Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 47, Number 33, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 April 1905 — Page 3
PEtKE BAI) BOf BROAü,
kl;i 'I
S3
The Bail Boy Wi itcs to His Chum from I ii The White Chapel District aud the Craze for Oiu Gives Hi Du 1 a Sen re iu the Tower.
rCtiprrUrbt I '. o J tsopbM. Bowles.) London. England My Dear Causa: I ,. , lived four isttei roaterday, Mid lt ma q mi- boav ick. Qui, hut if I could In home there with you and go ,t mi to the awimailag bole and get in nil rvr end play tag IP WW BBUd, ami
tie ioii !i en I yell nil ell " onus tad clotii'-s or on nur cl
.in' ami sinn in mh: s, ael t he poll ere coming, ah our elotliM under our run ui ross lots with no ,11 l gel in :i barn elld put ( end tlry our hair by
pounding 11 with a buck, to we wouui Boi get licked whea we fot home, life would be worth living, but bow nil I )., . . to dodg people on the itreeti and them look MOM when they btei
rover Know your Li zee of good old
Say, i . you wii: hick in being a d
r vi
INI
CT.. IN ANT.
the Whit.- Chapel district, end I kept looking booh fat (est on or too imo or women would Iii mu no the back with but. : ' i huttc, und laugh like au insane at)iuiu iuiua i bo you know, those Paonte wuo IdriaJ 1 1 b tad üuUbi ere differeat iiuui our American murderers, our I murderera win oauii ou with a ejetlOi POO you with a Joke Oi their tongue., end, and give you bock oar
faro when tin.-) hold you up, and if tbty murder ui they will uu a easy
aud My you nut with )our hands aeroes u yoiii bread tmi nuui) UM coroner, out your White Chapel mur derer warn-, to disembowel you and CUl you up latO chunks, and throw your remaina bead teal toto something nasty, um U you bare moeey aoougb uu uui- peraoo to bti) a Untie ol gin, your murderer is as well satisfied as though ba got a roll. .Smut iu u iu our countrj commit murdera la order to del uiu.n y to lav aw.t ao tie y tan lire a nice, respectable lift; and be good ever afterwsrda, but your slum inurd rT in London just kills btcauaa hiH tloiuacb cfOtrea B drink, and Wheu '"' gds it bO la tauj 1 1 tv a tiger that had eaten a native ol India You uiu) think thle letter la a eolemn oecaaloa because I tall you about thing! Uuit are not funny, but if you ever traveled abroad you will Und that there is ao tun aaywlere except iu America unless you make it or buy it. We arc taking in the solemn things firat in order to get dad's mind in a condition mi he can be cured of thing! he tblnka ail him. I took dad to :e Tower ol London, and when we got out ot it be wanted to have America interfere and have the confounded pi a. e burned down and grass .-own on the alte and a park made of It. The tower covers IS acres of ground, and the:-" are neue th.r.L-s brought to a viattor'a atteatl n that ought to be lorgotteu than you ever thought about l renumber attending the theater at home and seeing Hi' hard the Third played, and I rrraember how my sympathiea were aroused for the two little
boy princes that were murdered oy Kii liard he Third, hut I thjught it aaa a take play, and that there eraa notliing true about it, but, by goah, it eaa tight here in the Tower of London that the old hump backed cuss murdered those little princes, and dad and 1 Stood rit:ht on the spot, and the beef-eaur who t.howed us around told us all Ut particulars. Dad was in dlcnaat and said to th" beef eater:
I suppose It Is rii-'ht here that we In lerited the denire to lynch and bum ut the slal.e the negroes thai commit rime end won't confess at home. When an) thins is born in the blood ncan'. gat rid of It without taklag a dose ol patriotlaai and purifying the blood, an 1 I auvUe you never to vi.-it the Tower ol London, aolaai ju want to feej like KoinK out and killing eOBM one that 1 tied up wiih a ro"le MearuiK of these murders and at bag the place wheie t hey wr' Committed does rjot give you an Idea of fair play and you don't feel like taking some one of roar atae when you ficht, but you gat to thinking that if you could catch a cripple who couldn't defend himself vet would like to take a baseball club and maul tli" Ituffll I OUt Of bim. Von be-
WHAT ROOSEVELT DECLARED ROOSEVELT'S BEST WAY OUT
It May be Necessary for the Presideut to Make It Still Moi e :i.jhatic. PraaMaot nooaareli left Waahlngtoa for hu aoataera trip amid a buai ot spacutotiHi. The prcdniion that he will be the republican audida'e lr president in 1WH In ut UmltOe to a ien:satlonal newapaper which was, ostensibly at least, his Bon-iupporter in I'jol, It is achOOd by republicans at Washington eorratnoodonta w.'.o have
in oilier maiT-rs wrno n as u in pireo bare cootrlbutod their aalte to the third term propaganda. It Decomes latereeting, therefore, observes the vi baay Argue, to recall the exact
will pr
come imbued with the idea that if yoa attered iy Mr. Roosevelt to th
wi nt to war you would not want t'j I stand up and light fair, but that you WOUld like to get your enemy in a bunch , and drop dj namlte dOWB OB blm from a i balloon, and kill all In light, and sail away with an in ai.e la Ugh. Que. but another day in this tower, and I would want to .'o home and murder ma, or the aeighboi The only thins we have got in America that compares with the Tower of
'CrVra-
MfeVlflS';!
a
THE BEKF EATI K- STA MPLDE.
America. Instead or a aubject of Croat Britain, becauae rou have got to be rich or be hungry here, and if you are too rich you have got uj appetite. You have beard of the roa.-t beat of cid England, but nobody eats it but the duke., and bank' rs. The working Been never area saw a picture of a maet beef, and yet we look upon all Englishmen as beef-eaters, but threefourths of the people in this town look hungry ami dUcouraged, and they BBVer aaop to know whether they arc goin to bare aay aupm r, i weiu i. own to a market this morn lug where ilie :.i:d ii.; iia-.- uüd the very poor people buy tactr supplies, ud it would make you si k to see them. They b iv small loaves of bread
; nnj 'a w . r b oi tea, and that is ami if a man is working be ma of the bread to work for an i the wife ot mot hot buys a
or a quartet of a cabbage, and
L'-ne w ith a ptei e Of m at
km as i ti.-Oi bail, and that
London and It? associate- the luti;ert sausage factory In Chi' a"(. where Leutgert got tis wife into the factory, murdered her, and is alleged to have jcut her up In pieces and made einige of the meat, liven t ho Diecee with Kris-
D0 you mean to tell me you stood itle jQ to nlg dogs, boiled the bones until
and a brcai : takes lun
cat mi
Uia;. . .:
ObOUt as
uia.s supper, with a grw;.-r of boar
bav, the i hunk of Uu at with a b04M that an American butcher would ut row at B dOg that he had never boOB introduced to would ba a baagaet for a lare family over here i have been down into the White Ofeapel aiatrlCt, which is the Five Vo.nls of London, and of the thou Bands of tOUgh people 1 .-aw there was nut a man but looked as though be would Cttt your liver out for a shillinu, and every woman was drunk on gin. What there is about gin that makes it the national beverage for bad people beats me, for it looks like water, taatee like medhine and smells like Bold Storage egs. At home when a Boraoa takes a drink of beer or whisky be Bt least looks happy for a minute, nn 1 maybe he laughs, but here nobody laughs unless somebody fccts hurt, and that se ms to tickle everybody la the alte l 'bagel district. The pOOfde l'k mad and savace Whoa they are not drinking, as thoanjh they were only looking for au opportunity to commit murder, and then when they take a drink of gin. instead of smiltiiK and smachlBg their lips as though it was Kood and luaed tliem up. they look as though they had been stabbed with n dirk and they put on a look of revenge, as though they would like to w riin? a t httd'B neck or cut holes in the people v meet
Two drinks of pin make;-, a man or woman loo!; as though they had swallowed a buzz saw 1 always thought drinking llono made people think they Were enjoying themselves, or that they took It to drive away rare and make them forget their sorrows, but when the,, people drink gin they BBei to do it the way an American drinks carbolic acid, to end the whole busi Hess quick At hoaaa the drinker drinks to make him feel like be was at a picnic Here every drinker acts like a suicide, who only hOpea that he may commit a mur der before the gin ends his career And there are hundreds of thousands of people In thin town who have BO ambitiofl except to Ret a bit of Iv.-ead to sustain them till they can pet n dtink of Kin. and gradually they let up on bread ntlrely and feed on gin. and look like mad dogs and snarl at even body they egg, as much as to say: "What are vor; gotag to do about It?" a Rood square Aawrleai meal would give thafg I fit. and they woidd ro to a hospital and 'ic if the meal could Bot be got out of them tiueh. bui : was itiad te get out of
around and let Hn hard kill taoee I princes without uttering a protest or protecting them or riniiiR for the po
lice? By the great horaapoOB, ) i mat have been accessory to the fact, ami you ought to be arretted and bung," and dad pounded his cane on the Itoae Boot and looked savage. The beef-eater got red in the face and said: "Begging your pardon, don't you know, but h'l was not 'ere at the lime. This 'ieiory was made six 'undred years ago." Dad bagged the man's pardon- and told him he supposed the boys were murdcrd a year or two ggo, and he gave the beef eater a dollar, and he was so erat died I think lie would have had a murder committed for dad right th re and then if dad had Insisted on You feel in golnc throiiRh th" tower Ifl .- you was in an American slaughter houFe. for it was here that l int's and queens were trheaded by the dozen. They showed us axes that were use,! to behead people, ar.d Mocks that the heads of the victims were laid on. and the placee where ihe heads fell on the floor It seemed that In olden times when B 1 inc or a queen got too say. the an'i klBga or queens would go to the pala e and ca h : he l.inti r q-o en In the act, and take them by the neck
they would run Into the sewer, dissolved the remnants in concentrated lye. and -old the sau!-af,e to the lumber Ja I .a it; the pine woods
I eapect Chicago w-Hl buy that sail i sage factory and make a show of it. as , London does the Tower, and you can go ar.d see it. and feel that )o'u are as full of modern history as I am of ancient history, here In Londorf. I could see that dad was getting ner- I
; root ev. ry time a new beheading wa(described to us, and I thought it was lime to wake him up. In gptag through
papers and through them to the people, on the night of November 8, in an hour when his great triumph at the polls was already apparent. ' On the 4th of March I shall have served three and Ohe-half y ars. und this three and one half years ton-ti tutes my first term. The wise custom which limits the president to two terms regards the sub.-tame and not the form. L'nder no circumstances will I be a candidate tor or accept another term." The two words "or at cept ' great!) strengthens and solidify this solemn pledge. ' Plainer words were BBVOT poken." aaya the New York gam. Perba I that is. an overstatement. Gen. Sherman, when he said substantially hat he would not accept if nominated,
nor serve If elected, set the pace and made the model for all time, in declinations intended to decline. But, nevirtheless, President Hoosevelt's declaration aud pledge is sufficiently explicit so that to all it in question Implk - doubt of his sincerity, trothfulne ind good faith, and we would not presume to suggest that he reiterate It, with even greater emphasis had not men w ho '.aim to be bis frtOBda cast loubta which mUht more naturally have proceeded from source:- ) a 'pt1 hostility. "Repetition is th" mother of tdu Btion." There are times when to .-ay he same thing over and to ay it more
I emphatically. Is the attribute of ; strenkth. not the sign of weakn
! Furthermore, things have beau done ! and countenanced by the president. ! since November last, whidi need to explained ami divested of ail hint of . 'a -arism. . It was a mistake for Instance BD Ii I j the retirement of Cortelyou that is i to say. of Roosevelt from the republ lican national committee pro forma ! rather than real. It was a mistake to have Roosevelt - that Is to say. Coi ; telyou apjtoint a dummy acting chairI man: the national commitee should I hav! a real halrman. avoid of aaspl j : ion of white house dictation. It is so I natural for Pn 1 leal Roosevelt to like
power, ana to exeri . e 11 tor t!ie sane f activity, that it is thinkable that he permitted these things to be done in the honest belief that the hand of Mow
tnese irr tluail) BU huae-t i i tome the BU nt at piified an plication
i the 11
Westein Advice Concei ulnj? Venezuela from s Republican aTewipaper, The n ueia imbroglio affordsaftgai opportunity for Preaideal Booaerett to dttlate to the World that the .Monroe doctrine does not mean the United States U ihe polleemaa of the "anbb an a a and the i ' celreraf bankrupt South Amarlraa state . There is no doubt, says I he KanCity Journal (rep.), that ogeof the thief causes of the recklessness of the Latin republics in contracting debt.- an t of their refusal to psj thsm latbeooa" ni. nt ilm.se -tan s hav e that Uncle Sam
in from armed int r! riro; an BOW4 rs. As n n n notion i expl ided the for ali : cei i., i Whea ible little republics are n ulue that thoy mut be 1 stand on their ow n Lotless of 1 he S'atc departIgt ifl will be great. : I I uiid fort Irii ( uije BiSterially lessened.
The way go ver omenta are run in So.ith America is a disgrace to the Cam asiar ran I But an amendment cannot I i peeled until some delinquent state is given deserved punishment and made a wholesome example of for the beueflt of all. The Venezuela trouble would I a
good case to start with. President Csstro has authorized his tistal agent to .-ign a coat rat t by which about fgO.OOdv of . i.eut la bonds now held in Qse many, (Jrat Britain. France, Holland and Belgium are i, b, refunded St lour per cent., with payment guaranteed by the appropriation of one-half the duties collected at seven Venezuelan custom houses. The exact terms of the contract have not yet been made public, but it is understood that the seven custom houses affected w-ill be placed In charge ot collectors appointed for the syndicate repi nting the European bondholders. i his arrangement, of course, is simply another method ol doing the same thing whith was attempted several years ago Whea the United Slates Interposed to relieve Veneu- an seaports from a blockade which certain creditor nations had established. But this time It perhaps would be best for us to keep our hands off. The European nations Involved
have solemnly declared that they have no flesiRns against Venezuela except to get the money due them. The declarajon to this fTe, : should I- a pte.l as true and honest and the creditors of Venezuela should be allow ed a liberal ran-.-e of action to secure and collect their claims
Jesus Washing the Disciples' Feet Sunday School Leisoo lor Apr. JO, 1905 SpacU.ly Prepared far This Pr
LKSgON TKXT John 13 114 Merr.orj Verse 12. 14 Read a 1, of the chapter GOLDEN TEXT li ,uvt.rttu:ne an-rtt-'-Ool IU T! MK Thursday evenlr.e. t'LAt;E An upper room in Jerusalem CRIPTI'KK kl.l'KlitN1 KS. - Th WSTSiBSS Of J.-m- ..mit. at J Is Larger -Mat! '. . . U.lrO; Mark i .O-JT
Iw.U-P, L-.ke : e. i.
U bsl
Esriy
tne room wnere me o.u armor was ut- j voiM l)P srrn ana tlie , , ,. ,)f ror. Played the beef eater told us who worj Mfw hoan, RO oncer; that nr) man the different pieces of armor, and he W(vM perrPive tflP ronvenienre of such said at times the spirit of the dead came . an arranL.rmf.nf to a receptive third back to the Tower and occupied the ar- ,or;n nttitu ,,. or lo a si,uation whereby mor. and I noticed that dad shied at ' the whifp Bouse should say who shall some of the pi,. . s of armor, so w hen . ... ,... .... .,,.-,
r i
WS got rinht into the midst of it, and there was armor on every side, and dad and the beet ater Were ahead of nv. ami dad was waikini; fast in order to get out quick. I pushed over one of tho pieces, and it went crashing to the tloor and the noise was like a boiler factory 1 exploding, ami the dual of centuries rose : up. and the noise echoed down the halls. Well, you'd a died to see dad and the
beef eater
down on his küCSS, and I think he bepau
to pray, if he knows how, and he trembled like a leaf, and the beef eater got
behind a set of armor that Cromwell or some old du k u.-e.l to wear, and said, ' Wot la the bloody 'ell Is the matter with the h'armorf" and then a lot of other beef eaters came, and they
thought dad was the spirit of King John, and they stampeded, and finally I got dad to stop praying, or whatev.r It was that he was doing, and I led him out. and when he got Into the open air he recovi red and said. " 'Ennery, 'hl I
He who would avoid all hint of racialism must te. like Caesar's wife, above suspicion. We sincerely hope that the president win ie dtseuaded by no false nriae from WrtMTtg yet an
other declaration, which aboil forever I ut to sleep the thought that he is capable of BBplrtBg or consenting to the third term which the FaMo r of Hi-
i Pountrv rellr.n uished whic h nrewilont
Had turned pale and got th of our H1 .. . aHke
fori Id which no American. bOWSTST creaf will attain. VK THE POLITICAL DRIFT. If Sc, rotary Bhaw continues to do as well In Man h he'll catch up with the deficit in a little over two years N. Y. World. This bear hunt out Waat will give Nimrod Roosevelt a little practice for his crand octopos hunt next winter. Atlanta Constlttuion. A snake of deadly venom got Bolsy
e. f . .t Mt in.iiiKs Qlven to
'1 ur h -R m ll:2u; UJ M I I r i.b.T. ft... 1 fet l :, Jo SI, 1 J.-i .. .'.le. Joi n Ben lit! Th- Bssmple it ChrtaLlsa. at". JSeca .; Matt. ll.l;. Luke iZ.Zt; Jwhn fc.M. U. a-Ui Phil 1:1 Comment and Suggestive Thought V 1. 'Before the feasr." As the Uttil company was groaned around the table to eatehrate the Paaaorar Feast. "Hi hoar." The time for hi- gaal anaTnrlnga "His own which were i& the world.' Those loved and loving ones whom He was so soon to leave amid the trials and temptations of this world. "Unto the end." His lore was not changed by their faults, nor by the apparent separation about to tak. place He loved to the uttermost with a wise and faithful love. And it is so that He still loves. Whenever we call ujton Him for assistance it is given with the same love that was
i shown uuto His disciples at this parting feast of the paasorOf when He was about to drink of the cup thai mitfht not pass from Him. V. 2. "Being ended." While supper w as in progress. "Devil ... in heart." The devil originated the purpose, but Judas need not have let the devil's suggestion rest in his heart. V. 3. "All things into His hands." Jerus had power to save himself from the coming suffering He was fully conscious of His power, yet laid it aside in order to save us; fully conscious of Hie dignity, yet performed the act belonging to the lowest servant To be humble is ! not to tbink meanly of one's self. It u rather to have all thought of self cast out by the loving BBWpose to render to others every possible service. God promI ises us, In the Old Testament, that "h that exalteth himself shall be sbased, and he that humbleth himself shah be exalteth It is a promise that w may see fulfilled every day if we bul wa'.h. and it is a promise that evei will be fulfilled. V 4. "Bierth, laid aside, girded ' Ht Bros- from the table, laid aside Hisouter
robe drew up the inner tunic and fast- - 1 it with a towel, used instead of a girdle. V &. "Poureth water." etc. Water was p iura ! from a ewer (pitcher) upon the feet, and caught in the basin. "Began to wash." To rlaaaae and refresh Ilia disciples, to relieve their weariness. Jesus seems to have washed the feet ol one ot more of the disciples w hen he was interrupted by the p-istam eof Peter V. 6. "Dost thou wash my feet?" Peter feels that it is not fitting that He whom they call Master should perform a servant s task. V 7 "Shalt know " Jesus would shortly explain what He meant to teach ( vs li-17), and ac in future, they would receive more and more of Christ's Spirit they would understand m : fully. V. s. "Thou shalt never wash my feet.' Peter did not understand the spirit ot J. ana to be that of loving sen-Ice. No part with me." If Peter will not accept this, it will show that Jesus' spirit of
cessions So Mr Fairbanks reasoned, numiiity ana sen sacnncing love is
It is bardlv to be wonder- d that ias tat ,.n:K in ais near: turn musi oe num-
FAIRBANKS' TRI3ULATI0NS. The Vice President Sees His Chances for Advancement Growing Very Slim.
H in. 4 !harl - W arreü Fairbsnks of In diana. vice president of the United States is a nun h at ".s-d man. He was (or thought he was) the heir aprrent and logical successor of President McKinley, fate stepped in. and the oppor-, tttBlty wn.t to Mr. Ro .s, velt, says th Albany Are. us. Mr Fairbanks bided his time, and . !. k I down his disappointment. 11 took the vice presidential nomination, , after full consideration, and in the belief and persuasion that there was no better j wa to advance hisi! ancestor Uw He , u. : ! in the lime light. He would 1 ! in prominent as vice president that.:- - :..i-..r lie wou'. i be the naturalheir of the Roosevelt sdmlnistratiou, Bad hcr.ee put to the front on seasonable
you know, because me eart is palpitating," and we went back to the 'otel, to see if our invitation to visit King Hod Ward had arriv , d Say. we are getting so we talk just like English coachmen, and you wteift hunderstand us when we get "ome. Yours, with a bacccttl 'BNNBRY,
DAP TURNED PALI tND CP v DOWN ON ni km: i:s nn.l hnstls them to the tower, and
when a king or queen go! in the.ower they went out on the Installment plan, and after being thrown In the gutter for the mob to reoogaise, ar.d walk on the bodies, they would bring them back II the tower, and seal them up in a Blgjcng hole for future generations to cry over. All my life I have hail In our house to look at a picture of beautiful Anno Boleya, and here I stood rieht where her head was cut off, and I couldn't hIp thinking erf how we In America Rot our ciUI atlon from the descendants of the English people who cut her heat! off By closer, old chum. It made me hot I ihfa't care to look at the old armor, or the crown Jewels, which BMhC J uu tbink of a eat glass factory, but I reveled la the scenes of the beheading. 1 never was stuck much on Lings and queens, but it - , A U .. ft. n . I ... . . . . 1 . . r , I , . , ...
Sfwms to nie ll llicj eau iwuiuiuo in . ii thev otiub.t to have given em a show, and let them iiiiht for their Uvea Instead or getting Into a trap, like you would eBtiCC a rat with CBOOSe, and theo cut thtii beau off.
German Army Discipline. Discipline Is severe in the Germac army and the treatment of privates Is ,,, i mi, unj istitlable At Dessau a sergeant who had been drinking to excess insulted two young women who were escorted by a couple of men In the ranks. The privates protested to the minor officer, who drew his sword and attacked them. In his drunkenness wounding one of the girls, in the affray which followed the sergeant wa.1 disarmed and felled to the floor. All roe were put on trial The serv ant was sentenced to pri-on for five months, while the unfortunate privates were londemned to five years behind the bars at hard labor, were dismissed from the service and were deprived of their civil rights Servi.e as a prtv&ie In an army so regulateil cannot be a cause of pride In tune of W BM N. TTribune Wanted the Highert Figure. Matrimonial Agent I have here a widow who has four daughter The youngest Is 1S an l win have a dowry of 10,000 marks; thfTi comet one 22 years old. with a dowry of ir,,00 marks; then one 30 years old, tS.OOO marks, and the oldest, t'i years. (0,001 marks. Client -Yes. and Urn Wfdowfr- P1I gende Blaefter.
have got to get out of Lunnon. don't n the era near Mr Roost velt and h
aot off his horse and killed it. What u pity the octopus hasn't rattles! St I. ouis Republic. The new s from the (w ing line is all to the effect that Mr Rttosevelt will get no more leneflt from his hunting trip than he will have use for on his return. in troit Free Press. Mr. Garge Id has discovered that the people will eat tough beef sold by the trust ninth more cheerfully than they will iWBWllOW the tOUgh report presented by him -The Commoner. The present critics of democracy content themselves with a glance at the surface and a i;uess at the future. They discuss election returns, pass a I-t.-strictures on past leadership!, talit gayly about "party" quarrels, label th1 w hole "criticism," and dish it out to a public willing to be amus. d. The) Bt teriy ami vacuously ignore the very m sence of the thing which they a-sume to discuss, like a pack of jesters holding a magpie torn lave behind the back door of the temple of truth St. Louis He public. Senator Klkins has inv, teil prom ,nent railroad presidents to testily before lr.- committee on th" .atlway rate i.-g hdation It is estimated that the member of the committee will report fa forabty gap a bill rasyauatiag railway rater if the railway presitb nts Insist upon it -Washington Post (lad.). Anil now Mr. Fait I anks has been e ran ted the honor of representing the prieidant at a white ImMBM dinner during the latt. r s ab : , I n l -s a halt Iscalletl. the vice presidency promises to asritme sm h Importance that the puhlk will be able to rememlxr the locum heai'a sauie. Detroit Free Frees.
the correspondents tell us) he hears w ith pr found disgust and ill-concealed wrath all this talk alvout Taft and "the lid " which makes the war secretary a sorl of temporary preeldeat in Mr. hVaoaa relt'a absence, gives him any amount ol frt e advertising ar.d advene- - ma' i ially the quiet talk tdTaft as the r. al gOOOS velt choice for ttOt, Aside from sll that. Mr Fairbanks It harassed by enemies in his own state ol Indiana. He and Senator Heveridg never did get on well together, now Be v. eridge Is openly taking the state machin from him. and. worse vet. the vice prs Ideal finds himself practically without a : '-paper aBpporter in lodktaapotta it maaeouaced that hlafrteada, to remedy this, are alwuit to start an out and .-ut Fairbanks organ at the capital of th Hooater state. There is a world of truth ami common sense, however, in what Senatoi Boot! is reported to have told the vice pr- - dent, the other day. In cautioning him acainst the premature "boom" danger: "Have you noticed Fairbanks, that a summer frost nips the full blown ros and lets the buds escape? There's a ( -Lance for quite a few such frosts between this painful hour and 1PP.M Not Secure. Clerk- This. sir. Is the very latest r aeckWoar. It is called the matrimonial tie. Customer NO, thar.ks; I've had two matrimonial ties already, and I couldn't BBOke either one of them work:
Lightning struck one of the pvramids. th- other day. This Is n good omen for Vice President Fairbanks The linhtnir.R Is likely to gat around to more raoaai dad ones, almost any day Albany ArmPossibly the beef trust boosted th price of meat as the result of its learn ink', through Commissioner Cartleld's report, that It's profits wre hardly enough to enable it to make ends meet. Hiiighamton (N. Y.) leader. - "This Is the first time In American history, we believe ' remarks the Hartford Times, "that an? i resMaatof the United BtBtse hSB succeeded in securing the sintere stipp -rt of the Mormon church and all that it represents. When Mr Roosevelt reflects what such support reallv coeta and U hat it Implies, be may find time ami occasion 'o repudiate it. la Betsmat Aiaai sVrgua
Lb to accept fromanoth r that which he
recognizes is giTSt at the other's selfsacrifice. V. 9. "Not my feet only." Peter now understood that a spiritual significance was intended, and felt that his whole being needed to be rleansed. V in. "l washed . . . wash his feet." Two words in the original being here translated by the one word wash, renders this confused. The thought is: One who has bathed needs, after a walk In the dusty street, only to wash his feet aud his cleansing his complete. So when Jesus hae once cleansed our hearts from
sin. the stain is cone forever, but we
make daily mistakes, hence need every day to pray for His forgiving love to cleanse us anew "Ye are clean but not all. " The apostles all except Judas, were saved men Their hearts truly loved Jesus. V. 11 "Not all clean ' Judas had resisted Jesus' every effort to make him a good man V. 12. "Know ye?" If you w ant to understand what I mean, listen and I will explain V. LT "Ye call me Master " The apostles recognized Jesus' superiority to themselves, and his authority to tescb and direct them V. 14. "Ye . . . one another's feet." All who follow me must show the samhumide, self-sacrificing love toward ona nnother. As we truly love another, we desire his highest good. and. In seeking It, we lay aside all thought and care for selfish interests. We will wash another's feet by doing ever)thing In our power to better his condition of body, mind and spirit. He is greatest who serves most Truly blessed are they who learn from Jesus the set ret of true living, ami realize the power of an endless life of loving and giving. Practical Points. V. 1 The knowledge that our opportunity is short should stimulate us to do our utmost for others to-day -Gal 6:10. V. 2. We have a strong enemy, but one at hand stronaer to enable 'us toconquer him Eph. 6:12, IT V. 3. Unless we have the Spirit of Jesus, the Father's gifts may foster pride in our hearts. I Chroa. 26: It, 16. V I We are most Chri-t like when like Jesus, we minister to others GpI. 6: IT V IT It is not enough to call Jeeus "Lord;'' we must heartily accept Hin ss the Guide of our llce. -Matt f:L
