Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 24, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 September 1909 — Page 6
The Ligonier Banner e Ligonie Ban-nexl LIGONIER, INDIANA, = = | - oty . i MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF | © THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN ] - CONPENSED FORM. % Le i | ROUND ABOUT THEWORLD ‘ :RA - g ‘ = * t Complete Review Bf Mappenings of | Greatest interest from All Parts of the Globe—Latest Home and For eign ttems. " PERSONAL. : Edward W Harriman spon salling for the T nited Stutes from Cherbourg, ‘said nis henlih was improved and he woald be Eiad 9 gee the suil of | : Alering GEgan, ; i - Willard J66is & Springfield barg tender, wae arecaind aa Ru AcCCENODY A‘i?‘ ihe fabke Lank :!'_»'511":)' nal Frabk i Ly - : . [iesnite Bia deaire ta relurn 1o Lo dop fod 6 tew years louger, i ts sald thal Ambasandor Held 01l be replaced by Presdend Talt ax soun as bhe can fiod the right innn fer the place | Sitert Newhonee an inmale of the Disir s Bt Rlvewmiinglon, I, el Leir o SToO 68l fafl by Oliver New Luuse of dndinnatiolis, Ind \ Exiweie HOE «;?vf:‘-a g North Crio Hua addresding an gudiones at Chan tavgua N ¥ #Bid be had secn sights in U} go Asl New York so vile that shouid he déscribe them he would be | sitachud by Lk snade boeaters and that thie wrathf the AHBIEhDY WHE BUTE 1O slrihe Iheaie il ‘ Hev Father Edward 3 Dunne was cotnecratiml Blabae ol Pooria i ; in Cliiaga, Mgr Falconio, the papai | dulegate cogiuiting the corsioany ol Twnean B (‘m‘.:gvt £ who with | his son Helg Wan fuand gulity \‘:,; Killing farimdr Hemulor Carmack In Tennesdon, faherits $11.055 - from the extiale of his Yraber tatnier Juetion | ) i B Caas W dicd 10 New | York leaving sis) by | Witiiam Travers Jerciie anpounced that e wonid be g candidate {for re | election as distviel atlorpey of New : York He will ran independently | Sccrefary Wilsan of the departinent | of ngriculioee spenking before the - foesl cafisenUon at Denyver, satd the tirne -; comnihe wihen there will be no adulteration of Tl | Gonige L Maghider, ohlel gavdener | Gf the fibnais Uantfsl ratiroad ~l elov ol president of the American Al | socintion of Rallraad Gardencrs, whileh held ity thied arnual convention ip | Yhiigdeiphia -, : o ~ . GENERAL NEWS. Mo Paadan B FRolch avistor (g s iribng Sl W R rainatorm wy Rhbeins. Franes, k wWeared the recordg o Wilt Sripht loy Y In the alr i 2 hings, 50 anutes and D 3 seconds which 5 35 niinutes better than Uhe Amaerican’s mark : ~Following the unexplained death of District Attorney Williamg A Amimon at York Pa it ’i\:x:\ apnouteed that he was $460.060 short In hig accounts with the Standard Bullding & Loan association. of which ke formerly wuas socre tary, : o ’ © Postmaster General Hiteheook called a canference of post ofice offfcinls to consider a plan {or increasing’ the rate for registering lotters, rataing the price of money orders and lower ing the amount pald to ratlroads for carrying mails ' / © Hamburg Helle, after setting a new racé mark of 2:014 {or trotters in defeating Uhblan at Clevelsnd, O, was purchiased from the Madden brothers by H. M. Hannpa for $50.000. Having been dumb for 40 veara, George Purdy of Dakota, Wis, regained his voiee when a preacher at tacked the Masonic lodge to which he belongs. He whipped: the pastor and dencunced him in strong language. Two childréen were kl‘l}(*{ and 13 hurt when a havrack on Yhich they were riding at-a Sanday school pienic near Humbelddt, la., was overturned, _ The fifth convention of the Assocl: ated Advertising Clubs of America opened in Louisville, Ky, o The body of Ebenezer Steéele, an electrician who came in contact with a dynamo in New York, has become periectly rigid. The man was hurled acress the room and picked up uncon. sefous. He has regained his mind but -the body remains paralyzed. The historic memorial trees trans- " planted in the botanic garden in front . of the capitol at Washington to make room for the Grant statue, are dying. Among -the trees are the Beck elm and the Crittenden, Shepherd, Torrey . and Howard oaks.. nE T
Early reports of an earthquake which shook Italy said one person was killed, many injured and hundreds of buildings destroyed. : George Rutledge found a pearnl weighing 46 grains in the Wabash river at Mt. Vernon, 111, and sold it for $2.500. : v The cruiser St. Louis, in San Fran. cisco. from Honolulu, made a naval record of- four days, 22 hours for the trip. . : The isthmian-cannal commission has purchased of the Port Johnson ‘Towing Company of New Jersey a new ocean-going tug for $75,500. New York policemen arrested 84 youths for annoying women and starting “rough house” on subway trains returning from pleasure parks. Paul Schmidt, violinist in a San Franeisco orchestra, dropped - dead while playing in that city. Heart failure was the cause. : ] "Bubonic plague has brought death to 110 persons in Amoy, India, the last fortnight. v
An effort~lg being made to have the battleship Mississippi ordered to New Orleans to entertain the lakes-to-the-gulf deep waterways convention QOctober 30 to November 2. !
| NCPVRIET SN DO fatrycted 1o make eollection of the cowmercial lawe of all Central and South Amerd can republics. The laws will be printed in English asd distriduted in the United States to epcoursge trade »ith the Latin-Americsn countries. be mined and the port rendered safe from invasion In 48 Bours. arcording 1o Capt Fergoson of the cosst artil lory who had chargs of the practice layiog of mines in the bay. : ~ The centenary of Hanaibal JamHin's birth was celebrated in Paria HAIL Me, by many present and former Tesidenix of thal state, the fea ture of the day s cersmonios being the unveiling of & byomge tabiet on the Bonee where the stalesman was horn, ~ The Usiied Bobemian Turnors. be. gin & four<days foursamest in ULI CREgn e e i : . The body of Willlam Wade, & negro, who bad shot 28 eithsens in 8 stréct battle at Mogroe, Las, was burned in sight of a crowd jncluding womes and A report from Hosnow Ayres sald 2 Hrvew Bad been lost wlhen steam Ehips joaded %ftfimifififisu et iy women and chilfren, colided at the entranes of the m 2l Montevidiw Homer (mfi;bg?@jfigaas;fifi B, committed suicide 18 New York after writing a leiter Bocasing his wile a nurke of Cleveland, O of causing bt to take his life .~ i . The bodies of three torsigners were foand (n Ihe waeds 8t MeKeoon Rooks, P'a, making the fotal of dead in the . The fureth. punsal salional oo vention of insursbes commissioners, with 250 deloghion, yepresenting all the states attending wad Held in (4l prado Speines Lal Fred W Potter of lincts responded to the address of welentie, - = Mrs. Kate WHilstS of Mammath Bprings, Ark. was held up nnd rohted of $lOOO by & bhasd of masked inen A governipent obder Bas been lesned forbidding Ihe fmportation of liva stock from ‘éwi{g@ré&.fid an account of the prevalence of the footand nafh, diseuse in that eoantrs Newshove ‘infi’&?fl}fif‘ youths wita hard Inck stories much as 1 s wlock’ with my papers” of Lam helping mor ponr mother” ‘S?"@?%fi% & oy bivil. dity. will be forbliden the strects of Washington, vodér & pew ordinance . Charles Altred Byrbe, journaliet atd publisher of Trath in which tha famone forged Mfi?i“}’r’“ fotter of oy fieid's yrv-&t‘édo’af-rsziéii,fisémfgn Appenred, died in New York - - o Two woeeks fiffffififfii gearch has brought m_;vimg;;gi:;;;fgmgae bovse whoe disappeared from the camp of e Whittier State Military school at Ava lon, Cataliva Wland. Cal and it is thought that ther were drowned. The Internatiopal Order of Gool Templars has joiged the Antisalood ieague in askipg congress for stricter laws agaipst the sale and use of whisky in 'Wafiii‘?fifimfi. - . Import reporis frém the Argentine republic show the United States is third in that country's trade and Fog land first “iihflfififi;thh& Umes America's shipmenta, . After seeing scores of ships rotting in San Franciice bar for lack of husiness, soveral membirs of the dole gation of congressmen ob their way to Hawail aphouneed themsolvos as lwvoring o pational ehip subsidy Fifteen hmémfl delegaton arrived in _\\"_a&héagmn‘{fiiffiitfifid the twenty. cighth snnusl epcamipment of the commandery in ehief, Sons of Vot crans. Prominest men are among the number. . , “Glenn H Curtiss, the American rep resentative st the asiation contests at Rhbetiis, Prance, set a new mark for the course, making the distance, 6 1.5 miles, in eight minutes, 3525 scc | Qndfl‘ - ; ‘_ ; ; S - Ernest Newman, deputy court clerk and son of Dr. EH. Newman, slain in 4 polittenl feud battle at Meadville, Miss, several weeks ago, was shot from ambush and troops were sent to the town 16 prevent another outbreak between the warring factions, , - The Britlsn dssoelation for the Advancement of Selence began its annu ‘al meeting in Winnipeg, Man., the president, Btr' J. J. Thomson, presid. Ang and about 1500 savants Dbeing present, . . : ; Mayor Louis Fayette of Montreal welcomed to that ety the members of the League of American Municipalities, which met in yearly session, with President SHlas Cook of East St ‘Louis in the chair. - _ Fifty deaths out of a totsl of 76 cases of cholera occurred in the Phil ippine islands during the week ending June 26, says the report of Surgeon _ Mrs. Sarah Nagler of New York, ‘afrald of mice all her life, saw her cat driving one toward her, leaped on to a chair for “safety,” tipped it over, and fell out of the window and wae Klleda .
Since a boy several years ago stole two silver dollars from the United States treasury while being shown through the vaults, visitors without special permission have been denied access to the 83 by 61 feet treasury room, in which is stored $165,000,000 in coin,
As a sequel to the troudles of the First National bank at Tipton, Ind, the bank. which recently reopened, had a receiver appointed for the Beeler Manufacturing Company in Tipton. : : A fire in Monterey, Mexico, causeg damage estimated at $1,450,000, Plans are being worked out at the navy department for the four submarines authorized by congress at a cost of $2,000,000. Proposals will be asked for construction soon. Emperor William has authorized an outlay of $56,000,000 for the extension of Prussian state railroads. Chile—Two trains were completely destroved and many killed and injured in a collision 30 miles north of Santiago. : . Through a memorandum signed at Mukden, August 19, by both governments, China agrees to assist Japan in construction of Antung-Mukden railroad, thus closing the recent rupture. Orders have been issued to officers of the Great Northern steamship Minnesota, which is bringing to this country a party of Japanese business men, that the vessel shall ‘make the trin to Seattle in record time. '
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A R R R ' 4k B T VR O, ¢ & LoNkE LY TIEE B W N 1, el /0 N G P o ARG v A T “-.:‘r:"&;‘“";%‘f ""“ T R N ~ G s ‘.?‘\\\\ / ?‘;‘,"" b \ 5 > *-:é" ¢ g o &Y OMEDIITLTFELL #R, O7TY oF . fl{* A W . 1 Standing on the steps of the state | capitel st Deaver. tiay, Bhafroth of Cnlorado smiled and saved his Band | th & woout car thal wae giickiy speed. | ing nway from the capital bearing the | Cags of Old Mexico mz-:lvz?fl Laited ¢ States and followed by a donen well | filledd cnrs : : % This wak the Boal farewcl]l 1o !1'.,4"? tar and s crow of four men who | wers going 1o meke B trp from len E Year o Mexico Uty 8 digiance ol il moet §4OO pilles the greater part of | which was unexpiorsd L j The teip wus beivg taken to map » | route hetwesn Denver and the Mexl | cun capial over which an endurance contest will bhe rian pext October i George - A Wallgresn, » leadiog citl | ren of Denver, last fall offered 5| Lhandsome trophy to the car _that | would cover this distance with the | best endurance record. s o !’ Four men undertook this trip.in :\i i-horsepower car. which had already | guite a full experionce For !hi'.l:.“:.i-f; 20 davs this car bhas been d.r:"-frar.? through Old Mexico and the men h:n-n? Leen having strange expuriences in ui ccountry where autaniobiles have pexver § beun belore and the American r,mr:“g befofe set his fout This path wus | lald over miles and pilles of By o desert wastes and rovk sirewn rfi:&i!wg and parched sands They travelod (m’? davs without the sight of & bird wa ter, & human face or even 8 Human | abodd, Al nighis they slept by H;ri elde of thelr car Wil revalvers in, hand, and were sung to eleep by the | will of the eovotes. which broke the | awlul stitldess of & sembtropiont der | ert The parte consisted 'f,-;f Billv | Kuipper, an experienced driver of i racisg cars; F. Ed Bpooner, newspa- | per man; W. E MeCarion of Denver and James H. Howard a giide : This party left Denver May | anpd | arrived in Mexico Clity June 3 &t mid- . day.. The {trip from Denver to El Paso, the last stop thiz side of the Mexicap border, was full of plaasant driving, soon to he forgotten when | the car got into the unesplored coun. | try. The trip was mdle lHterally | alopg mountain tops. The car start | ed at an altitode of 5173 feet above | sen level and ended in Mexico City, which is XOOO feet above sea lovel At ‘no time was the route below 8,500 feet. : ! s In every town they stopped at they | mel a lively reception. : * . The party spent one day of rest in | El Paso and this time was spent ig | generally averhauling the car and get- | ting additional supplies for a dash | into a country in whieh they did not know when ther would meet man again. The crew found here that the | -trip of the American ear into Mexico | was beitg accepted as of much greater | moment than they had anticipated. | . They were informed that down in | Mexico, all along the line, preparations were being made to receive the | tourists and extend every courtesy. . - They left El Paso with light hearts. | ' net knowing that it was theirs to re | | turn again ' . It was proven that the gulde which | they had taken on &t El Paso knew | little more about the roads, or pre- | tended to know less. than they thém«i | selves. In following Kis directions, | Cthey took the right fork of a danger- . ous looking road and went hub deep | in adobe mud. Block and tackle, . which was part of their equipment. | - came into play, and the ear came out ' backward. They started around this and the car was bucking the sand | nobly, although the men often had to
Telephones in Maine Woods
Work of Lumbermen Greatly Simplified by Introduction of Improved Methods. : ‘ One of the most interesting uses to which the telephoné has ever been put is reported from the woods of northern Maine, where lumber camps are finding it an invaluable aid during the logging season. Many and varied are the tasks which the 'phone has been called upon to perform since its use has become so universal in this country, but this case is unique. . Travelers in the heavily wooded sections of Maine have lately notieed the wires strung along with the trunks of trees for supports. These conneéct with the dams on the streams down which the logs float. Should there be a sudden jam in the mass of lumber making its way down the stream the telephone is at once pressed into service and the man at the dam is notified to hold up all the logs until the lumbermen above have had time to straighten out the tangle.
Lest out o outl sage brash fraen the gms;r and ‘dig eand from _under the - whesds before they could make head war Finaly the crr went down aver the kubs in what proved te be quick: sand, and réfused to budge The Mook sud tackie prosed of no svall They saw that it wax a case of camp and walt for rellel This was thisir firsl taste of the Bitter of path finding. They later found that they weto stratded In 2 desert 46 miles from & rallroad, without foodd and water, They finslly decided that Billy Kalpper, the driver, and ¥ Ed Spoan. o 7 wonid glay with the car and Mo Carton and Howard, the galde would walk until they found a mnech house or gomne other place where they conld get aid. The plave where they wsere stuck is known as Tierra Blanca, or White Earth, so called frem the sand vofeposing it. Here the sand drilted Hhe snow and they seerted to be ta the midst of great oceaks of sapd The wind heaped the sdnd through the whetld of the car ji#e & cycione, and e fast as they wenld dig the sund from dnder the Wheels more would how in . Thi Bardahips of the two men left with the car were even freatsr than thoke ot the relief part¥. The wun was brolling hot and they made, a cover, throwing blankets over two poles lying against the car. Their wa. ter bags werd empty and they squerzed all the water from the radb ator of the car. This water they wixed wih some powdered peas and made & mixture which they called cald pes soup snd which they gaid tasted like. cough medicine. They were there for three days subsisting on this fare with no selid food, At the close of the third afternnon they saw Howard coming over the sands holding a 8 water bottle toward thers, They rushed from their improvieed tent vs"ilh‘:l shout of foy and stagpervd us drunk for the precious Hauid. : : ‘ The first reliéf party that was sent aut from El Paso wers unable to lift the car from its bed of sand, and they’ had 1o return for further sssivtance. Six men went out in anether car and by means of 380 feet of rope used as a bßlock and tackle placed arocund the relief car.they were finally | ble t lifg the car from the sand A%&r taking on supplies they agaln plunged into the unknown country, - The daugers that these men met in going through - this practically unkuown country would il a book. The car was met at Tula, 25 miles outl of Mexico City, it fihal destination, and escorted into the oity with great pomp and ceremony. President Diaz’ welcamed the pathfinders. Now the car, foliowed by. a large number of others filled with local motorists, paraded the streets of the city, which was han. nerflung with welcoming words. They were given a dinner that night at the Haotel Geneve and a ball oh the same evening. On Sunday the party was entertained by a bull fight of real Mexican styie and the pathfinding crew was given the honor of carrving Harper Lie, the greatest Ameriean bull fighter. bto und around the ring several times to be reviewed by Prest dent Diaz by his arrabgement. He was present in fall uniferm. - ~ The car was the object of great curlosity. and many of the pative Mexicans, who had been following its progress through the republie south. ward, knowing the condition of the Mexican roads, declared that such a trip was fmpossible. This was also sald in the western states through which the car passed. S ~ Motorists say that this is one of the grestest feats brought to the notice of automoblledom in years and will pave the way for a great automobile industry In the soutbern republic. The friendly invasion of the ears that cover this course next October will -add to the amlability of the two great American republics. . | ~ University 500 Years Oid. The University of Lelpsic celebrates fts 500th anniversary and its I,oooth session this month. -
In former days this service was performed by relays of shouters. Men stood on the banks of a river at intervals small enough to allow esch to be heard by his nearest neighbor. Sometimes the distances from the lumber camp to the log jum and from that to the nearest dam were very great. It can easily be seen what an enormous advantage the loggers with telephones have.—Kennebec Journal
Danger in Oysters. Ovsters fattened in bad water are specially dangerous. “Practically all oysters are diseased in summer.” Prof. Bardet. Colon bacillus is probably a common if not normal! fnhabitant of oysters. Eat all shell fish fresh out of the shell in summer. Take no man’s word, but see and smell for yourself. Travelers must not eat oysters in summer. Beware of cheap oysters, gaping shells and that black ring on the inner side of the shell caused by decomposition. '
| Paul’s Third Jou | L e § Sowsudy Arveestier Ths Pager | LERSON THXY ~Afs 853 Meomury : Yersew I . L OGOLDEN TEXT ™1 can do sl thines thraneh Uhoted wiieh stresgthrnstl we f P 5% - L TIME . Paal bt Epiemie bire e AL D B Dwesaster W lawuary And Febeoary, B et Uil He teadtied Mibeius wid g‘sx.“f.:‘«a?‘*@afi ‘ffl?"’; o Epliesing eelers “’at L deEh 00l Aneid . Z : : L PLACE o Paal afer lemivicy Maicewis, Lownnt threuph ecediain S 4 ueearh and %mr!::cemma by e s poste te PRalinge, %-“:‘N&w el M et . Buggestion snd Practical Thought, A Paetor's Wise Couneels Hedoomned by Exampie L 1 Pauls Joorseyings Among the By frfitmss:é Churckes-Va 146 We Isarn - frowm 3 Cor 100, weilten not & preat while alter Paul Jelt Eghosus, tha! be Jelt that oty Decatse Bls life was In danger H ke remained and ke ennid e losper do Bis work there He wan Ao deprevsed Tracne of mind om HE health. Prom Ephesus he ttwk 8 trad fng vessed Yo Troas o his wmay o Fhiliset {ivre a doir Ba% Ohw m*v«:‘;.._‘ry.,t Be was roatlvas beonure Titax falind o et bir thers with sews IPom the ehurch at Cortnibh {3 Cur 2107 0. & kl6§ o . Paul ook snoiler vessel to Philingl, - wherd he was oined by THos andg mtor 1o Peren and Thossalonion whern " Timothy doined them and her oinad - In oadddrossing the wecond leitel to the f';»zaz‘,th:.;mfi o the aviumn be webt 1o Liresde and a;--t 6l three nosths thers ciefly in Corinth ‘where ke had much V:@: 44 amid sirkoess and afic - Hons op every side, flglilinEr wWithout mbd fears within” (2 Car 3 oib iR 6 in caripp lar the churchey (2 Une 112581 and correciing wrong comduct (2 Cor 12:%0, 21:13: 1. ). 1t wan four or five ¥ears sinee bo had left them, after a stay of 8 yeur ard a half During adl this time collections were taken up in the various churches on this toar for Faul to carry W (he poor disciples 8t Jderusslem, according o Bis promize soven Yours before i Gal - 2:10). Beven delegates had been up pointed 1o adcompany Paul but a plot ol the Jews determined Him to rhange - his plane aud, instead of going by water. he together with five deleggtes from Europe, went by land to Tyoas where teo delegates from Troas jhined him. 2 : . 2 Paul’'s Experience at Troas—Vs 6 12, Paul and hiz vompany remained a - werk al Troas, a seaport on the Aeg. ean sea. They redached Troas five dayvs - after the Passover. Paul on the sve. - ning of the Lord's day, held a regcl- - ing service and holy communion in an - upper chamber As Paul was o sall the next morniug the service lasted il - midnight. A voung man was sitting in the latiiced window of the “;i.’j’f Ry ' The place was ¢rowded and hot the hour was late, and the young man was WwWenry, so that he wag overpowered by '_ li't‘wz'v and fell down three stories to | the ground and was thiken up for dead CPaal immedintely went dows by the outside stairs . common in Oriental bouses, and fell on him, emibracing Chim, as Kliilah in the case of the san of the widow of Zarephuth (1 RKings (33:21), and l*fi}rl;’::;, tn that of the Shu ‘pammite’s son. Doubtless Paul praved a 8 enrpextly sg those prophets “and the clese contact, the clusp of warm L affection gave new intenkily to the | praver of faith " His prayer was ancswered, snd the young man Was re stored. The incident revealed the love, the faith and the power of Paul and the religion he represented. ‘ { 3. Paul's Review of His Life at Eph. esus-—~Vs. 1327, 5 { Luke The change of. pronouns 1o L "we” in v 13 shows that Luke had now 1 Joined the party, and he continues with them till they reached Jerusalem L {Acts 21017, ‘ ' . On the fourth day they reached MiL tetus, bevond Ephesos. The vessel was s detained here for an upeertain length - of time and Paul sent for the Ephesisn | eldurs to cometo Miletus and meot Bis, Cfor 1L wonid uot be safe for him not 5&0, be ready to embark &t short notice, i Paul Meetz the Elders of Ephesus P Luke was probably present st the i meeting so that he was able to report t what Paul said : | Those present knew that he was speaking the truth. What be bad done (and taught was an exampiée for them ito follow and ap inspiration to faith- | fulness, . : ! 1. He did bis work (v. 18) “with all [ humility of mind” He was hot gelf- ! seeking, he was ready to do the hum. | blest service for the humblest person. iHe worked with his hands, although . brought up in the midst of wealth and ilearning. Paul set Christ forward and | kept kimself {n the background, - | 2 Amid great difficultios. “With ! many tears.” not for himself, but for ;others. And this (v. 31) “night and 2day with tears.” expressing the intens- | ity of ‘sympathy and desire for their igood. (V. 1% "And temptations™ . Trials of his temper, of his patience, llhmugh persecutions and bitter hos- | tility of those be came to help. .3 Vs. 20,27, “I have not shunned to gé;’lne unto you all the counsel of U All that God had revealed to him concerning salvation, whether men were willing to receive it or not. They hated to be told of their sins, and that they could not be saved unless they repented and forsook their sins. “I kept back nothing that was profitable unto - you.” Like a faithful physician, he gave the medicine that would cure, f'however distasteful. ‘ B
4 Paul used both of the two great methods of bringing men to Christ—by masses and by individuals. Every wise preacher and Sunday school teacher teaches both “publicly and from house te house.”
5. V. 21. Paul preached the gospel of repentance and faith as the condition of salvation. There is no other way. 6. Vs, 22, 23. He went on in the way of duty, althongh the futuré was dark to him, only he knew that bonds and aflictions awaitéd him. He was (v. 22) “bound” as with chains, “constrained™ as though bound to a chariot “in the spirit,” not bodily, but by conviction of his mind and conscience.
7. Vs. 23, 26. “I am pure from the blood of all men.” Paul derived this language from the well known words of Ezekiel (Ezek. 3:18), _ :
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e A e cam el o c M TYANRAL il STtd § donnshining 18 no longer the nrolits ¥ BTy isal 2 oyseg) o be Ad turding to the esthnate of the interpal fpvenue ofine At Washinglon, e tare Thkn ne - galiay of sniaw il Bhisky iB5 made (Gday Tor every 29 galions produced 15 vears BEL: T‘:a of pourss, in the resall of pefsisten? arid ußrelent g warfare waged by the Hirelitnent KEA et Wiigostiery wie have teen dfiven o lake refuge B & vornparative "5. Ex.'-i IRRCTPEY Heacitien gunily WMoutlsisoas Thathks o those chafigsl conditions the number o revenOe ARenls Kilied Ly moonsbhiinerys does Dol Bow #ve :‘,u(fB 0 iuch ne Ty on YORr A warked im proseent thin as may e Judged feorn the fast that bn m o pericd of 11 veare, Trom INIE I IRRC SR puveTh e goputive - «fgaped I 8 raiding giitls were sialg, and .Bl wounded Three comeseonlivy ;;s:m_ when the {tiicit business was most fercely re Bisting nte «3=-" e, witnessed the deaths of 25 raidera. Butl the SGgures gutted do not fuclude depuly miar shales Kifledd - while grresting ooon shipers: and s for the "wildcattors” thémselves, no oficial recard hias ever been kep! of -14 sk .'".J_;i’:fi atneng them, though it was undoubtedly fargs : Isuring a ;&-,;;“..,; of five years from 1877 Yo 180 o fewer than 5,000 el i«r.'z;é'.« were adized, ang BDG loon shiners Wére arresing Wheo { 18 considerssd Ihat the produet of the ay erage Cwildosl” plant s Hve pallons & day, 11 wiil be obvame that this neant & ¥Yery vons torable foss of tax to the piyvernment. Houghly speaking, in the Jsmt 26 vears slonutl 0000 stills have been captured, Ihe Ereatest nunber-an PRGS. when 2400 were gostroved. - Phe mronshite #lOlB always located in shme ipacesiihip sfe-prohivgd On & cliff that may easily be defended Ly 8 couple of Wen agsinsl & score, oOf hidden in a 4 cavers umfi--rf;r-.«iz.z ar concealed amid thick woisde in & defily between kills 8o lofty that the curl ing smoke tells no tale to the keeneyed govertiment raiders. FPlenty of cold water-—the one thing absolutely indispensable-~iy supplied by a moun tain streamiel. As for apparsiux, ail that & needed 18 8 fow wooden casks, a é'q,x;:v;:.»r ketle and a coil of metal tubing. Often the kettle is extemporized out of (wo o thres sguare yards of ghest cappnr. The casks, 100, are as Hikely as ot o be homemade, But the wietal tubing Wust be purehased: in town. and ix a 0 preclous that, when pot in actual use, 1 I carefully higden . A bip distillery can miske whisky for thirty. Bye or {ofly cents a gallon, dat, owing Lo the primitive character of his plant and also 1o the facl that xsy{,,{ft:(‘f‘;&'!i % on 8o ""’?"‘“” A scale the liguor tarced out Ly thée moonshiner cokts him anywhere from slxty to seventy five ceptls a gallon. Thus he could pot compete al all with the great liquor factories, were it not for the fact that the lalter concerns are ebliged 10 pay a tax of $l.lO a gatlon on the stull they manuafacture. The jaw which the "wildcatier” condemns as anjust, and which in its operation he resists so violently is In reality the sole suport of his it business—a. fact which, oddly egough, seems never to occur to the moonshiner. Nearly all of the output of the movnshine stills ig corn whisky. Some peach brandy and apple brandy s made unlawfully, however, and in one state copsiderable quantities of a lowproof rum I 8 obtained by primitive methods from the distillation of the skimmings known as “pottins,” of the ketties used for boiling molasses in the sirup mills. Perhaps the most picturesque “wildcatting” done at the
Objection to Modern Songs
Newspaper Compares Them to OldTime Favorites, Very Much to . Their Disadvantage.
An obsolescent 'but lively subseriber, in the course of a very agreeable letter, urges us to continue our war upon the popular songs of the day, =ays the Baltimore Sun. We enter an exception to his use of the word war, for our purpose is not homicidal and we have no blood feud
with the authors of these compositions, but if our correspondent employs the term in a purely figurative sense, and means by it nothing more sanguinary than a literary joust, we are with him, as Col. Watterson hath it. up to the Adam’s apple. Qur principal objection to the modern songs is that they are entirely destitute of true sentiment. Aided by alcohol, true enough, they are capable of producing a sort of saccharine melancholy which sometimes ‘culminates in copious weeping, but the effect here, we submit. is more physical than psychical. The juice of am
Lprenesl e f 8 conducied of 5.&;}35:;&5‘ % haniseooks among e swainiy tands Lot the Bowerp penineula by Eatives w s distifi Promm T petins g ey 3'?‘.s:»‘&2l"‘(; by eheap intnileant lof morte oF lews { beend colwen pticn RS ! 8o ingestously are et ¢lids eon’ :araufl §;§;gg,‘t}zwf wogid be discbver ol Chy orecegue oficers comiparalively v ;&}HT‘,}:U were [t Got for Ihe beip of Blired {informers. Rirsnge - sav, ¥¥EO ik g\: he moal Yeigdils fastnerses of Lhe { povmining (here are - alwars Cta e fovntd faen wbo w 1 abs spt frodn Eocle { Sam this kind of emplordentan s éz:i':)‘"‘&i#‘fil exiremely ci"m;"v:‘wz‘:;,;; Bna:« P murh s those who imderiake -1 &iv i-«i:‘“»"s-éiz@i’f? Hkelr to be murdered in rovhnge B A mumber of Cloalances Dihedyr Rowees Have i s burned, and Ihey thementies when ot kllled-have Boon whipped pearly fo death by the P moonshiners Ihey have belrayed } Gurk faformers redelive from $5 1o P B 0 for wvery still they pointoout The guverpment parys about §llOOO pef an nutn for Ihe hire of mativs & Tor this kpnd of work, apd to cmploy poesse Fien 1o éfif".ii! e gep ,‘s 1’:{5;555?2?&51_1”3_1; aking arrests. Al the prewent tthe the loee of tax fo the govsenment by i Tl distilieg B reckoned Wt eniy [ abont 5100.904. & ¥ear s amall frse friom of what 11 uasd to beSand iU ls D estimated that, iscluding pay of Teve ‘pud offcers and lncidental | expenses ; the entize cost fi! ‘aifi-.zs“r—,j(;:m Tt the Crreaeiry of the Usiled Siafes i tot | e than §l5O 000 agnunily Ly { Thers fs #u' old siyin! to the éfec? :!.bfii ons moonshine etill wiid d;“cm'.:':fa“\ji‘ | fpe apy commenily for a distance of | tiree mifles in every direction” The P iguor H loros sl beiog "M":Ei}_ alid [ drank fregh from the worm, s ke [ devila own bréwooa kind uf frewater Tthat mbkes men erasy 1 I 8 acoount able for most of the murderous fduds that Bave terrorized many distriels or | generations Owing to & Erowibyg pern Looption of shich facts, there has come iiaimui & changs In poguiar a@:fi_i};lxr!x! Lin mest peglons whers Cwideatiing’ fans furmerly cosntesunced snd sap P portag-t chalige s 0 far adverse &8 1o {have grestly heélped in the suppies i sion of the Industry. - - S ! Even yet however, there are lo¥all [ tivs in %hirf‘f,‘z'!%és'—:.r:fsv:;x_.w'b!!‘.i*eraicxnf pat st fout without great danger. No P sentiment in favoer of fair play sug ‘ gests to the moonshinlag mwounlaineer {the potiop of Bghlicg against the-law Lin the gpen. He prefers to lie in amz hush and to fake pot shiots at-the goy: { ermment agenl Whea a party of ‘raiders arrives in the nelghborhood | notification ©f e fact is spread far {and wiie by the blowing of horns;and (sometimes armed men will assemble | in force to defend A st against at {rack, Under . such . circumstances ! many a desperate battle has been | fought. lndeed; the “revenuer” carries ‘his life ip his hands at ail times, and ihe knows how o use his pistois, | whether running afont or riding at a | gallop, while with his rifie, which car- . ries ap cupce ball 4 thousand . yards T with precision, he is & dead shot. ~ . Nobody gues fo the still to buy It | quor. - Apybody- in the neighborhood {ean get #t by trading cornmeal for ig | if money is lacking—three bushels of : meal being deemed an equivalent for {one gallon of “cern juice” But most ' commonly 1t 18 known to the people of | the vieinity that bottlea or jugs may %be filled from a barrel of the stuff gkept at s certain farmhouse; or occa- | stonally a cask of whisky stands under | & tree got far from the public road, i the person in charge of it Lalling those who gsa by. Or, again, one. may learn of a spot in which af empty | flask or jug msy be left, with money z —tg Be afterwards found there -duly At . e In those parts of the country where t“b&oeka&fixs’ is practiced the people are usually very poor, and the destruction of a still iz likely to be a severe misfortune to the owper. . - German University Grows. The University, of Bonn, Germany, for the first time, this summer reached and passed the 4,600 mark in the pumber of students, . - -
orange peel or of an onion, injected | into the eves, will make the tears | flow in an equal flood, and the in-| gestion of a broiled lobster, half an | hour before bedtime will ‘engender an. even greater melancholy. Here, | in a word, we have not emotion, but | a npeurosis; not pathos,’but bathos; | not sentiment, but - senflmentality.§ The tears that flowed from the eyes | of the fashionable bucks of 50 years ago, when “Dariing Nellie Gray” was | sung, came from the heart, and were | Lonorable alike to shedder and provo- | cator. Hut the tears which follow | “Are You Sincere?” today are the | secretions of maudlin vulgarity. The | old song writers were not cynics, but ’ poets. The theory -that love is a | beautiful thing was the corner-stone | of their philosophy. They were not ashamed to set their ravishing melo- } dies to simple words—to the ancient, half-articulate vocabulary of true lovers. They assumed, as a cardinal pricciple, that love was both agree
. . * During Change of Life, says Mrs. Chas. Barclay Graniterille, Vi — 1 was passin through e Uhangeof Life andsuffers P : from Ervousness e ARG arelotber annoving Ai el Symptoms, aod I & ¢ CAn -1y say thal & P Isdial Fiokham's :‘ i ‘ Yegetable Canm. TS pound has proved = E B Wi eaunialns a 4 < 3 S | £ v AR PAN .32 - reslored my health S . sud strength | T L never farget totell AT my friends what FEY el I.vdiafE Minkbam's Vepetabin Compound has done for me ‘ periad. -4 miprinle rest 1 y 1o Beallh 1 % &G much R : i » .” 5 niake .YIA‘Y ! &} > o you ay publish $ i 1 Mis € uas. BARCLAY, l:. g 1 { i Koo '\7 % N Teieed ¢ for woman's {lle Loas reed - wicesgrrvad And une i hoow of bas such & recond ; ¢ q r tas ILedia E i & Voegetable Commnound } ! thas s years 1% has been ¢ £ $E plainta such as i 5 : ! giceration, jlocal weak I i \, backache, indigestion arnd neryous prostration, and it is eil i {or earrying women safely s - e periond of change of lifa it i 8 bout tthe o try Lydia E. isktam's Vegetable Compound and, s M Barriavsays il is Ywarth mogls tains of gold " o sullering wolnen, - i ,f-—‘\‘:,,,‘__,. e ————ny TR gy r—er—- | SAEN i N S = ;Q',.,.,A_,T_, e ( UV L (~. Lo “"‘ 5 - N i > e i g A i - — N _y(»\a'f.‘ e ¥ . iS PN et . 7 N b o - \ . > 1! ,[» g 1)” ') j Ei N - liig A' . { i _M/-L\l"“ < e A e - P 0G - R, ST (G, \.7. o L ; Yo, § \ $ - “ Nyrommnnes [ A %l TN " gt ‘ : ¥ . T 3T N o < \ i W — ______& v"’*”\ o / — Xy R e D S " \ - _‘ o — w:" /‘.‘\i:. «\" “Most grateful and comforting is a warm bath with Cuticura Soap and gentle anointings with Cuti. cura. ‘This pure, sweet, economical treatment brings immediate relief and refreshing sleep to skintortured and disfigured little ones and rest to tired, fretted mothers. For eczemas, rashes, itchings, irritations and chafings, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are worth their weight in gold: St thremphont the world. Denots: Leandon 27 Chiariertivime Bag . Parts & Rue de is P e Be R Towss & 00, Sytory: Indte 80l Caitutta. China. Hong Kong Drog Co Jsnan, Marusa, Itd . Tokse Russia Ferrein, Moscows tvk"‘fl’~ 5 148 Cape Town, «t 2 17 R & viler Lrig & Chem. Corp, Scie Prope., Boston e e e St . S . EDUCATIONAL. e eee e S e e Pt 5 P CHICAGO Night Claswes. Faculty of lead S ing Judges and Lawrers. Large law librars Home Stady in Law snd Shorthaad High scbool = courses. For catajog, address SCHOOL j.;.lobias.loB Randoigh St.. Chicage Where to Attend School Send for Catalog of - - . . V = Valparaiso University, V4/egraise. {acceEpiTED) One of the Largest Universities and Traising Schools in the United States. 25 Departmests Excellent Equipments 176 lastructors School the Entire Year Eindents may enter at any Uimes and select thely studies (romn any, or from many of the following DEFARTEESTS: Preparsiory, Tearhers', Kindergarton, Primary, Fedagogy., Rasual Tralsing, Scientife, (lasefeal, Higher Eugiieh, Ol Engiseering. German, Frearh, Spanish, Italiss, Law, Fharmacy, Medical, Destal, Fleention sad Oratery, Basie, Fine irl, (emmercial, Peamasship, Phonography sad Trpewritiag, Eeview, ~ The Expenses Are Made So Low that anyone can meet them. Teitien, §l5 per quarter of 12 weeks. Board sod furnisbed rocm, 8175 1o $2.25 por week. Catalog giving foll particniars mafled free. Address, H. B. BROWS, President, or O, P. KISSEY, Viee-President - Prirty Seenth Foar Wil Open Septomber Tiat, 199
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