HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-08-25, Page 71111131111 tea •
11W4Pi 4 I I I .
.A.MYSTERMUS MONST
Africa Was Never More Dark Than
is the Dark Ocean. •
,
•
Materea steels:fine to Actat thi raa' kindness and sympathy end muttral
liament or Caneda, in alio Yee, Viet - - a
nanoueend Nine Iluntiria and toga gen' sacrifice Will- blind the human
by nen. Daily. of froreato, st lb' family together, because the "era of
Department of Agriculture. Ottawa /
hate" shall forever disappear.
i A sespacd1 /row i4co 4,,,asssieti, co., But as the "ism of eeperatien" is
says7ney. rraak De .wittss,romage soutethnes the "sea, of hate," so it
may be also •the impasseble barrier
preathed the following- tents-ellevele-•
was 110 !bleb. SAparateS friend. fehra friend.
• tions xxl1, "And there napoleon, fretting life away in St.
More sea." . Helenas or Captain Dreyfus, suffering
. Who was the Writer? 'Where were on DeViVe island, or Victor Hugo, in
his feet planted when he sow tite en the island at Guernsey, Were no
epee:taxies width he describes in his !Imre separeted irom their friends
;divinely' inspired apocalypse? These
. two contutious lento, be eleary ander_ 131tnacletewdestr,t. JhoitstnirteenodPe.a,tmuosa, Legend
Stood befere one can la any true waY .4 s us that he was Sent to NirlorR in
grasp the meaning of the worda of
et Patinae mines as the Wiatan
my text. Indeed, to properly nP"' exilae £1,rt put to work in the Mina
, prepiate the words or the actions o Ian artiner. But when the day's work
any malt we Mast iirst put ourselves was done St. John was allowed to
in that Inan's freely roam over the Pianism rocks,
•
To -day, in order to rightly, inter- •Na, Prison wails were more secure
met the words of lily text, we must than thia prison or ;the apostolie ex -
rt ,put pueselves in Si. John's. 'fie. And now, methinks, I can see
him, his white hair'being tossed by
place. In the first instance, we. no-
tice, he Is 01 old trtan. His life's the winds. He strains his eyes as
Work Was nearly, dime, A man at he looks over the Mediterranean wee
eighty looks at conditions in 'heaven tern to Asia Minor, where he knows
and on earth differently from the his Christian eolaborers are work -
way' it young mart at- twenty looks Ing among the churches of Asia,
at tbent The struggles of life were• "Ah," says the old patriarch, len
to St. Jelin, very .reil and intense. heaven 1 shall never be seitaxated
For years he had -been 4 reSident of front those 1 love. stroll never
Ephesus, in Asia. Minor: He had be compelled to have the silver cords
ot affection snapped at the grave.
been a mighty factor in the Spread-
ing or Om gospel through ell those These wearee of separatio3n shall fore
ever and ever be licketi up. There
regions. He had sUffered for Christ;
shall be no more -sea."
he had almost been martyred, The
Is not this reunion vision of the
second fact -Wo must notice, is that
St. Jonn is art exile, Under the Do- I fele of Petonea to you .a transcen-
dent thought? Is' it not an uplift -
Ilene that those who were • once
snatched away ,from us by death
shall ho given miele in all the beauty
and love of the redemption ? Not
long .ago 'the great battleship of the
United States navy' named after the
state of Missouri was threatenen
with annihilation. By a certain mis-
hapqhe powder charges on the necks
were ignitetl•and eaploded. In an in-
stant. a spark might fly into the mag-
azine roorn, and then the whole ship
would be destroyed and six hundred
men might be hurled into eternity.
At °nee a gunner's mate who stood,
near jumped thronga the open doer
of 'the magazine room and elan:tined
shut the iron door. . The magazine
room was • flooden and the ship was
saved; not, however, before the brave
gunner's mate was nearly drowned in
that magazine room as a rat might
be drowned in his hole. 'As with.
that gunner's mate, somettines it .is.
our duty to face dangers. • 8onte-
timea-We- must,- as -it -were, tuna. °tie
back a upon aim: Mende and slam snot
an iron door, called, the .door of the
tomb, -which-separates us front ottr
dear ones. Sometimec. we mutt he se!
nitrated from those we love, even al -
St: John -On the island '9f. Pantos
Was- aeriatatel from his. friends in
Asia Minor.' But in heave n .God
win Ore us back our loved.. onera.
Tea: there will be no separatians,..no
nartinge there. 'For. in heeven, ae-•
cording' to theinspired Apocalypse,
',there is no more pea.", • . •
mitten persecetion, .he .was sent to
• this lonely, •roekbouncl Wand* of the
Mediterranean, • Therefore the sea
meant 'root° to him than it • might
znean to some. of us, ,,it meant, as I
shall try to show. first, 'the 'Sea of
Mystery;" secondly, the "Sea of
Hate;" thirdly, the "Sea of Sonain-
tionr. and founthly; the "Sea. of
Spiritual Struggle." By putting
ourselves in, St, JOhn-a. place aa ex-
iles upon : the island of Patinos, T
• believe We can syrnbOlize all these
facts.. •
'GOD i$ A MYSTERY. •-
Whet 'the elYsterious sea was : . to
• the timely enile looking Off upon the
• Mediterranean 'God always. has: been
anti alWaye will 'be to us on earth..
He is a mystery, • We know that he
created the World, ,hut now?' We
cannot tell. We know that the
beginning Christ Was, 'ancryist ' . he
Was born a helpless babe. allow? .We
cannot tell; WeAcnow• that John,
as the .beloved disciple; Walked. and
• lived with Oblast. .,Yetsconeerning
many facts About the personality *et
Jesus, John was as much. in the dark
as was Nthodentus . • when, he said,
"How can these •thinas be?" Paul
compares our knowledge of God to a
little child's knowledge of a, human
• parent. We know • that our babies
• cannot fully_ understand 115. . There-
fore . Patti soya:. "Nose `era l•aok
' •through a 'glass darkly, . Now I
knew only in part." Da you won-
. der that When. John hegart to Use the
mySterious Ocean as the sYeabol . 'ot
mysteriousGod he cried out in the
worda of niy text. in reference: to.
heaven, And ,there. was no. more
Sea?". Alt -the mysteries. of eerth
shall receive heavenly. solution when
the setts 'shall va•nieh' away.
• 'Dili sea or. mystery ie. to be Seat -
toed. : Yes, but the great' -"see of
hate" 10 also to 'disappear :'ent. the
• • . dasen.. That, sea tot blood
shall 'forever disappear, the di
. of w.hieli tarns a h•tonitii :heart into
• that of a wild beast's :when he le
-
willing to: trample- upon .and destiny
his weaker fellosae. Th4t. sea of
blood shall be licked up which •makes
man fawn ' the feet of Man on/y
. because, like a. tiger's cubs his claws
' are not . yet • sharp, enotigh andahis;
jaw not yet strong . enough to tear
. linib from. limb the being he now
sahiteS "as, master and king. •
. Put Perhaps . had batter.
.sceibe how the wends Of .11v text -
May meats the •"sea• of 'hate" before
a • ree malce- -.our applieation to. this
truth. God • made of one blood all
nations, to:I-neon riPcin the face of
• the. earth. He never intended Jews
to be antagonistic td' gentiles or liu-
• man governments o 'be arrayed
against.' huinert .governments. He
never inteocled the dividing walls of
eplor to separate the white reCes
from the black, 'or the yellow skins
• of the:. Asiatics to be at War with
the combined forces of the, civilized ,
• world. 13et .ahe ()teens, -perhaps,
more than any .other wearies have
been the cages whith hag produeed
these much. to be! deprecated tektite,
Great seas have flowed in between
the coritinerits. For. thousands of
years. -the nattigatore n,ere unable to
tross them. The ocean beds 'are so
broad and long that though the Aus-
tralian continent, with an area of
2,944,628 Sone° miles, Was discov-
ered by the Dutch eXPIOrers in 1006;
it w aa practically lost for nearly
two centuries:, as a pebble might be
lost. in the bottom Of a Inke. It. had
to be rediseovered by Captain Cook
in 1771,. Thus . widely separated
peoples grew up .with separate inter-
ests. rfhey4 spoke' different langta
ages. Their countenancea were
bleached. tho striowe ot the frigid
zone or darkly tanned by the tropi-
eal heats.. lieettuee they had no pro-
vtous ititereourse they associated
themeelves in clans or handed theist -
'selves together in nations. nett they
confronted each other, they -came riot
as friends, but as :armed foes.
wan SEA. OP HATE. -
•
Do you suppose Rome would hav5.
ever placed her iron heel of tyistriny
• upon the neck of the prostrate He-
. briny had Jerusalem not been .8epar-
INWARD SPIRITUAL :STRIPE.
But the Mediterranean waves 'beat-
ing against the Patroos rocks were
not only symbolic of external troub-
les, but also of an inward spiritual
Strife., • When • St. John gave his
heart to Christ, in one sense he- vats
emancipated from sin, But Satan
never for an instant, this side of the
grave, leaves off hie struggle to cap-
ture a gospel stronghold. The Bible
declares -a Claletian- shall not be
teintited by a sin greater than he can
bear. Ilitt Christians always have
ta be going :to Christ for. more spir-
halal "strength in order to repel the
Satanic oeslaughts which are • daily
being made against the strongholds,
of their hearts. • • •
. bEtra we not find the :symbol Of a
spiritual struggle •the never ending
restlessness of the sea? "Oh," said
a lady some time ago to me, 4'1 am
so tired of nearing these waves beat
up against the .rocks." Yes, those
waves have been. beating 'up against
those reeks for thoosands of years.
When sailing upon the ocean,. some
days its surfaee seenes calra. as
Lornalake asleep, as. a stniling child
in the bread • lap of. the Adironbaek
mountains, • Ilttt . that is only a
slumner. Within a few. hours she
inay awake With a scowling face,
with the fire 61 • the ligfitnings in her
eye and with the shriehings of the
tortadoefl in her Vole°. In nue lives
the spiritual struggles keep on to the
end. • • We Nave the a•a"good angel"
whiapering. ' one ear to ne , goad;
we have" the "bad angel" whispering
in the other ear• te be had. St.
John, even up to the„ end of his life,
had tr, fight by the power of the
Holy Spirit againot the restless sea:
of temptations. SO have we.
. Thuo ntsi text means tn\o-re than a
mere figure of speech. It has •more
than a Moro literal interpretatioe,
that heaven is to be a Place without
atmospherie moisture. It means
that the "mountains Caltrafy"
shill be large enough • to -hold all
peoples . who • give their . hearts to
Jew:4 Christ.. It means that • this
•"Inouatain• of Calvary'' shalt not
only be a Wide mountain, but a high
mountain. • It shall lift- us up and
up until it lifts us to the very
gates of heaven itself.. Oh, my. bro-
ther and sister, will you stand upon
this mountain, this blood red Cal-
vary mountain'? . Will you not to-
day. let the Wand or Pattnos. be. to
you. iik?stepping stone to a, heavenly
throne . There you will nester again.
hear the surging svaies of temptation
beating agelnet the rocks of sin and
and threatening to sweep you otit
Otto the -unfathomable depth& May
the Merit* of a gosilel hope shed 'to.
day its yellow. bootie over life's t colt -
bled waters arid 'have tor von it gold -
.en boulevard tyliich Shall lead tip to
'atiltl front the captal 'Of the Caesars the streets ar 0, may
by the sainta,Waves which- separated Jerusalem',
wore there shall be "no more stni,":
Rome from Carthage?. Of esturee cere .
tain nations' have been and ere sep-
arated from other nations hy the Germany is at preaent gelid,* 18, -
'harriers. of mightY Mountain ranges, 000 inhabitants yearly by
' fturnlgrst-
Thc Pyrenees separate Terence from .tion.
-Spain and the mighty Alps form the A bully man doesn't object to
a.
• northern boundary of Italy and the -woman with a history provided Ale
*• Western bounder's' of Austria and the doesn't come into his office and try
southern boundary or Germany, and.
shut up 1-lwill.mlend wlch n Gate
est tieltaratore of
g;e711..t.... 410"1.11); r.r.I.C:481°1116.6,r1;11;?pthlttoi 8.40111ilett-gilr, allek!Trt.(()11.4)lehati(*!latalgivilgUtl•Litf:ifir wet tiallyil•Fi`ji. 'in, IV' flitittlinn •nyabuletinitg tiowtta txtdu-sluirl tot° algrelyne, witTswoavidoe(gtbatholePrs°,17trighl isliTieitrePreelenrceeffittrenitt"t:thili?ced toMit
nati""t1W6Y4 flat t;e dot141 dreittein" of `euto. Itor$ tt to, lt.ti eriginni
tho
dnyb ea
have been the mighty setta. Tama maaneg apnea we eetae j,,,sit!fe ,
when St. ;elm looked oft upon the Dilute the Peitotkie with an equal A good solution with Which to
ern% 'on the nth the artily land. the
if a told glittering Weapons. At intim On the etiereh of take George,
pipets+ pleyed, Highiand tannest
ut of %rotor ti • yeah clothes requires two c• +alias of
J'ittek11118
OletierVation* of a Worneest MOM
Home They Sintited.
MY friend, Beronees dined
with Ane to -night. In commenting
on the day's dotage, she said that
fifteen eoldiere encl three Placers were
rtered t her h uee TuefalaY
and eigItteen soldiers and tour of -
.Thursday, says e. letter
lifreoerma Toaknib
Without regard to rank or eircurn.
stancea the Government decrees that
on a given date certain liOnS08 shall
receive troops coming from the
country in encees of the number the
barracks ran • accommodate. This
week it was the Baroness' turn
thue to supply lodgings.
A furious storm evrept •over Tokio
on Thureday, arid knowing that the
soldiers lied a -long mardit freest Ohl -
ha, across the bay, the Baroness
, gave them up when they did not ar-
rive at suneet. It was long efter
midnight when the weary detachment
reached her hods°. They came ail-,
ently. Only the crunching of gravel
under foot ot man or beast was au-
dible. •
The four ofileers diemounted noise-
lessly' and prostrated themselves be-.
fore the hostess, thanking her in
true Japanese fashion for se graci-
ously receiving the humble party.
The library and smoking room had
been turned over to them, futons
were spread on the floor of the cool
'veratidn, while the.menswere quarter-.
ed equally well on the servants' side
of the. house, and the horses champ-
ed at their hits when /eel to the pre.
vete stables -a luxury unknown for
many a day to the poor beast:).
The cooks and servants had supper
ready for all, it being' the custom to
feed these visiting soldiers front the,
private larder rather then on. the
Government ration. They ex,pressed
immense eatisfaction over the 'gener-
ous supply of• beer and cigarettes and
Were very notch awed by- their
and after gaining tom
permiseionrsur-
roundings..
Bath. tthkets woe •then furnished,
their °lithos. to leave the premises,
they sought the nearest bathhouse in
true Japanese fashion and after their
bath quietly. crept hack for a few
hours' sleep. :.
All .the next "day they went about
as silentl3r ea the deaf and demb,
and in stocking feet, thpir coarse
shoes should mar . the inserts -never
trespassing in the smalleat way, but
gazing wonderingly on city :sightn;•-
they were country hoye-and espeete
ally on the lovely. flowers in Bar-
,
epees famous gerden. •
lao matter how interested they
were, they. religiously 'avoided 'look-
inga in the direction, where tite family
might be assembled, and but for the
evidence of sights the Baroness would
not have known of their presence.
They had never seen a foreign
housea-aand--When _.: she took thern
through' it they whispered • solemnly
together, paused long before the plc,
tures and ornaments In :the drasaing
•romn,: Wallted;.•almost apologetically
on .the eoft ange; and When:their
eyes beheld, a fine picture of their-
Eniperor, with one eccord they .pros-
trated themselves before hint. •
Night fell " Tu. the • gray
morning ,light mi. friend saw these
soldiere go forth as silently ns they
of liqui4.1. two eneteveoefule sad * while the enly apProaall wag fen';‘•" E s
10901.0001140.04041111100.0041 pint of geld weigh* 16 ounce*. ed net a brimotwort of loge ten feet S ESSON
A wr.1 say* that though. mimes high, emelt sip/sued acres a, Ate
r •
I FOR Me Fie ME.ii:esta4
• I Intteb. "t"rned, 41.44 in, melt tnanner that the whole
eorti better, ss TO PrePara front could be swept hy a, croes-fira - INVERNATX0S.414 LIZ$8031t1
& 11) it thin method adopted. Pick the
bile till 0 of grape end mueltetry.s.At the foot
I 'Rear* fOr the Kit front the cola Spread ult thin! of thin- lay et dangerous mantes, and AVG. 28.
• fOr tho itensekeeper,
0
Hy* ens and Other
• SOMETHING ABOUT TVA place, EXamines after two or three InTeented insuperable diffleulties to
& eerie * qu to yoting. ut
sti tan platee. Pry in the oven and thence, for the diatance..of st cannon of the Lesson Kinge
X.
a bags of coarse cotton, put the eons forMillg. with their huge trunks and 1-8, Golden Z04, 14. CXX.1 1* •
take, eare it doee not scorch. mote shot, the trees had been, hewn down,
9 00990000teliOlt.11 into them and hang in a dry, warm tangled breeches, a vest ehattis thet
weeks, to see if there are Signs oi an aeindIant. The garrison, contilste
Ooneidering the enormous •coneumpe inustinees, and if so dry it over lug of ilboet thousand men, of
tion of tea it seems a little curiene again. Then slip the bags iota whom hall were regulars, wag cora-
that peoPle know so little about it.
The average tea-drinkeee information
i$ limited to n knowledge that th..e're
-a,re green teas and black tae; point,
bly that teas grown in Chine, japan
and Ceylon differ an flavor eiteli from
the other. Hardly any ona itnow$
that there .are a large number of var.
MOW ot each of the teas, depTtlr.
nig on grades of strength and ilevor.
Tea is 'the cheapest beverage in the
world, eheaper than any bottled
water, that is known. 'There are he,
tweet 200 and 800 cups of tea in
pound. There are only about Party
cups of coffee to the pound- If a
dollar a pound is potd for tea, each
cup costs the conformer only abont
half a cent even if it Is made very
strong, A good tea can be a bought
for fifty cents a pound, but not
choice kind. The teas void under
any cents are sintinebilly adulterat-
ed. Tea at a dollar a pound goes
so ixtuch further that it is just as
cheap _to uae• it as to pay half as
Much a pound.and use twice as much
white the b.uyer of the cheaper quid-
ity fails to get the flavor -the bou-
quet, it IS called -of the. superior ar-
ticle. ;
Tea is green or black, according to
the 'manner of eurleg. Black tea is
made by withering the leaVes , the
sum they are. then mashed and roll-
ed. • which breaks the 'fiber and leaf
cella. The loaves are then ferment-
ed, which makes the tennicancid less
seducible, and dried again. Green tea
Is withered. on hot Pans -48A '14 ,.
Jap-
an is usually -• steamed -than rodeo,
sunnea, Put in the pane for another
sweating, 'then slowly dried. It is
often asearted !het green tea, gets
its color from the use of arsenic...
CoNer., .�t. Phis ia not. true: the
difference in color is .wholly due, to
the different .znetitode of drib:lg.,
Leaves dried in the sun turn black;
It steemen- or withered by heat they
hold •their green color. •
Tea, possesses two leading :onemical
theine • and tannin. :The
to/alter is the bettelleial .aranieritor-
ithou4ss, en.lgerttntetrle tihoenideeleatentaa
harmless'. stimolatit.. tannin devel-
ops an gold that is injurious .to the
nerves ate -to digestion.' .
Tne whole eecret of obtaining the
one without the other lies in the
method of preparing tbe tea. . Tea
should never be. allowed to boil, but
should be. infitsen; that steeneci
'without . bei i rig. Not should the
:piocees of irifusion be long cord ineed.
Seven minutes is : the . After.
that time • tenpin. begins. to deVelon
and in ten Minutes is strong °inveigh
to affect- the nerves. Before 'seven.
miretteS the Ovine and the • delicate
flavor .of the- Aea are. extracted in
their 'fuli 'strength. Further "draw -
roe or steeping does not in the least
degree Mc:reuse them. Ilut it "does
develop; the itduriette prinoiple. •
Tea Shat ..has -stood too long :tie-
velops .a. tato/1ga' estririgent taste, aft
is 'unpleasant to the .palate 'And, in-
jurioes to the stomach. Many Pea,
file mistake this for the strength 'Of
the tea; it is 'certainlY the' strength
or the ,moits.harmful : part of. The.
Chit:tea° and •Iimatieue, who are great
consumers of teci,• would not, touch
what passes:as midi with up. Their
taste is ,,oultivated to Itn appreCia-
tion fieVer. They put, pinch of
tea .M • • a pot, ..potir.eit a .eufficient
quantity of boiling' water,. perMit it
to stand two Pr three minutes, pone
it off ,and; drink withoet sugar or.
Milk., They drink anlintited quanta.
ties. without experiencing any •evil
•
• •CIVOC.I.PIX ON.BACI‹.•
Mysterious Picture; Appears • On
Vietins of .Lightniaig Bolt, .•
Abbett Parker was struck by light-
ning at Morristown; N. J., and the
fire burned a perfeet crucifix on his
natii. Here end -there a. bit' Of skin
where tate tar:tura appears has begun
50 peel off, but the picture itself. is
as distinct and 'clear lcut, its' details
are as perfect% and - exact' as 'when the
Gray Nuns in All Souls' , Hospital,
Who Were bathing the injured man's
back,' were startled to see' an image
of Christ upon the cries appear be-
fore their eyes.- •
Viet Some Mysterious menner a
large erucifix . whith • hangs directly
above the .• head of the:. bed opon
which Parker was laid is connected
with • the picturea , upon the man's.
back will probably be, generally .'nc-
tepted as a partial explanation. of,
the phenomenon, hut, in fact, it
rather aerves to deepen the mystery.
That the' pieture of the 'CracifIxion
on' Parker's 'back is similar to the
sculptured presentment .or the enrol-
fixton which hung a:few feet above
his head leaves it rts much as ever a
mystery how the picture came to, be
painted with -.a litush of fire,„:: rot
tlint M svhat appears actually to
have occurred.
'Parker was. struck --y lightning as
he stodd beneath a large maple tree, •
under, whose branches he had sought
shelter. • His elothes were partly,
torn Mint his body, and when he was
Oohed up it appeared that his back
had 'been burned .severely. •
PICTURE APPI3ABFID LATER.
But at that time there was no .pic.
ture of the Crucifixion to, be • seen,
nor anything resembling it. Within
short time the man was removed to
All Souls* .110spital, where his Mims
Web e dressed, and it was only. during
the operation of bathing his " pack
with 'alcohol and Writer -that the- pic-
ture, of the Crutifixien. began to ap-
pear, faint . !kilt, but soon. clear
and distinct in .
At least AO minutes passed front
the moment when -Parker was struck
by lightning before the picture began
to be visible, and It did, not appear
at- all until after he dind .been, lying
on ft 'bed.. in the hospital With the
crucifix hanging directly above • Ins
head.
At first it Wee thought thnt It
Might • bo tint Work of a tattooer,
btit • Parker' -denim this, and ail Ms.
pert' who terainineff the impremion
promptly dittpoired of this
Thentde, Whit bah hod .ohougo or
Parker, said: . •
"Thi%re nee .140 litany mandeelinut
factors In the tsar- that ono eau wily
- • . • . . : '
GOOD HISCIPES:
•
Pea Salad -Put one can peas over
the fire an a .saucepan and, let boil
till quite tender, adding a little
Water if needed. afteii (lane thick-
en the juice With flour and buttet
rubbed together. Season well with
pepper, salt and powdered sago
or -
mace,. and .whea, cold add the; heart
of a, bunch' of celery and a entail
minced onion. Boll 8 eggs quite
hardi remove the • shells, mince the
whitee and sprinkle with 'salt and
pepper. Now add to the peas; stir
in half cup good cider vinegar and
last of all 2 tablespoons melted but-
ter: • Garnish the top with egg yolks
either sliced or. grated. •
tory Muffinse-Mix 2 cups sifted
fieur, teaspoon salt and 2 round;
ed teasPorms baking pent:der. Creole
1`•4 etio butter With I eup sitgar, add.
beaten yolk of 1 .eggr.,1 cup milk, the
flotir mixture. and white of 1 . egg
beaten etiff, • Stir in carefully i .cup:
•blOoberries Which have been • Armed,
dried. and rolled in flour.. Bake in
.muilin pens 20 raleutes.
-Banana •Sherbet-Beil together for
five minutes a • pt.. sugar and ;1 pt.
Water. Let it get cold, then siteld the.
juice of a Mall. lemon and' of an
orange,. and * dos bananas mashed.
fine, Peeeze .uhtit begies to tide -
en, then pOur in 1 cup. croon. and
Serve 'hi punch cups, '
.• Ginger Beer -The ingredients re -
(mired for making home-made ginger -
beer are no follows 2 lb. of loaf -
Sugar, 1 oz. of e'en& of• tartar, -
Oz. of btu -feat ginger, and two letn.,
ons rubbed on the sugar. Put ell
the ingredients -Into' a pan, add three
quarts- of hailing Water, min kir the
whole Well. When the mixture '
newly cold acid 3. oz. of Gertnan
met or two tablespooneful of barin,
and stand the remit near the kitthete
lire all night. Next day skhn oft.
the yeast, bottle the ginger -beer, nod
tie ft down. It will be ready for
11110. in a few days. •
niwrs Tt/ rtfltralleittetIPTett.S,
Tar Maine enoulti rtIbbed with
Paraffin, and paint stains -with Para'
'inn or terpentine, • = • ;
necept the Mele. as haying oeeneriel Oileloth tacked Meese the baton'
and admit that the explanntion of of a 'screen door will strengthen the
them Is heY0fiti Of eihirif.e, ihn netting tool prevent,rain heating in,
lightning is renponitible, !hut liete it. A proteeted by glass
wrOught this miracle in another Main maile for the purriose is
tee entirely, anti Oen 1 Abell Mitch fetter to ,cavey ttliont the holnie
not attempt te'eriplafft," then it lighted lamp,
It hi claimed peroxide of hydrOgett
. NOM -fbi»fryina Pall nil
witit cold water wed fdace on the fire
larger papessebage and it will keep
Coeli like fresh corn, without
making,
Orem Besliete-.Take three eggs, and
their weight in sugar, butter, and,
flour, Melt, butter' to a liqyuid statts,
but not so that it looke ilke oil.
Stir the eugar into this, .gradually
dredging in the flour, end keep the
mixture well stirred. - Whisk the
eggs, add them to tho mixture, end
beat all the ingredients well together
till they are' blended. Piece the re-
riult,itt castle Pudding -tine, and bake
them In a, moderate. oven fOr about
half an hour. When they are baked
one cool, cut the middles of the
eltkes out and fill them with the fol-
lowing mixture Witielt a fair amount'
of cream . with nett teaspeoneul
of ea.stor sugar and ono or two drops
of essence of Whet the
cream is Arranged in the 'hollow', of
the puddings, decorate the top • with
crystallised chetries, and,. having'
made and inserted handles of angel1.
ea or citron strips, your cream-has-
kets.are ready for the table.
0414NT • .,,BLAllic
THIa VITTILE STRUGGLE. AT
,; • • TICONIMROGA, . -
.Expl9its . Associated With ..Cii.ori-
ous Episodes in British .
• * .Among Highland regre
Monts 9f the British army, the Black
stands first and forentoet. Ev-
en the.. gallant Gordons .mast give
place to this. grand- 'old corps, with
its long battle .record. The ex-
ploits of. the Black' Wateh are es-
aociated with some of the most glor-
ibus episodes ixi •Britaitai military
history. ,On the sandy plains of Al-
exandra it fought under. the 'eye of
Abercrombie., sespending nobly to.his,
exelortatiint., "My bravo Highlandersi
renteMber your country! remember
your forefethers!" .Engaged dos -
pointe conflict among the: vineyards'
sofa Carmine:, if. was • animated. . with
redoubled courage by the words of
Moore; ' 'Highlander' • .. e.xnernber
Ifigkotl'' At Toulouse the 'Black
Watch 'len tile •cliarge- up. the • Ore-.
swept .heighte .and at Quatro Bras
it, 'stood Steadfast .amid •whiriwind
of : galloping. hoofs and sweeping
sabres. ' But the 'old Highland •valot,
wincla•has• contiqtatted .inateriallsr
to Miley' 'es. brilliant victory, :has..
shone witlino tese•Mitire in the midet.
of disaster ,at Peetenoy, .Ticondeia
oga, Burgos, and ala,gerifontein.
CTIA.JIGht PONTENOY; •• •
At Forttenoy • the - Block Wutela
greatly distingniehect itself b3r.'.1t0'
faniens charges and the' sailftil eanna
Mir in which it eevered the retreat.,
of Cumberland'as Army. In the spring
of 1756, wheh the' regiment was sta-
tioned Irelann it neceiveri orders.
to embark ; for :North, Aanerica, • in •
tenisegtience of war between the
British and Frertali colonista, Land -
Mg at New Vet*, the Black Watch
was despatched to ItIbanya On the
.marCh' thence, the skirling and tirot-
Ing of Alio Open drew flOPke Of: In-
dians front their SaigWares in. the
prinse-val 'forest. They Were 'delighted.
to see a regiMent in kilt, plaid and,
gartered hese, ta.Ceetunte resembling.
their own, hunting shirt,. blanket and
Moocasitia, The Mark Wetth bore
targets,' Write • and ,Lochither axes'
like the Indian shields, hunting.
knives arid tomahawks, The . red
Men lOoked. ot t• these griin and avara
like mountaineers as of the earn°
extraction thernaelVes and . wel-.
carded tlioni brothers.. The whi-
ter and folloWing spring Were spent
Mantled by the breve and distingu-
Med Marquis de Montealm. The
British troops trudged wearily on
over ground encumbered with fallen
trees, and under a donee canopy of
bouglts that the sun's'rays could
'scarcely struggle through. The guides
lost their way, anii,• while the col --
Mints were id moinertary confusioe,
the challenge, "Qui Thar rang Out
!sharply from thickets in front.
"Francais!" was the reply, which
slid not deceive the French.
FREN01-1 WERF1 ROUTED.
They fired on the Britieli. Miffiled
volleye reverberated through tint
wood's, and -Howe dropped "dead,
shot through the breast. The French
were routed, but nothing 'could atene
or the loss of a, breve and talenten
leader. The high hopes of the army
sank to zero Kant:, and languor and
consternation spread throughout its
ranks. Abererornbie'S itncompeteney
Was evidenced at once, The army
was kept needlessly. tindet Arms ail
night in the forest,' and, in th.e mea'n-
ing, was ordered back to the landing -
The adversary is alWaye on the .•
alert and wonderfully Well intern -lett
How much tba great adVereary, who
Rooth About as a roaring lion, seek,
itig whom. he may devour, knows of
the affairs of God and His people one
vannot my, but his knowledge is not
to be Made light . Ol., and tve must
nOt only have on the whole artnot
Provided for. 1.18, but we Must dill.
gently tvatch and may that we may
resist nim end not be overcente by
lioraninniseilIenot,isb' initeatoltkleitt.-. orelaptotieAtivreit:
is both; therefore vile ina,y always he
victorious, So weak Axe we in Dela
elves, however, that the moment We
take our eyee oft our Lord we will
'be sUre to fail, Ise FilM011 Peter did.
when he saw the winds and Wave*
and at 01100 began to sink instead of
Walking triumphantly on the water,
as he might; have continued to do
had he continued to see Josue only
Matt, , aim, 28.81)., .
. Initial had done nobly, wonderfully,
and a mighty vietory had been grant-
ed him, hut he is seen fleeing for his •
We from a wicked woman. He could •
trent God to care fpr hint by the
ImtelY brook and in the peer widow'e :
home and Securely to hide hint front
the wrath of Ahab; he could Stand
fearlessly:, on Carmel against all the .
place. . - . . . that Jezebel was determined to take .
prophets of Deal, but now, •seeing
The following day .15 occupied an his, life, he seems to forget the Peeler
abandoned .sawmill, a znile and a and care 01 God, the living God, be-
half from the fort. Abercrombie, fore' whom he stood, and, leaving. his .
having i•ecelved nesve that a Frenen servant at Beersheba, he neve to the
reinfOreeinent under Lovis was • ;op, Wilderness. In oorselves we are tit -
prorating, resolved' to strike w de- torly nothing, it is only In the
defencei from 11, neighboring .11111; .I -lis
neer, • Mn-. Clerk, to recOnnottre . the
eeseee. blew before it . should. arrive, Ivor:, t1hria,t iw6e).,ean be strong and ovets • .
-comes itazia.h was merveloutily help- .
ed till he was striing; then in hie •
earn strength he. failed (1I. Ohrons
Ire accordingly sent his 'engineer or,
report • was that they Were unfinislied
prospect of neccess. Then, 'without that had .beeri •unon hina, wearY in
'Poor Elijah, overcoine la, the strttin. "•.•
and might he attempted, • with: a
brought up., Abercrombie prepared to body 'end in mind,' needing rest and
Waiting for hie at-tillevY••• to be
etorni the lines, The Fri3nch finisbed sat don't under a juniper tree nnd .
perhapanot knowing what ailed hint,
there 'breastwork and abattis on. the said t° God :' "It is eriougli.. NoNsti 0
7th, and Levis arrived in the course " Lord, taloa away MY life, for 1 am
of the night, . •• ' a , . not. better than. any fathecs" averse •
% .ASSAlir•T .ON THE 'FORT: • s.*v)as alMeaada,Ybautelate. NIS1.114 ‘aViSflioe0illiStattvishitl' ;
. . . . .
al Timm the .folioseing ,dayathi3Brit- for the Lord knows ivhat is beet fer •
leh 'aziny moved forward from. its us. and has .assured: us that We shall'
eonfciehurni004:t‘ un,iott ..stoheenfiecaurri.ideo•41inis'sbigallitt. never bo tried -beyond whet we ere •
nor of Prance flaunting Over- rana able to, endures '(r Coe. ' x, .18) . • and
beat :the mil, to nems 'an the anng- things that can oome to ils and will ,
make up sure of the crown, of life if
"are among the best
'Part end breaut toot k a • .. ' The dreins tha't . ttia4
the oPen spece, and: began U. scatter- patiently borne alas. 12;.
ors:anti light infentry.emerged • into
ing• lire. , Then' four regimen:O. of (111).- °.i...i8111:1.1ts'Yhlt°It. tubl:s is s:?ritttli"et .
in high -.glaeed : hats; advanced' in tor :,tsis tha.„5...we may not be guilty: of . • ,
•
Scarlet -clad regulars, the Grenadiers,
saint column: from 'Oyer •of the 'for-. sonnet 'tatty. . • •
• 'Oh, the blessed ininistty. tit angels, '
ost,•••• : •The 'Black 'Watch mad 55th who "cell in' .stieugth;- doing .. FRI -
the breken :ground, with its maxe Of
aaer. commandments; .noarkehing unto • the
vdice of His . word -41'1s ministers .
Regiment 'Were 'held in reaerve.
rano: ttees,.,ibe asenik.aits Could sie wha • do His pleasure •!-- "(Ps. elia, 20, .
a Frenchman was Vieible. -
'Suddenly the .wuoie line belt:hod EIS. teMptation; atr6ngthened. 'Him .in • a... ; •
Bethlehem, ' ministered to Him • in,
at. 1 -Tis birth in - :-
the. top of the breastwork, hut ;not 21). TheY'.0ting:
Gethsemane.; , waited . upoin. Him . at ' a. • :
arenrrailatelateriball.eid' tel.:1nel° like a velem.° Hie resurreetion and •aecenilion. They -. : ; a ••
miesies taro Oro ditili)eRitheefaisrealluiTillige avaitst.aetsciAlbariala4sela .wilel.teTinselPentl•IlYin,:tv-elitsist...., "• .‘. .
British . had orders •• . to . Came' th. os ion. by . Jacob. and• are wonderfully . .
works With' the bayonet but. .-• their
ranks were breken: bY • the . abattis, prominent in ' . God's ',dealings with,.
ono , .they soon .,00got, to ret:oro the Mee.- • Theyabring -heaven. neey. near
vvero.:41.0,.. .The assf.anart4 pustiect. ituog',eartli, for'oui toed Said concern-. •
Rio . little ones, "In heaven their ‘
close to ;'the nreastWoitt, het thorn. ;otos do, :always behold the . Mee of
they were. stopped by •a; .hrletling oho- My , Father Who is in
vaux de false, of sharpened. beanches,_ heaven;" They..
*Welt they. could •not pass under the are Ministering spirite, always min-'.. . ...
isterieg : to the heirs-- of salvation • .: ' ,'
reurderoue (rosefire that ' swept them 'Matt. xviii ,, 117l; . Hob... i..,....1:4). The • : - :
from, front to flank, • . . • elements beveno power over- them, .....
. ,
.1311ITISH •FELL 11A.CK, • and they go and come tike lightning.
a - ..: , • . .. In our resurrection ....bodies- we :shall
be equal , toatliern, htft in. posit ion far
Wain) them.: • • . ,• , • .::
. . . .
laind.:::. the proof. texts. 1n on ta., .... '.. .."
Ezeka i., Acts xxvii.„ Lake Xt.., ' Hey; ".. • .
ii1,.. andareacithe in . the presence: of
Such comPaniene who serve unseen ... '•
and 1. unthrinkaa-net ,our departed .;
friends, hut angels who ware created - s.
such and • always .have been and. will
be just, zninisteting Spirits., Only
two are' mentioned by name, . and .
bOth names ate found in Daniel and. -
onealtarne in. Luke i. ' Again. the -an•••••• • .
get waked. hini ' and .feti atim; and in '
the strength Of. that:meat lie went , .
fortat days and forty nights to. Her- '
00, the Mennt of God (verses -7; 8).. ,
'Whether ' You . shall ever hear -the - •
voice 01: clo angel or not or see one
before you leave or not, or gee one• •
before yott leave the mottal body; s
do believe le and thank . God. for .
their loving lineally. . .
- •
. .
• How 'great . tlie.; strength imparted' •
to Ialljah by 'that meal! God. eoniti.
have strengthened him • without , the. ,
food, bet . Ile is pleased ofttimes ft... a
'use ..ordintiry .moans in .aocomplisiting
His purposes.. .11O has angels enough .
to • proclaim in . all the world 'the ..
glorious gospel IA one day or leen:: ;
hat He aces fit to use" inch. earthen' " .
vessels as- Wo aro. Who would not . ..•
desire 'to, be tt Veatel mdetafor tile'' • .
Master's use arid readY, to every.
good Work? (IL Pinola, 25.). Ilut
We must never be cast down nor clis- ••
courageda for . He Wheat We 'Rove
sliall not fail nor be discoeraged
Met.. x111., 4), . The work M . 131s, . . •
MA OM's, and , vie simply thief! with '.
the Xing for His work- (I, Citron, .
ivt.'1/0218n)Ust learn te. -do as Moses 'wag
.
told to do at that satne "Horeb, the
Mount . of God" -put ; oft our ninsen ' •
from out feet, for the incite is inay„ • -
When sve tread upon anything, it .
beeonles' oars (Josh. i., a), so put-
ting off our shoes meane that It is
'net our affair. but His, ' We must
not attempt to manage or interfere,
but only trust: 'and obeynnd see nes.
Githoetri aPleoeifeletiVailii:keliaee.r 89t; Pause, elex.lial)151t; . . .
Isa. 11., 22). As 10 W1,5411111g te die, •
ISlijalt meter died, and We may not . •
0. Cor: gle,, 51). - OtiU moment at
a time 'do iti4 000051011 500%*0 ea- add ,
leare all to Ciod.
. .
..
•
lengtb, exdaiming. that • the
worke 'were impregnable, they felt
back. -Abercrombie, who wad at the
saninillA safe distance: in the -rear,
sent orders to -attack again, . '.and
again: they- came on as before, stutrib-.
ling over, logs, :tripped by lariat sa and
caught in: the entanglements of fal-
len treeS. Tneth wite yells: and curs-.
es Were 'enaseered by .tho. -gay .shouts
of "Vivo le Roil" and "Vivo Notre
Genet from the French,. who ani -
Mated by the.2alert wad active' i/oitt-:
Mot -
calm . poured from embrasere• and
at Albany in praetising buoh-fighting 133°1/1101e an . unceasing hail ot death
upon 'their helpless foes.. The em-
end sharpshooting, in aelitcli. •the
flict raged furiously, and the rattle
Highlanders soon tevived the . skill
'of .mueketry. and roar • of -artillery
they' had attained as deerstalkers
rolled asany Among the. mounteina
and hunters among their roan 'Crags
„and corries. • . with a thousend;reyerberations. The
• .. Ilitahlanders, impatient of then. poa
. JOINED AllERCHOMBIE. aition in. the rear, could endure the
Itt the' sommor of 1756 lila anaea frightful scene no longer, . The pipes
ecreemerf an onset, ,and, ital by Col-.
Welch joined the expedition under
General • Abercrombie, deStieed. tes- raorial ,Glreahnitlingthoey'veicialtheede ainndadhlye Jionig•-
proceed' against Fort, Ticonderoga. '
away branches 'With their broa&
The. at my Was entartMed at Fort Wil -
On S.hey bounded in the lace
liam Henry's. the edene of the infant- sWords.
ous massacre irt the proceeding year. belf.etitisIS6/.1krfualn.dfireratruhi)aatitb,elciAledn,fr;r71
and the Shot of Lake George to
the Seat of the 'Wooded motintainst -:nattnrtgaienivotulfnedgor. octfanidledinn'It0h1e24' ntgoontteoilf.
were studded with tentp•irihnbited by
grim regulars witb. powdered wige..emerasles not- • to mind or waste a,
upon • there, but to follow
and Pigtails, lanky eolonial. militia. "thought
in ill-fitting uniforms, and bronzed. their pincers and remember, the lion-
rangets in 'semi-am:Ilan garb. Genera Or of •their coantry, ,
Abercrombie • an aristoceatic old, sbAtavirtiro BilaXASTWOIlIC.
gentleman, 'devoid of all militar3s,' No ladders •having been Provided,
talent, was but the nominal leader the Highlanders mv.ile strenuous of -
of the expedition. Pitt ilitended forts tb seale the breastsvork by
tvlie.stataithitio•etehael young and
should ivalrous edict 1)17 placiti4
ntatintina en ditch other's shoulders, -
their feet on barna-
Viseount Howe Whom he ileeeribea • ets and dirk inserted in crevices be-
ns "a, cheracter of antiont timea; a tweet the loge; But the defendees
perfect model of. a' soldier." Thiel Were well prepared,. and the instant
tealoes-epirited noblemae teas- tho tut assailant reached the top.the. was
soul of the aimye aud though 0.• shot or , throWn dosen, At length
arid, diseipliearian, Ida frank . end Captain Campbell and a handful of
engaging mariner won him the love followees ttouted the wen and
of officers and men.. On July 3 the leaped doWit among the White-MA-
expeditiOn, consiSting of '7,000- rept- totalled Pronchmen, only to be '
litre and 10,000 provinciala, eina etantlY heyetteteci. After a terrible
barked 800 batteaux and 185 struggle, Which lasted four howl/,
whaleboats, beeide craft earryingi Abercrombie, seeing 110 possible
eimeen. ammunition and provisions. chance of success, ordered a With -
A. spisetator of their departure sitye etrawel, but the Itighlantiost had he -
that when the van of the flotilla woe -come so exesperated ilie resist -
three miles Out the entire surtnee or :ttnee they had exteottutetvil and the
the lake wee hidden from vieW. toss _of ,so many of their roniredeil
• — ' ' that it Watt diffleVat tO reeell th0111,
• LONG LINE OP BOATS.. Again and again, they returned in
About noon the narrdsas werty the 'attack with inhitiog tenacity ond
reached ahtlethe beats stretched...flit leonine tory, It was noi until the
ill a. .long line, pasting betWeeti ett. tided peremptory order thitt the
drafting islete tidted With varied fol- :Bleak Watch <void be preveithd
lege, and majestia trionittaine, among to ,witlictraw from tbe unequal eon-
Whoed gray crags and verdant Sum- teat, after twenty -dye of the offieera
Mite the note le of 'bugle, &ton and told more their hair of its • men bed
baggifie lingered • long, dying in .been either or severely wound -
sweetened endplate Way in the dis- ed. The liriti4h !wisest totalled over
tante, nds eryetal waters of Lake 2,000, and of this number 641 be -
George sparkled in the radiant sun- longed to the Meek Watch, A epten-
Shiner 'and to the nattital beauty of did army had been saerificed by the
waters. or the i!deditcrrattean and
said, "And there teas no more 805,"
he meant practically this: heaven
there shall be no hate, no bitterness,
no. fault findings, no bloodshed, no
Jew hating Unman, no itoratut hat -
big Greek, no Japan ltussitt
and no !..*Speitt sucking. the lifeblood
of a prostrate Oahe., Then Imre and
DELI lin 'RAD. •
In seine of the old towns of ChM..
Where the roads aro in rather a. •
lough state, horses are much more
commonly seen than vehicles and ere -
sed by tradesmen when delivering-
-their goods. At Punta Armes the
baker rides on horseback, Across thcx
animale-slung pannier ftishien-- ere
tWo large baskete, oe belies, Which
ere filled with loaves of bread. 'Ilhe
baker then gets up mid seats himself "
altuost on- the nix& of his hark; and
between the two loads of broad.
1 I ..... .: , . ,,
, , . ' 1 . a,„ , „
ate tele 1 b I it
gently over the eurfeee ,, of the: ike, hot wathr. three 01111CeS of borax antl ed at the 11014thern eXtrelbitY of tho atm many oi toe men sang the sad inhafen tne neat doe.s not look to btr
lake, and termed in four columns, ad,, .14r6.' in, .04.1.10: 1.6'.80 eeehemi,t loom the very ernefortahle, he . apparently' ia '
A gentleman bought a new variety with a small sponge. no not allow two :haft 'or wl,lito soaD• Slice the
quite eontent. •
of potatoes, and told his gardener to the peroxide dilution to 00ek . into 80011 aid diSflOiVe it. and the borax 'vsneed through the pathlesp,,forestin deptlia. of. the vast Americen Arrest,
be Mire and plant them far enough, ,thil strstre 'but wipe. ,if, oft quickw in the hot Water. UM enough of it. itgainet Feet erfebittieraga, , Tillie while tears mimed their powder-- -
ap.itrie ,, "Weil, Sant, did 17511 'plant .3",/t11 a 'fieft alOth end Mt, the hitt nut to makaa a good %thee. Excellent Strong poet. .• etOod Ott it Torigife, of stained throe, ite. then thought •or ' s ,
the potatoee far apart,- as I told to dry -in the ttir. --The peroxide fOr 4180 'Where SOAP hillet eet be nib* land projecting 'into theetortuenuerive eineradets Who elept before that 'fatal "So . Jaitaby hail absconded, An-
yOtt?" Sate. -"i did, sir, I ;gamed Mesons. the 4Irt, .whith comae it oft bed :oil artleleff. ' . , . ._ er, relinectitite",,I.Oke George Wit,* fortress and Would return no mom other good Win gone wrongi.!.• ;Woo.
Rome in your garden and Nome fh the 01.0thAWIleri t. he hat,.fit.1441ped, and., It , hi well to rentember Shot es-reaket *Champlain: Itif ralriPartft WereatO the bonnie brach Of Loritither or sensel‘ It's inerely a'. bad man who,
ruffle, so tliest are four miles epert,,f 'also Oven thisstrittv a, good bleach, -pound of .sugar.is- one :pint; lin ounee nulkotinded on three rddes by WItter,, the barren clitYs of Skye, has ligeitiound out!"
•
•
IIII 1111111111111 111 II HI 1 1 1111ill
•
o
40 10
j2,thatieg. jaglaidiaiiithalk&:dgmaita&ah:
•
. ,
, .
44*
a