Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 19, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 July 1909 — Page 2

%, - - A ‘ The Ligonier Banne; LIGONIER, INDIAXA e o i i e e - ot w 4 e e MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF . THE PABT WEEK TOLD IN 'CONDENSED FORM. . | ROUNDABOUT THEWORLD 1 | Complete Review bßf Happernings of Greateg? interest from All Parta of tre (.“Aj.f!;c~~-l_.x?ca! Home and Fore eign I§mt~ : WASHINGTON NEWS l fist coenngred cwith Mgy ! BHoowEies { so. 0 11 ;’%':;,‘:- fur e feirit i ' £ ! ¥ ptes % CHA Vol pisthias RS £ i are e iote By 1 ' lAE N fusl be Kopt 0 - free ''; :z” At appoaed t prptont TR Gnßloaln, eRY iLe thelr ratiurn to cangress depended i a ::: (i fiest tinse in Rev EriAY VOhr :;b,_;f, B way in wihich they X i defant the }:,iv.v: W It Wi 6 weeball ganie. the score belng . #* - . PERSONAL o Wikl Prapkbin WOloughby, of Virginia, has been anpointied assistant i ef the consus buread : e ' Huntington Wilkog, QeEsisiinl aecrse tary of state ts Wi of appendivitis in Wi B oty o 1 Fre ot Taft will attengd the trans M PPt ctmpmercial COBEYEsS D Divings Algust 16 : : - The report that the king of Portugal I to wed Princoss Alvxandra of Eng lanid was officially denjed in London Judge laseph R Clarkson of Reno sha, Wiz, wha disajipeared {Towm Lhmiaha for five n;;z:szi:a(' I 8 yeaurs aigo, s again ‘mveteriousiy wissing Wavne M Balvin a New-- Yorker - who was caught short” In the wheat corner, was thrown out of the offfice of Janies A Patten in Chicago by tie _wheat king 8" body guard & -Charlea R Crane of Chicago, one of the largest Jnanufacturess. of the United States, has been selected by ‘President Taft na minister to China, - GENERAL NEWA ’(2;;2\&.«!5‘»11, Tex., was saved by the sea wull erected after the disaster in 1900 from & hurricane and tidal wave whiclt caused the deaths of ten per gons on a pier outside the city : Great damage was doune and the Hves of many persons were in ;s‘vr\.} when dams on rivers in northern Wis consin hurst following a hard storm Indictments charging miirder were returned at Watseka, 11, against Mrs Sayler, DY W, R Miller and John Grunden, held In connection with the - ®lay.inx-of the Crescent City banker, J. B. Savier = Arplication was made in the fed eral court at Indianapolis for an in Junction against the strikers at the American Sheet and Tin Plate Company's plant in Elwood, Ind - Former President Roosevelt was in peril when attacked by a dozen hippopotami in lLake Naivasha. He killed ~ two of the beasts and drove the others away g Corneling Shea, leader of the bloody tearusters’ strike in Chicago keveral yeers ago, was convicted, of attempting to murder Alice Walgh in New York., : el ' Fourteen jackies were taken from the fleet off Provincetown, Mass, to .the Charleston navy yard suffering from typhoid fever. o : Mystery was added to the disappearance of Judge Clarkson of Kenosha, Wis, by the discovery that his office had been ransacked by burglars the night before he vanished. : Following a hot . debate over the French naval scandal the Clemenceau cabinet members Tesigned. : The boiler of the tourist steamer Guttenberg, plying the River Rhine, near Rolandseck, blew up, killing a ‘stoker and injuring six of the crew. Passengers escaped unhurt. Rev. Dr. Henry A. Buchtel, former governor of Colorado, declared in a New York interview that “enly the dregs of womankind vote in Colorado.” Skin from the amputated leg of one patient was grafted on the face of another man in a Portland (Ore.) hospital. : N ‘Herbert Latham, a French aeronaut, fell into the water when he attempted to cross the English channel in his monoplane. ; s ‘ A lion and a tiger engaged in a fin~ish battle in a cage at Coney Island, New York. They had been performing and quarreled. N. Byrn, engineer, and I. Austin, fireman, were killed and six passen: gers were injured in a wreck on the Monon railroad at Manchester, Ind. C. Will Chappell, a leading official in the National Casket Company, was killed &mfiw accident at

Orrille Weight attained & gowed of Ef% miles an bour {8 his ssropisne st Fort Mrer : L A report from Gasteln, Austria sald ke Bealth of Vaward M Harrinan is !x:;-'u:'h utproved angd Le pow gives st of his U fo Gusifices : duslice lirewer of the gupreme court Ei!} s Milwaukoe speech erprosesd dis Eiei:f: vl of an ineome tlax and de clared for &late Hiphts | A contingent-of blus fackets froem ?I"?) Fritish warabiips aschored in the - Thames were fogsted by -the ld sy or and ths eorporation of Laandon The peogde pave the sea Gphicrs 4B entl ‘M reception Hrowndel Tiex. Was vikited by & firie and ;,»,bz' s dustiroved A ilnfgw shw il tomether With murh fumber, Biwy wWie Lurned : ' Altornyys jenrdßepling Prince - 314 ." Miin Anila Stewart of Naw York uer o lomdan and arranecd D B Werviage wottletpent of e G 05 e Lrihey WHE 8 R son = the prerent! o the thvane of Porfuea ; ¥ Mate Ualk Of 0 Tulurs = Pr. Ban vabluel the B 8 Wk Bloawn alwen & :."_,‘ fME Bas oy L farviile ABright I 8§ Bleht laeting aflvin oA" td Tor airahin Tiglas Phe wusponh gonßral 6f the priny in SRERIIESIER e sE ol vondilion of Feeruiles hae discgsered Lhal the B 2 Y By Ry thoee wha eniist I Wity ~: vu efure the grand vy in ha SmATier Biirger faße omt \Waiesk H sald fhey &N B 8 0y tear fhe dend baniker & body s (has s ered & bßlow W the seifdelvnen Giva f ': ! Milley B g cßt of o '~f:r:“ P iad ‘-z-' ‘v LETOn gvi:u el e S*..;‘ e fronn weslorn fatere e hands s beip dn 1 harvest fNiolds R YorH o wmhat ¢,,>;_"j‘f :3,",.;,,",' : Fip tocify 11 "O I cor e favang 3 13 the deat ian ?:' { Iy & the afnets o Hey Eathey 1 B ¥ K i ' > sirike :,j‘ -—.‘v i g 4 Steal Car Company & 60l os a 1 ! i § i L werd i dea e b % T i P the fipht & gy Gl Dereahe Were ihired Wit I lugram Ir wa Bidictedd At Now Ofleans for emberiiing $:0 U fron the Hibernian batik of wiid he wWas lrusl offices Argentine prastically declared war i 3 ,iijt:. nosler O YE oy e with i 2% bty oand Instricied her own Savoy to guil LK Vg immediatels The mutilnted body of Mrz. Mary Baloman, wilte ol Uarry Saioinap, a peddler, wan found an-a lonely road pear Clsirton. Pd Saloanan bas-been hHeld penditg an investigation 3 i ik ;:A.m.:,r.eiv L farm hand employed by B & Pinkhan WHs kKilled by Pinkhams bul) Lhadley, the winner of many bive ribbons atl Banta Barbara Cal Ther fury in the case of Ella Gingles, the Irteh iance maker, who has been on trinl several weeks in Chicago. re turpned a verdict of pot gulity but de Cclared her charges Rgninst Agunes Bar Tetle falne o Livut Rebert G Adams, the first witness called by the court-mariial (o he second invesßigation of the dealh of lieut Sutton at Aasnapolis two Years apgo, admittéed he had a fight with Sutton i The wsecond (il of Pairick Cal Rou, Ihe San Frapcisco millionaire ~on a 4 charge ‘uf_ bribery, was begun The first trial lasted more than five months e : . The tariff conferees have accnpled the corpornfion tax smendmeont as re }.dmshvd by Attorney General Wicker %&_hmn. the arsessment raw being ope instead of (two per cent . The Masonic lodge of Jeftersonviile Ind. loses $lOO,OOO by the birth of a . ¢hild to Mrs. J F. Deshon, nlece of ' James A Holt, who willed the amount ‘{ to the ludge in the event of no child | being born : . Engineers and conductors of the | National Rallway of Mexico threat;vnvd to walk out in sympathy with i the train dispatchers whko are on x strike, - ! ; : - Among the papers in the mysterious | packet kept by Banker Sayler, who | was killed by Dr. W. R. Miller at g(‘rem‘vn( City, 111, was a letter from ’g.\m‘lvr to Mre Sayler - , ;_ Max Dick, a New-York landiord, has “offered cash prizes to his tenants who sruar the largest families, the awards franging from $l5O to $5OO, the latter Eprenmun for twins. . L The new Imterpational! Unions' 1\11:}&d()\1&t(fi:~\ building, erected in Inhiianu;mlis by the United Brotherhood §ur Carpenters and Joiners at a cost L of $lOO.OOO, was dedicated with considerable ceremony. - . : | The rioting in Pesmnsylvania shifted - from McKees Rocks to Rutler where 13 strikers were injured in a clash with troops sent to protect the Standard Steel Car Company’'s property. Gov. B. F. Carroll of lowa, according to reliable reports, is considering calling’ & special session of the lowa legislature to adopt the amendment to the constitution authorizing an income tax. : ~ Paris has heard a story that Count Boni de Castellane is to wed Miss Marjorie Gould, daughter of George Gould and niece of his former wife who is now the Princess de Sagan. ~When Jikiri, the Moro bandit, was slain by soldiers he had nearly kept his vow to kill 100 men before he died. i : Thinking she had killed her husband Mrs. Fred Fricke, of Hammond, ‘lnd., shot herself. - John D. Rockefeller has tracsferred his 16-story office building and other Cleveland property to his son, John D. Rockefeller, Jr. W. E. Baker, engineer and Nelson Paulson, fireman, were Kkilled and three other trainmen injured in a .head-on collision of passenger trains on the Chicago & Eastern Illinois railway at Royal, 111. ° : ~ An American in London told the police he had seen Leon Ling, slayer of Elsie Sigel '}i,nth'&_tr oty ~ Glen Curtiss, a New York aeronaut, made a flight of 31 minutes in his aeroplane at Hempstead, L. I. . Reports received in London said 300 were killed by earthquakes in southern Greece and the springs spouted

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Kentucky, shich is ane of the chie! | bEardeond producing #l,fahm in the union, and the frsl state in:the pro duction of yellow poplir. ia makineg Bowd progress in the movement for the preservation of s foresta. In PRO 6 the jeplslature enscted the jaw providing fer the state board of agri culture, forestry and Immigration 1 mring the following winter the board aeked and recelved the cocaperation of the United States Furest service | in a fs"ci!.;' af the forest conditions of - the state This work was begun two years ago and ap examination of half’ the sarea of forest land in the state th; h,#n corspleted. Thes h‘*m:tt; ot thwg first year's work, covering the 11 most eastern ecunties of the state s published in the Kentucky handbook, 186 G 180 T The second report, now In the hands ef the state board of agriculture, covers 48 counties, in the cofl mining regions of tha state. When | thiz investigation s completed Ken. tocky will bave an excellent inventory of it Jumiber resources ' | The manner In which the forestry probleam has bheen approached ind}cales that the people of the state | realize that the ultimate solution of the impending tiinber searelty must, for the farmer, depend largely on how he bandles hiz Individual timber re. sources. and that there is no bettor wa¢ than for him to consider the wood lot as a hank account, using the interest which Is constantly faccrulng, but leaving the capital undiminished. Muoeh edueational work, - kowever, will be needed to secure this desirable end S o . The gecond report of the Forest Service suggests a forest lnw, Among its most fmportant features is a provision for the appointment of a state forester. The wisdom of this is evi. | dent since only by the appointment of & state forester can the work in cooperation with Forest Service he maintained and carried to a success. ful conclusion, Until such time, however, as the sate of Kentucky is ready . to assume the management of its own forest problems, ‘the National Service fr willing and anxious to co-operate in every way possible for the further ancé of forestry among private own. ers in Kentucky. In the co-operative investigations of forest resources now In progress, the government spent. over $4,000 _to duplicate a similar amount applopriated by the state. | Kentucky has always been rich in forest resources, but iike many other states has reached the point where the timber will Lereafter be produced on a" continually decreasing scale, and it is necessary to protect and use carefully the forests which remain. In 1899 Kentucky cut 734,000,000 board feet of hardwood lumber. In 1907 the cut was $54,902,000 board feet, an increase of only 16 per cent. in the nine years. In the same period the cut of yellow. poplar has fallen off over 20 per cent. During

Giants of Vegtable Life

Radish and Cabbage That Not Only_ Are Immense in Size, But of ‘Finest Flavor. ;

| Two new vegetables for the kitchen §garden, a giant radish and a cabbage { from Brobdingnag, have recently been ! introduced into this country by our { agricultural explorers. They are re- { markable not only for size, but for i excellence of flavor and will be hear- ' tily welcomed as palatable additions ; to the American bill of fare. i The radish in question comes from ! Japan, where it is known as “sakura- { #ima’" It attains a length of two feet or more, and sometimes a circumfer- | ence_equal to that of a man’s thigh. | Although the seed is not planted until Ithe middle of the summer the vege- | table grows with wonderful rapidity, { and early in autumn is ready for the | table. The government plant bureau | recommends this vegetable in the highest terms. It ought, before long, be in every kitohen garden; and there

the sanie tlmie the prices of Jumbie al the il Bave advanced ¢n an ay erage of 65 per cent, apd (he demand bas inereased sccordingly. “The torest of the United States (e threatened by many epemive, of which fire and reckless lumberiog are tha worst, Sheep grazing and wind come pext. Cattle and horses do much jesa damage than sheep, and snow break s tess costly than windfall Land. sitdes, floods, insects, and fung! are sometimes very harmful In certain situations numbers of treés are killed by lightning, which hak also Dbeen known to set the woods on fire and the forest {8 sttacked In many other wars. For example, birds and squirreis often prevent young growth by devouring great quantities of nuts and other seeds while porcupines . and mice frequentiy kill soung trees by gnawing away their bark _ Mogt of these foes mav he called natural enemies, for they would Infure the forest to a greater or less extent if the action of man were altogether removed Wild animals would take the place of domestic sheep and cattle to some degree, and fire, wingd, and insects would still attack the forest But many of the most serious dangers to the forest are of human origin. Such are destructive lumbering, and excessive taxation on forest lands, to which much bad lumbering Is directly due. So high are these taxes in some states for in many cases they amount to & or even 6 per cent yearly on the market value of the forests, that the owners cannot afford to pay them and bold their lands. Consequently they are forced to cut or sell their timber in haste and without regard to the futyre. When the Umber is gone the owners refuse to pay taxes any longer, and the devastated lands révert to the state. Many thousand square miles of forest bhave heep ruined by reckless lumbering because heavy taxes forced the owners to real ize quickly aud once for all upon their forest land, instead of cutting it in a way to lmsure valuable future crops. For. the same reason many countries &re now poor that might otherwise have been flourishing and rich. _ ) : His Order. ; - "Does your husband belobg to any ciubs, Mrs. Dubbley ?” ; “None but the Knights of the Mystic Stairway." & : . "The Mystic Stairway? I never heard of that order” i “You're lucky. The members are pledged to assist the brother who néeds help to reach home and to carry him upstairs, provided they are abdle to trust themselves on the stairs that go round aud round, and after that to try to make his wife believe that he was seized with sudden illness and that they administered an overdose of brandy or something of the kind for the purpose of reviving him.”

is no reason why it should not be widely pianted, inasmuch as the seeds are already to be obtained from some seedsmen. The huge radish will keep all winter in a cool cellar. It may be cooked like turnips and beets, or cut into little square strips and served like ordinary radishes, ! As for the giant cabbage, it comes from China, and is quite as remarkable in its way as the radish. It attains a weight of 40 pounds, and possesses 8o fine a flavor that cabbage of the kinds to which we are accustomed ‘must be regarded as poor things, relatively speaking. This remarkable vegetable from the Flowery land has a much more delicate taste than ordinary cabbage, with less of the crude “cabbagy” intensity, which many folks find objectionable.—Technical World. o ; AR Corn the Greatest of American Craps, Corn is our greatest crop, that 1908 being valued at $1.516.000,00Q

| Close of Paul’s | Second Journey Sendsy Schuel Lesson for Asgust 1, 1909 Semcinly Aroanges foe Thos Pagws LRGN TERT -Ajts BT Semery ‘fr;s:%s\ TEXT - In the woald ve ¥l Rase tribiiziies But be oal peesd s qumed § Bmve e aspes Ehe whvrl T ke CHIME - Froe late A D 5 osariy 18 B el was s Curinth s Year aad fIE T ¥ . s FPLACE Coristh e palltal casiial o Dreive the mieroteidia o gaßoDetie Suggestion and Practical Thought, 1 Corinty the Vanily Fair of the Roman empire. Coripth, the center of guversment commerce and business, a 8 Alhens was of learning. Hierature aud arl, wax situgted on e iethusne which joine the prout divislons of fsreece. I stiracied peaple Drom 308 over the world on adcount of s de fightial cilmate. It conthinsd & Popee Intion ol 400000 of the mostl Botern Rensous nature posxihie. & bopulation of UreeX adveniurers snd Roanasn bogrgeals, with 5 tainling of Phoent clans s mapx of Jews, exsoidiors philtanphers mereßante sxilors froad wivh. siaves tradespeotie bßurkdters, afd apedis of every fors of vive -4 eoianr wilhoul aristixrarcy, wsithoot tradition, withowt well enlabilshed citlgonid Hence 11 wufered from detmo cratic leense and turbuissee v i Pauls lavors Amohg the Cornthian Jews -V 34 1 s Opmr thnity This great city Wi Hix vl fimesz and slesrption in pleasure HBa vigorous and varied life, Hs infigis needs gave Paul a greal opportusity And wor the difeuitive wers #o ine menae, the obslacias 8o InsErpioust: abie that (¢ is no wonder that Paul catne 1o them feejing his weaknens, and in fesr snd frembling (1 Co 2 0 aid peeded the sision of cheer iy ¥ 2 His Feair Friends —Pazl had a atrong. social paiure and: foll the vialse of Irivnd= He Tound & certain Jow " Pagl always Yegan with the Jows. s the hest poseibie opering (of Bis work e was 4 tentmaker patoed Aguila, @ man of some wealth, burn fn . Ponius” but doing busipess in Rome. Hin wife was pumed Priscilia, and 1% supposed to bave been & Gens tile , 5 1o addition 1o these friende, Silas and Timotheus came (rios Macedonia They had been left atl Beron, when Paul wag compelled (o leave (At 17 1315}, Timothy had besn sont o “Thessalonica (1 Thes 3 €l, and from Philippians 4 156 we judge that he had visited Philipp! also Paul's friend. Iy heart was cheered by their jres. ence. > ; : : : The Circomstance in Which. Paul Worked -1 He earned his own living by working at his trade He was thus a living sermon, 48 L was Jewish law that every boy be taught a trade ‘of gomd kind for his support 2. He attended ¢v. 4) “the syna gogue every Sabhath and reasoped with the Jows™ and Greek proselytes. determined to know nothing smong them save Jesus Christ and him cry cifled {1 Cor. 2 o 4. He met hitter opposition from his countrymen. (v, 63 "They opposed themselves ' - The intensity and suc coxs nf Puul's labors kindled sn in tensity of opposition. The result was that the Jews v 668) “opposed themselves. and blasphemed ™ That was a sign that the Gospel was beécoming a power fn the community : I Pauls Work Among the Corinthian Gentiles —Vs. 722, Paul's Preaching Place was in the house of a man pamed (v, 7) “Justus one that warshiped God.” a Gentile believer in .the one true God, but not a Jew, “whose house joined hard to the syoagogue . Here would be a perpetual fnvitation to the Jews while at the pame time the Gentiles would feel welcome 1o go thers During this period Panl wrote his two letters to the Thessalonians ' Renewed Opposition This was both natural and providestial, It was time for Paul to go on with his wider misston which nd one could car ry on as well as he. et his work seemed 80 necessary where he was, and his vision had bidden him (o stay, how long he did not know, that it was necessary that some unmistakable guidance should make hiz duty clear and plain : 1R After continuing for some time lopger a! bhis work, Paul went to Cenchrea, the port of Corinth. whern he made a vow and then sailed for Cesarea stoppiug at Ephesus on his way Thenee be went up to Jerusalem where only the vow could be consummated. Moreover he wished to be at the great feast of (he Jews, probably the Passover. iv. 21) s The Vow. The shaving of the head indicates a vow of separation itke that of the Nazirite preseribed in Numbers 6. in a later modified form. The man under the Nazirite vow was to drink no wine or strong drink. and to let no razor pass over his head or face. The hafr was shorn at the beginning and end of the period, so as to present that grown in the interval. At the end of the time during which the vow lasted, his hair was shaven. ;

.As Rendall suggests. Paul may have wished to show that although he had broken with the synagogue at Corinth, yet he was a true Jew and a faithful disciple of Moses, by paying homage to the law and submitting to its rules. This would also be shown by his attendance at the Passover.

Thus closes the second missionary journey. i Make a brief review of these years: | 1. By the map, tracing out the§ course of Paul's travels. 2. By cities | and countries. 3. By person. 4 By events. 5. By a summary of the results in the progress of Christianity. | Reliance on God. l The whole walk of faith through | life is the simple but sublime reliance | upon an almighty arm that is mever | seen, but always felt. This ac-| counts for the fact that the word | “trust” is the keyword of the oM Testament theology, and the word | “believe’ 'is the keyword in the New | Testament. Hoth mean substantially | the same thing. And whenour Heav-i enly Father saith, “Cast thy burden | upon me,” and our loving Redeemer ! saith, “Cast the load of thy sins npon! me,” they expect us to take them at their word. o e Y

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B is indeed sdrprining 1o fod how upfamiliar the Eoplish arte as 5 rase ®¥h the boegitles of thelf awn coun iry ‘w many of them spond their Sk i“.f\‘._\; #-tm the drmtinent in Bearch ol baautitul scehery. nol koowisg (bt within easy avoess {hey 3:-;‘l_,%‘{% BURRETE il o egual and pradtcaciiy ins Josgn: Dite 16 %:ff‘fl"’f}}&,\%f*. o The glorious cognty of Devon s 14 crally teeming with bea HF spots, Ihe sty belng rémched In the delightlal e tein villages of Lyston and Ly LAty 3’.’-3"‘#«"‘?"‘l‘,‘ holweels preaaci: Blils and onding in the gipganiic rovk bound cliffs which akirl this Portion af the Piristol chapael e i O Blackmore's romantic | pevel of “Lorna Doote” and Whyte Meiviiies “'Kfi?i“:"‘:ft=' Lave dane mnek to maks these beautly spaolz lamiliar 1o us and those who fravel W lLynlon and Lynmouth via cosch from Minehead ran acqgualnt themesives with y o of the points of Interest with which the readers of these (RmOuUs hovels are tTamiliar ; ) ¢ lesving Minehead we pagks varied and beaatiful scapery il we arrive at the quaint Witle village of Parlock. where we pull up 8t the pleturesigus "Shin inn Two sdditivoal horses are here attached, 'for we have a very slesp climd of several bundred feo! before we reach our Best stopping place, and even with the wsix horses we now havp the ascent is pone too sasy. Bebind s we aeg graduaily dis appearing the r-:qzsém’w ¥iala of Por fock, on the right are the gleaniing waters of the Hiristni chanpel, whilgt on the left we chiniu gloriows views of hiil and mooriand, S At Yearnoor Moor the horses are changed. and the rest of our journey through Somersel past Counly Gate into Devon s indesd one of the love liest. On cur right we still have the Hrintol channel, and on our leff broezy Exmoor, and {f we have seiecied = fine day for our judrney we experd ence an indescribable feeling of ex hilaration as we inhale the pure 'air of the moors and enjoy the bLeauties of hills and. codmbes surely un equaled elsedbere - It we have chosen the autumn for our visit, we revel in a weaith of glo rious color that is indescribable; mile after mile of purple heather inter mixed with brilllant golden gorse, and A gllmpse of Exmoor under these con4itions 18 never to be forgotten whilst if fortupate wn may catch a giimpse of the red deer for which the district is 80 famous. Afler & glortous ride of about twenly miles we reach Countesbury Foreland, and we now commence sur descent into Lypmouth. On our feft are towering hilis, whilst on our right 18 a sheer drop into the sea of several hundred feet, and we bold our breath as the coach graduaily de scends the steepest hi'l in England, titl the rushing wateérs of the Lyn re wind us that we are rapidiy nearing our déstination. The coach stops at the Lynbridge hotel, where visitors to Lynnicuth alight, and one and ail agree that the latter part of the jour ney has leflt an impression that oothing will ever efface, s o The coach s pow lightened of much of its luggage and the hLorses start on thetr arduous climb to Lynton, several hundred feet above, and bere again the impression created is most profound. e And now for a few words about these exquisite villages immortalized by Shelley, Southey and others of our poets, and eulogized by Galnsborough

City Built Over Vast Tomb

Many Districts of Paris, France, Are © ° Directly Above the Spacious P Catacombs. Paris in many of its districts is built over the catacombs. These vast subterranean chambers and galleries produce that peculiar cavernous sound which is heard in the Luxembourg, Montparnasse, Vaugirard, Montrouge and Montsouris quarters when heavy carts pass rapidiy along the coarsely metaled roads. The streets are then like monstrous drums beating funeral marches to the graves over that vast common grave of ten centuries = of Parisians with its millions of skeletons dead. The quaint little Gothic house at the corner of the recently preolonged houlevard Raspail, which many an American artist must remember from his student days, actually has a private stair: case lexding to the catacombs from Yeneath a hermetically closed stone alab just in fromt of the doorstep.

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t Westiing Wiween gigabtn Bille in the Ling viliage of Dynmosih Hs one stirved wßitted by the Fant Lyd wihcen . wators vesh and o lionbie geer - tue ek & PR AR Radte o reqeh §€;.t":.'§*:a pd fore a* ¢ UK - i & 5 aR of Igveliness, - . ) T (rp osr FERL reaching far il Y sea cig U Eanik va;,. s St v nury Forsiand, whilar ot oy ”'1« stuntahdinis Citfte covered . Wity 'f',,‘v; pantiy -Naed Bowess or W ~\;.'~jl;§,,i;‘;‘_‘;-:_-;.l,’_ tiy The WBIEFR ;. - ey o 11w Teliste syt sleld and tollow thar Cunglee bt the 1.5 Nt % lew. gy ments we Gad p;_f:_f::w{a_; in ; ‘g,-,‘.,:.z:“' ‘ot Geauly, RBd We can wander Slong the bapke - for Beverad ‘1 Jomt s wond dormonl @t Ihe Rlories opeshog sut belore ws- ° ~ o - AR LT C Helow s ’g~ ne downh fha conlar of which 1n s rushisg stream, ihe Bed of which n strewn with huge rocks reind whiich the . water whitis “and fashes Ml oo fram. On either mide are precipiious E.i.i;ji dennély wolded, and we here’ aad . there obitain & glmpse of hanke of gigante foxgipves :.11',".412 wiber wii'ij Rawers w.fl.él;t-fi;«stg the walera edge sre férna 'n L»-vw‘aido‘fr%:%; variety, seme of which ave almoet tropical, reaching a height of. pesriy wix’ foel : . R A walk of about two miles brings us ti the fapicus ° ’&’3%' rEtneel" W Here the Comnle Water joins the Brebdos Waler I & .siccesston of Beautifyl falis, and the grandeur asd masdold boeaulies of the _fi.é_f'r:r:; & Z!jfifs :mm'! may Wempt us o remain here il we are ready 16 resume our ourney back tw Lynmoeuth. o - ) : SKhould, iinwhv:«r; we G:;.w“.-f‘hu&{; f\m ceed, we can follow the Brendon Water for another four or five - milés through séenéry momentartly growing more beastiful untii we At length resch Doone valley, where we can ex pore masy of theé. pointd of interest referred to in Blackumiore's dovel, in cluding the [amous Witersiide, and the tiny church at Oare, in wiich lorna snd Jan Kidd were minrried. “There are two or . three roules by which we can.wend our way home: wards, each equally beautiful;, but as we ure probably tired; we miy find it advisable to charter one of “the carriages which ply for hire pear the éntrance of the Doone valley - - A tiny cliff rallway for’s, small cost wiil take us from Lypmsuth into Lyo ton pear the North walk, probably the finest coast walk inthe kingdom. Cut in the face of the cliff belween six and seven bhundred feet high with jagged masses of rock towering above us.for another two or three hundred feet, we ‘have a scene of superb grandeur, and after a walk of about a mile find our‘selves by Castle rock, and at the en. trance of the famous Valley 6f Rocks. ~ Days and weeks fiy quickly by ‘in ‘exploring the” beautiis of this roman: tie little spot. Lee Bay and “Woody ‘Hay are within eaxy distance and their delightful glens, doombes and rushing streams, beyond which (s the steep gorge of Heddons Mouth, whilst coach rides to lifracommbe, boat trips to Clovelly, and the toy rallway to Barnstaple give-us the apportunity of famillarizing ourselves with beauties of which all Englishnien should ‘be proud. s - Different Pitchers.” =~ - Gunner (reading . about- antique salej—See where an old Roman pitcher brought a thousand dollars. 2 - Guyer—An old ~ Roman . pitcher? What club would want an old Roman pitcher? Why, 1 should think his arm would be stift. . -

From time to time, says Harper's Weekly, certain municipal officials visit this grim entrance, the existence of which is' known to only very few people. < R A former occupant of the house, surprised by one of these visits, the reason of which was mysterious to him, was accustomed to relate that once in the dead.of night while he watched, quaking, from the room above, convinced that he was witnessing the final scene In some Borgialike political tragedy, a party of men the chief of whom wore half concealed under his coat the tricolor scarf of a police commissary, had convayed a body through this entrance into the catacombs below. o Ree : And That's All ' : " “Some of the brightest -people in the country read my poems.” . = “Yes, editors are very bright pee ple geneeally” - o 2

. - -* Cared by Lydia E. Pink--5 . ham’s Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md —* For four sears MY Ule Was A tuisery toow. 1 *.!':!"» resd from {rreguian. i ties, terribie dragm S g SR llons, \‘, eXLleme Lelvolus : fn‘ < e o ;’\: d that ail R o 8 B oone feeling in my 3Q? * * stammach. I kad Wy W g siven up hope ; kel =& Wl ever beling wel ™ P en 1 tegmn to 8 take Lydis k. Mink. i 3 A T Vegetable Lo e Compound. Then A 1 feit as though — new life had been fiven me arsl 1 am recommending it ta all my friends Mrs. W. R Forb, 1258 Jansdowns NG, Baltimore, Md i e g 3 ful remedy in Lhis c try for ¢ ¢ of all forms of fermale « nis is lyilis E Pink. Bam's Vegela g L. It has pioon] the leat of years and today is : Y ¥ A i % TOY Uk <'€' i aiyotherd aie renwdy, 1t hasenred £ SRRV i v ¢n who have been tr ) Wil Hsplacements, inflamfriad 4 filroid tumors, ir. ey ties, pericdle paing backache, that twaringd fecling, flatulency, fralig L and nervous prostration, after ail other means had falled I you are suf net fromany of these atlmenta d L give up hope until you have given Lydia B Pinkham's Vegotahie Componnd a trial. If vou would like special advice write to Mrs., Pinkham, Lynn, Mass,, for it. She has x:uid«'l‘ thousands to health, free of charge,

Fosttively cared by these Little Pills. Ther alae peiieve Die tress {roa Dyepepain, loe &igwation ansl Too Hearty Esiing A periect rosy iy for Distinesa, Naw sen, Inmowsigess, Bad Tastelnthe Mouth, Coal w 3 Tougue, 'siln In the Side, TUHPID LIVER

CARTERS WirTie | !Enfi-&; el

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