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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1908-12-31, Page 7' it his11 In , uivalcpt of z11 Pro►,$ 1 r r excellency," c'xPI•essio,., 119111 i ncy," and which,' which re, irritates that the Person elute addressed was perhaps a a ma;, of ne expression a Rohan oflici;, high! ]j' is use 1. The ' ruse Ienl_n r ` ors ix and Festusdtheudclres At tlris Point ( Acts . • homan, times thread of the story a 0 1'3 26; 21. 3; 2`,l5,iii the 1 eter ante itself means liter) 1 point narrative of at which his ose : Ir ' (led." ane ended. s si been sial ! .•i nra4 A sabb e3'enr ep'i' .1, it strap say 4 �t He was r. �� .. 1 tuna t PLY a title or, two t1 at•h 't ;osl,el the! ae%t jrth ' r or , One as jnpel}ed to concede wh But all his m eCSUllfil. Ill•SlIri et . iorrrn , �1 Toti rs ..de who do wClt what we Tu see him di er•Hi`i,t•nee 'its or e3�:te j cgnl�pt, indeed, 1?•;"r'et the barber• His son and heir doth ride post epithe pro h„ 1>11ar/.n'hic•h /.ts, the `/.hatK.,.. Lis,e cies, have been di - friend iip rather than t e s�icfitter,n431 rr EverBut y one for his own. re_ / rr1t claim perfection, we might he name by 'trhich this indivilual was tattoo of the Sa Ia :.t, .. 1 r worse. That we are not wholly vic- ious, Tho night is starry and cold, my known in general society. Jney on that day. is witnessed by the multitud- friend 2. Until the day in which he was! 13. The upper chamber—A large mous leaves that are sure to bo And the New year, blithe and bol -I, received up—Luke's Gospel 'terra : guest room like, and perhaps iden- turned the moment you appear — my friend, tive, of which lie intends that this' tical with, that in which the Last new leaves, we call them—and on Comes up to take his own. second treatise (the Acts) shall be Supper was eaten, and which the Foch leaves have been written in - a confirmation, concludes with the' apostles were now using as a tom -I numerable stories of new lives, His face is growing sharp and thin, hirecord of the ascension of Jesus. I mon living room. ! lives of the reformed and of the It For the commandment here refer- 14. With the women—Or, "with : made over, who remembered the 1 `Mack our friend is gone. compare Luke 4. 44-49, certain women." «'ho these were mew Year and your introducingStepe[rom thehis se ,rpsees; � ane J letahim nnThe Hely Spirit—Referred to in Isnot indicntcd, but among them' namesake with grateful thought, assVetLto he promise of Jsus, recorded by Mary, the mother of Jesus, is sing-IonTg as they lived Yes, you must That standeth there mune, Icd out as especially worthy of men- � come on, Januar «e cannot eta And wsiteth at the door. uke (Luke 29. 49). that the epos- g ' Theresa new foot on the floor, my ties whom he had chosen should be tion. 1 along without you. If you do not friend "clothed with power from on high." His brethren—The brothers of come, we shall be left to ourselves, And a new face at the door, my Jesus and sons of Joseph and Mary. ' and we are not exactly fit to be left a list. of the apostles compare These were James, Joseph or forever in such company. Come on, friend, verse 13 of this lesson ; compare A new face at the doer. ll also Matt. 10. the treachery f Mark udas 3t 1t3 -1D. By Matthe number. 131.55n Mark 61and 3) Judas (comTheyare with areyour aboundingour py good romise. and here had been reduced to eleven, but was soon after this time again in- creased to twelve by the selection of Matthias, who was chosen by lot to take the place of Judas. Ba • ' ed in—Or, "with." he kingdom to Israel— s of Jesus. including alt b �/ mon esteef lie .t. _,0 a rhe 6 '1 ' tr'wt0 ;; 11',, 1/R''trre, p• 1 ki/cv ft„"eh �B•no/,,arir/1lt/trf`diefi o0sy/s(,! Ne• 1 .roil seve,. ; O4- 1/r , ,,r� it/r e u! rt- rtJ ns each sheet of wtithc....•- L/i„ ! k we, -r ng I ,1 ft. wide. Think of it ! Votress. 9p 3 r• d woof. llu�ldred square feet of paper alone without f ondrous pattern, : required to plan this new strut- c without ' nand prepared, titre One hundred and fifty men cot►rageme sprig of rue „ were forced to work every clay for at one's d were spared!” nearly eight months without inter- hat', eiter , ress. I. • � - ruption in order to complete the!'makes off. will dCna ;sott<' Ivan TRE DEATH OF THF. OLD YEARlernmentsomcial, and Lexactly a month Gov- tol Anohe. �; lies the winter snow, inspect the plans. The building is !propitious�i/c� oversee agree Full knee-deep mesa rlust have issuedAnd the winter wcauls are wearilyto have sixty two storeys, and the How other- sighing number of rooms will total many{„r.,,s on ing. f t3 e,o .•.f n, you know. ��'hat� Toll ye the church bell, sad and thousands. rci, what wildness, slow, These large buildings, however, etas there not been!! And tread softly and speak low, are swayed with every wind an that I loiter or hold p„r the Old Year lies a dying. 0 IC sw•1 _olp pus p "'� duces a sensation akin gam. ,n a C� P1 Loh., jest, and other p eery quips are o'er. nose until the occupants get used � ."-4--"'` e, across the waste to it. This projected building, things for h will be able to withstand a hoer, dreams ho is Qanc, for it is to be built on the not , main our e• 1 r inclple of wind braces. that 4. we mu •rd V .. I f - Fi0?tE$ MADE OF STRAW. There is nothing for thea Indo gent but a miserable failure. In future the boxes containing Thousands of young people are butter shipped from Queensland Thousands in school or preparing in other to Great Britain are to be made of ways for their life work. Wise men straw, and a $250,000 company has are telling us these days that the Leen formed to work the business. secret of nearly all failures in busi- Butter boxes hitherto have been neas life may be traced to lack of made of pine. but the dram upon thoroughness in preparation. Men this timber, owing to the heavy ex- do not rise above their starting ports, has been so severe that the place because they do not master wood is rapidly going up in price. their work. They are content to In one month (March, 1908) over get through the day watching the 50,000 boxes of butter from Queens- clock, and dropping everything the land arrived in Great, Britain— moment the closing hour comes. 1,250 tons, worth $700,000. In the They have no real interest in what now box a mixture of kaolin and they are doing. The result is they straw is used. 1t can be produced never get any higher. They blame and sold for 25 cents. At present it on their employers—there is no chance for promotion, they say. The trouble is, they do not make themselves ready for promotion. The new year should call young people to thoroughness in prepara- tion. Preparation is everything. It makes you ready to enter the gates of opportunity which arc al- ways opening in life's pt,ths. here clearly distinguished from the try to prolong the musts and to keep apostles. which would seem to in- the bells in tune throughout. the THE HORSE BLEW FIRST. di -ate that none of the four were year. We may not infallibly re- An Irish horse -owner, w osce , members of the apostolic 3,000,000 boxes are used in Aus- p group. member. Occasionally, we may horse had been prescribed for ay a tralia annually, costing $1,000,- -"'�--- forget; but if you will come, we veterinary surgeon, ran into the 000.The new box will save RED CRESCENT. will try. latter's office, and with tears in the dairy industry about $200.000 The only country which docs not —4r• his eyes and his face the picthur a year, as the material for maim- the of bad luck,” cried :— factoring the box can be grown in use the red cross as the emblem of HUGE RAILWAY STATION. "Oh, Dr. Moriarity, I'm poorly: the paddock which supports the twelve apostles, shared her hospital corps is Turkel, whichfile powdher's kilt me entoirel !” g heir fellow -countrymen the is allowed to use a red crescent in The townsmen of Leipsic, Saxony, „ y cow. It weighs about 10% lb., be - "The powder 1 cried toi Mor- Messianic conception its place, in deference to her soldi- boast that in ten years they will laity. "Why, I didn't tell you to ' cd for the re-establish- erg' religious susceptibilities. have the biggest railwaystationin take the powder. I told you to Jewish state in great the world. It will be spanned b r the reign of the Afflicted for years with a Diseased Liver. seven immense orches each 190 feet Place it in a paper tube, and put toed nu.Berlin, the him but known, perhaps, as "Smsllox Ben," has forms will each be more than 1,000 and blow hard.'' 1 re apostles for u.Ie•.1 : feet long, while twenty-six different "Yes, sur, said I at. I put M I L B U R N'S lines will run into it. It will cost the powdher in the chubs, and I $32,500,010 t,, build. Marble, gra- Put the end of it in the horse's LA X A LIVER nits, bronze, and steel will be lav- mouth, with the other end in my ishly used. The waiting and re own, butbegorra! he blew first." PILLS, rooms are to have gigan- flats, the rent of which she collect- : tic frescoes of famous German land- ed herself. seapes on the walls, and the beer- 4"' HI ;119 also flied them for his patients taps are to dispense twenty differ- A FACTORY ('IIA CEL. when nursing them, and it is a well-known meat soils of beer. lir more than half a century the fact that ant►ll pox sufferers must keep the den . . . Sema- bawds well regal.tted. M— lace -manufacturing firm of Messrs. tart of the Howl ah:.t he says :—" i have been A MISER'S HIDING PLACE have tried all kinds of medicine, tut. of . TThomass Adams and , NuWhat Medl , Akin Could Not I)0 P afflicted fir years with s disused liver, and ha, Englkpeuand, have insister! on all W- kccompllsttewith their testi- no A death in a poor part of Buda- themir, wurple —(o.who numtting-ber thei • home avail until about four ))ears ago I tried pest, Hungary, has j•Hight to Foote hundreds of both se ourfaxa Liver l'ills,sr.ei gotinstant rclief. light an cxtrnordir y of a tendin ace nursed r Bcrent paticyta wont•n's double life. live apparently Ida gilts. 1 -pox, and m each case 1 arently in o•e _ se , p'I east unnecessary curio - rd to the future. receive power --A ment for service, ra- le satisfaction of their curiosity, is to be their - Simply testifying to had seen and heard HEADACHE. f TIRED OF HIM.At a recent trial in Scotland a certain lady got into the witness - box to be examined, when the fol- lowing conversation took place be- tween her and the opposing coun- sel :— Counsel.: "How old are your' unntiar.rind wotnan, andcdinna think it right to answer that uestioyn.'' The Judge : "Oh, yes. answer the gentleman. How old are you 1•' \firs Jane : "\feel-a-wcel, I nm fifty." Counsel: "Are you not more;'' ?Hiss Jane : "Wee! six Blood Bitters. The ►1lgnisite asked if she had rd married, headache do not ing t.B. It is,no new pro• sail tl. inirtg to Onbe littlo adly occupation—what coaldust-laden air, tho position, and the damp fytiement generally ever ing consumption, rhouma- d other disoases; yet the death -rate annually is barely per 1,000. Flour is surely not a dangerous a'r admixture, for bak- ers have a mortality a shade more respectable than this even. Plumb- ers, and painters die at the rate of eleven per 1,600. Chimney - sweeps show the fairly average mortality of fourteen per 1,000, a rate which the well-fed butcher can- not improve on. The publican's life is a less secure one at four points worse. Work necessitating spasmodic rushes is singularly un- hcalthy—a fact probably account- ing for the large mortality amongst shopkeepers. It is still more signi- ficant as regards hotel servants and waiters, who die at the rate of twenty-three per 1,000. To come now to the healthiest occupation, we find that farm servants aro exceptionally long lived, only seven out of every 1,000 succumbing year- ly, but, low as that proportion is, it is well beaten by gardeners with the surprisingly low death -rate of five per 1,000. YOUR DANGER BE- GINS WHEN YOUR BACK ACHES: ft is the First and tit, Sure Sign of Kidney Disease. Doan's Kidney Pills cure the selling Lack by curing the aching kidneys beneath --fur it is realty the kit- neys aching diol nut the back. They set ,Itmet ly un the kidneys and .troy. at • - Ill • •L 1 -�J