HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1903-11-26, Page 3,
GOD I143 NEVER FAILED
The Mightiest tien. Have Always Laid at
His Feet All Their Distress
1Eetered according to At of the Var.
Lament of °amnia, in the year 04"-rA
Thousand Nine laundred and Three,
by Wm, ifelly, of Tororite, at the
Department Of Agriculture, Ottawe,/
A despatch from Chicago P4-;1'4
]'yank Vitt Talmege CU from from the following tent Matthew
28.: "Come mate me ye thet
labor Alia are heavy laden, Smd
will give you rest."
These old promises of the ale
feleno rest AO peace to those who
are troolew end in vein and sin,
have a far differeet weeping to les
after we haw been compelled to llft
the cim of sorrow to our liPs and
drink its contents to the bitter dregs,
When ;$droting men and young women
eiret open the Bible Gre gospel prone
ises reference to sorrows and
'waxy burdens do rot .appeal very
Arengly to them, Their hoz izons
era always rainbewed. Their 1011-
erides are alwaye heregiug, geordees .and
terraced vineyards. Tneir bodies
always gem to have the warm, rich
blood of perpetuel ;youth coureing
through their vein% phyeleineds
presertptton is pot Fought after by
the Well nor au oculist by Uwe boo -
big gonad eyes, But when, alter we
have been compelled to take a lonff
courre in . o o o a "erstte
4
arid then postgraduate course otter
postgradueto course, oh, then Inow
different God's eweet prottliFeS nnt
peat to us
AN INTERPRETATION.
To -day I would talk to those who
hove doundered twee dee p and clan
deep In the twice:muds of trouble. I
would try to interpret for you wbat
the gospel rest of my text means. I
owned interpret R not ooly for timee
who have totted this mit. but oleo
for *lune wbo may be persuaded, to
;seek it as God given bleesing at
the foot of tit rose t is Von
burden. ran brother? Pethaps it el
Seine sorrow common to the whole
human race. 11, es very Ineav,y ond
no lighter from the fact 'Glatt othets
are bearing the Fame hied. Pethaps
it Is 6u3ne troOble peculier to evur-
self Met you cannot near to deeerilie
even to a blend. "Every heart
nnoweth its own bitterneStl" hut.
whatever it May be, the ittailation
CIn it gives Is for you.
lie offers you rest teem the over-
wheiming•burden of sin. This WON
the heavy pack which evaniv crushed
„new tired pligthn Bunytues great
eediegoro. it is the heavy burden
that males the, hearts und brains
and oyes and feet and bends and. the
becks ot all 'ethically twine during
the ad journey of Mo.
A IlleAVY BURDEN.
Tho heavenly Father offers rest
from. financial 'distress. The older 1
grow the more I needle° that the
greatest struggle an earth is after
daily bread, Most people ere not
lighting for the Menefee, but for the
bare neeeesaries. If a man gets $50
or $100 ahead in the bane then
-tomes some dangerous relates?) in
the family. Ills daughter is threat-
etieti with blindness, and she ltas
to go to the hest oculist cold have
the most expensive glasses, er his
wl:e breaks down, and she nuist go
off for I'M, and eetra vervains are
hired, and the whole sum of money Is
soon swept away.
Said a, young man of about thirty-
five years of age to me a short time
• ago;'I have no sympathy for people
who financially do not got. ahead. If
they would syeternatize their business
and work regultely they would base
plenty of money." •:Yes," solilo-
quized I looked at bine "that is
all well enough for you to say. You
have a mother who has supported
you all your life. Yoe have never
known what it is to pay a dollar
for rent. Only a few clothee W.1'0
ever come out of your salery. What
would you have done if you had four
or five children and had to live upon
your salary anti perhaps support a
widowed mother or an orphan sis-
ter, as many, aye, incest men have
to, do ?'' Life for the most of us is
g Ceaseless struggle for a bare phys-
feal existence.
The financial burden is the heavy
one to bear. goat of us are ready
to grant that. That burden, too.
Christ will beer if you commit it to
is hands. Your anxiety, your dis-
tress, your foreboding, he will re-
lieve, and he will give you rest.
'says some one, "the preach-
er is talking simple nonsense
do not get out and hustle and
work end worry and get the Money
to feed and clothe and educate my
children God will never do it for me.
I do net believe in expecting that
God Will relieve me of my financial
distreee any more than I would ex-
pect tbe. water to. boil the kettle
if I did not have a fire in the .stove
or my cupboard be full of food un-
less I could order it at the grocer's
on the butcher's. When you begin
to talk alined Geed carrying the bur -
of :distress then you
are simply talking about emnothing
you know nothing about." .
4: TITNT TO CHURCH MEMBEISS.
And, my, dear Christian Mende, this
plea. to roll the financial .distress Of
your life upon Christ brings up a
very Oertioeet lesSon which ought to
praeticod by all. our churches', Do
,1 You 'know 'why the average Christian
church is having such herd work to
get' along financially ? 'Ai the end
of the year a few rich men have to,
,put their .hands in theft pockets and
make up the heavy deficit. is Pc -
cause these .churches in looking after
the. temporal life of their members ia--
• stead of the spititegi are Mit- doing
their duty. :The best Way to get a
full churcb trea,s,ury is- not, .as some
„\kOple SuppOse, to have .or
Oster .supper, 03' an -evening's
enter taininent of Mrs. arleys
wax-
works, Or a concert. The true way
:to get a fell therca .treasury to
,etore a loll prayer meeting. If the
rich men Of a cluiren, • the leading.
men .officially, would. set the. Tight
kX41.110.0 the kixerOgO C /111 C11 mem-
leers and come to the weekday Plea-
lngs and ta.ke a Sunday sehoel claSS
and Practice prayer la public as wen
as in private then there would he tat
diffieulty Meetieg the Onancial ob-
ligations 01 the board e of trusteeS,
lf we, the members of a church, hen -
WOMEN. wllp 81100T NOOSE
FEMININE SUCCESS ' WEE
WOODS THIS SEASON,
Two Girls Who .3fusited Style
and. 'With. Oney a Guide
to Help.
A y og woman et Clietheen, On-
tario, has returned Irene a trip to
New Brueswica after shooting
meoee, Not only did she briling One
down, but a girl Weed, who, with
the guide, made up the party got
A -7
ing time as these two airls had
The girl from Chathem was visite
eStly and faithfully do the new% ing the other girl, Inspired by the
our ClitirCh in a spitittral way God sight of a itieone fee tho highefray Oaf
will see to it that we shall be Able day, god bong wed of tennis. boat -
to easily carry its finalicia1 burdens ing and driving, they demanded te
in a temperal way. ie on a hunting trip. The head of
the heuseliold was willing enough to
MAN'S AMBPFIONS.
allow two light rifles want his reek
The Ilea:may Father offers rest al- to be used. and an exteosive order
o in reference to the salvation of for cartridges was placed. Theo,
our children, and loved ories. Nearly tower their own tuition, the girls
eVery healthy rtormal Mau has two struggled with the enysterjes of lere
ambition:1s. Tbe ove is to live Unix, practice, until they LeCaMe fa -
If I had my own way and Cold still tallier enough with their weapons to
live In health and strength and lire shoot with a ;air =mint amid the the surroundings I am having keey.
to -day as far as I can make oat I t The raternal purse is happily Eleep„
would like to live on earth at least awl when because time kir the
1,875years, When I think of all the/girls to try their 61;114 in the woods
'glorious opportmtities of woreinig ,on coraforeoble outfit WitS prosteed.
earth for my Lord and Moster I Iwith the very lest guide in the,
-trould not, voluntarily change Places/country. So well was the ground
chosen, that on the Emma. dav out
the guide aneenenced in the morning
ilia he expected to furnish a Moose
far 0110 of his employere to try her
;every healthy, vormat umn Inas m Non upon boom noon,
inot only to live long in an earthly! lie did. just as *he sun was
!ernse, but Foote day to own o large reeehing its 'viola the geitie no
-
e, in which he Con gather all ids 'tioned to the two sporteworeeto who
were erottehing becide a /nth,' melds
pond, to peep out from their hiding
place. Just eeross the hollow.
neatehing at a tuft oft dog wood,
was a glossy Week bull movee of
fourteen points, Utisitspicions of
'danger, he eel:Met-et] down the
side. The The girl viSitOr4 who by pre-
arrangement waft to iave the inst
thence. 'veined for the 19fONI:',n
the guide fhould give
Tun oitonn TO TAKE AIM.
°Steed at 2110 yards; hold your
gun nell up onto tin, WNW; welt jean,
a moment. Now lees tOrtaing
love down al the ishoitider itittnel"
The moment was well cheeen, the
reateeloo uerves trivet rate order
and the aim sure. The mum, stood
stupidly storirer, with bead
dined downward for an instont. then
emelt slowly upon all fours, and roll-
ed over dead. The bullet had cone.
pletely eevered the arteries, and the
heari Wa9 found ling quite 100So
within the animal when it was dress-
ed. The wade said it was only one
in a, thoueand sbots which did such
work.
The next day was wet, and wan
spent by the girls Pt vamp. The
Mikis) was afoot taking observations.
Tho meat day he led the party a
long tramp in another direction,
el stationed thorn, 'within a hun-
dred yards ot a sandy bank.
About the :middle of the afternoon
a large moo.ee etUlle up on a lefewous
trot and plunged his great antlers
Into the soft sand, ploughing it, up
deeply. By and by he stopped to
shake tine tinst out of his eyes and
to give a vigorous bellow, as It in
ouswer to a call not audible to the
watchers.
"Now!" saki the bunter, just as
the bead was outstretched to repeat
the cry. The rifle spol«t quickly, and
the big deer with a convulsive jump
bounded :into tho bush.
"Oh, surely I didn't miss him!"
implored tine airSiallS young woman.
"Miss him! I guess not," said the
guide. "Didn't you see how his tail
tell when you fired? Ile's not far
away, depend upon it."
A search showed that in its death
struggle the rnoose had tried to leap
over a fallen tree, which lay, five feet
high, in his path. rre was found
Acrioss THE TRUNK DEAD.
The party returned forthwith, as the
sportSworuen declared that after this
it Was too ttune work to two at
anything else.
This may be called the edition de
lure of the story of Woman's prow-
ess with the rifle. During the same
week a woman in the province of
Quebec shot at a moose under differ-
ent .circumstances. her husband,
returning from his chopping in a
distant part of the woodland, found
a dead moose in the path at the
edge of his clearing. hastening
home with the good news, he was
surprised that his wife was not on
hand with the usual welcome. In-
side the shanty he was dumfounded
to see her lying on the floor uncon-
ecious. ViThen she recovered he was
amazed still further by her asking:
"Did the old gun explode with
me?"
Then he noticed that the ancient
Snider rifle, which usually hung to
the ceiling, lay on the floor by the
wall opposite to the only window.
"There was a moose &Aside, you
know," she tried to explain.
"There is a big whopper of an old
moose killed out in the field," he re-
plied. -"Maybe that's the one you
saw.''
That was the case. The woman
had .Serin the great creature standing
near their home, gazing at it in
curiosity. Some sporting instinct
revived in her at the sight, though
she had not known or its existence
before. She had lifted down the
heavy ride, slipped a cartridge, into
the breed' which she had seen her
husband open before, and then crept
up to the open. window, rested :the
long barrel. on. the ledge,' sighted
well at the hea.d of the moose
AND PULLED ThE TRIGGER.
Of coarse, the old gun kicked
heavily. No one who ever used
those antiquated weapons will doubt
that. The butt grazed her head and
flew out of ber hands over her shoul-
der, and the blow and the excite-
ment sent her into a faint. But she
had fired straight and the bullet had
entered the moose beltito the ear,
Smeshieg the skull badly and inflict -
!with the brightest robee denieen of
'all the redeemed inuntertals beev-
en,
The second ambition which nearly
children and grandeluldt en and
friends and loved ones about hien
And if a num longs to bare an
eartido boute, where be eon coneet
his loved ones. bow much more typist
jthe Christian long that in his heav-
enly home he may be able to collect
all les dear ones. his children and,
'brothers and glisten's and pareuts wed
Ake ties of lore as Val Os Of biceta
;There Is not a true Christian raan
,or woman who has not felt all heart ,
el,he Leavy burden of ant uneitoedi
or relative or fritliti. Alt. Out
is a heave? burden to hear! If I ;
neotild throw thine raeetion, open to;
4est for reenewele for roraners from
all over this bouse people would;
iriee and say: "Prey for my lane!
'hand," "Pray for my child." "Pray
for Illy brolber," 4sPray for itev
nem:mate." "Pray for :my eister."1
But, friend. why PHI Of* VMS
;pulpit to pray for your loved owe,'
Why do you not bring that burden,
that heavy burden of the salvation
of your thild or busnand. to Christ?
Does not, Jesus want you to do this 4
to -day? It Christ will carry OW
heavy burden of financial distress
surely he ,will bear the iteaVier bur-
den of Gm salvation of your tied -
drone.
EFFICACY OF PRAYER.
Oh, that we might, one and ell,
bere and now, enter into a holy con-
spiracy of prayer kw the salvation
of our lovedeonesl Tins was the
way a great revival wave was start -
In one of my old thurehes. It
was by Christian people, lumbers of
that then+, getting together week
after week and praying for distiewt
individuals. It was in this way that
my grandmother and grandfather
Wer converted. Some of you luny
Parc heard the wonderful story writ-
ten by the pen or epoken by the hpe
of my father. It was by a company
of earnest and tearful Mothern gath-
ering together at a certain time of
the day in tbe barns to pray for
the salvation of their children until
scores and hundreds stood up in the
little village church of Somerville to
confess Christ, and the whole region
was moved by the power of the lloly
Ghost. It is by a conspiraey of
prayer that a revival can always be
started and our loved ones swept in-
to tbe kingdom by a tidal wave of
mercy.
Thus, iny dear friends, tired and
heavy hearted, tramping along the
highway of life, I want to lift the
heavy burdens off your bearts. It is
these burdens that are crushing you,
not the journey. ninny of the older
men have read an pssay which was
famous many years ago. It was
written by tbe "County Parson"' and
called "Concerning People NVho Car-
ry Weights In Life." The author
wont on to show that it was •tne
extra weights some had to carry
that made then). lose the race of life.
And it is these extra burdens Which
we can cast at the foot of the cross
that make us labor and heavy lad-
en. Will you not accept the invita-
tion of ray text? Will you not live
in the faith of that blessed promise
and die in the hope, as did the beau-
tiful Princess Elizabeth, the daugh-
ter of Charles I. of England? Upon
her marble monument in Newport
church, erected by Queen Victoria, is
recorded the fact that she was one
morning found dead, with her head
pillowed opon the open Bible and
her finger pointieg to the simple
words, "Come unto me all ye that
labor and are heavy laden,. and
will give you rest". To -day I urge
upon you this wide invitation, with
its glorious proinise. Christ bids
you come with all your burdens and
trials, and he will bear them for
you. He ()RI'S you rest in this life,
rest M death and eternal gest be-
yond the grave, "Come unto him
all ye who labor and are heavy lad-
en, and he will give you rest."
:friendeeetheee who are heated 10 hint
A GLORIOUS VICTORY.
Mrs. De Sty:le—rye got ahead ol
Mrs..De Fashion at last.
Hush peide-Ho w ?
Mrs. eDe Style—At Mrs. De Eaela
ion's- last party two of the guests
faintedt but at iny grand reception
last night the crush was so " great
that six of the ladies bed to he car-
ried out,. and one. had to liege a
do ct or.
irig prising strength of the creature had
a inortel wound, though the sure SUNDAY sffigRAL
enoled tau, to travel two or three I'L"' 'al/J"UV:44
hundred yards after receiving it,
The frilling the moose is veri- INTERNATIONAL 1,',ESON
tabic godsend to this touple. Under
good advice they have sedd the bead
NOV. P.9„
for $50, and Ilene Setae three 111M- t
dred weight , of prime meat with a-4 ° ti:m Leeson, clixon
WhiCh JO face the long Canadian 140. 0 -olden. Tent,
The thirteen yew* eau daughter of Vroy.
wthientle:e'al agent of one the great -Qur 105508 14' eAtTe" Parente who Prides over tho
, seourgo was PO gneat theta Prentiee
lumbering Orme up the Mattawa was ic;114rge, et°, Sql°,/"Ile „„b"ei,1114,t 115 PartMent Of Woo du and Forests, wet
padellieg acmes a bay in that river OCklerem II?' •Cre'S ail."' .AA'; 4,15.1ZOLI t offer a extbstantial bunte
with her brother's shot -gun anti 'es Pleee 111g g1vo '11du ebarge to F,for telling them. lepeo los Amite,.
eSaatertrwldignaet' alofeowkedda
liskeagao6ree: silo; 'Imesren4_71put the complete cheep both enoe-meeit of *fi' a head. The nneOunt
through her representative - g- 3
ktnc hes swimming over Irmo the to ..7.'°10110,01/ and the PeoPle includes, hos proved WO how,
ijoipoeplossit, tseimsiyoden.deleaeftinerg takne oexb jpeert.t, Loci. achtaleetaesrt atnhde ItibaestfatsWto4;r:efattioef latelextis, :Ittetez-eelrt,tse jt,,oes tetneoptis.abliunegteetletoa:tenvzst!
found it to be 4 moose. Although Thn address lo hotie concerns verge' end Feareele any nountiee hase Eve
she hod never tired a gun she was 1argeb7 the tenSPle which Paled bad claimed,
not ignorant of the use of fireerens. An his heart to lonld and for This is Alet because wolves are not
liastilY slipping in two of the duth !which he mode abundant provision. Plentieed enough, Tete' sent *4
cartridges she was taking to Per Ihut concerning which God said unto have multielied with the increaSe of
brother, she paddled op to within !him. 'Thou shalt not build an Jiouse the red deer, and tee large enaml3err
teu yards of the antlered head and 'for my narne beeause thou bast bona of the ni 'seen last -winter awl in tit(
at ehort range fired both barrels .4 man of war atiel hest oiled bloud @Present autumn are to be aecoontee
point blank into it. There was a )(verges lea).
W ()LITZ S INOREASWG.
The Lerger Nttralierf 1e4. Pee;
Gieree 'TIMMS F9 cid,
With the ApProach of wintor Comet!,
inereeee in the nundiber and
ijzeboldnees of the evedvee that are
visiting the northern friage of Sete
ilementS the Pontiac and Galion -4S
distriets of Combee. Last year the
tier by the feet that the (leer aread
terrific struggle In the water. until Mouy things eugo,est theineelvezst? r nangn
ruts t othweal1rdth:juzti.ti-mtowolvee4
tine Itiooso floated, during which elle 'the Mind of a child. of God witieu cpire t„,„1.4 item,ijanted by tbeil
prudently 6ieem bath to the believer and to aeb,noess enemies. riti,ex, agata IPt
intimate friends to he:oodoolsatbr:etr:::: :::ifirtatie,:eceontgste:t0f;c:::: 0;7; :4;
KEPT AT A SAFE DISTANCE.
Then she untied tbe tethering rope ,Che the otnee hand.
hut, the auggestltees are '11`at fa°41. ward of :515 jot, e-eeet w-oir
in the bow of the canoe. fe.steoed , tells a believer to do tied which in that tame -ewe 105415 thive teen
to one of thee big herpes. tied Ow seems contrary to tile common eeneo.too.04 Quebee, t14,7
'Other ond to thc ifiSt CV05:511!ar and 'and good Palau:tent both of hinieelf emu eteeeeee.
towed ber trophy to the home loud- ,and his fellow believers. Even Na» Teo wolece QM now beeentiog s' -)'l
Ing stago. •- head is sald 14 bo. an, i1i0 pi op net. tliought *hatn nagsanto that filo famer,t; aro crp
thc releet ever Peen In Otta—e• where ;Pavld's Inieleoere to build » teneede beg out egainet their deprodatiore
many Atm eins of bonne have been.lwas all right, and be at firet en,
exhibited. I connived bint in it (1. Citron. asvilo
ametiter instance of the MC- 1, 2).
cess attending the shoot ing at moose The apostle rata thought that he
by the gentle een has been recorded 5ought to preach the word in Asia
11)18 6085011. Within a few hours and fa Ilith3,-nda 04 his way weet
travel of null a Young vollide who iduriog bie eecond tour, hut the Spite
In one parteh in the county of Pone
tiee it is at-eerted ehat thee- bane do
etroene more Omen a hundred Ler;
and latabs. Scattered fettlWiil it
the northern pe.rte of tho provino
say that the howls of tee heeete
night am tirtiffring„ Oral Miley Pao
bow lately moreled were spending it. forneee lent to do 50 at that tarla 1021121 WI' to send their young child,
their 11021e72110o8 beside onto of the (Acts Mi.. C. 73. And what could reet1,41,lU
at'e to "hued the ti*3.t' P014
secluded larees 00 the antinean 'Svela more contrary to ail sound 114-a4e44 colte1e-
r. Just for enumement a rife: had !judgment/. of tone than to build a urtila"‘"talte1341e, 4nraf44;taiweor Irolevt/e5"Yrarliv
°milled with the koreasF.-es *f 104
one. Ile pad his rite with Man cote
aomaltdertoiwtillit„ toanteinorgf ttloieicelle;ele4,
The bear tureod on lino thoegla 11
heti reoeived two tattPete before cool,
bar, up to tee ineee aril he Inottatiad
to faiesesetie It with teweatcil01 Nowt
el
ter41110.
ed to 1.15' 0107i0 6124120to OW partioit we hear tie Ilion? eJoli nevi, teeTee le bed Oret ecert tee Inneete
more shot a il e home,
, eve R, V.) In orNutilott camilenIck;aloag their weal, the epee fuutrl
As she peered the stump Poet lee en redemption tnee in tflarnet wee -fil:T'l1110 ronaciala or 2111 le -Fe te4
hind which he 125218117 fired ehe only wernew keno In lee eiodeee.
was 6111"Pritced .110 hoer ".30114.4"1,g, -KWh Ifeliefeir it ones" he His worit-1 le le eetimatiell that lite weiVee
511%51441g 1111 tee water• ao 44hIna which uortoeh in re. or it will Canada 1411 teeny more deee teen
ho11111g that it 114/ght he delete 0421* innrrr to he wood, hey opal StteibbIP. 14/17401-S If allOWetit to teary .ott
tlously 14r4'l2041 'ant from behind a ithielt tenet lie inureed Mel. li„Ithetr Wfigtii of 4Ce51471011014 it in team!!
bush. To her surprise a moose was 13; Col. L. 29; I. Cor.111,. 1d. 15I•
unarehirog along the shallows. nib- ofte In ewe warning all Miens el -
Wire at the w‘ger wee" and lily ter the etenoreee of Ilis own will. two
stalks as he pofned.
Neeplug hereelf well in hand. in Lleer,°01.411ii,nerepteoeetelitleeliViliVerreireos:e'' Whtthr
I:14W of an ee-ceesive troubling:Lore trphe 1.. 11: 111„ 11). who
which Sel'itPil ker Jost then, slle..nnd sob, not cam, unite, not fnlv.
ested her little gun
on o eonvenlent ' mewl; Jacob. not Feata; Judith. not
/ranch. aimed carefully at the shotd-
der and fired. To her unbounded de- :IrottetnnIT n°0tiblZtinainittlx1411entloiet
light mid astoniehment. the 40111181 01)02102) sons of 313011 through whom
fell down. in its trades stone dead. 8on of men is to eone. woo win
Irer hulla had hoe° badly almed, hinteelt be the truo Temple and Tab'
but by a lucky chalice bad struck ;eeileeie (John e11e2e; wee 'raj,.
the backbone. causing laetatit death 2. o); also the Ledcomer m
Leder ono of
from paralysis. the building now being completed
been uthea and the presence ^great verso. With 210 water la eight.
of a pair of loons had. ofectrded good ',to eepect 508 to divide. a, river
practice U. the bride. who had he- ;mop gerelor. a city's w4215 to fen
owe quite prercient CS a anapsbot. „down by unteeene bona, tiVr, itlaVt'S of
Tee loteband bad gone out to bunt ,,oreee to pee aeieo own. or to ron
up a team. to carry the imeettold; oway ,stom!, from tomb 4)2113 e.
geode out to the t'3411047. when the. Kee n, corynintitm body to come
bride. having feelehed her "Padang, forth ite health? But levee 4210 (52117
took the title her hand cued noun- parte of the wane, mid bow little a
that 13407will in 1.5w compvietOx
tirpotothe game It ie Teeeeee mot
they 61150 wont "peat deetruelloe
among the 7021215 maga,
M.M.I.MON6.c.•C
11111
RUSSIAN REVOLUTIONISTS,
The Cause of Liberty Progreeeee
Slowly in That Country.
Much attention lean hem' given rec
only by the European newepapers t 3
the activity of the Russian net olio-
tionists. The newest of their organ-
ieatione is the Socialist Revolution -
(IC 11., 10-21), and the sou of ary party, width dates foam 1901.
when ft, hegann the publication of a
TYPICOID TEVER IN AUTUTtelh !David to sit on David's theme and "+.1.1,eign over the house of jowl, nee parer in. Tomsk. Siberia. This pa -
ever ons Why iti.Ists aniever(Luke 1., 81-88), per was soon suppressed. and never -
How to; r.,
j .h.rusnlcmj al of the people connected with it
Prevent It. is the only Oro, A, on earth OM has,were deported to eastern Siberia. ft
'rite question Is often Pr000undeti, ever been called the throve of thelreappeared, lieVertheless. in Wevern
"Why is typhoid fever nioet preva- Lord (verre 5; chtip. -man, 28; le. ;Europe, and is smeggled in 'ergo
le)1t, In autumn ?" lt when tuet as ;Citron. ix ti), und derunalein is the °numbers teems the frontier isto
well be asked, "Why dors typhoid only City ou earth OWwill be rail- 'Russia,
:beer prevail at all?" since the on- ed *Wine throne; of the Lord" (eter. Tine party carries on its DroPagan-
wee is moth the same in both cases; Me 17), and the only thing that 1 da Omagh fide and two other pa-
iminely, • because the IneaSerte ena- haw found In Scripture Ihat God pews, each of which urges the peas-
ployed to prevent typhoid me inent• MI5'S Ihe wP1 do with leis whole ants to rebel against the establisbed
dent, neglected or ignored. 1 boort, and toed is that He will plate order. Tho party has also it "fight -
Improper disposal of sewage lies Tared in their own land, give therilling orgenteation," intended to excite
at the root of the matter, for to- one heart and one way to fear Thln ibe peasantry by deeds, as they can -
though all sewage may not contain aral make them His people in the not be stirred by words. These re -
typhoid gerMS, it is poesiblo that eight of all rettioxs (.ler, mail, 37e voluntionists are charged with the
it inay contain them at any Wile. 12). It is part of His eternal pur- killing of Monsieur Sipiagnine, min -
Thus it is safest to regard r11 sew- Imre, and Ile will do ha spite of aillister of the interior, with sbooting
age as contaminated with typhoidethe caviling and unbe1ief of Jews and
at the governor of Kbarkof, and
germs.
gentiles. 1 with the murder of the governor of
If sewage is allowed to contamin- Let us give *oda attention in the Loso
ate the water -supply or food it is remaine.er of our meditation to the The older Social Democratic and
but a question of time 'when le-phoid 1 churge to Solomon and take what Liberal Revolutionary parties agree
With the Social Revolutionists in
demaudiug the end of the autocrary,
bet they do not believe in going to
the extreme of murder.
the midst of this agitation the
government inust protect itself. It
is consequently rightly hostile to-
ward the men who assail it with
force. It believes that such refornts
as are made must be through the
evolution of the present system, and
that the people must be educated to
understand the nature of representa-
tive institutions before they are
asked to maintain them Both
Monsieur de Witte and Monsieur von
Plehwe, the most influential states -
in the empire, have said within a
year that Russia must have a Con-
stitution.
In the meantime the Social Demo -
crate are at work on the outskirts
of Russia inciting strikes, and the
Social Revolutionists are provoking
agrarian outrages in the heart of tho
=pita. When the government trieS
to preserve order and vindicate it-
self as government, its purposes
are iniSrepresented and the •seeds 01
greater discontent are sown. Undo
these circumstances the task of the
tsar is hard, and the cause of liber.
ty progresses slowly.
germs will math the stomach through
the evater-supply or food.
The germs ef typhoid, like the
seeds of other tengetable organisms,
often prove more vigorous when
transplanted to tt,men- siZil„ This was
illustrated in the vitriota, camps es-
tablished during the war. While no
soldiers evidently ill with typhoid
fever were received in them, men suf-
fering from attacks so mild that they
did not appear ill brought the in-
fection. By not regarding all sew-
age as capable or conveying infection,
and by omitting disinfection of all
waste. materials, the conditions of
camp life furnished abundant means
for the contamination of drinking
water and of food, and typhoid of a
virulent type became alarmingly fro -
fluent.
No doubt many cases of typboid
fever are contracted in country dis-
tricts, especially by those who leave
the city in the summer.
If all sewage were promptly disin-
fected typhoid fever would become
extinct. This is most difficult ex-
cept where, by a system of peifect
piping, it is possible to carry the
waste directly into ti • sea. In ha
land citiee and in ether districts
there is still •need for the introduc-
tion of improved motile& of sewage.
In country districts •and towns
where no plunibing is employed but
where sewage is deposited in open
wens, vault9 or drains, typhoid fever
is a constantmenace. In smelt ,cases
the antiseptic value of wood , ashes
may be utilized. Coal ashes may
likewise he used, but the'effeets are
not 'so markedly germicidal.
The gerras of typhoid are also kill-
ed by prolonged exposure to direct
stmlight, but in a watery medium
they sink into the soil; and, in soil of
certain kinds they may .remain unex-
posed to 1110 SCSI, and in a state rap -
able of trinismittilig infection for
years.
Hiring the germs of this disease by
We can of it to our wen beerte. 031
,eprn 20, Isn't, verse 9 was male a
very opecial blessiig to my soul as
I rode on the train from Scranton
to Phiildaelphia. A. memorandum on
the margin of my Bible remireds
of this and the blefeing lasts to this
day. this,
is nothirg greater than
to know God (Jew. ix, 23, 21; johu
xvii, 8; :do, 9; Phil. ill, 10; 11.
Pot. iii, 18), to know Him as aur
Path er through Jaeus Cbrist, for no
man knoweith the Father save the Son
aud he to whoMsoever the Son will
reveal Rim (Matt. xi, 27). There
aro no childawn of God, according to
the Scriptures, except those who aro
born of God by receivirg Jesus
Christ as their Saviour, who also
created all tbirgs (John 1, 1.-18).
Then to serve Iltin nith a perfect or
whole beart and a willing mind, re-
membering that He Fearcheth and
unelerstamteth all the imaginations
of the thoughts of my hearts—this
is lire in earnest. Concerning the
perfect Meet see Oen. sell, 1; Heb.
xiii, 20.
As truly as the palace which Sol-
omon MIA I:0 build was not for man,
but for Vic Lord God, so the daily
life of every- believer is first of all
for the kingdom of God and His
righteousness (chap. xxix, 1; Matt.
vi, 818). Let the words. "Take heed;
he . strong and. do; be. •stroeg and or
good courage and do; feca- not. aor be
clismayed," Mul the other words of GUILLOTINE IN SWEDEN
verses 10 and 20 be compared 'with Who would. hone supposed de
Dauer xxxi. 0, 8; Josle 1, 5-0; Nag.
the ,Reige of Terror that a clay
rin
ii, 4, 5, and then hombier but 'hon -
would come when the -guillotine
evtly aPpropria,te SS your very own
to would be used for a laudable pun
God's special personal message
pose? Yet this has just happened in
your own soul, and, like David,' you
Sweden, for a gdillothie has bees
will find elan. affection set upon the
and with erected 011 the market place at Gotle
purpose of decapitating .chickens,
hoes° of your Gotl,
you21. might you will prop -are the cubing, where it is used daily for the
wily of the Lord, aect others will be
led to rejoice and offer willingly to ducks afid other domestic animals,
do nowise feeep, :vex-, 2, 3, 9), Teo local Society fel, the Prevention
Both in salvation and seeviCe all. is of Cruelty to Animals is respensibia
-some simple process .of antisepsis 04 God. The greatness, tile power, for this novel step. Animals, it
would prevent the infection of' water the . glory, aro ell ills. Ail riches claiMS, may legitimately be used a3
with this disease. Until this is and honor come from Him: all power food, but there is in) reason why
generally done, boiling all water of end. axe His, and all He tags -Limy saould eurfer while dYing, and
which there is any questem'12 essen- el ne fe to be Nth.olly and willintly i.the sweet way te avoid sinee. segee.
tial to healthielness and peace of His for His Pleaeaire alai seek Rim ing 18 to employ a gUillOtiflC0iJ 01
melee...youths' Companion. aude Ills will 01417 arid always., linstrunient 'of death.