Exeter Advocate, 1909-07-29, Page 2 (2)A
Ar0
V3t,fm
0,
ttuJious $uea
.,
i'will . IA,
thezu 0 1 t 0
tribp an4 tbe ztore, but. lifo wifl
ever perrnit them to teesesto grow,
• cr ..forgiv e* Avers- Ile
..
t
Ichis
ent
' • -
r
e
, ikere,
e *to worlds'1 up new ollr,
ui 10
e t* �f greltnen lic lbou
hinge .9 life. Ou
nearestileighbors heves soreethits
ter 1,1194..eVerX 1.11E4i$ 3.Old ene
the.great b insp ries or 1
aud life deetroying.
111 every circumstance of life lie
either enrielting ot-imposirishi
just as we may approach, it; its co
tent is for us to determine. DaLly
duties.may be seen as es.* pert of
greet end glorious servite for al
the world or may be as treading*
theedevillis mine, lie whet drivee
nail into s pecking ease may see
that be heoterving the 'universe ancI
leacirithr 106- 4241-1110 Ita greet
losiocith, or he may see himself aso
slave It a soul dwarfing teak.
, birth or, place
, make this law lewhinding on u
*oh a/molding- to hie -power* must
sek lergerpeweril' each *Cording
o his world mu stmake * larger
world. The more' Went* life places
our heads the more will the uni-
verse4eustied of, us at Wit, but
ill lees than was given he-
ed. nor even as much be suf.
lure
kere, to 8tagnate in life,to cease
togrow ioid to begin to die, to fall
baJc to the...animal and a1niots
'741
is already
the lotof those
ek
4 *
& iaehne in the*Shop or
the ofllce is to nibs your
chance in lite, to fail utterly at liVo.
• ,ing, no matter,how much you may
csesied'it being ;vetoed piece of
business machinery. .
- The great message of religion is
juQ here;it is.,everssaYing to a man
you, have valuee _ are no _in
1:04 4422,--lumr-6-:possibilities and
;Rivera that cannot be ineawared in
terms of things. •
LIFE IS YOURS;
all things and circumatanees are but
its tools and agencies. s"
Salvation is growth, in is fail-
ure to 'grow, tatting out possibili.
ties, turning aside from life's tine
and high 'aims and 'permitting that
which ;dull!' the line faculties, sears
over -sensitiveness to the things of
the soul-, and prevents the life from
finding its fullness,. •
This is the teal joy of living, to
know more, feel more, See 11101T43,
to enter into a larger _universe, to
Le able to do more and to be able
to give mor-e-4the--self.*nd-ofsone's
service to our day. Greatness vernal'
from such growth, and such great.
_ ness hes within the "power •of *IL
- Few may ebmb thc pedestals of
fame, but all may apen the 'heart
and the imagination,-....W.Osier..Weirlth
TILE SUNDAY 801100
--INTEIMATIONAL LESSON
oaviga,
inan-40 !Wing as to make lifo mea
more and to make his life r
motetNo dreams of heavenly bliss
can 'set us free from this obligation
to gain more life, and no specula-
tions about the worth Of our own
soul can set us free from the obit -
gallon to live AO *$ to have a life
werthsisivin to out world and
-PON_Yer aviriti
He who has found the joyofthe
life that gee* from strength to
strength, that treats of the food of
'the spirit, that Companions with.the
great of all ages, that finds more
hte resoiees, m being able to
iv afar lif h ho find lif
More ahundantespringing up within
at -every "ten of the way, has no
fear*** to life beyond; the potency
of the present is the promise of the
fixture. ;-
Somehow in the life that thus
grows, that finds in 411 about it the
sourees of strength and the AlVellUea
of service, there tomes a sense of
a larger, ill embracing life, the lite
of, a father of spirits, the fullness
el se power and affection toWit-*
which one presses, in which is found
the hope and aim of all life, the
40Utoe-a1241-604.0t beingsand-m-that
$622$6 of life olisliVing finds unity
and reason.
-Fs- COPE,
Lesson V. I se of St. Paul's Mb-
fi • Iden-Tese,
Jolla les 33.
I. Corinth,. the Vanity Fair -of the
Amen Empire. . Corinth, the Cen-
" **. tor of goverement,. commerce, and
hiosiness, as Athens was of learning,
-literature, and art, was situated on
the isthnites• which joins the two
, grOatAivisiolis o Greece.
The city has been tailed "The,
t Re:ilsoi," -"Thes-Eyes-of
Greece," "The Rridgreof the Sea,"
"The. Gate of the reloponnesue,”
"The Vanity Pair. of the BOtaall
Empire.'*
It had an almmit ideal situation
for commerce. It attracted strang-
csiunt of, its deligh, 221 clitna‘e; the
- eta from- all over ivorld tte.
" tethutian, games to Which - contests
Pal refers twice in his letter/A.4d
the Corinthians (1 Co. ft :44.4 ; 2 Cor.
-" t. 14.10)s and its position at; the
.0041tet of govirnmentt where riches,
could be gained diShoriesty and
oppreSsion e and the meat: of unre-
strained sensual pleasure, end of
every -kind of lieentioneeets and te.
eess./Vice and profligacy here het
high revels,. with thamelesiness
conSierated by, the rites of their
!else gods.
II. Pamirs o Among 'the
Corinthian Zew ,!#.4. I. Ills
portunity. This at
;its worldliness, and orption in
pleasure, emus and varied
ife, its netsls, gave Paul
*great' est: ts is. just the
kind trip see si isttreets minis.
ters end missioneries. And the
we,re so inutwase, the ob-
steeles so instiriumintable that it, is
no wonder that Paul .01112,640 them
feeling his "Weekness, end in fear
tied in much trernoling"' (1„ Cols *:
and iressled the ell'AOrt of eheer
(v. 9). • ,
0. Hit Four Frit 'Pell had
'al felt hi
lirig9,4261
.40(
s,
C4.0
a
dri
111
W
early in A.D. 52, banishing the
Jews, and had carried bis bushiest'
to Corinth. With hi wife Priscilla.
Apila is palled *ley, ,httt Pris-
cilla is not, it has 'been inferred that
she -was a Gentile; As she"is neual-
'1y, by Pailionentioned first- In
'speaking of the husband and wife
itshatt-beensinferred thats-she
ivas
df -higher social rank, better
edu-
cated .and of more mirk •
t all her hUtban But i
f note that both are always men.
thined together. He was the busi
ness Man 4494 his ability Mica
cese made it possible' for his wife
Priscilla to devote herself to reli-
gioussivork. may he for this rea-
son, as the one reoet directly in
touch with the religious work, that
she is mentionedriret. They were
true yoke and both are
mentitmedsies-instfifeWg
elo-
quent Apollos in the 'gospel truths.
Paul while. in Corinth, was the
guest etthis
5. In addition :to. theists—
SibirCend "Tiniot4tioS cams front
Macedonia. They 121*1 been left at
Bete*, when Paul entaPelle4 to
Artie (Acts 110340. Timothy hut
been, sent to ThessatortiCa (1 Thes.
Os and 'fro; Philippians
wo juoko- that leo • heel visited
Philippi also. Peureltiendly heart
was cheered by their pretence.,
Timothy also brougiit him glad tht,
inst., of the. faith and looiti'.9f these
churches and of their longing to see
him,_ so that. he was.:eoutforted con.
oerroig them7friall :MI distress and
qiction their faith. 1124,"
Philippians alto', sent him
*hide like Ioseiihl "(mons
'Jacob, broogheptoof of the, abund-
ant harvest of faith and love in the
church.
The-Cireninstunces in which Paul
Worked, Ile earned hit own liv
es by wetting at his trade. 'wit was
Jewish law etet every boy be taught
eome kind a, tratiot for his support.
III. retire Wiiik-'s-Among the
Corinthian • Gentiles.... -Vii, 742.
Nur,* .prettehing pie.* was in :this
/mute of Men named (is ;testis*,
ne‘that worshipped.God„ *Gentile
believet the ontarue Gods but
not v. few, Whowehou$0 ',joined 'herd
to tite trete would 'he a
petnal invitetion t
t los life
Ate we
the mos
sk
teins
Paul
„
0
„.
iO 1
g ivy ,i 10
1 $
,
tbeebair of
f&utttes,
11.
WAI
clever,
•
e
,
A
ou lighk e�ut. 'Xbe hsrsh volt*
differcnt COrk Win4rew
wrar
it.‘11°1AeltBncd trtoiree#4:4;11,:r100., d'ea
-0.0-
DER no
e
ut °
rled Cl
its i
rry without
sbat'e
e•FrieY joy a.
ro c tees y
owu
the wo
she sou sepulchre
like silences The
isith looted breath
et sent Joe Nterdoch
v
rah" 'il
)Uly„ t
was
n .2c
SC4fiold hid fallen.
omen ,in the'iihrery 'to eer
!ks
xzy
yu
v thitusendspoinidssiosil .
orl
ty
Jut are you wrltmg 5
0qutis
I ,51'
i" , esenie eei:hat 3Ou1 r
b put t�
ifl
rd. o „yOu ever'.
credit, she Se'. litesemest
sonment eomp4
life will he s
b.
" aUlfet
t
Pions;:,li • in it
t1�k rod; Xi-
• et 'You to „prove,truo
'oil tell me. 'time' for -t
Glory ! FulfiI half the
o her and
et stuod in hia IrdsIiipa
Iibrary and *Poke' bravely.
regret disturbing your lord-
ship, butmysbeteinese is of muh
nu Lance to me. ss It roar be of
aome importenee to you. I wish
our consent to my marriage with
our niece, Mimi Wingower.”
ha
u7ohlyt eyebrow e.
The old )194 glared from beneath
h
ish „your vonse4
-riase witb /our niece,
gower."
hyPo
vier-
,
re.
tion of y�ur.impudence. „ Your in
year was probably two
hundredpounds. Did you think
that sum warrantedlou **king the
hand of Lord Biwa*** *skeet°
s "I hive already won her .heart
and her hand. It was your an;
proval naked."
"/ shell arrange Mils* Wingower'a
future -lo
irityforheristppiness
nee
fo calisoffei
it does not become me -to reci-
procate Your insulting suggestions
and vulgar speech; but I maY sal, I
anticipated this. As in duty bound,
I Came to ask your approval of the
matrix e Cora. and 1 ave alrentlY
fgre 2.2 on re ,
is a di I could easily sur.
se*t*---11 'wash
.with o This *mount of my in.
'come concern* her *lone, and she is
satisfied. But it is fruitkets raising
these questions flows I accept
e4 file That
* I
)
while I regret your decision. Good
night; and I apologizefor intrud-
ing upon you on su disagrees
able errand 1"
ord Elitudie .1 immareled.
is only, Sister.' died early,
learing baby daughter whom his
lordship took over much as he might
bave tO:en, over any other form o
souvenirs
ra-Wingower-wassrearedsitliiii
snosphere of nurses and hirelings.
Slie Was -denied liothiug but affec-
tion -the
thing the child most hung -
ed for but -could not define.
She grew to beautiful wimianhood.
Then some motherly persons in-
sisted on taking her bend ;• and,
in that society which Lord bhp.
Elmstie had long shunned and
scorned, his niece found friends.
.ealtrtir Wu _prodigal 'of -love -WS
n Erie B ter and Cora
e expe pros
pheileel.thiop. The two young peo-
ple loved instantly. and. intensely.
Everyone agreed it Would he . an
'ideal' match. But the shadow of
Lord Elinelle hung over it all. -
•
corahad-always regardeir her
guardian from afar and _witli-ssims
The night he asked her into the lib-
rary was the .firec time their soar -
ate identities had really comes into
e°11441cou,%; Brewster h' 0. en* -here.
siatieg,Prisimeiort, to marry you. 1
refused."
‘iii.M.Atorry."
."-If you • have been -'sencoureging
hint you, probalily owe' hina Lan
akpology, Aeatte pay. As for
your inertiii*, I shall arrange it
for you-l-tvid'on a sounder economic
1,
AI
You' needn't. I arn goirg to
.marrY Erie Itrewsten" •
"I hope you realize whet you
owe. to your igreerdien at the end
of alt these years."
. "I Owe obedience, and I 'shall
render it so long as you exect, it,
All I say is that yea are not more
onvineed that I thall mot. marry
Eric than I am that I shall matr
no other"
No man wouId have dared apeal
14) to John- Elmslies- This. 'dip of
it did it without a tremor otber
.
voice or *quiver of her eyelids.
undoubted revelation of ,
and 1304:1's peesenee.
gompere the , vis,ons will& the
api;stle John saw velesn in the midst*,
perseeittions tould he re
presented only by 'great earth;
the eon, ,darkeneds tive
moon turned into. blood, the stars
railing from heaven, death and 11(41
and famine., the 'tar wormwood,
the smoke of the bettoirdees pi
i 1 n eought death end eould
Al
en
*od,fo
.1;
ss.rscrt
.s Nicest s:s
„ 4
0
nes
neture. " Pe Pal*
With her uncle was not to he thought
of, 210 she shook her heed atid shed
tears, -while ...Eritv lirewetet---said
things iencerning Lord Etesslie that
onstituted a severe strain on the
Isiyalty of the famous judge's niece.
Is100.0.000.0000,00
• ,'. IL .
the lone road betwoert Benerte*,
• Percy Iennet was murdered o 'talent. They sive iti haVe-believ. eti
0 .. 14.41Yhe W.41 piecing together
f hit ram w eature havo.sactlearningrsind it's aseower.s whom $413. laved' Though' ke
n "elevissi -.4-sii poor. For that
a stet"' your lord.
and leaner 4. -ar,s_iguej,__And_i w4lIts „ow ship iney.caee to hear.\. -Forty, ears
--ast'wotir the -las leut worthyoath no ill will befall me,- For I -184 'Ethel plinsw°14 'nal"- -4% lover
genticswires - s in e ing ereeture I am.
.. .... •_ .,....•..
0 wasutprt4ed itt UK appear. Ths* rest was detail. Ten nunu
of his visitor -a rustle of the eilficed for that. Then Erie lirews.
poorestyet VI*, ttemhling with fear' or went from the prisoner's cell to
ecs.transfarent henesty in !lei 4.4 sudge.8 nuitusion.... _
. ' Lord Elmslie was frigid. Eno
hat- can • do ' fur Y'Otti Brewster was- unceremomous.
ina“ilyaomulLe tbe.g gentleman that
that was zd4710orrtwtwOodapynigsbit blaveunveloveraceevsttr-
te.114* them lee' urdech was in" skpt. But I have succeeded in
lees' s.
c e;nyear 0 'nor ...
ted Lietween the
and Benertown,.where he con.
-sorted. with his sioenuals in eveey.
thing save drinking equity. .
.1Ie krt the town one efternoon, to,
wallehome as usual. Ins dead body
4.1 -
s ss
--
crank or bad sherea e
Ire soothed her and nrged her to
telt her story.
- "I am Mrs*, Carpi's. *I live he ii
lone eottage two miles from Benet-
town..., I knew Mr. Jenne'', and Joe
Muedect never killed him. I know
was found behindA stone heap some iho duty' t, for I saw it done. The
-hours later. Robbery was -clearly i murder day was greying. -- I tad
the motive._ Everything of value been at fienertown, and WSW seck-
-
• inti-tlwhed
w eaw-asmen; '• the woman. ti
hard how she au -
Id - eod ho sutfered- with her. On�
pais, for 'Ws * wild part, and 'a day, when the pain of past joy was
wornan's feeble. But when the man keen within him, he decided to go
-came to where I hid he milted. , A to Percy broiler and demand an ae-
few minutes more and Mr. Jenter count, and reckoning. on the
game along- with a stagger an is Benertown road the rival encount-
step. He didn't know the stranger ered his victim.The pent-up pas_
'first,I, but after d, bit be seemed, eion of forty years - -broke loose at
-to underetend. The stranger, thc hateful sight. in a few minutes
big, powerful man, talked quiet and Perey boner was dead. The num.
"len114" . heard "thing but. a tiered crossed- the fields to the little
woman's name.* It was Ethel. At station eficysten, and was Len.
lest Mr. (Selmer olit it's drunk he don, unknown and unsuspeeted, be -
was --laughed in 'a silly way, stud fere, the hue and ery ,iva out. i,am
:oaf guilatretl•hae- Yht"tigreamsaataln4hrutaltt thhwitintoi erhdy. nametel n-*:107:170outtd:. gittihrner:wiu:ht tenyttyl. :rose: efdetail,
_
stlwiriortat•sentind so:vitro garsounadv. -07Weeasilts, byoirothadaoynyootukrunle.e• rior:se- 3,0-etedur_iyaostu
he seized the "drunken .nta'n'a tett, with a . set of goldsleeve-links.
swung the body in 'the air,i and I was with her when she purehasA
brought the head down crashing on them. I see you are not wearing
eeclietthestinall 0.0 hafl ' ' the-at"eas--..Ite--4141414 seeellil-timel them They are broken. But you -
n many a jails' Penal establish. though the first had done its work. may still have them repaired. There
ments had enjeYedhis unwilling Then he threw the body behind the is the missing part. it...was found,
onage„ Prifien-rovernors sitone-heap_and walked- away. near the body sof pires, Jenner
fled to his incorrigibility. Joseph thought seemed to strike him and after he had been murdered_h3,
admitted these things without era- he came back. Ile rifled the pot Lord Elmsli4s
barrassment, but he protested that ets, tore off every scrap of jewe - s
The silence was intense.- Each
his hands were innocent of human lery, then he vanished though ,thti
blood.. opria46 hedge. - Silence* and Itudirds'Etelie opadily legenaerddeadndtchleosedatilehri;
"I wouldn't sis' done for the and the dead maul -I was too torri- desk. A revolver glistened in his
kid's sake. She's kept me' going Sect to move,. Ere strength return- right haat
straight for months.' ea to rar limbs r heard a child's.srow,aroselever ;shut •
„Iste'S -tribute to *his own integrity voice. lee Murdoch canie-lw, the will elleat you of your triumph.
was ineffective. But the ichild little thing rutinin lsfsehriefity encon...16.4gtirousao_ndtimelltbol_r_dattaningd-thirks..e-ze.
cited public interests She was Joe picked up something
Norah .Bwart. lier ancestry on the the ground, it was Mr. Iennerlsvprms oceaion will ruit earninth*,_
-• _
I Ile
een=fladteAtt, -,W.I. -tei,rific f.
against the stones. t
work of a strong man as well 11$ a
had one,
A - proslible culprit -was soon
secuiod. An elderly man, an i.un-
attractive pecimen of the tromp,
was found 22 an outhouse. He was
ucompartined by• a pretty little girl
of-threesyears, in whose possession
was found Mr. .knirer's silver pen-
cil -case. ,. r - .
Ail Murdoch protested his inno-
cence. That, of course, was the
usual tette- within the tragedy.
He admitted- coming along . the
Benertown road, out he had seen
nothing save the shining trinket inc
the readway, and he had given up
his grandchild As -4 plaything.
The mills of justiox started grind-
ng.- They ground Joe Murdoch es-
ss.sseefessesss,
naught but A oinmend him.
Their ehattel or sale, and ;fen. .
ner bought, it. For forts' 3re7arre
-Ethel Dunswolci suffered the roar-
riage-thn wife ineapthle lovieg,
the husband- unworthy 'of, being
loved.' Meantime' Percy ;termer's -
ival had gone his solitary way.
I roved a high and brilliant one.
•
other had di in a workhouse
some way back, Cid" bes-bad be.
-
come sponsor to • his .daueaderis
chs.d.
They were tramping_ the endless.
road, together And -the •child's
bap-
piness Was _patent; 'Whatever -the
color or Murdoch's soul, his
place in little Niarehtalieart wit
secure. he would not be eepar.
a om The. noosesmight
soon be placed around that. neck-.
meantinie the baby fingers entwined
it confidently. , .
Was a black case; Lott it .
was -
against all precedent to tend se than
IQ the fate he prisbably deserved
without at let a pretenee of a
fight. The *4 ieitors Xrie
rewster,to take the deuce.
105 ifiterest was at first purely
professional, *hitt closer intimotey
impressed hims Joe's protests
Counted nothing; set Erie Brewster
felt that, despite his rude and hideteosible code of ethics, loe would,
ir hanPier eireemstanees, beeo
white mans Again and again
"e felt that Jo e had been unlifted,
by the eloild's influence, hold taught
glimpse of better things through
r pure "eyes.
I1lidosreY best for ,you, be.
may eonsole Pin though it Will
not help you, to know that hon.
Italy believe you.innocents But the
otitis are egeinst yen ; mid the 'bee,.
est odds ivill be on the B6t.A. in the
person tif Lord Elmelit.. But he of
good tourege-soll that is humanly
possible will be dOne.
,Nest day. * crowded rend
they began to play for the high
tile of a human like Erie Breve
ter had never encountered Lord
Elmelie since that night the librs
but, in the first moves, he to.
tim.t his lordship WAN in
his t mood. Everythiog jetted.
$
nt
ric, •
..,
itt
dropped. it to the child
and passed on, ignorant and innoe
cent. How crept borne I know
not. Feu kept me tongue-tied. I
thought Joe _would he free. Now
I've brought -you altsthn_stwoor,
have _that _in,Ys esissitues latest
-
the murderer the body, he
need such violence that one. of his
skeve.linke' burst,. Part of if rolled
band,-.S.re---I-left.-1*--ieture.
't There it is, *iv; though small'
us it cart he to tote.'
The dazed 'Atelier took the trials.;
t lit regarded it mechanically a
mdment. 'Then -his head closed on it
swiftly, sol if to hide it from her
who had liven it. • 1
‘‘It• As a Strange, story e and sim,
heve..dorie right in telling it; .Toll
it to no other, and no harm will
come to you. Return to your home.
40e tItird?oh's life is now eafes-Ilut
for your own mike, as much as for
f
his, keep silence." , ,
Mrs. Carpin **vet itut with a re.,
lieved conscience lind & teh-Pound
cotes s_ '
Erie Brewster returned to ,hie
disk and set the skeve:link before
him. A long time he gazed as if
fascinated. Thin a greet activity
osseseedbims * Jfe hietily gathered
his papers, packed his bag, and lett
the house'
inquirers next day were informed
that Mr; Brewster had been sod.
steely celled out of town
Two days after. rentenee bolter
doeh was visited by %his. conn -el.
3oe was eltriost, therfel. s s
"Von .did well, Mr. lew'ter.
No 'nen could hove dont Mort.
4001, mind the Ini!le toeingssigsins
melionising ivon't hurt, and rd
rather be binged • innoeent then
'guilty. Vhy id rather dk than
r
jt
he t
Iirewster.
"
11.0.
‘gyatP„„oarp our: 'aavreen,a1 isake,i0r tit/ ---tt h
strangestpatt of my story it to tell.
.I have teen Joc Murdoeh, 1 hair*
told him as much as I thought; right,
and.I have ,mi
ade terms which I m-
Plote you; to. ke - 'Save Murthich
bests ehort a term
sP
-tie five thouand an. hIssibler$ •
and hewill hear the brunt.
t le not loath*, .but Joe is (Nita
pleased. iteraerotoof Cora; apart,
ber the Shame of your euicide.-Use
your greet influence tat ,the Home,
Dtfieti; write Aliti 'Secretary _ now.
.T6 -morrow I shalt arrange fArrnali.'
tielsoo'footillooyrakttEtzrat?nsditiflitutrit.0
can goose. Coraiiind 1 will merry 1
next month with youecinesent. Not
eveniles will ever _know the story;
°I will heleng to you and moi alone.
Most people will eeinember that
shortly lifter his niktes marriage
to Iffr.v Erie Briwotter;*. the .great
Lord :ElmSlie suddenly retired mid
spent the remaining three ,yeere of
'his life in 'sleep seclusion. By his!
will be leftst,900 tohis nieefe's
word, fiGrah Ewert. .
Iftien years titer llorah*Ewert,
was the loveliest debut -mite or. r
season, and ere the close of ithe
had made one of'llie blet ta
A strange incident took pilet' at
her gorgeous 'wedding. As the find
wits leaving the ehtirete,
haired, rough looking
knelt to the pavement ard
entis Tocie&eol the fringe of her gown.
Mr. 13rewster instantly .serit an at.
"teralarlt to detain 6/4. ..lote, but 1)6
waa gone, for ever„ and the ineident
remained to mystify the bride all
her life;
On the night of tht wedtling Mrs.
rewster .wes railient with soy at
the lisppineSsof the waif *ha hod
becetne dear to, het- ea env
h
',c3 ezr
C"
7r,J. gr.W A ,MA
stienin
1,10
11
40,
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'W I"' s ti" '
S•ISSS.
114,