HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times., 1909-08-26, Page 3Itritith 141nister
iszd a revolt'.
!u 1b4n.
otos; ,tit*he
. „
e tee Plam.
o fa witht nature,
their 'own otds cane ilto in-
pired. knowledge of fuminioi),
0 WO not find it so-to.dayl WIun
sun shines nature blossoms, the
rook babbles and prosperity
faith easy, Ufa Inosrou
Jo4is good but the brookdries
here carnet temptation,-
uggi.e.,' &taster, an
COL. SEEMS TO FO1UKE US,
o aro 1eft to battle aIon doubt
orelmwe- thhik, vhiio; uior wI1-Qo sbow
:Iis face; then froin the deptss
tore Comes to us the new faith, the
new_tentht.t.h.e.mew-m'an.ifestati
Irhaare
peciat objet of
ladoettehid a bighe
he vommon herd, Ivo
the.spirit-of---th
love; that
plane than
-0901108 in -
in
„ •
.1) 41.11 tiCt, the coutes
:th the prieta of BAAL In th
oIituto. WAS' revealed to, It,'
premaey of the God that move
.
the hort of.nature, in the hear
an, etTer the gods mode of-tv
nd "tone, woreltip
pines, 'Ji r
the works
springtime end
rivuet ,ax
liffereiit
ending.
and the, r
ug1v ten per of the. natFve.
the nnsiness Or risky
e,inenib*beiro•_v_oz*velw11,:a014.41,,_.:
larin
, ,
o when
•s ithin a couple- of •-ininutesst
than at- hundred iturdy
e With long. bows, antl
8, 0t00014210g in the
jungte just bOYOttfl the biltS
ing .for the rOdiet•t$1
On another occasion so
guese native soldier&3 tried
o'3tth afterward101,7*
the ,story of "Ink fate. Th
asset through a number Oftli
.tt
the sixtecuth century
burg. 1510 •to
supte.or.104
• 'throne was giVek to
nttpirte in;1SO3,',and the.
th� iiess giri
dtken to'04t4 he
„
througI ttTPsti14';',
happens that she es
am y et girls and
mon 'sense .t4tils -
Much better off ear
• 41 4
II away her
a„
iargo
at her. *era,
1114 she is
g 'her litp-ing
home.m4 at
eat
if Oil Ivittit *obi, on the, ^ft, side4 as
ot•Prrowierks Jxtnict af W
4 weak and Igoe
was,responsible for 144-
eeession and the' li.,,enirkt,
s
4) tiie' outfl
raniped right
wheri
'arcle•rs„.7.Lot
be Arehart ki
o eadly thorn
is It' hopi, the
'en 411
1 them to the'
Old ',chief who tol u
.story :chuckled over
*dently a hurnorOus *We.
r
acd Gc.neaIi',sjmo of t
•
uv and IULV7. Gody
was b:.1 0111:11
n arniy. to rnarc1,i tI
Spain to invadeland'
. .
Portugal. , When ft was to
thoAmasb_p_ett____ge ,ttw.oke
et , tr,
.is ttruek at ` the
for children earnirt
e -tg
the, leerett of Ger-
t
education, the following
he essential recommendations
ore manual work in the'soltools •
holitien-orralf-time-o er ec t - our ViSten o
Le.$80-11 nristian
colden ',1*,t,1' Cor,•
13:tel3i •
e to tie
o,...toore• 'live i
rcanhe±e, wit
•
ting
.•and Frknd. Fait
stronger, more eOm
than be
•
or our touts
avep. than
„
owe` • irctig
nor,..)1elper;
will (flly be
lee,in 'heaven
•nd ab,soon possible Under
0,44014 for _boys _at _work
eutture and girls "helping at,
xernti�n from sphool under
t -e only when. the 'child is snit-
mployed. :
egzstne* (at ,the cost of the
tej o help parents to fled pro.
ork, for eltildren leaving
nintiPired by real loVe,- not sec
ing the 'highest go4 Of the 'hearer,
is bill, sounding brab5, ()Ir.*. tinkling
'cymbal; mere noise witbut hae,
niony„ without, meaning, ',.without,
the, 404i of music. 'This it true -oven
if -we had,the gift of tongues be-
stowed by the Ifely Spirit at
Pentecost, and, could express. in
every, lenge
e tili?7"j - rapt emotion
• ...-gAr
int
isenel stritigS
:!dt411a.
0,-ji.40444400,-4
r we
in our ideal, the inore glorious
he, Weal to - be, gained. And.thi
through'eteinal, 805. We do not
geese growing, developing, by go.
ng heft:Vex,
Lore the Grostest of AIL • But the
greatest of these is eha 3,"
(1) It IS greatest ifljts.nature, .nob•-
,ti3ib, deepest,happiest, mostPa-
lost heave 2 Is ,
forts 10 Get ltonic,
•nantittee of the British
Bout,• Of Cornmons wiiich is to ha-
w° 40tO the question of elis re
searaen w
material to work upon Of such
erinieS,beflore. a
jiar1iameitary committoe, -4-flt, is
licit 50 very long ago that at ex.
traordivary case• tame und6r our
,bftrvation"fficial, •
dini IotuM.hiinsdt adrift. hi Lon-.
don, or so sou or, other
Je could noVget a•ship that would
take him back to *India:
, "Ike loafed- ',,ibottt the' liastii
4CLondon, lag oxi„the
l'Oltrifitil,',F4 uutil,-tired of g'tth'g
ug
41,i4;na.T.4-
She can be 4Ut in the world,
ige r, and still -be as niod
'&nd womanly as thougb ebb ha
-
vex left-the.ho
on an averaga oJtemark:
4 -cents) aday and freo bed
a4boarLmwhjcbeonsj
ughly-built barrack and or
on substantial meld, whereas they
eve: to. pay .extra .for the board
they tonsurree-of-,-wleich- the-, -y oat a
t i in just 9•41):41101111 , athome danger
74.0
she is eni—Vedtg nosiness.
Most of them aferirso very fond ,
of liquor, and ',during their work
they drink s good deal of the cheap.
est stuff.
es ab4jcatv4 ttpieo
• and his son, Eeruani
ex*to 121c i, prisoner.
adopted a •new
eonstitution which was. altogeth
diferent from anything .the couu-
try
d' had before. Fernando r
pudiated it 'When be cosine back fr
n et in 1814, ,..bUt. a revoliftio
madht eiti_lere*laiee thin? it!toth!!
DEFEATED III'S SUBJECTS.
The triumph of .the revolutionists
as short.14e4;,' however, ,for in
monde eiatexl-the,, help
French arms,. and administered
beating to own impetuous aub.
jerts. • When, be died- in 1e33 he
*filed' upon 1 is wife and Ids in -
et 41 nitat iible,4.;. kri,14.401;abidwii.threr,0
tuts, as she a*
ischief.. •
o imr.rirtind the a
t is• tountry,
'Sh0 is an .intelligent, capable,
sPectingt womanly girl, and
etineof -the. Country. should ' e
,roud of her. She gotta about her
iffess_ut,s.„8•Iodett,._sextaible wa
asking nothing • but jut* recognition
r- *tetrantrespectfol- treat;
-ment from those witb whom she
Lomes in ilafly -contam
She lic.'usually,* good daughter,
114, owing to her tenerosit,47i. 1007,
littIc.,extra;:ceseFortruereep. into, et
hoxne. . • .
Xf any young- man, reads these
*Os let hint remember that ^good
a_Liptir xteor ,Innk_e,*! good
wife
1 ani g the ho
iere ame certain egents who make
business of engaging these ;iris
the name of the big farm owneras soons
•
88 a
ey 'are- shippe1 o their destina-
tion. Tho G�vemnment, whieh owns
the railroads in Gerrnany, •allow
reeial rate's to such transports.
They,. usually base Prussia
aiitumn to retern to their:fit/
Onintry, whevre they spend -the win-
ter' and avert -.saving. They str‘-
neh7nore intelligent than ordin.
y farm workers, and -.many, of
them are handiOnle,
ORDE. ii noted superi!Gt
e:n4lieaLtE*oirtbe
ons of Temperance*was talking at .
n hotel ah,out tent/meant.) Orators.
, "The temperance ' orator of to
O a.
capectful •Itearin In tho_p
_
0 rd0 go.
' * - ioa
rititruetio the trades of the dis.
triet.
iiiLtzauung to he always
4
wen. • •
Thcereport says; that 170,000 thil.
en between tWelie, and fourteen
ve-- left- --tehool --entirely; *te
Ig' numbers are injured by ws
fourteen and
' Tour -Teem
education. •
‘,Siilitereasing intioher.Of 'bliriel-
' emplorneets tempt boys and ewe *
one of, t' most ..PflcrfuL.hmtr4-
ments
Orlove in persuading men
to repent, in nieving Men toward
righteouseess, in portraying the
hinest <4.' serving Christ; Pe
!vise not these gifts, lett transforui
and give them power' as the iststr
cuts of love. -Then swet
he Music of the angd harpfrs
COVHSE IT IV VS:
you were deeply touched by
the Poeta /*Oing Mr. Otiffsore wrote
.otil"-• aid fitude.
'Ye," said litaymie.
"lint it ivas not agood
"1 din't are. Iiaj titt
rouble for lhn to write it,
e gliectronis of Love.
lifer (nnbin
artance; of love, n
pert of all virtue$ an
•
in ofcharaeter
Persoqt
may have' this
nth 'r things
bnsie•
it
love Like 1if,, lose cannot be
defined, but it 04n be described and
reeogeized by whet .it dots by it
,fruite, by the eatprestion of it'
It is like life, T great -
'estscientists, tie -trots tell what it is
ts'itetiene0* but only4destril
'in1ities-irod---resu1ts.All the
-
Iities't0Set1nr----4;t0t,n7.1.nk0 lik
ad Wog,'
Pani Ils u. It is like light. At
O have *ten a man ef . science
atk0n bourt ef Iight And. pass ,
brim:WI a tryttal prima; y
haveittektn it COM& .out on the other
ty 'of the prism broken up into
it (ompouei4 coiers.red, and
blue, A Sellow, And Violet. And
11 tlie.eolors, of the
rainbw.-so Paul ilqW,C$ ttlitt
hiic h t tism
'who is 4r
dingthe achoot farms f tiro*
ik city, 24 making anxprinzenL
"inlarnting•vitn a elase of defielen
children. To reek of fourteen boy*
' es been.given term rout by eight'
•
t: eitti
flouAft
of them
um n stritka
her hopeless
ItSt4i.4
plAnti X e
metie It
en Mitt
ant, and I
' "When it
planted A span apart, the
.two spent and so 'on.
them that one span tv
wdth etthe take. like * 11*
rf the boys replied that they
not .d\ use their isa
or Jainaici. Jt wa 'the
lib could git, and eventually be^ar*
rived at his destination ir„td , was
4iise1iarged.
!!!lifttr months_of Nnitiax,
another .thip, this time rione
Ibm to SAW Isrtarieigco, whe
brpd to eonneet with an-
Waa aUCtessful to this
that he secured_ a bertht
T-Inere, again, ,hc vaite
traznp steainer
Fn ta1fa,it, bound for tittak and
o r .
slup with
' no'sant* (thief
eaposition wiViioul
ten fl.long civil war
o
• which 'Don roe pretentiorn
haning'. of ,the Qiaeei were so al
vat-Jai:tee with.titt! demoeratic
• the Party which supported hex
that Sokiin as 1)11414t4 into
orto4 of :turbulence, _p
iiientmi aninirvx w
minuted with
revolution of 1868, and
the flight of Tihe1 to Prance.
01.7E11 NEW CONSTIT141411
every day!
Ke p that in rnind, lit-
tle IA44 r -
blue beams* you Are not Paid
salary every wee As long as
our incither nee4xott,,,,youAre
g , best kind of work in
helping. to lift the burden fromit •
otenteaghted -itho1lder4;-...10Ate
Fairfax, New ,York. Evening 'JO**
Al. •
remarks.
t
earera-operanig fOr-tO
tune but ribald mterruptto
° remember began
'Verses of—
mectings was eld in & largo
Tho ie. I Y.'
he
order'
111-0400; or
tbo clea eontenthome
iththe aqualot •of drunkon-
He
•
s
That -at -
the 1at moment,fain had
reckeci orderi to go to the 6
for a cargo. The ship caIIed at
Capetown, only to sail almost
ately-for Aberdeen 1 Atte
she wandering the *retieh.
found himself' b
rem width he ha4
sal ully
AIfnso TXII.,
the throne at the et
th� nly'son of Isabet. A new
nod-
eratetonstitutien was adopted, and
still remains in. use, for the 'ru•os
parL The year* which have pstsed
since then have ben tetztparrative-
io XIX,. ded _at
the ae of 2R and his widow', Italia
(,ristina of Austria, .,
*coati,/
until her son, the: present King
The threatened st of Cuba
brought on the tneriosn
war in 1806, aixl 8pain t *II that
was left of her andent Weatemn
lipirof whok
Lbis was clesira,ble freedom from an
the
certain
atPortube)to ti
side resort near E44nburg
was taking the animals,tro
uges to*the arena tor t
Itt-tha time, The, anth
"n
t
Inturia
Whp
tit itOt
EG,.‘41C4,
01341
14 0
' tort
4.4444 titti
time v4.0
stteed 16"