The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, October 23, 1891, Image 3

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THE LORD'S WAK.
Dr.
Talmago Discourses on
Christian Conflict
tho
Firitiiiron ami l"iirncstiic KHVviitinl Tlio
JJJhlo IliwMlRlitiriit Weapon iT Cliriit-
iatis Ilnril Hlowi Xecwwary In the
Itattlo With .Sin.
In a late sermon at Brooklyn on the
rhristian warfare llcv. T. DeWitt Tal-
;o took his text from II. Samuel.
xml 1J: And ins imriu ciavu uhwj
cio sword." The preacher said:
A treat general of King David was
Elea.ar, the hero of the text The
Philistines opened a battle against him,
and his troops retreated. The cowards
ilcil. Klea.ar and three of his com
rades went into tho battle and swept
the field, for four men with God on
their side are .stronger than a whole
battalion with Col against them. "Fall
back!" shouted the commander of the
rhilistme army. The cry ran along
the host: "Fallback!" Klea.ar, hitv
hiTsn -pt the field, throws himself on
the ground to rest, but the muscles and
sine vis of his hand had been so long
bent around the hilt of th sword that
the hilt was embedded in the flesh, and
the cold wire of the hilt had broken
through the skin of the palm of the
hand, and he could not drop this sword
which he had so gallantly wielded.
'Hit hand clave unto the sword." That
is what I call magnificent fighting for
the Lord Cod of Israel. And we want
more of it- I look at F.lea.ar's hand,
and I come to the conclusion that he
took tin- sword with a very tight grip.
ThecoAardsv..io ii.-d had no trouble
in dropping their swords. I'.ut I'le:i
7ar hand clave to the sword.
o. my friends in this Christian eon
llict v..- v int a t t'-r grip of the gos-
el
IWI
vi. u .11 , a t 'tiler grasp m w.r
rl f.f till! trillll. It
p O.l
sweeping our hand around
book
until the tips of the lingers clutch at
the words- "In the beginning I. id '
........ t., I tin. lu:ivi'iis and the earth I
iniii' 'i i' --
like an infidel a great ileal better than
I do one of these namby-pamby Chris
tians who hold a part of the truth and
let the i est go P.y mira-le Cod pre
lervcd this Kible just ih it is. and it is
a Damascus blade The severest test
to which a sword can be put in a sword
factory is to wind the blade around a gun
barrel like a ribbon, and then when the
sword is let loose it Hies back to its ow n
shape. So the .sword of Cod's truth has
been fully tested, and it is bent this
way and that way. and wound this
way and that way, but it nluaj s comes
back to its own shape. Think of it! A
book written eighteen centuries ago.
and some of it thousands of years ajro, j
and yet in our time the sale of this
l'.ook is more than -JO. (MM) copies every
week and more than a million copies a
year. I say now that a bonk which is
divinely inspired and divinely kept and
divinely scattered is a weapon worth
holding a tight grip of. Yon give up
the ISible, you give up any part of it,
-mid you give up pardon and peace, and
life and Heaven. I. not be ashamed,
young man, to have the world know
that yon are a friend of the Itible. This
book is the friend of all that is good,
and is the sworn enemy of all tliaf-i
bad. .O, hold on to it. Do net take
frArt.tnjf-i iwwitywy7trib rest away.
Hold on to :;11 of it.
There are so many people now who
do not know. You ask them if the s ml
is immortal, and they say: "I guess it
is I don't know; perhap it is, perhaps
it isn't." Is the Itible true? "Well,
perhaps it is, and perhaps it isn't; per
haps it may be figurative-, and per
haps it may be partly, and perhaps it
may not be at all." They despise what
they eall the apostolic creed; but if
their own eree I were written out it
would read like this: "I believe in
nothing.the maker of Heaven and earth,
and in nothing which it hath sent,
which nothing was born of nothing,
and which nothing was dead and
buried and descended into nothing, and
arose from nothing, and ascended t.i
nothing, and now sitteth at the right
band of nothing. 1 believe in the holy
agnostic church and in the e.miniunion
of nothingarians, and in the forgiveness
of nothing, and the resurrection of
nothing, and in the life that never shall
be. Amen!"
That is the creed of tens of thousands
of people in this day. If von have a
mind to adopt such a theory I will not.
"1 believe in Cod the Father Almighty,
.Maker ot Heaven anil earth, anil in
.lesus Christ, and in the holy catholic
church, and in the communion of saints
and in the life everlasting Amen." O,
when I see Klea.ar taking such a stout
grip of the sword in the battle against
sin and for righteousness I come to the
conclusion that we ought to take a
stouter grip of Cod's eternal truth, the
sword of righteousness
As 1 look at Klcazar's hand I also
notice his spirit of sad forgetfulness.
He did not notice that tie hilt of the
sword was eating throi:h the palm of
his hand. He did r't know it hurt
him. As he went oe into the con.'iict
he was so anxious -r the victory that
he forgot himself "i that hilt uilgh'
l-o never so deenl "to the pain of his
hand it could n' disturb h:m "His
hand clave tint li,lJ swori." O. my
brothers and s.ms. let us gi into the
Christian con'1 with tlie spirit of ab
negation. WO cares whether the
world praiseUsor denounces us? What
do we earfr misrepresentation or
abuse or Tsecntion in a conflict
like this? Let us forget ourselves
That man ko is afraid of getting his
hand hurl"iil never kill a Philistine.
Who carevhether you get hurt or not
if von geki victory? Oh, how many
Christiar there are who are all the
time v iyiS about the way the world
treats ?". They are so tired and
thev at so abused and they are so
temptewhen Kleazar did not think
whethc10 ',a a kand or an arm or a
foot. 11 he wanted was victory
yc how- men forget themselves in
world' achievement. We have often
Sien 1-11 who in order to achieve
wory success will forget all physical
fatjie and all annoyance and all ou
st. if- dust after the battle of York-
PH
i I r I .MI
-ft e
Tnvnt c-oiiifsT?WWp.iIiii. l ''
the
" to. iu the American revolution, a
uAttXian. wounded, was told he must
vc his limbs amputated, and they
were about to fasten him to the sur
geon's table for it was long before
tbe merciful discovery of amestheties.
p He said: "No; don't fasten me to that
table; get me a violin. A violin was
brought to him, and he said: "Now go to
work as I begin to play," and for forty
minutes, during the awful pangs of am
putation, he moved not a muscle nor
dropped a note, while he played some
sweet tune.
Oh, is it not strange that with the
music of the gospel of Jesus Christ, and
with this grand march of the church
militant on the way to become the
church triumphant, we cannot forget
ourselves and forget all pang and all
sorrow and all persecution and all per
turbation. We know what men ac
complish, under worldly opposition.
Men do not shrink back for antagonism
Of for hardships 0. how much, men
will endure for worldly knowledge and
for worldly success, and yet how little
we endure for .lesus Christ- How many
Christians there are that go around
saying: "0 my hand, my hand, my
hurt hand; don't you see there is blood
on the hand, and there is blood on the
sword?" while Kleazar, with the hilt
imbedded in the fiesh of his right hand
does not know it.
MiiM I ba carried to tho skies
On How cry hod of i-me.
While other-) fought to win tlic nrlzo
Or H.-ilIod tlirmiKli Mocirtr &?
What have wesufTered in comparison
with those who expired with suffoca
tion, or were burned, or were chopped
to pieces for the truth's sake? We talk
of the persecution of olden times. There
is just as much persecution going on
now in various ways. In 184'J, in Mada
gascar, eighteen men were put to death
for Christ's sake. They were to be
hurled over the rocks and before they
were hurled over the rocks, in order
to make their death the more dread
ful in anticipation, they were put in
baskets and swung to and fro over the
precipice that they might see how
many hundred feet they would have to
be dashed down, and while they were
swinging in tlie.se bas'ects over the
rocks they sang:
Jr.Mis lover of my oiil.
Lftin to Tliv lioHcmi 11 y,
Wli'le tin billows near me ro'I,
Wliilu the t uipct still U lilitli.
Then they were dashed down to
death. O, how much others have en
dured for Christ, and how little we en
dure for Christ. We want to ride to
Heaven in a Pullman sleeping ear, our
feet on soft plush, the bed made up
early so we can sleep all the way, the
black porter of death to wake us up
only in time to enter the ('olden City.
As I look at I'lca.nr's hand I come to
the conclusion that he has done a great
deal of hard hitting. I am not sur
Iriseil"when I see that these four men
Kleazar and his three companions
drove back the army of Philistines,
that Klcazar's sword clave to his hand.
every time he struck an enemy
h one end of the sword the other
I wounded him. When he took hold
the sword the sword took hold of
i O. we have found an enemy that
mot be conquered 13' rosewater and
t speeches. It must be sharp stroke
d straight thrust. There is mtem
raiice and there is fraud and there is
ust and there are ten thousand battal
ions of iniquity, armed Philistine in
i.nuty. How are they to be captured
and overthrown? Soft sermons in
morocco cases laiu nowu in iruntoi uu
cquisi'e audience will not do it You
hae got to call things by their right
names.
We have got to expel from our
churches Christians who eat the sacra
ment on Sunday and devour widow's
houses all the week. We have got to
stop our indignation against the Hittites
and the .lebusites and the (Jergishites
and let these poor wretches go and ap
ply our indignation to tho modern
transgressions which need to be
dragged out and slain. Ahabs here.
I lc rods here. .Ie.ebels here. The
massacre of the infants here. Strike
.'or Coil so hard that while you shu' the
mii the sword will adhere to your own
laud I tell von, my friends, we want
.. fc JMHIYl"i THIll -lobn Weslevs
1 l
in onry jusi eiiouiiu.i.u,ti.jMrT ifcnaifj
- . 1. ........ m.'. ,
daneeiUwrf,y ani then to must
send a missive, delicate as ae tiding
card, to ask the old black gi:i of sin
if he will not surrender. j
Women saved by the graejof God
and on glorious mission scnt,Vtaincd
from Sabbath classes because tJr new
hat is not done. Churches till shook
our cities with great revivalnding
around to ask some demonstrate wor
shiper if he will not pleascjo say
"amen" and "hallelujah". a lit soft
er. 11 seems as u in our cuurvs we
wanted a baptism of cologne uibalm
of a thousand flowers, when wcctual
ly need a baptism of fire from tlLord
Cod of Pentecost. Hut we are sijfraid
somebody will criticise our sernAs, or
criticise our prayers, or ertticH our
religious work, that our auxiei for
the world's redemption is lost ijthe
fear that we will get our hand urt,
whi'o Kleazar went into tho ciiet,
"and his hand clave unto the swoi"
Hut I see in the next place wit a
hard thing is was for Kleazar tfet
j his hand and his sword parted, 'he
muscles and the sinews had bee so
long grasped around the sword he old
not drop it when he proposed todnit,
nil his three comrades, I
There are in the United States to-day
many aged ministers of the gospel,
ti'hey are too feeble now to preach. In
'the cliurch records the word opposite
' their names is "emeritus," or the words
I are, "a minister without charge," They
wer. a heroic race. They had small
salaries, and but few Woks, and thev
srain spring freshets to meet their ap
pointments. Hut they did in their day
:i mighty work for (Kid. They took off
more of the heads of Philistine iniquity
than you could count from noon te sun
down. You put that old minister of
the giTspel now into a prayer meeting,
or occasional pulpit, or a sick rooui
where there is some one to be comfort
ed, and it is the same old ring to his
voice and the same old story of pardon
and peace and Christ and Heaven. His
hand has so long clutched. Hie sword in
Christian conflict he canaot drop it
"II is hand clave unto the sword."
O, if there ever was anyone who had
a right to retire from the conflict it was
old Joshua. Soldiers come back from
battle and have tho names of the bat
tles on their flags, showing where they
distinguished themselves, and it is a
very appropriate inscription. Look at
the flag of old Gen. Joshua. On it,
Jericho, Gibeon, Hazar. City of Ai, and
instead of the stars sprinkled an the
flag the sun and the moon which stood
still. There he is 110 vears old. He is
lying flat on his back, but he is preach
ing. His dying words are a battle
charge against idolatry, and a rallying
cry for the Lord of Hosts as he says:
"Behold this day I go the way of all
the earth, aud God hath not failed to
fulfill his promise concerning Israel."
His dying hand clave unto the sword.
There is the headless body of Faul
on the road to Ostoa. His great brain
aud his great heart have been severed.
The elmwood rods had stung him fear
fully. When the corn ship broke up he
swam ashore, coming up drenched with
the brine. Every day since that day
when the horse reared under him in
the suburbs of Damascus, as the super
natural light felL down to this day
when he is sixty-eight years of age and
decrepit from the prison coll of the
Mamertine, he has been outrageously
treated, and he is waiting to die.
How does he spend his last hours?
nHl
l niirivim - - ..... ,-, . 4 g----------------
'itll v
er
nin ins inree comranos. i siiokiv l
ifitfim
1 H
IH
mnHiH u
Telling the world how badly ho feel
and describing tho rheumatism that he
got in prison, the rheumatism inflicting
his limbs, or the neuralgia piercing his
temples, or the thirst that feven his
tongue? O, no. His last words are the
battle shout for Christendom: "I am
now ready to be offered, and the timo
of my departure is at hand; I have
fought tho good fight" And so Lb
dying hand clave unto the sword.
I preach this sermon as a tonic. I
want you to hold the truth with in
eradicable grip, and I want you to
strike so hard for Clod that it will react,
and while you take the sword the
sword will take you.
You noticed that the officers of the
northern army a few 3'car.s ago assem
bled at Denver, and you noticed that the
officers of the southern army had as
sembled at Lexington. Soldiers com
ing together arc very apt to recount
their experiences and to show their
scars Hero is a soldier who pulls up
his sleeve and saj-s: "There, I was
wounded in that arm," and shows the
scar. And another soldier pulls down
his collar anil says: "There, I was
wounded in the neck." And another
soldier says:
"I have had no tiso of
that limb since the gunshot fracture." i
O, my friends, when the battle of ,
life is over, and the resurrectfon has
come, and our bodies rise from the
dead, will we have on us any scant of
bravery for God? Christ will be there
all covered with scars Sears on the '
brow, scars on the hand, scars on the
feet, scars all over the heart won in the
battle of redumption. And all Heaven '
will sob aloud with emotion as they
look at thoso scars Ignatius will bo
there, and he will point out the place
where tho tooth and the paw of the
lion seized him iu the Coliseum,
and John Huss will be there, and ho
will show where the coal first scorched
thc foot on that day when his spirit most uniformly encouraging. At Pitts
took wing of flame from Constance, burgh the demand for manufactured
McMillan and Campbell and Freeman, iron and for structural forms is im
American missionaries in Inilm. will ! nviiu but the eo:il xti-ilti continues.
there -the men who with their wivet
and children went down in the awful
massacre at Cawn pore, and thev will
show where the daggers of the Sepoys
struck them. The Waldenses will be
there, nml they will show where
their bones were broken on that day
when the Picdmontcso soldiery
pitched them over the rocks And
there will bo those there who
took care of tho sick and who looked
after the poor, and they will have evi
dences of earthly exhaustion. And
Christ, with His .scarred hand waving
over the scarred multitude, will say:
"You suffered with Mo on earth; now
be glorified with Me in Heaven." And
then the great organs of eternity will
take up the chant, and St. John will
play: "These are they who came out
of great tribulation and had their robes
washed and made white in the blood of
of the lamb." '
But what will your chagrin and mine '
be if it shall be told that day on the I
streets of Heaven that on earth we!
shrank back from all toil and sacrifice
and hardship. No scars to show the
heavenly soldiery. Not so much as one
ridge on the palm of the hand to show
that, in the battle for Cod and the '
truth, we just once grasped the sword
so firmly, and struck so hard that tho
vord and the hand stuck together, and
e hand clave to the sword. O, my
rd Jesus, rouse us to Thy service.
Thy saint in all tnl ulorlom war
Shall coiiiiier tli(.ui;li they "lie;
Th v sec the triumph from alar,
Anil efzis It with th eve.
When that Illustrious day slnti rl-io.
An I a I Thy arinh s -hiim
In rolies of victory through tho sklct,
1 he g orv shall he Thine.
INSECT PESTS
IN FRANCE.
DciaHtatliit;
I'lelils in
tho Ahftfiire ot
Itlriln.
The insect plagues with which tho
French fields are ravaged remind us
how delicate is tho balance of nature,
and how easily upset by human inter
ference. The equally divided system
of inheritance brought in by the
French revolution marked the begin
ning of an era of small and careful
culture. Under this system the pro
ductiveness of the land went up ten and
a hundred fold S precious did tho
soil become in the eye of the peasant
that hedges were abolished and a thin
fence of wattle took its place where a
line of demarcation was required. But
with the destruction of the hedges
whole tribes of birds were extinguished
lor want oi nesting room, ami ucn
they went the insects whose multiply- j
ing powers had only been counteracted I
by the fanner's feathered allies were .
free to exercise them unchecked. Now ,
the larva of the gnat or tho white grub ,
of the turnip will, if it enters a held,
destroy often twenty and sometimes
fifty cent, of its value. i
The microscopists have discovered '
-' .. .. .1
that these pernicious larviu are them-
elves liable to diseases, caused by tho
deadly parasitica organ-
,sm.s J his much was made clear
:,y the researches of 1 asteur
ind Koch. and it is strange !
that the loaded tubes of bacillic
bouillon manufactured by these scien-
ists after being first hailed as a spe-
ifie for saving life, should now be
1 . , , ' ii t
welcomed as a certain means of de-
stroving it This is the application of
the principle. The farmer who recog-
..;.o. ;- i,n.ir ; tt,. .... i .? I
what grublet' attacks this grub with
the deadliest virulence. He then orders
n ti,i... f.,n of tlio Hitl. tvir:isit..v nn.l .
pouring it over the mold, covers the
soup-piate vim anoiner, ano auows
the venom twenty-four hours for its I
work. The grubs haje now the taint
Grai- That Caup 1'aUr.
There am some ve.y poisonous grasses
in the world. The plants are not so,
but they acquire their deadly properties
from certain fungi, which attack them
and invade thoir tissue. Cattle eat
them and perish. Sometimes the seeds
get mixed with grain and poison peo-
PfVnrt
""i
and is known as "lolium.'
"Tremblinc
nizes the presence of a grub in his field eoniameu a qinuiiuv ".- u ....... .-. towing mitccr, i wo n.IUuni i-nwn
will collect a couple of dozen by hand me uyuamue carirmKc.-s ii k"- congress were cnovn ior ....- uosu,,,-j
Ind put them into a soup-plate full of powder and some fuses In addition to Vear at the doling meeting to-day: .
mold, where they can run to hiding. another bomb with fuse attached President Hon. II B Hayes of 1 re-
He then consults the vade-mecum. ' was found in the frame work of the iont. U: ric-president Hoel-ff Bnk-
or (loam on u em. ana u piameu o in , xncn ,,avc eompleted the amalgamation . -- . f h,.r . , orrr lM nk...
likely parts ot the licin, wm spreau it of the two onlers and adjourned sine I "' . ": , Z nntUr of ctnls on which'
among their kind, till the whole field H& The name of the association will Xi '
is rid of the pet. What becomes of hcnccforth the "International lnJhcn I
the auxiliary legions after they have , Krolhcrhooil of RRilwaj. Track -ore- f tLlllZ uJT 1 iS of ,
lone man s service anil no tooit remains ,., The followin-' otlicers were' .
, , -.ii. . . men. i n. muon mh ouicvr cri. s.vto to anwar Monlar morniar in court
for them suitable to eat .w not yet re- loctod: John Wlls00t cf Tennew . 0J; in lhe cban?B of e.xpo5ing
vcaed by the men of science. -N. prailli chief foreman: IL P Bridges, of 4 . tlir nntl &, Th,,
lrib.me.
pic. One such species has recently , c swaxne. uum .-. .were atiracuni oy ine Ai.arvja-iei-
taken root in this country, and it mav , chilian fngees but there were none , marcll macfor .W. The track was
ranv trouble vet It came from Eurori on board. Among the passengers was firm and fxvL Allcrton apparel to b
C
banks of streams or canals Their
rxyots form a complex network beneath
the surface and hold the earth together.
Sugar cane is a grass and so is sorghum.
There are about three thousand two
hundred species of grasses in the w v rid,
aud of this number the United States
has eight hundred of all sorts marsh
grasses, desert grasses, etc There is a
curious forage grass in Brazil that is like
very much magnified oats; growing to j
the height 01 twelve teet rrom some ,
grasses paper is made. The only genus J
of plants peculiar to tho arctic is a rare j
and beautiful grass indigenous to Mel-1
ville island. Philadelphia Press.
When a man gets ia a towering
passion there is no corresponding tit
ration in popular steeto,
grass" it is called, because it brings on lellfcanaivauo. awpwinw:. -- " , two away en even terms, iviniarcti
a sort of palsy. Two or three kinds of Salvador quite ready to go to war . leadin:: a halt length at the blf and
coarse marsh grass are used, particu- with ber neighbors." he said, but will lcnh snd a half at the three quarters
larlv in Holland, to keep the soil from n l,rins " nJ trouble by any orert ,n thc ,tretch Doblcgare Detmirch th
blowing or Inline washed away on the' act-' The recent trouble m the city o. w-h5p bol Allcrton came indcr ti
CONFIDENCE UNABATED.
Dnn'n Itrport S,MTlut MirprUlnj; Aettr
Ity I'rv.ilU-ltiiIiir In tlir South anil
Vrt imprfititic.
Sr.vr Yokk. Oct. 17. IL C. Dun.fc Co.'?
weekly review of trade says:
Business throughout the west and
south is strong and improving At east
ern centers thrre is less satisfaction
and the expected results from the har
vesting of large crops are more slowly
realized. Yet the volume of all trad'o
is as large as it ever has been, and for
October may even surpass the unpre
cedented record of last year.
The prevailing confidence in tho
future of business continues unabated
and is seen even in some branches i
which complain most of dull trade at
j present 1 he iron industry illustrates ,
the contradictory conditions. The out- I
put of furnaces in luast October : was j preferably "Christian unity,' instead
lM.Ol., tons weekly, yet this enormous i of "union." and "I tuteil Kingdom" in
production is marvelously ab-sorled. stead of dtvat Britain, which excluded
The demand for use in produe- Ireland.
ing all kinds of farm machinery J JJCV Dr. P.alph AU-remmbie. of Kn
and implements Is far greater than gland, regretted that the r.rocefdings
it has been in any previous year and of the morning had not been charae'er
the quantity of iron thus used is enor-i icd by that spirit of harmony which
mous On the other hand the wool t,ecmcd to le proper in the considc ra-
manufactories are short of orders in I
the men's wear department though '
Chicago clothiers are buying more j
freely. Hut, on the whole, clothiers I
have not taken nuirly their usual sup- I
ply of goods and many of the mills are '
closing. The demand for dress goods !
is strong, while knit goods are dull as j
well as carpets. Cotton manufacture
is active without change in prices
The demand for copper is large, but i
a rumor ol resumption by the Ana-
couda put down the price of the lake
to 1J 1" cents, and tin is weak at :!0. 1
cents with lead 4. Y The market for
anthracite coal is better, but circular
price., are not realized.
The reports from other cities are al-
At Cleveland trade exceeds last year's
considerably, and is brisk at Cineiu-
nati and especially in dry iroods At
Chicago the clothing and dry
goods trades are active, and the
movement of farm products large,
though receipts of cattle fall lie
low last year's. At Detroit manufact
uring is active and factories running
full time. At Milwaukee, St Paul, .
Minneapolis, Omaha and Kansas City
business is very active, especially in
lumber at Minneapolis, with advance
in prices, while the output of flour is
r.i.",0()() barrels per week, against !!.
(100 last year. At St Louis trade is un
usually strong. At Jacksonville the
largest orange crop ever grown prom
ises improvement
Speculation has not been very heavy
though corn and oats are sustained in
tho face of great crops and wheat is a
shade higher. Cotton is a quarter
lower. Pork products are lower, coffee
unchanged and oil half a cent lower,
The supplies of money are ample here
nnd at all western centers Foreign
trade though smaller than a year ago
hen the movement was extraordinary
is larger than in previous years and the
heavy exports ot iireaiisiiitis promise
further reinforcement of gold from
Kurope
FIGHT AMONG SAILORS.
Clilllitii Hint American Sailor Kukhkc In
Ilrailly I'Uht In the M reels or Vttlpsi-
lalni.
Nku Yokk, Oct 17. The Herald has
n Valparaiso special which says:
Three, perhaps four, men-of-war's ;
men were Killed aim several "
less injured in a uesperaie ugin men
with a number of Chilian sailors.
The Chilians did not do all the iight-
ing, for when the fight was ended a
number of them were found to be pret
ty badly hurt, though so far as can be
as-ortained now none of them were i
killed. j
The American blue jackets who were
engaged in the battle were from the,
United States cruiser Baltimore and
the Chilians were from the various war
ships now in the harbor.
It is impossible at present to get full
particulars of tho fight or the names of t
the killed and wounded.
,, , ,. ... ,1... '
1 Here lire several .itoiuhb .i:. i- u.c
,.-:..:.. r i... .ii(r....il- On,, nf tli.on !
III IIU VI ,.v.,...,.v....fc. ...... ..- . ........ ,
which seems plausible, is this: Kver j
since the triumph of the junta there ,
has been a feeling among the lower
classes of the people of marked hostil- ,
jty to the Americans and the blue jack- ,
ets from the American war ships were
sometimes subjected to insult
R lS alleged that a party of men from
the Baltimore, ashore on liberty, met,
with the Chilian men-of-war's men. '
The hatred of the "Yankees" led to j
M,me insulting remark, which was re- (
.scnted by one of the hotter-headed j
Americans and this brought on the gen- !
.- .. ...
eral light which was attended with
such fatal results,
There was much excitement in the
city when the news of the fight spread
The unfortunate aff.t.r is much regret-
ted ... othc.a circles and among the
better class of citizens.
Tho llonili Klmlrrs.
Vikn-va. Oct IT. An investigation
made into the finding yesterday of a
ilrnimito bomb on the Keichenbunr
oynamiu. oomo on im, in.ii. """K (
railroad bridge in Bohemia resulted in
."seovery oi an iron - ...-.. ,
bridge. It is lclieved these had been
concealed there in ordc r to avoid seiz-'
ure as a result of domiciliary visits by
the police.
AnialBimtloii Comnlrtnl.
s , (.u j-The committees
of the i;rotherhoodsof Kailwav Section '
roremcn and Order of Railway Track-
Kansas, vice grand chief; MikeO'Dowd, j
- a --.- .j
1 of Kansas City, secretary and treasurer, j
, L. C Havis of Kansts. and M. J. Lord, j
of Oeorgia, organizers.
w Front lanina-
Sax Ur.ANCisco. Oct IT. The steamer
Van Burcn, Capt Crane, arrnetl Irom
Panama yesterday. It wxs thought
. .. -,ti: ., v: ,-.. ir.
lir- iahioso .tiaiianu,ui .-".. "- "
. -- .- 17- a . n .
p,u - 1,, - ,ill,0 "" a'"' ." "T.
we arresi 01 a prominent . j --
cer 01 trestuciii. iuii--v,
Kallvraj- Note.
The Southeastern Mississippi Valley j
association will disband next weejc "
The Wheeling fc Lake Erie directors
declared a, quarterly dividend of I1 per
cent '
The Northern Pacific report for the
year shows increased earnings
ar shows increased earnings of over
52,000,000.
A rise in the Mississippi rrrer has re-
suited in relievingthe freight blockade
at BirvVs Point Mo-
The Texas commissioneri restored
certain rates on cotton to the old fig-
ures in
charge
extence.
j:ore
ther Uk
I t ...... T.I v. m Wi m v -k-w rm . - ar.
ECUMENICAL COUNCIL.
Ttir llrrtlirrn Noinrwh it K&rllei! Htrr th"
rrrl MttloM Ut lr.rf1ln(
Washington. Oct. lft Iter Dr Ioi
nellr. of the Irish Methodist church,
presided over the Kcumcnienl Mrth
olLst council at tie; lcgiunlng of the
eighth day's ses.v on. The firt bud
ncss was further consideration of th
report of tho huMns.s committee. In re
sponse to a memorial on Mclhtli.t fed
eration. Dr Stephenson, for the com
mittee, suggested a few alterations in
the original text.
Her Dr Collier, of Kugland. thought
it would U ln'tter to adopt no resolu
tion relative to Methoilist union nt this
t inn. i,.t ii-tinn jfiilit Im ntnrt!ftl
......... ...... .... ..'.. - .M.. ... ..
j a-s approaching a violation of the rules
that the council had agreed to accept
The resolution should read "unttv." or
turn of the subject of unity It remind-
ed him of the old hymn. "Into a world
of rutfians seut I walk on hostile
ground."
A deprecating murmur went up nt
this quotation, but hardlj- had Dr.
A lfrcrombie taken his seat before
there was a strugg'.e for the floor,
Dr. Ieonard, of New York, insisted
upon recognition, although the chair
had already accorded the floor to Dr.
Kin
Immediately there followed a scene
of great confusion and disorder, the
chair refusing to recognize Dr. b'oiianl
and the latter shouting repeatedly:
"Mr Chairman! Mr. ( hairiuau' I rise
to a point of order "
Nothing could 1m done iu the way of
transacting business and considerable
warm feeling Ve!o.el. Dr. I'avey,
an Knglishuian, e.nle 1 out that if the
delegate persisted in rebelling against
ehair's orders he shouM If sus
landed, where ip hi an Irish delcgat,
attempted to move Dr. Leonard s .sus
pension. The chairman explained that
lie had no wish to sit down upon u
member, but that he had recognised
Dr. King first.
But Dr. Leonard was not content
Forcing his way toward the front, he
kept calling out. "Mr. Chairman, Mr.
Chairman!"
Dr. Lanaha-i, of Baltimore, exclaimed
that Dr. King had the floor and added:
"It is out of order for anybody to try
i to biilldoe the chair."
I These appeals had the desired effect
Dr. Leonard abandoned his effort to
make his point of order, and Dr King.
! the secretary, was leeognled. Ilvs
1 object, it appeared, was to post
' pone the further discussion of the
subject of federation until to-morrow
morning, and. although Mr. Hughes
and others urged that a vote Ik taken
at once on the adoption of the first res
olution on the ground that otherwise
the "wrangling" would le resumed to
morrow, Dr King's motion to adjourn
the debate prevailed by a vote of yeas
Pis, nays 1 Hi.
FATAL MIDNIGHT RIDE
Ait fill l.il r 'Ilirce ICfnrlfr H ln
VVaiitril to Urltc l' nml llliistrntr it
MltliiilcM l!iili'iin l.ot-oiiiotite.
Ciiirvi.o. Oct Hi -An uccident, re
sulting in theilealh of three members
of the Inter Ocean iiewspaHr staff and
the engineer and the serious injury of
several other passengers, occurred on
; . ..j,,,,;., ,,
al rrc.lo. Tlu-dead are:
Leonard Washburnc, sporting editor
of the Inter Ocean.
Fred W. Henry, a reporter who had
come here recently from Louisville.
J. A. McCaffertv, an artist, recently
from St Louis.
James Clark, engineer.
The train left Kvansville early yes
terday morning and proceeded safely
to Crete, where it ran into an open
switch. The three men who were killed
were on the engine. Henry and McCaf
ferty having gone out for tin purpose
of writing up and illustrating a mid
night ride on the fast train, and Wash-
I......... ...1... ,, .... rutllrlittllf tik I "l I t.?l fl
"111 III, ll' .- .v..... f, ... v ...v....
, 1r..i;.. Irh, l.niin,- iin...l
"" . " J
his friends on the train.
The accident came without warning
ind as the locomotive plunged from
i the track the four men were caught
and completely buried beneath the
........ .v-
Mr. vVr.vt.l.iirti.. ,s in.r lie.-n 1.L
mnn ,ast ni ,lt at Uu, Wt.,i,Hg f one
of ,lis j,,,,,.-,,. Thomas K Weddell.
assjs(.inl Cltv editor of the Inter Ocean,
The news of his tragic end was kept
fnjm Mr Weddell and his bride and the
h:ippv ceremony took place shortly
.,. IMK)r Washburne's K-dv reached
.,,. ;,
W .!
Tin- CiTiiiin MInWtiT llriiil.
Br.in is. o.-t l'l -Cuint Ludwig Von
Arco-Valley, minister of the German
- s .
)n ,.rof : ann p.rfo, IIK.,i
o ;?, )n th. & his stomach
i for some time past having refused to
receive any food. The operation was
' unsuccessful. The brother and sister
of Count Von A ro-Valley were at his
oeusaie wuen ne oi i
omr, r ,,,.. .,i.,.n ..Crr..
nrrsiti mi.i. ra.. cl .-.- me ;o.
ernoff. of Mansfield. O ; secretary. Iv.
John L M.lligan. of Allegheny City:
treasurer. Charles W. Jessup, of New
York city.
Ilnlilnl Itr Anthony t mtrV.
Nr.w Yof.h. Oct !. -Anthony Com
lock, with live assistants raided
teve" Brodie's saloons at IU and :tV.
p!e;cres were vami.-ii at -ii-vHk cv.
Bmlie xH:ht them in rarier a
Brodie says Comstock raideil
pictnres were valued at about 5301
vear atro.
.- f it
Vti.ii in -StiMiclit nt.
Lr.xl.sr.TOV. Ky.. Oct 1G Twonty-
4 five thousand peoplc.avitneiscd
,jn nCi. Tcstcnli?. The i
tbe trot-
raajoritT
in splendid condition. Walker vnt the
-. .
wire winner or .vK- -w
an.i laint ncats were a repeuun ot in-
ursu iim uv. ;i-s .ij;w -
!!ailwj !.
'-phe Illinois Centra! emtiwfor
thiee n:onhs show an increax of iM2.-
003.
The roads doing bosines in Tex.
j hare decided to u: th contitatIoa-
aijt- aaj rnlings of the state railroad
' rtraniLviio.
The LouisTille Sl Na.Vh.TUle road ha
been fised SWOby a Keciaefcycotirt for
', riolatiajr the Sunday law by repairing
its tracli on that day.
Grand Master Sargent, of the loca-
J motire firemen organization, deaie
the reported federation w:;h the coa
ductors orscizaU-Jn,
-iv iinHiir- wrtii' iu x --
STOCK ITEMS
A Crst-clavk cow, wll nrrl for, wn
any furm in the land K a tnliiw
comfort and cronooir.
Thi cow fur eeoMODir tl oc lXt
'ruma qntty of food wBl prodnco
tWr iwnt and l-st. milk and Imttor
Feed brood sows ots bran and U
sif al in connection with corn, and 4
. dep-nd upon com alu. Com V a
ro 1 fel w hen nsod in cnnnwtion rrlU
ceiirr materials bnt ll U njt a Cod
4es.d for brtxl -ws when usel cdu
lively Ca ueol jdenty o nughnss and
if thl i of a good quality awl tv n
lcr a comfortable khcltor. very Httle
grain will U neotsssry A llltU" Uran
and oihneal. or bran ami erieAl,
mako Hp a xvrr cxniiplet' ration with
roHgSuev
Thc Muil jvlat-s ttiralps earrots
ir other rVs if lKtilel aud Biitcl witJ
bran, wake a v holcsiMtt. nttrti
food for growing aad breilig hocx Br
pnvii!ing warm, dry qHrtr S-s f wxl
will Ue required to wmt-r tbHhn
thcr are left to lookout fortkemclvrv
Of 1I animals kept on the farm. th
noo is it more necessary to ?cure
qurk growth and an oarly wiaturitr
thua with pigs. If the sows are mated
is Novrniber thy will farnw in lrl
rrry. It ts best alar t' keep J
reord so as to make whatever arrange
aents are needed at thr pnHr tim.
It is only 111 exceptional cass that It
svili pay lo fcisl it animal etcit for it
-ihiut tutu uft.'r it is flly ready t
murkft Tin ejHHK f fehng wu
.require oimskleruble advnnce it the
price to return a prtlt The safest
plan is to push th grow th and then
market as soou as they are fully read
A great many f.irmcrs d not keep
giHxt cows and thus hnro iIhhIj i
f rich ere .tin. and milk nid butter
Waii'i1 thev say "M is mi iiutrk tri. bit
l iniPc " Tlie man who makes his nv
iitgoiitof the Mill and w tin iMHiiot n
soino w:ty titid sotnl nly t milk l m
three cows is four thousand years In
hind this ae of eotnni.in wmn an t
-oiuiiiiin comfort l.v lirmge.
Many prefer to have the sow f.trrw
iu I'ebrtiary rather thnn iu M.ireii. a
the weather is more settled ind tin
pigs have that much longer t gr
I m fore severe cold weather in the fall
The tlrst six weeks, at least the jwgs
must depend very largely tiimii their
mother's milk for sustenance, and by
the time thev are able to eat grass will
have made a g-KMl start to grow
Colts need to run out every day thai
the weather will Mrinit Then is n
leiielit in exposing them in sUrms m
iu extremely tsbl weather At sib
times thev w ill If letter eiUii-d in
isiinfortable q-iaiters but v r day
that will admit they should W alhNl
Ut run ..lit I ,ilii' need er"ls Ies
than cots vet th-y will 1 lnttir li
allowed to runout iu plwasaut weather
FARM NOTLS.
While turnips ,ind cabbage can !e
left out until the heavy fronts vet it is
not a god plan to lento out t h Into
Hue advantage in winter iiimturnn?
of wheat is that it acts ns a fitu'eh t'
the plants as well as IhmioHI tlie m1
A good healthy ehiekeu SIX weks !!
-an pick up its own living around al
most any farm yitrl When it is four
or six months old Its Heh is wortlt
twice as much jKr pouiid as either Iwef,
inutt'iti or pork.
An exchange remarks! "We know a
great man farmers who own yi ners
of good laud, iu g-Hul district, mmr '
railroads and line towns, who make
butter that is just lit for a very hungry
hog to eat Is that 'business' iu this
uge of progress on the farm?"
Of rye .Secretary Busk, of the agrl-i-iiltural
department, says "It U
hardy, the straw Is valuable and the
average yield an acre is enough larger
than that of wheat to cover thu diller
nee in helling price. I ldleeit would
le quite as protltable as wheat"
The use of wood ashes as a fertilize!
should Im- more generally midorsloo I
Hardwood ashes are uiiieh richer In
ixitash than softwood ashes and art
relatively more valunble. Leni lied
wood ashesare hardly worth more than
the labor of spreading on the land- as
n rule.
Thc time when corn can Ih erildw i'
di-jK-nds largely iijhjii the season. nm
yi'ars it can lie husked out an I erib!ed
much earlier than others, (ieiieml.v J
r.hort time after tin re Is a killing fr ist
corn will do to crib, eocinlly fo 1 I r
corn. It is nearly always !ot to In. k
out and throw directly into wagons a
throwing upon the ground enuses wa t '
s-ave your o-a n tomaUi sii from thr
choicest sjH-cimens yon can UihI I or
seed choice only those that are m-oth
and roiiml ami that ripun fully t
the stem Isivr svl of p-jpir. i g
plant stiaji lnns buh bntt'r l-.in
arid corn. Lt all se Is dry god and
put up in paper bngs. rs,e that the,
are kept in a dry place and out of the
reach of rats.
Twenty-tlve yarsago notour farmer
in one bun lred knew what er.rry
looked like, few having heard of th
plant !Srs'-clavs hotels in th cities
had it occasionally To-day th! crop
is worth millions of dollars nnnnallr
nnd is in ll- throughout the land At
Kalamazoo. Mich, the crop wa first
grown in IsT.1, in a very Hiall tcay in
ten years the crp grown at ikl play
alone wm vatweii at ;-f'mrih of n
million of dollars and land oofnpar
atively worthless lfKi o4ry ww
grown is valued at frooi 0i t rt Kr
acre.
Nevr permit a calf to stj growing.
An iinjHrtant work now U Xn jf't
ready for winter. B-ttr tlttl enrfy
than a little late with work of this
kind
If five rents morn pr Wshil. or one
cnt more pr ponnd. t l mtrttil
by knowing th- market and nsng oI
judgment in selling, it is that mneh
more clear profit
A farmer in Dawaon ts-mnty. Nl .
raised forty bushels of rjr l ikr arre
He refusal an offer of -A ceaU per
bsh?i for the crop whheh. Sad kc '.
wokl have brooght him S 3L
Make a OwIut ior lhe ealrrs. Al
most anything will ! fonnd bnttr
than attempting to rrlntrr theo tml of
doors S?t np a frarar wrk of pa-cv
skle up with corn-fodder and cTr
with .straw.
There is nothing brtter foe lb fr,
than an occasional feed of o9'
chopped fine and fed wit any f:
fool ia th sarsinc. Pooitr fd hi ttos
way vrkiom are aiUg wwi any of the
fowl dltSr-Afcr-s.
Oearally if to-rk or prtlcU are
ratr-l U sell th Wst th to narn-t
1 wfcrn a pno that -will ! fr
per cent of profit can b rre-i.
Keep gool tnxrr to do th- farm m-r?'.
with. Breed t a ilraf t hoc- and Juir
them fool ab-nt Maj 1, a thai kt
skvck time ia the work and gr. ha
gii start. Week t" raarc- carfally
cp to foalutg Usm and let her rci V-3
day xllcr lsforr gofog u t, agaacL.
Fcd mare ad colt a lUJie sr a day
;ini ih-3 colt wBl ooe ler a eat.
When workiag lh- siarc ha.Te the dt
in the fctahie. It wfii oon lara to
U.j. b lex hathtr. and it I better for s
the colt than to foHo-w tfce mare.
A good ea-x can not give a aslXam
3Ci Of rf!k t??0 h5 l it "OR 4G
rKpiiarlj,
X4 slt s sv
T l ;. im r fur-4 Hr
rnvit mj l-Tr m n i -m rmi1m lft
I'rrtt rm mmd y Ur I -rm 4
r-H:
U uu gira in H mi .' m t
twr, tr crnd t ri IMralilrv m0H
ttm4 ! t n nn,a. mttmrt vJ Utr
rnwi'lniM.c.'tjtl. rMM
MtM r i.e fi I.i4 Wy N4(t
Tnt hwr. that Miwn In t fwtec. t"v
In. bxr gM -a fc 4m vitn vkm .r
t (Wf ta Ik Mk - tfeJt.1 e
If yen 'Atnk imr H tk wnrm. Wl
ognwt it nntil n nm .n unnirn
(ed.
"lyrr kTt B rnnt. . nwt wm Ifc
tkmt ot a . Ui tn ntHi Urn t
nMinMM - lklntAfM IVntt
Txr W W pturtf
swiri ni tiwt iJitf Ijic ru
lrv ttlt n vi. . w4j tf i v
flit- Vl ar ct JU' - tt 1
si t-4' " .'t I "rt .!
.Hut - h i..i'.u . i.v. -w
cs" -a- s j , ror im
VrMl!5JThrK'
inai-JgKSrTfJUu.- - i .:
t -
m fcJ ... K....
I J - N "' KL I
I FjGMP Inn i.Vi; to t .i?xi:
I sJHBeHkII'' -- 'rlrs vutirn ri with rhcu- I
niatism ot thc hip. I wnt curml lv thr :c oi I
I St. Jujus Oiu 1. C. DUHIK J
I 0 "ALL RIGHT! ST. JACOBS OIL DID IT." I
7 r Lg -"
n--, l n li
ffPJBFtt
I p v -
.ntl, i irr ma ...-."- - -v.. -. . - .
,-rtri T , .....- DIIIOIHnMHUIH.'IHlMOlUKl
TMt M .ST SILLIUL AS? C !lTI V Mlhli H . . . -s . e - - -
, 4 . rI ' - . - " - -
i,v. i , . - r , w .. -.J. - rjk C M COI. Irlleit,
""' IV V . - . '.V '' Broo.lway. KANSAS CITY. WO.
PETROLEUM v AS ELI NEJELLY
AN irtVAIA'ARLK rAMtt T MKL! T r
llunia, Wuun t Niirum. Klmumst.itn W n !, 1h U...l Dan ti,
C'htlblAina. V.u TkH thiini.r Wi.i Vvtm Cii
CoUfcflli. t'wltta tti t tl. tl l!l
PURE VASELINE 2 fcol'Je
POMAOE VASELINE 2 U tollle
VASELINE COLD CfiEAM
VASELINE CAMPHOR ICE
10 8lt
ir,
IS
10
i'iiuhii 1:1 iritiuiiiiii ii no i i-iiu i
hxw.ft i.ittlnt j''r ii i .1 i t . - i r r -
jwit lM-'.iir Jli t i r e. i , j ... t. . i, ,., , , tm m c j, j, fi rMMltu
CHESEBROUCH MANUFACTURING COMPANY.
Do your shopping.
risit your neigh
bors. Al IlmhI to
your sewing.
Put. your roast in
llic oven of
1 0AK X
OR STOVES.
Thoy will require no watcl
ing or banting. You'll
do better cooking.
LITTLE
LIVER
PILLS
no .tor t.Hii: ''in nnn.
p - rr , f , slf ic f r .
A III , . t6-
t llfl -m
. . &j ImI a. t. ..4.
n 4lilllT. t
0 P. iiT.lr. ! - i
IUrnntiff f.inill'm by tfrjln
!!. I r !.- tttnf
r. ar . 1 fc . C -w4 i
4r- l-p VwptyH''t o.
OR. H&I1CK HC3IC1MC CO . t ttkll. -
TJjr Tli frnrtS trnln l-tsr.n
nt ( ,Mntf,i ju,. th KjiM. on -v.
NflRTH f'"1'1 " ,4" oi-'' "f'p
nun I it ... fa iiMM.. ila,! rniTi
SHORE
f-rt lKiro( iU rmrtuf msi t
A . . . f - M 1 - t m- M. VtttW 4k k
I IMITtn fMnmil Md erfriir U
-. .itHi ni d. M H ft rlU.-l
lyt-l tn t-k l"nuw O.frntr'''.'
Mi- i. m i ut'. "TV- Ncrx ..
lii tlti it 1 ,t .' T" T. llrVN
.. w Wk nt ., mmI rj,i !
niilar f l"r"iitit jrvi
t'nt imU iUMxAtaoT Mrn jit lc
t rwiclH-l tlo k aftT Jt- xilC
InsChwvro. AMMtaW i jflt
"nl n l)mu Car m r -M.U yrinTM
.So i-tlni f; rlarr-t rr ilUtltil
Urn tall- 'f oUrr lnr CUnPf
mUi npj't ' rTr't r uiiUnt.
aV't. t Im i V.. Hu&:m. IIUlTCn
(J.i'.&T.A..Cka5o. UffllltU
Tower 5
irnproved
3.
o
FLICKER
. .( C.w;!t4
Lg. .fi-i4 Water
Z Ofi ee
5oftWooleo 'q.
WaifbliCl! Collar.
o
5
GOOD NEWS
F THE MILU 05 Of CCSt CM T
2 Tutt's Pills, m
tuty liver till
ifXUM. tOi i i-T lUn yHi A
a Ttrm tisr tnai riixn a
I T Md. -tt .. i .. Si. f . hwfti., wjes . t.
!
The Soap
for
Hard
Water
I
is L
en ox.
THC KANSAS CITY
MEDICAL tf SURGICAL SANITARIUM
irviani oi an bmeiiM mmm
Surlcnl Di.no
.: -t .v . .
-
- - . 4.. tw .. .. . .
VASELINE SOAP Vnuahi
VASELIME SOAP Pirfc
Milt
li "
WHTEVASEUJiE 2u wa "
CAMPKOKAILQ VASLLIU ?cr Mi Si
CAR30LATID YAS'LIHL 2 e fc a
vt
Mh
ti i
riit i m
t: Latest Styles
J ) L" Art Dc L;i Mod.-.
m r ... . 9 "
i II l.r Tv .w . ..
tttBHIt.
r - si-.
i . i k s i 4k
I.MAT t 1 t-t COS! "NT Ni.
EPPS'S COCOA
IJIU AKI AM
i
! !
.. ttU
U l 4I.X
, . kf lk Mtr9WI -
. . . ti raiHU" .
'-.... 4 , fl- f -
. .-iM t9r -
. . ... 1 Wr m ......
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