HEHHlMHHiHHMV .t'liVIBW' T t 4. J WY Paul a Prisoner The Voyage Sunday School Lenoo for Oct. 31, 1909 SPURNE TfZ0M- Q K Spoelally Arranced (or ThU Papor By NELLIE CRAVEY GILLMORE i J- tsrn m (Copyright, by Hal y Story Pub. Co ) You Should Knowg$jjM 1 ivJUrt a iV- -A A' V k-' X TT73Ara nr' fe. I ",j V Vi4ri ii-yr iu M k Sfc i ii i M Apartment House - jJ NEW YORK Thorp Is n man in blB runl estntp llrm In tlio Wall btroot district ot Now York city who linst not paid a penny ot housu runt tor the last tun years, nlthotiRh ho has llvud during all that time In hand some npnrtmcntH In the most laHhlon able part of town; the smallest or which never Is leased lor less than $2,fi00 a year. Among the very Tew who know the secret ot how ho Is able to occupy puch expensive quar ters free or charge he la the most on ".led man. Yet lie hlmsoll llml.s hl3 Rood fortune r.omothliiK or a trial. No does not know from one month to the next where he will have to move. He always Is tho llrst tenant ol' all to move Into the house, and when tho house begins to till up ho knows he must prepare to get out. Then this man who lives rent tree be gins to wonder where he will have to move to next No sooner has his family made a circle of pleasant ac quaintances nmong the other newcom ers In a big apartment house than they have to make some excuse, tele phone for the moving vans, nnd have their turnltitro taken to a now place or abode. Sexton Finds Ghosts THERE are the "ghosts" In the his torical old Chapel or tho Comfort er at 10 Horatio street, noar Jackson square, In New York City! Soren IJnjlgren. who until recently was sex to of the little mission supported bv jriHcenslcm parish, of which the Kev. Or. Percy (Jrant is rector, has not only seen the spirits, but ho has taken photographs of two of them. These strange, mysterious figures, according to Mr. LIndgren, congregate every evening at tho Toot of the altar. It in a weird story Mr. LIndgren tolls of his experiences In the church, where ho and his wife, who frankly confesses that none of tho "ghosts" have been visible to her, had their living apartments. ' So Interested did tho sexton be cdio in tho movements of the do- Elephant Collects I, miCK" RICHARDS, keeper at the U llronx Zoo, in New York city, be lieved until a fow days ago that the high road to riches lay in simply Ilcntchlng an elephant, hanging a tin linrl ii flit, n.iltnol ti.i.l !.... ......!. i. ,... v... i.iv, twin, u ii milt iiii-i, iuiii:.i..ii; hi in to bcu moucv from the mihllc ami rlng a bell whensoever he put a pen- I ny In tho bank. Richard's faith In tho inteurltv of eiorhnnts wns a sublime thing, but ii.iuw no iio.us oiepiinnis to no not only minora!, but capable of almost human uibeclllly. In short, It was Richards who a iM taught tho llronx elephant ingo to beg pennies nnd put them In bank, for which the huge beast has .pen tnmous ever since. It was tho Mock Court Ends HE Yemassle Hnvmnkers. a West U side organization In New York y, whose members say they aro i nnlt.iAn nf f nnni. t'lMtfi't ft f a . f n .. A I .llllllll'JIi Ul IIVUUUI uv iiiujitiKiin, yi an outing ut College Point and iuai lumuiiiiiuiii u.wiiu .mint; uy y of the Enst Thirty-fourth street, ry at 1:30 o'clock In tho morning. '''y lammed the ferryboat. Manhnt- , i .,..'. i .i '.. i i. i it ni'iimi, uuu inoiu Knu tiimi iiuu.iru I'liiinhor of niitRlHnrn rntiirnlnir In ilr homes. IB soon ns tho boat started Charles no'TSO years old, fiG7 Tenth nve . palled some of the picnickers to r and announced In no soft tones ho was going to cpen court .and 4 ns Indue he would sentence evorv, ifj broughf before hi in for .dlsoruer nduct. , I , f ( ,ie idea wns taken up readily 'and several of the "oHleers" appoint i' I i Mascot and His Job This nomadic New Yorker's re moval from one place to unothcr does not cost him anything, except the wear and tear on his furniture, and the labor of getting settled In each now apartment. His changing about Is parr of his day's work and arises solely from tho fact that ho Is consid ered as n mascot or a forerunner of good fortuno for a ccrtalr rich man, who owns a great deal of Manhattan real estate, and who Is continually Im proving It by putting up large apart ment houses One of the crucial periods In tho lire of an npartment house Is when It Just has been completed, and It Is desired to fill It with tenants. All tho apartment houses owned by this rich man are managed by the llrm of ngentii In whoso employ Is this mascot who never pays rent, .luut how tho superstition started Is not mown, but thnt the man who believes In It has grounds for such boiler that are sat Istactoroy to himself Is evident from Its long contluuancee. When a new npartment house be longing to this great landlord is lln Ibhed, tho lucky clerk In the agent's office Is notified that his quarters will be ready for him on such and such a day. His apartment Is tho first to be completed. The other npartments niny be ritlll In the hands or painters and decorators and the halta may bo littered with shavings and broken plaster. Hut this proresslonal first tenant has to have his household be longings moved In and get thorn ar ranged as artistically us possible with- Ch in a urcJ parted spirits that he purchased a camera and Iny awako at night to take snapshot pictures of them. The I.lndgrcus took up their residence on an upper fioor of tho church last No vember, and the presenco of tho 'ghosts" was revealed to Mr. LIndgren the first night he slept there. " 'lie not afraid." ho assured me This building was once a dance hall, and it was here that I wasted a for tune which had been left to me by my father, who was an Italian noble man. I killed a man in this very room. Yes. 1 smbbed him In the back, I stole tho money to buy rum, and her 1 am a physical wreck.' "Early the next night." ho said, "as tho old man approached tho altnr I fixed my camera In position and gavo the picture a long exposure. Mrs. LIndgren was- with mo and we went directly to our apartment nnd devel oped tho picture. Only the whlto out lines of the man's face, head and board were shown in tho photograph, but by using a pencil on one of the negatives. I succeeded In drawing an excellent likeness of the mysterious figure." Pennies in Z oo keeper's practice when tho bank wns full to take Congo across to tho soda fountain nearby and buy him n quart of ice cream out of tho day's receipts. At this rate Congo soon learned tho value ol' money, nnd also began to lovo It not for Its own sake, but for whnt It brought him. When Rlchnrds went for his luncheon a few days age ho carefully emptied" tho hank, leaving Congo with a vacant tin box. When the keeper hnd finished his meal ho hastened hack to the faithful Congo, but on tho way met four Ju bilant urchins, who were dividing CO cents. There stood Congo, swaying mourn fully. Reside him Sultana and Khar toum, two other elephants, wero hold ing up their educated fellow, who seemed 111. A seedy man standing at tho rail ex plained tho enso: "Some boys wore Just In hero with some apples thoy'd stole, and every lime they gavo tho elophant with tho bank an apple he gavo thorn a cent, an' ns soon as they got his last cent they beat it." in Real Court Trial ed by Amnion dragged a much-frightened negro heforo him. "This man spit on tho deck," said one ol" tho gang. "Mako him stand on his head," or dered tho court. Tho negro mndo n feeble offort to put his feet In tho air and when he was unable to do so he wns made tc drink five glasses' of water. Ho bo camo III suddenly nnd his tormentors let, him go. ' ' It happened that Sorgt. Trwln and six patrolmen, all traffic men In citi zens' dress, were nbourd tho boat, and ns soon ns they heard of tho court they started a mock fight so thoy could got arrested and i see how. (ho "court" was working. ' ' Pntrolman Frit sen was promptly nabbed as a disorderly person and was hurried to whero Amnion was holding forth and wa3 charged with fighting , wm mm linn iuw uanusprings, shputefl Amnion. but'FrltSch, who luV powerful lelkiw. jiurled tjwo or the fiien nfsido ajuf walked uway. j Next (lay In a real court tho "rowdies -T-ud line? for their lun. "Lut him turn a fow handsprings, I.KHSON T1-:.T AftHKl-SJ. Memory versos s!-'1 OOLlHiV TP.XT - Commit thy wuj unto the Lord, Imiki nUo In lilm; ami ho plmll IiiIiik It to p.i.st I'sn. 37 6. TIMi: - Htinutii-r ami ntiliimn of A. D, 69 ol () PLACi: On tho .Mrdltirnuiraii sen, on the way to Home. Suggestion and Practical Thought. The voyage of lire Illustrated by Paul's voyage toward Rome. 1. Tho Voyago on n Peaceful Sen. From Cesarea to Crete. Vs. Mil. Tho ships. After It was determined to send Paul to Rome under military escort, the first thing was to find a ship. There was probably very little direct commerce between Cesarea and Home, and hence they embarked In a trading vessel which coasted north ward along the shores of Palestine to Sldon nnd around tho eastern point of Cyprus, past Clllcla and Tarsus, and part of Pamphylla to Myra In Lycla, near the southwest angle of Asia Minor. The second ship was a large Kgyp Man merchantman loaded with grain from Alexandria. The ship's company Included Paul and other prlaoners, Luke, who writes ' the account (note the "we" In the story); Arlatarchus, an old friend of Paul who was one of tho comniltteo thnt accompanied Paul to Jerusalem with tho collection for the poor (Acts 20:4); Copt. Julius, with ti guard of soldiers from tho Augustan band, be sides wo know not how many other .passengers, and the crew. The Peaceful Voyage. They sailed westward. It took them several days ,'to reach the port Cnldus on a penln sula at tho extreme touthwest point of Asia Minor, although tho distance 1 only 130 miles. The sailing was still dllllcult, and they put Into n harbor called Fait Havens on tho southern coast of Crete. Hero they walnted for pleas anter weather. Hut It was late In tho searon, and rough, stormy weather must be expected to prevail. Paul ad vised them to remain at Fair Ha vens till spring opened. Paul's advice was good, but It Is not strange that experienced seamen should not regard very highly tho opinion or a Fcholarly landsman. 'J. Storm Tossed on a Wintry Sea. Vs. M-HG. "'There arose against It" (v. 11), the ship, "a tempestuous wind," typlionle, tempestuous, Uko a whirlwind; a hurricane, a typhoon, a oyclono. 15. "When tho ship was caught.' A very strong expression, Implying that the wind seized hold or tho ship, as It were, and whirled her out or tier course. "Wo let her drive," 11. V., "wo gavo wny to It, and were driven" be fore the wind. IS. "The next day they," the sail ors, "lightened tho ship." Tho Im perfect denotes that they began to lighten the ship, set about it by throwing out foiiio of tho cargo, not the precious wheat which was thrown overboard later (v. 3S). 19. "Cast out with our own hands," that Is, of tho passengers as well ns of tho crow, "the tackling," "tho fur niture of the ship, Its fittings nnd equipment, anything movable lying on tho deck, upon which the passen gers could lay their hands, such as ta bles, beds, chests, and tho like." 20. "When neither sun nor stars . appenred." Wo have to re member that heforo tho Invention of the compass the sun and stars were tho only guides of snltors who wero out or sight or land. "All hope . . . was thqn," nt last, henceforth, "ta ken away." Tho Vision of Cheer. Now Paul comes to tho front, tho only ono in tho. wholo ship who could bring a messngo of hope. Tho reason for his assurance follows. An angel camo to him with a messngo from God, as Jesus had appeared to his disciples In tho tempest-tossed boat on tho Sea of (itilllee. Tho message was that ho would bo saved because ho (v. 21) "must bo brought before Caesar," as God had promised him beforo (Acts 23:11). Paul's safety was as sure as God's promise. Tho promlso hnd been ob scured boforo this, but It had shono out again through rills in the clouds. "God hath given thee all thorn that sail with thoo." Doubtless Paul prayed earnestly Tor the safety of those who wero In tho ship with him; and their lives wore granted in an swer to his prayers. Tho good man Is never selfish even In his prayers. Tho Port to Which Wo Should Sail. A statesman declares that "Tho llrst requisite of ono who would have a successful llfo, as or tho pilot or a ship, Is a knowledge of Its goal. No helmsmnn nowever skilled In handling a wheel or experienced In seamanship would be trusted to guide a vessel unless ho know and could specify In which direction It should go. A knowledgo of the gonl of nations is tho flrBt essential of statesmanship," and also of manhood and womanhood. Chicken, Deviled. Singe nnd preparo tho chickens as for boiling. Mix fogomor onn.lmir nt ' .,,- nr..i .. ..,." ......: ""-: , H.I.OJU.UIIIIH ui mm, uuu Hllll-SpUOniUI each of curry powder, dry mustard and paprika, adding Just enough ollvo oil or molted butter to mako a th'clc pnstc. Mako a numbor of Inclsioni on the breast and thighs of tho chicken and tub Into them tho paMo; brush all overvlth a little melted butter and broil over a clear I'te When dono, wrango on a hot plattor, squeeze ovor allttlo lemon Juice, gainlsh with creas u'nd servo with tartoro sauco. Tho woman pnusod. breathless, at tho entrance of tho familiar oltlce building. Three years? It seemed either Psterday--or an eternity! Poising herself determinedly, she passed on through the lobby and touched the clouitor bell. Her face wns very white now, In contrast to Its accustomed warm pink, and the set expression about the lips Imparted to It tho look, rather of IW than '.!!. In less limit two minutes she found herself seated in the little box like nntoroom to wait her turn. Nothing was changed except, perhaps, a trllle or bo In the furnishings- new things duplicating an far as possible the old. The clock, the book cases, the picture'! were the same. Looking at them watt like opening au old wound, and she kept her eyes resolutely on the hands crossed In her lap. Finally tin- door at her left opened nnd a htiKgard-faeed man emerged, lie picked up his hat from the table In tho center of the room and passed out The doctor glancitl toward th woman and nodded; the next Instant, tholr eyes locked. He pronounced her nnmo In a fotmal tone, and she rose automatleall and went Into his pri vate office. Dr. Drury pulled up a chair and mo tioned her to ho seated. Without a word she sank down, pull ing norvously at her glove-fingers. "And what can I do for you today, Mrs. Pel'ltun?" Ills Inflection wns courteous, professional, to a degree. "It's tho some old thing Jack," she said, with a llttlo Ineaught breath. Her eyes evaded his keen gaze. The doctor's browB went up the bar est trifle. He looked at her with a puzzled Interrogation. "Pardon me, but with hundreds of patients coming and going continually " "You haw-rorgolton!" Tho tone brcntheil Btibtlo reproach. Dr. Drury cleared his throat to hide his annoyance. He turned uway ffllliii U wit In the Tragic Abandon of Despair. briefly, and drew down tho dark green shado over tho open window. "Neu rasthenia?" ho questioned meditative ly. The woman gave a little sigh and laid her hand ovor hor heart with an expresslvo gesture. "Too much coffee, eh?" "I never touch It." She bit her lip hard, an Incipient frown drawing hor blnck brows closer together. "Go west away from this enervat ing climate." "1'vo been west east north ev erywhere, only to como hack again and ngain. 1 can't stay away Hut Is tho thing." Sho dashed tho mist from her eyes with a furtive forellngor. Dr. Drury regarded his patient with quizzical gazo. "I'm afraid, Mrs. Pol ham," ho remarked presently, "that you havo allowed yourself to bocomo morbid. Havo you tried occupa Hon?" Sho laughed softly. "Thoro's noth ing I haven't tried, nothing". I I'm starving!" she broke out In sudden passion, "can't you look at mo and seo that?" Sho covered her face with her hands and drew long, spasmodic breaths. "Doubtless you need a tonic, my dear mndam," and ho began scribbling hastily across a prescription blank. Tho woman wntched him in silence, her facoleplctlng n vuriety, of strange, panoramic emotions. Her next "words wero calculated to precipitate a crisis. "There's no use boating about th" bush any longer, Jnck. You already know wjiat's tho matter with mo don't yoh? And notwithstanding your simulated Indlffcronco, I can seo yon romomber. You can you look Into my eyes, John Drury and deny that you still lovo mo?" Sho had risen, nnd was stnndlng very close to him, hor pink, palpitant check Jtst grazlug tha rough bluck of hls'coatalcovo. -1 v Very palntnklngly, nnd without t word, Dr. Drury laid aside his tablet and pencil and shrugged. "Don't be u fool, Dolly." His tone wns admirably modulated, but tho barely perceptible twitching of his up per lip revealed a transit nt weakness to his companion. She laid a trembling row of finger tips on his arm Ho remained Ita lian able, and she caught his hand In her hot palms, crushing It convulsive ly. "Jack!" The word was half whisper, halfcaifMH. lie shook off her lingers brutally. "1 thought wo hail settled nil this, yearn ago. Didn't I say enough then? or are wo to repeat the scene?" III.! eyes searched her shrinking face mer cilessly. Presen'ly sho began to speak again, In a low, broken voice. "I, too, thought tint It was over then," she said, "b;t It could"! bo, dear. I've found that out. I cannot forget. God alone will ever know what those three years wero to mo Hell Itself can hold no greater tor tures" "Stop!" Ho turned blazing eyes up on (ho plendlng woman; his face flamed with dull crimson. Hut even as sho looked up, a softer light mndu Its transient passage aerotw his fea tures and his eyes fell away from hers. Her hands dropped listlessly to hor Hides, nnd her slender body shook from hend to foot. Tho clock on tho mantel ticked audi bly. A minute passed, two three. At last tho woman lifted her eyes. The doctor stood with folded arms, his gazo on tho floor. Without look ing up ho said: "Several patients aro waiting for mo. We do no good by prolonging this Intcrvlow. Good after noon." Ho started toward tho door, but tho woman Interrupted him with a llttlo low cry of pain. "Jnck Jack!" tho word broke hoarsely from her whlto lips, "you can not mean thnt this Is the end? that that O my God!" sho crumpl. l down on the floor and flung her nrn.M about his knees In the tragic abandon or despair. Au Instant the man stood like stone, then suddenly his powerlul frame shook under a torrent of emotion, and he lifted her In his arms, staining her to him in a passionate embrace, llhi lips swept her hair, her eyes, hr mouth with burning kisses. At last he released her, whlto and trembling and she staggered against tho wall for support. When their oyes met finally, all tb old slavish devotion hnd como ban to tho man's. "Wo can't stny on here,' ho said huskily, "I I'm married now you know. In n wool: I can got uy affairs Into shape, and wo can go away anywhere you say." Tho woman contomplntcd him a sec ond In bnilled Bllonco. Then swiftly like n fork or lightning, rago and dis appointment flashed athwart hor quiv ering face. 'You fool!" sho Blnieked, "when 1 was so near It, to bo defeated nt hint. I hate hate hato you, do you under stand? Do you think artcr that day thrco years ago I could over think of ou again except to desplso? "Shall I tell you why I camo here today?" sho hurried on, gaspingly, ' It wns becauso I heard that you had grown famous, grown to bo u great mnn. That you had married n beau tiful girl, and wero happy your name In everybody's mouth, your opin ion valued above all -thera' .... per haps you havo heard or Lynnelto Mae Farlane, famous on two continents an ono of tho leading woman sculptor.?? .... I want to bo world-famous! AJnl had I succeeded In my quest tod-.j-, 1 would havo been .... 'Spurned' has boon offered a placo in tho great In ternational contest .... tho figures nro completo just ono llttlo expres sion lacking In tho man's face, elud ing mo persistently .... I camo n thousand mllea to got It, r.nd you havo failed mo!" The woman paused, her breath nil gone. Her faco wan lined and pallid, and Bho heat her hands together in tho passion or her defeat. Tho man stood watching hor stup idly. Ills tongue moved, but mado no sound. He put out his hand blindly; It fell limp nt his side. "Dolly!" Ills lips framed tho word at length In a duM monotouo; his eyes Bought mutoly to kludlo some an swering spark in hora. Hut with nn ejaculation of disgust, tho woman whooled and swept past him to the door. Wiping Out MocqultocB. Tho wnr against mosquitoes In Greater New York and Jersey hns proved an eye-opening, heart-felt, sur prising success. Thcro nro places In Grontor Now York whero three years ago a- herd of cattlo would stampede In terror from mosnultoes, where cows ')iad to bo milked In a cloud of dnrnp burning straw, whero tho pests would) sott'o nnd form n gray film ovor tho u'jomacha of poor old horses, whero these pests were so thick as tc troubro u hunter seeing tio slghti nlongjils gun barrel. Today In som of Uiqso vory namo places thcro ar not only few, but no mosquitoes, f blecBltig in comfort and real ostatt values that la simply "'nspeakublo. Now York Press. ' HlHwlfi Coldcn 1 Hwv! Seal 1 1 aKfM-MSirS Root. 1 Golden Seal, tho root of tho nbovo plant, la a very useful mcdlclno. Many people gather it In our rich woodlannfl during tho summer, l'ow people know liow valuable It Is In dyspepsia, catarrh, nnd ns a general tonic. Many thousand poundflof this root, nro nsetl each year In tho fninoii!! catarrh remedy, Pcruna.ThlrtfnctoxpJnlns why everybody uses Parana for entarrh. till tlUlllll Utllilh 13 Ill3l!lllliy relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment. This liniment takes tlic place of massage nnd is better thnn Micky plasters. It penetrates w itliout nibbing through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and jives permanent as well as temporary relict. II iiniiiiiil iny ftiimtioli wan Jtiat im If I i. til lioi'ii litutti-n tltli 11 rlnli. 1 iiM-i! ccry I'lnsti-r 1 cimM eel with no relief. Hlo.m'rt l.lnlinuiit tunic tin) p.illi rlutit out, nml I i'.'iii now ilo in much l.ulilor uoik iu imy man luthosliup, tliaiika to Mr. .T. I'. I'.vAV. of Mt. Airy, (1., Pisi ",Utor liclua utllletotl lor Unco ji'.'im with ihoiiniiitlKtii, 1 Uft'.l HIimii'h i.lnlnimit, nml u.is unroll miniit nml null, ami nin Rl.ul Iob.iv I hiivii'lbiiii trntililuil .villi rlinnmiUlMii hIiioo. My li'Kwta li.ully hu'iillcn I'uiii my hip to my Univ. Oni-hitf u huttlo look tho I'.iiii nml swelling out." Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheu matism, Neuralgia or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. rtlcM,25cE0c.and$1.rj0 NliMiii'tt I, mile tin Iiomtn,ca((K., liri, nml poultry aunt IW-o. Ailtln-ia Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., U.S.A. LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IN GR1IAT VAMI'.TY FORj SALlt cAT TMK LOWEST PHICHS UY WKSTKKN MWM'ArKlt UNION 551 W. Ad. mil St., Clilcnuo J Nebraska 'Directory CORNELL ENGRAVENG GIL Half Tuiii't nml Mi"' i;ti.'tilii(,'H Ni'n nml mm-ili-tifiiK'un),- plant. i'lON llthut , Mm-uln. FULL LINE OF PHOTO SUPPLIES ! i.. .. i i .i i . ir. ti ii ' l.i ii-r niailu It ho UK a MARSEILLES CORN SHELLER w r ' im k r m'i y.mr looil .li'.iirr JOHN . EEHtl PLOW CO., OMAHA I iui ii iii.uiu yuu uuius iMi juui uiu. Gool ijrndi-s, quick tli pmcut nud low pricos. Direct to tonsiiiuur F.W.Brown Lumber Co., Lincoln, Neb. Beatrice Creamery Go. I rys the lilirlifMt price for CREAWI ! SOUTH DAKOTA ! Improvi-il nml unlmpruvcri fariiiH in cuMeru Boutli Dakota for hale on , CROP PAYMENTS or 10 YEARS TIME j Will cret't lntllilliigKOiiiiiiy fui'm miHnmu'tiy ifiiiiM, I'rloo t'M to iu pt-r iii-re. For lifcH, jniipM, otc ,uil.1r.-HH ALEX. II. RAIT, Parmer & MerchcnU'Hlilif.. lGlli ouJ O St.. Lincoln, NcU t ... .... i r. . ... i. in aawgriiri)Miii wmsaa HERBERT E. GOOCH CO. MIOKEUS AND DALLRS drain, Provision!, Stock, Cotton Main Office, 204-203 Paternity B!i!g. Lincoln, Nubri.tka. Hell riiniio 512 Anto l'lione CCS9 ,lt-).'l'nt II II 11 HC III hi. Ill' lHfeH.Bn4 I I g"i M.IintllTWtMl IXI Sloan's . Liniment If JUL inMBvjni i m IUMBER f" !