The Brussels Post, 1906-5-10, Page 6FAITH.
No Mi Ever Bennie a Martyr for a Truth
He Received at Seoond Hand.
'rids is the victory that overcometh
the world, even our 110th,'—I, Jolla v.,
You cannot believe little things and
clo great ones; you eannot believe tu
144 ettecesses and accomplish whole
once. , A rnall'El faith sets the butt/elu-
tes of his work. He will do what he be-
times und accomplish what he believes
cite be accomplielted. elountaius aro
not subdued by men whe stand Me-
cum -aged et a molehill. A man meet
celiquee the fatigues of the way in he
ewe hetet or he alit never set out u
11 loud.
Back dr all free action Iles some (treed,
tenni cOnvIction. All veal battles nate
Nen fought and either lost or won in
the heart. The simple or stubborn
confidencethat leads to all -conquering
effort, this is faith; the vision that vital-
ises. The eye of faith sere the prize .t
the end long before It Is reached; the
eye of tear, looks so cloecte at Um deli.
chilies and dangers of the ouurse that
the prize is net seen at all.
There is a good deal of fatalism seek-
ing to pass as faith. People sits' we must
have faith in Cod; let things take Wier
course and they wit come Mit all ri
The church long commended the sloth-
ful who lot things drift, and called their
biziness resignation. But, faith feels the
CEIITI'ME OF A HARVEST
because it hos first diligently plowed
and sown and becattee of the goodness
that has ever brought the seedtime and
the harvest.
superstitious credulity is not faith. It
is more than the foresight that feeds
ot. visions of a. future heaven; it is the
clear eye looks keenly at the ehlinge
rI to -day. No truth is the better for
bring taken on trust; it cannot be pos-
sessed until it is known, not on the au-
thority of another but on your own ex.
perlenee.
.Only a. nest 'sand faith ism force in
the world. It is born of life; it deter.
mthes Ilfe, Your faith forms you. if
you do not believe men, how 0811 )11:11
11. a man? If you de not believe 101
things better, rekler, puree, how (tan
you move toward them? if at botleni
your faith IS in things mean, sordid,
sensual, base, then thither teens yea
lire, and no extraneigia efforts, no baclg•
es, buttons, er creeds can change Its
Oltran. •
You can measure a Inan's weiele 1(1
this world by the strength and oteartiess
c1 his cenvictions. Poor you may be,
Needless, alone, weak, unlearned; but
ell this can be overcome If height in the
heart there burns the unquenchable
Mime of some great passion, some high
ruith. Clivert this fire within them, all
the tools shall be found, but without
it the finest, elide:winced or brain and
body is valuelees.
Given by some great prinetple, 01(1110
purpose that- Lenes a holy passion,
11ON1E'rHING THAI' LEADS YOU,
like one of long asp who "Me:Messily
,sel his face to go' up 10 Jetusalem," then
1 all power is yours. The emu who has
' felth to remove n101111101115 &way.; feels
• the picks and the eleent shovels sone..
where. He hikes the huts he has,
though they may soem but teye beside
hie task, and lol some morning ween
ile. droaniore (tea se IP 111000111111 s
no longer there, Faith has had her per-
fect. work.
No worthier word W/1S ever said ef
ihe divine Man than that which spoke
of hun as the leader and completer of
faith. So great a work Was possible
only with sublime confidence In the
glorious possibilities of mankind, only
milli unshakable assurance that all
that was good and true in the universe
woe working with him for the good (of
all. With him faith' %yes an eye that
SAW man's hidden good. a. hand that
grasped the infinite might moving for
the best,
HENRY F. COPP,
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
MAY 13.
LESSON WORD STUDIES.
Notts—The text of the Revised Version
is treed es a basis or thes,e Word
Studies.
Stilling the Tempest. The group of
paraletse spoken by Jesus on that mem-
orable day at the seaside near Caper
-
name 15 reported in part only by each
of the eyneptic evangelists. Matthew
reports seven of the group, omitting
tho parable of the growth of the seed
recorded only in Marls. Slark records,
in addition to the. one just mentioned,
the parable of the sower and the parable
of the mustard seed, both of which, in
addition to the parable of the leaven,
ere reeorded also in Luke. Mark, in
verso 33 of the fourth chapter, at the
conelusion of his record of this day's
Ranching by the seasido, adds "And with
many such rambles spoke he the word
unto them." We are left in doubt, how-
ever, as Lo whether Mark refers in these
words simply to those parables recorded
in Matthew hut not recorded by him-
self, or whether WO tilt to assume that
leetts at that lime spoke still other per-
ables not recorded by, any evangelist.
When at last the busy day was ended
lesus suggested to his diseiples that they
cress over In the other side of the lake.
This they did willuert even waiting to
the elly or to pause for rest and eerresh-
ment. In their passage over they en.
ceunter a great storm, so great the the
sinking tit' their little craft seemed Im-
minent,. Bul, worn out by his dayle
labels James slept ,onluily 11 (ho inids1
of the slime, lentil tiredly the anxious
disoiples atoll:oiled 111111 and pleaded
with lain it, rosette them from the ',ern
in which they blood. A single won1 ef
cabal commend to wind end see and all
was 81111, Mer1 reveille tho gentle re-
buke of JeStis to his dIseiples for their
fearfulness /1101 (-Meer; Me account of
the wonderful event with the weeds
"And they reeved exceedingly, and said
ene 10 auother, Who then is 11118, that
even the wind rind the sea obey hirn ?"
At ihis point in Marie's narrative our
Present leeson begins.
---
Verse I. To the other skie—To the
eastern shore of the lake about opposite
Capernaurn.
ilerasenes—Anclent tunntismipts differ
in the spelling of the proper name here
used, though the preferred reading in
this narrative of Mark. and also in that
of Luke, s001110 to be the one adopted
by the Revised Version. leftist ef the
ancient manuscripts of Matthew's gos-
pet, however, road thelareness us do
Men some manueeripts or Mark and
Luke. (Comp. Authorized Version and
fleet:eel V01141.11 .1 Malt. 8. 28; Murk
5. 1; arid Luke 8. 2w.
Geriet, Email, from whielt (poles
the proper noun 0,8'11801.1s. was a city
on the east sale nisi 1111,,e1 half way
-down from the notile-ril streonity (of
ilm qua of Galilee, to Iffile no 4,/ limn ft
Mile front -the shore. Tbe sh ,00 Itt thie
1)0,1111le very narrow, n 01ee' Sad-
eng Manostabruptly irnm the high lable.
land to the wares edge. A small heep
or ruthe Al the font of the Slope boare
the gums mune /is the rules of the city
ne the tidal/eland alexia. (Indere, on the
oilier Ilene, tone n eily eix miles soath-
01101 or the ein 1 11;11110a, WO south oft
the Tarim's. er tperninex gorge, in
unetent Mo,"ity 01 great Importance
end one of the principal CiUS of the
Doimpolle Gums Ver. 20.) Since 004
dare was (1.811411.0s much better knoven
than•Geese, it Is quite poSS1b1e that the
rianlel Otadarianee. Was later substituted
',for the 'miry Whitler- though less familiar
name, (leresenes, the change fret, being
merle by some eep,ylet (Salado Of Palest -
fine who knet* of Oadare but hot of
Gorse. When wti tietnember how Often
the Manuseriptst vit our gospels !ern
copied and recopied during the many
centuries preceding the invention of
printing the wonder is that more copy-
ists' errors of thie kind than actually do
occur are not found In the gospels.
2. Straightway—A comtnon ward in
Mark's rapid sketch er events.
Tombs—Cayee in the limestone cliffs,
abounding especially in the vieinity
Gorse.
A man—Matthew 018111110118 tWO but
Luke also only one. Probably Mere
were twu, of whom one was the fiercer
and acted as ,spolresman,
With an .unclean spirit—For a note on
demoniac posession, cuoapare Wad
Studies for February 18.
G. Worshiped him --Simply paid hint
reverence. The Greek word is not limi-
ted in its annlication to reverende• paid
to the Divine Being.
7. Wird have I to do alai thee—at is
the demen that is spenking; Note the
strong contrast brought out by the use
of the pronouns I and -thee.
Thou Son of the Most High God—The
demon is represented as recognizing
the divinity of Christ.
8. For he said—The word was not
yet. epoken, and a better rendering pos-
sibly would be "He was about lo sey."
Perhaps the expression on the face of
Jesus and his whole manner indicated
to the demon what he was likely to say
next.
D. What is thy nante—Addressed to
the unfortunate man to bring him to
composure.
LegIon—Explained In the next Clause
"For we f1r0 many."
10. Out of the country—In Luke's
narrative we read "Into the abyss."
13. (lave them leave—We note that
Jesus did not command the demons to
enter the swine. Matthew is more ex-
plicit in quoting the word of Jesus,
tyltioh he mortis as having been sim-
ply "Depart." ,We note nig° float lbere
Is here no anticipalhet of the impending
catastrophe. '
About two thoueend—The estimate of
the frightened swineber,:s.
14. In the cily—In Gersa about a
mile lo the northeast.
In the country—To the farmers in the
vicinity.
15. Como—Tenses in ,.Greek express
rather the manner than Me lime of
action, while in English Jim t.imaal
rictlen receives the greater emphasis In
the verb form; houss diffinully In
trenslating these tense forms cones.
Wetly throughout.
In his right mind --In possession mice
more of hie mental -rowers, which so
long had been under the control of
demons.
They were ofraid-e-Ae afraid apperent-
ly of the 017110 Man as previressly 0( 1115
madman, or Probably afraid lather of
the power that had overemne the tor-
tnenting demons.
16. They that saw it- -Eye witnesses
of the miracle.
How It befell him and emir:emir g
Um swine—They simply seeded both
inoidents us they occurred, leaving the
hearers to infer .the reason of the catas-
trophe. The exit and ingrese of the de-
mons Willi of emirs) invisible.
18. leesought him ',het he might be
villi himeePossillly both leer roid devo-
tion entered into the motive which
prompted him to make the request,
211. In Deeapolis --A group • of ion
tithe; most end eouth of, itin sett of Gal-
ilee,
NO CAUSE. FOCI ALARM.
Ilicke—"My hale tone% out in hand-
fuls, it 'keeps on, Ill Soon he bald."
Wicks---"Noneensq, If it keeps on yoll
Oen never be bald."
PERHAPS,
1
CANADA A1ND THE S'fATES
POSTS 13111040 sir,T OUT TO ESTAni
L1811 DIVISION BETWEEN TIIEM
'hey ore Mode of Brass or Copper
Motes and Set in a ‘titeddinu
el Gement,
'Ilse boundary between United. Slates
ado into the United States, und some
cf this goes ort to -day, There nee 111110'
(10118 trails through the mountains ef
British Columbia, and 11 1110 Chinese oan
eeeepe peying the duty which Is now
charged by Canada on each celestini
immigrant they are liable to find their
Way in 10 OUr country.
MUCH OPIUM SMUGGLING.
Opium smugglieg is mother crime
frequently perpetrated, The opium Is
said to be prepared al Victoria and CM,
and Caueda is being carefully murked. Hod across in small packages, 'rhe duly
A. band of surveyors repreeentiog both Is very highend it, does not lake Inally
0„111111,i„ is gett,14 QU'O' tti meting new pounds to bring a profit to the smug -
1(108 front the Atlantis) to the PacIlle glee Of a thousand dollars. Our cus-
Lied putting up brass posts to meek Isms rffilltrel(ciloc,st:shlo,,arliont nol a telaihene tot:ailtaeldit a ritigactilt)‘s,t,
teem. I have been 111/011 the line 81.10* 0_1/1_01111e0n0
help them.
mut Limes duriug my trowels 111 Canada, ,e,l,tu
writes Frank 5.1, CnroulitOr 11'0111 Lets, Teem are custom houses at all 1,01111'
00(1 to the Gloicago Beeurffillerald. 10rr01, lIt::enl)"sl
At the town of Lauriee, in (31111811 Co- 10‘lakZSat 0000Y 101011
.;
Daniels, I found the depot bunt un Doe) sae-
Ih 1 o ii t
sides uf the boundary. There Wus a
struol'grgeli.ffill''e-ogm' .:(''.earoeugTa alio tgr Ite dtianlil 01
ittuiliiit'll1c, (101rinwoilite 1.10iinIgustiottal,1%y:iiitetchro:astlymaipultauti.
Steles. I have boiled goods in Ottawa
itrie(31, ileToroethilinsdeotticlle.ontoleyrtehltinangt oto‘1,1(1trrnten lige(
ti‘1:.otior°1,dlialuolvo01'id180vilinouii1L1soal SAlialt.ols'iereknevagill!
free of duly at any time I chose to (w-
and on the other side Canada and a pie -
der it. A lady friend of Mine examined
ewe 0( 1(10 1111(1(10 led. I planted one of
fur cloak in Quebec. 1110 other
tny feet on the 1(1 g10 and the other en a, fla"
The price was several hundred
the leaf and 011)0(1 101' It little 5,8101(10linY.
dollars, end she told the onerehant she
the division which seperales John Bull's
e could not afford to take it and pay the
Anierlealf possessions from those ' L duly. Ile milted that she need not
111010 Sarre Looking to the south I
movry :about. that. and that he would de.
weld, In my 11110g111101100, see the Rock- ler it to her at her Mune in New York
Me rolling onward fur thousands ffi ,,,,, „ ,
any day she chose to
miles to our Mexican boundary and et lee' •'„',, 'ro" 00
the north the wountodus of Canedit
1110 said that- Europe is liko
and the snow and ice of the MUNI
,,,, camp. Its every seuntry has fortifies.-
an armed
Amalie! exteusling clime" 1" 1118 ix"' • bons at the places where ft could most
ln 80111p111ly 10'11l1 11. 11. Hone, Ilie gen- ensily be attacked by its neighbors and
oral paseonger agent of the Great 'North -
Mr Railroad, 1010 Warr Willi 1110, 1 Walk-,
, hept up with a view to possible wars.
ee ease, mil a kW f, Lps 11 . 1 1 his line of 3,000 miles er more be-
,
of the brass posts whieh had just ham ' tween canticle end the United 0118(08
put up to mink the boundary. -le II no a
- -s , Is 1)1111108113' free from military defenc-
es: 01113' a few miles apart and they ere' es Tem le a great feet at Quebec,
being put up along the whole line, with , e eb „Id gene and n. few soldiers.
the exception of the grata lekta, Ircan 1 There is a coaling station at Esquimault
the mouth of the St. Lawrence to Puget i in British Columbia. which until loet
-- il'i year was garrisoned by British troops,
Sound. As I stood beside the Post
reached to my shoulder. It Is, I judgeb„t 101110(1 10 new nem entirety
-'
by Celt -
about flee feet high, eight, inchiele
es tfl,
, , actions. The British, In fact, have with.
et the bottomteear 111111108drawn theIr forces from Canada, and, tapering f
thick at the top, whore it ends in a from now on the Canadians will handle
little pyramid as sheep as that which their 0„ military establishments
capm
e the Washington monuent. the,
i throughout. Indeed, Canada has pieta -
post Is made of brass or copper plates, 11010113' 000 defences along he land boun-
soldered together, and so set in a beel. dewy to speak of, and it Is the same
I
ding of cement that it looks like solidwith the United States. According to
Our treaty, neither nation min keep more
than one naval vessel on the great
lakes, ami this is more for police duties
than for national protection.. Neither
One side of this post bore the word country is afraid of the other, neither
"Canada" in raised letters, and the 01)' 10811)0 a. large military force, and the
r osile side '"rhe United Stales." Om relations which now prevail end have
always prevailed between the two lead
another side was the inscription:
to the belief tint we will always have
"Treaty of 1836. Line established 1857
and 1861. Surveyed and marked 1003-
intereational peace.
11107."
Standing at the post I Gould look for
several miles east or west through a
wide road which had been cut along
each side the boundary right through
the forest. I am told that such marking
has been done all along the line.
enormous military establishments are
metel Indeed, I del not know 'e
It ns
hollow' until I tapped It with my knife.
LNE NIARKED BY POSTS.
__....„
Ain FOR EMIGRANTS.
Municipal aid is now being furnished
to emigrants from Leith, Scotland, end
I undereland that the boundary posts the result Is being walcia with great
along the eastern end of tlie line are on interest. The unemployed workmen erg
load condition and that they are being of 1005 authorizes the appointment of
replaced by posts of copper and gran- distress cummittees by the lomat authort-
ile. The origtuat ones between Quebec ties of eines and' towns and provides
and 'Maine, New Hampshire and Ver. that "the central body • moy, if they
moist were made of iron. They were think fit, in any ease of an unemployed
put up about sixty years ago, but the person referred to them by the distress
frail and thaws have dtsplaced many commitlee, assist that person by aiding
of them and thrown others out of per- the emigration or removal to another
pendlcular. Some of these posts have even of that person and any of his do'
been moved. lite surveyors who haoe pent -lents, or by providing or eontri-
been going over the line during the past letting toward the provision of tem -
year found two of the posts on tbe north- poemy work." Any expenses incurred
ern arm of Lake Champlath missing. whicei shell not be Met by vOluMary
One was sixty feet away from the line, contributions ere to be paid out of the
rates or taxes.
Leith is the first muntelpality in Scot-
land. if not in the United Kingdom, to
adopt fin emigration scheme. There nro
about four Inindred unemployed work,
men in that city, and it is proposed by
•the distress cotnntittee to send to Can-
ada as many as axe physically fit for
farm work and me wilting to emigrate.
lim
A ited number of married Men, with
their wives and children, will be in-
cluded in 1110 Ilst.
To insure the physleal fitness of eml-
gvants tor 0051(1000010the Dominion
the applicants are medically examined,
leech adult enliven', receives two new
complete ottliits of elOthing, a steertige
ticket and $5 or $0 pocket money. 11 (8
calculated that the mist, to the taxpayers
than now, One-half or a building, rot, will slightly exceed $40 for each adult
instance might be in the province of pereem sent abroad, not including the
°Milts of clothing, which, it is believed,
will be largely provided by contribu-
tions of apparel and money. The fleet
party of emigrants have been (1111)01)0'
teed work for twelve months on dairy
farms in Ontario. Four are married
men, over thirty and under forty years
of (age. With one or two exceptions the
single men are between the ages of
twenty and thirty. -
The development of the Leith emigre-
erorts for ceiminals, who, standing on lion scheme is watched with nnich In-
ene side of the -room, could snap their 'Wrest and not without misgivIng by the
(Mere al the officers on the other side,
end refuse to be arrested without a te-
quisition,
Our boundary with Canada winds in
and out at all sorts of angles for the
first thousand miles or so from the Ate
"antic. IL begins at the ocean ancl crooks
rind 11.11118 around ettilaio, keeping pret-
ty wen rtWay 100111 the St. Lawrence un-
til it loechee Utabriver at the northeast.
ern edge of New York. It runs with the
river to Lake Ontario end then winds
ils wily through the middle of. -the
swat lakes until it rettehes the intact
:mein at the northenstern end of Min-
toesola on belce .Suportor, brow' hove foe pigeororearing. they heve low
it winds a tittle through Um Mires Illy-
, natural enemies, hawks being very
or entullre le the Lake 01 111a Weans scares, while the perpetual summer is
tout then 1,11011 1111 almost straight shoo1 an impotent -a racier,
801•088 the pridrIOS (111/1 1110 11001tins 10 The form eovers
Puget 'Sound. just hnw long the whole .sabout eight acres of sunfle, gravelly
boundary line is 1 do not know, but lf, oil, and there is en abundant supply
01111,81 be nfonsidOrahly 11101.0 than 3,030 frriifirrieycover the grouesit water. Fifteen thousand lents
nd end lofts, so
iniehe'eeet (
s,,
he greet offenees committed that at limes from a dIstance it ap-
.pears as though soma of the snow from
(m. both Ales nt the hoimilitry In lise
s
West are, muggling end eaten rust Mu neighboring mountains had been
ung, ()popped upon the roofs. Tho inc00880
Thr, pas1,111.88 of Collude aro bettor then ef ihis &Ingle fleck is ellormous, but
til"" 1 Ihn 1111lied 184111.118.' nlIddeht,101 a 11\1011111', 11 (108111(1081(11111piisgelolsteruothrst6nntnitoo 111111.113',vrietin rattelunion frequeffily
erlost
stock nerose the houndery to reed- each 5,1111..
Canada's grass. Such depredations ere
"awfully widely:it by the moulded po.
110e. They patrol The inlerna11011111 11710 GETTING AROUND IT.
, end 11 hod probably been ousted gime
' In an ice S1101,0 when the wilier Was
unusually high. Some of these posts
stood neer roads and they had drop-
ped over into the gutters. Many were
broweed with rust and surrounded
with weeds. The most of these have
been reset or replaced with granite pil-
lows. so bedded that they will resist the
raveges of time.
There Is a custom house at Laurier,.
end our baggage was examined by the
breted States officers us soon an we
erossed over. There aro mono other
towns situated here and there along the
tine, and there are in some places whet,
are known ns boundary stores, half set
ime side and half on the calms Such
stores were more common in the past
v0-d81ter wity 0001)10 Who find 41111.
001(7 in genong lo sleep aro told to
Collat an endless number of sheet
jumping elter � wall?"
"Perhaps it le 'with the Men of p111110
the W001 ever their eyes."
Marriage Is kW& a failure, bin often
(lie aoattiaotifig parties are,
Quebec and the other hall In the Stale
ef Vermont. Behind •one were shelyee
cf American goods and behind the other
great store; of Canadian waves. The
customer paid his money and took his
chine, and the tariff laws wero about es
little regateled as aro those of Moses
le a mining camp.
BOUNDARY STORES LAP OVER,
Such stores were also desirable re -
people of Isdinbergh and other com-
munities in Scotland. The extent to
which it can be carried seems 10e5011e-
able enly by the very elastic term
"unemployed."
PrarION Wow.
NoYohlere in :the world, In all proba-
bility, can so many tame pigeons be
seen in the ale as on the pigeon farm
or ranch which is to be .1001301 11060 1.os
Angeles, In Southern California.. This
pert of the world is especially favorable
, Wr.WthlY raid t111.014 :41111 eowboys us have
Oleic 01,1e10 tha wnifig idT, Thay
g Say lhal /7 11 ,..1/8.11 fkal 00111ns 11110 (3m.
2(11(1 plyS P101 they ennlully (N.
alatne 011 l'11111.1 111.01%4111 in for tuber.
efficeits, foyer unit
es.
"Why, ',rankle," said lIro mother of
o threeeinereild, "You tette (olden both
of those molasscs popcorn Amteres, and
1 ffild yen lo (got only (gm."
"Ind. 1 klnek them together," sold 11111
youthful ,whereer, "and lied, (Tiede one."
IN Home 7"
Vid144,14414.14.7444444
SELF,CTED BEGIPBS.
To make red Roumanian seep, take
three to five beets, according to (Sze, out
1110111 11110 small pieces, and cook them
for at least one hour in four cupfuls of
water in which two bay loaves had pro-
vinusly been broken. Strain the liquid
and set it aside 10 cool, In the mean-
time take half a cupful of well strained
tomato juice, and mix with it a cupful
of 011111, the beaten yolks of four eggs,
with salt, peeper, and a little mustard,
and a tablespoonful of vinegar us sea-
soning, Piece this mixture upon the
stove In a double boiler, awl as soon as
it begins to steam, add the beet juice,
serving it as soon as it bolls, as this is
a soup that will not stand delay in eat-
ing. If desired (1 11183' be cooked with.
out barley in It, but even this will de-
trect Worn the vividness of the red
effect.
Beefsteak Pie. --Cut two pounds or
beefsteak into pieces not larger than an
inch square. Put the meat into a, skillet
in which there is a quart and pint ef
cold water. Put skillet on range and
simmer the meat an hour. Add boiling
WalOr if the water in the McGill. hulls
dovm, Remove teem range and put the
moat into a deep earthen linking dish.
Strew bits of bullet. among the pieces of
steak, together with a generous sprink-
ling of sag and pepper. Chop a me-
dium sized onion, and put Into the sleek
water in the skillet. Put two table-
spoonfuls of browned flour into an
earthen dish, and beat it into a smooth
paste with sufficient, cold water. Stir
this Into the steak water, and pour the
water ovee the meat in the linking dish.
Cover the dish with rich pastry, and
bake fifteen minute's in 0 quick oven to
set the pastry, after which "slow" the
heat, and bake slowly an hour. Boiling
the meat may be omitted, the steak be-
ing put into the baking dish raw. The
dish should be filled with water into
which the beowned flour has been
beaten. The pie should he baked two
hours—and the result isn't likely to be
as satisfactory as produced by the boll -
anti -bake process.
Stuffed Leg of Muttore—Take the bone
out of a small leg of mutton. Fill the
vacant place visith a. stuffing made of
Iwo cups of browned broad crumbs. a
chopped onion, a chopped apple,
sprinkles of powdered savory and salt
and pepper, 'enough Mittel' to metre the
mixture moist, and a half gloss of cur-
rant jelly. Sew the end of the leg se-
curely,. Put slices of salt pork over 0110
side of the leg—and put into a baking
pan in which there is a cup of water.
Cut new hosed or cake 'with (1 very
hot knife, litis prevents crumbling.
Walnuts oun be kept for a long time
if peeked in tley send and shoed 11) 11
emit plaeo,
Week beetles may easily be got eld Of
Ily spHrildIng powdeved borax over the
iloor every eight.
A. good floor polish is melte of tele
pint of Wowed oil end one (31111 1(1 Newell
yinegne, mixed wIth a little turpi•nline.
Divan ntleloth with a rag dIppool In s
little paraffin. Never moody soda or
ammonia, as they would destroy the oil.
Put brown ppm! on the top or the
wardrobes This is easily laken off um1
shaken, and peevents 11
Wardr0h0 bo -
awning Illiek ‘vittt dust.
To renovate black silk, sponge the
silk with strong oold tea, inte which
put a little letieshorn. Then iron the
silk on the wrong side with a leather
liot bun.
When 0110051111g fish see that the eyes
are bright and the gills a clear bright
red; the body shunts' feel stiff end the
flesh Ilene Very laege fish of their kind
should be nvolded.
Wash stiteetis, chintzes, colored em.
brolderles, etc., with branwelor, which
is made by bolting half a pint of Loran
In Iwo quarts of water for flfteen 171111-
ules. Skim it well, and strain it
through muslin,
Mut dresses should never be rubber]
with soap. 13011 the soap as for flan-
nels, and waSh quickly,. Put a few
drops of viteloi into the rinsing water,
This fastens 1111 eolors, but black it.
fades. Use salt in the rinsing water for
a black print, dress,
Copper pans aro most &treble. They
are excellent conductors 01 (10011 btit the
greatest care must be taken to keep
scru.pulously clean, and to note 'ha
the tinned lining does 1101 get of
repair, or Leal cases of verdigeis
potsoning may occur.
To. clean gold jewellery xvith stones
in it, wash 11 In warm suds made with
yellow soap, with tort drops of Sal
volatile added. You will find LIM makes
the jewellery brilliant.
Water that Ions sbond all night In a
bedroom is quite itnllb to drink. Cold
water is' a powerful absorbent of ewes.
This Is why it is US0c1 in a sick -room to
help purify the air.
Meeks on polished wood reade•by 1101
(118110S Should be rubbed with coal all.
This will remove the white ma tics, rind
3'01.1 can afterwards polish with bees-
wax and turpentine in the usual way.
Polished tables may be kept in good
eendliton if about once a week they are
rubbed with a mixture of equal parts of
tuepentine end olive oil. Apply with a
piece of flannel, afterwards polishing
with a dry e,loth.
See that Um iron is not too hot when
welling silk blouses, etc., as silk meekly
discolors, Sprinkle the article Rest with
water, then roll up tightly in II lOw01.
After this it limy be ironed, and the
creases will readily ha taken out.
A black varnish, splendid in lone on
steel or iron. te produeed by tuepentine
and fosulphur boiled together, Wei on
Bake slowly about two and a hweialf hours. „„r a. ,rese,e en „,
e evaporation of the
When doneput on platter and serve turpentine leaves a Bilis layer of sul-
o
with the gravy in the pan, niade rich
Whi011 111)100 Willi 1110 10011 W11191
with a little browned flour paste and healed a short while over ti Os or
butter, and the other half of the glass spirit mune. The varnish is very dor-
of currant jolly.
To make Irish hash, put into the pan
a good-sized lump of butler. and, when
the pan is hot, add, according to 1110
members of the farnily, the desired
(pantile( of finely Chopped corned beef,
and let itheal. The potalsies should be
'freshly baked, scooped out front the
skins while hot, and added to Ihe beer,
and the mixture seasoned with sell,
pepper, and a dush of nutmeg, and a
dash of onion juice, moistened with
chicken broth or- beef stock; and served
piping hot.
For a pepper omelet, melt Mt ounce
of butter in a saucepan, and In IL stir
two spoonfuls of flour. Use one pint of
beef stock, half a dozen good-sized
mushrooms,' half a dozen whole pep-
pers,. Season with salt, pepper, a dash
of nutmeg, and ecok for twenty min-
utes. When done, add a half-pint or
shrimps, three fresh peppers, chopped
(Inc, and let simmer for five niimites,
Prepare a plain omelet and pour in the
Mixture before 11 (8 turned 0001'. SOVVO
on hot plates.
Boiled Icing for Cakes.—In the making
of belled icing for cakes great patience
Must be exercised in the belling or the
sugar and water. Mix thoroughly be.
fere placing ort the stove, one cupful of
sugar to one-fourth of a cupful of cold
water. While this Is boiling beat rapid-
ly the white of ono egg, to which a pinch
of cream. of LaMar has been added. Ile
careful that none of the yolk is allowed
in the white, as this prevents the egg
from being beaten dry and 'stiff. Test
the syrup frequently by dipping the Up
end of lho spatula into the syrup and
letting It fell into tt cup of cold water.
The secret Is, just the inoinent the syrup
in strildng tho colrl writer congeals and
falls at onee into a round, soft mass in
the bottom of the cup and retains Its
shepe for 11 second it is then ready to
pour in a steady strearn upon the
beaten white of egg. To do this pro-
perly veep the syrup kettle with the
loft hand, and, while pouring upon the
egg, bent with the Dover egg beater,
holding it by the liendle. When 811 1110
syrup is in give the icing a thorough
beattng unlit cool enough to spread
upon 1110 cake. The use of the Dovey
border gives it most beautifully -white
and gloesy appearan0e. to tlie icing, not
obleined otherwise. Any flavor can be
retried just before spreading upon onto.
Tf 111115 are used they should be sprink-
led dry mum the cake and then covered
0t/01, with the Whig. Nuts mixed in the
keno Ogle a cloudy appearance not
pleasing to the eye, rehocolole dis-
solved and while hot eon bo added ie
the icing or spread upon the cake and
then covered with 1110 while leirog. Arty
fruits, flowers. 00 fency designs, will
rodhere lo ihis icing as soon its placed
in11;80110"1
1"
Ple.—Prepare the birds and
loint them. Wesh thoroughly. Boll in
just enough water to cover them, and
boll until tender. Then put birds into
an earthen baking dish, strewing the
Miner mod thin slices of leen salt pork
among the _phones. Salt and pepper the
(.11111'y end add the proper (Menthes or
'0owl-m(1.11mm pas10 and a dash 'of but-.
ler, Dover (11811 with rfell pastry, and
bake in a moderately quick oven e, half
hour.
(1,01181111, 11101'l'S.
Clotheslines ttod pegs will host longer
11 3)211 boil them oecitslonally,
ab101ffi
SslituleS for Weighls-1 tablespoon-
ful of moist sum, equals 'I ounce 11
lablesponnful or syrup, jam, Mc.. equals
1 ounce: t tablespoonful or 2 dessert.
spoonfuls of liquid moats 1 ounce; 4
teaspoonfuls of liquid equals 1 mince;
1 breakfast cupful equals half pint or
half pound; 1 teacupful er P pint equals
34 pound; 0 lumps of sugar equals 1
ounce.
Uses for old fell lials.—Do nnt burn
your old discarded felt hats; scrub them
clean with n breell end 1101 soasiends,
using several tvaters, then flatten linen
out as much as prissible beforee drying
them. If out in two theough the helm
rind crnwn the pieces can be made per-
fectly flat. They make the he.el of in-
soles 11 you aro 'troubled with cold feet.
Double soles bound with braid ere
splendid • for erncheted slippers for
heuseweer. Tenn holders rustle or two
thickneeses stitched together are (among
the best to be had, en11 a single piece
makes a good holder for use about
cooking.
• .._
A COMPLIMENT F011 HARKINS:
."John," saki Mrs. Harkins,. "I heard
a nice compliment for you to -day."
Mo. Hoskins put his paper down,
twisted Up the ends ef moustache,
looked pleased, and salds-.
"Wel, that's nothing to be reinaviceble.
I renelve compliments nearly every
day."
Mrs, Matins went on sipping her
tca. and her husband waited for her
to resume. Finally ha solid:—
"Well, why don't you loll me ‘vhat
it was? Who was it that complimented
r"?`?"
011., you cololdn't guess in a week."
"Mrs. Deering?" he veutured.
"Not ilesste Fallington7" he rather
eagwerol.y„ suggested.
"Oh, well, or name, if there's may
sceret about it, I don't care to bear
what it W11.8 Or who said it." .
"Thera isn't any( secret about it," Mrs.
Harkins 'eweetly replied. "Mr. Hanna,
ford told 'no that every time he and I
met he became tnore thoroughly con.
tinned that you wore a man of exeol-
IMtIslie'
Johnftrktni then shoved his hands
(101811, in his pocket and walked outside
to 1111111011 over.
A TREE WIT11+
MANY USES.
Among ihe remarkable trees of the
world is the Argun, which abounds in
eclat:Hi Moroeco, but is seldom seen
elsewhere, A "forest" of armies has n
curious scattered appearance, liecatt'se
lbo 100011' (1(081 singly and tar apart.
They are 'very leafy, but seldom execed
20 feet In height. The blanches put old
horizontally, and begin a yrtml above
the groend, Sheep, crate end camels
„feed on the leaves, and goats will eland
oe tholehind legs le reach them, hut
horses and 0111105 reftise to touch them
The Wood is verybrard, arid extremely
usettll to the natives, who make (Mar-
coni from 11. 'rhe frult;roosietrilliflti,riagisao•
large oliVe, is Used to feed cattle end
tfu'irtleIniligs11
ta°1115lerCl
1reain0apholttiTh
l sestenanee el
'Many elf the poorer natives.
00111111858 111031 doubt its owe Import.
enee, but 'egotism never does.
A. man eli01.11d be well heeled before
trying to eland en ins dignity.
GERMAN INSITLIS KAISE-R
SOCIALIST PREirliiin TIfig pltISOlot
TO 110111i OUTSIDti,
Authorities Destr;o to Get Aid of Him.
nut Cannot Without 10000.
Ing Law.
Streoge methods uf earning a living
are feequently employed 11) Um; go:ton-
gue ago uf Mane compelitego, tout the
ffiust remarkable way of proeuring food
end lodging at uffiev people's expense
has bean inveoled by 51 German shoo-
noaker named Cesorqu 81111081115, 100111-
01.1y l'0811.14./111 or ilooditz, lie make
a business of insulting the Geema
141.11nalOr, und he has pureuee 1,1118 0001.1
p1111011 With U111 urying success for the
lust tee yours.
Schoene revolved it good education
ut the Prussian Stele sehools up to
lhe ago of 14, and afterward at various
supplementary night and technical in-
etilatIons. At the ago of 15 he was ap-
prenticed l0 a shoemaker, and plied this
humble ealliug fop six years, during
eke moony other young German
workmen, he became imbued with
more oe lees eocielislie ideas.
He came to the conaltisioe that, it WAS
mined for him to be obliged_ to \\mete
ie „am) a weekly (1'11g0 01 white
hard for thirteen hours doP. in °oder
ether people (Ire enjoying a supearirlre-
ef wealth, and he combined with these
11e00105 a rooted dislike for any -kind
el labor. •
One day he stitod in the street 111
frent of 1110 principal pollee etution in
Clotarlitz and simmer] al the trip of his
✓ ico 0 long end vehement denuncia-
tion of the German Emperor.
THE INSULT.
A crowd gathered and listened he as.
tonishment to 1.1114 of ribil8e. 0110
15,1 11110(1 effizon dashed into the police
station to fetch the police. Schoen.°
was al:vested and Indicted on 0 chorea
of lose majeste. Al his trial he effor-
ts1 no explanethin of hie_nonduct what.
(leer, and the Court, in view of his
previous good record, passed ille 1111111 -
MUM .senience for his office—that of
Iwo months' imprisonment.
This wits prise:silly what Schemes de-
sired. Ile had come to the conclusion
in the course of his merlitalions that
It would be nn eXlvelliflly clover thing
to live at the expense or the community
In one of the Slate prisons. 11e Wart
not, guile sure whether the plousura of
O life without ciwe would sufficiently
cempensale for the loes of litiorly, but
his two months' experience in prison
allayed his dollblA on this point. Ile
Ilieuglol. prison W115 a great improve-
ment on the herd life which he had
lived aS a sweated sI (11'(11111L11', end he
made up his mind nett hie illear/vra-
1/011 would not terminate at lite endof
the Iwo months.
When 110 Was 1.010/18811 front Illo
• at Cluerlitz Sehnert° walked straight
through the town to the exaot moil 111
11 nut of 1110 prilipiltal station
where he had ('(811)1)1) led his first of.
fenee, and proeeeded onee more lo
laDvl out al the lop of Ns voioe Ins olio
aimed 111 Ihe Balser Again a ere wob
assembled. andag11.11 „ II
I ,10 ontlito swo0tuti.1
down tout arrested the culprit. Tiris be-
ing the s000nii .rronw tor wits sonioro,u
I.) six 11518 b1.4' linpri,o11111011t, Which 110
(111jO3'a) EIS 111411 (is 1110. fleet.
DID rT ADAIN)
When he was released for Hoc sednul
tome again Walked to thu 51/100 shut,
shouted his familiar abuse of the lent -
purer, and sulenelcd with feelings ef
the keenest pleasure to arrest. This
lime he Was f1/111ew/0d to sew yew's
i mrisorenent. '11110 111,00055 11114 re-
pealed thon taller troll?, 1(1W1 :-.4011.1.21/0
had Spral ten yeses in prison, warp%
for those Mier intervals required to
:tnetulilorsto.
froin the prison gates to the spot
where he perpetrated the crime of Rise
The authoviee 11/100 tondo various at-
trinpis to evade the necessity of sending
fsehoene lo prison for this offence, 'rimy
hate caused bun to be medically exam-
ined, with a view in ()Wining 5 deelara-
lion that as a lunatic ho 5 mat respon-
sible for his aetions. The phySleintiS,
however, declaee that - he Is perfectly
stole. German law in regard to in-
sults, or even disr0.11001.1111 re/narks a 1(11(1
111,1 NalSell, 18 stringent, anti 1a10/, the
offence or lose noriosro lins hem, (.10 -
Milted the perpetrate): must be me11 in
prisbn. The only ovny to prevent
Schnene from living 1111, nor no hes
chosen would ho 1,, eefortn the law re-
ading to leso toffiesle, end 11110 cannot
IN done, beetouse 1110 mowers Ilial 1s8
in Germany believe Pout the foundations
or empive would thoorehy be 1011811''
110(1.
IS IN l'Ill(q)N AGAIN,
lieeeffily 1)114 11'I0iII,C11 111,11/
prism) atter &Tying a senlonee 1,1 lo.vo
years_ and he Inunedletely. vele:el-1 the
offence in 1.110 old fumilier way. Ile bee
now been emits -need to hew yew': Um.
priSOI111111/11, heenuse 1110 1n00 1101/108
that repetition of this (lime 1111101 110
punished with hereesed \
SCh00110, W110 15 10.80 :1; o4111%,4 nr
will inns, ot 111,1. 11g0 01 ad, 111(00 1:pent
fifteen years in 00111111n1y Ini11r100111110nt,
nod there is el, ery 110,8011 111 !1,11il.11,1111.1
that when lie rognins his 111.0,/l' 11
1010 he will omen more 0.0,0,0 ffilic,ar.
dorn to loot,: him 11,1 100 11110111(1'' perieffi
111 lone, indeed, booms, ounii lo pnict,rit
a Wing hy nay ''1) )'"101'011i.
TIMM?. Nti
IL distressed '(li-s NVitillie 1,, ilnd how
11011011 the " Outs in shncluy
sehoot ()less thought ()boot de..•ss and
outward adrobilffi. Sloe losl st 1,13811 -
toady to len them limy effied 1(10
inlpnrlanne 5i1,.11 hit
didn't cone 19,1 81111,11ily
1113' 00(11 Was') linkh0/1,- 1.1101 11,101)11
Mary Potter one (1 1
won 11,1, A1‘1t1i,(1
its to her non-ani,earance ihe meek be -
fora. "My old one had spots on if ffiat
wouldn't. mine ,ofi. and a lo' 11 'A 11..1.6
the buttons Mel litre 1111» 11)311"
'tut, Mary, tient'," stii,1 1110 lkm,•be,.,
gently, nynn kn„w n/s IN, ‘11,1141,k,
that really inrillers.-
“111/AlM1 3 1111080,” 1.8lti 111110 N100Y;
"but, NUM Willing. 11101111.1. load ripped
the IMMg out, so (here wasn't any in -
Side to look all"
•
7 ./