HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times., 1908-11-19, Page 7-
'an
.'•11
.0,
it
‘.4
•
4141
I *1
.natcd OI�
,s.th
11,4, f
,
..tarCarti
e tains. 1,13 tsi pet
is •
0
forest an endless supPly of Moils-
ture to the thirsty auNiihilekthia
not enough to meet the total .de -
'mends of rainfall, 'it contributes
materially to it. This contributiesi
et Moisture is lost when the season
41 plant growth is., past. At the' ad-.
vent of..a,utunin the earth's surface
' water supply is 'owl °Wing to_i
demands made • upon lake and
;stream by thilong Warm ons*,
'the growin
et
1!
,
•!,
•.;
1 .
4 *
's
tt be Jhes,
teneei et Ca 00. 4
t at he cn lift his
but
au -
not te, I* ,on tet
same o, ishrot
rcalrn peakingf sof °Aett'tkierAftLiti.. stel t 4114
etrtt io as sacredly guarded to -day
it Vali 44, century ago, and there,
.no prospect of its revelation."
Yet because for6es. are .iticomPre.
hepible,, mandoes not deny their
exPAtellee, but attempts to turn
them to practical uses. "The great.
est of all_ reysterie$V! pays- vas,0 .
to...b,e-onscio.
thinking man BCCS t
'Oita
nit f
a'
tia$10
3,3 e
unknowable an
The ,earth's autumn carpet of
leaves and dry withered vegetation
also; makes no small demands' on the
moisture. Hence but little rainfall.
Indian summer is distinguished
Slow all other seamons-, of year
bazy -NOT HRED-ITS--
realrn.
Oree
Now, it is remarkable that inai
rersons who think themSelves r
tional .demand that -there be no,
Materies in religion. 17014S they
tan cons' rehend all the doctrine's in
which its practzcal duties are .te,t;
4,iget.v. due_ olOgesUites., rty..
--styrItliity-M:rilitiop;Tforz-
est Ares were of frequeet occar-
1111(.0, in the autumn due te roving
bands of Indiatis on the chase.
Hence the name Indian slimmer, =
tz, n111 t%4.A )49r-Itosin...
Ind. When the trade winds. dis-
appear the •Indian saremer comes.
• When the sun passes the eqya_2411
--tinYWOC1111144:101.17b1s-a-lt-ir
• • 'rn
jars ere similar to the trade. wind*
tf the northern hemisphere.. 'When
the sun is czossing the. equator and
• the poles -are equidistant from the
belt in the sure's-tract around the
glebe, it occur that a- rush o, Cold
air t t equator. comes from
th n rth and the south aud_on.:tif
t V
/nest mystery -should- nu,et-
,rwirenwebure-to-reltglistytdite
relates to the deepest questions and
the highest destinies of being?
Religion treats of God. What
theme could be more 'hedged about
• with Mysteries? Who can penetrate
the seeret chamber of the' Almighty 1
1pW9-*Tic.P.A9.1.14,,,,04,LA
Iron "Cat moo, says tne Boo
it lob, "by searching ,fin4 out God?
It is high OA oven, what eanst
•
Cams 0
- 0
0., 0 •
:
8
4
0.4:1
,Iijut?:34)
v io
t •
at atz
,
X
u et
• , I ote
•
resent We; SoWing 'ctevnity2
4 that the 'righteous Shalt shine
stare forover.,
ery truoa detti• nets ptsep
tIA
reason, our religion will javc
nothingnew, heavenly 0 "
A religion without mysteries cold(
givo\lno.food ,for 011r spiritual be-
ing. "Take away the deep, the bleiss
sed, the infinite aspects that robe
with. mystery
'VIE TRUTHS Or tEL1GION,
and yon _rotl, it of ita pwcr to
at-
traJt, to comfort and w the
carts ot M
prn here. tlien; bw :irr
tzonal is that. criticism asks:
thc' -to su ender ber- ho-
0 e*1Pf. wo note raise
lothen highest obhgation are those
ministerswhe ;listless literary eco-
nosnie or social -questions-which
belong to ,another s here-itostead
of setting forth the h&y mysteries
ot revelation.
s--40-4eseotart--11H.
our --text, "as --of. ther-ministe
-
(Ifth
ter,has not. .kt. faith in the
ivine-snySteries ;--nor•-'-let-fany---obe-
thiek that ourniodeLYn age has Deso-
to beyond these. _Were we to ex-
change these exhaustlep themes -10i
the dry husks of ethics, Instead of
fil-
ling, we wouldutterly empty our
churches's.
'Man has (Iwo ide;., -he
thit'for ,
ite And it is in the proportion that
rel;Oon keens to her sphere of Min-
1st:crust; to Ins war& with her uniqs_se
rrairillaVil?-1151
,
e a slated -Or -VokliY
glide to -lead ou t its ever
lasting home. • •
Rev.,/anie's R. .116
mg*, shall we turn a deaf ear to t
revelation' or xtim, which the Bihl
gives us? Because we cannot.ltnow
ly unfair.' life points out that in or-
der to be successful it must be' 1evi-
0 1 ad
that it? per emit of the burden' falls
on-the-mamtx.of le
than 1,000 francs, whereas a
a
c emit sach great extremes of heat
tit el IA • • 40
to up the rare phenomena
known as the equinoctial storms. •
••
110...1Wiriegol••
equator the_trade-_wipda, blcotlfr0131
• the-;:artlieast Tost7TtiCtre- eqiitor
Lh efilTiFilMiThinaoria"
from the northeast toward the
• eqisatorial- lisse:r•-- sumnie
. south, of the.,equator and eu this
aceontirtheVade-winds-trutingt
Seasen aro Wowing from the 801,1-th.,
(16;41'n1-,:410.---44111
, Winds must eross the Atlantic
ocean and in (101013' SOP come 10 tli
ONO, oidlir -ATifirita lieavs •
laden with moisture gathered from
- relit -1r tiretilitailit ran es . --A the
it an meo
000 to 50,000 • francs • &capes with'
considerably less than 1 per cent.
arglies, therefore, that fiscal re.
fairTiihIWT6713
oirout
'4414404
tion lir'ould be 4 single tat a in,
. • . •
totnes. •thstroction: should
•
erssnycler.
. .
ture- reiative.s, to chain them by the
neek atitk hold them at ransom as
guarantees that rubber and .ivory
IV 1
bis had been to turn the whole
-a
pawnshop, in W lett - the •pledges
defene-C1:1 ess men it -ria the
helpless women an .c r n.0 0
Congo.
The white men were sending
black men into the forests to. chase
0;1111(ce
tr,en, of. 10.111 33;
4
• 1
• I-
1 4,
1.
T se tax 'alionlil-be progrezsixe and atrocities, . of which there:wore
should not, tout,,h7amio-inIts,bolow., thousands, flogging being the least;
tain;_tainimortr_____141thie"÷titit t men armed with rifles
meets the objection , that capital 14/3 " g S' were str.°°°'
ragbt. be driveri front• tile yountry • blutat fc1l, and they' picked up
''..,...w.trit-forward to
general interests ' the° eoutttry t Was a° elaggeratIori
would not surfer unleos the capit-tu647 tto-t" doting the' last te4
Mt -Fr -ratt-there-had-bOn-tIont-to-rteri,
unt e'rig-71.7e-Tipo-t—d* regun
the Congo, directly and
- from .wor
r
iand f Lbiek
,
were now. per -
striking terror in o tht 1uartsof
lio people, eapturing _hostages and
.ri inthererin-to-the-4itempa
t,i401
litlittEk• 't a.thsr',elLon,
.14 *it's
rttiOostliOia
sic; so .0 4
Aehst , 1
InidtArtaattOi
lastrnair
1? 6
t
• •
SetiOrsorli
losesirestaosst. itsoh,
ttopos,...
rte. 14010 User 1414 itro sere int
voter wow to bum. otto or two.plibo masa apse.
Tlioy *se strieur e«.geslisstitoo do iittt trittroit
'Ingo butilnowasstliiiistiott 4100.00 alt who
tuS sm. -
-f'.---1:0231flig1t1l0404 -
;
)11 ,
• T03. '11,
41,
• t it ne
i .tiaturr4 d'is:r
at th0 int
0
eed will nerease to lila 01.1
Mute. It thou: rilt
brough::the zone" cf asteroids
tiny planet4 'whi,els Wander` hetw
Jupiter and Mars. 1/V00 to,
small asteroid it may, encounter
the way, lipt worse -still for
gored should '$.t erasis,....1sead oh
s t Jf'itni-7n.r"
4.
s
'0
,
nie was a
Aisplemed
t I discipline,
'
•to:
tf•
kr•-•\''d. 'Th
Iorn after salon* And ke
so• brother, a spoiled &Aid;
' jeekb-David's nePhew and
trustedt military commander.
Zeruilith-Daviir sister.
Abiathar' the priest -The son of
-Ahinielecli, who with all.his fanfil
cept Abiathlr had been put t
allratrtconini-aifttlirtraril-frar
Neing,kindueso to 1:),id <1 .Sant.;
•.. 8, Zsislok-A directl„ deseertdant of
4 l'. .41 .11110.4 iii . '"s4.,- al Well IttieWn fact that th fleaz the son.„,of Aaron.
•
BonLi
4: 4:14: -sow. many Vanes baso donewhich may. happen to d I; way under 'Solomon.
ill s o in'the..StisdY- i I ft.4. i ,ft, ..i 0 ,trOCO0ininooan,sd:rar..osf.2.3,Dr and
. Ne n a r i . s fife Crie/Tiagirir animiiirdeT
with the.cesiviction that it is sioeless' in a .itiost unprincipled'. 'fashion. $u- iXatlian---Tho_faithfal prophet 0
to etiriY the gospel through thigi -01010na huve'heen:‘,.cit0Used--ceneern- bovah and adviser of the kink.
.and other parts of Africa. if these Jog two 'new Moons aoquired.oflate had once 'severely rebuked Da -
things aro allowed to .46 PerPetti- years, which , deuhtlese wort (Pagel, ,or_f_t_wrAg,1.1q_14(1, ecoMnutted,
Atffect,t,
aced,. becams you ca_4414.riTit 1,..ix,n,i,t, their, .m.iettirmlikratzf_tl_iii,p7mastesmtsc4roid fyin i.,1.y. ,Jut- Concerning Slionei 1.4a Bei- lie.
Ole learn -eft astronomers of exit - is-7--known.7"---77-7-
0. The stone of .2aliereth
1444141tainfteeste.::eArnittbe%il ' .' zwirstaiii---/Srrereitl
1 so worldieto andvadding them to Mount of Olives beside En-rogel,.
„:11 .. Ats*-... - - .13,xi.--..--A.. 7-0.t.--0,1413t.tis/K-Xp ,r7tairr-i4entille n ; ;
that but. he , has reacheCteut for l Virgm's.Pool just South d the city
passing contracts, and - captured no ! at the junction of the It.idron and 1
less than -thirty which are now re- Houton' valley:S. . •
cognized and spoken of as Jispiter's. it Bathsheba -At, one time the
• wife of , Ijriall, the Hittite and
BElt PLANET.
Pi
"04VI
.11
• kerchiefs •Rceallett.
' • ,
"You 'knew there. was. 4 iiMei.
I,.
it Was the fashion for: men to carry
said the middle aged man, '"Witon
handkerchiefs with fancy _borders.
Then it .••was also the fashion for
ticked in the, outside upper pocket
j,.(44,0m.Akktir..tuulaarA.,-
of their eoat with a corner stick-
ing ant.
456,Y4tsis:bm".3(rosilot.,rnest jtossio-ntoo acy_otiket
,
dere- and de you •• :know that the
sight'orit'plealied me greatly. Per-
haps it was ;because it carried -me
hack to days when I was, younger,. the limit of the tsaco that kills, for, perzling the true state of affairs is
though I dou't think it wa.4 00 so •no_incremie.. in . [1.,peed of about 17 feigned for the purpose of arousing
insieh.as hepause I have ,a liking for miles' a minute :would end. dm the 'king to a s use of 'his own re -
44C410 -3' . . .._.. •aStrOt3Sly. 1,Ite &inset would • lie sponsibillty in the matter. • - -
1-461-441ore4-.1tan draWit along 4 -rAth 80. changed -in• SO. As •Jeliei&Ts---114-ethl."-X, --Soleil-in
family of comets.
Tat PACE TIIAT KILLS. ncehler ntialLrtri.is,,otgeo to ILDanviejr, son
""'"Xfilet. giatIliliftir-,lite't'as ere. favoriteer'o ion seems alitve been7,11n:'
tipidIsna;Agi Iftirsairi: threpc. cialnerta will iii-lty grain and better bred than
crease its speed to 1,'2$i. miles a some of his lielf-brothers. As the
A W
a e- s a -e
, f ,i.0
• .404...
ea y and wisclon. --
48 ftiles-41,---minnte,---and- •
it reigneth-Is I)
tically-nrottint-the situ7-. A rillatiTifti,. antriVill-ijtfr-adep d
though to escape' its intense heat's nless David himself interferes.
at the Kitreed 331370 miles ti• minute. il. Is this thing done by my lord
By that »time it will have readied the kingw-Natban's.igrioratice co
.1
11 11
• cbiefi3 were gently and feensbo With!direction that we would never see s oath' indicating the i eportanee
borders stamped in various blues'
im.s.r1s.which thkingatt 111.4
in grotesque patterns or On May 2nd, 1910, or one da is about to say. For the form 0
re
0 le 5 4311
ed bordo of a single solid cOlors
aS blue or red; and 1 ant free to say
I liked those; and for, that matter
•
downrightviers t,ha
ed and flndliig tat -fir& n e
thietilk...ofbe
-71C-iTalriiiiiited'IrritifierDv
'killed at New UOSS by being caught
4.:Atitesitiat,
hisnAbir.,-
the nubile matt -
Iir.._theAnver a
trim; three 'centenarians have ap-
plied for old age Pensions. One
therm,- 1,13-ryau---.0 -Donnell; ,
e a es IC is y ars o
At Portadown recently, Thuina
Yoli-0,1; attacked ht's NtSfe with a ra-
zor,cutting her nose off, and giv-
i3p; her a terrible • gash la the
ow
X
11 II
'roach to e sup, it wi P . And • ng -Data .sa . nee
Venus. thorougl,ly arouped ' to the situa-
Ori juite' lath, mo, : the cornett tion,-tho agta king proMptlY 'gives
will pass within live to ten million,_3 minute and onslicit directions for,
'. _I
,--wr tem.* # iwn,k• - pue sate- 7-iiria1 son- ' . s,
'vorite---101-4-43410-ottr-kist--su-e.,
ssor.
_
t.
ts progresses southward.the • ade
Windt "continue • to increase zo ac-
tivity; „Increase& ipientities of
moisture aro deposited in the tro-
I t A
North America. ou h the
1-1MhaTif-- tris
• winds, whose influenee is.felt in the
northern hemisphere in' to i,ay of
moisture, rain falls and the yitdiaa
• aunurier 1s.14rought to an end.
, e great 'pow t Franee as
the 0014 lett population', and the
: hrgest debt. The principal\tif, the
debt the„ Amami
•(4%14- on account tf it la 'about
000 ..-Taxation, thrfre,
, particularly iniportant (location
rn Vroince, and the subject of fisca
eforns iateresting
;flannel' tt A: E. OVistliier in a book
•hat*.was published recently.
eempariooir *rah 1iow
has been a..n\otable• I
"rtli••
oUld
▪ '
,„
r 110'up t•to t1f'1
o diyeet Cues ilrei
• tlt ttipy were.
V* Alt the;
U(1 est ‘-
•
t it
in•
10,
kW the rni
` •
1
i
I I
. ,
convinced 'that at_ tfAxittfOit 4IL
Frante stands there is great need
of- modificationit-in- the
justice, 'which can be' attained Andy
by tbe tax on 'patcapacity.
' r
14E1010 OF KUMAN BE
liAYE BEEN Ii1tt111),
41%
1.1v (tot.
An 0ktri,adtl
in o WaS,
iesionary
..iverpOol roontly
J&tn 1Earris,.the
stociation. •
Tho • 'basic:-jititity of Ilse (''ngo
regim'. L13 in the daizu ef 'the
ov-
erelgu, :absolutely uaorecedented.ini
istf
PEOPLE SAID S
rnirute
4 it
iVerea Ole
Conference at
14 -the* Re.
"Otof
r ct
f .o
/or
,;(
(V ptiro nod 1,
rit-ort
kteater; eagaged. tl
in
. enteral*
inhabititit
"$-AVIt
AAA
the, r;
13
Mos.
ti
Co,
unit I 1
1
mes
*
11,
,41
at
t,e
114'4.
r
..routr4ing.iite.0110:84nOo, to it
4, -Aa it rvetth'i,th
•eoinet'si pace will derease, a
ifLOttith worn out by the turt!fiulcous'
,
1 CI, so ..11
;Of
; tsr near Jerusalem- ,
. Anoint hins-,This was th
A force of about 160 pollee in
;gilt districtinopectorSs•recently
uperintended the re -Stocking ,of
drivAin" farnisisi letre.
rd:being.
out -recent ei---Parish-1 Imre
tt S5. ;try s, r re -a -F-1-31- a r
*tripped Away revealed an Ro-
man doorway, 1.004 700 year. ago.
Thomas - Murray, On ot. Mr. T.
Astray, manager of the•city ot.(ititt1
y Woollen Mills, bacgaincd
holarship.,_Valo *400 and
for three years, at the
versi
41 young'men.wert
rouglit before a opecial court of
sessions at tanistymois,.. charged
ithhaving driven *large niiiniter
the_. properfs-variona
udowners..,, •
• 1.10st Itevi*Dr.-01)wier, 13iSi!Op
letter -b\t-tfit.
k Press...has denounerd boxing
n4rAll. tlisgitsting and
•
n; and he appeals to the ,youlig
11 of his diocese to ,refraiu fret*
r, enraging the pritetipt,
111 l` the At
"th
I 1,
't !'
n
CtlY
it *1j)k8'7t5 041 0
Ef's
ts wU1 b
ft ;sensed Misr
hanN has -died
-1
y.• Ther*
il of -fare fit to
ide* of g0)0(1
n"t ta
1134
ep unc.1
Wfl:to sr
0 wi tav
_
.t%41111014.10113C;.1111451K Gran
Mum er,"*. ,seetiaLUL
-five
it i*as reaehed-114V symbolized tho establishment of a
elttel! ‘11. -'rt 'nee. fi°11t the 411n it relation between the king .and
ill have dedhnedto the.rate-literati, in virtue...Al.-which his -per.,
elk
ji
vertf„,,,
Any„irrigularity‘
,daiiiorces,Amd-should
,
,a
o
A
thsek
al et Mil
fr
'Of
h
the Air h.'ot
le is al
citatttade
'c•4
„
V 0.
e•
*too
4 1 v Ils
u a slf a d ' vials." 4
oents it vial, Di r $1.00, at an
des rsror mailed direct by The 'r...stillatris
Co., ,1,44lited, Toronto, Out,
PEARLS OF TRUTH.
Idleness is the key of beggary.,
Talent is (me thing; tact is every
- Silent men never have occasion
"eat their' words.," •
-.People are always' asking for ad-
vite but never taking it. '
There is always hope for a man
!unit he loses his self-respect.
'-;`,4thirfirstritertovearthilcuir*Ted§sr------
i•SW„t%eirleatIn wise man aingligt)ertasilethee‘ worst
of it, he makes the hest of it.
"Misery loves company" , the
kind that is long-eared and patient.
"Man wants Imt- •
than he gets, .atimittivimserd-
muddle theirs, if they
. .
other peopl
1st
Ye .
..uara*
Malty. a man doesn't do anything
worth while because he thinks it
isn't worth while. •
SKI OISEASES
Those troublesome afflictions are °rutted •
wholly by bad blood and MI unhealthy
state of the system, and can ba c I , cured
. ta,
-litYiistivisliftiftiV4glaWe .
'tis.s. of .
--c)
',Good
Bitter -s -
Many remarkable tures !UM 64,0I1 nude
hts-rinnedyrind-not-onl
st4htly skin diseases boen removed, and a
bright clear complexion been produced
tiny
snd ingers
•
!.
thesame $4,418
_ •
"IA Pi la OM DIMM1101133 ctl
Ur* 4ohn..01Connor, Burlington. 11.8.,
writest--"ror ars 1 suffered with Salt
Rheum. 1 triod L dozen' different medi.
eines but most of them old **dolt s'orse.
AcP,
•
AA•W Vt • • $ tr
isrt
le;d:r:ogotiviititt
half a doze!), doses I couldsee a change so
" -" " ILLL4kallt.tbrza., ---
ciinuet-star susiotrfiir your,
s gnik
0 Ft
0 t
I 1'
41
11.1
:AU!B AND POSITION'''.
'
15 ilk impossible , to ay anything
tegurdng the position,'ot the
ti
liave keen madeA irize Iias been
offered hy thr .0,111,11.40.:Xstronct
eaI Socicty,' af 1,00(J• markS for t to
moat .exact,, calculation, arid 'when
is made we shall know, exactly
or-tluf-co
•positioa w gard,ts the
c*rth and 'sun. If the earth 'hap*
ni; to be ntilke' the cOmet about the
tiuie of its, passage rOillia the sun,
the coratit's light is neeessar,4
ae.,,,aticlisitifavintild..•,itkitio,truailvt,t-e;nitipti_pstex-
ien.,,
w of the•gloriotia spcotacle
t return 111 176.0 the comet had
raiii riftY degrees in length, and
Wa rihir8e$;.tItTheliatiiit,thteht46tliratihnera. tithe;
cmiet atiuded tu a :distance ectut-
valetit--to a :little" 'More than half
the WO' from the 11911th to the 110-
.
'so- Atlillitr
ineWtia' plendOry
its train 4413$ teen degrees L.
length. now, tim ;net ,witi rodkt
its next fl'turn it is impossible
;lure, but it ito he hopd
it 0
a
4,
told
I •
• nA• ola
Piped with pipes The earliest
Greek version of the Old Testamen
Asti "danced 'its dances" which,
141 -$00111,40 -,be preferable to t
• Of our text.
i
41. Adonijah. and *11, •guests
' g---the-tad-of- ther,
protrae-
lcd carousal at rit.regel, the usur-
y er-and-his--foillowers, ,ineluding
Joab,, aroluddea, made aware1t1( (,I0mQn5. ftflO1ltiIlg at, of
4,1 to 4 retain:tit
record of the Utterollapte o
Ariviablieh
!'scoOtnnseortactte
**actuary because of its saeredniiii
'lorded at least temporary pro-
.. .
04,017:0114:011.1710tcoiti'00:4,niati
retiresoi,lttittrfrtivt*,:rotengli,ftebt. it. to. to.
;doing, versesof our lesson
coutazn the Iast cliare af thc agcd
king- to hi On Eolonion, an a
bricf mentio-t af the death and
L.uriaI of the king.
osp
01
• OT AT ALL PL
- •
ir4ar
t4111 •schiiol had been carefully ex-
plaining tlie ,parablepf thexrgdigal
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nOW sgC 0 it. 1 went well an-
ti she eame tow*rds the close,
hen she ,asked :"Now; tell Int •
who was not pleased to see the pro-
digal son. when 110 C41120 '1103110
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op
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gest, part „of. his hard. luck.
According to semis hi 4. jIloeu.
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1 to -day willhe illegible ii onic;
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onto. ;;;;te-4-A' suggestion *
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