Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 24 Oct 1901, p. 3

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lh a specimen 0! topaz. An lnfl- }1 :chemist or mineralogist would b pounce the latter worth more t‘ the former, but Job makes an I lgent comparison. looks at re- 3' and then looks at the crys- n pronounces the former as o! l: -mperior value to the latter. ex- 1 ng, in the words of my text, i crystal cannot equal it." .1 w, it is not part 0! my sermon- G design to depreciate the crystal. 1 her it be found in Cornish mine 1 ‘Hm mountain or mammoth cave I tinkling among the pendâ€" 1 Its 01 the chandeliers of a ‘ M. The crystal is the star of ‘ nmountain; it is the Queen at . we; and It is the earclrop of the ‘ .lln ; it finds its heaven in the dia- ond. Among all the pages of nat- ral history there is no page more iterating to me than the page 0! 'ystalltmaphic. But I want to how you that Job Was right when, in; religion in one hand and the! tal in the other, he Ileclared' t the iormer is of tar more Value beauty than the latter, recom- g it to all the people and to: 0 ages, declaring [The crystal‘ t equal it." IN THE F] ltfi'l‘ PLACE. w.*.'u vw-U -- v..â€" w. Dr. Talmagc preached tram (allowing text: Job xxviii, 17. 0 crystal cannot. equal 1!.” my 0! the precious stones of the be have come to prompt. recogni- k that religion is superior to m ”gm-mt“ [you 1011”. up... ht crystal in exactness. 'l’hat were 01 peless mass of crystal against FAR FROM LUST‘ROUS. 0‘ Itch you accidentally dasllfil your Scientists ’0‘. ages have been exâ€" :‘w. ""“.°‘t',';l“”5."t "lurt'rgmfmcss amining these wonderful transforma- m ‘3‘“ WW 9'" y ‘l :V' , y 0"“ are tions. But I tell you in the gospel In 1: styles '01. crystallization and all 0‘ the Son 0‘ God there is a. mort- tl ll them lelm-ly ordained. Everylwomxcrml transformation- Uvez k [ystal has mathematiral precision. l souls by reason 0‘ sin black ag'coal “ lod s geometry reaches through inland hard ag iron God, by his comâ€" s. It )9 a. SII'O'NU‘C. 01' It. l9 ll. I'D?- Iorting grace, Stoops and says, le, or lt is a rhoulboul. or ml “Thug shall be mine in the day r way It has a Illatlli-nlathal fig- wh‘m" lllake up my jewels.” i‘ Now. religion beats that m the "What!” say you. “Will God wear fart that splrltual accuracy jewellery?” 11 He wanted it, He could re beautliul tllall material ac- "mg“: the stars of the heaven His God's attributes are exactlhcn and have the evening cloud for i '” management 0‘ ”“3 world """l the sandals of His feet, but He does ‘ NOV" counting “Tm": ”WW!" not want that adornment. He will 1 unts the grass blades and the not have that jewellery. When God ' nd and 1h" 930"“ mill “"3 02501.09” 'ants jewellery, he comes doWn a Vldt‘llCc'S Ilt'Vt‘l‘ dealing w'u‘;iligs it out of the depths and dark- “dimlurly Wh‘m those "”0“ i ness of sin. These souls are all crysâ€" “WIN ‘0 be 0b“‘l‘W- ”oritalllzations of mercy. He puts them y MW" they 0‘“th ‘0 be V°"';on and He wears them in the pres- ' - Everything in 0‘" life arrang-zencc of the whole universe. Ile wears 1 without any possibility of ml’3‘1them on the hand that was nailed, 0. Each life a sixâ€"headed prism. love: the heart, that was pierced, on M time; dying atlube temples that were stung-J “TM 0 right “1119- There “"0 “0 ”haikishall be mine,” saith the Lord, “in 'ewels.”. ' n 50'3" in "“1‘ “‘WwaV ll Ilthe day when I. make up my 3 ought this was a slipsllod ‘llliV°"Sc;“'onllerful transformation! thr'é I won“ be in 0059111”- (:od ‘9 “mgsin ahounded grace shall much more ‘11 unarjlist. IJI‘V, order. symme';ab0‘md. micam.mmw try. WCClSiOD- a perfect square. a itaire. ”The crystal cannot equal it." perlert rm'tangle. fl perlect rhomâ€"l Now. I have no liking for those bOid. a perfect circle. The edge ollpeopye Who gate “Way! Qlarging ill God's robe 0' government “0"".Christian nne'tin‘s aboutgtheir early Ira): out, there are no loose screws‘ dissipation. Do not go i‘to 1.0 I)". in the world‘s machinery. It did .ticulars, my brothers. Simply say not just happen that Napoleon was‘you were sick, but make no display attacked with indigestion at Doro-go: your ulm.. Th0_¢hid “3 dino no that he became incmnpetentLtmde Of some ministers and Chris-v for the day. 1!- 0m not lmft 'lmm‘cnfiian workers seems to be their early lthat Job" lh‘mm“. ”‘0 m'””‘°“‘"y' cnmns AND DISSIPA'I‘IONS. on a heathen island, Waiting for an ' ' "1‘ he number of pockets you picked outfit and orders for another m‘spl'ml the number 0‘ chickens you \ ‘ ( . ’ oionary tour. rereived . . stole make very poor prayer meeting h se rd its 'in a box that float- and t 0 0 t the‘rhctoric. Besides that, it discour- ed ashore. while the ship and . ‘ . . crew that carried the box were nev-,a.£'08 other LhNStmn people .who ne- .. 5......“ "l- I believe in a particular‘ m' not drunk or stole anythmg. But 36 {as nlnancnnt to know that those 7 gm. i0} the p§escni 1 take up less valuable crystal. Job. in text. compares saving yisdom â€"- - . orders ”m a. box that. "usur‘ ed ashore, while the ship and the: crew that carried the box were nov- 01' board of. I believe in a particular ’ovidcnce. I believe GOD’S GEONETRY may be. seen in all our We more beautifully than in crystallography. 1-}. umq right. “ The crystal can- "dutifully than in crysnauuguwua- {aarm Job wa~4 right. “ The crystal cw'ithc 5 uot.equal it." . . . 'equal ~ Again 1 remark that, religion )9 suâ€"l “()1 .perim‘ to the crystal in tranmargh‘md icncy. We know out “hen 03‘ bY‘l wb whom glue-us was first. discovered. .troul Bonds of it have been found in the tals? tomb of Alexander Severus. Vague; “on ht up trom the nuns have “â€"W' TRANSPARENT BIBLE ’VI deuce crystal ‘? w to keep on the day; the crystal over‘ watch, defending its delicate. cry, yet allowing us to. see. or; the crystal of the tele-l by which the astronomer distant worlds so near he can them. Oh, the triumph of p crystals in the celebrated vim. of llouen and Salisbury l But parent in in our holy religion. It r. It is a train?“ it tell “9 i9 is enough about their Do you know that the Bible ‘3 a cross " but seventeen while it mentions a crown EIGHTY TIMES ? at old man what he thinks . He has been a close He has been cultivating taste. He hoe seen the ‘hnl! a century. He has fleet. He has been nn me... than we ‘3“ "' umsparent. talk too laugh {wont great. many‘ {my eye salvo curv- we find that ’9’ "-"V" " ' Jun» “.1 .u- ----- mmm'w’of come the diamond. In 073:“ wpyhls column 3- nothing The same Mm F f? M corals all kinds of beautiful things. As him what. he thinks of religion. and he will tell you: “ It. is the mosh benuuml mm; 1 ever law. The_' crystal cannot equal it." 1‘ ‘ ‘ â€"uA--- u. an .IPeautiiai-‘ifiâ€"iu; symmetry. Whenl it. presents God's character, it does not present him as having love like ' with His justice--â€" :1 love n.... will accent. all those a great protuberance on one sum as llis nature. but makes that love .‘n harmony with His justice-â€" at love that will accept all those who come to Him, and a. justice that . will by - no means clear the guilty. Bcuutilul r'e- ligion in the sentiment it implants! Bountiful religion in the hope that‘ it kindle-s! Beautiml religion in the fact that it proposes to garland and cnthrone and emparadise an immor- tal spirit. Solomon says it is a lily. Paul says it is a. crown. The Apoc- alypse says it is a. ton the sun. Ezekielsays it is a loliaged cedar. Christ: says it is . Wegroot ‘ - - - x-mn Ilhfin cedar. Ulll‘lflli- au’u u .â€" .. --_v .. come to fetch home a bride. While Job in the text takes up u whole vase of ptecious stonesâ€"tho top“ vase just one crystal up until it. gleams 3." the warm light 0! the eastern sky. and Inc 9153311113. "The crystal cannot. equal it.’ ; Again. religion is superior to the. crystal in its transformations. fie diamond is only a crystalllmtfiq. Cmbonite of lime rises until it ‘- ecomes calcite or arag‘onite'. Red ”or ‘iclc of copper crystallizes into cubes and octahedron. Those cryuals which adorn our person: and our \V l||'l| I lug ------- "What!” say you. ”Will God Wear jewellery?” 1! He Wanted it He could ‘IIHLLC the stars of the heaven His lurlt and have the evening cloud fox" hm: sandals of Iliq feet, but He does‘ not want that adornment. He will ‘not have that jewellery. When God ‘Wunts jewellery, he comes down and gdlgs it out of the depths and dark- lness of sin. These souls are all crysâ€" ltillllzutiOllS of mercy. He puts them gen and He wears them in the pres- ’:ence of the whole universe. Ile wears '1them on’ the hand that was nailed, low: the heart, that was pierced, on Scientists for ages have been exâ€" amining these wonder-ml transforma- tinns. But 1 tell you in the gospel oi the Son of God there is a mort- wom‘criul transformation. Qve: souls by reason of sin black as coal and hard as iron God, by his com- lorting grace, stoops and says, “They shall be mine in the day .wiu-n I make up my Jewels.” .‘nnvsnl (O ..1 man” CRIMES AND DISSIPATIONS. The number of pockets you picked ¢ and the number of chickens you i stole make very poor prayer meeting ] rhetoric. Besides that, it discourâ€" ‘ ages other Christian people who ne- ver got drunk or stole anything. But ‘ it is pleasant to know that those ' !who were farthest down have been ‘ {brought highest up. Out of internal iserldom into eternal liberty. Out of {darkness into light. From coal to ’the solitaire. “The crystal cannot l "()h,” says some one, putting his “can it be that 91 who have been 13.80. mpchm and .trouble will ever come to those crys- tals?” Yes, it may behâ€"it will be. Heaven we must have. whatever we have or have not, and we come here to get it. “How much must I pay tor it?” you say. You will pay for it i just as much as the coal pays to be- ”--u n... Ainmnnd- In other words, nothing. The‘sumc mumrmy www- thut makes the crystal in the moun- tain will change your heart which is harder than stone, tor the promise is, VI will take away your stony heart. land I will give you a. heart of flesh.” "0h,” says some one. “it is just "the doctrine I want. God is to do everything and I am to do nothing." ‘My brother, it is not. the "doctrine “it is just the doctrine I want. God is to do everything and I am to do nothing.” ‘ My brother, it is not theiloctrine‘ you want. The con! makes no resist- ance. It hours the resurrection voice in the mountain and it comes to crystallization; but your heart re- sists. The trouble with you, my brother. is the coal wants to stay cool. ‘ ‘ “nun-r nnnn CUM]. I do not ask you to throw open the door and lot Christ in. I only ask that you stop bolting and bar- ring it.- My friends, we will have to get. rid of our sins. I will have to' GET RID OF MY SINS, i and you will have to get rid ol your sins. What will we do with our sins among the..three_9rys- tals‘? The crystal atmosphere wopld display our pollution. The crystal II'V wv-â€"-â€" ~ . Transformation must tour now or no transformation at 311. GM sin in" than“ in your heart and the transformation til! be downward instead 01 upward._ In- In the days of Carthage 3 Chris- tian girl was condemned to die {or her faith, and a boat was bedaubed with tar and pitch and filled with combustible! and set on fire, ad the ‘Christian girl wu placed in the boat and the wind was onshore and thel boat. floated away with its precious treasure. No one can doupt that boat. landed at use“. on new man; wants to put on in a fiery boat and above you ’(I ‘il? on W direc- ASK chm . and tion most. § and The ‘ and When does W1 . m u râ€" â€"â€"vâ€"_ you would be the guns of desiaair, either kill sin or sin will kill you! It is no exaggeration when I say that any man or woman that wants to be saved may be saved. ‘Trcmen- dous choice! A thousand people are choosing this moment between salva- tion and destruction, between light , ‘ A.-.” m www- -‘v-v”, LIU _ - _ r and darkness, between charred min and glorious crystallization. BELFAST AN D . .‘Uwâ€" “_ extraordinary antics mar moments they very first. to put (10! like foot, 50 cities :1: m6! ‘all' British cities Ballast nan onener gone mad than any other contemporary city or town. Its cause of mental aberration is chiefly (Wing to religious *auimosity which1 isever 1mm. in themetropolis of 'the north of Ireland. It was only the other day that the city went mad over a. certain religious proces- sion whose progress in the town led the way to a riot. 'l‘he opposing sides attacked each other with ve- hemence, the police were stoned, and excesses against the law were freely t commit ted . “-â€"L A:‘-t ‘hn “Dull!!! L Luu . . In 1886 occurred in that city the Cl historic riots which have left their st mark on the pages of history. On tr that occasion Belfast in its madness ci killed eleven of its own number and w wounded two hundred others, be- cc. sides destroying much property. Sane Belfast blushes for itself and tl regrets the wild things it does when h it goes mad. (1 t LONDON’S BAD ATTACKS. 1 London's worst attack of insanity 11 occurred in 1780, when the 40,000'1‘ mad followers oi Lord George (ior- t don paraded the streets of the meâ€" ‘ tropolis for seven days. The dcâ€" t struction of property was appalling. ( ‘, At one time the fanatics created' no . _ fewer than thirty-six fires, which rag- ‘ L ed in dillerent' parts of the city. The _ Bank of England was besieged. New ; gate was stormed and burnt and the prisoners released, and St. Paul’s ' and the Mansion House were ima perilled. Of course, the outbreak was quelled’, but not without fearful loss of life. Some 200 peOple were killed outright, 2‘18 wounded, and many who 'had been‘conveyed to the hospitals for treatment were arrest- ed When they left the latter institu- tions, tried, and executed. Sixty years afterwards, in April, 1848, London went"mad again. This time"the Chartists were up and do- ing, and as they promised by their actions to repeat the performances of their grandfathers, the authori- ties took time by the forelock and placed a strong defence in the field of agitation. All the government buildings and offices and other ofliâ€" 3d cial institutions, including the Bank m and the Mansion House, Tower, Mint, and so forth, were fortified and protected by swarms of troops, m. whilst cannon, with powder and shot ‘11 ‘___‘_‘ - I C? (3-: ‘<‘< I"<'.‘.=o ‘V llllav U“..-vv- all ready, were placed on Waterloo‘ and Westminster bridges. These measures were sufficient to bring the Chartists to their senses, for the bulk of them who had turned out on divers occasions prepared to fight went home saner men than they had lett. ‘. . " - ‘__‘At‘ Nevertheless, the insanity 1881.801 some days, and It was necessary to enroll 150,000 persons (Including Louis Nap'oleon, who was in London and who afterwards became Em- peror of the French) as special con- stables. The precautions that, were A I-.. ‘LA SLiLUIcvo IIU .1- U‘cwâ€"___ taken had the desired effect, for the 4 great meeting that was to be held I on Kennington Common and the ‘ great march that was to take place ' on to Westminster never came 011‘. Free fights were plentiful. ‘ I. ‘RIO’I‘S TIIA WERE CONTAGIOUS. . The Chartist movement was not iconfined to London only ; it spread mm the country. and when the pro- vincial sympathizei‘s'saw how their London brethren were being treated they protested by rising themselves in various parts. anc spreading great dismay among the people. Birmingham went mad. and the Chartists there yore. the masters of the. Muttoni' but mom damaging property to a great extent the riot- ersézrestrained themselves from tak- ing‘ lite. But when Newport; went , mall and imitated the doings of Birmingham, they went further than ’ woinded hundreds: Bristol followed an“ and went raving mad, doing L gran. harm and making history by “use“, , _ - “d ”-vwâ€"v _ damaging property_ to a consider- abll extellt. Bristol took a violent diflike to the Recorder, Sir Charles Wfiherell, over the same matter which had created the Chartists. ‘vl , the Reform Bill, and his pre- so "c there fired the spark that had M slowly kindling for some time, wfill the result that it burst at last Mop's palace. and hundreds ot the meipal shops were burnt to the -- .nn “ulna "rich-(I 1) runs HOLD RECORD. of Bioters and consider- due the frenzied enemy. - . Towns and cities in the North 01' England have {requently been bereft of their senses during the many coal and cotton strikes that have oc- ieureli within that district. In the spring of . ' burn. Burnley, Preston. and other large towns went clean mad over the cotton strike of that year. The mobs wrecked the mills where the lunaties (for the time being) earned their daily bread, private houses were looted and burnt, police and‘ people shot one another, hundreds were killed and wounded, and cha? reigned supreme. Bolton iOllOW suit three years alter-wards, an that great coal centre became bedâ€" "Dvuring this same dec: Wharnclin‘e and his collie: dispute, in consequence of town of Thornclifle Wm with a bad form 0! insanil “townsmen went about loot? ' minded. \VHEN TREDEG.AR WE A remarkable outburst chin! imbecility charred a in July._18§2. This at. \‘l chin! imbecility ohurred at 'l‘redegar' in July, 1882. This at first began“ as a fight between some Salvation-1 iats and others whose views were Opposite to those expressed by the former Then a parochial riot en- sued, which continued for three whole ‘days and nights, and nothing could ’stop it. One of the opposing sides was beaten back into its own quar- ters, Where it was penned and i.. l_-L AA Punk} in Lera, \VUUIU av ...... , --_ able to do anything but to fight to try to extricate itseli from its posi- tion. This quarter of the town was eventually wiped of! the face of the earth in the prolonged struggle and its defenders woefully beaten. Hun- (lreds were made destitute and home- ;less, and then sanity returned to {the town. ..,_ :_ 1a-;lauh UU‘V Vv v- But aii~ these troubles in Britisn cities and towns are but as mere trifles compared with those periodi- cal outbursts of madness of a genea- tional order that visit Continental in- cities now and again. When, for LIUII'C‘J U1 UV. v----- cities now and again. When, for inâ€"' stance, Milan went mad a year 01 two back, over a thousand of its citizens were killed and wounded. while the damage to property reach ed nearly two millions sterling .Paris has her streets stained with Ethe blood of over half a million of her children. The last occasion was during the madness that followed in the trend of the awful Commune 011 1871, when over 50,000 people gave up their lives to the swords and bul- llets of the rapacious monarchy- breakers that swept the streets, who, besides being responsible for this fearful sacrifice of human life, destroyed property to the amount of $160,000,000â€"one quarter of Paris; Seaforth Highlanders Once Rose' Against Their Oficers. ‘ l2: The Seaforth Highland Regiment 01 may be surprised perhaps to learn t, that their renowned corps once rose w in mutiny against their officers, says the London Standard. The regiment 11 his tenantry, but a large portion of t; the men were not Mackenzies, as c' would have been expected. At some prehistoric dateâ€"history does not go e far back in the Highlandsâ€"the Clan ' o the Mackenzie region, and became hencefor most devoted supporters of the chief. Many of them joined the new regi- ‘ ment. In 1778, the men being trainâ€" 9 ed and (it for service, it received or- 4 spread among the soldiers, whom spoke English, that the Govâ€" ; ernment had sold them to the East . India Company. The Macraes' head- ed a protest, which was disregarded, . and so, quite calmly and quietly, i they marched out of Edinburgh Cas- i tle, where the regiment lay, and oc- l cupied Arthur’s Seat, the crest of L the mountain above. When it came 1 to this point, nearly all the Macken- zie’s joined their hereditary friends. 1 And there the honest fellows sat 0 three days and three nights, keeping g the strictest discipline. Fortunately n the Scottish commander-in-chief at t- the time was a man of sense. Iii- 1- stead of attacking the innocent crim- 'e inals, who meant no harm, he dis- Ie cussed matters with them and finally (1 gave them a written undertaking 10 that their suspicions were unfounded. :0 'i‘ he Duke of Buccleugh and the Earl MUTINY 11": llunv U. ourâ€"V‘---” of Dunmorc countersigned, and the Highlanders marched down from Ar- thur’s Scat as quietly as they had marched up. v--- :lifl‘e and his colliers had a‘ in consequence 0! which the of Thornclifle was attacked bad form 0! insanity. and its nen went about looting, maim- xd burningâ€"all forms of mud- bout. which the good towns- now do not like to be re- The Oldest Reigning Family in the World. The birth of an heir to the crown prince of Japan adds another link to what is undoubtedly the oldest‘ reigning iamily in the world. The‘ Japanese themselves claim that. alter endless ages passed in higher spheres it. began its earthly career ‘with the first. human monarch in the |year 660 B.C. With all deductions. howeverâ€"and Japanese history does not become a. record of solid facts â€"A-...- an_ IIVV vvv'w_ till' the fifth of sixth century AD.â€" the monarchy is of unparalleled antiquityr 01 course, the shccession has been carried on by the strict rules which Europe considers neces- ,sary for legitimacy. Nany mikados, even down to quite recent times, have been the sons of concubines. y . dafivn of history. It is a proud re- cord. and there is little wonder that veneration for. the reigning {amily In about the strongest relj‘ioug {eel- ing which Japan e‘xhibits. AA- _ Country Uncleâ€"Now, what's th’! use of teachin’ girls all these new-' tangled studies? .Wliat good is this astronomy you’re studyin'? City Nieceâ€"Why’ uncle. it's a delightful subject to to“: shout on moonlight evoniml. , We point out Venus. and them the you“ man says something pretty and thenâ€"é: See-that ring. JAPANESE ROYALTY decade Lord police and at, hundreds l, and chao on follow? BE GIMENT. in British Mutton or Chicken ”munâ€"v..- pound lean mutton or chicken out small, 1 qt cold water, 1 tablespoon rice or barley soaked in a very little warm water, 4 tablespoons milk, salt and pepper, with a little chop- ped parsley. Boil the meat unsalted n--- .......... Lmnina it closely cov- .'“- v wvyâ€" â€"- ped parsley. Boil the meat unsalted in the water, keeping it_closcly cov- ered, until it falls to pieces. Strain it out, add the soaked barley or rice, and simmer half an hour, stir- ring often. Stir in the seasoning and ‘the milk, and simmer live minutes after it heats up well, taking care it does ' not burn. Serve hot with cream crackers. Chicken Jellyâ€"Hall a raw chick--E en wunded with a mallet, bones and meat together, and plenty of cold water to cover it well, about 1 qt. Heat slowly in a covered vessel and let it simmer until the meat is in white rags and the liquid reduced one half. Strain and press, first through a colander, then through a. coarse cloth. Salt to taste, and pepper it you think best. Return to the fire and ' simmer five minutes longer. Skim when cold. Give to m the ice) Keep on the ice. You can make ' into sand- wiches by putting the 3 y between thin slices of bread spread lightly with butter. Layer Cakeâ€"Three eggs, 1.}. cups't'. sugar, i cup butter, «3 cup milk, 2!.- 1 cups flour. 42; teaspoon soda and 1 t teaspoon cream tartar. Flavor with 1 lemon or vanilla. This makes 3 1 cups. Put 1 cup of the mixture in a 1 tin and bake. To the remaining add 1 tablespoon molasses or maple 7 syrup. 45- cup raisins, :3 cup nuts and 1 teaspoon each of nutmeg and pas-. try spice. Make two parts of the mixture and bake. Put the layer; together While hot, the light between the dark, with jelly or frosting. Orange Cookiesâ€"Cream thorough- ly together i cup butter and 1 egg ; ' add 3‘; cup sugar, 1 spoonful grated orange peel, 1 teaspoon orange ex- tract, and ~} cup flour. Sprinkle ' half cups sugar, i cup butter, 1 egg, I 2-3 cup milk, 1 teaspoon cream tar- : tar, 4} teaspoon soda, 1 cup grated * chocolate, or é cup Baker’s cocoa, 3and vanilla. Mix chocolate and - “M... 4M4.“- with flour and knead and vanilla. Mix Ch()( cream tartar with flour stifl. ”Eomnmn Cakeâ€"Cream togetner 1 cup granulated sugar and a piece of butter the size of an egg : add 2 well beaten eggs, f, cup milk, 1:} cups sifted flour with 1 level teaspoon cream tartar, § level ,teaspoon soda ° ° our? and a tablespoons sugar, 3 of chocolate and 2 of boiling water. Let come to a boil, then remove and beat until cool enough to spread. Flavor. SOME FAVORITE CAKES. these ucaucu um-.-" - . Take equal parts of entire wheat." flour, graham flour and rolled oats. Put sufficient, of these ingredients in- pan for quantity of bread desired. Thoroughly mix, salt and sugar to; taste, and add yeast. It the bread be set in the morning, use one cake of compressed yeast ; it at night. one cake of dry yeast {or sumcient ° this whole wheat flour to make very soft. dough. Let rise. and bake in slow oven for {rom one and one-quarter to one and oneâ€"half hours. ‘ Smilax is an attract!“ It is extremely pleasing long vines on the {able dish of fruit. It was immish while in Inc‘ \t' with water-crests” Me if served cad very thin in used with salmon. sardines 9 salads. Guava or curran fish. turkey “4 a | t. jelly {or Med 0"!- , white 'tl'iti.(.).1-lswxvl:r;d hasva. rich ’ that makes one feel like entire meal o_n_it. Well, GARNISIIES. Cream together 1 :m‘ and it New 0‘ ' pleasing arranged in {he table or about. a 1+. was my favorite India. says a. m. “I. “luau-v “- ---_ celeryâ€"top end lettua‘ Parsley. are dways welcomed by the one who desires mum snatches. Gherkfns out crosswise are ugod with sliced corn beet. i Beets cooked..theu sliced thin, or cold boiled eggs sliced thin, may be 'used with many of the dishes re- quirin'g garnishing. Another favorite used in Inglia Wu “WI .W 6â€"- â€"â€"-v_-e Another Iavorite used in India 1? bread garnishing. The bread was p out in dice or heart shapes ; clarified! butter was dripped over them and then they were put in the oven on a tin plate. In India our oven was a VDutch” oven, but no doubt. a. com- Imon oven would answer every pur- Ipose. ‘ ‘ “Baby" onions parboiled and then drowned in butter in the oven make garnisheS. Oldâ€"fashioned flowera are often made use of to add bwuty to meats A correspondent of an exchange at“), one. how it might have makes some very appropriate re- loaded. and .0 on. marks relative to the kitchen. The While he was spam“ in w . majority of farmers' wives, she clergyman. _ 535’3' kmp “0 help and spend. in“talking pleasantly. All at on hll consequence; more time in the hit-2,3“3 caught the revolver. Setting 5; chen and dining-room than in any land roaring with laughter. he point- 'other part of the house. Therefore ‘ed it at Mr. Winona. saying ; those rooms ought to be the first “Now, 1'“ “my,“ you 3" consideration in planning the house. "I locked up that revolver !.. in They ought to have a pleasant'llr. \Vinans' grim comment. And he frontage ; there should be it piazzaâ€" :kuld have been glad. we may be a pretty, vine-hung porch, where the isure. to have made the m 41.. housc keeper may take her work and fposnl, temporarily at least. of h“ sit down in the fresh air to do it. 'silly guests. lied the joculu‘ity 01 There should be a light table and a the lady or the clergyman resulted hiizh chair on the porch for her conâ€" totally. as similar conduct has often AL- ------ "'n in. \ U" I 011w . The kitchen should be carefully 'planned so as to save steps. To locate a pantry or dish closets at one end of the room and the range -M--“ ‘A, high chair vcnicnoc. VIOV v--â€" ut. the other is stupid, for a multi- tude of steps will be necessitated thereby. Have a closet. or hallway for coats, hats, etc., and a sink for the purposes of ablution outside the kitchen. or at least. as far as pos- ing is going on. GERMANY’ 8 OCEAN TRAFFIC . In Human Freight Compared With l~11 That of Great Britain. :1 As for the serious loss of the 1: Atlantic express travel, a few words 1‘ will explain why this was inevitable, 3‘ keeping in view Britain's environment 3‘ The British steamship lines sailing 4 between Liverpool and New York” convey passengers to and from!1 Britain only, with her 41,000,000 R of people. The German lines sailingi from Bremen and Hamburg to New ‘. York draw first from the whole of northern Europe. then touch at: Southampton and draw part of the‘ .British travel, and, not content with this augmentation. crossing to Cliex'--,_ ,bourg. they draw from Paris and all; 'southern Europe. Thus three finei streams of travel feed their enor-i mous fast ships ; the 300,000,000 of . .Europe are tributary to them ; and homeward from America to Germany AL--- 4-..... “n mhn wish to Visit, 01‘ homeward from America to Germany ii they draw all who wish to ‘visit or; have business uith any of theso'l lmillions, for the hoineward ships ” 1touch also at Cherbourq. South-i: ampton or Plymouth, and land pasâ€" ‘ sengers. Against this the British lines have only tributary to them .1 41,500,000 of people who desire.' passage to New York, and returning . from America to Britain only those 'gAmericans who desire to visit the _ 41,500,000 for pleasure or business.‘ I It goes without saying that the 3 German lines must inevitably lead ;.in large. fast steamers. But no 1 cause for pessimism here, because ‘ British shipowners are neither unen- 1 terprising nor inefficient ; they only .- ' show their good sense by recognizing e the situation, and will hold more 0! the proiit of Atlantic travel for Bri- o tain than if they attempted the im- 11 ipossible. ‘ â€"â€"__ .Uv â€"â€"v--vâ€" '__ B|V.y.t y . §Copcnhagen correspondent. has just .had a long chat with the professor, ewho told all his plans. He is a shy 'and rather weakly young man, full Io! enthusiasm for his_ great work. -A-- Dr. Finsen, in London, Talks of His Recent Experiments. Prof. Niels R. Finsen. the inventor of the lupus cure by rays of light, has just returned to Copenhagen. says the London Dally Mail. Our '-6 $|Jlu .uv-uvâ€" .- of enthusiasm for his great work. “I hope that I and my assistants will succeed in making far greater use of the rays of the sun and the electric light. From practical ex- perience we go to scientific experi- ments, which in their turn are put to practical use. ‘ “The sun was my first teacher. 1 {was weak as a child, sometimes sick lunto death, but I always kept care- ful watch on myself and noted the‘ unmistakable healing influence of tsunlight upon the whole of my orâ€"‘ ganism. I tried to find the explana- .tion of this fact in scientific works but failed. Then I thought either I or the scientific works must lack something, and thus 1 was gradually {led to the study of the chemical in- fluence of rays of light. “After six years' study I succeed- ed in the winter of 1895â€"6 in curing in four months an eight-year-old case of lupus vulgaris by local treat-. . meat with light. “There are illimitable possibilities . in future wher the scientific basis » and the full chemical nature of rays of light are fully known. but we know already, that not only are light baths good for local treatment, but they have a healing effect upon the whole body. 7. . l 1 ‘ “A-‘ --‘A - ”1‘6 ““u-V 'v‘vg - ls anybody waiting on you, said 3 shop-Walker t0} girl from the coun- â€"*1-3 ‘L- LI-unl‘:nn .uulr" “.“v. 'v try; You. an: "mid the blushing damsel; that's my young man out- side. He wouldn't: come in. ’ men of the Christian worm. mute their living at. sea. Trivvctâ€"Did you hem: of cm dread- tul revenge Frothingham took on Miss Dinning when 'siie refused his proposal? nicerâ€"What was it? Triv- THE KITCHEN. SUN BATES . per -ccn't. of the able-bodied the Christian world; nuke oé'rZEIrhfi'uv'éIii'râ€"Tr v-! o t . which um um“... ‘ ‘ pr WY 600. to three ‘ med to her mother. ”mot exceed 31. was a widow. and now ‘couslno-o. at a man come to midqgtrbteflffl for a multi-j lunch. She sat down near the table. a her eye immediately fell on the re- lvolver. She snatched it up with e laugh. and pointing it as Mr. Win- ans. said : "l'll shoot. you 2" "Put. it. down !" said Mr. Winans. speaking as peromptorily as a. host. may. The lady obexed, and Ir. Winans explained to her how in- judiclous it. was to point a revolver at any one. how it might have been loaded. and so on. While he was speakiu in came e clergyman. He sat down and bogus italking pleasantly. All at owe hi! CIA-inn n ng 'uu ifle bullets are practically alWays ngstlgrilized by the intense heat devel- 0‘ oped by the powder at the moment “Wot their discharge. Their rapid pro- hc‘gress through the air while in a in heated condition still further serves ”"10 cleanse them of any extraneous “u 3material that may chance to hate incaaccumuluted on their surfaces. This or- ircleaiusing process is very enactuully 0‘ :bcgun by the rifling of the rifle bu- md lrel through which the huliet forces ”‘9: i its way. - ,,l I- l..nn .1llfl ul‘fl SUFL’. w uuvu [Minn-v ---., _ posnl, temporarily at least. of MI silly guests. Had the jocululty o! the lady or the clergyman resulted totally. as similar conduct has olten done, the plan at the coroner's in- quest would have been the old, weak one :-"Didn't-Amowâ€"it-wasâ€"load- More Dangers)“. the Rifle. Wounds in civil lite differ from those in military life in the greater after-danger of septic involvement. Revolver cartridges are more liabh than are rifle cartridges to have been handled frequently, to have .bccn carried in dirty pockets. and to have come in contact with variouo forms of iniectious materials that .may prove of serious consequcnoo :whcn buried in the tissues. flore- jover, revolver cartridges are covered iwith a coating of grease. and thin en- imuruges an accumulation of muni- ‘iold microbic material, some oi which gmay prove to be of virulently infec- ; tious nature. ; Duran-.3011: cuss. of i All these favorable motors tuv lacking in the case of the revolver lbullet. and so it is possible that in 'any given case such it bullet my carry infectious material with it in- to the tissues. If this were in small tumout nature might ell'ectnnlly Wu“ lit of! and no serious consmluences re- 'sult. On the other hand, such iniec- tious material might lie seemingly ‘;dormant for days. but really slowly L gathering strength by multiplication i and when its toxins were elaborated in suificient amount they might parâ€" :nlyze protective chemotaxis and pro- ' ;duce no Heptic condition. The long tails of the Shah of Per- sia’s horses, are dyed crimson for six inches at. their tipsâ€"u jouiously guarded privilege of the ruler and his sons. . a.-. ‘ l“â€" lll‘s' ‘UIID The Saxons. whose originui settleâ€" ment is dutcrmincd-by the kingdom of Saxony, derived their name from the soax, or short. crooked knife with which they armed themscivns‘. Canada's exports of pulpwood and woodpulp in 1900 amounted to 8' .- 335,265. at which 8966.920 were sent to Great Britain and 82.302.215 to ‘4‘ 41“ _-_AM- ‘1‘ WV ”I-vv-wu- v--- _ the United States, $06,194 going to other countries. The Chicago stockyards are the biggest in the world. They can hold 20.000 cattle daily, besides 20.- 'l‘|- A-‘ "U 'u ‘1‘! 'VW â€".-â€"-I 000 sheep and $10, 000 pig's They contain 20 miles of streets and 50 miles of feeding trogghs Parts now has automobile lire onâ€" gines which measure six to ten feet. weigh 2} tons. or when fully equip- DO“ 6.380 pounds. They start to work instantly. The pump «louver- twenty gallons a minute. - - -:A.. :.. nan- v v..-" There are now in operatinn in slum 11 extensive mills when- corn- meal is ground. Ono mill at Most. has a capacity of 17,000.000 pounds per year. It. is said that all the mills are croydcd at present. â€"- 7 AAA--- u‘ll'p ”V v.‘ w- The Nebraska state game warden has forbidden the farmers to fight the grasshoppers with poison. say- ing that the loss of game and birds is too costly a price to pay for the destruction of comparatively few in- sects. At Cotta, in Saxony. persons who did not pay their taxes last year are published in a list which hang. up in all restaurants and (saloons oi the city. Those that are on the list. can get. neither meant nor drink at BEVOLVER Wows- In the world there are 538 Protes- tant missionary societies. with 15,â€" 460 members. Britons hold the record in late in- surance, holding policies: worth 422 millions. against. the United Statos' 405 millions. and Germany's 127 millions. 31:36“; it. _ $12- wm ho over 850-000 ‘ ODDS AND ENDS will ye“, a revolver [cu lady wlm ro-Cvutly Ld workod all her lilo I and saved 81.500. came to be provod H. that she was for to 8155.000. without I had left all hor rblc factors are of the revolver record in life inf Those of Own

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