Ligonier Banner., Volume 43, Number 48, Ligonier, Noble County, 18 February 1909 — Page 6
A . - The: Ligonier Banne: LIGONIER, : INDIANA b ke —————— ' C At g MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN g CONDENSED FORM. ROUND ABOUT THE WORLD Complete Review Bf Happenings of . Greatest interest from All Parts of the Globe—~Latest Home and For eign ltems. . WASHINGTON NOTES. Sepator Hale itrodoeed a resoln than i %)‘ : : Y eI e tosslitatinngd 4 TG okl ] 4y ¥ .. bl g Mhe LR Wie oo ‘ et i e e Frisident Hoowevely i 1 ha e tantion ol "‘5“ A 0 Ol 2 i i Bie recasnines LE At : w i | Sal i o Ui on the jert A :“("/.%‘ ' :.'n 3 t * L 1 ! PTATIA M UV ’ { Mot vy n £ L attack wade o Represeniaise Halney of 1l o Ehe president of Pa 5 LA BEate. W s Yed iooa Vot ed e uasion Ove the tyiwe of the Panb 1 z it § {5 ¥ A ' 8 cki 1(\;: ¢ 8 G i : J . Creaned o MrN T 1 R “'i"“,"t;. ::k " ¥y 4 O n % ik i e Rty 34141 Joteirn £ ST agried o report favorabi g Lt house Decomies a law Presidunt Roosevelt, after a confer ence at the White House, sent a e wage L Speaxer Stanton of the Call fornia legisiature urging =& UATS deal’ Tof the dJapines The miintster fronn Panama fed a protest with Séeretary Hacon against the spoech of Congressinan Halney, at tacking the president f his country , The seuate may Ignored President Rooseveit s guest for secregy - con eerning the alatement of the secrelarn of the {reasury on war defictency fund of 1x95 : : Fulogies of the late Willlam B, Al gon ol lowa occupied the session of the Senate last Saturday fributes wera pald &ke by R pithliican and lemodratice :-‘i'l‘.,",us‘.v«’ I b vxerolses were opened with praver by the chap lain senators olifver and Camnins paid high !-:;.-z‘.r’,v to the deceased PERSONAL. President elect Taft arrived in New Orleans from Panamy and wil b en tertained in the Louisiana nietropoliis until S|aturday, when he goes to Cin cinnati : : President Roosevelt in a letter de nies that he ‘struck the horse of & NYOUng woman \R!’;l:‘g"l“.i[ riding seversl wieks ago - . “Jack’ Binns, the wireless operator hero of the Republic, dodged camera men who tried to get his picture when he landed in Liverpool Ry sticking to his post ™ Engineer Baldwin of the Suntg Fe saved the Hves of 100 passengers in Los Augeles, Cal : - - : It is reported that Secretary Cortel you, after his retirement from the president 's cabinet. will become ;‘r:-Si dent eof the Consolidated Gas Company in New York . United States Senatorelect Elihu Root ol New York, who is at Hot Spriugs for his health, has written the Arkansas jegislature declining an fnvitation to address the joint assem. bly of the Arkansas legisiature. William J. Bryan was not hurt in an automobile accident as reported from Tampa, Fla. He says there was no accident. ; GENERAL NEWS, . The warm welcome given to King Edward and Queen Alexandra, who are visiting the kaiser in Berlin, has pleased the English people who see fn it closer friendship between Great Britain and Germany. : Denmark held a great national feast in celebration of the two hundredth and fiftieth anniversary of the final repulie of the Swedish assault upon «openhagen under King Charles Gustavus. : ' A campaign against the expectoratfag nuisance was instituted in New York city by the health department. Every subway and elevated station in the city was patrolled by sanitary officers and more than 150 arrests were made of men caught in the act of spitting on the platforms. May Estilla Flais, eight years old, bade her father good-by and then killed herself with a revolver as he loocked on at Bolivar, Pa. William Nelson Cromwell testified before the grand jury in New York concerning the alleged libel on the Panama canal deal. Roby Baskin, the 18-vear-old negro under arrest in Houston, Miss., has confessed to the murder of Dr. W. T. Hudson in Moore's Grove. He says he shet Dr. Hudson because he had robbed him and then decided to get him out of the way. The boy is being protected by militia. o In a pistol duel over a woman, George Ketcherside and John Hughes killed each other at Leadwood, Mo. ~ The south was swept by tornadoes and high winds and in the country between the Tennessee line and the Texas panhanale it is believed 20 persons were-killed. e
i Flires cansed $560 00D Jrms in Chics fpo; BiUO.OOO foss e Baflaic. XY, and 1 SILOOO bms tn Hoanoke Vo ; . The pubiieation of cabivgrams whick pansed hetWesn Madrid anid Havana ‘during the progress of the Spanish WAr show tw Sumin surrendered Cuba berguse of fear that the Ukited States [»51.:14!;3’3;; wiighi &%!3&& fer coant i ‘bring on A eevolution ' F Martin Oberaian of Chicago, sudden Lly Beeoming insase on 8 train in lowa, siabbed Brneat Richards of Parkers E burg, 18, and EBB Dawsot and G Logan Lavawell of Chicago- 5 | The schooter Sarab W Lawrence wan driven sshore off the Iwiaware i coast nnd ;madeai 10 pieces in A gale E The crew escaped coon The California seermbly rojacted the E Bl segregnting the Japancse wohool puplis and Presldent Hoossevell ex | pressed his plemssre in telegrams 16 ; Gov - Gillett and Boeaker Stanion : . Prosident Hoosevell socompanied hy LMy Rewamnvoit, Miss Hoosevilt abd several goversment officials left Waske ; fngion for Hodgenviile Ky | the Linth. | place of Absahsm Lincoln whore The g ;g:“rg.fi;‘td?‘g};"x"- is o ;’}&&ii‘xr: s address vyt ;q thia corpersiane n} R Chuliding ' e . The body of Bisils Mariorfeld the derfle o Tha GOE codony sl I hupeane, §z Was Toutad dn the rdliar ol heor ‘n Yier i?;is'i'mz et —xf ig beiloved] Cehie wWas winly . Actindink o & Fiagicet My Tall has anked 0 M Hekineen of Tennessee 10 heroine Beereiaey ol war ATthough & citizen of Tenpessee Mro Ihe tiwl?fi siende mueh of Bia time in Chicagy L e owas o }‘mmifi?‘?:fif} DUt ewsisinl the H«““gz‘e'fizflifi“&!i'_ Bl n Uhe jart presiden - lia) emmpalgs ' ' Hes i}i*flt'(g}Vl3:4;’;s«"-:%’ pasiny of Bt Andirews chareh Philadeiphia hoas bekn extended & Ball to 01 the rector . #hip in '“?“s‘.i%ifi!m%‘.;km@fi,i““- soant by the resignation of Rev {yrus Tosnsesd By whoe e t 0 Kanvae Cily - ! -~ The state Bighwa conuninsing de eided 10 REMpeRd the cohaafeurs 1 - e nt iifi,rfih} \’ifi;:?v:g-.,” ol New - York. 8 Harsanl student On Febry By 4 Vanderbill was convicied In the - Paston A;s‘nmicxgéai ARt ol reriiias fiose I _G;wr‘&},k.:&"t;f S mulornoliie : Great tHiAin o necorded 0 Ar monr & o 8§ eontract. (or vanned ported besl eXitniing for Ihiee Yours . Bnd mmmgm&; iacpe figstren The dnlilal delleiry wthouniine to be Hh'rhl _'u&}i{\li‘).fi and IAo G prstitid s Cwil b Al Bext sutpemer. The poods will be 1! N under the sunervision Cof British army Officers, o The Soderal goand Sury ot Muskogee, fikia . indicied & 7'l>;:"29*:f?§s§s?\l 5 of lig i"‘ni{vfl!a!ifinffifi chargses of stealing tmber from segregated lands in the Lerritory . o : The middle west wis in the grasp 6f the storm Kipg Chicago. and oliies in Wisconsin, Minnesols, lowa, Né braska, Kansas, Missouri and the Da Kotas reporting much damage . . P Kellum, éditor of the News at College Corper. Ind . was siain by Clvde Henley who commitied sdlcide soon after the murder. . '}‘nffihh’»‘nf‘Rfin&‘@“‘_vfl refused to give testhmony in the Hbel suit of jiird 8 E.(’uh"r apainst & Brookiyvn noewspaper. . The Conl Belt Natlonal bank mt Ben. E ton, 11, was closed on an arder from 4 national bank inspector Thefts hy & foriner president are hamed o The Canadian Pacific railway made | known: it plans to open for settiement 3000 000 actes of reclaimed Innd in E the How River Lfi&tfh‘! of Alberia fThv' land has been made inhabitable E by tbe instaliation of a gigantie irri gntion system : . | Boss opened & switch on the Ilinols g(\um'raliat Coldwater, Miss causing a wrock of the Chicago Fiyer, killing iam- person and injuring 20 ' .~ Land donated by farmers for the i right of way for the Indiana Cettral | Traction Company, which was to have 2 been built from Seuth Hend to Hunt. ! ington | was bought back by the former owners at a delinquent tax sale at Warsew, . } The Cunard Line steamer Maure;.:‘axna'esmi{}inhm a record for the east: “rn vovage. The Hner covered the distance, 2834 miles, at an average specd of 25 20 Knots o ~ Russia has sent a reply to Turkey announcing her readiness in principle i.w Hauidate the éntire war indemnity, the details of which are now under consideration by financial experts. " The murder of Miss Clara Rosen in Ottumwa, la, remains a mystery. Ten Buspects bave been . arrested, among them a negro against whom the police clalm to have some evidence. Mrs. Agnes Hrewer Miyvoshi Brogan, formerly the wife of a Japanese nobleman, now the bride of a coachman in Ann Arbor, Mich., gave up her rank, fearing efforts to gain her rights would ruln the chances of her son to obtain his rightful position. ~ - : Secretary Garfield of the interior de. partment told a house subcommittee that the limitations placed on the secret service had not hampered his investigation of land frauds. . “Rear Admiral Robléy D. Evans, reured, iw an Interview in Chicago, was quoted;::umthut Russia will fight Japan again, and will have Germany, France and Austria as allies, while England will support the Mikado's conntey. - < : x
After enjoying freedom 321 vears, Jack D. Isham, a prosperous farmer living near- Marion, 111, was arrested. He escaped from a Tennessee penitentlary in 1888, where he was held for murder. e David S. Rose, mayor of Milwaukee, accepted a challenge from Rev. Samuel Dickey of Albion college for a debate on prohibition. ‘Mrs. George V. Parks, a society woman of Pueblo, Col., and wife of the assistant president of the Pueblo Traction Company, committed suicide in Pueblo, Col. Mrs. Parks has been in ill health for some time. OBITUARY. : Samuel Roebuck, a millionaire octogenarian screen manufacturer, whose supposed eccentricities had caused him to be the center of more or less attention during the last two months, died of pneumonia at his home in Brooklyn. . o Rev. J. B. Mcßride of Princeton, la., one of the oldest Presbyterian ministers of the state, died at his ‘home, aged 88 years. He went to lowa over sixty years ago. Forty years ago he was a minister in a Cedar Rapids pulpit. : : 5
* ':',s‘;‘ Wea W e o A ; pf [ % L/ P o ‘e TR ‘ oAL-'i ' ; o ; ; r'.;‘;‘gfl, ‘ v"‘ - ‘ 'fT . i . : A: ” ; .".;".’mu\ i “,‘ e » 3 j : ik FATAGI6™ T i IR i o, O N g . o & 4 7S\ ¥y ; £ . i“‘;.;l‘?g - =\ o~ iL - e-S3g. ; oy i : IRO I 3 TN TNV lIINTY TR PR el OO ANTE PREHSTORIC. CITY AROUND THE CASA GRANE LA LT 2 LI ff;,;:f')f {774 .'.afi? - = - 8 §32 . ¥P s T{ ¥ -! i ‘. ¢ - i 5 : - A 'v.‘, X ¥ bk o s s .’. ; - o : 3 : }% T M f“'', p 9 i N.z "';”:f' IT, ki i ¥ SRS H o 3 pt % e 3.0 | o G gy A & Y < . - \\" s L . . (w « 4"_7.‘ X, . po— : " e s PRI CAGA GRANIE RO £ “"; " Bo i oy . . 4 i sl S i Gy " 2 - ,‘%" B i § o o M\w‘hll A Boes o e e o~ i - rh . . . e gAI i N e e N ] & ? P & DN, -~ i .oo S ' i G, “Bl P e & e A AR g B A i v L £ AT g %Wfi ¥ S RTTY N = A s iPI
VESSELS R EENT S An American Pompet! is degtined to result from efeavation of ryine in Arizotia being made by sclentists of the Smitheonisn instltation. = The rotnx stk the dwelimg places of pre hisrorie peoples who lived there ages weo, . e 3 Walter Fewks, on behalf of the Emithsonisn instlution. las st the past (WO years in Arizona, and wirendy huge painres. greal core A rmmwrwmd fimbfit‘ffiifi«d%‘i‘?% ing places have Been uncarthesd and restored. - Intetost has boen guickoned by the uearness with which - these restorstions have Brought the people of today o those tha! have gote be The restorations were begun &t the b Cass ‘Gmn&%;mmh; which Lave been n o show plaee since white men firsl went to the southwest, ©f the Lundreds of ruine that are seatiered thronghout the region, ;ht;ifw,_&:frf Ahe best preserved. In the ptory of a vanjshing race they had probably becg the stranghold of somé stubborn chief whose people had held omt for hun dreds of )"*&flfifi&rtkflf!’fiflflvs had perished, and B a consequence had been brought so much nearer to the Great walls stood gaunt upon the Larren plaine when sclentista first vis ited thig section They sull stand,
bt Htlie worn by the passing Ggf two conturies, and form the hasiz of the thorough investigation that Is now go: ing on. - About them was two years ago begun the fnvestigation by Dr Fewkes, financed by the government, . Three separate rulng have been unsurthed in these two vears, and the cmianner of the village lHfe and the ex wnt and grouping of the houses are definitely known, as ix the probable character of the race that bullt them . The prineipal butldings in any given village occur in groups. In each of these groups there is afie great cens tral bullding which must ‘evidently : have been the seat of povérnment and | the residence of the ruler ' Near it care the places of worshlp where the | people evidently met to perform cere monies to their deities . There were immediately adiacent other houses of considerable size that were ungues | tionably the homes of members of the ' ruler's family or of other prominent [ personages of state. There was an ad: ' jacent open space evidently used as ;& playveround and possibly as & parade c ground for the 'drilling of soldiers | Certain it iz that the open spaces also | had something to do with the cere ' monies of the people, for they were alwidys toward the riging €un from the houses of worshin, and these people i patd homage to the sun A ‘ Then finally around thisx group ran tnogreat wall that shut it In, gave it . protection from intruding rivals in S time of war, and privacy from. the i rabble in times of peace. Within this “wall was all that pertained to the af faire of the ruling famitlea Outside of §t were built the homes of the com- ' mon people, some of them sufficiently ! large to leave a mark on the plain, : but the majflrity‘. were but temporary { residences of little size, as great - houses were not generally needed in “this warm climate. ot | The Casa Grande ruin attracted first | attention when restoration was con. | sidered because it was the best pre | served of all the ruins. It stood on a | mound as do all the important ruins. i The presence of these mounds as the { site of ruins {5 partly due to the fact § that high places are chosen on which i to erect the great houses, but chiefly to the fact that deserted buildings catch the drifting sands of the desert | and great, falling walls of adobe add | material bulk to the mound. Then _there was the practice of building one house on the ruins of its fallen prede-
THE SORT OF SOUP IT WAS
Small Man of Humorous Tendencies Enlightened by Lunch Man, S & 3 The man at the saloon lunch counter watched the approach of the three men with defiance gleaming from his ‘eye. He looked aggressive and apparently was just Wwaiting for some one to say something as a starter. Each of the men carried a glass of beer and the object of the trip to the counter was to get some free lunch. The smallest of the three, with a twinkle in his eve, read the sign in back of the lunch man and then asked sweetly: “What kind of soup s that?” . ' Then he paused and smiled upon his { friends as one who is about to spring & rarely merry jest. The lunch man, surveying the small man Wwith anger mingled with contempt, said: “You know right, well from the sign what sort of soup that is. All you are waiting for is to have Xme say, ‘lU's bean soup. Then you will gpring that terrible chesinut, ‘1
oersnr. Abd 8O a4l pigeration. of rulns added Beight 1o the mound that BOW remains R 5 Bomething wikx known of the old ruin historieally. The fieel European o ovisit it was Fatber King in 16%4 The ruin was then 5 & lair alate of presvryation, thangh it had lope been deperted. Father Kine calied the rofo nsn Granda Hxfl‘.!)bing “Big House" which was the pame éeven earliee ap pited 1o it by the lndinee He de peribod the raing as fhey then ap peared, and these deseripticns have materialiy aided the sclentisnie of o day in arrivicg 8t the actusl condh Hong in the enriler times (her vip Itors sl différent periods have de #oribe the Hig Hotse and all the évi deger brought toaother gpives a good iden ul how 1t resils ap pegred in i’y prime.”’ - 2 The Cans Grande Itself was 5 fours Elory s\\:.f;ifii!};gi :*E-mw:_ww! af terraces it i 2 not powitivély known that the Bret siory v; 8 ever aceupied Tor 1t appears that the walls for 0t Were bullt up and tm"n‘m‘?w! with earth aud thix used as a foundation for the stories above Thire first story or foundation whag of the sanmie height ax the surrounding heavy wall Each story above it was smaller than the one e .?}:m; giving the whole the .ap pearance of o terraced pyramid ; The manner of getting from one story or terrace to the one ahave was by means of ladders on the outside, The flat terrace ran around cach story and formed a promenade or lockout or Jounging: Mact'fls{ts the occasion re quired. The ground plap of tHis main building showys five spacious rooms. It was probably & bullding of .20 Tooms in its prime, which is no small structure for any ecivilization of the date in which It was erected. in the group Immediately about the Casa Grande are two othier buildings that were t(wo stories high. These were made up of great numbers of rooms, the walls of which can be definitely traced. They were evidently residences and in’ them have been found the skeletons of the dead. the implements of the residents, vases, ollas and ' varlous orpaments and trinkets. : ot More important than these, perhaps, are the six long ceremonial rooms that e In o series to the north of the main bullding. These were one-story bufld. fugs of great ground space. They were fittled to the sccommodation of gatherings of people and were evidentiy used in worship or other public gatherings. That they were never used as places of abode is signified by the fact that no domestic implements were found in thelr excavation, - Ear Drum in the Cane. It you see a man in the street in the theatér or in church holding the bandie of his cane to his ear do not take this action for eccentricity or af fectation. That cane I 8 serving a double purpose. -1t is not ‘oniy a walking siick, but has an ear drum concealed in {ts handle. ' A deaf man ecan use the cane as a walking stick, and when he goes to the theater or has anyone talking to Bim, by simply placing the end of the handie to his affected ear he can hear all that is being sald or going on with. eul any dificulty. This is less con. spicuous than the ear drums used heretofore, which had to be ecarried about from. place to place and which drew the attention of everyone to the individual using such apparatis, - RS D - Electroliers of Great Power. JElectroliers of French renaissance design will be used to illiminate the grounds of ‘the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition at Seattle. Hundreds of the beantiful standards have been built On the top of each will be a large sphere of light containing 60 30-candle power globes, .. . . .
don't want to know what kind of soup it's been. 1 want to know what sort of soup it is.’ “Can you guness how many people have tried to spring that on me to day? Waell, I'll let you know that I've reached the limit and the next joker will get something that isn't on the sign. See?” P The small man and his friends saw. They took their soup in silence. German Industries in Bad Way. Very hard times are expected in Germany. From month to month the working hours in the textile factories are being further reduced, amounting now to but four days’ employment in the Silesian district, while in south. ern Germany the working time of the textile mills has been curtailed by *l4 per cent. v , Calcutta, because of the hig;l rate of infant -mortality, has appointed a female sanitary inspecier ot $5O 8 month. : :
Stephen the First Christian Martyr Senday Sches! Lonscn for Febo 21, 1909 Somualy Arracged for Thas Pager LEAIS TEXT Acts A% Tk Meonnivy verses 88 < ; AN TEXT « They stised Begion CRIEREY uleen (Rl wrel REving fad AeEam. rewelve By EpINL . Kete DB TIME «Avweut A 10 B 3B Rasssay and Hormack piscs 1 sariter 5 asd 3 A« reding 10 Peod FRAO thate wiEE 86 1 terveguam of the Fomman Fiovernare abogl A 3d B owhen Plals was deposed wtic) friade 1t vasist Tap Ihe Jewiak roters s pud Bloglesn ¥ Seath aktrary b Hooman R B 2 . FLAE Sorisum Siyes e ity M wyves SaEse of the lißeetiees e s rERMber and ouiside of B Miepiews Baie opswite (let BT Comment ang Suggestive Thought. "We now enler GPOE B OBEW el of suntingous devvlopment which w 1 ad ux withost pause s Aete 10 724 L e Irem Hebrow discivios at Fervoun oot o Grewk Ohristions a3t 3'{:75“" B Hasrknty - Theres wers fwn «:;g&&&%f& il jrws nt SeEriies e The Gresises % 3 14 Y L 3 ro gy Sows Hellosieis thoee Jewe sl han et %0 tn Lavia N speߥing couniries wia S ke b common Greek dplent in olaes of Ihy virnacalias Arxinaie = z:‘.‘x’ i e Pales Yine and ‘.x, wotiid | B BEure Ter Toew fo B arne ”{ i Lireek Ahonepll ad o e ler 3 hroadened : areerd ol the wordsiary W development of £ hrigtianits TAgainst Mg ){c Lirewa” (v, 13, Ihe Jows of Palestine 9 bho e posed L far the larger part of fhe church of Jesunalem ; : : ~ Between these fwo clgssvs thiors arces & complsint sed murmuring be Chise Ihe "u‘h:«,f-l'un ol the foreign Jews did not vecelve their natios! Bare of the suppor! given to the home Jews And yot Ithey new "17 it % ';l'.'fi ey than the wilowe who were among fu;}z*;a,'t_ tatees and friends . The Diffieulty Settied by the Oy gantratiay f lavimen fov the Wark - The ehared electe 1" seyen men ¢ at fenal o this and simtlar o _r:"'fi x B ing the agposties free to glve their whals Hme o preaching praoer and training the dlieinios e i i4‘ fuaililles required in thege o cers of X* churel were 115 of good ra port (21 tol of the Haly Spirit (D of wige iudgwent, (43 fall of fait Lharacter Rketch of Btephen -7 A yomng man of such orlginal geniup and special grace tha! Ihe e Was notl Ing he might not have attalned 1o had he been alowed 1o v ‘Hie wonder ful openness of mind: his ;,v-f!’-flv*'; froe dom from all the presossessions. pre ndices, and superstitions of hig dax hin -courage. his eloguence, his spot legsg character: with a certain sweo! and a! the same tme majestic man ner, all combined to set Brephen in the very fron! rank beth '675 seryice and of risgk He was &wud‘}' all byt the feremost man of his day “—-Alex ander Whyte, Bihle Characters | 2 He was 4 man of power (he power of faith and 4?;3:;&:*!«'}. aftame with the Holy Spirit. His eloquence was logie on fire” ! 4. . He was full of grace, and of graceg, and the beauly of hallness Grace and power do pot HWM* go to gether. Some things are beautitul, bu? not strong SBome things are strong and not beautiful “How seldom ig a HBoanerges ison of thunderi at the siame time a Barnabas {a son of consolation). But the highest eharacters combine bhoth. ‘They that walt uwpon the Lord shall renew thelr strengih and the beauty of the lord God shall -be upon shem ' ~—Pres, Mark Hopklos, Strength and Beauty, 4. The source of his power was that he was fiilled with the Holy Spirit ov G Prof. Tiruce spld. of Philiips Brooks: “The tian i fust a great water-main attached to the everlasting reservoir of God's trath and grace and love, and sireams of ml‘, as by n heavenly . gravitation, pour through him to refresh weary souls” —Prof A V. G Alien’s Life of Phillips Brooks 5. The fruits of bix power weére deeds of healing and love, wonderful miracles, “signs’ which were God's indorsement of his teachings It Is almost impossible 0 prove that one's teachings are from God, ‘except by deeds that enly God can do-—miraries of transformed character, or miracles of healing and help. e Stephen’s Argument of Defense De fore the Sanhedrim-—Acts 7:1.532 1. Stephen's address is not a direct but & real answer to the charges against him. . 2. His very use of the Scriptures is a proof that he received them and dig not blasgpheme by repudiating them 3. He defends what the Christians thought of the temple by the history in the Dible they accepted. . 4. He shows that the Jesus he preached was the one foretold by Moses. : 1 ] 5. He shows that they who pretended. to uphold the law were themselves breaking it as did their fathers, whom the prophets condemued. ' Stephen suffered . lke a saint, praying, forgiving his enemies, while he fell asieep. The very expression {s an argument for immortality; for the one who sleeps {s alive and awakes the same person that lay down to sleep. “Say not ‘Good night; but in a brighter clime bid me ‘Good morning.'” Our very word ‘“cemetery” means “sleeping place.” Saul standing by and deeply impressed by the scene, and not long afterward changed into a disciple of Jesus, shows how the blood of mar tyrs became the seed of the church, and reminds us of the monument to Charles and John Wesley in Westminster Abbey. A seemingly ordinary man was converted, opened his heart to receive the Holy Spirit, and became gne of the most influential of men, gSo it may be true of us, common men and women. o : Out of troublous times, difficulfies, and persecutions, as from Jacob's pillow of stones, there may arise a pathway to God and heaven, the ‘“‘clear shining hills of Beulah above the mists of distractioh and the thunderbolts of suffering.” e - Stephen’s Christian life was short, but he accomplished more than most men had they lived as long as MethuStephen has part in the triumphs of Christiunity through the ages.
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. Kbt ek gl B ; g i - 4 4 . A WHITE NCOT LA STRERT &Y GNP ! entislis coiid only %ink ;\’*—!’,' - A'A. e iesd thin penter é PR M iy b &bl 60 matserialn Mooy 5 Ly sl WLt ¥ going n W H : 5 nterior e rnlght more ' o toil What s godng o & g ¥ L CEaR! The srvaliliing dis ißtpr 1 Bas fareved T T &1 ‘ s ha 18 loy ; Mol % A i wnder & & Eres gravhical conditions mind of ever i (3 Ey o iy and wintnan since the fa Wi {f thp new yeuar whédr "'*".‘;3 #xtent and hoarror of the liallae disasfer begad t Cuily realized And {1 &8 scarcely to be expected ‘that very much copsclation will be derived thersfron Or even from the'glalements of sot entisty regarding this earth's internal froy bleg, thelr alarming csuses and prob alite diskstrous results Loy It 1% not very comforting for in stance, to e solemnly Informed that we are Hving today on the outer sheil of & bigh pressare bolier, shich jeaks badiv in certaln wesk kit - and “bhlows out” with alarming [requency along a certain weak plate which is geographically known as the "sanh guake twit ™ It you take a map of the world and draw a broad line siraight across the Pacific ocean, from {he Philippine isinnds to Panama, thepce across the Atlaptic ocehn through the FHiritish Wes! Indies to Spaln and Italy, thence continning -across Europe and Asia o Japan, and on 1o the starting point in the Phiilppines. you will see exactly where !?;v carthauake beit Hes There yre other minor belts, ope of which passes southward along the coast of California and Mexico and the west const of Bouth America. There are evidences ohservable today in ;vr;u"g:« ally all parta of the world of gther earthquake bLelts in which tre mendous geological changes and sp Keavals were wronght i prehistoric times y ' Even New York city is in an earth gquake belt. At some time, probably thouszande and thousands of years ago, a mighty earthguake split asundér the rock - that united what is now the Island’of Manhatian to the Palisades of the New Jersey coast That earth quake formed the Hudson river Earthquake belts are admittedly weak spols io the outer crust of the earth—the high pressure boller on which we live—and there s no evi dence that any of them were ever permanently repaired, : Prof Edward Suess, the eminent Vienna geologist, predicted a few davs ago that eruptions would follow the carthquake and tidal wave in southern ftaly. He attributed the earthquake to the sinking of the earth’'s crust, other wige a buckiing of the boiler plates, in the zone of which the Lipar! islands are the center. He declared that as the process of sinking went on the Calabrian and Sicilian highlands on efther side of the Straits of Messina would. be submerged, ouly the highest peaks remaining above the sea. The strait, he said, would thereby be greatIv widened. “Prof. Suess is of the opinion that
SUPERSTITIONS OF THE GREAT
Men of Remarkable Mentality Not Free from Them, A man more absolutely governed by pure reason than Lord Macaulay could not well be found. But in his diary he refers to an after-dinner talk about the feeling which Johnson had—of thinking oneself bound to touch a particular rail or post, and to tread in the middle of a paving stone. And he adds: I certainly have this very strongly.” In one of his Hibbert lecture Max Muller said to the students: “Many of you, 1 suspect, carry a ha'penny with a hole in it for luck. I am not ashamed to own that I have done so myself for many years.” j Charles Dickens refused to lie down unless his bed were placed due. north and south. He gave notice of the rule before arriving at a friend's house or a hotel, but a compass was always handy in his baggage to make sure. Miss Justin McCarthy has told how Parnell gravely checked her stir ring coffee “the wrong way,” and in-
eY e N 4“'.. o A ‘; N el LW L . =k *fi,_, - :w«rA ‘H} g-.,' g o %fi" w ‘ L T ee R RO LI TRATEC bOLCRNE Tl B EARTHIURRE CHYSTEM the earih'a ¢ ""ei‘,- i» _i."'fi; taaally shrink T everywhere Thors b cogabinticn s Be Boasd bomever, 8o his Fijrther romark Ihal the Tife nf Bps Naman specien will be too shark ta make thls 3l BB O tmgseriant 4 f‘-;;a?rk:,i:‘, o The gverage (hicknoss of Yhe earth's erast Ihe beativr plates ig ;;‘;;,;v':.yéf; G -:q‘r;o‘-;’-; th b 50 Ziilea :27;;{ s gverpge fenaliy. Yo be abogt fßve ‘,;‘"t:i;?:s' ‘,k;,'r of water Selonlists have cstiimated that the dusnmand goeasury 818 depdh 5t H mniies Relow the gurlace of tha earih = ,-.B r'fi?*.s’,-'fiéz :"x-w«;.é_;s? batf & r:';.‘,;?;’:r;-; sednde 1o the s thare dnch. 1 (5 A safe conclosion that . within 8 trge potilon of The earth s crast thers LXRINL Rl ap gases. o lieulisly Woam nder & Srvarite sl ia Ihat exert s By the ot pawerful o high ex :;"‘-.;‘;;‘ly : 2o ; o } Wnen a Bigk exiiosive G detinaled the amiun! of srosuziry fapefids Iyt the yoluine of gases Überated dnd the £ s -gk h,;.‘h’s T Nitre glvewrive wxhinded in A grdde Wherte I el ' X et mould exert a s sure of probadbly from 300009 to -2i6: 0 raunds e the sgoire Inch The prefEuce would certalnly be less than half & milllon pesinde the sqiaare tnch ai‘k :.s:f: ‘the tampersinre of the gases would egnal the boilse pedint of stved Con am‘;:-‘;%"‘:}_ ’-i;fi*!t' B 5 e pound force holding In cheek a 350,000 poutid force which s contipususly ex erting Hself in _é-'s.:;‘--f!'fr*. to burst the enith » crust aaisnaler it s reasonakhly !‘fif'f""{,‘i’i‘,flfl«"'fl)fl‘v thal the stronger (oree will eontinge v,~ all for some time to come at fesst snd that there i 3 not the siightest danger of thé earth blow tng fo pleces Bs A !'flfgéfh;ts;}%x*%-i:: a 8 the ua_;mfi'm;z, e ord of earthquakes shows, , thire are many very weak fpotstis the carths crust, Dwep down under e crust where water hai entered Ihrough Tanits, 1o be entrapried T and © Bighly heated. with 6o room for expaniion. it dlesoives the rock. and as under the eaormons pressures it forces {ta way through narrow crévices 1o m-y\‘ s} tions it cuts new channels §n the gran. fte floors. just as in giscial time sub glacial streams cul jassages through the fee. s : Consequently, when the eruption of a voleano takes place relleving the pressure in the deep jnssages onder 4t there s a rush toward the outlet of streams of supdrhieated water . made syrupy with stone in solutfor. .As these streams of silfcacharged water find vent at the volcans. ihe expansion of the penbuy striéam takes.place with explosive violence, forming’ v’\-ulm!:!c‘ dust and pumice stone, which are belched forth in stupendous quantities Then portions of the earth’s’ cryst, which have been resting upon a sup port of steam- under dynathite pressures, naturallysag and shift when those pressures are rémoved or ma teslally lessened n s The vast ameunt Lof molid ~matter ejected at times from volcanoes ig difficuit of comprehension: - The gresat volcane Krakatoa had -been extinct for ages when, in 1883, it !f;':p Blew off with a shock feit clear through the earth, and with a blast that sent a wave of air around the earth three times, while the fine voleanic dust did not entirely settie out of the atmos: phere for more than two Vears, as was indicated by the unusuaily - brilllant display of red sunseis’. It Is estimated that more mud was ejectéd from the ‘mountain on that oecasion’ than the Missigsippl - river discharges in 250 years. This was the greatest voleanic ‘eruption in historie times. The distance is not too, great ner the time too remote for the eruption -of Mont Pelee to have caused the earthquakes of San Francisco, Valparaiso and King-
ston, while possibly ~Vesuvius may have played a material part. S
sisted that she should take another cup. A gentleman of Portrush sent Lord Roberts an old horseshoe when things looked ill in South Africa Gratefully acknowleding it, the general added that he would keep this horse shqge in company “with one I picked up the day I entered the Orange Free State, and another I found at Paardeburg the day before Gen Cronje surrendered.” o Korea to Maké Exhibit. ~ Korea will be represented. at Seattle by an exhibit of brass Wwares, carved woods, linens and silks: - An exporter in Seoul is preparing a fine exhibit for the 1909 exhibition. to show the progress of the Pacific country. : : Severe Test. “They tell me°you are trying to lead a better life.” ; e Wallyr ; / *“1 was just wondering what you would say when you slipped down-18 % pool of water™ - .
| ONE KIDNEY GONE BByt Cured After Doctors Baid There Was No Hipe, © fylvanus O Verrill Miifari Me. says Five yours 2z a bad iplury g - Parmiyves 4 me and % ’lég-“’ afecied . my kid Gv - e neis My back hurt & \ me Geribly, asd *‘fi,, h the grise was bad - T By E 1y dimordersg Do sb; 4 = tors =ald @y right 4 & B kidncy was pracii Y "v, - ‘ caliy dend ThHey b 5 said 1 rm.%;} tu*"c';“!" - j wilk agan Iread of Pyvan'g Kidpery YFiils and began U Ing them: One box made e sironger snd froer from paln 1 kept on usiog thety and i‘;:; B !;f';‘:-!‘:‘,?;i wax able 1O gel ol on crulches and the kidpers wire acting beller i bnproved rapfdiy. disrasded the cruiches and o U“-, scnder of sy Iriends wias soObD o iets iy ayred g Bold e all dealers 50 conis a bokx. Foster Miikarn Co Hufale N Y. . : INAPPROPRIATE. {.s' = =y * Serd [_ . & S R I L e " ! T {' : that \S"H’E'X ~".;*""’!‘s'tfl r hday s &be &y t gives me o<f 11 the momning ™ faanrrg * ilnt ta have YOO elabirate Bis birthila ing"™ CHILD HAD SIXTY BOILS, > And Suffered Arnnually with a Red Scaid Like Mumor on Her Mead. Troubles Cured by Cuticura, When my li%ls Vivian was sbout #ix thoniha-old b ul hroks out In bl she had o ity Is all and I u P Latienry N and Caticums tiinly 3L which ner entirely, Some tise later 8 Bur hroks out be. hingd bher war o 5 o vad ne on 1o her Bead ! w 33 nedriy ball covey The hannr Ked ke a seald, very red with a sticky, clear fiald comfng from ®- T 1 irred every siTinx I always i Caticura Soap arnd fMniment w! h kever falled to Lol o wur %t time #t hmke ot 2 became 8o had that [ was discHUrage:l Hut 1 continned the use of Cutlears Soap. Onirment . and Resolwent naill she was well and has nevep heont trofbled in the last feao years ' Mra, M A Behwerin €74 Spring Wells Ave., Detroit, Mich, Feb 24 1908 Pester Drag & Chem. Coip, Sole Prose, Boston, Not Afraid of a Ghost Jln & village in England, s monih or £ HE 3 man came running into AR fon At nins o'clock at nizght ar i rifed aat thatl-there was & ghost 16 bis back yard Theres were 14 men in the inn, and not one of them dared o go home with the man and fnvestigate. There wak & person who dared, 5 W ver, and that was the landlord's danghter, a gird e 14 Somme of the wmen {(aliowed her at & distanee and she went into the vard and up 1o the ghost Bapping He arimis abodt and discoverad-—what? That it was no more nor lesg than a man's white shirt flapping on the clothes line in & strong breeze. That's about the way-ali ghosts turn out. Crim‘-nnl‘«ty of Waste, - If I wanted to train a child to be thrifty I should teach him to abher waste 1 do Bot mican waste of money; that cures itself, because very -&00n there {8 no money o waste—hut waste of material, waste of something that is gseful but that you cannot rep resent !n‘nmney value to the waster. There is waste of water, waste of gas and things of that kind. If you wouid wish ¥oiir children t¢ be -thrifty 1 would beg to Impress upon them ’!he ceriminality of waste —Lord Hosebery, in an Edinburgh Address, : Looking Forward. Mr. Wiggins, being in a frivolous mood, was giving a burlesque imitation of palmistry—pretending to read his wife's fortune in her palm. Six-yearold Ruth was listening with intense serfousness, but neither of them was noticing her ? “And.. finally,” he conciuded, after the usaal recitals about a dark man, a light man, a journey, and a large fortune, “you will live to a great age.” ‘Thank God!"” broke In Ruth, clapping her hands ecstatically. "Then my cbildren will have a grandmother!” ; NO MEDICIN But a-Change of Food w_ ; Many persons are learning that drugs are.not the thing to rebuild worn out nerves, but proper food is required. ‘There is a certain element in the cereals, wheat, barley, etec., which is grown there by nature for food to brain and nerve tissue. This {s the phosphate of potash, of which Grape-Nuts food contains a large proportion, In making this food all the food elements in she two cereals, wheat and barley, are retained. That is why so many heretofore nervous and run down people find in Grape-Nuts a true nerve and brain food. - *“I can say that Grape-Nuts food has done much for me as a perve renewer,” writes a Wis. bride. “A few years ago, before my marriage, 1 was a bookkeeper in a large firm. 1 became so nervous toward the end of each week that it seemed I must give up my position, which I could not afford to do. ‘ : “Mother purchased some Grape-Nuts and we found it not only delicious but I noticed from day fo day that 1 was improving until I finally realized I was net nervous any more. el “I have recommended it to friends. as & brain and nerve food. never haying found its equal. I owe much to Grape-Nuts as it saved me from g nervous collapse, and enabled me to retain my position.” = Name given by Postum Co. Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to Well ville,” in pkgs. “There's a Reason”
