Exeter Advocate, 1909-05-20, Page 2•
BEAR WITH ONE
I vend, and the letter {rum Jeru would happen it anything went "Have it your own silly way, mate stirs biro gallantly ; the pro-
A
�� N saleul was publicly read. 'Then wrong below. There's that pig of ani there," he said ungraciously, pellet fell into place. In recut the
(11 they rejoiced fur t.,e consolation. engineer lying blind drunk in :luny
the engineer straightens t
lune key ; the great stern nut was put
•'t'unsulation" is the abstract alleyway ; I'm sick of him ! He'self with an effort. He reeled down over all, and the mighty screw -
noun corresponding to Paraclete, not fit to bo carried as ballast ?s to the engine room, and sounds of (e rench, held by stout ropes on deck,
the Comforter of John 14. It Some of these days he'll catch me in strife came to the ears of those on `Nes clapped on to the nut. Thea
'
Forgiveness Among Men Makes Possible the Com -
refers primarily to the friend
advocate who stands beside a a bad mood, and then hed better deck. Tho entire stukehold crew,
take care.
`some five in number, poured up
-
whence
in the court, and streug+I - !
1 The words were hardly out of his wards, assisted by the cine cu-
ing of the Kingdom of Eternal Goodness sus his case by testifying on mouth wheu there came a harsh, grocer, who was acorea with a heavy
side or pleading for bine. ft+' grating scream from far below, the spanner.
thought is the sante as the Lat,'i engines raced violently for
t_ yelled,
whence "comfort" is derived, .wan there was a def
onating
the good of others and for the well (turn) -fortis, "together -brave." It seconds
"Forgive us, as we forgive our
debtors."—Matt., vi., 12.
Perhaps forgiveness is the least
understood of all the virtues. To
many it ineana a willingness to see
others forego vengeance; to others doer ; it may wither and scorch The truths taught by this history
it means a process of defeating the; like a whirlwind. But it will up- are very practical, both fur the
ends of justice; to some it means' braid, it will denounce and it wit! church at large and for individual
curly an evidence of cowardly weak- !punish ev3n in love, all with the in- Christians.
near. It is so easy to be merciful tent of bringing back tho wanderer 1. Christianity, with its stimui,rs
to those who have wronged others from love's way and never with the to thought and its insistence uprn
and also who have injured us whenthoughtof getting even, of paying liberty, has vastly promoted dt,-
they are stronger than we are. i back iu kind or of satisfying cc►t- cussion of theology and of ecce
Forgiveness is the setting aside geance. It will by every means seek astical systems. It has given !lie
of our own selfishness and our uwu
personal considerations in the atti-
tude wo take toward the wrong-
doer. It is the refusal to take ven-
geance; it is the setting of one's
self on the side of the offender in
order that we may help him to re-
cover from his transgression. It
makes one the friend and not tho
enemy of the one who may have
done lit the wrong.
That great common prayer
teaches us all to forgive just as we
hope to be forgiven. This would
be a dark world if every act of en-
mity and hostility set us its eter-
nally sundering chasm between us
if our offense against the infinite
affection set us forever at variance
with the most high, shut out from
all possibility of return, or if the
act of anger ur greed made forever
impossible further friendship with
the one injured.
Passion, greed, anger, envy, sel-
�tshnees in their nosey guises
prompt us to wrong out fellows, to
wound them and work them ill.
Sometimes the most grievous dam-
age is done by simple
WANT OF THOUGHT.
crack, and then the steady ttuub and the spanner fell home cruelly.
The silent Mulligatawny soon being of all than tar my um n pros- means more than soothing there bin div away, to be replaced byY
be-
tige ur persoual advantage. fore; it implies strengthening. g came as busy as a hive. Ever
Forgiveness niay nut always an ominous silence. man aboard flung himself upon the
smile with tenderness on the wrong- THE HEART OF THE LESSON. " Good heavens!" exclaimed hatch -battens aft, and wrenched
• them clear. They had been told
• ne second mese wounded from that their lives depended on their
Phillips. "What's that 1"
the bridge at one leap, raced along smartness. The winches were un- pumps forward, and opened the
the deck and disappeared down the covered, the derricks were run aloft, seacocks aft. The steamer camp
engine -room. He returned in one and inside five minutes the cargo elowlY to an even keel, as wave
minute by the chronometer, and his was being lugged rapidly out of the after tearing wave lashed over the
the tarpaulin -covered cargo on the
sunburned face was utterly white in after -hold and transported, on a fore -deck, and the captain bitn his
patches. Also, he panted as if he cunning arrangement of wires, to fingeders tok, the bone as heata waited in
had run a race. the fore -deck. Cases and barrels, ( dumb misery.
"Tail -shaft's gond, sir! he said bales and slings of iron, went For one anxious minute the
curtly. "Clean in two! It's a won- careering madly through the hot Mulligatawny one on long, anxious
wildly over,.
dor the engines didn't shake them- air, and were stacked in orderly her scuppersgfilled with churning
selves to flinders i The second en- array well up to the forecastle bulk- the oily it broad -
theresaid he always suspected head. And slowly the bow of the, water,aed rift atoiiy wake far of hernorth.
there was a flaw in ..iie shaft." steamer sal... ::own, while her stern si,Alen riftthes arose art to the soundh.
"Damn the second engineer !" tilted up coquettishly. Men panted that was not the note of the storm.
Phillips gasped.
'Ureal ocott, ' he cried, "ins
engines are working!"
And they were.
It was not until the steamer was
before. And too .ars mutterings out of danger that Captain Philips
of the coming gale sounded like an left the bridge and went below. He
►e on the good side each other, could have sworn the events of the
And never in the measure of per- undercurrent of sound to the steady past hours were but a wild dream,
try t- sec matters from the other's
along to give us a tow ! We can't clang and jingle of chain and wire. , for a recumbent t figure lay in than
sonde pleasure in retaliation, clew point as well as your own ; +�
The old law says, An eye for an fit the spare tail -shaft at sea. It mattered not that men fell be alleyway, cueldting an empty
i
eye; this new law says, see how much you can give up, with -
"A tow : Something coming side their labors, and panted midst whiskey bottle.
d d
to lift to your own level the man to numberless discussions and dif
who has degraded himself by tnjus- ferences, many of which have re-
tice or passion instead of trying to suited in permanent divisions.
get even with him. 2. When Christians differ so muse
Forgiveness does not defeat jus- that they cannot or do not work
together, as a unit, against the
forces of evil and to further ;he
ends of the Kingdom, their di', -
ions are harmful, and they aro to
be settled in some such way as wo
have been studying.
3. Our lesson also shows us how
disputes between two individuals
tice; it puts another motive in the
act. Justice is that process which
teaches us all that this is an order-
ly world in which one must reap as
he sows, consequently must follow
causes. Forgiveness lets justice
take its way; it does not shield the
willful criminal from the fruitage
of his acts, but it lets them fall on are to be settled; talk it over, free
him only in the measure of educe- ly, frankly, and face to face; look
tion,forhishelp and restoration •d of and
If every wrong made an impractic-
able enemy the whole world would
soon be, but a battlefield, every
man's hand against his neighbor
and all progress and peace forever
imposiblo.
Only as we can boar with one an-
other, only as wo can be patient,
make allowance for weakness and
passion, give up the natural desire
for vengeance and seek to heal the
breaches constantly being made by
selfishness can Hien live together in
peace and good will.
To forgive, then, is to refuse to
take the attitude of a foeman to-
ward niy fellows -vho may do me
wrong or injustice or may leave un-
done their duty, and more, it is to
take the attitude and play the part
of a friend to them. It is to turn
a deaf ear to the demands of sel-
fishness, self-love and self -pride and
to have a larger consideration for
the winch rattled daily as tho nut
was hove tight and doubly tight.
A wave slapped the two ,nen pain-
fully as the last turn was given,
and a shark took McLellan's boot
heel into its jaws as ho nimbly
scaled the rope. The typhoon was
upon thein now. It shut duwn like
a solid thing, and the Mulligatawny
staggered to the shock.
'then she began to drift slowly
down towards the rocks.
It was McLellan who started the
said the captain snappily. "What and eweated as the work went on.
we've got to think about is what's The chief engineer had shaken off
to be done !" his stupor, and wad doing the work
The second engineer came up on of ten; hitting a loafer hare, drag -
the bridge at this juncture, and he ging a case clear there—a case that
was visibly troubled. two men had not been able to move
"A clean break !" he explained, t
"Impossible to repair it! It's a
case of waiting till something comes
LOVE YOUR NEIGHBOR,
strive to do good even to those who
would do you ill, rnako friends of
your enemies. Vengeance empha-
sizes and seals the enmity; forgive-
ness breaks down its battlements
and makes friends where there
h h b lifelongfoes
Forgiveness, ten, is the anti -
out offending conscience; seek the
divine guidance.
+4+++++++++++++++++++4
1.+DeltsMieW.eciitillic
f
along! yelled than skipper. "What ably that they co,.i ono more. "Ah'm naught but a dissolute
are you talking about, man! This ! The merciless spanner sought them mecnanlc !' rotten» fticl.etlan
part of the world isn't the Chan -I out, and they rose like hunted sleepily. "But the captain micht
( with ships passing every five' Bares, to throw themselves with hae told me his opinion o' yon
Chinese loan !"—London Answers.
r•c ,
seconds. There mightn't be another desperation on the cargo, while
vessel appear in a month. And their wounded hands :tripped blood.
there's a typhoon coining down on "Awa' tae the engine -room," vell-
us in a few hours. Good heavens'. ed Mcellan suddenly. to his second,
Ana it's the first accident ever I've "an' tin they forrard tanks full o'
might have been
HOW 111: GOT OUT.
h N t come across!" wetter ! Hurry, yo Renfrew rade Then Prisoner Squeezes Through
thesis of enmity; it substttutosThe first mate had tomo to the 'cal !" Iron Cute and Window.
helpfulness for hatred. It is alto- ` scene bythis time, roused by the The chug•chug of the pumps began
geether apart from the matter of t autumn concussion below. theo to Jack Sheprpnra's goal -breaking
forgetting the wrong done; sumo- ++++++++++++++++++++++ towd f t thediigataw ifesank till foals have been emulated at 'un-
tinies you can out} help er hi� Tho chief engineer of the s.s. three y,for looked at e.lc another bridge Wells, England. A young
effectb t gravely, for each man realized what lower.
past
impended. A dead lee -shore, the They lugged out the tail -shaft in a man named Dunn, who was remand-
ed in custody by the Tunbridge•
wally at; you remember his Mulligatawny was drunk. That was
•acts. But forgiveness takes nothing unusual ; he had often been mad frenzy of despair, and the chief
fatal Clobbers within a few mil
es Wells magistrates, has apparently
vanished into thin air. The circum-
stances of the prisoner's escape are
indeed remarkable. Ho was placed
in a cell from which escape appeared
to be impossible. The cell opened
on to a corridor in which prisoners
are occasionally allowed to take
exercise. The only exit to this cor-
ridor is guarded by a large iron
gate, extending from the floor to
the sting out of the memory ; It re- drunk before. Everything working a swift under -current steadilydrag-,
members with calm, with growing well, he would undoubtedly be eyel it lovingly.
desire to help. It docs not over- ging the ship southward, and a furl-' "A varra pretty bit o' steel," he
drunk again. It was his greatest nus gale blowing up to the north—
the
commented. "Tak' it ablaw, ye sod -
look ; it sees through and beyond failing. But rho peculiar feature of
the fault to the possibility of what tee caro was that he had chosen it was a combination of circum- gets ?" till the
the other may be with a little help
and love.
Forgiveness is the attitude which
says I will nst be at war with my
own fellows even though they do
wrong me. 1 will tight, but I will
to be drunk in the white -painted
alleyway that communicated with
the captain's room, and when Cap-
tain Phillips left his cabin hurried-
ly, summoned to ,one bridge by a
stances that might have daunted the 1 They took it be1owi, and s
stoutest heart. On the face of it the cargo floated out of the gaping hold
Mulligatawny was a doomed ship. land trundled forward. The sky was
"We can't sail her off," said the now shut out in black and brood -
mate. 11'0 haven't Baugh canvas ing cloud, and a mutter drummed
aboard. We can't anchor, there's'across the oily sea, that now and
11 throw h the speaking -tube, he hero- intori •les of foam
fight the greed and wrung along ca g close on a thousand fathoms Again broke p}
with them. When a man has fallen abouts. It's the boats, and herb-++ Another difficulty presented itself the ceiling. The bars are about Eve
.. though 1 prostrate, sodden form. The chief• g else!" I ..ow. A swarm of huge sharks had inches apart. Once outside this•
tripped and fell his length over the
• i gate, the prisoner would have to
II,lucC temptation, �••-•-- -•.---o-- - en ineeC runted, the captain �a„----- +r ""^ swarm
thereby injured, I will help him, g g That's about all!” said the cap- I ga••.ered round the stationary Muth-
engineer
with hint and not against him swore and grew purple in the face, tain, with a working face. He hadgatawny, and were prying with
and so bring the kingdom of peace an the vials of his wrath were ++u-• never had an accident in the whole venomous noses at every plate on
and good will to come among men. of his career before this.
her side. The stern -gland
- HENRY F. COPE.
loosed as he scrambled to his fr. h was still
win -
and glowered at the sinner. l get through a closely barred "A greasy, drunken del, not Up to them there staggered the a clear foot under water, and the dow. Five minutes before he mads
that'» what you are +" he snarled figure of the chic{ engineer—the storm was on the point of breaking. his escape he was seen by a can
"A greasy,
elude the eyes of constables, who
were continually passing along the
corridor, and would also have to
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL
IN1't:11N.1'1'1ON.1i, LESSON,
\1.11' 23.
Lesson VIII. The Council at
Jerusalem. Gulden 'Text,
.lets 15: 11.
introduction.—The world is full
of quarrels. There are many wren
like that of whom a character in
Shakespeare says : "Thou wilt quar-
ry with a man that hath a hair
Inure or a hair Zees in his Bead than
t.huu hast. Thou wilt quarrel with a
men for cracking nuts, having no
other reason but because thou haat
hazel eyes. Thy head is frill of
quarrels as an egg is full of meat."
'There are atony others with one-
sided views, which they hold perti-
naciously and pugnaciously. In
short, the disputes of the world
are so many, so Varied, and so cer-
tain, sooner or later, to involve
each of us, that n lesson un quar-
rels is sure to be useful. If we can
learn how to settle disputes wise-
ly, it will be well worth while.
That is the theme f to -day's 1.•�
son, which concerns a very deep and
dangerous controversy that arose
in the early church, and shows the
wise and thoroughly Christian u ay
in winch it was settled.
1. The Point in Dispute. --V. 1.
Whole Paul and Barnabas rested at
Antioch after the first missionary
journey, what difficulty arose! l'er-
ta,n men. perhaps thus» sent by
James (Gal. : 12). came down
from Judaea. The Bessie text says
that these visitors wenn l'hariteees,
members of the strictest sect of
Jews. Perhaps they came to inves-
tigate rumor` of laxity in the
church; at any rate they taught
the brethren (the seri, ie in the
imperfect, implying eontineevl ae-
tion--theyJiept teaching). and said,
Except ye be circumcised . . . ye
cannot be saved :\ very different
doctrine Irian St. Paul's "Believe
on the Lord Jesus Christ. and thou
shalt be save�et" (.Acts 16: 31). Of
course these Pharisee ('hristinns
required faith in ('hrist. but they
added the requirement of (-r nfor-
mity to Jewish rite% and laws. The
result was no small diasensinn and
disputation (v• 2)
II. The Matter Referred o . ecu.
mined that Paul and Barnabas, and
certain other of them (including fit to bo earned for ballast . If you "We've wasted time !" he cried.
warily calm.
Titus, Gat. 2: 1, afterward Paull' l must mako a hog of yvurseti, why "Yo'll understand," he said,. ��
companion, a Greek, a man of Wo might have got a start in the
hutch ability, who would serve as don't you go to your own particular „ boats before this!"
ysty? For two pin,, Mr. McLellan, Ah m in no wise tae blame. the'
a s ccituc•n of the Gentile con wi'out number s s•e drawn the! And Mr. McLellan bade him
P I'd log you, and report you to the . i +
r t) should go up to Jerusalem ,,, superinteadent'a attention tae yon."Hand his tongue.
( b
drunken scroundel, not dissolute mechanic. He was flushed. Captain Phillips s t rew up isl stable securely locked up. No one
• and thick in his speech, but out- hands in despair. � saw hint go, and no traces could he
found of the manner in which he
effected his escape. Tho gate was
still locked, and uninjured. Detec-
tives at once set out to find him,
but despite a close search of all like-
ly hiding -places, no trace of the
er s , owners. ,
30Q miles away) a out this quos-, tail -shaft. As rotten as a carrot' He drove his men below like
Th h' f•to etc i u - •+
lino. Paul went "by revelation„• e c ie engi.teor s gg c P were ma tarts worrds. slaves, ant after a quarter of an
right and swayed unsteadily. Then; The captain, hot with misery and fugitive could be found. Dunn was
(OM. 2: 2), which is entirely con a look o[ portentous gravity over-� p hour of wild hammering, the broken an exceedingly thin man, and it is
sistent church sent to squeeze
ii hint the statement that the spread his face, to be followed by 1 by the greabsyecollarrpk the and shook engineer
i im beeshan •n co Bary was Iter »otneone to in -board. It hgo ad through theelieved tbarrhe liof thedgate. Tho
III. Peter's Plea. --Ys. 6-11. Who a vacant, oily amrle.feowalked Ilike drat. i over the stern in a bowline, and
forward a ace, steppedcharge against heba him was that of
made up the council The apostles impeniment that was not there, "Pout vile propreller•shaft! he secure the strung tackle to the use-
,
a°- stealing a large quantity of old lead
and elders, who "aro mentioned snarled. "Thc ship's lost ! Look less propeller to prevent its being and some fittings from an empty
on acount of their rank,
not as and lurched against the portly form at that 1" And he pointed to wind-' lost. The gigantic nut on the end house.
composing the entire assembly. It' of the skipper whom he took by rho ward. Mr. McLellan eyed the of the abaft, and the key that kept f
is evident from v. 23 that the other i buttonhole in a confidential manner. ' the screw from twisting round un
"Ye ll—tic—excuse me, sort,' weather conditions.
Christians at Jerusalem were also he stuttered, "but Ah'm at thocht "There's a spare shaft doon the shaft, had also to bo removed. THE WHOLE FAMILY.
present, and gave their sanction to troubled ower money matters. ablaw," he remarked conversation -.The second officer had looked over Nobody knows the holes to mend,
the decrees enacted. (See also v. ally "11'hat'e lac odds agen ship -,the tnffrail as the tsetse was rigged Nobody knows of the buttons
12 compared with v. 2d)"--�Lucri_ 111 ad ye min'gi sin' me yet private pin' it?" i but a dozen loathy sharks had eyed lost ;
Nobody knows of the babes to tend,
Nobody kuuws what tho groceries
cost
Nob,xly knows of the socks to darn,
Nobody knows of the patching
done;
Nobody knows -here we'll end this
yarn --
Nobody knows but mother.
can Commentary. Proviously to an perrsonal opinion o the Chrn , ,
this public gat Paul had ase loan tae Turrkey 1 An' a short Captain Phillips fell away in sheer, tiro through the clear green of the
p g g but thorough—thomu h Y astonishment. !water, ant he bad shrunk back dis-
placed his views before the leading g mint e•— „Don't bu a foul n+, well as a i mayed. Yet he had Royal Humane
apostles in an unfruitful private' dissertation on the• qucetiun of c(runkard he snapped. "it's out Society certificates in his chest. No
conference de.erihed in Cial. 2 : PTlace.
et.- nn railway stock wad l inh of all posgihility ! To ship a tail-; man would volunteer for the hai-
1 6. pence. Tae say naught o —lush
iv, i'aul's flea.- V. 1.1. What, sakes! The men's clean dementit?" shaft at sen with a typhoon corning acinus work, and it looked as
was the result of Peter's testi- t'aptain Phillips had broken away uP--well' you're drunk; that's, though their efforts had been in
mons- 1 All the multitude kept from the detaining finger with nn your only excuse. ' I vain.
f d t 1 h I 1 t I "Ar•, Ah'm drenk, but Ah'm 1 McLellan charged aft, and his
silence. the previous debates and ' t 1, nn lar s ou a erre t 1P en• speaker' sober sense. Ah'in the
lacer to one side,loudening to thekeen eyes blazed.
the buzz of comment having been g K P
hushed by Peter's speech.
Theypwee mon a3 11 dee It, ter!:, "n a professional reputation's at Nobody knows of the shoes to buy,
bridge in sheer 1 speechlessness. Mr.
were in fit mood to listen to Paul11cLcllnn nddresecd the• white hulk ""'' the spare trail-al;aft f the; stake,' he cried ; "gi'e's a hand o' Nobody knows orf the yearly bilis,
testimony, And, like the skilful head against which he leaned. average traaip-»trenier IS usually you bowline!" And he slipped over Nobody knows when the gas bill's
tactician he was, ho (nod learns• "titans drink," he murmured kept do.•-.' the after hetet, hidden the stern with a grim laugh on his high;
+ under a ins• hundred taus of cargo. lips. NubrKly gets these thrills.
bas) promptly seized the fnvurah;o drink's "F ilun drink . Eh, but This is in order that it may be in It was killing work, but it was Nobody wears his lust years suit,
opportunity to speak. drink's a ra:r thing' 1 rvouldna
V. Janes s Plea. --Van. 13-21. 111m gang sae far as tae tank' an,a' a immcdtate readiness. The stern done somehow. The snatt was What, again 1 Well, rather ;
was this Janes, aha tmM advent moo's character, but yon skipp hr's Blanc', where the tail -shaft leaves hauled clear, and the entire Indian Nobody gets the eternal boot,
the hull and protrudes for the pro- Ocean began to poor in through the No, not one, but father.
age of the silence and spoke next 1 fou' .\y, drink's salt 0n the tem- place, ,gaping stern -gland. But the pumps
He was the brother of our Lord per? I'm thankfn' I'm a sober pellet to he• fitted in lace is sub
mer ed about twelve or fifteen feet kept the water down, and in one Nuhvely knows of the fnshir,n tip,
(Gal. 1 : l9), called in ecdesiasti �a, men." b Nobody kuuws Of the leo.. est
history the Bishop of Jerusalem 'then he slid gracefully down the below the waterline, and any at- spasmodic gasp of 'Titanic effort the ody
(Ensebins, 2: 23). Ile was a He- bulkhead. came to an uneasy rest thrust through
brew of the Hebrews. From his with urs head between his knees, t e t Its end showed clear
upright and holy life lie had gained and snored blissfully.
the surname of "The Just.". He Captain Phillips was boiling with
spoke, therefore, with the• weght of rage as he mounted to the bridge.
character ns well as of wisdom. The Mulligatawny was trudging
VI. The Wire Decision. ---Vs. 22- through A glassy Rea. nal the thick
i9. Why were representatives of smoke from her funnel lay heavily
the Jcru,aleni church ehoaen ►•' on the renter The tinkle of her
carry the de•eision to .\hooch' To
givo dignity to the whiter. •tad
weight 1'o reciprocate the honer
tempt to draw the broken shaft, andnew tail -shaft was itNobody knows where such things
replace it with a new one, would, t re opening. clip
followed by a mighty inrush of in the aperture, and an eighteen• When they are gone from
water. The work of unship- foot shark nuzzled it inquiringly. under-
neath;
ping the propeller, arid hanging it, "Ah canna dae't a masse : ' Nobody knows of shoes that pine'',
until the new shaft, is pointed, is grunted McLellan, seeing the gigan-And ,•then things that twist her;
ar.luous, and taxes the resource's of tic propeller hanging there. The �iobud}. knows what makes her
a highly -fitted dockyard. And Mr. second mate had gradually been ' flinch.
McLellan Was gravely propounding worked up into a pitch of Berserk
Nobodyknows but sister.
t rage. He supped over the stern,
and joined the chief engineer at the Nobody knows of pants cut dewn,
sound The men on deck threw great When dad no more will wear 'ern;
paid by the Antioch Christians. to lumps of coal at the prying sharks, Nobody knows how ma can frown
the Jerus9lem church in sendng heat of the engines. But away to "See al'out getting the boats pro• and the skipper came aft with a re- If he, perchance, shall tear 'em;
their leaders to esevent with the.u' the nc•rth haat there brooded n thick visioned, Mr. Scott." solver that he had never fired be Nobody knows how dear, sv+eet sis
and nut merely spading a letter. T and sullen cloud, and the second The mate turned a rns-. but the fore. Utters things a girl should rmo-
ceufirmthe report of Paul and liar mate pointed e + +rehcne ivel e ) ther,
nabile which otherwise might b+' barometer. p 1 y t +the chief engineer was in deadl ,•ern screamed thec hist, as hehgui led the If he but hides and hears akiss -
ow•pectcd of a hies toward their e
"Cumin un to been•, air "' he ":1h ve a whole ca:•e n whu�k>- in propeller on to the tail -shaft. Nobody knows hut brother.
own well-known views. It is nl g
wars best to conduct busrnegs in said pessimistically. ''(rood thing ma hunk," he said atubhc rr,ly. ' xn A bullet had clipped the steel close
vie re high-powered, r:ith these :1h'+r n0 gain' Lae leave it hehiwel, to his hand. He kicked stoutly. with ---'i'
1
person I' { d • ) VII. A Jo}•fol Settlenvent.--Vs. under safe current. and the Clete' Ye'd better think o' repaint, the a heavy hoot at the nuzzlinct snout Like cholera, influenza always
her hock• under t).e lee." ' •haft." r+t a snare, and brought down a travels from east to west.
sakm.--Vs. take s. 2-h. 11'hat wise dispute
! recei How did the fAthe
mailchurh
Ras taken concerning this dislnttc n.cei+e the rle•ws of the eonncip'+ ..Yes, a good thing," n+scut.•J Ole' It was A forlorn hope, but Cap- ispanner with a backhanded swing on Healthy cows yie'd. on an ♦rem•
They (''the brethren,' v. 1) deter- decision! The church was con- skipper. "slut ileayen know. vs list tain Phillips was desperate. the nose of another. The secuuct age, tee gal!ons of milk yearly.
patent log rang loudly from the the Sugg^*tion that the Mull
stern -rail ; the clang of shovels in gatawny should be repaired at' -ea.
the stekehold was the chief d The captain was 401y angry.
to he heard—that and the toady "Talk sense "' he »Aid suittly.