A RA CULTIVATED WITH WATER. ‘HOW RICEIS RAISED FOR MARKET IN LOUISIANA. Water is the First and Last Want of Rice Growers—Grassing the Crop-The Nuisance of the Birds, | “Tell you something about rice in Louisianu?” repeated Andrew C. | Wilkinson, the owner of a large rice mill in New Orleans, where the rice grown | on his plantations is cleaned, at the Gil. sey House. *‘Isee that the papers have just found out that Englishmen are try- ing to buy up and form a trust of the rice mills in the South, although the agents have been down there tor some- | thing over six months. Nobody is quicker than JohnBull to scent a bargain and when the South began its march on the road of its present marvelous growth he simply poured his money in a golden | stream into our Southern States, He bought our coal and iron mines, our timberlands, the phospate beds and now ! he is trying tn form a trust in the rice mills. While it will take several mil. lion dollars to in any way give them the | controll of the rice market, if they do succeed in getting it a mighty good pay- ang investment it will be. “New Orleans is the chiel rice mll- ing city in America. Fifty years ago | we did not have such a thing as a rice | mill, bnt now we have sixteen, working 220 rice pounders and employing more | than twelve hundred men. Working | these sixteen mills all the year and he'ped by four other large steam mills, | we in New Orleans will be hard pressed to handle all of last rice {Lowsiana has always been known as the Sugar State, but we also want to add to it that of the Rice State of the Union. “How 1s it cultivated? Well, the first necessity of profitable rice culture is a comparatively level piece of land, prop- erly prepared for the seed. This field must be located so as to be conveniently irrigated from the prairie reservoir or the flume in the levee. Highland ree does not pay in Louisiana, the ously profitable rice being that grown in water. Water is the first and last want of sprouting, growing and ripening rice. Before the ground is ready for the seed it is divided up by a system of little levees and water- | ing ditches. It is then planted in drills dug by machines-—or, rather, I should say that the machine is the proper way to do it,but the seed is trequently broad- casted with us in Louisiana. *“Then comes the most delicate part, in the water manipulation. After the sced is planted the soil is thoroughly saturated with water to sprout it, but the water is at once taken off when the seeds have evenly germinated, snd kept off until the tender shoots of the plant rise two or three inches above the ground. You can easily see that the young plants may be either drowned out or dried up by the least inattention in regulating the flow. On theother hand, with too much water, crawfish invade the fields and devour the delicate plants, while with none at all, rice caterpillars cut them down and kill them. If you neglect the main flume you not only risk the total ics 6f your crop, but by per. mitting the water to get ahead of you there may come a break in the leves sad away go your cattle and crops. “The most expensive part of rice growing comes when it is about a foot high, after it has been liberally watered ; I mean the grassing of the rice. You see, the laborers wade through the rice, pulling up and throwing into heaps all the weeds and water grasses they fiad. This grassing costs on an average about $4 an acre, and after that is over the rice planter has but little to do except to | give it plenty of water. One peculiar | thing about irrigation is that the heads of the rice plants never fill out, no mat- ter how much water you give them arti- ficially, unless there are pleatiful rains. “One feature of rice cultivation would be great fun to city sportsmen, but it's a terrible nuisance to us. [ mean the birds. Talk about your ducks and geese hiding the sun. Perfect clouds of rice birds, English sparrows, summer ducks, rail and other fowl of the air and water, come to see if they can’t harvest our crops for us. From daybreak to dark a perfect fusillade from the guns and old muskets is heard in hundreds of square miles of country. Over in this field you | hear the shrill shouts of Creole farmers | shrieking in French patois; from the next probably the deep chested whoop of negro fleld hande, and in another the hoarse yells of the new American rice | growers—those who have come trom the great Northern wheat fields. It is scream! ~pOp l= whoop!— bang!— boom !— | boom! in the noisiest battle from dawn | to dark that you ever hear. The rice | birds are our worst enemies, and while we kill millions of thera, left to manure the flelds, other millions come into take their places. The ravages of the rice birds some years are fearful, the crop | being almost a total loss, “As soon as & pale yellow tint appears | over the level heads of the opening the water is carefully drawn off, the fleids being drained as thoroughly as:| ble, and the work of harvesting is | n. The dried sheaves sre carted | direct from the fleld to the steam | thresher, where the grain is prepared for market, “The profits in rice planting, with good luck, will in a few years make any men rich, The yields on good lands in Louisiana give from fifty to seventy-five bushels to the acre, is a plant is generous to the attentive and industrious farmer; but it resents neglect more than any other cereal. A mas can season's crop. | | been | three members and eat rate of increased acreage Louisiana ! will be able to supply the entire country | with this most valuable cereal, New | | York Telegram. Germany has 6,000,000 acres of for. | SELECT SIFTINGS. | OSts, ! Green Lake, Col, 10,252 feet above | the sea level, is the highest lake in the | world, An old Indian burying ground has discovered near Winstead, Con- | necticut. It takes about three seconds for a mes. sage to go from one end of the Atlantic cable to the other, It is pointed out as an interesting fact that people with a tendency to consump- tion are never bald. On the contrary, they unusally possess a luxuriant head of hair. The average French family embraces the average Irish England the average ! of a family is In mombers family five. number of four. More than $1,000,000 was received in | London, England, during the past year London direction, taxes. The in this in dog are vigilant other. police if no It is the custom in Lima, Peru, to keep animals on tbe roofs of houses. A calf makes its first appearance on the roof, and never descends until it comes down as beef. Lewiston, Me., has a three.year.old girl who prattles in French, Swedish and English. Each of her parents was a dif- ferent nationality, and she picked up English from visitors. A new style of saddle-cloth has the un. derside made like a waffle. The holes and their edges are intended to hold fast to the horse's hide, and prevent slipping if the saddle-girth is not fastened firmly. A Truckee (Cal.) saloonkeeper has a curiosity in the shape of a couple of big trout joined together like the Siamese twins. The body of each is perfect, but they are united by a membrane attached to their They are alive and frisky. A A bellies, veritable curiosity has been captured in Africa. It is an elephant larger than the late lamented Jumbo, pea-green in color, trunkless, and has tusks that branch out something like the horns of a deer. It is in possession of 8 native king, who will not part with it. of the United of the Maxwell, says the Lieutenant States Army, climate Dakotas adds to stature. When ordered to that country he was over twenty-one years old and had reached the age whan growth was supposed to stop, but during a residence there of over a year he grew three and a half inches. one's Some immigraats carry tin trunks. It is easy to imagine what happens to a tin trunk when an ordinary trunk falls on it. “Why anybody should make a tin trunk,” a baggagemaster says, ‘‘is more than [| can understand. They may | be good enough to stand in a house to | put things in, but they are worthless for traveling.” Some of the designs in use on the Oriental carpets that are so attractive to Western ideas of taste have a history that reaches back to Xerxes and the early Persian Kings. They are banded down from generation to generation of | rugmakers, mothers transmitting them to daughters, for most of the carpet. | weavers of the Orient are women. ——— RE ———— Revolution In Naval Warfare. A complete revolution in naval war fare will probably be the result of some successful experiments carried out on | board Her Majesty s ship Vernon with the torpedo net cutters invented by Cap- tain Wilson. The great mcmentum of the Whitehead torpedo, armed with Cap- tain Wilson's new torpedo custers, en- ables it to cut its way through any tor- pedo net, even when thé latter is set at an angle of forty-five degrees, without apparent retardation of its flight. The cutter consists of blades arranged scis. sors fashion, which sever the wire meshes of the net, making an aperture sufficient for the entrance of the torpedo. Iron. clads will no longer be able to defend themselves from torpedoes, as the utility of the nets, upon which they have hitherto relied for safety, is completely done away with. —New Orleans Times Democrat. ee — Romance of a Picture. There is a very curious story con. nected with one of the pictures in the famous collection at Wentworth-Wood. | house, Lord Fitzawilliam's beatiful mansion. The picture is of a famous race horse, named Whistle jacket, and the curious thing about it is that it has no background. When the picture of | the horse was finished some one sug- | gested that a portrait of George 1V. | might be placed in the middle and a | landsca tted, but before this was done Whistlejacket was brought to be | compared with the picture, and, to | everybody's astonishment, attacked his counterfeit presentment so savagely that it was nearly destroyed, The incident was deemed so curious that the unfin. ished picture was hung as it Wis Jag background or King George, and so romlne 10 this day. London Tit-Bita, EE ———— Brilliants Discovered in Arkansas. There is some little excitement in Gar. land County, Ark., over the discovery of a persone 4 superior article of the stone known as the Hot Spring diamond, Charles Garret, well known Hot A BA. A WAI SN THE MERRY SIDE OF LIFE. ———————— BTORIES THAT ARE TOLD BY THE FUNNY MEN OF THE PRESS, Turn About is Fair Play-—-A Hopeless Case Eager To-Social Amenities «The Place tor Him, Kite, When we are young we cut our hair, Then why do we all cuss Because, when we arg sixty-three Or more, our hair cuts us? w= Truth, A TIOPELESS CASE. He-—**What way shall we go home?” | She—*“The shortest.” Then he gave up all Blade. EAGER TO. “We are organizing a piano club? Will you join?" “Cheerfully! What pianist propose to club first!" Puck, do you THE PLACE YOR HIM. “Where's Blithers? I've been looking | all over for him." “Did you under ors's thumb 1" Puck, look Mrs. Blith EVEN. Brief No. I—*‘8ir, you're no lawyer.” Brief No. II—*'8ir, you're no judge.” Brief No. I—*‘] never wished to be.” Brief No. II—*'Which proves you, too, are no lawyer," — Puck, JUST THE THING, “We have no use for bear stories,” said the editor, ‘‘our readers demand something spicy.” “Well,” said the man with the manu- | script, ‘‘this story is about a cinnamon | bear." — Truth. SOCIAL AMENITIES. ‘Jack said I was the brightest girl in the room last night,” said Ethel. *“You were,” returned Marie, “but it was rude of Jack to say The room was 80 warm you couldn't help getting red in the face." — Truth. 80. AX ECONOMICAL DRSPOT. filled to hall saad “The jails Your Highness. ones?" “‘Most certainly not. Proclaima gen eral pardon of the occupants. can fill ‘em up again.” — Epoch, Aare we build new EASY WORK. “We've got to economize, Maud," said a] ’ i Heary. ‘It is absolutely necessary.’ “*Yery well,” returned Maud, *I shall | give up your cigars.” ““And I will do without a winter bon net,” sald Henry. —Harper's Basar. AX ARDENT LOVER. Mami¢—‘‘Papa, don’t you George is an ardeat lover!” Papa—‘‘Yes, my dear, he is an srdent lover——a lover of the ardent, and [ think you had better give him the mitten without delay.” Yankee Blade. DESERVED TO WIN. He—'The artists say that five feet four inches is the divine height for a woman." His Darling (crossly)—*‘You know I an five feet eight inches.” ] He (quickly)—**You are more than | divine, dear.” — Binghamion Republican. wri | think | TOO MUCH. I can never ' “1 must give her up. marry a girl who stammers.’ “Why not?” “Why not! Do you think it's pleas ant to be made sheepish by being called Ba—Ba—Bob?-—or to feel like a college | cheer when she calls me Rab—Rabh— | Robert I"— Life. INCOMPLETE. Gazzam (looking up from the newspa- per)—*‘That's the longest sentence I ever heard of.” Mrs. Gazzam What!" Jnzzam--' ‘Fifty years." Mrs. Gazzam (who was once a school. teacher)--*‘It isn’t a sentence at all, It has no verb, "Judge, A HINT. Papa (up stairs)—‘‘Maude,is that old man gone yet!” Maude—**Whom do you meant” Papa —*‘Cholly Hicks." Cholly Hicks—'*I'm not an old man Papa--'*You weren't when you arrived, [ know-but time flies, Mr. Hicks, time fies." New York Sun, " ASKING TOO MUCH. “Of course it hurts, Josiah," said Mrs. Chugwater, as she applied the lini ment and rubbed it in vigorously. ‘Rheumatism always hurts. You must grin and bear it.” “I'm willing to bear it, Samantha,” groaned Mr. Chugwater, ‘but blame me if I'm going to grin.” Ohisage Tribune. A FAIR FINANCIER, Cobwigger—'‘The material for this quilt must have cost a pretty figure.” Mm. Oobwigger-—‘‘How can you sa sch a thing! Anyone but a man woul know that it is made of pieces that were left over. Why, ever since we were married, whenever I bought a new dress I got an extra yard or so for this very purpose,’ Life. THE IRREPRESSIBLE BOY, “You didn't bring your wile with you, Mr. Jones,” said the small boy of the house, addressing the guest, ‘See her thumb! What do you want 0 Sug us mls 55200 . ma ih ays bope.— Yankee | that | overflowing, | Then we when they know the well is dry. THOUGHTLESS MAN. She was very rich, but slightly passe, and he was poor, “You are so beautiful,” he whispered ns they sat out in the lambent light of the harvest moon, and the languorsus music of the orchestra in the distant ball room was wafted to them, sweet and low, on the evening air. She did not take her hand away as she felt the warm pressure of his upon it, “But beauty fades,” she sighed re- gretfully, and there was a touch of bit. | terness in her tones. “Yes,” he said abstractedly, *I had noticed that.” | She snatched her hand from his and with a scornful look froze him to the i'spot, so that the iceman picked him up with his tongs in the morning and de. livered him at the kitchen door, — Detroit Free Pre AN, AN AMUSING FABLE. Traveling throug } i } 1 ing rough the sagebrush country a Jackass moet a Rabbit who ex- claimed in great astonishment: bow did doubtless “Good gracious! {80 big?! You | rabbit living." *No,"” said the Jackass, “‘you are the | smallest donkey,” y After a good deal of fruitless argu- | ment the question was referred for de- | cision to a passing Coyote, who was a | bit of a demagogue and desirous to stand ! well with both. “Gentlemen,” said he, ‘‘you are both { right, as was to have been expected by persons so gifted with appliances for re- { ceiving instruction from the wise. You, sir'—turning to the superior animal ‘are, he has acutely observed, a rabbit. And you"-—to the rabbitt— | **are correctly described as a jackass. In yur names man has acted with incredible folly.” you grow are the largest 8 transposing yi | They were so pleased with the decision | that they declared the their candidate for the Grizzly Bearship; but whether he ever obtained the office his. tory does San Francisco Ez- manner. Coyote not relate WISE WORDS. No fiddler ever gots tired of his own m ic. The truly great are those who ¢ nquer themselves, You can tell whether a man is any | count by the way he steps. ac- Nobody pays any attention to a pump You can't tell who isin the coffin by the length of the funeral procession, : It is the tree that stands the straight. { est that does most to resist the wind When some men pay their preacher they feel as though they wore gas bill The man who does his place he has now is on his way t ter place. The man who gets his bread paying a bost fresh every day never wants to change his boarding house. When you find anybody who is doing much to help other people, you find one who has suffered, The man who lives right himself is continually making unwritten laws that other people have to follow, You are doing one of two things, brother. neighbor out of the ditch, or helping to make a ditch for him to fall into is itl—Indianapolis (Ind.) Ram's Horn rn - A Shirt Has 21,000 Stitches. A New York merchant, in the hearing of a newspaper man, made a calculation { of the number of stitches in a shirt, for ! which a customer thought thirty-nine | He found : There | are four rows of stitching in the collar, | cents too higha price. 3200 stitches; cross ends of the collar, 440; button and buttonholes, 150; gath- 1205; stitching wristbands, 1358: ends of the same, 65; bultonholes in wrist. bands, 148; hemming slits, 264; gether. ing the sleeves, 840; setting on wrist. bands, 1468; stitching on straps, 1880; hemming the bosom, 383; | sewing in sleeves and making gussets, 3050; sewing wo seams of sleeves, 2554; | cording the bosom, 1104; ‘‘tapping” the sleeves, 1526; sewing up all other seams and setting the side gussets, 1272, Twenty-one thousand stitches in all. — New Orleans Proagune, 5.5 Mistook a Prelate for a Beggar. The late Cardinal class carriage, says the London 7% Bits, A poor Irish woman sat opposite to him. Dr. Newman was not one who gave much thought to his personal appearance and his biack clothes may have had a threadbare and neglected look. His face, wan and thoughtful, evidently suggested poverty aud pinching to the heart of the daughter of the Emerald Isle, for, as she was leaving the carriage, she slipped a small coin into his hand, honors that were lavished upon him. ——- Tigers On the Increase. Of late yoars stops have been taken to Jrovent the Justiyitips of fora by fee certain districts of India, This care has had one curious result, Cover and water, which vanished with the timber, HH i i You are either helping your | Which | ering the neck and sewing on the collar, | shoulder | Newman was once | traveling, before his elevation to the | | Cardinalate, | station along the line, seated in a third. from Edgbaston to some | AIRS, HOUSEHOLD AFF DOK'T KEGLECT THE ATTICS, Nothing is more discouraging to a good housekeeper than to move into a house with a neglected attic, where the debris of all the previous housekeepers has been allowed to collect, It is im- possible to calculate how much dust and unwholesomeness drifts down through the house from such a neglected spot us this. A good housekeeper has no such neglected spots. —New York Journal, RED ASI AND WHITE ASH COAL. | Very few householders know anything | about the respective qualities of red ash | and white ash coal. In many small cities ! white ash is all that can be had. For | range use, however, a good red ash cosl | gives out more heat and | nomical than anything else, | does not like it so well is more eco if she is inclined | to be indolent, because it does not burn | | gogues, soever killeth you wili think that he docth | up 80 rapidly as white ash coal, and can- | not be started so quickly, but when it is once started and burning its lasting pow- ers are surprising, -— Boston Cultivator, ABOUT PRESERVES AND JELLIES, | Journal: ‘Jellies and preserves should be kept in a dark, cooi and dry closet, If you have papers about the preserve jars when they are put away. Handle the jars carefully when you have occasion to move them, for it often happens that a mold forms on the top of the fruit, which does not do it any harm, but rather heips to pro. tect it, if not mixed in with it by care. less handling, When you are stinted in closet room you can peat strong sheets of old boxes tumblers of of pasteboard the top of one lay or jars of fruit, and » these, Before Darts : er of st another 1 storing these jars 1a the closet wipe them carefully with a wet cloth, Rinse this cloth frequently in hot water It is a wise plan, when put. ting up jellies, Ver tumbler with a round piece of plain white paper, and then tie ayer of cotton batting. 0 ¢ each on a thin MARKING HOUSE LINEN. Ornamental monograms for marking house and table lis i i eated in the letters designed orated with birds in various positi each holding a spray of foliage and ber. ries, To this device is attached an escutcheon a smaller letter standing for the Christian name. “hese letters are adaptable to every kind of decorative work where painting and em. broidery are brought in requisition and are reproduced in colors that harmonize with either the toilet set, bed hangings or dinner service, as they may be em- Pp There are several ways of exe. | euting initials. In embroidery | white or colored silks or cottons are | effectively set off with washing gold thread, or a well padded satin stitch can | be used for the jointed stems of the bam. { boo, as well as for the leaves and berries, with crewel work jor the birds. An. | other way of displaying this design to | great advantage is to produce the letters | in applique work, and in this case the | bird may be painted if preferred. The | whole is two inches and a hall high. — New York World. 0s, inciosiog £ yed, these RECIPES. | Butter Frosting—One and one-half | cups of sugar, cup of milk, butter size of an egg. Boil all together for fifteen minutes; flavor with vanilla; beat until cool and spread before too hard. Becisteak Pie--A paste made of one pint of flour and one-half pound of bee suet minced very fine is very nice for this pie. Line the sides and bottom of » | pudding dish and fill it with lean beef | chopped very fine by the butcher, Season with sait and pepper and plenty of butter rolled in flour, and two slices of fat salt pork cut into small bits, | Cover with an uppbr crust, securing the | edges well, and bake in a moderate oven, Peach BSandwiches—~To make peach sandwiches, take very ripe delicious | peaches, pare and cut them up, sugar them well, and pour over them a little | cream, just enough to soak into them, | then put them in a large bowl or other | deep dish, and let them stand for sev. | eral hours, until they are soft and pulpy. | Take light rolls, biscuit or short cake, split in half, and spread thickly with the | peaches. These should be eaten cold, and are delicious. Stewed Potatocs—Take about a quart | of cold boiled potatoes not over done, | cut in pleces; allow about one pint of one spoonful of flour, three spoonfuls of Put the potatoes in a double kettle, pour smooth, then stir into the potatoes and add the salt and parsley if there is not closely and cook ten minutes, letuce, ete,; mix well together, One large tablespooaful of sugar, one of salt, and one teaspoonful of mustard; to this add three large tablespoonfuls of vine. gar, lump of butter size of of an A and two well beaten eggs; place dish containing this mixture in another of The cook | { be offended with Him. no dark closet, wrap news. | | of the milk, a tablespoonful of chopped parsley, | butter, and half a teaspoonful of salt, | in the milk, mix flour with the butter | enough milk add a little more—cover | | and He will show you Salad Dressing—Good jar of cold | string beans, chopped cabbage, lobster, | = | SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON VOI ROVEMBER 8, Lesson Text: “The Work of the Holy Spirit.” John xvi, 1-15-Golden Texwi John xvi, 18-Com- mentary, 1. “These things bave I spoken unto you, that ye should not be offended.” He has Just been telling them that they will be hated and persecuted for His name's sake (xv,, 18 21), and now He adds that He has foretold them these things, so that when they actually happen they need not think it strange nor be offended because of such treatment. To John the Baptist in prison He seat tidings of the evidences of His Messiahship, and said, “Blessed is he whosoever shall not be of- fended in Me” (Math, xi.. 6, To question His love, or think His dealings strange, is to “They shall put you out of the syna- ea, the time cometh, that whos 9 oy 5 b God service. The man who was born blind | bad already been cast out for His sake (chap. | ter ix, 35), and that was but a sample of what should happen to them, How any one | could think that he was serving God by | putting a fellow creature to death in the M " n i po ini the Says Miss Paxton in the Ladies’ Home | BOMe of religion is explained by the con fession of Paul In Acts xxvi., 9-11, and in Acts xxiil,, 1, be says bo did it with a good conscience before God, 8. “And these things will they do unto you, because they have not known the Fath. er nor Me,” In Tim. i, 18, we have Paul's lurther testimony that his blasphemy and persecution of the saints was because of his gunorance, And in 1 Cor. #1... 8 that if the rulers of this world bad known the wisdom of God they would not bave crucified the Lord of Glory, Thus he con mony Je in this verse, snd in xv, 21 i persecution 9 smints is N TREC he testifies rms the test of due t pars 4. “But these things have told you, thas when the time shall come ye may remember that 1 told you of them.” In His great love He forewarns them, that they may not be mrprised nor dismayed when the event tore to pass, Sothe Word of God tells us of the events of the last days, that as they some we may remember bow all was fo ld and not be discouraged by otherwise pErpiexing events . “And these things | sai beginn He was row atl the While » Lhe i: unto you ng, because I was with you . visibly with them He was one i and not t He kept them, He 1 and when He was arrested gO their way” (chapter He would be invisible, vy wou d repre He had been and oy Lhasa now it io them © Wented as {is wpiy i De » be treated wil go My and pone Thou™ One wn of wert in this Gospel xen Li it more than That He came (rom God and # going back to God {chapter xiii, & io Him an ever present reality, So real was the unseen to Him that He seems surprised Hint they do not ask Him about it, 6. “But because | have said these things nto you, sorrow hath filied your heart” His presence had been their jov and strength, and now that He was about to leave them He told them that it was for their benefit, end that He would surely return in due time hapter xiv, 2 xvi. 22). But they, like IK, were too Much sel upon their own per- wnal comfort and blessing and did not com- srebend His plan of salvation for the world, 7. “Nevertheless | tell you the truth: itis rxpedient for you that 1 go away.” This should have satisfied and quieted them. Their fesponse should have beets, “18 is the Lord, et Him do what seemeth Him gond.” “For if | go not away the comforter will sol come unto you, but if I depart I will wnd Him unto you He would abide in hem, testify to them and through them, bring to their minds what Jesus had said to them, and teach them all things (xiv, 16, 17, ¥.xv, %) He would be a comforter or parakiete, one ever ready to be called upon 10 belp them in every way, 8, “And when He is come, He will reprove {or convict) the wor sin, and of righte- pusness, and of jodgment.” And now we wre given, in this verse of our lesson, His great work, which is that 0 conviction. We as Christ's witness have only to speak His words in reliance upon the Spirit a He will 20 the work 9. “Of sin, because they believe not in Me.” This is the sin of all sine. “He that believeth not is con lemned already, because be hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Som of God” Joba fil. Is 10, “Of righteousness, because [ go 0 the Father and ye see me Me no more.” The presence of the Spirit is proof that a right- vous God has given Christ 4 seat at His right band. His own people Israel, ocon- demned bim to death, but God raised Him up and gave Him glory, and said unto Him, “Bit Thou on My right hand till | make Thy foes Thy footstool™ (Pet. i, 21; Acts ii, 34 3, 1L “Of judgment because the prince of this world is judged.” In chapter xil, 31, He said: “Now is the judgment of this world, pow shall the prince of this world be cast out.” Sometimes this work of the Spirit is spoken of as if verse §S read “judgment to come,” but that expression is found in Acts xxiv, 2; this refers to the judgment of Him who has the power ol death on Cal yary res WAS of (Se 12, “I have yet many thi to say unte you, bear Aral {4 No slow were to understand thatHe said to Philip, “Have I been #0 long time with you and yet hast thou not known Me? (xiv, 8. 13, “How be it when He the truth, is come. He will you into ali Hulh® Zhie wtans to ve the their inability of which ¥ in the a ae gd] 4 for all who have received the Spird have His and we have Himself, have this promise of Him who gave us the book and the author thas He whataoover THe ahall Darr Toor hin The hy E: i § Fs B "
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers