Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 30, Number 44, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 July 1888 — Page 3

. . . 1 . M I .. .1 I .. . J I

. ... .. .l l.l ... Uil CtatJIIw I WUI M

U HUHl M A Writ HIB IIWK WW 1 J a. -a.

..III...- .. U ... B .L. . S L. u iiiiiHHT SMB.! BBS

treaualy, much bettor thtui soares of shallow-natod soma of hi

la TL. --t 1. 1. 4Ua uliiiiiirftil about

1. r .. J .1.. .. M..V- ........ A -J " A llkMJT.

-unlaw the next year wltnesaed some

Miohff uil laalctUfoF alteration Ht

UM young DMA a prospnw.

The week wont by minor mouoto-

1tt4a-aJa, i a. iwiuJiiltAa fMHMd ill

rtilv nftar laavimr AdeJe UM WW

. 1 . .4 ., V. UM .-v ..... 11 nil 1

uiuu uAirf nf a nuwuu 1 lai.UUi HiUi IMMMt

... a . ... ' 1 . X a.

Tsatenaa un witn nor imhot.

. .-11 1 1 1 1 miliaa hnnnKi

I Mi m Ml ftn -mmm mum

nbie young follow ana preierreu om-

liur binuMtii nun it is wimjuhnh t n

.i i i .

wm .wm.w w w.jg, - J - . - . . i a 1 .

CiAiiMutl illuvivAr 11m worked hnrd

i . i . L it.. i :

. . . . f nnlLiInu un ' In ll .

MVM 1'fc HVMV1IW A.-. --

dienUure thitt evidenced an eventual

. f ,11.1 a.. do

ra b irwa. a w arvs anuaji mna-w wra w -

vote himself to Ills piiwjt.ce that ho almost forgot to worry about HI lovo af-

1M 1 .

Ikat this could not last. Of course

I. 1.1 1. W. ...... , ......a

... a

lv html work ho wan brooding ovor nis

.am - . X . ,i f ha

vniuiu i-fi n il ivii vm mm ssw .

tiela in tha ovoninr nnnor. The art!

nlaln mua-kllrvn rluralT. ST. iniM urui un

.

a a a 1 . I ai ml

unauimou. ronomination at the hanu

nf himuirtv hum five weeks nreviou

u . . . . i . .

iv. in wnusr. -iwruumnisnuuK "

great fluency on the ease of the victory

,n. ly- Wura lha C.nltmeA. had nro-

n--ula.l in tvtnsrratllln.ta WlwhlllirtOn

BOa-iwtv on it prospect of enjoying the

...... nf 41ao ai minir tail UMnn

nlUheil MitM Monk for the forthcom

ing season. Thin brought a very mo

rose train of rellection with it. air.

lumen aanea tne imnor mw iu kh5,

with an exceedingly forcible ejacula

uon, anu men proceeoou w reiiws

He had sat this way without stirring

WMri( mm hii-vivtwi

iiwninitioB. there flashed acrom hk

ItfvV f K IVi ay i f' C

feet with a smothered "Eureka,"

mnvAtl nvnr to hiri tio&k nnd indited a

noii to Ariel. In it he bade her. in

.!... . . . 1 . .la. i nn Bfk nail

brought him an idea that might prove

Colonel Monk was engrofwed in his

. - t a

.xl.nv1- miiM Mtlntr IbftLXI SLAV

WH t m vj mvi , - n - f

one had expected, and the moet enthu-

vhui lllrat svm Afal wmr.hAnM. ttJUi WIM

. a. . a . l a .

. ...hi. rm. ji4 a

MHM Tl vaaaaa. .a A..a a a.w

Ulln ill H71 C?VlftK IClimi .vfi tt.v nm a-" a.

..Ha m 1 1 .a a .la im.'aa V.WU. ..a. ar. aywaaaajaa

IJM1 1 I i a 1 1. I VI .1IT. UWTT IW UI11M a. a ...

nf (Via ftu-lt ititMlf.

Consequently Colonel Monk whs not

a ltllla. ulu -aul tn nMMklVM a UlMIKlMtM

from the criminal court of the county,

(iiu r anniuir s iui timui i i i hi

uamA lav In iHn I'Mnlfl nf ftlA

VBLfl VU. IM4HT. A1UN MJIHfl matXtlUIl

the Cdonal rcMMmlmed that thit man Black, who was now in trouble through

iii iim iiimriT uih.tth n 1111 mm irsix c&iu-

l . . I V. .a.v u m 1 luiiftn li Mil fnit.

merlrbeen employed about his own

houtte. iHtt, as his summons camo

from the defense, tlie Colonel wat) a ht-

VfV mj -tt

- 1t l.f .t a...

At nine o'clock on the appointed day

Mtf vvivnvi " -

iiin n '

a 1 .

uuiutmij "t 7 i

giaed for the necessity of putting him

to WKjh trmiwe, mn areu mm so

quittal of his olient.

Acmiittall" ftpuutorcd the uoionei,

MMIUIIUCU " T ----- r J,

cam u -

"Wnll. Cnlonel. we shall fee. re-

- . w" r a a

lint ia tun meanume i m eoinicr w

' a - a.

.... . a ill . . ... ........

... 11

tMHsauee I Know you wiwn w gw. n .

The Colonel , wa profuse in his

1 annnn Ufa riTflV

feverishly, while Albert made his plea . . r i.1MMA1td a,(nt wan

. . ... v inin n Lam BmaMir 11 lui c

HMMtU to the effect that the crowds

were already awembUng, and bidding

Witr. Mr. KUke was nothing If not

.a aa . a a . i aa f AM

fell il VMiive Amnnvi r r---

aV-.l.ftl-.-. J.. -a ..1. tMAi Ana CLal UUt MM

a .. .. . 1 iU UAAIUU

HLan va-a-i i an ii aani i.nu mninvi

.1 it. . i hia man

71 Jn VH ani HQ Mil la J

rlrhtlr. Wo nooner were tne worn

.. a. a t a -a u.U1l uiotm HA-

m.n.1 that the trial nroceed. The

luoi.a HlMILaVfi W1T.E. 1U . I M lav m im ana

Aa tho Hrt witneee lor the State took

I.-, -la.1 Hnliaaa HaaV millm Mr.

MUk over to him mid told him that

ka aaatlt-MV rfttdt IMaaMtL AkOW

roaultixl him a thitf mw

: "What the devil are

A anther hour will rtda ia on the ground making

friend by the Moore."

" You BewH nM the Colonel, nerv

ously, I pneiUvely muet get away.

My ehaneea of uteotion depend unen 1U"

" SMry," rejoined Mr. Blake, oalra-

ly, " but my ullent,a ehanoea of iroving

hit innocence dejtend upon your atay lug, and here you stay."

Then the Colonel, like many a bettec

man had done Wore him, lott hi tern

per. "I'll itee you dd flit!'' he retorUMl, " I'll get oit of here if It eoete

me a thouaand dollu!"

Without a word Mr. Wake up rang

pat him and barred hU progreiw to the door. Then he turned and addreetted

Uie court; "May your honor pleaae,"

aaldhe, "there UawitneM here whow tentiinotiy ia of vital lmiotianoe to my client' oatte and without whom it will

be iuiiKMeible to proooed. He mut

either le made to remain, or your honor must grant my requet for an adjournment."

Now had the Colonel, like a prudent

man, conueacenued to explain mattera, the judge, who knew him well, would have probably adjourned court if only

out of deference to him. Colonel Monk

was pat all meeknetwi now. The perspiration WHti pouring from his forehead. Ills eyes were bloodshot and hia voice hoarse

"I will not stay here 1" he roared;

'there Is no power that can make me.

It's a put up job! It's a swindle! Ah,

II

RATHER PRIMITIVE.

PCR40MAL AMO UTCRAJtY.

III. I H II .

11 111 I i

"I WIM, SOT STAY HERB," UK HOAKKD

ifiimMM."' and the Colonel made fot

the door again.

Unfortunately enough the judge hap

pened to be an ardent Hepublican whom

Colonel Monk had boaten overwnoim

inirlv at the polls two years before. It

wmilil b unfair to sunnose that this

fact exerciml any influence on hie pros

ent line of conduct. But anyhow he grew very red in the face, arose from his seat promptly fined Colonel Monk

flfty dollars and ordered a bailiff to sec that he did not leave court until the

fine wae paid and he had given his tes

timony.

The Colonel subsioed into a seat, wiui

despairing groan, and for half an

hour listened in a daaed sort of way to

the dreary cross-examining of the first

witness by Mr. Blake. hen lie had

finished and the second witness for the prosecution had appeared Colonel

Monk again beckoned Mr. Blake over

to him and engaged him in earnest conversation. At the end of five minutes the young lawyer stooped down and whispered in hia ear: "Colonel Monk, nothing save your unconditional consent to my marriage with your daughter can get you out of tills court

room before one o'clock."

The Colonel gave a great gasp. He

was due on the platform at one preoiasoly. The hands of the olock now pointed to twenty minutes past twelve, nnd it was a five-mile drive to the

fair grounds.

Again groaning in anguish of spirit

the unhappy man broke tho seal ol another envelope a messenger boy

brought him. It read: "I have about

given up hope. Ihe people say you

aro afraid. U s admirers have taken the hortes from his carriage and are dragging him about the grounds."

Perhaps at that Instant a vision or a

tear-stained little lace that om mm good-byo that morning rose before the Colonel, because he dashed his hand across his face as he muttered: "Curse your Ingenuity, yes; I'll consent; there's

my hand upon it." lie walKeti rapuuy over to the clerk of the court, handed

him fiftv dollars and apologized

41aaa.iiiii WnJiHut- Wkwa MtataMatal TTaa a VaPaaB) v a r"alawa"Fiiaj Uf Ua aUUitf Ajaata1aaa.aaWkMF. WW a WWWm .affa!." a--ra Ma- v A Hartford (Conn.) paper give Mta(4 of it (HMjiety column an aeeouRt of a wedding that occurred ia a town near tharo a few days ago. The parties eonetstod of a inlddle-aged man, who owned a umall tract of poor land and united tho lMtaineee of rahdajg garden vegetahtos with thai of making andselllug ehareoal, and a woman of about the aamo age, who for many yearti had been employed a a domeatto la a farm-house. They rode to town

in a market and eoal waon, which was decorated with lilac and apple Nossoms and was drawn by a pair of patient oxen. The prospective bride and groom were dreaeed in their beet elothes, which repreaen ted the fashion ef 1870. The latter helped the former eut of the wagon, and after giving the oxen a baiting of hay took her hand ia

his and proceeded into the house of the

tdergyman, making known the object Df their visit- Theee simple persons did not know that a marriage lioenee was required before the ceremony could be performed. They accordingly walked hand-ln-hand to the oltiee of the town clerk and obtained the needed document, The minister read it and sailing in his wife and daughter as witpronounced the lovers man and wife according to the statutes of tae

State.

They then went out to the wagon.

took from under the seat a tin pall of

bread, cheese, cakes and dried beef, and sat under the branches of an apple

tree and ate them. The repast being finished, the husband drew from the

well some cool water for his bride and oxen and put the pall back in its former place. A box was then placed on the ground to render the ascent into

th cart more easy, and the bridal tour eo.nmenced. There was no reception, no flowers, no presents.

Quite likely the future of this couple

will be brighter than that of many who

are married in style, on whose dresses

thousands of dollars were expended,

whose bridal present filled a large room,, and who set out on their mar

riage trip in a yacht or private oar. It Is not likely that we shall ever hear

one of them applying for a divorce or

giving eause for scandal. They have

no "dear five hundred friends to com

ment on the match they have made.

Most likely they will live for them

selves and contribute all they can to oach other's happiness. They will

never live in a hotel or fashionable

boardinsr-house. and the money they

saved by having an inexpensive wed

ding will be exjwnded in procuring real

oraforte. Chicago Turn.

Mr. Ottpfcaat an. writton

forty Bawnla. nearly all el

food. The rkurrkmrnm eeilMMiaM that a aap rfipaaaj ajHlaaaa aaa" - : " " aroHUesa venture in dturak jkmrwallam ia New York alone amount to aver a J antes Waitooma Jtttoy never fifai ai a poem for puMieattoa till it jaat suits him. He often works them ever maklag many and laborious ehaages. plated fifty year' work as a teacher ia the Franklin School, Boston. In honor of kr long sot-vice, aaereeeived among other presents, a puree of 20 in gold. Mr Edward Balnea U the eldest ac

tive journalist in Kurope. He is eighty-

eight years old, is editor of the Iedc

Mercury, and began hia journaliatk ear ear three years after the battle of

ar Waterloo.

Justice Gray fairly revels Sn

French novels. Since he went on the bench he has drawn from the library

ever a thousand eopies and he ia a con

atant buyer of sueh hooka. Ihey are

his recreation.

Mrs. Augusta Evans, the author

af MBeulah" and other stories, w an

athusiaetic lover of flowers. She hae

a bed af garanhtma which botanist

GIFTS UNTO TIB LOSIX

aoa for Ja)y 9S,

V-Auaa at. aaaa.aaaBaaaBBBa "aTa awa a aw"aaw aa

Lnsiow laxtMx. Wknm,

(iouw Tarr Oe

giver. SCer. tkT.

Uannui. Tnnrn n tm a wren in 1 1 im

give freely for God's earns.

Tuoa Autumn, A. u. ian.

Pufcca The Vidler af

FREEING THE SLAVES.

I4 m

fhe judge for his display oi .

temper. At the same instant, Mr.

Wake informed the court or a suuaen

discovery on his part that the Colonel's '

testimony would not be needed, w hereupon the judgu magnanimously forgave

Colonel-Monk, remitted his nne anu permitted him to depart, which he did

with a rapidity that took the tmmn

breath away. No one seemed a mi

surprised when Mr. Black suddenly concluded to switch about and plead

guilty, submitting with groat grace to a sentence of six months' imprison

ment: which, in view of the heinous- ' ..

ness of his offense, was exceedingly

moderate. !

Colonel Monk wan elected tho following day by 1,48 majority. Adele and Albert were sitting aide by side on a sofa In the library as he came In from the balcony, where ha had just been addressing a fow thousand triumphant Democratic voters. It is to he feared the Colonel had for tills once departed somewhat from his wonted abstemeousneas, because lie swayed almost imperenptlWy from side to aide as he regarded the guilty pair, murmuring! "You're a very fhmart flow, Albert; y' ought to go int' politics, me boy; y' ought, really. IUom Vysmk.

rrevMuM Which t.vcHtHUy KmaMetHtIeR In Brazil.

About the middle of May the Braail

ian Chambers passed a law setting free

every slave within the territory of the

This is the end to which, the

good Emeror, Dora Pedro, has long directed his effort, and in his aim he

hua been iweonded and aided by hi)

people.

Gradual steps, looking to the first extinction of slavery, have been taken in Brasil for the past seventeen years. In 1871, at the time that the first law was passed, there were lathe Empire more than a million and a half slaves, valued in money at nearly six hundred million dollars. The law of 1871 provided that all children of slave mothers should have their freedom, though they should still serve as apprentices until they were twenty-one years of age. These apprentices might appeal to the courts for protection in case they were cruelly treated. The law also established an emancipation fund. Meanwhile the Brazilian Government freed all the slaves it owned. The result of the law of 1871 did not content Dom Pedro, who was ardently desirous that the stigma of slavery should be removed from his Empire as quiokly as possible. By ita slow operation only twenty-seven thousand slaves hail been freed In fourteen years. So, in 1885, another law was paucod, providing for the payment to owners of tho adjudged value of their slaves, while all slaves over the age of sixty years wore freed at a stroke. The third law, which has now aeen passed by both Deputies and Senators, and has received the assent of the

to i Princess Isabel. Kegent, makes tho re-

pronounce to be the finest ia the world.

Ear home Is in Mobikr, Ala.

Senator Hoar is said to be the beet

informed man in the Senate on all mattors relating to American history. He knows the constitution and the Feder

alist naners by heart. He ia a book

collector and knows the inside ai wall

ym the outside of books.

Of eighty-six Jewish periodicals.

eighteen are published in the Hebrew language, fourteen in English, and others in German, French, and Rus

sian. The Jaws have forty-nine synagogues in New York city, and a large Jawish population there to-day than

an be found in their own city, Jeruaa-

The Pacific.

Miss Charlotte M. Yonge, the nov-

eiiet. is a devoted member of the Church

af England. With the proceeds of hoc novel "The Heir of Redoliffe," she

fitted out the missionary schooner, the Southern Cross, for the use of Bishop

Selwyn; and ten thousand dollars from

the profits af "The Daisy Chain" are said to have gone to the building of the missionary college in New Zealand. Miss Amelia B. Edwards, the novelist and Eyptologist, ia like Charlee Ebert Craddock in oao thing. She

studies the scenes of her stories with great care. One of them describes running the blockade at Charleston Harbor. Miss Edwards investigated map and pictures of the place, charts making high and low water in the channels, and actual bills of lading to show what kind of goods were shipped. She talked with officers and sailors oi experience at the time, and made a special study of naval terras under the late Admiral Sir Thomas Hasting.

HUMOROUS.

demption and freedom of all the slaves yet in bondage in the Empire immediate. One of the striking feature of this beneficent event is, that slaver has been abolished in Brazil, not ax was the ohm) in this country, as a violent result of war, nor, as serfdom was aboliahed in Russia, by the fiat of an absolute sovereign, but by the force of a growing and finally victorious public opin

ion. The slaves am freed on moral grounds. The Brazilians have done with slavery, because they reeognine it

as a groat wrong.

Thus slavery disappears from the

lat Christian country in which it hat

existed, and front the American eoatinent altogether. rtMM' CtmpmniH,

m

A piano put

I wall ie not so r

squarely against the

Fitted far the Bwslneas.

lee Dealer (to applicant) Ever aeea

in the ice bus wees, hoy? Boy Xo, sir.

Ice Dealer H-m. Kaon any thing

about arithmetic? Boy Yes, sir.

lea Dealer H-m. What would

twantv nound of ice amount to at a

eant and a halt a pound? Boy Seventy-live oanta, sir.

las DaaleiH-m. You seam a likely

lad. I guess I'll rive veu a trial

Bride "Give me a kiss, Harry?"

Harry "No, that I can not do; but I

will loan you one il you will return it" m-BUs.

Anient Greek coins have been dis

covered with the figure of a horse on

We are glad to tonm at last

where horse cents originated. rfeav

The man who can hum a hymn

while joining a stove-pipe is goon enough to walk right into full membership in any church without probation.

An avaricious chicken swallowed

a five-dollar gold piece recently, ana

the hitherto skeptical owner then knew there was money in poultry. 1Terr

"Sir," he said, "did you ever bleed a a . -v

for your country's Hag?" "U yea."

"In what engagement?" "In an en

gagement I made with my mtbetitatof he bled me for eight hundred dollars.

X. Y. Sun.

"You wieh to know why they all

k the diamond field, Clara? That ia a reasonable desire, and we hasten to anw . a ,. a . tfaUfc

Bwer you. it m Because n coew iu,wu

to get a jewel af a player." WHrptrt

Ha was mumbling about tough

steak and cold coffee and making himself generally disagreeable. "Don't rrowl so over your breakfast, John,"

asid hk wife, "nobody is going to take R away from you." Life.

A youngster was asked to give als

idea of the meaning of " responsibil

ity," so he said: "Well, supposing I

and only two buttons on my trousers

and one came off all the responsibility

would rest en the other button."

City Editorfto waortor) "Dklyoa

get all the salieat potato in that boat

racer' Reporter (iawamiy aeporing

hie superior's ignorance) " There

't any silieat points. The raot , . . tar 1J

was between Meamnoais bnCriU.

Waiter (to gaattataaa who baajasi

tinned himW Excuse me, sir J but do

you know that ia a twenty-coat ptooa?"

RMUaaaa fsnttLar it aaaK am

poekat) "Why no, I took it far a quarter. But it's all right, I know where I got it," JV. T. .

-Adam (a good while ago)-" It's all your fauK." Eve "Why k it?" Adam "You had no business to entertain thai serpent." Eve" Weil, yon said you were tired of my chatter and I had to hare somebody to talk 'I hoard a very pleasant making woman make several outtiag rasnarka as I paeed through market last night," said one traveling man to another. "What were titejr?" " I don't romuav bar them all Wtoneof them was: 'PU take a ooupie of siloes from that ham,

"aJweWslWnrw issa(aP0Bs)

IjmioMcnox Ia ear last laiiaaCedaa-

ioses' waver lor Mis

with the Moata, and

His dory. After torn,

Main MKUBOoed up mm taa mount,'

ar beweat with two newtables of i

a which God aaaia wrote the

meats. Moses remained forty days ia

mount. On rwturnieg he united upon taanssple for tree will offerings, wita wwan to construct the tabernacle and it fnrafUire; and taey gnvs abundantly. Itisesnamied that the tabernacle and its furnhara oust about a million and a quarter doUnr. Hsu Ovan IUxn Flacks. SO Jhtd aft fee emwrialUm dejarUd : from the groat asomMy to which Moses had snmmmii them, rononting the Sabbath Jaw and asking for eoatriboUoas for the taboraaoia, BUting whattaiags weald be needed. St. Whmt mrtm4 Mm p. the heart is thaeanteraad source of liberality. GHvwcis

of IHUe account without the heart. Tto UbtrmOe: a eoaUy and beautiful tent lor tita matfottio of God's preetce and far a center of worship. It is deseribod chaps. S5-38- See next lesson. 33. laWiat.armlets. St. JMur, etc.: the colored yams or cloth of wool or of linen dyed with taoas oosUycolora. Md sMm; skins taanod and dyed red. niri tick: seatoldnsymiic into leather. M. SMtUm eoo4: aoaeai, a thoray tree, like our hawthorn, only larger;, a cleM grained wood, of orange ookr. Ka other kind of wood was used for the tee ar sacle. 25. WiM-fearM: akilled, aad dtvsti

to God. Fine Nam.- a asocial maanfaotnra of Sgypt, where it was .so. fiae as sobm times to be worth its wsight ia gold. sr. On Mane; the stone sat af which eaateoa are cut, being fonaod of different-colored layers. There wore two af

these upon the cnaod. MfM: overdress of the high priest.

a small eotUy garment of the high nrisst, on which tweivs nrecioua atones wore placed, to represent the twelve tribes. Rarxxx Ixnmcs ox ran Oivsna Ood did not need tbeee aifU. AU the treasure

of the sarth wore Hia. He who could i

the world with a word did not need

rifts of a small portioa of thatworhl. Bat

aU tins was oaeof God's method of tramtag loyal aad largs-hsarted men sad women. It bound thorn to Him with now tatarssss aad strong metirss; it stcaaed their marmuring, and gars them good cheer; it gave them nobler objects, and led on to amors kmag oooaecration. CoamtXTS Solomon says: "Money saworeth aU thiags." What s moneyl Jtm rtnOy a ptrt of mnif. For if I work for a day for my employee, and he rive me twa dollara for my work, i not that two dollars my day's work turned iato cash! In reality, I have two dollar' worth of myssif ha mvnoeket. Aad if K to my father whs has

given me the same amount, it is two asttars Worth of my father that I am sarsymg about ms. Is not tai a strange way of looking at naoney! And yet it U a true wag. I am aU the thas carrying nyself aasai with ms. Whoa, tasrefore, 1 spend my money for any thing, I am spending n.retf. If we only thought of this oftener, ws should be more careful about the way. ia which we spend onraelre. See that young man! He ha juet received his week' wages. He says: "I have ten dollara; what will I dowHhitr' Ho is a fast young maa,ssaa goes to the neareet asiooe, and epeud H for atroag drink. What ha he donel Jfc as avataMwtf MmMtf rum Mmf! Aaother young fsUow comas home wnh lata UmdsUars, aad says: "What shall I as with this part of myself r He is a lover of

and so he son to the secoad-1

bookstore, aad earefuliy picks out a many hooks as his tan dollara will pay lor, aad

with a part f himself under Ms

A third man put hia money- iato the

saving bank, so that part of himsstf may earn him some more oah in the future. Tet another any a to himself: "My aid mother used to pinch, herself to lay arid money for my education. Sheia old now, aad nssdeaome IHUe luxuries for which she can net nay. I will send my ten dollars to- her." feeheaeoda ten doUara' worth of htasssifto the oM lady, and rejofoes that he ia aato thus to pay a part of the debt he has as hmg awed her. Family, still another aays t "Ttale ten dollars is a wsek's worth of myssif, aad. I will send it to carry the glad tidrngs. of salvation to those who have not heard i" So he puts it into the contribution box, aad k goes to help the cause of misnlana In tab way let the teacher draw cut the strange power that money has, aad make the class sec fat. a now Bght the power of this common thing. M wonder that Solomon said: " Money naworst h. all things." We alt admit that wa arc responsible for the way la which ws nsa sur bodies, aad for the way ia which we ass oar time or our talent. But we are act sa ready to admit that we are rospsasiWc for the way m which ws nee oar money, las last thing- that i converted is ton often tea

neoaot-book. Ia fact, tae next rerivm

the church needs is a revival that roach as far ss the socket of those

have been converted in previous revivals. There arc today many thousands of church members who have nohtca that God ban a right to every doUar that they own, aad that unless they give m prtnorttea as am

has riven to them, they are rsalrri

ea. it tae duty at utasag taetr : is nrssssdhome neon then., they

that that was a Jewish rssnirsmiat, i

that we do not live under the mw, hut unaar the GoapeL What they really mesa, but as net want openly tosey,Mtai,tasA1toir wnnt to be mtaasr than tae Jew over thought of beieg. This ia the true inwardnee of the abjection to the titaiag system. Aad sa this account wa have church asass, SsnVal natvBM tolaAssn feWl attavmtejT'MiMai 4aHssSf amWa Bmt emanWsaWr ITatfJs'aMI ifcsas If Carta tins were ss liberal a the Jews ia cur lesson, ws sacald hardly know what to as with the miUisnfl oa million that waaM sour into all sur treasuries.!!. A. F.

rnarticAt. aeacastiow. 1. God has riven as a groat work to da la make the whom world His tempts, asal bring all the peopte iato Ilia kmgdom. t. A right heart mahsa a ltbeml sand.

S. It is a great blsasiag to be able salt wilbur to give. 4. AU man, woman aad chtlJfaa saa find some work to da for God. B. Bach aac mast give what he ha aad A.

htastspssd. m fimmm -lhBt, k,. anBaS4sBBBnal J a,bJaaJaBLskst

by a bsty ntenve aad worthy parsii.

7. Chearfltsaralgrrtnmtdwonyi grrmf.