'An Appeal to Housekeepers and Heads of Families Everywhere setice in devotion to the home. The vants will inevitably fall to appre- ty and a aad of s- according to Act of the Par it of Uanada, tn the LI ae Nine aos and 'lhres, Baily. of 'Yoronte, at the artment seer ares 'Uttawa) A despatch from Sax Chistico says :-- Rev, Frank De Witt Talmage preaci- : Psalm home The. name of home ought to have for every true housewifo a charmed sound, It ought to be spelt by her, 108 her grandmothers used to spell it, It ought to unto the hand of her mistress." That the housckeeper as well as the se' egligent in her 'The psa! of it. eleven Ielters, * other word of nino letters, oss.'" It onght to o words, the oneyof cight and the when, as a young artist e scas to study at the feet of the old masters and sits day in iv copying a Laphael's and day ont sheraeabeal "Sietine Madonna" or a Paul Vero-| sos Tt ought to be apelied in air poy cy ore wd . other word of seven letters, "liber- ty. The truce wife should never want to be anywhere but under the on a pedestal as) a model for the | Shadow of her home. But though servants, Day in and day ont the; 'Mary Anderson, tho quecn et - ections of the parlor are being du-j American stage, gladly abdicat er the kitehen. Adam 'theatrical thron in order to 'ques n of her domestic fireside, a = 'or "Last Judgment," the psalmist raises the imistress up- Michael A ngelo's ic may a in ste same way, wo c evils H wedi fount 'in the kite fest } ey a the | nurses. They want to be separated evils practiced in Wee: "goa All f from their husbands, on account of virtues are oth in oad-! | their clubs. They want to.be liber- clo All feaanine cata lthfaicoas| ally educated in everything on earth, and injustice do not warn them- | except in the old fashioned way _ Selves near a kitchen stove or center | learning how to be a good housewile a stupid and stolid head with | and mother. n waitress' cap or nestle im tho sel- HONORABLE EMPLOYMENT. fess Hers cot cho gi es it a disgrace, as many wemen the seem to think it is,-for a mother to 'be seen wheeling her baby carriage along tho strect with her own apn and blood in that carriage?. Vo own part I think such a public sight of a wife and mother is a far imotatiio one than for such a woman , to be seen carrying around a pet dog to be seen out driving with ge ench poodle by her side. You may sinilo if you will at the figure I havo drawn, but I say unto you, oh, wives and wmwothers, that you can appreciate car ~ = head of the hause wishes her sem vants to be faithful and true to her then she myst first set an ---- of faithfulness. She must bo and kind and loving and Christians like to her sorvants and to all the people with whom she comes in con- tact in hor damestic walk of daily Pp lifa INCULCATE pel BY PRE- The SP in is her servant's model, at implies that the mis-|pever get your servants to ay tress must be honest if ske wants|the nobility domestic calling lev servants to be honest. ato, | Until you yourself fully realize that once tried to con-, the greatest work and the most hon- = philosopher, man's | jorable work you can have is that the idea that an evil 'eetle coud be concealed, at least Which is to be found within the four or a tin Ile illustrated this; Walls of a consecrated home thought oe 'the story of the fabled; The housekeeper ts her servants' -Cyges' ring, which could make the 'model. Then she must give to tkem 1 aa her sympathy. oa wifo answers, Servants. falxe ac -- of the wearer Savieible | i love ~ h, * some 'Pinto ihe Greek, ** "the truly honest /"'T could hae lov man is the one who would b sane lemiid ayinphtbize with thom in th cir | est at ull times when Fe could be troubles, but I could not love them dishonest and bis dishonesty never| Why, if l loved them I. should he found out." but is such a cen-}to receive them into the 'holy of | tingency possible ? Who can ever} holies' of my héart. J should in one | De sure that his pant ats, js- safely |sense have to make them part of my hidden. ?- he als, off own family, I cannot place my ser- x. »ordinates, of eoapts'eon, are keen ivants side by side with my child- and see more than we hnow. They ren Yes, my sister, you can love "are apt to imitate, too, both the! as well as sympathize with your do- eed anu the bed, so that one) mastics ou can give 'hess sia wiengdcer may cause deterforation | heart as well as sour hand Yo i Unrough hole circles of his social) make them part of your nacho, inferioes. the home, as in bus- You can look upon your. domes t jness, the example of dishonesty has | jy 'Ip in the sanie wa ay that Kir 'S ft nolw % the tendency to recoil on thes gmon looked upon his. 1 _ He ver weongdeer, 'The merchant who con- jbally painting the ide ral condition of ives ul his clert cheating of the" his hoine when he wrot "And had customers in Ais interests must nee orvants tor: soar i me se ta Vr eel Wf ike Clerks Cheat Whid non any sists That | in theis own interest. If ae farin oe jars Ane. aS take it, that the ser-! ons sly cores false weights o, Yants were part of himself, If a market, and Mien Lede packing a \ereukien should come those surennts buirel of apples places the good would cling to him and love him on apples upon the top of the barrel tereunt of the love with which he and a lower grade of fruit beneath, Joved them You can learn to love that facmer is teaching his farm Se Vants just the same as your ser- hands be deceitful in their rela-!vants can work for you from a high- thers te him when a yoare gathers !cr motive than that o1 Retting mon- ing the fruit, lle is teachings his | They can learn to love you. men ta lie as he has lied and be dise | CORDS OF AFFECTION, hon Ne was dishovest, Hf the) Tlousewives, if you will only tearn hank officials criminally misplace | ig joye your servants and mave tho institution's trust fuards, (ere is 'their interests your interests, that likely to come a time when one love would be returned to vou in a those bank employees will defantt, las vd bl W aud the emptied sale of mt a blussings. oa Droxe ~ tho silver cords of affection e southern stitution will, Ihe the proverbial | e chickens, come home to rovst. lanters to their black slaves. A step further! i a housewife YO! hose slaves return their mas- | will bid her waiting maid answer, ters love by u noble devotion? There the front door beil and tell the "@8 meny and many a woinan in the would be caller that she is out, South who, after ae husband had | when she is in, that mistress js Deen shot in the civil war, would | have starved to death had t the | teaching her servant to be a liar in all things os well as in part itu strong limbed negroes whe worked wife ix false in her dealings with for her as 'staves of the law" con- her grocer and butcher and washer. | tinued, on their own free will, to woman eM@fd false in her financial Work for her as "slaves of love dealings with 'her servants, she need 'There was inany a wounded Confeder- | n be pris the steals the stray handkerchiefs and not his body servant, who easily collars and the cook sinfully wastes could have escaped 'into the nevth- the butter and filches the cupboard, ern lines, gladly and willingly and es so far as to sell prayerfully nursed hins back to health If a'and strength. There is m any @ ser- housewife, #0 protoct herself, is un- vant working to-day as a hircling in just to and turns | some home who if she was loved by them off 2 a moment' s : Baice when i her nistress would return a wealth she is Jeaving for the country vaca- afiection and devotion such as she tion, then she should not gruamnble | hergelf dors not believe herself cap- = bmi servants treat her in the same | able of giving. he true interpreta- tion of love means simply this 1 esty " an immoral germ: whieh by apt pre: ugh a whole/your loving them they will let you female. as the diphtheria germ often 'creep into their hearts and make pe a ae : : cmaid, [Four interests their interests, of ons household ; THE SERVANT OF ALL. The sinful plague of dishonest | gue oO ee | Oh, nristresses! Oh, housewives and untruthfulness and unfaithfulness! : . does not always enter a by housekeepers, in your dealings with the ok It is sometimes Your servants may you reveal comteciphie installed in the boudoir a Christtan life to ntl long before - your household in wants to Took sa the grave and to loo Then, When your do- often when the ; mestics, through your Christian ex- housewife is finding fault with her , ample, walk hand in hand with Jesus servant ske is pay pd the rist thero will be no "servant formed results of her own evil life. | question y? There shall be no hqusokeeper is the domestic's | unfesthful and slothlul domestics. also in the matter = ios he pathy. If she nc ants/well the importance. of conaterating th 0 be sympathetic with her somaiinn your lives to Christ, not only 'for usekeeper must de ur own sake, but also for the sak sym-|y Her Leow servants ought not to peste etic with theirs. be limited to their service. She those whom you su ose t uld take an interest' in- hele 'per- | be sewed than cae Thiet a ' al nd ile -* ive br " coun-! those whom you are above r difficulties. easier aes gre the: common tot of our tan? canine ae sate ae tal og té if the sc! who willingly became. the ser- ant of all. « wey een RE EES Sa PHYSIQUE OF ¢ ENGLISHMEN. Government will Find Out What Changes Are Occurring. The inquiry which the Government is about to addross to the chiefs of as to physiquo of the eh. poople is not only justifiable, but most wise dy immense c' c passing for the time, eflect of those changes upon health of tho "population really is, "Phe P * peop =< 'apid uitti the country for the re i It is is ing 1 t the great cities are growing till--to take only ono in- stanco--it is becoming a rorious dil- fitulty to supply them with good water, but the minor towns growing till in other countries they would bo accounted cities. "Where- as,' gaid the Earl of Meath, in the L * S an onormows change condition of Dritivh life, and it in- {f nocess ity | other it for a wise community to ow. Then there is a second which has assed over the people and which for tere or evil, must, one would think, affect the national health. ordored every for to use their minds instead of their hands That tre effoct eration is, on tho whole, most ben- indeed, we only wish that the period of ediawation could be lengthened by do we know anything of its effect upon sin or the little leaks on the farm, upon the intelligence of the new gen- |P eficial we should be tho last to deny; | fed upon = iF ' be made on the farm by buying for cash only.. 'To ape to buy. thin gs essc in the well regulated pel if a fine product is to be turned o Yo make the | most o "the hired man, plen his werk carefully, and keep a strict acfount of the he spends on each branch of work, This will enable you to estimate the value of his work and to so arrange it that you shall get the most out of it. ~ money-making farmer does because he looks A t decal piven I how, quickly time and money can be frittered away by neg- lecting the little things on the farm. By not keeping, the-machinery in or- the fences in re- geod ways. Pigs should 3 well b pounds ought toes produced in sev- en -- from its birth. It should ed, neither should it not be ¢ be half-starved, "ae fed steadily and regularly. fod steadily and Many observers declaro thet it is; not at all good; that even when the: schocls are perfectly ventilated confinemont is too great and is deac ihe for momentary younger the owns. We price d do not notice that that tendency amon; t inndran of the well- to-do but then Inundress 'ate soldier who would have died had | from often sleeping in ha ay-Inows or e |engagement on board a steamer ply- ing between Marseilles and Algiers. The circumstance is to bo noted as Mlle Broido is the first French "doc- toress" who has been engaged on Hitherto ships' doctors a sound gymnastic | least, they are as healthy animals as could well bo wished f moreover, none 'of the cares which ja. thas peried begin to press upan je who have on have ja race whose fore-fathors could pol ge ' and the cfleot of mental de-; the ill-fed are all road, we ole auaael t upon | pilerts vith a meterial and diroct hearing upon health, and ha far too carelessly studied. 'We do not feel at all sure -- they are partly shortens the remedy is in our own han t is only at this period of their "fives that we have j full contro) of the maeses of child-| | ren, and it should be utilized to the }utmost to promote the welfare of} = bodies as well as of _ their ds ----_4--_--__. DEDUCTION WENT WRONG. "Yes,"" soid tho reader of hats, "I can tell the moment I look at a hat what kind of man the wearer is, | j how old, whether tall or short, and other characteristics.. Oh, it's no trick. don't know how I came by the facully."' "It must be a gift," suggested one Fs the compan second sight or mind-read- ing," observed another "Bring on your hat,"' 'snid a third; -- the sores el Beg neurotic ten-! ara) regularly will oie the most satis- factory results to the f when AUNT i ects tn | patience of the. Bev ar ou and ' At last t bwere 'not on oath bak most scathing retort was tho following, in some country news- tral repeets of an assizo_ case: - ft came tle : tins with very ute sorely taxed the every one in court. t the 'judge dates rented with an de taaast e hint earned Lede (ome to etc his cross-ex: The who Daag tha. judicial fatimation with a bad grace, before telling tho witsicss to stand down accosted him with the parting u're a clever fellow, very clever {cllow! We,can all see that! it " nding over from thé Box, quietly retorted, weult roturn the compli I men tif Another story "A -- ny bag A --_ article of Edwin us arrister who was ne 'ee unprofessional " conduct just as he was about i be made Solicitor-Gen- ral. Edw a commannate impudence. time he lived in some West chambers, for which the unfortunate Monioca could never succeed in aining any rent. At last he recourse to an expedient which ob- had he sense of his obligations. him if he wouid be. kind enough to advise him on a little legal matter- in which -he was concerned, and, on James acquicscing, drew up a state- ment specifying his own grievance agajnst the learned counsel and ask- ing him to state what he considered the best durse for ° take under such conditions. per was returned morning with the following sentence subjoined: 'In my opinion, this is a case which admits of only one remedy: Patience. single defect of that genius among judges, the late Lord Kowen, was perhaps an undue proclivity for irony, which on one occasion he in- ulged in from the bench, with dis- the-factorics. A heg period o , fed afterwards, . Feed | t fixed hours; | . "i mitigating the tedium of ios Pp Fatipdbgeethy ee = 'ceedings summed up -- in tho i A wri an English exchange 'following fashion: 'You will have ' says: ay one remedy for observed, gentlemen, that the prose- la sic is very simple, 'cuting counsel laid great stress on = bling the cnormity of the offence with ne "treat Which the prisoner is charged, but a _-I think it is only due to the prison- os Sake a: tle mace er to point out that in proceeding i poo pig, however, wit sctdom refuse new milk, even when more. Grade tho+dose from a tea- spoonful at- six weeks old to a table- | Spoonful or more iyr a mature hog. COOKING FCOD FOR PIGS. Many farmers believe in cooking | 'food for pigs, some even going so! ifar as to cook all their food. The results of numerous experiments show » a8 a rule, steaming or cooking , especially coarse food for cat- tle, adds nothing to its value. Po- tatoes, however, cannot be fed to swine in any quantity without cook- ing, and often grains which are dam- aged in some cooked before fecding. must not be confused with cooking n occasional feed of cooked food will be relished by way of va- ricty. Warming or soaking the food may make it more casily yogi In th way warming the feed m tagreeable to the palate, and omens, may m it more comfortable or advantageous, for reased comfort will aid in economizing the food, or Bg; "I'm anxious to sce how it works.' fecrsemty the palem A large numbor of hats were pro- WEEDS. duced fromm ono source or another, large hats, soft hats, and stiff hats, _ There arc two ways of egies and their ownership was y coda. Gna in let | concealed. them have an opportunity to. "arom | The hat-reader took a rather|%"d, by frequent cultivating, turn /broad-brimmed, soft, shabby hat|them under as t as they make 'from the lot, and began to inspect | their appearance; the other being to "is the hat of Wine "he said a tra * Tio ow do you "By snmtstekabic signs. The brim is turned up at the back; that comes in too under tree! front to shade It is pulled down ithe face from e shows that he had the -- skull of an idiot. Am I right ess £0, old boy,"' host of the occasion. "That's my hat, and when I was on my walking tour this summer I did nenrly all you mention. Try another.' --+--_--_ MOST EXPENSIVE HAIR. Every year, two or three days af- ter the fete of St. John, a market of human hair is held at Limoges. Girls, matrons and old women, from the country around, bargain to obtain the best price for their tresses, which are shorn off in the market- place. White hair always fetches the highest price, because the color can- be produced with dyes. It is often worth $25 per pound. Grey hair comes next in market value, then flaxen-colored, golden auburn, light and dark brown, in that order. The cheapest is black hair. --+ ro) A LADY SHIP DOCTOR. Mile Sareh Broido, a young lady doctor, has obtained a professional he} down a row of stalks and a row o the | repeated wd them out by growing some pi that basin not give tho weeds a 2 to No system of culti- vation will kilt all the weeds a crop is desired--such as corn--for the grass and weeds will only be kept cultivation lasts, "aid by" a time when the weeds are pro- ducing seeds, thus establishing "A Mfg for tho succeeding year atest of what supposed clean oe ture of corn may be, simply cut f weeds will remain. As a single weed produces thousands of seeds the lab- or of destroying the weeds must bo next season. THE COST AND PROFIT. Profit depends upon circumstances. The hen that lays the largest num- dozen whén eggs a The sum cotwil is the same but it costs less to produce one doz- em eggs than it dors to produce two zen, and although the. same amount of money is received in both cases, yet the prolit is not what it ved in the gross sum, but that which is | produced above the cost; hence, a hen is profitable according to the season during Which sho Jays he obtained therefor. ever, the eggs may cost , Npthing the hens are on sae ran SPRAYING FRUIT TREES. Many people thing it reer? to spray young" fruit trees before they heme = bear. This is a 'mis- -- L = | instance, tablespoonful is given in a quart fe | astrous effect on the jury. Shortly after his appointment as a puisne judge he was trying a ie war in some country town, way of ro- about nla enterprise he at all events fede rir the be ead Gang ts dium, rapidity that it it is difficult a "ok With precision. The deep- naturally, is ee on are The results of a series of experi- fments in Gaeat Britain and on the Continent are such as to arouse the hopes of expert investigators, why are now devoting themselves entire- ly to De great problem, that they are east on the right track. > waite be rash and ge a pt are constant the daily press og false hopes of sufferers that a as been found at One such was made the other day by eminent bacteriologists, who have been engaged entirely in _ tast six months in research w the laboratory of the Royal College Surgeons, don, under auspices of the cancer re'earch fund. Drs, Murray and Bashford, who were e confinmation to the eclare, -is i neglected by the a and consequently much research has taken place with respect to incipient CANCER IN LOWER A yet the causes of canc er in thes animals are often of an entirely ait. ferent nature from ose e parasitic conditions are different while the treatment which would be adopted and proves successful in the cases of applied to ings. The de cure, said one of physicians, will never be discovered by one man When it is found it will be by the continuous cflorteé every ono enga, One little clue leads to another and nobody hides anything or trices to hide anything from_ his collea t mat too, t intimation the | Our lesson among thoso appointed investigators th --e could never be sec -DVTERNATIOWAL LESSON, AUG. G.'30. Text of the Lees I. 8 - xxvi., 5-12: Golden ae Luke vi., 27. answered David and After the parting of David and Jonathan, in the last lesson David in due time made his helen uarters in the cave Adullam, and, having plac- ed his father and mother under t the care of the king of Moab, he becama captain of about 400 distressed and him is own brethren were also among them (chapter xxii., 1-4), Saul in hig anger having, by the hand of Daeg,. slain cighty-fivea on ell Abiathar cscaped and David, and to him David said these memorable words: "Abide thou with ar not; for he that sceketh my thy life, but with ma shalt, be in safyguard" (xxii., 23). Probebly many years of David's Persecutions are covered by the words, "And Saul sought him every, any but God delivered him not into his hand" (xxiii., 14), But in tha twenty-fourth ga as he as in Saul is _scen in David's power to 'do with as" he will. and ig h case David returns good for evil. Saul's camping place, and Abuhat the son of Jeremiah, responds, - 8. Then said Abishai to David, God hath delivered thine cnemy "into- thine hand this day; now-thercfore ict me smite him, I pray psi with the spear, oven to the earth = once, and I will not smite him econd time. Having come to where Saul and his people were by night they find them sleeping, -and Abishai thinks lingly offers to he tho executioner. same Abishai wanted Shimei's head off when he cursed David and threw stones at him. Ho it was also. wh delivered David from the giant Ishbibenob and slew him (IT. Sam. xvi., 5, 9; xxi., 16, 17). He was a valiant, natural man, but did not seem to know much of the gracious long suffering of Jcho- results from the experiments are imminent. Prof. Duguet, an eminent eae physician end rofesser in t French Academy of Medicine, de. Temes hich to base scientific treatment. | He says: "We are still groping in, ' displa for the plover of the house. rather than disturb ri ha tM wit co oe wadbia tb cots and went stint. in a his 8 Taye Me es the inclemency of wea Further, inst ca of rome rly wo crea noise that must have aroused the ined servants from their well-earned = re- pose.' After proceeding in this strain for some little time he dismissed the jury to consider their verdict, ard was horror stuck when, on their turn into court, they pronounced the acquittal of the prisoner!" a HUGE BLAST. at Da Imeny, on recently of the largest blasting operation which has ever been carried out in Scotland, if esti- mated by the: number'of holes which were fired at onc time. Twenty-sev- en holes, vorages in depth from 6 ft. to 17 it were charged with 300 Ibs. of blast- ing eelatiow. All the holes were con- nected u d fired simultancously by ps ate ag nthe blast bringing dows altogether about 4,000 tons of whin- stone, an unusually large weight of stone per pound of explosive used. VOTING LY ELECTRICITY. Members of thé Liverpool Town Council will shortly be able to vote while sitting in their seats, are adopting a novel system - ing divisions. Each councillor will have two electrical buttons in front of him. One of these will be mark- ed Picky il and the other "Against." As he pushes" one of the knobs a small aa will appear ogainst his name on an ean ee promin- ently on the w f the council chamber. The clerk will thus be xe to count the votes from his seat and they can easily be checked by m record remains until another division is taken ONE MORE. INJUSTICE, Some time ago, wliile on a holi- day, cycling in Ireland, a young man Turning a wa collection of household furniture scattered e the door of In the midst _,of this scene Po disorder sat an -old woman. It led him to = that an evic- tion had taken plac Full of sym- pathy, he demactnnsed, and, placing a few silver coins in her hand, ask- d she, = after shure, s "Pat is white- pocketing the miARey, washin' to-day ! ONE WAS ENOUGH. "You love my daughter ?" said the ld n. old ma "Love her ?" he exclaimed, pas- sionately; "why, I could die for her! For one soft sweet eyes 1 would hurl myscif from yonder cliff and perish, a bleeding, rui mass, upon, the rocks below !"' his head. crm, something of a liar mye, 6 dy '"'and one' : Base gab a sail family like mi A lady purchased a nice new door- he - other morning with the werd "Welcome" st. thereon in glowing potters. ane to ong olavena% Rie wan a thea -gatherer.. The "total, [tonnage of "the 5 world (excl oll experience in the largest saaritein in re rays is no new thing in the London put his number]. the dark with regard to the na | ed cures by the X-rays. | Paris has made me most sceptical, | Believe me, these 'cures' are not de- rt "peceeven sugges- rts of the | pe Great Britain tions of cures ta pa | The authorize the asitive that, while they do not they have effected anything like cure by means of the - a ht treatments, ve Fineen TAS BREN ABOLISHED. Edison's experience ill effec from prolonged ex posute to assert that) al and) the X- t has long been to epithelioma, a nan oe = the skin which to cancer, The w diograph departanent of ondon* hospitals are now on ba cntorced vacation, with their hands injured, but this is not a- common experience. One precaution | taken some of the Continental jed hospitals is that of employing a) leaden taking radio- | hs, so itr shall be exposed to the rays. This plan, it is Ee by br Sie s rer bar i allied ers in the ra to be impos probably destroy the medical pertics of the ray Various newly Atscovered rays of surprising propertics have becn dis- he N-rays recently thermat. More heat may be regarded as sameth article in Flectrician, nays there seems t influence A the N-rays,. some modi cation the atomic vibrations which, chile ering their energy unaltered, increases their frequency. , the fact ree is of great importance and in y= ing tending to increase the lum- inosity of a body at of ts temperature brings ae nearer to a --- of the great problem of of light. HE SAW PETER = ss Leading Russian jou ing attention to the ory that pened has been for some time in the hospi- tal at Tomsk a man who has lived for more than 200 years. Knowing that the public would be loth to be- lieve such a story unless ample evi- dence of its truth were jorthnoniing, they further point out that they hove carefully examined =, birth and marriage certificates and can tcs- tify that his married life tasted 'for- ty-seven years and that he has been a Widower 125 years. This wondcr- ful old man has been bedridden for time, but his brain is as clear and leases him once had the good fortune to see Pe- ter the Great aod Queen Catherine, FICKPOCKETS' WARNING. A detective says that lifting the hat and touching the ear is 'a age among London: pick that constable in-plain clothes is néar, --_-->-- A story is told of some visitors men were Sewing. *'! of the visitors whisp: cious- vt Pray, Middlesex capital in -- wth, atiadleses, ae cer-resenrch. in| Thaxo Lord 'o-; unreliable t creatures | ahs for {"' "Because | | is Veh. 9-11. David said furthermore, the Lord liveth the Lord shall smito im or his day shall come to die or he shall descets) into battle and per- 'ish. The Lord forbid that IL should stretch spec! mine hand against the Lord's anoin Sueh conticens > had David in his God that he could leave every ono a everything in Ilis lind without xiety, sure that the counsel of the would rae = the ee of | His encmics bro ht could ae eee not as ibe mere OWE: OX- - rience: re eree not. thyself because. of the evildoers, for they shall soon jbe cut down like the grass ~_ with- on herb, Res the Wait patiently or "yim" (Ps. xxxvii., 1, 2, 7). 12. They were all aslcep, because a deep sicep from tho Lord was fal- a upon them David's suggestion to Abishai was that they take the spear and cruse from Saul's head, which they did, been slain by one who took away the spear and cruse from his mas- ter's head The reason of their being able to do this was that the Lord had caused special sleep to came upon them. 21. Then said Saul: I have sinn- °° Return, my son David. Behold, I have played the fool and bave erred exceeding! Danid's kindness to 'him when he had him in his power scems to have touched s ha heart, and he ee he would no more do him But he had also seemed | anita when 'David spared him the foumer time, (xxiv, esi sana iio stable, disobedient, "ar oi willed. " uae 'willing to be controlled by God and eaneitke outates by the evil ome, 22-24. Behold, as th: life. was" much ay Pe this day in mine eyes, s0 let my life be mach set by in the eyes of the Lord and let Hitn. deliv- er me out of all tribulation. erienc: paper guide in pi a and the meck will Be teach His way" (Ps. xxv. « ). Meeknees covers 80 nach ground and is so necessary the word must be received ese, and, being saved by His mores we must take upon us His yoke who is and lowly in tear and fol- _medk low Fiim (Jas. i, 21; Matt. xi. 29). David's desire for 'null deliverance whom glory for a and ever. iment' eter Tim. iv, 1 be thou, my a. mu shalt b do t things alto shalt still provail So rer i went on his ways and Saul . plac *Wother Saul wished what he said . the him (MI Sam. v, 10). e purpose et Goad concerning David's son shall be performed, notwithstanding all the devices of the enemy, even of Satan himself. see Yea. ix, 6, 7; Kuke! i, 32, 38 David and Saul he going his own way suggests the only two ways--the way of the upaere and the hid of the wick- --_---------- ,"" gald the ee hj Wate eo tied: ineS® an 4 © to find that you byerenry at tne foot of the clase. I can lieve it possible.<' al fa be eer plied. the son, * the casies thing in the wo: - a he. young get cgn- T gave up my job -