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Exeter Advocate, 1903-7-2, Page 7iRt It TWO, ITN OfSELE One of Righteousness, the Otber of Wicked- ness and 8in. egetered, eecereing te set et the vele aboteett ex tetionee m tee eeer chit+ eitteusene Nixie theoiree tete Theta he Wie. many, of 'reroute, tim oepeeteeine et oterteuttera etteetwee tlo pot want rot to go wiIi th But , children. though 1 may bove been able to guard end shield •Ana properly protect toy little girl while A. despatch from Chicago says: she was at Levee, there come VW - Rev. Front De Witt Wattage preachoreentoue laity When she went beyontt ed teem the following text: Matthew bee direct care told guiding Mho- dih, 14. "SuliOr little cbildren, and !once. Teat day iiret came when we roreid them not, to OR unto ie' sant her tit achool. It wes o eati Thia Children's day. ')is s,tivee for the parental heart when e moruing when the Sunday i our oldest child bad to peck her an opportunity for your coen ealaae echeole of aiuerica, headed by their i little school books and leave home. tion lihe this go amiss? "When your suPerintendents and teachers, hove Ifer mother took, her up to a greet little children are ready to sorrand- made a grand clierge 0,40, captured big" roomtiled with little boys road er their beetle to Obriet, ere 7eA4 her lap awl put your arms about her neck and ask her why she did not Neve femily prayers?, I tell you what she would do, Perhaps site weeeld get dowe on her imeep and • put her or= about you anti then. end there eeliseeratee her life and yours anew to the Saviour, Oe. cbildrent Ole little children, that is one reason why X -want you to respond te Christ aitatioa, "Side fer the littlIrez t ent() Unto need'1 Wiait YOU, '0 come to Christ to,dity to be seved, that you may also ask your big brothers and eieters, your fathers end mothees end all your little pleyeeatee eo eenne aleag by your elde. PAKENTAL LOVE. Having talked perimps already far too Wog to ttio children, I would like to speak a few words he (dosing dirocar to the parents and the grown, up people bee. assembled Pothers and unithers, are yeti to let the pulpits rani pews and, eboir lofts girls and left tier there. In that Of all Proteetant chorchee for their :school we knew that there were bed owa ettered sereiCes Tiles is the day 'girls as well as good girls, bad Wien when tbe church auditoriums are. for as weil as good hoye, and she had not willing to consverate your 'levee to hie seri* as Rorer befere? You dinow that the etrongeet ties we have on earth are those which bind, the most. Part. fragrant with two :to sit there mut associete setae iis to opor children, Are wo to be f kividsa ilewera,re are the flow -i extent with theta all. Now, who is .e.gers Welch were produced in the goieg to look after my little girl greenhatteee and the back Yards and when she gam to meet tho tempta- Spiritina etorabling Wel; ta their way? A, beautiful tecidtat Jetely reeount the front yards end the tvild countryitions of echool tiniest Christ, ed in the Geritiett per aeto hillsides and the meadow lauda. Hera, laves little children, goes along Ando in etrongest teraia what the pitm- an, also the Inman buds tittle)* wore e takes her by the ham)? Wm) is get 'tal love might not cooly be ia ehe leatilereil Oat of the nurseries of hg to tell ber Meet to ho ween the novo, but also in the haulm botie bad girl tells her tte 4LSOber ber Timor William IL wan inspeeting tecteber and whispers. re. her ear the poem of tbe failetetla induetrial Wale - naught., story if Christ is not there? ithinents ms kingdom. To ono the meet expeneive kind at thio lace dreeees were beteg mode. Tbe pro- prietore. desiring to give the emper- or e present M reeognition. of the or his visit had conferred upon theta wished to send the eippreee one of the most delicate and eerent Many liOnirS. Here they are, these Monett flower; M elusters a many • cliteeee, My. my t Bid you ever SVC SO l'neeY beautiful ilowere abloomIer mother catmetto it. Her M- oll in one garden? We know not tiler cannot do ite Witt aro not which to tetimire most—tile pale lilies there. (twist only Cart be her guitle and her shield. TEMPTATIONS. Some grown up people di n hitk that little rhildreu have any ant. In the church year, without eotne of the greatest temptations %moat it a, moment and thee laughed. But I know that sive of gowns. The emperor loelied what I cousidered the most import- big ielliPi4ii°1113' liesitatien 1wollui answer. niihichh ever bave in We come to tie weep 7 enie.. he said. ,.then gown is net rens day. This is the Sebbath S1eam Yclin40' veryiyoueng. knew appropriate for my Wife. It is tea /naming •whelk parents ilea only of cue •!Atte bey woo ,ottl net thsa thin, and delicate. It would uot leSt bring their children to the eiturcio.s• ale"g with lum to SCI1001„ a day.ty wito neve., moves entese where Christ is melted, but teem 'fine day P14'1;14°34'8 were teasing 53;''e /1°3 "k"° tbriY4 babies buliblg their own thoughts. I believe. are ldha. ;Fire , delid rate at ter stiirts. and they would tear irresbly drawn toward the divine I ftly„(2, h'"i„''sa.41. V" '444* he 4°'‘" "i; that ,geowe all to pieces. ' Beautiful teachings. If a father cannot feet :Tate", ate. a slim'''. taut" pleatta that! And eet it is the litc- his affections Mewed with love toe "dr'Irt it at 111 whirh is seen in every true par - ward Ood when bia little girl is it'fd:"iedinl'sh:1,"„" tithe cats life. We rawaya should have ainging her Saviour's praise in the ich""I'hatetour habit hewing upon as. And holy eatetuary. his Newt nuiet be werd "9 be Ug be4 the way we go into the kingdom of in the elweltetbe red lessee la the lipsthe goldenrod dancing among the yellow curls or the rogeteli &awes of these "black eyed Sete ans." If any one should ask me in(leed as dead as a. stone. to his de th (IT° dines Ceriet. will often decide the Thia IS children's deo, e Naomi blinded, I knew of another littlelway our down sidu mum. rathera "balk to the children for a little while i b„?y,`,,vbch bee:wee he did not 'lave, ith, thittt.h. thi„ Hi you start.fur .about eine at the eiteethit scenes in' otiose with Wm, waited to frighten he"ten'et"idtl; awe a grand curium to all the Bible. There wan a great a playmate. as bed boys sonictirnee it" tbie ebildtetes day festival? Stand - crowd jostling and. pushing about i do. tie reshot hint from 0. bank Ing amid this beautiful human flow - Jesus Christ. It was the thee of , ittto a river and the little boy was mace) er garden of little children, ; have the Sltri°°1°8 eaatillY PoPularitee tilleeried" 1 saw his Iwbr ii— - i one more word to s teak. 1 cougrite Every mu; wanted to speak, to usu.; after it wes taken out of the i „ . _ „ i . t los church. because it plat,es Christ. water ittA I heard the broken heart- Oslo 0 t , il I f h i i tl lace where CONSIDER TIM CHILDREN.. But In the crowd surrounding Christ there was also a. lot of un - 1. mother weeping over it, 1 linew , „ of another litthe bay who grew up it hewn"- Next to the prayer jail Meeting the most Impotent of ser. to he a thief and was rent to , .. vitt% he was young his rhos le the Sunda' school seselou, sympathetic men and women. They. bad little schoolmates tooght him May God bless the Sunday lichee' ple wile 4-hink Ibat I mit, how to eteat penelee Out of his mo- suPerintendents of America. May Ah, children. God bless the teachers and the belonged to that great class of pee- ---itt C-L.—en are n ther's pot -boot.. born nuisance end that they should you cannot afford to tot to school i other Sunday school Wilma. ItlaY never be seen and never beard In and meet, the temptations of the died bless the scholars, and may public places. Thee ' think 0 they i nietegrottud unless you take Christ every Sabbath be a ebildren'sday. go stud visit a married friend that friend should have his children eat in the kitchen witile they are there, or else have the eltidren wait until along as your divine proteetor. No ieuntlay should be allowed to pass Then, after awhile, you must go in any Christian church without still farther away from the protect- 'some boy and some girl being led to Chrietian We by sayiegt "Let us be and do like others," is *et -Ismer -a sin repeated, 6, 7, Aad Satiate), "ware), unto the Lorkl, an4 the Lord soh!, Mao Steeneli Ileerkezt unto the voice of the people ail 'Wet they say Mi- te thee, for they have uot reieeted thee, but they bola rejected Ale that Rhfinld. net mige. over them Their coeduct WaS no surprise 10 God. Ile heel foreseen it all and loam from the beginning their evil hearts and. how they would treat Him (l)eut. >wit,* 14), yet. He loved them with an everlaieting love, heard them witen ithey cried unto Hire. fort ,41.444 0 044•0•Q"...444 t THE RAGE TO wild -Wad, and the lirst pereeo te Paw was Margaret West. Sim looked at him curiously Pad gave hfin a, distant bow. Billise fired with the etteitemeet of his wild ride, flushed engrity at her Voldneaa. THE BRIDGE • not realizing for the moment that ' ' tit she ceuld net underStand how he 41. came to be in his present plight. 114.04044.4). 414* A$ be welked pest tier a, voice • The ram WaS beating a lively tat- tolled; toe agelost the windows of the "ITellei Bert; 'what's the 'matter Shelkott =treed statiee, and the with Yee? 1 dide't anew you were 1 night•witeent was so black that the eihe What:a etePaVel usr lamp above the graveled drive but - . P•• °Met wOg the inatter with he 441rmatli're QuItt•114:Icion7seid!"titke:u11.11.1111413irte7.1141°I'Vhgee'eaT;Aedel:rirlie"w4enPes'an'ereencldlialliMs°14' gehe Om and delivered them nian,Y Qnetbe44 "4 the' We4t 1"3111 CloWn 55h0'ten -feet Yeatea'd of the loegeomo- pagulrotetheiintent.aoistyenwtis.netatittheeniiiihspazooetphicistoerfteatr cteherridargiev.eronsAtthebif=ptzseAatt throtQwdbriit, ihe.„ phriaimed. 0 mp. 0334 their Alesalah, but evert Him thee' rejected tied erucided, sitaileg• "We have no king but Citesar.". •Still, He loves them and will yet fu1011 His proutees to Abraham. "Isiia0 and Jacob ter His owe enneda sake, The ime will come viten they shall limit open Him. be deeply convicted. of their sin and reeelve Him as their Jong looked for itleseleh and rejoice Him and He in them leefore all Cities (necb. xii,. 10; xiii. 1; Ise. oeive 9; Pieete xxxvii. 21-.O8; Jae Org; lioke ie 3i, 33), When Israel' murmured figainSt 11050S, they murmiteed egainet Him who ot Moses; when people rojeot the meseengere Oceli they reject Gett Himself. 8, O. Now. therefore, heoriten unto their WACO; howbeit yet prothat got, eerily unto them and shew them the Manner Of the King that ehall reign ever them. The Lord mettles Siouttel that this Miseoniluct of hereel Is nothing AM, thet ever MOO they len Egypt they have anted thus toward Hint and • that Samuel latest, tacit feel slighted or edema, but, accept it at as fel- lowehip with God Himself, It would be a. great victory for every believer if this was continually precticed and U. when anything is veld or done t VO would remember that Ile foie it as done to Iiiimeelf mid Ile Will eea to it (Acts ie., 4, 5). God wante cheerful, willing =vice, the love et Motet conetraining. Ile does not love that which is done grudg- ingly. The Lord loved a cheerful giver (II. Cor. is. 7). But when Hie Pees people deiermined to hove Img etormi thQ Oth0r was an aotonge. egge us A 0 nt _ bile, from whieh young man lump- ehould halre been. tbe betioni of eel and briskly into the sta,. tlee. river now:" time. Insteotty the passengers were CZ "No. e7 on thee, ',ewe he ieetee their feet and tee ear was in a, wil4 cheerfully, of the agent wee seed commotion• Questions and OP with his cheer. twee egeinst the ieeto $Wers new Dal* and forth while the desk, people began to grasp the extent of eonete the is. Bee.a aaaaaa beard., the fearful catastrophe that had. beee anything different," game the ext.169 nacrnwley avert -ed.. In Oa laidat wer.• of the noise and confatsieu the con. "Here's a telegram for you." ductor came lute the car an4 Bert Hate glanced hastily over the e4 Allw to message and said, half aloud: "goveh "The trackatellter has Peet cam( ernor"S MiSSeri the trains and Won't: down front Sheltee," he said. "end be imam tin meriting, ere a, Dpol Ole hew yon made tbe run, to ' ;OM% to bo cut 00 roAd. so ru wait, Atop the tralu, Weald AN gee PI toy way borne alowly." thing 44 I've ever Seen della 1'W As lie turned tO go the door opemdwire and littih girl at lime." Panting for breath, staggered up ti e tbault Oath and r know that evero "Letti, the bridge le dowel" Startled Deerfield epeeeh. the• two men looked at the newcomer in op- enouttothed =commit, Item Stu- art, the agent, accustomed to meete ing emergenciee, the tirst to m- e-0We bis 6MSer. "Whora that!" he Quieted. "The bridge is down!" repeated the other, pressing lila aides to re- cover his spent breath., "The heavy rate undermined the lower abutment and the bridge fell not ten minutes go. beet teething to flag NO. Pa WM, so I ran up here as Met as uld. Hurry and yOn alloy catch c4, awl man, wet to the allotted cm'itlallrsi. "and Ia their nrini" the ticket window end seeded: soul aboard the train bels just, tie ti do " Arany ot the pamengers beard the conductor and they all docked around eagerly pressing thett thanha. "ttreat Neat. Bert."' exclaimed the friend who teed ettippeti him WIWI/ led fleet COM into the ear, "you're It hero.," being lavished upon bitre and Hillis began to feel decidedly no Comfortable over the praise that wet looked around for eoine ramie of est cape. Ife *tally succeeded in pee ing through the crowd and bolt for ate rear deer of ite Car. Just leer at Fordiwao, n as he readied 1,1. and was iteginuinit The agent sprang to tee desk and' to congratulate hinteelf on Ilia ew began to pound gereeiy for Venn cape. he was confronted by a diet hem. In lees than a Wien* came tressed looliing young Indy. the itnIVCring eliek. "fart," she Mamie:red. "I didn"( Stuart turned an UAW UCe to -1 enderatand." ward his companioule "Why. Margaret," he eoplitinedi onty ochre he ethiaineeni eine. all of Ids auger vanishing tetore the their own way Re eametimes gives hes Met pulled out of Fordhant and tears that stoup in her eyes, 'how them their request, though it brings is due at the bridge in eve minutes, could you?" leennee.e inte their soma (Ps. eve, She'll go through like a shot, and i "I how how much you ritiked 104 41 be covered his face with his save our livea--" 10. And Samuel told ail " the kande, as if to shut out the "I'd rather hear you say that th az words of the Lord unto the peopie Picture. "III Yam Fordlituri IurtsR the rest put togetherO' be int to tliat asked of him. a king. rupted. "but it isn't necessare. to Just. 43 when a obit(' he told every whit of the Lord's mess.ego (Chapter 01, 18), even though it was a message of ludgment, so now he declares faithfully alt the words of the Lord concerning tho meow ef the 'king whom God will give *el Then. when the people insist. not- withstanding, on having this king "Samuel beard all the words ot the people, and he rehearsed theta in the ettre of the Lord" (verse 21), He Is no man pleaster; he sPealte tho rnessages intrusted to hbn faithfully, leaving results to God (Jer xxiii., itnt care a your parents. As young sok Christ, tho one who elWaire luta -We (Ial. 1., 10). A. God of :ova the older folks are through and then men and women vou must go out in_ jeted ang always will love little will not let His people rush into go to the second tablee New, th do to e great wide world and live en- itildren. ruin blindly, nor will He overthrow not believe that is the right way 4 I • His enemies without offering them bring up boys and t° tirely away from home. You must mercy as Re did to the people of friends who visit my home are not. girls' If mY be like your father and ntother and earn your oWn Then, it you THE su doctors and nurses; there s nothing else to be done." While the agent was tali:leg, Hillis ood pale mid motionless, a tflan for saving the train flashed over him* and while it was a desperate chance, be determine4 that it ehould be attempted. It) a voice constrained, but quito alm, he said: "Hand inc your IOU tern. Iotn." Stuart passed out the lantern without a word, and with. three kali% the young man was out ot the station. In anotber moment. there was a whirring sound and the auto- mobile sped off into the darkness. It was about two miles to the bridge and four miles beyond that point to Pordhain. If the train was to be stopped Ito must reach the bridge In four minutes. In daylight and on a good road be would bave 'willing to eat at the same table Noalds time before the flood tied tie NDAY SOH 0 L SO to 11 with babies the need net Come do not bave Jesus lor your side, tame t and, Its people. and visit me at all. I am just I ich will beset you and trip you there ere many, many temptations Mercy always preeedes judgment. • headstrong enough to believe that A you now gping to drive what is good enough for my child- re • , • PAPER CORKS NOW. twist away from you). heat t and INTEKNA.TIONAL L'ESSON. .71:71.4X 0. *There were some men that day, I 4"('' 9 itemember he is your chief the cork -tree hes been the only For hUndreds of yearS the bark of inn is good enough for my friends. „, - too, who followed Jesus wherever he Preleeter• went and were called his disclaim A LITTLE CHILD snALL LEAD. known substance from which corks have been made. The process is prac- They knew how precious every word But there is another reason, chile ticaliy the s•une now as n. hundred he uttered was mid how many sick dren, why you should come to years ago. There has been no 'm- ated blind and deaf people he was Christ, and that is so that you can provement, no progress. On the curing, and they did not want. his bring your father and mother. big time taken up with little children. brothers and sisters along with you other hand, cork has become scarcer So these disciples told the fathers to Christ. Uh, how many children and scarcer, until it is almost doubl- and nmothers not to bother Jesus there are here whose -fathers never Ing in cost every year. The supply with their children. They said: ask a bleseing at the table Or have is not equal to the demand, and is "Here. fathers and mothers, what family prayers by the home altart rapidly becoming exhausted, until users of ano sorts of cork ilnd it dia. ficult to secure them. A remarkable invention has just been perfected and patented. It is a neachine tbe size of a sevting machine, which makes corks out of wastepaper and paper pulp. All kinds of waste and scrap paper can be made into corks. These corks aro superior to the regular sort, as they are not effected by acids or oils, and have been tested by leading eheinists and the largest users of corks, and by them pro- nounced far superior to the old style in every way. One machine will make over three hundred per minute. Corks can be made any size, color, or shapo, and name or tradeinark can he stamped in the top of each as made. They are sold at one- tenth the price of regular coras, mAcriNiFfrIC POWER. There "has been discovered in the forests of India a plant which pos- sesses astonishing "magnetic" pow- er. The hind which breaks a leaf from it immediately receiwis a shock equal to that which is produeod by the conductor of an induction coil. At a distance of 20 feet a magnetic needle is affected by it, and it will be quite deranged if brough near. The energy'. of this singular influence varies with the hours of the day. All-powerful about two o'clock in the afternoon, it is absolutely an.• during the night. At times of storms its inteosity amounts to striking proportions. l3irds and insects • never alight on this plant; an instinet seems to warn them that they would meet with sudden death. None of the magnetic metals aro found where it grows, wheel is n, prrof that the electric force belongs exclusively to the plant. THE STRENUOUS MOE. Caterley—"What are you doing itt town? I thought eod were living Tent ot the SASSO'S:11 L Sam. alit., 1-10. Golden Text, I. Sam. viL, 3. 1-3. Ansi it tame to pass, when Samuel was old. that he aMde his -oils judges over Israel. * * * And is sons walked not In his ways but rued aside after lucre and took bribes alai perverted judgment. After the defeat of the Pitts - tines, retorted in. the previous chap- ter, which we held as a, lesson six months ago, they 'Afore .subdued,, and the haled of the Lord was against them all the days of Sam- uel. Saalimel was the Lord's repro- sentatiive in their midst ;lad ever sought their true welfare in the shalt of God. Ho was the Lord's faithful, messenger, seeing God and not man and seeking nothing from man. The /lames he gave his eons (verse 2) are indicative of his piety —Joel, Jah.ovah is Gdd, and Abiah jetrovalh, my Father. BLit beautiful names neither indicate the character nor ehange the heart. Righteous- ness is not hereditary, and intany gond paren.ts ha.ve bad children. Consider Eli and David and Heze- kiah, azd, stranger still, listen to Jehovah Ilemself Isa. a 2, "I have nourished and. brought up children, an,d they rebelled against me." Truly the carnal nand is en- mity against God! 4, 5. Behead, thou art old, and thy sone walk not in. thy ways. .hrow, make us a king to judge us, like a..11 the natians. God had chosen Israel that they might be unto M.I/1 a peculiar trea- sere above all people, a kingdom of Priests, • a holy nation, separated from ' all other people, dwelling alone, not reckimed among the na- tions, • delighting to say: "The Lord is our judge, the Lord is aur lawgiver, the Lord is our king. Be will save us" (Ea. xix, 5, 6; xaxiii, 16; •Num. xxiii, 9; Isa. XXXiii, 22). His power was tlieir strength • and His presence their gldry. The very thing that God chose them. for they fanned their backs upon and vvanted to be like other people. They chose the earthly and visible in preference to the heavenly ,and in- visible and: deliberately rejected the high position to which •God had called them add in Which He had placed them.' It is just the sin of cherches aad of Christiaos to -day. We are called out of the world to have nothing xn,ore to de with. it, hut glorify God in it and rescue people feore it, relying upon the un- seen God to aipply all our need, ,Everything that teildh to lower alas high stale -lard or in arty way des- troy these distinctive teatores oi the are you bringing those children here for? Why do you not take tbent home, where they belong?" But Jesus, bearing the commotion, stop- ped and asked the eause. Then when Christ heard that these men - were driving the babies from his a side be turned and practically. said: • "Ah, that is not right. Do not. lit push those little ones away. Open a path there and let the children come to my arms and be blessed." Then he uttered the sweet words of lay text. "Suffer littla ribledeen, arid forbid them not, to 001110 unto eem, for of such is the kingdom of hen - von.', Christ gave this sweeping invita- tion to all children. to be brought to his arIXIS. Therefore 1 shall try, children, in a few plain, simple words to tell why it is important — • very important—for you to come to • Christ while you are young. And when I show you that it is import- ant for you to come to Christ I 'eland also try to show you that Christ is the best friend a little child, a young boy or girl, can ever • Yes, he is even a better friend than your father or mothea sister or bro- ther. He is it friend whose love is beyond your mental grasp; whose love "passetb. all huraan under- standing." • CHRIST THIE GUIDE. Little children should come to Christ • soon, very sem.). • Their Christian fathers and mothers. will not be able much lon.ger to .shield them from the evil tereptat.ions as they have been able to do. When my • little bo;ys and girls were at home I ceuld do what I pieased with them could say' -Susan!'" or "Gertrude" Or "Thornee De Witt" or "Frank"— for I have four children' -- "I wish. you woeld pot associate with that little boy you were wit le this more- ing." And if one of eety little girls elioulcl say, 'Thy, pataae" I would answer: aI do not think he is a nice little boy. I heard his mother call to, him to -day to come into the house, sand he answered, 'I won't come.' And when his mother wont after him. he lay right down in the • etreet,_ and boaren to kick and meate aua bite. Now, o go o d tale eaa will ever act like t,hat, Oh, how many little Children. there are here whose fathers and mothers mut big brothers and sisters aro drifting out into a life of sin merely because they have never answered the pleading call of Jesus and have not come and knelt at the Saviour's feet! Little children., do you not know that you perhaps better than any one else can lead your fathers and. =there and brothers and sis- ters and uncles and aunts and big men and big women to Christ? Do You riot realize, boys and girls, that as the Bible describes the day of millennium as the time when "the wolf also shall dwell with the lamb, and the little child shall lead them," the greatest gospel inessengers who ever lived are the little children who are leading the grown up peo- ple to the„foot of the cross? Boys. and girls, if you have a fa- ther who never goes to church, what a good thing it would -be if you could bring himi Suppose you should go home from this service and Clamber up into his lap and say: 'Tape, why do not you come to church? Why do not you love Jesus?" How good a thing it would be if he should put his arm around you and should say, "Yes, darling, fer your sake 1 will go to church and learn to love Jesus," He would be doing just as that great lawyer and statesmaii of Philadelphia, did a few years ago. ale was home frore Washington for. a little while on a yacation. 'while he was sitting In the parlor his little six-year-old daughter rushed into the room, crying: e011, papa, I have learned to read. Would. you like to hear me read?" Then she went and got a Bible and opened it, and with her little fingers used for a guide she slowly read the sixteenth verse of the third chapter of St. John, "For God so loved the world that he gave his; only begotten ISOM that whoso- ever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." Before the little girl had- finished her reading the father's heart melted with repentance and he was crying like a little child. Boys anti girls, what do you think your mother would do if you would climb up into in the couutry playing golf, ping. pong, tether ball and. going to clapnectees:.;:eaeee any. .13u t I have to conic .to town occasionally to get rested.'', talk about it. My automobile it still down in the road, and I guest, there's steam enough left to tette ne home. Will you ride with me ot sball I have the canine sent 'doeva for you?" She rode with him, and in spite ot the rain and darkness, both decline d that it was tho happiest ride heir lives. ABOUT TIACARONI. Is the National Peed. of the Otalian. Beal macaroni is made of bard wheat of a semi-translucent sort which grows In southern Europe and Algeria, and which is richer in glut- en and other nitrogeneous matter tban soft wheat. welcomed the exeitement of such a Macaroni is nothing bat flour and ride, and on a. pitch black night, o.nd with a slippery track, it was prat - catty suicide to attempt to drive he Otto at is aimed of thirty miles an hour. Tito rain imbed his face and the darkness bewildered hhu, but neither the driving storm nor tbe black night could shut from his sight the fair face of a girl witou-t. he knew was on the train. He turned oa tbe power, gripped the knits wheel with both hands, braced bit:melt against the foot brake, and the ear forged ahead as if shot from a cannon. Albert Hillis never knew how much ho loved Margaret West until that moment. A month before they had quarreled and parted in auger, and since that time had not seen each other. He bad told himself thee he could live without her, but now as be sped like a rocket toward the bridge, his heart almost stopped beating et the thought that he might never again see her, except in d:1ithlie. illlsthat fearful ride. „Pew could could never afterwards de- sequal him in the skilful handling of an automobilO, but in the darkness his skill availed but little and . he could only trust to Providence and pray that the ear might keep the road. A dozen times he was in the ditch, .and almost upset, but he al- ways succeeded in regaining the road and the car tore on in its flight. Once he grazed a tree and again he scraped the sides of it bank, but he gripped the wheel grittily and choked back the impulse to shut oft the Pclwtsere Iemed like an age when at last, he heard the roar of the river, and at the same time the shrill whistle of the oncoming engine. The car thumped through. the little cov- ered passenger bridge that spanned the stream below the railroad, and before it came to a full stop; he was out arid scrambling furiouely up the embankment toward the track. Stumbling over the ties, he waved the red light to and fro, and in his excitement shouted incoherent words of warning. The glare of the head light shone full itt his face, but be knew, from' the crunching sound of steel pressing hard on steel, that the brakes had been applied, andahe heavy train was slowing down. As the engine passed him, 1-tillis felt sure that it neust go over the chasns into, the river, , and he shouted to the engineer to, jump but the brakes had taken arm hold and with a hissing of Steam the train came to a full stop. ' volumes made from trees in) the parki atillis sprang up the steps of one at Wilhelmshohe. Every volume,. of the coaches just as the conductor, bears on a tab—not in timber, but, important, irritated, descended to queerly ' enough, in morocco—the find Out the cause of the troeble. The name of the 'tree from which it was, young men briefly explained why obtained. There are plates of the the train: had been stopped, passed tree in all stages of ets geowtie. and the lantern to the °laces, and walk- theletterprese is a treatise on the „edir,ient‘a ovtshabeetatie.z.s. web, jusirly arid .tioreirting and neturel history of Lilo water, but it has to be eatedelly made. The flour is mixed with boil - tug writer in a eylinder which 'con- verts it Otto stilt paste. 'Then it IS rolled under a huge granite wheel, witch flattens it into o mooth mass. The matt ot the wheel cuts Os into squares and claps it under the wheel again and again until it is thoroughly kneaded. The dough then goes Otto an up- right metal cylinder closed at the lower end with a thick disk of cop- per. This is pierced with openings, through which a plunge -piston squeezes the dough into threads. The threads are tut off ot regular lengths and handed to a man Who hangs them on 'wooden drying rods. In making spaghetti the holes are small and the dough comes out in solid strings. In the manufacture of macaroni the holes are latger and centered by mandrels which make the tubes hollow. Macaroni is also made into pastes of various shapes, alphabets and thin strips, cut by Machinery. When the macaroni is shaped, it is sent up into a, drying -room, the small pieces in trays, the loag strips of vermicelli, the thin, solid strips of spaghetti, mid the large hollow tubes of macaroni on long poles the, size of a broomstick. Here a cur- rent of air dries tho paste. Genuine macaroni always shows the bent ends where the long hair- pin -shaped lengths have straddled the poles. Cheap imitations are made from conunon flour, which is not glutinous enough to herr itsi own weight, and therefore is dried fiat. . Real macaroni is tender, yellowish, I rough iri texture and elastic. 11 breaks with a smooth, porcelain -like: fracture. When it boils, as every cook know, it swells to twice its size and does not become sticky, blit holds its tubular form without col- lapse. It will keep any length of' time, and is a very nourishing food, TIMBER BOOKS. There is at Cassel, a library prob-, ably unique in the world. It bound in timber, printed on timber) pages—possibly from wood blocks— and deals exclusively with timber,ac The library in question is the Holz- bibliotek, which was compiled at the; end of last century by Karl Schield -1 bach, and composed of about 500,' •