Exeter Times, 1903-2-5, Page 7TE TDARK,TE
eincina9
rs
Little Liver vr 4,y
.11
rviust Bear Siunature of
$eo FeceSlanito Wrapper Bellew.,
Wry email end ao easy
to take as sugar.
y- FOR �1rrictlllt ill
CARTER'S FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
ITTLE
IV R FOR TORPID LIVER.
poll CONSCONSTIPATION.�ti Y
�a FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE DDOIPLEMOl-'nu
• CaiMMISIt.TF9 UunT$I, I , NATURC,
#5 6%143 I PIrreaT vet atiz &. ^ws y
CURB. SICK HEADACHE,
:617 >0 CH
BLOO t�
BITTERS
MAKES
PERMANENT
alas
as
OFsuch severe diseases as scrofula,
running sores, salt rheum or ec-
zema, shingles, erysipelas and can-
ceras well as boils, blotches, pim-
ples, constipation, sick headache,
dyspepsia, and all disorders of the
stomach, liver, kidneys, bowels
and blood.
Burdock Blood Bitters always
does its work thoroughly and com-
pletely, so people know that when
B.B.B. cures them they're cured
to stay cured.
gar
J rj7
R
ri
EMIT
irPILLS
FOR
WEAK
Asetraile
They regulate the action of the ,
heart and invigorate the nervosa.
They build up the run down sys-
tens as no other remedy will do.
Thcy cure
Nervousness, €leeplessness, Brain
rag, Palpitation of the Heart, After
Effeots of La Grippe, Faint 9r Dtzzv
SpellsaQn:aanda, General ,3ebility
and ail trou'cles er,.u:sed by the sys-
tems being run down.
They have cured others.
They will cure you.
baa per box or 3 for $1.25. All dealers or
The Ta num Co, ,Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Backacheof Wenn
Not ono vvornan in twenty has a
strong back.
• Backache Ea the cry of Weak Kidney*
for help.
Cackasho istho warning neto of much
mote serious trouble to come, if not ata
loaded to immediately.
Backache can bo cured quickly and
permanently by using
LOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS.
The great and well known 'Kid'
nay remedy. They have cured
thousands of women. They will
cure you. tO
Mrs, R. L. Lane, Maploten, N. B.,
Writes: "I was greatly troubled with
Bea.cke.che and pain in my side; r.
saw Dean's (idney Pills' advertised, so,
thought I would give them a trig 'After
the first box X began to feel butter and
i took two more to make a complete
, Cure, Z consider Dean's T?;idnoy Pills.a
L,.a.l: good, honest, reliable medicine for all kid.
noy troubles and can'highly recommend
them."
bode. er .box' or 8 for $1,25. All dealers or
li'Eliti 11o4N IrrnailGr Pl24.1 co., lorolato, ca.
PI3STIJOUS NIGHIS
sometimes They Are the Bright Dawn of .a Day of
Christian Usefulness,
(Entered
E 1 Bred according
tdingdto to ctho l that U e het' that you are being fitted for
Thousand dine Bunched and •i arca:, your work, if you are faithful to
by Wm,, llatzy, of Torn ate, at the him, as Adonirani Judson was being
Department of Agriculture, (Mantra• fitted for his work ; r•ememoer that
in the dark hours of your tempes-
tuous night Christ Is watching and
caring for you as he watched the
disciples strtteglingon the waves of
Lake Galilee ; remember that at the
fourth Watch, or just at tho brejik-
mg'af the dawn,. Christ, as 'be did
of old, Will appear to you walking
upon the crystal pavement of the
deep.
•i?ITTING US FOR TUE WORIC.
There is a suggestive story told of
a young . girl who sang in a large
et rate hall in Londun. One of her
trite:. s aster' a noted musical ical critic
who was present what he
thought , of her voice. "She
laci.s one e'entent which would
matte her the greatest singer
of teal c •e, ' st.;s a e.. he (:rule:.
"She lacks soul power. If I were a
yotng mart and could marry her and
Ll treat iter amid bi cak her heart,
tie n o11 account of her grief and her
tuleut ste would be one of the
brightest stars in the musical firma-
ment." Time passed on, and this
A despatch from Chicago says.: --
Rev, i'rank ,lie Witt Talmage preaeh-
ed from the following text :-�lliat-
thc;v xiv,. 22, "Jesus constrained
his ciisciules to get into a ship."
--'t"riere it is ! - See .! Yonder is the
disciples' haat, tossed about on the
waaees of Lake Galilee. Ti.:ose leen
seem to be in as critical a situation
as Was the captain of •an Atlantic.
coal barge • ,Some time ago. ',the
barge had been Vaught in a storm
and was sinking under his teee The
captain signaled to -the tug. Then,
as it drew near, he picked up first
ono and then another of his little
children. IIe raised them above his
head and • hurled them tnieite i the
air into the arms of the rescuers.
Then he turned and i'astened 0 rope,
thrown to him from the tug, around
the waist of his wife and another
around his own Waist, and both
leaped iiito the sea, Pao minutest
after he and his wife had b'.
Red into the rescuing boat his own
coal barge made a plunge anti ,lis- woman's heart was broken by -a.
appeared, Every neemeut the disci er el ht�s''. and. Then canto the -true
tiles, like that captain, dieted
their boat to founder. Some of them
were veteran fishernme, eat they
had given up all hope --of ever reach-
ing land again.
The Danger of drowning 1n Lake
Galilee was not' the orly clanger,
nor iud'eed the greatest danger, cite of 1,0d's iavorhtes. There is a
which threatened the disciples. They great trfrmph of gospel usefulness
were in spiritual danger. Uavir.g f; r you ahead. -
seen J•rsus only a few hours before Batt clan., tempestuous nights of
feed a multitude 01' ratite) persons flnaneiail ruin have often been,. in
with five loaves and a few lis -hes, !Clod's
sight' the bri
ht, blesaod sun -
they had lost sight of his spiritual Ehiiyc as v.eaa nerdta,L.
days of ter power and fame. God,'
when he wishes to fit us for great
and true work, sends us a hurricane
of trouble. ITe compels us to bat-
tle with t'11o. Galilect.li tempests for a
whole tight: Po not be weary of
well doing, my brothers. lou are
Mission and were about to hail hint
as a temporal leader. Like the mul-
titudes which had been fed, they
began to whisper among themselves :
"Wiiv not make Christ -our king ?
IN THE DA1tik HOURS. -
P1ze dark, teml,eetuous eights when
the altadow of the death angel's
wing hovered over the home -have
Such. a miraclea. working leader as often been ie. ou s stent tate bright,
this could not only feed us and Miming days fur tee broken hearted
clothe us Without any work upon
houe.e,Jc:ld circle. It was awfully
our part, but he also could liberate Lard for you to hear the doctor sav
us from Roman tyranny and be to there was no hole. You felt that
us another Moses, another Joshua other people might We,.. nut-sonieftow
or another David." In order to the truth was neer fully brought
counteract this design of makinghome to you until then that your
him, merely a temporal king, which mother or wife or child could ever
would have brought him into col- Le tai:en. Since teat 'moment not
1151Un with the Boman pout,and , onl;, t his life. but the next, has for
have degraded his mission into a 'Y"stn entirely dit`,erant significance.
mere insurrection,. he determined to i Uhy did you place upon her coffin
teach the disciples their weakness plate the word:= "At rest?" Did
and helplessness. He compelled them you mean that her sleep was to.be
to launch their boat and enter into an en.•l ss sleep, which shall never
a fearful combat . of at least ten 1c • have an awakening? You used to
hours with the Galilean tempest. So l revel
11 the
theories
neoi ieusett to clams Darwin's vo-
loolcin rcer to atcay f�ciilt�euurl owo nac ly i to the
.o d me to 'physical man was only a 1Lgher form
gists, which aro absornzrg •fur of a developed animal. .tion was
thoughts and desires, and lead us to horn 11. a. dog; he must die like a
I•'
you u stillclingto those
o
seek fromhim the higher spiritual clog.
theories when you placed upor, her
blessings he has to bestow God 1
clouds our skies and brings upon us coffin lid the words "At met?" Oh,
a tidal wave of crusttin•, caster, no. You immediately went back to
that we uta be driven to climb into the sweet faith of your father and
y mother. And so when the death
his loving, protecting arias. heel's wines began to flutter over
The dark, tempestuous nights of
'the bed of . one of your loeed ones
religious persecution have often•wfth one blow it not only struck
been, in God's sight, the brightest Ivo :r heart, but it also knocked your
and the most blessed of sunshiny 'infidelity clean out of your life. You
days for the church. It was by haw- •immedia:tety said, as you looked into
ing his eyes temporarily Minded the pale are sleet' ing in the casket,
that Paul gained spiritual sight. It
pais by being lowered in a nasket
by a few friends over the Damascus
wall in order to, escape the mur-
derer's dagger that Paul was set
free to embark on 1115 missionary
career. It wan by exile to a stately
island of the Mediterranean that
John was enabled to see his mar-
velous apocalyptic visions. It was
not until Rome had been burned by
the bloody Nero, who laughed and
fiddled while the conflagration re red;
not until the Christians had suffered
under the false charge of being the
incendiaries that the church was
purified and fully launched on its
great evangelistic work. It was
when Martin Luther had to face the
diet of 'Worms end -had been im-
prisoned for months in the ; Wart-
burg that the reformation was start-
ed. When the pilgrim fathers on ac-
count of religious persecution - had.
to leave England, then the first
foundation stone of Christian Ameri-
ca was laid. And in no time of
church history can you find that. a
great religious leader has come
forth without the previous roar of
the 'Galilean tempest, as it yawned
to destroy ' the- church and engulf
Christian faith. •
TIraOUGII PERSECUTION.
What tempestuous struggles have
accomplished for the church as a
whole they may also accomplish for
the humble individual workers in
the church. -God fits many of the
humbler workers for his vineyard as
he spiritually prepared Adonirani
•Judson, the great missionary,, for
his work. For seven long years Mr.
and Mrs. Judson seemed to labor in
Burma in vain ; for seven long years
he testified for Christ amid almost
insurrnotintabie difficulties ; for .sev-
en long years lie and his wife every
four weeks sat down to the .com—
munion table absolutely alone. They
had not. yet made one convert for
Christ. At the end of these seven
long years of seeming defeat the
Missionary society wrote to him
that he had butter surrender his
mission as.a failure and start in an-•
other field. Adoniram Judson, with
his gospel . spirit • aglow with the
awful struggle from those seven long
years, answered the 'Missionary So-
ciety- in these • memorable words
"No ! No 1 I cannot and will not
surrender this mission. Success is
as certain here as:.the promise of • a
faithful God can snake it." Them
cane the great outpouring of the
Pioly Spirit ; then Burma saw its
cloy • of Pentecost. So, my brother,
in .the. Christian minis
or .in the
Christian -pew, fighting against seem-
ingly
eemingly overwhelming obstacles,. re -
"I know she lives. I know she is
living in some other world for me." made..
And us you look up to see where
that other world is do you not feel
that you were being struck by a
Galilean tempest, as were the dis-
cinles of old? Do you rot feel that
through the dark shadow of the
death angel's wing you have been
able to see the spiritual face of
0fliteet:eiogloOs eeo`tel 0(11
OP THE ROME
Recipes for the Kitchell.
m 11y;jiene and Other Motes
2 fur the housekeeper.
1kt11,I INA I373,EAD IN WYNTuit. •
Making bread in cold weather often
proves an irksome task because the
bread is slow in rising, and bread
that takes its time to rise is seldom
good bread when baked. Pleating
the flour fron•.i 12 to 21 hours before
mixing helps pot only the rising pro
cess, but the whitening also, This
fact is now so well understood that
many millers add the advice to the
printing on the flour sack. It must
be put into a' bucket or pan and set
whereit will gat just warm, and
stay warn., nothing more.. To get
it, or the dough after mixing scald-,
ing hot, is to spoil all life in it, and
black soggy bread is the outcome.
:.s for yeast, the housewife who
keeps the everlasting, or as some
call it, neighbors' yeast, knows well
how to make bread with it. Put
this yeast must be used by more
than one family, or at. the farthest,
used three times a week to keep it
at its best: Where one lives isolated
this yeast can be made fresh each
time, as it is , nothing but old-
fashioned potato yeast renewed with
the same amount' of fresh stuff each
baking.
To wake it, put 1 • cakes good
dry yeast to soak the morning of
the day before baking. This com-
pressed yeast is all the better for
being allowed to soak several hours.
At noon stir 1 cup. mashed potatoes,
a little salt, and cup sugar in 1
qt hot water. When cool add the
soaked yeast and set by until bed-
time, when your quart of yeast is
ready to make a sponge of by
stil'l'ing in equal flourto illake a
thick batter. Put this in a place
neither too cold nor hot, and let it
work t.lntil morning Add enough
water or • milk for the amount of
bread required -1 pt added will
make four ordinary sized loaves.
Many young housewives make poor
bread by reason of not mixing en-
ough flour in the kneading process.
To stop short of enough is to have
runny, dark bread ; to mix in too
much flour is to have the bread hard
and floury inside. This mixing pro-
cess is one not explainable on paper.
Experience must be your guide. You
will soon get to know by the feeling
of the dough on your hands when
enough flour has been added. When
the bread is put in a warns place to
rise, cover the top with a liberal
supply of lard or meat drippings.
This is to keep out the air. When
baked, grease the tops and sides of
the loaves to make the crust thin
and flaky and keep it half an hour
in the open air without any cover.
To put a cover on directly after tak-
ing from the oven causes the crust
to toughen.
Biscuits to be sof and flak after
t
3r
baking must be mixed with 'enough
flour and kneaded ubtil the dough
will not stick to the hands. If you
m.ako your biscuits from so many
recipes going the rounds, which say,
"mix just as thin as you can easily
roll," you will find that nine times
out of ten you have hard tasteless
biscuits to put on the table. To mix
as thin as possible may do for
cookies, but that is not the way
good old-fashioned biscuits are
DOMESTIC RECIPES.
Boiled Onions.—Peel and lay in
salted water for half an hour, then
boil tender in two waters, hot and
salted. Drain, season with pepper
and salt, and serve with a white
Jesus Christ as never before? It sauce.
was trouble that did it — terupestu- Baked Onions—Peel and slice them,
nus trouble alnne which made you I cook fifteen minutes in boiling wit -
Use the hillock of a grave for a ter, then turn thern in a clean cloth
kneeling stool at the altar of mercy to drain. Either fry, a few at a
and pardon and love. time, in a frying -basket, or cook in
TWO KINDS OF PEOPLE. butter in a frying -pan till brown
Now, trouble conies to us in one
of two ways, and it rests with every
one to decide hi which of the two
ways it shall come to him. It may
collie as a sanctified trouble or as
an unsanctified trouble. It came in
both forms to the thieves who were
crucified with Jesus. To the one
thief the physical agony 'was um -
sanctified trouble, causing him to
curse and deride Christ; to the other
it came as sanctified troeb.e •.ausing
him to plead for mercy and love.
Unsanctifiecl trouble comes to a man
who stands by his child's open cas-
ket, and 3 t embitters him and causes
hien to set his jaw in rebellion and
say, "No good God•would have tak-
en that child out of my arms.,,
Sanctified trouble came to a 'young
officer of my church and caused him
to- say to the visiting minister: "I
do not want a pastor to come into
my sick room to make merely a so-
cial .call. I want him to come in to
pray." In . tsie midst of : your sor-
rows and trials are yon reedy to
hat your troubles become sanctified
troubles?
Are you ready to feel that in the
darkeet 1)0018 of your night Christ
i.s waiting to speak to yon, that ho
is reatty to appear unto you? •
Friend, to-da.y in your troubles
can you not hear the voice of Jesus
Christ speaking to you? - Can .you
not, will ,you not, see that even •in
this dark hour Je1us 'is walking to -
Ward tion, stepping lightly union the
crystal pavement of the deep? •
In Belfast district no fewer than
70,000 people are employed in con-
nection With the linen manufacture,
and in the numerous mills and ware-
houses no less than 213,000,000 is
invested.
The Compulsory Education 'Act "is
doing good'• throughout Ireland,
Both in the cities and in the rttral
districts it has, wherever adopted,
Member that God has sent to you emislet;rehly increased the average
that tenmpest for a purpose ; 1011enn• n.ti:enda•nco.
TI1'Ia, OF TURPENTINE.
Turpentine, either in resinous feria
or in spirits, has a household value.
A. child suffering with the croup or
any throat or lung diiioulty will' be
quickly relieved- by inhaling - the
vapor and having the chest rubbed
until the ` skin is red, then being
wrapped about .with flannel moisten-
ed with fiery spirits. Afterwards
sweet -oil . will save' the skin trails
irritation. In the case of burns and
scalds turpentine has no equal, It
is the best dressing for patent leath-
er a it will remove paint from
artists' .clothes and workmen's gar-
ments ; it will drive away morns if
a few drops are put into closets and
chests ; it . will persuade mire to
find other quarters if a little is
poured into lie mouse -holes ; one
tablespoonful added to tna %voter
in which linens are boiled will make
the goods wonderfully white a few
drove will prevent starch from.
sticking ; mixed with beeswax it
makes the best floor' polisfl, and
mixed with sweet -oil it is unrivaled
as a. polish for fine furniture -the
latter mixture should be two parts
of sweet -oil to one part turpentine
physicians recommend spirits of
.turpentine, applied externally, for
Iumbago and rheumatism. It is also
preseribed for neuralgia of the face.
WINDOWS OF THE HOUSE.
To the passersby there is probably
no. one feature which lends more
eharacter to the general aspect of
the house than do the windows.
Windows aro at once the eyes and
the smile which light up the archi-
tectural face of a dwelling. Through
the saving grace of well-designed
and well-placed windows, the hum-
blest
umblest house may assume a"charm all
its own. They attract unconsciously
and, by contrast, dignify even the
plainest portions of the house. The
successful home -builder must wisely
consider the distribution, plgcing
and character of his windows. More-
over, every window should receive
double consideration in each of
these aspects, for it must look well
both inside and outside.
THE S. Van ESS is
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
FEB. 8.
Text of the Lesson, Acts xviii., 1-
11. Golden Text, I Cor•, iii., 11.
1. After these things Paul de-
parted from Athens and came to
Corinth.
His testimony was not in vain at
Athens, for some clave unto unto
him and believed. He did not ex-
pect, nor are we taught to expect,
that all the seed will fail on good
soil, but we know that no labor in
t11e Lord is in. vain and that His
word will always accomplish His
pleasure (I Cor. xv, 58; Isa. 1v, 11).
The Church of Christ is made up of
an elect number out of all nations,
given unto Him out of this world
the Father v v 9; I� h. i 4;
byeRe .
( ly
vgive xvii, 6; vi, 37 ); but ' v e the
gospel in good faith to every crea-
ture,
rewture, for whosoever will may come,
and we aim by all means to save
some ( John lit, 16; Rov. xxii, 17;
I Cor. ix, 22).
2, 3. And found a certain Jew would enjoy them. See Josh. i, 9 ;
named Aquila, boon in Pontus, late- e, f, 17 ;
Ise xli, a10, 13 Gen.r
ly came froItaly, with his wife xxviii, 15 ; Dent. xxxi, 6, 8 ; Mark
Priscilla. '' as * and because he was v, 36. The great and all sufficient
of the same craft he abode with them promise "I am with you" includes
and wrought. all others, for His presence insures
After all these centuries there are all else. See Ex. iii, 12 ;Josh, i,
still in force cicerces'tlhat scatter Is-
kaa
��Fi � se.,
�H TOE3TRENGTNTOW91,1 �,
IEYC!1REFUNcrloN L Ro G50t '.
EY ENRit; TUE BL000 f.
Till` CONSTITiJTIOtd .4
Ondon,�+y I.
Marrirea.�'16os
�� FRiGG 1
fa1TBRITAIN'% AMERICA
all Pruggist5 lk awn
Pricein Canada: $1.00;
Six bottles for $5.00 1e
A remedy which' acts through the
foltctions of nutrition, by the building
up of new and healthy tissues is not
to be expected, to manifest its action
in a few days.
When tate disease is of recent ori.
win, this early and illtzuediate action
ill often be met with. Otherwise,
wilelt it has already lasted some time,
the action of the remedy '.must be
chronic like the disease itself, •
This is why the length of the use
of Sat. Pains WAr'rres will vary with
every individual case ; but it is a fact
which no one will now deny that in
the treatment of general debility ST.
f A1liBs WAVSRs produce relltarkable,.:
and is some cases, immediate effects,
ST, f AlifES WAITERS help stomach;
digest food and send the ntitrinleut
through the blood, and this is the
honest way to get health: and strength,:
the kizid that lasts, develops and
breeds the energy which accomplishes
much.
"Xn diseases of ill- stomach St.
James Wafern are almost if not
at is t p specific. I have great
Dr. Edward A. Robinson,
Cori[, Ireland.
.11.,lames IYaftrsa+•t nota secret
stnreay: is the vttmerousdo, torsre-
c,nnmenaing d;,ent to their patrents
n,e mai: the formula -upon request.
Where (eaters are not sellingthe
Wafers. they are matted upo•t re-
ceipt of price at the Canadian
branch St. James Wifars Go., 1728
$t. Catherine at., Montropl,
of the Corinthians, hearing, believed
and were baptized.
When one door is shut, another is
sure to ,open and sometimes, as in
this case, next door to the one
closed against us, When the Lord
opens, no power can shut, and when.
He allows a door to be closed it is
because He wants us elsewhere (Rev.
iii, 8; Matt. x, 14). It was a splen
did victory for the Lord and Elis
servant to have the chief ruler of
the synagogue and his household re-
ceive the despised Nazarene as
Israel's Messiah, and possibly many
were helped by his example to do
likewise. But the chief ruler can-
not always control the other rulers,
whether he be the president of a
nation or the governor of a state or
the mayor of a city or only ruler of f
a synagogue.
9, 10. Then spake the Lord to
Paul in the night by a vision. Be
not afraid, but speak, and hold not
thy peace, for I am with thee, and
no man shall set on thee to hurt
thee, for I have much people in this
city.
The Lord saw the weakness and
fear and much trembling of IIis
servant (1 Cor. ii, 3), and by this
special message strengthened him to
P g g
continue. So He strengthened Ab-
ram centuries ago when Ile saw
his fears (Gen. xv, 1), and all His
"fear nots" are to strengthen us,
but we must appropriate them if we
reel. They chose Caesar instead of
Christ ()John xix, 15), and the :Cae-
sa.rs the world rulers, still oppress
5 ; Judg. vi, 16 ; Jer. i, 8, 19 ;
Hag. 1, 13 ; i!, 4.
11.And he continued there a year
and six months teaching the word of
them; but "IIe that scattered Israel God among them.
will gather him," and the time is Ile had no higher criticism, nor
even now at hand (Jer. xxxi, 10: did he cast any doubt or slight
Ea..•ek. xxxvii, 21, 22). The move- upon any portion of Scripture ; but,
went known as Zionism, although believing all Scripture to be written
unbelieving, may be part of it. by inspiration of God and profitable,
While Paul believed and taught that he taught from all Scripture the
they who preach the gospel should things concerning the Lord Jesus
live of the gospel (I Cor. ix, 14), he Christ. See carefully II Tim. iii,
also took pleasure in working at his 16 ; Acts xxiv, 14 • xxvi, 22 '
trade, that ho might minister to 1115 xxviii, 31. It would be grand if
every believer was so filled with the
word as to be a living translation
of the same.
Fried Onions—Peel medium-sized own necessities and give the gospel
Spanish onions and boil in salted freely (Acts xx, 34; I Cor. iv, 11; 1
Thess.
water for fifteen minutes, then throw Thess. ii, 9; II coned ill, 8).
into cold water and let . stand half in And he reasoned in the 4,ymat-
an hour. Drain on a cloth, cut with g°gue every Sabbath and persuaded
a sharp knife, into slices half an the Jews and the Greeks.
inch thick, place in single layers in
a well -buttered tin, and bake in a
quick oven, basting occasionally
with butter till browned. Serve in a
hot dish.
. Onion Stew—Peel and slice the on-
ions, let them lie in cold water half
an hour ; put them on to boil in
fresh cold water, and turn off after
they have boiled three minutes. Re-
peat this, then in the fourth water;
let them cook tender, put through a
colander, add hot milk, season with
salt and pepper and a generous piece
of butter, and thicken while boiling,
with a little flour wet siuooth with
cold milk.
Old Plantation Johnny Cake—Sift
one quart of Indian . meal into a
bowl; Make a hole in the center and
pour in a pint of warm water, adcl
a teaspoonful of salt and gradually
Mix water and meal into a solt
dough ; then stir briskly for fifteen
minutes or more until it is light
and spongy. Then spread the dough
evenly and smoothly out on a
straight flat board ; and place it
before the open fire and bake it
well ; then cut into squares, send
to table very hot, split open, and
butter. This can be baked in the
lower oven of a gas stove very sue-
cessfully, but must be placed low
(Teem from the fire.
To Roast a Turkey—Take a rine,
large turkey, if too fat take. part of
it out : see that ,the insides are all
removed, saving the giblets (neck,.
heart, gizzard and liver),' for, the
gravy ; after it is thoroughly clean-
ed
leaned. make a dressing of stale bread
crumbs, salt, pepper, 0eee of but-
ter, some sweet herbs ; it may be
Moistened with a little water or
lemon juice, stuff the turkey well
with this dressing, both the neck
and the body. Or, prepare a'stuffing
of pork sausage. heat, elle .beaten
egg. and .a flow bread .crumbs.
He doubtless did as at Thessa-
lonica and reasoned out of the At one year this weight has in -
Scriptures, opening and alleging creased from 640111. to 750Ib.
that Christ must needs have suffered The average age at death of peo-
and risen again from the dead and pie who die by accident is 351
that Jesus is the Christ (Acts xvii,
2, 3). From the day that the Lord
Jesus met him on the road to Da-
mascus his one story was that Jesus,
crucified and risen, is the Christ, the
Sou of God (Acts ix, 20, 22; I Cor.
ii, 2).
5. And when Silas and Timotheus
were coupe from Macedonia Paul %vas
pressed in the spirit and testified to
the Jews that, jeans was _Christ, - -
Tnsteai,d of "pressed in the spirit"
the Revised Version • says "con-
strained by the word." This re-
minds us of Jeremiah, who because
of reproaches determined to speak anti
no more in His name, hut the, word rum
such a fire within him that, he ed'
f
was constrainer) to speak (Jer. xx, „.,e.
8, 9). We think also of Peter and
John, whom no threats could pre-
vent from speaking what they had
seen and heard (Acts iv, Cl), and of
Elihu, who said that he must speak
that he might be refreshed, for he
was like a, bottle of wine ready to
burst (Jobxii, 18-20).
6. Your blood be upon your own
beads. I am clean. From hence-
forth I will go unto the gentiles.
It was his custom everywhere to
preach the gospel to the Jew first
(Rom, i, 16) and then to the gentile.
Compare their conduct at Antioch
in Pisidia (xiii, 45, 46). When any
one is duly warned of danger and
refuses to take need, his blood is
on himself (nick. xxxiii, 4, 5).
Those who obey not the gospel shall
bo punished with evet•lastiag de-
struction (II '1'hess. 1, '8 9). As to
shaking one's raiment see Neh. 'v,
18,
7, 8, And Crispus,. .the chief ruler
of . the, synagogue,, believed on the
Lord with all` his house, and ina,hiy
The average weight of a calf 3
months old is from 233111. to 3531b.
years.
New Zealand has an ivy -tree which
has a thick, short trunk and heavy
branches. It is not a climbing plant.
took the outside."
There are 6,209 private schools in
England ; of these 1,958 are boys'
schools, 3,178 girls', and 1,078
mixed.
• A- uhlin correspondent learns au-
thor tatively that Mr. W. E. IT.
Lea will not represent Dublin Uni-
vers ty in the next session of Perlia -
men .. No election can take place
Parliament assembles in Feb -
when a new writ will be move
r.
I'R10IY1 ERIN'a GRIN ISLE
WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE
LAND OF THE SHABIROCR.
Some 'Personal and Business Notes
That Will Interest Irish -
Canadians.
One hundred and sixty-nine cen-
tenarians died last year. in Ireland.
Litter for horses and cows is to
be made from spent hors at Dublin.
Ulster has sent out 1,085.590 emi-
grants during the last 50 years.
In Belfast on the 13th ult. a gen-
tleman was discovered lifeless on a.
tram car.
The establishment of a second bat-
, talion of Irish Guards is to be pro-
ceeded with;
1 Claims for compensation in three
cases of malicious cattle mutilation
have been sent in to the Tuliamore
'District Council, King's County.
Juidge Adams, the well-known Ire
eelh County Court Judge, says that
I Irish humor, 'Which was at its height
!when Ireland had a parliament of its
own, has greatly declined strove
O'Connell's time. '
iThe ,first determined action to
Meath stop fox hunting in West waas
'made at Killare, near Mullinger. A
large crowd, headed by Mr. Calvin,
ID. C., assembled and prevented hunt-
ing there.
Not thel least notable result of the
Trish Agricultural Department's
work is the revival of table glass
making in Belfast, formerly a great
Irish industry, but extinct for many
years. Early potato growing for
the English market has also been
placed on practical lines.
This year two great firms, Har-
land & Wolff and Workman, Clark &
Co., have left the highest outputs of
both Scotch and English firms about
10,000 in the rear. Harland &
Wolff turned out six large liners, or
79,497 tons; Workman, Clark & Co.,
twelve vessels, or 78,933 tons.
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