The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, June 18, 1891, Image 2

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    THE SIOUX COUNTY JOURNAL
L J, SIM MOXS, Proprietor.
IIAIIUISON. -
'EUUAK.
STILL ANOTHER.
TVa Xvwia BaHkoleiuv
Poet ac Pbiuce, June 10. The mass
acre of St. Bartholomew has bad 0 re
production ber lately. There haj been
rumon that revolution again st Hyp
polite was imminent, and these having
reached his ears, he caused tae arrest of
About eighty suspected persona.
Among them was General Sully, who
kid himself when informed that he was
wanted. Failing to secure him his wife
was taken instead and thrown into pr'u
an. Ab outbreak occurred Msy 23. A
former cabinet minister at the head of a
band of well armed followers stormed
the pirteon and released 200 prisoners,
ho were provided with arms, and when
Hypplite's troops arrived there was s
bloody battle. The rebels sere routed
and ther leaders shot at once." By
nightfall forty men had been put to
death. Others were captured and shot
on three following days. Every man
suspected of being in sympathy with
the insurgents was put to death without
trial as soon as captured. Most of the
300 prisoners released from jail by the
insurgents were recaptured anu shot
The outbieak seemed to have been pre
cipitated by the killing of Ernest Ri
gaud, a most prominent merchant
of Port au Prince, " Hyppolite sus
pecting him of being in communication
with legitime and of having brought
cargo of arms for the rebels. Hyppo
lite went to his bouse with a detach
ment of soldiers. Rigaud denied that
be had any arms concealed either at the
store or at the bouse. The president
called him into the street and bad him
abot down by the a ildiers the next
morning. A nephew of Rigaud called
at Hyppolite's house to ask about the
killing, not knowing thai his uncle was
shot by the president's orders. As soon
as he stated the object of his visit, Hyp
polite hid him dragged into the street
and shot About the same time Alexis
Ressigonal, an inoffensive and much es
teemed man was put up against the ca
thedral wall and butchered. Seventeen
men were executed in a batch, and even
aa this letter is being written (June 1)
an occasional volley tells that another
wretch has gone down. There is no
fighting in the streets to excuse this.
Every execution is carried out in the
most cold blooded manner, the execu
tioners being soldie.s belonging to the
most degraded type of men, and who
seem to enjoy their bloody work. Day
and night Hyppolite's troops patrol the
streets, searching for persons suspected
of being in sympathy with the insur
gent. Business is practically suspend
ed. The bodies of the rebel shot are
left lying in the street for hours.
Cid Crumbling.
St. Louis Mo., June 10. Under the
head of "creeds crumbling" and evening
paper quotes Rev. Frank G. Tyieli, pas
tor of the Central Clriatian church of
this city, as Baying all signs po'nt to ths
dissolution of the orthodox creeds. Mr.
Tyrell pointed out forcibly the discuss
ion in regard to matters of the belief
and faith which have shaken the Pro
testant ohurcb, and fr'm this drew con
clusions that creeds are crumbling and
will erelong disappear. He cannot, he
aayt, accept the belief of the trinity of
Jesus, and a to why he believdd the
Protestant creeds are failing he replied
that one had but to notice how the
teachers of the gospel are demanding
the right to make their own deduction,
provided they acknowledge the divinity
of Christ Tyrell's statement lias
created a sensation among the orthodox
ministers.
The Martae Depextssent.
Ottawa, Oirr., June 10-Th marina de
07tmot has received a detailed report
from D. McPhersoo of North Sydney,
Cap Breton, who we cent to reader as
sistance to the sufferers from grip on
St. Paul's island in the Gulf of St. Lw
nnea. The doctor says on his arrival
b found Mr. Campbell, the superin
Uodent of th, light station, and the
chief engineer, suffering from pneu
monia, andnearly every person on the
island had bean affected with influenza.
Tl sal Via this, many children were suffer
ing from diphtheria or whooping cough
aod, in aom instances, from both dis
eases. Th grip is also epidemic
. at Magdakn island. - Hundreds
of people are sick and the canning fac
tori had to be closed, a there vaenp
on to run them.
A new Political Party Launched
in Minnesota Under the Le tl-er.-liipota
St. Paul Contractor.
Duel jiikb. I
XewYcuk. June 12.-A tall, dark '
TAUACL'S SEEMS.
..1 - -, HfliT
man. wearing a uj - iWumi
iUit and a large light colored aombrero, u l i e uruen
UIO iruiipj"-
press last night at Jersey City. He
wore abusing belt with field k'.w
slung in it Everybody in the crest
v-innnntie dbim as he walked down
.,.l.irt of IW. Talmaprisrtmn,,
. .... ..- ; ... i;..r and
Vast il'J burton
lie thall E'l'Uiu
out I f we lose (l. j- V
uion the Lord, and
. , , . ,. .1 .:,,!,: own medi
jiavM was urn-
. . 1
if, m.'i-i l.aJ on iii
A In u4 OIeUof IheOrgMfMlioa.
St. Pazl, Muiji., June 12 A new po
litical party has been launched in thie
oity urder the namevf the National as
sociation, sixty gentlemen of SU Pau!
and vio nity filing articles of inoorpora
lion with the seoreUry of the state of
Minnesota. The leader of the new par
ty is Charles F. Huff, the well known
St. Paul contractor. The objects tf the
party as stated in the articles of incor
poration are to "unite socially aod fra
ternally all respectable citizeis for the
purpose of bettering their conditions io
private or public life by a course of de
bat upon political subjects, frou.
which will result a more thorough
knowledge of what is needed in the wa
of reform or political economy in the
counties, the states and nation."
"It will give us a clearer idea, from
the interest shown by the different in
dividual members in these debates, ol
their fitness as candidates for different
positions of trust as public servant in
stead of picking them from tke ros e,
of a base political party as has beet
dons heretofore, contrary to the feelings
of the well meaning citize'oe of the dif
fered t communities," said Mr. Huff
The new party is to be on a secret
society basis but will not be exclusive.
It mode of nominating clivers is uni
que. w benever eitiction lime approach
es, the ward or township associations
meet and take a ballot for candiateb
for the positions lobe filled. For ward
or township officers the person receiving
the highest vote shall be the nominee.
In votes for county officers the board cl
the ward or township organization.
The man who has received the tuou
votes is declared the candidate and al
other members of the organization are
jworn to vote for him. For state tf
fleers the same plan is to be followed,
except that the votes from each wi rd
are forwarded to the county orgaqiza
tion and then to the stnte organization,
and by that organization ths declara
tion made aa to ho the candidates of
the association are.
In an interview Mr. Huff declared
that the "supreme association," which
is now composed of only sixty 8. Paul
men, would before many days have 1 n
organization in every county in Minne
sota, and he expects that hi. party wil
cut quite a swath in politics. This or
ganization will be extended to other
states as fast as possible, and by next
year the leaders expect to have sufficient
strength to warrant the nomination of
a candidate for president of the United
States. According to Mr. Huff, foil)
canvassers a.e in reaaineas 10 start our
through Minnesota, and as soon a the
printing is eopleted they will begin
their work.
f
Will lw Sent to China.
New York, June 12. According to n
special from Washington, it, is reported
there that President Harrison has de"
oided to send ex-governor and ex-Sena
tor G. A. Pierce of Worth Dakota as our
representative to China. Mr. Pierce is
now an editorial writer on the Minne
apolis Tribune. He is a native Id-
dianan and his personal relations with
President Harrison were of so intimate
a nature that during his eeuatorship
his utterances regarding administration
matters were usually accepted as au
thoritative, lhe sending of Governor
Pierse to China will, it is thought, be
followed by the appointment of rx-Sen-
ator Blair as mi jister to Japan. The
alary is 112,000 a year, the same as that
attached to the Chinese mission, while
the court to which he will be accredited
is a far more desirable one from an
American standpoint.
The Terpede Beat.
Jqciqck, June 10. The torpedo boat
AlawauU Lynch and AlmirantCocdell,
aoooaapanwd by two armed transports,
attempted to bombard Piaagoa at long
raaw today. Very few of to ehll
reached the town and to two
ama retired, Th congressional ship
sT(oarn pursuit. The British ahip
Ebrtee from San Franoiaoo ha arrived.
c2m fsport that an agent of Balmaosda
ttawatad to detain bar at Oallao, bat
tie British bj in iU at Lima opt
awh aatioa unless th agent deposited
fF Tb ItatawUl ba ready to aaii
tor QjQmtowo.
- tvXl "O lsTtuUi a Re
A CeSBterfaiters Contfleslea.
Springfield, Iu. Jane 11. Rev.
Jerry Holmes and Rev. George W. Van
oil ware taken to the Cheater prison to
begin their sentence for making and
passing counterfeit money. Holmes
has written out and given a detailed
confession of hi guilt, heading the ac
count, "Th Effect of Bad Company.'
H ray that about the time of hi con
version be became acquainted itli Rev.
Q.W. VanciL One day ha told Mr.
Vancil that ha oould make money fast,
but that he did not like to, as he
thought it was wrong. Vancil told him
h thought it was all right It th money
was used for benevolent purposes,
Mr. Holmea thereupon gave hiss 12 of
ths bogus money. Mr. Holmes' oocfee
sloa concludes: "My confidence da God
is unshaken. I did wrong but it was a
mtafortun that oauaad it I had my
mind on Paul's word to Timothy, 'He
that provide not for his own, and esp
dally bia own houae baa denied th
faith mm! i won than an infidel."'
Ibe platform leading a dog. The man
aa John Sargent, the partaer of the
tnt lir.hort I lav Hamilton in his west
ern ranch, and the dog was - Jocko, the
pointer that Mr. Hamilton took wuh
him when he started on his last hunt
ing excursion from the ranch and which
Mr. Sargent ssvs was watching by the
corpse that the search party found ir.
the Snake river. Mr. Sargent left the
ranch on May 25tL in a coe-horee wag
on and for the last two weeks baa trav
eled continually. In the Deton canon
he found the sno wenty feet deep
Mr. Sargent was obliged to discard his
wagon 'Dd pack horse with bis big
gage. He and bis horse swam the Two
Oceans river and the Snake river amid
the floating ice, and after a wok's jour
nfy reached a railroad, having covered
1GJ miles in a steady down-pour of rain
alone and almost without stopping.
He arrived here nearlv worn out.
Concerning the finding of the corps
supposed to be Robert Ray Hamilton,
he t aid: "I would rather not say any
thing about the matter until I !"v
seen General Schuyler Hamilton, Ra's
father, though I might be able to dls-
lose some interesting information.'
"Is the dog you have with you Mr.
Hamilton'.?"
"Ye; I brought him aloag with the
rest of Ra's effects." Mr. Sarent
said that Hamilton was the best man
that ever crossed the Miscouri rivar. All
through the conversation bespoke as
if he were convinced that there was no
rcoin for doubt of Hamilton's drath.
lie said that bis business now was to
go to Washington to see about the va
lidity of his claim to the rauch. Th
government has enlarged Yellowstone
park and Mr. Sargent fears that his
claims havo been incorporated in the
park. These claims were filed in 1BS7
and be thinks even though the govern
ment has cusnected them to the pink
he can hold thf m.
Mr. Sargent ent to the Windsor
hotel where General Hamilton lives.
He causod n sensation when he arrived
there in his cowboy dress. He whs dis
appointed in not seeing General Ilamil
'.on, who had gone down to Staten Is
land yesterday to spend the summer.
Llr. Sargent went down to the Park
uvenue hotel to get some sleep.
A f oclrty I.ruilrr of l.e ) dn Tlrtifn.
New York, Jun 12 Mrs. Coeutry
Waddf )), who wns the social leader of
this city before the war and a famous
beauty in her day, became hopelessly
ill and her death has been
expajied at any time since. She is now
lying ut No 310 West Twenty-third
street, where she has been living re
cently -villi some relatives and friends,
Chauncey M. Dspew is quoted aa say
ing that Mrs. waddell was the first
woman of this city to establish a saloon,
nnd tbnt she was a social leader in a
fuller and broader sense than it is un
derstood today. She was the daughter
of Jonathan South wick of this city.
William Weddell, her second husband,
was a man of wealth and social promin
ence. He built a fine mansion in 1815
on the site now occupied by the present
brick church in Fifth avenue, wbere he
anu his wife entertained the best peo
ple of the city and eminent foreign vis
itotf. A newspaper extract of 1857 says
of a great ball given at the Waddell
mansion at that time: "The gathering
01 Deauty and the concourse of gallan
try could tiot be surpassed." But in
me pnnic 01 way Mr. Waddell lost his
fortune and soon after died. Mrs. Wad
dell was a woman of great courage and
considerable business, faculty, and when
she returned from her retirement re
deemed a part of her husband's fortune
by a lucky transaction in real estate.
She was thus ensbled to receive many
of her old friends in something of the
old style. She was born about seventy
two year ago.
1 fine. 11 a uia.'i v
luH-hts.I'av.dli.idthom, and yt -u
1 t.f his own exjH-riHice hi- advi-l J"'
I .,.i ti!,f. l-3t way tl p'ttu.
heavy
out
11
ttilijt
.v.. l.rinrr. Com, nz into li.e
rraver there may be uo sic" t
uesaorsonow.butwhere is the mini
has not a conilu-t ? Wli-re is Hie
Vju) that has iM a strnsrgU-? And
Ihsre is nut a day in all the year n-u
Ei text is not prtnusy a)prlna'
w those books that tonwlhlng hadOxare the lbW,
U, n n,ia,,rropriati. d kt.ew "
fore liodhew boiiert. The last day
fame. He kmrw if rould not that day
make his accounts come out riglit, I
would go into disgrace ana g
lanbhiuwit from the business cstab
liJ.niMit. He went over there very
early be-fore there was anybody iu tl
pl.-u'e, and he knelt down at Uie desk
and said: "h. I-rd, Thou kmwMt I
Mve tan-,1 to m horn st, but I f nnnot
make thinKM ronia out right! IMp n
this niomiiix: iw
.i ,r... t 1 ,e K-il way n n
. .- 1 Tl.; ia a world of bur-
y.a 01 0Jrun , ,
an nr.wp. atid Iiaruiy
bled oi) the planet whew
not lit the occasion: "t.
upon the L'-rd. and lie
Uiee.-
Oh, my friend, what we want is a
practical religioiu The religion the
people have is so high up you i.u...
reach it I have a friend who entered
bo life of an evangelist He gave up
a lucrative business 111 mc.i', '
he and his wife finally came to b.-ere
want, lie told me that one morninj?
at prayers he said: "0 Lord, Ttioii
knowest we have not a mouthful of
food in the house! Help me, help us.
And he started out on the street, and a
gentleman ment him and said; "I have
been thinking of you for a long while.
You know 1 am a flour mejehant; if
jou wont be offended I should like to
send you a barrel of flour. .my inenu
cast his burden on the Lord and He
natnitir-d tiim Intlio straits of Ma
gellan, I have been lold, there is a place
where which ever way a captain puts
bis ship he finds the w ind against him,
and there are men who all their lives
have been running in the teeth of the
wiue, and which way to turn they do
not know. Some of them may be here
this morning, and I address them face
to face, not perfunctorily, but as one
brother talks to another brother: "Cast
thy burden upon the Lord and lie
shall sustain thee."
First There aro a great many men
who have business burdens. When
we see a man barred and jierplexed
v rill lift m
i,b .li.l-wi oiwned a book that
the desk, ami there w as a leaf con.
a line of fi2m which explain
ed rvervthins. In other words be cast
the Lord,
Lord sust.im.Ml him. Youna man, do
tin n (2x1 lias a
lay
.1 io i.n.r 'in MlllllfliCe .l-"'
raiiwi'M'"-" . 1 !....- i i r.
1 ... ..vt I il t I fd L Al -', J-"l
' is, thy burden j iym.h, ith anyU.ly that is In any
!e will taih kil U" knw !!OW
i... 1 ( l.rwkn I nil Uie iw
,-.rri tin the la bl-r -f the wall: He
i,..:ir8 ihei.irkiix of the miner down iu
,....., , -
tionnj iudustry. Ir!ujn,'j
back the estrand furtl
our g"oi name, i-nliarxfc,
of morals may apuc,
tiou lor iutegritv: but
back lhe dt ar depani .JJi
theae empty cradios ai4
of childish toys thut ir9
again. Alas me f v.
and the silmoe in the
never M-lin avain It. tl......
r, . , ..,.rwr
and orphanage. What k
In ll IM...,.U. ..I..
Ill lira nui 1 ur!v M114V M.
dead, what long black ,uQ
wing 01 death, what fveiw
grief, what hands tremuloaJ
reaement, w hat iiistrnnxW
shut now because there m J
to play on tliem! htlmj
such fouls? A j, Hki
. . . . . .
into tne narrxiroiuiv text!
ffisartal Have.
Abomoob, I. T. Jan li Rport r
cud hr giv brtroding aoooaDti
of to fearful hafou to (if and property
.a the ovf-nowed valley of th tUd
rlvsr ia Tasaa, In thi territory dll
iog vd tahWMn houasa war awapt
away, orop dsatrcysJ and atoak of all
kkkiatwMd. ASM boat
svaral aw who war teytagto
feaaOaa Wva U (& tt of
hMMfcir Oafiorx waa t jdmd
wmtoniisiii cast
Found In a Drift.
Gaihsviluc, Tkx June 12. Nr
Lion, L T, thirty miles from here on
the Red river, the dead bodiw 0f a mm
woman and babe were found in a Aritt
they having been drowned in the recent
oveifbw. William Lvcn.
Hickory sreek, was drowned while try
ing to fold that stream.
The rbw in the Ked river w
odnUd. At Wsrren'a ot-i.L
bends, twenty mUes northwest, tb de
truction was widespread. In these two
bend, there wer 10,000 aorss " of oorn
ootton and small grain cultivated bv
about fifty families. Alliib, crop,
www destroyed, most of the house,
wept away and a large numbs, of cat
U, hog and- chicken ' were drowned.
At Yellow Bnk'. ferry Mr. ) SSL
waa drowned while trying fu, rtach
hora in an old ferry boat
Jamnt from Tr
woo witb Charles R.11..
robWa Northern PaciHorir'7
OWta.tAuflt,jI1pwlrr()mnaJr
twlnf.tfull.p.0,, ofm'
f-b- brought from ai Sid to
'wtiVUh
"hWupatotkiIrf Vy nH nuri
and annoyed iu business life, we are
apt to Bay: "lie ought not to have at
tempted to carry so muelu" Ah! that
man may not be to blame at all. When
a man plants a business he does, not
know what will Ijo IU outgrowths,
what will be iU roots, what will U' its
branches. There is many a man with
keen foresight and large business fae
ulties whojhas been (lung Into the dust
by unforeseen circumstances springing
upon him from ambush. When to buy
when tosell, w hen to trust, and to what
amount of credit, w hat will be the ef
fect of this new invention of machin
erv, what w ill be the effect of that loss
of crop, and a thousand other questions
perplex business men, until the hair is
jilvered and deep w rinkles are ploughed
in the cheek; and the stocks go up by
the mountains and go down by the val
leys, and they are at their wits' ends,
and stagger like drunken men.
mere never has been a tiinn when
there have been such rivalries iu busi
ness as now. It is hardware against
hardware, books against books, ehand
lery against chandlery, imported nrti
cles against imported articles. A thous
and stores in combat with another
thousand stores. Xever such advan
tage of light, never such variety of as
sortment, never such spl udor of show-
window, never so much acufness of an-
vcrtising, and amid all these severities
of rivalry in business how many m-n
breakdown! Oh, the burden on the
rtioulder! Oh, the burden on the heart,
Toujiear that it is avarice which drives
these men of business through the
street, and I hat is the commonly accept
ed idea. 1 do not believe a word of it
The vast multitude of these business
men are toiling for others. To edu
cate their children, to put the wing of
protection over their household, to
have something left so when they vm
out of this life their wives and children
will not have to go to the poor-house.
Ah, my friend, do you say that Cod
does not care about your worldly busi
ness? I tell you Cod knows more
about it than you do. He knows ail
your perplexities; He knows what
mortgage is about to foreclose.; je
knows what note you cannot pay; e
knows all your trials, from the day you
took hold ol the first yard stick down
to u last yard of ribbon, and the (iod
llAtlAlnfwl IIubU 1.1 .
yv.. .,a,,u vu uo mug, a(J W(0
Wiped Daniel to be prime minister and
ho helped Havelock to be a Boldler
will help you to discharge all your
duties. lie is golttg to see you through.
Then loss cornea and you find vonr
property golns, Just take this book and
ut it down by your ledger and read of
lhaetornal possessions that will come
to you through our Lord Jesus Christ
And when your business portuer bo'
tray you and your friends turn nualna
you, Just take the Insulting letter pm
K down on the table, pt your Itiht, il
side the Insulting ktUr, and then r,,l
f the friendship of Illm v.ho sticketh
Closer than a brother."
A yonnj accountant la Ko York
city got ai account entangled. Jh
knew ho wm l.onpst, and yet bo could
not make his accounts come out right
and he toiled at them days and hlghi
Will he was nearly frewied. It see , I
ii.,.ih:ift-llo knows how strong
the temirst strikes the sailor at mast
head: He sn-s the factory girl among
the spindles, and knows how her arms
ache; He s- s thf sewing woman iu the
fourth story, and knows how few pence
she gets for making garments; and
louder than all the din and roar of the
city conn-s the voice of the sympathetic
(iod: "Cast thy burden upon the Lord,
and He shall sustain the
Second -There area great many who
have a weight of persecution and abuse
uiMHi them. Sometimes society gets
grudge against a man. All his m ilives
are misinterpreted und his good deeds
:ir iliMirwiated. With nwro virtue
than some of the honored and applaud
ed, he runs only against artillery and
uhrirn critiriHm.
lhe world alwuvs has naa a cross i-
Ikih-ii tivn thieves for the one who
comes to save It High and holy niter
nriio has always been followed by
ibuse. The most sublime tragedy
self sacritico ha come to burlesque
The graeeful gait of virtue is alway
followed bv ffrimace and travesty. 1 h
sweetest strain of poetry ever writte
has come to ridiculous parody, and as
lang as there are virtue and righteous
ness in the world, there will bo some
thing for Iniquity to grin at All alon
the line of the ages, and In all lands,
the cry has been: "Fot this man, but
liarabbas. Now, Itarabbas was a ro'
lxr. And what makes the pcrseeii
tions of life worse, is that they con
from jieoplc whom you have heled.
from thus i to whom you have loaned
money or have Btarted is business, or
whom you rescued in some great crisis
I think it has Ix-en the history of all our
lives the most acrimonious assault has
come from those whom we have lame
(ittert, whom we have helped, and that
makes it all the harder to bear. A man
is in danger of becoming cynical.
Now, If you have come across ill-
treatment, let mo tell you you are in ex
cellent company i urist una j.utiier
and (ialileo and John Jay and Josiah
(Jiiincy and thousands of men and wo
men, the best spirits of ea'th heaven,
ltudgc not one inch, though all hell
wreak upon you its vengeance and yon
1 made a target for devils to shoot at
Do you not think Christ knows all
alMiut persecution ' Was he not hissed
at? Was he not itruck on the cheek ?
Was he not pursuedjall the days of his
life? Did they not expectorate upon
him? Or, to put it in JHble language,
"They spit upon him." And cannot he
understand what persecution is? "Ciud
thy burdens upon '.ho Lord and He
shall sustain thee."
Third There are others who carry
great burdens of physical ailments.
When sudden sickness has come, and
fierre choleras and malignant fevers
take the casth-s of life by storm, we ap
peal to (Jod; but in those chronic ail
ments which wear out the strength day
after day, and week after week, and
year after ye.ir, how little resorting to
(iod for solace! Then people depend
upon their tonics and plasters and
their comials rather than upon heaven-
ly stimulants. Oh, how few neoul,.
tin re are completely well! Some of
you, by dint of rsverance and care
have kept living to this time, but how
you have had to war against physical
aumeiiiH. i no world seems to be a
great hospital, and you run against
rheumatisms and consumptions und
scrofulas and neuralgias and scores of
old diseases baptized by new noniencla-
Oli, how heavy a burden sickness
To tHt no JraHia nil, 'trd
I will . I ill 01 mi,,?
baka.
11 DM, totTCT, to Clr
Then there are many l
burden of sin. All, we all
til In the appointed w.-ijUxj
lifted. We need no hi
the whole race Is riiiiu-l ,
tacle it would be if we tuti
the mask of human dc'.ilc
a drum that would hnn
army of the world's trai
deception, the fraud imdUti
the murder and the enmt t
centuries! Ay, If 1 could
trumpet of resurri cton intat
thelicat men in this audita
the dead sins of the past
up we conld not endure U
gTim and dire, has put it
never relax unless it I owta
of Illm who came to dcjlrsj
of M-ecVv I
t)h, to a m -a .I.u gfi
soul! Is there no way tohe
den mo ved ? Oh, yes, -Cut1
upon the Iord." The Siokai
to take the consetiui-nca i
And I know he is In earw
I know it? Jly the streamsi'
and the streaming hand! a
"Come unto me all ye who
and heavv laden and 1
rest." Why will prodijii
swincs' husks when the rot
ring and the father's welcotK
Why go wandering owl!
Kara dewrt of your sin srtft
Invited to the Bard'-iuof (ket
of life and the fountain
water? Why be houK-lns
less forever when yon may
sons and daughters of tiie
Almighty
To fumigate a room N
shovel and drop sugar a
the drjors and windows a
ture.
Is!
It takes tho color out of the mkv
,i ... ...... '
im mo sparaie oui or the wave and
the sweetness out of the fruit and the
luster out of the night. When the
limbs aclie, when the respiration Is
painful, when the mouth is hot, when
the ear roars with unhealthy obstruc
tions, how liard it Is to be patient and
eheerlul and assiduous! Caat thy bur
den upon the Lord." Don jour head
ache? His wore the thorn. Do your
feet hurt r His were crush! of the
spikes. Is your side painful? Ills waa
struck by tho spear. Uoyou feel Uk
giving way wider the burden T Ilia
weakness far way under a eroav
Whirl you are la every possible way to
try to restore younphysical rigor, you
are to remember that more aoothirif
than anodyne, and owe strengthening
than any tonlo is the prescription ef
ths text, -Cast thy burden nposj Ca
Lord ud He shall sustain thee." .
a tiotiief tardea mm km tv'tstrt1
to Uie rraC.TtlBtni.h'l
!r oniu ' .
Five-year old Kdith wenttif
night with a good -by kiss for
was to go away early ti'-st aa
a long business lri:. The an
mamma said: "We must pn;
while be is gone ol. TW l
won't off run the tn.ik atxitt
asked-Kdith. "Yen,' rejWi
"what would we uo ir papa
killed?" "We'd cry, that's
tqe little maiden, "and Un-s
married again and have aw
A Toi.Be Man'. Vot'M
Father Who is that youaf
comes here so much to see tl
Mother His name is
Father In business?
Mother Kenlly I do not b
Father Don't you know
position Is?
Mother I have iiot learort
LltflC Hobby-1 know, i
tlifougli the keyhole.
Or mi ii (I Ice in Svvi
Mr. Carson, In a foreign
descriU-a a peculiar kind ofm
found In rivers In the Jura if
clear cold nights crystal fofj
bottom, and rise In groups to
face. They consist ef M"1 n
lamcllirs of Ice held by mA
lion, b.it not adherent to )
They offer no resistance W "j
oars, but may sometime
liu-onvei-.ieitce; tlms t!"f
and stop water wheels; or raA
lecting on a dam, they insyf
ing. M Frailer, an AW
-pointa out that all circum",
r....i.t. ....iir.ii, hi Inirn",
IIUUIAIW IV IIHIinu-'
arc also against formation
liv which is rsrelv. if rer'
a stream that Is muddy orW
na i.nt In trntiKlllit tllC I
we-j fjaav miwhv -
.n.r.i inn (ft form.nl "J
at tlw bottom to be covered
ment
At the sluices,
coming w m. s uii 'ji
about the Iron work 1.
slalce. and Is got rlJofW'T'
nrea. m. i uony i r-
ii,.iiir bv cooling
ner ten orgrecs i"
ero(X,Wdplnngln(fn52
thus Illustrating th r8" Pl
pllat Of bridl" s.
V
v.!
near
0UM
J
.... 1 n hll
;Hr. John iln". u- ,.: f
poMe to revoluti."'
mklnf the bd fl ,
ud aiding
eatlnc the conio'-
Hff. .
n