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Exeter Times., 1908-09-03, Page 3, lectu 4_8 ' ' God as ay�vJit e hupr eity as con - as • • at. delOseshia great .coal fie Ts rzo »i pietitred by the past,we must . we, are living thinkers atheists. ' The important thng---is ot--w ther we eau all agree OA to the • • oryou • urse f. are r oniething of tile divine and th WE NEED TO P to be delrored not from intellectual atheitur_A*,.... that wi_Jilturt no one., W nted to pi -ay to be delivered rent ,i,, presi Pt, them in. International railro of. Benjamin a charter from the villg,r410P‘o railroad eonnectiug wiL east of Michel, tt. and extending in a southerly dirge - Vitt 'Fallow tion ftteen niilea. conatructin44 gans aze now in the lield, ruain mchowthe divine in onx- live 1.01somehow cometo resS tha a ut honesty that he eannot.bcljevc in a nee is Ilecorded b., ualiti;S-74;:ire Labrador coast,- writes e feic one• is very 004. That is the way. in which ins Jiitereste in you (40001* cord !eta. stranger.' Icklog ,:msta-tiderifro generos- a recorded 'as coining under the dcctor' notice-. . • as stranded last week„ in 'the eyening, 'about' fifteen miles from homec.•'•Owirig to the crowd, in hos- pital and my my colleagues being *MY illifteMtbret that I No dogs, were, obtainable; So fis e'lt44v of a' poor fisherman. "Tffffi€Jii a. "tough of the paralyze" when he s a boy. With an imbe. cilc4ister, a mother and a brother pend nt on him, and Only his crippledlimbs, he has lived' in, an ninterrnpW1 state ot poverty.. Vs, tiny shack, crowded already; 4 an aged and still. poorer strati, r occupying the best part of the or lipace, v.hom he'begged me to "era -tune while he "unmanned." cleai of the henst 1 reasoned_ with _him agiiinst irkervoing his liabilities and. bur - dope. 'lie replied: . is to eerammed a bit Just now.' flis dogs were, Vast little better One has i$ro-plitit-that—trayr-yeaufre- inm, living in - -the henna. Rut his standard of diet was not ours. He was 50- deli lited atrcM7y2ug-me,-- eve• trif- ri t..Hit to erarrip-Ins--intellect ititw toilet tiorts-longneco--: _ptitgrotn -• a-Ve-b-ciffri,:ifirsfedifo-hifii as tial to FAITH IN TAE DIV' E. the isense ofa higher life h t so mltse ,es-ot being, _beyond our ,diiioov. ering and charting; of.a lite from which all our life springs, and of a goal anclo.icteal of life to which all our beSt life turns.- The is not a matter of de- tails. God is not a matter of gram. mar. 'Faith in the divine is always the cdhseionsness and hopoof that etededfleslifelligifitTen. '- 1eie ftr. right to call "yourself an ''atheist pbr-li err Bc S tho trus athciat Vi7bo seeks to bury his !if in the dt..tst• and awayfrom the divine. Ile may be uell i . nfOrmeit on--torieis of the iniegi'he may he that dangerous per. son the.piously-orthodox *theist. The man who makes this life of ours an ernPt$ thing, who robs this. world of its heauty.and glory, who steals /reinsong,the_note4ha • . te .itBelf of thc high aid holy, by its avarice, its pas8ion for tho Vnoed to seek to*esc dia- bolicdelusion of the. It knowledgethe Jaet €tder*ies his likeness, in the living. 13 irld-"Taft beighbo?niht quarrel forever' as to your concep- tiens,Of 0041 but' let each one Slek to express tbat ideal of the divine in .the daily doing, and Yon shall ; • . n • he waree crrands -and youz' feet .,shalt;:earry-yett.' to- gether to heaven? door as yetx_seek„. the ways. -of. the 'neehly and the sad and suffering.. This world needs God.' It never will be satisfied ,with pietuites.of that great spirit of love and life, IL will know Gods only as we, show tbat love and life. We, might well spiid le %Atm, abouf God ir lY we wA rattige t(,r wJich our ideals of Ood stand. o goodness., tendrness, helpf twos, affection, then the rneaure'of your faith in imeli a,being and such qualities is your own pro eAtion of thitia into the world. it, .is tiine that ve,-pease4A0 Atiarret -tIver4t4 finitiens and descriptions of di- vine and began to do the deeds di, TERICATIONAL ZEssoll - SEPT. 0. csson L Saul and ,lotirithen oyo zs ogs. e .teached--the--hospitali. pgged him to let me feed his dogs *d give thein a bed for the ni h • e-t.;s--pareeI e rep ie you thanks." ' . A ' k4-„ them 0004 We. doctor, s be.home again -14 'breakfast." * ' • slammed the door and tiirne 'Ming ever so smelt :StSTEIt' -01-147;717 nn1y," said Mr. Qreen, the-psittor: ee half an hoar -Might-run .uptitaire sTiter knows ri ' replied Otroity. yott.' a 'etottin, Up, the • Walk' She lookei tough- -•the blinds - -and saf. - 'Tlierefere' Saul took' his swot and fell upon it -Nothing but the extremity of despair would lead a Irehrew to take his own life. his e raiFw y 71.(lestr ost e t city, sas- tie of- eerful happenings,Predictc, anuary, but no hint is given e nature Of Or pany bolds prown- rants from the jfrovincial 'amble. A branch of the Great Northern railroad, known. 44 the Crows' 'Nest Southern, Was extended from ford.. en.. .the. - main- .Jiue -in Montana to Pernie, 4 distance of sixty-two miles; i few years ago in order to rtinder.accessib.le the output of the 'coal Dunes at_Merrisscry 'Crows's tun the e x ht have duubled led his total, 4$,O10i- C t The confines Of this vast fuel easiire-house are not not hard to de. rmine. The east line" of the ,14a- ." Panhandle, 11 continued north - rd on the lIOth meridian of west I :tide e tf British ColUmbie •froin Alberta -.1the-isutionit of -theltee - sin*, and interseetthe main line of the •Canadian Pacific railroad etc* milos northwest of Banif, in the Canadian National Park. 11. .4r.aFscreezr Oint rt intersection ;With the .0anadiao P:acifie directly .east for a distance of 200 9,604iiiles- to. the Ititly meridian -4.10n6itade•-and,-thenee-4seu tit r ernfx n , tit-trea7tii-s.or Main*. " " extended °ars e tit ...be ad math ,for rulery, AprilWill 'bring -disgrace And death to a prominent financier, &Aube:accident in -New York is pre. dieted for May; and thediscovery vf mountains of silver ore in Ittexieo will iipset the bullion market in June,:a montli. whieh will witness alarnung riots AO Liverpool. Yzaizitaai. shake Birmingham; therewill be a railway disaster and an :excursion Xrisb Sea. t any eniVeln ¶.V 21S5 away in August, in much ele'etion exeiternent," and there will be a terrible disaster in Hull or Grimsby; and 4.1lashions will run very eccentric this month- witli--the - An awhit'eartliquake in the West 'Indiesis promised for September, and explosions may he expected it the -north during this .tacintk. The American eagle is expected to _scream -loudly_ in November,. _hit d otherwise the month will be. corn., pars.tiicsily quiet, and the year will end with hard times •on the east , coast. ideas of the next life as a. sbaJevrY, y --AT !MST -SWIM. - nattractive--,exiatence- , e of wieide- in all -the- Beriptares Sam. 17. 23 1. .gs .10.-184 Watt._ 5. flits armoribearer. .clied with "tinir.1.11-44StthiL-part,of--41.,ni-Xastenr se .... nt. to_iihare:_the, •21 -ate ---„of (..ug againat sr was no rderitkirtnish but -clash of the ma -sed strength of two, na- tions. - ount Gilboa --A mountain peak, and also the rangeof adjoining ie c 5 ern ou dary of the large plain of Esdra. on, -and -though mentioneillir t6Testament=only-in--4!enneetio with this partictilar battle, it fi ured. in much of the military his- tory Of Palestine. Along its ridge the I,hilietines fought and pursued Saurs forces. • 2. Sons Of Saul -One Son lilt- boslieth (or Esh-bitil). was either not otthe fiCldr Or escap'ecknotice, for 'he lived to eltim4hturs'4hrone for s time. Three sons are said to' have paid the .price of their Prom. inence in the line .of battle. .3, MO:battle went sore against aiil-The Latin version translates "The whole tv.eight of the bat, tk as:direeted---agitinitBattte!-- a...Abe Tin' 'to ave-been,pioeniiien '1 50. of the how. I The Philis- tine rs advancing rapidly in their r chariots and singling out the s--lor--their-aim-eause44 'ane of tar. ife was reatly distressed greattraits."* . Whether this term a. ondition 61 inward ,iigita*, tion or twinsl danger is hard to telL here is a0M6 WOight in '.14.eptuagint which readt. 'he s sort . wounded." Accordin to tlio story of 2 SAIL .h0 leaning upow his ** 4. t Ai i _nce of iun;r, and vo1vie 'g, the, d to kin Verson. . . e tiret.iniCiSid- iad benational religious ifkance this. terrnwould ,held 13 the tiiezning of our words lien" an Adel. g e. So Saul died."40 146 there is another account of -his death, told b a messier) er who _comes_ pecting a reward r news. e w ory may e understood as & fabrication by the ngsr,--or,,-/wanatixer--e ccond independetit record h • istor4-eAivent,------/w any caa the most trt146V-44116. Arrlebil:ttieiii"--,,This`400s not mean every min in the 'army, but Isis, brief summary of the awful fatali- t2e5 of the day. , V„ the other aide, of the valley -This.could Mean across Edi&0- lon-to -Carmel on 'tho-Welit,-.Or.. 6 valley of ..Iezreel northward 'anion the' bilts--OVISSagliatrZehilltin,' a ,11S:a0tap1i..rranr any of these points the, inhabitants might have been watching with 'eager interest, .the "outcome of the battle. Gilboa Jut. tett out into4the._,_plainAnigge,h- y that the ._enings_on.its _seenTfiii =les in- aImo eery -direction All the neighbe ug.eities, as far ** ' the Jordan, were loft unprotected by the tali of °I+cii,%13etnihiildie ihiliStines tameto trip .the slain -The unconcern 'with winch , this custom is throws light upon This inhutuanit • o ancient warfare, 'Compare Davi treatment of thePhilj,tj giant. 9. They, cuttX, Itis,hestd and trip- ped off •bis arMor---"The anointed. Jehovah 'fares no better then' the tiniretimjsed,;00ftath now - that orsaken_hiniJ- of a d hi armor Wet ly di'ipl&yed as The einte`• Of the .Aslitar be Inge -ot- Atttarte,I of thee as one at.,Askelon.'. an --,A fortified town o eastern point -of the ' plain, of lraelon, near Oil rt, looked jvheti-tif rein •-• *IC '-deitretiliteit;O igineera at present are engaged. in :the nii way point in the northern, making •ii,:,perinarientlocatio-ti loundarolot7t1Ao-state of Montana, line of this branch. road up theltik and if continued smith through the river, .with the apparent :intention state would pass east of Great Valls cf. the extension to t'-' at a distance Of only twelve miles. 'head Of the river; thence across•Ce -in Alberta this- same meridian' divide to the Alberta side and froiniPasies but a few miles west of Me,.. that point. on to Calgary, which thane Hat, a town situated on the • •. where they hayo been exposed by the upheaval of the Livingston* range an g at Cat lit'cittritaiii.-133 while it is known that coal exiMs 'conirnonly knownif 'Cro Nestcoal- .fiel4 occupies but a_por. "tion -of thsouthwestern quarter of it, extending from.the tilt River on the west to the foothills of the - Rockies-I:in-the -east Xreinifre seam" coal ranging in thickness from ithrough at Morriesey; Coal Creek, liosiner .and Michel, and is- of. the Sanas: thiekness as exposed at Cat 1 515 5 14 5,1 5 opening ie angular territory to. the railroad the problem of marketing the coal will be solved. With the speed be- ing made byAhe construction gangs the day.is not far distant when the teitr atiCereisaltivPaisns trheegi*funelwisluipfiX problem of North America. -4'.' G. 31(earltrativ,iti,otheacsitnicaLlVOIL-..., Magazine. ,..... 'tie* Law Enacted in Austria Spars Ruin for Them. . 'Consternation , has beep caused N. , .. anic,ng motorists in Austria, by the .. new law regulating iiiker, traffic, the full import of the measure hay - mg, been expounded by -Dr. &ail Pk. . Vrisehaner a well known Vienna - ..• qi! 37s jr) NI a .--- ' — Dr. Frischaue'r says that there is ,... ...... • t . k. --0, - 46, -,›- eiihkr fel, 7.1. 4.1b. aut:Scoilt:treiy- no l'inli.tio....theilouat- , t ...,if compensation that may . he ex,- . . , ..., „,„.. .,,,,,„„ ,,„,,,,„..-- . acted- front a, Amotorist foilxiamage., e . caused by or ;due to his ear. RO . is resp5msible for the damage -done • , ,.. . . 14_ frightmed_ --horses,---: and --the 7....,....7.1.....,.. _a_ymear ago, said !pi. 0"you were constantly.. telling your friends that ,oer_marrjage._Was„. the _result_ of now you are always finding fault 'tly-metz" ----4-471435-k-it-ir•Arne4hat-it,--was-a- ease. ova a to( mg IV en met yettio-repliect Oldby,wilth 'and VII never forgive 'myself for eavin s eetacles a ;ewas 00 ng orar1cw, . Lnd iten!lit lie w,hat e rett --love p0ti,44- tri- *rrn, nen, ‘‘niere thanr can tell *ords*.i', " s," she replied CrOWa lirest is.-„nearly--inc,the •.tentreof the znap-and-of thp-regio which- the great coal \deposits occupy. the railway centre' of the. siattltent-stuth branch* ititIEW---Elittliateheivin" part of-Alberta.river, where the Canadian Pacific The amount of coal lying hidden main line crosses the.. •stream. A cia an. tra..psport4ion facilitiesal most . Surpasses compritensio roirthe-reports-if-Canailiairgeo oeits and of .mitfing engineers is Apparent that there is Approxi Mutely 100 feet • of -workable coa 'underlying 4 territory which ex tends from the tik river on the *es to and beyond the Livingston 'range, east of -t mit-of-th Rockies,- and-trom-t • headwater of the Elk on the 46 th to the in ternationsl boundary on the south -Oirthe-basis of th-c-, -repoTtVf IYr 'Selwyn, -of the dominion geologies, department at Ottawa, of the pu croppingofthose fielinia as they at his found three_ ,or tour mile trthi-o-i°iIttr"tihtrYetrlors'64-1/XtsctrYal* -owe tktithire-re t0O,*otpo ootorTiajociiil. tt rows ,Nest branch e Cana- dian - Pacific joins the main lin". at Dimmorcriunctitn These tour lines \bound a rect., angle 150 by to° ni1es in ,extent, 1.'30,000 square .iniles or 10,200000 - Jules. ° FURY '0i:4 -fourths of this teat, "the toOthiltii ef the itioeky WronLitaint. Cap. ttaii been found in armostuev- -ery 'partit this distriet; �t Iffetii- . CIO** Hat, jOgAti °V A*. the 044,0 . boundary; natUraj gas has lelso'been disteovered and is being usedby the d'ailway eompany 'and by the citizens ,of the town tok do. "nestle purposes; at Rank jn_the _northwester-Leoriier-i- all along the .eastern slope of th , northeast on Sheep Creek, where it ha. ben 'mined for -,donicittio 'purpose for teeny. yeitre; and on the headWateti 0f2Joligh_ rivet, Where it has aloe Leen Wren out for use by the talichT ers tor the last twenty. years. lrundreds of tOOS. Of it are mined 'daily at :Wier, thirty miles east Lethbridge. At the latter 'place are situated the mines of the ()elf, patty, the, oldest, coal* company. In tilts territory, and other mines of other' companies of more recent 'de. volopment. Cr** atong the'foothills of thc Rockies, it is found. in, large beds, while on .tbe Crowe Nest -from Ltattlhreek, -forty Milts west Of Macleod, ,t'o* li(orriskey, nine helitrise rOt016, ninuerbus min:evert in constant operation. ..1forth- or the railway . Are pa,n the upper EflCS fr bere-Xtehef • e eilired,. , ureq, the outcropping of coal ills north of. Morrissey me sures a• tarot .101; feet, in layets"running•i thickness,'from a „taw inches ove orty feet, t 016 la3ers of roc are interepeid through...strata reek which, form, 'together with 'coal seams* a.' doth of 41116 fee from 't upper to the lovitett '$e ot oa1 in the totiet. MeEi etimzt that- at least erte- he fet of this 6141 feet o worahIe and markets:hie.... '44 -Although theextent a. the cott lands in the •-enti re.artit,eatt nly h :somewhat rongliir estitniite* estiniate square tulles -shout - ,le neer -011011,0 to the triti!.i to , wed * hots for the ealetilatio available tYi AT supply,' vt'o. A little, figurin this Tw „ ctu1 to s 4 /.. •P' of eoal if O i feet *mil ' e ' ri the Jot IS1'r$4$ yield of. 14 weuld, , by Any. mnall local tribunal, There is no "damage _and in** of the notorious hostitlity of certain. thtrieti tn_._niotorists _a: fortune. journey. In Germany the "damage. Two amnrrmirti Club asserts that the position. Venioit °ugly adipinistered. • saYs a 1 ,Onet '1/A7e3111C.Of Pen to the motorists, and eiva.de the law by the, formaton of las will join to form ,a company, each subscribing a ertiint . five members will thus$25,000 at its command, and will purchase the ears of :the five 'members,. giv- log $6,000 each. The tompany now bemmes liable for all damage done. Being & limited habilif.y COnecrn,• it is wily able to pal' :fines or Coin- tittoir- laillii0iiiiirerthe tut* hand','. and then' becomes-'bein16. Dr Prisehautt conside fhiCetiefi. OrriPanY. WoUld be in.* -,ehronie state of banlirliptey, bnt- it :would be the only way of evading 7 Vie new