Loading...
Exeter Advocate, 1903-9-3, Page 2•••••••••••••wwwwww.,.. 44, KEY TO I SUCCESSFUL LIFE 8eoret Whereby Reverses May be Trams - formed Iuto Triumphs, tian slavery, How old wee Joshua when the mantle of the dead Moss feU, upon his shoulder*? He lied and five. He was already preseing on tOward ds iinatieth mileetane, So God has for you and me, if we only throw ourselves upoo hie mercy already passed usqoe. ear4 a mission, of OhriStian Uaehilsesa. goOdt arid 1,h1e banes, w114141 out ROBBERS 11EAP EAltVEST beneVolent and millionaire straagert tio be teneptee of the Holy Gtio . It the eventual victim enakes haste te evitS love evil pease and joy. disappeas, It ia order When he come* U4III aeaseeeessesi by Stich enemies as ENOLISEE BURGLAR IFIAS NQ examine' the contents ot the port- • enx-y ad 171abreci anti, eteplisei QpNTIAMNV1.1. RIVAL folio. sat*el, or portmanteau &bat he raises the cry that he bas hem thoughts aslid einful luete ard 'Vats robbed. The thieves in tide twang' (1'44'$ Pr°PO4V be r4dk'' "detilud- gfo.bits glirepean People Rene or crime speculate on the nature/ dis 8 Taiey cut oft bee head and 14 Men and wentene with many years about So pobiLeei it in the houee of cl" ThCLE:aslya' °27' the average Man. lins At even though we iney be old Ihe. lead of the I'hilestines l'eanta honesty. Wirier strong teraPtatioa ee eteipped oi1 Ide armor tired serit irito Of watied OPnertunitiee te Mir die- Weir Stioas aifel among the neople. Eneppa hoe long %littered abrea4 Illackinailipee-aleo prospers on Gag credit. 1.0144 mgat ,avi, foxed °Awe .114.4471 _1.40 cuenviabie reputation of breed, cion!iiient far better than, in Eng - _ By an eaemerober of *mg eberox 1 mu* arid tbeae eweereeenseises psess, eit,,ig. tx•e„nlii,g, uml letting loose On 4331g" Viler° glill'iftlals a till VErred ag4ordlin to „,eAeS,St! =Pr i bills college znen as well 8.8 ea. inisters reerVerdjerelie7 9ed can blezes a re- tines abused leio teed - B t. 4 1-• tale evorta toe most skillful pielepock nre cenlilig ZattinIscruetitereuxtitt e. u wor,st • '• e a ffraltinr itst leliiiinWreCiThiff-TkrtZ ' in annual Conferetwe fox prayer and h - vine') Ines bee9 tursed of all, it was pUfwiti4 payroa-4 ets‘ l'uat aa Italy stoads firat in the !ale gatne -$ c • ' - ' sereocee of ta chu ee, of ed i • 5, ' .°. ° " bell nne - men and women Berlia is fall oa candle. Abroed furnishes an iee u.ur. et l'oron7te. at tbs counanniOn. With God ead for the Y many 'years Qf Sm4a time among awe iceolafteme defiere of tke Matter Of highwayMen, or Germane' A tissvateu team etsteas0 saxs :eel down by the tiatu, angel. ono day was PastOr. Silo wished te atio w v - by a prdiee t'ee "ft I • is ot A Owen Poris. be ft said to the , see teeo TerY Wee letteng beoatiful name is blost-them01 the time of Dickens' revelations m A boolt could be. writteo on the Aube - by WI 11.1411%rtanclat 0 AgrIcultnm Ottawn.13_, , „ s 1, -ive ago a poor women attenoed tbei aus Iry G -41 ,w prosoetion as cos 0 out St noble subsistence to thousanda soeue ex we 4,1 e, u ts,331, as .4 stass, Ass. se00015. was struck , AN. W it It vette .,eaen tam mule of awes is 4.0 swiadlers of the class /mown to the . uewepa ers. for lucre, make them. ed from the f011owing text deneaua geustie services in Eaesas In bat the iiieneber o t s • • - Wtt'alltul "rid" the 4" " 3 in doubt about AlOeS not at all deeerva thia rein ta- Bev. bratik De 'Witt Talmage pleae a: day on los wtq. g ' " 3 be '"axen were each or tbe deall. Vitae holy ' Matter of fact, poor old England alsglace of the French press, many aud will be with teee.- i was the result ot 11r. lo Y 1 °4- 's death? faXe was scar d d • ilfteee nitel'o Drell i - th 's' al s r ... tie% which. dates more or less from selveS the allies of -theee scoundrels, bee la. Sbe bed been fer .. mitteet ur great bust -twee" hem is bee.ne found eer past deharueeheriTa. .esahlesecihoitwiblril` rtale-tneell goi"risietrrillnwtese.rano, and 1;4 show "OliVer Twists', mid It. would be eaey jeet of blaCirmailieg in etranee, Ira° 'defiers ot to prove from. police statistice that One of the grate et novels ever has any grrea evangelist BURIED TREAft-tURE, written, so eonsieered by ;natty of to take liis place ,, la. w 11. her Mae a druaen huslaand and two qical ot tie eroteot to shove tbe percentage o 'ea is mien a o a toThmer.11107)1QutrvetrrelireansdwioOtdhi:..rt jdomunrts„ our best critics. is 'tor Iltago's1 answer; not one, no -t, one - ,,,, ableefilthily dressed childree. The eese mar teeteed of li-fixn 4114 Ills peopie„ the pickpockets arrested on the con- meeeterplece. "Le:, Miselables." atuid-1 10Y idea. If u. ene hula ebet- talked. with her and at last de - you, this elle tratheel4r. loody, eitled to place her on probation fog or hoped any ere be be pzr4jy. ThO dek il mover tie eat -wog goo tinent is. a small one. On the other alists„ does net noweeedays melee hand, the reason of ibis rimy be that many victims in England. However, all the art pellery of that ,reasured: to take . e* book ate meet wonderful description . tell . as six months. At tLe end of six „ 10 (rue a tis arpria. in tau, tbe artoo dodgers ot London little the Spanish prisoster and ha cone Iteetiiineellavt*orrd oPf44,4.e„;t1Pal?olbeSenwilhliecit etlIte.i alvelenegIri.viMugo2Iti‘yas wrietenr dealt. ' ern' el TentelliZuz's.e‘Z atrzliae renonkIrseil to 1(4,111 tOn1S33 of eashtarettla ailei they Vas., ,Caro to practiee abroad. because of ' &mere still reap an ilhundaut. hael,-,, tle'' pictures t:?/e doWnfAil of "Napo.. Chicago institute and Mood y church ratted set, stwse'rt es? " „ai,'"' I toned tais body to OA undl of Betio the great tleveritY 9i the f4areign .est. If you come to think of it tba lean the Gre-:.t" 4.b the b:.1.ttle field,. have never been so great as they ,AND " '"° '433 a"'" 'then • , courts in dealiag, with this foien of itufttetert4b.oeie•eo.soweiond:teort:dititoitt siasio-o,nyllirtllw. "Itlei'rance, for instance. there scenes varief[y of this form ot robbery. to be a fixed penal tskia applied to ,l'housands of lettera go out yearly forelgri voletirs a la tire, as* that il front Barcelona to people la all parts code. Sive years' Imprint:meet. It Idersees laeing tialt+ell frOln the Varttnia is. the Maximum allowed of by the ot the Nemo, their memo awe F. Is probable most of the pieltpochete continental directories. tied face, $to certainly Lad a, good.. bo °iterate abreact aro tlerman$ or ' This swbuthe by tee way, woe in, lane, though AMerican enterprise ' vented by a prezteheten named St. much. by 'whet bapeened as what. dio gAle 44 , e • ..._,l .., „ „ , , , „ not happen, For ;easy Lours tea. ire 019'gcsu heart e'Neitillels ever Pro" beeeess noels, skey spirit inupirew 1.1-46. 'AU We valient men exoee is not laekizig in thie,aireetion lairto. ,leirmine arid there is still eiNtnnt 4 upon w e 5 muter to a ge . . ler - ern ) r ( erEke , 1 , c tu 798 ea,WO of efetee:,- eeen,ea teeeetded , duced were, heing silent in tke grave. face. /ler wi;ole we w.s ‘4.,,,,,,,.,,,,I. ,-, and went all flight and took tile body The English fret 'ay en ee letter ‘ti tttn he bb* in 1 . , to 4 hub t . tt it , t si elle moor s gospel st!,eil ylapting It woo now a 04,14114n eillieeoreteevoe; of salo ;led the betifee Of bis, seals eatisfacticet -from the statement thet Parisian tradesman nanted Pauvert, fluttered ties wacy mid tz,At. As i k..10„. e . i ..,n.; .4 .7,,la yi. rale usese ac,s, . , n.t , Jztt le front tale wall of Iletibeaten awl eitutei in tide bi•auelt ot crime the English in which he asee foe an ital.-ewe ol eeouge teessitie,g same 0neen espested i eons. and vezne a 41.......r.,, ........., er and sister, no matter how euti to .inbeele and bora Vim t14ero. burglar for &hill an courage hive no tuude so oe to be able to travel to a I,. 5. An 1 was with moses. so I. next day upon bis death httl• • 11:flat years a dissolute character, He"•..4 n • .* e „MS IA OM that WO111031 moved away eud left , eehe poor botey that might. leave of Waterloo. Attlee tit is greet teas- to -day. The Instal:Ames, at leovrtiz, our church. A couple of years ago': eboolea aloe te. Coe_ ni. W. Wit. ter et literoture topples over the. Oche were neer d. oillg better %or,.. .th-ot woman called upon Vie. At Die amor that woo no nee to Deeriti Feeeell coloseue. tte ea th trerreeles; than at tbe Wesent un!e• 43111, first. I did not know her. Not only , or to ,8atit potter, Maw we beWiiii, and the dead renturieS come faith . whet, is more, tha verYtsuuu_lu.1:.,a4-7 bad 00 grace of God eleariteed her' ten itz u frig too armor that win out of %leer niesie tontas mei t00% ter Mr. Mood,v died tire mign.teese race. hut the ntarlk6t et (11441,400n, on in perpetual wondetitteat. '7.St`eftt'lltileicitirerlivea.ceseekeeueit:efaUsIntwton almost_eolir_elys. ele.fita beuro, cwoutint- re:7.4:141 chit 19faittlif' r4;torit9e' Yet after ail in leaeieg tee thrill,. • te log. eaoeuess ton, tqllextee. t '! same one bokoet at navAitoo, big :len:, 1 atn iteeti•eseed not so tho fact tliat to it n d the averege artist might call a beateo TheilleaGed for tae faitixful iit all Continental rival. One rarely reede epot where a buried treasure wee a . - apo -g itV("1 t to IVP l' '3." to Onide N'! W" Cletra werhe and oda Work y014 InaY be and how mane wasted ', e. -. -- ' -- Ito will tot toleeele an in- abroad of houees being broken tote 'Meilen, peeved woe to have hie earS Alre behind. shall not GOQ in- . leil hinnSelf -nal-. •nottwg„ anli4ou6ly la 0. • wanatee for tee sayee reeleer, romps 5 coo vim ausss twit waiut.... 5pire, 2.30%; eee litt you up 4,4 be Mat to Tils nolre if they crat pre- att night when people are sleeliing in sham in the p.oveeds. $t. I, amain The entente' ttotray la in them and the denger of deteetiou Is' said lie bad been valet to a ruelelte little while he would take hie 1 field changed, that wonian's life ? Shall' vela it 1 .11•0 eanip and is taking the beoh. of great In the last, few vears there man, who, geeing the &meet's oi glass and seaa ethe ,:reurnthig .,!$ Ged will bless the lives of moiler ot the, divine rower gitard your re-. a .....„ a .1 be; 4-i, v , a_rel,...valle.vs. e.vere *Ate:. ite ie ee Chi; . e. - • tl .ough the 'ming days as ?doses and josemes 4.... ,..1'. 440,..Og ,,, °P +40 Klenle have he en two such cases in Nrance.,the revolution. bud buried 0 ells5t. . . eoeol tern to lus s,tail ofi.t.cors anal eeares loatnellevesler%eer:ateleneemitte. Is often -e, • , e 1 . . ' - - g' 614 16 evtA liaNiPg wielied Vargs. and two ante', and In each eaen the Containing $,"0,000 in gold .4%1 a sa'Y : -Ito You teo lam ? tiara Vell a epiritinal pruning hook. it lope! Neally esery royal order lies 0, - - '1' - - ''T V6 -5- arli Arrested burglar abeatt oe . Lord es CM.' t proved to be a „ quantity of jiewel-ii. St. Viradr* wne tOerefore ahout (lied himself. for countrytuan of Dill Sylces. In raelt,iarrested lit ignl, anal it then C41310 1ie4rd are; rieu•s from asouelty ? We oft eel -tele brartavs, of the meat trea F.. royal ilirignia, la Germany Otte of ' wItoteeer die7e7010TS Christ or the ea,e Ile nent031CO Was 0. heavy one; •,` out his story wt quite true. A, of the bunion race in order tba0 the most honorable of orders, Wei ranst bare re-enforeeinentis or we are los\L" In the me:aniline Over CV ot", el* 1),;ot4les may be,ttee develop lethat started by Ring William called r2•,11, ...,"!4,4,14tillat?,..al.6 affd 1.,41e indeed. one of the two was senteue-i ire,vnTO hail treen belled under the hille anarelare liarfAtal 'neater with and WOW. WO Ure AR teudy to reel ciao order of tine rron (Iro$s.''' i'ku4er., ''''4"14:'ere ii,.6 „Ito „,33^°111,'Ile eti to pellet servitude for life. circumstances deterilred. Vtifortue hio tteronao re-enforcer:tents. That conntee the neefulaess Of a Waning Would that to -day 0,0 ll'eavenle ' iera ""I'Cli,n3,_,".."15 Ile"' 'X'' 'Ae 44%91 OPERATE ITY DAY Li PRANCE. loately the ratite hare been titled, ea IA v devi-ive event. Vietttv'S kook in a. terapotal sense, 'Why vita i Zing, instead of an earthly potei.- 'ar'41 11° tt4P) 44411061W 0143• Ilit. 20. , ,e. , , i. per Inver/ably the enevaletes 6tuei bit trade wan a, belie:toll tat hooter. She dew to the eke e d tids - -et 1 0 tee zee 1 t i , , . bear*11. V.), lend ilsey tiliall surely be lite "'‘'enen 40115earen " ' 1 ., . statteeted of V e. a et It .t..ui ,4ecleed„ To the spiritual eeettelinx the deatIt'Al 4'tbe sign of the Iron Cross." Way o‘evtiVrow.te,.„.1-.%tvist.,4•0a ..,wit,ttt, 7.21,:r:::gs174r,:izaztt,017.,,zitcl.t,,, pllf,',',4,ith 11.b.i.,",„.',4146t111;111 ;a'a4c4sertgierlirellle: ' *Frig -0 4 r , V, . ', 4 ,0,3t O 3PIS 3n a_spai tea tense . 0, . g i 33 33,4„43, oxei your .. gleAnt Ii) th3e " more i° I'M' 1'4'114. '', wars a misforture, but u. laleeeiug,),woll'ed ad Will continue to n'ott 'b.' ....... I -- ---1 b - II 'Clillg 74114/°,:etttr-alliZStaere: •SileiC41 fihs4945t4illaf4 iii4iit."10.14.7114133n4oilfs 041net104; III; itly"' The X'-aPP114.'nvi''' r'trv 'I'''''t in ', of the Atone; Christian is not al-Ilt Provo *at in Ms name You haeo to do all He core tte briefer tenor , a 6 4 iir nii,i n It. Wa% MO InCii. of reeenforeements at :, Let me illustrate this truth in, a 01%iro wonders. Saved by grace. .t41 a bel7 name and remember mv4Y a't It'w. -va- -- -- - - .--.. 'Most produetive forms of thrall to 0" Cri“f4311 mono A whivit 4lectrot"fel i e -.....o. -,.. . C„••••. •••d••••••0 ...Ir. ii..re may you alwaSs Continue to epitteill'at to obey is better litan tlaeriiiee• the visit of the increased penalty, for.1_,, „ _ . _ . _ the Viet eh :nary. It is the leek of „ w "4 • ''''''"' ''''''''' ...bw '"*. t 11 w b) • VI 111. S i • f 11 'TSe I Ora. roal'e its uilliing and oho- as in England, herglar,e in ininitillt4 wi44°41 unwell (olitoitY alSi cirefiUlitY . /it NI in your tOWII u, noble, true ua .7. eta 0 e a 3,otic e ow bee mem house. fait vietims. lh1Eereeeeforeeneetnie which may dot I men, who was tle. father of a large tuen• Anent, -to glory 1 much 3nOrn eeverely stony liq in the battle of life. The tem wilts us of miother gem,- itome not °ply sympathized with TITP, RUNTI V' 111100 1.1..0 kit) teftel IT BAIN'S DIAXONDS. does not want to have to 'kill jj Welly. Suddenly le died. The thee. Ile oply 4ffoim for" prvan- wan their ocelninanta are away. CECEESE CIZEAT. tUo "I AULT, BE WITII TUNE." Aimee who came into the beret nit ulzoeded re.eneoreemeote.f tbe widow hecaufe She had lost ber en insure his safety, though if he is 6-411.1:1 . Chcceosuentlftelse. in DiTereet eaugint in the act ot robbery he in - To doeleatt was vommitted tee tesel husband, but because site eeemed to variably tries to kill. He Is always Each country lias Rs favorite vompering a country. tad by ware have no vieible means of support. armed with a revolver and e` ()Pa- close. The lewleen make the Ortie Rho eeople. To him at tee supreme Per eldest son was a nothing. ye ger. but generally relies on Ms 3.01, woe. wrete, et mew memeut CinneS the asetirance of the was a Lothoute Plant- bad de' l• my" for silencing his aggressor. I. mtre. end in Nu of hallo; cavted hy But he does not want to MU. Two tee vasm in lerwettiation. To vide men executed on the Place de la, 110- Endolet eleee $4 iq IN/ Cheddar. fir:4 made in the. Englith town after INTERNATIONAL LESSON, SEPT. 6. Lied of Ileste, "I will be %lint thee.' lot e P Text of the Leeson I am ot ditine re-erdervement voli.b came. Le seemed to be entirely unfitted to earet, ute friends. tee same woe his father. Mentally and morally' 1-13. Golden Text, to .losima when he took command of assume the reoPonsibilitie (If. ,thu Prov. xiv , 12. the leraelitieh too es may also be borne. _ But burdlY bud tbe °°t°e°ien 1 .Mtet to us. Wi-en Pled gave to died W3,01 a, charge eamo Geer ilea etior Lae events of the last ieeeort • his couruiveion be said. "Josh- hot'. Instead ot being a clinging' David and bis 600 went to Achieh, us, if N'OU will he true to um and vinot,e stiffent'd int° 14°1%1111' erdc• ling et Gath et the 1'111116d/1es' and' eget under my standard I wiil he we it thee as 1 ens with tlny Tl.at eitine stirrer which Veil wee to Joshua la. gave to our Cent emit father:4 -that divine help be tval cis.. to us if we will truet idut mei believe on Lim and UN c for him e eiore I woe'al ineeire every clement to voter:Idly go faith and I believe, often uses the sharp prun- /welsh taking David and Ins Meet tio v Let God wenis him to do. 1, Ing hook of death to spiritually de- with them 1.0 battle. In chapter woeld lespire all Cluistians to live velop his undeveloped ehildren. Ire xxx. David and his 600, returning etel vork with a lease Leart, be- takes away his Moses in orter... :to Ito Liking, find it burned with tiro eau, ti e reeults of out future e(nno thi•ow the spiritual r0:,non:•ibiltheS and no traco of their bunnies. Then filets are as mire as God's promises upon Lis Josituas. Ire se.ys to us followed one of David's greatest Me Sure. one and all ; "It is .not right for Wben even his 600 turned vim oh young men, to learn to lean against him and talked of stoning him, but David encouraged himself in the Lord, his God, and in due time, through the young man of Egypt, he recovered all and more and rewarded an, maldng it a law in Israel that those who tarry by the stuff shall share equally with those who go to the battle (xxx.. 6, 1,9, 24, 25). 1-3. Now the Philistines fought' , Ire wout to work to supply bred receiving Lilting from Achiele lie for that family ot little ones. Ira .11welt there n sear and Lour months, became the stall epon which his malting continual raids upon. neigh - mother leaued. It WaS ti 0 death of 'boring tribes (chapter xxvii). The 1 his father that developed, him. It neat chapter tells of Saul's visit to the more tn. less resistant -character was the hillock of a paternal grave the witch of Ender and Samuers last: of the surface wbere they fell. by 'Mich .t.1 e son was able to find massage to him, In chapter =Ix. One of his couteenporarles inentious steppirg etones to a tbrone. nods, the lords of the Philistines oblett to a,n instance wbere, on a broad plata over an area about five miles in meter, were Scattered 3,000 to 2,000 masses of metallic iron, the crap. malts weighing from half a ton to a fraction of an ounce. There is little doubt these masses formed part of a meteoric shower, although no record exists as to evlen the fall took place. Curiously enough, near the centre where most. of the meteorites have reteorites Contain Black ansl Transparent Diairionds, Diamonds from the skim cenveYed to earth in meteoric showers, ia a tbeoLV first broached by Meydenhau- er. The diamond, be says, can be of Quetta complained. bitterly that ill • smic origin only, having fallen as luck had forced them to becOme nuir- a raetearite at a late period of the derers when they bad never had the earth's formation. The localities intention of becoming anything but where dianiOnds are foetid Contain burglars. With two other men OW the residues of not very compact bad broken by night into a house meteroic masses which may have 'al- tbe Rue Poussin, log it to len in historic ages and Penetrated be uninhabitated, knoWing that the more or less deeply, according 'to faintly was away at Nice. Hoe:ever, Yost, God will he with ilex Chris - lien workers of this present genera- tion. We fight antler his gloilous beamea David had proved it by experience wnen he wrote, "Thou Laet given a banner to them that fear thee, that it may be displayed because of tin truth." 'Under that banner the church of God bas won victories in all ages. Solomon saw upon your fatl:er's and mother's spiritual life You must team to lean upon my divine arm, and mine alone. And in the leaning I will protect thee and care for thee, as I did for your Christian pareals," THE SWEETEST NOTES OF 003. The sweetest gospel music is more it on its march tend pronounced it often found to be the echo of "terrible as an army with banners." , dirge than to come bora a fantasia He saw it later, triumphant over all; or a serenade or a dithyramb. Moz- evil, enterieg like a bride into the 1, art's "Last Requiem," composed for home of a beidgroom and ber lord his own obsequies, was his master - leading her into the banquet hall and placing over her the banner of love. GOSPEL WORE NEVER DIES. God is with living Chrisbian work - piece. A beautiful legend teaenes this : Many years ago a German knigbt wanted to change the towers of his castle into a great aeolian wa(eb It is named. Brie is o popular Preneti eon cheese; and Camembert. orglitating Nottintuilt't andther. Theta ebeeees 31,14+ cured in eaves, where tine temperature 1101.0r WO above 32 to 34 degrees. Thee are ready for maiketing in May tied Natant- ia,nrolonaistoesr.tunate caretaker slept on the , her. lloquenort, o eelebrated Preinele cheat*, Is made frora I he mingled MCI' IIARVEST AT 'TANI), litilk the getall1;na:en.cdusulierflItntii,4satofinOeivie4 Tn these matters the housebreaker A1110. TI'eSe rheereS are aloe rip takes few risks, lie usuelly reaps vied in CaVeli, but the temperatene rich harvest. The love of the French ie hot a 4,0 degrees., for economy is proe'erbial. and on- °Akin to the Roquefort elteeSe is other typical feature of the national , that 'mental Gorgonvoiti, made ta character IS 'that PeoPle who smo Italy atter :endive. proreews. It h like to keep their nnrneY in cask miliier then llotietfort, met not itIvItekreorthtehyo civenseeeh rittenoclorecnoint tot te. low- ceillotialerer. good; but it is sold nate/ Another Italian cheese, er and middle classes have little con- the parmesan is eery bard, one is inlenee in Savings banks or Invest- usually grated. been found is a crater with ragged pleas, and since the Panama smaeli edges, three-quarters of a mile in di- this conndence still has fUrtber (11- tbie'ialuebrIllnragenre, cohreieg;attleod bienlolleeldgiuibn3. &meter and about GOO feet deep, bear- minished. So in in0St rooms and it is Ing exactlY tbe appearance which &vertu:tents in Paris the robber is as- i lowed to ripen to putrefaction, extraordinarily ricle being al. would be produced had a reiglity mired of finding a sum of bard cash, i hence its horrifyieg odour to unace mass of iron or falling star struck the ground. scattering in all direc- tions and burled itself under the sur - against Israel, and the inen of Isra- el Red from before the Philistines and fell down slain in Mount This was the battle from which David was hindered, and thus again God delivered David from having anything to do with the death of Saul. It is sad to see the people of ers in the continuity of service. He earth When the striugs, were first ?el faallingibenforechtt dellaersthoofusGol • was and two nuttinga1.143,g000 to fiat will never allow the go pel work of strung from the toevers no sound ascii. o e • came therefrom. No note past generations to die. Obristian work has immortality. Like the gov- ernment of England it goes on unin- terruptedly from generation. to gen- eration. Waen Eing William IV. breathed his last the archbishop of Canterbury immediately hurried to the home of a young girl. He knock- ed at the door of ter palace until it was opened. Then he smamoned this young girl to arise and come down and meet him. Velma she en- tered the parlor he bowed to her, saying : "The king is dead! Long live the queen!" 3Vben that young Fire, after she had grown to be an old woman of eighty-six, lay dying the watchers stood anxiously about her bed. As soon as ahe had breathed her last, and tbe attending pbysician pronounced her dead, ner eldest son, Edward, was greeted with the acclamation, "Long live the Sing 1" Rulers may come and ridere may go, but the government goes on, no matter what human hand ;ante> grasp the scepter. In the fourth cliapter of Mark, Christ conipares Chrietian work to 'a sower going forth to sow. Some of that geed tvill surely fall -upoa good grouad, whica will yield thifte, gan to lead forth tbe children of" struck, because the slender fingers af (Deut. xxxii., 30), but the best of the spirits of tee sununer winds were men are nothing if God is not with not strong enough to bend the them. It makes one's heart ache to strings, although they were able to read in verse 2 of the death of Jon - neatly touch them. Ilut when will- athan, and we cannot be astonished ter came, then the blizzards had at the depth of David's lamentation wrists bunched with muscles. With over one whose soul was so knit the strong touch of musical masters with his own (II. Sam. i., 17-27), they began to run tbe gamut of but we wonder as we read that it every scale. Accompanied by the was over Saul as well as Jonathan. shriekings of the tornadoes. the David saw not bis enemy, but the strings of the castled towers began Lord's anointed. Saul had known to vibrate and send forth the swees much of the mercy of God, but now est of melodies. God sounds his he is in the hands' of those who sweetest notes upon the harp strings know no mercy (Prov. xxix.. 1). of our spiritual hearts when we seem 4-6Saul died and his three sons to be the most weak and helpless. ' ' ' and his armor bearer, and all his He often develops his cbildren by the men that same day tosether pruning hook of trouble. He makes What, us lean heaviest upon 'the diyine then? 'Where are the dead?. The words of the Lord Jesus in 'heart when our ,own tearts have been L gashed open by the gravedigger's Luke xvi. and other words of the spade, and when the dark nights of Spirit as plainly recorded in Scrip - sorrow have obliterated all consfei- tura teach us that, if we are redeem- lations save the one star 'which ed by the precious blood of God's gleamed over the Bethlehem crib on great sacrifice (Lev. xvii, 11; Heb. the night that Zesus Was born, are 22), "To die is gain." "To de- part is to be with Christ, which is NEVER TOO OLD. far better" (Phil. in 21, 23), and How old was Moses when he be. when the spirit leaves the body our conscious personal life continues, and the angels who minister to the re- deeined guide or carry us to perfect bliss in His presence, where we await the resurrection and the king- dom of God. - 7. .lerael * * toreook the cities and fled, and the Iebilidtines came nevelS in ahem. Here are not etnly tee 'defeat and sleagleter of the Level's people, Is- rael, but 'their possessions taken and enjoyed by their enemies. 'When Chriatieunt refuse to walk humbly eoieh God, in simple reliance ileum Him, and i:nrri 'their bacee upon Ilien in. order to fellowship with Ilhe world which Iles Hirre, She ene- mies of raod lain come in like a go -me eiety, some a hundred fold. Is.rael into the wilderness? Was he It must reproduce itself multapotent- ly in the human Berns of the succeed- ing gonerallene. When Dwight L. Moody died aid his work die? With- out doubt Mr. Moody was the great- est ee-angelist of the past century. His personality not only appealed to siethers, but also to the greatest Christian workers of his day. His voice axed pen raisad vast stone of money /or Christian work. Be was a gospel ineesenger who stirred Eng- land and Aseeeica on his evangelistic fours. He built the fameus Moody institute at Chicago. He built tee faleaus enatifeates at Northfield. He of life wleva he went forth to liber- atlesred aneeng the Massaehleset- ate the ebildren of Israel from, Egyp- a young man? No. His hair must have been eabite. His skin must have been wrinkled. Micbael Angee lo's wonderful chisel has cut him in stone as a giant. There Moses sits in the Roman capital to -day, with ai•ens and back knotted in muscles, with beard tossed of a tenepest, with features swarthy enough to frown down any mob and with fists like a sledge hammer. But with all of Michael Angelo's genius he could not Orange the facts. His chisel had to Make Moses an old man. He had almost passed bis eightieth milestone face. Dr. Foote, in cutting a see - tion of this meteorite, found the tools were injured by something vastly harder than metallic iron. He examined the specimen 'chemically, and soon after announced to the sci- entific world that the meteorites con- tained black and transparent dia- monds. V...74;j41,4, IRON DUKE'S WEAKNESS, Patronage as It Was in the Early Days of Last Century. A. book of memoirs just published has a good story of the Iron Duke: - Colonel Wellesley was very much in debt and embarrassed when he left England, and a small tradesman in Dublin was of great assistance to him by the loan of four or five hun- dred pounds, which on his arrival in India in, due course of time was re- paid; and I have yeard that On his return from India he walked into the shop of the tradesman, a boot and shoe maker, and asked him if he re- collected him. The man said "Well," said Sir Arthur, who was secretary to the Duke of Richmond, aeon I be of any service to you?" The man said, "I want nothing my- self, but I have a son." "Give me his name," said Sir, Artbur.s. "you did me a kindness once, and I do not forget it." Ile got the man's son a place at £400 per annum. It is an interesting side light on the methods of Government, patronage in those days. Will the memoirs dealing with out present enlightened -age have sim- ilar revelations to make? - and it is surprising to hear what sums they do lind. The other day a fire broke out in tbe attie of a house in Paris and amongst the garrets which were burned out was one occupied by a milkman's carrier. Ms despair, bordering on insanity, on learning what had happened was explained by the faet that be kept in a. box in his room $4,000, $1,500 of which was in gold. "THE POLISHERS." That is the way of the French. A provirmial assize court recently dealt with a gang of housebreakers, known as "the polishers," who were convicted of a number of robberies in farmhouses, the sums stolen varying from $100 to $1,000. Their modus operandi was to send two women of the gang, representing themselves as 'French polishers, who offered their services at such moderate rates they were almost always engaged. I? was their business to watch where the money with whith they were paid where the work was done was taken from. The cache having thus been located, the rest was easy. The cache was sometimes an old kettle, sometimes a hole in the mattress, but most often the cupboard. This custom of using the cupboard as a safe is a rooted one in France. French servant girls all save and all keep their money in cash in their rooms. These rooms are situated on the sixth floor of the big Parisian apartment Muses, and -this floor is elbsOlutely- deserted during the day time. All the doors of the rooms being fastened with cheap locks, it will be seen that the housebreaker has an easy task. As a rule, how- ever, he carries a complete outat of burglar's tools, for the manufacture of which England still has the speci- alty. VICTIMS SELDOM COMPLAIN. THE PIGEON'S FLIGHT. The pigeon's capacity for flight is marvellous. Many have flown from Nantes to Lancashire, 410 miles, in a day, and the winner of a race froin the Shetlands to London, over 600 miles, madethe journey in sixteen hours, at an average speed of thirty- seven miles an hOur. It is on the continent that the con- fidence trick especially flourishes. Hardly a week passes in Paris or Berlia but one hears of some one who haS been robbed in this way. But, as a leading French police official pointed out, these cases are hardly ever taken up by the police, because almost invariably the aaual victim was in intention a thiet also. I -lav- ing exchanged portfontos with the cusdomed nostrils. Some person' have a saying, "Gorgou2ola is il cheese to swear by, Lintburger tI swear at 1" From 'Tolland coin( the Edam and tlie pineapple cheese, both made in cleanly manner and very popular. TEN -MILLION -TO -ONE CITANCE, One in 10,000,000 Born in 1903 Will Be Alive In 2009. Taldrig a million a.s a basis of cal- culation, statistics sbow that at the end of seventy years there will sur- vive 312,000 out of 1,000,000 per- sons. At the expiration of eighty years there will be 107,000 survivors of the original raillion. When it comes to ninety years of existence, there is a terrible thinning of the ranks. Only 8,841 out or the 1,e 000,000, or one in 115, will live to that age. At ninety-seven, but 211, or one in 410, will be alive. At ninety-eight, half of tiles° nearly will have dropped out, leaving only 119 souls alive out ol the original 1,- 000,000. One's eitteeees to reach ninety-eight, aceordine te these tab. let's, is about one in 840. Of the original 1,000,000, only 54 will live to see ninety-nine years, • or about one person out of 18,500. The century mark will be reached bee only 23 out of the 1,000,000; or, in other words, out of a group of 43.- 500 people at the same time, only one will fill out. the century span ol existence. Only one in 3,000,000 persons will reach the age of 104 years; just one in 5,000,000 can be expected to sea 105 birthdays; and as to living to be 106 years old, these tables p1ac4 that contingency as out of the range of practical calculations. Possibly one human being out of 10,000,00i who shall have seen the light for tin first time in 1903 will be alive in 2009. I -WAVIEST MAN. The heaviest man in the world it Lee Trickey, of Glenwood, Wieconi, sin who tips the beam at 560 Tbs. A few years ago he weighed 1101bs.i but has fallen away to the ferrate figure. Trickey follows the octal:pm tion of a teamster for a living.