Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 41, Number 41, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 June 1899 — Page 7
I i cii tu (Courier. , . : IN Dl AK - pi I.
with H fi lM fil
.it. 'i i Rot t "ii -nd m clumsy
THE SEtD.
ay
on atiken mg. that Httl.- pafp ! -all Rf f mil l " H i. .1. r m the als-ht uf all
A y.ttery f Iii- and ' m h, re COnCi SM '1 -An unborn bSOUtf esst I" rfutne Ts i . rt vealsO w hin thai germ o samt und brown Are - "f May. vv-.n mel 4y. HU a- down 0f each lad tejr. A hiii! .!r d aut '' unburn Are In It ptMMtk Tha wait t.. . ham Iba sklea "f morn With rfum. d bn ath. Within a f A that airily Floats to anil fro p. rhsps may be a giant tres In mi l I ,1 onward by the rtl o wind That lit t I 1 A r-vstlns place at last shall tind In wood or mead. - me dav. ah, what a m t' ry Shall are I th sttu A tall and . ..-fiil forest tree Pre Ml IM lt rnijfht. ran It be that SO mall thine Bo reich COUld yield ; r.'.v a 8" ! ' i' " 1 ' lt! o r lull oi ii iu.
land -land.
The humhV't thirir. In nstun Ofttimes ' "r.'aln What se.rs have tried to und
l!ut all in vain. The flop ts of BM m nd' w fl jwer "Ova poW r m.iy BOl 1 To tow a tU I I In iH- I ' IW Wlt! suinme-i "ld. A sweet will rosebud by theMreara Boom meardni wt-utt As prf at. p-rl ' - my sic am From ttai I ijfcw fpon those worlds we look with awa. An 1 fail M 1 ' As great poWei a -o-Uar law Ucs In as- -
!n rat ure The oak or Must In a m h t'nto th s-
low.
1.01
' e.:s
O wondroii" my-:. r
Tj human a Produclt k by .:- ' I law It own in kind. riant rese and to lfm will clin A crimson pit 0 I lant U an Ufa will ipttOf A fh MM liae snow. Vature's asset p rteat as. i.iy
A
.aten til
wa
It W ills TO l . ! . ..i. : ! 1
idle
Hi h of sub
-Ai
t in vain. bath high and low !. .. 1..IW UM ! ilo Farmer.
An Incognito.
1
ill I.
Im result of further observation .i only to da l'1" fin impression. manner ind .u i.t -f tin paii . j i., . fr ... lilgn Bow bW tcel Uvirtf btl the favoriti miIi..r ,.; talon I all ttt Ma parties, it uaa ol im wraa aaartf t aatHrilmta or li r mi'' ol I itit-nce. One IBOrawl.- ii tin little Baald Ol all work L-i.ti' ut of .in- ha hmp iii ftwai litgi itivc of a iiny i" boUoajTi ' al ai de Villi, ra ithi iucrcdlbW
hlgh-flowa aaaw thay v-' ""' !, '
iomm tli'-- hti-i-H up in II" r.mi
ai- aad aproa ami amn i "t im
uuli a broom an! ouster, lor au uw ftorM Litt a Ma.- boubret:. Ihr busl.ainl had attHKl by, Uoffhinf ur.ar-
kiualy, ami the rbota bad eonciwaca with an nlTeot innate skini.i-h. i which tbt broom bad played an Isaportan.
.n II... i.:nr in..!' 1 any exiurtiuu
to the ibOfa, she eairyil g 0 her arm n iirepoatt roaa mark t baskd u" . . 1 j- . f .1... l.-i.vv
I . t i tiie iiii.ii "
n. iw.t mmtnif alsHita, arlii a ajwBl
and itewed reafietlvalj in our Itaat
parlora, taaac pcopM wouw nrufowi Rk.tM .! 1 their itMitsteii an I lunpt?
till lmltiiiie in .-!:iti:elefc8 uif.ii.i-
hitbi of toairown and Miioking jacket.
Hitherto the raapeetable remotcn of
Mich Ro had been afrpyaomteo iawkera and stn-et minstrela, ami they !.:,,; Mldoaj tro ii.. .1 w with their etalta Hal ii" charm wa broken. fUim iuftiincl h. mod t. urge th. no
dailv in OW direction, nn instinct ju'ti-
Bad by the b. hatrlot the newcomers, who i.oiiL'ht .dirimjis and water ereaaaa, nd ihres haitpence to the man srith th cruet. Indeed, th d.irk us.u i..n reated " Ihem of harlng inflicted ..t i.io. viils-ariti .f arunch and
i lit -"f. r. Judy show upon the i ' by di '.ibi-rate Inritatlon täinly sat at their wiin the performanea, eahl sins of appreelatio.
CalKafi ! Ihem ha I ti.-, n nut of the IIH stlol
, ism i aa thetn in llie row. tr stn et. o-.ir eoui.tenan e H"K wont to put on the moat lUMpproaehahM look, wherti wa i. (h 1 they trould leather the exlenl of their offense, and i bsdaoad, I . rhaps. to mend their way -. Y.-t I am t:la.i '" ..y. '-r the eha ratter of the row. ti al am weta all of ' ihoeked at Urs. Delaa.ar . when little Mr. de VUlieTS stoppet! one BKMna
ii f In fn.nt of her reraoaa to say pron words to Im parrot taaainf Itself i fh re. darted ant red am', wrathf ul and ', bore the eaffO ':i. k with he thtoiiph ' the parior window, aat h ugh she f eared . . nomination for the bird, Pol while wate-hlne arrew red and white m the
i i. half, she rt funii
of Rich th n
1 hey had r iw throuf hont Iting marked (rom the first VoW w'm-ti we
WE who live in the High Kowawoln one morning to find tiit tht bills had betsn taken ot t of Um window-"i So. It) i the row. The bonae, bOae fuure teaai y had for "in.- lime beta the subject i i our ho; es ..:ki fears, was it it iast. ami oi.r late, in the matter ol ... v neifhboi . decided for good or ill fha Koa was an nld-faaMnnad eor-
inti r-
- tsriat nl more of
had beer it rhaps al t h
ly inj: at
1 1 , back of a largt m s-
tida town, oat oi the reach of th ytarlj indojc of noiae and irfppara, Wa took cm little cr.-'it to ouraelvea for our . ii, i.i i a
isolation, ami woura nan wum " haVC been at any I itue i laeoTt ml aabOflg the crow.) parading UM am front. Ter-hap-. indeed, it was the desire to igaora the aiiect of the town as a pleasure resort that form ! the basis of s mpathy KB which our little ach Ij waa founded. f this aoclet; it waa oU Mrs. ttewme, n Nt. i. who an - caUedoa bjwal laaal two eonaty fa niiies, ami who took iaily airings in a earriagt with yoBon wheela, whom we looked up to as our load, nnd to wheaa wire referred all pMsUona f fashion and social ethk -. Ha eertainly weit, take u all in all. ;i liiirhiv re -i i... table corner, am! might
be forgieen in the absence f worthy bjrets of comp.'.ri-on iti adataking otu wlsaa ft r tht ait nf the earth. Nor is It to In WOttdt red at that we were ftlltd with alarm a ham f r ih r. was i pi j. ,et of a bouse changing hands, although hitherto the tduiactef nf lh Bow had not suffered from any such
c hange. The dingy old ci.rn r Bknd Uttla appatl to tht mavnga houae huntr. A smseptibiiitjr to the eharm aa lerlyiiig th. dlngineaa, enough to asalti : tpm ar a ! -ii abi. place f raaMeaofi had in most Inatances prored symptomjiti'. and in the general run of nwBOUM r- we had found new friemi-. I ' ve ONW that th. link inu-1 one day turn, and tin- present oeeaaloo 011ed inor- than m of us vAith ugue for-bodine.
Nj. 10 had been "To it. famished," i-o we could not hop..- for nn introlueiinto the nas" twins through tin custoamry ran guard f houaatsofd gds. there was nothing for it but to XMBnSa jtir soc.l- in pntienee. and to keep a 'wiko'M tor tluir arrival in the rl. -li. v Wert baking ten at Mrs. Delaae's, anil diseuwlng somewhat dolef allj the pjnhaldlllUa of the new tmam y. when the aaaad of hieta driring fatta the BeUJ fc nt u all to th- window with a tush. Yes, there Qstf were! A 11". Iwaring a small quantity of :.) drew up lefore the dOOT of No. pi. A young man in a tourist suit jumped out. nnd waa followed up the Hep- bv u gil l dteaeed vatlst i too ekshoratel) ti hi ta ;ueot 'lante with 1 1 i tri l!"W notion of aaataal aleeane'-. I he man ease a
pull at th Im II. nm I no response itntneltately forthcoming, he und hi- eomlaninn . lift.il 1 lie limwlli' nf the
I doubi knackt r and rouned the echoes
ire. and the fa
it of iur hostility.
that we. toe original u.liaieTaiii . f.-i paed as lasportani element In thf ..-,-, oi;-ne-- of the p- ir a- the pump at the eo.ner of the rusty .dump of ahrubs that did duty f.-t garden in the middle ol the Row, a aa thejr -.mMnaiM to stand ii their head-, meta-
i phorieally speak t g. . v.-p. ratinply in- : different to the existence of an andi
ene., try ing to frown them down into a mora eonttialloaal attitude. Yet it WM strange that they should se.-m eontent la be ,.t severely al. .. for aa far aa enUers weat tl.ey might hare lived an adeeart i-',..nii: the p..-t-
tii. in rarely brougaf tberaa letter, nno a summer merged Into autumn, a etmage like that affecting the season ame over the offending household. The girl" smart toilettes, f which no it. ra was ever rei.. w..l. tiegan to hnik iatled and shabby. M.e drew the light cloak, ibsign.d f. i s-immer weather, io..!i a.iselv nlMiut h. r -boulder, but
ewindldawcoldthronarhtha bmeoand
. hiTotis. antl she shieiel miserably. The little fa. a ander the bic hat, w hose
udaoaaa feather had long U'en inno- j rem "f enri. gran white and pinchd. an 1 the eyes had a frightened, wide- I . ' .. . i i . ti ... i
: Olsetl look'. 1 H" same ions waa rruev uu , 1 in the face of the man. a- he Ktoo! for I 1 i ra together drummli almleaatyatj ' the w indow pane. Men w ho looked like dans erata se-n ta heqaenl the dor-; ! The airl'a appearance intheatreet
ur-w an occurrence .f im ri'a-ing rarit. 'I, n eeasl n!'oL- t'.i. r. and had it tu t bei n for a glimp- i n and then of a pale face flitting past an upp. rwindoW, aW migh' have believed she had b-en spirited away. It was the man who went to mark t now. mo-tly of an rsAlnsr. and arm. d slwst - W ith theof-
fendlna bashet, no lam holy r lie of ;
the Ii nie when lif- had - t." .1 a game
to le played with appropriate toy.
I would haveiriven -otnet hing ti dare
to araaa the row and open my armatn
those i.H.r. forlorn thlnga. mit .Mrs. tlalana k. it lTnxeTed watch. The ron
as a row had shown no ntjrn of relent-
ing. U ho w a I. to fly in t In- face f th general ver.'ict? So I iu-t did i.otl.ing. and wa- nu-erable. tr- ing in vain to ktee tnr eyes and my thought. frttn the h"iise over the Way. One dar mutter approached a crisia. flcsalll. my mail. had jut informal ire
lhat she had seen the doctor call twice at No. 10 on the preMuu dny . ami remain a long time on ea h ecnaion. That girl nix t i. uslv ill dy inp. erhnps. laaajld keep away n Ion.' t. ami I ii mied mi nnieklv from BUT SCBt with
the intention of rutin iil' .t u ' r ny hat and !ak. At that MUBBBBf the; clatter of heai v wheels urr the rbhle- I
-1 ii-o i r. te! ii. Bstantfan ta vhe street What aau there kta me moled to the pot. A great yellow aaneh with hue., herahlic eiubhuon meut. , 'rixen i.y a v. I i. winged cjach man, had drawn Bp In front of No. 10. 'the txiwil red man holding on behind
jump 1 ' wn and rave a knock thnt : bt Iba r st ol i be Hw ta it par j I I. r windows in time to fee the lu"t obvious dowager duchess disappeaf through the d lorway. What eonld it mean? Had some dan of high i -'ate ' :!il ;f th. ir !- iffi rli gs. and railed to I play the part of Lady llouatlfttl? Then I remembered that from Peestn'i attle eoutd be obtaim d a apital rleW of the I in w tenant-' liist Jh.or front, sad Naught smldenly- by :i Iretiy ..curios- ' ity. blinding me to all sense of decency, I scampered an the stairs nml arrived ! at Ihc ittle window at the motneiit wh'ii the strange visitor wa erorsitig i the threshold f the room where i goesaed the invalid lay. From wln rel Stood 1 BBW IhC p -or little white IgOTi spring apoa her eoneeveawide, pale I j - parted as though she belndd a vision- ttien full back on the instant
among her pillows, hiding her fa.-.- in
her ham!-. Another moment, ana ine i-itor was by the bedside, bending over her, and what followed cnm BM as a blurred tangle of oarcaaaa and emotion, in whi. h the BStn etandffMJ on the other side of th- ld was al-o ii - elude.!. Th.n l larned away, startled suddenly into propriety by the eon acJoaaneai of tears running down BJ face. a veek later the rreat yellow ear-
' riage drove up for th- lent time liefore the aVsar "t No. 10, where i' daily Spleearanee la the interval had cone far .. . i. . .. 1... ;, I. ...I
lo compensate wie i.o . u.,, """ j aadergonc at the handa f the new tenants. The dowatr. r sail.d in in hcff
usual rustling state, and returned siirmrtintr a bundle of shavl-. ...it of
which I Ied a familiar, pathetic little
face. The husband foiiowm i mmi, and the faces ..fail three shone lik. sunshine after rain as they entered the eoaeh am! clattered -ut .f High Bow. Neither of the pair pave u- -" mueh aa a baekward lo.k. but the little tn.od-of-all-work. auperintending the lading ol a "fly" with portmanteau belonging ta
her master, cried iniaeraiuy on me doorst-p. and that was the end f it. antl an f ; the Ron were decidedly out of eoneelt with ourselves and with one another.
It had been a variation on th theme f If red and the t)aks. and we bail .listinguished ourselves in the part of the neatherd's wife, w !,. D a little nu.re Iis carnaaenl might hna placed aa la per manent touch witfi th. British aristocracy. For. although wa w ere net ft u to learn the winde f the story, tht fact of the intimate connection of the couple with that august body was established beyond aoubt. Bat by ta.-it "iis :t ...... :. nirelv intide of the III ill
in. ii... ..I - - - our neighborly talk. They bad been the bm ans of dispelling our Illusions aa to the unerring character 'f "'ir instim's and perceptions, and Ihn subject remained a painful one. I i tie. saw the girl again, lut only ft a moment. I had gone to stay with a friemi in Loudon, and we had walk", one afternoon to the park to WUfet the carriage returning from th- drawing ii m. She was in n- of Ihem, stately bat radiant, in Budding feathers an! aaahing jewels. A princess, every inch at her Bow eonld wa hate mtarend the vi.'tis? Our eve- not. a look 1
s i s sä w-ftM s ' It I --i'Bsj. I THE NFW LIFE IN CHRIST.
The Monetary Problem, jj
I i.l i
a SOUND MONEY." , , rdi uini Dolaatve ri.ru. of be Bdseeetea el MM .ii I in a .i.i nl.
URAL DEVELOPMENT. Mnraata fonditlon Brannbl Attuui
l l .lil siwntlar.l lrulllre. ilh. . POStefl .
coarnltion cr. pi Into h
then slit
turned away with a l!o-h and a littlt toaa of the head. Thej Imdnnaieral I ii-. then, and our attitude of hostility, and had resented it and beea pniaed by it. while appearing t Ignore It 1 wish -.i all OUW have known bow Bt at 1 had on been ' boWingoal my hand, apd my eyes tilll with tears, which I. wed BOni of th ir bittern. to the fai t tii.it it ami a noble linly who had ad even bm the eat dhrect, For at the moment I cOUld think of BOthlng but the leal opportunity of humni love. Good Weed.
FOLLOWING A PRECEDENT. rhe ri. ver uv In Prfsteb n tnveen Keepi r ,t B'vea n Mb : fell-l.e .l.l.lae.
We . an hardly blame, perhaps, tht aatisfaetion which BBOBSuited Ktigant in a certaia eoart aaea pined from at opportunity that chat... asiVC him. A lodge, traveling on circuit, had h.-fort hitn in a small t ouutry town I ease ic which a tavern heaper was held ua tha payment on a !.n.d transaction d a bwge amount of money which he had net agreed aelaltcly bo pay. TlMeoanrl d- dared that, although hi- aureetnent
was not on record, it was invilvei By cfinstrm tinn. or implie.l. in his participation in a business proec-ding eonMi ted with it. After judgment had been r-nder.-d th- court adjourned for lim. r. and the judge found that the only eating boom in the piaoewea kept by tbedeteadnnt in the ease which he had iuet decidid. H- also foand thnt the defendant personally superintended the preparation I of the BM als. and the food wa- chnrged for on the "Fnropean plan."
The pj Ige ealled for two tsnileil -eir. which, with the other food he ordered, were brought to him done t a turn. II- Bte thetn. and at the end of th- tin s ( the Mil was presented tahluB, Re waa! BBtoaished la read on it the follow ;np.
item : MTvro boiled eggs, 15 cents; to chtchean, at "5 -ents. i.äo." lie called the proprietor a. id said: "Hon is this? I hav. had no ehlcheenTi whr do you eharge me far thetn V
"Those are constructive chics ins, vour honor." answend the hst "What?" "Whv. tpe ate implied 'n the j.'ga. vou know, your honor." the man yer
sisted. The judge bagna to utiderstan nnO said no nmre. Üowevei . whi n he Ii inded in a fivel.dlar bill to .av for the dinner he found that the innkeeper bad jjiv n him hit fell change, withotit charging for the "con-tni. tivc." chicktM Irtlnrll Kiee rreas.
poarlay is the tribute that vice payi tovutue." The world's tBUghbsn meat to-day will aot m notion tyranny aad oppreasioa ander panaina label that diacioaea it- ha tent und purpose, i'.nr worda and delusive phrase -of neeamity are OSed, like the livery of ll.av. fi iu the s TV ice ol the vil, to lx'1-tcr ev ry scheme aimed at hu.iau rights. F.v ry prostitution of government to private aat s. every undue advantage of th.- few over the many, ..s. rv thing d .ne in public affairs thnt would pull the bandage from the eyes of the little godde-s with the scab s, and Are her cheek with Indignation. MUat be- done cov e rtly in the name of justice. Only with popular catch words as niotines an the BTCal heart of Aineriea be
iaeetved. Collectively, la the hatareet
i ' .. f.nlilie weal, we are hom st. J h
m.-rieiii wsinnlti are nloneera la "of
. ..... - - I 1 the people an-! by the people, "and some of the an trodden paths in our front
-'em eouallv alluring, ami must be trav
eled and tried before we know whether
the lead to better and higher ground.
This should enjoin us to pal i.tie- w ith
nil honet iliffereiiees of ODiniOU. btlt
I vniK-risv ie-i rvi s no shield. In the
diseussion of monev it will not do to
impute dlehoneety to all who u-e the
t.n:.s "sound moin-v,' "honest money
"eh. an mom v." etc., for it would not be
true. Yet hoi.e-t HeOOlS Will takl hc-d
pf what these t. rms imply, and see if
injustice is ta t l.e.tig parad n nmiertts
u-iial cloak.
Sound nioi.ev in. aiiS stable, i-ecure-
Btoamy, it means a basic awney pan
portioned to the credit money resting
en it. Was tht ba . excessive with guld aid silver both as standard money.
with two and a half billions CXCesS of
paper money above the world's specie?
It not. was the n-dij.-iion of that base
bv ne.irlv one-half conducive to sound
in .' It has bei :i shown bv trial that
the new base i.- too small, and has to
i..' siii. i.b met. ted. l"'-s that (". n.on-
.'t.i its siitlicicncv? Is not the un-
boun!nes of the present s stt m exact-1 s i i .. .1 .. 1 ......1 .1.1 I v
jy nitusuieu uv me- Nvmnran w riiake it sound? Would not a further reduction of basic money be doubling the present weight of the gold und be farther eondacrre to the spurious -.mi:, !tu cm. tele:, d for? Ifoi ly quality and not piantity of 1 SSlc money is to be considered, why da Uta borrow to increase the baae? To call that sound tinance that projts a mountain of rrt .lit Bsoney into the air. the enetna of Whfeh has no metal base whatever. Means to reverse all our previous conception of things. If tbil "g' s." we shall have to cut) gel our brains to luvt nl
a new term for unsoundi ess. I' would
aat do for the advoeatat of the new ilvirr to mlniit that an exclusive cold
has.- a (tart I values by taereaaini the . rvri 1 I
purchasing ju.wcrot money, l ins. in the nice of bttlh nl of debt, would ban admission thnt contracts had been impaired, the legal right to do which doee not exist; but then- an implied
Emissions from wl.ich there is no log
ical aaaape. Tin allegation that a return to bi llll'tM llism will make "cheap money"
is ;.n admission that thedt partim- from it iti.nie tb-ar mon. v. What Ihm- neaol
II tha bamv arguments to show that the
. .. - - - r, r" gold standartl had no effect to im rt SM the burden of debt or h BM I the- price at land and its producta, if rt tracing our itepa by rt monetlrlng silver will
make cheap money? The use of th.
term "chean moDcv" is a conf.ssion
that money can be inanipulatrd a- to
itK value. If there are some who no
m.t am what the two contrary argu
inents imply, it will be shown more clearly vvbeu reduted to its lowest term-, v i.. the depart ure 'mm bim tal-
;-tn had no effect on values, but cm reat oration of bimetallism will nmki
Cheap money and be calamitous.
W.r. it not for debt and credit, annaey manipulation would be without
: ii ohi. ct and would cea.-e. Ihc sole
object of metallic money i-.that nature, bj thl output of the precious nn tals.
helps to limit the supply, inis is more o.sitive restrict ion than mankind have yet shown thems Ives capable of. Time Will show the folly of disturbing the ofn relation. If reatiletlen of coin age amttes eearer ananey for credltora, that debtors w1m outnuinlter the oth rs ti n to one. when they learn the game, will not, it is feared, stop at II to 1. nut will inflate paper Bw&ey to a min ona tltaarl in retaliation. With the BfeOney lords in a hapless minority, where" will It stop? It la useless to ; rgiic with those w ho contend that the
Ulm of gold is fixed and unchatigeabie without regard to its quantity or demand, who prove its stability by measuring it bv itself. Nothing but a sur-
gical operation would serin to h dp such a case. If their i mories are not 0 short, they can recall the time when the nation of F.urope made their crusade againif the yellow metal; when it wa- demonetized in the German states. Holland and P.-lgium. and railed again-t as ailver is now. and for the -ame cause. We must abolish debt, at . . da establish the money of the constitution.
H J HAvUWB
'I I... I. .: . . litb Reg ler, wh.t-h
bj B0 sen I ., i. he calltd a yellow jour
nal, diacubse as loliovvb conuuion in , t untry and city during thia gakl at ami'
end, trust-brve ding eru:
Political ecoiioiniata, stuuents of
soeiology, u, will u those who are ncitbei . have noted, xvitk varying not. of alarm, uneasiness, or severity, the
movement of p.juilat ion froni toe country, its farms ami its village, to the cities, which has been m marked a
feature of the? last two decades. There
wen periods when this movement was met with acclaim l.y the petal of the - . . . - uh.
growth of their am Diuona towns, wna exult itlon us giving evidence of the at-
lr..eiiv. ne-ss ol 1h ir various eiiits.
Later, whoa the bubble of good times
burst, and industry s.-emtd to be allud
ed with a partial paralysis, and there
were crowd i of torn men on me atresia and the authorities were bes,iiged to
dispense charities, the same papers bunt Btedtht congestion and plead with
the unetnployt d to go naen to tue um With owner- of vacant city lots, the own rs of new adklltlona, wh bad bought by the aer. BBd that they might
sell by the square foot, woo aaaron um exulting atBsatiotis of the press and
viewed the in rush from the c.umry with warm approbation. When the bubble eeUapaed Up - of theaa whohad
not let go t!. Lr holdings, and some wuo
had. taking back s. cuiity on them. isgaa t have a dim eotiseiousnesa that
Hiera waa something wrong tn the economic eondltionn that had caused the movement from tha enruis. But there la daepar significance to thil movement than the upbuilding of ambitious cities or the disposition of Bcrea in lots, or the advance of r.al aetata prices, the resultant of iBgeati a. It is the effect ol vast !oie- set in motion by the economic changes that have made the last half of thii aantnry ao epochal, and whieh 1 are Operated in ev ery land where civllization has ma.ie those changes pos- ... . . .1 - ... .i .......
si i ! e . It M not alone tue t unei oiuie where this transit kou of population has beea so atroni as to draw attention and comment, but from every cocidry
of Europ. conic tüe samt ßtones oi
eity growth at th. expense "t tiie countrs. The perccntape of growth of
ei'les every whe.-e outruns that of the state or nat ion.
Keen wh.re this sums to 1 the ex-
eeption when a al ngk city is compared
with it- state. as rJostou, wnoss UWMSV - - - lv -
act of grown, i ct. ween ioei vun i-"
was 2 " and that of the state 'J1.S7. or
Philadelphia, wh.re the p. reentnges
were respectively '- . and l3t.7T,tne
alight margin is lue to me wcioww under tht atati " t' the numerous other towns and nies In the state 1 bat have
i.. it receiving their .-hare of the cxodus. The minor causes are many, but
the major cause is the Introduction of
lab r saving machinery em Use farma
that has produced an even greater dis-
plac. it. nt of labor than uns tue same BBMshlnery in n.unufactur. s. The productive enpnetty of the farm hand has
beeB immensely liicreascu. ineun.ou
over, one band can- !"r ti ucrts, in
the prairie- siati s tlx- ratio is one to
r.L'. In the latter the production of
ata in la C50 bushels, and of meat l.udü -:. a V 1
pounds per hand ciigap-'U. 1 ne .aoor of thr. o men fi r a year n a Nor h Ia-
jtkineoa atntes, panoneea
Itilrrnu tliiowl sundii? ii-lmul LtsaN fur Jmir 1-. l-.UU 'I el. t .l MMMnMBO ; ..-, Miiii.r rrin 1-4. PsaataUy taaptsa fr m B leuberanjotm l GOLD EX TKXT-Ut IBS iact of Clod rul in your heartt.-t'ol 1:11. JlKAl Id ' lantt:17 MtdM TIM K Wi It ten durlna I'aul'a flrat Koassa Imprt-senment. about A. I. O. PLAt'K -I'aul'a prlaon t Koine RtJLKlRf - n re, tmpi rot of u..m; ajblnut. netvtrnor of Judva PLACE IN BIBLE IUST l: Y I 'aul a tminUoiinuiit la rfvrrJ to In AetA(.aL rhu ta no mentiun of the Colotalani In th.- Act, hut It t probable that the church tber was found 1 while I'aul w u at I Epheau. la that nflhborho. .l (Acta IS), i DiVIBlONfl F TUB BOOaw-l The Introauetlon 0:1-13), Includine the irreetlng. thaiikMKlvitis and prayer far theColoaalsn church. 2 A loi-trinal potior (1:14 to 2:3). a eontroveretalisotloBtlst toltl)aasUaM certain trrors. 4 Moral si : I Stloa n.-to ' 44). i. Psrsoaai irseetagi 4fT-tt). KX 1'LAN A'l'i KY. I Ci Ballad vv ith t brist. The old Life- Dead.- It has U n w i --ly said that I "to learn what tu love-iii.d w 1 at to hate, vihnt to hoimr and what t" despise," is the nuipona of odnaatton. it may Ik: addM that what one is alive to, and , to what he is dead, are the t. st of character; so that he who bv- what he ought to love anil hate what II L.iteful to (.d, who bonore hat is honorable and despises what is unworthy, who tears. So do w roue' and delights in what
ever is pure and hly, who is l-ad to sin and ulivu to righteousness he is "the perfect man in Christ Jesus," and ia "nimie meet to i- partaker of the inheritance f the saint.-- in light." and has Uten translated by Ood "into the kingdom of 111 dear Son" (1:12, W). 11. The Uesurree-t ion with Christ to m New Life. Vs. 1-4. But hi thai ia
dead to sin is tint a dead Uing. Thus Paul says .f hbnaelli "1 Bta crucified with Christ; m-v -rth.1. ss 1 live; yet Bet I, hut C hrist liveth In me; and the life which 1 now live in thOBOeh I live by the fuith of th son of Gotl. who lOVed me, and gave Himself for me" (Gal. 2:20. See also lioni. 0:4. 5. J, 10; Eph. 4:2-24; Col. 2:12). Disciples arc branehM Of the True Vine. Their life is the same as tin life of the vine. The Mine life flows unseen through vine and brauchen, la Godl" "A- the infinite sphere of all yOBf life, your love, your aspirations, your voluntary Be tivities." t 'owl. -. When Chrif-t shall apfsaart'1 R. v.. shall i- mani-fi-t.-.L In this world bv the coming of
His kingdom, hy the fruits of His life, und at last by Bin glorious eotning in the elonda of fiory. "Shall ye also appear w i 1 1 Him la glory:" both in thin present time-, in the fruits, which grow from the inner life, as the dusters cover the vim- and show what it i and manlfaat Use glory of ita life, ami also In His final coining in glory. 111. I'm t ing Off the Ohl Man and His Deeds. Vs. .VP. "Th. an vcraes contain tha negative side of Paul's appeal." Harry. Imtempemam l ona of the worst and most typical inanif .-stations nl the ohl and worldly nature, it f st.-rs nil the ,-vilsi sK)k..-n of alx.ve. as dampness and darktuss f.-:ir crawling laaweta and verinin. It is th. hot house f crime. "When our pjdgea tell u from the hannh that nine teotha of pnuparfann and crime nre caused by drink, and i.ur physicians that if only irngular tippling wer' aUdi-hcd half th.- cum nt sicknaaa of tha lami vrauMeenaa, and our statesmen that the ravage of strong drink are etpial to thewe of the historical ne-out g-s of war. fainiueand peetilenee combined) anrely to swallow such it clut f spoil the appetite of hell must bare bet a still nmre t nlai gadli and the BSOntbof hell made yet wider." OeOrga A. lain Smith. IV. Put t ing on the New Man and His Pada. Ta 1"-1. 12. "Pat on therefore:" As the necessary result of the n-xx- life. Dr. .L-n-hir. n speaks of these verses a a b seri ptinti of "the ir rmcnta of the renewid soul." and "t he waxd-
kotri farm
neit. rial to bteai! Li DO BS M "i for one
year. Th. rural population ot this ; foht )f Jlu! (.onst.rraU.t, h0uI... country incre:-!. during the cheade j T,,mi(1.r.iIlr, st;iI,lN ,. ,
-90, but 12 per cent., wane uuring the same time that pro! action of wheat inert used 44 per o ut., that of corn 43 per ' Bt and that of out M jerccnt. OB the average one mnn on the farm Bayer can do the work that required five men M years ago. Ami this displace- , ment of farm lnlor in thi country has 1 been accompanied with an in. in. use in- i cr. ase in the area ef land Bttdkef cultlration. Between ItttnnwJ I W0 107.100,- 1 0D0 aerea hart- bee B brought into tillage bj the siat. s vm -t of Ohio. In part this ! 1', . ta immigration, in part to the
displaced lnb.r turning to be virgin
Temperance stand- among these vir
tues. They flourish in it atmosphere. Note. Is this list of v irtues practical, nnd noble, and worthy? Yes.; for he who h..s these has the elements of B bat are called the hemic virtues. These ure the household heroisms, the dally nnd hourly cultivation of the pialitiea which asnJha hei oaa and martyrs, lane ktraa well says: "By the side of Its sincere and lofty beauty, the 'heroic virtue-' t'liilNxlifd in the world's type of eaeelleaaoi show ruhyer and glaring.
ilk-- si me daub representing a soiaier, the sign-post of a puldi1 house, by the
med labor t urt.ing to - v.rgtn , ng. lie's w hitc-n b.,1 riakma
aoil. but. espec.any among ti.e tili eon vent walls. More self-
population, the hsplacctl l.ave moveu
cityward. Excluding from tirbanitcs those in villages of less than l.uoo population, tha urban pOpttlatloii imOeased between !-- i-."i per cat., while the rural ii.crea-td 12 per cent. Fxclnding New England cities, the larg.st percentage of growth. lf.0S, vvas In citiei of from S.inin to 12,000, and the next pr-at.-t. "."0. xvas in citi. s lietwecn 12.-1.C 1 and 240.OO0.
Time t Do mir! Ii I ng. Mrs. htlmnia hTary, it was one o'ctoctl thi morning arhen you got In. I hearl you. t .rv Well, ma'am, if I wa yon I'd
'ake something to make BM ettCf bet t r. 1 '00k my shoei off down in the kitchen ai d i i t make no more noise than a rat would. I've been kind ot wtirrled nlmiit you for a good while. Chlengo Times-Herald.
Vrril, t oontrrlinlanee. Ac.-ording to goldit ? stories told Is being dteCUVareo and mined in such quantities that it must sfKvn become a drug, if tlnir previous claims are not ridiculous. These stories are open to the grave suspicion of being manufactured to create the impression that there is no n ssitr for the cinnge nf safea t. furnish the iieees-ury per
capita of aahv But the fa t is the nicie abundant the crop of gold, the aaora is silver needed as a oounterbeJ- , ane in the carrying out of the well- j aatabikthed prlnciplea of bfnaebtllhBBs. The fn silver men welconie the dis
covery of mora gold, and i's coinage as money.-Illinois State pegister. V.Irrtro-UaarwetUS. William (.ilb rt. phyru-ian to Qu en Ulaahrth from 154O to icon, studied the pheaomenea "f ambrr-rubb'ng svs-
tetnatloally, and was the ttrst to propose the term "electric" by which to distSnpulsh the forces thus broaght Into play from tl oe d u-to n.agnrtln Albanv Aig"x.
on the still convent wans, .vmrr sen-comma-. d. BKNU heroic lirinii. s-. more anattamnt for the popular estimate, more of everything stmug and manly, will find a nobler deed in sulxluing passion and cherishing fwglveneaa, which the world think folly ami piritl ss. than anywhere ehe. 'Beth rlahi ihatraleth a spirit than he that taketh B ity.' " Ipant Point. aaM forms nf p.ibb- study are attempta to satisfy soul lituig r by eating the dishes instead of the 1 inner. Man may inherit but cannot merit eternal life. Sin- should be vvn-hed bv the blood of Chriat, not whltewaahad by the devil. Chri-t's yoke will not fit stifT-necked people. The rewards f Heaven are not based . . ' ,.M 1 1 .
oil the sie I our sn .nn, u " Ingle-hcartcdness of our service. Ram's Horn. Inprovrmfit ollkt rfcnnrP. At a recent meeting of the .V adcmie den Science, Paris. Mr Mar y present
ed s new anoBCnjrajNI BTBBm eaKsiw distinctly that me an scan-ely re. ognie any difference betwatB thi original u.i .- and its repcdu.-tioaj, n the aanie asjeenfna Ut, Duaaar deetniheal s new metb'Hl of amplifying the tonuda of the phonograph just Maphotograq In aahwffmi it i- dona h tnlngr tht phonograph to Bpaah Into a se.-ond phon.'vrmph hav ir ? a cyllner of Isrgei diameter.
w Ihv
