Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 48, Number 16, Jasper, Dubois County, 29 December 1905 — Page 2

WEEKLY COUR1EH TH WEEK'S NEWS

TERSELY OUTLINED

HEN Ml IM VM I'ul.lUVr.

IAS1 I

INDIANA ran i HO refused BJ to f I mini

ve-teraa of bit

Ines has bank.

b No v York ire fore-: gners alian. a keep. . w hose cam

per at a time, n a savings

The ii ..; ritj i f the New York Chi neae women devote certain hgurs eaeu day to ll . 1 P.:- I ach tho.r young children the precepta of the Chines religion. No matter how well iw fated a Chiaeoe child W bO in the A in. rioaa acboi Is, i rote a certain time to the ; rusal of Chinese literature and the hi Story of Big lather' native country.

An Epitome of the Mast Important IfMtl at Home ami Aurcad the Past Week.

NORTH, EAST, WEST, SOUTH. vv hsti (uunti-H i Irsing, loitttiiri Willi ll.. II.U-I..I-IIKIH ' Uil.rt.Ml Ireiililt in KlMla ItSMI I ullrtl lr.Mii 1 in rlu l I Hup peslsgrs vit i r iiif w.nia.

Editors and tailors are not the on If persons who ar.- made happy on occav ions by -he pr-s-r.t .f a pair of scissors. A gift of this kind was made to the Bmpe rur WH lam of Germany recently, and If he was cot made happy by it there has been no intimation to the. oootrsxy. The tsot that thle particular pa'.r of Kiasora cm: $5oo might Lave made tome difference,

Most of the Chinese women in New York's Chinatown have rvante to do tho cooking and the heavy work of th household. Negro women are eni ployed two or three times a week to p. ill v. wash windows, and clean house generally, snJ the Oriental wife snd daughters devot themselves to the car of the young children, to amusements, and the needle-work, io which they have few rival!

e o t. It ll e i 41. MHi:. üoth housea of i ogress bars packod their friga auJ 000 h. me or eaeSbt to spend the uo.iday rSOHB, tu reassemble Januar 1 Mr. Fredsrick Land;, of Mediana, took bis insurance bill as a text tur hi atahiea apevih in the bouss, commanding close atte.tiou and eliciting gOST oua applause. He wa.- accorded a rcepttoo on the floor when he had t.oucluded. Th sei.ate tiuds the CSS of Senator Burton of Kansas, daUcat one, auu i handling it with glove on.

,tt the ra of the Store long begin an apparent bai i lou Ion. as thj

Th re a"sLyse rapt, rs " wi In London. Th. r to its :nrx '.

Bounty council s building act prohibits ouch structures, but. like all restrict' ire measures, it is not prohibitive. An Ingenious suggestion for introducing s Skyscraper in the guise of a ' tower' is made, and It has additional interest from the fact that it conn within the cope of the bj -laws. It is almost incredible, yet it it true, that, because of recent dlaclosures affecting the great life-insur sjice companies, th ;a:.-is of policyholders have permitted their r k a to lapse. A sort of panic seems to have seized upon them, and it has been far boots costly to them tha to the insurance companies. In many instance? new insurance cun ni-wr b obtained, and in all cases the policy holder has sacrificed the advantages wb.ch accumulate wi'h time.

The New York charing house, representing 53 banks, cleared last year tM.OOO.OOOX Th1 average daily clearings were 1200,000,000, and the parage daily bsJanc paid in money was . The next biggest clearing house is that of Chicago, wirb Blearing of $v The Nov Yorii clcarisg house is, in fa t. the most important business institution in the world, its transactions exceeding those of the clearing house of London last year by six bill ens.

rust aiTiATioa i ntsstA. Tb Rosetsn government ii mid to be bewildered at the strength ot the political strike, bat whether it will prove a success i r faihtra ii to bo iaterm.ued by fviture events Meanwhile i.umeiou

a:u-ts aie . :t.- u a a:. vi a vigorous offer. ie campaign waged against the revoluttoaar) leaden The uews fr.'m th Baltic proviucs Continues bad for tue govern mvut. r':e terii KStad b M boon taken by the uurgents, end Kreutaburg is surrounded and stan:.; - a siege. At a ss- :. of rue ai.::.'t. presided .r by Banperor Kiobolas, it wg do c.ued that ut.:er.-ai saflrage shuulTi not pi - ranted. . ke demands promulgated by the Rnaslaa trikers baclud almost everything that would tgo to establish Utopia in their midst, whether or not they wiuld be capable of appreciating It The workmen in the St. Petersburg n. - ai l faitor.es have demanded of Um priests that the) dlocoatiao the usual prayers for the emperor, threattnlOg to boyOOtt them if they dont. The WOrkfOSn'l eottOCl in St. Petersl r mici .-. le 1 .11 pru.t Uti at.d eirculatiug i'"'.o'o ,,,.. es if ,t3 pap-r announcing that the government had declared a civil war on the proletariat and saing that the challenge mu.-t b accepted. It. declare that the throno of the KomanotTs is tottering, and that another blow will settle iL A i all for a genera! political strike issued in St. I'eier.-buy. n the night of DocsmbOl If, with the approval of the union of unions, the union Of peasants, the general railway union a:.' th OOttDXilaof WerkBaea Of St. Petersburg and Moscow, to begin at noon on th-- Jlst.

KOW York City ha- nearly half, or 70o.oi.il, of the entire Jewish jopulatlon of the Inited States, or many times more of this race than were ever gathered before in any singM community, frwn the patriarch Abrahams days down to those of Dr. Herzl. the Zionist. From three per cent, of the population of the city in 1880 the Jew have grown to fifteen per cent, in 1905. and their expansion, proportionately as well as absolute, continues at a high rate. Every sixth person met on the streets of New York is a Jew.

A prophecy of world-wide bloodshed sad horror during the year 1!M)6 had been issued by Ilms, de Thebes, who was accredited as court diviner to the superstitious Xaprl"n and Eugenie. It is said that she Btodiotod the downfall of the seond empire. As her vaticina'ions for next y.-.ir hf see re as says: "Oennaay is to come very near tri a smash early in the year; South America will be contorted with wild upheavals, and the I'nlted States will be decimated by an unconipiered epidemic" and many other calamltosl are p: 1 ; The second highest chimney in America has been complete" I for a plant in Newark, X. J. It is 350 feet high, just 15 feet less than the stack ot the Orford Copper Co., of Itayonne, N. J., but it is said to be a far finer pleco of st rue oral work. As its cost would seem to indicat- fg,000, r 5100 per foot of height it is as complete as the liest of material an I labor 00O Id make it. Aside from this, it is an engineering feat of no mean pnportlons, for it is built on tho treacherous salt meadows Just to th" east Of Ntwark-

The moat qui "tion imposing starvation upon the- poorer classes of people because of the excessive high price of meat In Qermany is a atraag condition of rlvillisatlon, Th.- Ooraata farmers secure J legislation prohibiting American tna; sod ..v cattle, which gives them the tie umjk i!y of trade, but they tre unable to raise half enough neat to supply the nr it pipulgtloa; Indeed no Kur il" an country can or does now pro in- ' meat enough to supp'y th demand. Tin t -;.li of c,r mary ap;eal in vain to lb ofieteia cfar relief to aim'.: American n.eat.

OCX I II VI m: i , Charles E. Ehler, in the county hospital at Bakersfield Til., ha- adn.-.t-td rhar he has Informatioo as to the kiding of William Qoebsl in Kentucky whic h would clear Caleb Powers Me hesitstes to make a full at.-;... nt because it would implicate others. A train dashed into the Adams Expresa Co shed la the Uroad Street station in Philadelphia and 18 passengers were injured. llritish consul.-, at Rigs ami other Rttsataa ports have leen authorize 1, in ease of tengsr, to charter vessels for the removal of British subjects. QeorgC Muehlbach. president of the afoelbach Brewing Co.. at Kansas C.ty, Ho died in that city, aged 7J yeass. ith three brothers he came to this country from Switzerland in ls.r2. It Is considered likely that Pres, dent R i ssvsK will name Hon. Jnawpb H. ChoOt as chairman of the American delegation to the second peace ooafSTM at The Hague. The boiler of a U-hiph Valley railfn d tocooaothr exploded whim pali lnp into a sidlr.K at Van Etten. N. Y.. IvlilinK the fireman and fatally injuring four other trainmen. A It Crosier, an apprentice assjaw, aped IS. whon! homo is in Portsmouth la . who was a prisoner on board the trainint' ship South ry. stationed at the Poitsnouth (X. H.i navy yard, escape by Mwtmmlng to the K ttery (Me.) ihre. The Preabyterton, afethodiai and Coagetatlonal churches of Canada have agreed upon a code of doctrines thai will unify the three dOBOminStiona into one preat (hurch to lie known as the "Ualtod Church of Caiiada." The Soo anal froigbt tonnace for the yen it mn a total cf Hdt70,g0, an inin a-e i,f 40 ,er ( ent over ItOi, The CnbSttn liberals have COadfadedtQ bre-ik i h long deadlock anil participate in the issa oh uf noapasa The barge Maker, bound from .New York to Pbllsdetphbt, in tow. was bttrBSd to the water's cdno off Atlantic City X I The crew wss taken off by the tug Bag Kins. Richard A McCurdy, former president of the Mutual Life insurance f'o . and other members of his family, are reported to lie transferrins: valuable property In Morrlatowa N J. Thesau family home, said to have cost about 1400,000, has been put ' nt irei.v in Mrs. 11 I hard A hf C ird) ' name The minority if the bOtMN -ti, niitt-e) on fray and RH UBS hprof at. -dl ute free trade bctwien tiic I't.ited State, Hie fhillppineH. Hawaii and Porto RJ CoagrSSSSnOa Herbert Parson Pag fMRted chairman of th New York onoBit roaajtdlaaji committee bv acdsMat lot

Fudde- high i ;- pte- uie at Swlssy;l p. I 'a us : lie i.r:s : - wru! epu sa tis. Ore in the home of hav id

La:ng te-uitcd in a tire in who h three tiati r tiieti.tu weie ssyriously bin psd Tb motli n for a ih-w trial in the Taggari divorce oass at Woooaara o., WOO . i ruled by Judge Easi. Mi s.

Taj.-g.ii"'' uttornevs took excspuooas and atii vim i d intention of cany mg tie i.ic fa tho circuit COort Tb i i oereuns and cri)orstiona in

dicted cm rharges of coospiracj la retradnl trade la lb n.eat buatoasai is C.a -.o v;.. co h) trial Januarv , lttJ. on their spodaJ pica.-' of .unnuuit rlu- jur baa beet accepted, iwora sliI rlleseed until that date. A the resttll Of a battle ou a Southern railroad trau aa route from Way ie City to Ka.rdeld 111 started b two prisoners in charge of a constable trying to escape, Constable James Kingston and James Marshall, one of tin sisonera were killed and Edward Manball probsbly fatally wounded. Thej passengen took i hand In the battle. I ut all soaped unhurt. Tte entire shipping world has beesj sane! by the Uaitd States hydrogray i ofKca to lo.'k out for the tloat.ng lot k Pewey, and DO to pass between the dock and her towing thlpaoQ Y I w fever 1 decktred to be pidemicat Ouayaquil, Ecuador. Dr John Warner, father of Vespasian U'..r icr. United States comniis:or.er .if pei.s On, died suddenly at Cliuton. 111., ag 1 vears He a native of Virginia, settling in Clinton 0" years ago. He Wai a major in the civil war. Mope S Davis, a prteti Inf law er of Quincy, 111 . for SO years, being at times SSI listed with Stephen A Douglas and Abraham Lincoln, died at Quincy, aged 7 years EIx-Aldermaa Robert I, Raadolpb, of Ullwaukee, has been sentenced to on year In the houe ot correction, having beer, found guilty of sOllcitlag a 100,000 bribe to secure certain legislation. William Grow, ill and penniles.

wandered into Bemldjl, Minn, recently, and met with a OOd Samaritan. A letter in hi- possesion 1st) to the di-covery Of relatives in IH-s Moines, la . where a ?1 1,000 inheritance awaited him. Col. George w. Johnson, who was for i- years chief clerk of the United Stat- - !-e-iate and prominent in state and national polities, died of paralysis u: Minneapolis, Minn. ae,i BJ years. Homer Laar, a non-union workman, was shot and killed while engaged in a tight with stove work itrtl era at N wark, O. All bids for the Philip; .: .- : a. r. ad "or.cession.s have ! eei. i j '"1 and new bids called for under amended speeiötations John R. Walsh, former president of the Chicago national bank, has re- - gl ad Bf trea.-urer of the BOUtb l'ark board, aid J 1. Mitchell, are deal of the Illinois Tru-t k tavlnp l ai.k. has been appointed in his steal The National G inners assoc r n'a report compiled fnmi returns from the entire cotton bolt, indicates a total cot ton crop this vear of '.c.lTS.Vlo bales The crt p a' the time the report was issued SS MJ ir cent picked and M ler cent, ginnet. Au-tin Francis, charged witb the murder of WlnoM Newton, aue.i 15 years, bbl sweetheart, in Kan-as Oty, Ho . BS found guilty of murder in the first degras). Edward Wilder, treisurerof the Santa Fe railroad Co . died at Topska, Ka-. Mr- Milier. the aged mother of Joaquin Miller, the poet, died at the latter'ence, " The Heights," new Oakland. Cal.. aed nearly M years. The cruiser Marlhead has pone to Panama to relieve the B.jston. Februar? it, ipot, has been named by Charles E. Shiveley. supreme ihancelior of the Knights of Pythias, as the time for celeliratin the anniversary of the founding Of the order. Jspan snnounces that S0,00Oj0t)9 of fourth exchequer bOttdO, liearinn six per cent, interest, will le paid off in March, April and May The new ferry houses of the Pelawahe. Lackawaana & Wawtara and the Central f (few lorsey railroads on the New York city water front wer dO stroyed bp fire at a loss of over $50t.ang, Fifty thra released Ru-s:,m prisoners arrived at Vic toria. B. C, from Japan and will seek hörnen in the Pnitc 1 State- One of the party sa.d that hi iiand of th Russians now in Japan are determined not to return to Russis until a constitution is secured. Ab Hümme', the well-km w n New York lawver. was convicted of conspiracy n conaection with the DoiceMi isc u-e in New York, and was ontenced to one rear in the penitentiary and to jiay a fine (.f MOO ROT. Pr. William Eiw in Parson, pastor of tiie Church cif the Reformation In Waabington, and one of the foremost Lutheran clergymen In this country. (Had al New Raven, mGeorge Herrin, chairman of the CltP Of London Electric Lighting Co.. km donaaad KOO.OOO to the ffgiraUoa army to br u-jed in a home colonisation sc he me. PrettdSsil RoOBswoti held an informal reception at the white Bouse in con i ' t ion w ith he celebrat loa Of th centennial of the establishment of thapoh lb acboolfl of the Di-tric t of Columbia. William ! Crawford, former deputy auditor of the post oftVc department w;.s bui nil RUilty, in PnahlBitOn, Of conspiring w ith Aiicu-t w M.e hen and (leorne K. Iorenz to defraud the noverninent in connection with a contract for lette.carriers' sate hel... The Initial run of the Los Angeles limited from Chicago arts made bets "ti the latt-r city and Cgdstt, I 'ah. nt an a-ri e -j .a ,,f 411 niiles an hoof laciudtni ail stops I P Wie-, editor of the Marshn'.ltown (la.) Herald, committed suicide u ahooting He had beco nc despondent over III luaith.

NESTOR OF CHICACO BENCH ALL 0VEE TUB STATE,

Death ot th,e Veucrablr Jude Murray 1 loyd Tulry, ol Chicago. lie llntl lleon n 1 1 iiiiiI en ii.a ii. nii Bessat ash its as sun) i7i Milwaukee. lei- fg JadgO Munay F. Talsy, of Chicago, dud BJ the I'- neoysr mnttarium la Keaneha, Monday Bften.oou He went to the hauitai'iuin ou October .ii suffering from nervous

' exhaust ion caused bv overwork.

il.r el llie I lili-Htio llt-iieli. Chicago, Dec. :' Judg Murray 1' fd rttlsy, the tie-tor of the Chicago betah. vv h".-e death occurred Monday, sa- ma of the most vtdSly-kttOWfl juristin the SCSI He was elected to the drcuil hoach of Cook county in ls79 and bad Barred COatinually since that time. Judge Tuley had the record of fswor raveraah of his rtarlattnai by the supreme court than any other cinuit judge. Judge Tu ley was born la Louisville, Ky , in 1SJ7. He was a veteran of the Mexican war. serving as first lieutenant of the Fifth Illinois infantry, ami in IK49 served as attorney general of New Mexico. The body sill be brought to Chicago for burial. FARMERS SOCIETIES MERGE riie Kattaaal rsmtn Bxebasrs Hiul I In- tsSSSlsaa l nrm. r' l lilo 11 t ' oil t(l I illl t e. Itsrltng, 11:., Dae, M.F. e. .ndrswa, attorney for the National Farmer-' cm bangs, announces that the amalgamation of tb National Farmers' c x hange and the American Farmers" union is about perfected, The new organization will be the- greatest society of farmers in the I'liite-d State. The National Farmers exc hange operates on the plan of the trusts It does extensive business in Illinois, Iowa Nebraska. Kansas, Minnesota, and the Dakotas, owning and operating several hundred elevators. The American Farmers' union has an extensive ni-nile-rship In Texas. Nevada Indian territory- and Oklahoma. The National exchange I capitalised at 1100,000,000, A new name is to be chi -en THE FIRST MEDAL OF HONOR (.true I'opII. of OSWStS Ulniiil, fh tu Hi ri-iir I Iml Vli iliil I 11. Icr I lie Id of I'rlir inr llll, 1000,

Omaha, Neb., Den-, iv, A special to the World-Herald from (Iran. I Island, Neb ays: Georpe Poell, county Clerk-.: got this county, received a lot ter from PfealdoBi Roosevelt convoying to him the information that the fir.-t Btednl of honor Riven under the act of f mg ess. approved February 23, 1906, had been awarded to him for consj.ii nous bravery in saving the life of a child at the risk of his own and fpn -.-inir warm comme ndation for the deed. Mr. Poell, Who WSS B locomotive file-man. tan al .r.trside Lis engine to the pilot and snached a little child from th trach. saving It from Larm. but himself fe 11 under the- enirine, losinn a and Lelns oth"rwi-e badly injured. HE FOUGHT FROM HIS TOWER

Events in Various Portions of Indian.' Told by Wire,

Roc "i Bedford Bank. Bedford, in. 1, pee, 20. a slight 1011 on the Bedford ualionul hank, of Bedford, of which John R Walsh, at Chicago, 's President, was promptly nu t Tonarm) bj the ofoVHaJaof that ls etltUtiOsl who, while- anticipating no serious wltbdiawals, bad prepared for BJt) amergancy. Sufficient gold, It was atinouuced, to pay e rv fopOBltOf WBB piled blub on the bank's runnier in full vh w I . the . roved of eage-r deposltor TI is. coupb d w it Ii the act ion of bUsllle'SS ineMl aud large- de positors, wiio elbowed their way to the bans windows tu make deposits and tin n advised everyone to allow their funis to remain in the- bank, served to allay the excite-. I depositors and after the run had COB tinned for two hours it subsided. Many of the depOSfbrrs after withdrawing their accounts returned to deposit their uoney Offers of as I lance from either banks were elo clined with the st 'teiu. nt that assistance was not necessary.

The Quarterly Review Sunday Schoul Lessoo lor DtcJ!,IH4 SpacUUy Prepared for Thlt Ppr

road here000 to $1.: Walsh (I t ra vacant

Holdings of Road Valuable. Torre Hsats, Ind., De. to Th terminals of the- SOUthSTB In i ana

are valued at from 1,000. !S0,000, and while John R. said to have- paid expriees for the land, it i

w r'h o per cent, more than the parrhsse price A belt road Of trn miles cost him S00,000. Though completed a year ago. it was put in use- by other roads only recenily Loennse they bad boon Kgahie to agce w-th lim on terms. The Chicago division of the South, rn Indiana now building had bOOB looked forward to as 1 - once of relief from blockades Of Indiana coal destined for Chicago, and last week trains of coal were- re nt over It for the first time, and as tar north as Humri.k. 111., to be delivered o the Clover Leaf. Call Mayor a Criminal. T.rre- Haute. Ind.. Dec. SO, MayOT Bldaman has removed his three p.die commlaaloncfi becaoao they had given to tb public his letter! asking th--m to permit saloon keepers t beep open after hours The three com mlssionsri ent blm a letter tayiag "your ai-i'.a is willful an 1 1 riminal but you cannot lorce it t.. be criminals, too." He is told that his purpose Is to hae a board "which wUl permit the city to return to the wickedness of former day The city ministers' aasocbv tiem appointed a committee to report s plan for the proeecutloa of th BUtyor under a new law which he is alleged to have violated by asking worn officer to violate their oath of Offil

ertainty or ev- ry

The duty of building for of separation from the

o

A Vi'ur.i Bel as rites with Orlelca nml Klllnl ! nit 1 sesj mi 1 Battle,

To Put --Lid" on Hammond. Indianapolis. Ind.. Dec 2". t R. 4' do I Joseph I Huff and Qoorga Pearaug have been appointed police com; lissioiiers for the city of Hammond. They had a long talk with Oov. Hanly. in which th-y hear'ily Indorsed his policy of a closed town, and promised to see that the law 1a Btrlctly enforced. After ihe in'frvii v Mr Knotts who is a brother cf Hammonds mayor said that Hammond would he absolu'ely a nosed town hereafter

Paducah. Ky . Dec 26.-In a battle between a po'iceman and Jedin Tice. a one-lefPOd negro, a frogman for the lUnOÜ Central, who had barricaded himself in hi tower at Kleventh and Broadway1 streets, Patrolman James Clark was shot twice in the hip, and Tue was riddled by scores of peopl wi;h rifles and pistols from the surrounding treats and roofs. The negro became enraged at someone throwing bricks at his tower, and liegan firing from the tower at people in the streets bslOW. When the police attempted to arrest him he flrecl on them. He wad killed.

GOV. WRIGHT IN MEMPHIS He Una llcnril the Humor f III I -tr iiil. il II I' n I IA 101 1 1 1 . 11 Huf Im t n 11 t 11 re of Ii OSS ree . Memphis Tenn., Dec. 26. Luke B. r t. governor general of the Philippines, errtved la time to sjiemi the holidays at his home here. Gov. Wright is quite optimiatic as to the future of the Islands As to his plan, he is reticent. Regarding the reports that he would reslun his offic e and return to Memphis, he said nothing further than that he had heanl of the- rumors, Lot was unaware of the source from which they came. Ps I Neu Ortes ws tu riefet. New Orleans, Dec. tg. -John McCail, T. Hi Well-) and Jarno Bester, three lumbermen from Lumberton, Miss., we re found dead In two roomw of a St. Chsrlea street rooming house. They -am'- bore to eotebrato Cri-nl I Ire nt USS Kim. lilnn. v ctoria, n. c. Dae ag,. ..Man idvtegg from Bhsnghal tell of a great fire at Han K.w. known as the Chicago of China. In Which abot.t 1,000 houses wen- destroyed, a large number of lives loM. variously estimated at from 100 o fieVI. e.innt lasien 1 rmmwm t im-ikh. Sioux Citv. I 1 . De, Bg, Jht, SouthWigd a Kisal WlaBebagB Indian, earns over to Sioux City Sunday night end amulejsd in Irawater, .Monday morning h. waa found ot. a sandbank frozsn to death

Uses a Revolver OU Son. Hammond. Ind.. !. 2". Because h objected to the proposed marriage of his iR-year-old sein, John Pokorskl. c.J Han nond, sh'd him during a cjuarrel. Mrs Pokorskl ran to the rescue of he r 100 and knocked the revolv- r from he.- husband's hand as he was about to fin- a second time. Wh.-n the boy told his father of his coming wedding the elder I'eikorski punehe-d blm. The son retaliated with a hard rignt swing and th- shooting followed Badly Hurt by Train. Connersvllle. Ind. Dec 20 While walking along the tracks on the way to th railroad station at Cottag OfOVS, 2" miles west of here Tuesday night, Mrs. John Pultz. 42 years old. and Miss Je nnie Holland, 17 years old. were run down by a passenger train on the Chicago, Cincinnati Louisville railroad and fatally Injured Roth were badly mantled and the attending physician bold oei ao hope for their re covery.

Indiana Postmaster. Washington. D C . Dec. 19. The following Indiana BOtmatOra have bjoog naiied: Princeton, Arthur P. Twlneham; PendletOtt, Calvin F Pmwn; Tipton. Marvin W. Pershing; Martinsville. William W Kennedy; Klwood. WeldOB A Plncb; Covington. Fb-tchei V Boy4; In lianula. Ml - W n Mar tin.

H - r for Concern. South Rend. Ind. Dee 20 tin complaiit of a iKinding company the Charles A Kaestner Manufa Hiring company, builders of gasoline motore ami 'nlnlng engines, was placed In the bands of a reOBtef The plaint iff seeks to recover an indebtedness of jLtn.ttfio.

Girl Heiress to $5 5.000 Mlhaw.s. Ind., Dec 1fi Miss Maude K Heinzman. Of this city. be bee n notifie d by the Judge of the court nt Nottingham. England, that she Is heiress to 12... Odo. that smount having been beepieathed by hpr grandmother, Mrs Sophia Cattell. Pnsed Away Lnporte. Ind , Dec. 20 Jehu L. A imdmansre n jiromlnent Indiana Iplrltuallst died Tuesday, 6'd 71 .ears

OOl.DKN TKXT Ti .o r u-,. .. 'ar with thy gooSneas Psalm CS H THi: KKVIKVV. To review the lesona In the truest sense is not to , over ail the lessons separately, . after the Other, to r.'pe at titles golden texts in order, to select rcr . truth which have been learned, and this la especially true on the lessons of the past quarter. MBoWiawltt Bgyi I'eloubet a, 1 is looking backward from aoni tower or hilltop, over the landscape through which we have b, . a traveling. The bills, the valleys, the cities, the villages, the forests, the fer til field., we have been seeing in de tail through the quarter we now a one broad country, and we u: ' stand the meaning and power t tb land as a w hole." With this thought in mind we ne i to atrlve to catch the movement of th whole period of the history included in the lessons, to study its meaning, to learn to what it is leading, and -e how each event, each character, beara upon this end, to help or to ; der. We need to see God in the history and to learn th lessons the hol

I pe-riod te-ae-lles.

Till! PERIOD The time of the letoun of the quarter covers over 1 year, from about 538 to ISO U. C. It begins with the hard scheding and dis upline of the To years of captivity ana then when the nation has BOffkleutly learned its lessons to make It safe for them to begin over again at home m Pale stine, they are permitted to return, and in a small way to start anew . CENTRAL TRI THS The lessons of the quar r are not very closely connected with one snot her. snd a good way to spend part of the review hour will be to try and bring out the aneV tral teaching of each lesson. Opinieir.a will eliffer as to what the central teachings are, but the following, entered B suggestions, sre outlined by Dr. Torrey: Lesson I. The folly of lif'ing ones self up against the Lord of Heaven, and not glorifying; Him in whose hand our breath is. and whose are all our w.iya Lesson II God Is able to deliver the one who serve Him continually from vary danger, no matter how apps'l-ing.

Lesson III. TI word of God.

Lesson IV. J - a vah and

world. L -- n v. Vieton Ii of J- b isai

by might, not by power, but by the

Spirit of Jehovah. Lesson VI. Anyone in a posi'ion of tntluen.c a:. ! power is put there, not for themselves, but to use ih ;r powr and In dapm I for the iutereu of God and His people. Lesson VII. The band of God is spOn all that seek Him for good, and He will deliver his trusting servants fr m the band of the enemy, and from such as lie In wait by the way. Lesson VIII The character of r e prayer begins with adoring contemplation of God. is persistent, in accompanied by confession of sin. is built upon God' Wcrd of promise, appeals to threlation of Qod to His people, is Intensely earnest. Lsson IX. Things which ere perfectly lawful, still ought not to be done if others will be injured thereby. Lesson X. The one who works for God should trust in God, but at the same time should exercise all prudence in watching against enemies. Lesson XL The Word of G d has power to convince of sinand to brirfg abounding joy. Lesson XII. Jehovah is coming to refine and purify His people and to execute Judgment upon sinners Lesson XIII. Jesus Christ is s wonderful Counsellor. .Mighty God. Evi r lasting Fstbcr. Prince of Peace, and of the U'-rease of His geivernment and of I a e there shall be no snd. PRACTICAL APPLICATION.-The review of these lessons coming aa it does on the last day of the old year suggests the need of reviewing our past lives and the events of the past year. As the rower looks backward that he may go forward, so we look at our psat in order to make s belter future. We look at our failures that we may learn the lesson they teach, and then forget them as God forgives and blots m I forever. We look st what we have gained. In order '.hat we mar stand upon that past and do better. It Is well therefore to see 1. What lessons we can learn for ourselves from the history we have been studying. 2. What the history has to teach our nation. 3. W ran take courage from thw fact that even with such imperfect people, and such hard times, real an t great progress was made of w hich we are now reaping some of the results. 4. Let us see visions of better thlrgs and keep the divine ideala always before us. Faith. Faith is the color-bearer in the army of tb Lord. United Presbyterian. Where faith goes out aoul famine come in. The faith tha' believe In thine unseen soon sees the things unknown. The strength of a man's faith I in inverse proportion to lis singularity The ktsst prayer that reaches God's throne shakes His footstool. -Ram s Horn. "I would rsther walk in ths dsrk with God than go alone in the light r would rather walk with Him by faith Juia walk alone by sight.'