Indianapolis Recorder, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1908 — Page 3

WTE RECORDER. JPIDtArlAPOUS. !ND!»n«

atag^

^—— FRONx t ^

I+0UR CORRESPONDENTS, +1

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News, Incidents, Social +'^ind + Personal Activities ^

c. m. cTwillis

Westfield

Mrs. Caroline Dempsey, of No. blesville, spent a few d:tys with her daughter, Mrs. Sarah Armstrong Miss Mayme Allen was in Noblesviile Saturday on business Byron Armstrong was on the sick list last week Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Armstrong and niece, Miss Verca Winbum spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Armstrong’s sis. ter. Mrs. Wm. Stewart, of near Nobiesville Me^ws Clarence Sweat and Harry 1. Carter called op friends Sunday in Nablesville Albert Carter was entertained at dinner at the home of Edward Armstrong and family, f

LAFAYETTE

Mrs. Ida C. Biggs entertained Star City Tabernacle, No. is, Or. der of Tabors, at a thimble party lust Wednesday evening. The at tendance was large and a number of useful articles were completed. Ruben lacksou of Crcwfordsville spent several days in the city this week, the guest of his daugh. ter, Mrs Gertrude McDonald, on Salem street Mrs. Mattie Jones and son, have leturntd from a visit with relatives in Indianapolis ..W. F. Anderson and wife were the guests of honor at a dinner par. ty given by A. F. Lindsey and wife at Frankfort last Tuesday. ... Mrs. Francis Smith was called to Grand Rapids, Mich., Lst Monday to attend the funeial of her brother who died in Louisville, Ky., and whose remains were shipped to G. R. for internment Mrs. Luella McKinney is visiting in Indianapolis... About 6:30 last Wednesday morning. Anthony Hubbard was found near a shed not far from hsa home, bleeding profusely from the result of a guu shot. He was unconscious and first was supposed to be dead: but on the arrivitl of the Coroner, he was revived and taken to the St. Elizabeth Hospital where he is yet in a critical con. dition S. H. W'harton. who suffered from blood poisen in his right hand, is rapidly improving and shill soon be released from the cure of the hospital and be ab’e to loot alter his business aff iiis..., Fredrick O. Evans wt<l serve as a Grand Lodge representative tor Washington, No. 22 K. of P Subscribe for The Recorder; it is even more convenient than to bor row it from your neighbor.

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NOBLESVILlE

All newo for The Recorder will be kindly accepted at G. B. Roper’s Baber shop and the same will be attended to. We want your news Mrs. Author Kelly of Indianapolis was a visitor at Mr. Alferd Scott home in Federal Hill last week.'?...Rev- CrossLnd succeeding well in the protracted meeting that is in progress at the A. M. E, church. Meetings have been held every night for a week and will continue indefinitely.

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Notice to Subscribers: The U. S, Postc fli e h is ruled that on and attei Jun. is’, 19 S all Sub>cribers to weekly publi^.itions more than 3 months in arreirs cannot be sent through the mails. This will be the last issue sent to a large number of Recorder subscribers unless an im. mediate remittance is sent in*

D. L. Nesbitt The leading colored Tailor Suits tiom $15.00 up. Pants from $4.00 up. You will like your domes. 8c will your friends like them if we make them for YOU. Made to fit, to have style, to look Vik-' the worker good tailors. D. L. Nesbit 356lnd Ave 50c on the Dollar! Everybody. You make a mistake if yon don’t SEE Charlie When in NEJED of Shoes WILSON’S ...Cut Price Sample Shoe Store... Shiel B ock, 217 Indiana Ave

State of Indiana, Marion County, ss: In the Probate Conrt of Marion Count}*, in the State of Indiana No. 174. Complaint for Divdrce, Lizzie Clark vs: David Clatk. BE IT KNOWN, That on the 22 day of Jan uary, 19C8 the above named plaintiff by her attorney, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Probate Court of Marion connty in the Statejot Indiana, her complaint against the above nam ed defendant. David Clark and the said plaintiff having also filed in said Clerk' office the affidavit of a competent person show in# that said defendant is not a resident of the state of Indiana. an4 is a necessary party thereto and whereas saw plaintiff having by endorsement on said complaint required said defendant to appear in said Court and answer or demur thereto on the 16th day ol March.1908 Now, Therefore, by order of said Court said defendant is hereby notified of the filing and pendency of said complaint and that unless he appears and answers or demur thereto at the calling- of said canse on the 16th day ot Mar 1908, the same being tbe 13th judicial day of term of Conrt to be began and held at Court House in the city of Indianapolis on the First Monday in March 1908, said complaint will • e heard and determined in his absence. Frank Williams. Attorney Leonard M. QuiU 401 VV. Pratt St. Clerk.

1

Edmonia Perry

vs

Charles Perry

MT. VERNON

The entertainment given at Pointownship Saturday night was a success Harry Buckner filled the pulpit Sunday morning at the A. M. E. church YV'm. Jenifer aud, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. P. Bishop, his parents are all very ill On next Sunday quarterly meeting services will be obterved with the^presenc e of the presiding elder and a|so Rev. Mrs. Edwards, of Terre Haute George Bolden and daughter, Jessie. Henderson. Ky., were the guests of Mrs, Susan Davis and family Sunday Rev. T. W. Daniel left Saturday for Evansville, where he will assist Rev- Wallace in his meeting Several from Maunee attended ihe entertainment Saturday night The supper given at tne residence of Mrs. Smith was a success Helen White was entertained at dinner Sunday by May Moorman Wm, Coleman was called to Providence. Ky., by the death of his aunt Rev. Bell ot_JJnioDtown, Ky., held services at the Mfcsionary Baptist church,-Sunday The sick are improving Mrs. Lina Napoleou and Mrs. Frank Buckner visited relatives in Oklahoma Mrs. Grace Webley a nd Mrs, Lucy McGill are ill.

State of Indiana, Marion Connty,

[ Circuit Conrt Marion

j- County.

In tbe State of Indiana | No. 16509 I Complaint, Divorce

Be it known, that on tbe lOtb day of Jan 1908 the above named plaintiff, by her attorneys filed in the office of tbe Clerk of the Circuit Courtof Marion County in tbe Stateof Indiana her complnint against .the abate named t’e fendant Charles Perry and the said plaintiff having a’.^o filed in said Clerk’s office the affidavit of a competent person, showing that said lefendant Charles Perry is not resident of the State of Indiana and cause is is for divorce and that the above named defen dant is a necessary party thereto and whereas said plaintiff having, by endorsement on said complaint required said defendant to appear in sa.d court, and answerer demur thereto on the 12th day of March 1908 NOW. THEREFORE. By orden f said conn said defendent, last above named, is berebj notified of the filing and pendency of sail complaint against him, and that unless hi appears and answer or demur thereto at tbi calling of said causeou the 12th day of Marc 11 1908, the same being the Tenth jnd cial day of a term of said con rt, to be begun and held at the Conrt House in the city of Indianapolis, on the 1st Monday in March 1908, said complaint and the matters and things therein contained and alleged, will be heard and determined in his absence. Janies T, V. Hill, Atty 8J£ N. Delaware st, LEONARD M. QUILL Clerk.

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Bryan of Nebraska gogue.' That term does "not go with his makeup. He may be a bit theatric, he may like to keep in the limelight, he may even be something bf an unconscious poseur, but he must at least be given credit for believing what he says. As for the taunt that he is su*. perfleial, perhaps that may be said of all orators. It is no more true of Mr. Bryan than of others. He has shown the ability to grasp fundamentals and to state them in an effective and simple manner. He surely has the courage to say what he thinks, a virtue not possessed by all politicians. He is not afraid of tbe interviewer and never sidesteps an honest question. Nor has he that cheap and despicable habit found in some public men of talking ’for publication and then denying his statements, to the ruin of some poor scribe. Bryan has always been popu lar with newspaper men. Without regard to party, they have rated him at bis worth, and their judgment is by nb means to be despised. Your average reporter is expert in detecting shams— he meets so many of them. As for the accusation that Mr. Bryan runs for office too much, he could doubtless respond that the American people can get rid of this tendency by electing him, just as some girls free themselves from the importunities of a too ardent suitor by saying “Yes.” An Early Title. Still another of the early characterizations of “the Commoner” has gone out of fashion. He Is no longer called the “Boy Orator of the Platte.” One reason is that he does not live on the Platte but on Salt creek. 4he suggestive name by which the stream that hows through Lincoln is known. A second cause of the change is that it is hard to refer to a man who has lost most of his hair as juvenile. One more fond delusion * regarding the Nebraskan is likewise disappearing. He no longer is regarded as excessively radical. Bryan himself has always insisted that he is a conservative aud lias often said that some day his opponents would be forced to come to him to save them from the actual radicals they themselves had reared up—not entirely a bad prophecy in the light of some recent events, for mast of the people of this country have not only advanced to the ground occupied by Bryan, but some of them have gone far beyond him. There is one charge that the rea> radicals make against Mr. Bryan with some consistency—that, despite his great will power and undoubted courage, he has proved vacillating. They aver, for example, that he changed front on his support of Parker and on the government ownership of railroads. They say he has had too many “paramount” issues, only to cast them aside when they appeared unpopular. Is this the Achilles heel that will prove his ultimate undoing?. Congressman at Thirty. Mr. Bryan was born the year of Llncolnjp first election, 18G0. He was valedictorian of his college class, studied law with Lyman Trumbull, went to congress at tbe age of thirty, sprang into national fame by a speech on the tariff and won his first nomination to the presidency at the age of thirty-six by a speech on free silver. He has been lawyer, editor,’ politician and lecturer. Once he narrowly missed being a preacher, and even now he says he would rather talk religion than politics. He was even a baseball pitcher, and a fairly good one. That was in his salad daj'S, when he wore a beard to make him look older. One" of the notable characteristics of the Democratic leader Is the lightninglike rapidity with which he makes decisions. He can say “No” as quickly and decisively as any man in public life. His fighting nose and jaw and his wide, thin lipped mouth are not false alarms. “Delight of the Chautauquas.” Bryan’s forms of recreation arc farming—by proxy—shooting ducks and making speeches. His regular occupations are soliciting subscriptions for the Commoner and running for president. He tells good stories and has a new stock from his trip around the world. As the Emperor Titus was called “the delight of mankind,” Mr. Bryan could be called “the delight of the Chautauquas.” Everybody knows, of course, about tbe Bryan country home. His farm on the outskirts of Lincoln is almost as famous as Horace’s Sabine farm. Tbe only difference is that Horace raised poetry on his place, while Bryan raises “aristocratic” bens. Bryan's great antetype in history was Brutus—both orators and both defeated! Both also wrote about their travels, but Brutus’ stuff was so platitudinous and commonplace that it has not survived. Mrs. Bryan was a classmate of her husband, and to help him she studied law and was admitted to the bar. She is that rare and delightful combination, an intellectual w T oman who is "thoroughly domestic. One of the beauties of American civilization is the Ideal home lives of our public men, and in this regard Bryan is near the summit. This much can be said of William J. Bryan with truth: He is actually # a great man. He is one of the first, If not the. very first, of living orators. He is a potent moral force. He took advanced ground and has seen the country come to his principles. Those w’ho are nearest to him know him to be white all through—brilliant, generous, kindly, manly and likable in every

way.

But, as to whether he is ever to be president or not, that remains to be determined by fate, the Democratic party and the American electorate. Being in such hands, he is entitled to the pious prayer of the judge in delivering sent6nce. “And may God have mercy on his soul ”

THE SWMHGOL, Lesson IV.—First Quarter, For Jan. 26, 1908.

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Text of tha Lesson, John ii, 13-22. Memory Verses, 15, 16—Golden Text, Ps. xciii, 5—Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. [Copyright, 1907, by American Press Association.] The more I study and write the more the saying in I Pet. i, 11, grows upon me, “The Spirit of Christ testified beforehand the sufferings of Christ and the glory that should follow.” This sentence Is a summary of the whole Bible story, and every part bas a couuectlon with every other. We must never forget that the Spirit wrote through John in order to set forth the great truth that Jesus is the Son of God, equal with the Father; that, believing in Him, we might have life, and have it. more abundantly (chapters xx, 31; x, 10). We learn how by His sufferings we become sons of God and then, bj feasting on the glory, bow’ to live as such here in these mortal bodies. In the last lesson Nathanael was told that he should see the glory, and now’ in the first part of this chapter w e are told of our Lord’s first miracle and that at the marriage in Cana He manifested forth His glory (verse 11). The marriage takes us back to Eden and to Adam and Eve and on to Rev. xlx, to the marriage of the last Adam to His Eve, tbe church, “Then shall w’e see and share His glory, and His word will be to us a light such as we have never seen, and the w’ater shall be changed into the wdne of the kingdom.” It will be on the third day also, counting 1,000 years as one day (Luke xlii, 32). Israel will have her place In it, the names of the tribes being on the gates of the city, and then shall the Passover have its complete fulfillment in the national deliverance and conversion of Israel, according to Luke xxii, 15, 1G, 28-30; .Ter. xxxiil, 15, 1G. The temple at Jerusalem shall be restored, according to Ezek. xl to xlviii, and the name of the city from that day shall be “the Lord Is there”—Jehovahshammab (Ezek. xlviii, 35). In the new Jerusalem which shall come down from God out of heaven, that the nations may walk in the light of it, th6re shall be no temple for tbe Lord God Almighty, and the Lamb shall be the temple of it and the light of it (Rev. xxi, 22-24). Then shall be seen the complete fulfillment of Jacob's vision. These thoughts and many more on these lines are suggested by the Passover aud the temple cleansing of our lesson in John ii, which topics suggest the practical questions, Am I truly under the shelter of the blood, and, if so, am I consciously His temple? (I Cor. vl, 19.) After this brief visit to Capernaum (verse 12), being rejected by His townsmen at Nazareth, He made Capernaum His center, and it is called His ow’n city (Luke iv, 14-31; Matt, ix, 1). Capernabum, as it might be written, is the village of Nahum, or the Comforter. Let us each be a Capernaum for Him and not hinder by unbelief. It was at a Passover that He was lost to His mother for three days and when found in the temple uttered those first recorded words In Luke 11, 49, “I must be aliout My Father's business.” The Passover of today’s lesson is the first of His public ministry and is signalized by His cleansing the temple and foretelliug His resurrection. That the Passover lamb typified Christ and His blood shedding is plainly stated in I Cor. v, 7. Some of the lessons are safety only under tire blood, the assurance of it by the w r ord of God, fellowship with Him in eating the lamb, a suggestion of suffering with Him in the bitter herbs and tbe absence of leaven the necessity of putting away all evil. As the first Passover marked the beginning of Israel’s national history, the future fulfillment spoken of by our Lord at the last Passover (Luke xxii) will be marked by a deliverance that will never again be marred by a future bondage (tsa. lx, 19-22; Amos ix, 14, 15). From the beginning of their national history there was a place for God to dwell in in their midst, .first a tabernacle and then a temple, each typical of Jesus, their Messiah, the true tabernacle and temple. liut they were ever negTecting or defiling it, for It is man’s way to defile everything. In the time of the reformation under Hezekiah they were sixteen days cleansing the house of the Lord, and the filthiness had reached even to the holy place (II Chron. xxix, 5, G, 15-18). The Lord Jesus was the only temple that never needed cleansing. We as His redeemed ones are His temples, but are urged to cleanse ourselves not only from all filthiness of the flesh, but of the spirit too (II Cor. vi, 16;,vii, 1). What can be said of the buying and selling and other filthiness found in so many churches today? And is it not possible that He who looks on the heart rather than on the outw’ard appearance sees under many an outward form of a seeming worshiper a very market place or a Wall street. There are deliverance and cleansing only in Him who died for us, rose again and ever liveth as our great High Priest to intercede for us. His disciples did not receive the truth concerning His resurrection until after He w’as risen from the dead, and some of us seem just as slow to receive Col. ill. 1-4. We know from Heb. xil, 2, that even He was sustained in His humiliation by the joy set before Him, and unless the resurrection, with all its glory, is very real to us w’e shall be apt to dwell much upon the way and' its discouragements.

fJJ It will not be possible for me to meet Hi all my many friends personally so I fff take this method of letting them know" that I am asking nomination for office of County Surveyor, at the approach- <<< \ ing Republican primaries . yyy HENRY W. KLAUSMAN.

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gj- It will not bepossible for me to meet ?^5 personally all my friends in Marion ^3 5^ County so I take this method of lett- ^3 C ing them all know that I am asking o nomination for office of County Commissioner, at the approaching Repub- ^3 5^ bican primaries. JOHN McGREGOR. ^3 ISuimmuuuuuiiommuuuuiiiiiumS

jFor (Coroner of fIDarfon Count? Dr. G. A. Petersdorf

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Everybody is For Joe Ibogue for Sheriff ONE TERM ONLY and Fair Trearment to ALL Will Win.

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