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Port Perry Star, 21 Oct 1914, p. 7

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light-weight comfort. This nd ve, price of bai RE use, all pudding cloths and : bulent crowd moving the eleven. g great, multitude the size of the crowd. That as not small in number is clear; ves and swords' also is an in- ite term. It would = suggest at the crowd was not composed h| Of regular soldiery and was hetero- uld be washed in very | elly bags rs {ol bts and when they have been | ¢| well ringed, hung up to dry where |: "sugar, | they are exposed to a.good draft. ipfuls of --not hot -Sven al ten = fifteen minutes. will greatly improve ; fe Bavor and it will "also go much urther. < : 3 _ Great saying can be 'effected in if | the use of metal polish if it mixed EEE ota ilk. about four egg cupfuls of the boil: oil shaken together will last for lonths, besides being much cleaner Vegetables and | his Lazy livers are on the in- Dishetes, Bright's disease, kindred troubles |, | keeping. . i a | OERMANY'S SPY POSTERS. {Put Up tn France Two or Three "Months Before the War. ] a Jae 8 In Altaraatery, the 'water ur, wi ut half an hour, gar: Molasses: -- The eipt used brown su- | D9 ses. This receipt . toa Before using tea, spread it on a | _of | sheet of paper and place in a warm | Hi the part South Africa played , The Union was then grant- i 5 ® ng crease, : (vod Botha and H. finally had an SEY uarrel. = Bo supported him, and he then resign od and was asked by Lord Glad: "| stone, the Governor-General, to form another Cabinet. This he did, | with Hertzog left out, and he has Prime Minister ever since. 'ersonally. General Botha is a very brave and very shrewd man, hose vision is wide enough to per- ive the short-comings of the large number of Boers who have not en- joyed the benefits of education and oa : to $400,000 yearly for that purpose | fi "the Unionists demanded am in-| practically all of whom | hi éneously armed. That they came om: the chief priests and elders of e people would indicate that the on ly draw a rabble with it as it pro- eded out into the night away from concomitant of crime. 48. He that betrayed him--Judas elsewhere is so designated ' (Matt. 10. 4 and other passages). The stig- . Gave them a sign -- Some sign would be necessary in the dark, and especially because the . officers of the chief priests and scribes could 'not be expected to know Jesus. . Whomsoever I shall kiss--Lan- guage fails one to describe the per- dy of Judas's act. But to con- ceive as its means of fulfillment tthe loving approach of a kiss stupi- es one. 49. And straightway he came -- He would have the act over with immediately. If he hesitated, the influence of Jesus would' control | ma' stuck to him. im. Under his control he could not betray him, Hail, Rabbi--At the last Judas | cannot approach Jesus informally as his wont was. He comes with a foimal greeting and designates him a professional way, The kiss of tion under this approach 'was y thinly disguised... - » -'80. Jesus said unto him, Friend-- Jesus matches formality with for- mality and calls Judas 'Friend.' Do that for which thou art come ~The meaning is, 'You have done that which you planned to do. I understand the meaning of the kiss." The Master saw quickly the parade and pretense of affec- tion. 3. Then Judas--That is, after Jésus was led away to Pilate. As soon. as Judas saw this he felt the doom of Jesus was complete. Who betrayed him--Again = the stigma rine tod himself, and brought back 'the thirty pieces "of silver -- He repented to the fullest extent: he brought back the silver. But the silver no longer had aught to do with the betrayal." What was done could not be undone. The re- pentance was genuine, even apart from the restoration of the money. 4, Betrayed--This word can al- ways be rendered by 'delivered up.' The betrayal included the delivery. . What is*hat to us? see thou to it--The . priests could not wash away the guilt of Judas. Had they been able to, they would not have been concerned with doing so. Let Judas stand the full brunt of his ach, That was their thought. And they doubtless gloated over his dis-| th comfiture as much as they did over their good fortune when he came . | to them to gay he would deliver . pla tor iy 'holy of I Jesus in their hands. 8. Cast down the pieces of silver +He could not hold them. They were searing his flesh, Into the sanctuary--The unclean money: was even to defile the tem- as thrown igto the very [into effect, i | transfer, as the craft use | getting NEW PURE FOOD LAW. ds| Farmers Will Bo Greatly Benefitted FL By It. ; January 1st, 1915, will be the when the Amended Law Bill, num- ber 99, passed by the House of Com. ons on the 6th May, 1914, will go forbidding the use of the word "maple" on any product that is not absolutely pure sap of the maple tree. The following is a capy of the new Law :-- ¢ "20A. No person shall manufac- "ture for sale, keep for sale, or 'offer or expose for sale, as maple co ugar any Sugar which is not pure the city, Curiosity is always the "'Bchedule to this Act, or, if such "standard is changed by the Gov- ""ernor-in-Couneil, to such standard "as the Governor-in-Council may "from time to time rescribe, shall "be deemed to be adulterated with- "'in the meaning of this Act."' "2. The word 'Maple' shall not v either alone or in combi- "nation with any other word .or "words on the label or other mark, "illustration or device on a package "'containing any article of food or "on any article of food itself which "is or which resembles maple su- 'gar or maple syrup; and no pack- age containing any article of food "or any article of food "itself which fis not pure maple sugar or pure 'maple syrup, shall be labelled or "marked 'in such a manner as is "likely to make persons believe it 'lis maple sugar or maple syrup "which is not pure maple sugar or "pure maple syrup, and an article "of food labelled or marked in vio- "lation "of "this-sub-seotion shall be "deemed to be adulterated within "the meaning of this Act." The above legislation will prove of great bemefit to 'all maple syrup and sugar makers and will effec. tively stimulate the industry. In- cidentally it' will keep the Govern. ment busy in following up their good and wise enactment. The grocery trade throughout the Do- minion will have to be circularized, putting them on their guard against having the adulterated article on their shelves. Inspectors will also be needed in large numbers to thoroughly safeguard the interests of the purdhasing public, who will of course expect to get the pure maple syrup that they are paying for. With all the protective ma- chinery at command the Govern- ment should be able to thoroughly cope with the newly-created situa- tion. After all, this new act, to be effective, simply affords another in- stance of the truth of the oft-quoted maxim: 'Eternal vigilance is the price of safety.' ---- ANTICIPATING A PATRIOT. How Affairs Are Conducted in Eng. land During a War Crisis. An amusing story that illustrates © peremptory way in which affairs are conducted during a war crisis comes from England to the New York Telegram. ! A gentleman who lives at South- ampton and who owns a speedy power boat wrote to the commander at Portsmouth, offering his boat for the servide of his country. In' re- ply, he was considerably surprised to receive this letter : ; 'Your offer of power boat to His Majesty's government is received an It will not be make a formal THis Magoats roar: mots, esty's nava rces. lty has. bee i necessary for you to by y petrified 1 Cty The London Express publi following from a writer for right to speak with authority the editor vouches : : Most Terrific Ever Known, 'The new explosive invented twe date | years ago by M. Turpin, the 'par. ent' inventor of melinite and of lyddite--which is merely so named from the fact that the first experi: ments were made at Lydde, in Kent, in presence of the French in- ventor--is undoubtedly the most terrific and the most widely death- dealing high-power explosive ® ever a new shell on ex; , th ite use become wi armies, i i nations, would be completely exterminated in the course of a few weeks. Nursed Grievance, M. Turpin is not only a remark- able man, he is also a man who for many long years nursed a serious grievance, but who considered that he had been deeply wronged in con- nection with the discovery of hig previous inventions, melinite . and lyddite. It is said that he became resentful and suspicious, and that he resolved. to set to work and dis- cover some new explosive that would completely throw into the shade previous discoveries of which he was the author, but which had heen "improved" by official tech- nicians, For years M. Turpin, in his quiet house in the little town of Pon- toise, some twenty miles from Paris, had silently working away at his new discovery, and at a com- paratively recent period he had the eatisfaction of seeing the French Government make him the "amende honorable." This modified him considerable, and he offered his new discovery to his country, but his old dislike of War Office methods and ar Office technichians persisted, a lis somewhat hindered the ne- gotiations ">... , Lost Appetite. "M. Turpin, however, was used ta War Office procrastination, and he therefore had a. special gun made 'on his own." He had it made! in parts in different factories, and these parts were put together else- where under his personal supervi-| sion. Bo, too, with the shells, In a small factory close to Pontoise he personally filled them, and then, in the presence of a dozen carefully selected and invited officials, he car- ried out some of his first private experiments on a deserted part of! the Atlantic' coast. "The merest chance enabled me to witness one of these early trials of his mew explosive, and I confess that, although I was ravenously hungry half an hour before, I re- turned to my inn without an appe- tite for dinner." redone We ee ia He Caught It. While terms of peace were being discussed at the close of the Boer War, there were several interviews between Lord Kitchener and Gen- eral Botha, before a working basis for a treaty was agreed upon, says Pearson's Weekly. There was still a good deal of skirmishing going on; and at the end of ome interview General Botha. got up with the re- maak, 'Well, I'm afraid I must be off." "There's no hurry," replied Lond Kitchener, pleasantly; "you have- n't got to 2 train, you laughed. 'Perhaps not," he answered, "but I must go now." : Bidding Lord Kitchener good-bye, he hurried off. The next morning came the news of a successful Boer raid on a British armored train on 3 the Delagoa line, ("AhY' Lord Kitchener com 'mented, when the news was brough him. "So General Botha catch his train}? : fe ~ Charity _ begins at home, which may explain why the average man is 80 good to himself. oN

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