HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-04-15, Page 6►
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CLI2121:NT TOPICS.
A discussion has arisen ever the
declaration of President Eliot in
favor of a library which should con-
sist only of the best books and call
dor no more than a three-foot or
fisc -foot elicit. This would bar out
'Lust of our complete editions and
make the task of selection a very
hard one. There are "classics" by
the score, :and, though buruo of the
'meet classic of thew are great dust
eollectc•rs, they would probably
not he excluded by the severest
judges. We ehuuld have to stake
room for thous and crowd out 'lunt-
erous favorites_ —
But probably the suggestion is
Pimply a reaffirmation of the idea
that it is better to read much tlrau
enauy things, and the soundness of
that idea is emphasized every year.
,While it is desirable to cultivate
the reading habit, the great read -
et is often re very poor reader. He
forgets as fast as lie reads and frit-
ters away time un worthless stuff.
Hard and fast rules on the subject,
however, aro of little value and
are not likely to be followed. Some-
thing must be allowed for inditidu-
al taste. There majr be no more
%truth in forced reading tbali there
is in careless reading, and there aro
benefits to be derived from pure
ditersion in books which help to
pass away an hour or 50.
Frederic Harrison is a reader of
keou intelligence and good taste
ho has attempted to prescribe for
ethers. but he would more than fill
the throe -foot shelf with Scott
atone if he were to insist on typo
fit for human eyes. Though he ex-
cludes touch of the popular read-
ing of the day with studied dis-
dain, the library that lie commends
would cover many shelves. Tho
most that we ern get out of the
Iver recurring debate is that there
should be some effort at an intelli-
gent choice under proper guidance.
The verdict of time is nut to bo ig-
leered. It is high authority. Hut
all new books are not bad books,
and one may be as safely guided by
a retiewer's praise of .ontempor-
ary work as by the conventional
praise of standard authors, which
degenerates into 1
petition.
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TALES OF CHINA!'
�'ie boo-heo ! of an oar -racking' horns is A keen cricketer, ter, and in
THF SECRET OF GRFATNESS'QVEERJ1s•rn, workext burnothing like a Lube winter turns sl.r tIi w keep
garden hese. ,himself in trtinuig f••r t11c suis ho
Women aro regarded as ,n.tlting, Accumulates during the ►►aria
STA R'f1.1NG T111N1:S ABOUT in china. They are brought up in months. IIr. Herbert GladstoneTHE "FLOWERY LAND." ignoraure of the world outside, the fends shooting, fishing and yacht
one ohjec•t of their life being to get it's quite euuugh for his purport.
merriest, and have sons to follow Dr. .'daenarnara is a very good gel -
the fathers. A girl is not even al- ter and fisherman ; while two such
To the Ordinary European ('Irina is Jowed to look open her husband dissiulilar minds a, those of Lord
a Lund of l'unlr:ulicltuu� wed she is actually wedded. !Morley and M r. Keir Herdic de
COURTING BY CARD. Of
in book and MSS. collecting.
Uf those of the Opposition side
Supposing, for instance, a than c f the }loose of Commons, I►1 r. Au
"What a poor, weak looking has a daughter he wishes; to marry etch Chamberlain delight, in a
baby:" you might soy to u China- well. A sort of "go-between" is model dairy at. Highbury, where
man about his offspring, and he engaged, and she prepares a card itis father's gardens are How faun -
,will Merely shrug bis shoulders in bearing the ancestr•tl names, and ous. Idr. George Wyndham is au
reply. Meet, hint in a month's the symbols indicating the year,' amateur poet, and Mr. Alfred I.yt-
tims. and ask hint how the young- month, day, and hour of her birth, I teltun a fairly proficient golfer.
The Cultivation of Great Qualities of Heart
and Mind in Secret,
'•'I'lie path of the just is as the Your place in life may seem to and �urprisc•, .
shining light that shineth more be a lowly one; but the size of your
and more lint() the perfect day." - life does nut depend on your situ -
Prow. iv., 18. ation ; yeti would be just. as email
Pictures fade; books turn to if the caprice of fortune cast. you
dust; but flyers lite on forever. Tho up on the steps of a throne; you
soul of a single man has such pus• would be just as great if it led you
!Abilities that it can project it -self to the most obscure place on earth.
through all time, touch practically Tho essential things of life lie 'ter is getting or. "The disease and presents it to the prospective` WOIIK OUT O1' WORK --TIME.
a{1 lives and flit all etern►ty with within the reach of all; the ellef was a fatal one,,' he will answer,'hridegroom's lare*)t•i. Should the The ex -Lord C'hancellor's hobby's lie
its force. Beside the potentialities stents of greatness aro never in with another significant shrug. if suit be favorably hooked upon, the appears to be work, for in addition
of ono life all other powers sink things unattainable. by the most the child were a girl, yeti could latter consults a fortune-teller to to attending to his judicial and
into insignificance. This is the lowly. Isafely draw your own conclusions )earn whether the match will be other duties in the House of Lords,
fruitage of the travail of the ages The man within you depends not as to its fate. John Chinaman has propitious. he is writing a sun inary of the la•. •
and all the works of our hands are on gee-gaws or feathers, not 011,00 use for deformed ur very sick- A similar ceremony is then car- of England, in tweuty volumes ---
but the dust un its petals. baggage or furniture, not on rank 'b. c `ildren, particularly girls. tied out on behalf of the bride- no light task for any man, r.,uecr-
ally ono who is in his eighty-fourth
year. The Lord Chief Just'ce of
England is keen un singing, mud
once upon a time no legal func(� •0
was complete without a song front
"Dick" Webster. Nowadays the
"Chief" contents himself with :'e►g
ing in the choir of a Kensingt•)n
church. Sir t?(ware; Clarke, K.C.,
P.0 , may be termed a rival in this
respect, though the great, sawyer
looks anything but flippant.
hobbies that. the majority v+'•nl'1
consider queer are fairly common.
John Rockefeller, fur example, de-
clares his faverito occupation to
be Bible -teaching; and this, cant-
ing from the man whom his ene-
mies declare to have made his for-
tune by doubtful swans,- has ex
cited as much derision as approba-
tion.
. Then there was the hobby of the
lute marquis, an eccentric gentle-
man, who gave away hoots, and 110 -
thing else. He used to tramp all
over Louden, with his eyes fixed on
'the footgear of pedestrians, and
whenever he saw a worn pair he
would atop the owner, and offer
to substitute new boots.
There is a gentleman in London
to -day whose hobby is attending
1' 1:1•:N ALEXANDRA AN AMA. the last nights of plays; and there
4is a retired Army officer, who is
'1'1•:1 R PHOTOGRAPHER. lt. devoting his life to helping prison-
ers to employ counsel. But he 'lust
first be convinced without argu-
J'rince of Wales Owns $200,000 meat that. the prisoner is worth as-
sisting. Incidentally, he adds to
Worth of Rare Statutes --Other this a mania for corporal punish -
Royal Collections. meat. for children, as opposed to
impri'enment.
Few may write books or paint
great pictures, but all must live
their lives and with us all it lies
'to determine. whether they shall
be great or small, high as beaten
in their towering inspiration or
deep as the grave in their dark
warning. This is the great work,
just to live aright, and to find the
unending life by living the kind of
life that cannot end.
The great books, pictures, ser-
mons, oratorios of all the ages are
just human lives; all our writings,
con►positions, and sayings are but
reflections of the light of greatness
its personalities; every enduring in--
spiratiun rises in some living soul.
What you aro is always more to
the world than alt that you can say
or sing; the one is intelligible and
possible only by the other.
WE FORGET THIS SO EASILY;
we talk of living to do great things;
we socia to think that greatness is
wholly a matter of exalted circum-
stance or exceptional opportuni-
ty, possible only to the few and de-
nied to the many because it is evi-
dent that not all can be kings or
conquerors, heroes starring on the
front pages or martyrs dying at the
stake.
The truly great. are large of
heart, lofty of aspiration, gencr-
uus of soul long before they meet
the particular duty or crisis that
reveals their existing greatness to
the public gaze; they are great be-
fore they meet the great occasion;
the greatest remain great of heart
and soul after such an occasion.
The position does not make the
man; the man but magnifies the
position.
or station, but on large hearted-
ness, honesty, sincerity and eleva-
tion of purpose, breadth of sympa-
thy and simplicity.
The glory of the great life is that
it speaks to us u11; such a life is
one of the prophets of high heaven.
The most high is not silent so long
as these lives speak. How they-
movc its to shame with our petti-
ness, with our strivings after empty
honors and fading wealth.
WIIAT A ('ALL IS HERE
to lay' aside pretenses and mocker-
ies, to cease to endeavor to dis-
guise low aim with lofty phrases,
and to bo our best selves.
There were great lives in the
long ago; and there are truly great
lives close to our own clay lives that
lift themselves in sheer gentleness
and nobility to leadership and bear-
ing themselves with simplicity and
humility, in elevation and through
tremendous crises help us on. Can
there be anything much better than
to make them known to our chil-
dren and to follow their laws our-
selves?
Let not the lower self, slothful
and dreading toil and trial, say to
us: The way of greatness is only
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
REFINEMENT' IN TORTURE. groom; and, the preliminaries be-
.ing thus settled, cards, on which
curric<t to a point of refinement. are attached a dragon and a phoo-
Oue of the most terrible was surely 43.1x.—enlblauratical of conjugal fe-
the cage in which a won was placed Jncity--and red silk cords, aro ex -
so that his head just protruded at aril changed.. Presents are also given
the top, while his toes only touched
and received, and at length the
the ground sufficiently' to prevent bride leaves her parent's house in
dislocation of the neck. His hands a. sedan chair. Half -way this is
were bound behind him, so that met by the husband's friends, who
finish the journey with it.
he could not relieve himself, and
be was left to be jeered at by the The bride, with covered hood,
public until hunger and exhaus and the bridegroom adjourn to Ole
Lion put an end to his sufferings. reception -room, where each tries to
sit o1 .it portion of the others dress
The day of the bastinado, too, as a sign of mastery. Then follows
is by no means over. The prisoner worship of heaven, earth, and un-
it strung up in a reverse cunditiun cestors, the partaking of wine, and,
and the naked solea of his IQ" if'tnally, the lifting of the bride's
head -covering by the husband.
Yes, truly Chien, is a land of
enigmas. Ina country where, wo-
pounded with a cane, with the re-
sult that the victim seldom recov-
ers. But the more common form
of flogging is to beat the thighs men are held so cheaply, it is a re -
with the concave lido of a split markable faet that for the last de -
bamboo, which cuts at every stroke Cade one of the sex --the late I)ow-
int.cr the flesh. - ager-Einpross—was the predouin-
('hina, by the way, was the home tint power in its destinies.' London
of that terrible death by water- ,Answers.
drops. Tho victim's head was placed ---
vn water,
hhblock.ter and drops of THE HOBBIES OF ROYALTY
water, nt short intervals, were al-
lowed to fall front a height on to
for the chosen few; he content with lis forehead—a far worse infliction
being just about what you are. Let than that of being tied to a beam
not that saute self, seeking to trick by the thumbs and big toes,
you, say: Seek the great place; lift QUITE MILD!
your empty self to high place and
men will call you great. The great Tho "c•angue" is regarded as a
stream is great, whether it flows comparatively mild sort of punish -
in quietness or is sweeping lib- tient. This consiets of a wooden
etaeles before it or bearing ships collar, about four feet square and
on its bosom. The great fife is not four inches thick, which is placed
less in obscurity than when the over the prisoner's head, so that
times call its reserves to their aid. its full weight falls un the ghoul ,rbc publication of Queen Alex
HENRY F. COPE. ders. A description of the offence �indiu's bo -.,k of on of 'graphs peseta
Alex-
is ; attached a thetvictim's y BES FOR RHEUh1ATISA1
that her Majesty was not only un
body ; and as ho cannot feed himBEES
and power, the surrender of salt he has to rely on the public enthusiastic amateur photographer,
u nicauing ens re his ambitions and hopes. the giving fur sustenance.
, eat also a tery clever ono. She
up of his family and his wealth,
Conservative to a degree. it is ,s clearly entitled to be nurnbcrcll 01.11T1)11: CURE BEING TRIED
! � becoming a despised outcast, him- not, surprising to filed that the amongst the great army of hubby- IN �I:�1. 1'Olth IIOMPIT.�1..
S4 self subject to the same perils and levers. I'ho tasc inutiun stamps -
Are you rheumatic? If so don't INTERN 1'1'10NAL LESSON, persecutions that he had been in- wheelveyanbarrow,
is stillsin p g ietiger too,'I'c'ssrsx for the ascinPrince of Wales is
APR11. IS. the other
and knew all to well. On ' r ntatter of curnmsei knowledge,
buy a bottle of Dr. Somebody'siant ono ir, the ferry, conaixting of a light: col -
had steen commanded his alleginn e. canoe, towed across the water by t though
then real est st of his We
Sure cure, but go out and get stung
by n bee. If vie sting dues not Lessen' 111. Thr t'e►ntel•ien of It was a remise of ultimate vie- o uamherne of forswthe! know, however, that tho Prince
P Machinery the most part is
euro you, get et ung again. and Saul. Neth 9: I,:foo tioltleit tory. Ile would only be leaving the (lespiscd and the mill, still used note owns more than .1.:•10,00()
worth
aft
era m
a few stings you may want 'feel, .lets J: -t. losing ride. Ansi Christ himself for winnowing the etaple diet, rice, ! of rare and precious etamps, and
had promised him (Acts 20: 10 -ib) a isof the simplest and most out .,f that, when he lends part of his con-
te sit down and write some testi-
1. What Paul Was Converted notable part in the conquest of the lection the exhibition authorities
menials to the busy bee, fur the y date description possible. The rice �trc compelled to insure the phila-
frum. -Verses f 2. rs Why does the world to Christianity, that he, blind i` ,laced in a cement basin, ()ter p
benefit of those who have been account of Maul's persecuting be- at; be ons, should "ones men'tt y%liich is a heavy ,tune nt the 011(1, relic treasures for an enormous
'•slung ' by paying out seed 11101)03 gin with ''but" ("and" in nuth or eyes, and turn them from darkness of a long Inver. This is worked up' cum)says London Answers.
ler conventional medical treat- lied version) t To contrast it with to light.'' It was n terrible three- i end (town by two boards, in the I Prince Edward of 11'nles has
the prupagatfn work of Philip, days struggle. form of a eros', nttarhyd to the uxlc ('eased t.hreugh severe) hobbies on
meet. The sting of the common ��cc
just oCII hack
;end why is yet used 1 '2. Converted to C'hrislinn Testi-(,r a huge, handeurned wheel. the way from infancy to boyhood.
i 1 garden tariety of henry bee as if K•,(a back t., the mad zeal of teeny (vs. 10.1'5. 20). \%'hat (f;seiple� (;lance now at another familiar Hauling, cycling, two lir three me -
of
cites for rheumatism is an old Saul against the Christians at the was sent to help 8anl 7 His name .ei ht --a street theatre pJerf'tnan "ag''''11•s, cricket and football, have
superstition which has been revived time of Stephen's death (.lets 'i: was Ananias. It is good to have r.nre. The singe, genetnlly curse all attracted hien, and al. Usborno
by a youngphysician in charge of a 3). That sante threatenings and some one to redeem that name thirty-five feet square, is erected on
he added 1,exuig to the list, so that
New \oorrk tits- hospital, who slaughter continued. Paul himself T'nu{ afterwards (Acts 22: 12) said huge props, so the trnffu' cni, he has mane hobbice to beguile the
(.lets 26: 9-11) paints a tiyid pie- of him that lie WAR a devout roan. ,Lusa t„ and frothatthebeneath. i(!iiuO (111'0•
111/11041 in a few weeks ago t.. ex- lure of this persecution, which held in high honor by all the Jews the stage are small rooms [„r the ITALY'S K!NU.
/,c iU141)1 with patients atllie(td evidently involved the death of • 1 Damascus, in spite of his ('Leis- actors and actresses. A single The King of Italy is one of the
with an excess of uric acid in their more than Stephen, and which fol- tine prefessiun. Moreover he was ;nay will last the e or fear days. 11I d El cutest collectors of coins in the
lystcras. Whether or no there be Icwed the fleeing disciples far be- lesrncvl in the law—precisely the spectators will welch for a fest world. and envious rival collectors
any real tirtne in the nurture 3011(1 .Jerusalem and even Pales- than that could appeal to Paul.
Iu,ur., go away, and then return •droit that his Ii11150lln is a '181101
line. :). ('unverted to Sufferings (s's• ! to enjoy u further instatltnenl of the:
of completeness.
cause(' by the sting of a bee. that Il. ileo Paul was Converted.-- 16. 2325, 29, 30). \That very loieee. Mutt the exact hobby of tho
sty:e of treatment has been getting ver,,,, 3.7. How was Paul journey- strange motive fur following hint! What would be said in this ('4,1111•; Kaiser is, it is difficult to say. He
much gratuitous advertising, and ing' Perhaps on horseback. as did ('heist present to Said ' That tare of a 11uut who, w'auted to build e an de shiest. Anything, from
threatens 14' become a fad. usttally represented by painters; or he was to suffer many things for; n house, merely dumped his lint• tin !dlnq n b+tttleship to getting in -
on A eanu•I, areor/lin); to ('yuan the sake of ('heist (v. 1G). 'These: terial down iii the reed. eulsiug tort is and, An41 in between these
(;oak; on an ass or mule. nreord- sufferings began at once, in separ I{,edeatrians to get past the ohstrnc feats can be sandwiched painting,
Heeognir.in4t all the value there ing to Felten. Atter a jenr11(y of anion from his family, iaelntiutt tion as best they c'u'd 1 Yet "lupsy- i umpusing musk, planning ennt-
tmny be in the theory of counter it fiyo lir six days, be was near Da- from his friends, the retire recast turveydem” thinks nothing of it. paigns, And running a model puree-
ritants - and anyone who bait been mases', ',crimps within sight of ing of his lite. it is to this peri•wt For simplieity of keeping a city lain factory. Thr latter deserves
stung it -plenty by either bees, her. the beautiful city.(ihr "many (lays'' of v. '23) that vie informed of the time Canton would attention, if only because it shows
ells or unspe will agree that it is What wen(ler stopped him in the must assign the retirement into.'lie hard to beat.. In one of the the Kaiser at his best. He in the
way ? it w85 ab,nrt noon Arts 22. Arabin mentioned in Gal. 1 : 1., temple" are four large earthen j1rs, )n+5drl employer, fee at his factory
p c,.nnter irritant all right many (ti). and Ills Ka' -tern noon i5 ex 1'+, which lasted three years at on successive shelves. Water de. stages are good and pensions err him, until further sutler, 100 bees
pc, sees will continue to be as skep- ceedingly bright ; ueverthclest, least one (1111 ycrir and parts of; scents by 'ler. drops from one to fain and, to addltiun, the men each week. The firxt couxignn►ent
ti.11 of the ability of hoes to rare there fell About Saul a light from twu others. the other, a Lena' scale on a ileal eliArr in the profile, ihr lathe be. ,•nm0 tau a'crks nt(e.
rbc.lruati�ru as ,.f tronas to cause Lenten that was brighter than the 1. ing (vst0,1 In the Divine In- in the bottom (Inc indicating, as it ing about 110,00' a year. 1V1►atever A bre is placed in A turnl►Ict
sun (Acts 26: 13), and in the midi dwelling (vs. I;-10). How did .\na rigs, the hour of the dac. at. flys the rest of (:ermnny may think "!, end the tumbler is plece(1 upside
snarls. There are others, how -
of it h( saw the Rloritiid figure u( alas obey the vision.' By finals
Ener, who would immediately start ,-R +•'clock every afternoon the lowest him, ihr Emperor is certainly' w.,r• down ngainat the places!
joint.
.Issas les. l; �,) Saut. laying his bonds stn ilial. ',al-. jar ie emptied, and the upper one' Shipp:•(1 8t l'adin( n. I'fhe bre is then stirred up. and
hnnliug freebie around beehives 111. What Paul ea. Converted ling hint lirether Saul iu tekeii ()f refilled. On the outside walls e.f
The King of Ole Belgians has on(' v hen it gt'te mad it stings the pelt.
if I.•11 some pnpulnr actress weu!d i••.- Vs. 530. Al least -flee toi<ults his aelmissien into the Christian the city are display((1 beard, with hubby, and 'het is nurncy•lnuki"g; •1 her ie worthlrse after one sting,
It t .t ire known (hat he or she had of t'aul's conversion are indi: nicht brutherhu, d, ar,d telling him the( the nuaiher .,t ihr hour en ihr.m, e(r and tory' sucrrashi1 it 11as been, for it dies. Usually three boos aro
beta 'lung for Anything front heart iii ihrse ccrsca, which may best he the same Jesus that had appeared that all may see. \nd this has foo, fee t.. -any Lrepelel must 1"` esed on the sante joint at a sit -
failure
from this point of view. in the wnv t•' him had oral himself.' gone on with;rut a break since 1311. the r.ehe+t rneuarrh in the world.
failure t•• a rew's fret. In thin cru {. ('onterte(1 t„ L()w1Ni(a5 (vs. R, teat Saul might receive his sight , The Ring oI Spain is n ke ei stet- liT t
theclien .tun Ignace I'adereeski. fl). How is that shown ? By what and be tilled with the Holy (short. PROVIDING FOR Till. I'l"Cl'It .. „ri t : while the aged Emperor of Tho man who couldn't sleep ons
t immediately fellewed. The cent- Twogreat gifts—the greatest in the I'unerale n tr almost n meek 1listtia still retains 1► passionate Ihr lira t•• be experiuirnted on. Nr
the fatious pi8nist, has Riven t.1• K R pp' 1 said he felt better after Cie first
bee superstition u lerribl:• s,•1 pans with all, in spite of their: physicAl and Unc spiritual reales'. e•ry to the triter. it m•,n0y run h+•tete .•f burs(', his „tad at. 1'i,•n'11 ening. lie, repeated the %rune thin'',
anesrrment, a ruse and" stood (v 'Cent means "turning ' fr(e)t' spent, a manager ie appoint bring a wonder of the city. 'Che hrrhaps with a few pieturrsgt4o
bark. He has relate, •(I It, be stuns ;) before ie did it 1. eyes lied it implies turning from lonmething, cd, and frons 111.• highway.* and the 1)ownKrr (,juc�,i ..f S{ells renfP 5i'4
1rimrl.rngs, slier the 10(01 1. 811(1
for his nc�nntatism. Otherwise 1t been elkee I, sine eliers he epcne•d the and to something else. Paul. as byways street hoy5 and b'K;{:tr` to the e iiriuu• hebhy o{ eellectiug After the third was quite• happy.
might hate been quite tlto proper 1 ds. he perceited to his horror we heyo errs. turned (11 frena are eollectrel, dreese(1 up in 8nr8/ {obeying cards. ! Ile i, tem hack at borne, able to
thing 1 •tort stung , n general Ir111 that hr stn• blind• pride tinte110c'ual and spiritual) t.• ing eos(umeS, supplied with d.i/ M. 1•• S AT 1'h.\1'. sleep and ter attend to ithsl ic"s.
\Vhet m3' the outward sign of 1cw'linese, a humble following of ?ling umbrella1. standerds, and The ossified roan was next. Ila
tCip;eS, and senlful young montes' this new lowliness ► That he was Jesuit and ce-o oration with other beards, which are carried •,vet t'.c r Mr. An•tuitl.'s s ,le recrratiun, un -
nut 1,, speak ••t the rheumatic.,led by the hand, and thus brought ('hristians; (2) from violent opp'_ . shoulders in a lung straggly. Others • til hr tr,,k to golf, was chest; and was able to shrug his shoulders
Qe 14141 keep the 1)005 so busy" this into Damn• -cu•. What a con- sition to Christ, to the boldest and earry small houses and carts mauls ,Mr. 11A•four, his rival, 14 an en- - after the first three stings. Soon
summer that they would have nujtract to the entrance he had r,•.st persistent testimony- for of eard, paper horses, men, w0-!thuslasiic golfer. Fly-fishing and he was al►le to
chance to wake belies', 1{.lanned' Christ; (3) from n life of auth.,1 men. etc., indicativeof the (lend tennis are two hubbies that the TURN 0%'EIt iN 111:1).
Hew slid he spend the next three its and 0850, to a life of perseen ,•ne's trensnree; and these, with .F,rei;,ti Secretary once indulged in 'and was se pleased he had tl•^ doss
-- •}— !days? fn helpless blindness. so ab- tion and snfferii) : (a) from the (heaps of paper coins and paper with a thoroughness that made him increased to t -en hee% He is no
J 111"\' 'whoa by his now situation that rmptinrse of w•:)rl(11y wisdom, to the 111080y'a, are 1►i►rnrd at the grays,' an expert in oth, longer ossifed. and ho{r0s aeon to
h( could neither eat nor drink. i unfailing guidance ••f the Holy se that they may be enjoyed in the' Thr %Vas Mecretary finds solace in Ieitt s the hospital. The been were
'See' etins. 3 111811 50(1115 to bah What did his new situation in- fi ,it it : CO Irian the weakness of life bee owl. I'urh peaceful ncenpati.,na as hetet tried en the twee other chreftio
di best of an Ar'gtllnent," said I vette? (1 he 'helped to what he worldly puwcr. ie the int inr•ible Hired mourners. w it li etnein Ia. ! 0ellt'hng and reading ; but If r •asps, and one patient was able to
l'nc'• • Eben. "simply because he i 11r,w• eleirly raw• •wAs the truth, strength of the Spirit. Such a gr'nga. and wind instruments, keep' \Christen Churchill devntrs hi% spire leave the hospital. The ossified
,e 1 t..tran' much to de elf his And preclainteel himself 8 Christian t+irning it made by curry true run- »p a continuous steles of howls and i lithe to polo, at which he has I.e
linen and the remaining patient at./
ain't i
time te.{'i•i' talk feud.'' lit 114(8ut the less of his former in- tort. - fluidics. to which is added the !mu- cruse very proficient. Mr John *till taking the treatment.
1 •
d' -
Under Direction of Physicians the
Remedy is Helping au
Ossified Man.
The world certainly does move.
When reputable physicians will
give cognizance t • an old euro
known in the back -country dis-
tricts fur many years, and scouted
nt by the more intelligent, then
that is evidence of the truth of the
assertion. A11 of which continent
it caused by the fact that they are
trying the bee -sting cure for rheu
matisni at Roosevelt Ifospitnl in
New York.
Dr. Arthur W. Swann. a member
of the hospital staff. remrmbere•d
his boyhood day's at \fineted, ('1.,
when the application of the busi-
ness end of a bee to a rheumatic.
joint 811411 5 had a perceptible and
immediate effect. So when ho
found in his ward some stubborn
eases of rheumatism lie thought of
the bees. One patient had such a
bad case he couldn't sleep with-
out (piste'. Three other eases
were ser advanced nothing seemed
1c• benefit them.
ONE MAN 1VAM OSSIFIED,
rind none of his joints could be in-
duced to work.
1)r. Swann suggested the bee
11eatment to the head deeters of
the staff. Tho patients were oil
ling t'r try it. 1)r. Swann wrote
his mother at Winstcd to rend