HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1909-09-09, Page 2 (2),
OP
it tit ett-
.rti. when *notbr se cries
look &D4 * , , 144
ripreuLy�."4rrsy of £runMnts
ie t,tb x .4, stiosltate iefave
1 ,
in z 0
tte
o 1;
in
4,
*i,lly ea
f 4.
,•
0.
to t
4 $
in-&nd ieoffe
eb 1914;-., ,
I, ,rt bu earrioil-us 4,4
o r." ..Detibtlest the final re-
, solt--final for, the Seaten,'oftents*
4-erthe intetestiat diseustion.ot aie
'Unger, to the 'human -rage- 0040,
.honteit and -elegies will I f* na-
ture to vino bat little distUrbance
to the - gilding and clothing trades.
• are warned that insanity
extinction wilebeIour7fate
• Wexalitly $0141re4ils-talk: about th
"bankruptcy" of iseienee in the., fee
of this exactitu e as to time -if
Wrta. andia
not level down our
use a o not. t r away as
4: .
, our raiment as inodesty
3 the 'levet* of the elimate in
ut• particular latitude will .perthit.
are admonistted to take the lid
134 . 4 f
.,,
.0 were
tniterin
flaILo eiNUPI*1 ave utul4.1fr
had emit vompliout..
exr Iive4
of "hsbituil twos')
pttert.T..-
Job in his losses; David in, ide ex-
ile, Immoas the man of sorrows,
Bunyan in his prison; lititon in his
blindness, *Robert /40444 StevenMnk
in- his thralldom.
have talight us to. look :ow- to hope,
to lave -faith iu 016 ethn*il god-
nesp te*--tatelv t.110 lAwoliug in the
tin and lest, *114 to arn
r elves the crown of A joy
loomet%r(ugh sorrow.
probIeii of--paiu -ii *1
r to those who must stand by
and ee others suffer, perhaps un-
able to help them byl any means
ttie for thwltbae„
must beat the. pain. It is true there
no wholly sal-,i'sfaCtory, solution of
ttfri3t
• tides u In presteater',Irnt-
h-. -its, "effects, in its fruitage ou
those who face it, in high courage
we n4„"t” see some suggestiOnslefit
ineamtitt in our untverse.
This Is the world's great school,
he place where the affections and
0
stiiizi bsie
"e at i
It
..,
1 ' 9
b u , *
ti . ,
,I'exhpeeo 0
,... „.
inigli
O 1
011•S ,
. .0, :AZ1,717140)17 t
.te, ' te t it Shi
u n
*
t 's 40',$0 s:1W1.el
e
OUS inateads*ttearn-
t • $,-that-thistivitild s
hall lose
' wine essisry 40tfering 49.4 gain
fl he good out of all that remains.
So when the. night tomes it ia,for
' to detertinite witethetv it shell
pire tia to song or lead us with
omplainings to make it yet dark -
T. t . g When
it us hardest
iri .cheer
i.iotlr.1
• hen' who A
*Fr -
f all toraisethe voice
• encouragement. Wh
it there ,are_aiwaY
OUId be *sled by our
Lare those. who_
SMI IN THE SlIAIX4W. • •
Sontehow, to believe Wit:love isd
nal,thet,',0*-34.fiatteggeedaess,
ter :640411 the, evil, to know
wih e 4r1d man Job that, 'thou
t
a'rviar-rozrIVArt*•'0W:11/67.-
g and unchanging values remain,
tbat -suffering after all only prieks
thesitrface---this is to Ind 4 song
M. the dolma hour.:
And these, experiences make ten -
r out hearts to one another; ry
,
y.
Sunlight, we are asured, makes the
• Savage the picture of health be is
and 11 we iodate him fully
the 1440' be47t 'hing is to live in
glass Ogrobta.
But alaitt Only the other
day an -
ether physician and, savant warned'
too much turtthine; is reak4
Ing 4runkarde, • degenerates 404
0441)1[00F Of.. '14t, Oausing- the.light,
• types to 'ariecumb in the 'struggle for
txistence here and .now. We 'wet*
• told to cultivate no Light,
alisAlei to avoid- &ow bcause
• ttal?".••17-'04., and busillt engage.in the
search of means of survival. Other
•eittiiirtinitture Us that nothing 'tea
• 1.$i• matters so long as we excise the
appendix: and . the ruiperfluous
• ties • -,.- -f4tr6the.Jstymeu.to
0,1Nothing ,itt 411 Well, we might
• xonxise on reform in ,our ,hatt
habitj Af .4141PcTing food at
double-quiek lunches and en trying
tobe fisisly somfortable- as to cloth-
ing •both sttnnuer -and - Winter. Let
us he tothlOvative-progrOUivete, 1,00*
and sane, in hYgiexteas in polities,,
and, leavoitte laoutele.st-and tlothes-
fits trtopia, pending .fulkt know-,
'cage,. to the medical"radicals,"
•
•
Peat is ortly developed 'coal. Na-
, turd has failed to impart-,., that
enormous pressure arising frotu, the
.dOpt)sit of soli .and rock upon the.
eteet,,yed vegetable substanee wlich
is necessary to oarriptess it. into
* hard niaterial;_n_et...has -
. carbonized and th water *tinting
• by the interior heattlte eaith",
natural iiikheavir:
• poat • v.,01%; • buried ,
itsr.fJtuattlatiorm-of roc
soil 'would 'achieve this p
•.c tele e operations earrie4,0 t
• turii, tompress the pe t and drhe
, off' the water by, * sttady heat, poet,
would be the result. -
-Dr. Martin Ekeuherg, a well:
known .-Awedisti scientist, sftr
• many, years' research and 'ceaseless;
experiments, has aitiatetitly solved
the itrehlem, and ittst,::
• be, manufactory
izt boge in 8w&kn 4,
:hich in sivertiarice, conibu
\ „
f
mtE WE
fortiludejitigt, sympathy, strength
to terve amt to lead. . None ot.thet
lesSons. are such that we would
kAhent of ourselves; none are
.snch, that we voko lase, them af-
terirard if we could.. ' - Never are the eta Stronger than
.when ell gather V the colteh of
suffering or wheal they atand AO-
gelher Straining their' ey s acres.*
.1.,
theitieat void. Ority .--t ose who,
kuo:vtrealize how :heme* qv, hallow.
ed by the fact of bet -engin to two
worlds „. . • .. , -
Out or suffering rise our great
songi. The- poetry that-.reitehes olur..
heart- has ' written : by eyes
'Itlincle;d-ut tears. It opens -its rich -
3 to US Wit,when- we . read. it in the
J
same way. ust as liberty -bits been
born * prisonwallS, so 7 his joy
and the confidence 4,441 vietoty.
f
*
1 11
calloused3'utter-
ly indifferent, but for these blows
that lreak up the surfaect of the
life. The poor and those who know
need aro onoto
another. Just to quire the grace
of sympathy were .Worth the course
in sorrow.
We may not aolve the mystery of
uffering, but we tan face it and
sing through it; we can take all the
good there iS in it to ourselves and
make our own lives sweet and r43
freshing through it. We can sing
songs itt the night; we Vita learn
patience with ono another. We
can keep our hearts open in sym-
,atriy; 3-Urnthe dreary
bouts to song in' some otherlife,,
for to think of the sorrows of .Othera
is to find. the joy that- lics hidden
fn every sorrow or, us.
".BEN1W F. COM,
1,
1 1,
liTiflitICATIQNAI LESS°
SEPT. 124;
lemon XI.. Pitul's Third Mbqdon
awry' Journey. Acts 21:
Golden Text, tete
Homeward bound Mitetus
a. 1-3. In our lad lesser' wo
left Paul and his eompartions at
Itgel: :trot 11:1*4: longrset
After a SAii parting Pea* company
tuba ked again, on Sunday morn -
1.; for they 'mudtake the
-10)en--4
Cooa, their firat port, was forty
ile south of Miletus. It is Alan* I
•eland o.the.eria.st.
'southwe4 corner of Aa
Thenext day they
lea to ,Ithodea ,k,
southeast of*.Coos;otf the. south..
of the
od`
and
bdi eat rang propert
c&pare* vorsaily with txial.
uinute. of the natural 4100.
autte;eetled in perfeet-
In an proceSsi, the, fundsk
rnentnl tharatteristies of Whieh stre
ination of the water by,
application of presissre
anieel xtgeney.
1 m ins gas earl
and *ply
The tweet* s so
Lbat*doptrd for the ma %facture,
' l„ The tarbonited-
,
*
. 1
SA
•4 '4
the
.. along th
h a -.Cyprus' ..where
a SS "tireAC/**ea the 1$0Spet s
•early days. There were
ris there erin before Ste..
artyrdorn, • (For incidents
%ebs 11 t 100 20; lat 00)
And landed at Tyre, the. tom -
int la _mporium; Plienicia on
dm hens -borders talestine*,
'It. 'Paul** Zaperienoel trIto.,.
Vso 44. Tyke' irataheat bui-
red
fifty relies •fr
a Lila bik,, rezehed itt throe or
days.fur _Itier tile seven days the - eople
bade Paul 'and hie '
moot affeetionate fare
to the ship.
tertating to note:that oven ti
drn steat.lcith ;their pari
the ahip; reveals St.SIISW •
*S ratter), that the e
busy with world Sr
nraes long -ditties *Or
af the children.
tootle***itt (e
S-1,4. S. VAS took shi
t
"AA
Ues'
,
*val At Jeruaalem. Va.
17. 15. -We took' tip our earriagf,
earlyan ..English word , from the
4, . oilearr as our modern:la:00
haggage is from "bag,"
or lig-
roin " ,"_ To -Jeral-Mit a
journey oft ',four miles accord -
g to Ramsay.
Ilere they went as guest . to the
house -of Manson of , Cyprus, an Id
-disciple, not aged, but of long
'standing, ILLY. "early,'" w
tided in` leruse em, but. seeirts to
have met Paul and his eon:Amnions
at, °view's: This. was it wise Plano
for they would be under tho protec-
tion of it ',devoted ' Jewish Chris
-
040 'well known . and doubtless.
prominent in the ,jewisli church,'
but who *In° -bad been brought up
in ,toi:.•Oreek country. ,It is also nos-
sibt,e_that at this crowdedfestival
the traveler* might not easily: have
obtained --comfortable lockirem., - , _
The brethren4rfteived. us-glarit!..
erring to private and personal
erietl,ilt .1410100N- }mutt, wh."011
Insie -been very affectionate
• ntlitlidastiet *bile the trtore'
orrnal .. reeeptkut....took.. Takeo the
iext day at the bathe of. ;fame
1. .
\
t000n watt tun,misAc.
strange. CatiOltlan iri
•'Period of the Ines.
In Peru ,at ther'periqd of th'e I
a, before, ,_its oonquest by the
aniarda tUriTeiTtly. part of the
si*teentk centiity, .por'erty' was
'sited 'rhe .0,140 torsi-
ry was' divided iistio three 'poi -
and the L.reven4esi
and esourices. were evert. (1). to
support the .priesthOed. and cere-
monisi the sun, :who WO
Lheir , (2) to the reigning Incs,.
[or the perukes of the royal boast.
the cost of -tiverilisiont
people Sit sti much ittoute
T exit of land apportioned t
itch householder -',--'sciir'-'-renolatect
by the, size of his tansikv, This n
rt, of workers Wrought. as one
man for Om; comMon Th. •
siniple wants i•wereeasil
t rely' „ sattisist, no one was
worked,, and thus they lived
and tented life w"
het
.4;
0
,
,fre
1
„
rett
h.'
./t
about °Vet! hi t
ntton atd 140:11M!
•4 . ts:**ng'ib ice;
oth#.4`m ,
btowz*, tut
thh
co
ea* el '01 •
4$4, not mu sts n
Antit Julia
4 Oodat tIU fronttt, 44' watch
The'boys
Aunt 3u1ii ante elow,where
-bey were ,,stAndiug,,''and taid; W1LLI
shake of the head, "I'm afra
be sorry, Roh. And Pm sure
'ed will. Wily, hole 'drawing oP
ids fOet-alreA044tDo-they•--butt you,
d°iItlrj'iNed liad made, u;'.4' hia mind' to
earrt;lite art -of g.dng barefoot;
totber had teld'hint"be might be-
tc
re he came to mit bx$ cousins So
. ,
e plante
the "ground, and answer o,
ma'am. fi4east they don't hurt pret-
When they Passed Uncle Rob's
• fore Ile heard the laughterr, and
4 iv said
.e I thank it back to you in ber-
ries, and VIU 'going to bringthe
most of anybody." .
"Iliggest buckets don't always
n ake the Most berries, nor biggest
t lk* g, either." And that was why
_eae r_t
▪ SIAIIldearri home ,tit
iest lot of kerma, but they deo/
(-4.1on differntpai1s.
-
They turned exit of the villa e
street, and a ten-minute -walk over
the sandy road, 0011 damp and tool
.from the rain, brought-theut to.
field where the ,blackberry thieket
waS. •Tlien.Pcor lied, who tad ne,
er in allhi fife before teen a berry.
growing on .ithush, soon. itam
that lie had chosen & bad time to
begin to toughen his feet, for he
ctuld not. get-netit enough to teeth
even the fruit .fol iha very outside
edge of the thieliet.
111 -
4 *
t 4:
se it S'X'S
,. The-girts-wriggle4---right into- the
bushes, finding the ripest berries
holt in -the shade, and Rob., who
tid not mind the stubble in the field
because he was used to it, went
4traight to 4 P1409 he knew About
teuxei out of eight. -. Ned bravely
led to foll w ; but the stubble WAS
tiff and 1)urt so that the tears cant
o 6yes, and he had to-Igive-i
vp.ancl arab to the top rail of the
rooked lone° to watt for his cou-
: ..
. . .
119:„- —• .7
The time seemed very long to him.
o *as just wondiaring whether it
would be fair to Pay for his berries
with the link puzzle Rob liked tlo
'rah, an . maybe get more than
Nell, after all, when be heard a
yottle, and. Nell herself. twilled her
"0 Out of tho briers.
"I• toldyouI'(1 get them I
brgan. "Ailhere sge yours Let
zleasure.” Then she caught sight
of his. .0TALY Pail, and looked from
tut) tiolethi face to the bare legs and
,chubby feet and her heart soften-
ed. "0 Ned„' she. said, the
•burtV
06 did not answer. to Nell
her beriles in* shady spot, clirubed
tri beside hint and fanned herself
ith hOr 40rithouliet. "I could pit
n --some berries and put them in
your'. bucket )4. she said, atter
bile, "but !I:wouldn't 3OUr
beating." ,fitill- there was no an-
swer., Truth to tell, Ned was obek!.
ing back tome' trZithlesomel tears.
lle did, not etre about 1),erriet ; 14
nted to ,pick berries. .‘ -
-SuAldetily-the turncil tir him with
it nevi., light in her face. 'Tit tell
u what!"- she cried, 'excitedly,
get, 4oirn, and you can put'
en riot shoes *0 'stockings. while
earned ion her I then his'face
y feet are dusty,". he said.
Matter." panted his ousiii,
ie*rly losing" her balance as sbe.
•ent esti to, unbutton •I the little
ioots. "Wetalways wear our orkl.
clothes When we go heillinti"
et disappeared into the bushes
Nell csll.d hfm back, 404 jji
theilt of -further gusierosity,
'him her secret plat* where the
black ones .were. Whentheit'• None straggling One by OMS
the thieket* they, found the two
waiting for thelA -under the
of a little tree in 'the rood,
g as if they had something
an all to themselves, st4,4 the
placed side by tide, were each
to the, 'tory brim.
Is had or/itched ba leg*
, little bit cross
ght'you two,
re
to
st
hest
il417114t bijk
aid,`41114t110
WillIteliNitre•44be
4
ts
.04• CU St I*11,4114' OU ate
.unt Intl* to, send ,‘Oul
*LRWS, ad : iliti'?*ehilgs
txi.:horni *1
;7:
nt ,
31 'Iktleittli.4401414., .. ' r, .,„
-u
. iwliou ,Ote.:.lrfo ' 'I,
in , dinieriathivIjady ba4,
...0, , 1 0: 614 iw
.,O,xia,• ' 00...• ,
' 1400 '1,:ialit;ol,
. ,9Rity •
lif, 'Cou
tninipety
4
•
aulty pink paraeo ait 21)4t4
qvtd with tiowera 01-Iadcr.
0.1ii.c 99 S, Ut4'
I niag'l,nek to tb0 trapedirt.
ew�st eoatare
reund affairs of Irish and ('luny
, TER STUDY Or =ORR:. ., .
Many skeptical an "practical"
timona_are twine to scoff at the Al-
legeil progress in =Oita Seience.
They *dant that the average span.
of life ,has been lengthened,and
that the fearful infant mortality ,e1
the last and rev/oils centuries
O.Y mil, is t4h;--t-re.n4rt 'el (4,tahtth1
etin.*' -
vements in ,hygtena effected as
ucli by sanitary engineers and to.
• as-hrinedieill-in* tors.•
,,, ...
They.,-.:cn, a ainat mcdieine the
4 o't1ie-iucreatiff, fi,rgetting that
tbis maye be due in part to thealtv.
ing of life in the early -years, the
result of whielx ifthat more,live
-
to teach the Cancer age.
Oars er is 4 disease .of middle or
ativais ecl life; and if more e.e. *
• ye...t tt.l. AI o w 94.,11V -.111M.
• I uffer o. a cafloilart :it it (An-
a that ,trio e will -stiffer fsrpn the
items's. ' • • ',. . -•-•
Medical scienee , has 4.1iSeovereti
• '4 -cause:et the mode of prepag
tion of malaria and, yellow fever„
and baiirced,,or--mack4, t -it
to 'free, the- tropical repent of the
World from these terrible scourges„
t has elist0V,OrOd: a ',remedy Which
43 robbed diphtheria of. Most of
's terrors, and . another which: has
reduced-ri
the * ertality of cerebro -
Epinal meta** tts ' ftora eight)! to
,
tweritplive per 'cent.; and promises
to, reduce it even further, and to
tip away with 'Alio_ terrible seekeebi
a the disease which formerly trittao
teeoltery almottworse-than. death.
It has not yet cenqueted, tulierettlo-
sis, but it is in is fair *of to 410 teOt
and, whit is /Orb, it is teaching
the public howio avoid the, disc .
• It has not. yet Solve$1the problem
:f. eancer. That, it -Will 40 so, how -
vet'. is, not doubted by , those in-
fornseil Of the litreauous efforts be-
im made in every eountry by tarn
est: and trained, itiveatigatets.:. -Al
over the World:rinstitutions have
been established for • caneer re-
sear:0i: • One of this sort ba exist-
etriii-114ifaloi New York, for over
tea years; -the disease is being
studied by a eommission in stiassa,
chusetts,„ by .. another in Englend»
Vim are also, inttitti e t te
studk of c aneer in Berlin, Frank-
fort 404 Ileidelberg. • in 'Germany,
and an inteplional society, has
been.' eitablis ' and'.7Miet's .:rf
larly for tiicomparing of,resititi.
lll:re11:'lbit4tar,i lfr.,it4h
poteOf44o'tho la;btnli4
eV been great; bot although no
,
has been found, a -great deal
It been loArrie,t1 *bentthe nature
of enter. The tomtit of -it hiCnot
et been definitely established. But
the study has been ayttettitttically:
prosecuted'.-1-774tinTy'*;,,41eco an
spite', the paucity of results, the
utiTitiltroiltrpotrorraniii4toing. .-it‘..„.,.....mit,i1 who
prophesied' the freeing': of Ilavanit,
from tellow filter •Vould hare been
laughed at: Ten, Oars- from
may hope and .believerthe I/
lent of Caneet- *111 Alio "hava hien
solved-.• -1,7Outtes Companion. •
1. .
!I!
The pannier dress Is coining c
o the dismay of the abort won*
Ostrich' feathers, hold their own*
,but most of tome now seen are curl-
ed.
Light, old rose tints ,are -genuine.
r girlish colors tui milinery pur-
poses. ' J
The veiling of one color over an
is one of the fashions of_thia
oment.
-Sarin trepos, tint of their
light weight, ar the preferred hab
facing.
•grin IT-90,-P,X-W5SAIX&11, fonAsio.oa, tauwo„
at deal of embroidery, done Wit
he- toarsest #hre4s -
--**tatkit#44,44*
r, iind is,now Often wisp cied with
floss for decorating gowns.
Hosiery colors th season are
leek, white, talc b ue, wisteria, „
taupe, bronze, an American',
beauty.
Te oats are notic able kfr taf;
14 It
—
"
ieW pV* iibbou e -
signs is intended not so much for
hat decoration as for women's flea.
.71.
< ,
P.'
After
ado,
. .
4.MINI)
WHAT f ,
eing lUctrod in bed tit
ggef.1 her mother : to, sail
with her until She. .got to sleep.
491Por,'"dilit pleaded; "it is al dark
rand-. Madge, is so aid." • "Ilitt
t1etk is nothing to be afraid .04",
her issolkher assured her. 14.11amt•
at goo right down,ottiri, /for papa
*there alOts waiting for her. Now
try to go Ito Sleep, and remetnber
thst the angels ore -right .hero with
and will take eats of /en."
hi but inaviso," wailed the littlo
t.I'd rather lia've you
eskee„ mamasend the angels'
dowit with »apa and you *toil, bot,e
with Madge, lineator for
8eptember,
h'
at
0011T11,41tY.
'e iltruilterebto law
I. coats ;shoo
tulart new. slipper has vamp*,
leAtherr-whila411O-rostot .
the slipper and, the heel are of white, -
kid. .; •
rainy white; ajeor4-jusek,
white lace, are pretty for the 'gide.
lyi woman to don with a dark lawn
dress.
Many eyelet , embroidered. ba-
tistes, sheer limas, and ether trans-
parent matiirials are teen- over
white, black, or a color.
Mager cult ers are -and- -
pearly all -fine coats for
next Winter ;with ter:
-Some of the .straight , scarfs are
made $o deep that they are almost,
131,siv;Isi and the shaped ones are
made with the same .idea.
Earliest advices to fall gats At*
at; -they will be Urge *ivi.h trim*
--wings of lrge-silgrettts-a
ous
Artificial towers are w• orn to
sone -aftent-in. the hair. The
niw-
est for this purpose .are made of
gauze and spangled with silver;
-Sheer sleevo5 are. inestly „Ma e
with bands of the varae material: it
strengthens the sleeve, and they aro.
I s liable to pull out.
Sccuins and heeds are as-fas
ionable in Paris as Choy ever .worst
tor; eveuing wear; both for entirs
gowns. and for these additiona
the• bodice whielx make such 4.good
teed as supplementary. to -a
If made, .well atilt* boll's& a
Entire gowns_ate now being Made*
of sheer marabout; whieb, tarot. ap-
peared as waists, - .They are protti-,
est. trimmed with Trish
The dross' anel, Which, has been
pmewhat pla now cut, shish.
divided, de into numer.
SWALLOWS -
� FLIES.
'What 1)ue- Suailust 3IayOtA
out iVirat t Singt tam*
"One swallow . mak* it
enmrner but," raid,
Mr KwiIlkurn-
by,"I think we nalitt all agree that
no, fly- may mak* 4 1Wititep$ 'or at
kitet a tielison: 4. great &wont -cut -
for us, and this at it tirne whenii&-
turaily winter would be •fiiitheat
from our thoughts; the single fly 1
rfottu;vdandrtohbohtti Itzl, uso00t,hswtileto4lowess
44
nt,to sleep, • okt, (*winner morn.
gL„
"We p Wake, AiLyt *t 5 o'ckck and
lof--thirtight of th sun vr.'ady
lrightli. Marked around rd
ers of the window *bade*. We 1o4k
at our scat& and Ste that it is
oielocks thanks to our giod
tortttill r) fkolit° fahrten 171:4,ritged to . . sleep
comfort. itt
and in the peacefit
ness, 'ajusting our head itt "Mt
poitinu that !these light stria
et, - strike our 03.05;
plosurOlo, „ thoughts of th.
lzutthou-
u7ffinoottr,,..„.40,of
doze off t
',Then WO, sngl,
A
4,49.
fl
rt;
b*
I
o
'a d
, A
1,43,
3rt
Yr 2
1
13?3,
WAtfl;
-
aria
1
ti
trt
, ti70
tt.
i‘e