The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 03, 1891, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    _—Y
[Tk
The Urooklyn invine's Sanday
Bermon.
Tex: «
evi
Sufficient wnto the day 1s
Matthew wi., 34,
thereot
The life
88 Closely sionrh
Such person were the only man, woman
ciild, There are no socidents, As there ia
a law ris in the natural world, <o
there 1s a law of troud! Y Baw of disaster,
FO us. ortane: pat tae ma jority
$ of ile are woagin AY, And the moss
» anticipated pever come. At any
rate, there is no cause of comnlaint against
God. See how much He hath done to mage
thea happy; His sanshine filling the earth
with glore, making rainbow for the storm
and balo for the monntain, greenness for the
moss, saffron for the oloud and orystal for
the billow, and procession of bannered flame
through the opening gates of the mornin ”
chaffluches to sing, rivers to glitter, seas to
chent, and springs to blossom, and over-
powering all other sounds with its song, and
overarching ail other splendor with its tri.
umiph, covering up all other beauty with its
gariands, and outtlashing ail other thrones
1's dominion--deliveranca for a
3 the Great Redeamer,
the sin of borowing troubls,
a habit mind and heart
3 t puts one into a desp
him for duty, I plant
in my garden, Theo
1 k $ pe i
me on the shady side o
. like our plants, need
taney of repulse is the causs
* and rel
of ruptey has upt
Levary man, woman and child is
ler the divine care as t
of st
Of Lia
lost
ol
thn other
sitions
yous fatiures. Fear
} rn many a koe Jusi-
ness and sent the man dodging among ths
note shavers, Fear of slander and abuse has
invited ali the long beaked vultures of
scorn and backbiting. Many of the misior-
tunes of life, like hyenas, flee if you coura;
ously meet them,
How poorly prepared for religions duty 's
a man who sits down under the gloom of ex-
cted misfortune! If he prav, he says “1
ot think I shall be answered.” If ne
give, be says, “1 expect they will steal the
money.” delen Chalmars told me that her
father, Thomas Chalmers, in the darkest
hour of the history of the Free Church of
feotland, and when the woes of ths lanl
see ved to weigh upon his heart, said to ths
chiuiren, "Come, let us go out and play ball
or ly kite," and the oaly difficulty in tha
play was that the children could not keep un
with their father. The McCheynes and the
Bt of tha church who d
vated sun
rerfieids
the
Wo
80:
I POORER O en
bh a stroke
eared the air, ar
thers and splashed
1a thickets, Ye are
dos
ag
1 will have :
ies that flock from beneath
gz in Gol an nz in the sy
he promises, you shall “renew your
youth likes the eagle.”
Again, the habit of borrowing trouble is
es because it has a tendency to makes us
overlook present blessing. To slake man's
thirst, the rock is clelt, and cool waters leas
into his brimming cup fo feed his hunger
the flelds bow down with beading wheat,
and the cattle come down with full udders
from the ol t tures to give him milk,
and the orchards yellow and ripen, casting
their juicy fruits into his lap. Alas! that
mid such exuberance of blessing man
should growl as though he were a soldier on
Bail rations, or a sailor on short allowance:
that a man should stand peck deep in har-
forwar f t that one
saith march.
ail the
the expected
should sit in
at ruthless want
cen window sash
rt
and st
overt
should feel the stron
vee
nues of life and yet trem
assanit of sick :
his pleasant homes, fearfy
will some day rattle the |
with tempest, end sw
the hearth, and Tange int
the bread tray; nan fod
B who cwns all the harvests should
pe to starve: that o 1” whom Gad lo
and surrounds with benediction, and attends
with angelic escort, wer with
more than berly fondness should ba
Jooking for a heritage o
} ba nard
sh t be forelodin
board? Has He covered thee with rage?
He spread traps for thy feet, and galled
cir, and rasped thy soul goed thes
with storm, and thundered upon thee with a
life of calamity f vour father or
brother come into your bas y ners gold and
silver are lviag about ye not watoa
them, for you know th are honest: but
an entire stranger by the safe you
keep your eye on him, for you do not kno
his
& Fataer,
tioak
and hovers
tora!
with thes that th
4 wa
ria
1
+i ‘ tals
ie sbiated tay
$
ay
RIG Wed
fail
oy
Cue
aesigns, Bo some men
but a strange
treat (oi;
and act
Bot ns
ataenio.
airaid He would steal something.
it is hugh time you began to thank God
for your present blessing. Thank Him for
your children, happy, buoyant and bound.
ine. Praise Him for your home, with its
fountain of song and laughter, Adors Him
for morning light and evening shado v,
Praise Him for fresh, cool water bubbling
from the rock, leaping in the cascade, sous
ing in the mise, falling in the shower, dash.
Ing against the rock and clapping its hands
in the tempest. Love Him for the grass
that cushions the earth, and the clouds that
curtain the sky, and the loliage that waves
in the forest. Thank Him for a Bible to
read, and a cross to gaze upon, and a Saviour
to deliver,
Many Christians think it a bat sign to ba
ubilant, and their work of self-examination
a hewing down of their brighter experi.
ences, Like a boy with a new Jacknis,
hacking everything he comes across, so their
seil.examination is a religious cutting to
pieces of the greenest things they gar
their hands on, imagine they are do-
ing God's service when they are going about
borrowing trouble, and borrowing it as
thirty per cent., which is always a sure pro-
cursor of banicruptey.
Again, the habit of borrowing troubls is
because the Present is sufficiently
taxed with trial, 1 sees that we all need
a certain amount of trouble, and so He ap.
Jctions it for ali the days and years of our
¢. Alas for the policy of gathering it all
up for one day or year! Cruel thing to pus
Hipon the back of one camel all the cargo in.
tended for the entire caravan, I never look
Be ay ACBL OSE WD a WORE oie
JF gagemnents and duties are far ahead,
| @very week bear its own burdens,
+ The shadows of to-day ars thick enough,
f why implore the proswnocs of other shadows?
The cup is already distasteful, why halloo to
far distant to come and wring ous
more gall into bitterness? Are we such
champions that, having won the belt in
former encounters, we can go forth to chal
all the future? om
a Gat
ars business men
affairs as they now are,
rout, and meet their notes,
as they now are, but what if
rite Sar book a
¥ on your da , on your on
JOur mower safe, “Bailcient unto day
_
!
f= tha evil thareo!.” Ds not worry about
notes that ara far from due. Do not pile un
on vour counting desk the financial anxioties
of the next twenty vears, The God who hag
taken cars of vour worldly ocouomti an,
guarding your store from ths tonch of thy
ndiary ay of the bur ar, wiil
n 1881, (Go i's ha
ine ani thal
tl in 189! as
tha
BI OIErE r He pois
be ax faith
is
ni machinations of stag
ol politioal
tL arm ol revolution
1
'
tha darkness will fly and ths wim iad
y
go 198, or thar 1s
snd wi
So thers are parsons in fasbla health, and
thay are worriel about the faturs., They
; make out very wall nov, hut thav ars bot ie
ering themselves about futirs nleqa and
rheamatisms andl nenrairias and fevers,
i Their eyesight is feebin, anl they are wor-
ried leat they ent pel Their hearing
is indisti ara alarmai lest thoy
become They felt ecailly tos
"18104
r Jose it.
ot, and thee
entirely deaf,
dav, and are exprcting an attack of tynhoid,
They bave been trounled for weeks with
some perplexing mala iy, anl dread becoms
ing flifefong invalids, Take oars of your
health now and trast God for the future.
Be not guilty of tha blasohamy of asking
Him to take care of you while rou sleep with
Your windows tight down, or eat chicken
salad at 11 o'clock at night, or sit dowa on a
cake of ics to cool oil. Da pradent a. « thasn
be confident. Soma of the siocest pennia
have been the most usefal, WAS 8) with
Payson, vho diel deths daily, and Robert
Hall, who used to stop in tha midst of h
sermon ani la down on the pulpit sofa to
rest, and then go on acai ;
Hughuysen hai a great horror o
the time came, and then it
Take care of the present and let the futucs
a FAR Quco t 2 AY
Is
Theodora Fi
avinr t
we pence ullv
1e svi] there
AK
8 Wi
ain, tha b
4 Doan
actuslly does
Soot saliiny
Tuo
aud be thorn pierce
cheek and then sel
silver, Haman sc
between two thie
gate the wn;
i yt
UAE
1s
an i mong
Judas will kiss our
us for thirty pieces of
ra will try to eracify us
We will hear tas iron
shar creak and grind as it
shuts in our kindrad, Bat we cannot gos
ready for those things by forsbodings. They
who flight imaginary woes will come, out of
breath, into cor t with the armed disss.
ters of the future. Thair ammunition will
have been wasted long before thay some
under the guns of real misfortune, Boys in
attempting to jump a wall sometimes gO sO
far back in order to get impetus that whan
They Come uo 2 ais eXaausie : and thess
ME races in order Ly get spring enouch to
vauit trouble bri: tie
ful reality =
iv, &
de among deo
0
» .
-
Cre ew ee
»
«
¥
Ww
Wika "
stnglinz forever
impli and coro
! hey wires soup,
¢ 168
heer
eaven's
my.
lecten,
3 # the ranssmaed ¥in
song the ransomed sins,
ris
Courage,
Rot guve loi
to ast hig
tuition aud
MI iY, Days
you grace ail at on tha
all yous ux
Throuzh earnest 1
everythingin i
Large interest mons
LES
5 wie
0 iva
wi
fatare, out will
a3 as fley
=, trust Him
and leavas is th
» pay will soon eat up
a farm, a store, an estate, and ths interast
on borrowed troubles will swamp anybody,
“Huff “eat unto the day is the evil thereol.”
-—
mest cons,
Put
Yi
Hare and
Coop suet, very
| a cream; this will lumps of
j suet in the pudding or pie. Before
pehopping remove every bit of mem-
i bran»
For simple hoarseness take a fresh
| egg, beat it and th cken with palver-
ized sugar. Ea it, and the
will soon be greatly re
Therel
fine, then to
rot
f
prevent
Kg
t freely of
hoarseness 4
' Hevedd,
Ix severe paroxysms of conghing try
: one or two tablespoonafnl of pare glyc-
erine, mixed with hot, rich cream. It
13 said to give almost immediate re-
Lief,
Have a pair of shears hanging on a
| nail over the sink for exclusive nse in
| the kitchen. Also a box of string or a
| ball of string hangiug in a cover rea iy
for use.
Corrars and enfls are first ironed on
the wrong mide and then finished on
the right side,
to keep the iron free from starch and
well waxed,
them, particularly when the evil days
draw nigh that bring those first indi-
eators of age, wrinkles on the lower
part of the face. By using invariably
the upward motion in drying these
wrinkles will be gently removed, and
with them the Stones to undue ful-
ness about the shin.
-An English inventor has construct.
ed a novel device to do away with the
enorm: us presanre of water against the
bows of ocean steam-rs. It consists of
one or more screws ob each side of the
bow whch throws the water aside and
creates a dry well in front of the vessel.
« One of the recent inventions for
life-saving apparatus is the Irvine pneu-
matic gun for throwing a line to ships
In distress or to persons in a burning
house. The air is sdmitied from a res-
ervoir to the chamber bebind the pre-
jectile at a pressure of 2400 pounds on
the square inch,
~There are many odd ways of get-
ting a living. One of the oddest Is
pursued the salonniers of Paris,
who make a profession 2 Tg gents.
men's cravals, An ex in
i this line can earn $10 an evening, It is
Arn sorts of vessels and utensils
be purified from long.
them out well
of any kind by rinsi
with charcoal —
| arooal pow after they have
A SEARCH FOR A VALUABLE
FrREASURE.
It is On the Marianna Islands near
Pern.
Information has come to light show.
ing thatan expedition is being equip-
ped in San Francisco harbor to go in
search of the treasures said to be bur-
ied on the Marianne Islands. In the
year 1823, during the dark days of the
terrible revolution in Peru, a number
wenlthiest residents of Lima
met the leading fathers of the Church
at a monastery to devise a plan where-
by some of their wealth might be
saved. The brig El Ciudad, lying in
the harbor, was bought. During the
night and ander the guise of merchan-
it
her
in
ed on board. is said CHIZO
besides
mable amount of jewels,
Unluckily for the owners,
Somers, an adventurous Engli
serving as a Lieutenant in
vian navy, learned of the
throuvh a maid in the sey
witli
an
Winton
shman,
the Peru-
whole plan
vice of & wife
whom he
affair. He
ining the services
fred spirits, who
pian that promised
git if tha
Of & Hilionaire wis
1 ’
ve
fore
aH hE
of the |
taking the
The be and
two of the heaviest caskets turned over
to keeping of the maid,
vessel they
of
arers were
Wis
asl the jewels
aboard, killed,
the
land.
threw out the proper
They
l Somers, as an officer
whic! in
i i
the guard;
picked their way among n
th
ships, and struck out |
Pacific. After
titi i per
puting,
wildly into
some ois ussion,
Line ' 10%
Time and the
her lot, h
intrusted to |
Weve
Pe ~ ¥
Cravyian
it
wife of i
SOmer's gre:
treasures, Siu
great official. She coolly informed
the messengers that she didn't propose
to go with them, and that she didn't
take any stock in their story relating to
was
Somers waiting to guide her to them.
The messengers threatened her with
the piracy.
to no
She temporized with
purpose. At last she
vice of Somers’s letter. The two were
waylaid by assassins, but they made a
botch of the business. Ravelo escaped
with a scratch, but the boy was mor-
tally wounded. As he lay gasping
away his life he confessed the whole
story to the authorities. The woman
was arrested. tried, and executed.
After suffering untold privations
Ravelo escaped from Peru and made
his way to Somers. The two survivors
now began to devise ways to reach the
buried treasure. At last they found
Capt. Thompson and told such a good
story that he consented to flil out his
schooner Swallow and have a try at the
heaps of gold and jewels. Somers,
however, to protect himself, would
not divulge the island whieh held them,
but insisted that the charter for the
vessel should include the whole group.
One evening before they reached
their destination, Somers and the Peruo
lh eid com aE Se
over
jiaviations were on the and all
Hla Syulen, Suddenly lookout
acry. Inthe wake of the ship
be saw a clutching hand disappearing
beneath the waves. Somers was gone
wind looking overboard,
The vessel was brought to, but the
body was never recovered, Ravelo de-
clared that Somers had accidentally
fallen overboard. The paper, which
he still held in his hand, had a portion
rl
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON,
EUNDAY., AUGURT 30. 1801
Christ at the Feast.
LESSON TEXT.
tion torn away and was much crumpled,
showing signs of a struggle.
~
prig, the Captain of which proved an
old friend. He divided the
with him, and together they sailed for
the islands. Ravelo was
where the treasure was buried. ile
promised compliance. On arriving at
the foot of the island he was asked if
that was the one, and he said it was,
As Ravele was stepping into
The eabin boy, who was
that he filled his with all the
lead and iron he could stuff into them.
On retarning he slid into the boat, lost
ath the surface,
Fhe coxswain made a grab i
appearing head
hair. The two Captains
and made a long and
treasure, They had
he had gone down grasping
i What des
in Spanish,
pockets
his grip, and shot bene
' ils {i 8
and pulled a tuft of
went ashore
Somers’
riptions they had wes
and not a man
them was acquainted with
we.
BInong
tant ane
In digging sbout some South Amer-
ican coins were found, a ring, a sail-
or’s knife, and a piece of board, into
which had been burned the
Cindad
h =
of the brig in
the teasure,
overworked
of pro
s Lhe
OIers
name
fled with
gr the
win
Crumbling smon
| aricd
Fisions
116
ileprest
ithout
Ch]
result
of
Thompson
i
old
rind
the expedition hs
disappeared,
fitting out A8
has
haunts who are famil-
habits onfident that
r with his are
: 18 now
il has been tested,
———
Sensational Letter Hoax,
An amusing hoax appears to have
I
perpetrated upon
the foreign
K
have been written by
FR the present (
i
tor to Li 'y ti tO 1 1}
{ famons
Aksakoff,
lotier In ane
pint of
ana 1
§
i
nlrnost
The publi
| immense am
Europe,
been copied in
or of any ime
whole thing is, how
The letter
wi
yrerdsy
slit
pears 1
£2 JIAave
ign
The
but a hoax,
a
for newspa)
portance,
IN Qliese
ition hy
§ LEE EL For. was
Kot
Alexand:
ascended
1G Count
Ke
$45 i bonhey
the throne
Alexander | : y eourtiers
in such hi
of
The
as
Vs}
ins
ine 1. original letter will be
and Times of Alexander 1.7
—
Neglecting His Education,
»
Susan,’
Aunt Susan—Co'se Ise cited.
Gentleman——<Now what has Zeke
done?”
Aunt Susan—«<W'ats he dan? Wats
he dun? Bress my soul if he didn’t
go down to de pahty last night widout
a razor. Dat boy neber will learn to
carve.” Rochester Post- Express.
An Editor's Good Work.
An unnamed citizen of New York-
who is, however, known to be Mr.
Joseph Pulitzer, the proprietor of the
World—has founded sixty permanent
collegiate scholarships for poor boys
of the public schools of that city.
Twelve boys who have completed the
grammar-sechool course will be selected
each year, and to each of them is to be
given a scholarship of $260 a year for
five years, thus making the cost to the
donor, when all the scholarships shall
have been assigned, $15,000 a year.
Mr, Pulitzer believes that education is
an ald to advancement in any country,
and that some of the poor should have
# chance as well as the rich. The re-
sults of the experiment will be await
od with interses, : ,
tJohu 7: 81.54 Memory verses
LESSON PLAN,
Toric or Tur Quanren: Jesus the
Son of God,
ror TAR QUARTER:
that might be.
licve that Jesus in the Christ, the Son
of God; and that believing ye might
| have life through his name.~John
20 81,
Texr
hese are writ n,
GorLpes
ye
Lesson Tovio: The Som Man's
Drink,
by the Perish
Lesson ODurrise
man thirst,
drink,
CGioroex Texr: 1
y
let
any
lili come unto me, and
i 7 + 27
John 7 i
Dany Hour Deano
M.—~John 7:
drink.
‘Yhe Eon of wo
Going ty dhe 100,
0 } Jesus arrives at
the east,
T.- Exod, 17 1-7.
Or Less,
Num, 20:
wilderness.
B.—John 6 : 63-71, Drinking t
| 8. —Rev. 22 : 1-17. The water
in the wild.
Water
| Water in the
1-11.
Le bl
of
SSO N ANALYSIS,
REJECTED
ih ITs Authority Recognized:
When the Christ sha
do more sions ? 1
| And all
(Matt
» TAAL
Cod be
» BY THE WICKET
the m
143 32
N enn
with hk
Beliove me for
ili. His Say
What is thi
How savent ti
free? |
made
John ®
i
f
TJLeocanse of
hn 10: 19
A little while?
There arose a divisie n
these words (Je
What is that he
John it iM,
| Him that bath enn
ath,
rod
! Td
i ng of sinners Heb. |
such geinsay-
2:8
1 “Will he do more signs than |
this man hath done?’ (1) What
Messiah should do; (2) What Jesus
did do, - i o
Messiah: (2
of Jesus,
Yet a little while am I with yon.”
1) Visible presence; (2) Approach-
ug dejarinre, 1) The little while
of Ix diy nhs
“What is ti that he said?’
{1} Chrisi's teschings; (2)
Man's dull perceptions-{1; The
Lord's } he pupils’
Clear manifestations
joe
- 3
word
clear
lessons: 2
questions,
il. XEEDED BY THE VERISHING,
Thirst Quenched
f any man thirst,
me and drink
et him come unto
The congregation Jdrank, and their ecat-
| tle (Num }: 11
{ My soal thirsteth
God (Psa. 42 2
| Ho, every one thst {
i Isa 55:1.
They ll drank of
God, the living
steth, come ye
Li?
the spiritual
Christ {1 Chor. 10 : 4).
Helpfulness 'mparted:
Out of his beily shall flow rivers of
| ving water (3%),
Wisdom is a flowing brook (Prov. 18:
4).
When once thou hast turned again,
stablish thy brethren (Lake 22 32),
{ We are God's fellow-workers (1 Cor.
3:0.
I am become nll
that I way
: 32).
[111. The Spirit Received:
The Spirit, which they....wes
' receive (30),
it
things to all men,
SAYe some
to
| I will jour my spirit upon thy seed
| (Isa 44 :8).
| I will
(Joel 2 : 2),
22).
They were all filled with the Holy
Spirit (Acts 2 : 4).
L “If any man thirst, let him come
unto me, and drink.”
sion; (3) Proffer. — (1) Human
thirst; (2) Divine supp .
2. “Out of his belly sh ow rivers
of living water.” (1) Living water
received; (2) Liv walter pos.
sessed ; (3) Living water imparted.
8. *“This © he of the bpirit.” (1)
The di Comforter; (2) The be-
liever's possession; (3) world’s
hope.
11. VINDICATED BY THE SORIPTURSG,
I. The Prophet Foretold:
This in of a {rath the prophet (40).
God will rasse up unto thee a prophet
(Deut, 18 : 15;
Art thou the prophet? (John 1 : 21.)
Thisie of a truth the prophet (John 8
: 145, .
Moses, which said .. A prophet shall
God raise up (Acts 7 : 37).
il, Tha Messian Foretold:
This ws the Christ (41),
cimma—————————--]
The Loxp, and. ... his anointed (Pea,
2:3.
And aficr... shell the anointed one
be cut off (Dan 9
The La
1).
I know that Messiah cometh (which is
called Christ {John 4: 23}.
i111. The Ancastry Foretold:
Christ cometh of the seed of David,
and from Bethlehem (42),
Of the irnit of the | o ly will 1
thy throne (Psa. 142 : 113.
Upon the throne of David (Tea. 9
There shall come forth a shoot out
of Jeese (Isa, 11 :
Out of thee shall one come forth
be ruler (Mio. 5 : 2).
L “This is of a truth the prophet.’
(1) The Lord's wonderful work: 2)
The observer's just conclnsion, —
(1) Foreshadowings of Scripture;
(2) Realizations of fact,
2. “This is the Christ.” }
Anointed One foretold; (2)
prohecics fulfilled; (8)
ty established
8. “1here arose a
waliitude
Div ded in rm; 2)
fi Divided {
. 26).
kp hath anointed me (Isa. 61
set upon
.
to
The
The
The ide nti
division in the
him.’ 1)
Divided in
rever,
tide ocause f
b+ 3
ney ?
*
LESSON BIBLE BEADING.
SYNE
Salvation
§: 14; Rev. 22: 17
races of the © ir
44:3; Ezek,
a,
Divine cons
Isa, 8B: 6
Wor is
2H
; John
: 17, 18 ;
volin 7: 38,
alion
of wis
p>
dom
J
1
20 : by,
Prevalent godliness
<2: 14).
The earcer of evil
Pea, 58 : 7)
men (Job 24 : 17
———
LESSON SURROUNDINGS
The disconrse
liesatisfuction,
of the
with
thelr
meet with
1 (allie
¥ mn
iyre
IxreRvEsiG Evests,
Bpert to
nau: led
Hy eral defection
ihe twelve
nai utained
ford
i LTA
Se
ur
ie of
g Hp
=
e fHaal
aven's imme
lite
lately preceding
expression of ane
by our Lord's brethren: his subse
juent private journey to Jerusalem3
the inquiries for imong the ews}
his pu teach aud the hostility
| thereby awaker the questioning
among the Jews; and our Lord's re-
| sponse in the temple, with which the
lesson is connected.
Prior —AtJeruasalum, in the temple,
probably in one the extensive
porches. The latter part of the lesson
is supposed to be oounected with the
priestly drawing of water. If so, the
pluce was within sigh: of the ceremone
ial taking place in the court of the
priests,
Live. —In October, A. U. C. 743;
that is, A. D. 20. According to An-
drews, the feast of tabernacles extends
i ed that year from the 11th to the 18th
of October. The fist part of ihe
lesson may be placed in the latter half
of the week (v. 14), and the last pars
on the last day (v. 37). Itis disputed
whether this day was the seventh or
eight.
Persons. — Our Lord, the listening
multitude, the chief priests and Phari-
sces, the officers sent to take Jesus.
There seems to be a distinction made
between the multitude and the Jews in
this part of Johu's narrative,
ixcipesTs.— Many of the multitadeo
believe on Jesus as the Messiah, on ac-
count of the signs be did; the Phari-
secs, noticing this, send officers to take
him; Jesus predicts his departure to
: the Father, but the Jews misunder-
stand him, thinking he purposed to go
among the Gentiles. On the last day
| of the feast, probably in connection
with the solemn ceremonial of the feast,
our Lord predicts the outpouring of
| the Holy Spirit; some of the multitnde
believe, int others object, becan e the
Christ was to come, not from Galilee,
but from Bethlehem. In this division
of opinion, no one laid hands on him.
There is no parallel passage.
a ——————————
Put Some Sait In It.
“Mother, what makes you jut salt in
everything you cook? Everything
you make you put in a little salt.” So
| spoke observing hittle Annie as she
| stood looking on.
“Well, Annie, I'll make you a little
loaf of bread without any salt, and see
if you can find it out.”
“Ob, mother, it dosen't taste » bit
nice, ” said she after she had tasted the
n are
ain
ng
Bcd ;
Die
of
“Why not?” ssked her mother,
“Yon didn’t put any salt in it.”
“Mother,” said Annie a day or two
afterwards’ “Jane Wells is the worst
girl T ever saw. She slaps her little
: ther Johnny, pulls his hair, and
| nots really hateful. When I told her
{ it was naughty to do so, and if she
would be kind to her brother he would
| be kind to ber, she ouly spoke roughly
| to me and hit him n. Why won't
she take my advice
| “Perhaps you didn't pnt joy salt in
it. Beason words with kindness,
my ehild. Ec all yom
and do, and your words spoken
the Spirit of Christ will not fall to
ground.”
Por oam m with yonr pew
Iverware phot, in never Yarnish an
as the gum is there. Never wash
as that gives it a
Z
= gE Fi
i
in soapsuds,
aRRearanoe