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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1908-11-05, Page 6 (2)111 tcry ation ir Euinpmade upof - eEzI rams epwaking differen toottlittit 1ttt,all lirof‘sing .the (hr4n ere eileite „ jrer Cr .0100,11yb a TnrkttLi ng ritar, ,ecte:o t ti ett • te • •ortlisi rnaiiilaii4 ,t1irw,t) tafei. 'on the. lend tlitmeent vipality, and 'finally a kingdom. These anteing -the Serbs who were vettled in Servist,gained their free- tictne, ;.The .Bulgarians seamed aut, tonoinyeand have now cut the nom- inal tio that hounil.them to Turkey. s The terideney toward racial union .bas not been weakened by the crea- tion of the Balkan states. Modern democracy, -which impels men of *ITV Wei e, k•re "tterlakr,;, free institution,SO 11404 ' In to unite wide one government, Tim ie-klifirpieliVistic.,entyat- Alisidott among three s powerful nations would reunite theinselvee if they could. During the last thirty years the Czech' national feeling has be- . tem° intense. A Czech literature has come into existence. The Czech language has supplanted the Ger- There it; no inclination in 'Bohemia; to break. away from Au- , stria violently, but if a peaceful op- portunity were to present iteolf the people would establish an indepen- Aleut --Ciechegovernment. . It would be trange indeed if the Serbe of Bosnia and Macedonia did not /earn for union with their fel. low Serbs of Sorvia and if that feel- ing were not heartily reciprocated by the latter. The power of racial attraction, intensified by a common language and ereed, is manifested in the case of Prete, It is As well governed anderathe protectorate as it would be as a part of the king- dontof Greece,but that eounts for, nothing with Cretans. Cyprus is another island a majority of whote inhillitants are OVeeilte Christians. It has. been, governed for Turkey by Great -13ritain for many years and has-been well. geverned. If the in- habitants were to * demand union , with Greece the British government hardly could interpose a veto. The Ionian islands were under the Brit- ish (tag one, but the British gov- ernment, yielding to the -manifest desire of their people, let them be- come a part of Greece. voripisomprre It Seems probable now -that there will be a conference of the powers • ,,, to consider not merely the action of Bulgaria and of Austria-Hungary. 'regarding Bosnia and Herzegovina, hut other phases of the eastern estiorotetheeannterstshoul not disregard utterly the aspira- tions of several raceator union and independence. That would bc a de- licate subject to diseust with /tits- trisieffungary, which_ is madup of more or less discordant races. But it would be wiser to :cognize the de*nantie power whieli lies in the lonsing-ofeinen who speak the same •'tongue to live under the samesflag • and that their own. Tieaties may ignore or frown on thatlonging. If fiftime those' treaties will he thattered-by the resistlese force of ,aspirations. SMOKE eXGARN IN SCHOOL. Diligent Crass Ittwatifed la/Mexieo by Geigeraf .Satelce. ; ,111<esieeti sehoolinesters sibow their appreciatioie of ft PuIil' ef- forts in * curious manner. T tie di- ligent student is allowctl to smoke a snot during. the ktson. • When the whole ease hag given eatisfae- ti ion permission is gven for a gen- all emoke, and even tbo little exieane are &1!n1ti light cigart tte for tW, ticeasien. 'Neediest et the 8titeoltna4ter• helf eigar of a thee and quality ortioaate to his euperior past - But the telet,ittee are not al. d dila, thiq priNtlop hein rded to the rater onty. Jn hi ek be alwatte ketps a kettle of which, when ernpteb °eta. mei' dispute *Leong. the pm tufa of his etholiits, as it lot consid, ered sinitonor to he able to fat the ethool,itessfer'e to:ttiv±.. Inn ul •• r- mink;0)1 to , "Ii.et haire .to erifiees tettkiei fl , ii -life .)t(41 tO. 1 0: iake i3 0 -ifiv religion . whether the things winch it o p' AS anpreme are theme which, are rightfully saperior ti all others and Whether their set,. vice vane forth the -best in the wor- shiper. You Cant find people who pour out the best adoration of their beings before steak and onione, It needs little insight to indicate the type of existence to which such worthip ends. There are those who 'with all their love on money. Theoreti- cally, at least, we all know the or that0Siiitti ftotn: Yet he would be a fool who, should "rapettened. I*A0 unwor 11y objets worship,or will have none of either." This was the mistake the early Christians made it is the mistake that marl make to -day. The. team that mane lose -their souls through' unworthy loves and they therefore say these things shall have no pine° in our Rees. xteii--thigal-:-Faig10118"-Tietrwit was a disembodied spirit. The near? er one could come to the grave, the more THE GLORY OF THE CREATOR was established. Since ttuieicle wrs forbidden,menshowed their tooth. ing of the fleshbyhovering_ on the brink of its dissolution. They heap- ed 'anathemas on the body. They talked of their bodies as belonging to the devil while their spirits be. longed to God. The modern lopsided religion- ist talks about his vile body. Often he goes a, step farther and affects to deride the intellect, a geatuitSius exhibition of pure envy. If Ile is tincerif he is sadly mistaken ;- the engineer might al well tape, about saving the steam by destroying the engine.' The ,one is but the instru- ment of the other. There can be no holiness with half a man. - No one doubts that the tool is supreme in man. It makes no dif- ference by what name you know this inner life, we all know that it de - 1 ft 4 iiittee. us to „„ineet ,tv• place tit thvlull WO' te place whett we And that Which . first placein life, 'When man thinks of luntself as the Child of the divine, the first, the eupreme thing is' the Ale which is his tie a IfP„iritual being, This I,. this oxi ,e. se, utOsness, separating me from 'the ;vests,aete eue beside the throne of the . Mere; within, is the true self; here the enduring life; here, with - n the walls of f1eh, take place the real battles of -life; thence issues eonduct and here is shapen charac- ter. Rote is bo..:7 and a form • ; TS FASHION It oLOlr titA cciden.s that ulay happen to -tbc physical body. Kerte where eonsciettee 'Teske, where I feel the touch of the divine, where I can apprehend the infinite of whom -I eannot reason - debate, here the soul life, the seat of att. tie:nifty in the righte life. Here wells.theelt-theeptteraonalitettehring lititle'iiite-ehedienctiTetivanfifil toilaitir still, end compelling intel- lect to, exert itself to carry out the plans of the soul. Make the lower to serve the high- er, the. lesser the greater, and the passing the p_tirmenent. Set the seul on top. Order the lite 'Wit beauty. Perhaps you cannot con- ceive of this soul in act terms; now- ertheless, you earl live for its We- lds, for the things you know to be best regardless of whether they have market quotations or not. Cultivate your soul. Think of yourself as a being with unending and infinite life. Make the moot of the body that it may' the better serve this, higher.life. Set all the faculties in their places as it minis- ters. Then all life is seen in new light and much that was mylittaious is plain, when, seen aa nunistering to this life of the spirit. The sod becomes the servant of the foul and the true man comes to himself ae the son of the great soul of all. HENRY Fe COPE. E SUNDAY SCHOOL • INTERNATiONAT, LESSON, NOV» Lesson VI. David Grieve( for tb aloin. (Widen Text, Prov. V. 23. Verse It David numbered the peo- plet-Mustered his men, forming his atray into line of battle. om.° years seem to have closed since David had engaged in actual warfare, so that the sudden eitiergency which iiitteciiine-uponeltintenteessitatedea- hasty reorgenizstion of leech forces as he could ,gather on short notice.. 2. Stint forth the people -Per- haps better, "Divided the people," tbst is, into 'three contpenieie Joah-The famous leader of 1 M ITC II PATENT MEDICINE. David's armies in previous wars : 14. Darts --Hebrew, staves, that is, short spears. los young . --The execution in which Joah, him -1 *self took an active part was most brutal, as the details of our nar- ' naive at this point clearly bring Ont. 10. Reid- back -Or, "spared,' -17. Raised over him a very great' heap of stones -The eustomarei mark of detestation. Thus was Ache** treated in the time of Joshua I (compare Josh. 7. 21). is. The pillar, . which is in the! - king's dale -Absalom not having' a son sought to perpetuate bis i name by meant of this memoria* 1 pillar. The dale„ or valtey, refer- ied to is mentioned only here and, IrtGeneeite-rt. -Itselocationt is noel' ltnown. „. 10. Ahiinaaz-the-son-of-Zadole- Already known to us ftoin the, ion" ger narratiire of our last lesson (2 Sara. 15. 21). • 20; Thou shalt not be the bearer: of tidingsthie tlay-loab refutes to Still tdinnina me to hide unw, oie4e, uth .frnn thnse we , love thatteeung men te TivA„ariit .11"tetisite.ry ," to' 'Speak, 'Mere 'NW king fullY initiOrte of: the wrd. nett , • FOIh)ing our -:"lin .over thideath ted by ettit; '• • , eve»tTA it -0 ..0.°04t:10; , en* ' r his Jong tap.; 1:\ti's to ,40.4 res4leni, 1)avid succeeds in OfilfAtt- lialip$ his kingdom more firmly than .ever, ett that at the time of 'Solonites succession, to the throne (compare Leeson for Norimber 22) the strength and glory of the unit- ed lIngdom is ailinost at its maxi. mum.. GERMANY NErtitli MORE ROOM. Extended Colonial rossession3 Ah. • sedately i%ecessar. .,41*, *OK writer on -political (pi ions, ia ii:etp:noy11:31:i.64setiled :41114k ciligettr46;47).,r'4444,1.7,1448Ari&ttt.Z 11.1;11;104unat,e,44-. 'avii*t; occasion, .of a remarkable Atha; fAlieefaitiveliesictitrikAitiderhe' to interest his brother in his favor, According to the Post, Germany and was, finally released front pri- at the present, moment, is in the son - He then' proceeded to London, samtetstate of ferment which char- acterized her in the years from ittti:,2 where lie poted as the son of the minister, Senor Rodriguez San Pcd- to 1884, those 'year;, namely, when stenaeuesnvottuirei,,,d ralherme4xtittisizletatolwrionti,;014,nay_.1daist jutwarLoon bcc_dostiame anfilittavorite in ewe rises a .-vbie0 that the people But lie grew tired of this humble are not satisfied with Mingo as they are. This voice says that Germane are too many on WO limited area, and cries out for opportunities of expansion; more elbow room. Germany is different frnm other European powers, says this Article. It is not Satisfied to take up a, sec- ondary position like Italy and Au- stria-Hungary; it is not rotten fin- ancially like Russia ; its population does not remain dangerously sta- tionary like that of France. "The sun of the future smiles on the, three great Germanic •nations, Great Britain, the United States and Gt?rmany; .but to secure our promising position we must have a strong fleet. As Germany's fleet is only in the building, and will re- quire ten years before it is of use, It it, of course, only .prudent to avoid every conffict with other pow - era. It. would- almoet appear as though in _ recent years Germany had become a, sort of Cinderella among the other nations, or, like Schiller's poet, had arrived too late. on the scene." The Post states that, according to Dr. Itohrbach, Germany's Airmail posseeetliterseiwill Only be able--toeutei p - port a white population of lootett, but Anatolia, Meeopotainia and Southern America still offer numer- oua possibilities. Something must be done if Germany's population, which will shortly rea.eh 80,000,,OSO is to be adequately cared for. Let us, however, be patient, 'ad- vises the Post. Who thought of Schiesivig-Tifolstein and Alsace -Lor. raine in WO. who of African pos- sessions embracing over 2,000,000 square kilometres in. 1884 . A na- tion with a history of 2,000 years, with. :In upward tendency, ean wait 'until the ripe gripes fall at her feet. Everything is ready,. It is onlyenectsmy-tbat-Getmairltetil,* rs keep their eyes open and mow no pportnnity of 'ettreingetlio when the; time comae. LEVER ADVENTURE • ORO FOOLS OP.TILF4 VIATE!, 100 4u11. eu ' ai • tivet 'Sitter, mill11 a 4ribg ifey liertoeSP'wa. uufoltkd in 140 e00t"'att. .1‘fadrid' the,,othert dee.. The ti iier• erae *rat San Pedro ed • r(V,Vf. Ir1eg4111 wearing military His ventures consisted of a long series es' impersonations which, owing to an attractive manner and first. class education, gained litio the en- try to the hest soeiety. ' Some tune ago he took the name of Villaamil, 8011' of the illustrious hero of Santiago de Cuba, and suc- ceeded in winning the affections ef a British oflicer'e young daughter at Gihralter. The engagement was officially ainnounced, and the fraud was discovered just in time to pre- vent the intirriage. • A RESTED. 14 • • and a nephew of the king. expose the priest's son to the den- Enormous Grind,* in Vogue of rat. Iasi the Gittite-See note u geirtm!n.mvolv.etlh *le beistring hales .ent mediciiI nes in steiele, Word Studies-for-Novernherett-- ° iIli i 5. Deal gently for my sake with 21, The Cu'dite--Or Ethiopian. vogue of, patent medies cin.Great the • youpg man --We note . hew 'Perhaps a black slave whose 'life Britain IS shown by a report of the throughout this eventful dayi whieh. the graveet interests of the-nIoab Inore willing to risk than Commissioners of Inland ftevennet that of the priett's inst Laned. In the lest financial kingdoitt were .at stake the father' a , 23.. Ity,, the way of_ the itlain, yearth0 .81‘103 wellsel the` laragest love oativeighs theMonarch's judg• Avoiding the more direct but ..also peeord. The totttr 'ditty paid' was more difficult route, teketi by the, ,fi-,1,670,110. Tweuty years 466 it All the people heard -The charge Ethiopien in order to ,gain the- ad_ was $203,000. ' ' concerning Ahsnioul was given to vantage of traveling' the well -beat. Of. the large total 91 duty paid the generals in the presence of the 01 highway wbieli formed tile ems. aNitialka COUtriblited' only entire army, • • • tomary route' from the Jordan to 'In Seotiand„"' !mid ik leading. Lon - 11. The forest of Ephraim -A:4 um, 3Iahanaim. • ion cheinist, "the old taedientee kuown forest or jutigle region ee. Between the two gates By camomile, rennet' II.psom salts And catedi not in Bphrann froper, but eettesheee outward And inivird sulphur -are more in deinand. test of the jordaii#in some part of from ow city, wall ant intmr i‘a rtht,, $.1000,000 bottlts; or eases the (leaser forest of Mead. outer gate were iprovided,/* sol4 tireat last Xcar re. i. The forest devoured mere iieto, teen •thee the ling waited for *rent' on fikir compufstioo not ple-4The usture, of the .'107,0,un" tidings from the fiebt of battle, fess. hAn 006 thumand million dos. mittie the eseePe of trot, togittves 21. The watchman called - Front es, tiext to inirssible so tnat inorP the tower *hove the gate below "The enootions revenue dewed were, slain in Ale pursuit through which, the king Was fitting. tftm patent metlieint stamps is the forest than had fallen in the 41te' g7. Ile is good man, anti eally..* tax on secrecy, as the duty thai battl"' Thus "ithsid°1111 14i1u- Oh with gold tidings--Dnvid rigb only Itsie4 when .. a propridor it met hiS 1'100.* rettions that Jostb Would n aims- secrecy or that. no one else 0. Itis•he44 311ght. 1014 °I choose so distinguished * messe tan Make the medicine. If he pub - Perhaps better, .4"wits taught or to, bear tvii lislies his formula the duty it not fast in the oak." 29. I "saw it-greitt tumult but I levied." at full eed,,liorhaps at the sante knvivi not „Alla it was,fxkl 6010'100 ig backward at lue puri • •teers, his head Vilt'Veauett in the Ecrk 'of Mk overhanging bough of II. Ten pieees of silver -Ten shr,. the value: of _ which At 'this tirnt% is unicnown. a. N'ot, pat .tOth my en i kin The r. regrt Ini hie itta rd of .0 i •• ailiSWPr was perhap3 prompt. hy,,a desire ia a measure pre. jaie theAcitig for the ovil titlingN 4e11 he knew the Cushite v“Teld shortly bring, lest the muttlen bieaking of the bed news voneetn. "tett ;Absalom should overwhelm the ged king. This, howtver, does n4 e, the falsehood uf ishich 11 'George, ")OU ..ha good many high positioni *1 ReL e and -*no iil rge, who lia4 been mar J. ng enough ic,now.,thAt heroic crvit the hiaprit- . itutiitstm the 'pett,00rria, poi. * no orator, •Siwlio will lift 4. voiee , And have heard it said that4 waltrtwduellri time • An4nilanireaVewo th3j- iwate.'inebra4A lug thOteall. te,hiizt. itOnnt,,,y‘ Invacnt 'iVhvn, it is chxiiii th4oncbtaors lea*whwh reitilts in tu1ar diet; • • tiblY§10. The me • t * • no /In conoa- ro - "inflaro 7,j, • ••••••t,'. h s its elastieity, and finally' con- teacts like ,other war tiesete, Whieh • it becomes. . lfflecre the triembra,ne lines the - smooth walls of -the heart cavities this thickening and contraction ao tit greet harm, -at least, cotnparat taiely none, -but where it extends over the various valves it doe* irre- parable damage. The leaflets -form* . ing the valves become distorted, shrunken, sometimes Curled up, and not very rarely adherent to earli other or to the adjacent parts of the' heart wall. The result- of this valvular deformity is that the blood is obstructed in eitist passage thi 141 V03J,Ifi0 that the ,tv• 14, 4, r'• back. In eillier CaB for this defect in the velvesand ite walls become first thickened and then fatty, or otherwise degenerat- ed, and kreak. The heart is left; reriously and permanently crip- pled. Acute endoca,rditia itt less serious; haListiz1ea inc't.ai -rgf/T1011.& n Iffects, The stmeileefe,rm m role, and resolved to become- a et$4150 fent, or no- sYwptereft, and prince. ,He crossed to Cherbourg,' when it has subsided it often leaves • uzid tilted to the Spanish Embassy the heart apparently as good rite it,, in Paris that the Queen of Spain's, vas before; It occurs moot ire - brother would arrive at 2 in the queetly in phildren and youths, and o'kn - ter _ f'cr 'r ,,ttettief • He was said to -have been „greet- -ed on his arrivalAry-the Spanis and British Ambassadors', ,and re. viewed the detachment of infantry eent to do him military honors. That ia the remarkable statement made in court at Madrid, but it ca,n never have happened. ,The pseudo - prince then proceeded to Gibraltar, breaking his journey at Saragossa, above he LUNCHED WITH THE GOVER. NOR, anti et Toledo, where he was wel- eomed by the primate of Spain, Cardinal Sancho. At Valencia he was diseovered and thrown into prison., but 'suc- ceeded in effecting an escape, and proceeded to Gibtaltar. There he dusky. blueness Vie *)kin. ;,s again credited with having done'. e prime necessi,y thi? treat. the impossible. He contented hitit. ment of aeute endocard , atiso- self with the uniform of an infan- lute rest. Cold rpphcati tie over try captain, but the number of de- the heart often do got d, but the corations witheethieh his breast wire'etreatreenttealls fax the cenbut etudded excited 'suspicion and he was ()nee more. arrested. usually as an accompaniment of -or-soma- other-ae infectious- disease,. es- pecially of rheumatism. L• A very serious form of mama - aids, called, because of its serious- • ness,malignant• enciocraditis, oc- curs in cases of blood -poisoning, in connection often with suppurative - diseases, such all childbed fever or abscesses in the ear and elsewhere, or with erysipelas or pneumonia. This malignant form usually an. ieninces its onset with a severe chill, followed by fever, with a very feeble,. irregular and rapid pulse. The subsequent course of the dis- ease may resemble typhoid feller or hieed,poisoning. There is often ,great shortness of breath, and the poor circulation ie iadicated by a • He, wait sentenced to four years' !imprisonment, but he has won the sympathy of the entire public, and it is believed that he will not serve the full terta. GETTING TIRED. An Irishman applied for a job at the docks. At first they said Ile was too small; but lie finally per- suaded thelli, to give him a trial. He seemed to be making good progress, and they gradually in. !Teased tke., tiivei of his load, until 011-t1W Erilas carrying a 1 hree-1iun1red-1)(mnd anvil. When lie was litalftteay across the geng. o ay taking his load on beard ship he fell into the water. With.a gieett splashing and splut- tering lie -came to the .surface. "Throw trio a rope, I say he thouted, and again he sank. A second, timethe rose to the sur tee _ "Thow me a rope, 1 ay! shouted again. Once more he tank. A *third time he rose struggling. Then he spluttered angrily: &vzou ,spalpeens don't hurry up and throw inc a tolie,.1111 going to drop this blessed anvil V' • • TEST OF METTLE. flut how cam yot . tell when a• titan rings tritely 'lust listen • when he it hard 'ithlic 'belt Tfo* . f I, kin, Japan. 'i • ' * ' \ 'S it eltild als441; be eatO ( nut, And a desert fruit salt.li Many an ugly ratal bas 4r.lianti. Le sPecialiY 'Made. mne mug in a barber sho • ••••••-•'-.1 supervision of the physician. Youth's .Companion. -.. SALT AS A PANACEA. Salt can almost be regarded asa panacea, so many and varied aro its ostee. -We are told that it cleanses the palate and furred tbiiguet and a gargle of telt and water is often ,. ,efileatious. / A pinch et salt on the tongue, Ifollowed ten minutes afterward by 4 drink of cold water, often cures a sick headache. It hardens gums, makes teeth white and, sweetens the thretithe-----t------- -- '- '--• - - - - Weak ankles shoull be rubbed, with a eolution of salt, water and alcohol., Bad colds, hay fever and kindred affections may be much relieved by , using_ fine dry salt like snuff. Dyspepsia, heartburn- and intlie gestion are relieved by a 'eat) of het water in which a small' spoenful-of talt hasbeen. melted. .• . -Shit-Ma Welter Wiltebnietilietirth- vivo an unconscious person ,e'llen hurt if brandy Or Ober remetlits are not et bang. Hemorrhage front tooth. pulling Is titopped by filliug the mouth with ealt aad water. . -Weak-and Jived CYC3 -OW*frillir,- ed by healing with warm water aril I' Many putplie 'epeakers and eing- ers lute i Wit.81x of ESA gild water before nd,sfter using the 43 it strengthene the orteina, of the throat, ' ,. , Salt rubb,est, into the szlitp ior easionally, tublefi to the 1,Tatr f washing' pieverits pie, lair ,fallin$ , •Therel are 84X1' out \.* 1 . . , J •.• e • • and his *wife way ho on necezury to provido go4 et I've lietit;:d" tTirt .oni homen don't e. %tat." d•et, le 1 11i tohirV ta,e, • 11 • tnl af iumph tb din to but a* as* oul • • .1.11•40, ;HEALTH 11/XTi4,, For fiewigg. rorti(e, Ida addition ttt t1t3 •nork Lask't- i' a emall Itertesloetimenet, fn,tenetl to a ribboi or tape t.pf suf. length, so that .it can be diijrL to the ilot)ir -to up cistors or needles. Poieon Antidoteeeeiti arid temiy. of , t ftItolietho• ted pIrt3 tlie times ng the * ' nent eeertele peitet tii*-11 elite with ex. Meet tettifte, ititetteeeete , tee .1.11,wr