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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1908-03-26, Page 6 (2)' .ateliSin • o1i1ttt.pb4.' 41, Lk Oiehit'S4iv. " * • W1'!p Wt * JMit 10141 • So man. " •'.wocd* that '•ipose'l,ktMlft Ikhom the. w.( Ptcr fel Wee ".heittede • to be beefed; received .1br silt of bee4tik • The apestie would *Ave 'been the 'first „diselaiim that the 'heeling vs'ae a • "OS aracter sciou y days: AO . he acided; 'Never befo 4t4t I heg. TieelitY Ceed etit•rize eat. lo tiedbread' terileir eleildrerr *Ince 4"9'esy Well:,lesalit reireatine *ewer* the door. • 'I shell drivie to or village this afternoon ' lead attend to your i wants: , !,- iliiiiik e liegiteieiesegleocetiitoiethee lei* - V "As I wes abelet he eiose the door be - M ' itee,We'it siiiiain,ge et nee: with bee tire -a At -tee 0..*o'kt-Ittligkr0‘,Py0;:vyk-,53.. WI 0 h14:71.,,tvg.s.:PlaltiAtt dotv, ' 110 0*0 114 (sceii r, i , , • ' ' .. , 11* . ii , .• ,i - , e. iltif,,,allivi, a, ,,,..::.‘ 1:ir it 4::::'s4LeOteace,' Tligifi"etir4t.tiiiNemit' . 'silo.- sAtItvw,. ifiutt#40.0, -01,4,00 ii t 'bt..•:tt. "ixt ,ittiholot,* iiighturs 10-o; Pa - . Iii4tt''Zit'ilhlii'irit,..!flii:clliti. _ , ttrieli, , 0 i jaidele tkillittiele eitiee °;.-,e1:t 49,',, bal z'ote:'-moyltifthiitt itue44ptioft: iyi ,11049$ ,tris10 ::41,044:04141t.: ' 14.01, , , 014 ,t , a i4n,010,1 .,''*111.14.,,,,,ttgi...4,* hflr--304,' to'voi`i0in fitkop)..'Fitttio.,,, im old.'nit*, ti*Mitin.413 re,,poivezto than 'AO ,0014FiCt ' 'Igitie4 dettyi but ihow 'they' ittilStfi',41.toutijrin. 4.4ar'4"fettlik4elli;te:L4;t1 sa114telaa4t4.1'1:0411. '114:601(Ittrt'.e:.ill'hlit*ittar lin . A FIJRNA proitien., ,' Theo .:abad(-,i* tineansaiensi me' *i at„,: . ,„,,. . " • .0 the,chilii* twittrti That boY leeed ‘Q(1- "-tii:atilltlital hat; 4)04 tPattit•IPtte41 ASK, ence m + 4 , d .• ' 4., llp& 4sww:czaT-st ,,,- ,sktA47.4=5.t.=5imrzAntr,,,,x ...--,,, .., f*001"stillotlitielnar ant4sighelei;t*goktki7":"111*Itclitn: 41: :::137 "ileorlh°1 Ili. 1141:441 tjahtl'ailifilioltilhliZealnve:t; :wilt3a$ 01:111111" ins Society tor the, klerintnittbmi ei s c41.4 lit ffnr*etiirr hist I threlreie` 4.11.4s FEW 'IlliNTS iviticii, ri WILL PAY mrn r ). y' svo i drugs. There ire men and -weinen niers 'and inotarille .4441,eleiteeit, . i.. Ite e e n iltit retot it,r te rid' these (Vends of them, writes a boition correspendent ` it \vas .at Ow Wed Metropole, the other night, while plessureileving tolldonr, unwlffing of the dire disease* that threatened them from ilia InYtiodil of rata 'inithe sewer s iheneiliti'l4irefeet. Wertrtkirsking to 'the •theaties and muste hails, that the decree of extermination against eats was pronounoed. Sr James Crichton Brawn", in eminent phystelan who has little feith in the efficacy of druga, but great, faith In the Til1aferitilenint1417.4* nitefOttiiritresideth• pnthusiastic snit -ratters cheered -his periods as he indicted the rat at the bar of eivilieation. Ile described the familiar rodent as AN AWFUL THING. ES$0.111 S RATS MUSTG ********** s flee fleas, and it was '01014 to VISIt fit Ibe rog,s even thit_coi..solpg : 'or he fleas with ut killing tlte rate. One movement al aye begets enother and in due tierie.'n doubt, them will be termed, a 'Ha roteotion Moeda- tion., Meanwhile. tle MA Extermineting Iseegoole11eolbeil1e1ditvith,str:,_141,usin Ooti44*, The Reureton preelitent end bord Aye-, herr, 1ie known •es Lath., 'hock!, the fudge's Ph(19$4.Pher ;and feki0 titio 0 'treasurer; When enough bitotittY tieee, been eitieed toentrike er leer etertsoperetleot will - ,bit begiire eie terigireieate 41.41%140V ,Ptitictha'eX„tere imIlta.tictne0 lhe iat is a. iitS0e9ariita or ' • . ' „t. • •„` . leareVII seats* Bed, the voice °tithe' ear or two ago, as they will o slanderer is s fin years to ceme. , And to trie all that Wei rubb'eil. --see TIIE WHOLE COMMUNITY ' •stale and unprofitable, and 1 tied no Is better, because' they are lilting lie it. other eliought but to 'eseape and go On the other. bend, there are those walking itndisturbed. whoae-preseneevarouses tilt that is evil "That old story -to the hay frightfully new. We of - the satistlei In us. The sort of shadow wo are casting *Ma& do not want to be troubled depends, to a certain extent. von troth' about the Massey. But these masses meat, but maetle upon eharacter. If are hungry, end are always striving tO Ji! . unconsciously his shadow falls, Paivints have cultivated in. theme. yes a ke..ap In their bodies. . _imeieireeteGoort.laxatt,,,,_,,,z_i, Writ of Juts:elfishness and of love their "Those beautiful, dreams, wet eyes ot LLLiessioeseseesseiseesseiessee childrenewiltiontrionielositer.4reat else. datleilititlidestilettielepXtgjLiein upon some erbe. An Influence. Iike some the -same pt1f nsphore duty" &Otte perfume, has been exhaled. It et the home in which they live. Is ems influenoe, unoonsclously wiekled. It we tultivate a spirit of contentment . A SUMPTUOUS MASTERPIECE. that really counts, for it depends upon end of cheerfulness we will unconscl- what we are and we show our true selves when we are off our guard. A man may seem everything that a -gentleman should be when away from home. His home life may show that In ofeitlitY....lie etelibtekgnarile.lt. .ereitee,atinesphereeofetheilicimeithatireed- .. forth of pewee that was, fore hit tuid been "with Jesus" and learned of Him. Marve'ous as this eutoonscioue pour- ing forth of power seem, 11 1* faCti ethastisiii4eVrilainlette its COnatantly (mfr.; cising .analogous power, not over the bodies of men, but over the mind.e a d souls of those with -whom We come - to contact. One passes Own theatre te I) INTERNATIONAL LESSON. MARCill , 22. Lesson Yuri. Tenspertmen Leeson. (olden Text, Prov. ?3.32 THE LFq.SON WirD STUDIES. (litased on the text of the Revised Version.) - • The Book of Proverbs. -The great master of Hebrew iwoverbs was Solo- mon, "son of David, the king of Israel." Of Wm We are told ethat he uttered more than three thoustmd such kay- ings. The canonical book of ,Proverbs. bowever, in the form in which it- has • come down to us, is of composite au- thonship; that. isein it are (*Beefed the wise sayings of a number of different persens. • This' is clearly indleated by thersuperscriptions <if different groups el verses, as, for instanoe, chapkr 22. 17 to 24. 22. of which we are told in the first verse of the passage that rfiese are the words of lite wise, and in chap- ter 36, in vehich we are given Lhewords of Agur, and chapter 31. 1-9, where are recorded exhortations to Lemuel, king of Massa, spoken by his mother. The central portion of the' book, In which are found the proverbs, properly so called, constitutes the portkin contri- buted bi Solomon. When and by whom these wise saying.s from differ ent sources were collected and put in- cense, but one grain, and thou art free; should lbe ruthlesely employed egainst to their present form we do not know. pEN, mices• ynEt9 pmereED me refuse, and thou, art thrown to the 'them. As a motto' for the societ he ---Theoversesiwbiehiconstituteetheite — Gusty exhale the same spirit. If we ' (By A. Banker.) cultivate within ourselves the spirit of .V.PINONMIle ' k vo and of meekness and of Mee. Probably one of the most magnificent °them will kal better Imola° we have structuees ever erected on Thasietirth passed by -they will perceive that we, waa the groat temple 01 Diana. at 1,4-;ot ,Itearg. tieenr.'lwith ifffillat, ...____,, _.4110,114x.1kt Allink,Jel w1.1.44.4, irv...ero.. cl.. --- WeliefitioDAVISie- itcovierseitenciteemenraitifilielitid7-ii- udgiiiirefrometteseietdeisrandefromet '4 4 , esporitomteseaLesonteeicife lielattaiWti —secure- ul.W 1 ' atailikentirotureireesergehrsthessilsocars hardy. beetalso of having been l'ob. erer- to -the Orittalt-MUs-ew,,, TAn o el his powers -.of reason and ,judgment the statefy fen./ must indeed nave been by strong drink. • -with,* the ono possible exception o As he that Iteth upon the.top of a the temple of Solomon at Ierusaleril. mast -The mast and sails of anctent gemmed with precioue stones, and °ear - ships were more eimple ,and clumsy taid with pure gold -the most impeaing then those used in modern times; usu. and the most majestic edifice which the elly but one large mast supporting a world has ever seam Each ef the se - large square sail fastened to a yard of peeb columns, whiell according to Pliny groat length was used. The drunkard were sixty feet •high, and of which there Is as foolhardy as one who would fie were a hundred and twenty-seven, is siown to sleep on the kip of such a encircled with sumptuous lifeesize sta- masL • tuary in the most exalted and most re- • 35. Shalt thou say -The fact that tined state of Greek art, upon which, those words are printed in italics in Up to this present day, the hand of both the Authorized rind Revised Ver. Time has in some cases made scarce by We translaters an -do not oecur in he skins indicates that y are supplied any Impression; and in addition- to all this splendid embellistunent, the temple the original Hebrew. • In translating waa enriched with trinuinerable statues • from any one language to Another it and other works of art by that great master, Praxiteles, and by other of is often netessary to thus supply wore.; to giv the plainly intended Theanjeti those tilustriou.s -princes of art, whose wilier and more poisonous than the'ser- pent-the disseminator of plagues and pit alien- unholy tereors-oa shieutish reewhosetieltrairedittisswhaeglikaii Maio Ietribleeto contempilate. One pair -or fiekliii* iiiideflavortible con- - tYriitieliii most awful' scourge (hot could elfli humanity. The rat, be told his audience, had teen proven to he manly retitle/1,1We for• 1110 pnapegalkn1 of the plague in Wit- and had there caused the death ot 5;5%000 people 8i:rite 1996. The rat wa.s the great reservoir of disease*, and the flea wait „the channel for its carri- age, and if plague was to I* got rid of they must fill up the reservoir -stamp out the rate Sir Saints called upon the assemblage (t. 'adopt the role el the modern Pled • Piper. He, advised' all earnest ratent- • terminators to avail themselves of the diseovery of Dr. Damen. This distin- gashed Frenchman had evolved a dead- ly virus, harmless to other animals, which when spread on bread and. but- ter or toasted cheese. forms a dainty ' Foots 'That Will Save Coal and Keep • ""T"em*pet rthsieturePre. per Benaember eirtiefurnacte . 'have:eerie:Ili iiitiniefiliiiteitinon.--tifeiriter'elibii- nay pipe% hot air piinips, dampers for chimney pipe. dust dampers, drafts, cheeks and so on. ta In lighting your furnace remember to open all the drafts and smoke dare- eandeseliiiiiikethiaisahkekt. . . Bunt some pieceseofiipaPerierieiti:bili chimney fine. This will siert a pr. mat of air upward. Now light the tire, and as soca ae the wood begins to ig- nite, put on a layer of coal. When this gets to burning well, add enough coal to make a deep bed. MAKING UP Fon DAY. Remember in the morning to fIrstiput " itifitaierartiiiiitiefir thrtireetketesiltes eeksiandioperr-allethe drafts: Re 4reweetbrieitiottoineiotithee4er - Open the deist •damper. Rake -the Prien,oramrsvhig all ' the cinders - and eike. Put on A thick bed of freth coal, let the fire burn about ten minutes, then ehkteeasitiehes.dust damper and take up the ot Remember to close the drafts when the coal begins to, look red on top. When the house is warm enough1 pap - Bally open the ehehks. In very cohl weather, put a couple of hodfuls (Mein the middle of the day And keep the drafts in the 1 wer door re opeslightly. . •: • Remember that if cold air omes up through the rei&ter it shows that more Mr comes through the air box than cart ho heated in the furnace. In ',this case the slide in the air box' must .he dined a little more. ct the morn of the einguege froth wwch works have never been equalled; Or dish for the rapscallion rodent,: Bid If there is 4 hot fire and yet but lit. IX heat coining through the registers, *rte..* making .therirenalatiou;--Zio even $CAM. appiviached, by Inlit:,suo- "after hhod nakt e ertn ef it, it made him ill -very 111 Indeed. And after a certain :it shows that there ts .not enough air Sappleeing of words is' not guessworic , etedlitil tienerittien'in anY nation. But what- innumisrable acnes of star. , time it afflicted him witireas feverish de, *dm ttett to the turnaee' but t; necessity.' a Not hurt-Or"painedTheo agety and of fiendish ,cruelty were wit- esire for fresh air and *open spaces. Then To remedy this open fully the slide , ." senses . el the drunkard are se dulledethat t roLsted in connection with the viroiship the poor rat crawled ferth from his in t air box of that godifeis Diana in Whose Jaime bole to die -with his tall In toots and, becomes •uricious of °old or nits. this mighty ,ane was erected. 'How of- his little pink eyes • • OUTSIDE AIR. levee ihe revieoes, the egaiintrY 'en cd a osihisr. re;n.1 inI. 'i1111 i. wait. TRAVEL WAS, DAN EttOUS. For these_ who were n,t ittelate er ey into it ware difficult, and evei,i dem, emissaries of the Govertients the Kure n Reecsie; fore .ati it was lag and, alaw„ 111%bItt•Wwv1 alii)Ointed' fee. beets; Of the Soden tioveturittei` .v* ii• (keit Seals nitbiy Up, Wit/41C Alt theeitirellitt, efeieriitortis' • n at-tiVia you tnsfjt1 40- 309t. -Uggek,SA by 'the Stidiatie a 1 *Mt n. grater leolible 'Then with' • OW SOIroe, • of Queen Capdo*. • through ,,tho .win404 .ot a tine‘4triOrt, eitem ear.: You enter- the irerrieleideei iedetoi-thieetitilttatieeekie;ii will roll you u� to the -cepitel of North Central Attlee in a night and a desseif luxuriotts tvierel. treatment. ten dtd the cry "Great I's Diana of tho ABULGE WITH AGO'NY. Seek it yet agaln-The anteeedent Eptiesiane" resound as a tocsin of lin- • of lbe pronoun "it" is left to be sup- pending doom to those who weuld not Meanwhile he had spread tbe disease plied in thought by the keader. Wine bow the knee to the gold and ivory bie (sedentiosis) to all the neighboring fami- or strong drink is referred to, and the jewelled image, lies; and presently they became eV- isvil 'Willem,* of , teeso• eo flies the A fair young maiden gracefel:y robed sessed with the eraeing or fresh air; thought of tho writer that he neglects ti. white flowing raiment stands before' and out they eiune.gaspi g -to die the eilearlyeto indicate Mut ...subject in this the image. -in charge of a negro janikm, dreadfal desith. It was A r-wer with- isentenee. and surrounded by a threng of Roman out mercy and no quarter-thall Sir ' -----44---...... . aoldiers• temple. servitors, and. weep- lames wanteirweged -against the rat. Ing friends. The' hauglitty priest sittirig Therefore her would not depend on the DIREFAMINE IN RUSSIA by the smoking altar in front of the deadly virus atone. Cats, terriers. fete image is adjuring the brave girt to do rets, traps -anything- and everything sacrifice to the goddess -"Cast the in- that would reduce their numbers - our to -day's lessen are a pert of a group --11--ever "rsieritieliongliteki-oArei words --O the wise (comp. 22. 17). - Verse 29. Who- hath woe?, -The word translated "woo' In our Bibiea the Ilearew is' simply an interjection or exclamation of distress. We might lraosiate It *imply "0." fletiivire • trim mads literally "To whonr-Or - that is, to whern fie there cause for ex- claiming in distress? Who hath sorrow?-11ebrew. le "whom alas?" the word eranslaled "sorrow" beirig again einiply an inter- • ejectiom though not the same interjec- tion. as in the prezeding sentence. cententions-Quarrelsomeness swill as results from indulgence hi. strong drink, and which oensequently leads to pug- racity and therefore also to wounds without rause. itedness et eyes -The actual meaning of the expression thus translated -is not certain. The word rendered "redneesr. may &co be translated "darkness.," or "dark flashing." Any of these transla- -.,— _i_eierieweieleireeefieeeediesiiie In harmony with, the farts. that is, with the actual etfeet of excessive in- dulgence in strong dent, though pro- • tele)? the rendering as we have it 10 the Englisti is the preferable. Seek out-Thei veils here used Is elsewhere, es. in lob N. 27. and Psa. 139. 1, need ot diligent search for Wis- dom. Aivitaeaven Perewne. comment ling on this 'se tik Carablidese Sibie, points out the touch of irony 'the use of this word in this conned'. • ten. Mixed wine -Net ei mixture, of differ- •ent kirele ett wine, nor yet wine mixed iwith ether &inns; slrang arkik---114 mixed drinta in the Anteritan senseee but wiee !nisei yeah spioes of different Lines mehe it retire pungent. f 21. Gera deem ersooiley erne ae cur ihuilterieed mini/acre tifeelon et the 115114 , trains:Mee the phrase, "moveth 113O1alinitiLc The ecinderingl eif the fleiiscd Versirti hitwever.lte \Pr• 'erred, 81„1/4 lairneany with the everting et Rana lot Sol. 7. ft "And th, mouth the tiest veine. that (teeth t'S11 snalctlity,r er. es to the Author,. Veraten. "Weil dectin 'sweetly" rginal readitg "straightly). 31 Strange thfnigs--Mitrginal fonder. 0.* frt the Autherised V#rs1011,' cStrange ifteeineri." 'the 'thought ts that imagination of the drunkard is' *matt by strange ant sinful *tom MI /MIA Utlieteth pellets* • $4. AA he float lietti down 1*11, „ cousrr LEO TOLSTOI. . sr/C•2•••••••••.••••••• Remember that the furnace draws the greater part of its Supply of air from cut of doors through the cold air box. It also draws- some air front the eel - ler. Hi the cold air is pure, the at- mosphern et the house must be pure, provided the ventilation is good. if the air drawn, from the cellar be, or the oold-aix• bOx is, eentamtnated, the whole atmosphere of the house wilt br contariainated. Remember to keep the cellar pertect- ly clean, and that the cold air box be where it will, :receive pure dry air. irong.e slidethis to be only milli If the weather is mil or the wind s st lkiffsi"-Treiridifenrirriiiiidiiiititii-*IaleMilfilirriiiiiiattielf-rielir Tiara itrialtenett 1.0-440e,24,10w4A,Ara_. 12.4442tar_jducatr. Remember if„ on the other band, the * I her for ever, seizes her hand and en- One enthusiastic enti-ratter declared bir,e-e_is e_h• ct,„alleeirtheise ,,„ *-11W-Th Tteecripttoo of .the Sufferings of the But no! not even for the sake of .him tre in the world. Hs said `ther•e were Every phrt of the house shoied liave eleavera to, compel her to- obey the priest. That London • was the greatest raheen. stmt.'. eiill' Iliti Li" leParltm w'uti• Pleasant* in the Wend whom she loves so well, not even for 6,000,000 ot tbern in the city. Just how a thorough airing each morning. Provinces. , A person will feet warmer In a tem. the whole round world and all it eon. he had rnana to take a ccriatie or' , tains %mild she deny her Master and thcan he did at explain, but nob) 'y perature of 65 degreesit there is a Otiorlite4reelosetheetdote--AindAttetretturftat-reatieradetairailliputernoradireleatiffalssuPPII-at-oxie Ygeneeibeine,'1"esne- Gaunt Loo Tolstoi, in an appeal for goes forth -4 to the lions," and in a assertion that the existence of such a t't .111 oiremnre az "Le oxygen ua'' uc"1 eid ter the famine stricken, paints a Short time the savage brutes are teats vast army at rats contlituted a dir. Mulch found tn. his homo town of Jasnaje, sPirit vaults upward on anget.wing to which, stolid bring the blush of shame i. -,..,..........01.0.04.11i vivid pen picture of the condition be rng her, linib from limb, and her pure grace to the metropolis of the ,wor11 myans. He mum._ , the Paradise of God. "Yeaterday t awoke at 6. A fine For she knows that her Redeemer lived in Ili But nobody blushed. 'to every publieapirited eilizen who WAS AN UNKNOWN LAND frosty rnorn, the snow eracklirag 'un- had suffered for her far worse agony Commissioner Nicoll of the Salvatien Get my heavy stepo as I entered the than any she could be subjected to. ,Artny put lie a good word for the cat yard. 'It is too early for the beggars, For He during those long three hours Tbe army. his said had started two eat 111E SUDAN THOUSANDS OF YEARS AGO,. , 1 ewe te 41,0 */ .self, can take a walk,. of darkness was bearing the dread load Terme in India 104 were breeding east i in peace new: of mankind's sins. which, like a loath- an rapidiy as Possible .--i recruited by "Vain hope, two were already on some vamPire, were hovering over Him such specimens of stray pussies as,they hand. They looked like a portion of as a foul and pestilential burden, too could irripert teem finglend. Given time 0 Mesh Government Has O the swarm of beggars that infested the heavY 143 tg5ars And then with a tri- and chance he Shought the 'Salvetirn pened It up yard all day yesterday. umphant cry His pure 'spirit Is rehiae- .A -my eats by killing off the rats, vi•oeld for the First Time - The i . "One was a peasant fellow, leg, strong tql, and ittPrifatr/ of heerren ate Opened Reoompristi a- great elett 111-- ceeiliatines--- -Desert Train. . , THE PLAGtE_1N_INDIA. .....____ ........i,_ TherereaL.Wedy-Ilalfer-wheeeeto-d "BredIng eats get rid of roans. youi firei touch ehe Soudan soil an just time and money. waited." gnifted a leave the Nile boat for eh* train that. lirilheit vith cui ern/10141*cl arid thied • at belie"rs' face. Ile wore a Short, almost hairiese •... -L S-eseessIeesio-----e- furrooatreffiliNcid-ATsaW-iirri g Afloat- ' - . HOME CURES. der. i A BOY. 1100. Prevent a Cold .-11 members of the sceptic 9 reekon we've got 200.000 or bears you acmes the desert, at Haifa, •frimay come home with wet feet, have 300"0 C&Isteinhijar 61.101:000nd Ivraltisisvhjeur40.Or centuriee the 1. or at Seyne, which is now Assuan, was "With him Was a boy of fourteen, Peri them r.emove their shoe es and etocitioesi teen tot€1 last outpost of Europe haps' Ile 113 44 1' a jacket, a nitre spreading a bath towel on thtf floer, Ice. 11 that don't prove you can't fight, and Asia, the final vedette of civiliza. 10593 01 rags'and het0t. rho boy, too, and quickly rutin the feet on It until they rats with eats 1 4°11'1 kn°vts anything 'Bon, Writes SsildeY Low in (he London C,4"rAsri°41'41W8aaSetyin' g '''iii ,.itpaid theiese iliss tee . better in Inelbe then ttlheley.rdoreninehLo about kieia, Gets ain't going .to do any Standard 'The level iain flamed comes tingle and burn. A cold will be avert- tislesi 9! lineal& they Avtd roe. -Folloi.v... Flaxseed Tette-When. you 'feel 'Vont' nu ror.„teviing, Tem p on London 02 e waste of sand upon the spearheads ie iat 'Phartilehat metisteleries end itte lief, ed tho usual appeal for aid,, and well- out,' got one pound of fiatseed whole; anj 1 °tin% "re' is/w Intleh it hum mets of Roman soldiers as it did upon known aird well-worn story 01 hard and grind it fine through an old coffee sem." the bayonets of Kitchener'a sentries. hick. I thought: 'Wm Since 1 am their grinder. Take two touPoonfula after Sir riveter Branton, another !earned . Beeond .the terintiet- tamp the We prisoner, let its Imre, 11 over airilliticke each meal. Yoll 601311 will feel strong physichn whesit speeialty le me, diges- %-eund• its,way slowly upward temente ey es pessibies *With that 1 rerested pea well. y . i - , , lice organS, formally nerved the reso. e . he mils to the Vestibule; thefoliewed ,Iiiittcp V- •Vhf-th• the NSitiOnfil ,.41Ctiefr social, Ettrwpfs, Meree„ Napata, the . "What do yote want?',. I asked,. like. - ' ANGELIC WORK, e.feti itc" ENleraftla6{M- 4)1 Vermin was eeilY vagee et:MO and doubtful -travel- , don t 83y tbiat an lawyera are .witsihthereattlyritocrrisotisseneentilenitt vewas)te.ca.rTrhiettit le& tales told of dim kingdoms, ris. a fool • "Little Father, we only ask that you ,tilleiern Yourself 'about 'us Poor, 8t"tr` have to adnilt that your profession , crooks," aid ,The rdocter. "bin you% ,ettiro,, teem * *oast% in ret --red bit, in end foiling and restlas tribes Of ing people.," ' , re<i cloak and red clavka-and the our. tin anlable ""ges. ' fele ef ter tonvietions. She mounted NOW LIES OPEN. el to iri the due 'course or time.' , you'rlrveriiriaglaer sin' iglivheingisrl*w. lih611 bona:14)&11:r todt:31!rs;Nno....ci,e,7rtealoikieirit:eadtigtehl: 10tilwym:rn.*Cyou doe- , lee niatterin *Eli made a eine icrietts But to -clay this vast te411 Iii§s.OPen. have the taa Of IIS , gb ''tlrIttqfkkji 00413t tais fiendish •crti. For the find limes in its hi/eery it Is In COW, AND itortSE DYISO. 1 \ i 6ay. irwoh-ej In the killing iof rafg bi full touili v.ith' the miter. workl. When l'Endleas larnentations, retested over , Itt tnTs wiNTIC ' t,1 know ritzr,h about setrie6, but s it borflaa ten Y°trs 6g°i theY did tot* ,tvitt::31::: v7c.rel: adeiciEnnitst par:iettide otherarigienermereallsy ret:enrilharerisevotellesudKhaanliffore's soil treerl'agalri. I have heart them se Stara' had a little wink' often 1 atce helieive halt that is drum- Wahl her eye sr, bite: toarYtcd aff_enttsts vroskni. 'Mt CreatOr EgYPt; theY c'cnquerP4 it in n "tie . (12 meil Mk my 'cars about the farnin&, "The same old yarn: 'Lend eabanstion , And ev yl.vhe_r_eLhat,hiarso went .elevor smiltt.' 3 fr4E5!Ike an'l tt'hen ffit vAgC11 Cum:Pied had never been en.° you bet the ,wink went, 100. .,ereate,riottrat:osItieni, 1,:z1c1;:rervitendpostheinn. had hero' litekte. ' .---the acres will not y:eld foodstuffs any ft it trus that previous 40 ilia wt. ice is 106 rzor., Eight ‘,y11,4er 118 REALLY MID. , EAt remit Itts °MAW ruled . ,Wtot it ifilts the ad:Wit% tiled god the Sudan, eren in the ldrelt bowline for kunothinit. The' hbf1.lo----•"1 Itodetitand yau eslEct Mit oil to ter_ tost, it tro They auteted. mtlt.,11 IndA'3_,41* firrihota.,, tor w ni, of ;odder. 'rho, 1 tad outbre4 my weruhlts3.". „e41 ,in k;11;:ng o"! tolt ihe tall. Beedae, n„„tutt_.,„,r ot,,Ine,,. w""h 1;ALlh 11 d bung*4 Pot Mtn. ' iliikin-Pl'ou !Ave bon mis'InfoztP.M. ztto tuttil. st,ord;ng to the seehtiste win °mom" 10k • vy tsrad MU% but hi* ,t 5414 that 1 didn'tbcliere, '''6t1 tvo, 114,91.,,:tilvel. tIm raWs wzrzi,,tiOt rostiounitivaa, and at "Ii- lit• bile for throt wets of any ist.* i s:11,,. tor the spread of the plague. ft leh soldiers It It is a very simple bustness to gee • lo,Kharttim nowee-days. Yeu can bOOk through, from: Charing Cross if •eott please, and the worst adventure Met need befall you on the sytty will he tad Channel onessing et' �'n tnaile:iptii4C- 1111rgheinrst..s..ratiwar -Measured fliTfie-itirrrAliiItrWhtelieiS-tlser VOW practical method of calculeting dis- tuirdes. Omdurman Is nearer London than Inverness when George 111, wa King or Venice when Charles Dickens disoovered • ,:**3-1******ttwomoisler,""rim***,--,•••••-.,,. • • ,••••••1. -•,• • • •• • • _ YOUNdiNi043000000000,0000‘••4itik FOLKS eillowardet asked-- -Marta' . • -ttliti4WitieettitillttOeiTalteiNttgalitfitteieeT-i,ei - -- --"Letemeiseeethreptied• lincteellowarde — trying to think how' to make a sinipie definition. "When two things happen at the same time that have nothing .to do with each other, but seem_ to have a great deal to do wlth each other, we call' it a coincidence." Seeing that Marjorie atilt lookei puz- red, he started to explain further, when a telephone message called him away. ite he. took down his hat in the hall, however, he paused long enough to aaY. "111 look out for a first -rite Co. ibeidence to Show you, Marjorie, and them you'll understand better." .This next_ day happened le be Fritter. and because there was no eine to drive Marjorie to school, and because she was not able to walk seo far, she was obliged te remain at home. Mamma and Uncle Howard were "very ' sorry, and they all thought of the two Shining gokl pieces in Marjorie's bank that meant two whole years without an beence, and of the, third that was to have joined them so soon; for Great - Aunt Morton, who lived in the big house on the hill, had laughingly told Marjorie the very first day she went te 'school that she should htive a five - dollar gold piece at the; ged of .each year that she was neitherntsent nor tardy. • But the gole piece was as nothing cempared with the broken record, and Marjorie sobbed aloud for a few min- utes; then, like the brave little girl that she was. she dried her tears, got out her paint -box, and began colorlog tp some sunbonnet babies for the other children. When she went to school On ikkenday morning everybody was talking ebout !ha fire that had oecurred the dee be- fore, and to her relief, -nobody saal tricto-Itir-nrattrittit--absefietc----S to_heraelf that she lest could not lii esirlorltielfilinatisodyettedi Two weeks later the monthly report. cards were given out. Marjorie receiv. ed hers with a sad heart, as she thought et the broken record. She did not even open the envelope until Gertrude iels-itad-turned-olleeimehereowneeitreetosi And she was &one. But as she glanced over\ the card, something within her gave a great leap, Could, sba believe her own eyes? There were no marks in the absence eeltniml The teacher must have made a mietake. Memmai and Uncle •Howard looked the card ,over, and esaid they were gall Marjorie had gone from "G" to rG plus. in her reading, but 'Ineither hi Mein, thought of the omisst n. • . ' 'then came a great temptation to • - Marjorie, If she should say .nothing about the Mistake, the record would- \ remain as It was, and the teticher end Vc pupils wouLdeforgeteitiretiext vette end, - Great -Aunt itlertieti need never know. ortienrd. w teacher without anything being said. _ Ail the next week Niel:era" Struggled' with the temptation, 'She see\ned un. like hereelf. Friday came againCthe tat day of school. Marjorie eould.stand it no lon- ger. Summoning all her: courage, elle cam. hack into the sehool.room at re. cess, ante the (Pliers were all out. and sobbed out her.Ptory ber leiter" "So you thought I made a mietake, did you?" asked the teaelier. "I'in se fad you told nie,- becatise-akini assure- , yOts that you are the one wht has mado the mistakes That.day weer ti very tea but. you remember, and something., 'trete 'HIvont-ttle"lurrtaze- Tarty 14-111*--'-' mornings so we couldn't have rehool that day. We sent word to all vitom- we "mild reach easily, and tlisn-itsv,1 the ethers as soon as they came. Yeti , live so far away we oUld not notlfy you. l'm 6orry this has troliblel yeitt et veldt; yen *Wind have toi4t your titer or tne '4430ner.4 arjorte ran round to treatAutit Morton's atter sehNal with her report,. card, and than fairly flew home to tell bar story tda manna and bade ii* ard. "That's *Mit 1 call ths happiest t Seitaleste," galtt Uncle lkire hs hoard the tive.dedlar ease With It. Make; "NOW $O the Weird.* IC!