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The Clinton News-Record, 1904-09-08, Page 7• oui SOCIAL - LIMITATIONS • Ivery Mates 'Liberty Ends Where :Ills liie : eas•rat • 1:7'' ••• • * .‘; • • • . • .$f • Neighbor's Liberties Begin. (Unwed *wording ta Act of the Pere Dement et tameda. in the seer tete Thouesna nine nundred ana iestirS by etym. 3fly ot Toroato, at 14a • R0PaTtt4ent et Agricelturtli Ott41", ) . deeliatelx from, Los Angeles eatre asitelt," Prank De Witt Telulltede preached from the tollovoing text ;et. ddine Viii. 3,2, "The truth shall Make , .you eree." The Word freedom. has 4 charming. • Poeta. Like Unto a xylophone, each s, one et ittelettere eeems to be a geld - en. bar. Likeunto a. ailver throated trumpet. its volensounds juet.aJ enchanting in. the rich manes palace tie in the peasant's hut. Like unto • the pheasent's call- for his mate, it • seems t� recognize no government save the sceptre, of love. Like unto ,the aeolian harp, which emits its ". meet thrilling notes when the Wintry • storms throb through its strzngs, due wordfreedom never has a More plain- tive Melody than when it is teetered by beings who pine Mr it while they cringe under the lash of the triskinee- ter and spend thelreilves in the. bon- dage of tyrants at whose word they may hoe to die. There ,ha,ve been orators whose tones were SO penetrating and im- pressive that the words they uttered took a new , and *sever meaning. It was said. of George Whitefield, the famous evangelist, that his Velem was • of such dompetee and . pathos' that he could melt an audience into tears by the intonation he weld, throw into the word Mesopotamia. But it is not by inelohimis toneethat the ward freedom reaches, the heart most pow- erfully, by the heroic deeds of men whe7balre suffered and died to Win the •blessing for their people. was thus uttered by Spartacus, the Roman slave and gladiator, when he ' • led the insurrection against the throne of the Caesars and offered as a libation for that word his Own ' blood, which' was shed limn the bate tlefield of Silarus in 71 D. C. We can heat; it thus spoken in the clarion °calls of a; Bernardo 0,'Efiggins, :the great liberator of Cline, or of a Toes- • saint L'Ouveature fighting for the • liberty of Haiti, or of e. Macao dying for °Ube, or of a „Garibaldi strug- • gling for the liberation of his beloved Italy. ' 0 freedom, thou art more than a - mere Word! Thou art asstrong armed angel of light, breaking the shackles of the' elaves tun:nuzzling the lips of the patriot, lifting the. shadow from •the home. abider •thie benignaist rule every man's" abode is his -castle, surrounded, like the ancient fortrees- qf the old world, With the moat - whose waters were inahassntile to the minions of a, king. Thou ert ' :tba • messenger of God, who Would_ place the coronation robes aroand every ' human Shoulder: ' rhou wouldst rut . the crown of sigold upon every reality or womanly brow as thou. dost sae': "Man, Aft high thy forehead, • for thou art a Icing! W.orastn, God has , spade thy head the resting place for a diadem which is the equal of the crown that I have placed upon thy husband's Yee, yes; no weed In ell sthe English languagehas a a • more patent sound than that of free- dom. for, as 'God gave to Xing Sol- omon everything .a prince could want becalm the young -king had asked of him "wisdom" .do every gotia thing .in life is accessible to the earnest, aspiring soul when freedom removes Abe barriers to its night. . 7'. WHAT IS FREEDOM? . . " But as 1 began to Study my text asked myself this itnhartant question "What ie freedom?" Is it unbridled license? 'Does. it practically. 84; , "Mat, you are 'free; 'Merck/re you can do as you will, no matter what your desire may be?" Does. it mean an emancipation •proclamatlen -which lib- erates froth ,obedience to -ail law When, On Jan. • 1, 1863i. &brawl L173.64)111 in the White House signed his. name to the famous staterupee which declared that :all blackmen and black women under theaters and • stripes "are and ,henceforth shall be Tree," it did net mean that the negro was set free to forfow hie -Mil :•144. - bridled inclinations; but that he 'visa- ed from under the control • of she same law that his (serene himself has to obey. , Freedom has its °limitations. W find those Ihnitationti in the physleal, ono day, anuch to frenry Ward Beeelier's feminine, he ee,w ttie father•. standing betere a beautiful picture. It was a hunting Rene, but the lien. prized, it for •the beautiful colors, olueli as are always found in the re- treat of the wood. teed • Henry Ward Beecher, "father is at • Met ,learning to love naturefea stopped up,to the side of the old Matt and sead: ".1.‘at11er, hoer do ice like the picture? 11Vhat do you like about it most?" "Well, Henry," Said the old man, "1 Wee studying that picture to nee Whether the art - let had aimed that gun right. Yes, I think that bunter will hit the rab- bit. I think he will. r think he will," father," said Henry Weed, "eau you not , see anYthhlg more in that pieture titan a cruel man shedding the bloodof an. nine- • cent, playful rabbit?" No, Henry Ward Beecher's trend and Lyman Beecher's mind were cast In. different molds. Thea both, had their limitations. What one could do in a mental way the other could not do, though both of thooe brains belonged to the master minds of the last century. Now, as we all have our physical limitatione, is it pre. posterously tiniest for us to complain bemuse wo. also eaye our spiritual }Imitations? If • the only way to cross the Atlantic or the Paohle 15 in• a steamship or a sailing craft" •es it not absurd for es to coraphain. be- cause we lia,ve to sail over the great Sea of eternity in a 'gospel lifeboat? XAMITATXONS OP,PREEDOM, • , True freedom always has its liml- tations. Tbe Christian life, too, has its rightful limitations. Christ said, "1 am the Way, the truth a,ngl sthe life; no man corneth unto the Father but by ane," There is only one way •to Gott..one door, one true life, But after we have once entered through they. open door tnen we 'are free. Aye we.may beconte transcendently and eternally free: Is not my text right when At says; "In Oarist the truth shall Make you free?" The freedoms lie gives. is the freedom from sin, the freedom !AVM punishment, but that freedom, like all others, can be ob- tained oily by,sulantitting to •Christ's rule, Inone weir alone can we gain that freedom, and that as by the evay of the ores*. In his service are endless joy •-and pleasure. for. °vela My brethei, my' sister; are you ready' to let '` the .truth make ,.you free, , In antebelfuln days' there, 'was a. beautiful scene eirneted in one of thesouthern slave naarkets, a A young blite.k girl stood upon the once tion block and was ,being sold to the higheet bidder. Bough men were trying to buy her for -evil' pura poses, but in that group ..of bystand- lers was a • Christian go/dietitian, hold - ing by the hand. • his • own young daughters The Yeiteg girlas heart Went. out for the - sufferings of her black ' sister, enil she perseadecl her father to purehase the slave. -Higher and highee Went the price.. but at last the Ch'ris'tian gentleman bought, the. Young Sleeve.' •When the • blaek girl. was lian•cleal *ever to ber new minter he said: "tifitey,-Iliotight you for my daughter's ,sake. I new give you your papers of .:freetlerns .. Yee can go. where and When you please. Yon are free." "What, master, am I freer. Oen I ho- where I will? Then I'shall . go and stay with you." : Oh, 'elie was a slave before the auction. She was a slave after the auctien: ut now • she had become :a slave .of love: • WM you not, oh, • mine'. oh, woman, litter Christ's preetematien. of einancipation from sin? Will you not let. "the. truth maks you free'?" -that is, • will you not, in Christ's. name, cease to be a subject of ' sin, but in bondage _for: the tette. of, Christ?. 'He diea. toentalce yon free-. Witli his divire limitation .will you not be eternalito' free, 0111' in bondage •to Jesus , Christ? • - .: .• Lord, oh, .teach ins what to tio; a : " Make Me faithful. Make Me -true. ' ' Help me, ere too late it .be, • Something yet to do for Uwe: - e the mental and the isocia,1 as well •a In the spirittial leielogistedind them in the dumb Melte and in the vegetable, third mineral kingdorne well as hr. hwiten society. Thee my • subject to -day, , 'The Limitaelons of rAberty," efforts wide scope. for natural and spiritual ineestigettoes and I shall endeavor to show that the only true freedom that the spiri- tual man cab enjoy Is in th'e surren- der of himself • to • the service ' of Christ. In becoming a servant of Christ, in taking tis as the law of our lives, we are set free from the dominion ,cif sin and enjoy the -glore ious liberty ,e,f, the children of GoCL I am not here going. into the dee teAls of the errore and the reasons why a Man • should not • abet° his physical organism. , But X: ala hero to stet& that as God limits the nat- ural realms lo_whieh• the .fielt earn live, and the plants. pen live, , and the ereepteter. things, like the Weems and the snakete. eari live; go Ged gives to Man a physical retain, and in that realm must Um If he persists in going out of that realm he must die. • BEECHER AND HIS The IbnitatiOne of brain pOirer Can be Well illustrated by comParing the mental fattkeup Henry Weed Beech- er with that of his illustrious father Lyman Beecher, one of the •greateet ecclesiastical leedere Of his day. The famoue pastor of Plymouth pulpit was in every eenee a Prose Peet- He spoke, he thought, livea, in syni- .bol and picturesque verbiage. The song of the birds, *the beautiful wardrobes of the dowers, the\ autunna al striniete, the beehives, the snow banks, the anermuring brooks -all heel to hint message. Lynam Beecher was made of angular Puritan granite. ge WAS in every pelage a logician- and a poItunic, Like John Calmat, he was skillful in argue \ • " t, P P and you must grant his eoncluelonit oppealett mostly to the brain as gray natter and net •to the attibile seetlineete, . • * '• tire It Watt a great "entree Of sorrow to Henry Ward Beecher that his father. never loved Ware as he loved it. Lynam' need:ter loved to littet, Ho leered tho Weed* for gattie, but not for the flowers. newt Vetted flotote dier gati flotedle. note always had to be ptefiented Elm as bare, lin- breakable Melee and not as ratite ciOthed in garments of greett and in ,Teeepliee eoitte of menet dotal toter/J. s DOG ,A.S CASH 11313POSITOlt. ' • . ••• • • , . • Takes Master's goner to hiaith,,, Enjoye Fishing Trip. • • : • "Rags" is the'. name of •a little Mongrel' dog, not prepossessingIn appearance,' owned by Mrs. John H. Morrison, whose husband is a book- keeper In a twittery' at Middletown; N. Y.; Where the canine 'spends xnucil of his time, but, nevertheless, • this • dog, owing to Jails remarkable Intel- ligence, is highly prized by liis niiss tress. "Rugs" .malms a daily' practice of visiting the Ural bank, where he de- posits the money of the firm where Mt. Morrison is engaged. Re has developed an instinct almost human. 1 -To wiIl not allow anyone to handle the deposit book after once taking It lit his moutee.ettare the bank of - fickle and his "mater at the tan- nery: Rolle of bills in "Rags' " mouth are meth. star by far than in hands of many men, who would be trusted witli. this important erreati. Another paetimeaof this rentatikable dog is to visit a pond near by his home, and with pole in motitli *Mine out to middle of stream and there fish for specimens of finny tribe:. Superintendent Harry M. Hayes, of the tannery, was walking past the pond recently, When he thought to have a little "wort with "Rage" by pretending to heti something into the pond for the dog to go after. The dog Jumped in and, owl/mime to the centre of the pond, Was seen to plunge about for a minute and then Start to Swink back. The action of the dog excited Mr. ',Hayes' curioeity, He came to the conclusion aliat "Rags" tiad midden. ter become 111, and was upon the point of going to the rescue when In the tnoutil of the dog he saw a long pole from which ix line was trolling. _140W and then there was a violent jerkleg of the pole and .tetileh almost pulled the dog from eight, but the plucky little. folio* grittily reached the hank In an etch/meted dohtlitioh. In ite MOUth was foot peter and a line, Mt the end of Will& Wee n Minor may Weaken the voice, but It etrengthens the breeth, No Matter how homely a Minister M a woman Meier' "aye he has a geod face, • II** tit" rid1014." Pt" °j" LJF IN OTIBIABINI to "" a Ma -1;;"" free from risk of demege by mereltatst sr by three or two by two inehee for ships, Mon have Wont. Inured to •tit* gu"4 bar.* The" eh"id ho Xs A 1:10-- ON, BT IT the concletioes on board thee. arida stecu.rely nettled to the eisie or the When first thea are eubmerged they the lune -house, spiked to the floor trough, and if *permanent trough in HAS ITS 001010/SATXONS. auffe rfrom singing in the eve, and Ito prevent breaking of:. The nee rt. of M HAWNot '.:04.torrocl, Non 11;:eareve amyl": auto: °tanauseaereinvtof asciudtyl- Tight, firmly *piked ehould be ampt- Vier delivering plop to a trough, a Wertz Seeking Feet ad Honor. comes to be attractive in mitnY ly *tent to secure endWiee eigiditY. • 'Went Or eMall trough should be v.._ . _,,, _. Jame,' are sympath.etec towards When the boat le set to dive like a errienged to enter eit the'sed of the mtiegYomoors,and yore froth to the work do, but thie TO 'KILL QUA= GRASS. I,Pliere ere several matte:ere of pro- ceidure more or leite similar that, are folloWed, in killing quack great,. The first thing that should be done la any case .is th. withdraw from the soil the largest possible number of the undergreund stems, or root- etallie. ma -y be done by plow- ing the land and then harrowitag and crose-harrowleg from two to four times, preferably with a slant -tooth - 4 harrow, in which the teeth are set well forward thue dragging out as taro e portion of the roots Mt poseible. These- should, then be gathered and carted from .the field and, berme!. this is done in late milliliter or early autumn, •tlie pro - cost, slionld be repeated in• the fall, at which time the plowing. and itiar- rthosevlinegnamanlyeybehgeiveeinmpftew,fporlorrwteerdly.enonr left in et. roughened condition where many, of the roots, will be frozen. En the tiering there ebould be impther plowing given, and harrowing. re- peated, for the Purpose of removing still more rOot.s, With regard to the • crop that should follow' may such treatment as outlined above there is a difference In praetletee Some prefer to .s.cov down In the Fall with a very heavy grain crop, which *ill act as a blanket during the next spring and permit of werking the land early the following summer. Others con- tinue the treatment by cultivation through the spring planting in corn, ,potatoes, or soine other erep which admits of freauent- cultivateon, and final extermination of the gram, plants in the row e 'by hanci-lioeing or by pulling. Snell treatment as. this, faithfully given will almost, certain- ly result in the complete eraditation of him, gratie, *the few • plants which' aro:able to come up in the rows of any cultivated plant being easily dis- posed of by bend, Although this seems a large amount of labor to put upon a Single fiehl, one should never be. discouraged frora attempt- ing it on •that aecount, e It is meeti cheaper. In the long raii*.th do the job thoroughly, at the eXpense of considerable labor at the start, than only to half do it ane have the mime 'thing. -to contend' with year after year, lit the latter ease • not only must extra labor be performed but the Yield of the Crop is frequent, 1Y lessened by reason of the • grass in the. lend, Again the extre cul- tivations given not only "do .ric.C.Ine jure the lanch: but firi. else eases out of tett will be a positive benefit by putting the soli in better mechanical condition -and also by ilestPoying other weed pests besides quick grass and the stoic:tette 'indueece of theee others in our agriculture being . • - licareelee fully eealized. . , BUYING PITRE 1311FMDS. • • , • farmer Who- buys • a trio or more of thoroughbred fowls WM mak; no mistake. If he protein to gee the eggs M the spring -aII well be well, but lie must exthet to be ridiculed by some of his neighbors for ..paying $1 or $2 each for -fowls. Neyeethe- lerike these tame farmers 'and neigh- bors , ,will promptly: come forward titer te request to 'change. eggs" with. Elm when they desire to hatch chicks thenextspring. .a farmer buys eggs 'of the pure ineeda, he buys lielidents at Portsmouth, puttee,. Mew from Its very unique character. feccearougue with ebbe ereaseaelsee, leapt. ulwon iirttwaliturtrzeoundere Porpoise, the inclination naturally la b to feer that she le going to take a, when the distance between the bars s' header- bottom 0* the see, and has bad under his order*, and aegest to the botto has been preperlv adjusted to the that they, suffer from a pallor which at first this lead to ttie roan controll- size of the imbued, one can get to eitlio With ill -grace on the cheeks of log the horizontal rilddere nervously . the trough between each epace, and an siderite° rrowdbl,to oeoeuoley. saitivelorhse, alSgtoulunesarmallYwhhiacbve aina ttesea re.re obruincegiwrigitbth: Ibuone;pt.toButthetheuisrfaancexiaatyt prevented. MOdIficationir for thie scheme 4re Preach to those whose Wes are epent soon gave way to •congdence. ., .. In shop or °glee confinement writes A Se long OS the boat is not far sub - satisfactory for feeding young cat- correePondent of the London Tele- Merged a certala amount of light tle and sheep, as well all a. guardgraph. There may be something in rtraggles through the glow scuttles, againtet poultry eating tato the this assertion. Life in theft little canting ,et weied greenish luta on every trough, and eaettering the grain emits *loaf fees about eat of aloe thing. But In lower depths theelece about and onto the ground. Tan bas its drewbaeks. The vesgels, WO:0104070ft slaw:etre:id, isprighatrieg uthoc: wilt find that. such a trough Will even the biggest, such as the leder- soon pay for all the trouble and ex- tunate Al, are craMPed. The bare bTetirwear.e bn. ba oa yonte eitenAgn' osfecteayfoeutyr einemnpuemn: efreae"incurred. .• statement that the length, is only 100 . , 1 ' ' feet and when sabreerged the die- ions, and men, can, become it -constant- . „NEW ITSE FOR X-RAY. placement of the "Improved A," ed to the vara,nge, cramped. lir/hater- class, to which the teinken veseel al conditions under which they live; Application of Diecevere" Miner-belonged,is:only 180 tone, lees than • and every care is taken to regulate . al Deposits. within are stored two sets of Ma - Away up in the rocky steeps of the *chit:wry, a gas engine far the surfeee barren Mlle that frown down on and electrie motors, for use when Coniston Lake and Windermere, Eng- submerged, that room heal to be land, there was seen lately the re- found for taroks for the oh, air, elece sult ca a renutrkable challenge and tric batteries, eta., and that apace the.establishment beyond question of ia ale taken up by the torpedoee a new scientific discovery, tie fascin. and .gear, is teefficient to bring home ating in its exposition as L is • 0,ee. the fact that eleven men, who cam- parently distilled to be Valuable in Prise the crew, .have not much room, Ito application. Half a dozen seep- for stretching themselves, The Brit- ticat mining experts and as many Ian boat? are /fife large, fiat cigars, with a e non-scientifiq ordinary folk, whp ridge at the top, to seryas not 1MOW a topper. lode front a load a deck when running alleat, and In of hay, climbed precariously over the side is one 'room,' in whith, oilleere barren' lialiglitte with a telephone re-, and men have to make themselves as ceiver n one hand and a steel spike Comfortable ae May be daring the in tem other, prodding the earth* lis- ho/i8r,s ofhdeuty. t Admir It iz th t halt that f cl t timing to nature telling over the tele- • apart from the (Mang; reertegAinega such phone in a language the simplest raecte existence must • be fraught could understand of the existence and w thO exactest IocatiOn of her storee of r ec ite hmui v e wcdis= whatis styled "hard lying cfort, and -the crew wealth, hhe- money" as some compensation. Yet hidden hundreds of feet at low in the heart of the rocky blit - every man Who serves in a submarine side. Then the rocks were dynamit- is a volunteer. The Same reniark ed, arid the lode exposed to show applies to ,sthe officers, and spite that nature was telling telephonic of all the close confinement and disa truths. • • ' • . advantages' attached to this work, . For five years two mining, and oleo- the supply of officers and men always Wail...engineers and inventors, Nina exceeds the number of vacancies in ,srs. Daft and - Williams, an Amerls the 'flotilla. 'It is an honor to serve can and an Englishman, have been under Cent'. Bacon, ami among the experimenting in British Columbia, ollicereat present is a sone of the in Ala.sks, In Siberia, and in the Secretary of State for. War. It United Kingdom, withservices for speaks well for the survival of the discovering, by electrical means, de- 'old apteit of the British fleet; which. Posits of metals that were undiseov-• made it Mistress of the seas, that there is this keerrnees for' a Job Which elable .by ordinary raining niethode, The miner. , of course,. knows • .to regarded through the rosiest -colored ntoto than he 'gees, though he may sPeetaeles, Is • risky, uncomfortable, infer. more; But "faints" in tho earth's strata, often upset his infer- ences, and many a 'rich. mine e has suddenly been pauperized by the lode becoming. lost in a fault,- . This Wets. the ease at Conleton, The R,ornane worked .cophehinines in the Coniston and insinedern Ones more than ia,750,600 worth pi copper has been dug out of the Weatlierhaln heights. But forte. 'years ago . the lode , was lost. 'rho mine owners knew it Wite somewhere in:the hearh of the hills, . but •, all. their . seeking faired to discover It. -.- Recently the Invention of Meseta; Dare and 'Williams :shortie& to .an Ina; .wliere the lost lode was, id dynamite laid it open Mr till te•SSee. In principle as in results. theelie: ventioe is mast eimple, though many electrical difficulties had 'JO be over- come in performing it. • - A, current of electricity converting a series of staps or :ticks on or- dinary Morse message,' is put. into the earth by means 'of special. triune. mittere. -This current nuiltes its way three& the earth ervetsu larger or stock, the eggs being simply the em 'smaller area yards! or miles, as the a s 'lore chicks, ' • operator may choose -but to what 'A farmer who desires to ireStrave depth hone • can say -from one elec- often goes, too far sometimes. in- trode to another. • . , •• stead , of depending on one breed he • Then, with a telephone and begins .with two or More. His fe-•' e-Ssteel spike, t*0 operators Walk terest will be safilciently strong. •for over the charged areas, and, sticking a:Year Or two'. to . keep the different the spike into the .earth.-itnyowhere, varieties seherate, .lant• in the .coarse Pick up the current; and the mysterie of time he will undertake to seave ous. ticking tells what is hidden In labor by turning all the breeds out the earth. as plainly as though one together. Then the down grade .be- saw with Mee X-ray °Ye. • gins, and in a Season or -•two his . • ' • • ' fowls,' will .411 be crossbred with no ,„ •• WORLD'S LARGEST BANK.' 'uniformity or fixed characteristics. . , If a harme.rilesiree iraproe, let Landon • Combination 'Which Wile. the pressure of air. To bra,ve men the post of danger is the post of honor, and one may be sure that the fate of submarine Al, deeply as it raity be deplored, will not affect the spirits in • Wilieb. these vessels will continue to be handled. fo Dicier that the secret of their war vaeue may be learned. It was only a Short time ago that his Majesty inspected the unfortunate little man-of-war which. now lies le &Wen fathoms of 'water pa taut Nab Lightship. A few dity0 later the Prince and Princess paid a visit to her, his Royal Highness, in company, with Ca,pt. Bacon, -making a short run under water: -Like all naval officers, the lieir-apparent has regard- ed this newly -developed form of man- of-war with much interest, and it wail natural that his should -seize an early oppOrtunity of going on' board ono of the type and Studying Its Mechanical arrangements. . It is probable that eutertarine Al. after she has been recovered, may be • refitted and rendered fit for service a,gain, She was the craft in which Capt. Bacon took a pride, 'because she embodies many ideas f43 had ar- e -Weil at during the early stages of his maitoeuvees with; the smallest Craft of the genuine Holland design, It is interesting to remember that men ean live for three days In. a. subrnarine provided the hull remains Intact and that She is not overturn- ed so that the gasoline tanks over - only. benefit derived by„the crews is bee Plan is to Have Light Above awonthditchhoehorobstttere'rifenthsoues oe duty. . . and entails close confinement. The . BEST' RE.ADING LAIYIP'. " .-- . • the extra pay, a certein relaxation . The Head. . c What travelling in the "TwopennY . 'I'liaoh TWOPENNY TUBE, sont4nUabridg °rat men-of-war.. th'et. the best form of reeding lami) . • •tive .shade, concentrates the greater .- is one whith, by means of an effete • portion of the light upon the reading matter. refrthermore, the lamp . is usually it is ' almost universally believed TretsibliblietLoardY.v°MYoarg'oe sien.' a et. young, virhich brings the, flame near and be - one of Alio "drop -light" ort, keen officers and Men rather • enjoy low the readerli oyes; ,The • result •the eacithment of the life.. In one sought after is that much light , he - British boat a crew' were once under precipitated on the page, and .on the water..00toowfoorr i nag sap nayc e hoeirmsix;w1thettilexsavvvitet parts of the robin be weakly ilium - page onlY', •- while the surrounding eel of a similar' rye remained s'ib' Mated, even to gloominess. merged in 15 feet of water'in l'et°°1° If this -condition be obtained an Bay, six feet below the eeeface of the meal state of affairs is presumed .. to water, for a period, of 3X hours; 1. --rt exist; and at first it looks very .plau- fact, from 7 ra m. „untill: 10.30 the eible, so plausible, indeed, that it is following morning the little ship, usually accepted as a positive ' fad with a crew ofthree officers and not to be gainsaid. But it :twist he three men, was entirely cut off front refuted. The cots"( one t h (high of ' long all natural supply. Though the ac-_, most able correctness, is a . bed one and standing, and of almost unquestione ecroemranipoe2attion aee, ipsioneertecoesisaartit art of doubly harniful because of the strong lodgteg under water were able to hold it has upon the. public mind. play cards, read, end sleep. without The best method of lighting riatlia, big any. inconvenience. In °Ph° daily, when the notirce of light Is a of the length o/ the stay beneath the bright one, is to pleat the lighteon- water, the air supply was. so .eirc,ela .siderably .above the head, hoisting the phere was purified chemically Lent that no demand had. to be em,de upon the stored air. complete suecese. This test of the with fleeted light front. the surrounding surfaces as from the direct rays frora The atmos- to be illuminated as nittoli tar' the rea reading metter ' in .such . a eositien as habitability, of a Holland , boat maw:a! •rothoerefiaranearethus creating mi. effect Made with an admiral and a resembling ”daylight"t ant of the Ainerican. NAVY on heard- conditions., ' • ' , . The experiment wasueelerta.ken for • • .1 . 15 hours, but -both these officers . . .• stated when they 'caned to the surface him begin with purebred males if , hetittstrip Any Others. does "not yokel to purchase a trio or The Bankers, ' Monthly, of New morebut stick to sale breed. V he .. York, announces that in London a gets a reale every year, let it be of banking combination Is now In pro - the breed he originally selected. In grew that will put the two largest two or three years he will have tlit /cow yoree boner, tor in the beek_ float uniform and they will • grow - ground. This is the combination of battle, and better every season, and at a cost that in almost ineignificantthe leigget% of the London banks end the one tkat ranks thirteenth. on the If neigh'bors 'desire to linprove, let list, or the , Lloyds Bank, Limited, .btlirewmoc,o-aoupoeraittethitleyP, ruerfeuliseas,inehenpubree ristdrie.tthos: anIcklyitotoshootcoor,uipaionciyi.Lillerrtoect.ot should compel them to pay lihn for Ills enterprisewhen theyall with The new combined°London bank Will , . ca situ,* et ogge erpol mongrel hem ,e world,and will overelfadow Oen be the larineit banking insiiteation in to be exchanged for something bet- th ter. . doer or two invested.o the big Goverment banks, like the Bank of Zegland and thee° of the pre brede will Make a 'difference,. in Fennell, German and Russian:nations, the quelity of the stable mad the nem - Banking laws here and in England ber Of eggs laid of more than ten are railicallY different, The privilege ftimeit the coat of the birds pu.relh. ion Lin:I-shell banks to,Jiatre 'branches is. ailed * • • denied to &Ur national banks, and this 18 a vital influence in bringing TROUGHabout mammoth hankie abroad, while IMPROVED . One. of the greatest troubles t i it restricts the similar growth • of erietin bietitutions. State banks the hog is that ho is So irrehressi- in New York and moat of the other bly hogistha 'When you feed him, he States have this -privilege, but the apparently feels in hie inherent duty charters of these. are not go liberal to crowd every other hog as far, and and are not regarded with the name favor as those of national banks, which also have tile valuable and profiteble privilege to issue notes and to receive Government deposits. Many of the State bankit have a num- ber of branches,-ainl trwet cotapanies locally. and in Other sections are de- veloping on the saute lines The, largest number of branches of any of our State- bank e is very areal as compared to them' maintained by the English 'banks. The largeet here has lose 'than twenty branches, While one of the batOce in the big London combitiation leas ninetyeilve, told the other almost an many. LAttonSqv °RAP. Li the Ameritian Museum of Natural forcefully away from the feed as pos- sible. When fed grain on the open floor, lie takes it, upon himself to coVer as much as he can, to keep nosebag and pushing his feltotvs, of- ten to his own loss of food, thrice More or less 18 wasted by his rude "table manners." 'When fed slop in the trough, where he complacent- ly statute lengthwise, and if not 'sat- isfied with that, lays lahneelf down, gulping in his oWn and the snaaller ones' share until too full even to grunt, when he will stretcff out for imooze 31 the trough is big enough, To avoid the waste of feed and, to give all an 'equal chance to Se*" cure theft share, Mrs device is all good as, if not bettor than, any. Then, tete it is so simple that any armer With a hammer and eaw, and such loose pieces As weer be found itt THE S. S. LESSON. TXTERNATIOirii 141E0BON OEM 11. Teat of the Levi:o2n41.11. ii:gs tie 1-11. Golden Text, Cien. • The litterVelning story hetween eur teat lomat and this Is full of inter» est but we are aelced to pitmen all by and give our attention to this moat intereeting and profitable ac- count of the translation of Elialb, our golden text asseclating it with. th,e translation of Zneell, who Walk- ed with God and was net, far God took hint, or, according to Ifeb, le, he wag not found, for God,. had tranelated hian, This /should. be of the utillOat interest and Importence to believers, for there is always possibility that we, too, may be trenelated, caught up In the clouds to Meet. #41 Lord in the air.a. Theo, bvu,te,74, strauweaeullebiel hchotanaglela Isnleept: moment, in the twirhiling of an ey.e a. Oar. xv, 61, 1$2). This will be the experience of all true believers who thall be alive on the earth when our Lord shall come 'again, and, le- asrauch as lAie coming is elway,f/ iunnthizilsesnet.W 01 would take tip -Elijah by whirl- hlto miargehtlivhiengthteo_edze.rience„ The time had come when the Lord wind into beav,en, and otir lessen ree cords the journey of Elijah coed Ens - ha from Gligal to Bethel and .Jericho' and through dentate and the separa- tion of Elijah and Blithe, tlielia be- coming t,he suceeseor of Elijah with as double portion of ale spirit. Elisha's thrice repeated "Ale the Lord liveth, and as the soul Iiveth. I will not leave thee" is, One of the most Intereeting • and suggestive words of our lesson (verses 2, 4, '6) and reminds us of the clevotiori of Ruth to Naomi and of Attai ta Dav- id (Ruth 1, 16; II. dem. xv, anti this ought to be our devotion toThCehrpislte.cee Gilgal, Bethel, Jericho and Jordan may suggest different ex- periences in the life of a believer, tithing the suggestions from ' the, meanings of the words or from inci- dents 'associated with the places- Gilgah'reproach rolled away; Bethel; • hone° of Gtod or vision of God:, ' Jericho, city of, palm trees, the - wa- ten healed; •Jordan, river of •judg. - • ment. Some believers may haVe•oely, the assurance of salvation, all sine forgiven; others have some special manifestation/a' of Gpd; others have • • .' • learned • to let alone ,the waters that cannoteatisfa and drink only of; the livhig water that gives health; still others see that they are dead, with . • ' Christ, buried 'with Christ,' risen with Christ, like the twelve stones •water Jordan and ..the twelve at Gil- ' • - gal (josh. iv, 8, 9), but to men . Ensile, no experience satisfies, math- - ing but a living person, to whom the • .... whole 'heart says 'I will not leave thee" -not Ills gifts nor riches •Of grace or 'glory, but Himself, apart • beat whom ell. is as nothing. . The .briae eyes not Ime .germents, see but her dear briiiegroont'S lace. I will not gaze at glory, but on my King of grace. The seine thought , is , presented in. the words of • verses 7, 8, 9, --"They two went on, , tbey ;;two • stood, they two 4werit •„. over”. This suggedts ”the Let& and Gideon" (jut*. vii, 18, 20), and Enoch's walk with God, and the .es- sentials to a walk witli God -"Row . dan 'two walk together except they , be . agreed." "Rumble th,yself to • .. wviiti.,1c8TitilThe(1 Lcre'rdeAhnalrh isip1:43e;n.MWice cannot • walk with Him unless we . meekly accept His word, and we can- not walk in fullest inthuitcy with INSECT MECHANICS. that no difficelty would have been experienced in reenheing below for a much longer period. , One Of the features of the British boats to ' which most careful atten- ticniewas. given is the air supply. o el berate use of a tool hY a little sand -wasp might well be -sup- posed to indicate reasoning power. weil-k flown natural 1st. Doctor Pee:Wham, watched a wasp dig a hole In the earth and eleposit therein an Ventilation is provided from the ex- egg, topeter with a spider, whieh haust of the air -driven mathinery, she had stung into paralysis, to which ie distribute• throughout ;the . _ feed the grub which should be hatch. Interior. of the teat, and there fa a ed 1n due course. Then oho :filled up refierve from storage ca,sks, Further - •the hole with "and or earth, and More, •the atmosphere is freed by chernieal. Process •from carbonic Jasnsea.it iThwn with her Stead. "When at last Rae fining as level acid produced by passage through the ventilating faits, *electrically, 'driven lugs, When on the • surface the, sWistii..til.,o gsralundC she hroeght a duall- y ..or tine grana io. iof dirt t the draw in. a constant supply. During subrattriug,' keep • the alr moving end all parts of the Spot, *eked up a small peibb in her in .pounding them down with rapid and destribizted in niandibles, and used it as a hemmer some trials extreme inconvenience strokes, thee making this spot . as was caused by the fumes from the haed and firm as the sourrounhing gasoline used •1n the suriaae • engines, sarface. Before we could regover. but this 'difficulty has been' obviated from our astonishment at. this per - to a large extent and the conditions form -awe, she iled dropped her stone tof life have been • so much improved and was bringing more earth.. Tit a that for some time no • complaints Of moment we saw her pick up the peb- ameng ehe crews have 'been tale, and again pound' the earth into Made.. ' . . • • place with It Once more the whole .Subiliarliies are not boats in which proceres was repeated, and thee the men have to live in the seine Senile little creature flew away," as they remain for a long period in "The whole of this performellee," torpedo cinft. Destroyers,' for in- writes Sir Herbert Maxwell, "Is so stance, have navigated the globe unexpected that ,even :Doctor Peek - without tho health of the men being ham's . high reputation as 4 scrupn- undermined, thotigh the.conditions bus observer' tnight fail. to convince life on board a:re hard and lacking skeptics that he had not been de - in Comfort. Submarines In their pre- caved, but similar behavior Nen the insenwtb'stichatethoef indeenvelsotpar ontiyare beats part Of a wasp of the same epeeies thlring Jia been recorded independently by the actual hours of duty, but in war- Doctor etimetote timeethere is no saying that they ,sity," of TCansas Univer- would not be called upon to spend several daye on board. But Itt face BAD lititt.rha talJoyABLE. of a. fee men will make great Sacri- fices Which are ttricelled for hi or'din- Wagstaff -"Good morning, doetor. erao Peace oPeratione. During the Are you enjoying good health thiel past fortntighte" Manoeuvres, against morning" Vice -Admiral Sir Arthur Wilson's Doctor-e"Well-.r about the fleet the crews of the enbma.rineti have only kind of health a man can enjoy, been tied to their tiny arnphiblotts len't it'? You never knew anyone to holotmemesetlftoro4cloansgionpeedriobydst,haenddu:tewiett ertivergelsteadfilise,aolhth; dyledermA known big ships hail proVea COMP:Mr' Settle doctors to enJoy bad health -fn gation for the discern/ate. In the oteersee With* navy, at least, it can be staid • that there Is the keenest debire to GETTING ON WELL. experiment with submarine eraft History Is a wonder of merino life Without rettervatIons, so coMpleta "Irow are you, getting on?" asked almobt ati3" seraPePile, can build a crab metteuring 12 feet, making it tilth:irt6wnflarttr'eetlisltiveoft;trtlinfild dziohriroanileditfAr.. 411 M7i.t in the ett,Tet the ether in the ehape of a gigantk erapatteee hrisorl of YOun g Wliom he The drat reneisite le a good. The epeelmen le a type of the spider Siete the news of the disteetet toe "What are you doing?" further eubetantial affair that will suit. the largest crefatteems, In the world. A . First-rate, was the Man reply. sized, welleconstructed trough: built Grab; whieh inhabits the lettere of Sebnitaritte AL tette published 'It tlheried ,rehlieeter referably a, V-ithape.„ Tim width the group of 'stench' formitig the Ete- "Pm a medical director in an in- eliorenten have been saying that 0 gf the siitt de boards will depend upon Piro of JaPan, bode' Portion lose of life vein render it diffiettlt to etitution." the eke of the hilt to be fed, A. of this mammoth crustacean Is the get 'nee to carry out the ritieeeettry "A. medkal dfrettor?" small trough, with taX-Ineh bearde eke of a heilfebushel measure, while expetiteetite, met a fate. which "Yes; you nee ditect envelope* hi reay woad for tho. x!eiv, pigs, anti its two great wee, conteinirig B&W - had not been. fereeeeit, although a patent Medicine house," tlatteli Alfa for the like teeth, called "pineers," the emu pOtedbility of Many other kinds of twebte or elktee lerge Photos end breeding -sows. 'rho !left encircle the Agin% of a Man. adeldelite had been thought of, The If a woMan is permitted to talk e Riles eight lege ramnible huge banlboo te Of plow- hould depend upon the fate tif thie wage' is an isolated Vile. the eatr.fitt not who doee the thinking, weight of the animate, and the strain Nies,ana ti are extremely °Iodic forth)* which if, tria.y madden:61y be "Teak° Provided /Iere" is the large likely to OW on the frame, Pea e - antkipated will have no effect on the 'painted itetke outside a little tots Nogg Of ordinary weight a piece of The delltiet is one of the rove pee., creWe, though it May Mid probably , toga on the high -road to Upping, tWO by four lintliee *liquid tie Anted llte tello Can fin an aching veld. WW teed to tome Mee -SUM being ilinglend -_„,,,eeeeeeeeekeialegseetegeekese... ,.. Him unless we accept.° all. His words, "believing all things that are writ. , tee." To da this, all of eelf and self sullicionsy and • human thietiona: Must be renounced and the Lehi and, • His.. word herome our ell stanciont emote. The meek will He teach His way. If- we edow anything to cOme . into 01114 lives that is not of Go'cl . •• companionship, occupation, recrea- tion in Which we cannot have fellevsh ship with 'Himseour Walk will be marred,s. our Communion' broken'.He may have to say to lis • as He did to' the' two Witb whom lie walked to Emniaus, "Oh, fools„ and slow of' heart to believe All that the pro- phets bave spoken" (Luke xxive: 25). • Let us net give Jfhn occasion to -pay this, : but let us: he "most purely believers." • • The last helpful Word we shall have slittee to consider in tiffs brief .• meditation with be Ellijah'e offer and , Entities reqUeet, "Ask whati shall . do for thee," "Let a double portion of thy:spirit be•tipon me" (veriie 9). The Condition, . on which the request, would be granted was that Elishet should see Min when he was. token. , As they atill watt -on and :talked We Mita not know le •witat direction Elijah lookecf, possibly Moking up- ward, but zbers eati be no doubt as to where Elishaes oyes Wero, for if he looked away from Elijah for.: only .. one brief Moment he might liaise that which he desired. So we see him With his game intently arid wave -yore ingly fixed upon his coinnanion. It lb the snarls Intense earnestness that is required of es If vial would be filled. with the Spirit, Tfie" word start/Sri, "Ye shall ••seelt Me and filth • Me When ye shall search for kfe with all your heart" Xeree. xxix., 15). The eyes of the Lord are still looking o -ver the, earth for those Who hearts • are whole toWard Hint (Ire Olfreat. *vie, 0), Ensile, saw ilim takeu with the whirlwind and cliarlot and horses of fire, and it soort beettme very•menifetst to the sons of the pro- phets that the spirit of Elijah did indeed reef, on 'Mirka. It is greatly needed that, the epirlt of Christ should be seen in Iris people (Rom. wilt..., '9; it. Cor. iv„ 11), that we might be living epietles known and read of all men, and it weuld be so if tvallad the Same earnest 'Steele° for It that Illisha had for the itheitit of Elijail (John xlv., 10, 14). • • • , -• . • • • • • *, • 1 • • . Nothing takes the conceit out of a • stuck-up man like a hole -up, Too many sermons are alined at pocketbooks Instead of at hearts. Ile -"Por the perfect enjoyment of love there must be comPlete confi- dence." She -"I have heard tpe, say identleally the None thing about stmeagea." eCien you forgive Me and love Inc , star?" Weld the sielvlyernado bride, "when 1 oedema that my teeth are artifielall" "Thank Ileeveni" cried the greeter as he snatehed off Ms wig; "how X ea'a cool my head." Lade -"Meat Is very dear, but- cher. I can hardly Afford to buy any." Butcher -"Why not tura veg- etarian, mural" Old Lady -"No, letleed; / was Imre and brought ttle a Baptist, and,l'in not going to ohmage my religion &t my time OP lite." 1111..1 N111111411 1 .11111111:11•IIIIIIIVI 11111111 IIIIIIIIIIIIuII,IIIuI 1 11111 11.1001. ..• , • • • •