Ligonier Banner., Volume 43, Number 45, Ligonier, Noble County, 28 January 1909 — Page 2

The Ligomer Banner -x.br;é:rf,f;_::»i, ~ INDIANA

IL.atest News Told - in DBriefest and Best Forrn - -

WASHINGTON NOTES. v A ! : " » = B & S 4. 2y e * V.‘ { » 5 & = : Cooey Hutiarnam ol Telitiogs: the stniwile geoabihition § ;Lo e it P @R Foiha M x BN secritgy { wigte nnd he teien will & yrgiyt .:' R t ta ; : 1o 43] ig) § : : Ing the alits h 0 Boahident of the Vinited Stutes o By g those of thie § ¢ £ st s il B EmAS { vf“'. honseatos sis 0008 4 voar sach 2 P et Hatkesait gent 1o the goy orhor f Laifirnin B lelepram ARG letter urping the Caltfornds legisisiu 80l 1O pase antilapanes mea ' £ ‘ _3-,__“:‘ 3 l'_v.n'f (ot New Yorg made an attack on Presidont Roou Fiise vistnse il Bin to tuie b rond } Hiwet wie chapean for senstor by = ya of New Y % M i 5 Jegislarore: a 0 Senatar Reod Suoot Cowas pated Boe gedlertlon " diean moimbess of the Ut ERiatnn \l‘_,--' 4 gy Tk ¢ th o f hoge Mmovenont 1o Here ron! £ fh ’:"""; : ! “.. 5 fatantyy Wi fax ¢ peated by the hyldraelicinle pawer in dusiry Kiks Pt fa 1 3 LR BRI ER i o siyve all 3 u".‘"”ltf“ 2 3 . Presideut Roowevell: pent 5 - spocial Lpasage the Nuee veliofiy &0 U that provided S EhE contruction b R I!J!?", £ x. g," 0% Tivi il signe county, Missnuri the purpos f.othe dam belng to get water to creste gl tric powee . - o : - PERSONAL. : P. I Kieran fofmer president gf the Fldellly Funling tempany. of @ Now Yark, who s Badd responsibic by mahs Cathiolic ehurelios asd s iy - i over the couhtry for the logs of funds and whose whorrab Gls b ive Dot unknown (o the putlic for severat muonths, weént to Pilisbure BAITOn dered hiniselt 1o the authoritics and Eave DO 30 TWo Casos : e Charles fp Peneen Wk {nausurated governor of Ulinvis for the secoud thue . ; i " Clara Morris. the actress, who has been {ll a long time, {8 in a serfous condition and her family and f{riends are \r-z"_\' anxtous about the ovutcunie: President elect Taft was warmly wel comed to Atianta, Ga, and was the guest of honor at an elaborite banquél- g : . 4. B. F. Rinehart, former cashier nn&' vice-president of the Farmers and Drovers National bank of Waynes burg, Pa., was found gulity of wreckfng the bank, and was immediately sentenced ta serve 16 ycars in. the ponitentiary,.. > ' GENERAL NEWS. . Probably 80 sworkmen lost their lives tn a fire which destroved the “inter mediate” crib in Lake Michigan, near Iy a mile off Soventythird xirect, Chi’ cago, There were about ninety meg, tn the structure when an u-\;'-‘:u’-,‘;» took place. Many were burned to death. Some leaped into the- fce waters of the lake and \\‘vr& drowned. Others rushed into the tunnel and were smothered. : ) -Over the veto of "Gev. Patlerson ‘both houses of the Tennessee legislature passed the senate bill which prohibits the sale of intoxicating liquors - within four miles of a schoolhouse in Tennessee and s fn effect a state-wide _ prohibition act. Kt is effective July 1, o 3900, . . : The jury in the case of Gov. B. B. Comer of Alabama®against the Montgomery Advertiser awarded d:uzi:mvs ‘of one cent for libel. The governor Cemanded $25,000, Four men were killed and ten others injured, one fatally, when several tons of dynamite in one of the build‘fngs of the Forcite Powder works at Lake Hopatcong, N. I, blew up. Mrs. Ingles and four of her children were burned to death in their farm--house 12 miles from Lang, Sask. . Secretary of the Interior Garfield, through his special agents, © has - Jearned of wholesale frauds, chiefly in states west of the Mississippi, by which in the last two years corporations and individuals have wrongfully acquired public lands estimated to be worth about $110,000,000. ~ On a warrant sworn out by gov. Haskell, charging conspiracy to de- “ fame the governor, ~Scott Macßeynolds, attorney and special agent for William R. Hearst, was arrested in Guthrie and a mass of data on the governor's libel suit against Hearst ~ was seized in his room. - John H. Woodbury, a well-known facial specialist, committed suicide at Coney Island. v o _ :Seven foreigners, who are said to have been stupefied from liquor secured at a wedding celebration, were - burned to death in a fire which destroyed three houses at Goodtown, Pa. ‘ Having carried out a prearranged - plan to die together, Schuyler C. Carskaddon and wife were found dead in their bedroom in South Norfolk, Va. ~ Snydertown, Pa, was thrown into a _panic by the collapsing of -an aban-

A shortage of $12.008 1n the city ww j@itors ofice at Kassag Oity was dis tioved following the lestailation of a e wysiet of E . The Carnegie Hero Pund commis {slon at 115 annoal meeling awardet 36 e R ¢ BRgregating $565 por mosth for gecds of walor investigsied lnce ihe agt cmeeting of the commission last Oc toter - . Considerstion of the bilis deoyiog s Japaness the flikfif#m sa6d or o Ibe directors of corporstions was de Liayed for one week by ibe Caiifornia Lasaembly at Ihe vequest of Prestdent Roosevel? and Gow Gillett, | Bix smisers wers kilisd and eight L dthers sestousiy i not fatally Jinjured PBy an expioaos m“,,flatfitsm-« Canot {ooal mine at Chancklass, Cai . United Hiates Sonter Jamesx P Clarke »ap mmmtmififmé himaeeif S at.n joint session of the legisiature of Arkareas. 0 o G %' Paul Hadiof under septence of Ty L years for wreon Bagged Bimself in the it st Marshnliiows I e

Phres peosons SBleted with lenouay were erhitiied Lalhve e tawg of tha New Yore Avasv@y ol Modieins Thut the Unitad Bihies 1 not & Fhriating eouniry a 8 'he vt od w i g munasl BN 10 e duilegystlos ! o ciTaaa o £ 500 £ ;. thergailivs o 145 e 20t o« Laiicgd g 3 e itivd 5 e Ly taking alrvchßine Mg ciling AN arfery in hiv wiring : vMons'na wasn swepd By v sßEalr For miany hours soldiers and sa are worked Lerolealiy to keen the Sanies frivm g Ihe 188 reminants of the town, And eveniualiy thes »u ceeded in getting e fire under cou Eight pereons were killed Ly a «;?a.‘_, earthguake whibh nocurre at Phocacn, 15 milles norithwen! of By ta. Turkey, snd &1 Other selghboring iAnßounroamen! wag made that an axther slivgod 17880 18 1o e fnves! ,‘v‘.;" it e fadernl agthorities 1 N 3 5 The cimiat - ‘ o (% the Atisntic Totra Coits Conijany. 847 O 5 T E o o Thy s tHa ol Ot R ¢ " e Begrse owmbho had athicked FEE Farmen ink of Hsis \ an s it with R i L ! Socording o R misteient made 1} fox. Gl thete Wil be 1 stetd 1403 o : g ?_--_-_‘-_;r. &t 1 %- NP RO of the UgliToenis Baeidiniar. Firw n ik ‘” IR TRI t o 0 O doshiaoeldl mofarty vaioad at 00 ping Boveral hundead Goeratives ceead ' i '\l -“,'i.:'»-: d the Tlrook side Worsged mills and the wis ¥ ing shed of Georgs © Moore &t North Chelipsford, Mage, epnelig a loss of he centenary of Ihe Birth of Fdgar Aflan P was Celehrated | N York, where & monuhenl wWas yoelied, Bod by meetlngs in other Cilips . » Ribert ¥ laoe's Birthiay wag appgos ‘;*:‘..:E.- iv-obeervan] In o many saau'lw‘rx: Ccities S ; e - (soy. Goeorge E Chamberiain of Ore goN, 8 Iwmiorral wae alectod United Slates eenptor by & Renoblican legts jature. mand Charies J Hughes, Jr - was tiected senntor by the Coltrado legls lature » James 1. Kellogg of New York, who was convicted in the state anid federal ‘C"‘if'v‘.‘ in connedtion with the operations of the sileged buecketshop firm of E. 8 Iwan & Ca, elght years ago, must serve the term of imprisonment fmposed by the state court, according. to a ideciston banded down by Justice Blanchard in the supreme court The supreme court of the United | .\"!.:H;-s aifirmed the decree of the siate courts ol Texas imposing & fine of E"x 23000 on the Waters-Plerce Ol !l“»»:::;m'n-_\ of St. Louls and ousting it from the ‘state on the charge of vier ating the Texas antitrust law. ' The supreme court of the United. - States dechided against former " Preside nt Mover of the Western Federation Enf Miners in the damage st _!,:‘m;a:‘:'.t by him against former Gov. Peabody iof Colorado ‘ : . A triple tragedy was discovered in . | Seattle, Wash., when W.- L. Secley, an attorney and former nationa] bank ex aminer for lllinols under Comptrolier of Currency KEckels, his wife, Mrs, Kate M. Secley, a member of the national society of the Daughters of the Amerfcan Revolution, and his daughter, Miss Rena Seeley, a student at the University of Washington, were found dead in a bathroom of their home. It was - believed Seeley killed the two women and committed suicide. Miss Frances Livingston of Boyd, Wis., who advertised in papers in all parts of the country for a husband and received 1,000 proposals of marriage, has chosen louis Struvanz of Dorchesetr, Wia. ¢ S ¢ Twenty-one persons were killed and 30 Injured. many of them seriously, in the head-on collision between a passenger train and a freight train on the ‘Denver. & Rio Grande near Dotsero, Col. L : Miss Violet Gordon Charlesworth, whose mysterious disappearance a short time ago caused a great deal of excitement because of her remarkable career and her intimate association with extensive stock deals, has been found at Oban, Scotland. . The navy department began the work of loading vessels with building material and sending them to the earthquake survivors of Italy for the erection of small houses. - Mrs. Nathan Sherrard and four children were burned to death at a lumber camp 20 miles from Ashland, wis. 5 : . Frederick Herreshoff, Yale man, golf -champion, and youngest son of J. B. Francis Herreshoff, a wealthy manufacturer of New York, astonished his parents by announcing he had secretly married Miss May Faulkner, a sfiow girl, last August. . ' After reviewing the evidence for 22 hours and taking 15 ballots before all were agreed, the jury In the trial of Thornton Jenkins Hains at Flushing, N. Y., found the prisoner not guilty as a principal with his pfother, Capt. | Peter C. Halnss, Jr., in/the killing of | William E. Annis. It /was believed

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A, Yo FPVE TONS OF CRYY

Prior to the war with ¥oafo Amerd cars knew Bt sbont dhe leinpd of Pario Hico, and the isiand knew {itie Kiont, He Besr meighbor Anierics Pan pow TRt has all heen i;{.,*siflmfifih‘ it e uniy ten vearw sinee the isiaed r’}'s'i,;w-' wnder the sontrol Bf the Lnited Hustes, amd in that ' thes Amevicans Eave seitiod in the jsland and dre row Yo b finnd in Bt 4;’&"4.“3@ ?'!‘L{rh;@;if[{?“ there in fael the cohiel indosicies puch ds. sueßr, fobseeo and frull are althrig ehiirely fuad rolied Ly Ameri €Bh -Capital o S The sugar industry, whick:is by far the most {mporiant has bad o phe Bomens] Erowih i Ihe Tnut Soende i’-sf:_z:v’”‘,v the oiantatinne sontlermd thronghont the fsland. Bet more espe cinliy in the coast reginns. weore opet ated independently The cabe was raised. the sughe “was miade and was shipped by each exfate This meihod of COUTMT hevessitated ,q"ww.}f primitive and {oeMetont ‘Drocess. The power ®aAs aimos wiihagt At'xi‘«;;!fiyiu fur nished by oxen oporating & swmall e Gl rollers dnto which the cane was fod by hand The Wiiiag of the lulee gl the oy s liging of the %z;g;tf = ag done oopen pans, with the sesalt that & IRy peroentiee of the §ugar Wik por revovered o flunse Porte e L aee famed for hir fne molnsees while it e nr nothine was ever Beard of her Frininetion of wigar.. G ~Todas an nearly vy estate the ol mills have fatlen d9ta disnse or bave bwon distiantied, the rollers used baoroad making 884 the pans for oatiie Yrodrink from. for meiae :w&»,... 53“-»!::( dividuais _fl #-thine of Ihe st - A nrionn T pAnbey have eatad Mol what are known as Teentealy’ and Bave made i for the ‘inierest of plantation owners 1o send their cane tiere 1o Le maile lot mfi;r These companies lgve cstabifshed raliroads wiih branches runsing inte all estaios "t hrtne the cane quickly and easily the mills : ‘ oo In mos! cases the "eentral” hds a goendral supervislon over the pstates wilh inspectors whay _3l3?'s‘&;;.{};;" latest methods of cane calure, thetall freiga flon systefis, enconraie the opening o! new lands often forwarding money for suil work, and in general é}_mm.'xw the cuiture ofomore and belter cape. « Besides owning kevernl plantations ‘rome of the larger “centmals” gather and gtind the cane from 60 or more piantstions extending along the coast sometimes for 30 or 40 miles and far back into the moustaing = " The advanipge to ‘the plantation awner {5 very; evident in that:-his work and responsibility end when his cghe s raixed cut and loaded upon the companies” cars which come by medns of portable trackd into his very Belds The eMeiency of the modern and elalorate method of sugar making . more -than makes up for the division of profits, . : - . These stgar houses are equipped with the latest and best machinery, No expense is spared {n this respect, for by the zaving of even the smallest pereentage of additional sugar the ~amount saved in the manulactufe of A season’s erop, often 25,000 tons or Smore, {8 enormous. i ~ Connected with the sugar houses are laboratories .with a corps of chemists, whi by continuned analysis at every ‘stage ‘in the process of manufacture control ft so that the maximum amount of sugar is ‘oblained, and the fnished product is kKept up to the standard desired by the refiners in the “states.” ™ . This process of manufacturing the sugar occuples from six to elght -months fo the yvear, the rest of the time being given up to repairs and improvements, L L ~ With the exception of the laborers, who are of course natives, these places ~are operated by Amerleans, and during the grinding season yow find many colonfes -of them situated far from the citles (n the midst of the eane country. Some men holding posifions which demand thelr attention the year round have settled - with' their Tantilies at these ‘centrals,” but for the most part those required but for the busy season go north for the reést of the time, where the social and climatic conditions aré more agresable. = . ~ The social life is of coyrse very Timfted in these places. owing to the fact

FREEZE STOPPER OF BOTTLE

It Causes Contraction from Neck and Makes Removal Eaty, Reagen! bottles holding caustic alkalles, alkaline carbonates, ete, very frequently become fixed and the usual method has been to tap the stopper with a wooden block or the application of heat to the neck, or a combination of both. Resuits are poor in certain cages and often result in the fracture of the neck.

The inverse process may be used to advaitage. In other words freeze the stopper, thus causing a contraction of the stopper from the neck. The bottles - which 1 used for experiment had failed . to open under the heating and tapping iand were bad cases of fixed stoppers. The bottles held sodium carbonate that had formed sodium silicate, an _excellent cement, and so. were firmly fixed. They were inverted in a mixture of crushed ice and calcium chloride, . taking care that the freezing sohition did not touch the lips of the bottles. g After standing 20 minutes each stop-

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ACOCH HLGSTRATION G THE FERHT F (RNE

that they are sitaated s far from the ol that, with Whe vory poor means of transporiation, 1L 1 very diffeult 18 | reseh thein 5 L . AU tHe dmrgest “cenfraln” vou find but wix or cigbt familios Hiving in sep ‘Rrale houses and a clubhouse housing L 30 o 40 unmsarried then or men with ot Oielr farmilies. - A . liut cven amoung themseives some socind life would be possibie were ¥ Cros T the fact that thess people come rom so mARy soclal clakses them ‘s..s"E\s‘e»fi & . 5 . The Jark of schools for the '::‘hflfffl"fi hax bewin 4 greatl drawbadk to men carrying their familles ith them bt | there 3. a plén urider consiteralion Hew far the government th estabiiah cmehnale gt donie of tße lateer Ccen trals” for American - ehlldren. This will probably be'the meass of Inducing gt R L‘:f;:‘,:‘&-ut;?.«i‘*i;’*‘&m'mié%(is with LR and evenianlly greally lprove ihe social e o Prabaliy the sehonl tearhers form the Jargest . cluss of Americsns on the s tand. but) of - eourse they are very widnly seimttersd. ln (e darger oities of San Juan, Ponce and Maryaguer. vou find 5 wreat many Alerican loncliors, oth mivn and wotien and pralabiy In theee thre@ citien are to be found bLas Cmany Americans as in the rest of the A G » U Ban Juan {8 the center of American | civillzation in Porto Rico, and has Lheen Trom the first . There are the 'i;;m'xztziwwm offfeials, anll most of the Lmen I hz:.«gif;r;ésj of a 4 commercial naY :‘,"3!'%‘, ¥ o | However, in travellng abogt the interlor of the island and in the smaller L coast cities, the larger part of Amer Lieans Vou meet Rre teachers. 1n every | town large esongh to be ealled such, §ylm find a school over which fioats i'.he Ameriesn flag, and in which the y English- language s belng taught [Qfien the only Engiish speaking per ‘son in the whole town I 8 the teacher, and 1t way be & long bard trip by ‘coach, or on horseback to the- next ftoeq. ; ' % Amaong a strange people. where the language, food, customs, ete, are so | hard to become accustomed to, it often | proves a hard life. | But in the larger towns the condi- | tions are much better. Here you genernlly find more than one teacher. het. { ter school butldings, and a higher class Lol people, with whom It is easier to | mingle.. o [ ‘The tobacco buslfiess has already | BTown o' vast proportions under Amerlcan management, as Is evidenced by ' the constantly Increasing consumpton of Porto Rican clgars in the i United States. In every town or vilClage, even among the mountains, 1o j bacco s still Yaised and cigars are | 8l made’ as they have been for gen- | erations, but the new tobacco raisers x. have planted hundreds and In one case jover . 1000 acres in & stetch, | which may be seen entirely covered | ¥v' cheese ecloth to subdue the lght TL@ improve the qualily. This industry has by no means reached its -I‘lwlght, and, indeed, has the prospect of a vast future growth i The coffee raising is also worthy of | mention, although not developed asg yet to any great extent. Coffee ig raleed ‘mostly . among the mountains and Americans have taken it up but littie { However, it has been pronounced the finest coffee in the world by President Roosevelt, and when the market for {1 {s made it will undoubtedly offer a broad field for American interest There are also a large number of minor industries which men from the United States have ontered and at which they are making fortunes Among these are the ralsing of pineapples, cocoanuts, rice and vegetables, which are sent to the United States for witiier use. S .

per was removed - -without the slightest exertion. Thiz is the npeatest and safest way to remove stoppers from bromine . hottles and other corrosive chemicals —Scientific American. o e ~ Ventilate the Bedroom. . “There is one place you can contral —Yyour bedroom. Ventilate that,” is the warning )uf a recent Chicago health department bulletin. The bulletin urges the need of fresh air in the winter tor combat consumption and pneumonis. It advises riding on the platforms of street cars and warm clothes, but no bolstering of necks, and s miuch aveidance as:possible of places where the air circulation is poor.

. Sparrows a Pest in Jfiug. The department of agrienlturd and commerce in Japan is béing prévailed upon to grant a sparrow-destroying subsidy, as in some parts of this district the English sparrow is becoming a pest, having devoured the ries gop. - :

The Tral of Peter and John Seadey Schosl Lessem for }u, 11, 1909

LEASON TEXT -Acth £3BO Musary werwen 3110 . : i A ! GUILEN. THXT - Ther wire 4if 854 s e Hady (Ghest snd Ihey spake tha woril oX Tod WHE bodduees el TIME - The samie ftsrncsn ae e isel Semmin, mnd 1t Tollowing Sernitg A fow wen® vy monthe pwasildy 8 Yy OF Bere afivy Penteooy T s PLACES « Bodomnn's porh In 10e Imo Pia chiiet A Peizeds. Yhe Ball of TEE San Fodpitn haas the femmgiie . & g;fwmzs"m% 5 the 3% 5 i Comrmrient and BSuggestive Thought The miracls of healing the wel Esown lame beggar, Peley & sermon prowiaivisg Jesds an the expedied Mesgiah and charging the Jews sepe. clally thels rulers. with the rriw “iaf murdw:ffig 'B‘l{.‘fi;’a, é:*if‘tafi?szt m.ghfl*fii to rwpent and be saved. and the fxet that thonsands became the dleedples of Jeana and soined the nek, enibhssiadliie sorrnanity. all this srossed Ibhe 31{.%1.! S 8 o pRI A o tes thin leligian wileh was “inrning the world umaide down” iV The fv'wifi?_‘; ~Euthar it !r%d—that the pew religions movement was the “brerailation of B new sialioe Tor the diatribution .of edrvenis of la ential opiniop” and 2¥£i*§‘.'x‘lfi§¢%’s§vwfi, 1o cut the wires anid glop the Bow (ol the curren bt thn Gy rmiite *g 8 ghoek b themselves, and pwire XW* & and mere Hphie 13 “Foola! thes thought i they soull bt wring A neck of the Crowing (‘t‘bfi }f r*flu‘i"?x pever be day. . L © OWhie thess 1000 were gl lews they were gomething mam! & ofinw slamp was ofi them (Stfierd 8 new pwrrfume. - g new atmospliere Wag_‘ arvund thep, & now jght shope 1o thelr . chararters. They bérame bow farces In the world Thire Was snthe such change in them as transformed Peter and John the fishermen. fota Bposties who changed the face of the world o The Comfort of the lmprisraed Aposties —“The speakars wabt o prls an; their 'words fook wings, and few 1o the 513;4‘!‘3lfr,»‘=ff=‘2 prte of the ewrth Here Iz a beautifol marvel What ¥ tality Is in a »: Hon ward! No won der that men Hike Joubert and Bowrl son todl Hke sigves 16 put A [heuaeht ito perfect laneguage! . Whb would ot be conlen! to go to prisng, ot death. 4 he cionld ave somvihine %&figfl" the Tweutvthird Pealn or e Heath tudes, ar the ithirteenth 1"!&1’.-:3{-31*‘«";! 2 Corinthisns. ax his {egacy i the world? Bebind those priscn bars, the - wposties comiavied themedves by re membering that they had wtiered V\‘n;n;’x which wonil not retdrn 1o Jesus Christ vidd, byt would gcceomplink the wivrk. wherednto f:_x_‘ had sent thew " Charles Frederie Goss, o The hatl of the sanhedrim acvorgd ing to both the latest great eyoiope ding, was within the templd conrt. Tle sanhedrim sat in 8 semiclirele, with the president (o the center, while op posite were Ihres. henehes ff‘ff-‘j‘hfl scholars of the sanhedrists, who. thius practically lsarned law . : . V. 8 “Then Peter, filled with. thé Holy - Ghost” In fulfilluient of Christ's promise (Matt zu.iw,f 29 Thus Peter was given caurage - 1o #peak the truth, and guided to the cholee of the right things ro say, and :_Hu- best way of saying fhem. 'l‘hisl s¥as his first experience In spraking before this august assembly. and he an uplearned fisherman, may weli have quplied before such a tribusal with such power over his fortunes, oven while he refoiced at the opportanity to preach the Gospel! o them. “Peter, filled with the Holy Ghost’ {s a their sand Peters: Peter multiplled by the very Delty. Peter—a straw blown away by the mocking wind, by himself But Peter ‘filled with the Holy Ghost' Was & man of war, a mighty captaina soldier not to be put down. elothed - with heavenly panoply. eloquent with heaven's thunder, gracions with heuyen's love” “Ye rulers | . . and elders™ Peter {s respectful, but these very titles {mply that they should be leaders In every good work, and taver ~all that would heip the people V: 1L “This is the stone which was set at nought of . you huiiders” Peter applies to the sanhedrim the - Psalm (118:22), which he had heard the Master use to a deputation from this same sanhedrim. This symbelic imagery “séems to have beep drawn from one of the stones, thn_rflzd, hewn, and marked, away from the site of the temple, which the bullders, ignorant of the head-architect's plans, or finding on 1t po mark, had put an one side as baving no place in the building, but - which was found afterward to be that ‘on which the completeness of the #tructure depended, “the head of the - corner”—on which, as the chinf corner stone, the two walls met and were bonded together"—Plumptre, = l V. 23. On their return “to their own company,” they all joined in a hymn of praise, quoting Psa. 146:6 and Psa. E-!:L 2, perhaps singing the whole of these psalms. Past deliverances of God'e people gave assurance of trlumph now. - v o - Peter and John tower up to heroic height. Suffering for Christ strikes out sweeter music in more heavenly strains than mere peace can awaken. ~ Then they all joined with one heart [, in prayer. Note what they prayed for, { for courage to go on doing their duty: for marvelous works showing the Boodness and power of their Master, Jesus, God's Son. They pray not for } themselves, but for their cause. The answer was . clearly made known. The Holy ‘Spirit came upon them as at Pentecost. They spake the - word of God with boldness. There was t_a ‘new unity, a new tmpu‘tm'@fw osity, new grace, new power. =

Friendly Epemies.—ln & sermon by Rev. W, C. Piggott in the bonfiion'iSunday School Chronicle, on “'Friendly Enemies,” I find these wovds: “Sorrow, pain, trial, are real enomies of man, and the perfect life which he hopes for cannot come till these are banished; but cften those things in lile which seem most evidently hostile 10 our peace may be our protection against greater evilg” N

‘We learn not only obedience. we learn joy itself through the things which we suffer, and as a modern ‘writer has said, the fear of the Lord is the beginning of pleasure.

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! AFTER THER FIRIT FLIGHT 4 . From Jhasuary to September' in) 1997 I Byed about nomile and & half from ?th&» eyrie ofy the golden sagles which Lhave neated on Mro 3 H o Prices ranch a! Koowilon for meven yoars ‘1 saw one ur other of the splendid J hirds almgeat dadly, and {t wax inter ;'firié!i::;:_’\fjf me o compare thelr haldis Zvfii‘m Pl st Hw%g’zw@ fgeßling near cany ovanch in Dawsen county Unilwe Cthe lalter iwhileh seeupied & Wedge of Srock), thése Kppwiton eaghia. bave vealpeted atall pne. alout Baglawy uyp i wm_f_, ide thi lhrgest troe g cihe grove, Thiz B forms ooe of 4 cwiid ploeciad range fading past, snd S apnroac el poross gpen neßitie from that wide It s zssa.#;i‘fiifi.tzf.m--sr:; 14 Crlde up !‘f}f"‘-’vi.fi}; f?fg:f;rl‘;.’sflfi ks e Bind and ook down linto the nest ; "rm Yhie Bilitan withoat alarming he F eagles. ANV that taNes piace ik plaln i wvisihle throaygeh ;m{li?p‘;{g;} Linocg : 2@«;’&l‘ Fhe ;" s ies -have 5{}14&;;:’};1;0 g 3 B ;(.W.‘i“‘fifi.’*i» tor Ihe wight fif iarge droves Lor borsés and attendant vhivrs fha i they take scareely any motlen of a Chuersrquan. On this nfs’:‘t‘rm%; ANy & L tions can be chserved, sueh ax the P capture, ! pred’ e fofiveyance 1o the s'isafiz'a{d(f'hgt teeding of 8o vaziels Ewhich . the mere shy badidng birds Cnever dllow me to witness The eyrie, bwhich copststs of xn lmmenas pile of i plne »otir«&g" rests upen, apd 18 Lail ammd B sm.im_%wr,.a:v; Erenn Bougks i while & dfad profecting beanch near | the evnter forms a canvenlent perch for the parent eagles A 8 wediiil g-fia!\im!’cy bepxgecied 0 the presest | case, the vertical belght of the nest L greatly exeseds the diameter, and ilx t width s much inferfor ta the nest tupon the foek’ previousty deserited | Nevertheless, ap seen from below, it {conveys an Impression of great | strength, which is not belled when It |ls reached, for a sixfoot man can sit iin it with ease. On May 11 the ! whole external ‘cirecumference of the | nest-rim was {nterwoven with an or ;g namental binding of green pine tops | As early as Pebruary 25 the ‘male | eagle was observed fo tumble In the | afr. Ifirst witnessed this remarkabie [ evolutlon on March 34, 1964, but have : a!zmrwéfii! seyveral times sioee. To i the bestiof my knawledge no previous . writer has a‘ilrfifld‘ to . thix habit of ?;‘Kffl.‘f%#"%g!m,, although i 1 {8 common i"m'!mfih ‘Jexes in the breeding season 1t recalls: at once the spring tumbling |of the lmale marsh-hawk, which s even mofe extraordidary from the {fact-that the hawk turnsi somersanlts {#h the alr. On March 1% 1905, 1 paid special attention to this display on the §_;;a;'t’nt_ the male eagle. which hap : penpd pt the tlme to be sitting on a f;r!n«v' u& my Ddwson county ranch, fSoaring skyward, he suddenly closad § bis wings and dropped headforemost i like a spent rocket, untll the inereak § ing impetus was checked by spreading {them. After hig first tumble the eagle ;‘?;simt upwards and repeated {l, when ['he retutned. 1o the tree before resum. . iug his merial performance. The bird gemploys a somewhat similar ma ; neuver, but polsed at a lower eleva- § tion, for capturing prairie dogs, to { which I shall again ‘refer’ At the ‘ahove-mentioned date (February 251 i the ‘Knowlton eagles - were observed ito be patching up thelr nest, and | while this ¥eemed to give promise of i;vrery eaply brood, the downy young | eventually“appeared about the same g:jme as ““the batdland eaglets. On

WITH A CARVING KNIFE

Feat of an Artist Who Can Shave g ‘Man in Forty-Five Seconds.

Robert Hardie is the gquickshaving champion of England, says Aubiey | demry in the Strand Magazine 3r. | Hardie's gecord of shaving five mexn in | one minute 15 seconds stood for some ! vears, but not long ago the champion | of the razor thought he wonld try for | new and better times, so he managed to shave &iX wmen in one minute 29 seconds.” Mr. Hardie a little time back | issued a chsllenge to the world .for | $2.500, and this money can be won by | any one whe will take up the cud’! gels at either quick or blindfold sha- | ving, and ig ‘able to-beat the existing | chanipien’s time. ; i Mr. Hardie can shave one man, no | matter how harsh ' his beard, in 12 seconds, or he will allow himself to be | blindfolded and then make a clean Job of it in 27 seconds. Besides these | times, which are accomplished by the ‘aid of an ordinary razor, Mr. _Ha_r‘dle} ‘will give any man ‘a perfectly satisfac- |

i 4 =1 &< ; :\z Ao : | ::" - Ny By \ 3 7"‘. . ’ figfi L& % LS oY ; 0 AT : 5 B a S TR I?‘ o Lo e f’ .Y g L B .. WIS b T R P R Ty 4 ""-‘k. LR ,;@ § & _:'g,f % ""* 3 \( $ 5 3 i LB ‘A* 5 i {A k. &\\ ilté ;; o R it l “‘%fi#g ¥ i‘: . ‘ : D ENTUMNE OY THE PEAT v

April L ihe (epn mas 3O ORE PN AR sxas, and oB May I thel yoRNE Were hateled ont o T ‘As ,eflg,fi%fézfic 6l ab ear! qarieg A '{‘a ‘o dog Bosis ielsdrely above the twwn” At a 8 mediam b ight on me thossleds . wings _i’;“'?%’%?::j.%?:af“fi} SRsnec g el . e ‘hupting o gronnd s sx,sje'fi;?j;;:il&hfif‘ iEWwide ririles of ok s#_&';‘-;w i hiass two o "'\{:‘?i&“ ‘miles Fach wAY Be A 8 ror unduly Sroalarm’ the game, Pasking Byer 8L Wag intervale, the Brd scans (he “dogrnwn gnd Ladees e prodienct Tei ;’i‘,.-."’flksi‘* cosstul atoap, The foalti dogs are, ot f«r!,flhi@%fiut;“fi o the Rier, bl caft BRI Bee iholr - dneniy o ae shart **szméf«:zwt* of 1R N b rounding gfiémk Bite. and indeeds gt :§:r.;;; s 53‘*, {fli 1&“;;5&}‘-.,3;5{1?' ‘?J;";‘%’f;!j. =f§~*f:'éa<-vs‘;§ at cme pidt b e n*a%:fl hasking over a 1 the ofhr MEAERERE. wing lie pecceral B i, a 8 i e TaF lOE 'Cv:fi’»'u?;}:g;' ?," thas Mungey 3" *’E«”&‘i’fu‘ wiil f".iu “’e 5 i a B ek, 54 hen ke w;x T :«z'fi.a,zj"-' rs B Lom ol Spralis clidnes B amceived B suve fower, W 3{%’}&* (iw‘s, 3 S Tttt 3,’9 U, et fi‘;;‘ y thing ke 75 Sards or V% yRIAR shognd the aite a Y Eiss aEine r‘?'fi,‘;“j af;"wu‘“h{ Bl :"-;.’_‘-« 4% 7.._ : ¢ tolds He wingw - & 1 wath shedgdsia rash faile Rexd Beyr oshrdoabe ass tounded Prafee dogs . Theps sdamper for thetr Babes® Lot alevat throe Tares feom the profing thel eads . spl wks e wings. and swilfis fuilowing Ihe tnfendad vlerin, dayis bt ksl 15505 t s grasp BB the abiack Ctalis .as sometimes Bappens, i vagl eI tls oA ElOw, reluciant HARREE T L " The winter of J¥o6 T iy the most sevaie i fi&‘h 18 % f‘**u | f).}m-,‘g;;ma _tl':t‘ferietior. The famishicl eaglis. Weie compelled o unosoal ofektcoand ME M k. Anderson Twho has a raneh in hils locsiity i mist windly senl ine s {ull acoomst of the foloNiGg Temarks &ble incident T the.middie of Jan: wiry he was riding two silies below ‘hia ranch on the south fork ol “Cot ronwood creek, and xuddesiy came clowe ypob three goiden eagivs which were devouring’ gu afuit-bhuek anie lope (Abtilocapia Amaericansi’ s 8, ‘;“;lf!%e “deaw” Upon his g;ygfaeéra_nfe_ the eagles ehdeatored 1o Take wing, but all found gread diffiveity fado ing #O, “And '{;o;a;mé Tand | fultered ajong on the show for-a ednsiderable distance before- betng able tar. Fae” Despite ‘the bifterly cold weather'the _antelope Was W cand lmber when found, a 8 i{hm ohly. beon quite ré ceatly killed. The eagles had “tern a large holé in {ts back with thelr ter ‘rible talans, and were feasiiig on Ihe kidnevs snd entralis M 7 Anderson at once Imvestigated the scene’nf the struggle, and - could easiy resd ‘the jgm%*sbxiae dflafls on’t Le deep; C}‘alfi",.yi‘d EROW, The sagles had obviousiy stam: paded a busich of antelnpe; and: then cut out & vietim by a combiged attack: il,efiflng"’ the herd. the lattgs endesy. ored to escape down a smiall right‘hand “draw,” byt after covéring about 160 yards was . beaten batk’ by the eagles. .Jt theh crossed’a ridgeé on ~which the main antelope trail ran at right angles to its .owp. and, bkard pressed by its assailants, -stroggied down a parrow lefthapil “draw’ to the, place where It suce wmbed. Al together, the antelope c¢ould’ barely. have covered 360 yards after the first aitack by ‘the esgles The- vietim, which had évidentis sftored & gallant resistance, seems to have” made a stand in three places, chlefly where found, -but also at poin'a along the trail. The erimsonstained stiow ‘aud thickly-strewn hajr, added 1o the welldefined wing prints of the flapping and W eagles, sufficiently revealed this prairle tragedy. -~

tory shave with the aid of a carving knife in 45 seconds and with a penknife in 28 _secdndfs‘ G RE e e Walpole's Prophecy of Airships. Sir Hiram Maxim’s propheecy @s to the use of airships in war is a serious paraliel to Horace Walpole's facetious speculation, made in 1784, after. Blanchard’s first-ascent—in England—in a hydrogen-filled balloen. " The seaports,” he -said, “will become deserted @ vil: lages, and Salisbury piain, Nexmdrket heath and the Sussex downs will be utilized as dockvards for aerial vessels; thére will be fighis*in the alr with wihd guns and there will be a prodigious increase of land for tillage by the breaking up of all public roads as nseless” [ : : ' Must Report Contagious Diseases. Chicago has started a vigorous crusade to compel physicians fo report contagious diseases, and as a salutary lesson two physicians have been mulcted $lO each for failing t» record cases of diphtheria. @ .

: NO TEMPTYATION, - 2 eL 3t ; fi ™ B Fa R T T Tl = Lol MR - : ML B < M) ¥ . e = 6 h*h S | * sias s dn o 1 . y e b l 4 e T-_a" ‘Wag ireferting to Miss Olibird)—s - Um, 1 shonld think it weuld be more eultatie” Hf she were sianding undey “eldetherrios” imptead of mixlilshoe Porvics : TOLD TO USE CUTICURA, After Spec alist Qficé te Cure MHer In terse ilohing NEczerma—tiad Been - Tortured angd Digficured Bt ‘Was Scon Cured of Dread Humoe, M 1 contmacted ecyema and suffered tnfensely Tor about ten mosihs Al Unies ]ll gt [ woald serateh My #eil 1o plores, My IRee and nonis were Civeret Witk ren red o maltoles we sl ] was a 3 5 3 2 i “:.‘ 3 aivised fn p s roe wha Was B &l toin skin &iu but 1 e . % 15 vt et tha EATO Catl *a2 (¥initeect | wis 7 yed of ™y A spraliin Hebing 1 t LW sl of tBe Cutlvurs Kat ties: and 1 Bl wiy e Rian } *HATO Kral Highiandiown, M 4, J ), 08" Potder Dong 8 Übeen Corp, 8o g, Boslion . X Men mte somelimes 00 oot and 80 greal, tEat one fs led to . excishm: Ol that thoy were only 8 little belior and & Clle gresteri—J, . Newman Jew:s' Bingle Binder #tvaight %o vigay Cea o 7 r i sFa ry. Peorna, 14 All sotrow i 3 an enemy, hul 1L e vies a Triend’s mesnage wi 81t o 0 Added to the Long List due to This Famous Remedy. O Carden, N.J.— “1t {a with pleasame a 1 add my testimanial to your niready long Ust—hopiugthat 1t maye Indnre others {0 avall themselves of -et 5 i valinlie 1 .l"fi‘ | gl el cine LydiaE. Pinke '“ S k] bans's Vegetable oy R | Compound 1 suf. e B 1 o<l from terrible . 2.9 fi headaches, palo In ;o i. & oy back andright - e | Nade, was lire d and #&%a nervous,. and so T 1 weak leould hand! . s S LR * G ar ‘%f‘« stand. Lydia }z/ P B N %: Pinkham’'s Vegetaook s N ble Compound re. (N S i 810T0d eto health ‘and made me fesl like a new person, and it shall always have my E’;isw.' ~Mra W. . VALENTIXE, W 2 Lincoln Avenue, Camden, N.J. - Gardiner, Me. — ' 1 was a great suf. ferer from a female disease. The dec“tor sald I would have to’ go to the hospitalfor an operation, but Lydia E, }";x:{\‘i;axn’s Vegetable Compound eom{’u:trl}“flzrfil me in three' months” — -Mus B A Wrrriaxs, R F. D. No, 14, Box 39 Grardiner Me. : Because your case i 3 a difficult one, doctors’ having done you no good, do pot continue to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compounda trial. It surely has cured many cases of female ills, such as in. flammation, ulceration, displacements, ‘fhroid tumors, frregularities, periodic - ;cnm, backache, that bearingdown eeling, indigestion, dizziness, and n%r_ vous prostration. It costs but a trifle totryit, and. the result is worth mil lious to many suffering women, :

A Safe and Sure Cough Cure. Kem DS Balsam Morphine, or any other rarcofic - or habit-forming drug. Nothing of a poisonons or harmeful character enters into its Coime position. : This clean and pure cough cure cures conghs that cannot be cured by any other medicme. 1t has saved thousands from consumption. It has saved thousands of lives A 25¢. bottle contains 40 doses, At a!l dmggiste’, 25¢., 50c. and-$l. . Don’t accept anything else.

SICK HEADACHE

Poshh‘e!y cured by these Little Pills. They also relleve Dis tress from Dyspepsia, lodigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness,”Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Toungue, Pain ip the Side, TORPID LIVER.

CARTERS 3 IVER ' 1 PILLS.

fhe;eg-nis; ‘the Boweis. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.

~ Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature . SR 00l REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.

CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS.

Costs 60c—80c per acre for seed, M ostwonderful grass of the century, ylelding from sto i 0 tons of hay per acreand lota of ture bewides. Iteimply grows, grows grows! &un today and o 4 weeksitlooks for the mower agsin, and s 0 on. Growsand fiourishes everywhere, on every farmin Ameriea. Cheapasdirt; luxuriantastve bottom lands of Egyptl. Big seed catalog free or send IOC In stampe and receive sample of this vondeflul;rm.shoof!pdn, the cereal wonder, Barley Oatls, Clovers, Grasses, ete., ote. and oatatog frea, Or send |4O and we will add a sample farm seed novelty never seen by you before. SALZER SEED CO., Box W, La Crosse, Wis.