The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, September 18, 1919, Image 2

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RED CLOUD, HEBBASIA, CHIEF
I
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CQRNHUSKER ITEMS
News of All Kinds Gathered From
Various Points Throughout
Nebraska.
A delegation of Gage county citizens
called upon Governor McICclvIe at Lin
coin to protest against tho breaking up
of u non-partisan league meeting
recently at Iieatrlcc, and to ask for
the removal of the ofllclals who had
refused to Rive protection to the meet
ing or arrest those who assaulted
those In attendance. The governor
told the delegation that It was his pur
nose to L'ivn tmitortlnn In nil innnlltifo
OF INTEREST TO ALL READERS conducted nlong right lines, but that
I the statutes provided thnt where an
I assault had been made, as In the case
Governor McKelvIe declined to com- nt K(,IttrIce, the courts were to bo
mute to life Imprisonment tho sen- 0ll,,(Ml "! nnd until that recourse
totiras of Allen V. Grammer and Alson nn,, ,)C0" ,nl0" ,10 woul1 ot act.
R. Cole, sentenced at St. Paul, to die I because Nemaha county, Nebraska,
In connection with tho death of subscribed about 500 per cent more to
Crammer's mother-in-law, Mrs. Lulu t"o various wnr activities than did it
ogt of near Elba, who was shot
to death in 1017. Thu accused men,
who were under sentence to die Sop-
leiniior in, however, will be granted n
certain South Carolina county, bull
No. 1,410, being built at Baltimore by
tho U. S. Shipping Hoard, Is to be
named "Nemaha," and not "Forsyth,"
reprieve until the supreme court according to Washington reports. An
S Uwn.M
1 Bolshevists burning British warehouses full of supplies nt Kem. North Russia. 2 Advance party of tho
First division of the Amerlcnn nrmy arriving nt Hohoken on the Pastores. 3 MnJ. Orde Lees In the water near
the Stntuo of Liberty nfter demonstrating the practicality of his new parachute by leaping from a seaplane only
250 feet above the surface.
NEWS REVIEW OF
CURRENT EVENTS
President Wilson on His Tour to
Argue Peace Treaty Case
Before the People.
HE ACCEPTS NO COMPROMISE
Senate Committee Votes to Report
Pact With Reservations Supreme
Council Sends Ultimatum to
Roumanla and Warning
to Germany Indus-
trial Conference
Planned.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD.
President Wilson Is on his way, toll
ing the people of the United States
lace to face how excellent a document
la the pence treaty with the Incorpor
ated League of Nations covenant, nnd
how necessary to tho welfare of the
world It Is that It should be ratlllcd by
tho senate speedily. Beginning his ad
dresses at Columbus, 0.,,be continued
them nt Indianapolis, St. Louis, Kan
sas City and Des Moines, nnd he is
now proceeding on westward by the
northern route. Before leaving Wash
ington Mr. Wilson had a llunl confer
ence with Senator Hitchcock and Is
ued Instructions to his supporters to
make n fight to n finish for ratification
fef the trcuty Just ns It stands.
Senntor Hitchcock on the same dny
addressed the senate on the question,
hotly denouncing the opponents of the
treaty, even those who favor only mild
reservations. He dcclnied the real
purpose of the majority on the foreign
relations committee was to kill the
pact entirely, nnd Indeed there seems
to be justification for that assertion.
Senator Knox's proposal thnt the tren-
y be rejected und a separate peace
made with Germany, be said was tin In
ano mixture of poltroonery nnd folly.
Mr. Hitchcock took direct Issue with
tlio.se who complain thnt the United
Btates will derive no advantages nnd
benefits from the treaty ns It is. They
evidently hnve no conception, he said,
of tho enortnons benefits America will
get from It, nnd Intlmnted thce would
come through the operations of the
reparations commission, though how,
and what they would be, he neglected
to explain.
The senate committee on foreign re
lations voted to recommend tho ratifi
cation of the treaty by the senate with
four Important modifications. Theso
reservations provide for unconditional
right to withdraw from the League of
Nations; assumption of no obligation
to guarantee terrltorlul Integrity of
nations or to employ troops for co
ercive purposes or to accept mandates
except under tin direction of congress;
full freedom to determine what ques
tions are domestic nnd therefore not
subject to consideration by the league;
exemption of tho Monroe doctrine from
consideration by the league und dec
laration that tho United States is sole
interpreter of that doctrine.
Senator Shields of Tennessee, Dem
ocrat, Joined the mnjorlty In voting for
all tho rvservt'tlons except thnt re
lating to nrtlcle X. Senator McCum
ber of North Dakota voted against the
first two reservations. On the hist two
the vote vns 11 to 0.
The committee resolution stipulates
thnt the twenty ratification by the Unit
ed Stntes shall not tnke effect until
the American reservations have been
uccepted by three of the four other
great powers: Great Britain, France,
sly nnd Japan.
The bearings granted tho representa
tives of small nnd dissatisfied peoples
by tho foreign relations committee
wust bo regarded as lnrgely political
sunk. The spokesmen for the Irish
af course made the loudest noise, de
,orudlig that the senate reject the
itreaty entire, but the Republican sen
ator) know, ns do most Americans,
that the Irish question Is none of our
business; moreover, many of us be
UtTe the Irish already ars tolerably
free nnd In the wny of being freer very
soon.
As for the Chinese, If Yosuko Mut
sucka, a member of the Japanese pence
delegation, Is to be believed, the wind
will soon be taken out of the sails of
those who are shouting ngnlnst the
Shnntung settlement. He thinks Japan
will open negotiations In a very feuj
weeks for the settling of the Shantung
question In a way that will satisfy ev
cryone. Tokyo will offer to restore the
territory to Chlnn, withdrawing all
Japanese troops, stipulating that the
peninsula shall be open to Internation
al Jrude and thnt there shall be an In
ternational settlement at Tslng-Tao,
and that the Shantung railway shall
be operated by a Chlno-Japunose joint
corporation. There are reasons to be
lieve the Chinese government is not
nearly so nngry over the Shnntung nr
tlcle ns the American opponents of the
treaty pretend to be.
Hungnry continues to present the
most annoying problems now before
the peace conference. The Itoumanlnn
occupants of the country so far have
been absolutely defiant of the orders
of the supreme council nnd are snld
to be plundering It In n most shame
ful way. Finally the exusperatcd
council lust week dispatched to the
Roumanians an ultimatum couched In
drastic terms, demanding that they
evacuate Hungary and hnnd over to
the allies for proper distribution all
the goods they have requisitioned. The
Itoumanlnn dlplomntlc representatives
In the allied capitals also were sum
moned by tho foreign ministers who
Impressed on them the seriousness of
the situation thnt would urlse If their
government should refuse to comply.
The position of the Roumanians Is that
what they call the war between them
nnd the Hungarians Is a new affair nnd
that the allied conference has nothing
to do with It.
In Budapest they were trying hnrd
to establish n government that the al
lies would recognize. Frledrich offer
ed to resign In fnvor of a coalition cab
inet formed by IIcInrU.lt, a wholesale
hardware merchant, on certnln condi
tions. All Jews are barred from tho
Helnrlch ministry, but all other classes
and pnrtles nre represented.
Serbia ofllclully denied tho report
'of n general revolt of the Montene
grins, but neutral observers who have
arrived In I'arls from the Rlnck Moun
tain country declnre the Serbs nre fnst
wiping out tho loyal people of Monte
negro nnd thnt they enn be saved only
by military intervention by America
nnd Great Britain. These observers
assert that much of the food Hoover
sent into that country fell Into the
hands of the Serbs and thnt no Monte
negrin can obtnln supplies unless he
denounces his own country nnd swears
ulleglancts to King I'eter of Scrblu.
Late reports from the Ukraine said
Petlura and Denlklne were closing In
on Klcff and apparently were about to
take thnt Important city from the bob
shcvlkl. The Reds claim tho capture
of Dubovka, on the lower Volgu, nnd
nlso unuotmced that Admiral Kolchak
bad evacuated Omsk nnd established
his government ut Irkutsk, l,0.r() miles
further oust. Kolchak bus Issued n
stirring appeal to all loyal Russians
to rejoin the ranks, and his representa
tives have been granted the privilege
of recruiting In Japan. The Esthonl
tins had tho bolshevik armies In so
tight n hole that the Lenlno govern
ment offered to mnko pence with them.
Trotsky, addressing the I'etrogrnd sov
iet, said tho bolshevikl must stand tin
pregnably In the defense of that city.
Tho reports that General Gough, tho
Ilrltlhh commander, was ubout to at
tnck Petrogrnd nppenr to have been
untrue. Tho Poles nlso, using tunks
for the first time, whipped tbe bolshev
ikl, rapturing the fortified town of Bob
ruisk anil 500 prisoners.
The supremo council handed to Aus
tria the Until pence terms and a long
reply to the protests of the Austrian
delegates, The note Impressed on tho
Austrlans the fact thnt they wero prl
mnrlly responsible for the outbreak of
tho grent wnr nnd cannot escape ret
ribution by claiming they have thrown
off the yoke of the Hnpsburgs. Tho
people of Austria-Hungary, It said, bnd
given full -support to the ultimntum to
Serbia and to the prosecution of the
war, and for years bad supported tbe
mltltnrlst plot of Germany for the donv
Inntlon of Europe. As It Is left by the
trenty. Austrtn will be an unimportant
"republic" of some 0,000.000. The
decision whether It shall be permitted
to join Germany Is left to tbe Lenguo
of Nations. When the supreme coun
cil rend the new Gcrtnnn constitution
tho other day it found In It provision
for the representation of Austria In the j
German rclchsrntb. This being con
trary to the Versailles treaty, the Ger
man government wus told thnt the nr
tlcle must be changed within a fort
night or the nllles would undertake a
further occupation of the left bon of
the Rhine. The Berlin press there
npon warned the allies of the danger
of precipitating a new revolt of tho
German people. The Pun-Germans,
by no menus suppressed, hclcLn union
conference recently In Berlin which
wns participated In by Austrlans, nnd
tnld plans for the restoration of the
Imperial government, union with Aus
tria and the recovery of the lnnds ced
ed by the pence trenty.
Marshal Foch bus determined the
territory which tho American troops
will occupy permanently In the Rhine
land. It will be about twice as great
In extent as that occupied by them re
cently.
Just before stnrtlng out on his spenk
lng tour President Wilson announced
thnt n general conference on Indus
trial nnd economic questions would be
held In Washington early In October.
Already u number of leaders of finance,
manufacturing, labor and agriculture
have been Invited nnd the list will bo
enlarged from time to time. The pres
ident nnd members of his cabinet will
tnke part in tho discussions, and It Is
the hope und belief of Mr. Wilson nnd
Indeed of everyone thnt the sessions of
this round tnblo will have decisive ben
eficial results In the way of stabilizing
Industrial conditions. Certainly much
good should come of tho frank Inter
change of opinions und suggestions
that Is planned.
In general the Inbor situation Is un
changed, pending the president's tour,
tbe war on high prices nnd tho nbove
mentioned conference. At the some
time flie radical elements nre keeping
busy, nnd It mny be the threatened
strike of steel workers will come any
dny.
Quick to resent nttneks on the pack
ing Industry, several big clubs and as
sociations of Chicago have gone on rec
ord against the proposed restrictive
legislation by congress. The secretary
of the Chicago board of trade snld Its
members were united In opposition to
the licensing fcutures of the pending
bills, believing the whole licensing sys
tem wns wrong, or, If right, should bo
applied to all business. All of theso
organizations seem to assume that the
reports of tho federal trade commis
sion nnd the nllegutlons on which legnl
notion ngnlnst the packers Is based
arc full of falsehood.
Tho senate has passed the highly Im
portant hill providing for the leaso of
public lands with deposits of oil, coal,
gas, phosphate and sodium, and the
measure hits gone to the house. Sen
ator Lenroot of Wisconsin says the bill
goes further In the protection of tho
public Interest than any other bill over
proposed In the senate or house. Other
senators chnrged that It wns framed
In the Interest of the Standnrd Oil com
pany. It plnccs the leasing of all lands
In tho hnnds of the secretary of tho
Interior nnd fixes the minimum nnd
maximum royalties. One amendment
ndopted compels constituent compiin
les of the Standard Oil company to
seJ their product nt tho same price In
nil parts of the country, nnd another
Is designed to force those compnnles
to become Independent In fact as well
as In nnme.
Mexican soldiers in tne utirrnnza
uniform provided tho latest complica
tion In tbe Mexican situation by shoot
ing nt an American nrmy nlrplnne thnt
was patrolling the border nenr Laredo,
Tex. One of tbe aviators, Cupt. Dnvls
W. McNnbb. wns wounded. The More
lenn authorities said the machluo wns
over Mexican territory nt the time;
tho American ofllclnls on the ground
passes on appeal by Cole from a re
cent district court decision refusing
him n writ of hnbeas corpus.
Thu fight on the Sliuan foreign lan
guage law, enacted by the last legis
lature began again when J. J. Sulli
van, Omaha attorney, filed a petition
of Intervention In the stitto supreme
court at Lincoln In thu Injunction suit
brought ngalnst tho act. Tbe suit was
Instituted on behalf of several Ger
man Evangelical Lutheran churches
of this state. The petition clnlms the
lnw Is unconstitutional. Attorney
General Davis bus also filed tho state's
briefs in thu Slman language suit. He
claims the suit constitutes an attack
on the public school system of Ne
braska. Tho backers of the movement to
establish a packing plant at Alliance
declnre that they have nt least $1,
500,000 to finance the project Al
liance Is certulnly a good territory
for such on Institution, which, with
out doubt, will mean a great deal to
western Nebraska. ,
Senator B. K. Busliee of Kimball,
president pro tern of the state senate,
was called upon to act as governor of
Nebraska for three days during the
past week in the absence of Governor
McKelvIe and Lieutenant Governor
Barrows.
Douglas county carried off tho hon
ors for agricultural exhibits at thu
State fair for the eastern district.
Kearney county won first In the cen
tral district and Box Butte took pre
mier honors in the western district.
Forty-eight thousand five hundred
more persons attended the 1019 State
fair at Lincoln than ever before. The
first five days' attendance exceeded
last year's full six days attendance by
20,000. Total attendance for the six
days this year was 207,458.
At a community picnic hold nt Wu
boo tho men enlarged the school
ground so that It contains one and one
half acres of ground, and laid out a
new ball diamond, dug a now well nnd
planted out fifteen or twenty trees.
According to Secretary of Agricul
ture Stuhr, much of the wheat raised
in eastern Nebm.sku thin year Is of
an exceptionally low germination, nnd
should not be ued for seed unless a
thorough test has been made.
A resolution Indorsing tbe Salva
tion Army home service drive which
will be held In Nebraska September
21-27 to raise $312,000, has been
passed by the Douglas county post of
tho American Legion.
Keya Palm and Brown counties
have Jointly agreed to share in thu
expense of building a new up-to-date
bridge across the Niobrara at Mead
vllle. Tho Installation of Bishop-elect
Shnyler of the Episcopal diocese of
Nebraska will be held at Trinity ca
thedral, n: Omaha, September 21.
T. 1). Hnrtstock of Jamison, promi
nent breeder of pure-bred live stock,
purchased a tract of 02 acres adjoin
ing Fremont for $.100 an acre.
The counties ot Lincoln, Perkins
nnd Keith are short seventy-five rural
school teachers, according to Stuto
Superintendent Clemmons.
Hamilton county telephone workers
went on strike when a demand for In
creased wages wits not compiled with
by tho company.
Governor McKelvIe was the princi
pal speaker at the formal opening of
Midland college at Fremont, Wednes
day. A home-coming celebration for
Kearney county soldiers und sailors
IMPIOVED UNirOHM INTERNATIONAL
Lesson
tny nnv. i h. fitzwatek, d. d..
Teacher ot KnKllsh Illblo In tlio Moody
lillilo iMHlltulo of Chicago.)
(Copyright, 1919, Wottrn Newspaper Union)
LESSON FOR SEPTEMBER 21
will be hold at Mlnden Sept. 25.
Aluswortb Is to lay several morn
blocks of paving, making seventeun In
all to go In in the city this year.
Hamilton county farmers predict
that their corn crop will be ubout 75
per cent normal.
The state treasurer's report for
August .'H shows a bnlanco on band of
2,470,207, as compared with a bulanco
on July III of $1,SS2,078.
Thu Beatrice sorghum plant hns re
sumed operation. A number of fnrmors
bavo a good crop of enno to market,
and tho owners of tho plant expect to
mnko a good run this fall.
Miss May Pershing nnd Mrs. D. M.
Butler of Lincoln, sisters of General
John J. Pershing, wero at tho pier to
meet the general when ho arrived nt
New York from Franco aboard the
Lovlathan thu first of tbe week.
Midland college, which was trans
ferred from Atchison, Kits., to Fre
mont, expects to huvo'ono of tho fast
est football teams In tho state. Games
ore to he played with Grand Island
college, Donne, Cottner and Wayno
normal.
Bids will be asked on tho new school
bouso nt Mead, for which $130,000 In
bonds bavo been Issued and sold and
eirort was made by the Carolina
county to garner the honor, but the
ship Is to hear the name "Nemaha," in
honor of the Nebraska county and
river.
Citizens of Sliver Creek nnd vicinity
nre greatly aroused over a series of
robberies which have occurred In the
district lately. Several negroes, who
have been working In the city for a
few weeks and who came to the dis
trict during harvest season, nre sus
pected of being Implicated In tho
crimes and huve been told to leave the
district. Several have heeded tho
warning.
J. W. Hlles, rancher, nenr Gothen
burg, has purchased two airplanes,
one for use in supervising his pluco
and tbe oilier for the convenience of
his family. It Is believed to be the first
purchase of the kind In Nebraska for
exclusive porsonnl use.
Several hundred head of prize Ne
braska bogs are suffering from pneu
monia and are under quarantine at tho
Nebraska State fair grounds nt Lin
coln. The exhibits will be held there
until the disease is stamped out.
Harry Boomgurd, 1(5, was killed
when a snud-sllde burled the Ind and
his father wlillu the two were work
ing in u pit on the Bnomgard farm
near Table Rock. The father succeed
ed In extricating himself.
Kearney people have filed a petition
with the city commissioners asking
that a special election be culled for tho
purpose of voting bonds for the erec
tion and operation of u municipal
lighting plant.
Through an error the list of dates
for cqunty fairs published over the
state the dates for the Frontier county
fair, which will be held at Stockvllle,
was omitted. September 23 to 20 tiro
the fair dates.
Four of Fllley's principal store
buildings were wiped out when a fire
devastated the major portion of the
business section of thu town. The
loss Is placed ut $30,000.
Highest priced farm land of Nuck
olls county so far reported was 80
acres Karl Crammer sold to Mrs.
(luvinii, eight miles east of Superior,
bringing $2(!(i an acre.
Spontaneous combustion of cnnl is
believed to have caused the lire which
destroyed the Hord potash reduction
plant nt Lakeside, causing n loss es
timated at .$000,000.
Hampton citizens hnvo been advised
by State Engineer Johnson that It Is
very probable that the S. V. A. high
way will be re-routed to pass through
that village.
High food prices In Hamilton coun
ty received a severe jolt when 200,000
pounds of government food supplies
wore put on sale at Aurora's munici
pal store.
Reports Indicate that Jefferson
county will have fair crops of nil
grains raised in the district, despite
many predlcltlons to the contrary.
Thousands of dollars worth of fruit
will go to waste In this stnto unless
the ncute shortage of sugar Is relieved
soon, dealers declare.
A number of Nebraska hog raisers
nre to exhibit their stock ot the Na
tion Swine Show at Des Moines,
Iu., Sept. 20 to Oct. 4.
A total of 55,000,000 worth of new
school buildings tiro to bo erected at
Omaha In addition to a new high
school building.
A total of 24,80.1 automobiles passed
through the gates of tho 1019 State
fair at Lincoln, compared with 15,7111
a year ago.
A Hour mill with n capacity of fifty
barrels n day, and to cost around
$25,000, Is to be erected at Gurley.
A movement Is under way to con
struct n stuto aid bridge across tho
Platte river south of Shelton.
An army store where government
foodstuffs nre to bo sold Is to be es
tablished at Lincoln.
Earl Drlscoll, 10-year-old Council
Bluffs bid, was drowned in a deep
hole In tht) Nemaha river, nenr Rulo.
Jnmes Rogers, Bassett, formorly of
Compnny L, .'Kid Infantry, has been
nwardod tho Croix do Guerre for
bravery In action. He forced German
out posts to withdraw according to Ilia
citation.
John Knlekrebm, sr., owner of ono
of the largest grocery stores In Grand
Island, has offered to turn bis grocery
over to the city, without any strings
attached, to bo operated as a munic
ipal store.
Withdrawal of J. J. Thomas ns a
candidate for a member of tho consti
tutional convention from tho thirty
eighth district will snvo Seward coun
ty tho expense, which would bo nbout
$2,000 of holding a primary olection
September 10.
According to n statement Issued by
tho state hanking burenu, thero has
been n gain In tho deposits In stuto
THE HOLY SCRIPTURES.
LKSSON TEXTS-Psalms 13:7-14; II
Timothy 3:14-17.
GOLDEN TKXT-Thy word Ih n Intnp.
unto my feet, and' a light unto my puth.
-Psalm 119:10S.
ADDITIONAL MATERIAL-Psnlm 119;
Mutt. 4:1-11; Luke 4:10-22; John 6:33-47.
PRIMARY TOPIC-Tlio best book lr
tho world.
JUNIOR TOPIC-Whut tho Bible con
tain. INTERMEDIATE TOPIC-Tho author
ity or the Iilhle.
SENIOR AND ADULT TOPIC-The in
spiration of the Hlble.
I. The Characteristics of the Word!
of God (Psalm 10:7-11).
1. The law of tho Lord Is perfect
(v. 7). The law here means the fun
damental principles which God ns a
moral being reveals to the consciences
of men ns binding upon the soul.
These principles are free from nil
omissions and redundancies, perfect
ns n moral code. It perfectly accom
plishes Its design, nnmely, the convert
ing of. the soul. The effect of tbe
law of God is to turn men to God him
self, to righteousness nnd holiness.
2. The testimony of the Lord (v. 7).
By testimony Is meant the witness
which God benrs ns to his attributes
and ngnlnst mnn's sins. This testi
mony is plnln nnd infallible. Those
who receive It nre made wise. Those
who with open nnd trnchnble minds
receive God's testimony nre wiser
than the greatest Intellectuals of tho
earth.
3. The statutes of the Lord nre
right (v. 8). Ills statutes nre the
principles given to us to fit us for the
different relationships of life. These
nre Just nnd equitable, because they
are from the righteous God. They re
joice the heart, because the true heart
rejoices In Justice and equity.
4. The commandment of the Lord
(v. 8). This brings Into view tho per
sonal God who stands back of His
lnw to enforce Its demands. This
commandment Is free from error and
deceit, and It enlightens the eyes. The
effect of God's law Is to give mnn
ability, not only to understnnd his love
nnd snlvatlon, but to be wise as to the
things nbout him.
5. Tho fear of the Lord Is clean
(v. 0). The reading of the Word of
God produces reverential fenr In tbe
heart of the reader. Those who have
this godly fear have their hearts
clennsed from sin. The life nnd rela
tionship founded upon this feur abide
forever.
0. Tho Judgments of the Lord nre
true nnd righteous (vv. 0-11).
By judgments Is meant tbe sen
tences pronounced by God's Word.
Theso penalties nro absolutely true
nnd righteous; they arc conformnble
to the Intuitive moral sense of mnn.
These judgments servo ns warnings;
they prevent mnn's shipwreck upon
life's sen and bring Just return to
those who obey.
II. A Prayer to God (v. 12-14).
1. For demising from secret faults
(v. 12). Those who reverently study
the Word of God renllzo In themselves
tho presence of hidden faults from
which they need cleansing, nnd they
cry out to God for this cleansing.
2. Kept back from presumptuous
sins (v. 13).
The sins which result from prond
defiance , of God's laws need to be
eradicated by God's special grace and
help.
3. Words ncccptnble with God
(v. 14).
The godly mnn Is concerned with
even his words nnd desires them to bo
untie. God's control.
4. Meditation of the heart (v. 14).
III. The Inspiration of the Holy
Scriptures (II Tim. 3:14-17).
Inspiration means God-breathed. By
the scriptures Is meant the Old Testa
ment. If Paul's testimony be accept
ed, then tho whole Old Testament is
God-breathed, regardless of what tho
skeptical critics say. Because tbey
are God-breathed they are profitable
for
1. Doctrine, that Is. teacblnn.
Reproof.
Correction.
Instruction In righteousness.
Thorough equipment of the man
o
3.
4.
5.
of God for his work.
Love Endureth All Things.
Lovo beareth all things, belleveth
all things, endureth all things. Peo
ple we lovo sometimes disappoint ns.
They do things wo never dreamed they
could do. If wo lovo them, wo shnll
not abandon them because they havo
faults. We shall Just bellovo thnt one
dny they will put nway their faults,
cease to do evil, nnd leurn to do well.
Love never despairs of nnyone. Lovo
never fnllcth.
denied this, nnd the administration nt 'which Is to bo constructed ns soon ns banks during the past threo months
Washington pntlently nwnlted further
information. Tho Amerlcnn army la
growing restlvo under the evident con
tempt In wnlcn ll neia Dy mcui-u.
conditions will permit. Threo districts
hnve been consolidated and thu now
school houso will bo a modern, up-to-dato
building In every respect.
of $10,G03,0t0. Tho reserve on hnnd
is $02,400,700, or 22 per cent, wherens
nil thnt Is required by law Is $11, 83V
727, or 15 per cent.
Of Ono Religion.
All bumble, mock, merciful, Just,
pious, and devout souls nro every
where of ono religion, and when death
has tnken off tho mnsk they will know
ono nnother, though the divers llyer
les they wear mnko them strangem
Penn.
When to Begin Kind Acts.
A more glorious victory cannot b
gained over another man than this,
thnt when the Injury began on hla part,
the kindness should begin eta ra-TUtetaon.
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