Queens County Review 18970611 |
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PBM QMnfT REVIEW.
nXBOKt, QOEBn OODITT, K T CHARIaBB D. BMITH. Proprlator.
^mm§ $onni^ fteWeto.
*2r:
1001 MB Ml nmnii
BUOSTBB n—
AttnctiTt ud Artistic StjIi
AT TBB
REYIEW OFFICE by Pnrir Pnssn.
•iII«OI.n OOPIB**. M'M.-VMi CliINXHU
A PAMILT JIBWSI'.M'KU tir I.IK.M, .\.MI IIKNKR.VI, 1 NTK.I.I.IIiKM K.
TEiaS: •S.OO TEABLT IR ADTARtA ^
VOL, IL
FREEPOKT, N. Y., FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1897.
NO. 32.
IKBFREEPORTBAMK
CAPITAL, SMiOOO.
9ita StTMt, . Freeport, L I.
JMDf J. BAMOALL. PrMMait. ..ttlUlinKMY T. fiPRAOUK. TIm-PnMaa*. WnXIAM 8. HALL. Okaklw.
¦a II.*;
'oiiBraTiSwttii aS.lalaaiwiiiU ta
llMaa oTtMlMrlka
a.r»~~» ...uilu' ar Trail Coaa- lary ataawuilallua aa far aa la kiiuamiallnii aiaaamiaaat. Miataaf IhraaiMriiial faM ea Ouaa aaatka nr aiara. I oa all aana of Rara»a. ^ ^ >al WBliliia baataMa. maib otimporoaoaa, onaiaaBln, ao-
t aaiMacthm inaraatacd. " la wMI raodara tmanpi attaatlwi. aa4 eUr aaawarat.
Bank of Rockville Centre.
I Ava.. BackTllla C^atra, I. L
Bo • Oatmrtl BanUng Boaiiieai it and OiaooQDt. I Paid on gpeoial Depoaita. ,^ ......... Hoiu»-»A. M. to S P. H
¦,tlamaiaT, 9 a. m. to is m.
BOARD or MMKTOM.
avIaaB, ThmnaaO. Kniaht. Hiram K. Smith.
i.Cmnbaa. Waalc) B. Smith.
. Oalllaofi. Charhn L. Wallaca, IW. Haraa, Auatin rimiirall. ] r. PtilUipa. rraacla F. Wllaon. r. Uallotl. . Juhn T. llavlMin, r DavlanB. KdwanI T. Tbaratoa,
Hamlltan W. Peanall.
DN. O. H. HAMIMOND. '^ niKBPOBT, L.L
DR. KDWIN CANMIAN,
Waaia.aai
r. UL
—. J
DN. O. L. LUSK. kOSMrfcrtlMTawaaf ¦¦¦pHiail.
nOCBAVAV BCACH. N. V.
TNOS. D.CANMIAN, D.O.S.,
IIaIH BTRBBT. rRBRPORT. R. T.
BBtoahaan:ta.a. tola. ¦.
Or. A. O. Roaan tl\«l«
:-CXPeNT DCNTIST-:
»MAIM aniRRT. HRMMrTBAD. N. T
WM. N. LONOCNCCKEN. D.D.S,
ttJtUilUtM DKNTIirr.
Wtlh LoncaiMckar Brottaera,
aiB ftHTaa arairr, aaaaaita
¦ooBa, * A. a. m I p. H.
V. L. SMITH, varaaiiiARv WRaaoM aad •BmriMt
i»H|i»«.U L
FNANOIS B. TAVLOn,
LAWTBR.
aOBNBR MAIN ANB PULTON ATSk.
¦aaaaHaaA !• L
WM. A. ONDCNDONK, <a AMaaaap aa4 Caaaaalr-al-Iaw. i-
~ Oflca. Nn. at Main KInwl,
CUrwaaBallillna,Mri<»ri. IIKMPSTEAn ^JMfdianat Haaklrmia. rVuntSt., naar Rvll CMI aail C^aalnal bualawa.
K. V. BALDWIN,
^BANJO SOLOIST.K&
CtBCirt BNgRgwiNiRH at Low llat««
. AMr«a. HCaMTUO or FKEPOIIT.
¦VMNRM CAROa.
WATKIN W. JONBS * CO..
out ROtARLIMlBO
lMlEsttter.lDsnniiceAi|eDC|,
FAR NOCRAWAT. N. V.
C. S. NANDALL, AraliHMt, ONaarar. Bnahira aaa.. aad Mala at., a**.
CHARLCS L. SEAMAN,
Carpenter **«> Builder,
PNKBPONT. L. I.
¦urtaa dwarfoUy giv^a. Cnatracta lake*.
CMMI « filLMI UTIOR.
CAWBNTERS AND BUILDERS. PRBBPORT. U I.
¦a*la« roMtUr nimplatod tka RBVIRW
RUIUOINd «* ara iiravarad u< taka
oaatraMa for tnt claaa vnrh.
tUWNT A. BCDCLL. AaiM
'> raatomn. L. I.
Ma at Hnl Ratala aaA ISruaal Ptaaarlf
JOHN P. WNIOHT, A.t70TX0IZXKR.
PIANOS TUNED
9y at bBKt Sfo Hrt Taaar.
J^BBB BMnoablBi
-. Ama At 'BBi -
la Um Bullanninm yoa will ba ablt to preea a batton and diaeoTer yonr miaaing oollar bntton, predicta Pnck.
The Baltimora San ia aaking itn rnadera for tha namaa of tba two mont worthy Uarylandera to b« honored by atataea at the National Capitol.
The Aaaociation of the Bar of tht City of Kew Tork haa decided by av OTerwhelming rote to employ one ol ita mambera aa a paid inrestigator of legal abnaea.
The Toronto Olobe aaya that 423,^ aqnara milea of timber limit* in the ProTinoe of Ontario are owned bj American flrma. The export* for the year 1896 amonoted to 'JiH,7M,aU
The record for rapid bnilding in Chicago, which antil recently wan heli) dy the Fiaher Bnilding, han beeu broken by tbe Fair Bailding, whoa< liine ateel atoriea were pnt np in twen ty-nine daya.
Tbe Baltimore American thinka il abont time that that city .were pntting ap another monument, and than livr np to the name, other citiee being in danger of atealing a march on thr "Ifonnmental City."
The Preabyterian Ohnrch ia thr only religiona body whioh haa minin tera and chnrehea in erery Htate in thr Onion, and by the atatiatioa or 1896 conninted of 7678 oongregationn, 6943 mtnialera and 948,716 membern.
French aoientiata now come forth with the atatement that roay cheekn are aimplr oaoaed by one immense rally of tiny miorobea. We don't carr a cent whether that la tme or not, aayi the Philadelphia Inquirer; bnt it will certainly make the roay-cheeked laaaiea mad, and aome of the ladn will weep when they think of kisaiug a big bunch of microbes.
From a bnainesa and, indeed, many
other atandpoints, on^Q^^])[^g|ggJ^imJaii^en4|iri portanL-.jiaitrtliir-reoently hamioil | Vuen't^i
"That pnnaiHl oT(»r, nnd this may. too Many aorrown hav.. i-om" nnil K.in.., r«ln haa tiirrlp.1—ami tlii-n, ).ii«n.-1 o "Tbat passed ovi^r, and this may, tu.i
Who forB..|. llml the !ikli>« nro Mu In ilri'.-iry nmH-.n-i .if f-.tf uml ruin Tomorrow thi- wln-l mnv >llt nun •¦That |ia!wi-l ovit. nn 1 llili. mny.
r .ll-
This In th«> noDK I wonl.l slnR to y.>u. O.il wlio Bi>n.l"th th- sum
Now that trial has oom.> on.-i- m.jn-. Iiimr.|..th Um ilnlT...lll u'vl
You'tij ronnniTPil jialn In thi» ilnyH of yoro. Sprlnit nuint i..ini... iiii.l tlii- winl "That iiansed over, an.1 thin may, toil." "Tlmt pass...I ovit. ami thl» ma
—Sarn M. llauKhton. In YiiutliB Ct
HELENS TWO LOVERS. |
rjjr ANNA. SMISIL,nS.
tmimm-mm-mmp^miB-i]-i]i^m
hnpiiy coni|iuiiinn he liojied to make her.
"If she never Inveiinip!" lie Iboiii^lil, Iiitterly. "If nil my Invn fails to win liers, what will mv life hv'>"
Ho ilill Iht iii.st"ii-e. He knew Unit if his line faileil lo win lier lienrl, liin giilil wan powerlens In make her liiijiiiy. He knew that if her molliev ilieil or (viuld not lie lieiieHteil liy lier mar- bruail
ir> he feel tri-
iiiniihani? Oiil
he feel hittiTly
ashanieil ? Wan
he Klairi> Was he
Borry'/
Will Spencer
asked hi nine If
thene qiienliuiin over and over, wearying of the repeti¬ tion, and yet never able to end it l.v | ''"''?''' "'"" «""''' "-"ther lie« h saying heartily that lie was glad and ! heri^oit than he hm wife. triumphant, or bitterly that he wan While inatt*.rn ntoml in this unsalis- norry and anhamed. The plain fait I f»<^tory ninte, Mrs. Kaymnml niaiV a sUred him- ever in the fane, that Helen ' ""WPstion: "J want ymi In ^'.i awny Baymond did not love him, ami that ; ¦'""'» "'"""'•" "he naul t« him, "ami Mrs. Raymond had nrged hin null, ami i ''* II*"'*'" '"'"^ 'I'" I'mmtant ilevolmn exerted her maternal infliienoe and . ">«* »•!« •"»" ''«'' «"'¦¦• ">""•»" ?'""• '""¦ eloquence until Helen ha.! consented tr'^'"*' L«'t her feel that a vnnl hns to be his wife, telling him very frankly j •¦"">« ">'" her life, an.l hnw dull ami that her heart wan in the grave of her I cheerless it wonl.l l.e if she lust ynn. lover, George Vanliorn, who had l.eeii I The weiMiug day is set for ,7iiiiii in.
killed in a railway colliniun nearly one ¦•"'' "'¦" '" April. Htay i 6th or (ith of .Tune."
vay until tin
year before.
"Mother wan never willing I nlmuld marry Oeorge," Helen naid, niully, "because he wan jioor, and we have suffered all that poverty can inHicl. He was on hin way to Colnradii, where his brother hod lieen nuocensful, when he was killed."
Will Spencer winced, for he wan rich, very rich, but then he put to the wound that soothing Ailve, "I will win her love when she is my wifo," that h^ wrecked so mauy lives. It may oome, this love that will not ho hid¬ den, to a man and wifo after they are bound together for life, but tho rink is great, and Will Spencer knew it.
Yet he eherinhed the delunion thnt love in the end would win a return, and he know bin own love In lie strong iag,..-^! ll.iail.".*n*'^^''>aal>
down by the U nited Staten Supreme Court waa that rendered in the cose of the United Statea Oovernment against tbe Bell 'telephone Company, says tho New York Independent. The main sontentioQ on the part of the Oovern¬ ment waa that tbe delay of thirteen yean in granting tha patent applied for in 1877 waa the doing ot the com¬ pany, bnt the conrt foand that the Patent Office waa solely at fault. The decision has the effect of continuing the control of the telephone by the Bell Company for seventeen years from 1891.
In many of tbe great cities of Enrope, whenever a great festival in about to place, all the questionable and Buspioiooa characters are "urged" by the police to take a few days' airing in tha oountry, and to disappear for a time from their ° aocuatomed hauntn. This is found preferable to putting them under look and key. In Ht. Petersburg and Moscow and in Vi. snna those who do not leavo of their own accord on being thus pressed arc ahipped off by the police in a special train, and Japan has recently adopted the aame exoellent cnntom. Now, whenever a great popular pageant in abont to take place in the Mikado's capital, the "Boahi-no-Kinba," 4ir "train of blackguards," may Imi seen ateaming away into the cnniitry wilh ita freight of known aud snspecteil malefactors.
Englishmen jealona ot their coun¬ try's honor deeply feel the disgrace of the Jameson raid, aud wuuld go to great lengths to undo the unfortunate ileed. Tbe Wentminster Oazette, of London, says: "We cannot help think¬ ing that the item 'moral and iuteilec- tual damage' in the little bill whieh President Kroger han just presented haa got put on the wrong side of the aooount. For it is thin ciinntry which has had all the kicks aud no, ha'pence in oonaeqnence ot tba raid. Bnt in any event it ia the chartered company which has to pay. and we anggeat as an interesting problem—it the com¬ pany pays a million to tbe Transvaal for 'moral and intellectual damage,' how much ought to be paid to England (or similar damage? A Oerman con¬ temporary remarks that a'similar feel¬ ing movea even the moat jingoistic Engliah papera. Tbey abuae the Boers to find an excuse for a deed wbich, in their hearts, they regard aa inexcusa¬ ble." ____________
The "war-cheat" ot Oermeny is kept in the (ortifled city ot Spandau. Here, atatea Youth's Companion, is deposited gold coin equivalent to thirty million dollara, instantly available for military purpoaea. It is nnderstoiHl that Oreat Britain and France arc oven more rich ly snpplieil. although neither of theae countriea ksepa ita treasure in a "war chest." Italy, on the other band, has very littlo, and her people are taxed to the verge of starvation that that lit tie may be kept nnloucheil. llusnia haa been a chronic borrower, partly to anpply a fund u( wbich no uue oiitnide | of Ruaaia knowa tbe extent. It ha* | been aaaertad. poanibly with some ex , aggaratioD, that Oermany could put I two million men into tbe fleld, fully i equipped, within ten days after hon | tilittaa began. On a war footing, tbe ' Oerman, Rusaiau and French armies woald number, eacb Bore than three million men; tba Ilaliaa and Austrian aliunt two millions saeh. To anpport . such mnltitadea would aooa empty { any "war-cheat." A country like Oer many, whoae public debt is oaly about { tan dollars per capita—Italy's debt is I allMat oighty ilaUara for askch inhab- I ilaat—MWM laamt to taxatioa, and by i vanoaa maama aiftat—li a loag atrain. Bat it atacian iaMgiaatioa to dwell ¦yo* tka kap4aa»lk«l ptvOiaieiad war iif ip«i Mtm RRhRfvy tahittat
' ANiaaallMb
forgo Vanhorn was met with Huch a smile un be cuuld never win, hail kept frora prennini; hin snit when the name of Helen's lover ap- peareil on the lint of the killed iu the aocount of the railway culliniim, but aftor tbe lapse of neveral luuiithn lie had won Mrs. Itaymoud to hin side, and so, by proxy, wooed Helen anil won—what? a cold, reluctaut coiineut to be hia wifo.
Yet she was not cold, thin girl of twenty, whone heart hail necnied crushed ever nince the day when Oeorge Vanhorn's name was recnrdod as deail. He could have Inhl hnw her eyes oould softou with love's leii.ler- nesB, her choekn Imrn with love's blushes, bor low, sweet, voice treinhlc with love's whispered wordn. He had won what all the Spencer K"ld, the riches of loug generationn, could not buy.
In the "long agu" Ihe Itnyinoiuls had held wealth, too, hut Helen's father, to une the cxprenninn of hin brother, had "muddled away twu for- tanes, somehow," and had died a pau¬ per. Helen wan but a child then, aiul her mother wan-nufltciently winetu "111 her for a teacher," liy a eonrne of ju¬ dicious education, for which her uncle paid.
And Helen, nervnun, sensitive, quick in feeling, impulsive in npench, was about as unlit fur a teacher as a girl conld be. Still she Iruilgeil almiil in all weather to instruct such juipils in music aud French as she could prn- cure, and helped her mother shnuliler the thousand and one caren of a iKiard- ing-house when she wan at home.
Before that fatal railway cnllisinii she waa a bright, lieautiful ^irl, with large, exiirensive, hrnwii eyes, a vnii-e of music, the step of a fairy, singiiiK as a bird singn, from nbrrr joyounnenn of heart, bringing a jest to all the hoiiMe hold worries, laughing merrily over her own blunders in the cnlinniy de partment, turning old drennes, reiiov ating old iHinnetn witliuul a complaint. living on love and hope.
After thut day nhe moved about slowly, her eyes dull and weary, her duties met with rigiil mrchanical pre rision, her lips onipressed, her cheeks pale, a shadow of her joynns oeit.
And it made Will Hpencer furious he could not break this icy calm. All in vain he brought her cosily gifts, I took her to every place of aninsement where he could coax her tu go, was |
It seemed to liim good advice, ami ho had Imsiness in the West that wmilil nil hin time prntitnlily. It i^ave him the tirst really hapjiy mnmeiit nf his engagement, when .Helen said, |,'eijlly. yet wilh a sliudder;
"I cannot bear to think nf ymi on railway trains. Will. Write often,thai I may know you are safe."
Her lips met his iu n tender prcs- sure, such as a loving sistor might lie- nt<)w, but with far more affectlou than nhe had ever before given him. Was he winning her? The linpe made this unexpected absence ciidurable, and fnr two weeks life held more pleasure than it had done in all the days of his cimrtship.
Then came a lilnw, smlileii, sharp, aaswiluj,lH.iU4U_^t^wiis j^i a larg Western iily, when, alter iii^i ttiriiiiig to his hotel, n mau oil criitdies 'iiskeil for charity. The voice was fiiiniliar, and, in a Hhoi-k nf liin-rnr, the face struck him. Dne ga.-iiiiiig cry encapeilliim:
"(ieorge Vanhorn!" The man would have hurried away, but he followed easily.
"Let me go, Speuccr!" the cripple pleadeil. "I did not recognize yon! Don't you know I am dead?"
"1 know you are cqmiiig in here wilh me," Will said, gently, sulistitiit- iiig his arm fnr one of the criiti-hes, Ullll enleriiii; the hotel wlicrc lie ha-l ii room. "Steady, now!" and ho led him, feeliiiK how he Iremlilcl, unlil he had him seated in ii f^rt-ul iiriii- chair in his room, an-l felt his heart stirred with deep compassion at the havoc jiaiii and iMiverly had iiiiuic.
Ho would not let his gnest siicak until he had ordered n supper an.l mnde him comfnrtulilc. 'rii.'ii, turn¬ ing tu him, he saw that he was weep¬ ing.
"See what a woman you inal^e of me!" tho pour fellow nuid. "You tlinni;lit I was dead'?"
"Yes! All your friuudn think no." "It was a narrow escape, and 1 wonder why I was spared. Nine months in a pulilic hospital hnve left nie crippled and inciirnlily ill. They would nut keep me after I cniilil |{el nliout uu crutchcii, hut I have Iiei;i(i'il or starved, aud it will nnl lie fnr l.uiu!
I wnuhl nnt let any nne know fnr fear it w-imid get lu—tn—Heh-ii! "
"You want to liiile from lu-r':! "
"Yes—yes! What would her life lie tied to miue? You will uot betray me, Spencer'?"
"Hut ynu may recover."
"No! ' I shniilil he nnly a wreck if I could, hnt I cjtnnot. 1 have iiilermil injuries that the cold and hunger nf last winter have iiicreaseil, fatally."
Will Hpeiii-er literally cnuid mil speak. This man unked of him only the nileiice that wonld |{ive him his wife. Ciiuld he let Helen rcmniii in igiiiirauce of Ihis straiiiie ailveiiliire the memory uf her old love might die away iu time.
When he could speak again he led Ihe convcrsatinn tn Helen. Ile was very frank, telling (Ienrge Vnnhnni how truly he ha.l lieeu niniirm-il, Imt saying nnthing nf his owu hopes, and
II was easy to see h.iw (ienrge had Invcd her, hnw utterly self-siK-riliciiig his silence ha.l been. To spare her
her openly devoteil slave. Thr fe
wo-<leof thankn ahe npoko wero dull. } pain he had kept from hor all knowl
ber imile wan on her lips unly, and | edge of his own snirering.
and her eyes did not brighten. By i But his pride yielded to Will's en
no device cuuld be call np oue Hash iif ' Ireatien 1,1 he allowed l<i liefrien-l him
her old joyouniiess. Shesangfnr liim. LUc was very weak, very ill, nnd he al-
selecting dilfleullovertiircHtliat proved | lowed Wlirtogcl him a pleasant r...iiii
her proflcieucy, displayed a charming
voice, nothing more. Never did she
sing the old ballnls that (ienrge Van
horn had loved, when she threw her
heart into every line, and made her
eyes misty with her fhrilling Innes.
Yet she was graU'ful, and s|sike oft«ll at her own regret that nhe so poorly repaid all Will's tonderncBs I She tried not lo shrink frnm his I carcases, to give liai-k numething of the warmth of hin love, and then, in . the privacy of her own rnnni, wept j aoalding tears ovrr her own faithless i ness. I
Mrn. Ilayiiiond wns nftvn afraid thnt ] she would yet miss the g.ilden prize | she hail partly won. and heartily see i ouded Will in his pr.'pnralii.ns for a siiecdy weiMing. It was Mrs. Itay mond who went with him tu open lh«' I hnnse thai he had iHiiighl Ui a.lnrn for 1 hi* bride, who aided him in the sele,- | tion of car|>els. curtains, furniture, an.l I gave him instructions regarding the kitchen de|i«rtmeiit, nf whoso needs ho , was as ignnraut as inoi-t y.mug l«ach- elors. It was Mrs lUymnnd who re- ! ceivo.1 an aunnynums letter i-.iiitainiiig ! a liht'ral sum, which she niiietly oy propriatod for a trnusscau and a snita- { hlu dress for Ihe lirnle's nu-ther. j
Hho was a womau nf rttre ta.*!. Hav- i ing won Helen's ixinsent t.i lie Will Spencer's »-ifo, she never Isitheroil her hy onuplaints alsiul hor IikIUiks in , differem-o lo her Invcr nr her future ' pnwi(HH*tn Hhe siruply mailr all the I arraugoiueiits for her, wlth.iut mice admitting a iswsilnlity of change. The betrothal was s|sikon of nu all ixt-a sions. tbe pi«{mriilion nf the hous,-, the aelortion of tho iri.nssoau rofcrre.l ^n'h happin. to in matter-of-fai't words that ma>1e ' know that si
in a ipilet linariling-hnnse, to fiiriii-it him with npt'.essnry clothing, to en k-age n .liM-lnr. amlLi take a hrnlhers place liesiile him.
.\n.l then true, uuselHsh Invc Iri- iimphed.
"She will never marry me, " Will 4buu>.'lit, ruefully, as ho folded a lung. TitW h-tt.T, "liiit she shall imt he ohoaloil nnt nf what little hoppiness life muy still hold fnr her."
He wTiite. I<~i, tn Mrs Hayiiinnil, a letler Ihat caiisi-il that re.-ipc.-tnlile lauy In grill.I her teeth, Imt which she i.liey.-.l. packing her trunk and ai-i-nin- panving H.Ien in the jnuruoy west¬ waid
It was Will Spencer wlm met Ih. two at the ile]Mit, and accompaiiii-.l Ihem 1.1 the Isiariliug-honse, when- In- kept Mrs. Kayniiin.l in Ihe parlor aft.r .sending Helen upstairs ulooo. It whh Will Spencer who sniiMithed away every difficiilly, ennnging nsinis for luntlu-r an.l daughter, and ipiiellv rlTm'ing hiiu self.
II »«i far Inn lung a -Inrv to try In recnr.l the lliree inoiilli-i that foll.iwc.l (ienrge Vaulmrn was rei..>liitt- nn mu- p..nil. He wiuhl nnt marry Hi-h-n He ha.1 nn Imp.- nf r.-ciery, imt if the iiiiexpectod shonlil ha) |s-ii he w.iiild n.ll risk riiiuing Helen's life hy bind- illg it 1.1 his.
"Oh, " she woald iTT, "what am 1 l.l .losorve ijio lovo of IWO such men"- Mntber. It homilies me Ui Ihiuk how
It wii-i three years Inter when hli ciiiui' home from n Kurnpcaii tour nnd cnlled mi Mrn. Raymond.
"The ol.l Indy" sir, is dead," the ncrvanl tnld him,'an' Minn Helen'n liv-
in' ill . street Maylie yeen didiit
hear she's ciime inln some money from her iiiu'le. sir, oml Mrs. (irady, she's t.iiik Ihis hnnse, sir."
('.line iiitii somo money! Well, she ili.l not iicc.1 him. He would wait nw hilc. Hnl in a few days a little note reacheil hini:
"It was nnkindt.i let me henr of yonr return liy nccideut. Will y|iu not como to see me'? "
Would he unt? .\nd when he went he cnuld not keep the love nnl of his eyt-s nr his vuice, and she—at last! Her eyes drisipe.l uuiltir his gaze, her cheeks blushed for him. her vnico liiltor.sl, wilhlenderness He had wnn his liriile! Aud he had nnsecret hidden frnm her Invipg eyes, no treachery he w-milil dread to have her discover. I!v Ihe frankness he had thought wnuld alienate her fnrever he had wnn her true, faithful love, n devotinn as entire us that she hnd given in hetgirlhiiml In the man he had no nobly befrieuded. Tho Lt-ilger.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
I'aper helling for machinery irt be¬ ing made and used in (ierinany.
An Oshknsh (Wis.) flrm is snccesn- fully mnkiiig hinding twine of inurnh hay.
Liverpool has the largest fire en¬ gine in Ihe wnrld—equal to Ihrowing IHIIIl gaUniin n miuiile nnd a stream I III feet high.
The Athens check factory is In he nperated by. electricity. This is tho Hrst cotton factory in (ieorgin to uso electricity as a mntive power.
Nntiiral gns is fast gning. .1 I>. Weeks has just made a rejiiirt on the supply nnd its decline for the Niitioiial Lnhiir Ibirenii in which il appears that the supply has fallen a half in seven years.
Fair-haire.l people are becoming less uumernns than furmerly. The an¬ cient .lews were a fair-haired race; nnw thoy nre, with few exceplinnn, dnrk. Ho it in in a lesser degree with the Irish, among whom 1.50 yearn ago n dnrk-haired pernou wn.s almost uu- known.
The Hiig..(cstiiin ia advanced that perhaps Hn- nllimnle fluid nf iicclyleno will lie ill thu lighting of liglilliniisen and nn linnnl ships. Itn ciiiiipai'lnesn ith whicli it cnn ho I nwi7i*Niii the form of cnrliide mill ease of gcneTnri.'iTf -"(.tli?' K«". to¬ gether with great l.irilliancy, aiTftl^oint lo ilu ndaplnliility for this purpose. r Thu "stopping" i)iialile8 of the Leo i Metfoi-d rifle, now in uso in Ihe Itrit- | ish army, has beeu tho subject o£ much comment ever since Ihe Chitral I campaign. The bullet used was thero found of very littlo use ill ntopping i the rush of a dctermiued lioily of fa- | natics. This will not he the ca.H» iu | future, it is slated, as a new bullet has J heen iiivcnleil, Ihe qualily uf which j aru said In he iitidmililcil. !
A recent discovery that priiclicnl i men ns well ii'i m-ieiitist.s approM' is ' the cniuplclK Iransforiiiulimi of wood into gas. Tho prndiict has a pnwer j fniir limi's grenter than tlint made j frnt.i liitiiminniiH i-oal.^ Its value lies | ill aihiptaliility as n motive power, ! which cun Im applied to the pmiliic- I linn of I'cruiiiii'M, in glass manufaciiire, | fnr Itessemer henrlhs, and like iiidua- I tries. Hich in cnrboiiic oxide as it is, Ihe gas is availnlile for the manufau- tiire of oxalic acid and other cheini* cnls, nnd, il is nnid, at a very consid- I ernlilu saving in cost.
TUE SA13B.\TH SCHOOL
INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS FOR JUNE 13.
rntary by Ko-
iifa AcItIc* to Tlmothjr.'* 1-7; III., K-I1—OoMrn ^inthy III., IS —Coin- II. M. StMirns.
Till
Hl.-y.-le MlKhwaywnman. .\ new- episoilo has heen added to Ihe history nf the bicycle. In Frnnce the nther day two lailies were stopped on the mad liy a bicycle w-omnn, who drew- a revolver and forced them to surrender their valuables. This is the lirst niitheiitic case on record of a hi cycle higUwaywnmnii.
Th<- <irr.-k lllil.
.\ lilnnmiiig (Ireek girl is uncom- 111.in. The girls'fnces thai must strike line nre the oulor of yellow wnx, which liln/.iiig black eyes light uji as mighl a devouring flame. There is snmelhiiig in must of the faces llinl hetrnys lin- liility l.l fever. All feeling for henuti- ful ilrnpei-y is extinct, 'riip rich wo¬ men dress in frightful imitntions nf French finery; the pnor in snnliil pnlclied raiment, t<io thick ami clumsy lo admit of graceful folds. (Iii Siin- dnys, however, there is nslmw of fancy needlework, thnt, with necklaces of coins, hns a jiretly ett'ecl. The (^iieeii ofti»ii w-ears n (Ireek costume.—New- York X'ress.
Ail AdiiiliiUlralli.n r.lrl.
Although the present admiiiislrntinn is dintiiiguished for its many young people among Ihe official families, hut one of all Ihe host of pretty girls has Hie right to stand in Ihe receiving line wilh Mrn. Mcjviulcy when she wol- i-nmes Ihe pnlilic, nnd this is Miss Flnra Wilson, Ihe only daughter of Ihe Hecrctary of Agriculture. She is slender and grncefnl, aud has exipii- silely dainty coloring, with dark hnir and blue eyes. Her five brothers aud her father unite in au eflort to make up to her for the loss of her mother, who died n few yenrs ngo. All uf the Secretary's children have received their ediicatinii at the Iowa .\griciil- tnral College, which ho presided over ua President.
(il
low <i..iirrul l-olk Wan Klll.-il.
irge I.. Kilmi-r, in a war iirttclu
heii.lc.l "Kcst in Scatlcred Ui-ns,"pnh- ! lisheil ill vour luqier to-ilav, makes :i stati-meiit"whicli i feci o'light to bo ' cnrrei-lcd. In sgieakiiig nf the Clou. feilerulu (Icneral Tnlk (llishnp I'olk) he stales that he was killed near At¬ lanta liy n shell uime.l nnd tired by (leneriil Hhermau. This is uot true. I was slaiiillng liy the gnu from which Ihe shut was llred Ihnt killed (icneral I'lilk, and kunw Ihnt (ienernl Sherman I was not present. The Imtlery, the . name of which I do uot recall, wan in pnsitinn nil the left nf mir brigade, ou - a hill nverlnnking a vnlley, ou tbe op¬ posite si.le nf which wns another bill ; cnvere.l with trees. While tulking lo the sergi'uni in charge of one of tho j guns, un oliii-er nppronchiid and direct¬ ed thu alleulion of the sergeant bi a I grmip of whal appenre.l lo he Coiifcd- ; ernte offl.-ers nt the e.lge of tho woods i of Ihe hill nppnsilc. and ordered him , to give th.'iii a shi.t. The sergeant sighted Ilis gun Ullll tired. The result was a great i-.iiiiiiiiiti..n and si-altering. |
Homelin.ly hn.l I hit. Ne\t innrii- j
ing we .Usi-nvereil it wus (ienernl I'nlk. : riie shut struck him in Ihe iipjier nrm, plnwiii.,' its wny Ihrmigh tin- chest, < and i-ntling him'nliimst in twn Thia ' occurred on I'liie Kimli, not far from | Kcnesaw Mniintain. On our a.Ivniice j Ihe iie\t .lay I visited the sjinl and saw j the stiimii l.f a tree against which (ieu- i eral I'nlk was leaning nl Ihe lime ha I wns shut The tree was i-nvered wilh | his 111.in.I.—C Laux, in Iho Los .\u- j geles Times.
Thf. KIn-trirai ¦¦|ani>.
.-V |iiann on un entirely new principle i
is aniinunceil fri>in Oermany. Tho i
strings are Htrelched lu-rons the soiiinl- | ing lioaril as iu the ordinary yiann, lint the eutire hniiimer mechanism is ab- nenl. Instead, the depressing of llie
key puis in ai-lion amagnel, which an- i
t'lmaticnlly attracts and releasos the j
wire, thus pni.luciiig viliralinns with- ; out the metallic stroke which uccniu- IMiiies Ih.. sniind in the cmiiiimii type,
rhe resulting elTei-t iiisiii the lones it !
sai.I to Ih- very reiiinrkal.le. Thel-igh j
imt.-s ri'seiiilile thn.-..- nf an .1'>littD i
lisrp. The iiii.I.lle nn.l lower miles nra I
like a '.I Il.l .-r an nrgnu. It n spmidj .
rea.lily l.i every variation in pnwer and j i-\pressi..ii .\ nnle can he sniinded
f..r several iiiinnt.- willi-nil varying in I
.|iiulity S. ra<li.-Hlly ilill'erent frnm | all eiistiiig instrumeiils are the effecll that a new style nf music "is needed tn
liring nut Its onpaliililies. — lllustratod !
.\mericau. '
liid hy ihis l.ive her ismrago was taintsi' tlwniikih Ihe three ni..iilh». eu she aud hi r mnthor sm.sithe.l irgo Vauhnrn's path to the irrave colli 1 Ik' hern, she 1 1.1 Will .Spencer,
Helen fi-ol, as it wa-i latendo.! she i »h:) shi.w.-d his l..ve only l.y his caro abould. that sho ha.1 walked into a uol j -nl the nivaii.i Ho never sj«.ke nf love from wbicb thare was no encaiw. , to her, giving her up entirely, hut
And Will d|Mncer kuew il all, and up<in her hiver he lnvishe.1 every kind- writheil nnder the kmiwl*.Ige. lieing a , iios* wealth ismld pns-ure, or f.-ien.l- fraok. loyal man, wh»Mi»'.mpnlsea wore , ship dicuto. He gave him a brother"* g«Daroas aad honurable. and wh.i ! dovotiim until the last parting came, lorad Heko with ail the atrrngth of au.l when he was Uid in the .-oniolerr y^ Mattit. Oltaa he aakad himaalf WUI H|«eucrr took Helou aud Mn-. Mm ht aMM waAora Ufa, tf h« iimiul \ Maymamd baak to tbair 1imb« ami Ist I
Hack! I'al.l I>oarl.> rorTh.-lr tirrap.
Two Susipiehauna t'niinty yonng men, a few weeks agn, retiiriie.l from a hear hunting tripthrmigii I'ikeCniiuly, I'e-.in-ylvanla. bringiug with them a jisir l.f l.K-k.rl Imrus. winch Ihey nl) taine.l from uu nld huiil.-r in that sis-" Imn. The hunter, in prowling thr..ngh tlie wisiils. eame uihin the carcanse.* nl tw.. fine liiicks. their linrnn firnilv in terlis-ke.1. They i-vi-U-ntly had U'en lighting, an.l in the struggle had ln.'ke.l Imrus. Ih'ing iitinlile tn get them sop aril -.1, an.l, cnnsi-.iuentlv. iiiialilc to i-!-ta!'! sny f....!. Ili.-y hs.f kli,rv.-.| l.l death in thai isisitmn. (Im- n,'t hal ume prnngn. The Imnis are s<i firmly l.s-ke.l '.ngi-lher that it is im|KisMlile to separate them withnnt sawing off oLt of the prongs -5ew Ynrk I»ress.
p te aMMaiBAnra Ufajtf>a iimad j ^ua
.K New Yurk girl ia said tu h» fouud a •900-diamond iu a liiiy-dv«- , I atad iatk tka a^bai day. I
There is no question uf keeping ofl' the sun liy means of the parasols wilh wliich the summer girl is filling her trunks for the coming campaign. Her aim in niniply lo make her costume as flulTy and highly colored an jioBsihle, ^ud the parasol is decidedly nil aid in HCCiiniJjrtwJiuyt the generni cITect.
One of the iui)sl"gorge>UJ*tift.he sen- son is the "sunliurst" pnrnsiiJ7^*illj^ in n mnsn of elaborate fluting. Then there is the parasol comiiosed entirely of cliiirou ond ruSIed from centre to edge. Only n shade loss olnliornle is the design of hrucuded nilk or satin, lined with a contrasting shade, nnd decorated with frills of chiflon, linnches of arlilii-ini flowers, or uow aud thuu a group of ostrich lips.
A particularly popular fancy is Ihat Ihe morning parasols shall match the shirt waist with which tliuy aru worn, as tho summer girl still clings to Ihe mont comfortable morning costiiinc which nhu hns ever knowu. Thus Ihe new parnsols nre mndo of Cham- hray, linen, muslin and mull, and are piellily lined with nilk of liucmniiig shades. The number of thene daiuly nrlii-les necessnry to the nuiumur girl's outfit has not yet been computed.
W.itiieli In ilui-tlrullurr.
According to the census of IH'.lll tljere w-ere ,'U'2 (-nmmercinl greenhouses, nr nli.iut nne in fifteen, owned nnd mnii- iiged liy Women. We hnve n personal ai'.piniiitance with several women who aru successful rctnil florists. Other women to our knowledge ure milking n sii.'i-ess of niising cnrnulions nn.l other llnwers fnr the whnlcsnle trade. These penphi sunn Icnrn thut the liiisiness of raising uml selling llowers is In-set liy liiilch cure un.l lalim- thut does nnt cnme iin.li-r the heii.l of pnetry. And yet nenrlv nil w-nmen llorists that wu have met were le.l inl.i the Imsiness liecaiise Ihey first nf all Inved tiim-ers. ll adds to the delight ami sncccss of any nc-u- patinii if nil., has a hive Iherefur. There is no qiieslioii that, as a rule, women have n grenter fondness thun men for flowers, why therefore shonlil Ihey not I'Mgnge in grnwing und hnndliiig them fnr |iriifit. The mugher wnrk nhmit llnw-er riiising, such us Ihe cure of greenhouse fiirmn-es, the hunilling of soil nnd lunniire, an.l the like, cun easily he dmie l.y men wlm wnrk fm mndernli' wngi-s. If wnnii-n are snc -essfiil as llni-isls Ihey are e.inally sn as raisers nf vei^elnliles m,,! smnll fruits,
i'i| iiilly strnwhenii-s; Ili.-y ilirect the
r.uiglier work, help In prepare the prn line fnr ciist.iniers, and perhiips laki- iii hnnd the selling. Ihus kei-|.ing i-l.isely In Iniich with tho state nf the luurket. (icnerally speaking, we think thai the raising nf strawliurrien nenr nnr liest inurkets is fnrlhi-r frnm lii-iiiLr nvenlniie Ihun thnt nf uim.ist nny nther kind nf prndiice The i-niisuiiiption is i-nnrm..IIS. ami fresh fmit lirmighl qiii.-kly fn.Ill the Hi-hls, wilh.ml a Inrgi- liistaiii-e inl..rveniiig. always will sell cniisiileralily highi.r than fmit Iniig from villi's' Ihat has lieen sliippc.l i Much nf the wnrk of pii'kinganil han.l ling small fruits is well siiiteil In lic douo hy womeu. —Vick's Mugazinv.
<i<»iiii>.
(^ncen Victoria is kind to her poor relations.
The servant girls are organizing unions almnt the country.
Kx-Kiiiiire»s Eugenie sism starts on a tour In Cnnstaiitiunple nn.l thu Illm-k Hea country.
Ilarniiess lliirdett-Cnutts, who mar rie.l at siiiy seven, is unw- eighty- four, and in gisid health.
t!luli w...iiM-n have been rejoicing over the ajipmntment of Jfiss Mary Itodlield OS rostmastor at West Puiut. N. Y.
Miss Mary Isabella r.itter, who was ordaiiie.l us an Episcopal ileaooiiL-ss in New Haven last Sunday, is the first wnniaD In take orders iu the diooesi-nl Counectii'ui.
The recent death nf Kli/alulh. l»nchess of Beilfiir.l, in Eiiglainl. iiittkes the Uuchess of Clevelnii.l an.l Lady Jaue Kllice ihe lasi survivors of (Jneeu Victnria's hridesmai.ls.
The Michigan Legislature has en
acted s luw t.J allow all p.-njile who
W.I assensed properly to H)t.j St
scbiHil eleetious, thus u lliiitlilii; some
of the womou l.l a liiuitod franchise.
Mme. Ilerlint Itisen, daughter of Iljnrinnn. au-l dnuirhter in-law of the dramatist,'has jnst male her publi.- deliut an a vm-alisl ..f Christiania. She iuleu.N In a,1',pt music as a prnfesninn.
Mi«s Mnry M Bartelme, of Chi¬ cago, whn has been apjioiuted pn'ulic guar.Iian hy (tnvernor Tanner, in the first wnman to hnid the position. Her dnty is to hsk after the estates uf friaudlo.iHi children.
doctor of lawn on the (\iuiitess of I .\lierdeen. Lady Alierdeen is Ihe first 1 woman in Ihe Pomiuiou who has re- j ceived this distinctinu.
Ill lleumark women w-ho foresee a [ life of siuglo lilc-sciliiens can make | provision whcruhv they can at the age ' of forty be put in the spinster class fcr j g.ii.il and leceive a wetkly stipend for thi-ir siiiiport. I
Next to Queen "Victoria, Queen 1 flirtst a.« Lniiisn nf Denmnrk is Ihe nldest Queen in Eiirnpe.. Princess Lmiise nf Hesse- Casscl wfts hnrii in I-'<'J'2 and was mar¬ ried nt the age of twenty tn Prince Christian nf Denmark, nnw -King Christiau IX.
The St. Paul (ilnlie snys: "A pic tiiresi|ue figure in the Inliliy nf the Itvuii Hnlel recently was Miss Carrie llacnii, wllll is nut ill the wild West iu the interest nf a maniinnth chewing gniii eslalilisljmenl w hich has its head- quurlers in Oliin "
The cuslnm nf wenring the engage- ment ring on the fourth finger uf the left hand is traced to an old pagan siiperstitimi which claimed Ihnt a vein cnniiecteil Ihis finger directly with the heart. It has also become ii matter of conveuiuuce, as that is tho Huger leant
inil o|itstlee art* all siiKgcsllTe of the lost ilnys when the w.irlil shall have corru|ite.l llie church, ami coutain 8|>e4'lal Instruollons to Hods servants (or tlmca of dlsurilrrs. confusions. I.TUiallty. itc. The faithful wituess is tnunht how lo d<>al with those who "turn nway from." "err con¬ cerning" anil "resist" the truth,or "will not emluni seconil Joetrlne" (^11 Tlm. I., 15; 11.. IS; HI., S; Iv., 8).
1. "rnul, an apostle of Jesus Christ by the will of Oml. aivonllng to the promise of Ills which Is In Jesus Christ." Hu loveil lo think of himsell on one sent lorth hv Jesus Christ anil chosen for this honor liy the will of Ooil. Why (lo.l should choose nny of us Is rertninly a great woniler, liut have truly receive.! the Lonl Jivus r Saviour, riisting wholly anil
. I'stlng w: only on His llnlsheil work of atonement, we neeil not fear to lM>lleve that we were chosen In Him Isifon^ the fuiinilation of Ihe worlil lEpb. I., 41; thnt we should be holv I.el.ire Hlin. and that He mUcUt send itheFatlier
used.
(ireat interest is manifested in Oer¬ man medical circles with regnrd to nn .'\mericnii Ind.v student who, nfler hav¬ ing laken her degree at the I'liiversilv of Wisconsin, has been admitted to a post-graduate oourse un.ler Professor Ur. Veisser at Ihe University of Hres- lau, Silesia. Hers is the first case of n female sludenl's ndminsiuu to a I'rUHsiau Btate clinic.
Fnttltl.in Nnt«a.
Flowered grenndiiien appear U, bo
among the leadern in summer fabrics.
(ireiiniline, both plnin and fancy,
Inkes high |iliice nmoug summer dress
fnlirics.
I.ilncs, white nnd purple,hnve taken the iilaco of violets with the flower vendors.
The Parisinu pomjiadour is the style of coiflTiiro which iieccssilaten o "raf to giv-e itn proper height.
The luushrooni buuchc of ribbons wired to stand h^- nbove the hat .i;rowii nt)!jj*inc(! essentially chie iu sumrnrt' luillinury.
Cniivns in still very pnpiilar nud seems sin ilmihle-fa
two rivnls of eaiivan now in the Held Sennrn
forth III Ills nauii sent Him (John Jvll., IS; ix., 811. The life that (loil gives Is In Christ, and a|iart from Him lhi-n> Is no life |I John v., 12).
¦i. "To Tlniothv. my dearlv beloved son: Orace, men-v and jieace (rom Ood the Father and Chrisl Jesus our Lord. " In 1 Tim. I.. 9. he calls Him "Mv own son In the talth," and In Phil. 11.. im luiarKlnl, Hn wrote that he had no man so dear unto Him as Timothy. We flrst ri'ad ol him lu Acts xvl,. 1. as a dlscl|ile llvliiff as I.ystra, his mother a Jewess, his father a Ore4.k. And Paul ou his sis-ond missionary tour took him with him. It Is by the Krneo or un¬ deserved favor of Ood through Josus (Uirlst that we are saved. 8 "I thank Oml, whom Iservulfrom my j forefathers with pure conscience, that with¬ out ceasing I have ri^membrance ol lhee4n my prayers night nn.l day." Ilefon> tho council he nlso said that he had llveil In all good consi'ien.'e before (lod (Acts xllii., IV or ss ho puts It In Acts xxvl., 8, "Alter the most Blrallest sect of our religion 1 lived a Pharisee." He doee not nttemfit to excuse bis great sins against Jesus Christ and His redeemed, but snys that he verily thought that be ought to do these thing (Acts xxvl.. 9).
4 "Greatly desiring lo see thee, being mindful of thy tears. Hint I may be lllleil with Joy.", J'aul prayed much for those whom Ood had given him, but bo would pray, especially lor suoh a one aa his son Timothy. It Paul kaJ the Phlllpplan and ulbor believers In his heart (Phil. I., 7") and
Srayed much for Ihem, how much more oos our Lord Josus carry love and pray for His redeemed ones. We are not told the cause ot Timothy's tears, but It Paul was mindful ot Ihem how much more la our Lord ol ours. .Then. Is comfort li
man weakness In the Ihouglit thnt^jTikK..
'• hejncreased by TInioth
ot such a one as Paul might
I call tojfinil tbo unlelRued
faith Ihnt Is In thi,y. " Not In him only but
lu both mothvarf;;! grandmother; not that
faith Is liMdltary, but children may bo so
I ti>'i.il.'< aud trnliKul that from earliest In-
'.Sncy they msy bo true believers lu the
I Lord Jesus Cbrtst. Dlesnod are the uiotb-
ors and grandmothers who no train the
I cbildren. Uuf signed fai lb makes us think
I ol tbe "oiosl surely believed" and "knuw
! tbo certainty" ol Luke I, 1, 4.
j 6. "Wben»fore I put tbee lu remombranco
that thuu stir up the gift of Ood which Is
i In tbee by (ho pulling on ol my hands."
[ Un refers to this also lu I Tlm. Iv., 14. Tho
lly to resist the iuvnsioii of ; Spirit bestows gifts upon |>eoiile severally
I cnshmerc and mohair— l as Uo, the Spirit, will, and (led iilaces tbo
members In the boily as It hath pleased
Him (I Cor. xll., U, IH). He gives to every
Ihu new bright shade uf I man bis work aud something to work with.
Spniiish red, is slightly less vivid Ihnu cherry color, hut iiiiire brilliant Ihnu cither llie geranium or Danish dyes.
(Irny silks ami poplins are trimmed wilh corselet an.l collars of yellow satin; bolero of Ihe gray lined with yellow, nnd full vest of white chilTou and yellow Inco.
and says, "Occupy till I oome" (Alark xlll. 84; Luke xlx., 13). Then at His coming »o will reward every man according in his works.
7. "For Ood hath not given us Iho spirit of fear, bul cf powor and of love, and ol a sound mind." Judging Irom the iiortlon of tbo epistle lollowlug, such as I., H, 12, 10; II., 8, ID, 13; HI., 13; Iv., S, 16, we would Infer thai the fear referred to Is a fear of what onu might bo called upon lo endure;
Silk hlousen are made with tij^ht : I'Ut thoughts^of the jierleet love of (lod oast sleeves, liultnuiug frum wrist bi the scant pillion the shoulders, and small
Id, nut brass, buttous are lavishly iis.-d for trimming.
(imv cmlirniilercd tulle, orange vel vol, Veiii-lian lace, n clnster of .Me roses, and a very unique buckle nf Fri-iich lirilliaiils fnrm a luvely miidel fnr an cv.-niiig hat niade by Virut.
Fmilnrds nnd ull snft silks will be wnrn during the sninmer. They are printed in diiiiily designs nnd cniiiii in snft ciilnrs Ullll in siii-li a viiriely nl palterns that they may serve fur any purpose.
* Crepe-ile-Chine is to lie very much wnrn this soMsun. i-s|ii.i-inlly fnr even ing dresses ami in ciiiiiliinatimi with other mati.rials, and there is a new kind, rililied like poplin, which is very delicate and soft.
The tiun-over sl.ick collnr of linen has lieeu a favorite for lailor-maile cnstiiinun and silk shirt waists for some time, but it han now made its appear
out all fear (I John Iv., 18).
H-14. "Ilut continue thuu In the things whlcb thou hast learned and bast boon as¬ sured of." Our Lord said, "Continue ye In My love ¦ "If ye continue In my word, then aroyoMy disciples Indeed" (John xv., 0; vlll., 31). I like to remember that Luke t said In the beginning of bis gonpel that he , I wrote oouceming the things which weru "most surely believed," that his friend might know the eerliilnty" of these things (Luke I., 1. 4), and that Abraham was fully persuaded that what Hod had promised He was able to iierform (Ilom. Iv., iW, 31).
15. "And ihat from a cblld thou'bast .known the Holv Hcrl|itures, which are able to make tbee wise unto salvation through faith which Is lu (.'hrlst Jwiis." These could |.n none other than what some despise as Ihe old Testament writinga. In which Paul lest Hies there wns wls.lom unto salvation anil the wayol faith In Christ Jesus. Ithink the way of salvation. Uod'sway, Is nowhere In ull the llllilo morn simiily set forth than In Oen. ill.. 31. The Lord Himself provided
tl lotblng by tbn shedding otblooil, and
A.Inm and Kve hnd only to drop us useless
their owu works, the llg leaf a|iriins, and
t Ood's |.rovlslon. Illessi-d are (he
laiiily omliroidei
is oven carried out iu vel
The English Inilor-madi
giilhers ut thu lop of Ihc
n liltle fullness, whicli
1.1 lawn ami ct and lace, cont has no, sli-cvos. It arranged
1
in smnll dart seams cox ered with fan
hrniiliiig. Miinv of the conts are
elnliiiral.-Iy liraiired. ami scvmul lUlfer-
I'lil kinds of liraiil are used on one
garmunl.
¦le Hold rp a Train NliiKlr-llnii.l.Ml.
.Inines True, the train roliU-r, is in jnil. He is accused of Imliling up a I mill single linnded. The elmrge against him was ma.le hy the Ihiiled States anthurilies fnr the reasnn, us alleged, that ho rnlihed a niailcar.
The nfl'cncu was coiiniiilleil lasl win¬ ter at lUutah, Tlah. Newspnperread- i-rs will rcniemlier aliniit the bulding np of a train at that place, Ihe robbery nf the mail and express curs and tin terrorizing nf Ihe passengers. Al first it was declared that a large liund of masked men hnd attacked Ihe train and that humlreds of shotn were fired III create thu inipressiou that there wns a small army of robbers.
After it was all over, how-ever. il was ascertained that the deed was the » nrk nf one man. He hail gone nwa'^goriiig tlirnugh the train and alnngsidu of it crying out orders t<i his "men." ar- cninpanying each order with a vicious oath and a pistol shot.
Thu trainmou aud thu passengers concludud that a band nf mlihers had surroiiuiled them and were l.vingaloiig- side the railroa.l track roa.ly to send a volley of rifle liullets int.i the train at thu cmninand of the lea.Ier. The rob¬ ber is said to have secured a lol of rich liooly from the-mail car, hnl he was unable to get into the sufe of the ex¬ press car, and coutoutod Mmself with small articles,
A bol search was imme.liately made fnr Ihe rolilier Ihrnugh the nimiulaius uImiuI rinlali, but withnul success. Slii-ritrs. i-iiiislaliles and detectives finally aliaii.hined the search, bnt I'lidu Sams ineii never grew weary, and ll is claimed thai a slrniigcasi- ban Ill-en ma-le agaiusi True. — Sm-rauicutO I Cal.) Hoe.
hllifren who from their youth am taught theso things.
ID. "All Hcrlplure Is given by Inspiration ol Ood and Is proHtable for doctrine, for re¬ proof, for corn'ctioii, for Instrucllon In rigbtnousness." While the llililn contains the vnry words of (Iml and some of thn very words of tbe devil, as well as somu words of good and bad men, yot the whole book, from beginning to end, was written by thn Spirit of (lull, lie giving tbo men whom hn used Ihe very words to write, as Is plain Irnm such texts as Ki. Iv., 13; II y«m. xilll., 3; Jit. I.. 7, V, xixvl.. 3,4, ». H: John ill., 4». I'lin Hplrit who wrote tlie liouk Is still lu thn book, and Us words are spirit and life (Jobn vl.,<W).
17. "Tbat the man ol Owl mny Iw .per¬ fect, thoroughly furnlshod unto all good wurlLs." A man of Ood Is one who Is flrat a child ol Ood by faith In Christ Jesus, and thi-n fully yiehluil In (lod as Ills purchased pr.ii.erty for HU service, the Lords .nes. sfiiiger with the Lord's message, rei-i-lvlng his iirdeni from God and respunMllilu to (lod, aeeking In all things His a|iproval. While we are saveil Irooly by grace, It Is thai we may walk in the works. Hn bos iireiiared for us (Eph. II., 10), and the Rcrlpturiia alone are sufflclnnl to iiualify fully for all good wurks. If we will only yield fully. Ood wUI work In us both to will and to do HIa good pleasure (Phil. II., 13; lleb. xlll.. 31).-Lessuu Helper.
KENTUCKY'S TOLL GATE WAR.
riie lausoi Whleh Havo l.<-<l to HItMHi- •lirti Over the Tarn|ilkoa.
VVhcrii roails am free It Is dlftlcult to un- -li-rstand thn Iroubln In Kentucky, where iii.ilis havo lieen d*i«troylng toll gati.-s and killing tbe koe|iors. Early In the present .-enlury the fever of road-linllding and lin-
NE\W YORK STATE NEWS.
Tho PiMtar ¦*«» ladaalry.
Tho n.iardol Trado ol WmtAold has lla- cllisl 1,1 lake hol,| of tho sagar bee* raWait bu»ln.w on a largo scale, with ths Maa ol mnkiiig It one ot th. ehlel ladaatrisa at tha wcsiern |iart of lli.. state. The L«««alatat« lhlsy.>nr iMuuMMlalilll approprlatlB* Ml.. um ns a 1k.ii nly to lie paid out to sagar beak , uriiw-ers. and the price of sugar beeta haa a.lvanoivl from *4 lo Maln-ady. TheBowA. .>! Trade therw has obtaineil sends aao««h (iirext..>nslvoie«ts on nt least a haaitla4 Inrnis. These tost s aro to And If Iha laM on the farms Is adn|ital>lp to th* augar hast, ami. If thoy are successful, tho farmeiavlU next year go Into Iho Inislneas of laWac the In'ols for market. Tho momoattheaaa- cess of the tests Is assured tho Board ot rrn.le will lake tbn neooasary steps, «o «h- cure the location ot a suiiarbeet ladlory la that lown.
In addition to tbo exiwrlnieaU lO ba made by the farmers, H. L. Knat, a nMBI* Is.r of the Boanl of Traile, will hlmaalt earry on soiito liwts under the dinMlhMi ot Ika Slato Iiopartmont of Agrtenltaro. IIOiHa two plocna of land, tiach cnntalBliiit aqaar- ter ofTMi acre. One of them Is la thehaait ol the vlilngn. Thiwo hn will work eaUrelsr under thudirectl.in.ilthoHiatoBoard. TPkak Is the grapegniwlng sisHlon of the Stata. nnd up to a fow- yi«rs ago tho prtea at Kra|ii.s made that busineas very profitable. Uut the iirlce has bisin going down yearly, and nuw Ihnro Is hardly hnntd and butter lu grA|H< growing. It has kooomo aliao> lutnly necessary for thn (armorato i«aaoaaa other buslmwi in connm^tlon with the(lapa growing. As an average crop ol *aagat beets Is from sixty to eighty tons on aera, and they can Imi diKpunod of lor M a toa, there would appiwr to ho a mint tn tha bustniMw. and thesifhguliin formon ore al¬ ready flgurlng what Ihey will do with their jinillts when thoy gettbnm. Ex|ieitslntho iiiisiuiws who have evamlneil the land say Ihnt thny nr* very sum that sugar boata f cnn l«> grown on It protltahly.
Tor* Out Ilia flwn Kjroa.
KII n<s'ker. ol (\itton Hill, attended a series of mvlvals last winter, and sines that lime his actions have lndlcato.1 that he waa not In his right mind.
On Friday aftnrnoon of lost week ho took his Itltiln aud wnnt to tho woods, a short - " distanco an-ny. Not mlurntng, his wlio re- iiueslml his brother to look for hUn. H« did so, and found him seated on a log with, his coat ovor Ihe buck of his head, a BIbto' In his bands and both oyos out.
lire. Illvonliurgh and Iteat wem sum¬ moned, and tbey found that Mr. Beokoi lind torn his erehalls from their mx^kela with his llug<<rs. He lold thn physlolana lliat the Lord coii-iiiandiMl him to tear oat his eyes, and he h,i I been doing the wUl at llin Lord. The doclora saw that a very ilellcato surgical u|ioratlon had to be | lormiHl, and thoy wero agriMid tba] .*ould nnt Imi saved. Mr. Ilncknr,^' about lliiny-nvo years of age, is iwrTod, and haa 11 family of small oblld^
Voana Woinaiii^^ani Toaoher Aaaaaitad.
bllllaii JJ((,'n,.y „ young counlryisohool leneljcf^iu, waylnlil ns she was eroaslBK "¦"rfelds to her school, near Ugdansbnrc, Utld assaulteil hy a burly rofRau named Joseph Dnynar.
Ileyoiir has boon arreeted and at the e»- amlnatlou made n coufosslon of assault. X motley crowd collentiul about tbe Jail and lliniatenod violence to Bwoar, but wore ;llB|inrsed by tho olllcers. He will Iw taken to thn couuty Jail to await thn aetloii ot the Uraud Jury.
Jamea tilbaon lloatl.
Hpn. JnmuH Ollisuu illml nl his home at rlali'rti, agod eighty years. For the paat sixty years be had liueu a lawyer and one of the must promlunul momlHirs ot tbe bar lu Northern New "York. He had been a Judge of Wiiahlugtou Oounty,Henatortrom the Twvl.'th Illstrliil, and Brigadler-Oea- oral of I hn Twelfth llrlgade National Oaard. He was iNitli on Odd Fellow and a Maaon. nnd ho was the only man whu has ever beea lirand Master of both these tralurnltlea ta Ibis Htate.
Nut llurn to Illo That Way.
liiillroail mun am talking abuut the mi¬ raculous iiseapo ot an Italian lahoror at I'llnliiii rolnt. The man was eroaelnii ths track whea the Ohlnago llyor, ruaolac llfty-flve miles an hour, struok him and knocked him to one side. The man got up and waved hlii%^«ud to the onglnonr, who wan slowing up his train ex|iuntlng to liad n dead body. Except for a lew scratohaa the man was unlujurod.
Huloliln of Roaar W. Keep.
Itoger W. Keep, a Yale man, thlrty-ena
years old, and worth tiMO,000, klllml him-
Loek|iiirt's wenlthlnst oltlson. VoiiBg Kuojihad lK>en In pnor health for some lime, nnd bnd Just returued froui Florida unim- proviM. HuwoMa disiii student, and nn- dermlnod his linalth by study while In eol- Inge. Tbo young man was a great tavorlto and was unmarried.
Lost Capitol Omtract aianed.
The final conlrant for the noinpletlon of IhnHtatnOapltol has Ismn signod by OiHirae >V. Aldridge, Huporinleudeut of Fubllo Works. The Oa|iltul cost *2ll,ll54,(n8 up to OctolH.r, IHMI. Hincn then contracts have been awarded amounting to tHOO,000 lur work ou various ports of the building. Tba flnal conlriict for t'lUV.OOO won awarded to thn Halluwell (Jraulto Oumpauy uf Hallo- well. Mo.
ent took hold and private turnfilke npaniea worn chartered In groat
Qneen'* Viuvaraity, at iUngatoB,
I OMada. kaa aamlatta4 tm itgru at, Xark Li4(«.
Tosilna 4'r«*oliery lor tho (joveronionl.
.KW criK kury wan- ami glass funiishod l.l the (b.vernmi-iit must lu. hovorely ti'sU-d. One ti-„t i-onsists in iMiiling the ware from Un to tiflc.ni luiuuti-s, or until it is as l.nt u-i Imiling water cau make il. It is then instantly re- £aoye<l sud plnng.-l int'i »iiier »- u'-ar the freezing point as pnnsililo and li« liquid. Nu cra'/iug or crai-ks must show after tbo test. The tumblers ar« put intu water at l'<J-4 dogreos for ond minute. Thev are tiion droppeil iutu water at 42. ft'degrees Falir. If they show tba least iiuporfertion nnder this taat thay will i.ut Im aaan»tad.—Jlaw
Is-rs, and alncn then iiractlcally nothing has boon done to free tne highways. 'Tno i-rivato companies have uontluuod to siiual (III ti.eir sections of rooilway aad oollont a maximum of toll on a iiiinlinum expendl- luro for maintenance and Improvonient ol 111., way. The owners jiut the pru[H'rty In I'linrge of i-hoa|iiy onipli.yml gotekonpi-rs au'l i.thorwine Int It take cam of Itself. Thn county authorltina seldom lat«rfere to coiniiei r.-|ialrs, aud the publl" Is left t<i en- Joy the privilege III paying for the use of
I r roads whose free use would cause
griimblInK "Isi-whem. The charges am .u- i-.-shIvo, amountlug In somo cosi-a lo two i-iiiitn a mllo. The tr.iubln Imgan largely through olllelal neglnct of public duty iu the county of Oarrard. This county had voind strongly In favor of buying tho roiidsi liut tlie authorities for some rna- s..n delayed aRling on (he vurdlct. Then thn iii'il. liHik hold. It swept ovor that county, ili-slr.iytng tbo toll gatoa and burning tlm gati-keeiM-rv' housisi. Tho movement en. t-iuded iLt'i otber i-ountioa. HiBce last Hop- teii.ls-r every t.ill gate lu Washington Couiily has boon destroyed. In Memar Couuty but few gat'ia am nuw staadla^ and .lUe gotelioejrt'r was lug the pr.i|s-rty. I.lneoln. Momor, Bath an.I Flemlug i-nuutlnn have also Imon '>ver- ruu, aud the mob spirit la stIU illo.
rallliNr <Mr la apnoa Immlsratla*,,
Tl tatlstl..« l.-l tho llur-au of Iminlgra-
llon show that tli.-m bas Is-, u a notabla falling uff this yi-ar In the numl«r of imoil- grant- i-omlug to oar shores, aa r.ompamd with lormer years. In poat y.iars Imoilgra- tlon has Im-ou tbo greatest In tbn aprlng months. The figures show that tbn Influx tm* year wUI tail deoldislly Imluw Ibat >-'
ror i*roald«nl of llnharl Collos*.
At tho meeting In Geneva, N. Y., ol (ba Hnbnrt (Allege Noniluating (V.mmlltoo to select a successor lo rrnsldont Potter. mslgued, tlm llev. It. L. Jones, of AU Angels' Church, Now York Cily, reeelved a unanimous Indorsemunt. Ur. Jooaa is a graduate of Williams College, elass of Tl. His nnme will ho siiluiiltlisl to the Board ol 'I'rustoos later for conflrmatlou.
Klllml lloiror. I.«at Wheal.
H. A. Oarrlgan lost eontrol of his Meyela while going down IUU near Catskill, Rs crashed Into a horil nf cattle, killing a liellSr" and rendnrlng himsell unuuiuielous.
The owner ot the herd waa angry aod , Junipisl uu (larrigan's wbeul, liroaklna ' several spoken, (larrlgau will recover. Ifi thinks thn drover's in't of bmaking his wIksiI rnlloves hlin from claims lor tbu lowi of tbo heller.
Jarjr Trlala In llalaaa I.aw Casaa. Justh'o Andrews, jn tho Hu|iremn Court,
H| lal Term, New York Cily, granted the
n|iplleallons In two eases under the llqaor tax law for orilers trausferrlug thorn from the Court uf Hpis-lal Hiwsioiui to tho Cuvrt of Oeneral Heoalons. The Justice holds tbat Jt was nol tho Intonllon of the Lnglslatura to extinguish the right of lli|uur sellers to atrial by Jury.
Orowth of tho Ntaio Llhrary. ^
The stallsllns of tlie Ktate Library show that them worn IH'I.VIi volumoa lu Iho li¬ brary on Jttuo t. In addition tn ttaooe vol¬ umes thoro am IIM.USI maniiaarlpU aad 7i,'lU iiamphMs. Alsmt IM.flOO volumes are added yoarly tn the library, whiob aoir eontalns about tialf as many liooks aa tha (.'ongrusalonal Library at Washington.
Worma In Appla llrokarda.
Thn apple Iroo worm Is •-anslnii frmal de¬ struction In the orchards nl Cnlumlila '. I'onnly. Large uunilM-rs of trees havo beea wholly or partly Btrl|i|MMl of Inavos by tha imst. The big gray nosts hang overywbara In thn ham branclim of IbetrMS. All at¬ tempts to stay tbe work of dstnifltlua Inr Iho worm bava (iruvod iraavaiUag, aad thorn am loan that ovory irehanTia tha oounty will lie ruined.
aurta Priaaa fopnlallaa.
Thn Htato prison iiopulailou for May M' m|K>rtod oa followa by llm HuporlnlnadiNlt III Prisons; Nlog Hlng, liW; AnUirn, IHMi ' Cllnlou, »M; Woman's priauu, HI; total. ¦.Uil.
All Aronnd Iho aiai*,
Uurglars i:ra>-k«il lour It/o-hester sadw au.l realUod tl.Vi tor their |ialus.
Vandals steal vaaoa trom Angola's onoui- lary.
A Ikillver grandmother Is loarnlng to lida a wbiMil.
Tho big cables of Ihn old Husfwosloa llrlilgn at Niagara Falla on- tube inodo Into nails.
I^nntraota have Imoo l»l wbicb will Inaara ___ till, eroi-iloii of «i4«i,aiw w.iHh uf new balM-
Vbol"whllo dei'ooS: ! "'«" '" Jamiwtown tbbi year.
la aapaarad I aadwIaMai b Ukathat c
A Ooolth «r HolMtana. Margaret Katharine Hinds, ono woek o|.| 50 Aprll«, of Furtlaod. Mo., has a grsat- (roat-grandmn^lior, Iwo groal-gnudfath- srs. Iwo croat-giaadmotbors, twu grand- (attwra, aad twograadaiutliwi. tta ber latbar's stda than ara lew Mvlaa asnor*. ttoaaaado* hataaliwra aide fv« uotm'
A new variety of birds has Wyoming Cuunly. The IimwI ¦marly whlto while the budy the riHlbroaat roMu.
Aitoraoy-CaiMiral lUacook haa dooMad that tbo faUamufa stook oorpurattMi la report to tba Heoretary uf Mate y, sot al-, llrleni groaad for aa aetttia to aaMlpl' ehartor.
Condll DibMe, nf Perry, wnll-kaovaM*'' balfliwik of tba Wllllaiaa tMimotQumSl 2; T.-am, wbo fwoalved lojurtns oa tba * " raualng a aaddaa loss ol BMHnory, ' ri-ootorod, Wbea be airukn, a ago, bo fuuad bla OMtaaryoatbaly.
I iovernor lirlatlnc
-sorMaat baaataaaiaj I tloM lor tmrtkSmm--'. I a tottj-tatd toaaataama
jM.
¦ttait^'i'.--
¦i^^jMtii^ammmiaa
lasM
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Queens County Review 18970611 |
| Date | 1897-06-11 |
| Month | 06 |
| Day | 11 |
| Year | 1897 |
| Volume | 2 |
| Issue | 32 |
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