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Exeter Advocate, 1905-01-19, Page 6THE FLOWER IN THE FIELD Unhappy, Because It Seemed to Be Living Only for Itself 1 find in hie, no fault at alt. --;cares to have me in the house, be - John xtii,., :31•l. 'cause We want to think a few moments 1 AM \ti'I' SWI•.I."1'. about a young man viio lived lime Aud lie.,ides 1 Late ;wither neighbors ago. He Stands in the duet• of his ,, whop with his arena strctrhed out SO nor friends. 1 do not. seem to be. that hie ),ands rest on the posts on dein}; ,ri;.thpli at all. 1 "11',•111," replied the stranger, "1 1•e►►015 int) 'will sere tt)►at 1 inn do for seen" tie the room and the figure in the dour- i way in trfiectcel upon she wall ie the hec•l.uned the suuheaams•1, and they feint of a cress.ipeneilesel the tittles fl)we•r with leanly land the evening earner and the cies either aide. The nun st S) ulna pima 'ssautsnei 10 Zno wast'• 1upiuvtu uelpvuei) aA1ap port spool' p in) UJrtunw gum suenniuso ►Clcidns 4.1 baler 1}aliu:l a41 Jo coal -ties iv!J'anisrt 8!(t o4) aigvue Plnoea swill S)naJ) KiWoschaas Y ••Cees -lbws ,S0)v)s PJ11ufl .tot nigral eipti SUIDOU1 a4) puu ossa•.") tleaee)aq ss.►u!snq ut e,134a,1u1 Sue 'punt( .rattl) a4) un •s.iv oliva lvywu -11110esuusi uvlpeuv') x111 a(; 0(1 1I!M 11 .rabid' a4) Damen:eta n.ra)S0ee1 pee UJ0)s113 a'l'l 000.% 'jaq Ssau!snq x111 .ta -)eaall a4i •s-tiu.ntlUa u.ra,;l.rox uulp 04) I'uu a!;1Jn.l >un.+.L Nun.+t) aq1 '.fusti!u)1 :.pl.tu,1 uelpeue.) a41 0) anti° snO.r)aysip OAUJd •isnot tion pun lava I(3 punnet! twos pun 111,1011 moil n) apes) assnot.► tiptoe lints satvlt. business, although Buffalo is just on the other side of the border. Sup- pose that all the factories in all the cities, tottns and 'tillages of Can- ada were transferred to towns and cit ie a of the United States, t he rail - 'Mere wax in this yo,rr.g slat► a ' kill l its cup, anni1 the next. nnornint, ways of Canada would be obliged to singular power. He Wiry talked lits t;reat11 was ','trot. ('lose h,•yiete• .t18'harge three-fourths of their cia- about by everybody. It tt:as relctte4l'ft flowers hobo; (1) grow Thal, were• Pluye+e.;, for every branch of their that one day he «rent into a house just like• it, and thus it soon had ht'�ir.e!xs would de: line in an extra- wher•e'a young girl was rick, a141.1i1e4' plenty 4•f society. And the ender - env way. 01 course a recipro- a h sirian nut beside her bed. lie env treaty would not close up every D Y Cess and the solitary place teei•e looked at her, and she r•eseurbtl'd u glad, Lind the desert bloswnned tike lily, bei face Wan so delicate. ltc roti„. touched her hand and a faint blttelt Ire rhui•s; sit 1 011 his truiek in a carve Into her cheeks, as we have hull hoddr•Ooril a yotnig man will be Keen the fire flash from a pearl Uy We ' Riad the holidays erre over, which turned it toward the e;un. lie s+poleOIw baa eepe•nt. for. the first, time alone and she opened her eyes. .11e smiled, lin a big city among strangers. He ami she smiled back, and her mother !kelt; like, that. flower in. the Ih'ltl. Ni' biassed her and there was great joy !wonders whether llfe is worth living, in that home. He was always doing !and why he has no friends. Nut in thing" like that, and is it any won- ,the next room be nuns. hear a step. der that a ninn who hated to admit Up tuid down some one is walking. the fact was cornpelle.1. to Bay, "I �1"irst he thinks it is strange. 'I`hcn find in his) so fault at all"? I be thinker.' it is "none of nw. host - An old instrinnent httgg upon a Incas." Then he thinks it will do no castle wall. No one . knent its use: 'harm to tree. ' So he knocks at the It was covered with ;lust . and the i door, and it Is opened. And he says, strings were broken. A stranger' "Ilello!- i thought 1 heard you walk - came one day, knocked at the gate, ing up and down es though there and entered the hall. He- reverently was something- troubling you." And- bruabed the dust from the instru- ; the neighbor replies: "There is." went, reset the rstringot, and all !And one will tell the other about it. hearts were thrilled by the music be And they will laugh. together, and was able to bring from it. It was when they -part each will have only the waster long absent who had re- half the -burden to bear they carried Nineteen 'out of every bundreil per - turned to big own. If we •should :when they met, and they will not • sons convicted of Murder are execute - travel around the world we would feel so lonesome as they did. And eel. - lind that castle and instrument there aro men and women like the A good railway ening will travel everywhere. And the instrument flower everywhere. But the world is about 1,000,000 utiles before it would be unsttrnng, unused. out of getting better, because we are being wears out. tune. And many do not seem to helped to be useful. And there will The cost of feeding the horses in know that be fewer faults in the world as we the British Army is about $125 each TJJE CASTLE 1S TILE BODY, become more like him in whom there Per year. wins The annual income fromthe Monte a temple of the holy ghost, and theti?O l•'AZlI/r AT ALL. Carlo gaining tables exceeds $7,500,- Instrument is the soul. And would 000. we know the secret of a happy life? And once there was a young gran, Over 3,000,000.000,000 envelopes Open the heart every morning to and he thought he was smarter than are manufactured in Great Britain him in whom there was no fault. Let his father, and be did not have annually, hint repair the ,strings that sin has brains enough to appreciate a mo- Two hundred and fifty thousand broken, and every day will be like ther's love. And he had more con- persons emigrate from Great 1Iri- tai i i every year. In the United States a ton its not 2,240 pounds, as in Britain, but 2,- 000 pounds only. The French tobacco monopoly brings in a profit of $80,000,000 sterling every year. Two hundred and eighty million pounds' weight of tea aro annually imported tato London. Fully 10,000 domestic servants in London are always out of situations or changing their places. Every inhabitant of the United Kingdom may be said figuratively to hold sway over 130 aeries abroad. France has four Ciansce of roads. They aro respectively fifty, forty. well, little flower, whet are you do- it would be long and hnrd. llut he thirty-three, and twenty -live feet Mg outhere all alone? Why did you 'net a stranger. And who do you wide. look at Cie? You reed not be suppose it was? The young man Bricks made of coal dust are used afraid. Not a sparrow falls to the whose shadow fell on the wall of for paving in Itussia. The coal diist is combined with molasses and resin. Great Britain requires 1'2,000,000 pounds' worth of leather every ;,ear Canadian factory, but it would close up many of them, and every factory closed would be a direct loss to the railways. ()n the other hand, every new factory ental,listred in Canada, and every cxtenslon of rat old one, increases the business of Canadian railway s. HEBE AND THERE. Interesting Facts About Places And Things. A rook sten fly sixty aaniles.an hour, a 'hawk 140 miles. - Bees suck 3,000,000 flowers to gather one pound of honey. Dainty Indian muslin» are wade from the fibres of the banana tree. In Yucatan there are no fewer than sixty-two ruined and abandon- ed cities. 'l'here is one lighthouse to etetry fourteen) voiles of toast in Great Britain. the beginning of a new year, and every night, the star of Bethlehem will shine in the skies above us. Once there was a Bine flower. It was unhappy, because it seemed to be Jiving only for itself. It had no color and it was odorless. It heard a step in the grass, and it wondered within itself, Will I be crushed under the foot of that man who is hunt- ing? Will n dog tear me up by the roots? I wish 1 e011141 hide from ail of these dangers. I ilo not know why 1 want to live, but I do not want to die. And as the little flower was in a state of great excitement, when the stranger stopped and slid: "Well, fidence in str-angern than in Mende. And he went , out, to see the world, and he saw it, and when he got through he Was a beggar. His air castle looked like a banquet hall after the guests have departed. The next day be ;tet the young woman who had given him her most sacred promise, but she did not appear to see him. He appealed for help to those who had frequently received his assistance, and they were all very sorry; would like to help him, but they did nothing for hien. So he began to think he had Net- ter retrace his steps over the wrong road he had taken. It saeemed as if ground but your heavenly Father his shop in the form of a cross. Thu Neotl► it. He clothed the grass of one wlto reset the strings of his in - the field, and he will care for you." strtnnent in the castle. He who So the little flower looked up into spoke to the flower in the field. a face in which there was no youth. There is 110 one like him in all the for the boots and Shona of its ro- und raid: "I ant quite miserable, be- world. "I Lind in hint no fault at habitants, tense 1 have no twenty, and no ono all."The largest proportion of single persons is found in Ireland and Scotland, and the ,;tallest in the he the coemtry of the twentieth curt- United ',tales. If more hvus;elkeeper8 knew how to tory. and they have no donire to In Spain street performers: ou the prof+oily cook 1 ice it would more fre- eurrenrler it to the United States. guitar are Ikonsed• while oe;;un eitl&nitly be found upon our tables They believe that ('anediansl should grinders are rigorously sui,Juw11se•el. and tie gout,► eritjuy one of the Most "'Then you are young Potts and the ripe, is the best. Not child - have all the advantages to be do- Within the past ninety years the ((-het.-game of foods. It is especially old Putts too! bear, dear, how hood, but, uu►t.urll;v, is the richest rives' from the opening tip of this Spanish-njioal.ing population of t ho rt !d) t.'e1 t o 3 ourtg chiltrc'►► cit►d 10- singularl's ; in happiness. Not the ;,tan who tuts grand country, and it the people of world has increased from 2x.,1!++►,- taii s "What do Sou want?" snapped, on the armor, but. he who after Their Offer Comes Too Late to 1 p r the adjoining Itepubltc—tne country 000 to 43.000,000. 'I e .ittl•ttneee� method of prelrtrirrg the doctor. 'victory lays it, oA, is roost envls►L,IF Defeat Mr. Chamberlain's '1.. krow old Mrs. Pevine, who i Not the joy of the young convert. THE PRIZE IS CANADA AMERICANS' AIM IN SEEKING RECIPROCITY. TRUE AND 'PRIED RECIPES. There is a knack in doing things which all do not posnsess, and no- where is this fact more evident than in the concoction of wholnionie and toothsome edibles.. The "sixth ;sense" comes into play here as no- %there else, fur a "trifle light as air" will turn the scale which spells success or its opposite. flow differ- ent ar•e the results that are sashievet' by different parsons, using the same Identical recipes! A !tale more of this, or a trifle less of that, or a little disregaltd to ttlllitat niny appear an iusiguiticant detail in the 'Show" when compounding the elements, makes all the difference in the wOr}d. Doughnuts—(lite cup sweet cream, 1 cup granulated sugar, 2 eggs, 1 tablespoon melted lard, nutmeg, 3 teaspoons baking powder, salt and flour enough to make a soft dough. Ankd sugar anis a small teaspoon salt to the cream and stir well. Add enough flour to make a thin batter and then add melted lard, eggs well beaten aiwl half grated nutmeg. The baking powder may now be add- ed and lastly enough flour to ;sake. a eoft dough. Have fat hot and fry until a rich golden• brown. Good reerults way be obtained by using pour cream .or mills, it ettougtr :.bah - big soda is used to- sweeten 14,4* -no more, as baking powder does the meet,.- Wheel milk is used instead of cream, an extr et tal*)eespo t,n of melted land must be used, Winne Jelly --Soak •hall 'bon or two heaping tablespoons gtelatine In half pt. eo)d water for ten minutes. Add half pt. boiling water, and stir un- til the gelation 'dissolves.. Add 11 cum -granulpted eager, the juice and grated rind of one lemon and half pt. oberr•y wire. Set on the fire and Air until 11. boils. Take oft and let staurd for a couple of minutes, thee, strain and pour into a inoki. When cool, set on ice. Lemon jelly is made the same as above, using in place of the sherry, the juice of three lemons, and enough water to 111010 up the half pint. Charlotte Russe—One pint owed milk, 1 pint rich cream, hall cup sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla, half lb. lady filtgeret, half box gelatine. Soak gelatii.e in the milk for 10 minutes. Stir over a slow fire until gelatine is 4lieseteed. Have the milk bot, hut do tot let boil. Add strgaa• and have the Opal; a second elisrtscnt stir or. t -fl di:esolveed. 'fake off stove homeward from a concert and pass-, arr41 lot slang] untlI cold. Adel van- ing the house of a well-known pby- • clay, ivhir.h gee to make the esa1, ilia or any flavoring preferred. A s'c'an. !phire: still a third elttttent iso S;uvt, few hlctnche+el and syhne►clelc►ei almonds until 1.11e elide of the doorway was a and soot goes to ;Hike a diamond. may be added if desired. Whip cfr a am speaking -tube, underneath which was i ane that is all there is to mud ex- At it is as stiff as it can be the inscription—"Whistle for Dr. wept water. Surely you won't find rnarle. (.'ream so thick that it will Potts." ;fault with water!' Now, that is just stand s<tiff after whipping ought to Not wishing to he disobliging what we (reformed drunkards) are he ureal. A4141 the cream to the mix- about so small a ;ratter, the student,—annlyzesi stud.„ Ilut Mr. Hadley (ere, el ir) should be oo141, brit not walked up the steps and blew into alight have adderl►-and the figure .,a 1 f melt mixture is the least the pipe with all the st rength of his would have ;been equully true to the bit eerie, it will the cream )wing' fncts,►—that God had of lite analyzed and the l)uflbtesss so desirable, will The physician, who was awakened:tttircl made regenerated men, mendisappear. Line sides of moldwith by the resultant shrill whistle neaar!liott ragain into a new life; for what lady t:.igers, leaving the ligure at his head, arose, groped his way iotthe speaker ;tenant to say, and what the tulle and shouted:— he die, say in the short address that the bottom uncovered. '1'ltc� lady tin- ••Well?” .followed the words we have quoted gees should be stuck to the sides of ••(;lad to knnvv 3Dario «ell," tvay was that he and She other n1e( for the nark) with 'shill of egg, or they the reply; "but, being a doctor, I , will not remain is., place. '1'I,e mold whom he, spoke had been 1:ai'Peert UV nt•ny be lined with titin slime of any a pose you can 'keep well at cosi:whom the grace of "from whisky and nie e light wake Insatead—spurge cake Price, can't you?' ,� tobacco and everything that is in the bet. ]'our to the mixture and "What do you want?? said the ;mel." 'their lives hold been nettle Net an he, or in a cool piers). When man of medicine, not caring to joke over; they had been d be nits at that tune of ;tight. re'ae(ly to serve, dill the mer}ti in hot new and a loftier sphere ,)f life'. Well said the student, after water for one or two sr(11511. , nut a moment's nietrli1ntion. "Oh, ),y + VerFe 10. "79tuu hast het►;. 'lir inure, c vo tura out on dish. I►elier the way, are you young 1 of fs or old i�us s;erv'sl with wine or 1400 )n Jelly. the pudktiigt, and there will be nu dlrnculty. Il:vtnr'ybudy has bean exasperated at the way an embroidered etcigo "wash- es out," but et'erybudy does not know that running a straight row of machine stitching at the heard of the wallops or points will percep- tibly linig't.hen its days and will not be notiex►d after laundering. Use No. 50 thread for heavy embroider- ies and Rhear for finer ones. Coifee' confined in tight caus has a tendency to gather dampness, af- ter which no skill can make good coffee from it. '1'o make a prince article the ground cotTee should bo so brittle that it will snag between the teeth. The secret of having plump cush- ions consists in heaving the outer cover about two inches smaller than the pillow. ►!t will then }ruff up prettily. White goods that has yellowed by being laid amide may be beautifully bleached by • immersing in a $ .r of buttermilk for a couple of days. 11 very yellow, keep them in longer and ilratigo the buttermilk (uce or twice. This ie one way of washing hand- kertfiiefs: Dip them in warns water, temp each one on both sides. fold loosely-, unkl put them in a pile in a basin, without water, to soak for an hour or longer. flub thein on a wa:loboard with a large nailbrush dipped in hot water, boil fur a few minutes, rinse in clear water', and dry. Begin the ironing in the cen- tre, and not on the bonier. DO Noir GIVE CII1LIHl•)H, '.lira. Ce ince, • Aleb.ol. Pickles. Greasy loo+d. -ace-oold driniks. Highly seasoned food. Rich fried dishes. Meals at irregular hours. /tits to nibble between meals. A subsrtna,trtial • meal just before bedtime. • Temtat oes irttil they are 4 years old. Unripe or overripe fruit under any C ire tuneta ncee. The skin of poultry, fruits or veg- etables. One ?eminently sees fine, hearty, too precoe.'ious r.hiktren, who are al- lowed all these things. The poor Stings will later pay dearly for the ignorance of their parents. ♦-- 80 FUUNY. T11E SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERiNATIONAL LE�G1K, JAN. 22. "The First Miracle in Cana." Gol- den Test, John 2, 5. THE LESSON 11.1.115'1'11AT1•:Ia. Terse 11. "This beginning of nee acics." This leesou is notable as tt% first record of our l.ord•e working s miracle. And the 1►resence of the miracle in the gospel locoed,' given great offense to certain ts'orl.) who believe only in the "natural." it is related that in order to put u e,top to the fraudulent niiraele•n in connec- tion with the torn; of the .Abe Paris, pract herr by the Jesuits, the king had the part of the tomb where the remains cel the *atilt lay walksl up. Shortly atter some one put a paper on the wall with thio inscription, "By cennue•rtd of the king. C:od is forbidden to work any, more miriteles hare! " ti) au unbe- lieving material Srlce1Ce has put. u1► a notice over the whole r'arth, which in effect is this: "By' reaiolution el the ActuIenty of Science, Clod 1s for- bidden to work any more intrudes in the world!'' Verse 7. "And then filhsl them." The servants filled the watetrpute with water. That was the limit of their ability. But that. got things ready for a power beyond thnire. ']'here is a point where- human pre - paration stops and (lod does the rent. -We prepare the grenirxi aid plant the seed, and there stop Then something happtnta we could Ifo more bring about than we couhi trot;• water into wine—the seed bursts ;tie shell and begins to grow. Tho Minn, " drilla a hole into the solid rock, puts in it • Mick of dynanitt+f,• lights the fuse, and retreat. to • place of safety. '!Tien somethtn-g be could not do happens. 'Jive dull tonic of dynamite nt, ldenly becomes al- most reedetkea power and rends. the rock into fragments. We can do nothing buf! jiet tbinge o ds.' for God. But when we make the proper preparation God always does the reit. Verse 9. "Tse water that was made wine." The Rev. S. H. Had- ley, the we))4nown reformed drunkard and rescue minion worker of New York, ed- dre�e►sing a large convention et Christian workers at Winona bake, Indiana, saki: "I heard of an Ata r i - can in London who tumid fault with the mud. A man Canoed Ruskin dip- ped up a handful of inud from the It was late in the evening as the ,gutter and said: 'In this nand one young student was weeding his way element is !wand, and from sand y o', 1 Alt')' 01� COOKING tUCF;. Rood wine till noir." 'flip trent al Potts?' the last of the feast. 'Ilse cueten, "I am I)r. I'otte;. 'There is no ',was otherwise. Ilut .le omen way i5 young; Potts." 'the divine way. and it stetod for "Not dead, I hope?" i Christian experience and is a pro - "There never was any. I have no , phecy and a protein, for all Intone son." ;history. Not. the green fruit., hit of the ninetert:th century—want to Figs have been uee'1 as fond in tier it Is to ‘...• 11 it thoronghl3•, put in - Plans• share the profits of the wonderful de- ! lives in the next etreet?" 1,101 that of the ripened taint, is the 1Yrittr de- velopment 'which is about to take 1 1 1 y "Yee. Is she ill? What's the that-1sweetettt. Not the past. tett the ti- b in lnduetrinl l'anada Mr. place, 1 they tnusst nun's across the dose �, pure, holder the tu,hlest a Vie Watson Griffin comments, gas follows r border into the Country of the twcn- t i g herr nephew too ---flue nt life! may be good, lett. /k► MF un the ItStatectty agitation in the rg, part anis he with Christ k ter het - he States: According to the both century, h ter. sled Boston Heeraltl the grenteest game to '1'() KILL, llNPl•�I1.IA1. ILECIPII(>'- he barred in international ' ' puta the best tart. We p politics in (I 11'. , • alumni not wish tee (deluge the metier. the near future is to be with a hien- I I probable h h Orient from the earliest times, are!, to .-.,tel wretee un,al 1►,i,i; it to a lucid were also believed to he an - anti- the , i>,sil rel tell • for 20 m)mrt,e, to poison. t. 11.' ore set u rh, •, ask' salt and drain. Vesuvius and 1•'tt1;► tire, never ► e•Ih if • . is iso indite(' chile cookie it active at the same time; when one Leen,, the rice dark. After draining, is violent, t e other is Most quire- 1 ,)1,e• melted buster over it and etarsi cent. i., tine ovr.n a couple Of minutcvt to lherc stands at the feet of M0.0►1 'try. It tankers' appetizing croquettes, Fina n chestnut tree eni h is Feed ;,i% ed to chicken or lamb broth is "Ilo you know Bill Brigge?" "Yee. Well?" "Well, ho went' morning, "And he had an accident! Hold on a minute. I'll be down -- "No, he's all right; but be got five brace of birds. I thought you might like to hear of It." "I say," replied the exasperated Y. P., "that's • jolly good jute, niy friend. Won't you take some- thing?" "What.?" eaid the arrrpritnni humor- ist, pausing for breath. "Why, take something. 'Take thin." And before the funny man could withdraw his rnouth, a hastily cAm- pottnded puncture of ink, ipec euan- ha, and about fourteen other drugs squirted from the pipe and deluged him from head to foot. about. a pint monopolising his shirtfront. And while he darted frantically round, sponging hiineeN oft with his handkerchief and twilling like • pir- ate In the last act, he could hear a soft voice from above ireset]y mur- tnerr:-- "ITai•e some metre? No? .Well, good -flight. Come again Boon, you funny dog, you!" hall called "rccij►rocity'," and "as t a t nt the reciprocity n agitation in the united states would to ix, 2,000 years ole, It is 2111 goes the battle so rises or rets the be cenrtined almost entirely to et feetin circumference. afar of n g1e.at conaolidat('rl British few cities not far from the Canadian The best cheese mane in ;:u�it.or- leanpire •, '.The iudicv►tf n are is usually exports"et, and is s1.•I- dom to he had even in the tuitions hotels of that '•(►t, : r r` 'rhe French (:ot•4'r•re,ne•nt makesa:t.- 2,50,(10n n year on( .ef 11'e. tery had matchers of the ;inters/;tit 1s e' a>f ivhi'•h it holds a rnonn''Oly ons a o border, such ass Boston, Bufhalo, 1)e - that the awakening of American troit, St. Paul and Minneapolis, but uiatesmiten has corole, continues the. for the fear that Mr. Chanot►crlain's Herald. •'the conte t draws on, proposals for mutual lmperfal tariff and the great, prim le Canada -1)0m- preferences may be adopted. This rnally cotntrto:cia] l`ana(ln, but ae- heir has trainee' a rapid development tunny the political Dominion," of reciprocity sentiment in the Unit- ed States. 11 the United States The longest eo,•t it,noes stnway Congress egress to reciprocity with in the world in that Which 14018 to Canada, it will be chiefly for the the tower of the Philasellehia City purpose of killing imperial recipro- Hall. it cotnprno'M n98 •Steil•. cit3. Once killed, that great leper- A bee, unladen, wi11 fly forty miles ia1 project ran never be revived, and an hour; 11ut (3nc et,nling 11/!I►n laetc e the United States will then be in a with h/rrei d,)es. trent t►;t.el fasste pusititni 10 withdraw any coneys- than teepee utiles au heels elons it may have made to Canada The orange is one of the most gen- for the purpose of defeating 11, . gen- erally i,ae�et nr tit 1e t food Sul Par a guay, especially among the t►or>r ire they country dietri(1s. Pigs nre■ fat- tened nn then;. 7n et het worus, the Ilostott Her- ald betimes that if the agitation for a reciprocity treaty between Canada end the Pelted States is successful, the British Etnpire will go to pieces snob Canada will fail as a rich prize to T'ecle t'au.tda %moulct, indeed, he n great prier, and the people of the United States are just beginning to realire the talus of it. Fortunately, the Chamberlain's plans. artatc►sStne'n of the 1'01(1011 States aro RAILWAYS ANI) 1RE('ll'ROCITY. not the ernly one who have awaken - eel to the value c►f Canada. British Queer things no/net-Imes get into Statesmen are beginning to nppre- the • aleck market ret►nrts of the slate the poesihilities of the I)omin- newspapers, but perhaps the onost. fon, and heft of all our own stains- absurd statement that has yet ap- ' nen now know how to value this trent heritage. Sir Wilfrid Laurier has melt Fait, that Canada is. to be the coutitry of the twentieth ann- lury. It it, not conceivable that the Vreemicr Rho holds r••uch a high t trete • t Canada's future will consent to any arrangement by which the Pone - Onion will become the prise of the !Republic. It is true that Sir Wilfrid 1(aurler• met favored reciprocity with the United States, hut he said ser- ies) years ago in the Canadian Howie of 1'ontmone: "('nnadians nit-u°.10.f. 11! s.11.10i.V") oql 11" it'll) osod Wafer deoure reciprocity." melte -dues 's•tirM1iI1.i )r,1s11 0q1 0) f•o!.101a11) were true words as regards the great. nttil)nuv,) 30 "nir.,t 0113 ,►mill: (3i earn,) 'majority of the Cnnactian people at ennuis.) tin ane) 0,1, • er.)tttRttl y.toA1 IMO time, and they are even truer Pill 0) aJnll0.t1J Putt 'y(11(11010 's1o15 to -day- than they were then. 'blur -!AOJd Silva )spar Saq,i, •ss).Tnp(.td rhnnge of sentiment is clue to the letrttiu 1111) sot 110x► sot s1r►.t,tit1rtst nes ------�- -- (1,stt if seri don't hna►t the urAtt.;ew weather. 'flus the bed of the French fort that they now appreciate the 04) Aniv.i 30ntrt (rCr•ttilvJ nv!{►eure, f I'atifnt--"t'ejctr,r, whnt do you eo the i'uel li,e.: trill hove no kitten- tang. soldier is the 0O►ft:lit of all terl,iiers' p:0Oil,i'i'les ,of ('nnada as they IP1'er 'rt►*ttr.i) u! 0J11 51►noi 4)IM oldotd wizen you hntr n cold in the hail?" 1',,t 10•,• (+e-!c►l.l ot.n• t'r fruit ;free belt=, n5 that of the ]•'retch peasant, 01,1 eet.•rc iter • agree. with `ir win tlo►t{er.tivo .Ill ,Ctrides 4'!'Iet 5,►)J01)03 Doti or- "11••11, n, e1►tin, 1 swine most it ,e ,'''11. htutcn 1 c nt,• i /OW 1110 a 18 url.notileele;e;1 o!co to i►c the test f: i.! :, thint,ir,, 1.1.rtt t'ana(lrt i5 te, aril 1r.►"µ unites:erre,) lend of the time " pie plate, ar,el tl'cn • e•,'I; rl►p it on of ell 1 ur',peon (Vent/i,',3. hued was one copied by a number of Canadian newspapers tt, the effect that n re'ciprecity treaty between Canada and the United States would cense a rise in ('anadian Pacific Railway stock. To ' any thinking man it Crust be evident that a red- procul arrangement with the United ,Cttal!VJ uvtt►ruu,) tit 04 mom 0Ja11) vo ilet!1tt►J °sttntnmt Ise intim 'opium tell 0) passiJssutex' Atus>pe1,ne 0.t0M 'titan) tit 1,0,(o1/ftrta U.)lltnla4►n ettn 1111mi 'I►,0 )3() paw tlu)1ltu0ll '01 'Me doss of Portugal are pn<< inn atel'y fond of grapes and sa iris nee purpolrely fastened to the animate' necks, to impede or pr not'c'h their entrance to the vineyards', in e.:ut•h of the iueciouss fruit. LAItGEST'TitooPPOtll' 1'1!Il:1'. The ltufferi11, n (reot'shile for the Indian Government, has 3 ,st been launched at lt;anrow (nen it's yard of Messrs, tickers, Sons, 013(1 1tls�trn. She is 435 ft, lone, and is the Iatg- cst troopship afloat. At she,rt not- ice the 1)ufer*0 can he c•orlterted in- to nn armed cruiser, has ing eight 4.7 gusts and eight thneepeitteler quick -firers. 'There is aecenlru)da- tion for 1,2,•'0 officers awl men, itith their wives and families. The si►ee l of the secaol ;till he eighteen 41d a halt knots. diel i:) 'S. unci 8.(1(18 gre+citly to weer.-• l:et:le• s. r11), lue4,---.' tir a Small cup of ewes. •••f 114.4. into 2 fits. of new 1 il:. 1(340 INH` tabule steno) R►rglar, t „ee to of fi►d t and pi'( e of ',utter sI.• 1-4 1111 o:%.. Crate int,) this half rot's.,•. Bete iii•,► hour,:. Serve hot, sit l: sr.. Mel 0stuc4•, or cold with t• nipped •'roan► W► i,h hae been •-'1 t►e tere'1! aro) t',tt omit. Eire e Olt 1•'igs--Itc'il 2 cupfuls rico ter 20 minutes 111 (3133' Cult eater; Hent 1 trees o10' snit sent strain in e.,ln,►e'.etr. 'When errs , stir in 1 11r. ch(1t►1•e■l t:gs nrt(l 2 talehenicio nt tw- ins wean) 2() 1111►tute•S. Se'r'e with At 101/1441 cream. Cis -emelt 1'1wl41ir►}C—Ula wilti of boil - 1e1 rice, :t rui>s nett milk, * cup 01 - gnu. :1 isms, 1 taldeopoon nom st.arcis Stone mod cook n large tea- cup eni',ins, then nril COW atm -de ..weer, etre aril yolks of age. Fleav- nr, rel lee,ur in:,) butt(. �oo prvteling '11•4, t(3 t'n!:e. ?Artie Ile. int't:e of %thine- et 2 eggs awl A trlets•'tlloons • loser. I I.1• or with le'ue•n. I:• er lit. tool,,'(►-St„rte; '- rt (. t:rtel,• --seed's; tier•, to tet!i4!, the.. ,1(1,1 4)104' ret . tullk, piniti 4,f eat?. '0.e e:ul eitg e1', reil!:S of three. ,•s^• • 1>0'•r into (/•tel t cups, not trete tain it!►t,e in pen of 1) 111 g water So 11►intetee. tire; tnn)4' n,rt ite0'1:e of wbites 1'ges 111141 401,0 l'ttirwll. Serve ruhl. 1t01'Si•:llall.t) Iliy'1'S. shooting thin •••••••••• BEDS OT•' SOI.DII:RS. In Germany and Austria the sold- ier has a simple straw hued with one or two covens, neither sheet noe mattress. In Russia until recently hes 'tient with his clothes on, on • camp bed, but now ordinary bods begin to he tite,l---the ri►'nilt of asr- rix•iation with more citilired eoun- klan1• ho isi'keepers have had the tries. After this it cannot be doub-- exl►evienc•e of l tiding nn orange ped- 0(1 that. the. 1•'rcarh en!dier's bed is ding has n bitter ;note, !entente the best of all. with its wooden or fennel: leer '•are in renee ing the' iron hefisteadd, 0 straw bed. aeon' unite, t•ithy ssl.in. A cerrsr':pt,1Rlestt mattress, she'etst, a l'ronn woollen! of iseel 11ousckeepi►,g has discovered covet 1t t. acrid an extra quilt for cold '1'O KEEP YOUTHFUL. Expect a good, long, useful Ittr. /fold your thoughts persisteatl) . Simply refuse to grow old by counting your years and nntte•it►nting your old age. Refrain from all kind of Oise, - lents and sedative.•. They will shorten your life. One of the beet preventives 11!' see {s enth►isiaem and interest in aftwlra of the day. Keep in the sunlight. Kethieyl btaut.iful or !sweet grog s or ripens in the darkness. Avoid fear in all iter varied forms Of expression; it in the greatest en- emy of the human race. Nature Is the great rejuvettal'lr; het• spirit is ever young. Live with her, Muds, her, love her. Contemplate beauty In all *'a forms;, end you will lirive everything that ie ugly out of your life. Don't allow yourself to think on your birthday that you are a year older, and no much nearer the and. Cultivate the spirit of c'ontent- ment; all diecontertt and dissatisfac- tion bring nge.turr(3ws prematurely to the fare. Keep your Mit el `ming by Ire*. vigorous thinking and your h rt' sound by cultivating a cheerful• op- timistic dispoeitlon. r NATIJRAT. PV CTUATION,ji "flow wonirl yen: punctuate till sentence?” asked the teacher et grammar end rhetot ie•: " 'As .John opened the hook three fire -dollar tills evidently placed there by his cousin /uttered oaf 11 urn tort WPcn the t►nges and were caukht up ),y the breine ' " ' I think. preefees•or, it you would allow /es. 1 should first snake • (l$Ah afterjllo' ),ill•,," tail t0. toned. pronnptls .