HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-08-11, Page 3,
- g 4 People in Different Tarte Dee Di!.
)format rorms.
A saiool has. been opened in Lon-
don for the study of Japanese, Its
proprietor gays that Japan hail as
•
APPok
ZAPAIMOIC DI'AraCCTOL. for inetarree, is at home only in the
1104...•
Wonderful Are the Triumpb,s Over Natural
com
:,tiV_heitpresent day the Chinese
mon
knowledge
characters occupy by far the most
important place in the ,Japanese
,style of writing. As in England, dif-
ferences of dialect are distinctly ap-
parent in various localities but
Laws and Forces;
%Estero* according to act of Lae leer.
hareent C oti1n h 0
Wan:tate Nine 1-lundred and Peptic.
. by Wm. -army, ot ',reroute, at 1,be
Department of agrietature. Ottaw )
A despatch. from Los Angeles says:
• Bev. Frank De Witt Talmage Preach-
ed from, the following text: John
40:v.t 14, "Greater works them these
shal,1 he do."
Man inereeees not his gospel faith
Y lowering the standards of the
poss. Yon might as well expect
ti.4.0- LS sea uphill cif -its own ac-
cord, or violets to grow during mid-
winter in a snowbank. or daylight
,t fallow after the staking of the
sun in the west, or the flush of
health• to be seen en.the pale cheek
of corpse, or a humming bird to
voluntarily- --snaket-,thera—nestsen- the
kiark labyrinths like a ground mole,
as for a radiant. l'aith capable of
transforming eshaeeeter to exist in
any temple tulles': the chief corner-
stone of that temple is Jesus Christ.
"And I, if I be lifted' up from
earth, will draw all men unto me,"
said Jesus Christ just a short time
before his crucifixion, "I•Am the
way, the truth. and. the.life. No man
cometh unto the Father but by rno,"
speaks our resurrected. Redeemer to
the gospel workers of. tete preseet
day. •
Let it he clearly understood- at the
outset that by no wordor„.thOught
Would seek to dapreciate the 'pow-
er and influence of Christ's personal-
ity and work. He it is 'who fills all
created things; he it is who eives
life, natural, .meatal, .110 is
the inspirer, the Springfrom which
come all out- triumphs. 1111t, I want
to show' you that the proinise•Which
to gave to his disciples,- 'Greater
Works than these shall: he do:" has
been fu 1 fil led and that' man inspired
with hie spirit has withthenatural'
forces at his disposal clone 'rnore for
uplifting humanity; as -Christ ettid
he should,than did Christ himself.
Man has taken hold of the power
which Christ bestowed and has op -
./plied it beyond the opportunities
which Christ had to complete the
work that ho initiated. Chriet fed
the multitudes: Christ opened- • 'the
blinded eyes and straightened .the
crooked limbs; Christ assuaged pain
find stopped the chronic issue of
blood. Christ was a great preeeher
and drew the multitudes about him.
Christ fought against ethe heathenish.
doctrinla that "might: is • riga".
-Christ' wass the greatestof all 'work:-
ers of wonders that the ewerld ' had
ever seen. There' Was only. brie
Christ. There;will never' he:ea:other;
Yet there' a•re aenses.,Inatural:as
spiritual, in which his preraise has
been kept to his followers,• and they
have been enabled through the pow-
er emanating front him to do everke
which sutpasa those he 'did iti
life on earth. .. But let' it n0a• Co
forgotten that • these! •.''greeteis
works , which man has done ....have
been accomplished only' because Jeeus
has lived and Jesus' ..Pronhetie
words have been fulfilled. in order
to get a better grasp of .this theine
let me read to you thefull verse in
which • the words .ot • my text "are
found. "Verily, verilee'sI eey.S.Santo
you he that • believeth eh me . the
works that 1 do • ehall he do also,
and .greater work g than:these shall
be do, because I go unto inY
Fa-
thcr." ,
AMAZED HIS GENERATION:.
-Jesus Christ . was the arnazethent
taf ama,zements fo the People of
deyand generation as a worker .of
natural pheeomene. Ile seemed to
his time superior:: to' all natural
laws. When he went. out to • visit
hisdisciples. in their • ehipa-he did
not tee° to use the' land, as „other
people had to do. He stepped. upon
the crystal pavement' of Lake Gala
lee as _ easily as an Alpine elimber
might rest his. foot upon solid rock,
as easily as a. hind's feet might glue
themselves to •inotintain ceeig. • When
he spoke. the .1ranage 'of ..ohediezice
was rendered to "hine. not alone :.by
men in the synagogue, :by :beasts of
.the field, and the fowls *of the . air,
but by the winds and.the wavers He
called' to the Galilean tempest,
"Peace be still." .At teceglance of.
is eye the "constioue. wetter. blushed
to see the faceof its Lord" at the
(wedding in Canes ,of " At ••a
/Ford from his lip the- fig tree dried.
lip and withered awctee. All he had'
to say was, •"Let no fruit ' grvw Orr
then henceforward forever,"-: eA-t his
wall came Whole schools of -fishto '
I' caught by the Gnlilean fishernith.
aly his .touch wboieovmi full of
bread seemed to be miraculously ere -
*ad. After the sermon' epon the
teount he fed themultitudes ley simp-
ily breaking five loaves of bread into.
atiecee. Ito kept on hemlines those
'nieces again - in twain tintil at:leet
all were fed with bread, its Muth ets•
they cared to eat. Christ wee . a •
wonder worker in natmail pheeone-
ena. TIe could tell Peter eittet where
to go and catch a fish whichhad in,
its mouth the "picks: of money"' be
which the disciples shatild paV the
Just -taxes to the Boman -govern-- !
,meet. In the hoer of his: surfering
and death the earth teembled and
the sun WaS shrouded in darkness,
In him was the power which. the
psalmist nseribc•rl The Meet /Ugh.
"Ilis lookoth upon the earth end it
trembles; he 'totteheth the hills *and
they Frm)I(r."
Not only dhl Christ estonish the
people in hie day by his power over
the forces of nature; he revealed his
divine nature by &mantle his power
ever physieeti diseases. Ito tried to
convince tho People in his clay of -
his power as s. 110000 of spiritual
snaladiea . by proving hininelf the
cleanser of leper spots, the opener of
blinded eyes and the 'only one of bis
time who mold Pend the shiggish
blood of health coursing through the
Withered limbs of him sick with the
noisy, Yoe to -clay, ea / study
Cellist, the heater of the siek, T see
that the work he did has been taken
up by his followers hna its trf-
uiltphs
milltiplied, fly the word Of
his power he gave sight to a fete
blind men. but in our day the Chrie-
tian surgrions, by their operations.
nre giving night to thousands. The
virtue front lila garment stopped one
issue of blood, hut in our day the
Christian physician, With his riled,-
entrionta,is stopping thousands of
issuea. Chriet'e touch rel.ieveal a few
eurterere in` 'pain, but the !inept.
tals of our time thousands pass
painlessly through suffering whieh
tormer times would have rooked,
them with excruciating torture.
3I0DERN MEDICINE,
these are not by any means so
merked as in the case of China. As
a rule, a man spealcing the pure To-
xin dialett might ,ravel throu'gh
nearly the whole of Japan without
experiencing any considerable (life
body of the anophele mosquito; and
it is the bite of the latter in
therefore, that produces tbe
plaint In num
Also it le now quite certain that
the mysterious sleeping sickness,
which annually destroys scores of
thousands of 'Ives itt Eunatorial
Africa, is due to a microbe whose
habitat is the body of a. species .0i
tsetse Ily, 'rids important diseoVe
ere, was Made only last year by Ool„
Bruce and Dr. Castellani, and wits
by them communicated to the Royal
Society.
Of course it has long been known
that the bite of the tsetre fly was
fetal to horses and cattle, but it has
always been held to be innocuous to
: man. Now, however; it is shosen
to affect hixrt equally maligpantly
But to -day are the "wonders , Acuity. 1 -lis words would generally only after a diffe'rent faehion,
modern surgery" any more inarveloual be fully understood, although he In short, . sleeping sickness turns
than the "woridere of modern inedi- might now and again be unable to out to be a human
eine?" Is the power 01 modern snecakatth the true meaning oE the an -
'eine to cure disease any more mara'swers he received. :AboliirshSEttlh'SeEinsFeie‘tYanDdISE'oAu DISEASE,
velous to -day than the power of 1 /t is the Tokio dialect that he now the aomplaint, For the microbe can
modern bacteriological investigations being taught to thousands of the sto more exist outside the body of
to prevent disease? You see Christlyoung men of Great Britain, for it its original hoet than can a fish out
stopping here and there to open a,:is the accepted language of Japan of watee.
blinded eye or to unstop a deaf call just as Prtrieian French is accepted lar. IThetelland'e investigations have
or to loosen the heavy end labored j everywhere in preference to that spo- disclosed the existence in England of
breathing of the asthutatie sufferer.' ken in the country districts. 11. la what he bas not inaply designated
But to -day the achievements of theithiS Partieldar dialect that is being "cancer fields," By this is meant
healer include more than here and i taught to young British Army of- vails in a very marked degree, They
eked there an isolate: phylesal Titre. eeeeseeete are obligoe, to- cleanse as areeirtvariablyesitented on alluvial or
see •the lights in t 0115an, s of
"-tinterpreters, either before leaving clay soil, and subJect to periodical
pitai w n owe g eaming1 iseee the
e Japan or before the Civil Service
stars in the heavens,
white - robed. nurses and the doctorsfe°111misst" at home, It is quite
probable that our young naval of -
coming forth as did the angels of 'ficers will, in the near future, have
health who troubled the waters at
to quality in a lik4 manner.
the pool of Bethesda, crying to the
The most difficult of all the diet -
sick everywhere, "Come and be cured
lects, perhaps, is that used in the
of your ailments!" 1 see thousands
and tons of thorisaeds of strong men
died Saesurna district, It possesses many
words peculiar to its own province,
and women who would have
twenty years younger than they are so much ao, indeed, that a conversa-
tow had they lived and been sick In tion carried on between two Satsuma
• the days when Chriet lived and he men is often all but unintelligible to
had Oen them not or touched them a native •of Tokio, ;although the late
not. Christ, as the physician of the ter might be able to Make himself
body. was a wonder worker. But understood by either Of the others.
man to-4ay as a curer Of physical in many country districts .also a pa -
ailments ig accemplishing far more tole is used knoWn qp13r to the peas -
than Christ ever did. Nan is . rat ants, and presenting great difficulty
only opening the eyes of those born tn any Japanese of the better class
blind, but he: is making by the thou- whp comes from a different locality."
sand and tens of • thousands the.
deaf and the dumb spen.a until this
wonder -because of its commonness.
ancient miracle has ceased to he S' THE. 1110110BE AT HOME
Now,. study, Christ ;from .. another
standpoiet, -Whet 'did Jesus corae wHER,E CHOLERA PLAG-
.owe epos earth to do? e• came to .
.1 TIE, ARE ITA.TCHED.. , Special form of what was once called I
floodings. Under these conditions,
and undee these conditions only, in
all hunia'n probality, itt. the as yet
undiscovered parasite responsible for
this hideous scourge developed.
:And as with cancer, so is it, but
in a more marked degree,: with lePe
rosy. It exists in Many parts of
the world, but it is endernla in not
more than half -a -dozen places, and
these are all low-iyitig, swampy
areas.
If we could oink certain, nearly
valuelees Polynesian atolls beneath
the ocean, depopulate the "hot-
la,ndea" of Central 'America, and oth-
er places of residence for some • few
hundred tholes:end Chinese and Melee-
esians; we could save inillions yet
unborn from the grip of an invaria-
bly fetal disease that is among the
most horrible known to mankind,
and perhaps even lay, the axe to, the
root of the modern 'white • plague"
_aoateumption.
Yes—consumption1 For 'Geroge, Di
little more; than ,ein aggravated 'and
save the world'? Oh, Yes; ho SamO • conatraption, then phthisis, hut
1.40i0,44t44e4oti+3E.14(..*.w....y4.4*.44
4.
FOR FARMERS
Seasonable and Profitable)
oillsitthsofsoorot.hennsy °
1**:.1(4.3**04)::******44•••:.**ifi.4t
a-ARDEN :LN MIDSUMMER.
.A.uguet is a very trying time tor
some kinds of vegetables, and in 0.
hot, dry climate they will often be
almost a f
cautions are taken at that time. P
Egg plant and peppers are especial-
iy liable to show a weakened email -
Moe, the leaveo often turning 10 an
enheeltihy color Ana the fruit failing
to make proper growth, There is
a very simple remedy for this trouble
It being a small handful of salt and
unlaaehed Wood ashes in equal guars
Utica; sprin.klod' ors the ground
around the stem of the Mont, linlese
rain falls soon after it is applied, ji
will he well to water the ground
thoroughly, so thet the mixture win
be dissolved and be in condition ..tt.
1)0 1180Ci by the roots at once. ln, a
very feiv days a dethrone° will 'be
noticed in the color of the foliage;
and the plants quickly start into art-
tive growth.
When early cabbage begins to
burst badly, as It is likely to do
when tho growth. is almost completed
and heavy rain falls on them the
grower considers them almost a to-
tal' loss. This need not be so 11 01)5
is willing to watch them closely. As
soon as even the slightest indication
of cracking is seen, the cabbage head
should be grasped firmly wite both
heeds and be pulled and evvisted•suf-
ficiently to break oft many of the
smaller roots, but not enough to.
cause the stump to Jose its hold en-
ttrely. The head rill. grow. no more
until new root/oat hey:: formed., and
consequently will not burst, but can
bie sold or used at any -time during
the following: ten days,
: Cauliflower, which is much _more
troublesorim about heading than cab -
can be aided in the work by
, providing. a' heavy match of fresh
. cow manure, spreading it all around
;the stein. of each plant for about A
;foot in each direction. When fresh
-manure cannot be had, the dry 'ean
.be used by being well .sdaked before
belng attplied,
miring the, height of the muskmel,
on season there is often repack trou-
ble from. cracking of the fruit before
it is ripe. This usually Occurs. after
a dry spell which is followed by a
heavy shower. Melons which crack
in that way are a total lossarptting
before they becOnie fully ripe. •
The"eracets &motel.). slowl3r at Male.
It one Will .go over the 'vines cara-
fe -11Y oeCe •two daya he can keep
article of all that show signs of • it.
As soon as one ie chstheered, the
stem should be. cut. about half the
way through, With e sharp knife,. so
as not to bruise the Stem, cutting
.0;04, half way between. the melon
and the Vine. This causes. it to rip-
en more 'rabidly while rerellying. less
nourishment ft -6M the vine, end' ;in
almost every case a .perfeet melon
will be produced, Which, though :not
'quite . so large, will. be ,peefect, in
shape and of good flavor. .
.. Head lettuce is hard to ebtain. late
in the eta:Meer, but' if a• temperer:it
frame be audt over the plants and a
muslin 'covet' be placed over at and
proper attention be paid to watering
some •vora:fiee heads will be formed:.
The ground .11 very dry should. be
web $oiked • and a heavy mulch of
:straw or litter . be applied. •
TREATMENT OF 'BROOD SOWS.
,
•
The first and mcsit important thing
to do in:,the raising Of pure-bred
hogs is the Selection of the brood
sow, No animal on the farm will
give its, owner ! such a liberal in-
crease for the money expended and
the food temsemed •tlle breeding
sow, writes C. ae, Abbe.
- By buying, a .gilt ;from a, reliable:
breeder, at three to glee months .
ago,the: &rat. Nal not be large. Get
only the best, Making miality, your
•
eeakea cern make a wellshallinbed rae
staadard; Skinunilk, mixed feed and
tion that gives bone . and :Amide,
without too inuelafat, and if allowed
pasture or ; the :run c>1 an orchard,
the' eonditione are ideal for the beet
deVelopment of a strong aniniat.
If confined inc pen or yard, fresh
elovee, rape and green corn should
be given. I have fed rape withhest
results and it is good for sheep and
calves as well. The spee should have
good length of body. Avoid having
sWastbaek, and yet to keep up the
length of the offspring, 'mate with a
India .having a slightly 'arched back,
or by tieing giro that: is shorter or
more compactly built. My choice is
the first Method. foie length gives. ex-
tra weight, belle°. extra dot/ars. Get
a gilt • whose dam ig eat exeellent
milker, and from a . family of, good
milkers and mothers, • .
to delve the world by drawing is Bacillus of Sleeping Sickness Lives which physicians are now Agreed to ,
unto Iiiieself and' banding them mon
-1
gather tis Christians. That means.
80 SO Ply. '
'aside .the Body, of: the . designate tuberctilosie. Only ' leprosy, !
like its own ' cousin lupus, attacks !
mete were to hecome followers et . T
arst the , outer surface, while con -j
himself, . l'et, after he •eame . to •
earth and was born in the manaer There has ' recently returned' to, gumption settles epee the ieterneV
Vienna from Asiatic Turkey a ' seiens: organs, and, • for peeference . the I
and lived in Nazareth, he eiterally ,
became the "despised and the reject- tific reeearch, expedition; led by Dr. lungs. '
ed of men." After he had lived and Klenz, :which has been. seelting to • But ihnenierebe 'of leprosy, the 111- :
suffered, preached and worked on and. locate , the Place of origin of. the tie chap that (hies the dantage, is
"bacillus pestis," the hidonts little indistinguishable• Troia the microbe :
on until the day when be was cruel -
fled; the coaverts he had won were organisea that is responsible for the of tuberculosis, Mahn the one; and:
dread. coMplaent weich mankind has you maim the other, Aboltsh it el- !
only a little handful of followera et,
the foot of h'in crosti, agreed to designate, these many we- together, and in time, so scientist :
. euries past; "the plague.,." • ' are beginning to think, the other will
clIRIST NEVER .VISITED INDIA. A few years ago such a search disappear entirely, , . . •
All India *was Yet. to. give up:' its .would, have been deemed ,stiperfluous .. : ,
widow burning and• the. tossing of its tron,. the point, of view of wa Ettr013- .. . 4 . . . . .
.helpless girl.enfants letoethe: Gauges' cans. We filo:mite-. we Were. exempt . .
heathen worship of ideate, bet cibrist known a:Meng us i.'1 11*'
teen taro .
. New Plan of Physical Reform Put.
Was not; in hotly, able as ,m man to hundred years: .. Therefore, 'we . : . —
set foot on the sell of India, William agreed, it Would remain .a 'stranger . , •
m r make: '
.Carey :and Alexander 'Duff and Ilish- to us until the. end of ;time says An arnizitig marriage has lust tak-
en Thoburn were to- do that,. •Africa, Peerson's 1VeeklY. • en place near • perm, in Nertheast
with its murder .and rapine• and can- But this theme,' ., wee ,rudely shale Beetle, oh the este:to . of a Wealthy
'nibeilistic - or lee va t b lti ' 't
ItlISS/AN BEAUTY FARM.
to be eaten by crocodiles and the front the epidemic.. It had been un- ,
ere w en • ne 3.899 the disease t" • d el' t'll • d t k fl
altars to the tvoeship 'of the `strtie broke out at Oporto, in Portugal; in The bridegroom, a, handsome peas-
. 4 re lie is GI name CS. en ni o
Gocl,": but Christ as a tarsier:1 ' '
e na., an ant, minted: VeisillefT, -Of eplendid
those -.deed: ',missionary helde. A: physique, and **the berde,, a, lcively
Lia•L spread• to Gicis eW, •wheeel .liowev r
maa, Was never to penetrate into elsewhere, on the Continent It altee •
g , , ° , girl ,of eighteen, were driven. to
insttenea'n Taylor-, and n Hartzell
were to do that.' ' Europe at- that rattly fifteen • died :out of the thIrta eaueeh in. . M. Reshetnikofra Carriage :
four persons ettacked,e'-an exceedinge
time etteking under the tread of the ly smell case -Percentage in so melig- and given as dowry a large wooden
Bowen • legions; North and South cottag-e and a plot of land: }fund -
bent a complaint, as the -plague, giv-
',America utterly unknown •t0. eiVili- reds .of peesons witne.seed. the Vera- :
tatiOe; the islands of the sea, most eintseiffae,titot•abbeli? conditions has proved
reohyS and at: the Weddieg breakfast I
'of them unvisited—all are yet' to bow 'a X. ,, Beshetnokoff delivered en elo- I
ed. ceuree these .otitbreeks ivere int- Christ -aed come under the. reign ported. - If •there is. one: thing, that queet apeech in whith Ito weleomee I
Of o e and. gentleness end purity ls .absolutely 'certain about sptague, it "the *second generation '04 his iltirse I
-and truth, These •arca to be , won ie that it is /let endemic anyWheke in lings - who are to make Holy Ratisia '
through the instrionentaheve of men, Europie . : A caSe •: for .example cOtild an earthly Olytratte -Peopled with
en nergize by t Holy.Spirit are no nipro develop of ii8 crwa aCcOrd APollos seed 1/ebes.".
T 1 • 1 -
to gain the whole world for him. inLondon, thee could it pineapple The, Meanie* ot these strange pro -
a a conquest..
and coinparta it with the work that 1 '...
spring up of its. own accord- in ,a ceedings is) as followes At the tine
he- accomplished in Palestihe we see ani e 1 ack gardert. • , • of -the Russo-Turkish war, V. llesii
su r an a -
;what he mecutt when he sides "Great- 8-0... knowing this . scientists get etnikoff, struck with the infeeior, ill-
er things than these shall Ye about fiedieg Out the otiginai 'Creed- nourished phYsieue of many reeled ts,
.d°-" ing-place—the home, as it. were-eof • set aside annually out of his large
Christ saw -ell this leture. conqueet
TI -Ile 'PLAGUE ts-
.
of the
world, but as
tnah riever , • . . the ptirpose• of eliminating the urait
fortune the•surn Of 1p,obi). roubles .for
Went away from the Paleetine hills: . And it Rr. ItlebeS is• to . be believed; by , encOtiraging:•' marriage; only • bee .
Bo grew up in Nazareth. 'Ile Jour- they beve fourid it: It is a. diefriet n
hoyed from Nazereth A few Aimeeeto Of not more • than a Square mile or ,4"'`'e young ' People cif expeptional
'Jerusalem .• rPhere at' the- eta:ha:lie tee; in! extent, and is situated itt beauty, health and hitt:Inger:We • •••
'oef, to :the Calvary :tier; ' • ' • .
capital he! 'Was .at leet led as a Illesonotandit, neer: the Persian froa-•••
. Workers on his .estate only, the hend,--I
somest are healthiest , Yillagers.•••:.
To attaie this end ---he he employed .aa!
heights to igneininiously die. To. 'In the centro thereof stands the
Iia entouraged to, °liter
.his followers he left: the . stupendous little village. of • Kefri, . And among Tiles"
task ors evengelizhig . the world, its Juvenile; population, and among
payment of. all marriage
matrimony by free grants of .1rted,
promising that be- would be with them. alone, plague. recurs year after fees, and an
.tluen to the end that through • his year, generation ' afto generation, ennui y. o
t 50. roubles it year for
Power they, should; -1.° awe, to win eentuey after eent:urea And out'. of (Mery dbeodrni
more Souls .than he had 'done. '` . its unspeakable foulhess the conta- He 'si ccee h.. all
*thieving from Itis
But though wa. lueve been praising gion sallies 'westward from Ulna to estate by rather, moans d
Man's "greater workS" we :would time to strike. clown the cleanly.— deformed and sickly persons. an, en
ljeye you bear well le, ,roale this one' and, A:het:cicala,. uneiminnee—leuropean traeted handsome .giante from. a
,,..ome.reeoun f,itca. No wore be elm, adult? 15•00pies. : pates of , the provinee by greeting
is , truly greatee than .Christ's week,' Nor I'; it: any wonder that . this them valimble privileges. 'Plies° whO'.
because alt. of man'e greater works should he so, when the, sittlatioe of refused. to martar the parteers he See
are the oh-teen:a of Jesus wark. . If Kefri la"taken. into account. It lies, lected Were uneerenionipualy depert-
you' iced tbe' verse in 'ivhieh My twit 'we ere .
trond•or the thought in tha.one word hills,
cer-elmped depression among . • the Slate the institution- of this hu -
told, in the centre of a San- ere
is farad eou wilt find the .Wholo
and co nsequen fly 'the mewed • is than beauty: • Pune forty Model mar- .
"becatise,". "Ile shell do greater so saturated wall moisture that the elages• have . taken ,place, and ovei
wore% •than these because I go to refuse of the villege le neither ah- lap children havebeen Cern, nearly
1115" Father." 13Peallse Christ, is • in sorbed iier • evaporated, • but decilitres
God and (id la in us is the reason tae en of thein being linnaenaely .superior
man Is able to accomplish . greater forni ,of a bluish -black oity fluid, to the average Russian ;pease:at ehil-
worke than did Cluest, • which surrounds the huts and ,eovers dren in stNeangtli and beetity. The
Toetley Will you .not feel that :you the paths, aria etainci the Walls two
feet tip from the ground. halide- the girls in particular are remarkable for
:pen only . accomPlish the greater e. their graceful carriage, and lithe, ete-
by hiring and ', working in Chriet ? ilnevecips
rt.iiiienglesevietrS"thsvinkasew°1<rse°iri ute4.e Livalsestilrieinft% nta;rictee Was celebrated.
work 'Christ has given to you to do
Oh, My .friend, marked with the obliterated, there Would be no longer
nay danger of the Plague no.unaing. With weceptional disPleaSe owing to
signs . of infamy uppn y,our Ireart, ttothrapa, ohm, tila only other pray., the fact that he and his bride are
marked whit the signs of reliant n
il 1 the first counle both of whom eprung
against Chtist, will you not. -oehimag'ao itd endemic centre .1 (.1 a wiirld is in — - re - '
'your belief to become an enthroeed the ,province of • YenrIan, iit rlhina, 1.., •
f ont anions• at:ranged by M. Beehet-
king'? You bear on your soul the lanna,
raft this only saves to infect, the Par --111-Koft. .
morks of sin, but If you will come Similarl • it bee beet het 1 1 no
o hum wilt take .you into lus ern- lest; high en authority' than l'h.„ Koch
ploy and will send you forth to
bless end help the world. As the ,that cholera is endemic in the -delta
of the. flanges below Caleutte, and
apostle bore on his body. the marks nowhere else, "If," he says in effect,
of the Lord ;Jesus, eio you may wear "(hie trietegular bit of country could
the badge of his serviee and in his be oblitetaled from the nuip of 'Est-
rum° end by his power carry on the die, cholera would in. a few years
work that he began, To you, too,
a-ao prornino in given, ..,kra that ha. become extinct." •'or there, and
lieveth on ,me the works that I di) aud there only, ia .
shall be do oleo, and- breeder works THE Ci/OLERA 11ACILI,M1
than these shall he do, bedew% I go
onto my loather." really and truly "at home.", 340
'stades other and far <natant regions
•
• Of the ttarili's surface. He works in -
"It's. all right to love at first comparable havoe among their in -
eight, but before raarrying take a . habitants. But, soon -or litter, he
eecomd look. Perishes utterly, And lie can never
A married meats idea of seal en- reProduentamself there anew.. '
joyment ie to do things his wife dis- the Sunderbunds of ;the Gan -
germ Nita, HOWeVOr,• ihiSgS are dif-
approvee of. -
Is a non fitioneially entbarragaeci „ „4„4„ „„4.
fent. Here he can, and &lee,. ori -
of nothing, as it. were
lie has morn nione,y than he knows "
itemise here, and here alone, are
what to do with? foiled the conditiens favorable to
"He says we are so alike he took suith I i
us for sisters," "Just like hint! of vast extent. Already teeming with Now, however, the TUMMY'S are ere- -
He oWes me a grudge." _ decaying vegetable end finitetd .,rnat- (nod with the attention- of nItering t
Ethel."Dld you givo Tom permis- ter, which conetantly being added the' name and calling the .phtee Port c
Won to kiss you?" Chtra—"Gi to by illth unspeakable brought down -Nicholas, after the Czar. "They will s
eouree not. tlidret ask it." by the river from the cities that lino probably wait until the port is tofu c
WHY•CALLED PORT ARTHUR.
Name of, Captain. of Pirst English
Ship to Enter it, . .
•
. Since -the Japenese bomberelments .•
brought Poet Arthur into notoriety, I
everybode• is asking' why the place is I
called Port Arthur, and nobody'
wine to know the reason, The bay
no doubt had, and • probably Atilt
has, •a (Minute name, but nowadays
even the ltussiatio call the harbor by
ite title. In 1857, before
the war, which ininglahd and France
declared against China, au English
crultier, named' the Algerthe, entered
the bay at the end of the Liao Tung
peninsula, and is said to have been
the first Veropean vessel' to -do so,
The confmander of the cPUizer bap- a
pencil to be Captain W. Arthur, and f
the crew, not, knowing what the ti
Chinese called it, gave the harbor
the name of their captain, Arid the
title hat; stuck to it ever since, a
Breed the saw ..at eight .to ten
Months of age, preferring to use a
mciturd sire rather than a young
male. Put the sow in the farrowing
pen about one week before she le due.
With proper bedding and other condi-
tides being favorable; the sow will
not need intiOit attention: .at birth of
.tiolese it is 'cold weather. 1 .A
railing arOund the sides cat the • pen
wilt prevent the sow crushing her
pigs if- she is' large and 'heavy.
Feeding the sow and litter is• said
to be an -art, but many xnen make a
sueeess of this work. A thin bran
mash the first 24 hours is all the
teed required—then follow With. a
light, emit. diet of warm wetter, '
limited amount of skiitrailk, .with
Mixed feed, until the pigs teike, all
the Milk, thee., increase the feed lib-
erally. about what the sow will eat,
adding soaked corn antee daily.- •Do
not overfed,• and scour the pig.
At t•hree to four Weeks the pigs
will begin. to thine to the trough,
hen give them a separate trough,
with milk and grain, also dry shelled
cern. It is goad for their teeth.
Clover, rape, apples and sweet Corn
Will inerenae groWth rapidly, Wean
at. six weeks. • but it• is baler to
wait untit. eight weeks unless for
°me special reason. Cut, down the•
end of the SOW one-half tor four
ays, then still more so in oitalit;y,
which •will city the sow off. At the
tind of a 'week,- seriarate the sew
nil litter, turning' them together
nate daily for. (wo days, end •. the
eiek ja riOne. With the sow- free tram
riked udder, and ready to rot in
ound condition, The pigs are Wen*,
mi without the loss of growth:.
llobbine—"What makes old Billion, its hanke. ' fronx capture by Admiral Togo, for,
the milliorntire, dress so 7$0,bbily?" It IA noi, 0,1Waye, however, that the if the wornt, comes to the worst.
Robbfits--"Pride ot Ma(to' • Bob- Pathogenic! (diametaprodueing ) Ini&P they- win donbtlese prefer that the
that" 'Bobbins— robe chooses for its home such Wall- bay shah be lost under Re nowlish
"Ill's afraid Of being mistaken, for a tiets as theseThe particular brand-name rather than under that of the i
of organisteresbonsible for malaria, czar, • a
MUTE MILT{ FOR 1:11GS.
The Missouri Fxperitnent Stritine
n it recent bulletin, says of the value
nd uses of skim milk on the farm:
"As a rule, more miltirmnilk ia fur-
nished by a herd of rows than is re-
quirod for raising the calves. One
of the bast uses that can be made of
this surplus is to feed it, to pigs.
ilincler some contlitione as large re-
turns can be realized from feeding
eklin utak tO pigs as to calves. The
high. value of thin product is seldom
appreciated even in the older dairy
Bections. Prof. Jordan says, "Ae a
mane of promoting growth and a
condition of health and vigor, and
also as a supplernent of cereal grain
products, skim, milk and buttermilk
are not excelled, and perhaps not
equaled, by any other feeding stuffs.'
The principal reason for the high.
value of skim milk as a feed for
growing pigs is that it is essential-
ly a growth producing food contain-
ing all these elements originally in
the milk, it is a well-known fact that
in the corn belt the tendency is to
feed pigs too much of a fattening ra-
tion in the form of eorn. Such. a ra-
tion lacks the growth -making ele-
ments which are supplied In the hest
form by skim milk and butter, In
feeding skim milk to pigs it is neith-
er neeessary nor desirable to fe,ed
middlings with it, as is Often
thought proper. Skim milk nattiral-
ly goes, best with corn,. which is
I rl ft .
por-
tion -of the grain ration, however,
may be middlines if desired. Orie
common mistake in feeding skim milk
to pigs is overfeeding. If allowed,
they. will gorge themselves with the
rrti w no thrive as they
would on lees ancl more grain.
The results of experiments carried
on by Henry, Lintield and Robertson
show in every ease that the best re-
sults were obtained when about one
pound of corn was fed to three of
skim ralk. For economy, in feeding,
the propprtiens of grain a,nd milk
fed depend somewhat upon the prices
of each. If corn is high and. the
Supply of olden milk abundant, larg-
er amounts of skim milk can be fed
than if the• relative prices were re-
versed.
"Another economical tie° that can
be Made of skint -milk•is to feed it
to sows that are sucking pigs. Com-
bined with middlings and corn it is
probably as good. f), ration as can be
made for this purpose,"
. :.• -4 —
GRAZING UNDER WATER.
•
•
Animals in Australia Adapt Them-
' ••selves to Circumstances,
While on a. cattle -station in West-
ern Australia Mr. Henry Teuton ha,d
an opportunity of' seeing a remark-
able" instance of the way .in which
animals can adapt themselves tee
their stirroundings. •
•On the upper reaches of the river
there was e large pool just fordable
at'.most times, but in a dry season
very low.. Arnong the 'horses making
their run in the vicinity of this Pool,
an old Mare and a, bevy of foals and
yearlings tatea to Tome down • every
day in the long,. dry summer, when
the herbage was scant and scorched
into dryness. They waded into the
pool Until.' the water nearly' reached
their heads, and stood there for
hours, diving to the bottom her .a
mouthful of succulent weeds, which
they . chewed at leteure with their
dripping heads raised above the
.The thee tima'..1!wittiessed this
strange sight Was during. a. dry: sea-
son when.I was ridieg with the over-
seer in search. Of 'gime strayed stock
As we approached the pool, ni3,. com-
panion bade me keep' quiet if I de-
sired to gee something well worth
looking at.. As we rode' quietly up
to the pool I saw 0, group of horsea
standing in the waten, and disap-
pearing from .eime, to time as they
ducked their head's • beiow the par -
thee, woneler; was Soon -•at an
encl.:when I 'saw dee of their heads
suddenly three- ahe with a, mouthful
of dripping weeds. NO. sootter was
this thf 1 d f than
ohethaedn:disa.ppeared in: seerchspf..
The overseer told me- that during a
long drought scene five •�r Six- yearta
previous, when hardly ete vestige of
feed was left exi. the run, and bush
thee had -Jaid bare the sand -plains,
the oId mare -had disoovered that
there was plenty ofi luscirius feed at
the bottom of the poolg,',which 'could
he 'procured, by divine tor it.. and
laving once put her discovery tete
Practice, she continued to do out -of
Preference what she had been driven
to do by necessity. , .•
• The several generations •of teals
which she had reared had ell follow
ed her example, although nOne of the
full-grown horses- had Ioined the am-
phibious .group. Here,' then, seemed
t� be a new variety of -horse in. eve-
luteen , width, if left . undisturbed;
might breed • and -separate from the
run, Perhaps to ' • stirvive through
droughts -severe enough -to. extermin-
ate all 'ahem. ; ; . •
. •
• •
WAVES OF CRIME,'
On the whole, 'during the la'st twers.
•ty 'years, there hate been. a reduction
in crime of- what is termed the grav-
er' sort; but every:now and then, at
fairly regular intervals, there is . a
wave Of, serioas crinea which saithe-
timer' extends over heti a )'cat', and
Sometimes eighteen months, The year
1902 was .one of these years of crime
Waves. In 1908 the total number
of persons tried .in Great Britain
was 661,667;" While .in '1902 the fig-
ures were 787,676. This increase
was chiefly in crimes against proper-
ty. All published statistics show
that Mettler pOtal !servitude nor Im-
prisonment-verves to deter the habi-
tual offendr from reverting to crime,
the most incorrigible of all being
women,. Of the graver crimes which
AriOW it marked increase are nuniters
and bOglaries. It ignot a pleaeaht
thought to the British taxpayer that
he has to pay.nearly $6,000,000 et
year for the seppressiort (4
arid over 812,000,000 for poor relief.
: I
AN UNOTTER11.1) TTIOUGHT,
Two.lrishreen serving in On Eng-
lish regiment Were good chums .until
Rooney was raised to the rank of
sergeant. Forthwith his 'chest ex-
pandrci, arid from that tine on he
looked down on Wartime.
One day McGrane itriProrohed
ildoney, and said, "Xtike.—j moan
sergeant, s'pose it priVate stepped up
to a sergeant and called him it ton -
coifed monkey, Dirwat wud happen?"
"He'd be put in the gyard-housei."
"Ile wild?"
"Ile witch"
"Welk aow 0'0080' the -orivat,e on'y
'thought the sergeant was a doneelted i
Monkey, and didn't give a vivd!
about it, Wild he be put in the
gyardeltollsel" . :
"Av ertorst not."
"Well, thin, we'll lave it go of. !
that.q
DIE S. S. LESSON
M.*
INTERWATIOWAL =SOON.
AIM. 7. 1
.191.11.••••
Text of the Le411,011 Jug*
148. Golden Text,
1. ilet. v., 7.
We are now introduced to and are
to epend eix weeks with Elijah, the
Tislibite, who was orthe inhabitants
t G'i d Th t roe rd r hi
. Contains all that we know of his
-birthplace and parentage, 1.1ke
,chizedek. stands before us on the
pages of 'Scripture without any re-
cord of father or mother Or anoes,..
try, anti he appears as SrididerilY. Ife
le spoken of by some as one of the
grandest and most romantic Charac-
ters that Israel ever produced. Ms
mune signifies "My .0od is Jehov-
ah," and before Jehovah he Stood,
end. unto Him he lived; The first re-
corded sentence from his Ups, "The
Lord God of Iaracl before
whoin I stand" (verse 1), givee es
his constant altitude, The rule of
his life was to please God, not tear-
ing the frown nor seeking the fewer
of mortal man, Hes opening words
are repeated in xviii., 15, and make
tis think of Gabriera words in Luke
I., 19, "1 ara Gabriel that stand in
the presence of .God." They also
carry us back to the Lord's word to
Abram in Gen. xvii„ 'I, "Walk be-
fore me and be thou perfect" '(mar'
gins ,upeight. sincere): this is the'
o.nly way for those Who Wouid .he tho'
Lord's xnessengers,
•
Concerning his meseage to .Ahab,
"There' shall not be dew nor rain
these years but according to. My
word," we must consider Jets, v..'
17, where it is written that he tray -
.ed earnestly that it might not rain,
and aleo .Deut. ed., 17,, where we .
have the authority for such .a pray-
, er, :the 'Lord having threatened to -
shut tip the heavens' arid withhold •
rain if they turned from Him to
worship -idols. That the heavens.- .
'were thus sliut up in the ;days Of . .
Elijah i$ Confirmed by .our Lord in, -
'Luke 25. Believing prayer Must
be based upon sdirie plain,..asSuranee •
in the word of Goa or some clesx-re.
- yelation• from God Concerning. His • •
will, George Muller han-called. the
former the grape of faith and this •
'latter the gift of faith. In one way •
Pr the Other God'ivill guide ns. • •
•• :Verses' 2 to 6 give us- the story of
the brook 'Cheri:eh and the ra'v'ensand-
- all was according to the word of. the
Lord; 'which both • . Elijah. and the
;ravens obeyed; The •Arst. time this
;title or ekpresSion; The ward of the.
iLord,"'iS used is in Gen. sm., 1,- It
1.414 mean .a •measage from God or it.. -•
may ineeti the Son of, God, whet is
called -'-'The Word" .(johnL, 1; Hely.
xiic;, 18). Either way is ..God con—
trolling, and :our part is. "Willing.
and obeclient":. (Isa. 19). " The,•.
.prOPliet .is'new. told to hide'. bireself;'..• ..• •
'he. has. deliicered his mega:age,' •read
:that ae that is.'required of. ,hint' • -
at •Present.... • ". • •
•. •
--
May the life" of every cbild of God ,
• .be srained itp in this; ..`Stajiseleg ac-' • • •
cerding to Hi working, werka
eth 1.; .29), for •
:unless:it ia.Goci workieg:in us it can-
• not stand. But Whale We thug. seekfiret •
the kingtion.Cof God . and .His; right- •
eouseess we- may. be. sure that all. . • ,
teinporae things shall be :added, eVein • ,
though ravens feed eis or poor: wide : •
laws Minister tostie. . In these. dears ' 7
of unbelief and. scoffing; ia any should ••
hear' it said that Arabe, .not , birds,
fed just"ask *hat kind of; an •
'Arab eleW out .61 Notth'snek, for the
word a'ret.,en' in.' our .lesson Is the
• levee, riih. thx3ey word
ever instrumentality the Lord: may '
minister- to ue,, while.truly grateful .
to Hire and :to- His. nainist.ering. • .ser;
•Yarits, We waist be- stayed upon Him- „
seer •alone,- lest some Cheritli *dry. tip •
,.and 'eve thereby, :vow discouraged, " "
Bab. hie 1.7, 18, IS .a fine word sic, • e
aPpropriettes for tilthev,er •or , What- . •• ••
ever. May, fail us aae can always truly : • • ..
say,.."Thota.,G Lend, rentainest , for-
fLem.svi 19; Hob, 1, 11y.,
. . .
• Ir was not for Elijah to think Out., .
I Sortie, -new splace :to go to, for .•
;Zord•.wlie :Sent him to 'Cherith %end.
hid and 'sustained' him there' had Wei .
'eye upon hfin Chron: exvi, '9),
and saw ell the ciecurnstanees; _and
doubtless Elijah talked wiehailini .
about Re Well, at the :right time, • •
not too soori tor too late, the sante .,.
word of ,the Lord. ether sent him
Clierith comeriande him te go to a: . . --
widow woraan at Zarephath, �r '
cording to Luke iv, 26, Sareetta, .and
there is oue Lord' conlirmaeion . of •
this part .oe the story also. Zero-
phath .signifies .tt place oe -refining, --
-
.anca, while at Cherith he WS cut off
from. all .human,lielp, . he is' now to. .•
etfined still more by 'met einalcaly
•htimaxt -ministration .• PaiO13,"•. he.
,journeye; foe the -Lord can hide ,
abliling; and when he 'arrives at .
the gate of the eiter"the widewS is '
there gathering peeler' sticks to Make'
ea,kti, for herself: and her son; of
the last heedful ,Of meal irt th0 hottee
and after '. that they expect to die, •
What a ',boarding .hotisei What a • -
welcome for *a weary*.travolert And
yet it is the 'Lord's way.
Liston to Elijah I "Fear . not;, go . •
and do as thou Imat'said, but make 7 -
'me. a little .ocake... first" (Verso 18). ,
Had this been all:: the *onion might
have thought hint seina. erassi tramp,' -
But listen . •yet "After that ' make
for thee and •far son, for . thus
. smith I thn 'God of Israel, the
berrel• at meal 'shalt WA waste, neith-;
.0 shall the cruse . of 'oil fail until"
* * * And wit, cone t� PEWS ace ,
cording to the word of the Load, and
the Meal and oil -were multiplied few
a full year (verses 10-16 aed.raargiti. .•
of 15). This poor Widow' gave all
to the Lord; the widow who had
two mites gave all; the lad With the
five loaves ge,Ve all. When we as
Unregervolle eve all,' we shell see
the Lord's ihcrease. "There Le that •
scatteroth and yet inereaseth" (Dross,'
xi, 24). The rest of the verse toile
Why Many* ere poor who might be",
rich. • ,
All the ships of the 'United States
navy are being aupplied with steel
furnittne. Experiments' carried on
for eeVeral months have proved that
alinoSt all the essential furniture of '
warships can be made of ateel. Ser.
damage Was &Me during the
Spenish War by the furniture ef
ships catching lire, the cruiser Bailie
more, lieVing guttered severely in the
:Rattle of 11.1.1111a.
New Cook*-"Ohat does your hus-
hand like kr 'his breakfast, initlarar
tIrts. GrowellS-a"Oh, lie likes si..nv;
thing We haven% got.'.
0 •