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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-02-08, Page 7Vet ft. 1.1 • !S • 1•••• 4.; . • • • • • II Sekct a Responsible Investment House sad yea will have ve difilovity Selecting beirable Securities Bonds wisely purchased comprise the essentials of sound investment. This house invests in entire illatte3 of Municipal, Railroad, Public A9,er. vice and Industrial Bonds, purchas. ing only after thorouili investigation* and aiming to satisfy its clients as to Safe(, Ilarleetalgtity and Income. A selected list of bonds wilt be sent on application. Daturnon SECURITIES co,_ RPOPATM -LIMITED TumbriTo. lattataiThEAL • LotiaortEna : likGREATITRPOSEVF: The Pretent the" litattle Soul May Win Its Right to Live What is the parpcse• of. life 7 If slate of you .should reply that lite7e purpose is to walleye happiness then •„eyou must tell me why the lives of men and women areseieited with so emelt unhappiness and misery. This query. cannot. be answered by de,.. Alaring that -for 'the nutiorportien of. hisstinhappinesa Man is directly and Personally. responsible. Eve Lf this indictment was true the P - neat of. life,. according to the'the ry • ef-*ap,pineaS ail its end, has failed Utterly of .fulfiliment. •• If the purpose of life ie to be geed • then why are the ways of goodness .lefa-An such obscurity, made so posi- tively diffidulti Wlir should it seem to be necessary. for the best inten- ti�ned person to make so” Many and sueli bhindeisa. Why are • the abatable' ways' of life made so • attractive, thea glitter, the empti- ness, the waste of health and strength/ Whys -why- is.• it all so easel Why are right: and wrong nteVitably. so mixed that nothing • . emus enttrely. • right, nothing all • Wrong, and we are compellecrac- • pordingly clioose the lesser Of two are all *iiimoild90 ',01tios- • Vons- and they alfeeeneeinthe pur- pose.' of lite. • ' goa Means to ask ,a.them: I an): mire' of that and to -keep On asking. Answer in its en- tirety. may not be ettveta but I be-; • neve wn. shall' be .ableto see froth which directiOn t*, answor..is • to • • come and we ,may even 'see stacete- ing nose;• though afar Oft . , . , In the First Platte , we may all agree that Menai facet •: • are turnedlOWard the future. 'The &title) is never long forgotten. We • look at our business plan for growth and tdevelopnient in the years to come. their future is --oat chief concern. In a certain ,,sense We are 1:1;k1ve)contented with thinks ae they - ides, The present laCks complete- • ness, The prizes lif,o,the obteets glee' 16'ts-srdeisiteChe iii -the yond: Aml3ition keeps' on our tiptoes, peering into the ettaes to come. ". •- Now r* think* there is• something itebie and stimulating in that for - Ward look. Things beyond our remelt requite effete, lieesietents viga . moue effest,,:beforte we an attain •thew, ..AnsU this. effort creates - strength and attfiCieticytalit- a. weird •sit builds character. • tabu -ead.I,cart dertlep into tebleie meta and wo- men 'through. -struggling . with diffiz overceinsing oblitaeles, and i of you that never dies. There is 'a partiof us that . never -dies, and whaia we _may; disagree on names we are all agreed on the mane fact. , The 'body and all its desires—aIl its parts—crumble, but. the soul goes forth from at into eternity: :There is one real,' indestructible self, the man 'as he it, the women ea she ; ite a word, their character. That eludes tae grave, that no 0110-:.4an ' Whet that character is to be lies, wholly, in our hands. Remember it 20 immortal and life fa' patting like. the shadow of a clreani. What is' it doing to you? Search your bank accountof life, not your calling list, Not Oilier PeOP1PIS opinion.of you— that ,constitules what we may call reputation -,-hut - you, the %perish- able' you. .• 'nape I said that -21411 not .P. eIrtishnl'a; see.M.-a gns1:161 •of ness, • but all pod Work for4-others all work that builds up the struc- ture, lifts •buieleni, clears - away eon -- fusion -and darkness is 'worth while and musk he considered pait of the- aniatose of life. But inthelast atm- lyste tae .saffireiblia apurpese is the erettlen of character. Marshal 'antes of your Soul and. face hard- ships breeselaats-Beve John MeGant, SCII0aLS 119 'CHINA. d •••.—••••••• :Students Bois the...Teachers and • 'Stud as They Please. • Some years have elapsed lance -the Manchu Government autounced. nregratuntia of educatio• nal reform for;Chinti, having for its *Watt the inteodeetion of a national system • .ethication approximating a's closely, •Lxisilble to that adopted by the weetero eitions. Phis -pro-. granmie has made some headway, but has not yet been, carried Oueirt, eatizeta, ies ultimate e teat emust remain doubtful until A tl duce and enforce strast discipline in. all state sehoolt and collegea, The laxity of the present eseinot be bet- ter deecribea then 5n the' Words of a Chinese peofessok. who, in the °mums of an address to thi stu- dents of Psteeliew'Callegeelii Oeto'a her, 1010, saitt:-... • s „ "The lawletta 'idea of liberty attest said: -- - finder the- manegeniett of director r who theinselvei Intim never. heti-discipline The at-1*W found the hest:al:tee itepeeintent n 'vetoed to equelite of will& Ahey had learned neJapaneee books; *Oat , either. with- their Tercets at horde- ot with their teachers at •sehool." While laasehool the teachers -ire eolleideied be the etudenta to he • * thole equals if not. inferiore; for, n fad, they ba,ve often been. styled' nubile servatite. Cases of frietion between the teachers and the stu- lents, ending in strikes on the paia when tae difficulties have been eon- querea and the obstacles tetanal:ht. whal.then1 ,Are we hippy and contentcdl Do we settle 'down quietly at enjoy •what we have at- tained? BY, no means. We never attain preci*ly 'what we desire; as I soon as our fingers touch it we peie • eerie it is lot exactly whet we have dreamed of and we renew our quest, a press forward into the future in pursuit of thevanishieg• ideal.' We are, by nature insatiable and this world:. it - • one well calculated to keep tikt moving and to lure utt on. ward. . Are 'se deOlned forever' to things whielt at soon as they -ti,re gained tease to satiSfysl In a sense), yes. What is the gain? What is the pur- pest of it alt? The parpose—let me sae it with emphansethe put - Pose ot lite is the creation of char- • toter. The beat reward life can give you ie; not money—although t of the latter, are very often ported in the newspaPers. With the unions formed in eeheole the Stu- dents become absolutely lawless. The positions of the teachers sas well as those of this disectoss lie in the hands of the students,. who, its fact, Aorm the moving trent of aim wheat inotitution. with the. pre- sumptuous power acquired from the 'union whieh they have formed, the ettidents,‘ through no medium of the directors (the president of the college), instruet the tettehere oh be best methods of teaching and money in certain quantities may be essential. It is not, friends. al. though every num and woman re. • quires fhe exercise of thentender- er eine:dome impulses :.)sf deep end abiding affection. It et not fame, ; position, pleasure, The best re- ward life earn give us is ' Charatetet. enc'esieg the word chare,eter here as a syronym for soul-- the part °emulating' examination ques- ionte.'" When women vote and the nicc. ion doetsn't go to suit him a man an blemeit on his wife, ILO toislos. eters *old% 804 hien Maas. u ss 041ass, In the study of tuperetitioa the is nothiug more interacting th that partainina to children. faculties end meta:tete a man esubjeet to only slaw sad gradu eastages. ?leti mental sake tif c_hilf, in wtioas the restraini •b"A SA yet itaperfeetly operate constantly reminds us of primiti conditions. bis lively fancy t world of iraagination m sa real that ea actual exiat,ence. Ma ehildren have imagantrY Playmate whose aetiotta and feelings are 'them as veritable as those of th eozripaniens by whom they aro,su rounded. The ideas whkh they -01 rive from books, or from the olde PetPle about "them, readily beam vutione. , . ," • Al/ children, as is known, belie: in Santa ,Claue, and itealom fin difavelties' in ha Hight over th housetops. and down' the chimney It wonal be interesting to eacertai .at what •period, if left • them Jseltes, • their Own observation would convanee theireof the unrea itY of their `henefeettor. 'The fairiee in whom many ehl drea, now' Neve ,faith and withou fear ex.pect to see are very differen feont these whom. otir torefether believed to exist. They were re gercled.Witlett mixture of feelings i •whieh dread axia aversion pretiom nated; they belonged to the real of darkness-, they were. stealers e eliildrens they kept in eustody beau tiful youths aed maidens, their ar .rows predueeSr elitease and death WAS • With aatriew modifyin their vitalietive jeaatutiy that the weresealled ."good 'people.", • •Supe,estition. an•ds sea ready wel come among children, an to collec the notionatettitertaineel then i Would tall Teatimes. Iteist •therefore possible to give enly e few apt:teas . • • Espeeially Chttaishe. , BOYs believe," the. • they eau aireVent. the stitch In the side,- which is likely to be inthiced by running, .mettna bedding a pebble •untlertthestetialie.' perstitious boy would put :it: 'The, lieve- that I could run:all day and not gt, tired if Ceultt hold peb- ble undes,my tongue" - For. s. . ••• .Peasonti• wstliting to- gether, to 'pate aifferent'aides of a post•*tee 4ividexV For this reason children:are careful , not to do this, 'eaten it they, have to fall. baelerin. erdee ,peee• in tingle file. The habit is So strofig that. Many" *Oro persons instinctively avoid: taepaeatine in this way: , It de -Sepals; aatentien, that chile siren do not .believe 4:m.6h:other on simple atetatiensS require the troth. of .the statements...." made -by. theta- eonsretles '64 be attested by 'estmeaspereate of oath. A child to wham is told any 44,01y. which he c.onsiders' remarkable will usually ma* by an • expression of ecepti•.- .0leniatineh as "Really and ttuly ' gcritestly "Eat -nest, new . or Uyou are foeling,t' The, first speaker ensw-ers by some formula:of asseveration EttrolIonor bright," or "Deed, deed and dauble•_deetls" It is not -infrequently that a child will say "prose. my heatt,SS isecom- peaued by the sign of the cross,: When they want the .petson to Whom they hatie told statiethitig to believe 'tally in its- truth"; On inquiry, the ideaeat is, found,: haet nothing to de 1 with. the. gettiiiiaa The meaning :explamed by the forni of: the cu- tom- in :wiliel.teakosase'd, this :asOssls'i "Hope to if den't;" at 'the ' Same thne,the ,sPealcer ferefingert across ethe::thioat ••frem eP-41.t.0 044, :which att a gesture, pr-. haps; ityrebotical.of lie.aeadieg;••• t The& ariother" atm .of •tatetitation''Whieh is 'UniVerailljs•in use, mai utteceonipanied. bytes sig- iiifieent gesture, ,Iitf lie'crins, to bo onlya variety of the foregeing. tattle girls, without any ielets of the niesning,.of:,,the,words employ sthe asseveration : , • . • I•• •Certain tine, „ Blitek and Waite . *bleb is etelatilettly explained by a forra, use, ettnetgaboyet • . ' . • • • • Black and. bine, t -ooripy head through •throligh and througli;- „ 'wheie the 'speaker thus deolaree his intention to take nis life • . It lie 'Violatee Mis Faith. It is obvieus. that these ehildish itistomS aro the survival of ancient forma .of eoileaset. An/el-441:a Chi- nese 4t, The' *present Bay, it is 'Said that the. only for ;6 Path respeeted that onf.otted the eactriatte of Theetytne. bol resettled,. aa intlieatien of, the •,e,OeSecineiebeaswaiting the per.... abate, which,. it is supposed„, -that the 'sacrifice leveret, The _oilainal idea, of the children's ueege. does s not differ fteira that of the Chinese superStition, except that. in the bit- e ter the pimalty of treachery is made e eisible through the medium of a *ie..: • t . The-. kilowatt; are isteme• Of, the best knoini. among the nature ea. e peretitionesof the ehildren <Witmer- 1 ica t When yeti see. a .shootina, star, if. you eau make wish before the b ttite disappeara,„the tome a trite, and again *heti ties first. star o appears in the evening it is tweets- A sail to say; Stet -light, etas -bright, f Ifiret star seen toSnight:: Wish I simy, *jell I might, Have the with wish to -night.. . , Win/ling lase much -to de with the o auperetition of ehildren, for es a usual thing their withes :teem never 8 to be gratified. Iti the 'rural i tricte 'whenever a, Child sees a load s, ,of hay he may make * wieh, btliev- itte that ilea, does. ae.wbatever he II itlkA for will be, &Nimrod is is not an unsitual ;seta to met) f children in the /spring 41,114 Simmer p 'search air the foeteleaf 'ver, for a they are Sure. if they find one, it sl will bring them good luck. And re an The are al the ng ve he as uy 5, to r- e - P. 11 43 1. 143 - • • BEAUMUL WIFE Or GERMAN AMBASSADOR. No German anaisetadorls wife has over made her mark in English society. so quickly as has Princess Lichnowsky.• It at, of course, a long tinge since there has been mph a smart representative of the .Pather- land in our midst, and then, too, the prineess is far leSa stolidly Teuton than her predecessors, being, in fact, of Polish descent, like her hug - band, saye a London paper. • Her distinguished appearance and her originality earmarked 'her at once, and before she had been in England very Jong, an edmittance to No. 9 Carlton House -'Terrace gave a cachet m society to those, lucky enough to get it. Besides her .comel,y-loi)ks, and her wonderfully good style -of areas she is extremely clever and a brilliant conversa- tionalist. She belongs already to the artistic and intellectual set in London society—by farethe mostataclusive and difficult set to get into. Slie has the prettiest and most tabulate manners in the world, and yet' is possessed of a dignity which enables her to all her high pesition to perfection. where is the boy, .who is in any way gone regarding children " ar superstitious, who will ndt always brought on by motherly love. .Ther turn his money, when he Bees • the is not an aohe Or a Pain that th new 'mottle believing that byl`so dO.: Child may complain of for which th ing the money will be doubled be- fond mother does not seerch out fore the month is out: It used to rentedyt and she is ;willing to tte be a general belief 'among the little everything. suggested. Many of th farmer! lads and lassies, when they odd ideathe; minds Of children Nell) Out at play, that the dandelion they , have, acquired front "thei wai their clock, and if they • were mothers, who tell them all kinds o not sere if it was time • to cease fanciful things to satisfy their curi playing. and go "home; they, would ositY,' and naturally their minds blow out the seed e of a dandelion, conjure others which are 'passed and if all the seeds flew away, at one from ehild to child until a lage breath, they were sure • " yolitme on child superttitton could • 'Their IfOilier Sougia Them. • - .13-0 ?ir4ten: • Tnere are equally as many sillier. • . stations regarding children as there _ _PROFIT SHARING ROSTDO.• are in the fancy of the thi.ide Orie ef the most contemn of all belief's AttraetiVO...,Porni 'of Investment. regarding a child is that it should ..at. folder which. fully dpscrilles an 'never be carried downstairs first, _ 2 atractive 7 per ...4cent. investment, but always 11/1 feir flights if hiek is to follow it. A practice that was formerly veryeeertnnotewas to puita, silver apoon, Within a ehild'e hand and then carry the child at, the at - tie. -This must be done. before the ninth day has passed i:ome see - tams the Itilele is mad instead of a spoon, and setae persons believe it of 'sufficient value to the-ebild,.mere- ly to mount a chair with it, Or any- thingMeier tharethe floor of the ,• . room in which it was born. • „ --A belief thatle pretty .general itt that Child's' nails should never be :pared; for if :uch.is done the baby is likely -to beeOme a thief. , One of , the greatest troubles a mother has tvith,lter. Child is to cure it Of whoop- ingteaugh, and the mother :of tthe :rural :district : more , feetunate these her eity.ststere for she believes 'theta iftehe • steals -and 'administers Milk; from neighbor's cow, there will be ttlemst an instant change. 6 ex:entry ..mether• also believes thee herecaddreia are afilictea with :theantuinps, if the sw•ollen •ettrts ere rubbed agailist such pore carrying, profit-sharing feature as well, may be obtained by writing to The 'National Securities pot -bora - time Limited,- Confederation Life Building,. Toronto, Out. '" • The investment descriffed is in the foerneof profit-sharing bonds, which are amply secured. In this in- stance, the National Securities Corporation, Ltd., 'acts as a hold- ing 'Company for two manufacturing companies whose combined capital- ization is $1,800,04 . Both of these companies have ' been particularly succ,essful • ever since their femme: tion, and for the list few yearshave operated under the handicap ore* being able to take care of about 60 p cent. of the business' available, •al ough working at'full,capacity. The present bond issue is for the aurpotie of eeJargitg-these-plante so that they mayhandleelt orders, and to eenabIe • them to • acquire timber limits now under option, and which •will doubtless largely ' increete in value. insthe next few years. t • , SCIENCE OF 'BREA.MS. AtOlia. of a hog trough as • have been- • . • Worn smooth by that, ;mire:al, relief - is speedily fo;rthebniing. ' .The 'retithee will be horrified• if anyone:- .should rock the entity cradle of her child, for she is sure such apt will bring misfortune to th.esitaba; noir shot:Wow. a- teething:4'U to look at itself iti m' ,i4irror;VO#lingatre it will leak* the ating,ecatteeth nimenally herd. To atop over airitilant at it lies on .the fiber , dei it pusig-;-ivica:lii— iate, ttaa if iteaten. with. a broom it Will be **ad fair nothing all tat' life. In Turkey if a ehild 'reports at breakfast that• he .• she had • es nightmare, remedies for lung trem- ble era-at:once applied. taeli.na- tion poseesies its ;own 'asertietthee supeetaitioris regarding . • r" The-, Curitig`or Diteatiee. • * But tlierelish people are 'especially Altana in their belief in this respect. • sure euro for nsea8les in Cleountry towns it carry the little sufferers, 'through their parishee, no matter _what the' weather may be. As by this elingeroue` eneteire . the; disease ielittely spread over eon, iderable territory, the. alltbaritks interfere end thc. records of prose. ution -thole th et. not a tie& 'offend - e heel any notion Whatever of the why and wherefore of.the stiperstie ion. • ' • In the. sante rotttaty,iickele are ured, not by ehenginar the eliad's tied and adopting other Tee...seeable ineassires, but by putting it out to (mud with "a woman who niarried man 'With 'the same name AS her The Polish people believe hat whooping pengli may be cured y letting a piebald horse breathe n the child. :According to Irish piebald horse ie one pee- eeSeed by evil spirits. ) The Polish uperetition referred to indicates hat tliosp.a)detor inetletra fry to drive 'at ene evil hy another. . Yet it will not do to look .upoti all uperstitions SS mere claptrap. For nstanee, a. cure for eonsumption in child is eupposed to be effeetta by arrying it every day tbriugh oek of theept, As hp are kept n the open and ns ilistence rein town or vil , the remedy rtseribed is almost equivalent to n opetaitir *cure. Therefore; it tould not, lte wholly.deepised. A great majority of the mmerni. • r• Illemories of Past Experience of the - • Individual: • • ' . • . In 'many cases where the incidents of it dream seem to be entieely un- familiar it his been shown eliy eerie friatievestiaation ttiet they • corre- spond to actually ekperienced eVetnts ;that haVe-escaind the me; mere- -of the'.waldng self. Delbeauf reeetels en intexteseteg, exannoltlega 'Iit 47111.17alreartiatt, h • found two lizards in the .snow. He took them up, warmedthem, and placed them in a hole in a wall, to- gether with a small fern which he keete they liked to eat. 'The name of theArri seemed in his dreams to be Asplenium amta niuralis Later On in his dream he .saw two other lizards come and 'est the tee:mine of the fern, and then a whole host of lizards coming -to the wall in a long :procession wlitch °levered the etaire street. On waking he could not remember. ever to have heard the name of the fern Of his dream, although he discoveredlhat a fern -caned Aepleniem" ruts, niuraria, real- ly exited. Sixteen years liter, however, he happened to be turning over the pages ef a friend's album of dried flowers' and to his surprise Came ,across thevery fern, with the Latietame written underneath in his own handwriting. He then re- membered that in 1860, two years before the dream', he liad met the sister of bit friend, and to please het had written the Latin names un. 'der the various plants in her album at the dictation of a botanist. Fifteen years after the dream he Also discovered' the source of the lizardprocession in an old illus. trated paper, dated len, which, its a regulaiesubseriber, he must have seert. Innumerable eases of a shut. ler nature are in reeetal and go to show he* remetik41y heightened the ntemor may be nt d ea. ea also w te foe aSh te e - • 0 a L7p:ci4i router dealing tall,with "An Attractive Profit: Sharing Bond Yielding 7' cofey,eviteugesi on Ptissitissot NATIONAL SECUR.ITIES cORPORATION, Limited CONFEDERATION LIFE BLOM, TORONTO, ONT. DON'T 188 HIS A. kiplend'd %out Hounhol4 tioacisly Istroducid An am Cords. TS prodstort by Oa Thritty,nounwits Who wsuts tbinis "Just siittl•Bottsr." Pent +.04r4 4-41ity. Othiplysati.- 4°.Fend Package of Household Specialty Advertised 'in my ,ffeivspaper." Thow• 4n-vott *ill boo MOW: Pty liSsAlsfts4-14 UN, tho atsk. 414inunP.01, -- Box 1240, Sfouttsii, Ossx. Mks offsrs*Arin Juni 2419 It Hoed SoKlaY1 CANNES AND MURDERERS 'EXPERIENCES AMONla THE 'HUDSON BAY ESKIMOS.. Missionary Tells of Lawless People Among Re Worked. A greet werk iS being done far uP On the north-east shores of Hudson THE SINDAY SCHOOL STUDY • INTERNATIONAL LESSON'. 1'1 Lesson, Joseph sold bite t Egypt, Gen., Chaps 27. Golden text, 1. Cor. 13.,4. • Bay in eonveiting the wandering, The portion oar lesson ehaPier Indians and Eskimos -w.ho preeeding the printed passage re- cords Joseph's dreams and ,Jacob's favoritism. The story is perhaps the. most familiar. one in the 014:1 Teo- taxnent. It should he read a'gain in its entirety. • a 'Verse te. Thecoat of Many colora —The marginal reading in the Itet : vised Version for this. phrase in vwjetrhsespeeavbeooe, tishe 'etitx•alootning e ft:LT(1 the phrase being uncertain. 25,. earavan of Ishmaelites—All. the inland toyamerce of the and- ent world was Carried on •by trads" ers, who carried their merchandise on camels, and for purposes of inu-,- tuaI,protection traveled in large coMpanies from one place and from one land to atother, - Spicery and balm. and myrrh Products of the desert and highly kited in, Egypt, where they were used in part medicivally, in part • as incense, and in part. in the that desolate region to - Christian- ity„ A devoted little band of three or four Christian pioneers is sta- tioned there, and a member of that' "Aretie nlisition," who is, in Eng- land for a slioet "leave," gave some of his experieneee of the country and people, , "I am stationed at a tiny settle:s meiit on Great.Whale River," said the Rev. W. G. Walton, "and the 'town' consises of two ,houses and a 'store.' *a live at one of the honees aith a Hudson Bey trader. We get two mails it. year eutethere, but the newapapers only visit us once, so .that you cae imagine our expeetaa tion when ,newspaper • day. conies round. ,At the eed ofAugust every year a- ship eillseandwe hasp to be very careful remember to' order everything we want, because it we fetgot anythinglIve shotild have to wait another' year. Me Eskimos tcess of embalming. never ,wash tlieniselves. 27, 28... Ishinaelites . aliditos- . s "Wishing" Children. , "I have eaten seen an Eskimo ,ivemen welshing her yoiont Children likoa; cat does a kitten—by lick1ng themalltitee. Their only means of livelihood lies in catehieg sealse Tbey.are alwaye the lookout for seal .holes in the ice They eat the bhibber,. that is, -the fit of the tbal, and.clothe themselves or .at any rate make "their trousers out of 'sealskin. It is Very eolat.--es de- grees beam zero as a rulee-and we, Europeans, have to keep roaring fires going in every room: of oar ites—Three solutions' are. offered :air the .dilaeulty raised by the mention here' of two different peoples; Bcfin0 have thought the different names were intended to rather loosely designate the same people. Other commentators •have suggested that probably it was a mixed company ' of traders to „ whom Joseph was sok!, there being both Ishmaelites / and Ifidiattites present: " ,To this' ' explanation the • Bible - narrative. leads 'much plausibility, isioce, ac- : .cording to ethat narrative as vitt, • ;new have it in Genesis, Ishmael .and Malian Were. bah; sons Of Abra- ham.. .Their descendants would -,!--7-be• Paalate -don't:live in aillaattat therefore he elOtely :a -elated and, in. -1;ut,-sePaisitelY in families, 96 as 'to: the earlier generations at least, have. as wide a field for hunting as .have many , interests in common.. possible. ' Ilea are a Very' revenge- The sam biblical narrative, aotis fill people. A short while ago all ever; makes Joseph ' a cousin --of the Eskimo ents out hunting and ea* a • black dot in the distance on. the lee. ,ointter°13x1Vp121:mnahtien!'•' seasticia.;e8etielitaane." On 043ProaCbing he . wade eertaiP or d by, e ' major of Old Testa - that it was A Seal 'ill" protruding In nt scholars to-dayas that the oc- ;from 41. seal hole. • ` • , nameseuncies . e%fe ,otihm6.-antrindsiectatireantes 'Le ' Bloody Feud. •••'' Re fired and hit it, but whet he pointing to the interweaving of two get up to it he folind that ' he had different eitecounts • of the same accidentally, shot a man. He palled event from which the Genesis tw- ee the -Widow,. welds how isorry he •rater drew his information, one Of 1' Was, and, artneasing to help the wo- • these aecoutts mentioning the Ish- the hunter killed all elle dead men's, Price. of at adult slave. I man, Asked for forgiveness. The ma,elites as. the. people • to whom son ,pf the dead niau. altoied, aud, ,ToskIpli was soldl and the oilier when. he hearel. testle0s off And kill- plontiotiing,Ilut.natinitdp„,_,„:,_„,„,,,_ i-cLeille_the -un ate—lainte e ' Twenty - pieces .of-ei re= ells., • family in, revenge. lie retaliation twenty shekels, two-thirds the • family,. arid so ,the 'feud began. Into Egypt—Whither they were When We. were informed of this and bound to dispose of their products; came to investigate we found that 29. Rent his , clothes—A eustems ' there was only ene Man surviving 'ary. stet ef_elistress and. mourning. out of .t.w.6 families at- abont, raper- Ma The child—Better, the -10. stns. We could do nothing but lee, The Same IfebreW word is used teat the survivor... • a . 'and toadesignate a tervaet "They_ were terribly- lawless until and sometimes a- young child, as NV,e tante, and even now when it the. well a a Youth, as here. ' grip of starvation oemmit the- meet. ,tfl. Sent ' the „ coat—Perhaps by awful deeds. Lately a, mother, MY; one of. their number, when/ they aged -terribly, by hunger, went. to followed shortly; hence the expres- the length et eating her twe -chile Rion also they 'brought it to their &en. !mailer killed bit wife and father. ' lived. on her, and when' she heti 33. An evil beast. hath devoured been eaten ne Wiest to .niurder! thtee him' -Jacob draws the desired in - Other men's' ehiklren. Luckily he ference at the sight of the blond - was prevented. .' There are no tut- stained coat, ' • tree lave. They don't etead, but $4. Sackcloth—Coarse eleth worn think nothing of murder. When as a sign of ineurnieg. ' they- are (put out,''. as the saying Se. His daughterse-Oelt* one , pee, they must take A life. , They* daughter, Ilitiele hes been mete, don't mind whom they kill when tamed in. the narrative thus far. they are- angry a:s long' as they kill (Compare chapter St) , . tame ones. There is no abet of pun- Sheol—The Hebrew Underworld ishreent for. the erinte. They are es. abode of departed spirits with - very fond tsf aitiging, • and their teas *tit distinction as to. their moral <wit° or only game is coonected quelitiee. The New Testament therewith, A piece of seal bete, equivelent is Hades. Prone: the de- with:a little liele in It, is euspeetled seriptione of Sheol given in Ise.. 14. from the 'reef,' They all alb round 4-24 end Ezek. Va. 1742 and else - the 'room,' and each tries to throw where we learn that the 'dead in an oak,* Into the hole. Ire who Sheol were theught of as "etill eueeeeds has to eing a. song, but, he, ,e,easemed, ' who sings meet songs Wins the theelOy, glitoustlikebiliinfge. " a ' I"' Me! t PIMP Zie/Vett Vrtartorts37 e thus l'otiphvelisii • . Ageptian vont lUstit<, 'over tills Pantie. Ilea essannen in later inectiltione from the tenth century B. 0. forwerd. „calslain rd. flag allarksOlist lat the inehutionera. Another tean4f lation ift "'Chief of the. butelterts." Compare "chief butter" and s'eltief beker" in the eidasernient Arm. their ways. ' _ d ONO large familiee, and the race ould inerease trentendqusly were t not for accidente and niiirdere. hey are, however, yeti' impressed y the Chrietian treed, itil'irwe aro raduallY .tstting Ulm to eliaoge • h lieve that incidents in ta dream *lash teem, entirel4new are really to. • i What Vt/hert thodSVII doesn't know else tot& 1M Makee a !e* mere hypeeritei; • the had* *sandy tor Ow 1141411 tOstS MN tht. hs and Colds. So EverYbody seeme to knew when a Ws. as waste of time to tell •a man ellow ss in love, et'en before he who Isuffere ISOM A t hronie thirst to uspects et himself. up. • - • ;