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Exeter Advocate, 1901-2-28, Page 2of ti eave 11. A despatch from Washington ,-Rev. Dr. 'Jatirattge preached from following text:—"Ilye hath not s nor ear heard." -1 Car, U. 9, The city of Cterinth bee been ea the Pri of etiquity. Indeed, eplenclautr the world holde s even,cler to -clay. It etood on an le mete washed by two seas, tire one bringing the commerce of Euroi tan other the commerce of Asia. Fr her wharvee, in the conStruotion „whiett whole kingthoure had been sorbed, war -galleys, with three be Ol GaSS, meshed out and confoun the navy.yarde or all tae world. H handed machinery ench as modern Vention cannot equal, lifted eh from the eea on one eide and tra pocted them on trucks aoress the is mu, and test themdown in the un the oth.er aide. The revenue o nere of the city went dawn throt olive grove e that lined the beach collect tariff from all natio The marth of all people apo ed in her Isthmian gam p.n,d the beauty. of all lands In her theatres walked her portic and threw itaaelf on the altar of h Piupendous dissPations. Column a piatue and temple bewildered the bolder. There were white InFir SJ Ideas tys: this world, get no idea or the splen - the dove of heaven. john tries to de - eon, smile° them, tie, says; "The twelve getee are twelye pearls," and that ned "the foundations of the wane are for Pailisllitd with 111 ma na er of preeialle llOh stones.", As leve e stand looking th- through the telescope of St. John we see see a blaze of amethyst and pearl and 3e— Ometald and sardonyx and chryso- eee, prase and sapphire a monntain of of light, a cataract of colour, a sea of ab- glass, and a city like the sten, John nks bids us loale again and we see thrones; ded thrones of the. prophets, thrones of uge the patriarchs, thrones of the angels, in.. thrones of the apostles, thrones of the ips martyrs, throne of Jesus—throne of ns- God. And we turnaround to see. the th- glory and it is thrones! thronesi see thrones! file "Eye hath not seen, it, ear hath not igh heard it," Ski ra from the summer to waters the brightest sparkle and you ns. will gel no idea of the sheen of the rt- everlasting se,a. Pile up the Splen, Cs, dours of earthly cities and they would at not make a stepping stone by which os, yen might mount to the city of God. or Every house is a palace; e er y step nd a triuraph; every covering of the I be- head a coronation; every meal is a ble banquet. ovary siroke• a 'OS is a wedding bell;•every day is ajubi- 'Y- lee; every hour a rapture; and every li- moment an ecstasy. "Eye hath not ed seen it, ear hath not beard it." all ramark fu.rther, we can get no it idea on earth of the reunions of rd heaven. If you. have ever been across Of . ' an met a friend or even an n 'aequeintance in some strange city, you remember how your blood thrilled and how glad you were to see him. What then will be our joy after we: in have passed the seas of death to 14- meet in the bright city of the sun those from whom we 11 have Irma- been parted. Our a, friends are in two .groups ---a i ganup on thie eide of the river and a t group on the other elide of the river. foentaeas into which, from apertut At the side, there rushed waters ever evhere known for health -giving qua ties. Arottne these basins, twist into wreaths of stone, there were the beautie.s of sculpture and arch feature, while, standing as if to gua. Ithe costly display, was -a- stain° Hercules of burnished Corinthia brass. Vases of terra eotta adorned the. cemeterie,s of the dead—veses so costly that Julius Caesar was not eatisfied uatil he had captured the for Rome. Armed officials, the Cori tharii, passed up and. down to see tht no .statue was defaced, no pedeste, ( overthrown, no bas-relief touch --- .singere of all the ages will join it, choire of Nvhite-yobed children I choirs of patriarchs ! ebbire of apostles I Mot -ping ;r3to,rs clapping their cym- bele; harpere Nvi,(.11. their harps. Great at or roll on! roll On I other empiree joining the harmony till the thronee are full of it and the nations saved. Anthem shall touch anthem shortie, and all the sweet seunds of earth and heaven be poured into the ear of Christ, Devid of the harp will be there; Gabriel oa the trumpet \yin be there; Germany redeemed will pour Itis deeP haeS voice in the song, and Africa, will add to the nuasic with her matehlees voices. The.y riee for the doxology, all tile multitude of the blest I Let us rise with them; and ao at thie hour, at the death pillow of thie ee:piring, Sabbath, the joys of the church on earth, and the jdys of tile chaech in heaven will apparel of our mourning will seem t mingle their chalices. ; and the der wheten into the spotless raiment the skies. God grant that through th rich mercy of our Lord jeeue Christ eve may all get there. e. KING EDWARD VII Seine of Ines Impertat majesty's "Mite end amtees. Believe e England and America wil civilize the world. Is the chief Free Mason in. the world. Heir apparent for eixty years. Holds the record for bearing the title of Prince of Wales. He is a friend of orphans. and gives liberally to many charities. Ile wt11 inherit only a portion of his mother's vast wealth. He is thomoughly farniliar with law and military science. He never allows a typewriter in his office. • He spends S5,000 a.. year for tele- grams. Ile allows only two knives and forks to eaeh guest at his table He -is a colonel eight times over. He has one private secretary, two assistant secaetaries and a staff of clerks to assist them. He receives 200 lettere a day _and answers most of them. Every nainute of his time in,London s spent according to schedule. He has eveay order of knighthood in Eueope. From the edge of tb.e city a aros with its magnificent burden of col a.nd the beauty of all lands sa Jamas and towers and temples (on thousand slaves waiting at one shrine and a citadel so thorough] impregnable that Gibraltar is ' heap et sand compared wit it. Anaid all that strength an magnificence Corinth stood and de fled the world. Ala it was a bold ;thing for Paul t stand there a.mid all' that and say ALL THIS IS NOTHING, _ A:hese sounds that come from th !temple of Neptune are not music com pared with the harmonies of which speak. These waters rushing in the basin of Pyrene are etot pure. These statues of Bacchus and Mercury are not exquisite. Yon citadel of Acre- corinthets is not strong compared with that I offer to the poorest slave that puts down burden at that brazen • gate. You. Corinthians think this is a splendid city. You think you have hued all sweet sounds and seen all beautiful sights; but I tell you: "Eye hath not scent nor ear heard, iteith.er hath entered. into the heart of man, the things i which God loath prepared for them that love him." / first .reparle that we can in this ,world get no idea • of the ee-ealth of ,heaven. When you were a chile and you went out in the morning how you bounded along the road or street—you had never felt" serrow, eickness. Perhaps later, perhaps in these very autumnal days, you felt a glow in your cheek, and a spring in your Step, and an exuberanae of spirits, and a clearness of eye, that made, „you 'thank God you were permitted to live. The nereee, were harpstr:ngs, and. the sun= was a doxology, and the rustle in,ee leaves w -ere the ru,stling of the robes of a great crowd rising up to praise the Lord. You thought that you l knew ivhat it was to be: well, but there is no perfect health on on earth. The diseases of past generations come down to us. The airs that float now on thet earth are not like those which floated above Paradise, They are charged with inIpOritieS ahd distempers. The most elastic and robust health of earth compared with that, which those experienee before whom the getee have been opened, is nothing but 6ir,lrness t and emaeiation. Look at thee soul a standing before the throne. On .1 earth, she was a life-long invalid, See a her step now and hear 2LeF voice .110W. Catch., if yeti. can, one breath of that d celestial air. Health in all the pulses! atIth of vision; health of .spirii; IMMORTAL HEALTH! No racking cough, no sharp pleurieies no eonsuneing feve re, no exhausting pains, no hospitals of wounded Men; health swinging in , the air; health talowing in all the strearne; health bloorning on all the banke; no head - 00 sideaches, no backaches. For everlasting ages to have neither ache nor pain, ear weakness nor fatigue, "Eye hath nuot seen it, ear hath net ,card it," I remark further that we can 1 In e ' ow, thm ere goes one frothis to that and anothee from thie to that, and soon we will a ALL BE GONE OVER. h How many of our loved one,s have al - d ready entered upon that Neese cl, - pace ? If I should_ take paper and ; pencil, do ytiu. think I could put the,ne o all down? Ah, my friende, the waves of the Jordan roar eo hoarsely we can- not hear the joy on the other side e wlagre there group es augmented. It - is graves here, and coffins and hears - 1 es here. Methinks when a soul hrear- Te some angel takes it around to show it the worbders of that blessed b place. The usher angel says to the 00 newly arrived "Thee are the martyrs that periehed at Piedmont. these were e torn to pieces at the inquisition; thie l the throne of the great Je- hovah --this is Jesus!" Oh, to stand in hie presence! That will be hea- ven i Oh, to put our hand in that hand which was wounded for us on the cross; to go around armlet all the group e of the redeemed and shake hand e rvibh prophets and apostles and martyrs and with our own dear be - levee] onee. That will be the great reunion. We cannot imagine it now. Our loved ones seem Do far away. , When we are in trouble and lonesome, they don't eeera to come to us. We go on the bank e of the Jordan an call acroee to them but they don't seem to hear.. We say: "Is it well with the'. child ? ie it well with the bored one ?" and we listen to hear if any voice comes back over the waters. 'Uli Norte none I nbeef says: -"They are dead a.nd they are annihilated," but blessed be God, we have a Bible -that tells US, different, His uniformare worth $75,000. He is a field marshal and an ad- miral. He is the chief horse owner, dog owner and yachtsman in England. He goes to church every Sunday morning. He never goes to the races oh- San - day. Ile started life with an income -of 550,000 a year. Be loves to travel incognito in Paris. He buys hundreds of theater tickets .without using thern. His favorite vehiole in Lendan Le a an,sora cab; yet his stables cost 575,-: 0 a year. He thanks his nephew, the German mperor, Ls tee eansational. He has friend,s of every nation, and speaks German, French, Italian and Rus- sian. He is five feet Siti inches high and weighs 180 pounds., He has light gray eyes, a gray beard a broev,n complexion and a bald head. His hands and feet are small and neat. Be is 60 years old and has six grand- childre,n. His favorite wine is champagne of 1889, and his favorite liquor a cognac forty years old. He is fond of Irishmen, F enchmen, Germans and Russians. 'When bn area.s young he was very tender-hearted, and c,ried for days when a tutor left him. He is said to be one of the best shots in England. He sets the fashions in clothes f'or the whole world... Ho popularized the Alpine hat. He is a D.C.L. of Oxfiord, and LL.D. of Cambridge, and a barrister. He, has thixteen university de- grees. Ile hal laid seventy-three large ancl important foundation stones. , He opened part of the 'Suez canal. He has made more speeches than any other man in the world, bat mostly s.hort one. IIIe owtns the deepest mine in Eng- land. Be wae the firet Christian to dine with the Spl(tan of Turkey. I xemark again, we can -in this world get no idea of the song of hea- ven. You know there is nothing more inepitriting then music. We appreciate the, power of secular music, but do we appreciate the power ef sacred song? There is nothing more inspir- ing to me than a whole congrega- tion lifted on the wave of holy melody. 57v -hen, we Sing aome of those dear old psalms and tunes' they rouse all the memories of t'he past. When I hear hese old gengs sung, it seems as if ,11 the old clontatry meeting "'reuses eined in Hoe chaenus, and Scotch kirk ,nd sailor's Bethel and Western cab - ns, until the whole continent lift e the axiology, and the eceptree of eternity beat time in the music. Away then witla Y.'OUR STARVELING tunes that chill the devotions of the Sanctuary and make the people sit sil- ent when Jesus is coming to Hosan- nab, ie But, my frnd,q, if natteie on earth 15 mo sweet, 'who 1 will it be in. heav- en. They all lenkew the tune there. Methinks, 'the lune of heaven will be made up partly from the aoings of earth, the beet parte of ell our hyrrees and tomes going lhe add to the song .o.f Moses and the Lamb. All the best TEA—PAST AND, PRESENT. Sir Robert Hart ca.1.1s, tea the world's best drink. However that may be, more et it is drunk, than of any other beverage. It has been estimated that the COnSutners of, tea number 500,000,- 000. The farst coneignment Sent to Europe by the Dutch Ea.st India Ocan- pany in 1610 sold for eixtoy shillings a payin ired. Pepy8 sas his diary curring the y e r 1657 nay wife noticing of tea, it thank which Mr. :Belling, the pottleary, tells her isgeoci for her cold," A few years hitl- er tex,of le, (3d, a bout 37 emote, on every gallon of tea sold at the coffee henries rens ho id in England, For lees than that sutra a think -able pound can new be bought in this colth try, , INTERNATIONAL LESSON, MAR. 3. "Jesus itierayee.- aeitn Ph 1-14. neaten Text, PRACTICAL NOTES. iVeree 1. When Jesus had spoken thee° words. " Words" recorded by John, chaPtere 14-17, but, utast of thent, nrst by the other evangeliste, 'They include the meet marvelous of our Lordts recorded " conversations," and prayei-e. 113 went fatal. Out of the eity ; en the sad journey which already we have fellowed the etudy of ,111,att. 2(3. 30„ the last; verse of Les- son VII.; it led to Getheerniune, where W the seance of Lesson VIII were enact- ed. ith his clieciples. All but ju- dehe s. It wee ttinie of the Pull moon. They passed "tlarough the clear light and deep elladerve of the silent streets, down into the valley that circled the walls, and a little way up 'the slotPe of Olivet," to the gate of the garden. Tim break Cedron. The "'winter tor- rent Kldreaa," a deep gully, which in the rainy eeasen became a turbulent stream. Kidren meane " Black." Its waters may have been .clark ocaor, buyere and sellers Nvileu he thrust them from the Lampe. There is no hint of a miracle, but Dr, Watkins sugg;esitethat his answer, I am he, re - repeated in verse 8, conveyed to ,Ti ervish ears the unutterable name "Jehovah," "I am," and (that labile this overawed the Jewish officers a' sort of infectious terror passed from judas to the Raman soldiers 7, 8, The repetition of the ques- tion and answer makes plain that they are empowered to arrest no one lout Jesus of Nazareth. Jesus so un- derstands, and adds. If therefore ye seek ,ine, let these go their way. Be- fore the ROman soldiers fully re- cognized Jesus ahey may have laid hands on some of his eisciples.. 9. That the saying might be fill, filled, which he spoke, Of them WIliCh li1041. gayest me have I tost none. We read in John -17, 12, our Lord's prayer e Lo the Father, 'While I was with them a, in the world, I kept them. in thy name; those that thou gayest me I have kept, a none of them is lost, but the son -of al perdition." The apestle's use of this text is noticeable ; In the first place, it is net quoted verbally, the sense only is given, although it would have been exceedingly eaey to have repro- duced it word, for word. This was in ' accordance with the literary habit of that age. In the second place, while the orig nal words were spoken of spir- itual dangers, John here applies them; to physica'l da,ngers. I 10. Compa.re Matt. 26. 51-54. This as one of the facie recorded by all the evangelists, but only John tells us tha the aators were Peter and IVIal - chits, and only he and Luke specify that it was the right ear Peter cut off., Our Lord, according to Luke, healed the wound. 11. The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it ? "There is italhese word S a tender trustfulness which robs the cup of ail its bitter- ness. They are an. echo of the prayer in the garden of Gethsemane, which Ls ecorael in John:* 12.- The band and the captain and of- fteers of the Jews. "The cohort and the military tribune, and the officer." Again the _Revised Version makes clear the mee eing by the US?. Of a comma after "eaptain." "The- band and the captain," were Roman :a dices, and the "officers," were temple try constables. ' in 13: When the evangelist says that ste they led hart away to Annas first he had implies that heevae afterward led be- ver him 6. Tt.o is ra ror nas'e senein-law, the old man so Lo have regained much of the nu authorhe authority of toffice. Tho trial fore Aia wss an informal exam 54-b1111 9relitnina,17 It the fuemel t That ealtie yeer fl1Cu)1. a 1 1liat Li 14. Cataphae wits he, ete. The et isJ told more fully in john 11,45-54. or, more probably,its name ' derived from the darkness of ravine through whiah ite flowed, garden into which he 'entered, t Ma disciples'. Our last two less have made us f a nei 1 tar with the en 03.11 Gethsemane, its fences' and flo w- ex-bede and cypresses and a olives. But the aucient Kid" flowed at least thirty feet below pre,sent bed, and about one hund th feet nearer to e city wall, and a not unlikely that the ancient Go 501111100ne was both it little lower (111 little. faether north than the pies garden. We are 'to think of it as oliVe Decherd, wieh an oil press, Go soutane means "oil press," on geounds. 2. Which betra I him "Who w betanying hien." Jesus ofttimee sorted thither with his disciples. statement that makes it probable th the, owner NVO. his friend. 3. 'band of men. "The band soldiers."—Revised Version. '.D.h e o ginal suggest S that they were a pa of the garrison of Antonia, fo ons • fAl. FURT1181:illS‘fk):3 bito Fun Per Time W"orTA Henna la be- Wood, Metal, Chine, late. ale_ With tile revival of the colonial st 1 rial. or architecture, so largely seen in the me. LICAV 110115(1$ (hat are ”hbeing built era through tbe couutry, as well an tao old oneS ro1110deled, the'colonial style was Of furnishing has ale() omne into vogue, the and the family that hes preserve 1 the A solid pieces of mahogany that have iete been passed along' the generations and ons kept the rungs and legs on its wooden et._ chair, patching over tLieir rickety stage, can now reap fall benefit in the ged Ittyllitennira,,toitoun. callynnd oLitumhly bfeltohnegiticlgfr,/,eianylee 'nn pointed out In pride and satisractien. its Indeed, so great is the honoe done red these old timers that the woman who is can boast a four poster bedstead upon th- which a great-greatgranchnother has I, a' slept, or, better still, one upon whose eiat ample proportions ai'ashington or La.. (0 fayette had stretched Iris weary limbs, th- is more to be envied than she wha 15 he the possessor of yards of real old lace, growing yellow with age and wrapped away in blue paper and linen, witlj a as bit Of wax to preserve it. re- There are few houses, however, that A can make a harmonious showing of at these old fashioned belongings from attic to cellar. Usually they 'are in - of terspersed with more modern pieces, ea. and the owner contents hereelf with at one room, perhaps, into which are rt gathered all the choice bits of age that Can be obtained. That this fad for time worn relies tends to the hunting up of remote rela- tives there can be no doubt. Especial- ly is this the case in small country vil- lages. The dusty lumber rooms and at- tics of fourth and even fifth cousins are ferreted out by the woman who lias the "family antique craze,"and if she chances to find a rickety table, a bro- ken down, bureau or a high back chair en three legs, sometimes on one, they will be regarded as objects of venera- tion, to command a price that will fur- nish a whole new set for the best front room of these new found relatives. It is worth while to have held on to the fire dogs and battered candlestick -9 that towered at the northeast corn of the, temple. This "bond" is men- tioned again in verse 12 of this les,- son, and also in Mabt.127. 27; Mark 15. 16; and Acte rah 31. The comma rehich the Revised Version places af- ter "eoldiers" LS of importance, for they had no connection with officers from the shief priests and Pharisees, who were ",servante of the tenarde," a Sort of guards or (policemen; John ha e already' mentioned them in John 7.32-45. These were the men who were to make ehe arrest. Judas guided them, and the Heinen 5o1diers supported them. To the eyes of Mat- thew, Mark, and Luke this company was a multitude, a mob; but John, vatth "his exact knowledge of all the ncidents which attended the life of ur Lord in Jerusalem," is specific in Ls description. Lanterns and torches nd weapons. "Torches and lamps and 'nes." Part of the regular equipnaent 13 er of the Roman soldiers was torches an lamps, and these men may have ex pected to hav,e to search the shadow (recesses ef the gulden,. Insaeael o "weapons" Matthew and Mark suppl a detail which John overlooked ; they say "swords and staves ;" that. is, the temple police carried, as pnlicemen now carry, clubs, 4. Knowing all thlngs that should come "were coming" upon him. John calls our aletention to the free, deli- berate will with which our Lord gave hanasea r .pce nes enemies,. forth. Out of the deep shadowe and out from the circle of his frightened friends into the meonlight, to stand; alone ; an.c1 as he stepped forward Judas kissed him, and policemen and soldiers at once knew which of the men they were to arrest. Whom seek ye. Be had. avoided the multi- tudes who would have made him king; he boldly faced his enemies. 5. They answered him, Jesus of Nazareth, An official declaration. like the reading of a warrant; but be was personally known to soan,e of them, Matt. 26. 55. Judas also, which betrayed hibj, stood with thein. 13-hvin(g kissed Jesus as a signal for ‘the arrest, he now openly takes his place among -the enemies. We should to pat ourselves in imagination John's place, and see -With con- rnatian the ."friend" of Jesus, who taken bread from, his hand that y night, now helping to arrest They went backward, and fall the ground._ This impressive feet ,ost, simply told. ...Some divine ter - overpowered them, as it had the 5. fere Caiaphas. 'lianas is called Ana - nus by Joeephus. He had been high priest Seem A.D. 7 to A.D. 14, when he was removed by the Romans, and was succeeded ,by three others, who each held the' dignity far a year or less, when Caiaphas obtained it. With the advancement of Caiaphas, An- rt2r% r1 e Than More steel Ls used in the manufac- ture of pens than in all the sword and, gun faciarbes in the world. - a Her ail Says Dr. Dillingham 0? the Now Yorrk'llealth Board I —The Dreadful After - ed. - Every reader of this paper caterecall many cases in which the after effects at sla • grippe 'have- proven fatel. Hew Many people are new complaming of atlmenls or lingering suffer- , Ings or weaknesses .wittch ' are clea.rly the resaits of 'the debilitating effects of la grippe. Ths halet plan is to prevent la grippe, if paesible, or, once 11 victim, to apply youtsclfadilIgently to obtaining what relief you ean, Dr. (Ihaee's Syrup of tanaceci an:i Tu pent:ne 15 raonderful- ly 172 behause it alleye Hoe in- mrnation in the throat and leronchi- (-1 tule:s. 10 34,5111 cough, heals the lungs, and peevente pecumohia 01 eon- cumption. 15 m'etake to seep -se that Dr. Chesole Syrup of Linseei ant hur- 90 in: :5 a me e coutli rertettly, 1 is rac more. 11 therou'ehiy cures the cold as well, and sy e ate to talt-e 115 Itehes and pains out of the leenes. No corlinare' ecouerh ra.tiOuro, coeld ever tlain the eater no.;:ue itabi whieh medieine now IVA For old anti young Effects Most to Be Dread - alilteit can be used with perfect safety and with absolute assurance that the effects will be remarkably beneficial, If •weakenscd and debilitated by the eneaarating effects of la grippe there is nothing so euitable for your use as Dr. Chase's Nerve Fond the, great nerve restorative, and blood builder. The regular end peesistent Use- of this great feed cure is hound to result in the upbuildine,, of the system, ca,use it contains in „ eorolensed pill form, the most efficient restoratives len ; ten to man. fitheureli only known n Cra,hada for a few yeare, this fanioue discovery of Da. Cha,se, the Receipt Dziak .t•tithor, has lecceene generally reengnie,ed by ye„ans end re,onl., alike ae a ga eat 91 re nee antler 5111 blood builder. In ns ease ia it metre successful than in reestoreng and reinvigorating a, eye - tem wa.ated ley la gtrippe.. 'N.Saltetlier weakene(j by ave'ework, worry or clis- ease, Dr. Chatse's Nerve will re. ivriO vit.ality Fifty cents a b»a.. all dr C15, or "IL'tlenaneon, Battee & Cea :Coro/ate. A HIGH BOY, past their usefulness. Even a broken teapot might be available if the color and shape were all right. There Is another side, however, to this wholesale revival of the old colo- nial styles. They stood for good, solid I worth. Thom was strength as well as beauty in their designs, and the ques- tion of practical utility was the under- lying element in their structure. Ex- anaine, for instance, says a writer in The Household, whose discourse' on old fashioned furnishings is here repro- duced, that aristocratic piece of solid mahogany styled a high boy—plenty of drawer room, not too deep to be filled or, when' filled, too heavy to be pulled out, with space enough under tlae legs to be easily reached by dust brush or broom and prevent the dust from roll- ing up into wads beneath it. The high, straight back chairs com- pelled one to sit erect on his °WTI backbone, giving the straight, dma phy- sique impossiale to obtain in our easy niodern chairs, which encourage lolling and ease and send us to gymnasitene and physical eulture classes to obtain what our g,reet-gratalMothers got for nothang. The fad would seem to be a sign of the time% an effort to swing back to the rtigged simplicity of our forefathers and te imitate them along some of the lines that made them what they were. _— Steams Nut Pudding% To half a ct.ie of granulated sugar add one gill a melted butter. When well blended, add two beaten eggs and one cup of milk. Mix two teaspoonfule of baking po eider with two cups of flour and add to the other ingredients. Sprinkle a seltspoonful of salt over 11/2 cups of ahy kind of nut meats bre- ! ken into bits Ind adcl them to the mix -i. Buttr a mold or pudding dish, turn the Dale ture in,,and steam three hours. Servs withwine sauce, P41cor1i Candy. , Having popped the corn nicely, salt it . and sift it through the fingere, thrit the extra salt mid the unpoPped corn !only eecape. Ilave ready some candy, metle by cooking aogether one pound of tno- lessee, one-'..utlf pound browto sugtir, one tablespoonful of .vinegar aucl n'01.11 10 t� 2 ounees of feesh butter. Na -lien this is all but ready, stir into it as mileh of the pepcorn as it will take up; ' then turn It .out on to buttered or oiled dishea or eltaeoe it into balls. Ono W110 15 SO ti (310a 1 110 to relle,(11 to any Olt ts icier, however in tit/late, anything to the diseredit 02 the lam- ily deeeeves to forfeit all fiunily rights and privilegee. 51