Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Aug. 16, 1912, edition 1 / Page 7
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11 EI CHINESE SOL AND MAKER Or HIST BY C.T.FER1HS fly MOCHAY CO N THE early autumn of 1880 a New York merchant Interested In the ma chinery and Junk business received a letter from Shanghai, China, which. Interested him curiously. It was fivtm an M friAfirl Anil aeaofflate. B whom ha had believed to be another example of unaccountable .disappearance. Frederick Townsend Ward had gone to Mexico more than two rears before to sell some old ord nance to the government Having accomplished this in due season, he had suddenly dropped out of ken, on the eve of supposedly returning home. Fancy, then, the surprise which greeted these words, if any act of so erratic a person could amase. 1 have entered Into the Chinese service, have very fine prospects at present and hope soon to have a comfortable fortune. I have been trans- . formed from a Yankee into a Chinaman in good style, with a good establishment I, a few days ' ago, took the second city of importance in the vice royalty from the rebels. I have made a pretty good thing of It and hope in a few weeks to take another city." . . Thla communication was a veritable boltvtrom the blue. A restless, almost penniless vagabond of a man, whom his friends had given up as lost, suddenly emerging in China as a master of men and a conqueror of cities! Our own bloody slaughter house bad not yet opened Its shambles, but the newspapers were so absorbed in an extraordinary political situation that they gave scarcely a para graph to such a curious piece of news when It waa made known to them. A few weeks later another similar letter reached the staid merchant: ' "I was then referring to his first letter J about starting up country, but I have since returned, 1 having been badly wounded while attempting to scale the walls of Sing Poo City, and was com pelled to return to Shanghai for treatment I got several shot wounds, the worst one went through the cheek and down through the roof of the mouth. They, that is, the mteslonarlee and some English and Dutch merchants, talk . -very badly about me and my measures, I. having used both rather unceremoniously when found having connections with the rebels: but. Jack, I am Independent of them all and consequently do not care a for them. "China Is th country for a man who la able to take risk's and is gifted with good com mon sense. I have made more money in a few weeks than I could at brokerage in New York In twenty years,'' Sixty years ago American pulpits and church conventions rang wltli the glad tidings that a Christian movement had sprung, spontaneously as it were out of Chinese soil. The future of missionary effort waa thus assured, it was hoped, In the blossoming of a far-reaching native force that would speedily win the heathen to the ban ners of the cross. These, hopes, however, were , blasted, as the rise of the religious cult of a Makka schoolmaster developed into one of the most ruthless and devastating civil wars of his tory, and the nature of the outrageous travesty, which had perverted a few Christian doctrines ' Into a grotesque blasphemy,1 came to be under stood. ." - Hung Su Tsuen had sought In vain for that recognition before the literary boards at Canton which was the passport of official ambition. In Canton he had absorbed some crude notion of : Christian doctrine from a Methodist missionary, and when he returned home, crazed by disap pointment, to live as a humble pedagogue, he began to dream dreams and speak prophecies as one directly inspired from heaven. As time went on, his propagandism drew to Its banner hordes from the ranks of discontent .-and crime, and an army of ragged desperadoes began to move from west to. east in the early fifties to establish the claim, of the crazy fanatic . (who professed to be the younger brother of Jesus Christ and directly consecrated by the Holy Ghost) to be the Imperial head of the empire, the annals of Oriental barbarism. It was esti mated, by conservative opinion that in ten years this Infernal regime known as the Talplng rebel lion had cost the empire some two and a half billions of dollars and the destruction of several millions of lives by war, starvation and whole sale massacres. ';.',,' ; .:..,'":'.-.-' Hung Su Tsuen, as Tien Wang or "Heavenly King," was enthroned at Nanking and be prac tically controlled the great province of Klang Su and . Sheh-Klang, the,., heart of : the richest tea and silk production of China. , His robber bands. Indeed raided down to the very gates of Shanghai, and the foreign merchants there were sometimes hard put to It; to defend the city, though nominally on amicable terms , with i the Nanking despot, on whom their trade so largely depended, One autumn morning at Shanghai In 1859 a alight, " dark-complexioned, ; lnsignlflcant-Iooktng man. called at the office of Tah-ke, a mandarin of the third button, a banker and merchant well regarded by the foreign residents. , . It ; was Frederick Townsend Ward, who had Just landed in Shanghai from San Francisco. He waa rough and seedy-looking, with a sailor's roll in his gait, but with a glance of fire and a solid, square-set Jawbone to redeem his face. Tah-ke was not encouraging when .Ward spoke of hla desire to enter the Chinese Service as a free -lance, and answered that he could get a belly full of fighting by Joining the Shanghai volun teers. ' . - y i 'v.; ,i "Thank you for nothing," said Ward, "but I can do that without your help. I didn't come for that sort of advice. ' I could make you help-' me and help yourself at the same time. You don't see it now, but you will" ', -v.- Who. then was Ward? Born at Salem,' Mass., about thirty-two years before his arrival In China, he came of a race of deep-sea skippers, -who had sailed on all oceans, arctic and tropi cal, and been noted for their handspike and be-laylng-pht discipline. Daring and resolution ran AM fester t "tT V 1 M PIEIt W FORTUNE ! V W In his blood. At the age of nineteen he had won his first mate's certificate. He took a turn in New York , at the business of ship brokerage and marine supplies. Thence he disappeared for several years and was heard of In Central America, , where he had Joined Walker, the filibuster, nar rowly escaping the fate of that adventurer. Ru mor also associated him with the ill-starred ex ploits of Wheat and Henntngsen in the same region. He had been heard of also In the Cri mea as enlisted in the French zouaves, from which he managed to escape by desertion to save himself from drum-head court martial after, having slapped his captain in the face. These and other adventures loomed in his background. Not disconcerted by Tah-ke's cold reception, - he took things into his own hands. - He had enough money to hire a small force of rapscal ' lions, native and foreign, the kind that Infest an Oriental seaport like rats, and among them a few deserters from the British military and naval forces, who knew something about drill. The most Important Of these acquisitions was James Burgevlne, a North Carolinian adventur er, who had severed allegiance to the "Heavenly King." Tah-ke had sold to Ward for a baga telle a batch of condemned muskets and bayo nets which armed this ragged and unreliable battalion. Ward and Burgevlne whipped them Into shape not only by camp- drill 'but by sklr- r mlshlng with the Talplngs at every opportunity, for from their cities of Sung Klang and Sing Poo, only two or three days' march from Shang hai, the rebels made constant Irruptions. Ward's primary object was to inspire his men with confidence in him and in themselves. He lived on the country and when he captured Talplngs he converted them Into recruits In stead of refusing quarter, as was the habit of the imperialists; Very soon the exploits of Ward's irregulars began to make a buzz in the foreign clubs and counting rooms. : He had cre ated his own standing and when he went again to Tah-ke that worthy received him with low . salaams. He went straight to his mark like a bullet, with the manner of one dictating, not accept lng, terms. , He proposed a formal contract, which Tah-ke was to negotiate with the Futal of Shanghai. Ward was to have $100,000 from the government for every city be captured, of Which 25,000 was to go to the Chinese part ners. He was to have the first day's looting, after which the captured place would be turned over to the imperialists. Tah-ke was pledged to finance Ward for one ' year, furnishing him with arms, ammunition and stores, within a certain limit of cost which the other thought would suffice. - Within a month Ward led his first expedition against Sung Kiang, which was garrisoned by about 6,000 Talplngs under the command of an Englishman named Gardiner, an ex-offlcer of the British army. The. attack failed, with serious loss to Ward's 500 assailants, i - ,. One thing had happened, however, which proved of vast, import to him. He had taken a rebel prisoner of some rank, who confessed to him that one of the bastions bad a choked-up subterranean sallyport - If he could make a secret entrance-through this, it would save the necessity of a desperate and bloody assault General Ward reoganized his little command and, with 5,000 imperialists to co-operate, made his second attempt. Sung Klang, with Its five- ' mile circuit of wall twenty feet high, was cap tured; and to Ward's great credit be prevented anything like indiscriminate massacre. Leaving Sung Klang with an officer of his own in command, he returned to : Shanghai, -where his achievement had caused a tremen dous sensation. , . ; . .There comes now an Interim in Ward's fight-, lng toils, for half a score of unhealed wounds compelled him to go to Paris for treatment, but we find him back again in the early summer of -1861 where . his presence was sorely . needed. The foreign powers still pursued their hands off policy and allowed the Talplngs to sound ' their drums and tom-toms within earshot of the swarming treaty port In a diplomatic way, in deed, formal recognition of the "Heavenly King" aa the dominant power waa in the air. . "-' Ward's coming . shattered that Intention, which. If carried out, would have destroyed the empire. He grasped the situation and, through VfV 'v . ..?'" g? the Futal of the province of Cheh-Klang, obtained directly from the Peking authorities a commis sion to raise and command an imperial Chines levy. His experience told him that, well drilled and daringly bandied, the natives bad plenty ol good soldier-stuff and would fight and die in their tracks. A singular thing happened at this time. At the principal temple of Confucius one day he discovered in one of the consecrated niches scepter-like staff of ebony with a curiously carved head of Jade minutely inscribed. The effect on his native valet was remarkable, and he learned that it was one of the great tails. mans of the empire. When he appeared with it before his troops the next day they fell to their knees in ranks. . Thenceforward he cargled no sword, only, this magic baton attached to his wrist with a thong. In the eyes of the Chinese, even the Talplngs, It made him an invincible leader. Shortly afterward, indeed, it saved his life. A large detachment from the main force of Chung Wang camped too near his city of Sung Kiang. Sallying forth with two regiments, he struck their camp like a thunderbolt at night, cuttlnr tbe force to pieces. The' clock now struck twelve for Frederick Ward. A courier arrived .poet haste from , the Futal of Shanghai, ordering him to report there for co-operation with the Anglo-French contin gent He obeyed with two picked regiments, leaving Sung Kiang strongly garrisoned under Colonel Forester. Admiral Sir James Hope had arrived and had insisted that General Ward should be fully recognized as the most efficient factor of salvation. , The first move was against Kaschlaou, which threatened the supplies of Shanghai. Ward and Lis Celestials carried the defenses in the most gallant fashion, leaving Sir James Hope's con tlngent but little to do except gather in two thousand., prisoners. All the English officers were delighted with the splendid dash and confidence marking Ward's attack, and when Sir James Michel, the , British commander-in-chief, arrived from Hong Kong with Sepoy reinforcements he agreed cor dially with Admiral Hope when these two re viewed Ward's forces at Sung Klang. . .. It was advised that Ward be commissioned by the Chinese government to raise from 6,000 to 10,000 men and be invested with a large range of authority. The result was an extravagantly phrased re script from Peking that commissioned General Ward to raise and command 6,000 nten, named him admiral-general, and made him a mandarin of the "peacock feather." With It came the famous "Yellow Jacket," equivalent In China to the Golden Fleece or the Order of tbe Garter, The new force waa designated Chun Chen Chun, "Tbe Ever Victorious Army." It waa In April, 1862, that a council of war was held at Sung Klang. Sir James Hope, Gen eral Staveley, the French Admiral Potret, Gen eral Ward and Viceroy Llch being present It was here that Ward's general plan was fully sanctioned. This showed great grasp of military strategy. , The proposition was to capture the cities of kahdlng. Sing Poo, Najaor, Tsaolin and lesser fortified places within a radius of forty miles from Shanghai. Needless to linger on the details of the on Kabding, Sing Poo, Najaor and Tsaolin. Gen eral Ward In each case, magic baton in hand, headed the asaultlng column through tbe breach made by artillery, and his men charged to the very gates of Tophet, resistless in their ardor, mad with the Joy of battle. In the Tsaolin affair the. gallant French admiral Protet was 'shot dead at. his side. ' ' r'-'.'r . Tz-kl fell before bis assault like a house of cardboard, but one of the last hostile bullets fired pierced Ward's chest with a fatal wound. He was taken aboard, a British gunboat commanded by Lieutenant Roderick Dew and was brought down to Ningpo. .; . - ;. ; -, . - Splendid , funeral obsequies at. the temple of Cdnfucius In Sung Klang were bald, at which all the foremost personages of that part of China, native and foreign, attested their grief and paid their homage to the deeds of the man who had practically arrested the disintegration of the empire. iNimnoM siwrsoiooi . Lesson (Br K. O. SELLERS, IMreotoi of few- nlna Deportment, Tb lUMy Blbl Institute of Chicago.) LESSON FOR AUGUST 18. DIDN'T WORK OUT JUST RIGHT .- v Attempt to Fallow Out Magazine's - ; Helpful Hint Made Trouble In 0 . One Household. -. An awful lot of tommyrot advice creeps into women's magazines nowa days. And women who try to follow such advice sometimes meet with traglo results. For Instance, not long since a magazine article dwelt at '1. length on the fact' that one husband owed both hla health and his business prosperity to the fact that S65 days In the year his wife prepared him a de licious piping hot breakfast and sat at the ooposite end of the table each morning prettily dressed, with her hair becomingly arranged. A Cherryvale woman was deeply impressed with the article and thought remorsefully of her appearance in the bright revealing morning light at the breakfast table. To be sure she always served a good, wholesome breakfast, but her time had been given to the cooking Instead of to her appearance. ;VV."';. , i But so deep an Impression -did the article make that Saturday morning she rose a little earlier- than usual, re solved to look pretty and surprise hubby. She curled her hair and colled it high on her head; then she put on some dainty pumps and lavender hose, instead of the' slouchy comfort slippers she usually hurried Into. After pow dering her face she slipped on a be coming negligee with bits of baby blue ribbon calling attention to the silken slip beneath. So Interested did she be come in adjusting a brand new boudoir cap that she forgot she had not even made the coffee, till she heard a bad swear word from her husband, who'd been Impatiently waiting on the porch, and he growled out: "If you're going to primp all day I'll go to the restaur ant and get my breakfast," apd as the front door banged shut the wife mur mured. "Men are so unreasonable; they think of nothing but their stom achs." Mrs. F. D. Boffett, la Cherry vale, Kan, Journal. THE RULER'S DAUGHTER. LESSON TEXT Mark 5:21 43. GOLDEN TEXT "And taklna the child by the hand he nalt.i unto her, Talltha cumii whlcA la, bell. Interpreted, Damsel. I sar unto the, arise." Mark This is one of the uot beautiful stories of tbe Bible. It appeals to the loving parents' heart, and charms the attention of eveiy child in the home. The Introduction of the woman who touched his garment Is referred to by three of the gotipel writers and show us an intensely Interesting side light as to the reception accorded Jesus duslng bis Galilean ministry. The .ran.atls persobao Is as follows: First, the father. Frum his life be is about to lose all the poetry and music of his home. Second, the child She was only twelve years old. Just on the threshold of Jewish womanhood. It takes no Imagination to plctuie her life up to this time, how it had entwined Itself Into the heart of the father as well as the other loved onea. The stricken diseased child is yet to be found in the land, that is what makes the picture so vivid. Why this suffering T Why these separations? We cannot reply but our Heavenly Father knows it all, and some day we will read his answer In the glory of his presence. Third, the woman. Who, where from, nor whithor to, we are not told. Only one of that fast throng who had Just faith to touch tbe hem of his garment, and she was made whole. As Jesus and Jairus Are walking towards the child's chamber they are thus interrupted. We can feel certain that Jarius in his anxiety must have been rebellious at this interruption, at this enforced delay. But he hears the story of one who had suffered for aa many years as his child had furnished Joy to his home, and it must have en couraged his heart to listen to the Master's gracious words. However, his hopes are dashed for as they pro ceed word comes that the child is dead, and, the messengers add, "why trouble the master, the teacher, any longer." Jesus makes reply in words that have been a comfort to believers for over 1900 years: "Fear not, only believe." Calm Dignity of Jesus. And lastly, the Galilean prophet One whose response to the cry of need was so Instantaneous albeit without haste or fret or unrest. We can. In imagination, see them as they walk along tbe roadway. Jesus cer tainly had a meaning in pausing as they are Interrupted for we must" re member that the woman was healed the moment she touched his garment and before they paused. Having taught the multitude and encouraged the heart of Jairus they reach the home and allowing none but his elect three, Peter, James and John, he en ters the house, which is now in a tumult due to the weeping and walling of the mourners, both the professional and the bereaved. Again we are Im pressed with the calm dignity of Jesus as he asked them "Why this tu mult? The child only sleeps." Their laughing scorn is due to their ignor ance of the power of this man, though the record is a strong emphasis upon the fact that the child was really dead. When he had turned the unbelievers out, Jesus takes the father and mother and the disciples Into the death chamber,1 the occasion was too sacred for the mere manifestation of poWer before a crowd. Taking the child by the hand, a personal touch, not by proxy, Jesus speaku those wonderful words which form the' golden text Mark records the Aramaic or vernacu lar giving us the words Just as they were spoken. We are told that tbe word "Talltha" means freshness, and that it is closely related to the word lamb, literally "Little Lamb, I say un to thee, arise." His touch was that of power, his word that of life. His voice entered those dead ears and penetrated a responsive spirit and soul and "straightway" (Mark's key word) she was alive. , Beautiful Love Picture. Having restored the child to Its parents Jesus admonishes-them' not to publish the news broadcast evidently as he was not ready to precipitate matters in the minds of the multitude for of a surety he knew that in cer tain quarters the fact of the cure would be known. This is a beautiful love picture: 1. The father's love v. 22,24. (a) His need. (b) His position, "at Jesus' feet." . (c) His plea, "I pray thee." (d) His insistence, "besought greatly." The stranger's plea v. 25-24. (a) An interruption. (b) Of long standing. , (c) Jesus' knowledge. (d) Jesus' response. (e) ) Her confession. .. . (f) Her blessing. The Master's love v. 35-43. (a) Jesus' knowledge (child not - dead In his sight). (b) Delay not mean refusal. (c) Tbe tender resurrection, an answer to faith, (d) The provision for all her needs. " . . .... Sorrow brought Jairus to Jesus and sorrow today brings more men to Jesus than perhaps any 'other ' one means. Jairus was a ruler of the. synagogue and as such had to lay aside his pride and, his hostility to make his plea or to- accept service of Jesus, and so must we lay aside our pride when wecome to the Nazarene, casting ourselves as did Jairus in the dust at his feet but notice Jeeus did not suffer him long to remain In that place. Jesus responded to Jairus faith ven though it was not at great a hat of the Centurion, Matt 8:8 PUNISHMENT. Summer Girl What do you think you deserve for kissing me like that? Youth Well, say you mtgbt marry met ECZEMA BEGAN BY ITCHING Goldsboro, N. C "My daughter suf fered from eczema. The trouble be gan In the ears by itching and run ning water, and later it farmed pus and became very offensive. She began to scratch it and it went into sores. When the scabs came off there was a yellowish watery discharge. Tbe outside of tbe ear was one solid sore. She tried several different remedies but received no relief. She had been troubled with it between one and two years when she finally began using Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment. "She had not made but two treat ments when all the scabs came off and the flesh Just looked very red and dry. She kept up the treatment four or five weeks and she waa entirely cured. It also cured other sores on the children, especially chapped feet on one of the little boys." (Signed) Mrs. W. H. Edgerton, Jan. 24, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each tree, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address poet-card "Cutlcura, Dept U Boston." Expect Big 8ale of Red Cross Seals. The campaign for selling Red Cross seals this year will be carried on In practically every state and territory in tbe United States, and even in Porto Rico, the Canal Zone, Hawaii and Phil ippine islands. . No less that 100,000 volunteer agents. Including depart ment, drug and other kinds of stores. motion picture theaters, individuals. and others, will be engaged in the work. Before the sale is completed, it is expected that at least 100,000,000 seals will have been printed and dis tributed, besides several million post ers, display cards and other forms of advertising literature. Solemn Warning to Parents. Tbe season for bowel trouble is fast approaching and you should at once provide your home with King's Diar rhoea Cordial. A guaranteed remedy for Dysentery, Cholera Morbus, Flux, Cholera Infantum and all -kindred dis eases. Numerous testimonials on our files telling of marvelous cures can be bad by request Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte. N. C. . Lacks Originality. 'Bilklns tells me that he has lately subscribed for a new thought magazine." 'I hope its perusal will inspire him with some new i thoughts. Nobody talks about the weather more than Bilklns does." To' be sweet and clean, every wom an should use Paxtine in sponge bath ing. It eradicates perspiration and all other body odors. At druggists. 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Bos ton, Mass. Out of Reach. Townley How's the new cook get ting on? Subbubs I don't know. She didn't leave her address. Boston Transcript. College and Academy of St. Genevlere for Young Ladlea, Ashevllle, N. V. Located In lheT'Umd of tile BMy" SUUU feet above lea lerel. UnsurpatBed climatic conditions with mild winters, ldnal home-llfA IrMt.rnntora hold dmrrROB from Hnropoan and Amerloan UnlTerslUea. Tbe lanjrnafieft are taught bj French and Uerman Professors. St. Generlefe also bas a Preparatory )ep&rtment for yonnff children. For catalogue and particulars apply to the Mother Superior. Checked and In Early Stages, Cured by MILAM the great Reconstructive tonic and blood renovater We do not let forth MILAM as a cur for consumption, but it has proven so bene ficial to such patients that we believe, and are supported in our belief by a practicing physician, that MILAM will arrest incip ient tuberculosis or consumption In its earl stages. We know that it greatly benefits even those In the advanced stages. Read the following Scrofulltic Consumption City of Danville, State of Virginia To-witi I, Edmund B. Meade, Notary Public la and for the City of Danville, State of Vir ginia, do hereby certify that Abram Word, of Danville, Vs., to me well known, did ap pear before me, and being .duly sworn, de poseth and says a follows! "For ten years prior to August, 1909, I was under the care of a regular physician. Last spring this doctor told me he could do me no good, and I tried another for four months without receiving any benefit from him. In August, 1909, 1 began taking Milam, and am now able to do my work without difficulty, my appetite is good, and I can eat and digest any food. My trouble was said to be Scrofulitle. Consumption, and I was wasted away to a shadow. I was so weak that I could hard ly walk when I commenced on MILAM, I regard MILAM as a truly valuable reme dy in all cases of blood trouble, whether eruptive, or proceeding from a lack of full, free circulation. I have recommended MILAM to about twenty of my friends, and so far aa I have seen or heard from, them, they all speak in the highest terms of it, and are recommend lng it to their friends. It was particularly beneficial tome in aid ing digestion and building up an appetite." ttigned) AiiKAM WORD. In witness to the above. I hare hereunto eat my hand and the seal at my office, this 2Jrd day Of March, A. D, 1810. EDMUND a HEADS, (SEAL) . Notary Pubiio. 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The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Aug. 16, 1912, edition 1
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