Exeter Times, 1905-10-05, Page 3ABSOLUTE 'PARENTS AND THE SCHOOLS,
SECIJRITYI
Rev. Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis speaks of
Their Responsibility.
Genuine
darter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Saar Signature of
See Plc-8lmlie Wrapper Selew.
Vary small saa as eaep
tis take ss sugar.
CARTEKS
u
FON IEAIACIII.
RI DIZZINESS/
FOR IIUousNIts.
FSR TORPID LIYU.
FOI CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FON TIIECOMPLEXION
�yt� etmlRvarfae.Wte'r1141
1 t3enit 1 Pr'm7 Y.eetalira." .G
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
1 -
CURES
'P1senter , Diarrhoea, Cramps, Colin
Pains in theStomaeh, Cholera, Cholera
■orbus, Cholera Infantum, Sea Sick.
less, Summer Complaint, and all
Flutes of the Bowels.
Has been in use for nearly 00 yearn
and has never failed to give relief.
I1ese pills cars all diseases sad dis-
orders arising from weak heart, worn ant
nerves or watery blood. such as Palpita-
tion, ,kip Beate, Throbbing, Smothering,
Dizziness, Week or Faint Spells Ana.{{aaia,
Nervous nesse, Sleeplessness, Brain rag,
asueral Debility and Lark of Vitality.
They ars a true heart tonic, serve food
and blood ssricher, bttildisg up ar.ei
renewing all the worn out and wasted
tissues of the body and restoring perfe,1
health. Price 50e. a box, or 3 for $1.28,
at all druggists.
A despatch front Brooklyn. N. Y
says: llev. I)r. Newell Dwight Billie
preached from the following tcxt:-
A small army of burs and girl
with then teachers. hate recent!
made their way to the publ
schools. For our people this reopen -
ng of schoolroom and library is the
most important event of the year.
Great indeed the influence of the leg-
islative hall and forum! But more
important Still these temples dedi-
cated to lcar ting.
Fortunately, society has cleared
the highway that leads to the tem-
ple of wisdom and clothed with al-
lurement the threshold. 1n all ages
the measure of a nation's worth has
been the building which it has made
central and dominant. For the old
Creeks all the paths converge.•' to -
well! the Parthenon -temple of art
and beauty. For the Romans tho
c, ntral buileing was the temple of
war. A later gtaherati in expressed
itself in the cathedral. 31eeelietevalis,n
rushed into sight through the castle
and the fortress. But foreigners
Oh! These misfits in life through
the folly of parents who have forced
their children into unnatural grooves
and broken their hearts!
y Every child is as unique ,tie if it
is were the first human being that ever
touched the planet. %Chen father's
blued and mother's bleu' are
mingled the result is something from
either father or mother. Above all
else train the child to self-govern-
ment. There was a fence around
Adana and Eve and they w,•nt to the
devil. It is a good thing to turn
a child Inose, bareback, on its own
will. At 10 years of ago parent and
child ought to counsel together,
while the father says: "You are old
enough to begin to decide things for
yourself. You have to suffer the
pain and you enjoy the pleasure of
a right decision. My experience and
ueservution incline me toward this
course of that, but you are old
enough to decide for yourself."
Responsibility brings st rengt h.
Every day thank God for your chil-
dren. Keep young with them. Be
o interested in their studies. tin shall
e they achieve the ambitions that you
e have missed,
visiting our cities and towns g
away to say that we worship th
schoolhouse, the university and th
library.
The one central building in towns
otherwise obscure is the great high
school building. Ours is the tic
mo'ra'y of education. All high-
ways of learning aro open alike to
the child of the banker and of the
washer -woman. The workingman's
child and the capitalist's child sit
side by side on the same bench, and
each niay climb as high as he can.
TiIE GREAT QUESTION
for the working people of tie cities
is, How shall i get the most for niy
children out of the public schools?
For multitudes the time for learning
has passed forever, but the poor
eau can, if ho makes the right use
of the common schools, climb up on
the shoulders of his strongest boy.
The amount of wage got out of a
tool depends upon the am t of
knowledge put into the tool. Put
the hand into the spade and it Darns
a dollar and a half a day; put the
finger on a telegraph key and it pays
85 a day. Put the intellect into
ink and it nifty pay Rudyard Kipling
a thousand dollars for a single
poem. At all costs, keep the boy
In school.
Don't let your boy piny truant
Refuse to put him out. at service
For the parent life is in the chil-
dren and their success.
Above all else. make friends with
the tenches: make n frank and con-
fidential statement just where your
boy is too strong and ought to be
restrained, and where he is weak and
ought to be strengthened. Nobody
understand:. the child its you tlo.
1"0ii know the heredity peril of your
family. the family wealuness, physi-
,:111,• and the family weakness ment-
ally and morally. Remember that
your whole life is in the success or
fellers of your child. We nre in
1hi'. world simply to rear our chil-
dren, and by Making each genera-
tion stronger, healthier, wiser and
heft. r than its predecessor, bring in
t i:.• gulden age of universal happi-
ness. Don't farm out :;our children
to teachers and expect the teachers
to do it all.
Nothing is so wonderful as the re-
sult the vomit "school achieveo in
clew• of the neglect of 1 he parent s.
to is almost incredible that one
t, at her should be asked to train
FORTY PUPILS IN A IIF31I1.
1% hen a man buys a fine colt he
...p r ializes (01 the colt. Does he put
i,•• colt in with forty other colts
ai a race track, turn the whale herd
i,, -se, %%hilt. at 9 o'clock a horse
,,cher starts the herd around the
track. some trotting. some gallop-
ing. some running?
colts are too valuable for
hitt. A colt costs a hundred dot-
er!). therefore lite owner specializes.
le climbs up on a sulky behind tho
colt. studies the colt's disposition,
ect. legs, and portly by instruc-
iun, develops speed in the colt.
It is only children that are so
worthless that they can he trained
n herds. But toucher and parent
must work together. Ask the teach -
•r to your house. therefore, for tea
n' dinner. anti take counsel together
tow to manufacture a roan of good
puatily out of this raw, undeveloped
not of yours.
Don't forget the child's body. The
other day an oculist told me that he
belie ted that one child out of ten
bo=erdnrsly injured the eyes either
in the schoolroom or with /night
study at home as to be permanently
trirpled throughout the rest of lite.
This expert may be right and he may
he wrong. but one thing is eerie in -
from every quarter comes warning
concerning ehiltiren who have in,mred
their eyes. There are two or three
simple rules to be remetnbered.
1 Don't let your child read in the
swilight.
2. Keep the book close to tho
lamp.
8. 1f the gas flame flickers in the
draught it will injure the optic
nerve.
4. Remember that children should
not use the eyes ton nut"h in the
utorning. Long ago 1 learned that
int( an honr'e reading before break-
-t tired Illy eyes more than ten
as: of study afterward. 'Poke caro
t the child's digestion. Simple food.
plenty of exercire and sleep make for
health and without health culture is
•
Can Eat Anything Hoye
�t
How many Dyspeptics can j
say that?
Or perhaps you are dyspeptic ►
and don't know it. 1'
jl
IIave you any of these I
•
symptoms?
e Variable appetite, a faint gnawing feel.
Ing elt the pit of the stomach, unsatisfied
h+nnger, a loathing of food, rising and
s:e:ring of food, a painful load at the
pit of the stomach, constipation, or are
yon Ql:: ttty and miserable? Thc:l you
are a dy_pept;c. The cure is:alef, I d.et;
a%oid stiutrlsnts and narcotics, do not
drink et r::-•;'--, keep regular habits, and
regulat- the !eorr.ach and bowels with
RDOCK BLOOD BITTERS,
Natio e'‘. specific for Dyspepsia.
• Miss Laura Chlccine. Belle Anse, Que., ;
says of i!c ',:.r.']erfc.l curative sowers:-
" I.ast
owers:-"Last wittier I was very thin, and was
fat losing P.rsh owing to the run-down
stale of my system. I suffered from
Dyspepsia, loss of appetite and bad blood.
I tried eve-stll:lig I could get, hitt to '
■o purpo'e : then finally started to use
Burdock B1.,od Bitters. From the first
day! felt the geed effect of the medicine,
and am now feeling strong sad well again.
I can cat anything now without may ill
after-effects. It gives me great pleasure
to recommend Burdock Blood Battelle, he
IOW It saved y lib."
0
n
11
th
p
to
f no tnlue.
BELIEVE iN YOUR CHILD
nd hie teacher. lteverence his
Mural bias. Remember that the
ing he loves and can do beet is
rohnbly tho think that ha ought
do always for his vccupgtion.
--r
DISASTROUS SHAM BATTLE.
Cavalry Charged a Regiment
Owing to Mistaken Order.
An extraordinary accident happened
during the recent military mauuouv-
Crs on the sand marshes of the
Scene, in Westphalia, Germany. The
general in command gate an order
to a regiment of flavorist dragoons
to perform some operations against
two regiments of Hessian dragoons
which were formed up in line half a
mile away. ()wing to sumo confu-
sion, tl:o "Charge of the Light Bri-
gade" Balaclava blunder was repeat-
ed. Thu instruction was misinter-
preted as an order to charge the
Hessians.
The Bavarians charged madly
across the plain, cheering and wav-
ing their swords and lances ,Expect-
ing that the charging regiment would
ssierve when within striking distance,
the Hessians stood their ground, be-
having
o-having as interested but quite tin-
ct;ncerned spectators. '1'o their hor-
ror, the Bavarians did not change
front. They crashed at full speed
into the hessian line. 1la.rses and
men were thrown into confusion.
Malty on both sides were hurlydl to
the ground. The commanders were
unhorsed and trampled under foot,
Every officer on the brigadier's
stab was swept off his horse, and
sone of them were seriously injured.
In the excitement many of the Hes-
sians drew their swords to defend
themselves, and some nasty wounds
were inflicted. A lieutenant had both
his legs broken.
The worst accident happened to!
one of t he subalterns of the Iles- .`
slums. :1 iiavarian dragoon, -mttdelea-
ed by the excitement of the char,go.
and unable to pull up his horse, in-
advertently drove his lance through
the lieutenant's body. Stall officers
galloped up to stop the scuttle. Call
cit to attention by the bugle, the
dragoons looked at each other in;
amazement, scarcely understanding'
what had happened. Fifty horses
were struggling on the ground and
many of them were so seriously in-
jured that they had to be shot.
Th Home
I4+!-3+1-II+t4444.44
SOU I•: DAINTY 1iL-d11-:ti.
%Walnut ketchup should be wade
while the husks of the nut are Stitt
gt e••n.
`lave scraps of halo, tongue, or
pressed beef, for they help to season
toreeiii at and make excellent relish-
es
Cut, off the ,lap of sirloin of beef
Heil sprinkle hall over it if the wea-
ther hu warm, then boil and serve
cold.
/'lever ,butter. -'1'u give butter the
fresh flavor, put some freshly- gather-
ed clover blossoms into the closely -
fitting jar with itfor some hums
uud the butter will absorb the flav-
or.
To melt chocolate for large cakes,
etc., rinse out a clean. small stew -
pan with water, put in tho chem.). -
lute, net over a gentle lire, and stir
steadily till it is liquid. The choco-
late requires to be watched very
carefully ur it will turn to powikr.
Veal Sausages. -'TA make these
take equal quantities of lean veal
and fat bacon, with a handful of
sage, salt, and pepper. Let all be
chopped thoroughly and worked to-
gether; a slit -.lied and boned an-
chovy may be at: •ed to the above
!.report ions. Make into • ails. (lour
thickly, and fry a light brown
col.'r.
('1••ar (:ingerbccr -To two gallons
of water. add Live pounds of loaf
sugar and three ounces of whole
ginger, and boil pll slowly for ono
hour. When this is cold, add the
Juice of five lemons and about tw
tablespoonfuls of yeast, spread on ae
piece of toasted bread. Lot the
liquor stand in a tub, covered with
a thick cloth for two or three days.
Then strain it through a cloth and
bottle for use.
Lennon lllancinange. Soak tine
o+rnce of gelatine in a quart of milk
for two hours. Add to this a strip
of very thin lemon peel, sugar to
1 taste. a dozen blanched almonds
+chopped very small, and let it all
cook slowly in a double saucepan till
the gelatine is rho -oh -NI and the
!milk delicately flavored. Strain into
is wetted mould. Set aside till tirtn
land cold. '!'urn out to serve and
I pass a gond custard round.
Tomato sauce for keeping is 1,ma(10
as follows: Peal one gallon of ripe
t(.matoes and five polls of red pep-
!
per. Cook until tender, strain
through a coarse cloth. then stir
i thoroughly into It two ounces of
:salt. two ounces of black pepper.
half an ounce of white mustard seed,
hal( an ounce of allspice and one
' pint of viuegnr. Boil slowly in a
jar stood in a pan of boiling water
for three or four hours. bile still
worm bottle and cork tightly. This
will keep for years, so should he
mode in quantities when there is a
good crop 1
A New Wile with Dried Apples-
1'or people who do not like a dried
erste pie made in the usual way, try
the following: To 1 q(. apples after
they are cooktl down dry and freed
from lumps. add 1 pt. sweet cream
or rich milk, two well beaten eggs
and sugar to stilt the taste. Nut-
meg or other spices can be added as
liked. Bake with two crusts. This
amount will make four or Live pies.
Frozen Peaches with ice-cream. -
Large firm peaches should he chosen
for this. !'eel carefully and cut each
in half. Pack In nn ice cave or
freezer for two or three hours, until
well frappe. Have ready rounds of
sponge or angel Bake. Lav one of
the peach halves on each of these,
surround the cnke'4ith ice creast or
whipped cream, and put a large
spoonful of ice create in the place
left vacant by the peach stone.
Liver Loaf. -Boil a htunh's liver
until tender in water to which a
sliced onion and a stalk of celery
have been added. %% lion cold wipe
the liter dry and put it through n
meet -chopper. �Ili:b it to a paste
with heli n teaspoonful of onion
juice. a tablespoonful of Worcester -
MONSTER GORILLAS.
One Killed by a Frenchman
Weighed 720 Pounds.
U. Eugene Ilrusscux, a french
official and an explorer, has Just re-
turned to Paris from Algiers, bring-
ing with hint photographs of giant
gorillas, one of which was killed by
his escortof native sharpshooters.
The animal is of great size, being 7
Get 0 inches in height, while the
width of the shoulders is four feet.
One of its hands when cut o11
weigh 6 pounds, while the carcase
turned the scale at 720 pounds, and
the united efforts of eight native
soldiers were necessary to drag it
to the French residency at Otiessou,
the administrative centre of Central
Snnghn, /there M. Dupont, the Gov-
ernment Adnninistrattor, buried the
animal and so preserved the skele-
ton.
,luring the past twelve months
several travelers have reported the
presence in the upper valleys of
1.onani and Snngaresh of these
enormous gorillas, which have never
previously been seen, while the
Arabs state that several times the
beasts have attacked caravans pass-
ing through the valleys.
'!'hese monster gorillas differ in
many respects from all others hith-
erto known. The ears are remark-
ably small, and the skin is almost
bare on the chest and stomach, while
the shoulders and thighs• are covered
with long. thick hair. M. Brusscux
believes that they belong to a new
or at any rate hitherto unknown
species.
CALLED DOWN.
Tho Chief -"You are charged with
conduct unbecoming no officer."
The Folicenlltn-"flow's that, sir?"
The Chief-" You were seen enter-
ing the front door of a saloon last
bight it:atead of the 'family en-
trance.' "
CUT RAT1•;.�4.
Dr Quackerly-Yet! don't memo to
sat that old Sawbones charged you
015 for amputating your arm?
The Virtlm-That's whet he did.
Dr. Quaekerly-Why in the world
didn't you mend for ne? I'd have
cut both your arms off for $10.
poultry such as ducks, goose or tur-
key, should be avoided.
Too hot an oven will ruin the
best -made cakes as quickly us too
cold an oven, huweter many pains
have been taken. The liven door
shield not be opened often when
baking either cakes or pastry, for
steady heat is necessary. •
To remove freckles the following
lotion is a good remedy: Take one
ounce of 1,-ruun juice, quarter of a
drachm of borax (powdered), and
half a drachm of sugar. Mix thor-
oughly and let it stand in a bottle
for (hie.. days and it. will be lit for
use. '11115 should be rubbed on the
face and hands occasionally.
On Insect Mites. -Salt will relieve
(ho puiu caused by insect stings and
bites if damped with water; after
applying this to the affected part,
hind round tightly with" it bandage.
Ammonia is of great service, especi-
ally with wasps and bee stings. to
which a blue -bag Daae also be ap-
plied. Flea bites are relieved by
vinegar and eau de Cologne.
atony people are under the im-
pression that cucumber is indiges-
tible, and when they eat it they do
sit under protest and with alprehen;
sion of possibly (lire consequences.
,low this delusion can have arisen it
is difficult to soy, unless it be that
cucumber is often eaten with sal-
mon and other indigestible table
fiends. It is out the cucumber, but
probably the salmon that sits so
heavily upon our stomach's throne.
Cucumber, in fact, is very digestible
when enteu properly. In eating cu-
cumber it is well to cut it. into thin
slices and to masticate them thor-
oughly.
IiAN(: UP YOUR IIA'rS.
When putting either summer or
winter hats away for the season,
brush them thoroughly with a hat
brush or a corn broom, then put
them into a large nnilltier's paper
bag, do a string tightly around the
opening several itches down, leaving
a loop in the string to hang them
up by. iletr.g the bag upon a nail
in the closet or attic, ns the case
may he, and the hat will comp out
as fresh as ever when wanted again.
If you tie the string tightly enough
around the neck of the hag. moths
cannot get at it, neither can dust.
A friend has a row of such hags
hanging against the wall of an un-
finished attic; and also a row of
cloth bags in which are sewed up
tightly various costs, dress waists
and skirts with the hooks of the
wire hangers protruding, to hang
them up by. This is a more satis-
factory way of caring for winter
garments than laying them atony in
chests, where they are sure to be
more or less wrinkled by pressure;
and a piece of camphor sewed up in
each bag is a safeguard against
moths and carpet hugs. Dresses and
coats which have hung all summer in
bags large enough to comfortably
accommodate then/, will be taken
out in just as good condition as if
they had been in daily use. If cash
hut. dress, cont, overcoat, etc., is
plainly marked on the bag contain-
ing it with the owner's name, and
also with the name of the garment
contained therein, there will be no
difficulty in finding it when wanted;
and in the case of the hats, not a
flower or a feather will be found dis-
arranged when taken from its paper
covering.
THE LOBSTER'S HABITS.
Disabled Ones Are at Once attack-
ed by Their Fellows.
The twenty-third annual report of
the Scottish Fishery Board gives the
lobster an entirely had character. It
is an intentionally surly, suspicious,
and unsociable fish. and regards any-
thing that comes near it as its
foe.
The main motive of its activity is
defence, and in defending itself it
manifests a blind and unrelenting
vengeance. It procures a hole in
which to wait for its prey, and to
which to retire after a fight, and it
is then unsafe for any animal to
approach it.
Its keenness of attack and relent-
ess hold. when once it has gripped
is antagonist, are due to its want
if sight. 'I7te eye of the lobster is
o sensitive that strong light blinds
t.
Although it possesses keen eye-
ight when first hatched, the lobster
s practically Mind later in life. It
shire sauce, one of mushroom cal- s
sup, and three of melted butter. 1
Butter n rather small mold with
straight sides and press the liver s
mixture down into it. This loaf i
is made more elegant by the addi-
tion of a few truffles arranged herr
rind there in the paste. Leave it on
the Ice until just before serving,
turn nut oil a lint plate. garnish at -
secs nothing pri.perly. but simply
has the sensation of light and sha-
dow.
It tests a shadow with its nnten-
nne. and sometimes when a strong
tractively', and cut in thin slices.
't) S
le
is
HINTS FOR t TiIi: HOME.
For your shop windows use koro- t1
sone for polishing; nothing else will le
make them shine so brightly. Pe A slice of raw tomato rubbed ?)n '
to ink stains 00 a white cloth or 0
the hands will remove the stains. 0
.hake tea with soft water as often P
as possible, for it softens and opens 0
the tea leaves more thoroughly than
hard water.
Alt herbs used for medicine should
be ),ntthercd on a lino day and be
well driest im tho sun, spread out
on papers..
After frying do not pour off the
fat till it has cooled a little, and
hen he careful to keep back the
ediment, which throw into the pig-
uh
hadow is cast on it, the lobster will
aft nt it on the off -chance that it
n foe.
The fighting tendency makes it
iff)cult to keep lobsters in confine -
lent. 11'hen once they mote settled
own. however. they will live at
net. with one another. but it is
my nn armed neutrn1ity. and if
ne of the fish ever 10=.•s its fighting
owl t it is at once attacked by the
/hers.
s
Soap -suds should never hr ere -test.
as they prove it very tamable ma-
nure. No one who is Ito ky enough
to have n go ••len should ever throw
eteny soap S111'S
To Keep f e: t ace Fresh. -half fill
a shallow basin with cold water and
set the lettuces stem down in this,
placing them apart so that they
cannot touch each other. ('hange
the water daily. and only leave
enough to cover the sterns.
3teat for young children Should Ire
carefully prepared and nlwnys be
fresh cooked. No twice -cooked food
such as hash, stew. or mince should
be given to young children. Rice,
NATURAL (ON( l.t'SION.
"Kindly put e t 7(011• longue a
little farther, 1110Mn," in id the :lin-
ter.
"Sir," rejoined the fair patient,
"do you think there is no end to a
'woman's' tongue?"
•'Madonn," replied the M. 11., "I
hale been married Feventeen vcar•a,
and I haven't found the end of my
wife's yet."
--+-.
PARTICULAR.
"if you will go nut and ehcp Remo
wood for an hour. 1'11 give you 50
cents." said the lady to the seedy-
Ieoking 10an nt the back door.
"11"ell. tiratlam." i _-plie(1 the roan
With his cop in his hand, "there is
so much being said just now nhout
the tainted money that iefore I ac-
cept your proposition i would like
t•e know Just how your husband
01(1'0 hie."
THE S. S. LESSON
INTERNATIONAL LESSON,
OCT. 8.
Lesson II. Daniel in the Lions'
Den. Golden Text, Psa. 34.7. ,
LESSON , 1101ID STUDIES.
N to- hese Went Studies are has
cd %in the text of the Revised 1'er-
siot .
Verse 10. Anil when Daniel kites/
that the writing wits signed -Certain
princes, j'ab's of the rank fuel
honor accorded to the Hebrew,
Daniel, and knowing his fidelity . to
Jehovah, had laid a plot fur his
destruction. 'I'itey requested of the
king that he sign a decree "that
whosoever (should) ask 0petition et
any gad or man save of (the) king
(should) be cast into the den of
lions"; and the king, evidently for-
getting his favorite Daniel, and his
fidelity to Jehovah, mus 111 his ex-
GeIlte vanity persuaded to sign the
decree.
Open . . . toward Jerusalem -:1s
every devout Mohammedan to -day
'till worships at sunril'p with his
face toward Mecca, To the devout
4ew of the exile period worshiped
with his fuce toward Jerusalem, the
Holy City and the seat o` Jehovah's
sanctuary.
11. '!'hese 'nen-Those who had per-
suaded the king to sign the decree.
12. Interdict -A strict prohibition
with an attached penalty.
The law of the Merles and Per-
sians, which altoreth not -Literally,
passetli not away. "Tho writing
which is written in the king's name
and sealed with the king's ring, may
110 1111111 reverse" (Esth. 8. 8).
16. Now the king spoke and said
unto Daniel -Before being cast unto
the lions Daniel is stir nntoiled before
the king, who speaks to hint words
of encouragement and in the spirit
of an apology for bringing this dis-
aster upon him.
Whom thou seryest continually -A
remarkable tribute to Daniel's fidel-
ity to Jehovah.
Ile will deliver thee -The expres-
sion of a hope rather than a positive
conviction on the part of Darius.
17. The den -'!'his was probably
part of an artificial structure and
was apparently, at )east in part,
underground.
Signet -Seals and signets were
b b
C0111111011 atnong Babylonians, Ass --
rians, Persians, and other ancient
peoples. "Tho signet if Darius Ily's-
tapis representee) the king as engaged
in at lion hunt."-Itawlinson.
18. Instruments of music -The reit
meaning of the word so translated is
not known. The root from which it
is deriver! in Hebrew signifies to
thrust. to overthrow, and in Arabic
I it means to spread or to spread
lout. 'Translators and commentator's
conjecture the meaning which to
them scents suitable to the context.
19. Very early in the morning. -in
hnsto-lndicating the intense anxiety
of Darius in regard to the possible
and even probable fate of Daniel.
This anxiety seems to prove that
his words to Daniel in verse 16,
"Thy God -will deliver thee," were a
hope rather than a strong convic-
tion.
"0. 11'ith a lamentable voice -Lit-
erally, a pained ve,ice, betraying the
olnxiety which he felt.
0 Daniel, servant of the liv,a; ':eel
-It seems evident that. the example
of Daniel's fidelity had made a
strong impression upon Darius, with
whom the question now was a ques-
tion of the actual power of this (Ioel
whom Daniel served so faithfully.
21. 0 king, liver forever -The stantl-
ing formula with which Daniel ad-
dressed the king (comp. Dan. 3. 9; 3.
10; 6. 6). The fact that Daniel an-
swered at all was proof that he still
lived. No further word /was really
necessary.
22. itis angel -Literally, his mes-
senger, that is, his ministering ser-
vant ( p. Oen. 21. 7, 40; Exod.
:33. 2; Nuns. '20. 16).
Before him innocency was found in
ane; and also before thee -'!'his inno-
cence had now been amply vindicat-
ed. and Darius was more than ready 1
to credit the vindication.
23. Became he had trusted in his
•
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