The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, October 31, 1909, Page 27, Image 27

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    thi: OKrcorj sunday journal.
PORTLAND.
SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 31. 100D.
TLRIALS md in.
HPAMPiAAV MA A
OQKTNfr.
v"v ,
m-v'' :'-rv;
with bulbar 'and put' Into a covered
roaster- when you have poured cupful
of lh pi liquor about It. Koast until
fork pierces It easily. Turn the gravy
-Into- saucepan and thicken with
browned riour, two tablespuunfula of
Hwwl ind strained tomato, a table-
. spoonful of pnlon Juice-, paprika, anl'
alt to taata. .
trimmer gently at (he aide of the rang
.while you waeh the tongue with the
yolk of an erg (beaten) and coat thick
ly with browned and cruebed crumlii.,
net In the oven, uncovered, for Ave mln-,.
utea, or until smoking hot and alight) jr
Incrueted. Butter again and aerve. Hand
In the gravy In a boat.
Carve perpendicularly. Thla tongue la '
delicious coid. , ,
. A "Left-Orer" 8oup. ,
A good soup may be made by adding
minced vegetables .to the stock In whlcU ,
the tongue waa boiled. Simmer until .
the vegetable dire are tender; season
with celery aalt, color with caramel and "
' drop tiny cube of fried bread on the
top. .. ,. '
t- Calf. Head.
In a story depleting the trial -and
training of a young and ambltlntia r
houaekeeperywbo "thought ahe knew it ',
all." 1 bavFTlarrated, among the other '
financial standpoint (he entire outlay
, ahould not exceed ft. r . ,
.' fibaep'g Head. ) ,' '
'Who but a BVoteh -housemother ver
thinks of 'cooking a sheep head
1 put the question to a notable house
wife the other dsy, and ahe thought I
mcan.t the Deh of the same name. Bbe
- had "never Imagined that anybody
would rat a real sheep' head!" Then,
ahe said. "Van!" -
t stood up stoutly for my hid."' It
rlelda the most palatable Scotch broth
have ever tasted. And there la no :
better In the world ' than that family
soup one haei in perfection In the High
lands. 1 have a recipe which waa given
to me In rhyme by the president of the
University of.Cllaagow.
'Nor Is a boiled aheep'e head, served
with caper saure and accompanied by ,
creamed turnips, a contemptible din
ner for the American who arrogates,
as Ma the right to have the best things
going. You may buy the cleaned heed
in a city market for 4t cents. In the
country the butcher will ties It over to
you with a laugh aa
wool on I
Take it home, acald
dered resin into the fleece
roota. atrip, and you have the founda
tion for enough nourishing; broth to
a gift-wlth ths K jM
t and rub paw -: ' f Qv
eere down to the ,faJ
"Wo growl over, the impossible prices of meat with prima ribs set before us."
1 1 i IIIS is the third of a series of
I - articles written by Marion '
V , Ilsrland with a view to help
ing the' housewife at a time when the
Siractico of economy may mean the
kerping of home.
The two ' articles preceding this
were "A Stubborn "Fact? . dealing
with the question of necessary econ omies,
and "Economy in Buying,"
Next Sunday's article will be . en
titled ."Economy in Hired Labor." , :
The writer of tho articles will wel
come letters and suggestions from
readers. '
. era. A fteatfy dressed woman said
aomethlnr In, a low voice to the man
behlnd'the counter, who wamea 10 me
corner of 'the ehop and uncovered a
"pile of what lo'oaed Ilk odds and ends
of meat. Sh made her selection ana
"uppish" cook of mine one stigma
tised as "Innards." X have had queens
of -the kitchen of tha aarna feather
arid lineage who objected to cooking
the giblets of poultry as "on gent ale." ,
If tha old saw respecting tha behavior
Durchase and went her way. 'In reply' of a. beggar on horseback anolles to
to ths query I presently put him. tha them. It cannot be fitted to ur well-toman
smiled "Indulgently and let do "American matron. Tha beat Is nona
THE?? admirable editorial which Is
ttje-keynote f the present
economy aerie's supplies us
with another and a preg-nant
text: . . ' ,
, "Our garbage barrels are Oiled with
.material upon -which European faml
llea would grow fa. Meat that here
upon the average table would be a
- tough and tasteless mess, if properly
treated would set forth a feaft of
soup, finely seasoned,' a garnished
' "stew and, for the breakfast following,
a hash which, with the cheap vege
tables boiled with the-meat and some
little additions of salad and cheese -and
coffee rightly made, would tempt '
. tho palate of the patron of the most
expensive restaurant. And all at less
than -the cost of a tough hunk of in
digestible and flavorless stuff set upon
tens of thousands of American tables
, to deaden, not gratify, appetite and to
' breed dyspepsia."
Plain, strong laneruag;e this, but not
a whit plainer and stronger than I
demanded by the facts in the case Re
fore us. We. provide more lavishly for
Our tables, than any other people on
the globe. tThe householder who rises -early
-and sits up late and eats the
bitter bread of carefulness, in order to
Join the ends of expense and Income,
on -the first day of the year, will state
as a self-evident fact that "the best
Is always the cheapest.'' Furthermore,
with the honest (?) pride of the free
born American citizen, that "the best
is none too good for him."
i- A-year ago I awaited my turn In a
:'n.utcher's shop, and as my wont Is
- have a cloaer view of tha reserved
fragments. That waa what tney were
the ends of steaks and chops and
roasts pared away tn trimming, and
laid aaide. not as offal, but aa salable
stock. All were clean and there was
nothing unpleasant about the pile,
"They are - never bought by Amerl
'cans," tha man explained, "except now
. and then by a "cute' boarding- house
keeper. The Krench and Germans t
them whenever they can. How do I
happen to have so manyT You see, not
one ladv In ten who trades with me
gives orders to have the trimmings of
roast or steak sent home. Yet she
knows that they are trimmed Into
shape after she buya them. Unless wev
have orders to that effect, we , never
send the trimmings. Moat cooks don t
like to be bothered with them."
I learned, too, that the odd bits for
which our American housewife pays and
which she dees not get are bought by
the canny foreigner for 8 and cents
per pound. I did not remind the civil
dealer that we pay for ataak and roast
and chop befone It Is trinrmed Into
shape. Hence, that he pockets-a tidy
profit from : each sale, even' when ha
charges at the second one-third as
much as tha easy-going native house
mother paid at the first.
Since it Is my invariable practice 'to
order the "trimmings" sent home with
the bulk of the meat, It was none of
my business to disturb his complacent
computation of the petty gains that
are beneath the average customer's
thoughts.
As surety as Michelangelo discerned
the embryo angel In the shapeless block
of marble, the clever economist sees In
the collection of odds and ends at tha .
far end of the marble counter the pos
sibilities of soups, ragouts, hashes, can-"
nelons. meat pies, currlc-and an In
finite series of Ather savories. The trim
mings of ner ntgnors tames would set when it i itwiM a , ?
Our editorial h) a smart slap'at this
form of Improvidence:
We sit and growl at the impossible
too good for her John and tha children.
Her wlsar -compatriot," who has made
' economy a study, buy lamb's liver at
10 or li cents and orders it to be left
. at her door, and this without-" a blush
. of shame. She has taught her boys and
(Iris to like It when "mother" cooks It.
It is washed and wiped; a few slices
of fat salt pork are put Into- a frying
pen, and when they are Crisp are taken
out. Into the fat goes a sliced onion,
and .when this la sllgrhtly browned the
sliced liver is laid In the same hissing
fat. It Is left there Just long- enough
to sear both sides of each piece. Then .
pork, onion, llvar and fat are . turned
into a -casserole. A half cupful of stock
from the stock pot Is added, and half a
dosen button onions that have been par-
boiled.. This Is . seasoned to taste with
salt and pepper, covered and set in the
. oven for an hour. It should be done ten
der by then. Next, the gravy is drained
off and the covered ca'saerole Is kept hot
over boiling water. Tha gravy Is thick
ened ' with browned flow and seasoned
with a dash of kitchen bouquet and a
.teaspoonful of chopped parsley. Aftr
boiling, it Is poured back Into the casse
role. It Is served In tho same when It '
has stood, covered, for five minutes in
an open oven,, that tha gravy may soak
into tha liver. . .
Calf's Liver.
CaJPs liver cooked In Ilka manner Is
excellent. Or. If you wish to serve it
whole lard H with strips of fat salt
?ork: Vtat !t dlrectod just now and
lay in the casserole. .A spoonful of to
mato catsup added to the seasoning im
prove the dish. Lay it upon a platter
when done. pour tha thickened gravy
about .Jiand anlah with the. button ' -JV1-
Halt a' can of French mushrooms
(champignons) make of the baked liver
a really elegant family dinner. The
uuiiavuiiiB oooicea in tne
mJmMM i
"Our queens of the kitchen object to cooking the giblets." . ,
hours. It Is then digestible and full of
properties that foster, wholesome
- growth In the young- and keep adults
vigorous.
Economical Pastry.
Butter Is a grievously heavy Item In
the expenew book, of our frugal house
motrtr, and one to which rfrMet-Thekla-Dlnah
lends the full weight of
her hand one, too, that must know
no degree. "Cooking butter" Is not
admitted to the economical calcula
tions of sensible home caterers. Bet
ter, buy and use half as much than
purchase the second best. For tbls
Whene'er I take my walks abroad.
I kept an ere upon my fellow-custom-
prices of meat, and all -the while we In
slst upon haung nothing- set before us
but prime ribs, porterhouse or sirloin
steak, leg of lamb or round roast"
A sharper thrust at the native house
mother comes in the next paragraph:
"Because there is practically no proper
cooking of chuck, flank, 'rump, neck or
shin parts of mutton or beef."
I subjoin to the Justly severe com
ment upon our national cuisine the as
sertion that our housemother looks
down disdainfully upon what a very
gravy
U 1 J
. .. , 1 . V ' - toil DUUIUU
" kui uimer m. weignt. it properly sea
soned and cooked, it Is a fair imitation
when cold of the famous (and costly)
pate de fole gras. And this at an out
lay of less than 70 cents, even If the
.champignons be added. Meat for two
meals may be had by following the
recipe I outline. I engage, also that
those who have never liked liver before
will "take to it" m this guise. l"i""
Beef Tongue.
A beefs tongue retails In city mar-,
kets for $1. Wash and wipe it and par
boll for half an hour after the boll is.
fairly on. Take It up (saving the liquor
in which It was boiled), rub all ver,
"The canny foreigner buys the trim
mings at 6 and 8 cents a pound.'
.-. - - Vi--;..V" "
-.'Distractions efrMartha," her struggles ,
to prove the manifold capabilities of a
alr head. I repeat now what was said
there in serio-comic fashion: that a
calf's head may be wrought Into more
savory and popular forms 'than any
other bit of meat known to the Inge
nious cook. It coats from 60 to 60 cents,
to begin with. The stock In which H is
boiled makes delicious soup; the boned
, head, after it Is boiled, may be breaded
and baked, or made into that jov of
the epicure, "tete de veau a la vinai
grette." or Into imitation terrapin al
most as good as the genuine delicacy,
for wtiich we pay a dollar a plate at
restaurants. The tongue is nice- eaten
cold or pickled; the brains may.be fash
ioned into toothsome croquettes or fried
in batter.
In skilful hands the calf's head may
be counted upon forfour : meals,' and
when all the seasoning Ingredients that
help to make these are considered from
a moderate-slMd family for two
Scotch "Bros.'
Speaking of Scottish fare reminds
one inevitably of the national dish of
that hardy and frugal race.
"What did you have for breakfast?"
asked a tourist of a bare-legged, mus
cular Highland laddie.
"Brose," was the answer.
"And what for dinner?"
"Brose," stHl cheerfully.
"And what will you have -for sup
per?" - I
"Why brose!" .surprised at the
stranger's inqulsltlveness.
-"And do you not get tired of eating
the same thing all the timer'
" "An" wha' for suld a mon weary o
his meat?"
"Meat" with him stood for his dally
food. ',
- "Brose." -alias oatmear porrldgre;! has
nutrlWve qualities to which the brawn
and endurance of the Scottish peas
antry bear triumphant testimony.
With us these would ba better un
derstood If oatmeal were properly
cooked. Tha mother who would have
her children strong in muscle and bone
and generally hardy throughout their
systems should learn the values of this
cereal in the course of her economical
studies.. Soak It for hours. Distrust
the plausible advertisements that
commend this or that brand requiring '
no soaking and but twenty1 minutes'"
cooking. That is a concession to the
American habit : of living- fast and
hard. Soak the Irish or Scotch' meal
long, and boll It longer. The tireless
coo or cooks - it to peneotion witnout
waste of fuel. Bring the sodden meal
to a boll on the range, then shut it up
in the heart of the cooker and leave It
there for eight, ten or twenty-four
: . IS?) v
use. to spread -on bread and at out ef
hand, have fresh and sweet butter.
And when you cannot afford to use
the same for rake and pastry, go
without them. Make plainer cakes ant
rookies, using half butter or half lard.
Very fair "family pastry may be
.made with the eneaper shortening; '
alone.
Never waste a teaspoonful of good
shortening, be It lard or dripping.' Try
out the dripping from . roasts v and set
aside for frying.
You know, I suppose, that' it. may be
used over and over, unless when yon
have fried fish In It? RtnlniHt l
left In the frying pan Into a bowl half
filled with hot water In which you have
dissolved a bit of soda no bigger than :
a pea. When It Is dead cold, you wlil
have a cake of clean, odorless fat on the
top of the water, and all Impurities will
have sunk to the bottom. Take off the
cake and keep it in a cold place. -
Lemons may ba kept soft and sound
by leaving them In cold water- in- the
refrigerator. You may get them by the!
dozen cheaper than by the single lemon.
Apples for apple sauce, . and for pies
for which they are cooked and strained,
should not be pared. Core them and cut
into quarters or eighths; then cook with
out sugar to a aoft mass that may run
through a fine colander or- vegetable
press. The peel, gives a goodly flavor
and pleasant color to the sauce, and not
an eatable bit of the king of fruits ist
-Jost. Sweeten to taste while hot and
Vou have the veritable "bouquet" of tha
apple. Instead of a taste and smell like
T preserve a ,.
fT ; Chicken Broth.
Another small (Which is not a "petty")
- economy Is to order your butcher or
provision merchant to send home tho
heads, necks and feet of the fowls yoi f
buy from him. They make rich. g:oofl .
broth. Scald and scrape the legs, and
scald the feathers from the , heads. '
Then cook slowly until all the gelat
inous strength Is ' extracted. lt .
.them get cold In the water; take off
the fat; strip the meat from the bones
and squeeze but all the moisture.
Then throw the bones away.- By add- -,
log rice to tho Uquor, seasoning with
union jice, perpper ana salt, with
a
aasti or mincea parsley, and. Just b
fore serving, stirring- In a cupful of
milk thickened a little with a roux of
, - butter and flour cooked together, you
, have a nourishing, savory broth.
I might draw out this talk Indef
initely without exhaustina- the
"Our garbage barrels are filled with
materials on which the European
family' would grow fat." V
more-than-ever-before vital subject of
the utilization of materials we are In.
the habit of underratlnar as foods far
human beings. The list of palatable
"left-overs" alone would fill many
pages like this. ,. .
And this I must leave untouched.'
DR. GHARLES ELIOTS RELIGION TOLD IN OWN WORDS
DR. CHARL.ES WILLIAM ELIOT, . Into institutional Christianity. It will with the lack of
farmer president of Harvard unl-" n?t',hink of Oo 8 ,fm enlarged and pensatlOTi.- Indeed.
Ln,, i ihi ; ui glorified man, who walks 'in the garden the past, the hpoe
versity. now. US president cmeri- m the c0i ,0f ; the-day' or as a Judge future-life for 111
tufl. lias been the center of a decldlnar betwwinliuman Htlcants or nn -done infinite mixr!
hope or ruture com- the religious compensations and cpn- Just God on human being who had vlo
he considers that. In solatlons of the nast. .Twentieth con- lated lit laws: nnd tho iiin
or compensation in a tury soldiers going- Into battle will not played a great part in the imagined
the older religions have been remarkably
successful in society at large. The fear
of hell has not proven effective to deter
men from wrongdoing, and heaven has
never yet Been described in terms very -
the lustica o? nod attractive to the average man or woman.
: in 1 the imagined trertyniMgijefjThe
Gl
asses an
asses
': tu; lias ' been the center of a decldlns: between' human litigants or as done Infinite mischief bv induclns: hu
storm of comment.' favorable and rmrunn or tnnperur ruimg arm- man tuiK io ue patient unaer conai
Ills sufXera! here to be able to say to each othef. as Moslem dealings with our biblical ancestors. A fceat Beniy.ses, like Dariteand Sweden-.
soldiers did in the tenth Wentury: 'If
we are killed today we shall meet again
aHri.n, ,k.-...it 1,1. , A imij.y inn nuujccn r u mo ijauiaicii uuus wjiitu uibj suuuia imve struggled lonigni in f-arauise. rjven now in
.u wno, in tne parly history or the race, to put an end to. But this Important mother who loses
ui can
graduate of 'Andover Theological Semi
nary once torn me mat When he had
By Elbert Hubbard. . ' ,
JHERE seems ever, to be a tendency
on the part of small, philosophers
to divide ' humanity 'up' Into
classes. We are set down 'is
good or bad, great" or, ordinary.
her hnVw nr th Iiiim-
before the; Harvard Summer- ruled his.--family, absolutely. These passage of "The Religion of-the Future"-, band his wife by a-preventable disease
it ls'tne
toman
I
. d?-
"tioglcal Review,- and for the first time ' crude." " ' '.' " " sation. -When- precious ties of - affec- votlon who has gone to a happier world.'
in Chlcatro the most h! en if leant nas- RucH t nnm nt tho mmf lmri.f tlon have been broken, rella-inn han hiri The ordinary consolation of institution-
sages of this notable address are given negations regarding the religion of tho out prospects of Immediate and eternal M Christianity no longer satisfy. Intel-
nu.iicuiir . (juuiiuiif . - j.riiH iiie Dunaay luture. -ine
'Record-Herald .was., enabled to do more forceful
inrougn ine. courtesy or unaries a. d'.-voted
school on "Th r?nilcrlnn nf tha Ts'iitiifo human f unctions will cease to reDresent should be riven verbatim and here-lt is: Is seldom able to say simsly:
irn.f .,M.. .nn,n , , , adequately the attributes of God. The "To. the wretched, sick and downtrod- will of God! The babe or the woma
jeirtnai auttress appears in print m run nineteenth century-has made all these den bf the earth, religion has lb tha Is better off In heaven than on earth.
! or the first time In the Harvard The- conceptions of Deity look ardhaic and Past held out hopes of future comnen- resign, this dear object of love'and-
s 'of th
-linn th
The longer and-perhaps even blessings - for the departed and have llffent people whose Uvea are broken by
rceful portion of the address Is promised happy reunions In another and he "lckness or premature death of those
to a positive exposition of the a better .world. To a human soul, they love. The new rflltflon will not
berg, have " produced only fantastic and
Incredible 'pictures of either state,'
. . . . . . -" ' " I " I w vvmWctfn man nrniill h n brl N, rjl.,
preacneu two or tnree times tn sum- "":',' ";-" k . , , tme-r.t. .rh. '
raer in a small Congregational church a" iypwvii; vi iuum yuwer w .....v , ,j
on eape uod. one or i the deacons of OVI1 11 uv- tocrat or plebeian, jianasomeornouie, ;
me cnurtn said to nini at tne close "V.f """iff "mu-mw iiuencuru.- -.me. ved 'or lost " ' - -of
the service: "What sort of senlimen- prevailing Christian . conceptions , of - . ' ' . '
thst thev sr teach- neaven ana neii nave nardiy -any . more v in . aaamon 10 iawe ,cie w-. v ,
ine. publishing aarent of the Review.
President Eliot divides his considera
tion of the subject into parts, first
formulating -a. series of statements aa
to what' the rellyion-of -the future will
not be and following out this part of
the address with a series of positive
statements regarding what it will "be.
He says: ...
"The religion of the future will not be
based on authority, either spiritual or
temporal. . The decline of the reliance
upon absolute authority is one of the
most significant phenomena of the mod
ern world. This decline is to be seen
everywhere in government, education.
In the. church. In business, and iu tho
family. The present generation Is will
ing, ana, inneea, often eager, to be led:
it It Is averse to being driven, and it
new -religion.
"Kvery age," says Dr. Eliot, "barbar
ous or civilized, happy or unhappy, im
proving or degenerating, frames Its own
conception of God. within the limits of
Its own -experiences and imaginings. In
this sense, too. a- humane religion has
to wait for a humane generation.. The
central thought of tho new religion
will, therefore, be a humane and worthy
Idea of God, thoroughly consistent with
the nineteenth century revelations con
cerning man and .nature, and with all
the tenderest and loveliest teachings .
which have come down to us from the
paBt. Tne new religion rejects abso
lutely ine conception tnat man
lodged- in an Imperfect, feeble or suf- attempt to reconcile men and women
ferfng body, some of he older religions i? Present ins Dy promises or future
h,v hi.M i tha ,r,.,.i0iinn blessedness, either for themselves or
i.veranee hv death, and of ontronn. nnnn for others. Such promises have done
. . 1 . ' Infln t. ml
tal mush is this
ins; you at Andoverr You .talk every
Sunday about the love of XJod; we
tvant to hear about his Justice.' The
future religion will not undertake to
describe, or even Imagine the Justice
of -Ood. We are today so profoundly
dissatisfied with human Justice, al
though it is the result of centuries
of experience of social good and III
In this world, that we mav well dis
trust human capacity or conceive of
influence with educated people In . these the masses.
uajs man ui mq nsaes nave.- ,Ph m, aP h -reat undissolved
The modern mind craves an immediate xl10 maase r tne great unaissonen,
motive or leading, good for1 today on residuum the people who go about their t
this earth. The new religion builds on business and neither pray ' on street 1
iumars'ocreras Pch from -housetop To
motive powers It relies on have been, them babes are born and the wires flaan
and are, at work in Innumerable: human no news; they visit, but the -. society !
hopes 'are bette7 groundt'lTanVse not burdened with, names j
a ricn compeieni and nappy lire m ............. ... Juauic vi a liiuim ijritwi, uiiiitno vi iuiiiuuhi i-eii($iun ana uner-: oe-. ul men nicnua,
short, for present human IUb, however duclng men to rw rmtient under siiffer- being. - cause free from ail selfishness and give-no sign. . - - ' .
crushing, the widely accepted reliiriona ngs or deprivations against which the.y "Tlie civilized nations now recognize from the imagery of governments. Yet it might not be difficult to find t
have offered either a second life nre- ''jould have Incessantly struggled. The the fact that legal punishments us- courts, social distinctions and war. a man who at the tribunal of. his own l
sumably Immortal, under the nairnlest advent of a Just freedom for the mass ually fall of their objects, or cause "Finally, this twentieth century re- heart would confess that he belonged to :
ZAtXZ. i- of mankind has been delayed for cen- wronsrs and evils rreater than those Jieion x net nniv tr. h in I,.-; th n We talk rliblv about giv-
happy oblivion.
Conforms, to Natural Law.
"Can the future, religion promise that
bu
wants to understand the grounds and
sanctions of authoritative decisions. Aa
a rule, the -Christian churches, Roman.
Greek and Protestant, have heretofore
relied mainly upon the principle of au
. thorlty both of the most authoritative
churches and of the Bible aa a verbally
Inspired guide is already greatly im
paired, and that the tendency toward
liberty Is progressive, and among edu
cated men Irresistible."
tunes by just -this effect of compen
satory promises issuea Dy cnurcnes.
v.
Surgeon the New Minister.
"The relirlon . of the fill urn will n-
sort of compensation for the Ills of this n,.h h. ,hi ...v,i t,
young. Since our ideas of God's modes
of thinking and acting- are necessar
ily based on the best human attain
ments In similar directions, the new
religion cannot pretend to understand
God's justice, inasmuch as there is
no human experience of public Justice
fit to serve as the foundation for a
true conception of God's."
To the question as to what consolation
w has been surgeon Is one of the ministers of the Jor human litis the new religion will or
the religion new religion. The new religion'rannot " the reply proffered is that it is "the
for which the punlshmenta were in- with the great secular movements of ingr a helping hand to the masses, ele
prevents the poisonings That
til fin -mi m-) rt n n . , m n .-a , V. . n , . nn i .
alien 1 the world or that God is i , .1 . " " ""r- anotner. side, that of resistance and
alienated from the world. It rejects acul08 . against threatened disistcr? prevention. The sailor who had his arm
? ii- ln" enl,l conception or man as a p .y ra mis inquiry involves poisoned by a dirty fishhook which had
fallen being. . hopelessly wicked and the statement that in the future religion ftered hii finger, made a votive offer
tending downward by nature, and It thefe wlllbe nothing supernaturaL" Ing at the shrine of the Virgin Mary and
makes this emnhaUo rejection of long Jn a doea'hot mean tliat life will be prayed for a cure. The workman today
roncepted beliefs because It finds them ftripped of mystery or wonder, or that who gets cut or bruised by a rough or
all Inconsistent with a humane, civl- ra"? ' natural law has been f I- dlrtv Instrument goes to a' surgeon, who
Used or worthy Idea of God." " nally determined; but, that religion, like annlles an antiseptic drrnnine' to the
iuuk.Kuiiiurui in natural taw wound anrT prevents in
soul tne Kuling Essence. Wlt;.,2t i-tZr 01 .v. "..
aetermlned. In this snM tha miirinn
una or the loftiest passages In tha ad- ' ruyure will be a natural religion, supply the old sort of consolation; but
uraiiiiuic . ... . ... tn I I 1M (hjnn, an.. .11 ... . , 1. jt 1 1 1 w . 1 j . 1
Nor will there be In. the religion f ur" lai wnicfl speaks Of the aoui; iTiifli. Ji"-.J, I'".", " U " " j.. " .V - ' Tir ".l Jl'r.VTZ
the future any "Identification of any for every one now believes, and all men no-" reliance on any sort of magic, or for consolation.
lu.'nnJ infihow,Ifr,mi1.?,tlol.n 5h,r; believed, that there la tn a man an rnlmcle, or other violation of, or excep- "A further change In religious ' think
tI'WiiI5 I' i .hi?" li ho1!,, anlmaUng, ruling, characteristic essence, tion tov the laws of nature, ft wUl per- Ing his already occurred n the sub
be recognized - that the He- " I i. u - ,orm no agical rites,-use no oceult Ject of pain. Pain was generally re
bfwt' on ina tnf,uenc? ?f w"cno f aplrlt which Is himself. To every processes, count on no abnormal inter- garded aa either punishment for sin
the Christian has been and Is very po- influential person U gives far the great- ventions of supernal powers, and admit ' as a means of moraj training or as
tent, was in the highest degree a racial er part -of his power. It Is what we no possession of supernatural gifts, an expiation, vicarious or direct. Twen
rellglon. and Ha Holy of Holies waa fall personality. In the crisis of a whether- transmitted or conferred by tleth century religion, gradually perfect
locaL in war times, that Is, In times losing battle It Is a human soul that any tribe, class or family of men. ed In this respect during the last half
when the brutal or savage Instincts re- rallies the flying troops. It looks out 'Ita sacraments will be, not Invasions t the nineteenth centurr. rersrda hu
malning in humanity became tempo- of flashing eyes and speaks In rutins' of law bv mtrM k k. i.i.i. man naln aa an evil ta tw relieved and
rarwy ominani, ann gooa win is urn- ones, oui us apepas-ts to other eouls or a natural spiritual grace or vt a
Ited to people of the same nation, the and not to other bodlea In the midst natural hallowed custom" It'mar ore
survival of a. tribunal or national qual- of terrible natural catastrophes earth- aerve historical rites and cereoionle
tfv In institutional Christianity cornea ejuakea, storms, conflagrations. Volcanic -which. In times past hare renresented
out very plainly. - The aid of the Lord eruptions when men's best works are the expectation of snagical or mtraco
of Hosts (s still Invoked by both parties being destroyed and thousands .of lives lous effects; but It will be content with
to International warfare, and each side are ceaslnr suddenly and horrlblv.lt natnral fni am rotation. e ,x -..
prla and. tbsnks him for its Sue- la not a few especially tood human and ceremonies. Its nrtenie win Ka mrn
nii4
fllcted; so that penology, or the science modern society democracv., individual- vating the masses, never once-admit-
of penalties, has still to be created, ism. social idealism, the zeal for edu- ting that we. like all others, are but a :
It is only very lately that the most cation, the spirit for research, the mod- molecule in God s masses. . " i
civilized commiinities began to learn ern tendency to welcome the new, the And a peculiar thing ; about this la
how to deal with criminal tendencies fresh powers of preventive medicine and that the men who talk most about "eH-
ln the vouns. In the eves of God k - , i , . - . i .. .aB.AMt nnn ... . ,r i i -
prevented br the promptest means pos
sible, and by any ort of available
means, physical, mental or moral; and.
thanks to the prorresa of bloloricel and
chemical n-lmr there la omponitlrely
little physical rain nowadays which run
not be prevented or relieved. The In
vention ef anaesthetics had brought Into
consolation which often comes to the
sufferer from ' belnsr more serviceable
to others than he was before the los or
the suffering for which consolation is
needed: the consolation of being ono's
self wlsr and tenderer than before, an t
therefore more able to be serviceable to
human kind In the best ways: the conso
lation through the memory, which prw
serves the sweet fragrance of character
and llvee no longer In presence, recalls
the Joys end achievements of those live
while still within
treasures sp and multiplies
en--ea tney exerted.
One ef the most striking pronouncia
mentos Is thst the new religion will
foster powerfully a virtue which Is com
paratively new in the world, the kive
cf truth and the passion for wee kin a; It.
and the troth will progreaslrely make
men tree; so mat the cnmtng genera-
ineaa a n.l in
dustrial ethlcs-but also in essential tie fellows who themselves are .merely
agreement with trw direct, personal pensioners on a patient world..' " ,
teachings of Jesus, as they are reported If there is any. better way to help
in the gospels. The revelation he gave the masses than by going 6fct0y about
to mankind thus becomes more wonder- your work and setting us a gudd- exani-
ful than ever." pie, I have not seen it.
m Each man thinks his own experience
T.'Sl.in!ala et. unique, peculiar, distinctive; he belong
l-aiz-l Jlan s btar bong. - to ciMB..f course; but a very small
Ah. golden topaz goddess, life were cold and aelect class; Just as all lovers tm
Without thy sun! Each day I pass "ure that such a lovejas theirs never
thee, here before existed, except, mayhap, on the
In the old a-arden. and the dav o-mw. stare or In a book. And thus adown
orear
With that thy passing. Hair of burn
ished gold.
Gold eyes that shimmer with rich mel
low light
From a pure spirit, and thy vesture
white.
Lend thee a grsce. a radiance austere.
Vet warm, with all the wealth of
Khama stoled:
mortal View, 'and ,hh'd" iff. tbe the rarden:
iltlnlt.a tha Infln- - .. thOU Walt,
i.ixe her of Ithaca, the ions return
Of some far loved one. while the dead
noura Durn
the centuriea from the days or tvi.
mon and hia gliulamlte shepher.lcs j.
lovers have strolled hand in hand, clmut
Ing the lovers' litany. "Love like uur
fan never die." ' -
And so we are all labeled snd plswon
holed. done up Into bundles, and those
that cannot be disponed of handily si -dumped
Into the . masses. Hut tf w
snatch from Kronen a little leisure an I
think It over, we will find that all
things are comparative: there l no
standard of giodness. or of greatne.
nor of freedom, nor of beauty, nor ft
aristocrat . and the man we think l
saved Is only partially saved and t'
In slow delay, and days are desolate? fellow whom we chnlkmarkej
Yet, topaz queen, I kneel here' at thy
flame.
Worshiping from. afar. nr seek thy
name. H. Bedford-Jones.
?."" 1 plrU 1J51e"h"-h steady the survivors, main- especially Interested In religious thought. nrmpLbVP.rTt''T pn.iU VLW tlons will be freer and therefore more . Z ' .
often been ex hlhl ted In civil wars caused tain order and organise the forces of possessing unusual gifts of speech en S' 5unl n., - ti-f i Z?.'. Va Plctlve and stronger than the pre- - Answcrlrss RkWlf.
by religious differences. .... rrarue and relief. . devotional subjects and trained In , yonnger e-eneratlnns TUtee with leered- I-di.- .. ... ,
It I not msnr years since an arch-.. "It Is a few superior soulai The lead- beet method, of improving the 2oVlU ""lie. te th. objection mMe nlv cedl- the Houston Post
Mshon of Canterburv caused thanks to " men snd women In any socletr. Mr. snd tndustrisl conditions o : hnmanllf. .,,.,,, nyre than 0 veers see by some . M rt-. T,h ,T?rk vorld has vexed the
be glret, In all Anglican rhurcle, that se or civilized, are the Strongest per- There will alirsys be need of .h dir,r"L .of r.,h" r"t'-h. Jr.',rt,,, UMlei. curleua-minded people for a tens : lime
IheXord Of Hosts had been In the Kns sonslltie- the per-oosllty bein, rl- He teachers and spiritual leeders bir- Hu,I 12. -nr-leyment ef 'btoTform - rv. BM df., n(H tKat with the qtw-nlon; What la a IVm.
llsh cwmp e-ier srainst the Frrtittann manly -sptrituaL and onlr irrnnJirllL- lu. !i i J,,,h... t. . ?1 T L" L childbirth.- nemely. Kst t phri . " " niof-r uui ine - t T Now It has simniv rnn the
. m.p 9hV wnfVlVnr, nl 'WeVolxTn, tothJTlhrU howev'er'hat'lf' happI Ji!" ,WM ih0I"7tl t. Be engendered by limit by perpetrsun, what ee-m, te be
er the futsr. wil, sot H' J? XttSX 7. TJT f w rrem the . SLrrna,
I-nctte th r Hebrew arthrerotnerrtc ' . 1 "h,T ef rre.Weet V.U for-. pAt f.i. hit Vh.PMt.1. ' rvr orrr" in rarl e- tea . at a. ra" t rr 1 r.Tn. hHI T.ele rtnt t a . .
rr "taller. . ef Cel. rne. f?A 'r."! i-T 'JSuV7? Pi VT "t I- tberefere. ,,. ,K ceenlle, ef divine J.slk. ' A a , - y'u p.V 1 1
tl'h W.re carried ta hu. massnre i.'k ln 7L JZhZL . JTIhI," Z SZ, f'P'.,' natural ,g.ll. r.f te fn- -T,e eils ' hi H. wee-ld bate w ran .snwr. In the Iwe trUt. Urn T v en. n.t d-t 1 .3
M n w.re carried la large measure ta-k to tjje erlhoz a. that which dra.s- tur, r..,g0 excludes froa. It am of retarded as' reoaluea Inflicted fry a nei'ber the Urtata nor the promleeVef waet te piraie. fekt or r.'st.r
"lowi '
mav weleome US In hrsven.
t'ondltlona nre transient; life Is 4i a
state of flux; rlssees are Ur- I a tti
iter of clothes; cssle Is !.. i fnnn I
on a false hpoth-l. and In t w--' i
march has often br-'-n tpid hy a i.i-.i
between cockrrosr and sun-up.
The a-mdatiois we etn s -
more apparr-nt than reel.
I n cloee insnllon w f i fl lie fnt
man K not so greet ee l'!""Hl i
the stupid men set eulte en iJ. l
arreare,)
A!o. the leU I" tvft el .' ' r
the saints pure et t-, t,-it !-.
sort ef ff.
Josniin M.ilr ! t ' i ' - ' i
he anil.
ii men whom Tr . a rn ! .
I find f e.n' h .f
IB men aror i-r,,- . - -
f 'nt a- a.. It of ,i . 4 i t
f -.BM.la l' 1
W here has 6 -1." .-