HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-02-25, Page 2 (2)4,*
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CU
NT TOPICS
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sasesiess,01.assnaiseseteSto
Of, 4,114
,
x
"Ot
ihcw *n , 0
She tax o rinks is
Sniternts no in
,theps, of z l* it oho
•nd gieic will peikonu u i,I
ietortiens anti es—
t0r" On6 Sweetens it the e
n to take the
4
1 fo
t
Rentove *icbo1 it out of
ili� reach of peeple,-*and„ hmnanit
will not have lost * single plea
sure. Oiviliriel men .will not miss
any more than no Wm.* opium
'The whnents q- ,enjoyment whi:QP
u iteps whieh" they leave be)nnd
them, onthe other hand, are long
not infrequently lasting,
r ng ,:young man to is. glass
of this "fire water," one is giving
him a ticket,*pass as it wore, to
mu -104i -s„-----por‘itrorrat—nune-
'emus other sicknesses And *Me -
on* wb1 ore- induced-braleo-
olic drinks. As for the state, in
sipite of the high revenuesi whichl
receives from the sale of aleoholic
drinks, it is * loser rather than
gainer. Millions of human beings
art made unhappy by it annually.
:Millions of their children suffer
and thousands upon thousands of
rinainals and mertiavi are made.. A
German statistielen bits figured
out that ono alcoholic costs the
te 000,000 fames in it period of
1:00years....that is: by the misery,
• sickness, and crime svhich this al-
coholic end his offspring bring in-
to the world.
.`o
4-•
lithe' second of the two greate
afflictions; the corset,leaves equ.
ally grave and Unto- rtanate resul
In feet, the consequences which
this unnatural teeing, pressing
and tightening . up of one's bodi
brings about 'ere sometime s ,et en
snore 'severe and more hurtful to
humanity than the ,tonsequenees of
silcohidism. For Woman is the
in4ther-Of the race. And the frail,
'MASS of woman i the ruin. of t
211,6 victint of " tight -lacing
and extremely ilo‘e,fitting,coreets
not only ruins' her own,heelthi but
it
,
.Y r scek thc bctis
of 1jf. But
14 iterOrte0
et may. bOCUt & sin,
tho door. to 1 4b,t b1e**ns,,
But these immeclose
the o -but there;we
uemy fol-
tw, and we ner-dre m that. we
" rs hettre.4 our-
selves ;t. There aro
certain thing tht We may do Until
' no ion Ond to the. best
ought* and fechngs.
WIN 0400E14 ' TRRDOO.
i)rwin tell 'quit in e&rly Iife
he was fond, o mu5c; fund gr*t
pleasure in0
.
invedigation and study of nature
st he lost his taste for music. DOE
louger carol for Shakespeare„ The
relit poet no longer ,4ntade an ap-
peal; the facility of Musicbecame
atrophied. Ile had no quarrel
with Shakespeare ormusic; they
had nob changed. lie still knew
nius of the tenturies; the other
----of-tfod'at-skVerineTi,(„4 apes "ti
to man some of his hest emotions
and aspirations, and yet there was
no longer anything in the soul of
Darwin that' responded to their
1
11,
.tIkoughtle$$!y shut ,`xx
everr day aa w gfo&Ui .to
quit1y. ror
dons opening
*toot to '1 te/t t
"hought, in our rnotos, intfroar.;
our ;moos," An. our arnue-
nients,
it
in all our Inibits,
We ,think lightly of theiethmngs
-
, tA0 day, 044. WO bate an
importantthoioe
an Under -
y trough,
,
We have not bee Iiv
he wy that will enable, us to
ho right choice, meek the te
ion or succeed in tbe underta
foolmsh virginx,
•. ...,:46••,.V•
,
t
—Tar
of°
a
If Jij;: DQUIg this *
the, c one at 'the
ill overcome unpleass everyventy :go :411v lenr7 out of
o
During muggy_r/eittler 4 it ° e
. tee f
ens that an attsek or, co ni 4, . age` perede, 0. Another oat
frets itself in the eyet. it otion is interesting. In some
T rot symptow are *feeling 0 tuult* issloti it) oonti4ection, with the
smarting irritation,. 04 though 4 Age Tensions Bill the Polndit,
oo, 4
kfilE
,
ing
X
ittio
1
d her
ertQii
,cfeome and fs. it here," she
Tour fur will soon dry in
suoshir, end we van talk to-
piego.,ousanill"riitriter tion of 704ears of ge and upwards geller'
them th0 ,eye, itoir became* wed. was estimeted at 1,2024.2$0. It thug
oho,: strong ughtt 1,404. 404, 'cow Wears that :nearly one out
sir sbOtildb0 *voided. -To prevent "-.yeir30; Ore_ persons of the "pentitort-
the; cementing the eyelid in the 4411e 1LBe i in receipt of *pension.
morning, * httle olive oil.should What * light thits throws on the ex, -
be emear -,overitight. The wily feet of old isfre-Povertri,
ike remedy permissible .in domestic The quettiont however, whieh
practice is to use a tittle lint dipped many .people witi put , even before
cig, 111 tepid water, or * diluted solur the extent of the boon:afforded by
rill tiou of boracie.
oic wo e, very
tempLation wo ma5ter, in every
uudert&king wo sacOrap xth. Per:
haps .we never niesintto Aut the
door onpurify and poweir, on char -
actor and sueces!, but somehow
they have escaped into the dim dis-
tance... We never meant to grow
e
on the soul
w_grcov-haix1.-
nor to 'letbest opportun-
tie3 slip, but *odd..y our
are open And We A ihat the door
is sliut. Like the feolisit virgins,
h liti h shut the doo
"a
appeal. Unwittingly h0 had closed oug A** 3('` av
tho door on Sflakespes,r1 Anal ” the Muter*
Bev, any Arthur Jamieson.
110 L
INTERNATIONAL LESSO,
FEB. Ati.
Leeson IX. _The Centel ia',Same
'Acts 8: 1;ta23.:teirt.ld.enT
: ,ei."
!ct
A4
Ver ere 141, ---.-The apostles
unto them Peter and lobn---Not
rulers, but an a friendly delegation
of leading *penile*, who could be
trusted.' They sent theirbest men
on the mission, The early Phriii-
tions Were sufficiently conservative,
but yet had open minds to the
guidance of Clod's. -providence,
though they were not so progres-
sive as to neglect to study careful-
ly the facts: The, ohj`
legation teems to have been_ to ob-
tain * true -report of tpe.,, Strange
40ings, in Samaria, which. if true,
must, Change the %IOW* Of the Chris:,
thtit of her futuret children 111S Wall. juin church.
I
VinY physician will testify to that 15, 17. Prayed for them . . laid
In fact, many physicions Arvoeis . .. . their bends on then The best
ready apprehensive of the; grave
dangers to which the eorset is lead -
Seg and have been warning our
!- women by .word*, and pen. - They
4 II
%ave. not been slow in pointing out
Are sufferingfrom
tespiratory troubles more and
snore, 411‘i 'aceotxot of the
Icorset. They:point out also that
• oniati, in spite of the foct-thot
she works. less than man, eub.
Ileeted to fewer, hardships, leads
More seller afar 'chaste lifi4 us*
far less alcoltolie drinks:4o spite
:01,411 these - thing's, the modern
woman is a Weak, frsgile creature,
an& 'comparitliely Ur Weaker
, . 4 •
tell EX *Ian. She.,:suftersc.„-inore',snd
*re from, intestinal triOnlb1e,4
herder to please, is more rierven
is beeoming more'
snore iinat for motherhaod.
%mit_ AL_ ta xlonet then, to
remedy these evils, combist, the'
aMietins The.answer is simple.
'Vhe. law /must take * hand in it,
likleoltolism is - already being at-
tatked from different direction*.
The eorstimuat be next on the
for extermination. In tome of the
tintries of Europe beginni
rtetly hes been made thet
t The minister ti
Itortinsitis his prohihibed
the ring - ,of eorsetsamong
' o trio helot:nee he do e
o.mskier it "'an' article of
Jnrt an obstacle to the nom
ivelopistent of the body and or.
arm," But tit has taken nip&
many the cor-
net IX white the
fie t r lessons its
znstics. If the verriments of
on&
oleo -
1
•,4 N'A•••••-•
. • , 4.5.•
,
intim', gifts taint through irrayer
The iskYinti 0110f hands 7tValithe con-
necting link 'between. the lira'. and
the receiver. And they received the
Holy -Ghost,. with the some outward
manifestations 4.4 terigUeS of' Some
as the welt
rkaltr ;powor, ,
hi Characterize Pentecost six
s-Eior *before*** appears, from EA*
mon'e ,request" The spode' reationt
for thia gift were much the **Moos
on its first'liestowal 44:Pentecost.
(1) It expressed clearly the brewed
grace onttpowelyso thot both those
Who received it, and „others,
,Miglit teethe the fact of the unseen
sift,. att the spark of the lightning
reveal* the pretence of el trieity.
r $tew
Paster.
bei4wo(t.
divzi
a esnallY 'Ur \the .chure • at
Jerusalem,' that the Smonritatt
olement was from ,Ootlt, end, *pa
reved ,by thi*Satieur and )(eater:
g. Simon. ; . offered them
mone to purchaseirom this apostles,
• -irer- the- thetanelves pen.
10. mon Peter rtak#XXS. Rjinon
Msgus thiO4igoetionlat tither*
an whotie plan, if yielded
(2), The new ehurobt
`eireurnsteneee., needed.
and sifts; and reab UJ
(3) It proved to the .lew
11
astroy the vilitite power
pel. Thy mosey 'perish
Peter does not -wish
Sivaon to ilerish, but he is perish.
d his money is eaot out of
el istian 10011. Neither the
aflH he was nor hie money, if
* crime, coikl
r tot in the Chri's-
tisn u
fl. Yet he entild be *eyed by re
pentanei, s thane of thareete
and life, and by diviste Iorgitenesi.
rX pereeive that thou eft
11 of bitternesi. The bit-
sll, thevery essence of bit -
'
And its the hond of jai -
1 end with the chain of
" !ha. 41) Iteadall
of tlie
s,Ao.
a malignant, contagious disease in
the new community, ansf."a rapx-
hag point for the gathering of int -
(Mtn" binding- it together.
24. Poi,* for me. --The first
thought 14 that Sintort's very prayer
showed that he was far from true
penitence, and sought net to be
saved from sin, but only -from its
punishment. But. it is quite po
sible. that these things from whieli
he would he saved included his evil
heart, anit'Imury 'to the church,
and, deliverance front tle chainj. of
iniquity. -
. It isnot known whether he
reperted or not.
A PARSONMIE 7114T *UST BE
OCOUPIETY.
In the prelinunary letter from a
certain New Jersey pastorate desir-
ng my service, was this sentence
Id: like-to-haveiosi-come
t
*ed . h
i us inarri man, at WO gyo
parsonage and would like*, have
it occupied. We'voill ps,y„you three
hundred and fifty' dollar* ao $eli
entl a 'donation.'" .
, . ..
was just twenty-one, and.poor.
I had no such thought in Ins head
as matt/age ;..yet tire—at the very
threshold of my work -4 was cons
fronted by it, much as if it !Peri:km,*
of the requirements of niirei,stry I
"Surely,." I said, "this cannot he
required by thereat* in #1"
at4.7 orpette-d-r—t.eorresposidence,
several other thurehts r knew '#Pe
seeldng pastors. They, itit ' raised
this chartit t ' "We want a married
mim." it seemed there vans but
one thing to do ---get married.
It was only IV short tome after
my .fliet 'letter that a Second cattle
urging my attention to their
lify answer was decided. I replied
that I was a single men and likely
to remain so for an indelleite per-
iod; atilt church cared to eetteide
me upon. that Weil* I would go sid
40 wits*. I couldlor tieM. , To m
t
say.' *ter: short, I was engagecl
"conditionally' nu it - conference
time, when it lets decided torretain
me lia a pastor for the following
,
Ths
mmittee, while expreman
i i ri of my ministry, mild
not depsrt without _a hint tbat
ould *out it * fever
try. During all the
A* of my peetorete
at kept constantly
mule a call I vrast
ed, of thet enipty
ought to be 404'
ogatiste.
ROW SSE WAI410131.
,
lady "seheol, teacher 'wee
ideoworing to *eke doer tO
outs pupils the meaning Qui
word She walked acrc
tlie room in tire nuonter;eit ,wo
$.
telt ree how
who oat vie
t of OW rObta Awe* per
r b islerting mat:
, 1 1 'Ar • '
i
14
4-1
oan n
with 0. mins o c
and perfumedwith r applied
to an incipient fever 0ore, it will
be effectually cheekWilid'siiiiper
ed.. ,All good driiggis' ts keep
zinc ointment already prepared
and slieuld also have- the 'Ter-
....—.
4*
.
0.
Orate ca
ower scaleunto. The
cost on this as figures out a total
for a. year of k71.40,000 cad. Frig*
the -point of View. -of the —budget,
the figure . is important. The pro!.
vision made in this yeses budget.
(10034) was ti,200,000.--a Sum, as
t. The additional provision in
lace; but the
ld nob ;be„heset in a warin p
ASrou ext --year's budget- (1000410 will
ten Ind them togetherhave to he at least ta 250 000
and t with „a. silver fork, ad —
-ding the perfume while beating, IRELAND GETS Aeon,
and then keep in Peoeehin jars; Another aspect. of the figures is I
if this salvo or ointment is to be extraordinary interest Hew ore
kept to prevent the fever sores, no the pensions distributed as between
carmine should be added, hut for the component p*rts of the United
d.dat once
aritoafruovaiutters:pilnitliim0V4:813r141:11:0r0Teit?; selliorliktgditinnidthlikauldejylieser fei7Satrci'tthbasat:e wbereas
ahnot
while beating. Then the salve will identical in 001:094tion soot/04 has
not be XIS noticeable as it used only 64,769 pensioners, and /rebind
without the canton*. 170,363. A most euribus result!
A hasty conclusion might. be, that
DITA0, theN9SIS casual°rTUBERCULOSISbi torv observer tthc hu,IteirdPisur ePt1;30eirt° were,
et Irdep e$; thateg aei ncde4eScot-
seemtf-ntrange that physicians•often , ,
cnar cter ass caaseu ner en111011-
find it no difficult to determ ne
whether * patient is or is not suf.. !Liblvit "„Lie ablistaiin frbortheeltuoirnegs
tering from consumption. The their r .4; T.
cough, the -emaciation, the. hectic dee* net -Rear out in= Ine0rY4
fever and the night tweets seem the following table een),Onte
to be .infficiently ,elteracteristic oft the proportion, roughly,
of the pci-
the disease to render its° recogni- siou moneS obtained bY the three
„
tion easy, -even to the non-inedi., countries severally with (2) their
cal person. And, to, indeed„It jx1 proportions of the total population;
ordinarily in , these advanced
stages, but it is very different at Pen- Pori -
the beginning. Every one knows sioas.
that the earlier treatment is be. tngland and Wales.. 00 p. c. 78.2
gun, the more 'flkely is it te be tStetla,ntl ...; to p. e. 10.8
atteoesOfitl. It is extremely import- Ireland ... .0.-30 p. c. 10.7
ant, therefore.; to be able to de-
tect the very beginnings of cott4
*urn mon *hue yet the person. 'let pretty nearly her share 0 the
re in almost 'Perreet''sion fund, proportionate to Po
pu-
n here liesthcdifflektl' Maori. Ireland obtains much more
„ . than her share similarly calcuIat.
there is 110 COUguit .,011 ;Malt rt is in zivistici sold wades.
flush, no undue Ae n ratio t
-"-z-----a a- that the proportions of pensions i4"
nigh4 and it 'x1°1'1°1114" the that
low. The deduction is obvious. t
expectorated matters - does. notc.3
x "the predominant partner
tharinitilltellPertosenniy" bdteptihr6tutureb-efr:01: *Wel; has the least preNsure•of old
hesiitti' being perhaps,* tendency to it *ge' 1:1"vetti' and is .t.he tn°4 well*
fever- after exercise, some loss of
flesh *nil * rather -rapid pulse, the
xritienee4 PhYllie* Taxt.ln*Peet
etild be resh. te assert it as a. hoc.
Within * yeti' Or *0' *eters' new
'Peaked*: „of deteetiog, diseese
1 its incipiency 'mite been devised,
and one at least'of them promises
to he of greetpractical utility.
These method *11 eoneistiin the
use of tube,rettlin, but they dater
in the mode of application of this
stibstettee. It has 'IPeoft known for
years that the infeetion of tuber.
lin will: be followed, if thesub.'
tuberculous* II symptoms
reacbi.9 that isby feyr,
ins, in the ham* ard
t\E maltase. But this
hod has never found foot
amon pbyaieians generally„
belief thilt itis danger.
o very dangerous as
ormerly 1311441; large doeswere in -
teat and the resetion
thst fol-
lowed was at times Prery: sever
mod in ostrtall'canta it was kis*
to 'have r.ekindletitthe -disease in
persona, in .irfitna iti hod beeorne
quieseent, arid who, were
It'vree by
some that the disease might b.
emitted lice*. 'of weak totals
powers by inoculation with, t
iberettlist. These denser* do
never exist, now that the sub
etace ia used in 'very sown .4lote
and is , form containieg, AS it
oei, only the gl,yeerin Atlanta. '
shottle-heollt end net
baeilli **14$011441. Nino
mapis if*4414
now b.end.vised, and am.
•
••.r
IS,LAND OLEt ro
ilanletslonclusim..114Y UV 4
atesiiin, another Way. Ile Lots
'Government Board recently prot-
pared estimates of the population of
70 years nod upwordis In the fol.
losing table we compare these with
the *dual number of pension*, and
roughly celculate the ',erten e*:
Pension Pen,
eble. stoners.' P.O.
England, and
Wales., 047,505 300,900 .
',Scotland .. ;,.:'-'133022, 44,700 49
1,13,3p0 ' 1,70,363
1 1' 1\ h '
164
an * Iv seen, as many
more "pensions:ales" than Scotland
(thofigli the total population is
nearly the seine). The:colielusion is
one. The popuisfxon of Ire'
1an dwiodles, tuid the young **eh
and Women onligtop., It is an js
we may say, of old folk... Yet
even so, the atnimingly high proper -
tion f pertsionern to "petition.
xis either that the een-
sus -in was itori interred
fast of pension pe
been very *fringes
*t exacti
bti 1 d�.
WS
Eit
ut
bust
"
Oo the kitten, who wet
draggled—flai Sleeping in we
leaves, vame. and $4, down on thehank, and for some time the two
blinked and purred in silence.
"Trarapingr asked the cat.
•filres,” *aid the kitten.
"Poor work!'" said the eat "I
have been at it for some years now,
a
hou
I.
'•-; .
e
1 •
fo
'
set;
reless. think'it tell he a good
place for axe to end MY 4401
"That Sennols Pleasant." said th4
kitten. "I am rather tired m3lie1ft
and have a. lanlenes3 in one toe."
"Two s,re better than one," said
the cat, "We should do well to-
ettift; more spring
xn the joints, and more wits in
-theAtesii. --Let-usr-tm-partne-ral'
They agreed, and the old cat
baAdc the kitten go in first to the
tense. '4Dance and play and make
yourself agreeable,' she said. "I
will attend to the rest."
$o the kitten watelied her chance
and when the doer was openod she
ran. into the house, and danced and.
played and made herself agree-
able.
The people said, "0.1),„ what, it,
dconr, little kitten! We must, keep
ber,:because she is' so young and,
aterry.'1' And they kept the kit-
ten and made muen of her. -
By and by the old eat came in,
and she dragged one foot after an-
other and moaned; and seemed
very Miseroble. And the people - -
said, "Oh, what &poor, forlorn eid
cat./ We, nitist-tetilly-keep her, he-
cauft •.slw is so old, Alla 'keble.'t
'Bo thtty,kept liter,. too, and made .
much of her, and every one euP-
posed that the two were mother
and ehild. .
Time went on, and *both mita
grew' fat and, handisorcie. Ono day
the mistress of the house said,
"We roust get rid of one of these
cats. They catch nothing, and they
eat a; great (teal, tor tile cook is '
I ." -
"Whytrt get rd of
he cook!"
But the mill Ea t t.4
.wou et be Convenient.
Then one said. "Let un keep the
kitten,. for slie is uteri" and. friss- ,
ky I" And another said, "Let un
keep the old- cat, for She is grave
and sedate." And the two Oats.
saksitle by side on the hearth -rug
and. listened. ',Ehey. knew it WAS
best to keep very quiet for a While.
"Whit shall you.de asked the
kitten, after a time.
meet esteh the
td eat, "tleare4 vim
o this. And What you. do I"
"Tramp again," naid the kitten.
"The leaves are falling dry and
elloW and it will be fun to go ,
scamistring sunong them, and to,
hunt for ,squirrels in the brown, .
woods. X hove had enough of four
wane end ‘59._ao. eked thing* in * sau-
cer"Tit641.eat tre*toll'etl' kers0li And '
?awned wearily. ."Cto Vt.:she said.
'You are.A,csit of spirit. I was
itch at your age, but now my. joints
re 'stiff, and must work, for
livingv butialf Vein -
herd, but *hat can, dui
. So the went *Nay; and
the old eat taught two mite
week, which was all she eoukl
bring herself to do. But the
fam-
ily was, sottisited, and so she lived
on in the new home.s.-Youttee .
Companion.
Arrk10.
you doing a
arrelit1" t
viaiting, replied the
ho r you waiting fort'
body; X Was just waiting."
hat WCt4 ties fort'
11
0 ifO15
s 464 #
Ow*
said' t
o the mites.
.y bead stop spr*.
ung rst 0 hitt is'your pro.
e 0
stiter? mid the **a.
Tin
4
' .