to ‘ss Ei 1 1 ; >` ._ , f' _ _ Y- Far the Largest Da.ily Circulation in this Province. THE CHARLTTETOWI G ARDIA 1 li `.. ‘ ` ` - »~f -vi .»;__~_vi;---,-_--_,_ _ _ ;--»~. --wmTvv<~w~€3gmy” r,fi-iw--f=.T:§-_gppmyqVo., P, ~ ---. ,.F-.1,1,,.(,,,,{_,,,,t,.e,.,.,,,,_,%.k,.,_.:,T.,,,_,wq`@_._?,F__,,,“._.Q . 1 , _ i ff " '~~~ »-_Y .._, ____ ____ __ _ 1< E2 O :rr- S4 EE ~ c UL {>U -MOR WEEKL .. z Q ei ’> _*_-';§g_jg-1 _ _ __ __ ci-iaRLo‘r'rsToWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, sA'rURoaiz=, APRIL 30, 1910. 1 ' N 1 .- El)-199| } " ""'" "` 1 ~~‘~'--~--- ------ ~----~--- -~- --~---------------» - ~- - 1-- -- ~~ --»-- -~-.W ~-- ~-_ --. _ __,___ ,,_____ ____ __ __ E <2 > 5 Ni' -r r: 7 If. :f. > »-. 1°: :S I4 ~.= J ._ i. is /invauoic mil. iN alivam-ia E 00 if , " r"-: 3-5-`T` . ' .°." Tir." ,-5 - -- 3 -»---._ _ ,____,__v_ __ , . THE "$1931 OF e » THE Elliliv llisioiiv oriiil I I A DISCOURSE ON CHRISTIANITY S E “F1111 011 LUCERNE 1 - - sciuili-‘ul Poclilioimls. ~- CHALLENGE BY DR J, H. WILLEY ._ __ _ A Valuable Lesson Continued by One Who Thorou hl Understands `- ' _ - - . , gllpplng: When sown alone in the ,pl-liig without a nurse crop clipping must he practised to l-reep down weeds _stalk up plants, and :encourage root gmwth, Cutter bar aloud be tilted ,io as not to cub closer than four ‘i..‘1°“‘:,.i“Z.?.“‘;."§i.i-..l§‘°‘.“;; _ m, _ _ :lwli will _ smother. _May cut every few weeks if growth lapid,_some cn? “"1” “i“..`i ‘,§.iZi‘§il§“ .?.if‘°i‘.li‘l”. ‘limi ' BS. léfpt lst in t-he north. \V}i-."i'_'e a iillrse ---1 ;:ai“'2i2‘.;l:;':“.;‘- he ra S ‘ as llzcn rgmoved. Young, tender,spinll- ly plants which have been strongly .‘:.l..:f;°<‘f..;.:;.‘;:l“i.°i;1.i :ll ltéll Sl . Tnil iii-y period of weather are vel-_,- liiililc to be killed. Some leave a hig.i stubble and‘ than mow leaving on as li nuilcli. Ball sown ne-cds no treat- ment lin'lc-as there is a vciy growth; autumn. _ _ Pasturin-g: Will not stalid pastur- mg llri,-1; year, very moderately sec. Und, and never closely. Must i;ua_r.l against tramplng of t-hs sr_i_il and .iii- jiiry to crowns. Mow _ o ecp fresh- ,liid to prcven_l; elxh-austion ftrom salad- ' _ Unexce e as a pas ure or iilxgine and in favor for horses and poultry-apt to_t_blc;at_ iattle and bee. Danger mi ga e y sowing ivltlip grass. Brome Grass is popular in sonic states for this purpose, or- vhal-ll gi-ass in tlui East. A vigorous stand will support 15-22 1_1-olgs age nd the may be mar e e wi i ie lldditionyof very little grain. By it~ Bell it is too ricll in_protein loueco- iionlic fattening. It is- li-:st to divide tlii-, ficld so that one part iiuay ‘tie giv ,in ii chance to start. Must have pro- tectioil left for crowns dllring \\in- ier, therefore do not pasture late in fall.. Hmlllli; For soilliig, where suc- ccssfullyh grown, it is without nu eulml owing to prodllctivcfii-ss, hi_._:u palatabillty, and abundant nutrition. Ten niilch dcows h_n_ve be_c_i_i__fed iroin two ucl‘e_~i urrlig ie emi" sunimci' w-ltllout other feed. l<".i'st cuttillli was ii little iininaturc when stzli‘tir.~,: aiidalittiie ripe when iinishiillt. _ 1_11-12 iiubscqileiit tcuttingsgailmelln al_l__i-ig.ll.. lt was cu once 6 C fly H \ 0 civc.-n»-safer if allowed to wilt iillgllltlty -before feeding. For sw'-le best cut on the ini-nifalillref side_Gliellii-i has iivli-‘iiged in six clitltiiirs over 20 tons oi soiling or gl-cell crop ptr acre. it is especially adapted for a soiling crop in the East; blit with knowlellgc i_f liandlliig and sliita`il_- weather for curing, it ninkcs cxccllcu; ha . » slay: (‘ut lor hay when one-tenth in uloo-in, or rnrlicr if mllcli to cut. Later cut uifii be all right for lloi'scs blit some danger of fibre foruiing balls in stomachs of ruiiiinants. Goof alfalfa hay is the. best niadc, even! pigs may bc wlntered in large mea-1 sure on it. It is much injurcd lyl rain which not only washes out ioo.1 elements but makes leaves sliiiflri' readily. Where weather is had, first cutting is often run thro' cutter and put into the silo, milking excellent feed. Forty to fifty per cent of_plant is leaves and they are -as va u_a1.'le for feeding as brain. (_‘/nt when dew is dry and shake up with ted-der in or- der thotleuves may pump out mois- iurc before they become dead. Should be riiked when wilted but not dry cn- ough to lose ilu leaves; in Midfllc West it is slacked next day from w‘l'ndrow by“go-devils" and "rick- ers." lil more humid clim-ntl-is bunoli windrow or put up in coils, prefer- ably made tall an-d narrow some use hay caps. In good weather these niav be opened up and curud next day.1~‘iuc growth of later cuttin'-s is best for rbecp, swine, and pollltry. Fealling Value: Greatest honey plant known to modern agi'icultlirc; in '00 Kansas had 57,722 stands cf bees with an average of 13 his 11 11011052 The plant is especially valu- ahlc as a food for stock because of its high protein content. It has iriv- en a new lease of li-fe to the livc stock indiistrle-s of the Western Stfitc-1 where corn is used as a finisher to balance the ration. But for dairy cows an-d growing animals it cannot he beaten in itself. Average alfalfa has ii nutritive ratio of 1 to 3.8. lil thc corn belt brood sown are winter- ed lurirciy on the hay. The leaves cnntuln 3-4 times as much pootein as thc stems. Kansas says they cl.'n raise-,ciit,clire,and put in feed racks for $2.00 per ton. In that state the nerr- uge has increased from 34,388 in ’ll1 to 015.000 in '06. lu Nebraska aiul California the hay is ground and put on the market as "Alfalfa Meal" --- excellent li made from good pure hay and cheaper transportation. Horses cilpeclaily should be brought ‘o alf- 11 a gi-aduall . (tluelph foilnd digestible constitu- cn li in one ton : Alfalfa Red clover Tiinotliy lmiiititiiilnta (nal (iiial 11115) l’rotn’u 192.2 141.0 411-7 FM :iii.a 29.4 lli_2 :tarcli or 11-1`0l»!‘0il per Bxtrncb 495.6 Fibre 205.5 200.4 306.9 (lthcr investigations show Alfalfa hey to contain about rio ver cent more digostlrile protein than hay madc from Red Olover, whether as 1’°111111`¢. soiling, or hay it is the r:oi~il_ valuable roughago grown in mer ca at tfhe resent time. Renewing, Wllen there is s. l»l1l11 ltand from any cause one' mBY 511°' Ned in renewing by disking and sow- 111R more seed, but old growth must be out back no u not to shade the -1011111! pilots; if at all had it is bot- ter to plow and try again. After a 111411111 is established it is vlaimedthnt lllslilng and harrowing is as necessary .riiim 523.4 i » 'to alfalfa as cultivation is to corn. N0 11111111118 is don-e first season after sowlng._ The light barrow is us-cd in. Ste11<1» 111 111111113 and alter cutting to ‘193t1`0Y W0ei1S and form a soil mulch 11151111115 iS 116311-11 second season and is done at_ least na.-ch spring and some practise il; iiftei- each ¢u¢tlng_ Disks arc set nearly straight and weighted to split the crowns eve-ii to adepth of two inches, sometimes crossed and then harrowcd down slIlO0l.ll. This not only dog(-,poys weeds and forms a soil mlilcli hu* in- creases the nuiuber of stems. Uoliiirii saysi "'l‘lie young plant consists of a number of low brlliiolies springing; from ii central, simple, basal stalk at crown. and nscendiiig in ii cluinii. ln time ‘new roots are sent down from the base of thcsc stems and if a stein mother by diekini, it will become an independent plant But the gcneial conccnsus of opinion seems to he that he increased by dlskiiig but not tht nlllnl.ei of loots Qiiuwa says culti- vation liilpfnl to any glowing plant if not d stluhed too much -he favors diskiug only to keep needs at bay lil-itaiitcs have occurred where Alfalfa lullll was plowed up and sown to grain, but alfalfa came up and gave a good ciop Kansas- has had (our iliskiiigs iind foul' <‘.L1tt111l-YS 111 one season Of course, il thi ioot\ .ic cut by the ploughsliure the plants will die, as it does not' multiply by rootstallis likl. couch grass ldncinies Blsides weeds alialfa has to cuilteilll with insects, gopliers,anil fungus diseases. Kuiisas rl‘.coiiinicuds early spring diskiug to expose the eggs of i',rai:.~ihoppci'.~i to birds and ivcatllcr, and puts out poison for gophcrs. ln the lilust the lea'<‘s soiiietimcs turn yellow ov.ing_ to :ln unhealthy coiliiition--tliis. _with _the alfalfa Leaf Spot, iu-icesitutcs .ui- mcdiate cutting to clieck the spread iii fungus and save new growtii.Whei‘c grown for sometime other pests are gl,l,wiiip_ Rod ltoot-lfot in Flllropc null glii-iliiliiil; iii Kaiislis,_lirowliltoot llot iii 'i‘cxu.~l und .~\rlzona, ltllsl. Downey lliildcn, and Allt\L'ii'uciiosL‘ iii some sections. ' Leaf Spot, the disease most colli- iilon ill the 1481-11, UCCl11"S as Ycuowlm; iiitowil. Shuts 011- 111111" *,‘.1“`1_“._“.‘j`,‘ ‘ leaves, soon woi-ks tllrolfgli and' n pfyirs lin i.-llc under side- 131111131 111' fected lcuieli will turn yellow B11-1 drops oil. lninicdiatc cutting 0f_crop, even if only a li__w niches high, is the ~ »~ -ri on . pll‘pe1iipg“t Ill? sce the day wlieil _Alf- alfa will bc a valuable _L‘1`<1l1 11111"“'~'° Edward Island. lt is_a fact that m-any have hricd it but with no success. 'i‘iiii; is not to be 'u'oI1_'~101_Li\ at when we take ilito coiisldelllghtlli the den-rth of kiiiiivlcdgc in _ici-ini _ 1_1 best uictllndi: of i¥f§1\"'1“_15 91"” i1"’c'{‘_ __,_0p_ H tm. l,iri~gots, is apt to destroy them. W1‘f\1\ l111\“1§"; ‘T sufficient autumn l€1'0\1'1111 lb ’““ Never cut or clil? 111101 `°“1’t' lst' but if thcrc is a heavy S11““'1”l1' mme than 8--10 in. of growth is liable to i-iiuotller the plants. lilxposctl loca- tloiia might lie toll-<1r<‘Hs~‘<1~, '1`111?- 11?' sides protcctilig plants 'ln wlntdl, may_ by kc-epiug frosi. in _ground longer, prevent. heaving in spriii-gland also hold water supply. The 111111011 f(,,,t;lil,y will rush on spring growtll. A covering of snow not only 11111111 prutectioii against cold winds, bllt, inciting in iiprinli. 1111111111011 11101911110- A scant covcriui: iuli,l'-t -be all melted li) ii soft spoil in the winter, leaving plants exposed or iced over. Colo- rado floods lifter ground freezes when they wish to destroy the crop. lllr. Giendiniilug. of Ontario. 0111111111 111111- ii silver thuw will kill exposed plants. G. LELA(‘»Hl~1Ul't. WAS 'l‘flLl'l H(lHl’l'l"AL WAS Flfldld T0 Al.L wr, o/\'l‘lli~ililNi<:s, April 27-it ii.- Ieilrllcil that Will. lllu'k\vui°th, the Eiigllsliiiinii who arrived at Torniitri. ln ll- dying condition, had been in the tuberculosis sanitariuin -licre, not the fi. and M. Hospital. The authorities today stated that he was sent hei-c from 'pm-iinlio in the first place, he having been told that the 'inSt1*»111'1°“ was a fren hospital for sufferers from the white plague. lt is free for local tlents but outside patients arc not 11?-_ _ttyl 0,, those terms. When he :I-:yvad here be had just como ollt of ted. Tile man was 'fn wiiicii nad expired W1 he We Azul; ali to Toronto. Duckwor h had send L_ A newspaper in Petrolla 21:5 :‘vcm.|;o,| ns lm mlviwtlsinl; solicit _ or in Montreal. with its roi/_ti= be separated from the _ ~ , ~ - , _ ‘ ‘ _ ` " ' E . g thc number of stems to a root may (-`f111`1S1`111‘111l¢Y Mross the centuries I . is .' ` 1' 1.1. - _ . ‘ ,. , ' w I \ ' ii spree which the hospital autliori-_ "Believe me that Iam in the Father or believe me for the woi‘ld's sake." Dr Willey said: This is the thrice spoken challenge of Jesus Christ to His own age. He is willing to rest His case iiere in all succeeding ages. _He makes his ap- peal to the facts; the workman is to be judged by the work done. Apelles of (los drew a straight lille across the wall of his neig‘hbor’s studio and said to an attendant, “Show this to your muster when he asks who has be ii here " The strai ht line of uoulll bc drawn by the hand of one 0111) We sympathize, therefore, ulth Scllclliiig, who declares that the most useful religion will ulti- mately he considered the best." They miay cali this pragmatism in these days of theological hairsplitting; they may scoff at our iltilitarianism, and ask a religion for religion's sake but the homely sense of our practical 001111115’ 1S 1-1l>t to ask of a machine what is it good for, an-d of a reli_ gion what can it do ? let us tu-day meet this challenge of the olden time -by showing a world without fIlii‘lsf;ianity, and t-hen a woild with (lin-istianity. Perliapsif \\'c believe not the words, we may ile- 119V0 10.1' the worli’s sake. 1_>`\1l1l1oSc the llhristiaii faith sllould 11111- 1'1\1l>l1ose we should wake up tomorroiv morning and find that the Billie- had ll(_ell lint iiiit (if c0ll|»l__ that the (ihrlstian religion had been voted a. fabrication, and the wrirlll had decided to abandon it-what W0111l1 11111111011 ? It-would be a dark day in history. After the fli-st mu. ments bewililerml-lit, the days when €V01‘yt1\ilrg' would seein to stand stlll,' theil_wl:cir lucn began to get their bearings they would ‘say let us get rid of the cllurchcs. They are ex- pensive cvcu when crnisidercd neccs- sary. What good are they no\v'!_ €at`i'e and leetlliie 'platform can furnish better' entertainment. Tile 0l1era hollse will supply better`inusic And so take away the Bible with its sure words, destroy all confidence in 1110 iI0Sl1el of salvation from sill and Sorrow, and who would care to waste his time in the church service '.1 The word of the pulpit is accepted as the word of (loll. No in the eloquence of the speaker, not in the beauty of the music, but in the authority of the mcsszigc, lies thc power of the (`hurch. Ami divine worsliip wnllld cease. Wlllif. B. 1lll}.’,‘ll(.y \`UlC€ fill' grind wiilllil thus be stllled. Note thc days when the city of Antioch was inllicl with rc- volutiou because the Emperor had imposed unjust taxes, and the Env pc-ror was eager for vengeance on ac- count of the insults offered by the pcoplc. The days when (`hrysostom lifted up his mighty voice from thc pulpit and saved the city. Note thc days when Peter the Hermit went through Europe with a crucifix in his hand and hurled, thousands of fana- tical warriors upon thc'walls of Jer- usalem. Thc Sralibath would become sccularizcll, the day on which wc take our heavenly observation. Sev- eral ways are there for locating the ship at sea. By dead reckoning, for instance, when the captain merely judges by thc spread of the ship and the direction sailed; by lighthouses along the shore when not too far from land, or by the lead if thc depth of the sea be not more than 100 fathonis. But when far out on the voyage the only sure method is by observation of the heavens. The sextant for the altitude of tho sun, the chrouometer for Greenwich time, so the ch-art is marked and so the llelnismau gets his orders. In the church ond on the Salvbath day we make our oliservations. We are apt to drift tlirolip.l| the week. We can- not alwals nec the stars 'from the offlcc windows. The sun cannot get down i_l_lto tho cold, yawning canons into w icll wc have turned olir city streets. llllt in thc clear-liglit of the niorning scrvicc wc get a glimpse of DIVORCE IN GRl<]A'l` BRITAIN. Judicial statistics lately issilcd in London sh-ow that in 1908 in the Div- orce Court thcrc .were 840 petitions for dissolution of marriage, an in- crease of 112 over the figures for 1907 and |372 decrees nlsi were gra-uted,as against 598 in the previous year."l`he petitions for judlcal separation de- creased from 85 to 67, and the de- crees iiisi from 31 to 25. Willie there appears to be a growing desire of re- sort to judicial separation, this re- medy is chiefly uscd by wives. Tho greater iillinbcr of petitions for di- vorce come from lillslialulu, a fact in which this country differs from al- nioiit all other colintrles, aa, for ex- ample, France and the United Sta- tes. There is, however, an increas- ini; percentage ol w~1ves’ petitions for dlvoi°ee._'I‘he nlimuei' of separation or- ders granted by magistrates shows an increase. In 1908 it was 7,965, a figure which has only been exceeded in 1902. “In no other country, so far as I know,” says Sir John Mac- Donell, who presents the statistics, “arc,therc so manyi separations. Lan- l cashire stands first in the counties in his regard, and the agricultural conu- ties are the lowest.’_’ ll v- » ' i' '- Isiglit was left on the table. Then Xlll : ll. For his subject recently Rev Dr the old beacons. The mists of self- ‘moi-row's sun the Bible should be- Joiul H. Willey, pastor of Sit Mark’s interest are lifted, the stealthy swisli come the ethical standard of the M. ld. Uliurch, Brooklyn, N. Y.,spoke of the currents of compromise and world, and that all business should lon "The Challenge of (‘-liristianity." policy may be beard and their pow- be transacted according to the Gold- 'The text was from Jollii xivzll: er to swerve calculated, and when en lllile. What would 11111111011? Wllhli Monday morning comes we are bear- does the (lhristian religion do even ing away again toward the seas that now though neutralized by customs lie under the smiles of God. _ alid laws and antagonized hy pas- civmznti0,,_ But you say we sliollld keep ollr sion and greed? ' ` 1 morality even though we lose our d i d cienc to the wishes of e he wants and so possess all? Your 11 consciolislless of God which lies deep and definite ill the human heart. W Discredit the Christian religion and C tic programme. There is Socialism 11 which condemns property as robbery 11 and rlpirituslism, which peeps ani i B world waifs who cannot write -gram Agnosticism, olir modern religioui =1 Knownothingisin, which dismissel W al chaos. Do we admire goodnes; 1 Some Brigadier Inglis _who hold: 1 Lucknow for eighty-seven days witi J fifteen; some wireless operator wh- P _ p . i swept the ocean round and called de 1 liverance ollt of the air'?` What's th< U wheels are punctual and well oiled 0 been mixed in, the combination wi 11 more phosphorus, and he might liavi C been a Saligula. S justified suicide and gave 'seven caser. S last ceiitliry .indorsed Justinian, he- i cause he acknowledged only Justin- ian’s faith. Why should a man live ii hc has gotten all there is in this world and there is no more to fol- low. He has squeezed the orange dry. Blit this man was only an orn- tor. It was easy for him to talk. Not so with Professor H-acckel. 1-io has argued it ollt. W-hy continue to live when life has reached the bollnd- ary. Indeed hc holds that we have the right to take other lives when they are useless and a burden. Two millions of lunatics in Flllropc ought to be disposed of. Discover that a man has an incurable cancer and give him a sufilclent dose of morph- inc; note that the grandmother has lost her teeth and cannot mastlcate her food and tllrn on the gas in her room after alle has retired for the night. Nothing can he more logical. Hear Victor Hugo on Talleyraiici, who for a quarter of a. century had been master of Europe. He sat in the palace like a spider in his well and caught in his glitterllg tolls Emperor Francis and Louis Philippe, and all the gilded flies that buzzed through the history- of forty years. When he died the doctors emhlamed his bod His biain h some ovci t t n O V I' 8 I` came a servant and tossed it into a sewer. And why not. It had dona its work. There was nothing more. The elui had come. rio come ye glib prophets of all anti-(Yllristiail faith. Life will soon be over, the soul will soon go in-to the shadows. Uome gatiier it all up, good and bad, saint and sinner, John the heloi/cd, and Judas, the traitor, and dlimp it into the cesispool of oblivion, for Christianity is dead and Agnostlcism and Atheism have written the doom of the ages, and there is no out- stretched hand to help in the days of our undoing. Here is t-he dark side of the cloud now let us change the spirit of our dream. Loon on that picture, then look on this. Suppose Christianity should succeed. Suppose with to- iaitle._ We have learned that two and opinion. Tihe difference between two make four in straight business; Brooklyn and Cripple Creek or the that honesty pays; that ollr social Congo Free State is measured by thc crecds are our social salvation. But diderence in pllblic opinion. Laws do our morality is the outgrowth of re- not make public opinion; they only ligion_ Men in the Old Testament voice it. They are morevften mouth- days made themselves clean that they pieces, than monitors, though there mlglit mme biifnra God, Perhaps are some notable exceptions. Thea- tliey had never been clean before, tres do not make public opinion; ann they said among themselves, they- render to the supposed testes "'l‘his is fine; let’s try to be clean of their patrons. The great opinion on our own account and see how it maker is the 611111011, 111111 1111011 011110 feels." The Sa-llliatli Ilay was ob- church is the Christian relig‘ion,, ln- serve n of ' e ` ood and found to lie esseiitlai to the mark is made nlwu every page of the wants ¢,l' mam what gr0lmi1¢,fm0i~_ world’s history. ‘I heard one of the ality is there except in the fact of j\111'8‘011 H11! 810W nights-since that Wei *od* Wil should not the mail who 110 1101- 1101101111 119011 1`0101`11W1`S1U1` 11111 the S____ c°_______°__8_°_____s __mv___3e 1 _ - . _ _ __ ___- _ in Winch Mention is Made of Decendants Now Living in char. lottetovm. ___.-_ ' -ll Minister of Fame In the city of Brooklyn, N. Y. Fmm the Text John_ _ American history contains no more Iii-ality of flii-.~ |,i.l;ll,, ,mlm fl~l,.,l _.i,,, . pleasing romance than that of the i“..,., UH, _ ' ` beautiful Indian princess Pocallontas, l|Lf`,,,,,\' f)|Uv|`u-Mnllmd the lhmnc M _ her womanly courage, her fidelity Loi 1156, un, _H),""" ‘fm "9 lm' '“""`li 1"’ the w_mt_e __ace_ ____d the _____w__ ___ the ;igB__e_i____ iiurcliit for the iiiriizciivc flint. light of civilization winch lined no ite, ""““ ”““"‘ "hc ""1" ‘ ‘ rom sava er thc c - ' ` _ James and; thetlldmirlftliiilllt djrrill llrlilvli '”eltiLh.l,l.'“"t ""1""`1‘ 1-"'-111)' 0111111111 the of the English-speaking world. 'l'lu-lg( ,:;lr,l-tim whrm as H" “mm” American people will ever kc-cp ii. pm.‘,',hI,f_'t '°'_ _,__ fund recollection the nl_eiiiory of thc April' M llT_`T_,m‘Ull"”(._ Joh" .1_{"H"' ."" .deeds of heroism in lvhioli this indian h____ _‘M21-________,__i_liil liiiin ti_il_:» iii_ii,,,, girl offered her liffl in thc cause of _\i,,.;,,,,i`,,,,`,`(“.|,‘;;`i{:;\,i!f,Eff 2-l,"'_"1"“'€s . -~. ._ 5 . 'li in ii whethw __ _ ._ _ _ 1110111 uuirr nolill- than iiiiiii:rl-i-lii,il ___e__c____ or ;gt__:_l_it _lii__l:_cl_itl5_l;;l_;_;l__flll_ _;~_,_,_;-_ii_ll_y__ il_i;l;i:_i_il f.l:_i;_t- lips f`oi~i-1-il .--iv. lie was about to bc slain hy hcl' lil- w,.,l_|;,,,,, W", [ti] \ _"_, _1'm'L_""';“1_'\" ‘h""S t."“."’-. is “`“°- 00°” 11°* 111 11'" l-f~.-i aff tiff? if-limi 'i'i|iL»=1ii“Vil H :~ll""ll'-A-ilmi mam' ‘hmmlsh the nuhuxty and uw 1101101* which was .L-t:iuii1c.l i.iHli|l;|ilsK~':lii!l ii... .i.......i.i;i ga; .i.I.'.;i; i.-'.I'1.;.',;.'.;.!f§;;;if.€f';“'“‘ 1'- il icuii. iii eight months and came back again Th,,"m_H__ __ ,__ . , , and again to iight the miswiiiiiili-y _n ' _ “___ '__‘_'d“”_‘ '_ ’"_, “’-"V11 111ul'l‘|~i» and) clean out the mission. Bill QCA _“__L;"‘ ""'_“"_‘f`~1 ‘-_'S11-11 Lho |(11111111~1111111-Y is made of heroic stuff -tal, _‘_‘_______ _ ilouei.-._ _l 1 cuimii- .aild held its grill, Rnd Water l\- open toward some sllnrising. We 1110111 W0"-111119 001110 1101- 110W B01 8 must find some staircase winding up- 0191111 11111 01 110111111- -1110011. 11 112 ward toward the stars, even though P1801-10911 111 111096 111V011t1i1111»111l§ 1111118 it lie ii iii-oxen one. Now what ia the subwfusw of which we read ln there for lin. Well there is ll/loham 'C119 110011 01 110110515. W1'-111111 K0 10 1119 `mcllisiu, where woinen ure degrndei 9011110111-1111`Y~ 11 -4111111111111 1411011111 and religious mllrdcl' is a religioll: 001115 10 NGW Yuri! 88 he Wvllt to grace; there is Buddhism, whici Egypt. D111111i11l§ 01111111 “V112 BB his strangles all aspiration, and Mor 5131012 el/e1`Y Y€110W J'0111`11H1 in the monlsni with its complicated domes C1131 W0\11d be 011 1115 1111011- C'111`11'111‘ nity has kept a large school", and ubllc opinion has washed her face nd plit on clean garments and has mutters and takes orders from otlle 'f110VL’l1 1111 0111 Of 1111! Slums forever. of Bowery Ike, convlctrfrom Illuck well’s Island, student in Moody's In stltute, preacher in (look Count jail, dying at his post in the rush o these and rude chronicles, but lioin er, with his Greek thunder, and Vir gil, who sang of arms and the innu Here is the ancient challenge o Jesus i‘hi‘ist. This is what Uilristi 1'111l1D0Se it could bc everywhere tri umphant; th-at every tram snl and every business lionse paid hon est w-ages and everv eit cl is .(1 -l Living Waters on Ullrystio sti'cct,a;idi Y tlrf: ciiulilicill.~'. 'I`l1r<‘€ _vc:il':a Iicforc l'oi-iillfuiiiiii Iii-..l been liapii;-_l-ll in l'liii.1liiiuiiy ,lull rlil'istc¢iod "llal,ii-i-"_" |l,.,- ` u.,,u 1 llsinc, ll-luionki: sivr-u livr ly liri- fii. glory and revival. Rough names are thin- nf. bil-fli -lin-ll ion- lil-i-if lou A' _ _ l lil ‘ the aiicclloliafc pi-f neu .» i,l' l»,,_-¢,l,,,,, tus, iiiciiiiini; “lil-10`l\,';;,ii_.,,,_~ ' . 'l‘ho lirilloi_'i'oonl, John l;..ll,,_ ,ml-_ _, and Dante, who looked tllroilgll filo ',-.1 _ _ gates of Heavem never had __ g________ |_l';_i___¢_i_\l_1l_;_ ___._i_____i_i_._l_::iiliil_ oi _.ru iiil_l'_i¢~llti er theme than the tolls and defeats l.~,,Kl,,,,l __ __t',i ',,;';’. ("`"‘_ 5 _‘\"'_'1_"11\. and victoi i tl - - _ _“_ ‘ " ' ."““- “ “' 1”* 101'" ed life inrit: liiternldss :;(ll]dcvt\,h(lil1Ut)ll&c hmrremly nf atm-C m me E'W'l"Sh Cul* face and coiiqllei-ell 'ony 'mf' was hmmy “`s1`c"1""]‘ H” . ' Itook hifi lndiuu iiiiii- ti lc 1 I, i ng null, lwlii-rc liel' lovfllilc disl i._.~ifi.,,l “-ul, ll,,, amty is ,ming every ‘lay .mm Ach;|§1_?al;lr;_;_rl_lll:;___l-.ilulirlli lu-<_.,_i_ii_ .Hlie nas of the Apostles is a contliillcd storygllml ,`l)i'.|,`_________ _<.<1_l1§l _ 1": "M11 and B' "EW installment 1” Wntten “V010/itllll-.)lil»~:‘ of 1-`l(i1'lll~.1li yml; Un w. » ., ‘ mefee __:/_i__1_1__11_V1=a_§_1;€__£_1:y ¢_:_fvLl ¢;'lltel_.i_ist l‘ol'iili;iu_l.as dlcd al. fli’:l‘.'i-scllii,ldii,¢_ _ _ -1111'~-`- 11 land, on lllurl-ll 20, lf»l7 ilu.l Llir- ie- Yeai wherever the gospel of Jesiis lsllfleii-y of lhc 1-iiiil-,.|, _, .`l l preached in its simplicity and power. lf,“-,~,,,_-- ` 1 'Al 'mm 1 W [Uh "Hilti, ll/lily 2. l`i'Iii\i--li I[i,l|`_ wlfn p 1 every of illoinsis liolf -f--nf fl, v" ~,- - drunkard " lt l . _ ' .’ "Q ' _ ‘ “#111111 ' mlgl ,e c0“V"’1`t¢‘-1- 31111 liilllv liiiiul- Wir; lil'i"i‘~ angl em 8 nm H e 1 lg ' ton ith _ dl .Md , n U gf’ _° H09-V011, 1411 11'~11VLl1lfoiiliaui.:» of .»\. 1-Lillie of llraclieili, e w .prayer an lui e its would b l l . _ .ins amid pi-aim in G,,.i_ <~,,,i,,,,,i,,,,, o______________ffff§___f___’§_f,__’{ff;__________________§jc"<1f»111\~-1; of -i<»1»=» uolfi-.i - o and self-saci-ilice? what is the use' fi Place where they might meet God MA if It so happens that the brain atom: 111111 H15 11111-2019 Wil-1101lt 8001031211115’ ' il are in elluipoise Do we thrill ag 10 some story of heroism, some Hohsoi 111 with his d med ship at Santiago. W , _ . OD his has not l/een a (ihristian nation. B1' A- 11'- 11101111111 ln “hill-cess." .s-istu»nl.s i'el'soiiulity hc is nilc to sei-/.e ill-oii ufficient reasons, as he thought, Mr time to ¢lme_ wlli-,ni-,vf.,,» we imw. ,,l,_ thrcc ilioiisaiul liuinzlu lioiiigs, luilil ul- comlltlons lu whlgh it wi-iiilil lie Roosevelt ordered/ this inscription portlinity and can uiloril the pi-irc, 1’-11f'ui lir¢~iit1ilnui=, syci-clil:-su, iiiiiliiui- excusable. A popular lecturer of the away- The whole land WHS 1111 011011 upliftc-ll and inspired. Uur iiiaiiirluiiii-`1”” 11-'111`s'»1111'. Hi--.il his sliiglilciif. :i.ii.ii.l n a fermelit, and so flooded was are thou, nf the m,,,.lL-al am; ,ll-,,,,,,, sivsy- l.h.ni us n field ol wluiul. is Congress with petition and memorial hh; gthl_»_i-_ swayed iiy ii i~u'\liiui; all-rin, o\cr~ that the words were restored aid There \\'~11H 5 U11” “'1“"11 W1'/'f1\l‘\lii_» ivliclul i.lu-ui \\'lf.li ii lii~u\‘-ui; iiiuiiilii now they are lil their old place hc- “pon the ili-aiiiatie stage was ,lug ml' ‘us the iiosoiii ol ilu- _svn is iallimwii cause the people want them there. c0m,m,,,__wil,(,n it ,vas po,-,l,li,lL. U, by li lii.i~i~icaiu-. For the people know. that it .s not vigil, A theater isiiil see gi-ent iieiilily... Now wlint is fha uf-rri-i ol fli;~i ii- hc gold which flows into our coffers acting “mt t,.anSp0r¢_ed we h(.l,,,l,li;|-.niilziilig lioivi-r ---ri po\-.cr l.liiil liziu from California and Klondike, not to reailiiis 0( the illlag-llml,io,,_ l,l,u|_` been fl-it in greater oi- li-ss dcgrcu by he crisp greonbfsckn with the guar- thrilled him to the core of hifi hi-iii,;_ -ovary our who has licuril tlic violin antee of the government niwn them. and that sent him away li-om tin-_ play i>1nyin.: of \'.~;ayc_ flu- iii-igiiiii; the ot our army noi' our grim gray bat- house uplifted and lmliglhtcd ,nit iii' .piano pluyini; of l’ndi.i‘cwskl, the sun- tleshlns Hiatt lnwe carried 01011111: liimaeii into ii liiii-lie: .an-ii ,, iioiiie, ny-iiaiiofl iuiic; nie siiiiiiiig iii Ni-.iiiii into every sea, but our national gphere_ The present generation of l\‘ielbn, the Alist.1~riliaii_ It is ccrtniu- faith in God and olir allegiance to playgoerg can remember iiiieli h<;t(,;S_ ly not to be xircoiintcil for incrcly by H15 18W £1181 0011511111119 U10 110111111115 Edwin Booth was one, and Ilicliiirdlexcl-llciicc of tccliiilcluiu in iiilitriiinon- 10111” 101111 111111 01l1` 110118 101' U10 111* Mansfield, in certain of his l'0lcs,\vas 'tal or vocnl mll.~ii1‘i:iiis, or by sur- t\\1‘l‘-~ ther. But with the iossiblc ax- liassilii: cllmlity ol voice in .~;iiii:crs . ano - Lord God of Hosts, he with 1111 1101-- eeption of Mrs Fiske, tdosc niur\ei< The iiiaricl ol innsiiul in.ilL'u-iuiis ia 1»€lt W8 f01`K¢l». 1851 We 101`E0l-- oils players have all passed from this no new thin-iz. l-in-i'_\~ nge, _~.iiu-c ilie. T116 W011411 01 (1011 1110 50911 111 111111' temporal stage. They have left bc~ birth of iiiu_»;i<~, hui; lil-oil stiircd by 11111111 liver! T110 (`111`1B1»11111 101151011 hind them man artists and a grant thciu. uch is t-he] Kingdom of Heaven. them is A maglpiair it la not vi-liolly All down tlii-ollgli ilic ilizcs lhcso Christian painters show Us an lnfhnt their fault. /l great neiii iii the wizai-ils -if the ivory 111-ff-liiiiiiwi. the vltins in Hill -mo*-1wr'l Ulm. 111° blame must be borne by the inoii liorsaliiiir now and the ini-iii i~.ii~us 1111 01 11110 W1" 111°11'11 1l11°i¢» '-110 011' who `writc our plays. The modern have. executed their various ninrvcls jnct of angel worship. The Christian di-gm" ia, perhaps, in some ways not and wrought tlicir fine cn'-liiliiniciils. eliglon leads us to the king and lnfai-lor to the el-der, bllt it is vi-.iv lt is fzrui- ihul. fl-.is is not ii lie- Q110011 01 the 11\\l‘SeI"y EB they 11° 111 dllerent. 'l‘he iiatllrnll.~i1_.ic. si-_liool of iiioiisflntivl- iiuiioil, nor u dciii.in- the baby erih. ...It is a new creed plBy.wi-ltlrig has not thus far bei-ii sli-ativc goiini-iilioil. Yi-l. illnic_ lilo 111111 8 11N11U111K ‘$111111-1011 1111011 11111 prolllic in tlu--creatioii of great paris, niuuy mi-u null woiiieii sllll liv\i=l’I to be told that a man is a fool who and great pai-gh "lakh gn-he hi~li,i~,i_ “.l,,,g,. ,,,0,,,iii~ii-5 i-iiii hill-li to fbi- diiys R11/011 1118 1110 111 0101181180 101 1110 But whatever thc cause, the iiiil.p,ici- wlu-n Jciiuy l.in.l, thc -“H\vl‘-!_\=‘l\ whole world. lt does for a man and ul the di-miiiiiig ,ieiigp me g.,,,,._N,,_¢mlm,,,|,._-1 was ilu- idol ol inc rcincnilicr thc liu.»rc what he cannot. do for liimseli. Mac- and ll; may lm tim; wi-_ shall not hour; who can - _ _ __ iw#-11. re