Cape May Herald, 26 November 1903 IIIF issue link — Page 6

“AFTEjjWARD” A Brilllut SuUty S«fM By *t». J.K. L»ck«M4. tkcUrt* tUl lfc« »M»r ^tl a f •• *• StlrH at Ok* Whto Yaa HaM ibt Kry«art.

p«-in-d Sumlav maramg la kun h in ike .b-rma of ika Dr .loin. K Aitadm. Mr. cil anJ favor»h!> known in on l^ini: DUml. wbcir be il ■•teloralc*. » Hr n«» born u tliooklvn and •laitinl Un ml ilu- miniairy 'lip kad

r r»rn ikrrrby ‘

is fir 3

“r*

tar I ha joy that waa « And. mr brathrao. p « a ,tha ram that ■< a«l b •l kran lookina (oraan

, kam lookina forward, looking unto 4a*u. tbr CapUio *

JSa eroaa. then tka crow ' u Umporary. the crown i« rlernal Tba lata Dr- Vtailbic Hatnork a’ltl.

aomawkat iogoniotunv. bul *-cr> kcUifuka. that if you Ukr tba akar,.. aairra *«r.|.

' diaciplina." and diarard the final i"r.

rhnb ia of little «r on valu-v a i» w»y, and

— tli#' ten*

IDE SABBATH SCHOOL

Ntreater 2f.

SaH.-c : DarU'a Chargi «a SaUaaae. I Ckroa. lirU. I M -QaMra Ter, fraa. (il, »—

r.cmary Vr aa . 9, M-l aa the Daj'a Leaaaa.

mbly of n

aubatitnlc a final

gentb- word '•] what ibr praam ara liamg made

Thai i

r bafHiii tba at'ur

uifanad il

ra antarin* into tba fellowabip of anna* tbit, "tirloaad, if «a ••ill Iim »a ab.il alao reign With Unt rard!" Afiar all. bow blank and dull, ai nnnntoimiu l.fa nuuid U will, r.ara of pain . Tba problem of oa l baa vexed u« and bow twin ha-

i world ^wiUir

I nrinne* <va. 1-4). 1.

.. And Darid naaeBibled.'’ etc. Thu reIcra to llir jieraoiu wtiort namca and otticca a it ntenliontd in Jht j.iTc*ding ebapier. An aaaambly comened conaiating of the print*# of iribra. t-ap^auu and aubordinate officer, ot lbe army, ateward. ot the royal • houaehoid and nobiea of the land- The na* | tion waa well rKitcacntfd. and the occa.ion was aolemn anil ijnporunt. "Mood up. | He waa now very old and chiefly confined I to hia lied. and. while he wa. addnwaitu i hia son Solomon hr continued on the bed, i but when all tbe principal noble, of bia kingdom came badore him he received ‘ atrength to aria® and addrewa them .tahd- | ing. “My brethren." Although Darid ia their au peri or and apeaka with dignity and authority, yet hia apint ia humble and af- ] feet lunate. “I had in mine heart. David 1 had intended to build the lenip.e, until <#od denied him tbe privilege and promiaed bun a aoD n*bo abould build it. ' *o biu.d au houae." David bad accompliahed nearly all of hia heart'a deaire a» to hi. kingdom I He bad found *H .mall and left it great. I Hr found it chao*. and left it finely organi iie«f. He found religion at a low ebb. and 1 left it earneat, active, organized for work. But there wa. one great work on which be bad aet hia heart which he could not accomplish. and that na. the rearing of a temple worthy of the religion of the true (Jod. and which abo-ild bold up tbe name ; of the true God be'ore the nation., end make iiennanetit in hi. own nation the

and tcachinga of tb^ divine re-

luffied to know the wuh oer heart#. a« we a»k .gam the

: dal

Inch cl

>rd mor.l exaltal-

e firrr

(V.^tl^oib^Wnd: oat for u«. Hie imn’orli more exceejjir* J --

live y jorou. agn inful. and^thiwc o" !t Vn &

>. w-th our hrad«.

i lot if t

•in •. bur onlv ani- # from tb# prime-

pr.-~-ri. intellect,

in a"d giorv b» in' - to l- plowed

From mud

n-n«leu b'oek of

OUR LAST CANNIBAL TRIBE.

a b>m..h And a. M.- hael Aneelo aa. I « toe atone thrown on the rubbl.h heap; " »•* an angel there ae.i I muat c»t bin out " God aec« tb# br*t there u in go. .n-t Tie u determined to bring i. Ait. eyeIf Ale mu*i need. u«e ch ; wl and md’e* Anu row the blow* a'e.atruek. the chrut. deep, the chin, fly "The more 11

ordered bv .Irbovah. and often called the "war. of tbe I-ord." In order to ealabluh lararl in Canaan, war. and blood.bed could

oided. *' ‘ ‘* " *“ 1

i Tho^.oetinue wprk a»d laboi ‘ forth, afterwar

dtmenaioo.

n -f

mtut.n

a f.i

p been h

fabr.r

_ eternal weight of glory thrill the m>uI forever’ Have it blind amk atuind w.wkrce at .f time, weaving an imaginary

rally had

p that hrateth the air." or are we art ually engaged in »on>r real w-oik of mat*l on. deign, whoae pattern wr are not r*ar_ 1.- ard in alf it. ro-nprrtieoa.ve detada. but which our Muter Workman known h well’ I.ct ua look at the three proffered expla-

life. Fir»L tbere<» the Uo^ful treating amwer of pKonaophic

and diatrracmg a aiini.m which a

that thing, a

I the C

Of tan)

raony with the aymbo.iaA of peace and quiet whjch v ere to be embodied in th.houae of .Irbovah. Hence it could not be done by David in hi. time. "David ia not blamed for hia great war.. They were mceaiary war., not wan of aggrcaion. but defen.ive wan. to keej. the enemie. of true religion from de.teoying the nauon and the religion it rrprrwntrd; or they were executive wan for the necemurypunf iahment and reatrwint of crime. 1. Th*-«c wan took up hia time, ao that he could not do well the other task, for which hi. victories prepared tbe wav. 2. They unfit^ him for the lw<t doing of the great work of peace. Thi* required a different

and fun perfection, that aagel kind of ability and a different tnining.

(he divine .rulptor ,11 «

f lore, until there .land. ;

•loriou* wml of mujea- ,

d CheuttiVr beauty I

r who bold# the eblacl, aatever environ, the ford akilful cutting the fbna ito beauty, of .

I with !

• on the finished prodvr

anrnriK. ,, I n Hi. matrbleas pxt.cnce coum . - til. own |

aclurcu and atubbont ;

the world ia rolling down hill and there are no brake, that can be aonlicd- The world now ia better than it will ever I* hervafter. If you like that Tiew. ae-*pt it. So. we muat not »av it ao. >■'«'. ao rna like it. but ia it true* That i. the way to p. : it; for. pleasant or repumanl. we meat aeeept v. hit i. true But tlu# view ttnnot po.«i hly be true unlern the paotimyitinn on which it t. bawd t« also true, the prwpo.i-.iroi of tip fool who said in hia heart, 'There if

God *

And in the arrond place wc bare the *wer of phdowphic optimism, wh-th . «rta tiiat-thilij. are .tradily grlting better. that, whrrraa life to4ay ia far better than ft wa. 1000 nr lO.Qon veara ago. it be far Iwiter 1000 or 10.000 years he But thi. prey lienl theory I. aoffccly any improvement on tlie other, except to the .uperfiriil thinker, (or it makes no provision -for the pcrpetuMmn-ol personalBy Where will you and 1 be when those far off improvement, of our ra»e arrive? Thi. uiatenaii.tir pbilosoohy offers u. of th* g.rc^nt no immortality, and hence no op 1 -irtonitv for tlie adjustment of hie'. pr«» .rn: glaring injs.ticr. I am glad In beoeve that the rare that .hall be resident here lOW) year, from now rrtll be a heller rare. But I would like l • be in existence somewhere. loo. when the better day dawn*. And even if ! rouht rise to the superb un selfishness like unto that which Poets some time, sing when, temporarily, they happen to be in ju.t that mood, and rouid say I wa. content to live and die and reuse to esuat bere or anvwheee else if only. •# a result o( my haying lived a while, future generation* might he lifted a little higher: still, one mu«t feel that that pretty and. after all. rather morbidly sentimental scheme does not satisfy 'Jie imperative demands of our souls that wrongs a^ll be idmuatr'y righted, that innocent aufferers shall be compensated and that outraged lielnirwaneaa shall be avenged. Now cornea Christianity, with its ample •nawer. It admit, all the facts., the ap parent injusticei of the present, the prosperity of the unrighteous, the triumphing of the wicked, and, on the other bawd. the. .offering and the aeemmg defeats of God', heroes and .amts in the fierce, hot contest of life: and then it apeaka one l.lcvd word, "Afterward!" and we cun be paAfter we have heard that divine word we can m* the wicked spread himself like a green bay tree, and slul we "rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him. and wc refuse to fret ourselves because of him who proapereth in hi* ways, because of the man who bntigeth wicked devices to paaa " • he whole puzzling enigma of life ia solved at once when you hold the keyword, and that word ia the single word of the

text. "Afterward!"

That ia to aay, yon can get no aali.fac tory explanation of thia at range and somewhat frrenah thing wr call life, unleaa you think of what ia to follow. A noted American orator, in n famous sentence of hi*, has told ua that we Have no lamp with which to guide onr feel in Hie future except the experience of tbe past. He contended, ana rightly, too. that we cannot properly estimate tbe future unleaa we base bur judgment on the experience of the past. Sow we may go On and supplement ratnek Henry's familiar dictum by saying that wr have no lamp to m r.l the meaning of tbe prtdenl. except the light of the future. "Afterward” ia the word that explains the mysterious diaripliaings and chastening! of the present If yon will grasp that word with firm, athletic grip, it will settle for you all their difficult prate lema that ao frequently confront your soul

and diatnib your heart.

When you come to eocne terrific . irace in life that all but sbatters tb* foundations of faith—wbrq vour a stricken and wounded on life’s cr tlrfirld—a thousand arrows of ten

pierring tbe apirit and . sorrow thrust through t

" you can do is to rry tn

lv Cod. mr God. ha— —_ •I" Than above tbe tumult ol grief and

me roar of tbe black billows, may Ood

send some ministering angclsf «

W hu-prr With soothing I-one Ah** onr worn. ' afterwardand tbe soft, sweet beauty‘of it shall aobre your aching heart and the

It n-aa fitting that the tec jle of tbe God for all the world should be a temp* of peace. It was intended to proclaim iware, to bring peace, to tearh jieace to individuals and to nations. Its victories were to be victories of ueaee: into it waa

.tone '* I to con ' r Die Prince of Peace, proclaiming There noforlrmatelv. anoiher aid* to i ..I**" 00 .,“£*>■ ,r«od »■>' U> ,For Hw wicked as well I Chose me. See 1 Sam. 18:1-12. Notice .. fnV ii— rtwhtrnu. iherr un ' alter- 'he different steps mentioned here. Darid ward " <Vr?\hat .^cuSchoiy scene I j refer, to the «ri&. tbe family and tbnin would gUdlv draw U»e curtain ot complete , dividual Ope after another waa set aside

.Hence T wooM fain hold mv pcore and j and at fast he was ebrwra

speak not at a3 of the wretched sequel , II. c declared suceemor hrs. which in the very nature ol thing, must M). 5. 6 sons. See chap. 3.1-9. be throw who hurl defiance at God’s be- j Solomon. The meaning is peaceful, nr- ..lent Dws (or the wmU of men. I H* "»• ao called Iweuuae hi. tb«» wm. to .lust a. the leaps of the righteous now be a paaceful one. and also because, being allin afterward be transmuted into eternal peculiarly associated >n propheey with cema. sparkling forever in the light of ' bavid a greater Son in whom the threme heaven. » the very gem. of U.r wicked, jof hu kingdom should be establiabed forth* tawdry tinsel and trinkets and toys *T» r ' W V. 4 of that now seem ao bright and altrartivr. mah who ia tb. Prface of Pear*. Lpon will he found, afterward, to be but the the throne. Nofa the qualification, needprnshahlc accea-onc of a mad nightmare ed to «*«e«ful y do God a work: 1. The of rerelry and rioting The empty ull* pre-nce and help of Hie Lord. I-A perfal'acw. with which they sported here, feet heart (r. #1. 3. Headineas and abuity killing time and killing soul, shall after- to do the Lord, work (v. 91. «. Perfect ward become wn : pa that lash them forever, obedience to God (v. 8). Solomon . . . ^.^.ThiT.Gn, i. SJrn.b tears thxt HiaU build." God had aopoteted Solomon are never wiped away, but which unreal- ; to do this work, and nothing could en-

inclv scald and scarify tbe aoul like biting • koarage him mon ari-U ratine ltie heart forever. I this fact. My i

For the devil', dor* the inevitable order fcromwe to David ---— -- is just that—now a little temporary picas- ; reive . father s care from the Lord, and a wre, just enough to bait the sou! sure*-..- I most chrenng meamge to offer to Solofull.: and afterward. deaoUtioo and au- ,«<>•-. "Hra tatber. What a wonderful gui.h indescribable. , . , i Ipromtae .. Hus'. And yet th'-a same promSo. to sum it all up-What kind ot an at- Sre i. made to m*ry one who wffl Urn to trrward are you going to have* That de- Jlod and aerve Him-faithfully An earthly ornd* on what kind of a present you are father ia ei-wcted to (1) rare for, (J) lf?' h.ving. Would you not ptkfer to .uttgr Vitfa for. (3) ; otoct and '«) corract hia afflictions with God's neonlr and aflerwaid khiWren. God will do all of Una for H,.

have glory finspcSkhUe than to anioy abe children. All we have pleasures of aia for a sea son and after - Me has watched

ind 1 arill aay "Am*n."

from God.

wTriWnffer The Toevi lable^Lf terms th of f lifetime, providing for us an? protecting despair? Sat “vra” to thxl proposition, ua from harm and danger. But tbe beat ' ' "Am*n." »/ * 1 l M all ia that He has promiaed to correct :— . Ua. When we do wrong and go astray He •lag U»a Beauty* ■ follows ua by (1) Hia Spirit. (2> by Hia I- .1.... look in* for tbe • proridencea. (3) bv the entreaties of our dark thion^f life- »nd ^Tcouree they find by ^e P r *^^* n ^ , b 2r , ** ,a t 1 ^

SS I ..d H.. ,;,.ui .bl*,., Tbo. .h,

waukee. relate* that during the first Tears , ^Ltlhhsh^Addld 1 till is o. hi. ministry parfah matters. «ei.f and , • LA V, illreUbU^ AWad toHis

financial, were in a bad way. and straight-

cning them out was slow work. He waa K n “ authority of the Lord- There could be dwr —ki»,r““Lr.":;i?“isLrsi-

Man-Eating Waa Indulged in to i Great Extant fey American Tribes. It may not be generally known tha' cannibalism was once prevalent ove Urge areas of the Americas continent Such waa the caae. however, and. It fact, the very word cannibal Is bu' another form of Canlba or Carlba, thi picper name of the Carlb Indians, thi dreaded scourge of the Antilles t -rt# centuries aso. among whom the Span lards, on first landing, found bumar limbs bung up to dry In the sun foi food. Many of the tribes of Soutl America were cannibals, and som*.' o' the un conquered savages in the dark forcala of the upper Amazon aUll feast upon human flesh. The practice ex luted also In Central America .and Mexico, as reader* of Prescott are well aware, but rather aa a sacrtfici to the god of war than from any depraved taste for such food. As a wai ceremony It was found among nearly all of the tribes of the eastern L•n^te^ ,

States and Ci nads

The Mlamls had a cannibal society

whose ruembei s were under obligation to eat any captives delivered to them for that purpose; and the Klowaa. with whom I lived for some time, ha.' only a few yeais ago a secret brother oood. each number of which wai pledged to eat the heart of the first enemy killed by him in battle. Thi old war chief In whoae family I stay

od was one of this society. All tbe tribes of tbe Texas coax'

. and back country %ere reputed canni

. j- T1, f *■*,? ." f bals, and with good reason. One ol n« u.™ ... Ih. AlUkap.. I~» .!.»«

■" ■ - 1 -the Louisiana pariah gets its name

which signifies "man-eaters." Anothei waa tbe AtUkapa tribe, on Matagor da bay. with whom French captive* from La Salle's expedition witnessed many a barbarous feaat. In 1*60 th* priests of the old Ban Antonio mis slon drew up a catechism for the ua* of their Indian converts, and among the questions to be asked In coufea sk>n the first one was. "Have you eat

en human flesh?"

But the worst cannibals of-all were the Tonkawas. who lived about Bar Antonio. Just back from the coast. Tc all the other tribes, even to the pres ent day, they are known simply ai the Man-Eater*." They were strong alfaleUc men, brave fighters, good hunters and Inveterate rovers. Un like other tribes of that region, they .planted coining, having a tradlUor that their first ancestor was a wolt and that they must always be Ilk* him. shifting about from place « place, and getting their living by bunting. They had a pantomime danc* In which the perfonr.ere disguised at wolves, scratched a man out from th* ground, where he had previously been concealed In the loose earth, gave him a bow and arrows, and then recited tr him the tradition, ending with an in junction to be a wolf always. Other ‘’"Indians would make no terms with them, and the Tonkawas were an out lawed tribe among all their red breth ren. with every man's hand against them. They retaliated by acting at scouts and guides to the white* In their expedlUons against the bostlU

tribe*.

When the Texan missions were es Ubllshed. In the early part of the 18th century, and the good Franciscans be gan the heavy task of transforming wandering savages Into Industrial* CXirlstlan subjects of the king, jre find some baqds of Tonkswas among th* score of tribes gathered Into San An tonlo, San Jose, and the old historic

SISTERS OF CHARITY Use Pe-ru-na for Coughs, Colds, Crip and Catarrh--A Congressman’s Letter.

SBS

u aiarv sosntry of tb« civilized world Sisters of Chanty are known Not onlv do they minuter to tbe .pimua. a*, .otei-

lectual seeds of tba charges committed to | man -- - tkair care, but they alao minuter to tbsir 1 b* Fsnaalbd >a

.undree m taka care oil h.ra^ed^ver.:

bottles of Pcncna

^ (re* book written by Tba faUswisg letter U from Coogrere-

Msckison, of Napoleon, Ohio:

i Co.. Columbu., O.:

With so many children to tak* rer* and ta protect from climate a«d “ueaae. (

theae wiaa and prudent Sisters have found . sad feel great 1 i-trona^insvar "fading safeguard. | benefited tWy Dr Hartman receive, many Utters from bom my catarrh

Catholic Sister* from all over the United states. A recommend recently received .rom a Catholic institution in Detro.t,

Mich., read, aa follows:

Dr. 8. M. Umrlmam, Columbus. Ohio : Dear Blr:— u Tk* pounp ftrt wKo used (he Peruna was tvfferi>i0/rwm larprvpUix, and lass #/ vice. The reauD #/ I As (raatmont was most salfa/aalary. Skt/ound gremt rwlUf. an* mf Ur further u— of the medicine wa hops lo fea ahta *# sap aha ie entirety cured.’’—SteUre of Chnrlly Th* young Mel was under the care of the Enter, of dbarily. and used Peruna for catarrh of th* throat with good results, a*

th* above letter testifies.

Send to Tb* Psrufla Median* Go., Lo-

Davld Meokfaon. ;

of tbe Scad,

feel encouraged too behevs that it continued u#e wil folly eradicate > diacaa* of thirty J years’ ataading.’’— David Meekuon. i

Dr. Hartman, one of laa best kno»_ phyaioana and surgeons in the United Sutea, wa* tbe first man to formulate I «- runs. It wai through hu genius and per" tevertnc* that it wa* introduced to lb# medical profession of thi. country. If you do not deriv# prompt end astufaclory reaulta (rom the use of Penm*. write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving * full statement of your caae and he wJI be pleared to give yon hu ralnabu adnea * r Addresa Dr. Hartman, President of Th# Hartman Sanitarium. Columbu*. 0.

Singing “Mome Sweat Home." * Some skeptical and superior people are found every now and then of making light of Madame Patti's frequent repetiinon of tbe most popular of ballads, "Home. Sweet Home.” Those .superior people look upon it as too great a condescension from the great singer to an easily pleased public. B«t Patti herself looks upon it from an entirely different standpoint. She contends that to sing ’'Home, Sweet Home” properly takes more concentrated effort ard more voice than to give forth the most florid series oT cadenza*. To throw off these florid passages is simply, a vocal tour de force, ol which many singers, and not a few amateurs, are completely capable The concentration cf such a song as "Home Sweet Home," the perfect poise of the; notes, the conveying of the emotional expressions and the_ sus tained tones—that is singing in

Dullness ol Barrack Ule. With the time for annual army reports comes a renewal of the familiar complaints about array desertions. Tbii i old source of' anxiety to the military authorities and the task of finding and removing the cause of it has baffletl them for the past generation. Deserj in time dt war. or when active field service, is possible, are practically unknown. The most obvious and probably the true cause of this admitted evi! in peace is the restlessness of the average American under restraint. It ts not enough for him to be well clad, to eat well and sleep soft; there must be some outlet to his energies, some assertion o| his individuality—something, in short, for him to do. Barrack life does not provide this indefinable but indispensa* ble thing.

tonlo. Ban Jo~. and the ota ntstoru ft ^ of pcr(ectio " i

Alamo. It la probable that only a lea | j anle p atll * "Let those who think otherwise try

adelfihia .... —- — — -z

which wc all need. Happy, indeed, _ . be those who learn and apply it.—N. «.

Christian ‘Advocate.

Onr Part ErsMtlaL ,

Cod has a place for each one nf us, sod a work for each one of u«. God doe* not expect ot to OB more than our own pure, or to do more 'ban oar own wor’ each one of ua u important in hu own sphere. AU tbr ~

wralthjr in tbe courts were well ia- their tinw

Bet tbe poor widow, who had onlv her two mites, should not have fett that her gift was unimportant. It eeenwd .a if Jesus aat - watching and waiting for -hat lilHe offering; and the store of her doin* her part haa been tqld the world *’ tori** since then,,as a lesfaspirarimi Even thoogh our part u but a little ooe. God, a* it wre*.

The larger

I am enite clear that out . 1 _. .j..n( wk*.

faihuvs u at the point'where, haring re-

_ the qualities bring SMBSM,

by example aa •rail as precept. "May posasss.* Tbe

. —... fjori designed and promised pronperitv to

I (Solomon, bat it mast not be expected on

’ ! any other condition than obedienre to tbe . I najpe lews of govermnent that had fixed -• — [the standard for other*. Tbe fund*mental

principle, most be observed, else all tbe , r——. ptrueture would be lacking,

own work; bdt . I HI. Darid * charge to Solomoo (vs. B, - ‘ - 1 M.) B. “Know thou. BttgfeM thorough-

ly acquainted with God. "Of thy Father." God had been true to David and sustained end kept him for many Tears. "Seree Him,” rtc. W# can seree God acceptably only aa we bav* a perfect heart and a willing mind. "Cast thee off." Tbe Lord is no respecter of persons, and Solomon th* king would bare no favor shown him it h* failed to obey tbe Lord. He would (are no better than tbe poorest subject in hia kingdom. "Take heed now.” Notice. I. The anxiety of David for tbe morel and spiritual welfare of his son. Darid cared first for character, and next for circumstone**. He belierwd that if the heart were right with God things would of themselves I SflSsnt i£j hh such counssla. .{low

were thus brought under restraint, (oi the lore of the old free life waa strong In their hearts, and long before th* missions were abolished, in 1811, wt find the Tonkawas again roving ovei llslf of Texas.—James Mooney. In Har

per'. Magazine.

How the Loot Was Found. . A legal contemporary recently men Honed what may fairly be called a ro

mance of the law-.

"Lord Langdale often referred to a curious case before himself lllustra Uve of the dangers of Judicial pred pltaUon. It turned on preeumptlv* evidence of dsath. - — "A*lum of money In court was sub

we have always don# J

ybody doss iL aadW !

fathers and mothers did It. bs the rery re: no why ire it. .There is ao sUtma of

——* te be drawn from

.bould not do IL .There fa no sUtioo of life, and no place of one's home, where, if he want te enlarge hu lift in canny tor people outside himself, he may not start on a career of enlargement which shall «• tend indefinitely And we shall bid the answer te our question to b* that tb. man

Human Nature. "Mike." said Plodding Pet*, "wbai would you do if you was to wake up an' find yourself s railway president?* "I dunno.” answered Meandering Mike. "Human nature Is human aa utre. 1 s'pooa I’d git mercenary an' Utvlo in wnfrv about all de rid#* Pi-#

to conquer the difficulties of 'Home. Sweet Home' so a. to sing it at nearly perfect a* possible.” said a prominent musician yetterday, “and they will find wha^. a task they have undertaken Thousands tit down at the piano and run it off as if it were a mere nothing. but not one in a thousand kno»D how to give that simple song its full expression. ’The Last Rose of Summer 1 is more difficult technically, but not half so difficult in the matters of

tone and expression. Soap Destroys Varnish.

.The care of furniture wood is an exceedingly interesting part of the intelligent housekeeper’s duty. The daily fight dusting must supplement the

Jed to a trust for A particular Individ weekly rubbing il the ■’bloom” is this ual for life, and after his-death war instance not desirable ** »® H k *PJ

lo b. aMSM putie.

Tb.* pmli. peUUonea for pMibbbl by i iMm arm, and thorof the fund to them on the ground "Ly rubbed in and thereafter the that Uhe Individual In question, the pj fcc furniture kept in perfect palish tenant for Ufe. was dead. No posi i by a daily nibbing, the oil U sure to Uve evidence could be adduced of hi* form a crust sooner or later, which is death but It was said that hia death gummy to the touch and not pleasant must be presumed Inasmuch as the to the eye. For this reason, new furnievidence showed that he had gone 1 * u « ‘ hoo,d ** kept as long as posstevldence anoweo xnai ne nmu tvu ^ wi ,| K)Ut ,y, e application of such-re-ahroad some twenty W ^hirtyyeari ttorative . Furniture which has been ago under circumstances of dlffcultx, w ith shelUc or varnish, and that no human being bad since whet ) ler glossy or dull finish, should heard any tidings of him. ‘nils did otver U cleaned with soap or water, not satisfy Lord Langdale. and h* Soap is made .to cut all oily substances, desired the case to stand over, InU and in the performance of the Mmce “ u « u « 11 s.juikrf

. surface it touches and destroys them. -

Mow to Build tbe Log Fire.

The season when a good log fire is comfortable in the evenings is at hand. To make an attractive ooe, which does not have to be coaxed with applications of kindling wood now and then, shake out a double sheet newspaper and leave the edges loose so that it will light easily. It will take longer to^ignite if crushed, and spoils the effect of the kindling wood, drhich it thrown

when he returned hs lived under • ^LktsS^ialL INt^a Milft log. the false name end revealed hlmeelt .v^^uldbelwued towarS hr no one. He did not know of hi. righ! | ^ ^ iro wougl. to star, till be aav the order.-Pall Mall Om Gir. h a good start, and

ready strong presumption he wouM attend to IL Additional affidavit* ware accordingly filed, after the Ups* of some time, and the case then ap pea red so strong that hs mads the or der for division of the fund as prayed "Tbe order, when drawn up accord log to bis lordship'* directions, was carried to the proper office to be ea tered. and the clerk whose duty it wa* to enter it turned ont to he the very Individual on whose presumed death tbe order for payment was made.’ It appeared that be bad a "

It it well to have a high Standard ol life, even though we may not be abl« altogether to realize it. Whoever trie* for the highest results cannot fail to reach a point far in advance of that from which he started.

_ Min Rmc Peter**, Seat-• tery Pari dele Tennii Qub, CUcago, from experience advises all yonat (iris who Save paint and OdaKS pecttBar to tbe* acx, to me Lydia E Piokham’a Vegeyoung girls dess and bops Use simply because sufflaUntatten_iNeP¥ire pet d to tbafr physical devslopsusaL No weman U exempt from phyaloal wtsktise* and perkxfio pain, and young girie Jaet budding Into womanhood should b* sarefully guided phystoally as wall aa morally. Another Ilngra wood, JiMlro M I thought I would write and tell you that, by (fallowing your kind advice, I feel Mka a pew pareoo. I was alwaye thia afad deHeaBs, and aows lhatiedeld har" - slnssfase was fa

am now wall and etreag, and msa-