Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 8, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 May 1909 — Page 6

!n‘ - .r . e Ligonier Banne: , , . LTIGONIER : S INDIANA P 4 : B G 0 BREIDRRBIJRGITHIHED | I 3 w 7 10 o s “ 55 o 2 IN i = . : A I e . <3 |TEMIZED FORM — - o : & ™ e ‘ 3. s - 3 2 Epitome of the Most = & 2 Important Events 5 . Gathered From All x = Points of the Globe. & ;%- : ¢ u;i :S el RS s eOy .I WASHINGTON NEWS. - i President Talt, foHowing conferenoe ":"'3. enate and house leaders, was | - eoenvinced (Bt the tariff bill will pot be paswed bature luly 1 > o Senator Dolliver of lown deliversd | B leiling ppeech a;:,;-f‘_s-v’! the tarifll Sl S _;" - Pede %ltk_j;";'f the new minister from | Venezuply wak presented to Presidest | Tal . : i The sapreme tourt held the Hep : Burp inlerstate commercs net o valid, bat (e reiltosds won a greater | T wietary through “i:_fiyv.'dw“xm'f 6 than did | 7 the govermmant. i . Representative Murphy of Missourd | o introdueed A resolution in the .’:"‘.}fi"i providing - for an © investigation of | Judges Philips and MoPherson of the | fediral eanet i fiscar % Seraus was appointed am: | Biavandor 10 Turkey o F‘\}’.‘;f« d Ambas { sodor Telshmn who ooy tKo i Rewator Horal of Idaho ia n speeeh favaring .ai tax on womes sald Theo ' dore Hoomevelt had saved the Repubd i Hean party from going oul of bl Lins s : : - Ma! Himes B Usyaoaugh :.4:!;;- 0l | EHineeE il MWashingtion on a 40u Cof inspectiog of the watars of Afnskn with '‘a view o] Buproving the sysiem Oy iy navipgation 1o thal farnonhb vro o soclion pf the United Stats : ! Gerrelaty Napel of the department | of colmeree wig labor donied Il & Bet 4t Rohert Walchorn lormor T Nl ey al fmniferation at hew Yo had been named S[enatiaek fTHman and MceUumber Had o Hvely debatn Ity the senate ob the tarif 4 - i ‘ PERSONAL. Cal Owen ] Sweit comnmanding the | Tweniy eighth nited State: nfan ¢ try at Fort Sheliing Minn has beeén ordered 1o Bis home th Await retre | ment from active service -,.(‘::u‘;aiie;#‘__en‘-tun the deposed presk | “dent OF \‘fi}n-x;x:--"u__‘:--?t Puris suddeniy | for Santander Spain, where e willi awail the arrival ot his wife : Count de 1a Vaulx, the FPrénch derodd nm;t‘(r»«.m:'rmt # broken leg by faliing from his balloon at \rles France Mavaor Hose of Milwaukee and Iw Dickic of Alhlon tollege. Mich. bad their wecond debate on lguor in Chi | cago : st , o Queen Wihelmina of Holland gave | birth to a daughter. and the wholed conntry cetebirated the arrival of the ;] qittle princess - 7 GENERAL NEWS. - v.Th/g_‘f.\'H;,-nuri-'-:«'ulr!lm}'t\ passod a r’:n‘sn-‘f_ fation /to submit a 4 'state-wide prohibi tion wfendinent to the constitution to | the Spedple. : MThe: trial of James Hovle, chiarged | “(lh Kidnaping Willie Whitla, was be- | “Bur %?; Mercer Pa i //)/‘Fha* American Therapeatic :m‘?n-t)“f opvwgl its tenth dnnual -,m‘.a-..mzn_n% in Lunpson hall, Yale unlversity ' Two more Hons were Killed by Col i s Roosevelt, making six be has now | ) m:’é\u down with his trusty rifle § ¥ INJY the hope of the “sleeping sick- | /}_fikaw commission that ‘l'hmdnrv; /KT{N’\:&J‘\"‘U will visit its camp at Sesse, | Uganda, and view the work being done to find a cure for the disease f May wheat was sold in the Chicago | market at §129% on the strength of | g rmn\rt that James A. Patten had rv-i entered the game, - Brissh riflemen in the international smalil bore match defeated the Amerfcans, 14583 points to 14,179 out of a.! possible 15000 = Arthur Stitt and Lesla Stroud died fn a buggy in Indianapolis from ° poison, after-she had spurned his love. -+ A plot was discovered in the Cali - fornia penitentiary in which J. R Clifton, a convict, planned to have a friend steal Gov. Gillette’'s son and - hold him until Clifton was pardoned. Mrs. Della Stringer was acquitted at Washington, Ind., on 'a charge of blackmail, but was sent to an insane{ -asylum. = Dr. Frank R. Hangon, wanted in Jackson, Minn., for forgery, feigued sickness and escaped from Sheriff Terhaar in Kansas City, Rallroads operating in California are endeavoring to ascertain the con- - stitutionality of the Wright act; passed ~ by the recent legislature, which prohibits them from giving free passes to Any person. / g ;

Army officers began a 30-day ride over the battlefields of the civil war, The third annual session of the consolidated grand lodge, Knights of Pythias of Oklahoma was held in Chickasha. = : _ Reports showed that more than 130 persons lost their lives and 300 were hurt by evelones which swept middle and southern states. The W. C. T. U. of Cincinnati will -ask Mayor Markbreit of that ecity to forbid the moving-picture shows to present scenes showing the electrocution of women. The princess born,tolg\e queen of . Holland was named Juliana Louise Emma Marie Wilhelmina, Evidence showing that Abdul Ha- - mid, deposed sultan, planned the mas. - sacres in the Adana district and the mutiny of troops in Constantinople was found. . - The grand chapter of the order of the Eastern Star of Nebraska met in

fog in the south of Haly. arrived in Paris oo hizx way to England =~ ExPresident Castro of Veneruels says his physiclon had advised him 10 g 6 to the Canary islands The bulldings of the Northwest Stove works at the Oregon Mate peoi tentinry. al Sulem, were destrored by fire. Lows, §230000 ni J. B Chiiberg president of the Alasks Yikoo Pacifie exposition. bas sont invitations (0 wWeslern governors and wiemhers of congress lo sliend 3 conleretive th bring aboul an agree mest for concerimd aetion in jegizla tive sulijects sfocting the far wint Capt. J. W Dunne of the Roval Eu. #iteers of England Is said (o bave invented gn adrplany whick i mu. perior to the Wright brothers’ ma chine St L Wealthy = linlisns have offered Thomae Colesanto, 8 detective of Wa tCrbhury Conn. SLSOO 5 yeur 1o go to New York and assist ig slamping out the “Hisck Hand He 8 1o take the place of Detective Potrosinog. who was Ausaseinated 1o ftaly =O2 The pouthwest ntersiale commis ¥lon on conniry e eanvened in Guth P, Okls.~ - Pro Frank B Hanson, who (2 wanited in Jackson, Minh, on & charge of forging a check for $B.OOO, excaped from Henry Terhaasr sheriff of Jack sufi connly. Minnesola at the Blossom house In Kansas City, Mo. by feign ing Hiness - R A bronge siatue of Henrs Wads warth Longfeliow was unvetled ip Washington with much cefemony . I wax presented (o the nation Ly the Longfellow National Memarial assoct atlon and was secdpted by FPresident Taft, - . - Count von Bersstorff. the German ambassador, viasited Miwaukee and wis entertained by the i Kluh and the- Cltizgens lusinese isaguy » : The fftieth .afit‘.iverfia’rx af the preat PEka's Prak goll discovers was odle brated in Denser anid Mber Coldrado citien. o ' . ‘ Hishop Peter 3 Mubtoon made his firer officisl vislt o Klpin 10 and was Eiven & greatl recesdioan : Philander € K#tiox. secretary of atate " celebrated Bk Bfyalyth birth day Thurddny Wl W 8 residence in Washington o 5 ¢ Ambassadors and ministers frow furelen conniries spoke 0 faver of worid peace gt the dlosiing scssion of 1 piaichal Deaee yongrens in d bt capn. o - The tonth shtoßl nuwting of the Atherican Thermmpeutic soviety was held st Now flgven, onn : A repurt from Aaunia. Asiatic Tur ke pald 30000 Bad been sdain and J 5. 00 Bowwioße Willllam ¥ {:);mg; Secretary to for nier Goy Joha B Atgeld of liinois sotamiitied suleide In New \‘(-;n-',_ The famous traveling trowel of -the Masanie lodge Wi started from log Angeles, Cal, on s trip around the warld. - o ' . Hmmue] Hoaver and his wife %aw»v burned to death i & fire which e alroved !bflfir"hfaru pear Middiebury, Apples in the Orark froit region are snbiected to hoth reasonable and un reasonable freight rates, according to A decision of the interstite commurce computsston. The decision was {n the caxe of the Oszark Frult Growers' as sociation Against the St Louis & San Fraucisco raliroad and others Ferdinand Planey Earie. the artist who achieved potariets Two sears aga by canting off his first wife, who iater obtained a diverce I France, in order to marry his “affinlty” was a passen ger on the steamer Potadam, which ar rived from Antwerp : : Melancholla I 8 supposed to have led Edward Everett Visal, & prominent Boston grain broker, to shoot and kil bßimself at his home in Dorchester August Rovske a welltodo farmer of Hancock, Wis, wrote a letter to his. wife saying he had been kiduaped and was held for ransom in a barn near Chicago.. =~ = _ Three big meetings were held by delegatos to the national peace congress in Chicago. - =~ = Theddore Roosevelt digplayed his ex. pert marksmanship by killing a lion ss it was charging his escort, & Thirteen murderers were hanged in the streets of Constantinople. President Taft has approved the sentence of dismissal imposed by court martial in the case of Licut. Thomas A. Jones, coast artillery corps, staticned at Fort Baker, Cal, on convietion of charges involving fraudulent conduct in his official capacity. Acting Warden John C. Wenger of the Michigan state prison gave $l.OOO bond to answer a charge of perjury at Jackson. 0 : :

Wintergreen won, Miama was second and Dr. Barkley third in the Kentucky: Derby at Louisville. Fire of unknown origin destroyed the historic Keczuma Springs hotel and the C. M. Buffington mansion in Boone county, Ky., 12 miles from Covington.. The loss is $50,000. The second National Peace. congress .began in Chicago with many prothinent persons in attendance. A mutiny of Turkish marines near the American embassy in Constantinople was quickly quelled. William W. Robinson, manager of a nickel theater in Peoria died from inhaling flames which destroyed the house. ’ i President Taft, in a letter to the peace congress in Chicago sald his influence always would be exerted against war. ' » Arrangements were completed for the removal of the body of William E. Bainbridge, the special agent of the treasury department who committed suicide in Paris two weeks ago, to Council Bluffs, la. The- body was brought to this country on the steamer Philadelphia. - - ‘ Charles E. Magoon, former provisional govprnor of Cuba, will leave New York May 22 on the steamer Lapland for Antwerp and will spend about six months making a tour of Europe. A girl baby three weeks old was found during a blizzard on the doorstep of John T. Leary, at Erle, Pa. The child’s clothing indicated its par ents were wealthy. Gov. Hadley of Missouri, sent a telegram té Washington protesting ‘against Representative Murphy’s reso‘lution calling for an investigation of ‘Judges, McPherson and Philips of Ihe federal court. §

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Five prominent tilizena of Long Beack Cal, R F Bend William E Hinshaw a member ol the board of public works: LD Mallery, W, J. Hinshaw, treasarer of the long Beach Trading osnpany, and O P Therne, hase retutned o that ity alter sever al-days’ cawping pesr the ruins dis cosered fu the Ban Jacinio moutitains by Mz»r uf‘;nd. ymg{;“‘?; ; - : ) The party bhrought back & tamber of phistographs showing the nature of the ruins. and Mr Bond traced 8 mayp of them showing their extent and con tont. ALI mEmbers of the party ate more than ever convinced that the roins are of great age, and discovernsd addditional data. which induces them 1 beileve the deellinge were inhahit ed mbaat the thme the ocean tovered the Aoor of whet I 8 pow the Cosehielia velloy and Salton sea and fs now mach helow sen level m‘!mxny places The Laong Beach party foand that many persaps have been nushiluonsiy hunting for the ruige and (he Keenest intercst previdis in the valley, Almost il oof these misied by a false report of the find, xiravid awsy Into the various canvons pod mpssod the rulos by gnany miiles . JH Rickards an old resident of e valley gnd mountiain wor and 1. B Mailors, who accompat jed the party on the present trip were the only successful ones to lo cate the rulhs. e S 0 much donbt and incredulity has heen expressed in regard to the exist ence of such ruing thal Mr Bond has decided to wmake public the loeation and thraow hLis find open ta dll who care to explors it : 2 _ In -this way confirmation of his find will become widespread, and the determining of the exact nature of the dwellings and the date of thelr oceu pation may be jearned. He has been holding baek the exact docation to alb low geientific parties to- explors. the ruting first. Many of thése bodies that have communicated with Mr. Bond have requested him to secure all the information -and photographs at his own cxpense and forward the same to him. This he s dnwmi_ux 1o do and he is willing te give doubtling Thomases the firalchance now. Atr Bond made the following state ment i “So many conflicting statements haveé been made in regard to the col lection of ruins we have found that 1 have decided to settle the entire twatter by giving the exact location "~ *{ am positive of one thing. that the entire area containing 40 acres approximately, and being more than a mile long, is the work of man, and, in my opinfon, were used as human habitations. 1 believe they are of prehistoric chardeter. In all, seven of my friends have visited the scene, and the verdict of all 18 the same “The rains are approximately 150 miles from Los Angeles, in. Riverside county. They lie on the north slope of the San Jacinto meuntainsg, borderfng the Coachella valley on the south, 101 miles due south of Indio and gbout §i miles due west of Mecea, formerly Walters, on the line of the fßouthern Pacific raliroad to Yuma, It is 11 miles northwest of the nearest point of the Salton sea. The ruins are on unsurveyed land in the Cleveland forest reserve, but 'if the lines were extended would be at the interception of sections 11, 12, 13 and 14, township 7 south, range 7 east, S B. M, “Persons desiring to visit the site can get hotel accommodations and rigs at either Coachella, Thermal or Mecca, all about equally near the locality. 1 will cheerfully furnish any further information desired” " The ruins extend along the side of the mountain a distance of a mile .and a quarter. They are imposed in terraces built along the mountain side, following the contour of the hill from sea level up a distance of 440 feet above sea level, and in place

LESS MERCIFUL THAN DEATH

Solitary Confinement, as a Punish. . ment for Criminals, Denounced as Inhumane. As a “deterrent” the advocates of the abolition of capital punishment insist on imprisonment for life between four walls. Whether it is eflicacious is strenuously denied nowhere more authoritatively thdan in Italy, where, however, it remains in force. In Great Britain the whole subject of lethal crime and its peénalty was discussed by the house of commons just 40 years ago, and in the Hansard of that day will be found the impressive speech of John Stuart Mill, who threw the weight of his authority into the nonabolitionist scale, first, because the gallows or the guillotine was superior as a deterrent, and secondly, because, in the interests of the assassin himself, they were much more humage. The “life in death” of such regi.cidsés as Passanante or Bresci, or, indee¢ of the inmates of such

g",b' l‘;‘ kq,,m sen esel in the opinion of ¥Mr. Tknd the dwellings were pocupied by a tribe that followed the recsditg ocesn, hullding npearer the w:flt‘-r ‘an it e cededd 'l"h:.fr:_r are more than 00 rootns u- '*,.r‘, aithougt owing tn their grent nge they are i many cases al ot ahliteratod i Thesst roruns wers sank In the recky terraves a distance of 24 feet znd the walls were piléd up a number ¢f fest Rigber. That they wera rmofed with hides or thateh fs the opinion of the mien who have sgeen them, &a nn traves of any roofing remain, One ;;'~'z!;;a of the rooms are beller pre gy el Thege have IwWO oDenings. teading into them, most of the others Bave Lt onwe : fines g fof3o o 49 ‘l\’! the roons locsted un the fourth terrave of the spven that are yet distinoetiy visthis are sl conv “' 1 by a well v'E--Y.\,'.'wf passage way leading from one to the gther glong the Tront aof the rox Al Ihe other roouis ate separale. and front mieredy on the general rouds Wik the Tiora o Eaidenve that "1;1-“ DCERS was osl corering thevailey when the residents of the ruins lived there {8 shown by ‘_.\ i J » }‘ | A ' 5 “.‘ \‘fi:‘ i ‘\\ & : : RN (9) Py, @ ks :‘ 5 G Lty N 7 N e - Y} \ Lt * 4 » 3 f L : WWY “”‘"qfl . IR~ G Yoo ' T (g s Lol o 0 @ @ 7 N Yoy 5 T oe 4 ‘o eNy ‘i‘ z A ¥ < «'C‘fi-»\ b . 1 Standing in What Were Rooms Long . Ago. the fact that the trail from one gathering of the ruins to another does not cross the dry wash sepsratiog the two settiements, but elimbs the moun. tain side by a circultous backtrail and comes down on the other side. This trail would never be used under the present conditions, : A welldefined trall into the mountaing _shows apother collection of ruinsg in such a bad state of decay thut the outlines are barely visible, There are about 30 acres of these at ter ruins. . ‘ . : The Piker. Alderman Muleahy of New York, discussing credit, said; “The man who aska for credit awakes your suspicion, and your sus pleion usually turns out 1o be just “A bartender told me how the other day a seedy chap turned to him from the free lunch counter and said: ““Can you trust me for a glass of beer till to-morrow evening. friend? ¥ *No, sir! Nix!” said the bartender, “Well, I'm sorry.'.sald the man. Tt seems kinder small to eat the amount of free lunch Y\*e'dunc and then not buy nothin'® - ] Wireless . Telegraphy on Trains. According to Mr. Nevil Maskelyne, the wireless telegraph office on trains is quite a possibility. In his opinion it would be less difficult to apply the wireless system to a train than to a ship, there being continuity from the rails over which the train is traveling. He thinks an installation would cost from $2,000 to $2,500 per train. :

establishments as that of Montepuld, in Tuscany, bears all too eloquent attestation to the British philosopher’s contention—the said inmates, as described by humanitarian visitors like Signor Dominione, being reduced to -straits, mental and physical, such as to inspire the profoundast pity, even when they do not cut short their sufferings by suicide. The Secolo of Milan, under the heading: “1 Drammi del . Cellulare” (“The Tragedies of the Prison Cell™), gives harrowing details of these sufferings; “altei tentativi di suicidio” (other attempts at suicide) being reported as among the incidents of the most terrible of punishments. The impression remains on the reader of Signor Dominione’s revelations is all in favor of the British practice, so recently indorsed by the French parliament—revelations all the more cogent as appearing in a democratic organ traditionally wedded to the abolitionist tenets of Beccaira.—ltalian ,Correspond ence, the Lancet,

AND LYSTRA ?M;Mh-ulb'&v 16, 1909 Speumly Arvmuged for This Pager L ¢! LESRGN TEXT ~Acta 313 Momory Yerpee 7 GCLIEN TEXT «"All the poiis of the Bt ne gor Sdede bt The Lond maabl the vt arR o Peade W 3 Tl}H\? Imiedintnly aftey Ihe lawl o o Perbhaps o the antars of A v 6 CPLACY b veanas, 1a sisatbers fialae tia fombiuese Toastivn Inede witl § e tarn 1o Anfieeh and Tvrgn. and thetie 1o Ruliseh o By . A Suggestion and Practical Thought. The grosier the work & mas b dtavors to 80, the greater the absin clow Ihat he will meiet and the move numerons Ihey will e llk prisgy pie of phowies (ha! resis ance Increases as the ssinare of the veliwity, Pauol's wiork, Jike thai of all trae Christians, A 8 very greal, and therefare i en rountered formmidabie oletscies ; Hul these hindrances were brer evins in Christ's streagth. asd the process of overoomtng them sirength rrued Paul as it =il sirengthon s A cerialin ameonnt of onpcsition x s gresl heln ton man Kites rise sEatie! and et with the wind Even s hest! windg i hetier thas none John Nes! A gres?! multbude both of the Jows ah%alwu af the Greeks ( Jowiah priae Irtesi belleved 7 butl there wore utibe Heving Jows” iR ¥ ;%m;:wd;pfi'fi 2o the Irath ) whe pretudioed the Jesiile puines againg! the mismiooaries by their calumnies For this doubtle rea gon Ctherofore ™v 3) Paal and Barn abhar remained ot boOnium 8 long fime " srobabliy several motihs sines £l3 there were sa many converis o he Insiructed in (helr gew falth and (3 that faith was evidently to Be Iried by severe appoaition and would nesd o be sirongly reenforeed by lGßizucLOn Finally, however the hatred of the Jewish ralecs amd of the Geatlles whom they influenced (nol the Gentile ralers, see v b hacame so Inflamed with the misslonaries’ bold speech and increasing suceess that a piOU was formed 1o stone them as blasshemers Getting gnowledege of this fil?&]}?higfiii af Uhprist's command (Matr 10238 o fiew from persecition, Paul aed Daras bas escaped. golug st to “Lystea” 158 mies south-southwest ol deoniam, and then to the Derbe, 50 milex 10 the soitheast of Lastra ' Stories of the gods coming dows to AR Ware commen Kpong Ihe (ireeks and other races Like distoried and ohgcure reflections in muddy water thoy give # hlurred {mage of the grant truth "= Muclaren They show that Christ s coming was in zv‘g;;«»s;m- 0 & universal needd. Ope of These tales was of the visit of Jupitér and Mercury to this very Lycaonia The people thought themn 1o he boar vagrants re fused to enteriain them, ridiealed and maltreated them -At last they came to the hit of the poor peasants. PBaucls and Philemon, who recelved them hos. pitably and entertained them with the heat they had. In return, the gpods transformed thelr hut inta 8 glorious temple over which they weré set as the ehief minisiers of worship, while the churiish nelghbors were punished by & terrible food which overwhelmed them. The statue of Jupiter stood be fore the gate of Lystra, and Ewald suggests that this story of Raucls and Philemon may have bheen recited year by vear at the great festlival in this temple. They "persuaded the people * “Prob ably they influenced the multitudes to regard the miracle, the reality of which they conld not dispnte, as the work not of beneficent gods, bat of evil demons”—Expos. Greek Testament, They rained a niobh which “stoned Panl' whose bold spesch had centered hostility apon himselfl. What memories of the stoning of Stephen ten or eleven years befors must have passed through Paal's mind! - "Trans fornfed into a howling mob, jike those which even in Christian America shoot pegroes. Chinamen and Itallans, the guondam worshivers left Paul ready; as they supposed. for the eremation fires or the vagrant dogs " —Willlam Elllot Griffs 1. H. D Perhaps as the stoning of Stephen must have moved Paul toward Christianity, the stoning of Paul was the turping point in the IHfe of Timothy The young man may have been among “the disciples who stood round about him” to give what ald they could, and care for his body if he were really dead | Nate the nizdd\‘»n‘change in the feel ings of the people toward Paul and compare §t with the revolution in the atiitude of the people of Jerusalem to ward Christ, from “Hosanpa!™ to “Cruecify him'"” Compare-also the snd. den change in the minds of the people of Maita, Acts 28: 48 The lesson s "not to rate very highly human praise; not to be greatly depressed by human censure. Had Paal beén desperately anxious to please lLysira. } faney that that stoning would have killed him.~— Morrison. . - L - How didthe missionaries close the first misstionary journey? Properly and wisely, with a report to the home church at Antioch in Syria, which had sent them forth. This report was to the whole church, for all had a part in the work, and needed the stimulus of the report. Every member ' of the congregation should be in the missionary meeting (2} It was a modest report, telling what “God had done with them,” on thelr side, as an ally, and not recounting the achievements as their own. (3) It was an encouraging report, a report. of progress, telling of the great forward firap ‘that had been taken, the admission of Gentiles into the church through “the door of faith,” and no longer through the rite of circum-

Too Many Lack Faith.

Just as in scholastic and artistie matters a broad line of distinction obtains between a mere amateur and a master, s 0 is there a line equally broad between one Christian and another, between the experience of the same Christian at one time and another. There is the faltering, fearing, failing, striving, troubled life of the imperfect, and the rich, free, happy, victorious life of such as are filled with all the fullness of God. For want of a little more earnestness, many of us live on as spiritual amateurs when we might know all the power and glory and gladness of masters in Isml ? 2

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§Ek e - 6 " b o Tadß o p 3 -2 e T PRy ' ! Sl AR R % e LW 6 i — T s Moz s Sl ) DO R T AR IY TN AN WiTxn FRNTH { No avstem of gardening or farming hax over sprvad more Gulekly in Fug iand than the maraicher of Frepceh gardes system The “btawun begss wEßctly n Pear ago this Marck Huch gardens bad also been slarted a iiiile cariter at Evesham, on & big wcale . At the Evesham garden -wshich, however, 6 (oo big for the beat work ing of the syslegi-~¥our WAy s 16 vl cloches or bell lave, and over 164 franios within a single fenos sight = singularliy pidasing and salls fvinge-a0 Brleph! and basy and peat 5 The paths are st wide enoush to Badigil B mEan walising the lines are recigneiiar the iaring and packing sl are 32y and Launy ar Al every inch ol 1 gardon vich wilh prosliuds , Within the :v.“a?' ¥our Ihd ‘ has become kfown, sither Bractioalls o theorstically, to many Theuzapnds whiy had never. beard v Fropel gardening, in UR precise and parti ular term, before What most sirikes the vigltor 1o & Fronch garden §s s marvelons tidd Bess It i= the tidient thiog 1 know, a 1 almost any fsason of the vesr It is alan fascinating in a proulisr degree partly from s neatness and absence of apny very greal muscular workwomen are especially successfal with the systesn-—-partly frog the uneeas fng riches that 1t produces (Of coures, fta supreme value {5 that the "goiden sl produces vastly more food than any svitem ever yet devised, and is therefore much the best form for gardeners of all sorts to learn, even | if they have po idea of startitg a French garden in the proper meaning of the term : 2 This virtue in the syatem was first renlized some two YPArs ago };,y twa g Faglish women who #6f up a school | tor gordening st Thatehain, in !z«rk.i’ shire. They had ot much capital, bat | they were B 0 greatly struck by the | kight of the gardens that sarrouandsed | Paris, where you may sed acres npon | acres of frames and lights that they | determined to set up a schoo! af which | ladics mmight learn this secpet of ma | king an acre of land produce food ! worth as much as $3.000 a year 1 ‘Ap ordipary farm crop is worth | about $35 an acre; a firstrate P‘fht?i*fi.’z% market gardener, such as Mr. Vincent, | a 0 well known at Brighton, can pro| duce aboat 400 worth of vegetables | Whatever the differenees in rost It muxt be valsable to know by what| secret this astounding production is realized S - ! The cost may be heavy but ecot | tagers - are bheginning o tise the | apparatus: and no one need begin! with more than would cost a few dol- | tars Let us say two frames, 13 feet long by four broad, for $l5O, and ten! bell-glasses, which will cost not more than 75 cents each delivered, and half a doren matls, : St How s the marvel of fertility | wrought? Partly by the tidiness that fitet strikes any visitor to a French | garden. The lines are all rectangular, | the paths are as narrow as possible, the | frames are bullt o that just five bell | glagses mMAY go to one light of one ! frame. The garden {8 go laid out that | the gardener can tell you at any mo- | ment exactly what he will be doing on | what square, at what time of year. | His little house, built at the corper | of the garden, is 2 model of neatness. | The shed, in which the glazing Is done, and. the forks or notched bits of | wood, are cut for lifting up the bell- | jars from the ground, I 8 the only placei where any sort of irregularity is allowed. ' The huge returns which some ml

SAFE IN MEDICAL MISSIONS

No Matter How Violent ¢he Disturbarces in: Persia, These Are Never Molested.

In times of peril in Persia the med: cal missions have proved to be the safest places not only for Europeans but also for the Persians themselves. Dr. Emmeline Stuart, niece of the veteran Bishop Stuart, had a remarkable story to tell of her own experiences when preparing to leave the country. :

The only escort available through the disturbed country from Ispahan to Teheran was offered to her by the military authorities, and she accepted it, to find that it entailed traveling on % gun carriage harnessed six in hand and that for ten days double stages were effected at a hard gallop, while the shelter of the carriage formed her cenopy at night. Dr. Stuart testified to the unfailing courtesy and kindliness of the officers to the traveler placed in their charge ‘and reassvred the committee as to the

ple Bave Riven--a! §7 006 an wcre 8 rather eßagEerated sam thougl giite capable of realization in a favorable sear-oare made possible bot smiy be. cagee The garden Base been bearing five crops, bul becaise the radiakes, lstiyees, Ihe rarrols the caulifloners, spd the melona hase all anthe tpated the sonsst by several -weeks i France, shere n fresh” salad i as much in demand in Febrigry 8% in Tune, tha Fretch gardenvr it almost & Becrasity of e - SRR The expenss (& great (L yol compare the French gurden =itk the drdinary garden: §t is pol great i you vom pare It sa it should b compared, with the greephouss; byt the Jadiex in the Hlustrations, as the Frenchmen dul: side Parls and the Intchmen Detweet The Hague and Delfr, make the gold on woil return, as well as absorh goid HAS NO MIND TO BE A “LION.” Distinguished Englah Novelst. La spoiied by Suscess, Was Glad to Escape Admirers.” - - ) Wiliiam J. Locke rhe grest Foglish uhvelisgt W revently i i ased ‘.&};,é:;‘;"(n_t;-ig Iry, Is very isll tn appearancg and has & yery sanidy cample vion His woesk table ix usually Hiteged wilh fapérs i nenTrecied pyood . tie 38 é“‘.fiirfi isf the fow iamwxvm‘ z'z,-'::: Sthal el i‘w hae nad Epadied and 1o this day obd s sideis 1 & high bower 1o Yo saked Jur 3 Pholograph-—a regues! to whish. to tks press ot !?v Las afwags rell@ioogs by aceeded lo manner Mrolaeke i 8 Siffident and shmosr shv | sl 9 be the Idon of the Evesing is o higy @ Wi tinction which Is almosl akin o pain A very distinguizbed Ameriegn art bt telly the ?Himi ag f\r's't'_.fl-~ T V{;zi. “Jawke he sgid "was ??3_"-* gie v::?a‘j"’q‘a' recoption one eveniug, and Wak gue 5% the Lambs’ ciudb af s o'eloek on the wame pent, wheg .a dlnne f_'\s A ‘é., n given him by the members, - Poar %1" Locke, Hanized by eversbody sy nad aimost embarrassed; (ot that the time for the Lanibs’ club dinner must be ar riving, but was far toh polits fo ok &t his watch e “1 went to bl on soveral ocfasians and sopedred thar Ume was %ying, and that it was essential - ihat oHe should make a mméi ax he' p_xg?lsfi e expoctad 4t the lLambs’ . After much begitation he finaily appreached his hostews timorogsly and - with ot stretched Fand 1 think [ must reaily -~ be began “What' exclnimed the hostess. “You mustn't (hlakS of go. ing yet and Immediately commenced # hrilllant fusiliade. of cobversation directed at the iloslzéd byl embar razsed Locke TUE Simfe S "Poor Locke stood there the rpict ture of the politest trepidation Finally the jady left bim, her duttes calling her elsewhere . Then 1 ‘maneuvered him to near the door, when. coming behind bim, 1 fairly pushed him from the room. Mr Locke, rathier shocked, but {ntensely relieved. ‘reached the Lambs ciub only 24 minntes late” 1 il soiidet | e The Men Behind the Guns. . Toward noon the various-~gun crews knocked off and joined their shipmates around the decks. In this place. so pear the line of the toples, the sailors generally . appeared- at work barefooted and in shortsleeved jerseys. The constant labor, combined with the dally handling of shells and powder, has given each and every man a wonderful physical development. Never has it been my fortune, even among professional athletes, to behold as many examples of perfect physieal condition. Not ondy is everp muscle modeled under the skin so that it ripples with each movement; not only is that muscle rounded as in the outlines of a Grecian statue; but it is full of blood, firm and vital and ruddy when unflexed. This obtains throughout the ship’s company. 1 suppose it would Be impossible elsewhere to find a similar body of men so. uniformiy and symmetrically developed. There is nothing of the knotty, stooped. desiccated strength of coal miners and the Farnese Hercules. Rather the type Is that of a full-rounded, elastic youth.—World's

absolute safety of the missfonaries during this period of unrest by saying that the mission compound at IspaPan was one of the safest places in the city. In fact members of the families of officers of the shah have in the last few months resorted to it ‘@B an asylum. ‘ A MAIDEN'S MINUTE. An unsophisticated youth, - e e Unused to women's ways, forsooth, Dropped in once when his lady: fair Had cute kid curlers in her hair. Of course, all these he never saw, But met Dulcinea's papa, vl Who led him to the parior, where He heard her voice float down the stalr—“"Wait just a minute” - = - The vouth sat down and n!kéd with m Of weather good and weather bad, Who next would be the nominee =~ And what things zhould be tariff free, And whether moons were made of cheese : : £ =53 And all the solar theories,- = And how to navigate the air And keep the roadbeds in repair, = - And countless other subjects, too, — Before the maiden came 10 view % - In “just a minute.~ :

: s 5: ! E ; . ’ By Lydia E. Pinkham's . Bardstawn, Ky.—*l suffered from glveration and other female troublesfor s 1 5 i(&{;g Limn, 1)00p " a tors had failed 0 v 2 ~ - fheipme. Lydia E T et -, l’:uk%u\m'sf?'fl&- | S | Ve §ooound was PN ) recommended, and e o | Y%W-EM k- {lt cured mytrouble "fi f and made me well Coem OF and strong, so that Bian &7 I candosil myown b . ork.” Mrs Jos .Tk {T“ » "fif BRy ‘ ¥ Hann, Bardse tawT, K. Another Woman Cured. Christiana, Tenn — I suffersd from the wurst form of female trogble po that at fimes [ thought | eould not five, and my nerves were in a dreadful eomdition. Lydia E Pinkham's Vepgs. tabis Compound cured me, and made e {ew] Hike a differsnt woman l.}‘fu‘ . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is worth s weight in geld to suffering women t—Mus MazyWoon LE.D.& If you belong Do thal counliess army Cof women who suffer from some form of female 18 don’t hesitate to vy * Lydia E Piukham's Vegetable Com. pound, made {rom roots and herba Forthirty years this famous remedy has bwen the standard/for all forms of female i amd has cured thousamds of women who have ben troubled with such aiiments as dispiacements, fibroid {umors, ulceration, infammation, ir. reguisritien, backache, and Dervous ,3‘:4:{: aiion. - 1 you want special advice write forittoMrs. l'inklmm.l,{'nu.)lm Jtis free and always helpful, NS e SHE KNEW., e Iy g - o ... e k% .o '».) : o . » S t { - % - ‘ oot : ‘e o f“?"" 7 eC 7 R ‘ ‘ o ‘ ® # & & . f2ey . - N i il ‘.‘* e ‘,; b{o # . i - ; » “.' F =."Wpe T £ f s The 3 P AGBDW I a: 2 ; - L % . Eyes Are Relieved By Murine e B iz ¢ s #t and Eve ‘ rage School e ; ¢ New York i iy 1 S i’u : i i i ¥ 3 ' -:4 r>.a.rl" e 5 & . Fove Pain o z PThvei- . 5 : ! 5 Preohibit- ( v 5 e f ) r Eye ; e W fike Mutine. Try It B b 5 ‘ 2 s Dirug#a & %4 g = : Moris Eve Y 1 o 258 it 3 v g Wit Bend You Ine teres g Eye B ¥ e t Early Experiences, Some tme ago an office boy, answer ing the telephome for the first time in :;ba\ ..'i‘f‘.i.'i no! xnowing how 10 use olt owas toid thatl when the bell rang ~he W&k 1o answer it When, therefore, he heard it ring, be picked up the receiver and shouted: A * el w hi thert 1 y,.-" answer came back: “I'm 105" “Go on,” said rhe bay. “ItU's time you were dead.” : A Cure For Colds and Grip. _ 5w seonvenience, suffering and danger 4 \ i 1 ¢ woanider s that g o W fake sa lew (ury ions against i is. tine or two Lape s Pleasant Talbdets e sty of ¢ nztne : tamn when the first enuffiv. feeling sppears, wlil stop the progCopees of 5 4 fef save a grest deal of unnecessary sufering. Drugeiste and dealers | genersily s these tabilets, prioe 2% rents 1§ vous cannat pet them sond toa Orator ¥ | Woodwiand, Le Bov. N.Y Sample free. : The Disappointed Ofice Boy. The Hosz (1o bookkesper, throwing Sim.& paperi—"Here's that old Buffalo 1 showing up again. Now—" Office “boy -rushes 10 the door and looks up ind down the street, but fails to lo-ate-the processzion :* “Abh!” he mutters, “who'd a thought Ne boss 'ud guy a kid like that? f s S t A Rare Good Thing. {- “Am using ALLEXN'S ilm%d‘.ASE. and i *an trulv say 1 would not have been withoul it so long, hsd 1 known the relief it P whuld give my sching f=¢f. 1 think it a frare good thing for ansone having sore ‘;z-r tired feet.~Mrs Matilda Hnuw:?n. ! Providence, R L. Sold by aill Druggists, { Sc. Ask to-day, - ! "Respect for the past is not bigotry, iand we are to bheware of the danger { of changing too much, as well as that { of not chauging at ail.—Sydney Smith, { |- FPain and swelling seldom indicate ini Yernasl organie trouble. They are usually ihe result of ;":‘Ai cold or inflammation . which ean be gmckly removed by a little | Hamlins Wizard Oil. Try and see. ! After having been so mad he i couldn’t say things a man begins to ' boast of his wonderfu! seif-control. i Take -Garfield Tea! Made of Herbe, it is { pure, potent, healthigiving--the most rai tional remedy for constipstion, liver and i kidney diseases. At all drug stores. When you go away from home, doa's forget that God is everywhere. Lewis’ Single Binder Cigar has a rich fu.ate.. Your dealer or Lew:s’ Factory, { Peoria, 111. = : ! ~ As soon as a man marries, his sing i decrease.

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