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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1904-06-24, Page 3Suday choo1. ifNTERNAT1ONALLESSON NO. X1I1 JUNbi 26, 1904. Review,-Ttead Isaiah re 1-10. Summary. Lesson I. Topic ; Christ healing the affiieted. Piece; On the borders of Plimeeica. Sermons on bread of life and pollution just de- livered ; the ,people plot against lien; Jesus eked •his disciples go to the borders of Phoeniea ; a. Gentile evo- man beseeches him to cast the devil out of her daughter; Jesus replies that it is 'not proper to give the obildren's bread to dogs; she asks for the crumbs; "for thin, saying" the devil was cast out -her request granted. II. %.Septic; Christ and his teue fol- lowers. Place; Near Caesarea Phil- ippi. Jesus asked his disciples who men said he Was; some said John the Baptist, and others Elijah, Jer- emtah, or one of the prophets. Whom do you say I am? Peter answers, The Christ, Jesus blessed Peter; man had not revealed it, but the Father had; the foundation rock; gates 01 Spades shall not prevail against 'it; the . keys of the kingdom of heaven given him; Christ's death ; Peter re- bukes him; get behind me, Satan ; saving and losing the life. III, Topic Christ's Present glory and future sufferings. Place; Pro - ',ably Mount Hermon. .Peter, James and John go with Jesus into the mount to pray. As Jesus prays he Os transfigured; Moses and Elijah ap- pear; converse regarding his depar- ture from the world; the disciples 'see Jesus and the two men in their glory ; enter into a cloud; hear a voice; Jesus is commended; Alone with Jesus; tell 110 man ; wondered what the rising of tbe dead meant ; asked questions about Elias. IV. Topic; Christ directing the af- fairs or his kingdom. Place; Probably Ilrh• Pores. ;lite 'seventy hpp'ointed ; set forth ; two and two; whitherhe himself would ',come; the harvest plenteous; requests disciples to pray for laborers; Go, as lambs among 'wolves; hasten; ask that peace may rest upon the house; beau and preach ; woe pronounced on C'bor- azin and Bethsaida; Capernaum' shonlrl' be thrust down to hell. V. Topic ; (Importunate prayer. Place; in Pere.. Christ prayed of- ten; Isis disciples asked that they M'igh't be taught to pray ; the value 'of the Lord's pmayer; meaning of kingdom ; God's will ehould be done on earth as en heaven; daily bread, to be given ; tens tel be p sardoned,l par- a.ble importu,iate borrower, which should teach use 'to be persistent in prayer; a glorious promise; parents glee good gifts to children ;f our heav- nly %lather is more willing to give ''the Holy Spirit to them that ask Hun. VI. Topic; The importance of be- ing ready at 'the time' of Christ's com- •ing. Place; In Perea. Let loins be girded and lights (burning -bo ready and waiting for 'the coming of Christ' as servants wait for the return of. their me ter from the wedding. Christ wdll come as a thief, sudden- ly, when we least expect Him ; the faithful, wise, just steward was pro- moted; the riotous and drunken ser- vant perished; the one wile knows his lord's wall and failed to do should See beaten with many stripes; the one who knew not and failed to do should be beaten. with few stripe. VII. Topic; Me:en's folly and God's oomlai.ssion,. Place; In Perea. AI certain man had 'two sons. The three o'cloek; Jesus cried with a I de dor 'peoples el lands and best loud voice and died; tile centurion's testimony. XII. To do; The events of the re- eurreetion anorning. Place: Garden near Calvary'. Cllu'ist was crucified an lL rirla April 7 ; rose early Stun - deal morning, April 9; several wso- men were early at the tomb; the atone w,afs rolled away; the .women entered the ,sepulchre; Christ was two there; wo angels appeared; their ,aces were like lightning and their garments ware dazzling; the wetter were afraid; the angels told them Christ had risen; He was 'to !go before themtheminto Galilee; 'the 'wo- men ran to take the disciples word; Jeiens met them; the Roman guard liiribea. r PRaCITICSURVEY.L SURVEY. Tale lee of Christ, arecordin'g to Prod. Matthew. B. Riddle. is divided into ten 'Paris. The lessons of 'the last quarter carried as through part four. Tee 'lessons of this quarter cover the •period of parts five to ten, divided as folic/We : Lessons 1, 2, 3, peet V., from the feeding of tl1a five rthou,sa;ad to the final kje p'arture from. 'Galilee; lessons 4, 5a 6, 7, part VL, from, -the final de- parture from Galilee to the with- drawal to lEpleraim.; lesson 8, part 'VII., the final journey' to Jerusalem; 'Means 9, '10, 11, Part IX., from' 'the preparation ;for the Passover sup- per too the burial of Jesa�s ; lesson ,12 part X., the resurrection and younger called for Sea portion of the inheritance; took all his goods; went into a far country ; wasted .his sub- stance with harlots; a 'great fam- ine; in want; feeding swine; de- cides to return home; is seen and met by his father; the, boy iel clothed ; feast is made; there is great re- joicing. • VIII. Topic; True greatness. Place; Perea. Christ and his apostles jour- neying toward Jerusalem; .near the close of his earthly mission ; James and John ask that they may sit, one on his right hand and the other' on his left, in his glory; Jesus told them• they knew not what they ask- ed; asked them if they could suffer with him; the exalted position they asked would be given to those for whom it was prepared ; the ten much 'displeased; they were not to exer- cise authority as the Gentiles; prin- ciples of Christ's kingdom ; Son of man came to minister. X. Topic ; Christ our Passover. Place; Jerusalem, 'It was Thurs- day ; Jesus sent Peter and John to Jerusalem to prepare the Passover supper; they found a large upper room where they made ready ; in the evening Jesus sat at the table with his disciples; he told them that one of them should betray him ; 'they wore sorrowful and every one asked, "Lord, is it I?" Jesus said It would have been better for that man had he never been morn ; he then told Judas that he was the one; Judas left Jesus eats his last supper wvlth the remaining eleven. x. Tope's ; The demand of the Jews for Christ's death. Place; Pilate's judgment hall. Jesus is taken to Pilate, tbe governor, who investi- ggates thr charges and finds them Et false; Jesus is sent to erod, who finds no fault with Christ; Pilate calls the people together and des°res to release Chest; they demand that he be crucified; throe times .Pilate urges his release; they demand the release of Barabbas, a murderer; Pi- late yields; washes his halide; de- livers him to be crucified, I. lxlopic; Closing scenes .in Christ's earthly life. Place ; Mount Calvary. 'Christ on• the cross; mock. ed by. the soldiers; vinegar offered; the sueerscription ; the two thieves cruelfied with Chrlst ; one railed on Jesus, the other confessed bis h.,ins and asked to be remembered In Christ's kingdom the mayor an- ' severed; darkness from twelve till or 'all, for the lWel man of Iwo, mann, Jawor Gentile whowill only believe in his mine. . Taaait Jesus lis the Chrlet fie shown ttt . events a ]Lan e. t ' in the a !us ex in les- sees nine,' ten, eleven and twelve. prone Tahuredae,1 'morning till Friday evening "yeas • 'the central dalyl of both tixne'afhd eternity," Nearly one - ninth of the three gospels is given td tIle 'events) of this daisy', and near- lyl one-fourth of the gospel of John. "I am 'blue door," "I am' 'the vine?. He i,s bruised and crushed that the lWorld mlfiyl 'b;e 'healed. -George B'r'ad{ field:: . ' MANY MASSACRED. Armenian Outrages Result From Sultan li ad Co nertan'tinople, lune. 20. Armenian patriarchs have received informa- tion thaat an Trade has been issued (bay the Sultan, !which has resulted in ;wlholesals massacres and the destruc- tion of much Armenian property. The trade prohibits the settlement of Armenians in the villages de- stroyed. ecco•rding to information received two days were devoted to the mas- sacres, May 16 and June 3. On these twin, days 37 villages were aasce,nsiotT. In time tshayl cover a destroyed; and of a population of 5,- wo- period from 'the summer of A. D. 000, 2,000 were e, ,aced. The tto early ,iunday morning, April 90 men of the viilagerwho disappear - A. D. 3a. ed during the massacre, have been The gavel 'story' as told in these lessons and their parallel accounts,' form's a co'mpaet consolidated, in- spired report of the mission work on earth of the Saviour of the World. And we (shall ,see in many ways, what the life and work of Christ, whose name has, does now, and will for- ever Stand above every; other name in God's universe, has dope and can. recovered by their husbands, but most of the girls have not been seen since. The villages destroyed were in, the districts of Metes and ilian. 111e.ssacres are feared in other places. Shops have been closed for three days at l3itlis, while at Dian- bekir•and Sessoun, reserves have been sent for by the authorities to sup- press disorders Miss Rose Peterson, Secretarymn Parkdale Tennis Club, Chicago, frorn T ex- perience advises all young girls who . have pains and sickness peculiar to their sex, to use Lydia E. Pinkbamts Vegetable Compound. How many beautiful young girls develop into worn, listless and hopeless women, simply because sufficient attention has not been paid to their physical development. No woman is exempt from physical weakness and periodic pain, and young girls just budding into woman- hood should be carefully guided physically as well as morally. if you know of any young lady who is sick, and needs motherly advice, ask her to write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn, Mass., whowill give her advice free, from a source of knowledge wiaich is un- equalled in the country. Do not hesitate about stating details which one xray not like to talk about, and which are essential for a full understanding of the case. Miss Hannah E. Mershon, Collings- wood, N. J., says: "I thought I would write and tell you that, by following your kind advice,I, feel like a new person. I was always thin. and delicate, and so weak that I could hardly do anything. Menstruation was irregular. "I tried a bottle of your Vegetable Com- pound and began to feel better right away. I con- tinued its use, and am now well and strong, and. menstruate regularly. I cannot say enough for what your medicine did for me." -Tow firs. Pinkham Helped Fannie Kumpe. " DISAn Dins. PINIsatAM : - feel it is my duty to write and tell you of the benefit I have derived from your advice and the use of Lydia. E. Pipiacham's Vegetable Compound. The pains in my back and womb have all left me, and my menstrual, trouble is corrected. I am very thankful for the good advice yeti gave me, and I shall recommend your medicine to all who suffer from female weakness." -;litres FA.rrrrm trartn,1922 Chester St., Little Rock, Ark. (Dec. 16, 1900.) Lydia rinkham's Vegetable Compound will care any woman in the land who suffers from womb troubloe, inflamma- tion of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability, nervous prostration, and all forma of wa►mnan 5 special ills; p: ° rl FE l 1' it, so cannot forthwith produce the original leasero and eigneenros of $5000 uboro testimonials, whish will proi,o their e�b,ioFute anise a+auepg. Lydda 10. 1'Inicltaina L'Ced. Co., Lyra+ 8t dgs1.^ YOUNG .14049 UN TRIALFUR ;vUROER Charged With Poisoning Hus- band Soon After Marriage, First Confessed the Crime Then Denied it. It is Said She Wanted to Wed Another Lover. her alleged crime, natal others were present. Then else 'told waw, she gave him the aassettio in milk, 115 hex"e!•to- fore stated, but did not ex -Plain howl she administered later doses, wwbich e 'n been given �3 have S are, supfacxsod to . 6 fee. 'Dhe confession Was repea.t- c�d afterw,ard to her father and the priest, but snow, sere positively. denies- the eniesthe whole thing, and five-of'tbebest lawyer's in Brandt county have been retained to defend her. 8.T2e is the first woman evek tried here for murder in dile oountyr cued only four men barye been tried for that offence in the histor',yi of the county. Coldwater, June 20. -The trial of M're. Katie Ludweek for the murder of her busbsa.rd, ,wallet began here to- day, prom•ises,to be the most remark- able trial of its kind in the history', of this section of Mlicliiga.n. A few mentils sago Katie Blstry, daulg1T•terr of a'thrifty farmer residing southwest of this city, was a light- hearted girl of ,18, comely in appear- ance and quite a belle among the rural .young folks of the neighbor- hood. Not far from the paternal home lived John S,udwick, a prosper- ous farmer boy, three years Katie's senior. John needed ra wife, and the fair Katie appealed to leis idea of beauty and of 1pahysical fitness for a farmer's wife, for Kate was strong and buxom. The young lady did not look with favor up -on his advances, but witix such fervor did he press his suit that Katie became his 'bride after only two weeks' courtahip. She had been obdurate, but leer father brought to bear such influence that the girl girl yielded and became Mrs. Lud- wv,fek, Nov. 4, 1908. Still her heart .was not her hus- band's, and after her arrest she is said to have ,Mated that her lover said to her; "You poison John, and I will marry you yet." Tp this slue ap- pears to have assented. Breing a. Roman Catholic, and educated to be- lieve divorce impossible, except on scriptural grounds, she began at once to plot for her release, as ap- pears from confessions made later on. "Love in a Pottage" wlas doubly dis- tasteful to Katie, 'because not !sheared by the aman of her heart, so she chafed continually, and the pa- tient I) asband'af a.tienthasband'ef lice took we a look'' of melanen:oly, which never brightened as the days event by; The honeymoon, if such it could be called, lasted less than three weeks, then carie John's funeral. Katie and John had been married something over two weeks when,one day last November the young Wo- man went into a Bronson drug store and purchased arsenic "to kill rats." This was on Tuesday, the 17th, and on Thursday, according to tier • own statement; she gave him all of it glass of milk -,enough to have killed several men -so much,, in fact, that his 'stomach refused to retain it, and lie was only Made violently sick. She oared for ham, 'apparently in much distress .about this illness, being in a day or two bought more arsenic - several times as ;much' ;before, the druggist's record shows. By Saturday evening John was suffering awful agony, and at his ur- gent request she hitched up the farm team and went after his( brother who lived seven miles away fie told lier he believed he was going to die, but according to the woman's story lie (appears to have had no suspicion of the cause of his suffering. The Indi- cations are that she did not emu- late the ride of Paul Revere on that dark November night over the Ionely country roads, and 'when she return- ed With her brother-in-law, three ],ours later, John was dead. In the meantime the unfortunate mean had attracted the attention of aboys and girl wlio were passing, and at this request, they' telephoned for a doctor. He came, but found the house looked, no one responded to his knock and dao went away, without entering. Very likely Lud- wick was even then dead. "Tho preparations for the funeral appear to have been very' deliber- ately,' entered upon, for It was Sunday. afternoon before the un- dertaker came. Burial was to have been made on Blondes', but the wi- dow wished to attend a wedding that daffy; eo 'that the obsequies were de- ferred until Wednesday and !t:e witnessed the nuptials in the Cath- olic church where she had, exactly; three 'weeks before, (sworn to be le faithful wife: eloon after Ludwvick's burial ugly rumors began to flea. about, and at the request o'f the paren is of the deceased and of the Catholic priest, Father Hewitt, the body was quiet- lyl exhumed, Dee. 2. Analysis showed the presence of arsenic in large quantities in the stoniaeb, and five daays after the disinterment Deputy Sheriff Fisk, with 'i warrant in his pocket, met the widow in front of the Bronson opera hou'n. "Katie 'you 'will have to come w me," said the kind-hearted offic "And what for'?' asked the girl Tito warrant was read to her, though weep,inglv,• protesting her noeenoe, alae came readily enough Ooidwetor, wlinre she bass since r Mined in jail. Not long after he incarceration she appeared 't want a 'burden .off her mind, an; called The sheriff' 'wife to her cel That lady,! refused to listen when tl. girl began to tell her the store: [The Markets Toronto i,'armere3' Markets R!eraeleette of grata to -day were small, With prices in moat eases nom - teal. One load, of 'w1ite wheat 6`old Jae Wee and a load otaibarleyl at 42c. Hale is dull 'with receipt e ob' 20 loads; 'timothy ,sold aft $19 to $10.50 a, Iton, and mixed at $7 to $3. Straw is nominal a:t $id to $1O_0 ton. Dressed Bags in moderate eupplee with (prices firmer. Light .sold at ale - 35. iaand heavy; at $6.75. • .Wheat, w.hi.ie, bush., 92o; red, bush, 92c; sparing, 90c; gears, 77c; oats, bush., 176 to 37c; pude,, bush., '65 'to 60o; barley', e2 to $0.50 toc;$110.50; t • inT'otk'hys pier ' clover, $7 to X3.50 ; straiwr per ton' 09 to f$10; s pplesst per bibl., $1.'75, to $3.50; r1rcre'ud bogs, $6.75 to 57.25; eggs, Fair dozen, 16 to 18c; 'butter, dairy, 17 to 18e; creamery, 18 tci'21e; chickens; 'per lb., 14 to 150; turkey{s', per lb., 16 to 20c; por,>altoes, per bag, 90!c to $1.10; cabbages, per dozen, $1 to $1.50; beef, hindgp:art- 908, $8 Ito $10; ,forequarter's, ,s5.5ib to $6.50; choles, carcase, $7.5 t�o7 8; medium, carcass, '96.75 lambs, 'yearling, $10 to 011; mut- ton, per ewe., $7.50 to $9; veal, per' .eget., $6.50 to $3.50. ]Leading Wtieat Markets. 'July., Sept. New York ...... 1)15-8 84 8-4 St. Louis ...... ...... 8813-8 80 ;-4 Duluth . •. . 081 7-8 811-8i Toledo 88 3-4 86 3-8 Detroit .. 901-4 86 1-2 Toronto Live Stock. • Receipts of live stock at the City Cattle Market to -day, and wpvat ar- rived late Thursday amounted to 30 oar loads, all told, consisting of 218 cattle, 457 hogs, 208 sheep and lambs, 89 calves, ''cntishs 621 hogs to Park Bits okwell and 65 horses. .Friday has developed into a sort of cleaning up day. Tue feve odds and. ends that were left over with what came in this morning where readily picked up. Trade under the circumstances wars good, eettlh prices unchanged for the different qualities. Prices for all kinds of live stock were practically unchanged all round, unless that it was that but- clers' cattle were a 'slisade firmer in tato best classes. It will be seen that McDonald & Maybes sold one lot of 10 butchers', 1,045 lbs. each. at $5.20, which is the higbest price reported thus far. Exporters-Chsolee,wel.-finished, heavy exporters sold at $5.20 to $5.50 per cwt.; medium at $4.80 to $5. Export hulls -Choice export bulls sold at $3.75 to $4.25; medium at 93.50 to $3.60. Export cos -Prices ranged front $375 to $4.25 per cwt. Bsutcbers'- Choice picked lots of butchers', equal in quality to best ex- porters, 1,100 to 1,203 Ibis. 'each, sold at $4.75 to $5; loads of good 'at $4.50 to $4.60; medium at $4.25 to $4.40;! common at $3.50 to $ 4;rough and inferior at $3..25 to $3.50 per cwt. Feeders - Short -keep feeders, 1,100 to 1,200 lbs. web, sold at $4.50 to $4.90. T.l.nose weighing from 950 to .11,050, of good quality sold at $4 tci $4.25 per caw,t. Stackers -Choice yearling calves sold at $2.75 to $4; poorer gradate and off colors, sold atj $3 to $3.50, ac- cording to quality. , • Bradstreet's on Trade. Trade conditions at Montreal are fair; It is felt, however, that 'renewed activity in this direction will be shown 'When the weather becomes hot. The outlook for the fall trade is fairly prom- Wholesale business at Toronto thin. week has been moderately good. The outlook for the 'crops is generally fa orable, and that has imparted a co dent feeling ,regarding the future trade. Fall orders compare favor with the amount of business booke this time last year, Values of et manufactures are firmly held. There has been a good steady dem for seasonable goods at Victoria, V comer and other Pacific Coast tr centres this week., Business with t Yukon continues satisfactory. The continuance of excellent cro conditions is stimulating the demand i wholesale trade circles at \`riunip Many settlers of .:' .d class cortin to arrive, Th is , 1 ever now an more att' A