Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 39, Number 25, Jasper, Dubois County, 26 February 1897 — Page 3

WEEKLY COURIER. , . I A N gfi, PuMaOtOMs

lASPSIL

IN IDAS.

IN THS GKASP OF ODIN.

Ii I.KoK.K II. I M R.

-A 1

.OME 3' i: C I I 1 ...

m KM WS I N'III$VI I" HI' jL aotserdaa. -

erier we Ma remained there sous? week ur captain got a freight fur IWgcn, in Norwaj . V- wen- to take Imck a load of pine I .::,! ! . but on ar

riving at I U i gen it ak found the cargo area away up the coast, at a small waporl on tin' Vcst-nord. and for this place, after discharging, the Kollo made sail. With light, contrary bree.s. we lacked a gl Ml many time, and on one ef UsOOf lacks, near the Loffoden island-. pased elOM ly the spot where, at eartuin t iiin-s of title, ami esiiecially after j,orthwist gala, Pages ÜM great Maelstrom, the terrors of which were so -iggerate! hy the early geographers. The ebh current had prolably set us cut of iir course, hut we si.w nothing remarkable, save a commotion of the waters two or three mile away, reminding ua of the Race in Lone Ialand pound. r of Hell (late, a it used tobe in IImmm day. A tr ' d ;me7e would hOt carried the Uliij through it in pcrf-ct safety, ror Would it have swamjied n fishing lxiat.

THUST TESTIMONY.

Crll riaatlnalluB of rrulrrllua .1. i . Ii. Ii. r Ira. The ! .a'...e committee of inquiry out infrequently only a debtee for "saying uuJ puted things in noch a solemn war." Certainly the first two ions of Scnar-.r Irxow'a committee on trust have been of such a character. To the testimony there attaches only the value which belongs to t formal demonstratio of facts which bad hfM 1 Kg -if current notoriety. The s: Mat I ffal thus positively developed by th s inquiry are these: The It ' root controls bo per cent, of the output of refined sujrar in the United Srates ar 1 fixes the price of that staple. As a result of this domination of the market it is able to par 12 percent, du ;.(m! on preferred and T per cent.

His atonihinent. .if course, no :gnal n its rommos itoek Mr. Havemeyer could llWM; and a. t.i .nr own . ap- amplifying hi testimony at this point taiu. I will not ilwell upi.n the. m..T:,.ri by remark:n:r that he would not go he must have r-perienced at that nio- into any business that would not net ment. from 16 to H per cent. The capital Soon afn-rward we saw that the rock of the company Is f73.036.000. Ilutchman. hating parted both her ca- much of which waa created for the purhlc. had leen conipell-d to make sail. MM of buying up and suppressing rival sheeting home his topsails, into which refineries. The unJ'vided surplus in he put etOM reefs. l-03 exceeded $13.000.000. Mr. HoveWith th! sail, and the tide in his fa- meyer. in a burst of public spirit, went

vor. he might possibly in the w ide. sea..ke fiord, still keep his Teasel from giving ashore, though her peril waa ex- ! r-me. i. . i w mm .K.

greatlv abated, and we could see thai profit of the Publ:e. and incidentally of he bad set his f..ril. foretopmast coarse, to a profit of 1J to 20 per cent.

mtm m mmft It u it h . hieh ruiiou n t "f nimseil.

anä swanbed past the couutera of the hip.

Suddenly he caught sight off the Zu) der Zee, and in Some way losing his balance, while straining bit neck tc look at h t. out be went. Mr. MlCfa" had just ati I luni aa bi ' - Ippe.iri I. hr . all- I out to catch him. a the Kollo' tm settled in the eddy liene.it h. and she. too. was gone. Those on deck knew nothing of th. catastrophe, until, as the Zuvdcr Zee swung partly athwart out stern, they

I saw a woman clutching a little loy. car

ried forcibly ajrain-l the Ihitrh brir. and almost dipped up by the beaxy bulwark. The stout Coitrrdam sailor iT:i-d tin n. as they came, and tl. S4piare-built Holland skipper signaled to u that all was well.

Pn to assert that another monopoly that of the Arbuckle coffee concernmale a profit of three to four cents a ound on its entire output, and that he

intended to enter that field, to the great

FARMERS VICTIMIZED. Mow the I'ruleelloa ebess It) th I'roitUf-i r It ia reported from Washington that the proposed tariff law will be full of protection for the farmers. The republican party baa been trying for a good many years to properly protect the farmers, and still they have steadily l m "nip. i.e. 1 to accept the assurance that the Mat tariff would do the fair thing by them. That is. the farmers have continued to live, in hope, notwithstanding the fact that many of them died in despair. Now. for the seTeraltb time, the farmers are assured by tht republican party that the good thing they have leen eagerly looking for la coming right along, and that the next tariff w ill embrace the quantity and quality of protection they need In their business. This means that, in the opinion of the republican leadera. "the same old gag" has not as yet outlived ita usefulness; that the farmers eyea may atiD be fi'ted with wool birndera. It is not necessary at this late day to bring argument to bear on the fallacy Mai tM farmer can be benefited by re

publican protection. The history ct American tariffs is full of evidence of such fallacy. The farmer hns always

found protection working agcinst-him

HUMOROUS.

Ally The aOVtl of iuouipsoa'aM perf'- t iiniu " - "r " It'a a MNl tOff." 4PWataWaMl Time. A Boy's Lung t'apaeity. "Urnrj," aid Mr-."oodle. "1 bear illy vo.ee. f oat stOf to the iloorumf t. b oi I want fatal T Hut Willy was twoiuiles awa. diapotiag! a oiiit uith the. unipir.. ICockland Tribune. The Ii' order luid MfMJ If bf a pretty old thing, wlien oag ev-ning she MMkafM U) find Uer husband in tears. "The cook." sobbed the unhappy muD, "b;u genu- and bought u new Mtoepipa

THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. lt.mtloul Loii for t'ebruarjF SM, 180 Tl Dteciplse UlsyetseO Acts H l-ll. lArranged from Mlaohat NaMaV OOUDliN TEXT. Th. y that vera r.ratterl abroad went everywhere tinai-uinf Ui Word. -Acts 1:4.

Tin: fECTION in-indes ths cbaptar ! through Vers.- 20. KMUANATORT. I. a Qvoal Peraocutloo Va. 1-4 1. 1 And Saul waa eonttentiug uuto bio death:" The word imjilie hearty ap- : BroeaL Ka foofaably aoaod- agaloat atai ami sjNike agftaol him in the Sanhedrim boatdet beaag aaaocg his mur dOfOm "At that t ine " Tue original

t ... i ' i..t . i I t 1 1 n 1 1 1

II. I IILM IM IIIIUV. " in-iimi ... is .! . I.,.. I J litornllv miiiiifv on that verv tl I

IVL.n.l "(.T-..:lt .t-.l- 1 -w m -

Hoggs' Old

ens. Mai Do I ini1 .v"u ffoMaMa to playing a cornet ou the street corner to make a living? Hoggn- "1 ain't dotag

thi- to muke a living. My wife KTOO t lot me practice In the house." Tit-Bita. Judge "Are you aw are of any mitigating circumstances in jour cane?" ( riminal "Yen, your honor; this is the fiftieth time 1 have Iseen arrested for vagrancy, and I thought that portaafO we might get op 0 Utflo jlblloo " TitP.it. Tom Scribbler (desM-rutely) "Jack. 1 am sick and tired of writing bad noctrv for a living. I shall not

never In his behalf. Hi agricultural cudgel my lu-a.ns any loagor. HtOOtf Implement, and the clothing he and hi. ""r1 'EÜT V Z JLmI v tkn imnl itr Xni Scr.bbi. r- T shall make me

of canvas his chance .f safety w as n.uch improved. S.. -n after the irale was over, a thick, rainy mist gathered upon the water, obscuring everythinc for 24 hours; but the wind, which had chanced, blew- a strong breeze directly out of the fiord. At leniMh the air cleared and we got under way. seeing nothing of the Dutch-

Standing into the es-hor1. we

finallv droiip.il nnchor in snnr har- j

bor, In fore the little Norwegian hamlet man. w hich raa to roratah a Ol Ith car-o. Had he felt Ma out with his lead What a cold and lonelv rcgtoo it a! 1 i.e. or a bedashed upon the roeka? Th.- eaptata'a wife and litt I. httf were The auieDse of our captain was dreaden board, and the sight of them kept ful. a w urm place all the time in my heart, j As we ased the mouth of the fiord as if m. aaoh Of bright New Kngland ; the intl haulrd in such a manner as to

tili sUrrtwrd for u. thouch we were

aw.iv iiti in the Vest-fiord

A Dutch hsig. allcd the Znyd.-r Zee. van likew ie there. She lia.l saihxl :i week In-fore ourselves from Uotterdam. and by singular coincidt!:!. b.-r caidain alo had taken his

... a I uv off. the air iee.nie f irgy.

and. in making a turn, we approached s.i : -ar the niae - vv . 1. a; its

heavy ninng.

An Immediate lienefit might spring

from th(s investigation if the gentlen en at Washington now engaged In form atattog new tariff would give heed to the figares show ing the profits of the trust. It seems a safe proposition, one. indeed, that should be accepted by the most thorough-paced McKinleyite. that a monopoly making average profits of ten per cent, on what ia bef'.eved to be heavily-watered stock Is not in need of protection. But it is tn equaTly safe propoit:on that the next official committee the navemeyers will meet w'H be the ways and means committee of the house of representatives, with a HM protection against German competition. It cannot be said the examination of

family wear he has lieen compelled to

buy at prices that prove how well the manu fact ureir are protected, but when he has gone 1o the market to sell, he baa always found protection, taking a day off. The republican party has found it much easier to fool the farmer than tc make a tariff that was of the smallcat

advantage to him.

a sand bug and cudgsd other people's

brains. ' "The pOaOOaahM of a Isox." tuiid Partridge to Mrs. S. N an Jones Smith at the ipcra. "ix-airrent blessing." "No doubt," said Mrs. S. Van J.Smith; "you men can go 00)1 httwpaa the nets without disturbinc anvbodv." "It is not

disturbing anybody

boon." lUiar.

that makes it a

. .u --v 0 ..,.1,11- that. sau I a rt rutir . it is inai we

vil course vue ä uvwo . nmuuu , T,r.tectJonmto.t embrace the eootl of alL ' BaM po out during the a.-ts without

Manufacturers, merchant, mechanic and farmers roust come in for a &hare in its manifold blessings on paper, and if the scheme fails here and there in operation, there is nlways plenty of "wool." The republicona will never le

at a loss so long as the "w ool noius out.

THE BUBONIC PLAGUE.

It 1 Cos.ed.d to lie a Krtlval mt th vu. trot nagaa The plague which has lieen raging

It is nerhana a rood thing, for them, for six months past at llnmbay, and to

that the farmers are disposed to be bobic extent at otlter place in India, is in nntici- concedeel to I- "the true idague." Iii

ifc ar.d little U.v. Hut the little blue- Jy calm, and we were ai in- mercy ui

.! f.-M.ivv vanomoreaout th.-deck, the tide.

We had seen his pretty face at the rail. ' "See all clear for letting go anchor!" as the briir f out of Kottcrdnm. and ; wn the next ortler. aga'n as she w. nt out of Herein, and And the Hollo soon av.ung to hef

the beneficiaries of the trust system is beim prosecuted with a degree of

m - m a. f ....

The oid.-r waa gien to pi.i me snip acumen which promises the neat restoya. hart aaaroaly hod wo r oa jta. Nor doe the fact that the cotn-

the opposite ta.k when it fell entire-

yi Jb wfSr

iation. the benefits that are quite cestain to fail of mateirialiaation. Bin liamton (N. Y.) Leader.

HANN A IN

TROUBLE.

St null

IN THE QUASI' OP TUB ST. 'Ii. Uttle Charlie Kivers. ettaridag ttpon the chain, with sh.eta and halyards let gb, bulwark- of our ship, bad hailed him r ud curses. toiaiIs, toa!lantsaila In ehlMlah tones as the Zuy der Z-c Ui;d rtuals clewed up and lazily slatting sweptpaatus. ' as she rolled. Mounting uKm th. ii. ad r.vl. while la half an hour the fog lifted, the his father and mother were lelow. he sun shone clearly and we could seethe had fallen under the brig's BOOM OOal j tremendous irges rushinc around the W.UH never seen air". riui I" ,,ke "'n8" in Pf The baiWPd mother. OMftaf on It was to the west of us. and astbc board of ua. aa we lay at anchor, took air to the south grew clear we obittle Charlie in her arms and cried bit- v rved a tall br.g drifting iow ly toward tcrlO Mrs Hivt-rs crictl. too. and from , the fearful vortex, thai niom. nt s. as roOtbiaadrj 00 "The Uutchiuan: the Hutchmxn. ore he nsivc of some accident to ber lit- criei all our men. in a breath. C r..r evervone ! that the vewsel 1

mr "in . The two v. ssels finished loadincat the same time, and the brigand ship got under way lop Iber, to ro dow n t he fiord. This is very w ide and long a sea in itself and in fftagh weather one ai the D.'.st dangerous place in the world. Hut now all wa pleasant. Thousands M t I t ... I n ....... .1 (I.. . i. T

S.NI-IOV.I ,11, H'l UI I'UIM I . . -. i ... . , m i and the distant höre, of the Loffoden " d. springing over the taffrad.

j taIIU ly Ilie laimr. i.'j r i a; ! rnd ast off!"

islands had a w arm. misty lieautr. Tili state of UtlagB, however, did not lon' ronl inuc. The weather thickened, as if preparing for a storm; then the br.-.'.e left us. and we dropped snchor in deep water, in order not to We set out Of our course by the tide. Soon afterward it Itegan to blow heavily, yet the wind, lie'nir from the northWest, our anchorage, under one of 1 h'1 Islands, was so sheltered that we did not drag. The I1. tide opposed the wind, and ttM tumult grew fearful. FhtMOM tr. meiiib.ii. It carried away the Dutch brig s deck load, her longboat mid yaw I. w bile lioth vessels pitched Iw.w sprit under at . very Olunge. roliiiii: "s,-upp. ito." and fust toJriog alongtheir ai eh.-r-. '1 i iirig dragged fast, r than the and ixiiig to w unlward. nine lie.ir getting afoul of us, as, stem lOfD n."t. tugging ia k un ber chains and drlag d W il'.i v liter, she saggfd .i:v p.it. Indeetl, her mainyard stru. k our ow n is the two w ;.!! im- i ss'is rolicd toward each other; a ' afterward she

Biittee will bold only six more aeaaion pffPr eno'iragemer.t that it report will form a very valuable contribution to the literature of the subject. X. Y. To'irnal. BOSS HANNA'S POLITICS. noodle mm llnorumk as rprts to Pimt. Mark Ilaxna is at hia beat after a bannuet. It is then that his penal soul expand, hi massive brain beg.nto work aad hia tongue is loosened. It waa at a banquet that the genial Mark outlined the policy by which the people w ere to be induced to believ e that ?laj. McKinley was against the trusts and in favor of bimetallism. With nnctujs fervor he described how, by carefully worded message and F;teecbea, the major would f;uten his books on the confidence and affection of the dear people without hurting the

interest that stood bock of him. Another banquet has loosened the CT-ai man's tongue and expanded hia soul. The Cleveland Hailway Men's Republican club, the name under which Mr. Hanna's employes masquerade in politics, gave him a dinner ar.d when the good things had taken effect the republican boa rolled out a chunk of w isrium embracing hia whole political platform. Mr. Hanna, w ho. 1 y the way. waa adrerted aa either a senator or a cabinet I " cer and who failed to deny the soft ii -achment, congratulated the men n- -i rh it they had accomplished and urged them to strive for more. "If at any tune I can do aught to assist you." said he. "draw on me at siirht." There is only one thing in politics, from Mr. Hanna's standpoint, and that is the draft. Ilts belief in it is excusable, perhaps, because that seem to be the only thing in politics that he knows and it hM carried him a long way tow arils power and glory. It nominated and elected his candidate for the presidency and has placed within hia reach the dazzling choice between the senate and the cabinet.

His supreme faith In the power of boodle and sham in politic explains hi preeminence among the leaders of u-to-date republicanism. St. Louis Hepublic If It Had H.-en llrra! The 4th of March is almost here, and Jie voice of the receiver U atill heard In I be land. Notwithstanding the wish

which is father to the thought that

prosperity ahould come, banks crash.

,...t ;ii. h.t.. II.. w sr.r it - ? th business cnterpr.ses are suu..-i.

the receiver stands preeminent a the

The Zuvder Zee was reached Mrs. advance guard of McKinleyisim We hSversand little Charlie, together w th were told that the mere triumph of u... Ihit.-h cai.tnin's wife, were put "so-.:nd money" would so compos matr

Li.a.1.) 9nH .11 hnn.lilMi.Wtrn ters that without further effort busi-

i., nnndier. taken with them. cess would take care of itself. The

With a co

little raorl

Ohio Itenotillean uimo

to Mis. The news from Ohio indicates that a head-on cuiJision is imminent between the llanna humbug and tb f'oraker-Kurtz-Bushnell machine. Hoth are on the tame track and coming al full sjeed from opposite direction towards the same joint the Ohio sentorship now held by John Sherman.

Out in Ohio they seem to kk upon

its general character it is identical with

"the black dentil," w hicii ill the four- , trei.th century lest roved, it is aid, lou.uou livt in London, tlvo live of ', seven-eightlu of the jw.pulat ion of Kngland and mc .'..oou.oi -rsons, or one-fourth of the population of Kurope. Hut sanitary oaJOMt is stipHsed to huve mitigated its iruletice or lsseiied its opKrt unities. In liombay, with 75',iiuu hahabitaots, the Mnrtollty is kept down to about 1.000 pvr week. Calcutta, w ith 1.io.'ms. .nh.il.ituiits, ovv ing to efficient saiiiUttioii i sulistantially free from t be BhsJVa.

At the tirst outbreak in the l-a-st year

Tlnnna. aa a ridiculous sort of person, nearly ev.-r i-ase was. fatal. I p to tue

a political incubus and heavy dead- third week f NovcuiUt 7 - i weight, and they thii k the best place had DOM atta- ked, and of these 517 for him is at home with hia private thed. Its victims arc almost umfornibusinca of organizing iron and steel ly very ioor and ill-fed natives. The -combine" and freight monopolies. English seldom or never take the disThe Foraker crowd ia saying openlj ease. The sups taken 1 per. f.. the

tliat Ham:a came vcrv near electing cities of In. lia. in or.icr 10 proiev i i o. u.

the Zuvdcr Zee. he had no anchors, no boats, ami rne urreOt was cairying her stead I y t ward that pla-e of terror, where th. sea god tklin would grasp her by th.; Vtel and hurl her thunderingly below. -Clear awa theyawi:'shotdl apt. Ri.-r. 't onie with me, four of ; ''

Three of my shipmates and myself

taken wun mem. oe uu.. v ..... implement of Is arsons our triumph has come, the date of inaugufelt the tide in a wsv that ration can be seen over the hilltops of

placed her in terrible danger, but at last we succeeded in leaching the .hip ia sa f ety. As we did so the Dutch brie went into th whirl. What a sight it was! Around and around she swept, now standing miiti r.n a.tH. now ivine over till her

,.1. aUasssd in the water, and all the tine into a raw place to -k MO quo

m hi ie headforemost, stern fore mos or tion. lut the people aro asking itevary-

Irooilside lo-going With fr ghtful where. Atlanta Constitution.

1 eed. it js mM that the major, in ortler Then the hull disappeared, the l mer J a do good turn for Mark Hann a. may masts were sw tilowed: the royal yard h. com pel led to pr.thim ia the cabinet.

time, and there is no improvement. Suppose Bryan had been elected, how II tliese things would have lieen

chsrgrd up against free silverism!

Since the reverse Is the fact, are theyi not aa fairly chargeable to McKinlcyism? It mar be like rubb.ng turpen-

w ent out of sight. She was gone

W0 arrived safely at Itotterdam. Hot ho can lescri;e the caresses showered

lay tuuiblin' for soiii. ! . it. -.soejoo I rjton little I har lie through all the

to our tpiarter that wc could alm'

have jumped M l'anl of h r. At this moment. HtthfChotilc Kiv-r was with his mother in the OavMaV The atera lights were open, and." stniidinc on the transom. Charlie was gazinr from to of thtni on ihc fom that curicd

I. Tl.. llnli-h m.ilhrr uh h.nl

L . ... .. mm ii -- , lost h r ly . eemed to love the Ann-ri-an diild almost as her own: and whea ui sanies! from the old lloilaud seapovt she wafted hira tearful kiss. bis s- .all fa-e l.M.ked heck 'he o.int d-awhridire where she stood.

Kryan; that the reason onio gave M- Kin ley only 47,000 majority instead of the 150.000 that waa expected wa because of Hanna's record as a monopolist and oppressor of workingmen and

a suppressor of competition. They show that the crv of Cleveland wa

ju the R. V.); immediately after the

atoning. "There was a great rsecu tlOB against the church:" The severity and the variety of suffering inuv be imagined from James' description (Ja. 3:0, 7). and Hail's ia 2 Cor. 11:23-24. "And they w ere all scattered abroad:" Not every niemlier, but the active one, those who taught the doctrine of Stephen, aa a furnier scatters his seed proadcaa,. They went ns far us Phonieia, Anytioob and Cyprus (11: 19). The enemy scattered the good sc-d. ami by scattering increased 1 he harvest. "Except the apostle:" These remained ,(1) because n leailers of the ohurch t'nev would rather suffer with those that remained, aa long as it was jioasiMo. fl0Tll. he made bavoc of the chureh:, Ha ravaged, devastated the church as a w ild beast does a vineyard or an baradlog enemy a peacoful country. He did this under the sanction of the rul rs (.0:10). "Entering into every house:" i. e.. making his search everywhere, that none ehould escape. B. One Elxample .f the Work Done: Philip, the Braogel 1st. Va 5-s. 5. "Philip:" Not the njs.stleof that name, but the evangelist, i nc of the aeroa deacons chosen to aid Hie ajwistles (fi:5). The capital of the district of Samaria. "And preached." proclaimed the Christ." the Messiah, "unto them:" Simon was the leader of the oposition (V. ''). but apparently Philip took no d.rect notice of him. f . "The people with one accord gave heed:" It is (uitc possible that Philip may have n iped a harvest from the seed

n b .f.-Mis Himself nearly ten years before (.lohn 4) in a city of the same region. The ds of truth often spring m after lying dormant for years. "Hearing" the gracious words of eternal life, and of the effect of the (lowpel npOfj I DOas who had embrael it at Jerusalem. "Seeing the miracle:" The jjg s of their div In authority, of tladr power for help, of the loving, helpful nature of the (io-pel they preached. 8. "And there era great joy:" Berause so strong and deep, and muoh joy ii:. V.) because it was s.. universal. The natural effect of the Gospel is joy. III. One Strange Result: Simon Mi.-r.is. Vs. .i-i:;; is-25. We have here the first eo'.lision of the (opel with im; -os tu re and occult powerw of the woild. "A certain man. calletl Simon:" Little is known of him. Neander identilies ihis Simon vvith one mentioned as living fn.m ten to twenty v.ars after this by .loscpliu. ami a iia.inir U-cn employed hy the procura

tor Felix to tempt Dmsilla to leave her

consist cfiielly in cleansing them by a

literal use of waU-r. As in lighting the famine, bo in fighting the plague.

the Hindoos are indebted to tin- arts , (King Azius) and live with

and sc . : . es of Huroiie. Hut for the

foreign government, with it railroads ar.d advanced ideas, the mortality of

unique among the great cities of the India would during the present nfllicnorth in that it gave McKinley but 5.00C tion of famine and plague be increased

majority where It ahould have gives doubtless by many millions.

iim at least 20.000. And Cievelanü U 'ihe plague is a glandular lever, at-

llanna's own city. 1 tended with a swellng of the groin.

These anti-Ilanna Ohio repuldicani it seems to bo unknown whether it is

insist that if Hanna should get the du. to a in ii robe or to unsanitary cou-

scnatorsbip the public indigi ation tl.tions. It ravaged iiong long a tew

would le so great that Ohio wonlil cc years ag . dcstnwmg many rnousanus

overwhelmingly democratic at th there. It Ls endemic in China and the

him. which she did ( ct24:4). Simon

is there . ailed "a Jew. U.rn in Cj prm. Tsed sorcery:" Practicel mngk-. 10. "Is the great power of Goxl:" Ih V.. that power of (iod which is called great. The one in whom du in.- power v as manifested. One of the w iards so Romero UI throughout the east at that time, and multiplied by the general BJtpOOtotllal of a great deliverer, and Uie spread of the Messianic, notions cd

the .lews.

next election. They back up then

statement by a very convincing analy

sis of the election returns.

If one did not know how nanna

11. "To him thev had regard: In

Euphrates valley, jiust as cholera has lH,te that he might be the long

.ts home in t M delta of the Qstageo, jooked-for deliverer.

London Miff.Tcd from it in Im.j isiU

again in 17-u. Diu mir t. , resent csn-

hated iublic life and public office, tar A-... !... i.e-ii ihr nne( --ene uf

cne would mv, from the way he if a I v.i. In P ' t Pairdiui, the

laying about him with McKinley and death rate from it w a U a day. and federal patronage aa a club, that he ua April 21 f that cara. many as iio,really wished to go to Washington , h ad IkwUm MO OOMtOal theto. It

lor.g-distance telephone , upicared again on the I .uphratea in

17..:. is?; and 1-.7. Its ravages in China have been enormous, but little w;..s known In BOTOpOOl the et-.ut of the loataaa it caused. Ilsitlniore Sua. Man M it Mb Iuq. In a rec. ut issue of the North American BaihlTI Prof. Thurston discussed man as a motor and tries to estimate his force. He iss beat engine in whicb

i omlu.tion takes place at a singularly Id temperature. The steam nwuir and gas nioior acts through vaoiations of tenq .ratun-, but the man motor is throughout of a pretty uniform tenip.jature about tin. He transforms energy by nHTis different froin thoae of other motors, by rroc'sses not yet un d. rstood. Considering the amount of fuel. er fiMwl, consti inid by a man, he has. for out fide work at least, theeflij cien.y of the best stentn engine. He ' eipials the let engine in the sutqdy of i gasige he gets out of a given ijunntity : of fuel. The inan motor consumes In ily a quantity of food equivalent ilynnmic-

slly loa i ti ttd of ..:.;. or OB' -fi'tll of .1 horse pOOfT fo-24 hours. A day's w ork is about one-eighth of a horse Maffff for oighl hours. The animal machine utilir.es one-fifth of the OMtgy supplied to it- as does the liest stenni OBgfne. Hut the man motor Ines more. The brain works ax well as the MIOBaMi Digestion, respiration und irculation. and the construction snd repair of 1 1ssue nil cot s ip, c energv. It follows that

th man nmtor g-t out MKh more than 20 per cent. of thOCMfgJ RtorodOB

In his fuel. F.jqicririieats . llirn with rrapoot to the h-at of the body auggcat that the naimal engine shows resirh.4 fnr as ntti'-h os 5o piTrrnt, of the thro n-ticnl laaiiaiani Btltlaaore Son.

and save

charsre Iwtwecn Cleveland snd the

white houses

Whichever aide wins the country will

gain nothing. But the pulverization of

the Hanna humbug would bfl amusing. If, T. World.

PARAGRAPHIC POINTERS. McKinley should be free to choose

his ow n cabinet, but it is hardly fair to mesmerize business by selecting a lot of old fossils. Philadelphia Item.

No man in the cabinet will be

rrore friendless and uneasy than Sher

man. Hut he has the possibility of keep

ing everyone about him in hot water.

Utica Observer.

The new tariff will produce plenty of revenue, but only for the trusts. The government will still have a deficit tinltva its ;- r.-'.s are enormously cut dow n. Kansas City Times. The nc.xtexcusethe McKinleyites will give for delaying the arrival of prosperity will be the failure of Mark Hanna to brc.k i: to the Tinted St. .tea senate. Kansas City Tiroes. Mr. Dingley's committee has not neglected to give the lumber kii gs the privilege of levying a heavy tax on the wood for the poor man's borne nnd implements of labor. St. Louis Republic. Mr. McKinley' campaign utterance about opening the milla instead of the mints sounded very nice, but about the only things opened since his election are soup house ami distributing depots for the ptior. N. Y. Journal. The MeKinleyite are proposing an extra session of congress next spring to throw the country into a fever f uncertainty in regard to tariff laws. The country needs a rest from lariff tinkering; but what cares the republican machine? Did It not pledge the millionaire contributors to the cam

paign fund that their pursea should be

Ibe countrv will not be in grief, how

ever, if Har.r.i's participation in government eball continue to be that of one of the ordinary everyday unit. Bing-

haro'on (N. V ) leader.

Syndicate shareholders who are .at'ikfled with the dividends de

clared In the proposed tariff htH will J replenished by fixing the tariff rate v I aäV.as 11 a l a ik.

end in their cla;ma to Chairman Lhnglav. St. Loo La UmohJia.

I . V. ..,11 !, mr -;l.., ,Wk IK

HO I Ii III llir. CVUIU l: J s. wi'f. ' mm.rm vw ptsonle? Illinois State Register.

,lu Ihf Urverse. "Mister." said the haggard tmiu. looking over the fence. "I'm that, hungry that I would be plrul If yon would gimme a turnip." Hut tM co'd-beartci (MsOlf gWMots torn-down. Cincinnati r.nouirar.

12. "Hut when they believed 1 hilip: V.h.n they suw the true light, tiie.y turned from the feeble worldly light teat hal nttriet-! them Itefore. (1) Philip's temdiing met tlveir needs, brought forgiveness and salvation, hope ami joy (X) Philip's works were not only more wonderful, but more gracious, more loiug. nioi-e divine; and hey w. re sM-di that nil possibility of deception was removed. 13. Then:" following the popular ride. "Simon himself bettered also:" The scpiel shows that it was a aiero in

tellectual lielief in Jesus, lie l-lievea the facts. He believed the mirade were the result of divine mer. "n was bapt ized " Thus making a public profusion of hin faith. iVrhajm he was tu lf-d. ived. and thourht that he pov m ss.nl the same faith as the others, and knew nil nix.tit religion. "And won-

deretl:" Showing the kind f belier ne hod. IV. The Samaritan Bridge BoawoM Jews and Geatilc. -Vs. H-17. 14. "When the afMOtlaO heard that Btiaaria had reoaioad,M ote.: The Holy St irit hail led the way toa fuller nndcratoadbag of the OospeJ spirit and tlio Qoapol ti.i.i. if he approved hy con-vei-1 ing the Samaritans,! hristianaOOOjd M t o less than to approve by receiving tl.em. We note here one of the step by which the Coel lieesmc nll-em-1 . .xkt. "Sent Peter and .lohn:" As leadiiur apOQtll who could be w lioly trusted. The minds of the Chftf tiana w ere open to the leadings of God. John once would have called down destiovintr lire uinm the Samaritans (Luke Now he gladly seeks to I rincr iqvin them tho blessed baptism of fire from the Holy Ohoai Knvvinf ttm Kb h. Do not be envious of the rich. They lav what money command-, the lux-

ariea of life, that a hieb mii-isters to tho eve and to physical comfort, but they have also that which wealth brings, :.re. perplexity. conUnuetl worry, tho hunlen of bu '' sometime heavv loss -.. The man of moderate t esfa, honbU competence, who ia tindet the Dec ly of working. U on tie merntre mu-li happier than tho ,vn of ooalth. Many a man of great wealth thinks with recrret vf the happy day whVh disappeared n riebe if crossed-CrJted l'reabytcrian,