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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-4-17, Page 3DAY OF DECISIVE BATTLE When Death Shall be Swallowed Up in Victory. Motored according to Act of no P111115111Crat 001,110*. thli vow 022o Thougood Illoo Hos- , Pill Two, ell Woni Bogy, of Tosioto, it thAlihooftrowit of aetioulturs, °Sawa! A. despatch from Washington says ; -Rov, Dr, Talmage preached from U)0 following text : 1. Col% x'S's "Beath is swallowed up in victory." The royal coon of the Sabbaths is matte up of silty -two. Fifty -Ono sire priaees in the royal bonsehold, bet ! Easter is quote). She wears If the world lasts as mach longer as vent. aligtory THE HEN OT THE TOMB, • nisi view, ef coarse, malteg it of but little importance whether we rue cremated or sepultured. If the /atter is duet to dust, the fort -nee is ashes to ashes: If any prefer in- cineration, let them have it Without cavil or -protest. The world lsittY Be - richer diadem, ehe Sways a more come so crowded that cremation may lteltroled sceptre', and in her smile be universally adopted by law as nal:Jars are Irradiated, How wels; Well as by general conseat. Arany of come she Is when after a harsh will- the mightiest and best spirits have Ler and late spring, she seems to step out of the snowbank rather gone through this process. If the world lasts as much longer as than the eoutservatory, to come out It has thus far, there perhaps may of the north instead of the south, be no room for the largo acreage set out of the arctic rather than th0! aintrt for resting places, but; there is tropics, dismoantIng froM the icy !plenty of room yet, and the race equinox but welcome .this queenly need not pnss that bridgo of fire un - day, holdiag high In her right hand til it comes to ,it, The most of us the wrenched on bolt of Christ's prefer 'the ohl way. But whether eepulehre and holding high in her ! out of natural disintegratiol . or ere - loft hand the key to all the 101110 wation wo shall get that linninous, teries in Christendom. I buoyant, gladsome, translucent, meg- My text is an ejaculation. lt is nilleent, inexplicable structure called spun out of halleluiahs. Paul wrote !the aesusseetism body. You will right on in his argument about the have it; 1 win have it. I say to you to -day as Paul said to Agrippa, "SVIty should it be resurrection and obsersed all the laWs of logic, but when he canie to write the words of the text his thought a thing incredible w1th you gers and his 0U 01311 the parchment, ! that God should raise the dead?" on which he wrote took fire, and he That far up cloud, higher than the cried oet, "Death is swallowed up in hawk flies, higher than the eagle victory!" It is an exciting thing to flies, What is it made or? Drops of water from a averother drops , see an array routed and flying. They run each other down. They scatter rrom 0, lake, still 00100 drops from everything Valuable to the 'track. * a Stagnant pool, but now embodied UnWheeled artiliery, hoof of horse in a cloud anti kindled by the on breast ' of weatuded and dying sun, If God can make Stith a man, lustrous cloud out of water drops MARGE' OF THE ISL/.OK GIANT. many of them soiled and impure and fetched from miles Etway, can lie :not transport the fragmersts of o huinan body from the earth and out of them build 0, radiant body? Cannot Clod, who owns all the material out of which bones, mus- cle and flesh are made, set them up again if they bave H 22. manufacturer of telescopes drop a In my text is a worse discomfiture. 11. Seeing that a lilac'. giant propos- ed to conquer the cart h. He gather- ed for his host all the aches and pains and titularies soul cancers and distempers and epidemics of the ages. Ile marched them clOwn, drilling them ia the northwest wind and amid the slush of tempests. 13e telescope on the floor and it breaks threw tat barricades of grave nibund. C(1,11 he not mond it again so you lie pitched tent of charnel house. can see through it? And if (10d Some of the troops marched with drops the human eyo into the dust, slow trend commanded by constunp- the eye which he originally lash - tions, some in double quick cam - n cled pneunionias. Some he haled, can he not restore it ? Aye took Ira besiegement of evil habit an, enne by 0110 stroke of the battle-ax ot cesualty. With bony hand he intended at the door ol hos- pitals• and sickrooms and Won all 1 1122 victories hi all the great brittle - fields of all the live continents. 'For- ward, march ! ordered the conqueror of conquerors, and all the generals and cominautlers-in-chief and all presi dents and kings and sultans and czars ih•opped under the feet of his war charger. But one Christmas night his alitagoi,ist was born. The old braggart t hat threatened the conquest anti dentrdition of the planet has lost bis mie, has lost hue grew all these flowers? Ont of the his seeptre, has lest Ids palace, (ma ;ha one „.„,a0201(1 and the earth. Resurrection! 1,112 his prestige, written over all the gut, s of manse- imon a 1221 catacomb and ts'cropolia, on cenetaph and sarcophagus, on the lenely :cairn of the arctic explorer 1,2,21 on the catrtfalque of great cath- edral, written irt capitals of azalia and cella lily, written in musical cadence, written in doxology of great assemblages, written on the 1.0122)) 2(211(1 door of the (entity vault, 111 "Viaory." Corona] word, em- bannered word, apocalyptic Word. chief word of triumphal arch muter which conquerors return. if the manufaeturer of the tele- scope, by the use of a new glass and a change or material, can make a better instrument than that which was originally- constructed and ac- tually improve it, do yen not think the fashioner of tbe human eye May improve its sight and multiply the natural eye by the thousandfold additional forces of the resurrection eye? EV L'ISYDAY RESURRECTIONS. "Why should it be thought with you an incredible thing tlatt God should raise the dead?" Things all around us suggest it. Out of what ROUT Ole THE KING OF TF,R- BOTTS. Victory 1 Word shouted at Cullo- den am( Balaclava and Blenheim, at Megiddo and Solferino, at blaratium, where the Athenians drove back the Medes; at, Poictiers, where Charles Irlartel broke the ranks of the Sara- cens ; at Salamis, where Thends- tocles in the great sea fight con- founded the Persians, and at the floor of the eastern cavern of chiseled rock, where Christ came out through a. reeeaS and throttled the king of terrors and put him back in the niche from Which the celestial Conqueror had just emerged. Alia When the jaws of the eastern 1314111S0- 101101 1001C (101V11 the black giant, "death was swallowed up in vic- tory." I proclaim the abolition of death. - The old antagonist is driven back into mythology with all the lore about SAygian fermi. and Charon with oar and boat, Melrose Abbey 4111(1 Kenilworth Castle are no MOre 12) ruina than is the, sepulchre. We shall have no more to do with death 2.11010 we have with the cloakroom at a governor's levee, 'We stop at such cloakroom and leave i21 charge of a servant our overcoat, out' overghoes, 0111' 01111V01'd apparel, that we may not be impeded in the brilliant round of the drawing room. 211011, my -Heads, when we go out of this world we Etre going to a King's banquet and to Et, receptio» of monarchs, and at the door of the tomb we leave the cloak of flesh and the Wrappings with which we meet the storms of this Wdrld. • At the close of an earthly reception, under the brush and broom of the porter, the imat m. hat may be handed to vs better than When We resigaml it, and the cloak of humanity will finally be returned to tie improved and height - 0110(2 0.1114 P111'1110(1 1111e2 glorified. You cold I do tust !relit our bodies returned as they are now. We *emit to get vitt of all their wealtnesst's and all their susceptibilities to fatigue nod t111 their slowness of locomotion. But as to 0113' 80111, tve Will cross eight OVer, 1101. Waiting for obsequies, hidepentlent of obltu- nry, into a, state in every 'way bet.' ter, With widee roam anti 1010012.1e5 beyond competation, the dollest of its into tompanionship with the very best spirits in their very best moral, in the very limier of the universe, the fear WallS burnished rind paneled they Will r be the emptied paves, they will be the abandoned sepui- chreS, with rough grOund tossed on each side of them, end elabs will lie 121102,e11 on the rent hill- ocks, and there will be falleD mon. Invents and cenotaphs, and then for the first, time you will appreciate the full exhilaration of the text,. "Death is swallowed up in victory." Ilail the Lord of earth and heaven) Praise to thee by both be given, Thee we greet. triumphant noW: Hail the resurrection thoul Resurrection! a ha raclimit butter- fly -where did it come fronts The loathsome caterpillar. That alba- tross that mites the tempest with its wings ---where did it come from? A senseless shell. "Why simuld it, be thought n thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead?" insects flew and the worms crawled last autumn feebler and feebler and then stopped, They have taken no food. They want 110110. They lle dormant, and In- sensible, but soon the south wind will blow the resurrection trumpet, and the air and the earth will be full of them. Do you .not thinic that God can do as much for our bodes as he floes for the wasps and the spiders and the snails? This morning at half past four o'clock there was a, resurrection. Out of the night the day. In a few weeks there will be ct, resurrection in rill our gardens, Why not some day tt. resurrection emid the graves? Ever and 1)112121 there are instan- ces of men and woiten entreneed. trance Is death followed by reser- rectioe tater a few clays; total sus- pension of mental 'power and vol- untary actiO». ltev. 2,111111)1)) 'Penfield,, a great evangelist or the Iota generation, of whom Dr. Archi- bald Alexander, a man foe from being sentimental, wrote in most eu- logistic terms -Rev. Willicim Ten- netit seemed to die. His spirit apparently left tho body. People came 111 day after day end said, "He is dead, be is dead." But the soul that fled returned, aral Will Tennent lived to write what he had seen while his soul was gone. Title FINAL VICTORY. And se when the world's last Easter morning shall come the 50111 will descend, trying "Where is my body?" And .1.2)0 body will ascend; saYing, ''Where Is my soul?" And the Lord of the resneeeetion will bring them together, and it will be a perfect soul in a perfect bo - 2331, liitrodured by tt peefect Christ into a peefect Heaven. Victory! Only the bad disapprove of the re- surrectiob. .Ah, there Will he 31101'0 10 rise on that tiny than those whose crimes have never been repented or Will want to see! But for all others who allowed Christ to be their par- don and their life and their resiireec- tion it will be a dity of victory. The thunderm 'of the last day will be the salvo that greets you into The lightnings will be only the torches of ti•iumphal pro- cession marching down to escort you home. The burning worlds flashing through immensity will lio the rockets celebrating youe core - nation on thronee teller° you vIll reign forever tuul forever and for- ever. Where is death? Whet have We to do with death/ As your re- united body and soul swing oft from this planet on that last day 8 MONTH'S TilURDER, OUSE CLEVER WORK xonTawzsw raouNTED ROLXCE. Charles Bullock Hanged at Port Saskatchewan for the Mar - der of Leon Stainton. One of the most reinarkable mur- der eaSes in the history of Oanatla, resembliag, in the . long patient search for the murderer, the O'Brien case in the 'Yukon, was closed by the hangman at Fort Saskatchewan, Al- berta, recently, ln 1.900 the Great Northern Rail- way was engaged' • in extensive tun- nel work at Aspen, Wyo. Among others who secured work there was a machinist named Leon 0. Stain- ton. Re was about 18 years of age and a, native of Kalamazoo, Mich. Employed in the engine room at the ttitsnonel works was Charles B. Bullock a a native of Michigan. The two became chums. In March, 1901, Bullock's father, mother and two brothers emigrated from Nebraska to the free grant land of Northern Alberta, and took UP a farm on the Battle River, not far from Ponoka, a station .on the Onlgary and lrchnonton Railway, anti about thirty miles by trail from Edmonton. Shortly after the ar- rival of the family in Alberta, Bul- lock's mother wrote to him at Aspen urging hint to come .to Alberta, and take up a farm before all the land adjacent to the railway was ,settled. She wrote frequently to him in this strain, and Bullock must have shown these letters to young Stainton and induced Min to go to Canada. The two quit work at Aspen, drew from the muster of the iverks what money was coining to them and left the place, after telling several persons that they were going to Alberta, Canada, to take up land. THIS WAS IN APRIL, 1901. sequently tha2. StaInton had lirought thia inetrenient to POnolta, Charles Bullock, when he left Ponolta, did not go to British Co - tumble, Ile returned to Great Palle, Mon., where under the mune of Charles Spencer he went -to work on railway Construction, Sergt. Heth- erington started after hlin, but his change of imale balled 111111. 31*1 R11011ES'3 ENTERPRISES, 2.$0 LPI'T.LE DONE 4°4.1130 110 KT/CH TO DO." Tiis Railroad and Telegraph Sehernee That A-7013 NOW TJnder Way, °oLli>" 3111110°10 through 4re 8t4t,C.h P' 1111.21111 15 said to have remark - but without 5o022e50 and ProhulnY 2 .2 eswam and again As he lay on his would not have got tan Mit for death -bed: "So little done and so two mistakes that Bullock made, much to do." Soule of his vast pro- Tirrell was master me -1 TRE S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSO APRIL 20. Text of the Lesson, Acts x., 34-48. Golden Text, Acts x,„ 84. 134., 35. Of a truth I perceive that God. is no resPeeter of ftersoes. I ets are well under Wan but. ere far As in Gen. 1 and 11 and Rev, stsi chanie -at the works at Aspen, 33111- • !from completion, There is no reit- mid xxii eo throughout this shele i leolt, ostensibly to get work, but 111 if any 1 212.011,40 : 5011 to believe, however, that they Bible the mtory is thet of (10(2 ''.4- reality to discover Will not be earried out, aucl In feet ing out, Ills °Lerma 11U2't1050 1 T.'11111. had been made about Stainton, there is every reasun why they should bit, 11) ootwithstendieg the uppcei-1 . IlalOIM TO ant TUOTNIAJ, go on. Rhodes was 0 proctiral man, tiun of the devil told of 01n22ll men i asking if there ,„ an opening tor i and Ids .sehemes for development., emitrolled by the Limit. The sp..: iii I ' vast Am they 1201.0, rested on a prac- 01.00, 41 the Arts is that or the he -1 !Weal basis, The completion of the glinting of the gathering out irom enterprimes now under way may be the gentiles a. people for ills mune', delayed because they hate lost the ixv, 1 1 I. and this noel: begaii in the, impulse he gave to et erything he home 01 Cornelitte under Peter, as I i took In hand; but some, if not all of recorded 1/1 001' lesson. Although them, are certain to be carried out. the 1,ord had commended before Ills! His railroad to tbe north, for exam- ascension that, the gospel be preach,' pleted before Many years. of Rhodesia and is bound to be coM- '054c100211t,s0.1‘5';yeArcYtscli'l,'"'Fit)u,r°1,111eLn:rire22.7etligitig litab: Cecil Rhodes's alleged project, for a celye a special vision. to teeth him "Oape to Cairo Railroad." Maps that God Was no respecter of per - Many articles 110,10 been written on only (xl, 19), and Peter bed to re - up to this time 'Jaen to the j eats pt 111%, lively s npecuessissianigy ("in() wirtiti•ed ; d 01 tv ells() miumesal -t utterinomt part of the earth (Mark him at Aspen. The lettee concluded "any news of 1311d Statutou Haven't, heard of him since I left hlra J. Calgary." The letter Wati written (rem Great Falls. Mr. Tirrell sent this letter to Stainton's mother at Kalamazoo, us she had ,been inquiring anxiously for tidings of her son. This letter Stainton's mother sent to Sergi,. Hetherington. it established 2.010 facts, that litaloelt was 111 Great Falls and that he hail been 101 111 Stainton in Calgary. Hetherington went to Great !Falls, but haring no picture of Ballock and lilt a poor description could find uo trace of him. Then there' crone into the ser- geant's hands another letter. Bul- lock, in order to timow pursuit oil the track, 011,010 under the 110010 of Charles Spencer to Miss Gill in Kalamazoo, a friend of Staititon, with whom the latter corresponded, to the enact that she would regret to hear that Charles Bullock, Stain - ton's friend, was dad. 'Pim Chief of Police of Great Falls found Charles Speucer on the railway work anci brought him in, At the police station he :raid ids /lame was Charles Spencer. 'You are Charles said Sergt. Hetherington, "and you are wanted in Alberta for the mur- der of Leon C. Stainton. "He was my best friend," was all Bullock said, In his baggage were iound many articles belonging to Stainton, for the possession of which he conlcl not account. He waived extradition proceedings and 011.15 brought to Edmonton, Alberta, for trial and convicted. The motive of the crime WaS rob- bery. When Bullock left Aspenlie h $4 ad, 2; Stainton had over $800. On arriving home Bullock gave his mother $25, his siater-in-law $10, and he had a twenty-doller gold piece, which he could not get (Mang ed at a neighboring ranch store. He had other nioney, but the Crowi proved that he had at least $55, 01 813 mere than when he left Aspen The 'defence attempted to show that the hodY found was not Stainton's but this failed, Sergt. Hetherington spent nearly eight Months on the case and the expense to the Crown has been near ly $3,000. The hangman 21022 011(1 Cent. Bink - ley, from Ohio, but now living near Ponoka. Bullock made 110 confes- sion. The Americans at Edmontm are very indignant at Copt 13inkley who qualified for the place by show ing he had °Metaled at, 1,13 execu -lions in Ohio. He is a neighbor o the Bullocks. In June last Edward Bullock, who was then living on his father's farm, but now has a plane of his own, went Out to search for the nest of 'a turkey that was missing. Near the Biillock farm there is a clump of brush not far from the Battle Lake trail, which runs past the farm. Thinking this a likely place for a turkey to hide her nest, Edward pro- ceeded to 1i001.011 the brush, but hurl not, gone far when Ise came upon a human head protruding from a shal- low grave. 'The body had evidently been hastily buried some time before when the frost was in the ground, 50 that rt, deop gi•ave could not be dug, Word writs sent to the author- ities at. Ponolca, who notified the Northwest Mounted Police post at Wetaskiwin, 41, neighboring town. Sergt. Hetherington, in charge of the post, rode out to where the body lay, He foand bullethole behind; the left 27111', The body was that al a young man. Looking, over the clothing, the ser -1 geant found that, the buttons on the blue jean trousers bore the name of a. Kansas City Man. There was in one of the poekets a curious bunch of 'notches issued as an advertise- ment by a, Cheyenne, Wyo., business house, and a metal badge of a street fair held 111 Kalamazoo, Mich. On the socks and drawers were foetid curious tin tags which afterward turned out to be tags of a latinch•y in Ogden, Utah. With these slender clues the police sergeant set about traehig the mur- derer, In reference to the Kalama- zoo fair -bade, he wrote to the chief of polite at that place, nsking if any one was missing from that town. The answer was that the mother of 11, boy ranted 1,0o1) Stainton was in- quiring for her Ken, who had left As- pen, in Wyoming, in April, and had not afterward been heard of. He then 100121ed ..Stainton had been a patron of the laundry in Ogden. The officer, instructed by the De- partment 10 make the fullest inves- tigation REGAlIDLESS OF EXPENSE 2('0111 to Aspen. There he learned of the departure of Sitainton and Bul- lock for Canada and got his erst straight, clue to the murderer, Hetherington, when he took the trail to Aspen, put on' his scarlet pollee coat and travelled in civilian garb. 1-1.0 traced 1312110010 and Stain- ton from Aspen to Ogden, Utah, to Salt Lake City, to Great Falls, Mon., theism to Canada at Leth- bridge, Alberta, and to Calgat•y, where the two took tickets for Ponokit, 120 miles northward, tu- (pieta] at 3120110100. showed that Charles Bullock had been there in. Apeil with a young compattion anti that they had set, out on foot for Bullock's father's. On the way they hed a lift, froni the mail carrier. Bullock reached his father's house alone between 10 and 12 o'clock ttt night. The first intimation that 1.110 family had of his approach was the 1ai1'iou0 barking of the dogs on the place. On entering the house Charles 'Bullock toid his family that a strange man had accompaeled him to the gate and had gone on to Battle Lake, Bullock clid not take up land. Flo keyed at his father's from Sunday, April 28, till SI/ochres- day, May 1, when be left, saying that lie was goleg to British Co- lumbia, to work in the mines. His father drose hint to l'01101i11, where he took the train. Before leaving he went to a betel and. got 0.11 atttoharp, Which he had previonsly left there. 'Phis atitoharp you geo dee'gashes all up ho preseoted to his father, and that and pictured and grordled witli all and doWn the 1111111, deep gashes act served to send him to the gal - the splendors that the infinite God -all up and doWn the Valley, and lows, for it 01118 clearly shotvii 111b 1)010 been printed of the rowle along whiclt the line was to join the north and south eods of Africa. As a mat- toi• of fact Mr, Rhodes distinctly said in the report he made to the British South Africa. Company, on May 2, 1899, that though he had 130 doubt of the ultimate building of such a line, the Chartered Company and himself were content to give their exclusive attention to that link In the road which would extend from 1111111wayo to the northern border of Rhodesia, a DISTANCE OF 000 MILES. 9.'his road was positively essential for the development of the territory of the Chartered Company and it was going 1.0 be built; the further extension of the road to the nouth did not. enter into their plans, it will be remembered that Mr. Rhodes asked tba Iiritish Govern- ment to guarantee the prm oissory note of the company so that it 36-38, Preaching peace by J05115 Christ. These glad tiftlugs were for Israel first (Luke xxiv, 47; Acts I, 8), but 111 order that Israel might reach out to the gentiles, which they were slow to do. God made the sinless one to be sift for us that we might In Him be Made righteous before God (11. Cor, v. 21), and apart from 112111 there is no righteousness, 110 salva- tion, however devout 00 prayerrul nian may be Even. Nieodeums had man may be. Even Nicodemus had order to enter the kingdom of God, and Defer had to bring to Cornelius the message by which he and his house might 'be saved (xi, 14), for there is no Sit1111- 11011 apart from the reception Of Christ and faith in Ms atoning' blood (Acts iv, 2: Lev. xvii, 11). 39. We are witnesses, migrequired to build a part of this 000 A witness does not, nc•ed to get up ht raise the funds at $ per cent, miles of road. The Government re- thing' his little speech or make up any - He simply tens truthfully few weeks later Mr. Rhodes raised hut a W11111 he 0(2011-11, and the redeemed of fused to give the guarantee, from companies holding mining the Lord are rontinnally on the wit - aims 111 Rhodesia the stun of jtiiitigtild jelputs•ocelEitiiinitsitng 512)112011121141 22121111)5cle $2„ cntetsn8rer start the road. to the zturibesi. The a 4110220 1241 Were true witnesses. what us testimony would ever be 500,000 on a basis of 3 per cent. 1,0 woo, was pushin41 nmah„.„.a whe„ going forth concerning Him who is altogether lovely! the outbreak of the South African 10-42. He commanded iis to preach unto the people awl to testi- fy OW it is lie 2111101121 1(5 ordained of (loti to be the Judge of iiiiick told dead. . war caused a suspension of opera - ItIons. Money had 'been secured to 1 build the lirst D'ilt miles 0( 1.118 rail- . road. The stur of $15,000,000 • would be needed to build the militia- ing 710 miles and before the war be - 1 WOIVIAN'S WRAPPER. Tasteful, becoratng morning gowns are essential to making a geed ap- pearance as well as to comfort. The attractive model given has the merit near the northern border of Rhodesia any need to wait, but where the 150 of being absolutely simple at the mn iles or(h of ViCtorF ia alls. heart. is 02)02) and the Lord truly re - same time that it is becoming and As" for Mr, Rhodes overlen21 tele- ceived there may be also the filling entirely satisfactory. The original graph prolect feom the Cape to the 01 the 81)1,12.. while sem le ea need to wait any defiaite time to be filled With the Spirit. there may he 11 11001 to wait because of the )1112'0021111))8s the boltever to receive, There came with Peter six Jewish brethren frcins looms (Acts xi, 12), who, al- though believers, were astonished 1011011 they saw the IToly Spirit given to these gentiles. It is to this day difficult for some believers to think that any people eon be blessed out- side of their so called churches, but they need to learn that (loci is no more a, I'1251422010 -l' 211 denominations than of persons. ln all their preaching these wit- gall about $8,000.000 of illis SIM) 2108518 fail not to declare that al - bad been guaranteed at a per cent., though the jeWS killed Jesus God the money to be paid into the raised ilim from the dead and show - needed for the railroad extenshm of and 1101V Peter de 1" f ed I I i m openly t o chosen w it a etiSeS. treasury „1„11 annual installments as tees this loan, which is boa The Chartered Company guaran- ed upon forward does (xvii, 31). that Ile is clare.o. as aul a - each year. the wonderful gold resources of the kind. the God appointed Judge of all man - country. l'hey have been we'ved b give all the prophets the official surveys to exist. Thye 1 w141:141:178T8'(' nim square miles ill extent Etial the svon-i ta0lItted ‘tvIlethatiohy to Emulous Ets 31e ose two that resiirrec- gold-bearing 0.1.01.1 iS 11.1)011 i St.O011! der „f it is Gait all the quartz crush-, 111'11 daY 142) °Nr°unded ""1" "113" ing done by nutcliinery in various: 113 4112 the Scriptures the things eon- ; ports of the country thus for show 117.; 11;1i self mid taught that ol1 I ore that, thong!' lOW grade, \ urin- !mints col,rerning 1.tm 1.1W, • 1 1 11 11,1 S tilltS yields more gold to the Dol.'. 1," 1,1 2111 ' A COURSE OP SIRROUTS. Z4lloatiou and Dieeipline el the German A correspondent Of an krhigliell per writing of a nimting with the German crown prince, deseribee him as a rather good-looking young man with the Iresh, high tailor and the •eittly blush of a country boy. Ile yes surprieed to find Mut exceeding - y and retiring, in spite Of he «tenor that he inherited his 1 father's appreciation of the might of the Holienzollerne. The prince is a young man of flne Phyeirme, the fruit of having hail little pampering from his youth until now. His father even improved On the simple 'military ethic:Alen and • Ws- cipline muter which all the Hohen- zollern princes have been brought up. it is only a few yearS ago that tho crown prince could have been 00011 trudging behind a plough, or mining., or eleaning ont the hen- coop on the farm that ham been es- tablished for the young princes. His brothers, August William and. Oscar, 010 going through the seine course 110'lly'll,e farm where Prince Frederick William was trained is Plon, in Hol- stein, the home of the lempress. The cadet school is there, where the cadets are prepared for the more ad- vanced classes of the upper eci,det academy of Gross-Lichterfelde. The royal pupils have a resilience in the loyal park. Near it is 0 large lake,. and on a peninsula of twenty-eight acres is a leased farm, where, with six companions, they seriodsly undertake agricultural labor. The farMhouse on the place is a typical old-fashioned peasant's abode and it has not been altered in the slightest degree. A peat chuestroit tree shades the entrance, which leads directly bit. a primitive, whitewash- ed room, furnished exactly like any Pfteasrae'clit-p'5ain.remd 113.1V1(1000011 °Tease% that contains heavy earthenware plates and coarse dishes. Adjoining this room is a1 small kitchen. where the princes often tio their own cooking, for they have rio servants. While Jiving there they, must do everything .for themselves. The produce of the farm is sent to the imperial 11011SO d in Berlin Potsdam, and the Emperor examines it both in respect to quality and quantity. The season's crop last Year was sent to Berlin. It had been planted, weeded, grubbed out and barreled by the two princeS and, their com- panions, with no aid from adults, and the yield was excellent. The Emperor pays his sons the market price for their produce, and in ad- dition to raising the crops, they must keep exact accounts, showing just how their farming operations stand, and what are the profits each year, The princes had a bad time with their vegetables last year, for the drought killed nearly everything. But the orchard .did well, and they balanced their loss in vegetables by unusual success with chickens. Prince August William lovested in prize white American Wyandottes, and they proved to be phenomenal layers. !Besides the chickens, there is 0 C01••• ; of white Peltin clucks that have !a beautiful little house built for :them near the pond. 11 THE POLICE DOGS OF GHENT. I They Are Said to Serve Efficiently as Policemen. g plays a promieent part ttelgium as the poor man's 2231:141 milk -carts, -vegetable 0111.1 0100 the "shay" that los metals But at Ghent, has been intriats.sed to the mid serses so ealciently 1141 a policeinan 11111 Cril).1,0 111 the clis- than on 1 110 Witwatersrand. The ' ' '11'41 '1.' ;4' "'"-• :-rT• 1.2" 1 The 210 paying nature of the ore hits been sl'" 2 1 ' "'''' 11' '1'1' tr•tr gistered milling claims are scattered and over 7:30,000 re- 141*`1. ono tse ,,......• ..• "ass ;1, demonstrated, over the country, but most of the sipi11;iety. 1111210011 1 i•egion cannot be develOped form testintotly of all W:11:111 11-,0 wit, 1.44 1111,112.1. 11IL101111101%,,, be bi•ought to it by Sldrit spealts is that the rirst gyro'. 11183 WORK ON P31133 RAILROAD was resumed several months ago with every prospect that progress would be rapid. Mr. 'Rhodes eeport- ed that a group of men in London W08 prepared to raise .$1,500,000 to build a narrow gauge branch line from the main lino to the extensive coal 11111105 170 mileS away, that were discovered nbout, five years ago not far from the great Victoria Falls of the 'Zambesi River. 'rhe money to build another road to the Guanda miffing district, 100 Miles, wits rais- ed before the war. The sum of $4,- 00100t,101000raaisirokettjuiro 101'tohwtidi,sen) widenthecgaugi,or Power of the 892111.span ake. d the Spirit Himself came in power upon Beira into Mashenaland was sub- thell"l't 1-1117 8111110 "me' • scribed three times over. D. was re - essential is the forgiveness of and this ean be had only in Christ by Ills precious blood. 44.. While l'eter yet spake these words the lioly Ghost fell on till them which heard the word. •The message was not Peter's mes- sage. but, the Lord's own message through I'etee, ronl Cornelius so recognized it, for he had eat° to Peter "We are all here present he - fore God to hear all things that are commanded thee of .tlod" tverse 331. As the word was spoken the Spirit weought, their ()poled hearts r))- ceived 11101 of whom Pelee in the ported in February lest that another branch road would be built within the next two years to connect the main line with the rid' copper field, covering about forty square miles, 4.5, 46. They lieniel them spettlt with tongues and magnify God, t 10215 cis at pentecost (chap(er ii, 4), except that there Was no waiting for tho Spirit having come as our Lord promised there is Ito longer Is made of dull blue batiste dotted with black and is trihanaed with silk, and narrow ribbon slllo ; but all washable fa- brics are suitable as well as challie cashmere, albatross and the like. To cut this wrapper for a Woman of medium size, 11 yards of 1110- terial 27 inches wide, 10 yards 82 inches wide, or 8./ yards 44 inches wide will be required, OMAN*. A REMARKABLE COW, A British jotienal announces the death of one of the most remarkable cows that ever figured in public milk tests. This was 0, short -horn Guern- sey cross -bred animal. 11110 10410 111 her. ninth year at the time of her death. Some idea, of her great ral 0. Milker may be gathered from the fact, that during the 101 months prior to her death she had produced at the rate of over 1,500 gallons of milk per anronn. On the day before her death she gave 60 pounds of milk. One is never more on trial than in the moment of excessive good for- tune. -Lew Wallace. The first man in tho business pro- cession has to be careful what ho einys end how he says it if he tvoeld have the greatest load over 1110 COM- petitOrS, Or if he wants to feel sure Method hi the very hinge ot 1.311221 - that he is snie from the interferenee ..ness; and there is no method with - of others in claiming the lead, out, punctuality. -Cecil. Mectitoranean it was completed in January last to PPR on Lake Tan- ganyika, about. 2,500 miles north of Cupe Town. Mr. Rhodes VMS the backbone of the Trans -African Tele- graph Company which has this 500110 111 1101111. At last accounts the wita)s were to he stretched to the Nile Eind down that river to Fashoda, distant from 133131 about 1 ,300 miles; at Fashoda the line woul(2 eonnect with the wire already complete to Khar- tum and Alexandria. FROM A GRATEFUL PUBLIC. A poor man suddenly becamo stone deaf, and thus lost his means of live- lihood, Some charitable people, therefore, subscribed and, no1 with- out a touch of gentle sarcasm, bought him a barrel organ, After 'the mart had been 0:1 his rounds a month or two, one of the subscribers a confirmed practical joker, surreptitiougly removed tho eylinder, so that the machine would not utter a sound, The organ -grinder, on the very first day he wns out after this oper- ation had been performed, brought betek thrice the emonnt of money lif usually took. 4.7, 48. "Ele commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord. 1Tere 15 something 11041(.11 for those who make baptism with water essen- tial to the new birth, for behold io this 001211)11113' (110',,,' 1)14' honse some saved and Spirit filled people who have not yet been baptized with Water and are thus beptized after they have been saved and have re- ceived 1 110 gift of the iloly Ghost.. On the other hand, we have in Acts 1-11, aome disciple:4 who, having been baptized. had not heard any- thing ebotit the 'Holy 1,;:pirit, 1a2 they were baptized Again and at the hands of Peel received the gift of the lloly Ghost om' spake With timpani and propheotetet 31 mention this to tiliolv 1hat We must make es- sential to salvation oidy thut which God makes 0148011 reeeivin( Christ, (.) oliti I, 32; John o, 11,, 12). triet he patrols is said to have been dinduished by 1.wo-thirdS. By mettes of dummies, made up to resemble as much as possible the dangerous characters that might be met, the dogs are taught to seek, to attack, to seize and to hold without hurting seriously. Tho iirst step is to place the dummy in such a posi- tion that it shall represent a man endeavoring to conceal himself. 'rho dog soon understands that it, is an enemy whom he must Inuit, and eaters into this port of , his lessou con amore. Then the teacher lowers the figure to the pound, and the dog learns that although he may not, worry his prey, he must not al- low his fallen foe to stir so much as a finger until the order is given. After the dummy, a living model is used, and as this process is not without danger, the person chosen for this purpose is usually one who ministers to the pupil's creature comfoet:4, and for whom the canine detective is sure to entertaia a grateful alTection. Nevertheless the clog is prevented at MIA, by means of a muzzle. from an exhibition of too much zeal, Afterward the experiment is tried on other members of the force, and in four months the clog's edocation tts a policenmn is considered com- plete, and he takes his plaeo with the rest. 9'he animals are also taught to swim, and to seize their prey in the water * to save life from drowning ; to scale walls end overcome other obstacles, so that any eaterprising burglar who goes "a -burgling" in Ghent has a, lit ely time o!12. if be meets with one of these four -footed "bobbies." The dogs work so well and so conscientiously that their mindier is to be increased, and there is every probability that the plan will be ntlopted in other Belgian centers, Their keep conies to only about six cents a day each, and altogether they cost the town less than three hundred (i4)1I1l1'S 11. 310411'. "When I grow up," said 111 00 with a dreamy, 00 look, ''.1 '12) going to be a :Retool - teacher." "Well, 1'111 going to he 11102101111 mid hove Six children," said tiny Edna.. "Well, when they come to school to me I'm going to Whip 'elm whin 'e111.'' "'You mean thing!" exclaimed nine, OS the 4111110 1101' eyes, "What have my poor 01,11(11 ('11 mer done tc you?"