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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1904-10-27, Page 3-^••• eesealaresallelaralraaralimaffilltillar7a, fliallfaaaffrar Yagtrafratr TEST FAMILIES Are Proud or Their Desoeut From Some One Mau Who Was a Nobody. .1 Kanterect according to Act of the X' 'lament of Onada, in ti 0 Thousand Nine Hundred and rot by Wei. Pails, of Tomato, et th Department ef aerlculture, Ottawa ••11••••••• a 41-rti Th H _ ome xeleirelLieL". SELECTED =cams. Ohestnut Croquettes.--Tieraeve tit 'and fighting manhood practleally shells a, ye OM 'red Met A despatch froaci Los Angeles, Ca says: Rev. Frank De Witt Telma preached from tbe following text: leroverbs axis., 23, "A man's pri Khan bring him lew,". The word "pride" in this age ma Dometinies be used in a good sene In Bible times it always hailat based mewling. Searcaing through coneordance I cannot find rate pia where that word "pride" was n Fashion not only allowe but favor • odd Pleeee anti even the eheap war will compare favorably with the bee • cut glees it the dishee are kept dee • ingly clean. Carafes, criiete an • similar articles may be cleaned wi • Potato peelings or creslied egg shell • They are put in the bottle., wit • pleuty of hot suds and allowed t • reraiiin. over night, then the bettl •= =Wet be given a. vigorous ebakin and. thorough rinsing. In washin glassware, avoid too suciden charm from, col4 to heat, as experience h. e VOR THE YOUNG DAIRYMAN. Ooze aveay. 0 man, be not Puffed chestnuts. Pour over them lioiling 0 up in your own conceit on account , water to remove the husks. Cook .1 of your seeming triumphs in Wel well by boiling in plain water, drain, You and I in a sense have both euc- mash like potatoes, and season with I., ceeded not because we are smarter butter, pepper, salt, and one well - go than a mon, but because God has beaten egg. Shape into regular size - given to us chances of success which croquettes, putting four seedless rai- de he has withheld front men who were sins (that have been steeped in boil - just as %next and •just as diligent ing Water to swell them) in the mid - Y and brave and as conscientious as die of each croquette. Roll in beat - 0. ever we have been. en egg and araoker crumbs, and fry e. ALL viEnE azNrisom,,r. itn adeep lett, Serve at once. This • * 25 -line- w It quail or any bird. co It la too often forgotten that or. To Prevent Cheese rratu Molding- ot rogence and pride are sins in theme Make a strong brine of one part wa- u,sed as the -symbol of "sin" and co denaned as the cause of sin. Go fa. denounces it all threugh the 0 T-estament. God hurls at it his ex orations all through the New. Aro • gance and pride compose the quic sands which have destroyed many a immortal soul inthe past.. They a the insidious means whereby, Sate is tripping up and manacling ba helpless victims at the present this Therefore this sinful pride, which found nestling in many hearts .as fatal cancer, must .be ciit out some of us will be ferever lost, PRIDE OF LINEAGE. First, consider the sillisst of a kinds of pride, tliat of aristocrat lineage. The spoiled infant in i canopied bed, screaming for the • e tention of its nurse, in not more bf nuisance than are these people wit strut through the world claiming th homage of their fellows because ;their having been born in an arist cratie home. It cries, "Bow ° t me, not because I have brain or hay accomplished anything, not be= I am of any earthly use to anyttod but because my father or grandfathe or great-grandfather has accomplishe something to make his pante faenau or because great-grandmother he In ,her veins tho blood of the Eur peen aristocracy." Listen to th •babblings of one. who would continu ally slialso before our eyes a sing' branch of his ancestral tree whic 'happened to bear a few faagran blossoms white on that same genea logical tree are hundreds of Othe branches which have • borne r nethin but worm-eaten fruit, and wide branches have been gnarled an ;twisted for generations and for aen • auries. • • Have you ever stopped totonside how many different ar,oestors • yo have had? My parents were twe number. I had one father and on mother. But, stopping back anothe generation, I find I had four grand a- selves. The lofty epunt which boasta d '.that it is free from the guilt of others 14 and holds aloof from the repentant • e - ginner, •wbotre it -surveyswith scorn, 0,• Is tiot that prihe a taunt heinous sin a„. In the sight cif a just God? During - • the darkest days of the Peenci2 revo- re lution of 1830 a great mob of insure, • gents and rioters were blockading the perisian, streets. "It is useless to, 01)041 to their reason. They have no e. reason,".. said General Lafayette, the is conauander of the national guard, which ultimately placed Louis Phil- or• iPpe upon the Prench throne, "Shoot • thein clown like 'dogs." "Let me, general, try to emitter thent,"• said statt officer to Ids commander, The 11 Yainig roan took off his hat and rode im to the threatening inob. Then be ts cried, "All gentleraen will please to. t- retire, for I am ordered to shoot a down the rabble." At Once the mob o scattered. "Not," wrote the his - e torian, "from. fear,. but because not of one of those fierce rioters wanted the o- people of France to consider that he o belonged to the scum or the off scour - o ings of the. nation," Because* arro- se• grant pride considers herself different y, from the repulsive hags of sin does ✓ that make her _different? toll the d nay. The vilest and the Meet de - e graded forms of sin are not more d condemned iu God's- :sight than the 0_ sin of the pharisee. Christ said it. e We niust believe it. . Who is this Pharisee of -old, modern- - i• zed into the language of the church h life of to -day? Let me describe him t as you have often seen. him. Sunday morning. is- hete. The supercilious ✓ creature crawls out of bed. Re must go to church. It is part of his reli- g won t� go to church. Every oite says he is one of the Pillars of the church. He dislikes the word "pia- " tar" beeause for a long tittle he has • , thought be. is the whole sanatuary;' r •choir loft and "pulpit *thrown in as u well as pow. •• 1 a • He ' has hard Work to get up, 'this e .mornieg because all the week, like ✓ Shylock, he has been demanding his - pound of flesh. He gave a hundred parents and eight great-grandparent and sieteen great -great- grandparent and thirty-two great -great -great- grandparents. • And ' so back an back they.. go, doubling with generation: A. • few hundred year hack 1 find my ancestors were no counted by the tens, but by the thou sands. •Now, rny friends, . what righ has a man with family price to fol low up one branch of a genealogiai a tree that lands' him -in a king's throne room or in an arl's . palace and ignore the hundreds .of • other ancestral li,nes, any one of ..Which would land him in a peasant's hu or perhaps even at the. end of a hangman's noose? Foy, though sortie of us may not have had ancestors Who were hanged, all of us have had plenty of them who ought . to liave been hanged if they had been ;treated as they deserved; Thus, when we estimate how many differ- ent ancestors sve all have had, both good and bad, there ie. a great . deal of broad common sensein the answer which Tlieodore Roosevelt gave to one of his boys who had boasted in school about hisfamily. The Presi- . ;dent said: "There are only. two classes of boys ;in this .world, son. Big boys and small boys alitte are either good boys or bad boys, It does not make very much difference from what family you spring, if You are a good boy the world will re- spect yati and if a bad boy the' -World willpunish you..and deanise you." CIRCUMSTANCES MAIM MEN', Circumstances make men just the same as men make circernstancem. When I was lately thinking noon this theme my eye involuntarily saancleadd down a country road to a big white barn where a livery is kept and horses are rented for the day, About one of these horses a young man was working. Who IS he? He Is .a young man who for .years has •svanted to be a lawyer. But he is .the oldest son of a large family of chitdren„ His father was a farmer in the. east. There that father's health broke down, and he bad to came to Cali- fornia climate or he must die. Ile bought some land there. After awhile two years of drought . Came on, and he was ruined. Then ;that father was :confined three yenta in an invalid's bed. Then that oldest *non had to spring into the breaele He Is !there yet in the breach.. The bread of his mother, his fattier and the children was for years dependent up-.• on that oldest boy and his work, The horses of the f arm were Merely' changed during the drought into the horses of a public livery, lf you and had been in that oldest boy's place would we not have done juetthe same lis he did? Would WO be where we are to -day? Men intake circumstances. Not al- ways. Seine time ago when seated in a railroad train 1 read, aneses- paper article in reference to rine •Of the notorious pugilists of -the coun- try. This article went something like this: "Mr, So-ancl-so 'will never amount to anything again in the roped arena. Why? Decituse he has been twice whipped. k man is like a dog: when he has been beateti enough to find that some otie else is hie truieter his nerve 18 forever gone." "How trne ftt lito is thitti" I said to myself. Then I pictured that noble dog of Jack Loridert's In his "Vail of the Wild." Ito Was o big, lovable, brave dog, but HO sooner was he sent north than he wail clubbed until hi g epirit was broken. Whitt then? He whined and Whimpered like a frightened Mine So tome men, noble men, brave men in their youth, become failtiree 08 Middle aged Men. Why? 1 teeatt8n they aro battei•eil and pounded by' ateuggle after struggle arid defeat after defeat. They are Halted in their progreee through We by dietaries prealically !repos:fillet° to overcome Vail at Mee their courage and note° ter, haat a cup of common salt, and teaspoonful of flour, Stir well, and When dissolved, wring a soft cloth out of •this water, and' pat over the cheese, end it will not mold. Black 'Iluttera-Blask butter, brown batter, or burnt butter -as it is var- iously : called-eis made by putting hotter in a Peat and slowly beating until it turns a deep brown color. That process should be slow, and the butter sbould not be allowed to cook to such an extent that it is black, or even riearlY .so, or It will. be too bitter to Use. . While cooking, it. should be shaken often et etirred free quently,a as the. froth watch covers the surface may give' rise to the thought that it is still yellow. To convert It into sauee, cook the but- ter 'Slowly •uritil .of -the requisite color and throw in quickly an equal quan- tity of vinegar, and boil up once. Thessairce is then 'ready for use, Stuffed Potatoes, -Remove six Po- tatoes.frozaaoven when perfectly bak- ed. Out off the •eops and carefully, TemOve the inside; mash with• butter,. cream, Salt, and pepper; replace in the empty shells, 'piling high, Brlish over ,the tops **Mt melted butter', and brown in the caret. . Creamed 'Hashed Patatees.-Delle delis creamed hashed potatoes are .prepared as follows ; Boil smell • po- tatoes with their. skins on.. 'After ht them get very cold, thee Peel them, and chop •'Very• fine in 4 chopping bowl. For a pint chop- ped potatoes , melt a air:ping table- spoonful of: butter in a; saucepan, then, drop the potatoes in; pour in enough creani to cover the' potatoes, season. with a little salt, and thent •sinner over a slow:fire, - until the cream is aasorbedr then serve in a hot dis• h, . 'Potatoes Au Gratia. -One table- spoonful butter, a•one-halt cupful grated cheese, one tablesporinfel .of salt; oneefourtle • tea -spoonful „of pep- per, ewe pint. of cod:boiled potatoes'. Make, a' white • sauce with tae • butter, dear, milk; :and 'Dice the potatees. In. a baking disk put -.alter- s' dollars to the churela last weeka-bee nets layers oa potatoes, cheese,• and s he did. -not miss. if.niudi. Ile took sauce, :nicking the • lastlayer sauce. it ell the wages -01 his employees; Put • one teaspoonful af :butter in d Daring' the Week, by business: ti icaa eaticepan; when Melted,add one-half e and financial themb-ecreWs, he got Ett CUP of bread erembs and etiruntil a least 'four differerit pieeee of 1 e0. the butter .is, absoreed, e Sprinkle t tate 35,000. Wsthan they were this ;ever. the :potatoes • and ltroseia,in a. worth. He died about the deal but a' alniels' oven. • • . . a of course heonly lied according to • Creaming Raw ,Potatoes. -Cut six a recognized hasinew etisto.m.. ' Lriet. raw potatoes .intoeedice., •Boil ten 'night he discharged a young girl . be-minutesin '.boiling . salted water. .cause site was dela Ile knew what.' • Dram of thOov..5tter. , Add milk ,to . neerie her sick.' .He worked her over, ce.ver, and let simmer until potatoes time and •worked alt the physical Cue tender. • Thenadd teaspoonful of life et of :her, : • • • butter, chopped parsley', and *pepper. Shake Weil and serve ' • • t.ILLTPS E•P-99K$'• 14.1)\TCP... Potato Pyramid.ae011eese , • emall Hoar do you know ' that your. own. retract .potatoes of even size, pare church is the bestchurcla.atid• the them delicately, -• *drop in •'ctilti• 'water ender true church? Have ieni ...ever as payee, •aid let, stand an hour. ateched the • ways. and the. *uterine- Drain and dry', then drop • into deep other ministers are using in ouu. sisa fat, Itoititig hot, •and fry to 'a rich ter churches? It Would be .1:1 'good golden bronrn. •• Skimout drain on• thlngor you. to seveilialp. n Sonte. •blotting•papezMidover a hoe plate, 'other, church for a littleawhile before then pile .pyrcunid fashion on • a naP- you are so quickto condente• their kin. laid over a•hot dish. Stick aprigs W03 s of doing ;t1iings. i`Other sheepof iiitreley, .crisped in the hot.fat :and 'lave 1 evhieh are .not Of this 'fold," well drained; in the tela,and . around said Cliiist; . Oxje. of the best- truthsthe base. Serve as hot as Possibte. I -ever: read from the • Pen of • that nalcol '0/116oa.:7•Peel. large • mild on- ; 'greati., big hearted. • arid noble 'Chris- lens -Spanish ones: are best -cut a tien, the.Most 'beloved New England- veshapett pike out .of the hearts, and • ea: :of. his.' day, Phillips Brooks, was set theirain a Pan:. ' Pill the cut out .from a letter, hewreee to ,a 'minis.; .placee. With . butter.; Well eeiteoned thrift' 'friend, . Ainericaa The :let- with salt and pepper-muitard also ter liren...sornething this "Dear if the flavor is approved..Dredge well .:brother, ,You ought •ti coiee Over to with flour, then add :water or weak a Europe. at least once ra year to find .hroth to half cover: thii..offio,ris; set ,. out :how the big ivorld is 4cfw Many: them in a vac hot oven, and bake people. there 'ciaein at trying to .'do- "until tender:. Baste :price or ,twiee right.ondhow-sinallthoJApiscoprillitic _yrith_. limier; in the pan, •After tale. ' church' seems looked at-frina this side. trig- up eut-eadireeillenThielfeeeette-d- •olethe -Atlantic," You een •surmise taking •up eut each oniou ,through what. .Phillips Brooks Meant.: He. downward and put a dab of 4.tter in meeenethvrinchtetegda iyiti oftlie;leorbigtieiesfst. zeortolydthe mita., befere to :table on ; • people ' there were. many -different Peoteetiint •churchee filled with .jiret • • III.NTS TO lOrst"'Ilvs, • , as acted PeePle AS Phillips ••13rooks To rerrioi,e the odor Of 'fish or cat - had ni his own Parish. , foils from a frying Pan; Put a ittde •IlOse doyou know that our Way • 'Vinegar into the pan aria heat•lt over of 'bringing .upyourchildren is the the fire. • ' • 1 - Oily right way? eliave you developed Clean the .ciintc. with kerosene, ap- ebee fatally so nutrveloubly that PlYing the 'oil on a cloth, end you the are , brighter than all other Will findthatdirt itticl greawa are re - children, more iatelleptitel, more atoired as if by..niagic, . 'spiritual? Perhaps instead cit Your. Don't • :waste :old velveteen.' • Wash ehildren beirig bla.med for doireg is and then use it for polishing silver wrong yott ought to be blamed. Your or glass. It Is an excellent substie -Way of discipline mak be wreng, tete- for wash leather as a Plate 'Broaden your life. Study the .Ways cleanei. of other Christian pareatf3 and you • To dean japanned trays, rub' With may be ,eble to, iraprove your on a cloth orx which a fear drops of' oft ways; aa • hatre :been sprinkled, •arid then polish How du know thatyour with a -soft; clean piece of flannel. • • o yo. OW11, i For cleaning enamel* baths, take nteritretatien of the 'Scripttire is right?, Perhaps if You would °illy! oneir etablespoonful of edry salt mole - empty„ eourself of eelf •and as II; ,stu. tette& WIth ispiritu of turpentitea Rub this Well in the 'bath., which must be dent come and sit at Christ's feet you might leato f46 mach from him., quite. dry.. Then rub over with a i n c who Wan meek and lowly of heart clealoth, that you would have a . less exalted* It is very difficult to dry the inside estimate of • yourself and of your! oi 4mincing entehine to 'prevent own wisdom and piety, 1. peeeemeny rusting. The bbst. Why to clean it usieg is to grind some stale, would never have any use for a pliy». after gician who thinks 1,e ktows so much pieces of bread through it. This will I that in the crisis of disease ,he would be found to collect all grease,. fat not' as& another physician to come old skin from the small keives, Then to the' bedside of the sick tar eeestee1W1Pe With o, cleaa cith. fatten, 'Neither has Chalet any use! Many, of Inc. beat housekeepers haVe. for oho of his dieciplea who knows forswm the use of 810vP Pohen oft - proves that the short life of many atticlee of One glassware is due to the abrupt cherges of thg tempera", ture. of •the waters in which they are washed and rimed. If the glass - stopper cannot be retrieved from bottle, tie a twine String Onee around the neck of the bottle and begin to saw beckward and forward, In a few minutes the glass will get veXy hot, and the stopper max be eaeily 'reraoved. Before wapbing glassware, rince out every particle of milk, fruit or anything that is colored, as hot water will soraetintes drive the coloring matter Jute the glass and ria its bright- ness: apd• this le espeelhily true ef milk. Glassware may be 'Itept beau• - titular eleart by washing through a wae,d rm, peine suds and then zincing in clear Werra water, and if an ex- tra shine is desired, dampen a soft cloth with the spirits of wine, rub the glaze well with this and polish with a, clean dry leather, Nothing repays one Bo Well for the time spent upon it, as shining glass and there is certainly nothing that adds so much to the appearance of the table and gives It such an air of reeeernent as sparkling glass and polished 4ishes, and the glassware can be kept clean no matter what the financial circum- stances of the family may be. en 1 PONE LA1JORABLE RACER • FASHIONABLE SPORT OF PAR-. IS AND BERLIN. • . • King Edward., -When in Egypt, Found Muck Amusement in . An Eccentric Race. . It is not long since. ten of the lead- ers of society in Paris organizea a Wonderful veep to determine the re- lative speeds of theirrespective pets: The Baroness de Beret:helixes repre- sentative was a tortoise; the Prat - cess de Ludnge ehterett a lion Cub; the Countess de Beauregard, a parti- cularly :adipose di:arse; • Mlle. de Yturbea a South' American monkey; Mlle. Sarloyeae, an Egyptian beetle;• and so en. The race aroused .the avildest enthusiasm, and proved more exciting even than .was: anticipated. The young lion, atimalated by • a dainty stick, wielded by his fair Mis- tress, forged ahead at thc.start, but growls so demoralized his rivals that for a, time they seemed paralyzed -all ekcePt the tortoise, who plodded steadily on until,. half -way, he 'fell. soundly asleeir, on .the 'course. At this stage .the monkey :took the lead but finding a bantam preeeing him hard, be palmed to wring the bird's neck-;. "and ' then there- were nine." The turkeyaoveatook the beetle and •sig- • nalized the (Went' by gobbling ' him up; and the monkey, taking- advan- tage of his opportunity; weut ahead •and .wtin the rate, With •Mr,. , Turkey a poor second, and O . THE LION A BAD THIIRD. 'When Xing: 'Edward ' was last la Egypt he found much amusement in •a similar race, whiCh inclUiIed a peli- can. driven by .1.tord Dunmore,an oa-• trich steered by General Dormer, a pig • by Captain Maxwell, a; monkey 'piloted by Captain Kekewich, and a Cairo dog,a- turkey„ and a eat, re- spectively tinder the control of Cape teen LQWIS, Colonel Sandwitla and Major Camped'. The pelican start- ed a bot favorite; but alas! for hu- man anticipations, • while holding a good lead hem caught • Sight qf water and promptlY xriaile for it; the mon- key spoiled • tlie. cat's - chance bY.- jumping .on its back, and the ostrieli won with ridiculous mine from the pig -aa bad second -and the deg -e• wersle third: . • .- ' • , A laalies' rr ace ecently witneased 'at .latioae was ,both novel arul start- developinente. 'The fair carmiotitera raced to it line of bas- kets Pieced/I:midi the course, and an givensignal each raised the basket in front of her, Surprise!' ' delight consternation!' :Worn* under three sprang up tiny recruit-boys,who pre-: sented pretty prizes to the fortun- ate whiners, while froxn the other basketa emerged a regular .nienagerie. Heria-doves-r-soared-'up-into there a. eat .bolted as if:pursued. by a, hundred.dogs, while partridges, ogee and. lawrAeVix etittrroTt 0 led , At1*koviD,. lie many a country district' in dela Many there Is held an einival ox -race Which attracts theusarxds of specta- aors, tacit one fe 'ridden' bareback by its owner,- without whip, Our.' yoke, or harness; and as the 'rage is acietee field a* mile. wIde, and the riders hatee• only firdr voices to guide 'the rigrant animals, the re - rite are often highly diverting, es- pecially es the spectators can add to the fun bee diciuting arid gesticulating at the oxen and doing their best to cliVert them from the direct path, Not long agO at Nogent-sur-Marne , the international wooden -leg vitiating I charopionship was deeided in 'the pre-, - Once of 5,000 spectators. The dis- tance •Wes, apprOxInlate1y .220. yds., and 'the winner was'' found in it Roteln, Who provee the swiftest of sixty-seven competitors, and eciterecl the journey fri 80 Secorids..1.lordeaux finds. its. chief excitement in .sti1t.4 racing. In a recent coiopetition 'a ' youth, Abee Martin, covered 275 Miles, in 4 ehade °e'er 76a hears; um/la:stilts 6 feet long and weighing aver 16 Ilea whhb a, exhort time ago the mayor of a small French town orkanized it race anieng the local drunkard -'and won it hitneelf. • 00 much that Ito le not -.willing to the kitefien ranger excePting °nee be 1 t tc•neaeon, and greese he come 'to sit at feet and learn wie a of lilin. Are yott ready to-cley to ompty monarch ot the kitchen•Instead, Once weelc the stove is washed oil in 'e Teurself of self and be as an emptyit vessel to be filled with the Holy 81.00.RY water, aid on. the (Uwe be- t Spfrlti. tiveen Is morel e wiped With a, greasy Oh, snare Wilt you yield up your cloth, -pride for Christ?' Will you be as a Te Whiten Heft a little pipteclity aye dem at lee feete win you dissolved in the water used in witeh- ing linen AttVes a great deal of labor . t nay, elerigter, ate nothing,. but thou atrhtataltlifehibialleir of 01111.tiloY1 (I"Ilddegrant - iiiirindettsothaopr'ottullghdlye.letth'srehaistInlethdoicrl"."ite • hero and now foi•ever be' cast out of specially tweet ht towna where oute everY rine of our hearts. "IS- man e (foul bleachlng 15 Prietall,V an t pride Anil bring him low, but honor 11000fhlliteei uphold the humble in apirit." • ' . CARE Or' _GLASSWARE'. Eminent. Barrister ilust arrived There ie nothing that condueee coLtsiorno OLD DOORS; lerear• Ponterfact, England, lives a tanker Who Ike a museum of old doors, They are from old houses, itstles, oe abbeys that have some his - ode interest. Quite lately ho bid X.1,00.0 in Paris for a door through whicb, daring the Peendi Itevolution, farie Antoieette, Cherlotto Corday, Denton, ited Robespierre passed to he guillotine, One .04 his doors is aid tO have shut off Charles 11, trete Is Roundhead pursuers, and it bears marke of a battering -rem, A collee- ion of necient weathercocks is 4180 no of this gentlemareg possessions. A I`AMILY DAV. OPP*Prior . - home from the criminal eieurt)-"M'S1 more to a dainty table than shiriing rn the church at Suesarty, Austrie, Here and Vette Debos welter, eee,- rated their golden Wedding; their son (I ditthlattend.hie wife their never wed- In ing; and the latter's daughter Was Y narried, all oe the scene day. An - thee gandehild of the old people, the to ride' brother, read the serviee rlest for the first tiree. I T • An industry that counts its Mora ture by the thoutiands or volumes enh has thousatal men puttin their best life's wet* into the ocienti lie investigation of 4, and tivice 0 inany -more postng as great expeits each one finding out sornethieg new and of vain° daily, it is pretty liar to tell in 0, column how to retie success, and give on insight int Modern thought as it now relates it Self to the dairy, writes Mr. Joh Gould. Success in dairying Is largely Unlearning what you theuglit you knew yeseerdity. The wily thing lef to the dairymen that Was orthodox knerviedge forty years ago is, th Motherhood of the cow, and that wa not then considered in a thougliefu way or thought -of as the real fouu dation of dairying. A mother's ear and feeding as part Of the dairy in slustry were not take a into account Ludt war well thought bf then, and the knowledge that success could b arrived at only by thoughtful, studi one attention and investigation wa in its infancy, if it liad any real ex istenee„ The man who feund out all about dairying years ago, and discards al recent ineestigation, is' not sat adviser, This naan in his. day has objected to wart* barns, because they ••,1 for quality is not far away. the solids In milk -trot itti Water TH Qiat conetitute the value in milk for L any purpose. Have A home for the hatter, need not be costly, but it can be vliegnlittilutweadr,msa, nritrty4,1771mreefortsarobulle, odor and well kept. Have hoer that "conies to the ground" and is made weterproof, Ilea the feed to Make Milk, not to svarm the barnyard. Water haS no more health giving - qualities about it for being atAlie lee , melting point. Cern fodder is never 4 improved by a six mouth's exposure ^ to Wind and storm. Clover is much 11 better in June than in August. Feeds • produced on the farm, are seldom ad- , ulterated with cheap etuff of no d value to increase the prolita, h not let any man tell you. thet there 0 is no value in farm. raised. oats tied - corn ground together, for milk xnak- 11 ing, and that the purchased concen. trates are always the cheapest. Re- . member that no experiment has ever e proved that grain, to exceed seVen to eight pounds a day, it cow, has e :ever paid le the dairy, except with s now and then a plienorninal cow. All 1 feeding and watering should be regu- - Mr, and milking the dime, and the milk should be at once -well, that needs a special chapter. Read dairy • books and papers, and above all, be- . Iieve in your business. Make it a ° success. All successful business is - raade by the persistent will and pur- s pose of its promoter. The dairy is - no exception. 6There la nothing new In this article, There is only the , education of restateraent about it. Reiteration sometimes conviveece once 6 in a generation convicts. • Made cows tender' and lacking liardi nese; he has said that Well bred cows could not stand the StralQ Q dairying and were highly susceptible to disease; :that Succulent • foods in winter were against nature; and that cows kept in the stable fifteen: Walter weeks would die for want of exercise, He "knew" that all milk was alike, Pound for peund, for cheese and but- ter makir,g; that machine made bat- ter would not keep; that the separa- tor woes net as good as an open tie pen, and that dairy schools simple taught a lot of nonsense; in fact, . ."THE sow po.movp." • age of dairy :enlightenment and sharp clitapetition, wouldadvise only the _man to attempt dairying who is in hearty, born sympathy with live stock, and likes to caro for cows and leas a cleterminetioa to stay with the business from start to finish; avlip believes in dairy cows and knows them and knows what kind of it cow he wants for his aartleular purpose; who knows enough aholit his busi- ness to test cows and breed them in line, I:loci-not become a breed mixer; who recognizes that.• the cow is a Mother, and needs a mother's caret who .can and Who will provide a: clean and sanitaay barn for hip stock, .and keep it so; whe hes enede a study of the different foods needed by a cow, and can. Proportion rations With some tlegree of.• practical -accuracy, and will • make his farm a region growing plant; .who will Select •soine one of the three divisions of market demand for milk: frictory, batter - making. or pity supply, and bootee e specialist in ono of three; and lastly a student of • the inclustry,• always studying and inVestigating.to the end of• acquiring definite knowledge, that can be lieed to profit, and itotato peeve a prejudice 'or .httinor :a whim, True all Men in the • dairy:, hupiness 'do not secure the same restilts late dairy is a creation of a man'e busi- iiess and eaficational fee:tildes and just as -Men, • suceeed elsewhere, :so. tiler.. will in dair3r; but men,' we altiak, utteily. M ing than .in what is, known ea the industrials. The best 'business ,iperi often- fail, but how often does on hear qr.& dairyman failing who is up to date in his practices?: In :starting out there must be .three .distinat . 'propositions .• before • the would-be suegetsfill dairyman: How cite procitiee the most good milk? How on. prodece it tilt 'cheapest and what co* meet milk to pro, - ; INVENTOR OF LIGET OHRE DR„ PINSEN DIED •'.A.T. COPEN-, • • HAGEN SEPT 24. . Man •Vit hese Discovery .Benefitted e • 59 Many DWisciesa.sae.. Victim of• . • . Tn. e' death .of Dr. Finsen wan a re-' 1 lief even as his life was torment. t O There was a grini iiathos . in the short career.' of the maii! who Made, 'perfect the surgery, of light, who f was "the wolf -killer," in Mr. Harold BegbWs etriking pheese; the' slayer:, s of lupus, that raving .disease which. a eats up the skin. -and•turna beauty in- to 'loathsomeness, a a . roe riaseit,' though. he could bring e 11 health to huadrecle, was himself the e victim of a .coniplication'bf 'diseases.. ' • TIM acart, his liver, his .digestive pr'- , dans, were all so ' dieordered that 1 . when he . took; his doctor's degree' at. 0 the Copenhagen University in • 1890, I -he was thee thirty years old -there' WAS no hope (goalie prrieticing • . ale • . -profeseion. • • ' , . - , • P . It. waa about 1893 that he start- 0 led ihe arorld front Cepenhagen with t ' the .,antiouneenient ...that in• certain t eraptive diseases like steal:pox if .411 c but the red rayia 01 light Were, ex,. eluded front tlie patient's room there t ii,puld. be ne eriPPurationend no sub- a sequeat disfigurement. ..- • - '. t ' ..: • ptim tar LUPUS.. •• h • , Other' (pipet -find -its 'convinced hirie, i that the ,. 'blue and actinic, rays,• t 'whieh include violet: and tiltraeviolet; are the Only rays • to have eny:Pheree a lotegical. effect upon animal life. Ex- : dude these chemical rays' front . the 1 room vet ..0, •smalliica. p.atiett :by the'. tine' of red ' curtains, and the eourse i ofetlie disectee woala ae. mild. • . . • .7' ,•.Ile Fins= next . made, extherimeate , n which cOnvinced him that the bacterie c cidal dation :Of light itfas linaited •to e the. blue, violet, and ultra -violet 't rays, The next •sten was to . pro- 2 duce a. Poweaful .' electric' lielit • " in . e . whialtathe actiaio rayS, Nirere ..conce& ' tr.Tatheed.doctercaintriented: ids, phetes... 'i. therapetitic: treatment in •i890: on. a P *case of lupus. With very poor tools h -a' hand -lens ,concentrating •thearitys c from an arcelarirp, the red' and ultra- s red l'a,iS being • elteked ''out ., through. a blue watereetlei .yciung Prefeaser 'tine t :ea' his that. patient .fil Six. ixionths, h and saav healthy,. Caste grcata again w 0n the face patelies •where the bacteia w ia had: .eitataized, 'Iliad eiteep -up the a skin. . • ' • a : " . . a : p • T e • .F nsen-light • p re Is now .• 4 a cornixt9a7pIace • of . all ' • .COntineate, c thengb,, to -the• imagination it is still • ita wondrous thing.' It. brought al- a most lnetant; :fame to the young 1 Cop'enhagen. 'doctor. ' It 'bre-Light. him a the Nobel Prize for -Mediciele, 313.765 w of which he devoted to the.instittite a ligiehed -fOunded. It larotight , 'hint a othele-hbribreeeeelitelielik-Vetsetorreeiteep ,to enjOy, . • , , ' • '. • o . : QUEEN INTRODUCED ITa ••*•:, m The Queen herself, errtrodueed ' the 'first. Finsen lainp in, an action .widcli ° has brought - ferverit blessings :upon tr herallead from patietits.end front the Sy .parerits • of children.: threatened . With 1. the lifelong. tortnre ,and disfigurement .. of the "wolf." Her Majesty. had Zi visited the deatitution of her areaag •: colietrynnin at Copenhagen and Seen ,b.., the progress of its wonderful cures., I" When the • Queen; then peindess of se We les, paid: la private. visit to the' he London Hosp tal in 1899, 'she spoke 01 ilt. of the Pihsen pre.. •• ' :•E "The •physi no were .naterelly an sotriewhat• sceptical," writes, one. et • 11„ the visit; "but the Queen insisted .,0,1 that she had • personally. and. thor- zu oughly: investigated the cure at the .' a inveriteee elide, and was convinced se of 'its coMplete efficacy., She. added eo„ that she .wotild et oleo order it rine 01' sen lamp for the use, of the hosiiital. la. This genexous offer Was, of course, -a„, eccepted, and the treatment was le-, stoarn•tedlittemnp'Ucioisits29.$,501,9000110." btl't '. tt.e• leitl generosity of private donors has sup- dr plemented that of the Queen and - de the London Ilosietal is now ei;Uipped !I): With a number of lamps, • • • • bit • • .' e --,e• +--,e--' , ' ft AND LODELIA .WENT... •• el INTERNATIONAL LESSON, OOT, 30. Text of the Leatitnti ICI11104 8-23. ,Golden Text, Pe, XXXilat 7. A good tit'. fur a large part of the Bible Would be "The Lord God, the Goa of Israel. who only doeth Won- drous thbags," and every devout. hear.t should cry; "Blessed be giS glorious name forever, and let the whole earth be filled with His glory-. Amen and Amenl" (Ps, lxxii., 18, 19), kV= beginning to end His name is wonderful, anti Re is ever doing wondrous things in love unit grace for and through the sinful sons of men, the man of God, is still before UP as a sample of what man Might and ought to be, for while there Is but one perfect pat- tern., the man Christ Jesus, there are many Who may be followed As far as they follow God, but the very blessed way is to see no one but Jesus only, to run with' patience, looking unto Jesee (Marla ix., 8; Heb, xdi., 1, 2); to cease from man, and behold the Lord (Isa. ii„ 22; iii„ 1). The opening verses of our chapter tell'of the new house by Jordan %deli the sons of the prophets start- ed to build because the place where 'they dwelt with Elisha was too strait for them, Whether there is a hint here or not that 'Elisha's 'hoiY life Ives too narrow a way for them cannot' say, but one cannot forget the inCident of tae search for Elijah, became° they' were not in full fellow- ship. There is xnany a holy life to- daY that is too great a trial even for other believers in the same household and God doeS not • compel holiness, eo Elislia let them , go. and even went with them to. help them, for love is aiwaYs kind even. to' those who' can- not see as are do. . Our lesson proper conceres the de- iverance wrought by' God through Elisha for the king of Israel, , and also Elislia's own 'deliverance from he king of Syria, reminding. us of Ps. 14; *milt., 10, 11. The child of .Gadmay well take reed cane ort from such Words as these: "No ' weapon that ie formed against thee hall prosper." : "They that war'. gainst thee shall be as nothing and a s thing , of naught" (lea 17;•• le, 12). The king 0 Syria thought' 9 entrap .the king of Israel; but the atter being warned Elislitt, the taian in fellowship with Gad, 'saved iiinself from the hands of the king 1 Syria inore than once, so that the • cing of Syria thought that there must surely be a traitor in his camp ' who, in some way --Coinntunicated his , latis to the king of: Tared. 'When ne of his servants assared eiim hat it was not so, but that here was a Prophet in Israel : who:, Ould tell the kink -of Israel his. ino'sn..seeret words, then he. de-: • ermined -to lay hands on the propheta hearing, that he was at po- lien, :he sprit thither a. great host of oeses 'and chariots, whieli earn° by. ught And compieesed the citieeebout, hat they might cepture the roan of God,. bat letty :vain are the theughts nd purposes' of rnen who. knew not God. Tee humble than of God ie. rerfectly quiet and 'Unmoved, for he sees another host af horses. and char - HQ tis heartwhiei1. cQorudlir yr -eyes1 g6 zin"*It u 111 ot fear though an host should • en - amp against me" .(Ps. xxvii, 3). 'Behold, God is•iny•Salvation; I will rust ancl -•riet be afraid"- (Ise,. xii, • • • • On these three:points hang all the law and the profies. Dairy prices are just now. low. The num with a cots,. giving 3,500 pounds of anilk a year it right in saying that there is a los§ iri it, all the time. The other man goieg through the same Motions, and' feeding-. /4 ttle,----4 ing . to* that gives from 5,000 to 8.000 pounds, is etill • • ' MAKING A ruoriat.: • • A dairyman to -day •'rneet knew about foods and their elements; not that he need he e• chemist, but be • wants to be a dose stedent of analy- tical reeultee, and know how; by 9ieso tables, to assemble re fataiY-* at least balanced -one to five, or ono to six or seven, ration; he mustaknow enough when lie buys, to buy drain, and riot eob dust and mill dust entice ed with white day. He must know about die values for cow food of the different grains and thetr differences and iTei: scout the results of eareful- ly made, 'eXperiments, A man Wilt teust his seal to the dedeetione of e hook -read etiology, but look . as- kance at the summaty in abook on: dairy economics: All. this means in- formation along crop growing lines. What' wilt inir farm grow'? Will it readily produce the clovers, red and alfalfa? If not, why riot? What cow is it that gives 5,000 to 6,000 pounds of milk? A tech bred oue, well selected, well fed arid well eared for, of any of the dairy breeds. Failure in large milk prodection re- sults from three nide .catites: Mixed breeding, crossing' breeds to get com- bined excellence and- getting it seri* result, and trying to milk the gener- al -dual-purpose cow to get both milk arid beef and getting heither profit- 0 ably, a ceinditioe note existing about w ilich the' great apogtle dual put - pose is now belaboring the breeders of this* class of stock for having al- lowed the milking (realities to ea - cape. Soled a breed) and breed alert 0 the tinee 'of one family of that breed, Test, Weigh, cull out, sell and kill. Save the best all the time. See to id this yourself, do not trust ft to Vire ti hired man. interest in, .the mat- ter door not I Not so his servant • who tried, 'Alas, my master; how shall , we .. de?" As Gehazi had beeome a loner, f ' wits Probably some ono in his hide ,yet svoa 'Gehazi. might, well - ave. been afraid„for he, tao, if a hili of feed. was also out ef felloWe hip. . Elisha, did not reason. or rgue with his servant, but with . hese words assured and coinfOrtql ho, "-'ear not, for they that be • " .1.tb. us are more elute they that be , 1111 there!' (verse 16), aacl then' be • • sked the Lord. to Open his servant' • • yes that he might. see, and he, too, aw the mountain.. full Of horses and hariote of. fire roundabout Elisha. od -for us, Carist her us, theSpirit In :Rom. viii,.2e, be, 34, we see or us, and we have the beautiful miring words, "at' God be for us ho can be against us?" Yet •we re slow to believe that all things ie. just as God says, we do well to Myatt= Ondesvould-enlighterrathe- . • - - - yes of our understaniting that we - ay know what is the hope of owe calling and the riches of the glory*. ' Hie inberttaece in us; that Ile Mild open our underetandings that • might underatand the Scriptures Eph. 1, 14; Luke xxiv, 45). God can as easily blind as . open yes, so, at ,Elisha's request, Ile hided these , „Syrian's, , Mad tlisha rought them to Samaria., to the ng geIsrael, whom. they were really eking, for they only wanted Elishae cause he kept them from the king terael. 'Again at the request et lisha the Lord opened their. eyes, d• they• found themselves the ands and at the mercy of the king' Israel, ,who, instead of 'smiting ells, as his own heart suggested, t the word of Maim, fed them and nt them home, thus dottquering them net, for a tune at tenet, the baeds Syria came no more into the TrittheYf alcstrendel'according to Rona, ' , "If thine enemy henger, feed m; if hd thirst,' give film drink, for so doing thou shalt beep coale ot; a on his head." The Lord's further livet•arices end 1 -Xis kiodness through igha to thd woman of Shunem are corded in the next two ,chapters, 1, whether famine or delIyeranee, IS C•Led working In all and through • 1 for His people and agaitist HIS Mies, • , She- John, how oftea are you hayed?" Heeeeefour times a Week 'tea, NOT A ravGitillp rage." . "Hottaiong does it take?" "Aboutehalf an .hour." "Halt an hour four times it Week! two helms a week, four and ne-eliird doe in a year, and nearly' Month and a half in ten years. hink of it, Biltiger.; If you should t your beard grow you: would save ree enough in ten 'years*" "Look here, how often do you these your hair? "Every day, of tOtirSe; but that's ifterent." . "That'e different is it, alt? It takett OU halt an hour every blessed day f your life to look after your fris- s, if that's what you call them. • hink of it. Italf an hour a day, roe hours ad it half it Week, nearly gilt dries in a year, and an entire ontli in four years, a whole year in rtsaeight years, and over "two - are a centuryl Lobelia, you'd t tter go and look after the baby," pay day. See what you can do with the reek and hoar you can: he related d to the best Market. If you sdl by the 100 pounds you will went y ntilking dairy. If itis cream, or cer- 0 tifled intik, you want a breed of n z Medd type. 71 it is priVate butter T eking or sending t,o a creamery, ee our plena will need norne chimp; ei udt witinany event do not get •entnng- to A SKIM MILK DAIRY. Ye lie era of general toning of Milk be dear, you had better leek up ever- reaSn, and the coininotest kind of b thing in the liOurie, and Put flio glansware can be made to look beau - Ver in the Rafe," Wite--"Whyl" Ent- • Wel by careful handling and proper d enent liarrifiter--"Well, the notorious washing, end Where there Ara erevicea 1 burglar I got oh in -day may be core- on the outside of the dish or anflt y ing round to thank me for my slice , article there will be more tare need- b •cetsful Opeedi far his defence," eed to ketheir. bright anhinnep)d ing, P Lovers of good, plain clogs, Whieh have beett allowed to grOW ,naturally, will appreciAte the story- of the Eng- liali tiddler who went to it dealer In dogs and thee described What he Wanted: "rli Wants a. kind of dog about so, 'igli an' so long. Hit's it kifid gey'omid, an' yet it mita a gry'- mind, because 'le tyle is shorter nar any o' these 'ere gry'ounds, an' 'is nog° is shorter, art' telh't so slim rotted the body, But still 'it's ft kind greound. Da you kop such dogs?" "No," replied the dog man. "Vila drowns 'elu," Beets make alcohol. The converse of this proposition is also true. Money that talks does little else. Money that whispers re-echoes where least expected. ItIoney that acts might save Many et broken heart; trom a suicide's- greet, • • • • • , . • • • •