Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 236, 29 September 1907 — Page 1
MOOT A ABIITM io pages nn T RIO 10 PAGES TODAY TODAY AISJO SUN-TEL EGRAM. RICH3IOXD, IND., SUNDAY 3IORNING, SEPTEMBER 29, liM7. SINGLE COPY, 3 CENTS. VOL. XXXII. NO. 23G.
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EXPECTED THAT A GREATCRDWDWILL visit cmr TODAY If the Weather Is Favorable The Attendance on the Session of Indiana Yearly MeetTig Will Be Large.
EDUCATION CONSIDERED SATURDAY AFTERNOON. tJo Large Donations Were Made to Earlham This, Year And No Special Plea Was Made for Money. PROGRAM FOR MONDAY. 8:00 a. m. Devotional meeting. t 9:00 a. m. Epistles from Wilmington, Oregon and California; minutes of permanent board; returning minutes; bible institute; White's Institute; miscellaneous. 2.-f p. m. Epistolary committee; miscellaneous. 7:1. p. m. Davotional meeting. Since the Indiana yearly meeting was first held in Richmond, "Yearly meet ing Sunday," as it Is sometimes termed, has always been the big day of the Mccinno U'Vion thA first vpflrlv meetDnOCTlUUCt -w - - 1 . ing was held In the city it was attended by large crowds, not such as characterized the meetings of today, but as large in proportion to the population. Sunday was the favored day among the Quaker farmers, for miles around Richmond, and the crowds were always larger on this clay than any other. Year after year the custom was retained and where a few hundred people assembled on Sunday years ago, now there are thousands. Just as Sunday has been the great day of the meeting from the very first organization of the Indiana body, today promises to be the great day of this year's sessions, weather jermitting. Many people connected with the Friends' church, who were not already in the city for the Sunday session, arrived on the night trains Saturday, while today the Interurbans are expected to carry hundreds of people into the city. Richmond, the Quaker City of the West, will itself turn out en mass to attend the sessions. Friends ministers will occupy the various pulpits In other churches both morning and evening. It will truly be a Friends day. The younger members of the church came to Richmond In large numbers Saturday to attend the Chris tian Endeavor sessions of Saturday light. No Large Donations. For the first, time in several years, there were no large donations given to Earlham college Saturday, the regular educational day of the yearly meeting. For the past few years it has been the custom for some Individual belonging to the Indiana meeting, or another, who is interested In Earlham, to give the college a large sum. It is thought that the great activity during the past year in raising funds among the Friends for the library, dormitory and heating plant at the college, is respon sible for the non appearance of a large donor at Saturday afternoon's sessions, many of the Friends feeling that they have given all that it Is possible for them to do this year. When asked whether or not Earlham to his knowledge would be the recipi ent of a large gift from any one prom inent Friend this year, Allen Jay, financial agent, said he knew of none at the present, but that he hoped a goodly sum would be subscribed before the close of the yearly meeting sessions. He would give no assurance whatever that this would be done, however. Report Is Encouraging. President Robert L. Kelly of Earlham. read a voluminous report of the affairs of the college since his last report to the yearly meeting. No broader, more encouraging report was ever submitted to the yearly meeting. It was clear and concise and not only spoke of Earlham's unprecedented growth during the past year, but also spoke optimistically of the future. Practically the entire report was published in the Palladium some time ago. Following the report of President Kelly. Charles Tebbetts, ex-president of Whittier college, California, said Earlham. with its high standing in the educational world had made the Indiana yearly meeting what it Is today, a power in the Friends denomination as a whole. It is a misfortune, he said, that all yearly meetings have no central educational institution as has the Indiana body. What the Friends are JLoday, he asserted. Is due to their edu"catiofcal institutions. I Aid for Dormitory. 1 A"cn Jay spoke before the yearly meeting, of the work in general that had been done by the college and In particular of the present needs of the Edwin S. Bundy memorial Tlormitory. Although a !a'rge number of persons have agreed to furnish a suite of rooms j aach, many or tnem sun remain to be J furnished through the generosity of the friends q the school. He asked for a
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S. W. liberal response from those desiring to still further furnish the dormitory and about ten persons agreed to give $50 each for such a purpose. Mr. Jay said that the college wished to establish a first class hospital In connection with the dormitory, which would cost about STrfio. This money he wished the Friends to pay unsolicited. The hospital Is to be named the Margaret Moon memorial hospital, after Margaret Moon, who labored many years as nurse at the college. In regard to the vacancies due to the expiration of tenure of office on the board of trustees, the permanent board of the yearly meeting reported favorably on the continuency of Timothy Nicholson on the board. Mr. Nicholson has for forty-two years been actively en&iged in the work for the bet terment of Earlham college. He' has been a trustee of the institution for that number of, years. Joseph A. Goddard of Muncie, was also selected to serve on the board of trustees. Academies Flourish. The Indiana yearly meeting's academies. Spiceland and Fairmount, were both shown to be in a flourishing condition. There were seventy-eight enrolled at Spiceland last' year. There were eight graduates. The library has been increased while extensive additions have been made to the laboratory. The buildings have also been im proved. . There were one hundred and fourteen pupils at the Fairmount academy last year. The outlook for the present year is very good. Courses in agri culture and domestic science have been added and are under the guiding hand of competent Instructors. During the present sessions of the Indiana yearly meeting .$l!,052.f3 has been raised to be devoted to the following work Peace $ Southland college l."5.r2 Foreign missions 90S.OS Church extension 842.S! FINE YIELD OF POTATOES. One Bushel Produced More Than Fifteen. Economy, Ind.. Sept. 2S John Franklin is the champion potato raiser of Perry township. He bought one bushel of Irish potatoes early in the spring and planted them and they yielded fifteen bushels of fine potatoes. Besides they grubbed young potatoes and continued using from the patch until digging time. FINDS ft SNAKE IN BUKCH0F BANANAS Will Porter, Groceryman, Has Lively Experience. Will Porter, who has a grocery at North Twelfth and B streets, has "a snake story to tell. Saturday while he was preparing to cut some bananas from a bunch hanging in his store, he was confronted by a snake that proved to be twenty-two inches in length. The snake made two efforts to bite Mr. Porter but it was speedily dispatched. The snake was drab in color, with diamond shaped patches of brown. The highest cloud3 are said to be only ten miles from the earth's surface and are composed of minute particles of Ice.
GAAR, CASHIER SECOND NAT'L Students Enrolled Following is a list of the students enrolled at Earlham College for the fall term. The list is not complete as many new students have enrolled very recently or will enroll soon: Dormitory Students. Larvin W. Bond, Farmland, Ind.; Stewart V. Bacon, Hutchinson, Kansas; Everett Brubaker, West Alexandria, Ohio; R. E. Boomershine, Brookville, O.; Ethelyn Bishop, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mary BInford, Greenfield, Ind.; Elmina J. Binford, Greenfield, Ind.; Lola B. Beasley, Fairmount, Ind.; Leroy D. Beachler, Decatur, Ind.; Grace Beeson, Losantville, , Ind.; Nellie Cassatt, Indianapolis, Ind.; Rachel G. Calvert, Selma, Ohio; Katie Coahran, Summitville, Ind.; Grace Carey, Summitville, Ind.; Estella C. Cutrell, New Richmond, Ind.; Edward H. Calvert, Selma, O.; Merrill Choppell, Carthage, Ind.; Howard Comstock, Noblesville, Ind.; Mae Chenoweth, Lynn, Ind.; John Arthur, Duf field, New Madison; Edward W. Douglas, West ' TJlf-Tl r T.0IH1 riuihnf rontnrirlllo Milton, O.; Lellia Danbor, Centerville, Ind.; Mary Rosamond Mason, Penville, Ind.; Florence Melleth, Springport, Ind.; Epha Marine, Upland, Ind.; lone Morris, Elizabeth town. Ind.; Edna Metcalfe, Worcester, Mass.; Walter Miles, Newberg, Oregon; Ethel Ruth Moore, Huntington, Ind.; Reba Macy, Lewisville, Ind.; Edna Mills, West .Alexandria, Ohio; Harmon Maier, Covington, O.; Louis Mitchell, Tippecanoe, Ky.; Retta McConaha, Centerville, Ind.; Thurman Overman, Knightstown, Ind.; Anna Osborne, Pa oli, Ind.; Levi Pennington, Knights town; Esta ""Pearson, Troy, Ohio; Lo is Pitts, Morristown. Ind.; John Perkins, Rising Sun, Ind.; Esther Painter, Carmel, Ind.; Edna Stauffer," Centerville; Earle Stanley, Liberty, Ind.; Roxie Stalker, Westfield,. Ind.; Ruthanna Simons, Chicago; Helen Stanley, Wichita, Kansas; Helen Sutton, Fort Madison, Iowa; John Iddings, Ludlow Falls, Ohio; Cassie F. Jones, Wichita, Kans.; Maurice Jones, West Milton, Ohio; Francine L. Jenkins, Winona, O.; Rowena Pearle Johnson, Vermilion Grove, Illinois; Hoy Kenneth Jenkins, Rockville, Ind.; Inez D. Jones, West Milton, Ohio; Joseph H. Jones, Hughesville, Md.; Gorseth E. Ken, Troy, Ohio; Hope Kerr, Connersville, Ind.; Eunice Victoria Kelsay, Amboy, Ind.; Edna Kellar, -Lewisville, Ind.; Beulah Kauffman, Goshen, Ind.; Wilmer W. Llndley, W. Middleton, Ind.; Lois Emma Lambain, Paoli, Ind.; Paul Lewis, Williamsburg, Ind.; Iva Llndley, Bloomingdale, Ind.; Irene Mills, New Paris, Ohio; Florence Elizabeth Maple, Lewisville Ind.; Martha Meyn, Hammond, Ind.; Clar ence . Sumner, Noblesvine, ind.; Grace Stanley. Liberty. Ind.; Anna Stanley. Westfield. O.: Edith Stout. Paoli, Ind.; Raymond Stout, Paoli. Ind.; Rema Stone. Carthage. Ind.; Carolyn Stuart, Knightstown. Ind.; Catherine Snepp. Dayton, O.: Verne Swaim, Bloomingdale. Ind.: Edith Scantland, Economy, Ind.; Pauline Saint. New Castle, Ind.: Edith Shugart. Marion, Ind.; Lucile Sharkey. Van Wert, Ohio; Rupert Stanley, Carthage. Ind.; Orville Wright. New Castle, Ind.; Mabel Woodward, Knightstown, Ind.; Carl Weesner, 'Wabash, Ind.; Mabel White, Knightstown. Ind.; Hazel Werking, Hagerstown. Ind.; Oliver Walthall. Quaker, Ind.; Herbert White, Carthage. Ind.; Mary Wetherald.; Beyantown, Md., OliTer Weesner, Mooresville, Ind.; Arnetha Thomas. Fountain City: H. D. TrundelL Bloomingdale; Glen Thistlethwaite, Hortonville. Ind.; Emmett Trueblood, Salem, Ind.; Anna Trueblod, Salem, Ind.; Amy Thomas, Wilow, Ind.; Bertha Thompson, Ludlow
BANK. at Earlham College. Falls, O.; Robert Votaw, Kansas City, Mo.; Addie Wright, Fairmount, Ind.; Amy Winslow, Carthage, Ind.; Grace Winslow, Carthage, Ind.; Russell Worl, Cambridge City; Ella Williams, Western Springs, Ohio; Howard Winslow, Carthage, Ind.; Myra Ware, Butlerville, Ind.; Edith Eliason, East Germantown, Ind.; Miriam Furnas, Indianapolis, Ind.; Fred Francis, Bridgeport, Ind Edgar Fisher. Eaton, O.; Idris Tickel Lynn, Ind.; Katherlne Gainey. Liberty Ind.; Anna Hampton, Monrovia, Ind Albert H. Hall. Paoli, Ind.; Cora Hock er, Berne, Ind.; Latta C. Hudson, St Louis, Mo.;Nellie Hallowell, Pendle ton, Ind.; Marjorle Hill, Carthage, Ind. Edna Hockett, Wabash, Ind.; Melville Hawkins, Bridgeport, Ind.; Harold Hill Arkansas City, Kans.; Horace Hedges New Castle, Ind.; Nellie Hughel, An derson, Ind.; Arthur Hotchkiss, Indian apolis, Ind.; Elizabeth Holaday, Bertha Hallowell, Pendleton, Ind.; .Lester Ha worth. Danville. Ind.: Hazel Hancock. Anderson, Ind.; John Heaton. Smith- . - field. O.; Roy Wollam, Ludlow Falls, O.; Chas. Weisner, Mooresville, Ind Lowell. Wilson, Cambridge City, Ind.; John Hancock, Fairmount, Ind.; Edna Hall, Elizabethtown, Ind.; John Haworth, Decatur, Ind.; Lewise Haveland, Bryan town, Ind.; Celia Heler, Campbellsburg, Ind.; Grace Huff, Leesburg, Ind.; Agnes Hunt, Indiana polis, Ind.; Sidney Hutton, Brookville, Ind.; Edyth Harvey, New Castle, Ind.; Daniel Albert Hay worth, Clayton, 'Ind. ; "Chester Haworth, Dan ville, Ind.; . Byron Huff, Martinsville, Ind.; Otto Harrell,- Kokomo, Ind Hurshel Hutchens, Carlos City, Ind.; Latta Hudson 'v St. Louis, Mo.; Anna Hampton, Monrovia, Tnd.; Albert Hall, Paoli, Ind.; Cora Hooker, Berne, Ind.; Nellie Hallowell,, Pendleton, Ind.; Mar jorle Hill, 'Carthage, Ind.; Edna Hock ett, Wabash, Ind.;- Melville Hawkins, Bridgeport," Ind.; Harold Hill, Arkans as City, Kan.; Vern lleddon, Indiana polls; Edna 5 Haviland, South Glen Falls, N. Y.;. Ramona Norris, Carth age, Ind.; Lesley C.'Nanney, Haycross Ga.; Ernest Wear, Hughesville, Mo.; uienna ;etn, uovington, u.; Nicholson, ' Harrisburg, Pa.; Edna Newsom Azalia, Ind. ; Harmon Neff , Greensfork; Dorothy Quinby, Philadelphia Pa.; Alice Quinby, Philadelphia, Pa.; Ethel Raiford, Conley, Va.; Jesse Reece, Spiceland, Ind.; Clarence Ru pert, Noblesville, Ind.; Ina Rataiff, Fairmount, Ind.; Willard Robert, No(Continued on page Nine.) GOING TO MULLEN HOME. Members of the Palladium and SunTelegram Jamestown party will meet this morning at 8 o'clock at the interurban office and will go from there in a conveyance to the home of Mrs. Cora Mullen, where they will spend the day. LECTURE PROVED PROFITABLE. Fountain City, Ind., Sept. 28. The lecture delivered by Rev. Marcus B. Parounagian on "Turkey and Mohammedanism" at the M. E. church Tuesday evening tinder the auspices of the Woman's Home Missionary society was largely attended. The society cleared $ 18. THE WEATHER PROPHET. INDIANA Sunday fair and cooler. OHIO Rain Sunday; cooler. -
PHILLIP BIIIKLEY IS FINED BY CONVERSE
Former Member of the State Senate Found Guilty of Trespass Charge. HIS ATTORNEY IS FIRED. DID NOT LIKE IT BECAUSE MEDSKER ENTERED A PLEA OF GUILTY CASES FOR ASSAULT ARE PENDING. Phillip Binkley of East Germantown, a well to do citizen and formerly a state senator, was arraigned In the city court Saturday afternoon charged with trespass. The charge was preferred by Mrs. Ella Myers, his first cousin. Mr. Binkley was billed to appear In the city court Saturday morning but he has so much business in the courts now days that he got mixed up on his dates. As a result Constable Clay had to be sent to East Germantown to bring the ex-statesman to the city court. Mrs. Myers with an imposing array of witnesses waited some time for her cousin to put in an appearance. When Mr. Binkley arrived, Attorney Bert Medsker of Cambridge City, who has been doing some legal work for the former statesman, was on hand to represent him, in fact Mr. Medsker entered a plea of guilty to the charge for his client. This action on the part of Mr. Medsker met with the displeasure of the retired senator. Mr. Binkley promptly and without ceremony discharged Mr. Medsker, stating that he had retained him to look after his interests in a coiple of other cases pending In the justice's court at Cambridge City. After discharging his counsel, Mr. Binkley withdrew the plea of guilty entered by Mr. Medsker and plead not guilty. Was Fined $25 and Costs. Mrs. Myers stated on the witness stand that several days ago Mr. Binkley, who had been drinking, entered the home where she and her brother, William Schalk, live. She said that Binkley started trouble and she or dered him off the premises. Two days later again under the influence of liquor, Mr. Binkley returned, she stated, and offered his apologies. She refused to talk to him and a dispute arose, as the result of which Mr. Binkley next week will be the defendant in two assault and battery cases, one preferred by Mrs. Myers and the other by Mr. Schalk. Mr. Binkley, she stated, after the hostilities, was again ordered from the premises. Mr. Binkley did not have much of a defense to offer so the court assessed a fine of $25 and costs. Thi3 fine Mr. Binkley paid. Mr. Binkley, his friends state, has been drinking heavily of late and his dissipations have brought much woe to him. Just recently he was fined in Cambridge City on a charge of intoxication. STARVATION AHEAD FOR THE PEASANTS Floods in the Southern Districts Have Caused Widespread Devastation. MANY WITHOUT SHELTER. WOMEN WITH BABIES IN THEIR ARMS, PLEAD FOR RELIEF RED CROSS IS TRYING TO RELIEVE DISTRESS. Madrid, Sept. 28. Starvation con fronts 200,000 peasants in the flood districts in the south and it seems im possible to provide relief. The dam age and property loss Is estimated at many millions and thousands of people are homeless. Malaga alone will be able to reap a harvest and the food situation Is the most serious In many years. The peasants who were driven from their miserable homes by water have absolutely nothing except the rags upon their backs. They are gathered in great crowds about the government offices In the towns, begging for assis tance. Women who have carried their babies In their arms for three days and nights and similar pathetic sights confront the officials. The rain continued today in some districts. The Red Cross society has begun to give relief and will do everything within the means of the organization to assist the sufferers. The church of Benamargrosa. which was undermined by the flood, fell during the night. There was no loss of life. At Malaga many dead bodies have been washed down the river and out to sea. IN THE HERAULT DISTRICT. Flood Damage in France Estimated at Four Million Dollars. Paris, Sept.'. 28. The flood situation In the south, of France was little bet
REGULAR TREE OF MAGIC. Losantsville, Ind., SepL 2S. William Hawkins, living northeast of here has a pear tree In his garden that is bearing three varieties of pears and three limb of very fine apples. The rcat was accomplished by grafting, the tree.
OFFICIALS BELIEVE SURRENDER IS NEAR Have an impression That the Traction Company Will Soon Dismount. KERN VISITS THE CITY. CONSULTED WITH THE BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS AND POINTED TO THE PROVISIONS OF THE FORMER FRANCHISE. City officials are of the opinion that the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & East ern traction company Is about to dismount from its high horse and accept the terms distated by the city in the traction controversy. This impres 6ion was left by Attorney John W Kern, who appeared before the board of public works Friday. Mr. Kern asked the board If the city would, to bring about an understandin between the traction company and the city, yield any points in the demands made on the company. Mr. Kern In tlmated that if the city would permit the company to select a freigh route other than North E street, the compa ny would consent to sign the franchise agreement offered to It by the city. Mr. Kern stated that the company feared that in case the North E street route was selected the property owners on North Twenty-third street would Insti tute injunction proceedings. City Stands Pat. In response to Air. Kern the board members emphatically stated that the citv had dictated its terms and that they intended to stand pat on the de mands made of the traction company Mr. Kern was Informed that in regards to the North E street freight route, it was best for the company to make ar rangement to place its freight line on that street and, in the event the prop erty owners on North Twenty-third stret applied for a restraining order and the court Issued a permanent in junction It would then be time to dls cuss another freight route through the city. s Cites the Provisions. Mr. Kern reminded the board that under the terms of the Lontz and Free man franchise, which . provides that street cars, freight and passenger In terurbans can be run on lines on any street in the city except North Tenth and North A streets, and those streets on which car lines are operated under the franchise granted to the old Rich mond Street Railway company, the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern could run a line down South A street and operate both freight and passenger interurban cars on this line. Mr. Kern was Informed that some parts of South A street were extremely narrow, In one place the street being only 24 feet wide, and if the city cared to, it could prevent the traction compa ny from operating cars on this street on the grounds that it would Interfere with the public use of the street. Mr. Kern was also Informed that such a line could not connect with Main street east of Fifth "street because the compa ny had no franchise right to operate cars on Main street. ter today. The papers are filled with accounts of the immense destruction caused in the department of Herault, to which the damage is principally confined, and which is estimated to amount to $4,000,000. - The waters rose so rapidly in the valleys that the people working in the vineyards were cut off and compelled to seek refuge in . trees, and on the tops of houses and walls. Reports from the departments of the Rhone, Card and .Vaer say that the rivers every here are out of their banks and the flood Is causing much distress. Many people have sought refuge in the upper parts of their houses and have been without food for days. The authorities are hurrying relief supplies to the flooded sections of the country. A number of bodies have been recovered in various parts of the departments mentioned. A dispatch from Marsailles says that an unprecedented fall there has flooded the lower ' parts " of the city. In the department of Ardeche the rains have caused a dangerous ris? in the streams and serious breaks la several dams. Parliament will be asked to furnish relief for the sufferers, who were Just beginning to recover from the losses sustained as a result of the crisis In the wine trade which led to the wine growers revolt last summer. Much of the responsibility for the disastrous nature of the' flood is attributed to the unrestricted denuding of the forests. - - .
PROGRAM FOR FIVE YEARS MEETING IS GIVEN TO PUBLIC
Outline of the Work That Will Be Done by Important Quaker Body fhen It Assembles Here Next Month. MANY MATTERS TO BE UNDER CONSIDERATION. Program Bears Names of Some of the Best Known Members of the Society in America Topics Assigned. Below Is the program proposed for the Five Years meeting or general conference of Friends, which will bo held In Richmond the coming: month, opening on the evening of Octobed IS: Tenth Month 15th.. 7:.1 p. m. Opening of meeting with Edmund Stanley, the clerk, in the chair. Devotional opportunity. , S:.'i Presentation of the credentials of delegates. Delegations Instructed to select their chairmen, who will nominate the next sitting officers for the meeting and members of the business committee and the auditing committee. Report of the committee of arrangements. loth Month Kith. D.-oo a. m. Devotional opportunity. 2. Organization of 'meeting by the appointment of a clerk and, two as. sistant clerks. Appointment of a business committee and an auditing com mittee. ;t. Presentation of propositions from yearly meetings. 4. Proposition for the establishment of Nebraska Yearly meeting. .". . Reports of the treasurer and of the auditing committee. The meeting will then receive and consider the written reports of tho standing boards and committees, viz.: The evangelistic and church extension board, Charles II. Jones, chairman. The American Friends board of foreign 'missions, Thomas C. Brown, chairman. The board of education, A. Rosenberger, chairman. The committee on legislation, Timothy Nicholson, chairman. The finance committee, A. K. Hallowell, chairman. The board on the condition of negroes, Allen Jay chairman. The associated executive committee on Indiana affairs, Edward WIstar, chairman. The peace association of Friends in America, Cyrus Hodgin, chairman. Statement in reference to the proposed conference on the liquor traffic. The following subjects will be presented in the order ntated, unless otherwise ordered by the meeting. Th Friend first named will read a paper to occupy about twenty minutes unless otherwise stated. The Friend follow ing will open the discussion of the subject to occupy ten minutes. Speak ers following will be limited to five miutes each, unless their time Is ex tended by the meeting, viz.: The Present Opportunity for Friends, Rufus M. Jones, Ralner W, Kelsey. Methods of Evangelization, Robert E. Pretiow, Richard Haworth. The proposed Missionary Union and the method of providing funds for Its administration. The Federation of Churches. The Social Mission of Friends Ed ward Grubb, Margaret T. Carey. The Pastoral Needs of our Congre gation James Wood, Mary M. Hobbs, Clarence M. Case. Propositions on Ministry and Over sight. Province and Duties of Superintend ents of Evangelistic Work, ten minutes to each W. Jasper Hadley, J. Llndley Spicer, Louis E. Stout, Thomas Wood, Eliza H. Carey, Samuel R. Neave. Proposed ex-officlo members of the Five Years Meeting. Friends in Public Affairs (evening) Benjamin F. Trueblood, Joseph J. Mills, 30 minutes each. Ministry for the Present Day El bert Russell, Ellison R. Purdy. The Problem of a Friends Meeting: In a Large City Albert J. Brown, Charles W. Sweet. Non-resident Members as a Bafila for Church Extension Andrew F. .uicn?i, f ranus j. vtrigui, 1'noeoo S. Aydelott Inter-Yearly Meeting Correspond ence Charles E. Tebbetta, Llndley D. Clark, Mary C. Woody. The Expansion of Quakerism Isaac Saarpless, J Elwood Paige, Alfred T. Ware. It ia expected that the meeting will close on Second day, the 21st, or Third day, the 22d, as the requirements of the business may determine. JAMES WOOD, Chairman. LIKES HIS HOME IN TENNESSEE. New Paris, O., Sept. 28 A letter was received by the high school this week from Jercy Jarrett, who is now living in the Cumberland mountains in Tennessee. He writes that he likes his new home very. much.
