HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1901-5-9, Page 3'ENEMY the. foundations of the earth?' Tne a Isxt now that mane' of the finest
iN ONS OWN HAND IT IS MIOHTV nut), be better troxmated...soetteis•,,. riot fit to be looked at, anti they are
we.11s arid pavements And bazaars of
. I enougli for any world to turn in. holy Jesus. The art of the world 1
1 Worldly pbuosopoy said; otenet on the side ot obscenity end crime
an absurd story about Joshua woo_ and death,
1 Mg- the sun. and moon 'static), still! -.quell of the art of the world has
1 If the world bail stopped an in- been in the Possession of the 'vicious.
liVEA.1)ON OF AN earth as no foundatiori." Christala specitnens—neerely artistivally conside
philosophy comes aad, ends non, ered—of seupture aud painting that
TO WIN ?ATV -XS. So now see how it will read if it is locked up. llow Paul Must bove tat
translated. rigb.t. "NiThere wast thou whim, staoding amid those impuri-
h I set tile sockets of tint eoethn, tie.; that etared on hint Iroin tele 1
word as trauslated edoundetionee are to be foiled amid those ruins are
low ot Gocl'e hand—o socket largo Coriuth, be preached a the pter
1Vhere la the socket? It is the hol-
o and
SCIENCE UNITES WITI-1 RELIGION
"
ielret It Was Vete Goliannseewore, not
It Afterwards, )$ecoras a 'Weapon Tor
Ow% nod Ilas Trove!), a Very Wreotiere
Ono e'or the Teuth—Voiversellte of
Wasbiogton, May n. --In this die-
alle Um roll of
, the whole universe would have -What to unclenn Henry VIII. was a
stout
bf ** eStop,e sale beautiful picture of the
een oat oaeon
Madonna?
h "not quite so What to Lord Jeffreys, the unJjustg,
1 thture of the " d-
tions—one on it$ own axis and ment?" 111t to CrNo, the unweehed. I
Christian philosp ;
quick:" The world. hoe two lien iwgge. t 11
Course Dr. a ge ti er around the Sen. a picture of the beptista in thee Jor- I
ionuerice once oettogortist.le but, now It Wa.s not necessary In eian? Tbe art et the world on the
frieodly to the gospa and eucourages • malting them stand still thet both wrong side. But, tbot is being
1 ions should be stopped-nonly ibe changed now. The Chrietian extist
Christian. Worners; text,
;urn 9, "'Mere is uone tbet; give
•it Me."
David ned from his pursuers. The
Norld runs very fast when it is dies,
ing a good man. The country is try-
ing to catch 1)avid. and to slay him.
David goes into the house of a, priest
and asks him for a. sword or spear
with which to defend 1$C1' he
priest, not 'tieing accustonted to
se
4e441Y wcaPtets. tells David that .
Cannot. $upply hint. but suddenly t
prieet tbiults of ten. eword, then
had been carefully wrappeil. up and
laid away—the very wienoct that Go-
lienti formerly used—aud be Lines
doshrt that sword, end witile be is tine
TrApping the eharp, glitteriog. raem.
Oroble blade it nestles upon David's
thot, this Is the very sword
Veal was used. ago:lost himself wizen
was in the figlte with Goliath, and
Tnevid can bardly is hand off it
Until the priest. hoe unwound it. Da-
vin. stretebes out his baud towterd
tbat old sword arni says, "There is
Jit011e like that; give it Me," In other
Wavle, "I wo.rit in my own hand the
!Word has been used against
We mid against the cause of God.'"
So it was given Woe. Well. lily
Sriends, that is met the first or the
last sword onve 'used by giant and
IntiliSte iniquity whit% is to come
into the otiseession of Jeetts Christ,
nod of his glorious eitureh, I want.
us well tut God may belp inie. to shots'
yea that tuany a weapon 'which has
been need against. tlie armies ot God
is yet to be captured and used on
O8' side, anti I only imitate David
When 1 atretelt out my hand toward.
Olen Wade ot the Philistine and ere",
"There is none like that; give. it
Mot"
I remelt first that this is true in
regard to all scientific exploratioo.
You know that the first discoveries
astronozno and geology and chi) -
were used to battle Christian-
ity. Worlilly philosophy calrie, out
of its laboratory and out of its ob-
nervatory and said. "Now, we will
prove by the very strurture cuo
'earth and by the movement, of the
beaVenly bodies that the Illbio is
lie and Oita Christianity as we have
R, among men in a. positive imposi-
tion." llood men trembled. The
teleseope, the Leyden jars, the elec-
tric batteries, all in the bends of
the Philletines. lint ono clay Chris-
tiauity, Woking about tor some
weapon with which to distend itself.
'happened to see the very old sword
that these atheistie Philistines bad
been using against the truth mei
oried out., ("riwre. is none like that;
give it me!" And Copernices and
Galitei o.nd 'Rapier and Xsacte Newton
and Herschel and 0. tn. Mitchell
value forth and told the world that
in their ransacking of the earth end
heavens they had found overwhelm-
ing presence of the God -whom we
worship, and thiS old began to
Intake itself from the Koran and
„Shaster and Zendavesta with which
it bad been covered up and lay on
the desk of the scholar and in the
laboratory of the chemist and in the
lap ot the Christian unharmed and
-unanswered, v. -bile the tower of the
midnight . heavens struck a silvery
oltinee in its pritise.
Worldly philosophy said: "Matter
is eternal. The world always wes.
4:hod did not mane , Christian
philosophy plung-es it d crowbar into
rocks and finds that the world was
gradually made., and if gradually
3m.ade there must have been soine
point at which the process started,
-Then who started it? And so that
e'OeS over to Rome, loons an the pie-
There was no reason why the lailtieg tures and brings bock to
ono turning the world on its otos,
of the eattit should hove jarred. end con studio etude of the power
disarranged the whole inieediee, these old masters. The Christian loin -
Joshua right and God eight: irinden. - ist r goes over to Venire, loons
ty Wrong every time. I knew it would the "Crucifixion ot Cbritt" and comae
be wrong. I thank 410,1 that the time back to the American pulpit, to tenk
has come Whqi Christi:a:3 need nut as never hefore at the Sufferings
be scared at any sell:melee explera- the S'aelour. The private tourist gees
tion. The fact is thot religion and to Rome and loons at Repheens pie-
seionee have etruelt bands in tternal ture of the "Last judallient." The
friellnishiP. tied 'Oe deeper (IOWA ge, t tears start, onn he goes been to Itie
()logy Can dig and the higher up room in the hotel and prays God for
astronomy can sear all the better for Preparotion for that day when
us.' Tlie pruner; •)r tbc) horti .1Lsos
Christ bow stormed the observator, i Shriveling like a paretic,* scroll,
its of the world's setowo. ob I Peen 1, The limning heavens together roll.
he highest, towers hove Rung out the f
banner of the ereon, and Chriselanno 1 Our Sunday echool neWsnallern
now from the observatories ot Me , wants are adorned with Pictures
bany an.d Washington stretches out Joseph in the court, Daniel in t
its hand I OWard the Inlinidng acienti- . don, $hadruch ill the fire. 13Aeli, in the
fie weapon, eryiege nave :t, none shipwreck. Christ on the cross. Oh.
like Glut; give it ran"- I Was Tend- 1 that we Might in our families think
ing ot Herschel, who was looking at '' more ot the, power of Christion pito
A Meteor through a telescope. and 1 tures! One little &etch of Samuel
when it came over the face of the 1 hneeling in Pittner will mean More te
teleneope it was so powerful he had your children than 20 sermons on
to avert his eyes. And it has been i votion. One patient face of Christ, ny
just eo that, Many an Astronomer lies t the hand of the artist will be more
gone into an observatory ann looked Tour child than tint seri:nous on fore
up int° the midnight, heavens. and. earaure. The are a the, world is to
the Lord God has through scone o tattoo for Christ. What bets be
sevizigiug world denied Anton his vis- come ld Tbeirwaldsen's ehisel and
1011, and the. -101;trued man cried out: Chirlonehelo's efahnu? CaPturetl for
"Who am I? Undone: Vatteleaul MAW the triith. '‘There is none Into the
nerheY, lend 0 oill'' give it nee."
Again. I remark that the traveling So 1 routarlz it is with, bueiness
disPosition tit the world. which etas cumen and teen When Cbrist was
adverse to morals and religion, is te upen earth< the people thathe followed
brought. on our side. The man that him tor the most. part bad no social
it clown to Jericho And fell amid position. There was but one Mau
thieves W115 a tope of a great. Many naturally brilliant in all the apostle
-
travelers. Tbero is many a man who ship. Joseph Of AriMathea. the rich
' very honest at home who when he Man, risked nothing witeu he offered
3. unread has his honor filched. and 4 bole iu the rock for, the dead
his good habits stolen. There Are but twist. How wenn ot the merchants
very few Men Who cau stand the in Asia Minor befriended Jesue? I
stress of an expedition. Six weeks at think of only one—Lyttio. How
watering place have ruined niany n mon* ot the eciestles on the beach at
In the olden times God for- ;alike eatertained Christ? Not. one.
ba the traveling of men for tne When Peter ettelle to Joppa, he stop -
purposes ot trade because ot the cox,- ped with one Slition, a, tanner. What,
ruptiug influences attracting it. A poever had Christ's name On the
good many men now cannot st Roman exchange or in the bazaters
the transition from one place to an- ot Corinth? None, The prominent
other, Sonic Mee who seem to be Men ot the day did not wont to den
very consistent nere M the way of their repatation for sanity by pre
-
keeping the Sabbath when they get tending to be one of his followers.
into Spale, on the Lord's day alwitys Now that is oll clumped. Among,
go out to see the bull -fights. Pinto the mightiest men in our great cities
saki that no city ought to be built to -day are the Ctristion merchants
nearer to the sea than ten miles lest and the Christian bankers, and if
it bo Oo to:1mnd to commerce. But this morrow ot the board of trade any
reveling disposition of the world num should get up ond malign the
which was adverse to tbat whigh is nazne of Jesus he would be quinkly
good is to be brought on our side. silenced or put out. In the front
These enail trains, why, they tone rank of all our Christian workers to-
m- Bibles: these steamships, they day are the Christian mercbauts, and
1.reeeport our Missionaries; these the enterprises of the. world exe coot -
sailors, rusniug from eity to city all ing on the right side. There was a.
arcrued the world, are 1.0 be convert- farm willed away some years ago,
ed into Christiite heraleis and go Mit all the proceeds of thot farm to go
and preach Christ among the heathen for spreading infidel books. Some -
nations. Tho gospels are infinitely 4 hOW matters hove ebanged, and now
multiplied in beauty and power since all the proceeds of that form go to-
Robioson and Thompson and litirck- ward the missionary cause. One of
hardt hove come back anal. talked to the finest printing presses over built
us*about Siloam and Capernaum and was built for the express purpose of
Jeresalern, pointing out to us the publishing infidel tracts and books.
liliee about which Jesus preached, NoW it does nOthing but print lIoly
the beach upon which Pout. was ship- Bibles. I believe that the time will
wrecked, the fords at which J ordan come when in commercial circles the
was passed, the Red sea bank an voice_ of Christ will be the mightiest
which were tossed the cvadaeses of of all voices and the ships of Tex-
tile &owned EVPtinDS. A man said: shish will bring presents and. the
"I went to the Holy Land an infidel. Queen of Sheba her glory and the
I came back a Christian. I could not wise men of the east their myrrh
n
help it." and frankincense. I look off upon
I am not. shocked, as some bo.ve the business men of this land and. re -
been, at the building of railroads in joice at the prospect that their tact
the Holy Land. I wish that all the and ingenuity ;owl talent aro being
world reiglit go and ' see Golgotha brought into the service of Christ.
end Bethlehem. 1Tow inany wbo could It. is one of the mightiest of weep -
tears now easily buy ons. "There is non- like that; give
ri-
TOLSTOI TO THE CZAR
• 4
THE, PHILOSOPHEW$ APPEAL TO 7 tie
RUSSIAN nMPEROR.
view, I epe fr t ot view
of Your Mejeety, who .ble to Pxr,
an end to the eriniee co 'tteci are,
der the guise ot legality dee
stroy the bases on which $ crinue$
th4r
owst
ko
are founded, Therefore. I e
liberty ei advising you
To revise and abolish t
Tellil 411° of
4" As.,- h$-uT4 Vrgelt"1 Fr"- trlitiient;riva. 4rnecglatsrt7pItellisleacuwt4ion"i;
t14°- 14 12 _W113 agn° tbe ow= of religloo, whicii have
Op ep* NV it), ,,,, AVV eal to Angel es ceondunttroy aely eppterluse us Russia; afila)n,lio pontintisir
Alut°3:0°,7f.4u°v( 3-114 °Ica G"'cl Sea° went for neparture from, the religiouo
creed of the State, and to liberate
In 1896 a Russian official publieo.- all therseus imprisoned and exiled teet
:1 tEboi°fItIl:tel:1C1r eied:r ant unegTsuhisatieFeeelvtioraa°fts:Ms1 sl I IficesectIseer 111:At rriu 'Ai aieute;orietoli:sei gt tolitletst itr lee q:Su: tiltvatleae: ule - -74; ts;ar, ::ftacilbre°8eisoctu 1:11:11cie
consider the questiOn of how to rq-
1
nonleiloeotteett end. Mineola — totter tong ceased to exist, in every other
marlin ia order to acquo.int the the refusal to tone Art. oath anti tet
Ymmg EmPress' the gr°71alaught" °4 perform military serviee; not to Pun-
.
oe inventors, A pretty little weteatt et a was nnti patterns, organdies, aleat, t of the country which had just bet isb. such dissent as e. crime, but try,
Some women deserve 4 plaee in tile Oat liatmei. oureohonda, madras, misses ot I, Queen Victoria, with the institutions
mY getiu°12talice waDtea a Ilevr fl°Ikli ties aail oo wad ed taffetas tuned SO I come Her 31ajesty'e new home. ono. te°ehreeci?ezletidt theeeolelle,o7streeteeencLhiaosniTesa7
dotted eaa c4ress Pa ehaed not ,,,nleameY eloselY that 010' become substantially also to afford information on the "by" eenhennory Weer in exchange for
gellevaL military service, anti a eolentie din
elieughte IMIT One- obe on° a `oaeA.'a'e' ao.other fabric are all seen. These, as subjeet for Englishmen in
oat nt fee' 4 Mee frock. She teen it :meet bet the more dressy ones nave some i autoog other extraordinary thinge. porgien we if I novo not expoeined
eleration to speedc the truth in couete
ta, i4nt it Waa eld alld SideY in n, 13114 and 4 geueral rule, leave the sleeves made I says the nloscow correspondent of
and Washed it as she would wash One° kiaa ee eederneeve effect. Tills is callt t there is a cbapter on the toleration ef law instead of the usual oath,
in spite oh all her efforts it looked old atiel iti regular shirt sleeve pattero with miffs, i The London Times. In that boot,
13/4 reenter who bullpens to ltnow the reel ht ;your positioll, I 'believe that the
i each other to find sensething new and
Itussie. in thia reepect, tom religious oppression 'practised,
1711::11:11e:tairp4tLe1141Pc'tuaTaSix6:!jia:sureleet°e111;41:nri:te Illnentehtthier44°. leed the Englislintan who tunes his ill Ysaur P°Alle" he'stde$ dQing harai to
selutely imposeible,
1 rthead of the other in a wao winch le ale e yourselt in tbe opinion at the people,.
lillere strining. Seine at the pinturee are position of
itint is certainly ea,leutated to rids-
'" • inicat of Europe O. the
and ironed in tearing it soft lihe sera„lh ad tbe Empresso Eugenio sleeve, Loog of the Russian Government in relig- my sneolnincloeaertt pPelY01)7:11Yn, mg-teirvale waleaSel
nFreedeou of et hnoeseie porticOlax. hnow and
lAqges 4°1113 to the t°1)1°,t 5°4 NVitiL a Oleg, 4114 the corset houses vie With whieb, will astonish any feel an the weight And responsibility
Viler' this IS'ae done.' She f'a5teee4 an waieted effecte Are still to be tbe proper ious matters entitled
\
ly new, but It is to be one ot the princi-
pal styles for this online eeason. Veer
Whale jacnet le nuely and elosely tuelced,
and then it is cut lute the proper shape
for a short jacket anti haisted exactly as
rare the cloth ones. Some ot these at
cut eft quite short in front, aud others
tare lotwer in front than in the been.
Some have ebarp 'pieta and others
rounded ones, '11.st like -those a covert
claa cloth. These are edged in some ettees
With cable cording, end in others they
ara trimmed with lace or some one at
lithe fine brains. A few are open at the
;neck without collars, and -then the uext
I will base high collers witb revers Or
with drip toner band.s. Alt of these 130
\
ivell tut the separate waists aro calculate
ed to nielnao tbe beauties et tbe low'
Corset.
hlost of the fancy neasrear ehowe a
tertdeuey towerd lower eteciteil gowns„
not suelz es are vatted eveniug dresses,
ba4uutarogovetrnosuaidendiescipdaertsd endulasrhasptyeiso aullado
aoltwatilyao bIelinuet5alle5titnupworaepradgetouivrir,:ntwatitaye
railde in. these styles. They make It
\
necessary to have little scarfs and dolma
And other Saner late or 6nO Mull nr•
raugements to threvr aver the neck When
ist the Street, ouch a$ Otir greet-graxele
Monitore usen in their emiug days. Thei
I are called bertha% %Imre are also welly
hrtiell and SoMe Yellow oil pilot silo made
13184s o!
otfluitUaiffeI° btlethicubeoticteinglieherlar its
DVINE11 GOWN.
ber polka dotted eilk. The dots are just 40o/wit.
the riglit size, and they aro half an inch ll We see in the most advanced hoosee
apart. no dress is Mane with two nate the sure forerunners of the thepress Ein
row Tales at the bottom, awl the waist
Is trimmed with black lace upplique, in
which. she has run a thread or so ot yen
low silk.
Speaking at polka dots reminds me
that probebly no other single design will
he so popular this season tie the polka
not, and it voiles in size train that ot a.
pin bead to that ot a quarter ot a dollar. ,
Some bare .tWO sizes in one design. For '
instance, there Nvill be one large dot arid 1
a duster of tbree mean open This is a ,
:Fere' pretty design end not so eet awl I
tigid as those in Which tho dots tire all 1
at ono size. Another design which we all '
knott wellobut whicli is put forward as
new this season in all the now tints Ina
colors, ie dote made of rings, white or red
or scene other eontrastiug color on a
dark ground. Some have dark rings oil *
wbite or Very light ground, ern this is ex-
ceedingly neat and pretty. These dengue
are brought out in all ot the new raate-
nials. Another way of utilizing the dots
to maks. a new design is to have a curly- ,
cue all ot dots of different sizes, the
small one beginning at one end. The cur-
b -cues iuterlace, and the deSigD is net
and pleasing.
White and black are so very stylish this
season and show such a tendency to con-
tinue so all the year tbat no woman will
make a Mistake in getting her gowns of
blach and white. Shantung sillts and
linens are refined when the vhole motive
is a combination of black and white, but
most of these Show only the string cm
linen color. The same color is seeroin all
the lines of dress goods. Sills and linen
waists are among the novelties. One style
informatiou trout this att Q
eclat pit 4
unprecedented expenditure Of lAbor, iadnticlorhillteindtsIlleg.0,7isTair persecu. ti and
by the Russian Goveruneent with an
Money end zeal. As a, coutraet t° by tuaniug ite repetition iropessiblO
inis official "Freeflone of Religion.” you tot net only rotten yoursot ot
3hivb' 111i"13°" °ther Asiatir or this resintatiltility, lout will oval-
Derliuoval things in flussia, hittdert
ureter Eitropecte, nomencloture, meaes e., h ug done 4,.. aood
elyei the pleasuroble conrsc.iOueness el
:xv:rcytlevYhterbee erelsse.erisnc tfurscollp?, iti ules4enrids
a tritosintiou of one of the ManY cuPe svGilICIddolleilhileYaugrteoriteds: good fowrilti:
...p;eaectle Him. And in doing this you
the Czar, now beteg privately Cir- tuvailigati, people and for a -ourself. Your
les of Count Tolstons last letter to
dated. The style in Ruesian seems Dehoahheh, 3h -i, 1000. Len. Tolson.
l'HE Onterht-E ElOnR-
the Sake of Xining*
anniftw.I.T
TrtUtUIVIU Of NAtiVeS.4%.104 f q*
Inritiug Irmo 'Kurtzman, 'under datie
orident sendo
zn,
• lately distributed hadgmhah 0! hithany u
you
uboi-
objection was overcovo, ond in not affor
first- three worne of the llittle we find tickets from Constantinople to .Top -
that Moses --stated megetificent pat Then let Christians travel! God
truth -when he said, "In the begin- speed the rail trains and guide* the
aing'" • t steamships this night panting across
'Worldly philosophy said: "Vatir >11 phorescent wake
Bible is a most inaccurate book. All
that story , in the Old Testament,
again and again told, about the
al:My of the locusts—it is preposter-
ne. Nies. There ie nothing in the cone-
ing of the locusts like an army. Alt
army walks; locusts fly. An army
gees in order and pre.)ceseion, locusts
i without order.' ' "Wait, ' said
CLIrIS-
lean philosophy, and :n Itt the
southwesteen part of this. country
.Christian men -went out to exaMine
the march of the locusts. There are
Men right before me who must have
noticed in that very part • of the
country'the coining, up of elie locustS
like an army, and it was fOund that
all the newspaners ,inewitehigle epolte
of them as au armee Winn They,
eeem to have: a commender. They
march like. It hose. They halt like
a host. No arrow evee went
10
straighter iliglit- than the locusts
come,. met even turning aside for the
wind, 1! the wind rises, the locuses
-drop and then .rise again .artere it
has gone down,' takiug the"ettate line
of march, not varying a foot. The
<old Bible is right every time when it
speaks of locpsts coming, like an
army; worldly pnilosophy wron,
W orinly philosophy said; ''Allt that
story about the light 'turned as cley
to the seal' is steeply an absureilet,''
Old time evcirldly philosopily said,
"The light conies straight." Chr s -
teen. philosophy says, "Wait
vhile " arid it goes on and makes , ture making o
V1'1 anxiotIS elifs.elay to have the
' 1 tforrn On
ine neep
tat the shining- feeteof him who from
wave cliff to wave cliff trod be -
storm d Tiberius. The Japanese come
a,cioss tbe water and eee our civilera-
lion and examine our Christianity
and go ba.cle axed tell the story and
keep that empire rocking till Jesus
shall reign.
Where'er the sun
DoeS his succeseive journeys run.
And the firearms with which the in-
fidel traveler let -might down the Arab
horsterian and the jackals of the de-
sert have been surrendered to the
church, and we reach forth tear hand,
ereeng, 'There tame like thetegive
it enel"
Samuel L. Southard eras mighty in
the courtroom and in the senate
chamber, but he resolved his. Strong-
est elfilaience for- that day when 'he
steod before the literary societies at
Princeton conmiencement a,nel pleaded
for the , grandeur of our Bible. Dan-
iel -Webster won not his- chief - gar-
lands while responding to Bayne,
but on. that clay when in the famous
Girard will ease he showed his af-
feetion for the Christian, religion and
eulogized. the Bible. The eloquence
and the learning that have been on
the other side come over to our side.
Cantered for 'God! "There is none
RICO that; give it me."
So aSo has it been with the pie-
ld We are
it me."
Noev, if what I have said be true,
' away with all downheartedness! If
science is to be on the right side and
the traveling disposition of the world
on the right side and the learning of
the world on the right side and the
picture making on the right gide and
the business acumen and tact of the
world on the right side, thine, 0
,
Lord, is the kingdom! 011, fall into
line, all ye people!. It is a. grand
thing to be in such an army and led
by such connnander a.nd on the
way to such a. victory. If what I
have said is true, then Obrist is go-
ing to gather up for himself out of
this world everything that is -Worth
anything, and there will be nothing
but the seem left. We have been re-
bels, but a proclamation of amnesty
gbes forth now from We throne Of
God saying , ' 'Whosoever will, let'
him come.'' However long yoremay
have waridered, however great your
crines may have been, "whosoever
will, let him come." Oh, that this
hour 1 could marshal all the world
on the side of , Christ! He is the
best friend a man ever had. He is
so kind, he so loving, so sympathe-
tic! I cannot see how yen can stay
cep t his mercy . Beheld ' h im as
b very careless for so distine
141 guished a, writer: but this, I am to i .
is to be aceOunted for tee the fart
at it woe written when the author
s very ill and bedridden at the end
vex Its contents have bo -
so gerierally lenown here atom,
ell -informed peolde ine.t there rebruartt 18. Q.
013113.
rdly be ono doubt as to its leoron a terrible picture of Iteor tare
sas kite'. The request Made on bariti in that distrion
beim of certain Russian women. Writes, "we baVe beert isolutetl, awl
"For over eight Weeks now," len
who ask tO be allowed. to leave their
re-entered our district out -
bands in exile sontewbere in the re- rebels)
notives were Very Al:Mime:3 to tont,
motor parts Of Siberia. I bad very great difileulty In per.
Your nroperiat :Majesty Gospodar
eaa,ding thole tort sit still, but tet lesh
Nicbolas Alexandrovitin they sew the tatility ot rising.
"The Boer treatenent set uat,ives in
Kindly revel threugh the enclosed
ot first intended for you, end it is Most brutal. I knoW of too ittanyl
colsrdiinrit,en;Y.0,,ung
°rt. Listen to the promptings of %%nee of brutal murder doze to ititetee
cent waives ever to feel agoin that
letter yourselt wed alone; it was not
*our Own good heaxt ond act ace
a. Doer is a. kindly, generous, and
woinen living at Tiber- stlimgePri-eur.askainuts, itlwIethiee as 41ret I t oei, ax tl..,
kill -
and itawvooro,latittnetratserounsin,g 171 atisloyttilsopve-0
tifolgr* Darders ICuil with despatches.
He has never returned., but the renel
One of our natiVeS left hero
ty, with sufficient for their needs,
lea.der has sent word to one in our
accumuloted by hard work, to be el -
lowed to give tip a free and corafort-
chieftains that he was eaptured and
\
shot in. cold blood. The story, os
oble existenee and to go to the most
the most, painful etoulitions. ndbanti told tityheye, teinedpotiobsendtoeyne-wwiat5nnenss;iingis_
horrible place of exile surrounded by
must hove been the sufferings eompelled him by frentediug
tge‘lo dihgirahis ow u groves, and then nee
these people during six years of sena-
tation, livieg alone, in the most dere
ficult eircurustances? A.nd. how inier- him -
"When these same rebels attateted -
ill Daniel's Kull the women and rhild-
al and strong must they be if,
the midst of their suderings, they
of the village went into the
to ' church. for protection. A white flag
thiek not of themselves, but of one ren
anotber, and of how to be true ori the building, and the eneray
. wwaerse told that only women. and
tnintetirtizatinarnrniile3gepveno;ise. who are
tahreesesuicaarre.
children were there. They neither.
ing there. Hundreds ot such Ruse
. respected the white flag nor the sox
tlergoing still worse suffering fromre- i, -and age of the people, but fired vol-
sitens, the best of the PeoPle, are un-
ligious persecution, which, throe& I ley after volley into the church, kill -
some astonishing inisunderstancting, ; ed a girl_and wounded two <Aber,
continues to be practised in Russia, 1 people."—London Daily Express.
and is even. on the increase at a i
time when. all enlightened persons I 'Victorian nreddene slug
-
and Governments have long ago re- , The wedding ring of' Queen Vie -
cognized the futility, abourdity and I torie. was , by her own wish, buried
cruel injustice of such persecution. 1 with her, says The London ()braid -
have long had it in ray mind as a. ole. As a matter of fact it has been.
sacred duty before I die to try to her inseparable "wear" for more
open your eyes to the senseless and than. sixty years. The rule of her
terrible cruelties which aro perpetxat- married life has been. never to re-
ed in your neme. The accompanying move it, and once 'when a ca.st of her
letter from the Doukhobors has de- hand -was -taken, her great alarm.
tennined me to put it off no longer. was that the ring vrould be displaced
Thousands of the best Russians, sin- by t.he plaster. With the single ex-
cerely religious people, and. there- ception of its enforced removal in
fore, such as constitute the chief later years for a few b.ours to be en -
strength of every nation, have been larged, so as -to accommodate it to
alreody ruined or are being ruined in the increased girth of her llnger, the
prison. and M banishreent, or have ring was worn incesstuitly for sixty
been sent out, or are being sent out, years. Of all her innumerable ringee
of Russia. The floWer of the popula- next to her wedding ring, <nicer', Vic -
tom, not only in the Caucasus, but toria. valued a very siinple oned'entenen
also in Russia proper, 10,000 Douk- deed. It was made of gold and onen
hobors, rtotwithstanding all hard- amel, and had e very small diamond
ships and privations, have quitted. as its central ornament. Its market.
their fatherland forever, not only value was slight enough, as it well
with regret, but iu terror from the might be, for it was bought with in
remembrauee of all they have had boy's pocket, money.. It was, M fact,
to undergo there. Several thousand the first present made by Prince Al-
Molokani in the district of Sars, as bert to the Princess Victoria, when
many in Eriven, whose petition to at the age of sixteen, he visited the
be allowed to emigrate I have al- future conntry of his. Adoption. The •
ready submitted to you, t,he eficilo- actual emerald serpent ring, which.
kani of Taelikent, and some 10,000 he gave her atterward as the formal
persons in the provinces of Itharkoff engag•eteent ' ring,' was never quite
end Inieff, who are persecuted for so precious to 'Her Majesty a,s this
their faith—all these wish and PraY humble predecesseee Which. stood as ,
for one thing onlY, and that is the the first token of the Memorable af•-•
permission to leave Itussia • ato fair of tho heart.
go where they may safely wor,ship ----n----
God as they understand Him, and madame Tatiana.
not as ordered by the authorities, On April ltn, 1850, died in her
most of whom recognize no aod 'ninetieth year Madame 'nes:etude
whatever. foundresS of the well-known eolleca
It you 110 not lcnow of all the an- tion of waxwork figures which every
surd eruelties which are commit.ted tourist to, London visits. She hadt
in your name, then allow me to tell actuielly lined ' ternong the celebrated ': t
you here that my words will be eon- men of the French revolution, whose
firmed by any just person whom ycat effigies, formed .the nucleus of her
may eommission to investigate the tanlishment, Marat, Robespierre arid '
matter. But once knowing that your Charlotte Corday she modelled froM
name is used to justify the infithtion be recollectiOn of ,them as then en- .,
of sufferiog upon the innocent, and peared in life. At ,one time she wee
the best among the people, and that in prison, when her associates were 1
you are able to prev,ent it, you can- linadame Deauhaenals and a_ hen e
riot hove peace of inin'd entil you daughter, afterwards mother of
have done this. Do not , take couneel poleon III. Escaping from Parise eheee
1 men who have arranged led for .many years a life of struga
gling poverty, until her settlirig i
London proved the beginning of
411
years of constant prosperity, end e
founding of an estoblislement in
has since becOme worldwide ire i
reputotion.
senorita** oiente,
Sardinia 10 Celebrated 301 t
tainDS which prove that prehloW
cally it Was inhabited by 'tient*.
........
present place ot abode evidently re. /Mow little et -allot treenspiring
fers tbeir veldt to join their hus. the outer WOrid. MCA the 730ere (41i
1, zetnerv aeceextre
genie styles and are graeely told that
aside from the hoops of on* part of her
time we shall certainly evear the flounces,
and wide sleeves and in fact all the
things belonging to thet particular epoch,
but here is an empire dinner gown which
certainly belongs to the age of Josephine,
and several other distinct styles, each
hexing ite rise during the reign of mime
the queen or emtwess, may be found.
This partienlar gown is of einem peau de
cygne, riehly etabrc.idered -with gold and
silver. The train is of lilac YelTet arid
has a trimi33ing of gold, and silver braid.
It ie lined with parma elolet satin. Mold
atter that il'e see a !nice for a young
lady made of eilliatross in the most nein
eate of tau, triramed with lace and insets
of white satitt. The new arrangement
et tucks is prettier than the bayidere
stripes Wilich go with. the Eugenie styles.
The neat wed jaunty little jacket ot
Shepherd's plaid, with its teeing of black
velvet and it.s flap collar, is much l xnettier
than the long, shapeless black taffeta
coats -with the roondabost trimentag of
black velvet ribbon. The jacket mention-
ed is pert of a suit is therefore dou-
bly upeful, as it can be 'Worn with any-
thing' A --"--------.IFInaT on tbe Tr,ate/c.
\ "Do you know tho one thing of which
' a locomotive engineer is most afraid/"
a well known railroad mail asked. a
\
friend. "Nothing- will. clitek a train
quicker than a hog on the track. A.n
ennegsihneeeervLawnidnwirtri ttv,heraeubgithattnetywhantrehhberrsde
withouMhouglat of danher hut the sight
ot a hog between the mils makes his
hair stand ea end. ' 1 have never beard
a snentifie e,xplenatioa ot why a hog will
throw ao eegine off the track nine timea
out antes, Ime ant' reilroan man will tell
' ' Astneap tis 1 caa tzars it
diseoveriee and finds that the einem-
.
phere curves and bends the rays of
light around the ,eartie literally -as
LO the seal.'' The Bible
away from hirrt. Coxe noW and, ac --
stretches out the arms' of'ifis salva-
tion, eaying,- "Look unto. me, all yu
ends' of tke earth, and be ye %axed,
for I ard od Make Anal choice
now'. Yoe will. either_ be willows,
planted by the water courses or the
chaff which, the wind driveth away:
Queer Vreink of Notote.
alt A. Wilson, 'le It. S., in Tho London
Lancet citee tee' case of an ant,elope
, < kid, killed in Soiith Africa, Which ,
wren • ••
'whiting press an , ,
the side of Christiariity, but we over-
look the engraerees knife and the
,
' ' T antiquarian
eae. eat elephantine head and probes -
'Philosophy, "all t,hat allueion in examines the chisel(' P a d lop.): type. Tile author Supposes thau
tiketrailthwans tel tthhee
m. says iroi'ldy goes and loolts aepictuared oGrt ebli::;;(,livalletitin6, three
Job- about the foundations of the Thebes' and.,Nineveli and POD1Pelt an regnant ewe to have been irsghtene
vart'a is simply an absurditY. :Where then comes back to tell ins. of„ thy by a' elephant.
West thou.' sevs Goa 'When I mot beastliness of ancient art, ann.
,
rigitt again; worldly phileeophy painter's Penti .
1
tra----"" •notissl DBMS' OM innkaltOSL
Irv.. .. , ,
shows a blamed front with, tented yoke -
and Persian braid around the sentare of
the yoke. Anothe'i line ot tke breid peo-
ns mine around *the waist to the batik
i e
' h it --t t a Th ' lc 10,tie
the
w ere is as eite .., e yo e i o .
tucked lineie tuel the coffe ,aret of the
seine witb the trimming over it., The
sleeves Are of, n 1008e bishop shp.pe. The
,-to4.1k collar is Mgt% end oefered witk the
le aid.
Wiliam of linea. *Me lanstlewae, title
(kit,' lining 'entslitentlegged aattaal, the w 1 e
this ill-trealenent td be guided ,.
reit it is 9 ._,.
hogs bode ido.ser to tbe grieend than therri, neither with Pobiedonostooff
that of other Animals and more apt to who is a man m
behind his tie',
'e
thtioegrertsliast°InseeetIllinengtoTalbilldtlitais'(itvtleilte °oft aft 1 ciit'nentnhii:hg?'hiPahi°ta:gisilitutitua'est,\Yethhaaliih'doisie‘,°'eursullele18;„t'ill ran°11:t...
get beeetith die engine, and tben, too,
Ithhh°e°17atisiv,;'hlighigtrot°1,htt,Ilemar;I:nise tIgnsel:wse enlightened, Such people will tell you
\
turrIttto.„ . ,, say is not froxa me' own point of
...._„
Litkuenl1 1
wtarthtahte amamhoegatona teohowt•iltrreacka Nrhlel that a Ioanndlie9svipoeriostinanns: and thitat, 'al
, an a are
teen -est man win, ever 14111. leetunettre say and advise is: tiniest, but what