Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1896)
FARM AND GARDEN. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS, rp-tn-Ptdi Him* Aliool linn of the Moll an* Tlolil* Thereof — Hortleolloro, I Itu eltore and riort ealture. O early vegetable in looked for more eagerly than tbe tint dlab of anpara gim, A bed of aa* paragua om e entab llwhed I* permanent and It In e**entlal, therefore, that the work of preparing the le d ahotild be done thoroughly. A well-drained Kandy loam la lenL T. D. I ia I field write* to Garden and b'oreNt thut lil* location I* a dry one, hut ho ha* never Vnown the bed to »iiffer even In the drleHt NeaNon. In heavy hoIIn •mm artificial mean* niu*t he adopted to relieve the noil of egceNidve moluture, Whew hepariigu* I* grown In the low land* it la ciiNtornary to enltivate it on ridge* *1* feet wide, three row* to u ■ridge The Intervening hollow*, or trenobea, are filled during the wnminer js Hum with the I it tor gathered from the manure which ha* Iain on tbe ridge* all winter. When thoroughly decom , powd thl* I* thrown up again, with an additional dreuNlng, and the trenclie* ’■ft, agate left open during the winter. Tbi* * plan will be a good one to follow In all heavy noli, and tii auch cane* there la another advantage, that of having ranter aNpiiruguw than coold be grown In bed* on the level. Thi bed* being I 4tk Permanent the around mu*t be deeply ■k treached with good loam to take the ^ plane of poorer nil. 8lx Inches of good manure should be worked In deeply, a* aspurugu* roots penetrate the ground for fully two feet, and this also Is a safeguard against drought. It Is not, however, recommended to make the < plantation deep. Mr. Hatfield's origi nal bed Is now 20 years old, hut it is equal In hearing and quality to planta tions six years old. It Is later, and this may be uncounted for by the fa/'t that crowns are yearly formed below, or be - hind the main one, so that now the original roots, once near the surface, are from 15 to 18 inches deep. When the cutting season Is past, which Is usually when peus come lu, he has given an additional coat of salt with Hi no Injury to the growing plunts and with advantage In destroying millions of small weeds. There Is an excellent Jh, artificial manure, specially prepared for top-dressing. In city gardens this will he preferable to barnyard manure. Asparagus roots ore sometimes lifted |K In the uutuinn and forced under benches In the greenhouse during the winter. The result* are seldom satisfactory and the shoot* are at best weak stringy >jhi. and tasteless. IUiniI Dmliiags Wtth wet or clayey roadway*, sur face drainage alone Is not sufficient Without undcrdralriage the crown of such roadways will dry only by the slow prooe-HH of evaporation, during which time the topping becomes more and more rutted by the passing traffic. A Kiibdrahi in such soils will not prove efficient for more than about twelve feet on each side; hence, two lines of longitudinal subdrains are needed on those parts of our country roads that pass through wet plat**, low-lying lands or clayey soils. 'They should have an average fall.of about one in one hundred; minimum full, one in one thousand. At short Intervals, say from thirty-six to, one hundred feet apart, are placed cross drains to discharge the water Into the sldo ditches. Thee* crons drains receive a greater fail, say up to one In thirty. Generally two and __ U.,1# rilliA,. MX. ...Ht I dent. It is advantageous to bed these tiles In well-rammed brick fragments and to cover them with toad metal, lie certain that the tiles are correctly laid and that nothing interferes with their free discharge. As Bald before, unplatted round tiles, about three Inches In diameter and. under certain condi tions. jointed with loose collars, are tuokt suitable for sttbdrulns. The bot tom of the (lies should be laid both to the proper grade and below the frost line, after which the tile trench is tilled up to suhgrade with dean gravel, “i-mall held Mtones, road metal, or broken bricks. The cross drains are also made of uuglused tiles, with the ttceptlon of their outlet sections, which should consist of vitrified culvert pipes. Hegttlur brunch pipes should * unhid the longitudinal and cruss tiles. On level reaches the iaieral toad way slopes for surface drainage should not be less than one tn twenty-four, and side ditches t'hould b<- provided, if gteesrgry, as previously Indicated Finally, a rapid discharge of the side ditches, if requited, through adjacent lands, fa of the utmost importance to roadway presetvaitua..Urn l<«> Htoue, I hi< ago as a Waul Market Chicago lies l.ooo miles from lb» seaports and tka freight on foreign wools from lints points to Chicago is h»« per pound W v* it not for this our Western menu fvtutvrw would also work largely «s foreign wool, consequently wool con signed ta this market from ike reaura! States and western territories Wit) Mi ^iparo la ike skipper than by sending II la the tar taat, where it will come ta direct compeiitiua with wool from III aver lbs world, ta be said al very law prices, sfles requirtag oae year sad la same tastaacea to aur kaeal rdga taa years la get returns li Many a Wo avail weals her bus head la remember her birthday but la fvrgat her age A Property M»n«y«l r«v»«t. Biltmore Forest Is the first practical application of forest management In the United States. Biltmore Estate, of which the forest la a part, lies near Asheville in the western part of North Carolina. Before Its purchase by Mr. Vanderbilt the small farmers to whom the land belonged had pastured their cattle in the forest, had burned !t over to Improve the pasturage, and had cut a large proportion of the trees which could be used or sold for fencing, fuel or sawlogs. At the time when Its management was undertaken compara tively few large, sound trees of white, black, and scarlet oak and short-leaf pine, which are the more Important species, were still standing In the for est, and the condition of a large part of It was deplorable In tbe extreme. The prime object of the management at Biltmore Is to pay the owner while Improving the forest. To this end "im I provement cuttings" were begun In I some parts of the forest, to remove old trees which had reached a merchant able size and were standing over and j Injuring good young growth. In other I places the only measures nqulred were to exclude cattle and fire, and give the forest absolute rest. In the process of felling the timber the trees to fall were first carefully selected and marked, then sawed down and reduced at ones to cordwood or sawlogs or both. Great care was used in selecting the place for each tree to fall and In throwing It so that tbe top might not crush the young trees among which it fell. The result was a gain of probably 1t5 per cent In the condition of the young growth over that which usually follows ordinary hjmbertng, while tbe Increase In cost was not more than 2 or 2 per cent. The output of the forest was sold at market prices In open competition, but most of It was consumed by the other depart UK-nifc oi ino estate iimpiy wibuk iuc prices charged made it worth while for them to purchase of the forest rather than elswhere. During the first year S great Improvement was effected In the condition of the rorest at a very small cost. Out of a total expenditure of nearly ten thousand dollars the net cost of the improvement was somewhat less than four hundred dollars. Dur ing the year 1*1*3, however, with woods men more fully trained and the whole force in te ller working order, the man agement yielded a net profit of rather more than twelve hundred dollars. T!n«'vnl«fl of th« Htrmwlmrrf The worst enemy of the strawberry Is a dry spell. In warm wet weather the fruit and leaf stalks are affected by mildew and the leaves are attacked by a rust. As this makes its appear ance late In the season. It causes but little Injury. Insects are more injur ious to the strawberry than are diseases, and arnoug the most destruc tive of th*ee are the various species of May beetles (I.achnosterna*. One or more species of these Insects abound everywhere and the larva or grubs, commonly Known as white grubs, with out regard to species, are all destruc tive to the roots of various plants, es pecially those of the strawberry. The grubs are usually more numerous in old dry past.nres or meadows. If the ground Is thoroughly cultivated for a few years previous to planting It to strawberries, the grubs are not likely to be troublesome. All May beetles fly in the night and may be taken by a light placed over a tub of water. Birds and domestic fowls are the strawberry grower's most efficient helpers in de stroying these insects. The struwberry leaf-roller, the larva of a small reddish brown motb, is a small worm which feeds on the leaves of the strawberry and causes them to roll up. There are two broods during the year, the first in June, the second in September. The remedy is to cut and burn the vines after harvest. There are many other insects which attack the strawberry, but if the vines are always burned after bat vest and thorough rotation of crops Is practiced, diseases and insects will seldom become very injurious.—A. M. Ten Eyck. krparaJr Trough*. It Is net a great undertaking to pro vide a i-ncall trough in Home convenient corner where they eat their souked corn and milk unmolested by older stock. They learn at an early age to visit their sideboard and their appre ciation of its contents Increases daily. As time goes on they will become more dependent upon their side ration, un til, as you go the round with the feed buckets, you are reminded that you have another regular lot on your feed roll. By the time they are ten or twelve weeks old you have them weaned with but little ceremony. They have become so attached to their feed trough that they miss their mother hut little, and the sew will have reduced In the flow of milk, making weaning a very sim ple matter.—t «c ifle Kami I'ress Klf d Crop* aim t.trne, Hie Mary Ir it'l » spertment station found that by ! in i|>||li .iti *n of twenty buaheisofstone j time a gain of * 1-3 bushels of corn, and ; on lbs following crop of whrat l.& bush | • Is. This la M •wr cent for lb« Amt crop and it |»rr vent for the Butt croft Kur a subeecfuent season when lime was t**ted on tbs bay ><<*p a gala of I 111 pounds was ss« uretl an uulimed tecton giving but I 3*1 pounds, aud lb* limed j section I Odd pounds. Tbla dors nut •buw a ciifl* *n>* of ! ITI pouuda la I sitgbi mistake in the mathematics of i lb* sta*i«ni, lui u<»>rth< less a guod "" • u_ 1 I'tttrm* Tendencies t h. irtT.K u. * > tn is *nt »»ats has bssn lo grow ha! ' 1*01110 and mutton sheep rather titan dairy and wont breeds In many parts j sf the country These who pursue a . mi idle or opfoalto roorsa ate apt tn And an tn*rsn»ing demand um < t tr*ms is usually uTowed by Ha op* grailt - I i TAIMAGES SERMON.]; - , "DESTINY OF NATIONS," LAST < SUNDAY’S 8UBJECT. *Th»r» nil • Great Star From H»»**o Barnlng as It Wsra a Lamp, and It Fall Upon tha Third Part at tha Blrara”—Rar. ••10—11. ANT commenta tors, like Patrick and Lowtb, Thomas Scott, Mat thew Henry and A 1 b « r t Barnes, agree In saying that the star Wormwood, men tioned In Revela tion, was Attlla, king of the Huns. He was so called because he wag bril liant as a star, and, like wormwood, he embittered everything he touched. We have studied the Star of Bethlehem, and the Morning Star of the Revela tion, and the Star of Peace, but my present subject calls us to gaze at the star Wormwood, and iny theme might he called “Brilliant Bitterness,” A more extraordinary character his tory does not furnish than this man this referred to, Attlla, the king of the Huns. One day a wounded heifer came limping along through the fields and a herdsman followed its bloody track on the grass to see where the heifer was wounded and went on back fur ther and further, until he came to u sword fust In the earth, the point downward, as though It had dropped from the heavens, and against the edges of this sword the heifer bad been rut. The herdsman pulled up i.u>/.r,l n»A la A a a 11.. Attlla Raid that sword must have fallen from the heavens from the grasp of Mars, and Ita being given to him meant, that Attllu should conquer and 1 govern the whole earth. Other mighty j men have been delighted at being called liberators, or the merciful or j the good, but. Attlla called himself, and demanded that others call him, (he Scourge of Clod. At the head of 700,000 troops mounted on Cappadocian horses, he swept everything from the Adriatic to the Black Sea. He put his iron heel on Macedonia and Greece and Thrace. He made Milan and l'avla and Padua uud Verona beg for mercy, which he bestowed not. The Byzantine castles, to meet his ruinous levy, put up at auction massive silver tables and vases of solid gold. A city captured by him, the Inhabitants were brought out and put Into three classes; Ihe first class, those who could bear arms, who must immediately enlist unrler Attlla or be butchered; the second class, the beau tiful women, who were made captives to the Huns; the third class, the aged men and women, who were robbed of everything and let go hack to the city to pay heavy tax. It was a common saying that the grass never grew again where the hoof of Attlla’s horse had trod. His armies reddened the waters of the Seine and the Moselle and the Rhine with car nage, and fpught on the Catalonian Plains the fiercest battle since the world stood—300,000 dead left on the field! On and on, until all those who could not oppose him with arms lay prostrate on their faces In prayer, and, a cloud of dust seen in the distance, a bishop cried: “It is the aid of God!” and all the people took up the cry, "It Is the aid of God!” As the cloud of duet was blown aside the banners of re-enforcing armies marched in to help against Attlla, the Scourge of God. The most unimportant occurences he used as a supernatural resource, and after three months of failure to capture the city of Aquiicia, and his army had given up the siege, the flight of a stork uud her young from the tower of th< j i-ny vim lunen uy uuu uh u sign Ilial lie was to capture the city, and bis ariuy, inspired by the same occurrence, resumed the siege, and took the walls at a point from which the stork had emerged. So brilliant was the conquer or in attire thut hig enemies could not look at him, but shaded their eyes or turned their heads. Slain on the evening of his marriage by his bride, Ildico, who was hired for the assassination, hia followers be wailed him not with tears, but with blood, cutting themselves with knives and lancet. He was put into three coffins—the flrrt of iron, the second of allver, and the third of gold, lie was buried by night, and into his gruvt were poured the most valuabe coin and precious stones, amounting to the wealth of a kingdom. The grave dig gers unti all those who assisted at th< burial were maasai red. so that it would never be known where so much wealth was entombed. The Homan Umpire i Conquered the world, but Attl'a con quered the Homan Km pile He was 1 right in railing bliuself a scourge but j Instead of being Ibe scourge of God. he was the scourge of hell |u au*« of bis brilliant* and bitterns ,• the 1 routinetitatuis were right In bellcviug hi in to he the star Wot m wood. A* the regions be devastated were parts most j opulent with fiiUMUlUs and streams and rivets you sc* boa graphic Is ibis i referent* in Itevetation ' There fell ' a great star from brown burning as It were a lamp, and It fell upon the third purl of tb# river* and upon tb« fountains ef water*, and tb* Mine al tb* star la vailed VYetntwaod " Have you ever thought bow many embittered live# lUtt* are all about us, uiieabiUruptc morbtd, acrid, satin* j Ibe? The ttwrepenn plant Iron wht-b Wwimavaal ta vstrasted. nrtsmleln ab* I gintbium ta n per* tntal plant- and all | tba tear sound It I* ready a* etude It* ait And In many bum*# live* tbata i Is n perennial t|i*itllali«n at wild *»■ . partenaea. Yva, ibst* ate t»w* »bi»«* whole Wash I* to *b#d n batetol lnlu< I gttvn *« *tb*t» i h«* *** Aittl** •! - be borne, or Attllas of the social clr :le, or Attllas ot the church, or Attllas >f the state, and one-third ot the waters >f all the world, If not two-thirds the eaters, are poisoned by the tailing of :be star Wormwood. It Is not compll nentary to human nature that most men, as soon as they get great power, become overbearing. The more power men have the better. If their power iiaed for good. The less power men have the better, If they use It for evil. Birds circle round and round and round before they swoop upon that which they are aiming for. And If my discourse so far has been swinging round and round, this moment It drops straight on your heart and asks the question: Is your life a benediction to others, or an embltterment. a blessing or a curse, a balsam or wormwood? Some of you, I know, are morning stars, and yon arc making tbe dawn ing life of your children bright with gracious Influences, and you are beam ing upon all the opening enterprises of philanthropic and Christian en deavor, and you are heralds of that day of Gospelisatlon which will yet flood all the mountains and valleys of our siu-cursed earth. Hall, morning itar! Keep on shining with encourage ment and Christian hope! Home of you are evening stars, and you are cheering tbe last days of old people; and though a cloud sometimes comes over you through the querulous ness or unreasonableness of your old father and mother, It is only for a mo ment, and the star soon comes out clear again and Is seen from all the bal conies of the neighborhood. The old people will forgive your occasional shortcomings, for they themselves sev eral times lost their patience when you were young, and slapped you when you did not deserve It. Hall, evening star! Hang on the darkening sky your dlu mond coronet, * But are any of you the star Worm wood? Do you wold and growl from the thrones paternal or maternal? Are your children everlastingly pecked It? Are you always crying, "Hush!” to the merry voices and swift feet, and their laughter, which occasionally trickles through at wrong times, and Is sup pressed by them until they can bold it no longer, and all the barriers burst Into unlimited guffaw and cacblnna tlon, as In high weather the water has trickled through a slight opening In the mill-dam, but afterward makes wider and wider breach until It carries all before It with Irresistible freshet? Do not be too much offended at tbe nolic your children now make. It will be still enough when one of them is dead. Then you would give your, right hand to bear one shout from their silent voices, or one step from the still foot. You will not any of you Jjave to wait very long before your house Is stiller than you want it. Alas, that there are to many homes not known to the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, where children are put on the limits, and whacked and cuffed and ear-pulled, and senselessly called to order, and answered sharp and suppressed, until It is a wonder that under such processes they do not all turn out Modocs and Nana Sahibs! • * * But I will change this and suppose you are a star of Worldly Prosperity. Then you have large opportunity. You can encourage that artist by buying his picture. You can improve the fields, the stables, the highway, by introduc ing higher style of fowl, and horse, and cow, and sheep. You can bless the world with pomologies! achievements in the orchards. You can advance ar boriculture and arrest this deathful lconoclasin of the American forests. You can put a piece of sculpture into the niche of that public academy. You can endow a college. You can stocking a thousand hare feet from the winter frost. You can build a church. You can put a missionary of Christ on that foreign shore, t on can help ransom a world. A rich man with his heart right—can you tell me how much good a James l>enox or a George l'ea body or a Peter Cooper or a William E. Hodge did while living, or is do:tiy now that he is dead? There is not u eity, town, or neighborhood that has not glorious specimens of consecrated wealth. • * • What Is true of Individuals is tru< of nations. God sets them up to re volve us star*, hut they may fail us wormwood. Tyre—the atmosphere of the Uturt, fragrant with spices, <omiug lu cam vans to her fair*; all sea* cleft into foam by the keels of her laden mer chantmen; her markets rich with horses and runiclc from Togaruiah, her ba/uura tilled with upholstery (ram l»e ilan, with emerald and rorui aud agate from Hyrta, with wines from He.bon, with embroidered work from Asnur and Cbtlcuud. Where now the gleam of her tower*, where the roar ul h<r i 'uriots, w h< re the uni* of her ships t l.et the Bshi rrnen who dry their nets where once she stood. 1st the »••* that ru. he* upon the hun*an* »» where once »h# challenged th* admiration ol all satiens. let th* barberiaha who »«t <hetr rod* teat* where w>« her pel* »■** ai.ttvrvl answer the guestMn. she was a star. hot h* h*r own sin turned to * urate uud and haa fallen. Hundred-gated Thebee- for all lime o be the e idt el the an iarl. li and hterofHjbi*!, her atwpeadoua ruins •crend over teeay-astea miles. her < Uptuse* pfe.enioa la nee of eartlor sad ehurtot. the tidwiw with vkidt the aow to gotten kn.g* of Kgfpt n. *»h the nailoe*. her obelisks sad ••lumas, Ceres, sad I at* or the atu pendens tempts* u( her pride! Whe *» us*au> the greatases ef Thebee ia lhoe* da*a eh*a the h'ppedrem# »•§ With her ap«*r*s aad foreign pop iltp hewed a* her ehrtase aad her tvenuea reared with tie wheels of pre set ieeg ta ths esks of retorting *>*• querors? Whet dashed down the vtelon of chariot* end temple# and throne#? What band* pulled upon the columns of her glory? What rutbleeenese de faced her sculptured wall and broke obelisk* and left her lDdeerrlbaht* temple* groat skeleton# of granite? What eplrit of destruction spread the lair of wild bea*t* In her royal sepul chres, end tnugbl the miserable cot tagers of to-day to build huts In the courts of her temple*, and sent desola tion and ruin skulking behind the obe lisks and dodging among the sarcoph agi and leaning against the columns and stooping under the arches and weeping In the water* which go mourn fully by as though they were carry lug the tear* of all ages? Lei the mum mies break their long silence and come up to shiver In the desolation, and point lo fallen gain* and shattered stat ue* and detoxed sculpture, responding: ‘Thebe* built not one temple lo (iod. Thebe* holed righteousness and loved sin. Thebe* wo* a *i*r, but she turned to wormwood and ha* fallen.” Babylon, with her 250 towere and her brazen gate* and her embattled walls, the splendor of the earth gath ered within her palaces, her hanging garden* built by Nebuchadnezzar to please hi* bride, Amytls. who had been brought up In a mountainous country and could not endure tbs flat country round Babylon—these hanging garden* built, terrace above terrace, till at the height of 400 feed them' were wood* waving and fountain* playing, the ver dure, the foliuge. the glory looking a* If a mountain were on the wing. On the tiptop o king walking with his queen, among Mint lie* snowy white, looking up at bird* brought from dis tant land*, and drinking out of tank ards of solid gold or looking off over river* and lakes upon nations subdued and tributary, crying' “Is not this great Babylon which 1 have built?" • • • I pray that, our nation may not copy the ciimes of tho nation# that have perished, end our cup of blessing turn to wormwood, and like them we go down. I am by nature and by grace an optimist, and 1 expect that this country will continue to advance until Christ shall come again. But be not deceived! Our only safety Is In rlght eousnt ss toward God and Justice to ward roan. If wc forget tbe goodness of the Lord to this land, and break bis Sabbaths, and Improve not by tho dire disasters Unit have again and again coine to us as a nation, and we learn saving lesson neither from civil war nor raging epidemic, nor drought, nor mildew, nor scourge of locust and grasshopper, nor cyclone, nor earth quake; if the political corruption which has poisoned the fountain* of public virtue and lies limed the high pla-es of authority, making free gov ernment at times a hissing and a by word in all the earth; If the drunken ness and licentiousness that stagger and blaspheme in tbe streets of our great cites as though they were reach ing after the fume of a Corinth and a Sodom ure not repented of, we will yet tee the smoke oi our nation's ruin; the pillars of our national and stale capitols will fall more disastrously than when Samson pulled down Dagou; and future historians will record upon the page bedewed with generous tears the story that tbe free nation of the West arose In splendor which made the world stare. It had magnificent possibilities. It forgot Ood. It hated justice. It hugged its crime. It baited on Its high march. It reeled undei the blow of calamity. It fell. And ax it was going down, all the despotlsnix of earth from the top of bloody thrones began to About, "Aha, so would wc have it," while struggling and oppress ed people looked out from dungeon ban; with teurs and groans and cries o; untold agony, me tu rn or most and tht* woe oi these uniting in tht exclamation, "Look yonder! there fell n great star from heaven, burning a* it were a lump, and it fell upon the third part of the rivers and upon the fountains of waters; and the name ol the star Is called Wormwood!" tst. James the Less was thrown from a pinnaele or whir of the ti tnple and then (eaten to death with u fuller's dub, 01. John was put Into a caldron ol | boiling oil at Home and escaped death. | He atterwurd died a uulurnl death at Kphesuu in Asia. WOMEN OK NQTI, The Countess of Inmiaven sings it the ti;!ug< etio'r. Ta te's truly daughter has H arried M Du bet* mm ui he lute ilirei uv of th< Beaux Art; ’though htuught up .v. i > I'm test..nt vlin Tatui was tunu.id it ' a Ki u au Catholic church Mis Scrub Francos lilt k I mi beet cwsbirr ut tb> First Nutl.tml tumk * I It ktingtou, lint, fir bitten years. Hbi I ». * also i liiseii s litre, tor St the Una she sum • di d her lather SS eashler ll mi. Mum Ftiiiui Thursby, the Jrilgk'fo I e.t.ger, sears s handsome ilvci reitvl I innsietlng uf s splendid ItmtUule* !a I I quaint gold seeing. *H»h etas pee seated to ker s# a token ul iulwiriiiM I by tbe Cast uf sit tbe Hum las Mim Frames K Willard, lady lt«tt) ! Nometeet and Mrs ISktsall bmttb n it | bee lbs central My ire* at tbe ceikstPi i meeting uf tbe llritisb W'i man's T> m f himmim Mt& Inn Mine Wtlisrd. s.ks ! ta Ike guest at Lady ttumeieet, la rs leliilg I'liHitg UKllitivsi in tis.l numerous Fkgl.sk loan*. Mr* Allis Freeat.ae. I aimer ex pr si debt uf Wellesley t ul legs, be but 11 Venice Mb* kan sotpled Ik* milts tit n ml tk« A mar teak Missionary A son ctkt.uk In be one of tke sg.sksts k> he labile* ml tbe snaotiaiMS tk M.s'tta Mil IV tuber Her eabject will be 'IMm esiianal Kqnipm**l lor Mtamos ay Par .it* “ THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON XIII., SUNDAY JUNE 2* —A REVIEW. Oslil.D Taatl "KopoBfanno anil ttamla • lon of Mm hhonld Ho Proacliad In llta Hama Among All Natlona*’ — l.nka *4i47. K ham Ix'cn .tudyfng Ihn Ufa of Chrlat. a. rooordod In l.uko, fo /'' J Ilk MWtka And now at tha ' ion. no nhnuld \$fi rovlow that Ufa at a nholo. downing morn fully no flirt portion / » "Iomkimk 14 tlie laat thrna nioullia. W« ham lM*«n ktudy ,uk i ho pario now wo will aludy II ao * wholn. Wo hava b««n It wara, looking at p a r l I '' u I a i vlarn through a lalononpn, rayaallng * brlghton*. and tlnla that no unaldod »y« ' .in pot: nivn notv wo will look nl lh« wholn ,'ky w Mi n.l ii. htuulllul rnnafrllkilonn ahowlng tha *i >r.» of (lod. Tho Individual «yoiiIy ar« llko lonooa wrllian nn tha «hy in lalr.ora o lar.o t.vM ill Yr«* *•* Ttwirtwi AMP W'iMTlNO. 4 It W »•*' . I Wamln »*. C II r»r*lil#'» l>lM'»»#rr<»i. r III Tin* f#r ^llir**l (Ufii £♦ IV Itlf I'lrh 4*u «nd £ I.AUAniM ^ MUfllRKK A-* a jS 'if lA»4rVn JlM'tMl ¥ V, T«*« l^p^r* III RtNl K«*#r>i/»i v, V|, liMwHU I'rtirr Mk»r"U VII. <if ttw» 1’iiHMln. Ilf, Mii|»|m i at IMiinnjr. April f _ . . . „ . Mi;*pa*, Triumphal Kotry. April i .. WonttAy, Cli'an»tfii| <»f Win Oi/ifiln, April », VIII <lN»t H«)r »f TrMihllitf In T«>*WAf, lb“ T»in|»l" A pill 4 l,»**t limy *f J«*«M>** I'ulillc Miniotry '4 ... ToWAIiIm ***nM0 toft ill* 1 * * mirw il t»> lil» <llWil|»l»,»i M»» (P olivnt, mi ttW l<M»t oajai ^ Men* *t B*Cti»liy. AptH'li. 1 _ A* v fjont’i «u|<|rf^. Thmimi,. A (Kv-ktiliiKi Apr ill., U«illM»UW'( MlOMlgtot# ftlOAl, A pi H 7 ¥l Arrent *n4 Trial* KaiU ( imi/i * io»», * it t'hH'U |i«i»i It And Hurlnl. » tv A . « *. Hat , In Wia Tomb. April 4 £ TE^u7r«Mi7~ ; *•»»**“ g Klv*‘ App* Ar«»ii'»» i April » .a* f' Ap|*i*ArAi»<^« , I® <iar*« asr In all. I __ U/ -—-1 £ AwAtMtaf). j ***** I1* ^ LESSONS OK THE QUARTER TABUJL.ATKO. ,h*t we run »e* but * nentenee »t a time, though full of meaning and hleaaln* Now we will read the atory which tho **n tuner* ferui, and aw deeper meaning* and r - I Clve fuller lileanfng. The culmination of Cbrbit'n work wn* tan crurlllKlon, Le»non XI. Here hi found Ur atonement of »ln; the proof of the Ka'hn.-'a r.ndlnea* to forgive, the hlgheat maul flon of the love of Ood, tho ntrongeet me five* Ui lead tnen to repent of ein hope fear, duly, love. Lennon I warn* u» again*! nln *0 '.bat wo may repent and come to the croak. Lennon II attract* by It* heavenly feats', and u rn), the raoet pressing Invitation. Lennon 111 nhown how «n go antray, the evila whleh follow, and Clod’* welcome to the peni tent. Lennon IV nhown u* a picture of the non world, to help u» to live aright In thir woild. Lennon V t cache* about the faith that nave* and taken hold of Jenun. Lennon VI *how* un how to u»e the heavenly power*, without whleh we nhall fall. Lennon VII l* a parable netting forth tho evil of neglect, and the blcss»lng of faithful nervier and of accepting Jenna an our king. larnnon VIII allow* how Joaun offered hlm Ki-lf an the Me**lah. Lennon IX nhown the calamities which com* from rejecting him. Leaned X In tho preparation of the disciple* for the dutlen that were to come upon them after the departure of Jeruss. Thun all the*e Icnnon* lead un to the croa* and It* power to k*vo, Lo**on XL Lennon XII I* tho beginning of the new erst, tho coming again of Ohrlat to found hi* new kingdom and hriug It to nuccoais. It make* tho ora of hope, of life, of nalvailon. of me power of Use Holy Spirit. More than any other event In all hlatory, II marku Ilia dividing line be tween the pant and the future, tho old and the new. liooct .Mmnnard mi*t llentth* St, I/Oiils' health board hope* to Im prove manner* and Increase sanitation by law. it will ask the municipal aa Hembly, a* the municipal legislative board in St. Lout* i» termed, to adopt an ordinance making itn misdemeanor for any person to expectorate on tho floor* of street cars or other pubit: coti veyuuce*, or in hotel corridors, thea ter*. public hall* and pianosof worship, i ulmo that the porter* or person* In • barge of tho cars and public place* t*» r, mined to furnish cuspidors in *uttt ricat number, and mat thsy be requited to clean the vessel* dally, usiug some | disinficling Paid to be approved by tho board of health. K.MI «» s • hstr in the museum si Cape Iowa i. •hewn au uld fashiuued. blgo b*« k d wooden chair, to which attache* a weird story It »a related ihsi toe • hair la the oa* la which the Hut b llwtMBur He Noorde wu* touad si tiug dtatl a lew wurudlta afl* l the «»»* u lien el a soldier whom he sshtsgcsd to be banged and who oh lih doom being proaouaced. srtb’tialy tailed op>*h h # j read* mast to m company him to thg I ihtotte of the supreme Judge ........ THh Haiti op gt.*c rwciTV. A* adyerttstag aev«li» >» ih* ahap* •I a hand, actuated hy aa WWi u otwr, a hu h ls.;t>Mi to tho paasei l<, ha* h*o« placed .,a tits tooiget hy a* Ksglish lr« Th# ita* of slectrl* light* hv a*<d#g *»* srar th# Ursa vtlts# no the purpose *d sttmwialiwg ih* growth of «egv«*h»*a l* m th* iocrwsss. y.vper•*«.* has shown that #**«it*<at tssslis may ho oh | talked horn hooding th* sat dew* with the ray* of are tights