HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-9-7, Page 6THURSDAY, SEPTFlIDER 1, lee,/
THE BRUSSELS POST
Discover
r Yiurse1f
T77
To :drink a cup is a reaTerlatiOrt. Tray its
Fathers of Confederaiion
maamortad
The Hon, Peter 141itchell, the leadst
of the Confederation del.nestes that
came to the various eonfeeeeke..• le OM
Now Brunswick, is the meet to whom
Canada i very deeply inkielee d for
the general style of th Lnys-
tem of government which h. b n
n operation for the past sixty years.
He was a member of the party that
visited England to frame and assist
with the British North America Act..
In addition he gone weeks of times
to a study and report on the minuie
workings of the proposed government
after the four colonies were meted. •
He was a great wor'o.r far the
teonfederation sehema. To those who
have made but a superficial s...ekly
the history of the eastern )C.Ifl of
Cenada it will be recalled that 3 wave
of resentment swept over New Brun-
swick on t'he matter of the preonskel
union. A previouketen n: this
series has told how the Try gov
rnment was defeated on the isaue,
The antiaeonfederationists ruled hr
a few months an -1 it was In•tee Mit-
chell who rallied the confedera:.ionlete
nrought on a new election and Sauna
'himself the prime minister e Nev.
Brunswick in 1an5. It wite kthieel
time and In, deserves to go on ne.erd
as great sta.:tamest for che sreelene
usk ii t1han•kling
sl'tuution.
E.. was a natite -en of New uns-
-seek. ±1 i holm t13
1 e24. Lilo e so many °then ee to.
faun Fether- f Coen eierstne,
Selene'? to the law ••. aklor.
Ffnlil 1'110, taw in: ene•ke•
Fenn the foe, sueeestior e: :L
11.i1 :eitit An a I": ve.t
11 'len •,t rho
PHASES OF MOTOR. TRAFFIC
Tim views or Hon, G. S. Henry,
Inn:C.:ter of Hiehways OnkerLo dif-
fer t eni xt,-..nt fro,.t itioa of his
lifetime 11.17•13.er in Qatebee in mitt-
ter1,1 liel`talilinn' to the tekneeel of Me-
ter trains. Mr. Henry natinteles that
eul1i. its. and alakeitine kkee
the niehways safer then Lee' eats:tie ;
1.''.) ernetnients. II:s method, of et-
teireng his ohleetive ln ti' nottt,.r oi
eafety have int earke•,I
tention, and as he ,e :kink Peeeld.ot of
the Canadian Good Road) Aareeettioe
it is certain that various: n! !teed, of
traffic control will be the sol.i....t
discussion when the Aesoeiatier holds
Its annual meetings at Nieteera Falk!
on September 27, 2S and 21 neat.
Warning Against Loafing.
Only a few days ago Mr. Henry
had an advertisement painted in
many Ontario papers calling attent-
ion to seven rules for safety. A-
mong these rules appeared for the
first time a. warning to motorists not
to loaf on the main highways.. &telt
a warning is the result of many min -
plaints that notoriously slew drivers
have been holding up long lime of
traffic. In turn, such slow moving
traffic lines have started tho dan-
gerous 'cutting in praetice. Mr.
Henry advises motorists who are
merely out for a pleasure drive that
if they desire to move slowly they
should use county and, township roads
where the traffic is light. The whole
idea iks to avoid congestion on the
main provincial highways and keep
traffic on them moving steadily and
at a pace which will not tempt the
"cutter -in". No attempt is made by
the Minister to define a loafing speed
but on Ontario's main highway,: aty•
thing under fifteen. miles an hour /nay
15e safely classified as loafing.
Another point in this advertise-
ment which has attracted much at-
tention is the advice to drivers to let
cars pass 'ahem if the attempt is
Made. In Ontario it is illegal to rade
with a ear when overtaken, As s
matter of fact the law distinctly'
states that the driver overtaken must
pull over to the right and allow the
second car to pass.
Become "Traffic Conscious." '
Officials of the Canadian Good
Roads Association agree with the
Ontario Minister that all tar drivers
must become "traffic constioue."
That is, they must realize that the 1
1
P. Mitchell.
keep the basic faets of the great for-
ward movement Itfor erath,. electors.
Ho was the first minister e± Mar-
ine and Fisheries. A story is told of
how some of his political enemies
taunted hint with twine aContoder-
ationist beaus: it earried a let job
with it. He met the taunt be resion-
, ine portfolio and his sea: in the
• sem' 1172. He then returned to
his aidg inof Northumb.-0,-d in
New Brunswick and ran for e s: :37 III
the I'll -lend House of Comesers11
was elected by a hire!, majortly al-
though he ran as :Ill 10i.111on1.1rt and
did not seek aid from 'Ir:' the Or-
orntIlliZed partie. He '1 .1 not :mein
enter the cabins.: at OtteWe. /10
W:113 appointed to tit. editorial chail
of the Montreal 1-1,...r.11 a few months:
aft, this stirring event. EL after-
wards 1-weame tho owner ca•:' that
PaPer. Ife lived to almost' tit, clos-
ing year of the last centlmy and di,,t1
111 Montrciti n 1,.1.12.
irtestiou sathe high-
ways, in the final analosik. 1 alto-
gether In their own hande. In Cen-
ada today there are IlVlrgIt'n'ittely
7.000 miles of paved roads and 46-
°0011.1;1es of good graver roads, .to
tiles it is thanifeetly tranossible
to
keep it constant police petrol to have
t very motorne checked uo.
uht very much if w,. can
make Ile ieghways safe sslely by the
enforcement of laws and Nelda -
tions„ stated Wm. Findlay, Tor-
onto, a member of the Executive
Committee of the Good Thad-) Aeo-
eietion. "We now have no evil of
regulations when you 1011.1into Con-
dderation those o fall nine provinces,
To my mind the best method of act
eomplishmg the end In view is by
constant education. We emet ereate
a 'traffic consciousnessin tht nmol
of all drivers. By that I moan simply
the unremitting Ure of cm
omon 501100
and courtesy. If all drivers used
only common sense and ordinary
courtesy, the accidents 00 Our high-
ways would at once be reduced to a
minimum".
At the Good Roads Association
meeting ways and means are to he
discussed about inculcating a greater
measure of "traffic coescemeness."
1±is now -recognized that this is the
great problem with which to deal.
The day is past when it is necessary
to educate the public as to the ad-
vantages of good roads. It is t mat-
ter o feducating the pablic on how
to use good roads sanely, safely and
wisely, -now that they have them,
HURON CO. SCHOOL FAIRS 1927
--- ,
Henna, Sept. 8
Zurich Sept. 9
Wroxeter ...... ., . Sept, le
,
Sept. 14
Walton Sept. 15
Belgrave Sept. 16
Fordevich ., . „.. Sept. 17
Varna Sept. 10
Goderich Pp, Sept. 20
Colborne Tp. ...... ...Sept 21
Ashfield Tp. ..... Sept. 22
St. Helens Sept. 21
Winchelsea ..... Sept, 26
Blyth ....... .,Sept. 28
Crediton — . . ... ., . Sept. 29
Grand Bend ..... Sept. 80
Dashwood .... , .. ..... Oct. 8
Clinton Town ...... ... Oct. 4
Clinton, rural ..... „Oct. a
The white race, embracing 550,-
0(1(000 people, is the Inegest, with
the yellow race second,, with a popu-
ation of 600,000,000.
sea-desegereseeeteewasereaesereverriensuraseeceasean
The Hour
— of Atonement
let By PERCIVAL laRA.NF,
genseksn'eleasZendeanensea:nnestenitansnsaseeeneesilerb
10(••1).3
rate 111111 i‘ilrivii 1.4.111, 1.01 1111
friendly mow mid the tenses el thk•
1111110 1113;4011AI 10 hIltOn t1l,11.1:^1,1111'.
.1 11,1 1,11,1 1011,101.11y, 1111 had
wit his !mike Ntilaze 1o1' 1.11sY,
Itis-
ltiitg county sent with a thetamnil dol-
lars he had earefelly sink .1. Ills
thought luel bece to ioar± in business
'le a Mein eata, hat la, seen found
11,at amount or taiiiital ittsulticient.
Ity inisillance he got acquainted
'1 tit a genial, frieloW -acting youpg
teen kyle, rolled leeksen: 1Iartin Bearee,
and who 40110 it Stork. 0311e,1111111 for /1
(10( 01.11 1:roltiol•13,1 on 011 (email:toy
neer('' seen 1:twee/sled in persuading
1 laie that 110 eould get hila 001110 ul 1.110
'18 ". 11111.,:110 11'1 i'nuti
ulu1"r
t '1.1
.1;1'
.11
,tf fully led per cent, anti Lade hamlet
11111 the Molloy :11o' look 31 tellillorilry
,tob ill fruit store, eke:kiting the prom -
sed ricly•s,
tine morning ills newspaper con-
e -tined :el account -2 the failure el! the
oil company and Llisaerearaluee of
Os exploiters. Tito rllare,
Attn:!: 4.110 ll hoodoo 1011g re-
membered by Dine with emotieus of
bitterness and resentment, but as time
went on he tried to title las loss less
severely, although les bright, tonbitious
dreams were disaipated. lie phaidet1
en holliTerently for 0 year and then
seturned1 Ardee, gut his eld position
and settled down to it humdrum exist-
ejtee, persuaded that the gifts of 14(11110 0 111 11.1. 111111.
Then came cempeteettion. During
1110 ubsenee seeing lady named Not"
um Layton laid eot 10 to Arden 11111I 1111(1
00(.11111e all elindose, la its one DAM -
0017 e1411111101111111111. Wimt attracted
Dale to her 1011:3 ller Sni((11101.1, 1111110St
sorr01.11111 nature, somewhat in tiocord-
:nook with his ewn, It Ives apparent
that slo. had 11111000 trouble. At the
home sle• 0''1d with an old widow
lady she :wool reaerved and serious, as
though seeleing Its loneliness to hide
;nen 111' worm at large.
Dale got Itequnitats1 with 11151 Lay -
ten end theie relit:lees Were friendly
11111 pleastint She never alluded to
her post and Dale suppressed his 11110
himitess experiment. Ile had saved
quite a sum 2 money and 41118 il8.1111red
"f Permanency of employment.
"I shall never 111/11 Al 100111101 Moly
Alltell to 10)' temperamenlally," he so-
liloquized, "and she 01 '1510 to be glad
viten I (oitne to her. Dare 1 tell
her that I love herr
Once 111der the itiluenta0 (1' love and
its prompllugs 111,1`11 1111/111,10 1(210
towerd leerteng his fate. It was a
lovely sunimer 00)1,i0g when he
reached the e01 of
lis, to 111. infernied thut !Miss Layton
Ams somewhere In the garden, and
Cale Weld lht11:01. in 1111181 of her.
Tie heard Voive, 1t(.1011;3: some 110118e
,-1111111•14.11,y, Tit' holes of N,..11111 1V01.0
1011111,1' recognizable and Pa', started
.(0 lie caught thy mimes of the 11)100
of a man. It, too, ettuseil ti. thrill,
minjeeture and utter a subdued excite
11111 111.
n•*1: r`l Bet:rev:" htha tithed, and
then he uttered a groan. The nem had
gathered Nornat in his arum
her, Ile handed her 810110 1,111•011,1. Sho
clung to him for it T110100111 111 11 1'11011-
%led. 0411,1.Then es leaped the fence
and disappeared, Norma v.-ent toward
the house and Letlak etude see tears
in her efes and hear her low soltiiings.
Ills heart 111,0 crushed, a cruel des-
tiny seemed to pursue him relentlessly.
The same person who leol rotated letu
of his 11111e Mean:, 11101 11(141' 1111111oilled
Itis slreetheoll, for what 11111111 he the
meaning of these kisses and caresses
except that they were lovers? 1.`or 11
few monients and jealousy
lainkleti in the soul of 111110 and spurred
len on to pursue and apprehend the
.
swooning Benree, q111111, comprehend-
ing that to Injure him, unworthy its he
was, ;night crush Normn, he bowed
his head and tried to subdue the sor-
row and despair that had overwhelmed
'late next morning Dale learned that
Miss Layton had resigned Iter position
at the millinery shop and was about
to leteee Arden. 13e himself could not
confine himself to his working dray
that tiny, distracted with the events
of the evening -previous. Ete-
about the village aimlessly until after-
noon, and was seated in its little park
gloomily meditating, when the seat
beside him was suddenly filled and
Norma, pale and trembling, extended
an envelope.
"This is yours, Mr. Dale," she said
elmolY. It contains with Interest the
money Martin Bearee got from you two
years ago. Spare the the Iminillation
and grief of going into his remissness
In detail, He hue repented his acts
while a tool for clever svvhallers, and
lest evening brought me the money he
hits made by hard work to repay an
those he induced to invest In the' oil
comnany."
et "But why thayou appear as his Inter-
mediary?" question,ed the amazed Dale.
"Bemuse he Is my brother," came
the low-toteed response, "1 am going
awety—"
"Then I will follow you, If the path
leads to the ends of the earth I" ex-
elahned Dale epontarteously. "I came
last evening to tell you bow X loved
you."
"No, no—My hrother—"
"Is fortunate in having a sister, the
memory of whose great goodness prob-
ably turned him from hl e wayward
eettese *darling we will not forgt
hitt, for he has atoned, but for rest
from your sorrew 00040 to nie—to
Who Veil give you all of a life'e doe*
' ODAK'S
DOUBLE
D UTY
l'clien the grain's In the barn, -nnd
the teanns in pasture for r. wcil
)-tarned Sunday's rest -- there's a
chance for a Kodak pietere.
Story -telling pieturee of farm fav-
orites and practical pictures for od-
vertiiing and record both have their
value.
It's all easy with a Kodak, Let us
show you. Kodaks 145 up,
—Brownie Cameras $2.00 up—
J. R. WE, ,DT
JEWELER
WROXETER
'4$410111,.,,riCAMMoggir'
C
Here anciI !rri acre
Air mail service between Winn -
peg and Farge, North Daketa, has
been inaugeratel and the -first mei!
for Winnipeg from the 1:::ted
States arrivereceotly.
- The potato aercage aloe g, tlto
Dominion Atlimt:e .1way lino is
larger thnn teat ykar an,1 a 111 r
cent, erea in.r'a' i,, JuLed for.
There wid liktiy lo reaete: Moen.:
:wallet:a. for export, as eonneseeki
with 1:1.1,11 111 last ycer,
British ColumItnt's ferias produc-
ed $71,342,209 last year; hi -seeing
all merits and geining
over the prey:ems year, itesereing to
the final fletn,...): ef tee Provintita
Shttistielati, 0. IL Stewart. Lum-
bering leads with eerieunure second,
A new weeld reseed is set-e±'t
wane L. ;seen: baby chIchs arriv ..1
fr.ea the Unive.•,-lty if
t. lIttawa '.1,:o.010 the
Caaatian 1 '0.1EXI`r•-,
Igtm. ! • wmor .,0
their 2.1 1, ,tairlt..; itad 10(01
Llic.1 or sah'...rta.
P-• !, .!
y tli
nrs .
LI! 1.2.4114 • P
:ji It t:It 1,e1
which t:, e. • n
Thk Wet','
prod:it:1,m
A}m,sitt. 0.1'.
114108 111 1±1
kisys.
Memhers yf the newiy-app.iintwi
Saint John Heard of Hari -wt. 0.0,11-
11issioners. It ,adttl by /Ion. W. E,
ttr, rettatly tone:tided
1,11 with Canadian I'a-ithic nif 01,111
1Ie011eal in connect::th the
p1.1111 d improvsments 01 the grain
shipping facilities of the port. The
eider object of the new eka; nissien,
according to lir. Fest, the tweet-
ing of a national idea of an All -
Canadian trade route through the
Port of Saint John.
Shots in Canada are lee:sing few -
ward with keen interest to the
coming Highland Gathering alai
Festival of Scottish music to be heikl
at Banff September 3 to 5, the ac-
tivities taking place on the grounds
adjoining the Benff Springs Hotel.
Through the generosity of the Cana-
dian Pacific Railway officials this
festival has been made possible and
is along the line of the Canadian
Folk Song Festival held at the
Chateau Frontenac, Quebec, in May
which was voted snail sen outstand-
ing success.
The 'United States' interest in the
development of the locomotive in
Canada is seen in a request by the
Baltimore and Ohio Railway to the
Canadian Pacific Railway to send
one of its latest passenger types of
engine to the centenary exhibit of
locomotives, which will open at
Baltimore on September 24th. The
Canadian Pacific has arranged to
supply one of its latent types of the
"2800" class locomotives, complete
with crew, for the occasion. This
is the company's fastest and meet
powerful passenger locomotive.
One of the strangest attempts at
taking a census is now being nide
by Andrew Widsdcn of Bella Coola.
B.C., according to information re-
ceived here. At the request of
Harlan I. Smith of the National
Museum of Canada, Mr, Wid.dtin is
taking a canals of the grizzly bear
population of some eleven valleys
along the fiords which are included
in the "Norway of America" tra-
versed on the steamship journey
between Prince Rupert and Van-
couver. The coast line between
these two ports is a noted big game
hunting spot and attracts many
grizzly hunters each year from all
sections of the continent es wolf
from other parts of the world. a'
EXPORTING FROM TalE WEST
Vancouver—A. refrigeration ;ler-
vice to the east coast of South Amer-
NATtritee °ALIA A HALT.
Atetletes Are Now Near the liniotus
Speed -(4m11,
New records in both motoring' and
flying havo boon Hot up nmently, hut
perhaps ',you more people nro into!,
ostml in the onduavors or our nth -
!tea break record, fur
apeed on the el ador-traek, say.a
writer in Answers,
',rote 11 111, the Nvoll-known
authority of track aihiotios, win-
uor of the Motel medical paze in
1122, has Just pyrfeeted .1 mollto1 of
measuring the charekeeriatiee or an
athlete in the 0'03 ndil Ore ellernY.
reeeareles, based on 0 viede
of the hffeet of 'ndent fat 11411', 111
tltLj)l1t('t 1.111 With Itt ineeni•me thulne
method, peter( that. in :10 v of (lie
shorter running events. 111)1' In's! unit
lytys have come so near 1,1 the hu-
man speedlimit 111111 future record-
breaking is likely to bn In hull-
dredllIN. rather than in fifths or
tenllis of a second,
In order to run 100 yards In re-
emol time, the professor has found
that a sprinter most perform work
equal to that of lilting himself 300
reel off the ground, wilily In (10Ver-
It! 100 yards in ton ,mconds, nine
horsy -power of entrgy is used.
When travelling at a high speetl.
the runner muat pay a tremendous
price in energy for even a slight in-
crease in Kr' •nd. for, when progress
at this rate is being wade, most of
the mecnanieel energy devoloped by
the museks is absorbed by Internal
friction, Only a Very 1,1111111 propor-
tion of it is available to move the
body forward.
It is improhnble that athletes of
the future, unaided by meybanical
devices, will by able to beat the re -
porde now in existenee, Once ft
sprinter has attained his racing
speed, the remaining distance to be
run is so short that it is almost im-
possible for him to Increase hie pace
to any extent; and the grain on
muscle and tendon at the speeds new
reached is so enormous that any fur-
ther increase would mean total phy-
sical exhaustion, possibly ending in
death.
The Mechanical Ear.
Those aggravating tolonhone Mnn-
Saner the right wording of which 1411
easily slips one's mind have for long
boon a source of worry to clerks ana
others:
Now r. mw invention has clone.
away with this worry. 0111, has only
to press a switch and the whole of
the aethel onnversation is netomati-
coins. r,.eordad on a cylinder.
Later, the =whine, known as thry7
telegraphyne, can be mad,- to "plav"
Lilo, a gramophone, Simeld a tele-
photo:, eonveraation be dispuf...1. the
machine eau relay the original words
to the disputing party. •
Farb cylinder takes half :In heur's
ennvereation, plenty of warning m-
int4 given when the time limit is
nearly ti p, If the talk ir not t b..
pre -leveed, the cylinder eau by sera 71-
,11 anti used again. It will stand
scraping ninety times,
The machine ean else) he need In
conjunstion with a wireteee reeetver
to record telegraphic and telelli,011
mess:toes, and if set for env boor or
the day or nient autonkst teeny re-
corde any Lass:Leo it pik.lis Stop-
ping etortioz 11.11 womb, (111(10
signs are byarti.
epee)] It
The limit of 81l' '11, en far as pas-
senger liner tire rone-crod. has, In
the opinion oi' exeerte, Nom ...audied,
if vysisels aro to he run with any le,pe
of 10111:noreini .1111,
Th se: Ie of paste of meenteirine,
speed at sea 110' 11 "11 T'1-11.1Ant;
1.1.S the number of knol, Is Irma astl.
Thus, with n ship of 1 e,0 ne to /8,000
tons displactammi, the cold vettninp-
tion per day. when 10,1111114 ttt
knots, would ho, approximately, 20
tons.
Running at 17 knots, however, the
Berne ship would vorisume ebout 192
tons of coal a day, At 211 knots (thy
snood of a Fast Atlantic liner) the
consumption would have risen to 844
tons, and at 25 knots to over BOO
:
.ixat.Y1.11 cosi: en is 11,,.11 In running
tonTsh,a,
at 14 instead of 13 knots would work
out at only 268 or so per 1,000 miles,
says an Old Country expert, but the
difference between 20 and 21 knots
would mean nearly 2200, and a 22 -
knot speed would cost 2375 more
than 24 knots. A vessel of 10000
tons running, at 25 knots weuld re-
quire approximately 1.500 tons per
thousand miles.
Cannibal Butterflies.
Butterflies that eat plant lite and
1011117 bugs dining the larval stage.,
instead of the usual vegetarian diet,
have been discovered in the Orient
and New Eughl,nd, 1:11 OW11 as hair-
streake, they oven carry their canni-
bal habits to the point of devouring
their own spades during the helpless
state Of transition from larva into
tho pupa, -
Another strange phenomenon of
Nature Ito an electric caterpillar,
found in Nigeria, which Feeds en
mistletoe flowers. A tingling sense -
tine, distinctly resembling an electric
shock, was felt by a conector while
handling them, although the bleeds
itadIx) bristles or other protrusions
that would eause irritation,
The Yew Tree.
Yew is one of the most character -
tette evergreen trees in Great 13r1-
tain. It attains a great age and
yields an exceedingly hard timber,
Ycw was the favorite wood For the
old aenglish long -bow, and its extreme
hardness renders It snitable For cab-
inet work, axle-teees, and the flee
where strength and durability are
required.
Fourteen Thousand Feet High.
1'11e140' 1100 sixty-one mountainhi
the 'United States more than 14,000
Ica and other Pacifie coast ports will feet high, forty-seven of which are
be inaugurated this fall or winter, it In Colorado.
is definitely antounceti. Laet year,
The Chinese Language.
Some of the !words In the Chtaese
laugaage have as many RS PM
metenenge, . _este ida I !
in addition to vast quantities of
fruits and other perishable proiucts,
Rio de Janiro imported 6e,000 tons
of potatoes.
Sunday School Lesson
BY CHARLES (1. TRUMBULL
(Editor of The Sunday School Times)
SOLOMON DEDICATES THE
TEMPLE
Sunday Sept, 11,1, Riggs e.
Golden Teat,
1 ..an 1011(-1) tl1••y 1":.! tui 0
qtr., lea 4,1'0 into the hoes.: ot' the
Pam 122:1.)
ACer Solomon'e choice of wiedom
withal we studied last eetek, we art
told of his first test, and the Divin.
wiedom with which he do .i.lkst (11
case of the tew women wee Clot:Moll
the quite child. There follows 011
account 01' the greatness ed ("nag-
nifivenee of the kingdom unitr eele-
num; it was readly a forser'eo 1 of
the millennial glories of Israel, when
the Greater Son of David tend Solo-
mon, Christ Himself, shall reign over
Israel and all the earth.
After this Solomon built the honsa
of God, as Cod had proimsel David,
and also the royal palace for himeeln
Sorel years 101)81 the temple ie
bullil-
ing', and it must have exceedrd in
beauty any temple this :teeth has yet,
501111. Rare woods, costly embroid.
tries, hewed stones, beautiftil vary-
ings and gold adorned it within and
without. Then came the tette for a
great national dedicating of God's
h°17'±E;e1 W(10 a vast nation now, "as
the sand whic11 is by the sea in mul-
titude" (I. Kings 4:201, and repre-
sentatives of the entire nadon wee::
ass:m-0)100 by the King in Jerusalem.
Tho imimal sacrifices, sheep ani
oxen "could net be. told nor number-
ed in the multitudeaThe beet that the
bileg and his people could mier were
biome:It freely, gladly to Gm!. There
1., dettimsl, most searching of
pieeeel lions in the Lltda.e.ares of
th.. 1emple,
We are told that this great a•,,sern-
Mist.. of 11.• 1101101) wets 'aim, thee
0117414 hying UP the 11.11k ,1 11, ('10-
1711.-1 6f the Lord," 1.) oe 'n
"th•• wee!: holy place" :13 Itsh! 1 melte
e merele•r that th•• oak is :;
tyyt Carin and that the temple,
e•ee 0 the individual helievee
ie veal se; 1,7,111 by a nata tl
%ye hens! lo . 101111, thiS 141,41111,
&orient Referetwe - Bible:
-rho conseeration 0:1' tho. temple
illuetrates all oonsecrotion.
toulnl,, like the believer "1.
en; wns threetold: the canna that
which was outward, sesible, 111001"
.1 to he body: the holy awe, where
everything appealed to the sacred
emetioes, answered to the nod; the
tily o.! lhe place of 13 011111,1111 -
lot: with God tlax. 2522 answered
to the spirit of man. Tlr, ark was
the Ines!" an -inclusive type of Christ
of any one of the vessd, tim tab-
ernacle I Ex. 25 :9). When, there-
fore, the priests brought the ark into
the tong, the holy plake, 1)110 the
holy of holies they were, le type en-
throning Christ over the body, with
its powers and appetless; tha soul,
seat of the emotions and desires; and
the mind, seat of the rapacity to
know and commune with (led, In
Christian experience this IIII9Weri to
Rom. 12:1-3; Eph, 3:18."
We read in I. Corinthians 0;19,20;
"Whet? Know ye not that your
body is the temple of the Holy Ghost
which is in you, which ye have of
G•od, and ye are not your own? For
ye are bought with a price: there-
fore glorify God in your leely and
in yOUr which are elkelae"
1 And In Ephesians 3:1 bet, Pate
prays for all believers "the) Chr'se
May I I Well in your helot lee
TO " !Well" 11.1ro 11101111i 1 oecupy as
the owner 1111d head of the lemee
It 101181 nfter the ark we; brought
into the most holy place of the tem-
,' ple, everything being done in screen-
, lou:1 a(1110111 -111111A1 Gotta; emtruct-
, ions to Moo' : for the handling of the
, tele and le avoklanee of re) ,red mis-
take that David had made when he
brought up the ark (II, Sem. 6), and
when the rieets! had thee retired
from the holy place --"that the chat
filled the house of the lord.' Thio
cloud, of course, was the Shekinah
glory, the cloud that had led Israel
011t of Egypt and through the wild -
('00155. It was a visible mailifesta-
tion of the Holy Spirit, showing the
Spirit's relation to "the holy temple'
the church, and to the temple wheal
is the believer's body."
The glory of this cloud, which now
-filled the house of the Lord, wee; ee
overwhelming "that the priests could
not stand to minister bee.eese of the
elou I: for the glory of the Lord had
• filled the house of the Lord,' It is
a beautiful aseurance to all who he-
! lieve in Christ as Savione, 1-ceive
'Him as Lord, and then peee.:111 their
' bodies: a living sa(rifice. (Rom, le:
I 1). When this is done, Ceriet dwells
in the heart by faith, and the Holy
!Spirit fille the life. No liummt he-
, ing' can do this forth'' helievev, but;
I only God Himself as Christ and the
Spieit. It is a mini try that Coo
!undertakes for Hi, childrea, withal
• neither angels nor et•Ilowmen can
offer.
The adirees of Solomoe 111114 fol-
! lowed. 1100 then his Preaer, ere MO
Of the area': and inspired deeemente
of the Word. 00 ulliei,ei-0.1 men
could have spoken these 1 1011-
t110 11(11111,1S 1111(1 1110 press.). lereel
vats given at renewed vision t.her
God- tut 1 what He hail dem: teal
wouhl do for her. Tho prayer looktd
down 1:trough coming
fore•aw tim sins Into which 1,,rae1
Might. VIII it tolo or God': 1401*4
'pus 111,1 0111'!' 2111 te2±»'-
1414' ±11111.1' sins, whyn coo,ess. (1, and
cleanse and helli 11311
Alt 1' the prayer Ilh."0 wee an-
othee eacriiice of rem, of.
ferners ,zooros 01.1 all
1011. hut a faint hint or 0, mean-
ing of the oter:elce of tho lkomb of
God foe Tarael and for the 10001J
world. It Is not to le: wondered at
that, after the temple had teem ‘10-
dleated, "they blessed the King, and
went unto thei'r tents, joyfel and
glad of heart for all t114 goodness:
that the Lori had done for David,
His servent, and Israel, His people,"
61111.741TRIMOVilabliMVAMilat.e.
PART OF AMUSEMENT TAX
GOES NOVEMBER i.
Torotto—Commencing on Nov. 1
tho Ontario amusement tate brought
in years ago as a war revenue meas-
ure, will be abolished uo an amuse-
ment admissions of 25 cents and un-
der, The tax will remain, however,
when the price of admission ex-
ceeds 25 cents. The ementimene
will exempt about 60 per cent of
Ontario theatregoers from amuse-
ment tax payments.
'11 lici,1.1,1,1.''''1Ui111;aP711111ilitill
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