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Durham Review (1897), 3 Sep 1903, p. 6

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tk. _ Then far and wide the gorgeous beacons fly. Her spars are lit with flame, her decks shine like molten brass, every man on her is silhoutted against the forbidâ€" den blackaess of the night. Beyond him, as plainly as though carved out of marble, flushed with fire, every rope, every bit of brasswork is patent to the eye. It is a picâ€" ture glorified. In the daytime that ship bad been ugly, a cold, grey, wilent monster; now she lives, a tning to «.oucoa a poet‘s soul. Above us the clouds lower heavily, black with a promise of rain. Midway buatween the shingly beach and the warship liss the great yacht where our King and (Qacen are resting after the labors of the day. The yacit is too big to bo calle@ a thing of beauty s yan ts g>, yâ€"t she seems per.oâ€":t in ber parts as she lies there hallâ€" «lrrouded in aaulow. I turn my eyes to right and left of me and see the great bulldogs of the seas, the mighty warships of Britain, swingâ€" ing lazily at anchor. Well may the King rest casly wpon his yacht, for there on shore thouwsands are standâ€" Ing who would faco death readily to whicld him from harm; whilst out here those dark shapes that lie so #llll upon the waters speak for power and protrection. An oficer standing at my elbow guices my eye until I I looked along the line and saw noâ€" thing but gorgeousness, whilst on the very deck I trod nothing seemed so commonplace as [laring light. We looked towards the town and saw nothing now but dull, twinkling gasâ€" 3ht, the glory ol the fleet had killâ€" the town. Perhaps, they, lookâ€" Ing ut us, saw glories on the sea, but we saw pothing but a shadow on the land. Then once again the scene was changed. The dark waters of the bay were lit with lights of every hue, for from every pier and cape and headland the "Hurrah" boats Were coming to pay their tribute to the fleet. % Well were they called "Hurrahs," for every man and woman on the fleet of boats shouted "Hurrah!" as they came nearer. Yet such was the discipline of the fleet that none of those bo;;- of pleasure could get rear enou to take a message to the shore. All nt TOnce the lights upon the fileet died out, as if a magic hand lsnd dimmed that brilliaint scene, and the guards of the ocean lay once A manly, fearless breed, with a touch of the shore and a taste of the eca in their looks amd manners ; amd the women are better than the men, for they have the touch of the wea in their wary hair and a taste ot the skiee in their big blue eyes. It is the music {from the shore that makes one think o thego things. One catches it in every gust of air that bliows, and feels how good a thing it io to be a landsman. Between the can just make out the form of ship alter ship, a terrible array of splenâ€" éid foree. _ ‘Tho clou‘s above us deepen into imâ€" ponetrable blackness, and the waters of the bay, unlit by moon or star, look dark, forbidding and uncanny. Thon all at onco the scene is changed. The Admiral‘s ship leaps Into flaime, 4 thousand lights come Into being in a blaze of splendor ; electric lights touch the vessel and make her a gorgcous thing. Clear as orystal the myriad lamps shine out from the waterâ€"line to the main $ruck, a full hundred and sixty feet. Like stars in a southern sky the lamps glâ€"am and glisten blaeâ€"white against the blackness. Then, in a ewidon blaze of splendor, the Adâ€" miral‘s flag is limncd in living {lame. It is #uperb, out here, with no light nor sound to mar its beauty ; it is groat. I feel a wave of pity for the landsmen creeping over me. They ean only soe this masterpiece from amiost their own garish surroundâ€" Ings, but to me it is given to look upon the superb handiwork of man whilst resting in the lap of the dark occan, God Almighty‘s masterpliece. A moment later, aad the Rearâ€" Admiral‘s ship leaps suddeniy and gilently out of the darkness. From stem to stern the aoble vessel glows as though countless stars bad fallen upon her from above. Her main truck sparkles like a «diamond ceatred in the sun. whore and the great warship on whose decks I stand there is little ekse but darknesgs. Bangor liese right in front of us, forming a half circle of flame; for the little Irish town is all aglow with life and light toâ€"night. This bas been a redâ€"letter day in its hisâ€" tory, for EdAward the Peacemaker and Alexapdra, his Queen, have been its guests and notih‘ng that the inhabiâ€" tants of Bangor can do is too much trouble to show their loyalty to the throne. I lean over the bows of the great warship Jupiter and gaze upon the town, watching the lights flare up here, there aml everywhere on the shore, amwl ag I look 1 listen, amdl to my ears, waited on the soft summer breezes, come the strains of muslical instruments. f On shore all is jollity, galety and merriment. The dance music conâ€" Jjures up the bright eyes of fain woâ€" men ewinging to and fro on the arms o‘ stalwart men, for they are a ;ymd of stalwarts, those Bangor ‘olk. To right and left the speedy sigâ€" mals flew, until in the twinkling of an eye the darkaess failed and the world of waters sparkled with light. Far as the astounded eye could reach great warships blazed a mase of â€" unspeakable brilliancyâ€" and yet over all the black clouds bovered ominously, dropping lower and lower like a maotle that would envelop them all; aod the waters scarcely less black, seemed to rise to meet the blackness overhead, whilest the great blazing, brilliaot fliest lay in betweenâ€"a thing of wonder aad of power, the sign manual of Britain‘s greatness. Writing in the London Newa in a recent lsgue Mr. A. G. Hales gives the fo‘lowing description of the elecâ€" trical display made by the vessels Of the British squadron which es# corted the King and Queen to Bapâ€" James J. HEll, who built suecegssful rallroads in the northwest when evâ€" eryone said he couldn‘t make them pay, has had a personal representaâ€" tive in China looking up the chances for new railroads there. ; ; PAINKILLER is the best, the safest and the surest remedy for cramps, colic and diarâ€" rhoea. As a liniment for wounds and spreins is unequalled. Avold substitutes. There is but one "Painkiller"â€"Perry Davis‘. VL Goi _ came ‘cross his path. Straightway His form was stooped, the ugliness of sin Was on his face again, and he who pagsed + Him by was caroful not to touch the garmonts * *« f TMttg; wore. He slunk away into i/. 4 Shadows of the coming night, & thing Conde‘_mned by men, despised by self, A gigantic act of sequestration of ecclesiastical property has just been perpetrated in Russia at the expense of the Armenian Church. An imperial decree places its entire capital and property, with a small exception in favor of the churches of St. Petersâ€" burg and Moscow, at the absolute disposal of the Russian Crown. Proâ€" perty to the amount of from twentyâ€" cight to thirty million roubles is taken out of the hands of its eccleslastical owners ,and vested in the Imperial Ministry, ostensibly in trust for tha objects for which it was originally Intended. The glebe land and real estate is to be administered by the Minister of State Domains, the capiâ€" tal by the Minister of the Interior, and the land and money set apart for the use of the schools by the Minister of Education. ‘The pretext alleged for this wholesale appropriaâ€" tion is the desire to prevent the use of the church funds for the support of the Armenian national cause, toâ€" gether with the refusal by the Arâ€" menian authoritiee of funds for schools reorganized in conformity with the official system of Russifiâ€" cation.â€"The Tablet, "What ! _ Already doctor, pleasantly. The Reprobate. He was wholly badâ€"the world had called *% % Him such, and long ago had left him to his Pb Evil ways. But yosterc‘en I saw bhim Where the last rays of the setiing sun foll Soft athwart his uncouth form. His hat he Carrilod in his hand, his sinâ€"stained lago bared To the breeze which lightly lifted {irom his .\ Brow his unkompt hair. The daisies by The wayside kissed his heavy feet. The birads M Caroilod a sweet goodâ€"night to him, and nono Of theee called to his mind his low cpstate, And not lesgs lavishly than on other mon Did epend on him the sweetness of An Arithematician. "Amlable man, that ‘ere, Sammy," said Mr. Weller, smoking violeatly. "Seems so," observed Sam. "Good hana at accounts," said Mr. Weller. "Is he?" said Sam. "Borrows eightpence oa Monday, and comes on Tuesday for a shilâ€" lin‘ to make it up half a crown, calls again on Vensday for another hall crown to make it five shillia‘s and goes on, doubling, till he gets it up to a five pound note in no time, like them sums in the ‘rithâ€" metic book ‘bout the nails in the horse‘s shoes, Sammy."â€"Pickwick. their lives.; ks pass In quick rosponse to faithfuiness of l.he.lrs. I saw lhun straightcn with some digâ€" nity His slouching form ; his breast and but nokiing * c‘ 1% 0 * _ In the secret chambers of his soul, A spark of God‘s eternal light. "Oh, doctor," replied the patient wearlly, "I am suffering the torâ€" ment# of the damned." "What! Already ?" inquired the Inussia Sequesters Church Property A Little Previous. (Chicago Post.) "Well," said the doctor, "how do you feel toâ€"day ?" _ Then in *r wake, four cruisers sprang to life and followed her; and so the sea swallowed them, Edâ€" ward and his royal consort, wrapped in #splendor, their guards wrapped in greyness. We saw the men upon her decks standing to their posts, saw every move of her as she slipped like a great greyhound from the leash and made her way, a thing of beauty, where hll else was dark and dismal. more grim and grey on the lap of the waters. All was darkness perâ€" sonified. Above no star glimmered ; below no Ilash was on the waters; darkness claimed her own, until, without warning of bugle, or beat of drum, or call of fife, the Royal pacht sprang into splendor, the only brilllant thing amidst the darkness. â€"Josephine Conger. Dear Sirs,â€"For some years I have bad only partial uso of my arm, caused by a sudden strain. â€" I have used every remedy mithout effect, until I got a sample bottle of MIâ€" NARD‘S LINIMENT. The benefit I reâ€" ceived from it caused me to continue ite use,, and now I am happy to say my arm is completely restored. Glamis, Ost. R. W. Harrison. It Was Mean of Him. Chicago Post. The printer‘s boy was devoted to the minister‘sg daughter, and she {fiâ€" mally prevailed upon him to go to church, Whether her {ather knew of their coming is not definitely setâ€" tled, but there is evidence that he did, for he gave out as his text, "My daughter is grievously tormented with a devil." The printer‘s boy has been a little alraid of churches ever since. C. C. RICHARDS & CO., Money in Blubber. The market value of a whale amp ly compensates for the hazards of the hunt and the outlay at the facâ€" tory. The whaling companies operâ€" ating here pay from 25 to 50 per cent. annually, and the business, as already stated, is only six years old. A sulphback whale is worth $1,000, and a steamer, with factory, costs about $50000, while a good seasor giveoy a yield of h0 whales. New York Press. I wonder if everybody on earth who writes with a steel pen knows bow to make it take up the ink at the first dip? The polish or varâ€" nish on the new pen prevents the ink from adhering. Now, if you will hold the new pen in the flame of a match for & little while and melt the varâ€" nish off, it will write quite as well as an old pen and the ink will not drip off. Try it. It is a very old % BOTTLE CURES SPAVIN. Btittsville, Ont., June 28, 1903. Dr. B. J. Kendali Co., Enosburg Falls, Vt. Will you please send me a copy of your "Treatise on the Horse and his Diseases." I have used your Kenâ€" dalls‘ Spavio Cure with great sucâ€" cess. .I had a mare three years ago with a Spavin. and I only used half a& bottle aud it cured it completely and she has never been lame since, so now I have great faith in your Sparvio Cure. > Montreal Herald. It sometimes happens that a man loses his health by drinking too ofâ€" tea the health of his friends. Rov. W. H. Main, pagtor of the Bapâ€" tistâ€"Emanuc1 C:urch, Bulialo, gives strong testimony for and is a firm believer in Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder. He has tried many kinds of remedies without avail. "After using Dr. Agnew!‘s Catarrhal Powder I was benefited at once," are his words. It is a wonder{ul remedy, and will reâ€" Move any form of head pain in ten minutes and eradicate Catarrh. Two Kinds. (N. Y. Herald.) Though some attempt to run the mill With water that is past, Another party flourishes As hopeless as the last. i & ( For frequently have we observed That there aro ever some Who always want to run the mill With water yet to come. Dr. Agnew‘s Heart Cure helps the overworked: heart. . Relieved in 10 Minutes by Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder. It is cures of this kind that have given Dodd‘s Kidney Pills their popuâ€" larity. You can‘t find a neighborâ€" hood in Canada where Dodd‘s Kidâ€" bney Pills are not known by their cures. If the disease is of the Kidâ€" neys or from the Kidneys, Dodd‘s Kidney Pills never fail to sure it. "I had been troubled for a year with Lumbago and Kidney troubles," Mr. Fletcher continued, when asked for particularse. "My urine was of a very bad color and I could gos nothing to help me. I consulted the best doctors in Granton and St. Mary‘s, but got no relief. Finally I bought a box of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills and commenced taking them. They helped me almost from the first, and I was soon completely cured." These are the words of John Fietâ€" cher, a wellâ€"known resident of this village, and similar tributes to the great Canadian Kidney remedy can be heard on every side. John Fletcher had Lumbago and Kidâ€" ney Disease and Could Get no Relief Till He Tried the Great kMKidney Remedy. Granton, Ont., Aug. 31.â€"(Special)â€" "I am glad to let the public know, that Dodd‘s Kidney Pills cured me of Lumbagod , and I am now, perfectly Bound." To Let the Public Know Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Cured Him Minard‘s Liniment relieves Nourâ€" GRANTON MAN COLDS, HEADACHE, CATARRH YVery truly yours, Treatment 1j0or New Pens. Not Healithy. SPEAXS OUT James H. Nell. TORONTO hb Ki "Well, is Carson enjoying better bealth these days ?" " Oh, much better." "‘That‘s good. What cured him ?" " I heard his wife gave him absent glasses in common use by the amaâ€" teur photographer, may serve the same purpose in regard to quanâ€" tity, and the housewife will be able to determine, aiter a few tests with the rising cream, the lines on the glass which should indicate the words average, good and very good in the quality test.â€"Philadelphia Reâ€" cream on top will be measured by three small lines below the meaâ€" sure, and a trustworthy notion obâ€" tained of the quality of thq milk. It is impossible to secure such an effective device, made especially for testing milk, any graduated glass cup or jar, such as chemists use, for the generousâ€"sized graduated treatment." A Simple and Sure Device tor the Practical Housewife. She had recently moved into the neighborhood, and the milkmen, with butcher, baker and grocer, were vYyâ€" ing with competitors in securing the new trade. It was noticed that a goodly supply of milk was required for daily consumption, and each of tho milkmen from whom saples were tried was accordingly anxious to place her name on his list. There seemed to be some special magic by which she tested the quantity and quality of the milk left at her door. The disappointed ones wondered at the oause, but only to the man on whom her choice fell did she disclose her secret. On arranging with him for the weekly supply she displayed a Smple and ingenious invention for testing both the quantity and the quality of the milk, and warned him that she would quickiy makea change i his milk fell below the required standard. It is noedless to state that, alithough there was no magic about it, this simple invention inâ€" sured a satisfactory supply of milk. The novel device nmay be in the possession of any housewife, and it is as eimple as it is effective. It consists of an ordinary glass jug, graduated on the outside in pints and fractions. Beneath each graduâ€" ation ure drawn lines, marked reâ€" spectively, "average," "good," and "vrery good." , On the jug being filled by the milkâ€" man the purchaser can see at a glance whether she has received the proper quantity, and after it has been allowed to settle will be avle to see the quality of tha milk also, for the thickness of the layer of _" Not at all, She simply visited her mother for six months." _ ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and birmishes from horses ; blood spavin, curbs, spliuts, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, cougcs, atc. Gave $50 by use of one bottre. Warranted the most wonderfu: biemish cure ever knowB. Use a good white soa[&)‘:aor the purâ€" pose. All colored clot should be dried as quickly as possible in the shade. Starched ciothes are dried in the same house in laundries, in order to keep them stifl. If they are yelâ€" low, they are bleached in the agun, and afterward starched and hung in the house to dry. Colored dresses which are trimmed or combined with white should be rinsed in water in which salt has been dissolved in about the proportion of a tablespoon{ul of salt to a gallon of water. Brown soaps usually contain resin and soda, and are good for washing white clothes, but they should not be used for colored clothes or flanâ€" nels, as soda bleaches the one and the resin is Injurious to the other. A housekeeper whose clothes alâ€" ways look as white as the driven snow, says that it is best to soak coarse clothes in cold water, but the table linens and fine clothes need not be #so treated. The same housekeeper eay‘s that as soon as she has removed the stains from her clothes she putse them in cold water in the boiler, and brings them to the boiling point, and then puts them in the washtub to be rubbed for the first time. The boilâ€" Ing starts the dirt, and the rubâ€" bing is much gasier than it would otherwise be. After rubbing, the clothes are trans{erred at once to the first rinsing water, then to the gecond, and when they are thoroughâ€" ly rinsed, they are put, a lew at a time, into the bluing water, providâ€" ed they have not been blued in sevâ€" eral weeks. If they have, they _ are wrung out with the wringer and put out to dry. All white clothes should be dried outdoors in the strongest cold and the heat of the summer‘s un bleach them. washing has begun a great many stains will be permanently set ; but if the various kinds of stains are careâ€" fully sorted out and properly treatâ€" ed, hours of rubbing will be saved. | imbors May be Lightened if System is Used. Washing day is justly dreaded in the heat of summer, when all work i# a double burden to the Slesh. Anyâ€" thing that lightens the work is therefore especially, welcome, but though the tools of toâ€"day are supâ€" erior to those of our grandmother‘s, modern invention &as done comâ€" paratively little to lighten the labâ€" ors of the laundry. In spite of the cost of washing machines and the reâ€" presentations of their agents, & perâ€" forated sinc rubbing board is stlll the most useful tool that a good laundress can command. One of the most important parts of washing is the assorting oi the clothes. There are many stains which like those of perspiration, disappeat magicâ€"like, and others, like furit and coffee, Wwhich must be treated with boiling water, but are permanently set by lukewarm water. If it is the practice of the family to soak all the clothes in cold water belfore the HIVES ‘Oh, Thristian Science business, FOR TESTING THE MILK, wWASH DAY WORST. Mbsent Treatment. _"In clothing the baby there are throe assential rules to be observed ; The chest should be amply protectâ€" ed, the garments should never be tight, and they should conform in weight to the weather conditions. Pire should be at all times avoided. Long clotiwas should be discarded as early as possible, and all clothes should be susecrded ffrom the shoulâ€" dere. In summer the thinnest {flanâ€" nels shouldl be worn. ‘The majority of babies are overdressed, and kept In overheated rooms. The mother @hould, esporfally in hot weather, avo‘d undue fatigue, eat «imple fond, ard indulge in no alâ€"oholic drinks, Equally important is it that the child should have rest ansd quict, and not be made to laugh to6 much or be excited or ecared by its sometimes overfond parents. â€" Final words of advice are ; "Never rock the cradie," and "don‘t indulge the child when It cries. A little healthy erying will turt so baby."â€"Philadelphia Record. are given under the direciion 0. one city‘s Health Department, was deâ€" livered Wednesday evening by Dr. Henry Goiden. Mothers filled the room. The speaker of{fered a numâ€" ber of valuable suggestions as to the proper treatment of the littie ones during the hot weather. "Bathing twice a day,‘ said Dr. Golden, "should be an Indispensable part of the babys‘ Lygienic treatment. Water areng'tn.el’w the babies, eards off disâ€" ecase,. It is the best tonic in the world. Tt child shoud be bathed in & warm room, and the head and facse snould always be wet first, In caso of prickly heat vinegar and watâ€" er should be used, while the baby‘s flannels snould be changed freâ€" quently. _ Nearly all the safety matches which are safe against friction on sandâ€" paper, stone, wood or brick, ignites readily from a quick rub on glass, ennummondcremmmmmmmmemmeemencennhens . e 0 SARZ AMFY 1t A Little Good for the Child, and So are Iwo Baths a Day. The {first of the talks to mothers on the care of their babies, which Philadelphia Telegraph. A party of boys were piaying on one of the streets the other day, when an old gentleman coming nloxg inquired of them what they call their game. "Why," said one, "autoâ€" mobile. Joe, he‘s the wheels; Bill‘s the car, Ben‘s the brake, Harry‘s the lamp," etc. Leaving the boys to their fun the old gentleman walked down the street half a block and found anâ€" other boy alone, watching the others playing. Said the old gentleman to the boy : "Sonny, why don‘t you go up and play automobile with those boys ?" "Why," said he, "I am playâ€" Ting with them." " You are?" said the old gentlieman, astonished. ‘"Well, will you please tell me what part of the automobile you are ?" "On, I‘m the shell." who care only for the information which they can glean from the teleâ€" grapkh and local columns. _ But as a rule the man who carefully reads the news departmente turns to the ediâ€" torial page for a review of what he bas been reading. He may not alâ€" ways find his own ideas among those in the editorial columns, but he is given interest by gleaning other people‘s ideas, and if they, are not in accordance with his own he has the eatisaction of, combating them in his owr mind. It is usually the case, Lowever, that the editorial page ls a& source of suggestion and informaâ€" tlon to the siudent of politics and world affaire, and those who read i% regularly are among the best postâ€" ed pernsony. Minard‘s Linimont for sale everyâ€" where. 4 44 PHGIETE w P RRTORRTCTOTCT O CS drain upon the fleets Great Britain normally maintainse on her various foreign stations. The Editorial Page. Burlington, Ia., Hawkeye, A crewspaper without an editorial page is like a man without a mind. Tkere are some newepaper readers Minard‘s Liniment cures Burns, etc In the Game, a Long Way Off. Minard‘s Liniment cures Dandruff. Hyp INSISYP CVPERIOR LET THE BABY CRY. Will Light on Glass Fet aute 1 TUBS, PAILS, ETo For sale by all first class deators _ ON _ OCTT:im@ C o Catarrh for twenty yehrs and cured in a few days.â€"Hon. Goorge James, o( Scranton, Pa., saye "I have been a martyr to Catarrh tor twonty years, constant hawking, Gropping in the throat and pain in tho head, very offensive breath. I tried Dr. Agrew‘s Catarrhal Powder, The finst application gave instant re» liof. ,At-te:r: using a fow, bottles I was ‘Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever‘s Dry Soap a powder. It will reâ€" mavethemwiththegluu-tuu. 36 " Weally, Iâ€"awâ€"fail to compweâ€" hend youah quewy," rejoined young Bofted. "Whyâ€"awâ€"do you awsk ?" " Because," roplied Miss B., "It has cured." 50 cents. Explaining a Mystery. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) Bingsâ€"Yes, a singular thing hapâ€" pened to me on my wedding day. I accidentally ewallowed a silver dime, Bangsâ€"Woll, I‘ve always wondered what your wife could have seen in eauch a vacant look." City Manâ€"What â€" makes high here ? Villagerâ€"This is an in town, City Manâ€"Things don‘t metropolitan. A staff largely of Specialists. A thorough and extensive course given. A nm.rk.b}v healthy location. The only college in & that rejects day pupils to give special ourors jlor social advantages to those boarding. Noted educationists commend most hlcm Demill Ladies‘ College as a safe Christian home for girls. Parents, make a note of these facts. Terms reasonable. Rc:d for calandar to Rev. A. B. DEMILL, President, 8t. Cathâ€" arines, Ont. (Mention this paper.) Chicago News. " Te your face for rent ?" asked Mise Bluff. * t "What zind of breakfa you prefer?" asked the the new boarder, "Flannel cakes und ; syrup, buttered toast eggs and coffee," replied man, who had his an Villagerâ€" AlkLbL OTHERS E. B. EDDY‘s It is the best, you cannot afford to deâ€" 3 prive your wife of so valâ€" uable an aid. bearings and strong spiral springsâ€" thoroughly cleanses a Every house needs a New Century Washer. INDURATED FIBRE WARE It has ball â€"Style Breakfast Food. (Detroit Froe Press.) New York Weekly, An Awful Jolt. Mctropolitan. LKDEG‘U replied the young is appetite with an incorporated CÂ¥ st food do landlady of & C o Saul‘s last GJdark struction was not t} the moment nor feas the enoemy, but the « mer life and the ©com o his heart Trom G his menâ€"Compare 1. Bome think this roefe guards and means t] all slain; others th ence is to arn his how with hiin to the wa his hopes for the fu N. The 4â€"10. 7. 0O "The inhabita Wdo «C the gr The district t« in which the : bulun and N: Bb Other «idc 1!‘&1«1 even t the Jordan. B: here means "o «dlan," that is, tween the bat JbiA. Filedâ€""1t the poople in 1 there to take | they waited t tors, they mu war usagos «» «leprived eithe their lives." ive Ne Tearei j & nobler motiv« fused to gurvix Lo Sayve j {fellâ€"Boin life ho 1« #‘0. Foll upo imsel{! by f. Is belioved b struction of ended lhis life armorbhearer . Baul and Do weapou with ;mcred t muel xxii. bably «w king‘s bo bis sons on t served them | Out offâ€"The fares no bett cised Goliath, asken him.â€"C; _ ““;fit th heathen mig (@2 Ram. 1, ~ mor were th their idoisâ€"T as the giver Philisiines di their â€" Geitic goddess who: abominable. here was do ge of Venus ereedotus all bher temp wodern Besi atine of G:|b The wall of the bodies w haye faced + elty‘? (2 Saur glorious careor. _ _ Bs personal quall iPegal in person a =<â€" *Mindful of : owed to San Nahash" (ch They made a miles. secur turned to th gan in a «in ‘This was no was eithor r furthor insul more lkely. was burned, eondition of his kin the rights : or mln‘j:(-,(‘t.s. anointed kin Jehovah. 2. throne by : mance, but h/ fi:’d Iflt‘.’;t ® he as= b©y political WWas a member afi‘al family. cally rec the people, ~ @PCnors sing him. Thoir | lhim anc som .’m Kore â€" tressedâ€"The the correct whore meapn: Â¥ersion hnas | was tho man shooters, an and quaked thought of 1. ercry. 4. Woald _ who, accorn|ii was Dooeg, w In «tudy! ecannot hel pity for o yet so unh His earl; mot a usur IV. Th (x¥®. 11+1 Fartedâ€"This wourning. The are rows wi After t archors . Philistinss mlnnl tha t s ©One weoy sonsâ€"Jonat} 1, Go@ wou! ju@gmont th upon saul‘s | Davig‘e way ©poen. 3. God is to not in #lainâ€"1t rally. Sa heroos, a @elves in: that the ba :bs plain o clites T the slopes c the Pailistin tle, b them. E. 6. Saw Death of Saul a Commontary.â€"I {Â¥s. 1, 2). Fro:i through the sub: the kings, we hn {froqueni supplem| “ the books of L pare owith this »anday mnunoxud SEPIEMEE IL °n 110 w N O 1y better n AT 1»} n W n JX s Asta B6 W H Li U U nal

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