South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 236, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 24 August 1919 — Page 18

.-. V, A 1 ' t I si, lH

TttE SOUTH Bt.NU NEWS-TIMES

THE TURMOIL

By Booth Tarkington

Condensation By Clarence IV. Barron

The Sheridan . ill li- t ! j- oo I 1 1 Tarkington was lxni nt andiente of tin printed juice and t He realized that his father held his ViCKrst Pkj-fcraprr. th" Sh'-rid.in' r"" ' ndiaii;iMli.. July ü'.i. ISfj'j. In ! tltc playhouse, as in the ease of j own life of no account compared to! Trn! Co th Nc'.-st rink nn! ' diana had not thou Im-ooiiio m ! "Sewntcvn" i! irin Hk laM n- j that of hi yon. Uibbn perceived I ' ' " v f.' tirmlr funMnmi a I- now tli t ' son. IVw writers liao achieved ! '.vhnt lie had nver perceived he-

Greece May Get "Enchanted Isle" Reward of War

Sheridan, r.im?e!f.

the !,iKt

t ul! der and lrcd.fr. ml ti t-r and staler II s within her

I

dlrtv ad it- i t f.t;r '

1 i'-tf-r undr th Finokf t a and i : i:.lrfu Ti.idl in i piled tower on t"'ver and -pr .If 0'it over tl.? piain i f :

our.try. I I'.ihr A 5heiid.-,r. v.r "odd ' re"; thf family fr. ill n. !! it -v , up Only irngt h vi and .:! I'Z v is- ) the dry M'afl'oIdiriiC of n n..ir;. Six ' ir.or.th !n h!' fath r' j - i r : i ; works ( r.:ad n ' :---.' ry two a rs i:i .i sin;- j tari'im. He rf'.:rr.-d th-- 'i. v. . hoi.jp-" on the oijt.kir? r.f th" ,f. in tin." for th" 1.'. i- -u .( r;;.inr j juarty. To this r.-irac Mary ' rtr J whöv-,. family next door m ; .r.ta::; -d j th l-ii-'C-t air of r t i !-:hf y ! iipon a vanishing for hf i '.ndr ho::)" pi'n-. p; i n l.-- Tii.it ! Je." hr-r to i!.!?.!!:1 wi'h hr v it ;!id ; heauTy both Sheridan and J . i n i - ' Sheridan. Jr. j

WIimi yo ir.L- Jim had Mr. T'o.oe Sheridan, hi law. offered to h Ip Mary for help in an nfi'alr of

Mnry' mw that in 1 a rt ! iiur. i : wai to ho bartered with. Ihr so.il rebelled and h" d" l:r. d to marry younic Jim Sheridan. Ih- r. -r :; the letter. Sheridan demanded T T'.ihi.- if h" tNOuld fpilt dr-a inir;r: of poetry and follow uifh Ilo and Jim to

inakf tlir hüsm H.- rui'l th- eity

the lit rar ronl r of ih' 1'nltf I I creator sneees in the iwrtraval of

borden, i j Ihjs than has Tarkinioti; a very la rev audience is

p!'Oposf'. -i I iriin i t i r n h r o w i . .

that Mooth oiiht his f-tlnr.ilioii at liieter Ae:ideinv

and I'riiK-ftoii, U a da-h of I'uril le tmUci-vity in I i-imo ii. Mth a p i-t-i.-nluate course of a joar in the Indiana leuilature. Showing: tlio pi idr of all it in of Iii, vffj. in their heritage, his ir: l;olv was "The (enth man I'ioiii Imliana." in !H!e. followed b v '.Mon.-iriir Ilea m-aire," i n moo. The laih-r

wa-. (Iraoiat ied in

a huh pla e on the sJae under the Kiliul aetin- oT Hichard Maiili Id. ami sctti!i th: prefdriu for many of TarUinztoiTs Ih)U-,. wlii-i hae had the double

rer tm the ahrt for a n y a n d v very upjwaran(v of rcnnnl anl his friends. The not els of Iioth Tnrklnston .how an Increasing 0 power; they h'e iMt-n of freqiifiit apM'nrancr: icrhaps "The Turino.!!." 1 0 1 S.

stands out as the j for me all men!

one of the mot perfeet human

pe

for the shadowing of iomethinK enormous, indomitable, lawle..s, irresistible and blindly noble. He looked out into th vat foptry hf art of the smoke. Dizzy trareries wire rising dimly apainst it. chattering with steel on steel and srreechinc in team while tiny figures of men walked on threads in the dull sky. BiRne.ss was beinp served and there was only Turmoil.

Hut what for the misrhty question ;

came to Bibbs with n. new despair. The roar of the city beat upon Bibbs' car until he bepan to distlnpuinh pulsation; the voice of the god, Blg-nes-s. "Come and work

By your youth

and your hope, I summon" you! By your age and your despair! ' By your love of home and woman and children! You shall be blind slaves.

BOOTH TARICINtJTOX. Born 1S63.

lias humor, he

winning 'has a light and winning touch, and

lit knows America und America im as do few of the icplc who are writing nlxHit them. As a novel of American business life, ''Tlie Turinoll" holds first rank.

I have ! ccn doing t h i r own cooking." I "Tho.-f j-fIf were so hard up Ithat Miss Vertrees started after j Bibbs before t h v knew whether he

bi;'- J w-.'is insane or not." "She had to

rer. Bibbs could tpt uiI'-rsra i;d ' -d hiui.

why anyhody wanted to mak.- ; h '1 know Jo- wasn't things bircer. :mai; any itl would "Damnation!" roared Plu ridan. be with."

the money-changers; worked and talked of nothing but werk. He delved into the ways of the city and its political influence, and began to buy Intertraction shares

fortune had

"If he'd stop to think ' where the Vcrtrees

the kind of a j vanished. e apt tu fall ; Soon the Vertrees were able to I pay the butcher, hire a cook, and

"Did you ever hear the word 'Bros- j Bibbs quickly burned papers and perity!' You ninny! Did yen ever I notebooks, descended and told his hear the word Ambition" Did you j father: ' Til take the job you oft vtr hear the word 'Progress!' Look i fered me," and went straight to

at Jim, just completing tun more J big warehouses at the pump works In half the time the contractors J wanted. Jim took the contract I hirnsr'.f, found a fellow with a new cement process and ue I i ri mmux i them nxt week. Now, I'm g'dn' 1 to make a man of you. By tlod! I ; am!" And Bibbs was ;rien two J months to get his mental attitude i riyht for the pump works. Mis Yetrres note went tn the I i senior Sheridan, as tint afternoon one of the new warehouse walls 1 collapsed sending the Inventor and j Jarr.es Sheridan, Jr.. to their eternity, j Bibbs hid to man 'ige the funeral; and ride from the cemetery withj Mary Vertreep, but neither spoko. "He's not insane." sain Mary to her j mother. "He looks dreadfully ill, j but has pleasant eves." j letter Bibbs and Mary me as he was passing her gate. 0 apol- ' ocized: "I I h.ite a frozen fish ' mvelf, and that thr-e mile was

Mary Vertiees and said: "Will you marry inc.'-' Mary drew it all out of Bibbs; then sank down kneeling. tears overwhelming hor, "r ran make it plain," said Bibbs. "I never ilnain-

I

d I could do anything for you! knew you never thought of in

encroiisl v to

joor. and I think I marrv your brother.

topped me from T posted the bt-

cept

"We were did mean to

But Miniething such a sacriletre

follow the broker's advice to keep the balance of their stock Sheridan boasted that his plan for Bibbs was working out all right. Still there was something wrong and the doctor and Sheridan agreed that it might be a good thing if Miss Vertrec:; would permit Bibbs to see her sometimes. "I had to make Bibbs go my way," Sheridan explained to Miss

ex- ! ertrees. "but there isn t anything

in it to him. He gave up everything he wanted and took the job he never would Just for you. There's only one girl he could feel that sorrv for. an't you let him come

it n d e r s tandlng which lie lias

yet written. He For reward you shall gaze only up

on my ugliness." Then, the voice came as some music struggling to be born of the Turmoil. "It is man who. makes me ugly by his worship of me. If man would let me serve him I should be beautiful." Front the vague contortions of smoke and fog. Bibbs sculptured a gigantic figure with feet pedestalled upon the great buildings and shoulders with soot. He thought up over the clouds unseen from below the giant labored with his hands In the clean sunshine; and Bibbs imaged what he made there perhaps for a fellowship of the children of the children that were children now a noble and Joyous city, unbelievably white. The telephone fiercely summoned him. A startingly beautiful voice caused him to tremble violently. "Yes, Biggs, I was near the accident. They said you hadn't been hurt, tiut I wanted to know." "Mary would you would you have minded?" There was a long pause and a soft, "Yes." "Then why, oh why, won't you

let me see you

I've been like a

ter but he ne r got it." "You kept me alve and I've hurt you like this." said Bibbs. "Could ou forgive me. Mary?" "oh, a thousand times! But there's nothing to forgive and you musn't come to see me any more." she cried in a passion of tears. "Never, never, never!" He returned in time to tell his sister-in-law in the presence of the family: "I proved wh.it you said of me, and disproved what you said of Mis- Vertrees. I asked her

too long for you to put up with one. ! to marry in" and she refused."

I've never been able to speak quit Uly. becai.se If I tried I'd st. immer. My brother Boscoe whipped me once for stepping on his slate pencil. It took me so long to tell him it was an accident, he finished before I did." Instantly. Mary' saw- his nature and suffering. Tlyv walked op. and he invited him into the church to heir some Handel music. It meant, she said, one tiling above all others to her courage. Thereafter Bibbs went often to

the home of Marv Vertrees

pee he confided to her. "it is all so '

simpie. I am to reed long strips ot zinc Into steel Jaws that dte it in-

Bibbs went with his father and

1 ack V" When Mary responded: "I can't! He was only sorry tor me": the truth was out. "Don't don't " she cried. "You mustn't " "I won't tell hint. I won't tell anybody anything," said Sheridan. On a crowded downtown thoroughfare Mary saw Sheridan, at the risk of his life, spring before a moving trolley ear and wl'h the whole force of his big body shun. Bibbs from impending danger. The crowd had shrieked warnings, but Bibbs had looked the wrong way. High up in the Sheridan building.

sat in the porch of the temple with 1 Biblis sat down, shaking anil sore.

man chained in a cave. "But. Bibbs dear, you don't un"Mary," he called, even more tremulous than before. "you can't mean it was because you care. If you meant that you would let me see you, wouldn't you? And now the voice was so low he couldn't be sure it spoke at all, and if it did, the words were. "Yes. Bibbs dear." But the voice was not in the instrument, it was so gentle and so light, so almost nothing, it seemed to be made of air and to fall from heaven. Slowly and incredulously he turned and looked up anil glory fell upon his shining eyes. Mary stood upon the threshold .

V r.-.. cuds its career as an evening stir this month and leaves the he.iens singularly devoid of planets, a state of affairs which we notice

"You particularly after the richness of the

i :ewning skies in planets earlier in (the year. Mars. Jupiter and Saturn all are morning stars in September,

not be easily end of the

SEPTEMBER

SKY MAR

10 cfcJocH Strpt.V,

-WES J

MOLO MAP AOOVE HEAD

VITH ITS COMPASS

LETTERS TO

X 2

to little circles. f,S a minute. I used

to fiinch and the workmen laughed." ' though the latter will "It shan't hurt you." exclaimed observable until the

Mary. "All day long. I'll pcn.l my ! momh. I'ranus alone rinds a place on

and you must friend s'ands

cur monthly map-

re -

i But in bright stars the sky is still j very rich. The map shows' no less

than seven of the tirst magnitude. In

thought's to you; member that a

tide you."

1 1 1 1 r t leu tne ohl 7.inr-eater. (Ms- ,

covered its musical rhvthm. anditJu' rv' st aro Alttlir'ls ;'"tl Antares; K.mg his portrv in resonance there- ;iIm,,st "verh-.id is the notable triwith. At night Bibbs srrübled: k" f""' h VK" 111 Jra' "Manao, nj.r t b-f. Your :,.,rf lI,omh " O'gnus and Altair in Aqui.in sing a n d yo-.r laiud ;,:i br-v f!ie 'la. the Kagle. ( n the far northern

eli yur hand nre working. !.at horizon will be found rising the roMAOtuT

n turbulene. is tor. An-I -vers are i , . ., ,vhifo iv.nelbi nnd VV

blind. Ii it rrieiMsnlr w;i',K Z'-'Mly "" "" lOOri 5

and v!ta open iiar uown in me soumeasi is me very PHASE.S

Trouble grew in the Sheridan i red s'ar I-omalhaut in I iscis Austra- ic.t.0r.2t?

nousenoui. Kfiscoe to...; (irmk: ! o. x ti M;nnoni i isn. ine ureal FiiU M.Q

then quit. He had enough - a few S.-uare in Pegasus is well above the l.it Qr 16 thousand a year. He had Wen so 'horizon- New M busy he had nearly los; his wife. "A . Interesting Isver l.ihts.

Tr- Vilify o!. x

19 A- Z r--:; ooores

ST Aft

VACMlTtiTJE

woman has to hae sometlr.ng in lif- besides a business man. Now we are going to Japan." Sheridan sent for Bibb. h; only l."Pf. coffered b.im Vic- pt es; d -tn i- s. salaries ar.d shares; but Bibbs preferred happiness and nine dollars a week. "What's the ue," he v-abl. cf being just bigger, dirtier ar.d roisier?" That evening Bibbs and M.irv

'ne sl:oiild not focus all one's at-.

tention upon the brighter objects, for there is many a light in the ky

, though it docs not catch the

one-half. The minimum stage lasts about i'0 minutes. This variation in

the horizon. It is next to Vega, the

brightest star in the northern celes-

wmcu. mou-n i noes not eaten tne ...itnri o,,;, ,.r..Tt onnnrh to 1

.ve as leadilv as the stars, of the s wuK-ltlal hemisphere, and its magnitude is

or the gre.it-

brst manif.ido. et is

st int i t t when one knows some, tbi'itr of what the astronomers have learn, vl conc-.tiing it.. Let us take such, a as.- in point. Far in th

cut the aid of the 'escope, by com-

1 parison with the t. ighboring stars, w hich do Yiot undo- ,0 such changes Ohl Theory Substantiated.

h

read Maeterlinck together nd

to!d her; "Totr.crrow, I'm or;e ej the hand. of th pump woiks and

pcir.g to sT.i- or.e. thrown out ar l de I lumbirur."

U'h, re l;vc?" ai "The.-e's S,

to

a m idv

gl.e lub th- f 'hir.

a

i:r,:

than h; pbsaal

: . . a I w the Aery s :o la 1' tilI;ghtr.;::g:' "Ye' cr:. - Shears . If h. 'a' g'- ,iv. nnd made

cov. van;

1 w

a :

1 Y.v i.g f.:ry B :- y, A'.tx .b

1 v

1

l-!icl that Bibb

tied.

..'a " n hilf a

iv w:h it. it work f . : 1 . r:i h.ie orr. f o . 1 . B. ; '. s.'.il. "No."

I

doc Bi

i w-int :.-d the w i'.l!" a ;ack.n b.e'd

t ort ! w lb i;s. will bnd

t : d a I! . t t r O U O II i e

' . I . ! .1.1

t IS and

the 1 oust elkit ion- of

Tn U. on tr.e map. von

1 star ot the second magnid Algol. This is what the

Many years ago an astronomer

suggested a possible explanation of J the Algol phenomenon, which has

since been suostanuaieu ana estaD-

1 all a variable star. i. jinked as correct. It is very simple:

-t ir winch changes in bright-j Algol is not a single body, but realTo some persons who hive ! is composed of two. which revolve 1 .-illusions to the jrn! about their common center of grav-

mutabi'ity of the stars this may ! ltV in orbits. The plane of this mocom, ,.s somewhat of a surprise; I ,ion iq fiCt located that perioJlcally but the lumber of variable stars in ono tho bodies gets betwfn us

given as 0.2. This star is also a binary: It is really composed of two stars, which rovolve about each other. In this cae the period of revolution is 104 days, and the mean distance between them is about 00,000,000 miles. The entire system is moving in a direction away from us at the rate of about L'O miles per second, and the distance from us at present ir about 3 6 light years, or 220.000.000,000.000 miles. If the sun were as far from the earth as Capella i, iv would be only one-seventieth r.s bright a Capolla appears to he. The spectrum of Cane'.la is verv

International Sunday School Lesson

ET M,.- CliriJo,r f Review by P. B. Fitzwatcr, D r or iNexi ounuay j 0f English Bibic, at iwy in

Review by P. ß. Fitzwatcr, D. D., Teacher

itute, Chicago.

(Copyrljht 1913.)

"Cyprus, fairy land of the Mediter-; ranean: which (Ir4at Hritain hasj been reported as standing ready to turn over to Greece, xemplities a1 bromide, for the netion In Shake-!

Mir CONTHOL (TeiniHTance,) I.LSSON Ti:.T Daniel 1:S-21.

will of Daniel and his friends. S :ch recognition w'ould encourage them

i()hDi: Ti:.T Ihtrjman tlut ' to give thtmsclvcs up to the

speare's 'Othello' for which the

island, in part, is the setting, is no

The Heavens in September By Dr. C. S. Brainin of Columbia University

he heavens is extreme- l.rge. Thei:tntl the other. Since there is oniy.inucn like tnat of th. sun showing 1 1 1 x 1

indicate a change of ! 1 onipien iiei iuu. one o4 me fu.tWo if about tb.e fame It

fers to theirm' or:g.n ami tne outer on possible, therefore, that we mav! given of religion. I find none so ac-

eomparatlvely dark. The minimum , hav. vere a 9v.trm with nbn net. nie I curatelv descriptive of it as tli's:

a 4 wa

1 cl

j occurs when the dark one eclipses

d

"it

. r :

troTM-tv.ers to po;;.cn. bat

b r.'.ia in y. M.inv Tvtcs of Yaiiables.

There are main different tvpes of thp brighter one; if both were of aptb.f se arl.lble stars, truy are ( kiss- ! preciable brilliancy, there would be ::b d according to the wav in which tno minimal stages in each period, their brightness changes. Some are the relative intensity depending upa ry irregular: in others the changes I on Jhe relative luminosities of the follow a derinite rvcle. always re- two components of the double star, turning to the beginning state" Such Thu remarkable property of Algol

of the is very

stranger tnan me vivia nrama or actual history enacted thtre," saysj a bulletin from the National Geo-i

graphic society. Richard Coeur de Lion wrested it from a ruler who had won it by forging letters in his monarch's name, after that ruler, Isuac Comnenus, had refused to let the crusader's shipwrecked and seasick lady Jove land there the first time she asked. Richard married Berengaria there and "vent his way after turning over the island to a pennikss adventurer, Guy do Lusignan, who founded a "feudal state amongst t-pice gardens and silken luxury" and thus established a dynasty which has been described as tho most romantic in European history. Cyprus bulks large in the crotch of Asia Minor, like a huge fist with a lean ringer pointing straight at Antioch. Historically, one may imagine, the finger should be crooked a bit more, in perpetual accusation of the sultan, the degenerate Selim II, whose generals captured the isdand, impelled In part, at least. hy the fact that Selim's favorite wine came from there. Geographically, the promontory marks the line of Cyprus' pre-historic connection with Asia's mainland. There, too, reigned the beautiful Queen Catherine Ccrnaro, adopted "daughter of Venice," who, though grief stricken by her husband's death, struggled against intrigue that the throne might be saved for his unborn child. Yank of tho Levant. Karly came to Cyprus thos "Yankees of the Levant," the Phoenicians. Sargon, the king of Assyria who. as Isaiah prophesied, led "the Egyptians prisoners, and the Ethiopians captives." also conquered Cyprus. Esar-haddon. the Caesar and Carnegie of Assyria, who left at Nineveh an indexed library of many thousands of clay tablets, received tributes from lo Cyprian kings. Fausanias, Renedict Arnold of Sparta, liberated Cyprus from Persian dominion, and Evagoras, one of the island kings, hero of the world's llrst known biography, penned by I socrates, united the scattered principalities, is the King Arthur of island tradition. Thus Cyprus wreaks with composite memories of eastern, Grecian, Roman and even Anglo-Saxon civilization. No hss was it a focal point for religions. At Kouklia, where certain tides still pile passes of foam along the shore, Aphrodite is supposed to have been born of the waves. Here are ruins of a temple for her worship, where originally fetes were held which, as one writer puts it, "were the scenes of a too liberal worship of Venus," and where, until recently it was the custom to immerse a maid in honor of the goddess' birth. Where St. Paul Struck Sorcerer. Kouklia is on the site of the ancient Paphos; the Paphos of today was the one-time Neapaphos where St. Paul struck blind the sorcerer, Elymas. and converted Sergius Paulus, th Roman deputy. The present day Larnaka is on the site of the Biblical Chittim, whose ships are mentioned by Daniel and whoso ivory is referred to by Ezekiel. in Larnaka is the tomb of Lazarus, who. after being raised from the dead, became bishop of the renowned city. The area of Cyprus is about equal to that of Delaware and Rhode Island whilo its total population is about half that of the latter state. Greek of almost classic purity is spoken. The people follow agricultural Pursuits, along primitive lines, and until recently the famed Cyprian wine had its Jlavor affected unpleasantly by the use of tarred skins as carriers. Among tb.e other products are grains, vetches, and carobs. the locust beans which John the Raptist is supposed to have eaten while in the wilderness. Marble is c4uatricd.

triwth for the mastery is temperate in all things. Cor. !): 25.

j AIMH IH.VL Komans 14:1-2;; 1 Cor. 0:21-27. I PRIMAKY TO V 1 C Koopm

away from tilings which may harm us. .Il-XIOU TOPIC The ftory of a lKy who be-nmc a strong nun. i x ti : i iy 1 1: n iate to pi c i a m - lug self-masrery. SENIOR AND ADl'LT TOPIC Self-control the hoc ret of success.

King

with

It is somewhat strange that' the lesson committee should select this Scripture as a temperance lesson, for it says nothing about temperance as ordinarily understood. Total abstinence from intoxicating liquor should be the law of every Christian's life, but it is not so taught in this Scripture. I. Daniel Tested (vv. 5-7.) Daniel, while a tender youth, was torn from home ties and made a captive in a foreign land to be trained for service at the royal court. In order to be of the largest service it was necessary that he be brought to love the king and nation, and be detached from his own People and religion. To accomplish this they 1. Appointei him a daily provision of the king's meat and wine (v. 5). This was for a .twofold purpose: (1) To gain the good

i servier. t2) To supplv them

food deemed suitable for their j

sical and mental development. To partake of the food offered w.;s agaihst Daniel's religion. His onscience would not allow him to partake thereof. Doubtless ?!.. meat and wine had connection wi.ii heathen feasts. 2. Changed name (v. 7.) The object of this was to obliterate national and religious connection, and to identify them with the heathen people. Daniel. which means "God is My Judge." was changed to Delteshazzar. meaning Bel's prince; Eananiah. which means "The gift of Jehovah." to Shadrach, meaning illumined by the sun god Rak; Mishael, which means "Who is as God," to Meshach. meaning who is like the god

dess Sheshach; Azarlah. which means "Jehovah is our help." to Abed-nego, meaning the servant of Nego. Behind this change of , names Vas the attempt of Satan fo wipe from the minds of tlitc young men the name of the true ; God and to cause them to Ios i their place of separation. II. Daniel Standing the Tot (vv. S-14.) Though a captive in a foreign j land, Daniel purposed in his heart j

this tryir.t: ho s:o:i of ( i.;. ra his conviction tales of his c r!i:i;i.:r.::.y ! :

l'):-" I.. reim st

he

h a 1 t : s-ar. I ' ' e i V."

de. it

allow d rt suits, sei r.v.e

r :. : . i: ; t . P.-v.-bich

agree.;. I a a It y ' a Lot

Ii..;. tt!.e C ' ' to

b

,.tw ak . God

a : w

t. manly I vh..v.u-. III. Daniel'. Ko-.-.aril 1. Physical he.t::h , -iy and temperate li.;. King's meat and wi:.e

ecu e:y palatable, p..r: :k- ri 'a ;: ! ha e p: :..:- u.tei h.s ccr. exT' ,5-e ef s- !f-C'?. fro ter kept h;s , ..-. -i.--n

also im.proe.i Mental growth

( ;.

h Pa' WO'. t i.:

i a

1 1

liysic.. IT " riar i

'IS 1 H timt s the .;;,.

Seci.tVy (v. 1 r . I . fore the kir.g. He t-.o. next to tlie k:ng 1 ;t 1 dent f the colb-, f u

irime jniniyti r . f t'r.e . n.j..: tinning thi"':;!: s-vv.i! (v. 2 I . i

irituallv ( v. 1 7 . (

he., -:. i f h:

!i.

stood beo ?-. ! v: s r. e j! s : -rr. n. .i t.d . : e . (?".- ! . r. i t i- s

4. S

vealed to dream and

T e-

him Nt-'ii.' ba-i gave him i-aur. -

ir.K flcins.-: the h:!"ry of tl;. Tiie seer! of I bv.b i's l( , ( 1 conscientiousness; i

r .

that he would not dehle himself to God; :; ) J-tislh: of with the king's meat and wine. j4 prayr rfulnss; (I) His home training was such that in' ( f, cmirt'.-v.

dih.y.

Sueda j at tibi Churches

Mc 1 HOÜlbl

Urt Itev. .Tcseph N. Green, p.TBtor; 313 N. Main st. Class rueetiug at 1-' ) m. Sunday scbool .it :"0 a. m. ; Pr. J. II. Nans, Buperlntcndont. Public worship at 10:4O a. m. L'nblic worship jit 10:40 a. m. Kev. M. II. Appleby, pastor First Meth -dist church of Craw fordsvllle. will occupy

the pulpit. I'pwortli league t C:.;0 p. i Ui

in Miiluucl- t.ifi l,.,. lila ii nnL- will r. I

... .-i.-.-.TTiv r-. ill. I . I . .9 ..... ... led lv L. L. hi ike, Wednesday evening at 7:3. No evenlug service.

It. lilover.

CHRISTIAN.

pi. j:ie

st. raut'H Itcv. James L. (iardiner. I. P.. minister. Sunday school at .':30 a. m.: . II. I-'idkerson, superintendent. Morning worship at 10 :4.". Prayer meeting and Sunday school board meeting Wednesday evening. Grace Corner MIcTilgan and Tutt sts. llev P. I). Heck, pastor. Ciass meeting at 8:45 a. in. S inday school at 9:."0 a. ra.: f'leni Whltenan, miprp.itenl-nt. Morning- M'orship at 10:45. Kpwerth leagtie at (:C0 p. m. Trlnltr Corner I'.lalne and Vassar avs. Hev. itusseli L. Phllltpt. pastor; residence. M-J Pdaine nv. Sunday school nt 0:.TO a. ni. ; lludolph Kline, saperintendent. Kpnorth Mftntrlal, cor. Lincoln way W.. aud Olive ft., ltev. G. W. Switzer, pastor; Sunday chool at 9'30; Glenn Finney, superintendentLowwII llelchtu -Miner and Trancli Hb. Ker. C. J. Gordon, pastor. Sunday ouooi at 0:45 u. ui.; II. C. Delong, ipprintPDrletiL 5tnll Mf-morial Chnrch. Cor. S. Mlcblenn and Victoria St.. Charles H. Leenn. I. C. L., p.iitor. Sunday school nt 10 a. in., John Edwards, superintendent. German I.afnyett bird, and Watui t. Rev. II. s. Mllier. pastoi. Sunday tchool at OioO a. rn. : Joan Koch, superintendent. 1're.nchin? at 1030 a. in. and 7:30 p. m. Epmortti league at 7:00 p. tn. Prayer meeting Wednesday at 7:13 p. ra. VVealeynn 722 K. Broadway. Itr. G. I'ay re. pntor. Sunday school at 9:30 a m. : J. II. Keller, superintendent. River rark 1 serrnt h st . south of Misbawaka av. Iter. (J. L. Kulisou. paatur. Sunday school at 0:." a. in.; Marliall Hall, superintendent. FREE METHODIST. Free Methodist-Pennsylvania aT. and Hush st. Hev. V. E. Webster, paster. Sunday school at 3:."W a. m.; Taul Neldtzel. superlntf nflent. TreachlDf at 10:30 a. m. and 7::io p m. AFRICAN M. E. Olivrt A. M. E. 310 VT. Men roe st. Itev. A. T. Ueaddin. pastor. Class meeting at 10:0 a. m.t l-d by T. Hlnes. Sunday 6'hool at 12:o0 p. tu.; Henry Coker, huperlntendtnt. Xaylor' a. M. 1:. Z'on -Corner Kdi? nd Canjpau ts. Iter. L. J TowelL PHttor. PRESBYTERIAN.

asbestos is found, .salt Is

and there nre npone fisheries, but the copper, from which the iiland derived its nt .me, has been exhausted.

V7tmlnttr Scott ami Llndsy sta Kev. Alfred M. Kell. I 1.. pastor: res-

procuce ueiuT. mou si. uniay bcu-joi . , . t n. m.; L. C. Whltcoinb. superin

tendent. Public worship at 10:15 a. m. ar.d 7:50 p. m. Toe session m'ts betöre tue moraine aervlce. Stibor Ludearor society meets at G:.';0 p. m. There will be no church ervices , luring August.

Firn . Main St.. south of

library. Rev. K. L. MrUuarv. pastor.

Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. ; TreJerb k 11. 1 r u im ti il. stnerlntenOrnt Our teachers ire trained aud lesona graded. V i:ive classes for all acc-

ndiana .iunu-( orner Indiana av.

S. St. Joseph sr. Kev. Kdwlu J.

Cain, minister : reslien'e, 1K I. Howman st. Sunday school at 'J :3U a. ;a.; l'ied Wilson, sunerlntenaent. Conimuuioti und preaching :t P:'.0 a. ru. Preaiddnjr at S:0 p. m. i;.T'iie pfYen a curdial Invitation to attemi all of our services. Linden Avenue- I. Inden av, and CarJIe st. I. N. Miller, p.istor. Sunday tchool af. 10.00 a. m. ; J. C. Collp, superintendent. EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION. I'lrst Cor. Lafayette and Monroe sts. W. II. Freshley, past-jr. Sundav school at 9:30. Dr. W. II. Snder. 's-jperin-tnident. Lesn: "Sf.clal Iiesponsiidllty." M-.m-lug worship at 10:30. No eveiiinir servIcm during August. i'raer inevtin "U Wednesilay evening at o'clu k ; (Jcute J. Lontf, leader. Grace C ho rr r ".-. innoli w ay W. and Waltut sta. Kct. U. n Lo7.Ier. minIstera. .Sunday school at 9:30. G. F. Witt. uptTiutendentDroadvay313 E. Broadway. Her. F.. Garfield Johnson. pc3tor: residence. 141S. Carroll st. Sunday s-h.ol at 9 :3w a. tn. ; Samuel C, Tehjnan. auprlntcndent. Mornlncr worship at 1:3). Ymin? People's .-illi im .' at ":i"i p. ui. i Mi Hessic m. Khlneiiart. rrtsi-Int . Prca-h-

in at 7 :.".( p. ni. ly ihe pai-ir. I'iM v. r

Chdr rehearsal on J'ridav evening :it o'clO( k.

b'rrti Heart Hlg n 1 120 V. Thornat. Per. CLarlri . rischei. ;astoMau at :Cj nnd B :'.') in Suadn? ebool t u JO p m r.enedlcttc at 3xl p. m. CMURCn OI: GOD. Chunh of Go.J venire (Abrnhnmie I'ai thl liold k.-rvi.s in Mejvllle h dl. -1-S. L:ifavf-tu blvd. Sundav :io,i .-it pi :t ni. F. A. Sti'n u sijperiiitci.il.Mit.

y I-

i I le.i- liiu- jii-rvl' at 11 and 7

l L. an a tor of An:os. In I

Morning worship ar H o ' -:.i. k. 1-d by oin.- of tLo- iii'-hj!t. .No j-. rvi.e. i'liurrh of lird or S-nmts- i ;ei c Unrrisoa at . oij? I.iock north of Llno'.a Sunday school at '.:4Ö i. m. ; A. ü Ülrkle.v, niperintcntleou

EPISCOPAL.

St. James' Lafayette h'vd . crta fT Wnshliifct' ii lit. IffT. J' tin V.nT'-n VMte. re'tor; PeT. P. Lrerett srr. vicar. Holy l omunn.i i:. ?:'.' a. ia. No tl.'-r .-rvi' e di.rii; SCIENTIST. Pirnt Cburrh of Christ. Slen:it .Main ai;d Madison sti. Sundav rl ut 11 :0 a. ru. 1 etiin niai u.-ctiiij; r . ry Wednesday at S.(n) p. m. Sunday g . Lo.. for cldl-lree and young; people up to its of 'o, from ::4.' to lu.) a. m. Sunu.iy uimiI e:;tiaace oa Mad n et Pcnditx root.is r.iaintamrd l.y tts church en the seventh Poor cf the .1 SL S. üu'.llu.g. re open dally ex.rpt Suaday rorj IJ to Ö. and on .iturd.iy eve;lüg from to S. SPIRITUALIST.

Spirit "l.'i 1 1 - T tu-'" I "in'i.i

ha. I, "ti'Z td !

p.l o: .Ml sh a. m. ;

Anten Chapel n. J. Nits'li". Pesidcii'e 'Sim Lincoln way W. tiwaka. Pible si hool at i0:fK

lesM? P.arpes. s ujierinteudent. EVANGELICAL. Zloa- Corner Wayne and St. Peter t Kev Waldemar tioffeney, pastr. M. I'eter'a Gcrninn 41Ö TV. Lasal'.e a Per. H:gu Wetclieit. pater. Sunday äool ai 'J :'J0 a. m. ; Carl Kelnke. super ti'eud'Mlt. Penlar servl.-e at 1 0 r 1 a. in L-niicN

Aid inefts at ':.''.! p. in. Senior le.ii;. j ni"ets .Monday at -s :. p m. Chureii oiiin-il mef-ts Wednesday at s :o i p. n.. win;.' eln-Ie meets Thiirsd i. v ut t.-rir -m. I

I. 'cd M-n

ue!l. IP-V. S P. Pii-uei!. . ; . . t w'a.l. i I .1 .. I .....

1 I M ! 1 .1 1 .''1 " . ) . . i b :.t IP d M-n'.K l..il! i.t b'fk. M .-.l'' : HI "11 .

Pii-

v : .

.'.

' ef NhId Sri--ei.h.s

Teinplr IJrlli-l.l .i I . 1 'ia.vior ht.

JEWISH.

C i riic.

MISSIONS.

Hope iV.-T i' ho 1 at - :

n:d 7:"

N. ') :

Pi

.( p. ni

"i k nnd M-'oim . i e at 7 . "

:l j r N u lc i.i i r

I- I -i'i: V ,t,d

.'() k. .Mi 111 i.aU't

J- .1 iy ..t : a - t:.o . P. T'l.l V

LUTHEFvAN.

City Ih'i bl. Jrai..u U1 Lty A. P.ini. si.peri.Meiidcat. Su:. .icy sl. jol .t 3:00 p. m. JUbie c-la-s at 4:"" p r.u

fV!y Trinity KncTisu Sr.r.rmar av ana ludsey st. Per. Albert II. Kn ic pastor. Sunday s'ho.d at 9:1. a. tu. Charley IT i s. Miprliiten lent. At 10::tf a. m., worship Mth st::.ot. No evening services. S wi:i ::j--t : n jr .r the ( hurcii on Wednesday altern o:i. Worship with serinou by tlo- . lo :.".( a. in. N evening S'-rv i duri;:. August. Thursday evening th- La-Ii.-s

o-pol il L. L ". ; :, -I. . i u! i , r-

d;

e.

ul

iJ I'll-

I'll,

.1 : !.", .: i

S-r i S-t;rP

Aid sociefv will

the church !awu.

hold a la n s ii i.i I ri

orn iikavkxly r ATiir.it. AM of ht-avfn nnd all of t irth cannot contain God. There is, something of Hinisndf left for tho hearts of men. Just as the water

lirht Corner of Washington ft. and Lnfayette blvd. Pible üchool at 1:"' a. in.; John J. Sliefer, superintendent. Men's Fellowship club at 1 :Ö0 a. m.; lr. C. A. Lli idncott, iader. Midweek meeting on Wednesday at r .I. r. in 'IM...... .. I'l I. .... .. .l.l..

which spills out of the full bu.kct UcivlcVs during the month cf Aucust.

ts as good as: any of the water in

the bucket, so that part of Llod which dwells in tne hearts of iv.en is jnst as much of Cod aa that of himsoif whicli dwells in heaven.

LIVING IM'LUPNCi; Whatever definitions men

Pave

Kwnd.-iy

i . i.iV'-r

. : a

ii- :

v.'crk:np

ft:t'-iie ;t upon an -,.i:-r Paps--Then paper ar.d p : v-il as he stood up p.-. r.i'.M i. his .half-dp-:-. ilu'T he !. Itocc c Sl'.i-ri.Ltts ..i : M...thir S:."T.d;.:i. "Tl.. h'' Pis; 1.-:: ...'.d 'ii ftthey are aiP-v. 1 ti Ii-.- t tie 1'ir.cir." "Mr. ".-rtri.-s trii.e- to t j sit.o::.'

tar-! arc a'.Ied porindic variables. Alto! in Perseus is one of these: Its

cave it thf appellation or tne ue inon star." and In the ancient Greek

:. n ' dr Tl ' I ! ' V.-

i Per- ' 1 . e 1 ro ;.-h I Mrs. : t r i '

chances m hrmhtness have been oh- j uranoffraphies it f.ured as the head svni.l for mmy years and can now of Medusa, which the hero Terseus . e predicted with trreat accuracy. Its hart rut up magnitude Is siven as 2 2. but Another variable star of a 5-ome-r. itul.ir intervals its brightness what different type Is Deta Lyrae. fi!N :T to the Ö.4 magnitude, which i th4 second brißhtest star in t leprrsents a loss of about two-thirds I Rroup to which Ve-a belongs.

those in the solar system. havincr;that it is such a belief of the LP. Lie two great contra! suns, instead of 'as maintains a living influence on

t

This change takes place

I.:-

Another Intcroting SUir.

hour?, ap- V.'e w ish to call special attention

!?gh

. : y two Ias and 20

. . .... . i.. . i. -. .i.i,.,, .-. . ; . p.,m . .. v, i ....... e . i.t i.v. j , . ... . .

l';t'.ii.i.i.ei-., i ji ui-i niif . -i ui iNm- iu v .i'i'iia, .1 wmie out jl iiir k-iiui: im ie;s us see tne S'ln

" taniii- about four and one-half magnitude, which is to be found in4 both be'ore it has reallv risn nnd

one. When Autumn Begins. On the morning of the :Mth. at 2.36 by mean time, or at 3. 3$. by the "daylight saving" time, the sun enters the autumnal equinox, crossing the equator bound south, and autumn officially commences. We may say "officially." because the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac, published by the navy denartment. pays that it then commences. On this day. night and day would be exactly equal if it wer not for the effect of atmospheric refraction, which tends apparently to rniie all objects in the sky toward

the heart and life. Cecil.

iirsrLT or christian tcmppu Peace is the proper result of the Chrlidlaji tamper. It is the great kindness which our religion doth us, that It brings us to a settledr.es of mind, and a consistency within ourselves. I'.lshop Patrick.

geometric horizon. In taking observations of the position c heavenly bodies, as in navigation, for example, rllowance has to be made for this phenomenon, otherwise the calcula

tions would be appreciably otf. How-

Triidtj- .roi,ti .s, Purtu, paktor on leave. A. IP Saunters, pastor on duty. Ilopr Leer and Pnytoii st. Cdwin (I. Me'.pter. minister. Uible school at 9:30 a. ra. ; Fran Kettriag, superintendent. Gronger- Uev. Harris, pastor. Sunday hcol at 9:i." a. oa. Iiivlne worship at a. m. every Sunday. Everybody i! ori;. Hungarian Corner -erry nnd Washington i.t. Kev. John l)f-7). pastor. Sunday stool at i :00 a. :u. Cinirch services at I0:oo a. iu. Vesper services at 1:0J p. in. BAPTIST. first Corner Mali nnd Wayn stt P.ev. (J . Davia. I. !.. pastor. HesMenre 211 W. Wayne st. Hlble school nt 'J-;iO a. nr; C. S Stephens, guperiuten --nt. tiulnry strert-OrnT P.lair.e rT. cad allfornia st. Howard Ibddon Leonard, pastor. I?!rde . h..(d at .:;0 a. m ; J. W. Kendall, juperlntendout. Flrat frwetUb C'orijrr Laurel n1 Napier ata. :erTtce at 10:20 a. m. and t :'SJ p. m. Mt. Zlon Her. .1. It. Srnartt. pastor, undiy scbool at y :.U a. a.;Ci:isses for ll Ü2e. U a. m

ft. I'aul's Cie. -in: .TofTeraou and WPliam ft. Hev. II. Hollo, aster. (ilorla Dei MifdUh-Cli i p!n and Kerr scbool nt I .00 a. m. 3nd lible class at sth. Kev. (Jottfrid Uisi-n. p.: tt Sii'lay l3RiiTHKt:.

Ilffct-Jter. G. W.

rteaco.

v.

D.

1) . pa li

ter. Sund. iv gr-uooi at u :.!' a. in : II r ley

l'lrsfone. superinter. Jent. Primarj vrhi; mcMt rit t tie sun h-ur; Miss

Margaret Whituior, siperlntr.dnt.

Ipnte-etnl, A p.olif Faith :. t. .'U.dav ii "l j! P ; l'it.l -bliig ..f 11 I'O !' ? 1 i at v .''!' i; M ci " k i. ' t ; :. Tnpd.i v Mid 'Idnir ! ;y enit:g l'a. ". c, -v aneli v.t. webh .ins'licl M:.bmM .in an i .p ;ir.. -r. I : K:i : ;i. r. S;üi'!j i - I' '-d ..: P.i:'i . .äUHt AiMlrr-O'ti. up.ri:.t'i:-le:.t.

VOLUNTcHKS Or AMHKICV

N. ia. z a JI.

an -r

Hoheit ii.lsion. . A ii (.'-rlstlsii n '".fill's

jff ' ü 1 C .1 u st '. . . v ;;.. t n t

S r.e. day.

i

First ( burrh of the IJrrthrrn Indiana ' av. Mid Miami ct. li v. IL II IP Puan. ; pastor; iiid.'ne. L. Indiana av. j Sundav s'diool ::t ':".' in; I. i

j''' air ',. -t'.ux every

day, aturj.ir and .""ailir -1 i.-1 ..i;a,e n Mr"-:, f .or..'! Kfsr,f 'V.crtiir .1 Voinrti-ei ! s:on iif-j! ..üdav i-im '- i.Ti.' li 1 1 i d All 'ii-u'ii.

SAI.VATiON ARMY.

I. .'ofTersuri i fs; Mor n!:.g. c Sunday ftno'. at 2

S ii a d a r Ii. Vi

9"

') t. m.

sti.hley. huperlnt'did'-tit.

onfcrcne .Memorial l'niled -010 S. St i

Joeeph at Iter. I. L. Younsr. pjstor Sunday school at 9 :.'i0 t. ti.; Miss Al.;? tPr don. fcut'er'.r.tcr.derit Morninr worship ar 10:4". Tr. I. M

I - . -.V.l.. ... . . " . . r M. n A

i MlMllli I I"'...'' J.. I.i- n..'i -t '

M'rnln worship at in:J

i MINIS TIIRiVL A-SC; J AI ION.

Meeta "Ter Monday at 10:'O a tt. V. M. C. a ltp.d-nt n.d v!i .:ii;.Isr r aP-vav a -.- ou.-. Lev. I'i e. h 1" . i.rf'id.-nt : !:. '.". ;;.

I -I.:; L :.

II.

Lndeagor at 7 o'clock; lender. CATHOLIC.

7 :-" p. r.i. vl-e i re;!c!.t : Jev.

i'i.r!tlrin ; . t rv -1 r.-a s j rt-r. A ,W N'i OPEN AIR SERVICE.

fct. Itedwlae'a rollsh -;orr.r Sctt 1 nd Na;der nts. Itev. Anthony ZiU?rU. i C. S. C.. pastor. Ixw at 7 :.V. ."0 and 10 :0U a. in. S'indnr 8 Lool at 2:30 p. ru. Hor.edlftion at 2iC0 p. m. bt. ta-lialr. l'lib S-l vVeratef 1 t. Itev St.iiitsAus j'orka. pstr. Lvt

n.ans at a. m. lltgli cass at i. m. Vespers t li."00 p. cl

Smrred llert. 'otr Dame 1t. Jctn , B Scheler, C. S. C. pistor. Low mmi ; It Q:X, . m. btudef masa at :(?) a ! m. Parish mesa at l'J.Uf a. tn. Ves.rg ; ot i ifl p. m j

I ni.!: - r I -t!.-M,:.!f-i!' i '. :t 1 ill : - i :' p. ri ThM. L. h-:r. !. : . f .-y ; :i: is l:ivltH,i.

t

H--

a-. I t .

..t i i r .

ASSOCIATED

BIBLE

STUDENTS.

Prencldn at 11 :m

a. m. liv oil-

t!

viitin niinlsters v'. the Puj.tUt eon-, vcntioti. At r: :t i,. m. on. third of the!

fei. ftephen'a lluacari&a Thorr. a er.d Mcl'herikou ta Iter. Lwwreace Ilorvsth. paster. Mass at n .oo ncd 10:Li a m. 8uadaf acLcci tt 2 ;fX p. tu. UtacdPtlor. at 3:00 p. m. fit. rliik'a .10? S. Taylor L Itv. Jotm F. IeJriete. C. S. (... pietor Masa at 0. 7:"u, 0 and 10:00 oVlocJc

YVr nun's Club L

; :-u.:i!!.c l St::'!:" : n ! : t i ' ." ' re.. . m . i . : i s p. . I.f ki' ! .!.n- : c i' .. ::i .

.J3y at i ; .

' P is ! ,r : ". i , ' I".lt"

J M 5.

UV,;;.

'-..-yNV .

PAIhV

i-1

Lr-riVeri vr. W-I o p.ere elo 'A- Spi I

I I l( ) I . I I'l'

It'

-They

.i r

and the recoery three and tho northern heavens not far from I after it has really set below thelnight are eiual.

t- Joepir tüli at. nJ Lasa'le n

... . . . I! M.tl.t i-u.. I... .-im i .. . . . l (..!. L- T l'arr'ili I S f rf-.p T . m

. ..... u-t fT T . TOT BT n ' IT A..' I A'.l.r. . '1. .1 i - lllf . I11 ' L u V . - m . ' - . - . - - .. ft' - - - -

n f ii ui iivi i. . " . , , . ------ - - - - .. . i i

IV that On this date the da nJ ... n i..,.,..,. ... .r a m l'tnt-lMian t

At s :u p. ni. i.reachicg hy Uvt. Jamti p. m.

Try NEWS-TIMES Want Ad