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Exeter Advocate, 1908-12-10, Page 6 (2)• .‘ r CURREN' T a 4 4.0 ifo s . tin * .i r printd, fla ti, i hu her, . seee tdnit e 14 At., ,; .. „ , . li• ,*eeuii1. �ynpw.ha. :ud▪ i poTtkueYfitatet..,it ui s'atc tlie emperor1' ' it , ii0,10 . • .ttriul$0, Ai. foreigner that his .uncle, Xing td ' Mt yr.arcl, had .4on . lioundrag - o.1" hit- nglinting -him for two years; that he'hel4 Prance inithe_hollow 44, ' liaridT1Win the ,event of a great war in *14011 -England was limbed Germany .would content itself 'with' --tatinfc: .1014- 'aiia, liberating-fite' holy land from the, Yoke of the in - del. A sovereign fleshed with wine - -ces newer might . Make iete`arki• ca I- • vitiated to et the world by the ter* II the world _heard ,thern but - a ' 'bosom trieneli„ 'XtOttnikosziti writers, would be hiscell.n1,, W'''',,r;Sibt,c,4 ''''' -see- , Assists!. e eMperor coursed of rulers and peoples with euch dangerous freedom and tbat his comments would have been pub- s_ liehed but for the blue pencil of the discreet forth` office ceintor see ' - Europe. The, angry netionis the emperor is said to have criticized would have denianded satisfaction If the 'emperor is xi wildly bulls- creit lir hies talk -utile latest synop- stinseerise woul&-trielreA6tssetet to- be there , teats Leek down. On us, measuring might be war in Europe any dase, us with heart$ freed from the bus I th d fits f the world we et ere and vigilant. Ife slept when the4n. - ^ If 0 4 1'49.1441; en -0 it es• *tie .„, , ittit 141 , 4.0ti :VOW * fq; /4'8414 e look into eure; tree ,may' rneznory of features, tett stilt, wit rn ntS Oda 'cherished treasure of their love arid firm es eternity •tlie faith that they" love u* jtilL •JNit_ plant. -the, ilowers---on -the mounds. in the churchyard not be - Pans* We ever thing they are lying them, but beceuse our love fox, them must find some expressiQn1 'rains up within it -must work its self out •at hands and Alieier Blinded by looms, wattling those flowers, we weep not Intli sorro that they' are gone but with slit. felt, of emotion, more the pain of joy than of bitterness, :that -we -can Thusin such *little way express our love to them.' 0•' - COM gether u tune. , It hito laid hold on t which is eternal. Its howls bin not flesh nor day, but spirit to epirit and heert to heart. Friend- ohip tiefieslim fading leaf., the with- ering cheek, , the devouring worm; •seesns-sisr_essin-pers its ezesnrese3- me -beyond -in ust and intruder. IN THE OTHER WORLD. - It comes to pass that some of u 'have the best part of ourselves over there, and 411- ussarreeniadesino ° itier ,cou. nications from • the other world. It the deep, abiding and strength- ening senSte that the tech of love .tnntiot-bc cut brViii ;Wen edge '0 death, that friendships *bide through all, that love is iMmortal and loving the measures of our ims mortality. No wonder the immortal hope burrni lovr when. unfeel. by this see rot _suppl,y; no wonder men :doubt the liiture, When their hearta*lin O vital contact with it* life, when they must- depend -04.16:411mt heed b reason from otinibreee and P"' . naie • .61a nd. The only going outfrom lifo tied to fear would, be going out to the world where love was not. Precise plans of eternal4redemption lie beyond my reasetting, but on the fact of infinite friendship I rook 11 tux ess censor was alwas% awake -0 ' We aced riot worrWhether wie interview with the retired Engliohl, knowsehess againy, thesis mows diplomat which Made so much l whets faces lightened ones in ditt41 trouble for the emperor was sub.,' gone by, for though they be change 'flitted to, him. If the emperor has! 4 t eaut3r' " *shall see not their faces, but their af- faction, He lives yet . in.. the dust who worries as to physical preserva- tion and identification. This we all know, who hold deep within. Us the friendships -of those- who are living inslarger life, That love. can never die, that affection enlarges despite the decays of time and grave and that something of the self which been a loose, reckless talker in the pest it is to be hoped that. be bee reforzned. • Ito has had a lesson. • . The Royal Society or tbe Pro- tection of Birds is waging a vigor- ous campaign in England LI behalf •of what is knoivn as the Iraportation of Plumage Prehibition bin. This bill is explained by its name. Those who have inaugurated the moves merit believe that once Great Bri- tain has set the example other el- iilized nations can be persuaded to adopt the same principle of pro - rt i$ possible, therekre, ,• that the bill offered by Lord Ave - bury may have a far-reaching ef- fect in protecting birds and "dislos eating the whole nefarious, traffic in ornamental feathers and rlumes." • In America the friends of the 1- irds have met with only partial. seccess in their efforts to prevent the wanton dettruetion of • the innocents, carried on to meet the millinery demands of fashion's sedevoteee.-Miclouhtedly- • it4 AA'83 pat etie interest in the flew mov 'tient wilt develop here. - Naturally, the feather trade has protested. ageinst the preposed leg. islation, objections being liaised on • the ground that it would impair ',Mgt% and threw many out of /em' ploymeet: The reply to these ob. • jections has been that prohibition of importation iseidd lead to a eater demand for ostrich plumes which are not Inc -lad -ea in the pro- visions of the bili -and for floral decorations, so a that wageworkere will not stiffer in consequellee of its, e'naetzttent into law. SIGNALLING WITII All throitglEthe continent' rice. „the natives have 4, very feOt *item of signellingavitli ru by which means tlfere wrap isu terms frorri \tillage to village, a s quite wonderful how ewittli e life a ow world w 11 have its. liberty end - he IX* of all. know not where I shall meet those friends. where father and mo- ther and die& will westelnit a-ToVe light, that burns dear here with- in, will 1034 me to them and I shall now them by that light. Love will ; .3 Li # a this an 411 1;111 „. rntu y, #X0 .40004 e'ia • o Solomon bed the feaot, ihe feast of tabernacles the tante. referred. to in verse( and the .greateentumnalleoeit :Of the ° levee, The 'entrain*, of Ifounath .-se The northern boundary of the kingdom. Tho brook of Egypt —The vfad.1' vlsArish, the southern boundary of the kingdom.' This stream enters' the Mediterranean *bout fifty miles *outhwent ofsthe site 44 Geitik. On the eighth 11V ---In siecord- Ce- with, Dent. le. 13, 15,-thiefeeat of luetoilgorioree4elperrten.ssefvoenr theh homes OA the eighth. So on this occaaion, the glad festive season bein nded, th £*t. s- tpP •••' ; • ItlilES VOA einuiztEN. Taught in tilteir Scheele How to Treat. Foreigners. '4fiefer plafrall rtfirtMisairriaillP re love teresting tiyitoPsis of the rules Will be which the public schools of that Anne into its own; friendship into itii fulineole' Thobarrierswill have been broken down. We :shall know even as we are known, for we shall love even its he loves. So what can I do better in these country were teaching their pupils [ on the subject, of the treatment of foreigners- . - -Tine synopsis is reprinted in a res -cent book, "The Empire of the 4 East," by R. U. itontgomery, and is accompanied by some interesting- factseconcerning the schools of Jap- an. :The rules area* follows: Never call after foreigners pass- ing along the streets or roads. When foreigners make enquiries days than cherish this hope, magensi aintiter then)) Politely. ' If unable to fy thio life of loving, make more itientle that X . now breve greeter tidiness of living there, and. if the great hope of that life be this free ' fullness of friendship, bring into this drear world as mucli of that life as i 024 by hang' 'good friend to a many as I may? . HENRY P COPE. tut A.' The . . nom- 'wiask---40,-** aver* Not ,h6fies;;:iict..h ein stee. oho'luck Not .att. ,b7nt,ilef.7171414,,i;r1f, 1711111.0itvii*i„,:1411f '. 1 Wben . . ••• a #. 3 ; it 411101*;.,, O *.thate 04 ' it • • a „ • .1;1)10110 , ree lungs he's learoe a t,tht Man who tries ids feisor in Ilia employer eye's; tit•pays to know more than one thitg welt; That he k.nows - 4o- tell. - ,,• So he iverke .1,1314 'waits; till line There's sibetter job And bigger pay, And the men who oldrked whenever 'they could , riehossed by the man hose work made good. Por he Inan who wine 'fa -the -man who work*, Who .iteither labor nor trouble ,shirks, • Mart!, Otos,. e DISGRACE OP BEING USEFUL, Alma Servine is a, dau ter of y--- we rers frfricarirWtrent-trer-tn Omaha to study music, for which she had talent. She grew mum - cal skill, and was invited to the homes of her fellow students, un- til- ' 'It -was- discovered that- *Alma Ser - vine was tiding over a scarcity of fund* by working. for wages and the use of a piano in A private fam- ily' in Onutha. And when:- those, daughters of western "Republicans" and "De- mocratsp gave the world a proof of the deep.disgrace it has become, even in- the laboring west, to be They dropped her from their vis- iting lists. They cut her With all the cruelty of girl, barbarism. They objected to her eontareinating \presence ia the- studio, .and the music master, for self-protection, told her and asked her to come at tizzies when they were not there. s ' Then Aline Serviee.gave her de- monstration of the awful thing "so- ciety" is prone to deeni the crime of usefulness. That is, the poor girl_ went toads -actually lunette and between spells Of destroying the written mueie, improving on the piano, declaring that Ihe vent a mu - *kiwi, "not a hired girl," she rav- ed and babbled, and filially went to the state msarie asylum, pros • eouneed incurable. • So the story.goes,sofiC ille mine by the eonteezousriess of crime the crime of being usefuL There is not one American family in a million which is even one gen- eration removed from shirt sleeves and kitchen • apron, save among southerners -and they are return- ing to the regalia of labor. We as a people are rosceeded from the soberest of European peas- antry. The lime of toil is in our TRH SUNDAY SUROOL piTERNATIONAL LESEIONS DEC. It Lesson XI. Solomon Dedicates tbe • Temple. Golden Text, Pse. 122. Verse 1. The elders of Israel - These were chosen from the heads of the tribee who were the princes or senior Mae members of family groups. TO bring up thesark of the coven - make them understand infoiin the police of the fact. • '40' Never except a present from a foreigner when there is no reason for his giving it, and never charge him Anything above what is proper. Ore not crowd around a shop when e foreigner is making pur- chases, ' thereby causing him much annoyance. The continuance of this airaetice disgraces us as a nation. man in my sight -Hebrew, "There Since all hursan beings are broth: shill not be mit off unto thee a man "era and eik-tere there is no reuon from; my night." Tilts Verse and the' for fearing foreigners. Treat them one succeeding contemplate a dil1. as tquels end mit uprightly in all larger fulfillment of Jehovah's pro- your dealings with them. lie plies( itt. the permanent establish. neither servile nor arrogant. ing' -of the new founded dynasty. 1 13oware of combining against the 27-30. The Verses give in general foreigner and dialiking him be - tenni, the -substance of Abe detail- cause he is s foreigner; men are to ed petitions which fAlow. Solo- be judged Ay their conduct and not mon's earnest request of Jehovah by their 'nationalit,. is thetthe temple may always be As intercouree with foreigners ba- the symbol and predge of inter- comes closer and extends over a count" between Jehovah and hie series o years there is danger that people, and the pledge 'also of an- many Japanese may become enam- swer to prayer. The heaven of oted of their •ways and cue - heavens cannot contain thee toms and forsalte the good old cus- Wordt whichs dicateprofound toms of their forefathers. Against conception Or tne spirituai nature! this -d ,i you must be on your of God on the part of the supplis geese. • ant -The transfer of this sacred cant' Taking off your hat is the proper mind of Jehovah's presence from 'Pray toward this piece -With , to-. •ealute .foreigner. The - raw ,eSeturnecl—towerdsejerusalent-sat ‚8 t dwelling place Tree an °latent pert sittles • service of tie ieeting the new eenctuary. 1 -The tab - 4. The tent of .nteetin ' ernade in which up to this time -the ark of the covenant had been kept. tfoly•vessels-thote uted eons fiectiim with the services ef the sanctuitry. 5. Sacrificing sheep and oxen The nuirierous sacrifices referreitte were appareutly offered. at stages on the route, the. ark being brought from its abode on the lower South- ern WO Of the cattern hill of le. ..rusalene,to whieb. the name "Zion" used in veree 1 was originally res strieted, to 'the 'higher northern plateau on whielz. the temple now stood. •• O. The oracle of the - The innermost sanctuary, the of • holies. ' V. The, stave l thereofesTher bears oi boo:lite 'lir iboz ark was oteeied. • 1 iet.,Nothing tile ark. rive , the , two tables of etones-Th& "' kit of manna and -Aaron's rod men - flow far they Aft able. scresid,i ,t-ione4 Nett% /ea aoti use,. new*. The drumming, * D. 4, had apparently been tempor- 'done at night, when totInu *rily removed to some. other pitied fatqlet, And/ '11% One Ikes Awako 0143 At Iforehes-Thet ie 10. The cloud fine the hOnse Of 'Jehovah -The placing of the eyins bid Jehovah's pretenee into the ahritte fo-lrowed by the Appearing of the ,glory, Jehovah in the form * tioud„ tho familiar symbol of his overshadowing presence used' in E*od. 33. and other 'passages; 14. Blested ell the asserahl Perhaps in the words of. verseii "t0 btiowo. nt in *imilar lanuaje Th' dedicatory prayer propel!. :Giese wi still ',cave which is retarded verse% itiee,15 44 Mexico. - preceded . by ,sitt expresolon of 'thanksgiving to jeheveh foztjile Gertniiiv. Can .tOvt. put, 4,wt 000,' Aliment of hie peortiite to trooteilti the — perlitipt etteral * hiltt.addit$4 the peOple, perhaps in the form *ving i* * c ear night the ear is oft,,,,in s gently *smiled by the low *milked roll' from II drum in the •viliage tear. and otoz waits' with pleasant • expeetancy till the answering' echo comee, ;milted by distal:tee, from a village sometimes two Miles, away. Tire bone trims of the 'ex rage whale weighs *bout forty -leo tons. 4,1/4‘510!1'"oz'4.11*.t4 "*.it'•4 046•0b, , a , Vast tow.txt174,,%,,,:tv t4::«*•ta,A.Aor ,t pi-Oui'Motiamiiias still pray with theit faces turned -toward Mecca,. 31. If a man sin -Or, "Wherein - sower a men shall sin." , 32. Bear thou in heaven, andisle, and judge thy servents-Givingset- feet to the oath taken in the sane- tuaty. , Condemning,: , justifying De- termining the guilt or the innocence by monis of the teat made before the alter. ef Jehovah. 33-37. The mercy of Jehovah i *sired for in cittei of national ape troy And consequent defeat At the hands of their enemies: and in *At- es of drought and founme ,oecitsion- ed by eimilar forgetfulness of Je- bel/eh and his. commandments on the part of thil people. ,\tei. The plague of his Own heart The etsecial visitation or judgment sebt upon the individual for his per. riar4ha, ti ern ilt# o s eandcorrect on and ter whieh eontequentiy only the liudividtial.' himself tan pray, 41, Concerningl forelnyner From pitsages 'such, as Exed. 21; 23. 1), 12-, *ate note that ton eto,tion.for foreignere was a insrkcd feature of Jewish legislation. 43. That All the peoples of the earth May know thy 'ruiste--The thought of the foreigners sojoiirri- ing among the people of Israel leads to the thOught of the ,pepples and nations whom these foreigners. re- present and suggests the influence upon the nations of the earth which the merciful answer of the petition If Such foreigners in the sanctuary 'of Iehovall's chosen people may ex- ert. , "Forgive thy; people -The hur f pras.i u for forgiveness ercy itt tab.!! of any possible illness en .3he part, or rnth Or valet in retpett to the isiendmente of jebovide A*4 tit. king and alt Inst. olfe!.tal *strike 'unto le - prayer of ifedicati et V a • 1 # t; # f -Commend .t* mg. #18* Ilold in high ,regerd the worship of ancestors and treat your teat Um* with waracordiality, but -do not regard, person your enemy because he or the *Christian. 'Beware of zoning your souls to foreigners and betoming their slaves. Sell -them no houses la lends. Aire at not being beaten 'in your competition with foreigners. :Re. ineniber that loyalty And bliss, piety. are our most precious national treasures, end do nothing to violate them., • ' , aLlaa0,aiaeoaaaaAtaaarastaato., , Said that he hinittriing of 'ph 'wines runnin cot and resages.* fall of temperature -0, -or More hotirs before it .rnarkcl hy,the,thermometer.i and; v,nthc,otlier hand', the laimMing of r4h. -.*4.)uth. wires. foretells,* ,:ttenperature. • •• •REC9110,3t-IMPc t f -1, • , .011000bite .)70tIng, -athlete. Torniny IarEon,-aiged-.eighteent:: -Of the. 00 . merit Collegiate .8elioolt Burin*, has at :the Rangoon annual' athletic itefItting ',cleared* the high. jurrip f lett itg inches.Thia is be- lieved to be a world's retord for a ..sehoolboyi OT DAIWEROTITI. * ear yer wife .is sie Atoiket Mike,-flhe a °mt. Pat --Xs it d*nernube st Mike-14ot & bit8lia't too * ble dangerous Any more. Many * boy keeps lions gettin witted by keeping *had:, Is i tetintettei that, titer* *ise lw*3* 4,00000 people at 0 6 'new•, . an e eenamOn sense o r Shoulil be in our brains. It is not aristocratic blood, .nor % Droll descent, that makes us such snob* and fools and 'tads ;and toadiesses we must be to rear g,, iris that would drive a fellow student crazy' with ecorn for her serving. It vast be-that„conscioup of our own pea. sant origin -and ashamed of it -We drive -ourselves to 4. hostility against social equality that peo. plc of descent from real "gentility"! would not feel. We have no. eame 'lid in "somety" save what we our. selves have scraped together in One goneretion, and if welose that by assomation with 'servant girls" WO lose all. En "descent" Wit *re' to.neer bankrupt thet Ave must be "exclusive" or the world 'will lin"- • ! Mei* Suspect! Why, the. world, knows. that those Omaha girti-Land the me• would have, ben true in gn ler fimeriean • eity-4,,aro'lh,eiti., s ves Ole daughters or grand' tighteks•liit wou‘tir who worked in tleAen,S, and etrubberl and mopped and wished -end did it for wages if they got the chance./ Tke ad thing is that even in the lemocratw west the virus of snob - ins' to *h.otve gone so deep. ttop along this arid°. *tie road will have to be refute. ell in coming to the day when all will serve, and when the ones who reTutt, to serve will be the outcat and espised?---Petiver 'Express. GIN, A CLIMAX. grt know what's passing la you ds" eaddenly said the in*ide hit habitually silent tiller star- t Iter. -"I limy, too, why 302 here night. after propristing my time to keeping other nil* yo want- sasi to mostly Ott*, $, , 'Mt s Olt *, • • #11, 11 • weettcoe n, •4 1444is sed ori asli • *ass •• .•411ilittelation. of outachc 1* or than ever, :hats are pretty in new shape an tyles. -seeate *re long sud they weir 401Tin of more, Tg-tereV-, A great, deal • of swansdown: is ,uscd to trim the blaek' hats. The telt end bag set is one of the fancies of the season. Plainted. ribbon. trimming appear on the Clirectoire evade. The colored now weisteoat is one f theitolieltiet of the day. Dyed •very Available tint, the ostrich, plume( still holds swat Black coato and gray, brown COOS and blue are all to have col- ored :•eessss ST-tieset4ir "tone The bracelet is now ofte substie Mated for the ring as aymbol of hetrothal. The mourning veil of to -day, .though of crepe, is not 'heavy end is not Black end wl ite is like! , t he --erne-endearnicieseitsesstsh_renglotAty—se..._ eftW-1 `istriiirosts- The great breadth of the crown of the new hats makes the brim aps pear moderate. ' Trimmings of velvet here a etre tains degreessefsruivelty_saitel in alt cases are effectiie. A new boot has patent leather-, - vamps, braided cloth tops, and two inch Cuban heels. Some skirts are made with the ghsempirescorselet bolt in taffetas, generally in black. Many blouses are made without collars to accommodate the mails beeoming neck fixture. For actual warmth the goat skin, and opossum coats, lined w th cloth, are successful. Big pigskin, walrus, or leather auto bap, ten by twelve inches, -aro eeen lit the shops. One of the handeornest coats zee this seaeop, was Made of bro*thail in directoire style. - Nowadays nearly all women welt jabots, and among the prettiest i the 'grandfather's hill. Royal blue, golden brown, muls berey, and Maize &TO fitshionald coleys in high clats costtimee*.- Embroidered dite of various sizes re used in daint*.ties. The dot new be white or a odor. Perla has againset the fashio for fall cravats, the material being corde satin or silk, than anrother material in the eon- struction of the evening hood. Cashmere de soie is a meter* that is being employed to & great extent by the smartest dreesinake era. A little touch of white crepe, At tUrnariter at the neck and wnit is allowed_ now in the deepe mourning. ' A noteworthy chaeacterietii of the silk filet net blouse is its simplicity. old world shades; embroidered with large self -colored *pots, both !quart and roundroverlepping tueks beg their tole adrnment. lirltir HE Marx) MOD.1Y. WI you wbat it is salaam*, - M firmly convinced that every. nian hos lJs partieular day ter' good and bad luck. Monday ir„rny• unlucky day. I have been watch- ing it for twet,ty years: and Log can shake me in this belief. never begin any' oiterprite, fl matter how triviel, or start on. journey on thet .day. Therefore make Monday an Off -day„ and sdo nothing but potter around this house. Ei ven n these little *traits everything goes, wrong.' site tho retord of last Mondays it,lair aver, - age, and be toueirieed:. "kfroailtied lingerwhile nailing hoard on fenCez,k.".. "Pell n • cellar tairs ' with , " Wheelli/stiOw arry.itig stviadder, 4,484 down on chair *e chitd en had been pulling "Got swindled by 13 'Iii'faisoitituhro:$71) pinehed gide- "Received sUMMOtiii to serve. (tit Forgot *11 about "Was tined 00. !‘fricome-tax Iran "While eating supper squi Ora ef ceiling fell on dinin "Weirt to bed: to wept furtb Had rt.ighenitnitoilta: sit . I from to •Eif Tower Fell oat of bed Lq st11 till clocktruck tir*Ii sod. • tereei se 4.01a ,