect, Thera ing will be. yours • is, , not unnaturally, 4 lingering tee- . • IF YOU. TURN TO anz. • sPieltann tnhia;:i • ittphpecatreaenTe'g • . • boansgeno,eormedo In -dealing with God, land the soul hy. foundoilon. must deal with Him), it is either .a The reserve holds good to an equal • case 'of juggment or • blessing. Bless-. extenti make a, good impression, from ing Ho. wants to give; judgment He the start, and your chances are must give if you reject the offer of greatly increased, 'We have it on mercy. :He holds before the Foiget- morel...that enothing, succeeds tors of Goct the 'picture of tho • man stiecees," so if you make a good like who was . yielded himself to Him impression you 'have scoted an initial "Whoso offoreth the sacrifice. 'of Success, and you stand a good 'chance thanksgiving •glorifieth Me;:' and to him that • Ordereth his way aright of tc thou i;logi,t• itoo u uspeterElthe Imf gyro: .do t will I show the salvation of Gied,", the se.cend 'vent•ore, your effort will Theehgreet sacrifice for sin has been be ,regaialed With mere inhuigent made: Jesus Christ-. GM righteous One. has huffered in place of ieYIefs:you' tritvel. to .a certain teetiii; and lost • inatt. Goa pleads -with I ovaieli you have not. visited. nrevious you ft. thankfully • accept Him, as a ln, and Voir first impreselon :is of Sati.our, "God can be glorified and grimy. houses 41111 streets, dr of • • a. honored in no greater way •than, for wretehedly cold spot with torrents of you to accept 'His gift to the world.. rein, Feu eahe e. dislike to . the place.' 'Think you that the 'SA.C.riDen -oi too May lexeen afterwards the+, thanksgiving means ' some • great realln 4 pleasant spot to. bye , thing you can 'go fox 00d; some .ser -•in vice you cam perform :ter Ilim, Seine ..-huZ that first anneession. is not whoa, your ly :effaced. On the other hanclae, tave goodness you can. manifest in ()rola° first appearaace will maim yoo life?. • The Only sacrifice you cnn ig ly or an occasional.. grinu- Make that will .be acceptable to God think nese 'of- torreetial downemar. • . ' le the sacrifice of your will that will • give Christ. • the. possession of :entitle Employees seeking " neW • ei teat ions (tee •,haa eily1 eee. aee .01' the Oal u o of ,, 4 heart. .: 'rho only, thanksgivinge•which will . reach the' eel! of Goa haa"Tha" geOtt :first impressions, ,And they. a.11 eleasire to Hine 15 tee •• ak . . • peer befote their. eutur•ee employer. in . . ...0 . flan spying the. :beat lif.rht. Semethnes timer that has ae its inspiration and o3terdo it in the tray Ordress, and th the d 'Lord by this cluinsiness. preduce the very eirtimise is . sure, as, His': Ophosito oiled,' but the fact ramaiee. juggiiamit..: He says that -will that the Importance of the .edeasibn, seiew '.111s salvation to the •,man Who ie. Understood. Yet. it ' is. not etiffici- ordereth his .Way aright; In the days ently •,understood. Olein truth of the Romare'pewer, • when the Cite - thine. he cau lay his halide on., This is,. .t. at if y.ou, . wish to produce a , • •- • sers ruled the world, it is said that man is respeetable in hie theevero favorable first -.impression, you 'must :alengside of the mah who robe in e. all roads led Oniee. Sere it people • favorably all the - businese deal or enga.gce in. question- that all 'toads that Gerd, c Us right"..;ho'''..'aa . lead to Christ .end salyation.. 'are t• • ' • • —' The old statement that prectice who wall over' the road .of re- • • mo.kes perfect"' holds good in this aentanto and faith will .130 .shown as in evetetthifig antic.. If, you .only the glorious :ealvatibir of God in pot on your : best anneal -fence on • in- - 'Christ Jesus. Forgetter's of Ged, • frequent oeca.siorie, you will be stiff your position, is. 4 perilous one. Gad pleods with you to . consider year and_ awkward' at 'Vie game, and you ,yeitatiene: . . .will it Ile whe'is constant4, ly..doing otniest. to gain the I 15 OD IV.119 IS •SPE, AKIINTG. den opinions of other's' wilt'. find ':•th coipparatiyely. easy to nialcou geoa. It is not, man's 'message; but Gechs impreesien on • the person: wilont messege. The. openingversesof the meets for tho fleet time; that self - ho One declare that tho • Mighty evident fee he will. be acting nature. One, . God, Jehoveli. bath. -shoken." ally -and in his usual everyday man - There is authority and power be- nor,' wheraualineWito•'.-striveseoply 'for hind the sp.Okiiii: wOideeautliorith to the first iinpression. at 'odd times • • t ',„er .. will he playing a .part 'for which he • nd, and . "G'od :•luatieespokee." .The efaker • ,of illilittede • • • • • Heaven and,: 'Oath, the , Creator :;Of .• • , Maio: the Ruler ,.Of the' uniaerse hath ' • 'hee • • • • • • ' PLOW CO'TEE SEA. talked with Mani • Jehovahe the One, . Who luelas peculiar' end close' spiritu- — • to . polite stealing in busmees - he, , •Usual Ca.:d d.' daso of ematiorie with male, the Ono :Ohio smiled Approvingly,. especially . whon covencints With Man and Wheehieepe . . LakehAssal's Tributaries.. he was itl 071 the profits. And- -not. those covenants inoiolate, is the'. One Lake Assails a smell' body of aery only is the -Forgetter of God coat; hho hath spoken,. 11. eleho speaks . salt Water lyiag raven, or eight Milee promisror with evil, but he is a Par- trtkee with adulterers. ere is seinen, is all this, and niore, does" it not bea inland from- the :Bey. of Todioura, of the world who, though perhaps :12°°ve. us listert? ``The .efighty 'one of the •••Vrencli eioeseseiona ni One, God, erehoaribe hath spoken!" East .Africa, It. •:conaprises Only not himself a Moral • leper, fellaw- ships with those of •positive irrinioral Wheri Napoleon spoke it is said that about sixteen square /Mies. habits. The social fabric of the • his It is surrounded by • a. 'wonderful soldiers tremble'd before ' him. It present day is becoining rotten' with teeent :sernothing for the fierce, 'all- confinsion of .jitgged :Mountains, dee- Moral irregularities. • Divoreo is conquering general to -speek. .rending to:the witter's 'edge se 'that le ie, filmoet impossible . to • travel coming to be - the rule rather thari .miait be heard: He Mast be obeyed the exception, and marriage ties And When god speaks hew' • ,entreli areund It. • its eyelet's are salt to ni d vows are thoughtlessly end lust- " more it should be true that He nmet. the noirit sitter:4ton; and at its, fu. iv formed and then More 'thought- be Wird and obeyed'. NaPoleOn. has lowest level theio • is seen imon• ite lessly and lustfully broken. And the long since .ceased.' to speak,: '.ens baek a teem of nem y.pure t ()tea rectitude, yet he le a partaker With With God.. He Who spoke ,in thunder , and. a foot Gaol:, ..• derived its ,water, The ..feW men. who Forgetter of God, thoegh, he may be tongue is silent... His. poiver In outevaed conduct of high . moral authority eve ended. . But. not so • For years nobecly keetii whened It. adulterm's because his bosom Mende,. tones on Mount Sinai, and Made the visited it. could not ascot to in that hie associates are morally defeetive, children of Israel fear and ttenible npy .streaur flows' into it; It •Wait and he known it, and yet he. excuses b f i .thought that • the lako . probitbly. had. . se ore - Ina s spat *mg to -day, And and overlooks and forgets.' And then. thank you that -it is it 11 ht, -thee subteranean.ailluents, but. this theory Ile gives his Mouth to •evil. Ah, . that God shonld An. en g, 6 Wits not demonstrated, . how unclean and vile is Much of the nay! - --es "e"• a°u Tho Mystery • of Lake :ASSal 'Was God lutist be heard! h If the • a ' (- conversation of tho smokihg eolved in 1.88e by the French ex- l'enni ear is 'stepped and . the heatt hard - or the social circle. The question- . . plorer, Henry Audon, Ho 'carefully able witticism, the double entendre, Pi d this. Bee so that appealand examined the 'shores; though he found .0 " e e po ie• the smutty story, the light, flippant, it veey difficult. • His bard. -Work vation aro :Without °ilea,. then, as wee at, -Wet rewarded hie the intir-7. Joking remarks upon the most sacred the soul Appears before God, it Must . relations of the married life, all theso.. aieee mat oaak.,In mar of a waterfall. • • insue from the mouth given to evil. . judgmentea The edGettahleode b:potthie: saoinicnig thi•leo ttismorioaaticolt 'rhe Forgettee of God is tho mail or seed may. tem from eaod in this life, woman of 'polluted lips. I.To also but it cannot. escape Ulna in the of the enigma; Was before him: Ile .the liar. Lying is ono of tae (fora' next. Tf it will not listen here, It found a large brook of crystalline inonest of °vile. Tt is considered most do: so in the hereaftee. • histee; teeter foaming over the stonee and quite the proper thing ainong the Ye- who would forget God ; "The throwing itself impetuotisly into the majority of •people, mid yet it is an MilltY Ono, God, Jehovah. hath lake.. Ile tasted the 'water, • and abomination in the sight of . God, Stte ctn." i in message is to you.. found it as salt the ocean, of And then there the slanderer and Psteni Ph, Preolous soul! hNow eon. vhifilt indeed it had been a part. backbiter, °Vali tOWarcis tlioqo of his eider this, 'ye that forget God, lest hake lies colielderahlY bele* own household, and last oe all. the teat. you in pieces, and- there he the: surface .of the sea. It has •130011. Forgetter Of 06d is 'spoken Of as the • none. to &liver: lehoso .otteeeth the aseertoined • that, the We ter that corrupter of the true Cod; that •is, seeriflee , of taaneegieleg gam kith pollee into It e0A1a8 fitin the brooks; ho has a loove caul low cofichhtion of Me; and to lain that °Moretti flow from the Gubbet laity. (lod, quite in conticieeetee and liar- way aright will I shew the salvation cil), a little bey at the extreme Wes.; inony with hie oWn Anti eluiroe:. of God." tern eud of the bay of Tadjoura.- . I ter. 'And this is the' . • . The we t m•a of the Indian.. Ocean are I PORGETTIall OP 001). .• • ••• : carried Miami to fill this depression; • So much for the Forgetter of Clod. TIE • ARMY. • le the. iritevior, and when they reach! You knew nem lie. is, without further • • • Lake Asset they are ainfut 4no feet discussion on our Part, You know Proposed Iteorgatazation to. Train- ihe.i'w tht* is"li telt.") i•V.r°1111 d tt' t tune to thee 1. sa iee I me- ter.' But •whatever your attitude The London Express says :-Lord lane bah! tetrueds God, God !me not ICitctioner's sehenie for the re-orgenie forgotten you. •Ho appeals to you %talon of the Indio) frontier for war end to ruaa Wivens of the clan- is now eoneplete. . It Will bring ger. lie waits in Mercy. Ile beide about a dreale alteration in the oitt ITIs promise of milvatien, ITO Indien Military affairs. Ile propos. plead() for ItS to coriSider our condi. es to place the bulk. of the ',Indian time otir danger • mid out' Orme° of Army teethe frontier, and se have it escape., "Now mu:War this, Ye ready in. the Piece whore be unit forgot •Cfoe," and then Ile Mali needed, At present tho army is dis- on to warn of the impending definer, tribUted oVer India. In Lord Lisien, Ye Vorgetters of Clod, "lest Ititchentes opinion this is useless, 1 tear you in pieees and there he none and would entail vast tranclportation to deliVer." rlere is the daligelo eignal. end netleh loeS of vital time in war, 'floe is -tile sign post'ivritten by the 'rile eyetent that he Is to change was finger of God telling you that by deVlsed after the mutiny, bet note ahead or the pathway Whieli you aro obstdete: Large ggrritons in the paratiltig .in comiess forgethilftete ,of preoldenciee are no longer needed, as (10f1 there ere jutfronent and puniall. a cheek on the Indian viten. These able . enterprises that promise large profits, or takes advantage of •• tho mistake of a' clerk ore cashier which is in his favor -when he' view • this; kind of a thief at • tiorl he winked and smiled a bit and thought whet. a eharp fellow he was, and perhaps. he .wo.s. in on, the deal e.nd Shared. in. the profiCs. Ile wouldn't • do • anything - dishonest, not he! But he. will let the other fellow do the dirty • work and he will pocket his share -of. • the h ----proceeds. • Yes, when he se* the thief at work, he consontedst • With him. He had seen a hungry beggar purloining a loaf of bread .froin, 'tee. bake . shop,' or • the highwayman. hold- ing up the wayfarer aria. taking , his valuables, be would, have been quiek, to yell "thief' se loudly, -• that the policeman could have heard him quarter. of a mile. away if he had eared to do so. lIut when it .„catne s ore ng TREA.Tathlahr 1110R ORCHARDS, "If were to give specific, advice as to the treatment of old orchards," said Prof. IL P. Hedrick,. of the Michigan .Agricultural college, "It Would be in brief as follows: "1. Get lute the orchard with the pruning saw. For this work you need inert of experience. Too many so-called tree pruners are tree butch- ers. Their zeal is much greater- than their knowledge. Tho (ally obsolute rule in pruning Unit can be laid •down is to cut out all dead wood. Branches that are badly inntred, dis- • eased, crossed or that form week crotches should be removed, after which same small limbs may be cut out and if tho tree top is very thiek • there should bo a, .judicious thinning of large branches. Let the pruning extend through two or three. seasons 'either than one. A!' tioned there, quartered in the bar- racks, billeted among tbe inhabi- ME S.•S. LESSOI Sovatity-thres thousand seen are sta", • tante and crowded In the public, buildings, Including the theatres', row -closed. • At dret there was great difilealti with the trfineport of troope over !Lake Baikal; but now navigation is , open, and Prince Mil/1M% who looks ,after the passage of the regiments, leas taken the necessary steps to !effect the crossing with rapidity, J According to the indications which :have been given to me by a high iliiiiielan functionary, • 350,000 per- ; sons, civil and military, have cross - led, Lake Baikal en route for alukden I since the rupture of 'diplomatic ne- gotiations between Ruseia 'arid Jee ;Pan. Now, counting ilia troops twhich wore already hi Manehuria be - :fore the opening of hostilities, one can figure out trisia; tl I. I ition upon the number of soltlieis tvhich bay° left Ii•kittok. that 250,- 000 men aro scattered over tee field. of. operationa. That, of course, ifi only ". one-half of tho eumber de- manded by Gen. Kouropatkin. But the five aney corps evhicle have hist lbeen mobilized will be under way at itne end of the month, and it is be- .lieved Unit inside of two months alieee live Melly corps, numbering 250,000 men, will be in: Manchuria. "2, Nearly all old orchards ere in . sod. This must be broken up-abso- ing tobacco and used the juice in- t u e y must if success is to be • at - steed of • milk her lubricating his I tained. Start its cultivatioo and P4RS°NAL hends. • Ms excuse was that "all it going. Plow in a good • it is used," It is a, fact thot pas- land then harrow in 4 good dressing • Gossip About Some 'cif the World's . Leading Peeple, this 'ore milk is pasteurized before d'.;e'ssing of stable Manure or plow • toensIrtelzoinrog than one covers a multitude ef sins inf fertilizers rich ie. potash and obese The Shalt of Persia bas a sword dairy' farm in the Phoric acid. In, the words of the scabbard worth $1,000,000, eountry. ; parable of the barren fig tree, 'dig : Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria, is eit.e• most importer:a point to be Cleanliness in every detail is the dairyman "3. With a short handle hoe , about it apd dung it ' Mid aroond the stitble, milk reom, and -Overy•where milk. is handled o I and his help, in their. daily dueies in r f then • spray thoroughly,'hil th 1 numerable insects and fungi, and .---•• tlie old rough' bark which shelters ine f„.,,,,, War kind of a box scraper temove y... .of ' the best revolver shots in.• the or world, There are no fewer 'then twenty- phySicians and•i Russian Court. stantly impressed upon the con - stored, • Cleanliness must. be looked ees are in the •dormant condition, laxly. attached to t le after in all the details of milk maim- with copper sulpliate at the rate cll NV e . o Caueen Wilhelmina„ Who is the niece facture runt in - . . • one pound to 25 gallone of . woter. _-. of the Duchese. of. Albany, is fond • of collecting J.apanese curios.. . ' HANDLING, MARKET MILIC.• " 'hi, Make op - your • mind to • feed, Lord Woisoley is .usually spoken of .priine, spray, acne *cover crone. Mal as an 1HW:imam this is only' partly . Fovery dairyman knows :that bettor lculthrate the orchard ' far the re- correct, esehe• :belongs to a -,Stafford- butter can bo made In the private i . . dairy; es. a general rele, simply he- 1 cause one man, or one wornan,. use- i -- i fails to eppreciato the treatment °ate I tun er of its life, If the orchard store family, • . • At. Sendringliem, the Queen has • althea above, cut it down and „plant ,sorro of tho furniture: whith foimed ally has. ;charge cir personal, •Centrol , ee,oho : 'Why cumberethe it .. the !patt. of the .household in. which she: oyer. . the whole procesa, from tlui .'- .feeding of the. cows. to the inta•keting !ground?' Do not . expect 'too much 'lived .16 COpenhageri. when it girlof . I 1 le 't nor go c o quickle urns. "As .the Queen Helena of Italy is an nn - h • ' 4 p ti . • : - twig is bent the tree is inclined,'• Ond / tiring .walker; • She was accustomed Every patron of a creamery, no matter what his relation to the coma a season or two of , good care cannot to ta,ko long tremps with her fa•thea pony may bo, financially or eiflicial- Makeup f ot a lifetime of neglect. Do lead brothers on the ants Of her na- no follow years of outrageous tive .country., Montenegro. • . . • I treat -tient -with unreasonable expectae, • eat to see that his milk le lernished ly, Will. always find it to. his. inter - •tions." : • • ' ' • The 'Duke .of Coenaught surprised daily at the creamery in, the best • • " 32:10st of the Inchon Princes during heesible coneition, . .a. CLEANLINESS IN FEEDING:- prowess with the' rale. Most Array " • --""'" • • • • • • . his Coronetion vesit to India by his .-.. . A 'distegarel oi. any. of the xtetails . Do .not :.throxv the soft food. for Men envy his skill. s , • WhichaSSISt in ftirnishing piire, Crean , , a/a.,t.ae fewls on the greund, but give it Lord Roseberry ;began speech -mak.. :Milk, eVel.y night. and meriting; ways affects the. quality or the, Whole in hroughe, or he :any euitable yes- ing. at the early,. age :of fourteen, set Into • which the foWis cannot where he addressed it volunteer ' eegi- `of that canes aimply of: lung:at the • factin'y, and ' theh tlroam and butt& place .their feet; .birt, 7hard food, Stich. Merit and excited :Much enthusiesin as, the .grains; may be Scattered with and adiiiiraticat. takeii ' therefroni 'le also % likeev'ise • .aff. . , seQted. , ... , . •., .- . • ntivantage... Give the food prefer- • The Pairiee, Regent of Bavaria cola. es:, ably iii •tho ,ertii•d . or the' fields, and lects 'beetles; , but ho. does not . , gill ' The cows should be kept:east... 4 clean • as possible.' ": There . is hardly elm nge, the feeding:place. ; fr equently; theni, he , neepe them. •alive and . stud - any there .te not 4 pure stteant of ies• therm. closely : lie aeye that they Amy necessity.* , of keepieg• cows With water, supply the .fowls daily '' with are, gifted with groat intelligence: ,filthy flanke, belly,. and tepee; • It fresh water, which should lie placed King Eilwara : is ;Owl:type eager . . to costs. barely nothing, •except a few to In the shade in a vessel into which receive early news . of .' important boards, a little thne-aea,energy, they cannot' • get their feet., Bear clients before thiar die: actually pub - old, cow stable, !•.so that. the aesws, in mind that elle kerma . of disease' lisheci, end: his friends. ceanot 'please aio easily ••carrieg. name an infected hine better thee by telegraphipg In - cannot get sealed., 61 • cOarne, some cows will 'Soil themselves, if they 'are 'faun .on. the spies •ef. the boots' and teresting atenle. . . • a .2 he-- _ . . . .. . . . .. . obliged, to • almost break their necks . ee , o the attendant... • Seine disease Ihe Ring. of, the. Belgians wishes . . • . • . .. . . . to 'do it. •In,.eueh a case it might he better ' give the butcher, a. thence to do the "breaking" Provid- ed ha es. willing pay a..fair price - THE PRIVILEGE. . • . Lok.out .for the. ventilation -of. the cow. stable. See, that the isejtiet as' pure as -possible, especial- ly at milking time.. Bo ,not allow tbe .niaeure to 1•36 • disturbed in the. gutter or stall' after- milking is ovor, rand the milk • ramcived • from tho stable; . We have tried . to prevent raising any dust in the barn; for at least oneelialf hour. before • 'milking time. May, Core, " stover bedding, °toe arit. alt bendlea and arranged .early 131 tho day, . on this :accoufit...-Thene .• when the cans • and milk ara carrie&. an to 'nine, the ritmoepher.e.leajtist as pure as eve min provide it. There es mote danoee- of •bsteterial inoeulatfort from:dried -matter floating in the' 114, ,tban. many supposha• • - • • Of course all pane, cans, etreiner -and • .strainer-eloths . should be per- feetly.elean and. .sweet, ' A. combina- tion of mild and hot' Water; • fresh: anti pure, with late -Steam to fipish with, when possible, .can make all work in this . lino very ,satisfactory, and is far:.ahead of any pasteurize- ,• tion correctioes .14tee "on in the twee." •• \ • i • • Do not buy. any cans or pails that ItaVe seaMs• unfilled with, solder. It you have them •hand, do not throw them. away, hut have Your tinsinith ell , all :holes and Greeks. with solaet. Tills will preveat one source Of stroutileein hot, weather: ' When ready to milk, and before 'putting .the pail -into -position brush the cow's :udder end teats With your dry • hands,' or with a clean- dry oloth: Despite sliggestiona to the contrary-, we advise against tile 'prac- tice of washing the udder and teats, tis a. generel. propoeitiori. • ,There . is no. need of it, unless thee() OPPend- ages aro absolutely filthy with cow Manure, in that case we advise putting the .whole eoW to eciele. • • . • PRACTICE DRY AITLICING every time. If it is necessary for the !hired. mon to spit on his hands, try and induce him to do it after rixilithig Is over. Milk quietly and .quickly, milking two teats at. a time, of course., Soule profeesoe once advo- eated milking • one •teitt at a thno, but that Was • probably' because of • his own personal disability ' help- lessness, It was at this lime that a friend ea ours ridiculed' the profese sor, end suggested - that experts , should he • trained to milk all four teats at mice. We will Illustrate and describe his plan in a later is- . m1,(1.31ist es -soon es eueb tow Is milk- ed, the 'Waned be strained 11110 the .cans. Tho strainer sbould 'be jil• a clothe 1 al • '1 •) by a ring or Olanips'. if eheesecloth is used on top, it may be h91d. in place with 'clothes pins.• • As .soon as possible, when the cans are full, take them out of the Stable. Cool down and aorato the Milk , inn • Inediately. Thi e is absolutely int- peratiVe in hot weather, in order in keep the milk' in good condition. At ally rate, be sure to aerate the even If you do nothing more. Air pumps are tioW advertised foP this. Piltrtirla. poor pion on the form, gen- . orally, to mix night's and .morning'a Milk together. 'When eve separated our milk, it was done in the morn- ing. Night's milk was slightly Witerned, tvhile the morning's inlik was going through the Separator, so M et lar you souiself Are It horget- •• ried by caravane .far inland •tte Itfeeelithif capital, Perhaps there are only two other instances known of nrater,ilowing in- land. through brooks from the sea. Both these brooks are in the Aland of Cephalonia, in the • Milian Sea, west of Greece, They tire on the nouthwest side of the Wand, pear the mail town and! Port of Argostoll. For, it Iit,tle way they flow near ono anothoe straight from the Pea; -and then follow differ. ont courees. Doth streams finally diseppear in the ground, probably reaelting taime subterranean reifervoir wimee wrtiers perhaps again reach 00 sea through lissures in the rocks, There is in) tide In the sea here, meet God s end the low of the salt water mercy and patience rimy regarded Its firmly loyal. Tipon etreatts is perfectly steady atid -wa- viest ist4 he counted for weak,t4is loyalty rea an asset, Lord XIV, Winona, es, axe invariably ,produced in dirty that he had been. a sailor, bat.. his serroundings, -and 'they, can best ' be .felencls Say that be wouldhave made _avoided by cleanliness' and disinfee- a splontlid..• roan . of ausineese . : His tion. Theeo • prevefitive measure's Money is •,catefly- • invested in come will guard •egainst many 'diseasea to ,rnercial. concernfee' : . • . •• .• Which poultry- are Halite, 'chiefier roupel The Duchess of hafe, who catch. lit- . • garieS. tuberculosis and diseases. - of / tie for . Court 'ceremonies and prefera the. condi :and . 'skin, and - will also to live the of e,.confitry lady, line .imphove the general eondition- of boon 'etticiying Geelic: in order . that, the loWIS, as well as materiaihr ein- elm May be , able eto converse . With erease theie .market value. ..- . e her Ilighlapg . tenantry. in their own . ' , --re--a-a*--)-eae . - • . tongue. ' • . - . - --• - BM SIAN *110,33XLIZA.T1017.. . i ' . : W.: .1rerices, 'the Arnerica4 firianeier, .Lazy- •er .... 1129-ireMents,. 0 does not believe that a. rnan is atoo ' ' • • • . aah Progress at forty' ; • he says, if correctly reported,. that,a, man is in his ap- 1:. ' • and Careleesness. •- • prentice. claye • until •he IS feety, and .. . At, '11.foscaw....r wi,p. present. : at .the that' a business man is not. ripe,on- departnee of 'offiCeas, writes:et .acirrese til he hi :fifty. . . • . - • . . pendent of ; Le • join -ilea of Paris. .11r. Choate, the Americareeatinistee :There were about fifty of them , on in London,' is an -example of a man. ;board tho train which Ietook. Chi- who sacrifices 'monea • fors a proud . . . . . onels, ..of Cossack. iegineents, eiegane position and .the opportunity• ofserve officera, of '' the ..Contrd.„ and young Ing: his :coin -dry. 'His eatery 'is :$17,7-.:: Lieutenants web°. all exuberant and '500 .a• ever, .,but widle•he is Iltrictis- :gay. Oh, wieh Whatebethusiamri they ;jig 'state:ea !ahem ...W4S' nnt. one monient. " at the Berle mead nextrer $100,-, Gone. where tho meli bade farewell Prance Waldemar±:of: Denmark is a 61 sirchiesa, and that. was at the .sta.- . • • • and giate :the last kisses :to WiVes„. good emateur beixere. and : one of the childion, rnothees and • fiancees, But sieP9;.tan,chloeusndlv,1*tieelesitte4...tel:!'laeat esiegotn tew be- tho-inmnt the train got under wan alletendereese and affection. eenished. tween him and.. his 'august relataen; claapedhenas 'and: emigratulated each the Teat, when there is • a family Tee oflieers niet in the dining . ' gathering in. •our own Queen's native young Captains and Iiientenards. were the land. ' . . • ., .. , „ ,, . does not touelt extras excent When on other. • 'For them going on to.• 'war was it . -line - feast, whiCli, was. The Emperor ot Austria' never .Oflicere .:of ': high • tank Aver° .. nianh ' the eight.: The . plays a genie of cards :.uniess he is Conti/mod far• into .11Oure already at. rest, .wheri • the very . much tvoried. ' The 'Icaieer etill drinking ehamprigne to the el,:‘, board Ms yacht, •'1`he 1Cing of Italy is a .town of tile departure of the troops. Samara, heard of outside her own Ie was at Semen), 'Oita. '..t :L•Witnossed.• . • Oneen Olga 'ef • Oreece is .seldore, .1teeeiaa. has : ii, norroi• of .extede, and (amen, little king - 1S , victoties 'of the Christina .of Simla banished- them army... , . • . . . • . • from the Spanish Court. 90,000 inhabitants. It. done but she is adored within it. is at. the.point, of bifurcation' where She' takes the greatest interest in the gteator number of the railroads hospital Work end nui•sing, . and she of European Russian join the Trans- finds intiCh pleasure in acting as , Siberian line. • The soldiers used at nuitch-tnaker to her ;poorer subjects;: first to travel in thilde elaSS care she bee* provided; out of her owe wagons wbich have been fitted up When Dr. legram,, the present Ilishe for theme eiages; .. but now, for the most parth puree, hundreds .Of doweries for pea-. they, are transpertecl . in baggage sant Wile.. itished with atoyes and berths, and stepney, be was advised by 4 geode These - wagons are •far-. op. of .Loniltin, become Bishop of they tiro Well ventilated. ' tech 001. natured laundress _that he would dice Is • fuller supplied with blahkets. make no heit(hvay with the- people The Morale of the treope hi excelleht. ' They all appear to • be delighted and unless ho adopted a grey shirt and proud Of the cliance to perticiletto ?-0..e'ed•leeki'n"tulaiiiewo.s.InTotle oicfstill'o°1) t1(1.,1,11. in. the first engagemeets. , They do 2110 hint, „Ina fpand that en not take thole nl,eals In tho wagonS. ereeiee hv :it, - reallY They eat at the ra 'tread stations, i , m . .wm:rington ihoon4,0..01], hrd_ where refeetories• have been establish'. i I% iher of'the hero of Sfafecing, is a 141 iiiidi food, end they have plenty •of awe quiet -looking harrister, and few. peti- te utilk about alter each meat, ee. kite invegine that ho was (3. sailor for cause the 'administration has taken , t hi r eon :1,,011 I 0010 it devoted 013 znialerers• enable tpo to that • t • here triie trecire molt' to • e g , • eu reet on an( m et y N. 0 mode at the. liar. T is COaS ant - AT SAM'All,V • ly dee'gnitie I'7111SINt, 110 is respon- it is , lifil .11 1 ii. 1 : • oti.1 . file (1 (1 two tioton, (melt of . . ,tt.• 111 b 1 .• . , ; ' . ' Viis.1 1 k . 1 W.1.1...I _as .0.0s nainvil •Naililos. • . - s' titigents 34 tee Fee oast. pew tewos 11), Ceitiplual.. nee, piencipal of the twee boon wkon fi,,n„ ,,,,,,t, lame,. , Royal No ma': 1 Col lege tor 111' 111 Ind , in beveled tegh0(.3,41 nat. eettipully, .114 Ono Or 111Wi. W110 0011 Sail fileti14l310 las mil - a st a oin ( t j. baltahints, ;111 112 . Withoot MOO. Tie is tor eic- littliirtfit ificegnixiinettiliteseettc;.(oetiflonriiiiiiieeds bleyit,titittliltegls. 0Pne1;11, (3,10.0113-1141,1of000r. Is food or (N"lf-, leoreughly appreciate scen- t* them witli artily corps from Si- erY which ifi deserihod to him. To tbell'ifenitho i lltebeinoh inre°rtr d igrizottihe reservee Anierica, Years ugh, ho taught eleve vn to read, and was threatened with tip to the i0th of May there pass- death in twenty-four hours if he did ed through elamara for the seat, of not desist; it Was only his affliction war only 70,000 men, and in thinwhielt saved him, nil it emoted syin- number must, be counted the ,riaiiors, , Nally for hini,• but he had to "git," the mechanics,the personnel of the , 'Red Cross, 8&0480 that the minibee , . of soldiers must he reduced to 80,- 2)00. But in all the other stations, ' A Woman's admiration for a paint. ltaiewlia, Teheliabinsk, Omsk and ing usually rues to the frame. aemsk. 11t11210001113 convoys have been Tibet has its "park pests." The !formed', An average of twelve trains. robe, Which coristitatea a intin'a suit ;Six carrying,: eoldiere and RIX Medea • of clothes, is simply utigirded *rhe i‘litit war material, munitions, horses he Hee dottin to sleep, It is neither, te2 provie,lens, arrive at tritutsk • ehanged nor washed until it gO011 to los cry day. pieces. The 111411 inside the robe Irkutsk is now an 131131101100 carap, fares no better., -ye INTEIANATIONA'i. ,..7_Z$S.0); JUL'2O. . Text of the Leeson, II. Ohm% 1-11. Golden Text., U Chron. 43' 4, . rt is pleasant, as well as prediablek to continue meditating upon one who did right in the sight of the Lord (xx; .82), for he sought to the Lord. tiod of hie father, and walked in IBS conunandments, and his heart was • lifted up in the ways of the Lord,, and. the Lord WAS with hien txvii, He is ,soad to have reigned twenty-five years (xx, 33,), but it is possible that three of those • yeats were the last years of Asa, his fath- er, while he was diseased in his feet. In order to keep before us some idea of where we are in the history of these two kingdoms, it would be well to consult 0.3 compara- tive chronological table p2 tho kingn. • and prophets of Judah. and Israel, such as may be found in the appen- dix of meat of our geed reference • 13,r ,estalblesniivgo . aliax1r4,1lible 4 in New . From this it will be seen .that the twenty-two - years et a.haths reign in Israel were about contemporary wi'th. the first twenty-two yearra ,,ot Jo- tioshaphat's reign in • Jodah. The prophets of the time Were helm, the son of 114nani, in judah. and Mic- alah and 1.11-ijah, in Israel. It will help ns to keep this in mind, as our next lesson coecerris Aliab, and ',the six .following keep Elliah before us. • None of the propliets whosewritings we have had up to this Gaze ()emcee - ed. Jonah, who is the first, Cornea latet. . .• Our lesson begins with the return of JehoshaPhat in • peace•to Jerusa- lem "Learn the battle with the. king of Syria, in which he had been an ally with Ahab .and Very narrowly escap- • ed death. Ahab, althouhhedfsguisee, fell by a, God directed arrow from a • bow drawn at a :venture (xviiie 28- 34). • Jehoshaphat began hiii reign exceedingly well: and sent teachers throughout all the eitiee of. Juieali with the book of the aftW Of the Lord triches and horior in abuntiance (xvii, . fill the kingdoms' of the lands round- about Judah, awl they. made no war.- against jehoshanhat. The Philife- tnes and Arabians brought presents i as well as. tribute to him, so that ho waxed greitt. exceedingly and. had o:rateach 'the . .people, .". rsze,.1being .t that the fear of the Lord fell upon h Then cain• e 'his alliance with a man Who did anOre to Provoke the Lora. 00d eif Israel to auger than all the .kings of Israel that were before him (xhiii, 1; 1 Kings xvi, 33). He, al - ]owed his •son johoram to'. take Ahab's daughter' to who •(I1 Kings NW, 1.8), and alsO. joined :Ahab to light algeinst the 'king: • Of• Syria, (chapter 18); hence •tlici reproof. • of mfr. Lord throtigh. Jehu in one -• les- son,. "Should*, then help the noged- )5, and love; : them • that bate the., Lord • (Verse 2.) " 'Gee feels like saying, Why 'could . not • Johosh- ephat ,• let inigodly • Mone and continue, as he had. chosen,a to walk' with :God? • . 111.3.it is not ;- tilde niattee :of worlgier •allictrices atho ' prominent phi of out own:time? Ia.' marriage, e in budinesS, irx religiouse, matters, is, it :not seen everywhere? How few seem to give .• aner ceosidere : ation to 11. Cor. vi., 0-18, 'mid are there hnany Oven, among. God' • uainiee tors who think at wrong to :have fele lowehip with those' who, deny:: that joins .Christ.' is God, or with those who deny: that: the bleed of Christ cSaloni:1:healtbiovtlayt (.,Y1 any works. • 'ta The thinner ef jehesiteplatt's lile•• • .• was es a rune, right in the sight of •• the Load; although there, were' two ' 'very - dark, clouds in ins clear day, • the 'One.we, have meetiened; and lat- er hisullianco witle'Ahaziale (x.a., 35- , 87). But :. it is refreshing: to . '• bial eft the aerna.bider of our les- son ehanter, after.: the Lord reproved him; goiug out :through all tho p00 - pie t�. bring. them . again 'to the" Lord,: setting:judges the, imid and admonishing them en ,sucle .words: as !'Take heed what ye ho, for ye Jtedgee, not for. Mau., but for the Lord . who. is you" (verses saying al- so to the, priestS and•Levites: Thus' Shall. yedo in the feat of the Lord, faithfullea Mai witho, perfect :heart. Take conrageiand do, and the Lord shall bo with the 'good" aveeses la, 11, 'aria rearginn: These arewords for us' to lay to heart, for only such • hvnlg and actirig will stand in .tltat. clay; None othee".ean- glove His ap- riroval (It Thin., 11., 15), On the words • "Take heed" see Luke villa 18; Meek iv., 24, 'alatko heed now ye hear and wbet ye hear.," Meer Melt. xxive 4, "Take heed that no Man , deceive • 'you."• Thay via; 4.; "Take bead and be quiet.'Fealeifoeh",. As to the Lord'e,hatted of eniquity,. respect • of persons and taking of. gifts, see • Ex. xxiii., 8; Dot, X., 117; Job xxeiv„ 19; Rota. ii., Eplo 11•1•X8tt-9.'e have ' 'S • hut OrinieSOI, oti the life. of this great king we must not Omit a .glatice at chapter a0, and the victory which the Lord wrought fee, Hie people, • Realizing. their 'helpless - nesse they vest them'seleee wholly' up- on Hine ' and the • Lord fought againet thole • enemies and. Med° them to -rejoice 'over their' enemieSi and gave then).rest rotind-about (verses 3, 27-80.). Note the kinpra prayer (verses (3-12) and put verse 12 with xiv„ 11:, "We havo no :might 'against this groat company that contain against us; neither know wo what . to do: .Thit our :eyes are ilium Theo," :These aro the people whom. God helps, the . impotent, the utteehr helpless, not , those . who . can . help 0(11.0461:ye8, 'Nieto, also, verses 15. 17, 20, 22, and learn to fear net, lea Veva anti praise. • This' whole -hearted reliance it.pon not 4' et to oixt 1, lesson and the last is greatly needed. the T.ord made so prominent in this MN'S' APARTMENTY. Queen Al meand ra's boudoir a t the casino is it charming apextmeet. lier Majesty hag taken the greateet in- terest in its decoration and :furnish- • -log, and .some of the Louis ,xvr: treasures ,which are to bo found there - were diseovered in 1902, When 80111:1 , alterations were 'being -made in . other- part of the castle, The bath- • •roores used by the -King and 'Queen• are 'magnificent, 'the marble in eaely. • having been brought .oVer from some , haeh-10: quarries in -Greece, WM& were said to have been lost sight of -for a thousand years, and whielt Were net reopened :until 130(3311310of years ego,. • Nothing• itinueeS Ow that doesn't annoy grin** fe11-4; f? •