DRUNKEN WITH false mmm Man WorsWps Mm Raster Than Rsvercs Gol the diy Dtwa is upo;i US. Castor Russell Proclaims the Rising Sun of Righteouonois Will Soop Scatter the Cloud and Reveal tho True Character of the Creator Di vine Justice and Love Will Be Made Clear to Human Vision. I . Pill' V; A N. J.. Sept. !M. J A I I'juhtr Uu.--..c:i's U(idrc:s i:l (he ; ci'u Huu-e was I In event of the day. Am usual l.e hud lilt' closest iili .1- lion iiiul m i i'o. ') cd house. l V1H. "J. i:"H of ii 1 e it s u : c l : HfMOK KllftLLDj ii,, , f.Kui ..f gndlincsa lull de nying the power thereof. From mik-Ii turn uway." (II Timothy til, 4, :.) lie nili):- Our text could scarcely apply bct'.er to present day conditions If St. Paul had written the words HiIh very d.iy. The world seems to In- going ploasute mad. Very evidently we are In the "perilous times" nieiilloned in the ( on tent. It 1 proper Hint we Investigate tills tendeney toward pleasure and formality as respects religion. VVImt Ih the cause of tins condition? It I not because iniiuMnd have naturulli more desire for pleasure than for (Ii.il On the contrary, Phrenology kIiowh lis Unit the very highest oruans of the h u nili i) lulu I lire those which relate to spirit iinliiy and reverence. Under nor iiimI coihV:; ns, therefore, all mankind might re;i ;.nialily lie expected to have their chief pleasure In spiritual things. In tin riuoiiy wlih a proper reverence for their Creator and 1 1 Ih will. What bus changed this natural' con dition, ii iid turned the hearts of men away from reverence for (lod mid spir itual things to more sensuous pleas ures, with merely mi outward form of piety? The answer Is that man's reverence for his Creator and for spir it mil tilings has heeu taken advantage of liy Satan, (iod him been pi' lured men's mind as All Powerful rnd dev lll'ih. Tliese false ductrlnes, St. I'm' declares, are "die Irlnes of demons (I Timothy v. Ii. ' Thee iulscc,uep Hons, formul'itol into nmPiliiilino'ii creeds, Ikm-,-. e l'i.'. i. Fn h d,' creed Contained n little nucleus in truth, around which monstrous errors Mere aggregated. For a long time we Mindly and stupidly wurshlod our ereed idols, flghllug for ourselves nnd against otlters. Conlrlliuting our mon ey to the point of sacrillie and seif denial, we liulll costly temples, each p irty for his own idol. VA'O were kept so liusily engi'ged In thus lighting ii. id working and build Ing, tliat we did not Mop to carefully notice the hori'ili'e oiillines of thee hlols, nor to consider their blasphe mous misrepresentations of the true find of Justice, Wisdom, Love, Power The Day Dawn Ii Upon Ut The Apostle says, "Tliey H at s.eep. sleep In the nlgld and they that tire diiinken are drunken In the nli-'ht." Many t tins hrvc heen asleep and h ive dreamed terrible tliiir:H respe ting t1 i future which our Heavenly Father Sr. ordained for Ills creatures. Y.iriill ; hallucinations and nlghlinnres have aitlicted us. Many have been drunk en with Hie wine of false ihnti iiie-i, lientioned lu the Apocalypse, wh1 h tells us that thl "drunkenness" or stu pefaetlon of error has extern ed to ill inllons of Christendom (Kev. xvill, lb. We may well thank (Sod that ,lh" night Is far spent and the day Is at hand." "The Sun of righteousness uluill rise with healing In Ills beams" (Mnliichl Iv, ill. The result will be the complete scattering of darkness, -.! perstlllon and error, wtip-li for so loin; lias more or less beclouded the mind. f mil nv of us to the true clianu'tev f our (iod mil the true teachings o His Word. II Is because we are If Hie dawning of the New hay that we nre beginning to see. as never before the horrible features of our creed Idols The majority of Christ inns have no' vet discovered the real cluirHCter ot the Almighty. They nre in n tiensl tion stnte. They no lunger worsh'i their Idols us formerly, yet they stil worship them. We can direct titer to worship the true (Sod, hut the idol so monstrously misrepresent the (S'xl of all llrtice Mint ttie worship is neee- l.irlly faint nnd half hearted; or, a the A mist e declines. It Is merely "a form of godliness." without the pover the force, the slreiifth which slieu'd accoinpnny the worship of the t ri.v God, rightly understood and properly reverenced. A Revulsion of 8ntimsnt Tho dawning of the llrht of the New Day of Messiah begins to wnUev us from the nlghdnnres of the IarU Ams We have Is'giiii to doubt our creed Idols. Many have ceased their wor ship altogether. Many others respect them merely as fetishes of the past Some are afraid Mint if the masses cense to worship the Idols all rever ence for holy things will pass away nnd the world will lapse Into henthen lh darkness. We should reiuembi-r. on thu contrary, that we hire beeu in I': J V S . . .1 i heathenish darkness, nnd are merely i,..w .-..Hpli.g fr..m It. The bc.-.tlr-n hae hud his idol of wood and stone will); we have hud more ethereal ones. The bea' Leas Idols are ugly enough, yet far le-s horrible than the creed Idols of civilized I;: nds. No excuse will longer muflitam '..iol worship of any kind. Looking For the Truth The great I'il'lciiity with the masses is th.t. repudiating the idols, they are lapsing Into iiiniosticism doubt. They know tint what they believe. They are looking for the Truth. They find the leaders of the creeds still bowing formally to the idols, but privately repudiating them. Such lenders are unworthy of confidence and only par tially honest. Hungry and thirsty for something to satisfy the craving of their hearts, the famishing people are turning toward pleasure. "They are lovers of pleasure more than lovers of Cod." Comparatively few any longer be lieve In purgatory or everlasting tor ment, but they believe that these doc trines have n Scriptural foundation, Which tliey proportionately discredit, tinl charge with being the source of all their Ignorance and superstition In the past. Willi faith in the P.ible gone. Hie masses know not where to go nor whom to trust respecting enlighten ment regarding the future. They are reaching the conclusion Hint every thing is a big guess, mid that they mny ns well do their own guessing us to pay a minister to do It for them. The situation !s a deplorable one. An we have already intimated, human ity Is so constituted that religion holds the very highest place in his mental organismthe seat of power and ron trol in all the affairs of his life. With no fixed conviction, men are drifting. The learned are going Into Infidelity, under the more refined name of High er Criticism. The poor nnd less learn ed are going Into doubt respecting any Intelligent Creator or Supervisor. As a matter of fact they are saying not only there is no (Sod who would tor ment mankind eternally, but appar ently, There is no Cod who takes any Interest lu humanity. In this frame of mind Socialism ap peals to them. They propose to bring about "ParndUe Restored." by the power of Socialism. They say to them selves, "We are wit hunt a (iod, without a future hope and without conlldence In our former views, 'let us eat. drink nnd lie merry' let us enjoy life let us get all that we euil of pleasure out of present existence, for we are hopeless respecting n future one." Is It nny wonder that the Apostle foretold that, under these conditions, tic mames would become more an I more pleas ure-mad? Thus we account for the great la-1 iiient that is going up from all churches that the pews are empty, and the collectlon-hoxcs empty, and that the system W'.aiM Co down except for the bene'-o -'iit wealthy, who really do Hot believe i i the creed Idols, but who desire that others shall believe In the:n and worship them. In a word, the crowds which once flocked to the churches, wllh their nickels nnd pen nies, now make for fhe tluntres and crowd the hard, rough "bleachers" of the ball grounds. Tliey have become lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of (Sod, because the representations of C,od III the various creeds are too re pulsive, too Irrational, too devilish, to lie longer believed ill or worshipped. What the people need Is a general smashing of all the creed Idols and the unanimous return to the study of the Itlble. nnd to the worship of 'the true . (iod, which the P.ible sets forth. Praaohsrt Art In Perplexity No men iu the world are to be more sympathized wllh than the preachers. The treed Idols have been richly en dowed by well nieiinlng votaries of the past. The Interests of the clergy nre all wrapped up with the interests of the creed idols not only their ttmi n.-ial Interests, but their honor, dignity, titles. The ouestlon with the clergy today Is, How can we smash the creed Idols? How can we destroy them without ourselves perishing with them? If we tell the common people plainly what we believe, they will nil leave the creed idols. Tliey will nsk us. How long is It since you came to this con clusion? If we tell them that we have not believed in our creeds for many years, will they not call us hypocritical and lose their conlldence In us? And, besides, what could we offer them in stead? It Is no sis-ret thnt the grent ma jority of the educnted clergy nre total unbelievers, not only In the creeds which they profess, but also In the Kihle-they call themselves 'Higher Critics" and "revolutionists." They have hoththii that they could teach the people, except their doubts, their mls- understundlngs. Having lost faith in the creed Idols, they nre seeking for the true (5sl, in whom the musses be lieve little enough ns It is. They nre hound to Cod nnd religious things by a very slim cord composed of three strnnds Ignorance, superstition and natural reverence. The Ignornnce nnd superstition will soon break, nnd nil that will be left will bo mnn's natural reverence. Now is the time for re placing Ignornnce with knowledge, nnd superstition with loving obedience to the true (lod. "A Famine In the Land" When I was In Moston Inst June the largest opera house of thnt Brent city senting thirty six hundred, was crowd ed; four hundred more, were behind me on t lie platform besides those who stood, and I learned afterwards that hundred were turned away from the doors. The next day the editor of a religious Journal en lied on me, Ills leading question waa: "Pastor Russell, how do you explain the fa thnt the people of all creeds, and of the world, eome lu such crowds to your aieoiliiKi? I waa present yesterday at the Roston Theatre and witnosseo hat vnst concourse of Intelligent peo ple. As I looked at lljciu 1 ask.-d u.y S'lf ttie quest ion 1 am now asking you. How is ll that such crowds attend your services, even In this sultry, sum mer weather, when the summer re sorts n ud Mfushore pleasures would call them elsewhere, a ml while many of our leading unit utile ministers, sup ported by talented choirs, have small attendance twenty, forty, fifty or so? What is your explanation';' " I replied. "My brother. 1 believe we are witnessing a fulfilment of the Scripture which says: 'There shall be a famine in the land: Not a famine for bread, nor a famine for water, hut a famine for the hearing of the Word of tho Lord" (Amos viil, 11). The pul lie are getting their eyes too widely opened to ever again respect the Cod whom P.rother Calvin pictured n Cod, All-Wise and All Powerful, but thor oughly unloving, who foreordained aud predestlnnted a saintly handful to glory, anil the unsaintly thousands of millions to an eternity of torture. We once believed those tilings, but the new morning of Cod's grace in Christ Jesus Is gradually scattering the dark ness. "Neither can we longer believe with Rrot'ior Y.'ps-'uy that our Cod is good nnd loving, nnd would like to save ev erybody if He could, but was unwise in Ills creation of man, nnd is larking in power to direct the mutter now. The people are hungering for some thing belter-for something consistent nnd rational nnd in accordance with the Rible declaration, that Hivine Jus tice, Wisdom, Love and Power are co ordinate that Cod is Love, and Is as Just and wise aud powerful ns He Is loving. The people need to be shown a theology which will accord with this Divine character and with the Divine statement that 'knowu unto the Lord are nil His works from the beginning of the world;' nnd again: 'My Word that goeth forth out of My mouth shall not return unto Me void, but shull ac complish that which I please,' saith the Lord, und shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.' ' Bible Doctrine of Election Christian people need to believe the Rible doctrine of F.le. tion. but must see It in a different light from thnt which P.rother Calvin threw upon the subject. Tliey must w ! tion from the P.ible standpoint - Hie flection of a saintly Church, n "little flock," "n roy. nl priesthood, a holy people," to be the Bride of Christ, nnd His Joint-heirs. They must see that this "elect" Church with the Redeemer is Cod's appoint ed channel for the blessing of the non elect world. They need to be shown clearly that the saintly few. j-athered first from the Jews, but subsequently completed by additions of those of saintly character of all nations, nre with Christ to become the great Seed of Abraham, the grent Messiah, Abra ham's spiritual Seed, "like the stars of heave;:." It must then be shown why this spiritual Seed, has been "call ed." "elei led." selected from amongst ninnklnd-tlint it is for the very pur pose of blessing the non-elect, the masses of Adam's race, in harmony with Cod's promise to Abraham "In thy Seed shall nil the families of the earth be blessed." St. Paul refers to this spiritual Seed, saying, "And to thy Seed, which Is Christ." and "If ye be Christ's, then are ye A bra ham's Seed nnd heirs necordlag to the promise" iCnlutlans III, 1(1. '.".. All these nre Heirs of the great promise that has not yet been fulfilled. The fulfilment waits until the completion of a foreordained num ber, nn elect "little flock" of Hie saint ly few. Then these, changed by the power of the First Resurrection, from human nature to divine nature (II Pe ter I. 4, will constitute the glorious Kingdom of Messiah. The Kingdom blessings will go (lrst to Abraham's natural seed, nnd through them to nil nations. (Soil's character Is so great, so grand, that. If seen by men. It would be rev erenced. Cod's Plan of Salvation is so grandly beautiful that, when rightly un derstood nnd comprehended. It proves more fascinating than nny novel. The world has been kept nwny from I od nnd from the Rible by the machi nation of the Adversary. lie lias had much to do with the formation of our creed idols. Seeing men brenklng away from error, in the Reformat lou time, nnd groping ufter the Truth. Sntnn pre sented himself "as nn angel of light" nnd misguided our fathers Into the for mation of their various creed. This Is corroborated by St. Paul's words. The god of this world hath blinded the minds of them thnt believe not, lest the glorious light of the goodness of God. ns It shines In the face of .lesus Christ our Lord, should shine into their henrts" (II Corinthlnns Iv. 4). The Adversnry did not wish us to see with "the eye of our henrts" the glori ous character of our Crentor. Ills love for mankind nnd Ills glorious provision for us. He wished, on the contrary, to blind us with prejudice, to turn us nwny from Cod nnd from the Rible. And surely his plnn tins been measur ably successful. Nevertheless, Satan has gained no real victory, lie has in no way hin dered the finding of the "elect." Rut her. we may assume that these various, blinding Intluen.-es nnd stum bling stones have but served to prove, to test the love, loyalty, faith nnd obedience of the "culled nnd chosen und faithful." If we have seen why the world is going plensure-mnd, and if we hnvi seen the step which should be tnkcu to guide the well-intentioned Into the ways of the Lord, let us, my beloved hearer, not only be faithful ourselves to the Lord's wny. but let us lift high the Royal Runner of our God nnd of our Savior, und "show forth tho prnlscs of Illm who hath called us out of dark Dwa Into Ilia mnrvctoita light " ' They Challenge the World." .... Iwiil-ek, jr., iiiul .Lie I'.iilm went nut In lln- (ijlsnii farm at Ruck Mull's Sunday, each with a if 1 1 ii 1 1 sack. They wanted to buy a 'itiaiier's woilh of watermelons cadi, (iilxui gave each of them nine large iiienn. They did not g'i far lilt tliey wished to lighten the load, so they ale one apiece. Sunn they wanted another one. They reached home, nne with three melons and the other with fniir. They ate the rest, they said. YOUNG AMERICA AND THE FRUIT ORCHARD Many of the Old Men of This Age Can Remember When They Were Boys. It is customary when one be comes a grown-up to look hack with a certain degree of pride on one's boyish exploits in the purloining- of fruit. The man who has not as a youth raided apple orchards and grape vines right and left feels I hat he has had a molly-coddle liovhood. Many people lake a very good-natured altitude about these depredations and regard it as useless for any one living in a town of any size to hope to raise fruit except at a lonp distance from human habita tions. This is, however, rather rough on the many people who are be coming interested in good horti- 1 1 I I i i mi nn J n Iia n nn ruilliiur in n , , , i i I i n wit lit IVOI'L in ili.ll. iihtntr rkiinliUfl ... , , ... T ' . ..located as it is in the center of a vines and orchards. Is it a wise plan to allow young America to grow up feeling that he has un limited license to reap the benefit of some one other person's labor? Will the boy who has no qualms about enjoying luscious fruit that other people have spent time and money to develop, be very careful when lie grows up to render dol lar for dollar in the business transactions of the street? We doitbl it. UNTYING NUPTIAL KNOT? EASY AS TYING THEM Union Woman Filed Suit for Divorce Saturday and Got It This Morning. Saturday ellella Leach, Hie wife of I'.dward K. Leach, the keeper of a hotel at l iu'oii, tiled a suit for divorce. The answer of Hie plainlilV was llled at the same lime, and at 7:.'j0 o'clock this morning the divorce was granted. II was not coute -I' d. 1 lie pet ll ion staled Hull t lie plaintiff and defendant were mar lied al l ii inn November J, li0l. She staled that she had been a faithful and obediant wife, but that two years after the marriage her husband began the use of in toxicating liquors, and became a habitual drunkard. No children were born of Ihe union. She asked that she be given legal separation and the restoration of her maiden name, ellella Clar ence. In the answer Ihe defendant, I'M ward I. each, admitted Ihe use of intoxicating liquors, but not to excess. Boxing Contest at Nehawka. We understand there is to be a six-round boxing exhibition nt the Noise Anderson hall on the even ing of September .'W. The con testants are Mike Yelic, a local exponent of the manly art, and tlreg Alexander of Omaha. The affair will be preceded by a cou ple of good preliminaries. Ne hawka News. Entertained In Country. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mejsinger entertained n number of guests at their country home eight miles wt st of town Sunday. Those entertained were: Mr. and Mrs. John I.ibershall and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Meisinger, George Mcisinger. Mr. and Mrs. Frank I.ibershall, Joe Libershall, Frank and Anton Koubek. Miss llulda (loos went to Oma ha this afternoon. C. A. RAWLS LAWYER Oflice First National Bank Building CASTOR I A For Infant and Children. The Kind You Hara Always Bough! Bear the Signature of 1 F- un visii iu mum I He Gives an Account of the Con- j dition of Things in Murphy, Idaho, and Vicinity. C F. Cutlimariii arrived in the city last Saturday evening from Murphy. Idaho, where he is in the general merchandise and lumber business. He will make a two weeks' visit with his parents and other friends and relatives. Charley is well pleased with the western country, and while he is living in a very small town it is business from I he word go. Mur phy has only about 100 people, but the town has a modern water works plant and is lighted with electricity. Tt is the terminal point of the railroad and many mining camps and pretty fair sized cities are supplied with their freight of all kinds from Murphy, being loaded into wagons and carried to the various points. The wagons are loaded with from ti, 000 to 10.000 pounds and are drawn by from six to ten horses. Mr. (iiitlimaiin also conducts the freight and transfer depot at Murphy, and in bad weal her the freight for the various mining ramps and little mountain cities accumulates Quite rapidly, which alone is no small task to look af ter. Murphy is about fifty miles from Ibu'se City and promises some time in the near future to develop into a modern little citv, 1 --'.' great mining and stork-growing country. Charley js looking hale and hearty, enjoying the best of health and in a business way we venture the assertion that he will always be in the front. LOCAL NEWS From Saturday's Dally. I it'll rill, from near Murray, was in the city today looking aft er some business matters. John X. Heck, from i west of j city to- i l'latlsi iotMlt. was in. the r dav b. nking after some business mallei-, and while here called at Ihe Journal ofiiee to renew for his paper. C. J". Harris, from near 1'in'on. was in Ihe city today looking after some business matters. Crede says the laud business right now is .just a little slow, but he always has a few good trades up his sleeve that he can bring forth when Ihe time is ripe. (ieoige Kverett, one of the Journal's warm friends, from m ar I'nion, was in the city today looking after some business mat ters. He paid the Journal office a brief call, renewing for his paper another year. Mr. Kverelt is one of the progressive and thrifty fanner of Liberty precinct. From Monday's Dally. Attorney M. tiering went to Omaha this morning. Miss Messie Lawrence went to (nialia this afternoon. "Hundy" Movey went to Omaha Ibis morning on business. W. C. Ramsey was in town over Sunday visiting his parents. Mrs. V. W. Coales made a business trip to Omaha today. Mrs. Ziletla I.ench went to Omaha this morning for the day. Harry Royal of Lincoln came down Saturday evening for a Sun day visit with friends and rela tives south of the city. Mrs. A. J. Iteeson and her guest. Miss Hallie Drown, went to Omaha this morning. Miss Drown is on her way to Los Aimeels. her I home. Mrs. J. S. Hall and her mother. Mrs. Irina fv went to Omaha this morning with the former's cousin, (ieoige Pence, of Los Angeles, 'who has been visiting here for several days. Mrs. Marvel la How land. local president of Ihe P. K. O. soicety, left yesterday for Lincoln, where she will leave on Ihe special car lo attend Ihe convention of the national P. K. O. society at St. Louis September 26-20. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rehhein and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rehhein, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. August Rakow, left this aft ernoon for Casey, Iowa, where they will visit before returning to their homes nt Applegate. Mrs. r C Partuele and daugh ter. Miss Hallie, left this morn ing for -Lincoln, where thpy will join the p. F.. O. party which will go to the P. E. 0. convention at St. Louis in a special car. Miss Paruiele will enter her second year at Montivello, which i9 near St. Louis, in Illinois. THIRTEEN KILLED AT nAILKSING Fast Train Strikes Hay Rack Loadad Willi Young People. HREE ABE FATALLY INJURED. Big Sign Board, Combined With Fog of Early Morning, Obscure Visions of Both Engineer and Driver Vic tims Are Terribly Mutilated. Neeiiah, W is., Sept. ' 23. Sixteen death.s probably will be the result of a collisiou of a mile a-minute passenger train with & hayrack loaded with thirty-one young people at Neeiiah. A hig bUi'.;oanl along the railway tracks obscured the vk-w of the engi neer as well a:i the driver of the wag on. Mist ar.d fos; did the rest, f Twelve pet sons on the hayrack we a Villed instantly, one has since died, and three of ei.l.t others injured are believed to he i'atallv hurt. Nine ol the thirty one; people aboard the waff on escaped without u scratch. Both horses were unhurt. Nobody on the train suffered except from a niomen tary severe jar. The collision occurred on the Chi cago and Northwestern railway at the Commercial street crossing here Train No. 121, northbound, whirled through the wagonload of people at a 'forty-five degree angle, the highway crossing being diagonal. The victims were returning from the Peter Hanson farm, where they had gone to attend the celebration ot a wedding anniversary. All but two. men from Chicago, were residents oi ,Menasha. The dead: John Drill, Chicago; Jame9 Chesiock, Oust.av Finn, Mabel Finn, John Hart, Steven Lisek, Doml nick Ommiechiiiskl, Mabel Renz, Johii Schedlck, Joseph Schedirk, Joseph Sienyo. Frank Stsgardt. Isabelle Su ifchowski. Bodies Caver Right of-Way. Bodies, terribly cut and mutilated, covered the right ol'-way as the train mine coaches in length, was brought 'to a stop 800 feet from the scene ol i.he wreck.- Several of the bodies wert to 1 h13 badlv mutilated that identification possible only by fragments ol icLothing. Six of th victims, all dead, were discovered on the engine pilot, where 'jthey lay until removed by the train irew and pnssensers. Two other '.were hurled through a flagman'ft isnanty with such force as to overturn I !t''e little structure. One of these wat ruiss Finn, who was projected through 'one of the sidewaMs of the house and was still alive whn removed. Sha .died a few hours later. Anotlibr ol the victims killed was thrown high Wver a harn fifty feet from the railway Vight-nf-way OIL TRUST BUSY DIVIDING Work of Dissolution Proceeda at 28 Broadway. . ' New York. Sept. 25. The work ol dissolution is going on merrily at 26 roadway, whore the Standard Oil combination is dividing itself Into thirty four parts, at the orders of the supreme court. The work is expected to lie completed about the middle ol November. There nre seventy c.Ie-ks, st.'iiog rapheih, typewriters, and various oth er of office help engaged in the manual tabor of extinguishing the life of the combine. Ilesides, there are sixty eight officers of the thirty-four com panies. Their duty is to examine ana sicn the now certificates to supersede the old Standard Oil shares. For each certificate surrendered b : stockholder in the old Standard Oil enmpany thirty-four new certificates are to be Issued. They represent the various component parts, bunched Into thirty-three companies, and a thirty fourth part, comprising all that the courts allow the old head company, the Standard Oil company of New Jer sey, to keen unto itself. TO SLEEP IN OPEN AIR Missouri Frata Constructing Chapter House With No Closed Bedrooma. , Columbia, Mo., Sept. 25. An $18,000 chapter house, without a closed bed room, has been practically completed by the Sigma Alpha Epsilon frater nity In this city. The fifteen Missouri university members of that fraternity have decided to try cold, fresh air a? a healthful sleep producer and restore tlve for tired bruin cells. Instead of liedrooms a large open air sleeping (hamber has been constructed on the third floor. No beat will be allowed In this room even in coldest weather. i Tourniquet Saves a Life. : Chicago, Sept. 25. Fellow workmen 'Probably saved the life of Charles A. Keith, a press feeder, when they quickly applied a tourniquet to the attimp of his right wrist. His hand fiad been amputated by a machine at the n'ant oi' T ,? '"eripoH- Co. v. lowing the temporary aid he was rushed to St. Luke's hospital. Gowns to Aid Women's Cause. New York, Sept. 25. Ten thousand women In purple, green and white. (This ie the Bpectacle the Women's Po litical union plana for the suffrag jparade next spring. They will march in costumes made in the colors of the union.