IMPORTANT NEWS THE WORLD OVER IMPORTANT HAPPENINGS OF THIS AND, OTHER NATIONS FOR SEVEN DAY8 GIVEN THE NEWsITtHE SOUTH What la Taking Place In The South* land Will Be Found In Brief Paragraph* Foreign ? Two steamships and eleven schoon ers, members of the liquor fleet which put Into Canadian ports after estab lishment of the United States coast guard blockade, have departed from Halifax and Lunenburg and are sail ing for St. Pierre and southern porta, including Havana, Nassau and Ber muda. Sir William Fletcher Barrett, 81. scholar and scientist, died at London the other day. "In your comfortable hotel we for got that von Hindenburg had been made president of Germany" ? this note on a Milan, Italy, hotel register lost William Jaenicke, son-in-law of the late President Ebert, his Job. Difference of opinion has developed in the arms conference at Geneva Dver which and how many states must ratify the convention before It can become effective. Fire destroyed the city hall in Que zsados de Guinea, about fifty miles from Havana. Sixteen men. all of the crew of the motorship Wakena, which burned off Nanalmo, B. C., were picked up by the tug Bella and taken to Nanaimo. The Wakena'a men escaped in life boats. Queen Marie of Roumaoia has Juat completed a series of newspaper arti cles, the first of which will be pub lished in England and America with in a short time. It is observed that she remarks in one of the series that she does not care for men too tame. A stormy debate on France's Mo rocco campaign, featured by Social ist charges of imperialism and de mands that peace negotiations open at once, culminated in an extraordi nary demonstration of enthusiasm for former Premier Herriot of France. The first and only portrait of Mi chelangelo ever painted of himself has been discovered in the artist's great est moral masterpiece, where it has been hidden for centuries. Three of the leaders in the recent bombing of the Sveti Krai cathedral, Sofia, Bulgaria, in which 160 persons were killed, have been hanged. They were executed in a public square in the presence of thousands of persons. Ernest Berger, treasurer of the newspaper L'Action Francaise, Paris, fell a victim of a mad woman's bullet intended for one of his chiefs, Leon Daudet, leader of the Royalist associ ation and editor of L'Action Fran caise, or Charles Maurras, co-editor. The Bulgarian government has or dered demobilization of the first three thousand men recently enlisted with the permission of the allies to meet the crisis arising from the coun try's internal problems. Demobiliza tion of the remaining 10,000 extra troops depends upon the allies' reply to Bulgaria's request for permission to retain them longer. This permission is not expected to be forthcoming. Washington ? The shipping has taken a step to ward weeding oat obsolete vessels and placing Its fleet on a more compact basis, adopting a resolution recom mended by its scrapping committee, specifying that 200 designated ships should be advertised (or sale as scrap. The federal grand jury Investigating naval oil leases called more witnesses from the Southwest. Henry L. Phil- 1 lips, president of the Sinclair Crude Oil Purchasing syndicate of Tulsa, Okla., was the first to be heard. George D. Flory of the State National Bank of El Paso, Texas; A. D. Brown field of Coriita. N. M., and J. W. Zev erly, counsel for -Harry F. Sinclair, were among others called. O. P. Van Sweringen of Cleveland, prime mover In the Nickel Plate con solidation project, placidly recounted before the interstate commerce com mission the procedure by which he and his brother, buying stocks, bor rowing money, winning associates, had, in nine years, prepared them selves to lead the^ first attempt to combine trunk line' railroads in east ern territory. Bert E. Haney, Democrat, of Port land, Oregon, has been reappointed a member of the shipping board by President Coolldge. Proposals of Park and Tilford to veil to the govr'.ment at cost the 1,800,000 gallons o. eld Over holt whis ky which the concern has Just pur chased would be accepted if tome pro hibition officials had their way be cause they* believe that government dispensaries for medicinal whisky would provide the best method of control. President Coolldge does not think the United States should become a party to the present discussion among European nations, directed toward ne gotiation of a security pact. Conductor 975, James Gray, of the Capital Traction company, left hie car several years ago and went over to the curb to escort an old lady aboard. When she got off he helped her to the curb again. She died the other day and left Mm $4,000. With Officials convinced that Italy is making a serious attempt to accom plish a refunding settlement with the United States, methods of exerting more pressure on other government having unfunded obligations were giv ?n consideration In government cir cle re^ntly. , ? ? Extension of the operations of the dry fleet to the west coast and the northern lake frontage and then a converging movement upon liquor law violators up the Inland rivers, Is plan ned by prohibition officials. The recommendation that the min imum specifications for a standard patch for compressed cotton bales should be 28 by 48 inches and weigh between two and two and one-half pounds was made by the tare commit tee of the American Cotton Shippers association. Domestic ? Between eight and twelve men in automobiles besieged the town of Brook, Ind., home of George Ade, hu morist, blew open the vault of the State bank, and escaped with ap proximately $2,500. Clem Shaver, chairman of the Dem ocratic national committee, said at the Waldorf, in New York City, that he has no intention of resigning his po sition at this time. First sessions of the board of in quiry appointed to investigate the sinking of the United States steamer Norman in the Mississippi river near Memphis on May 8, with a loss of 23 lives, has begun. Mining men are looking forward to the time when the coal bill of the United States will be reduced $500, 000,000 by the perfection of devices for mining coal with machinery. One of the robbers who held up the Cottage Grove State bank at Des Moines, Iowa, was killed and another wounded when pursuing Iowa officers engaged them in a gun fight at Ave nue City, a suburb of St. Joseph, Mo. The Terminal building, Toledo's (Ohio) largest auditorium was recent ly damaged by a $200,000 fire. Charged with being a party to an alleged fraudulent ranch unit settling scheme which was said to have net ted more than $200,000, Millard C. Baker, real estate dealer of New Or leans, has been arrested In that city by postofftce inspectors and placed under a $3,000 bond to answer an in dictment at Denver, Colo. Willamene Wilkes, 37, one of the beet known women stage directors of the country, died at Los Angeles re cently following the birth of her sec ond child. Clarence Darrow, Chicago lawyer, stands ready to aid the defense of J. T. Scopes of Dayton, Tenn., who has been Indicted on the charge of vio lating the Tennessee anti- evolution law. A definite break in the Presbyterian Church in the United States of Amer ica is imminent, modernists in the denomination's general assembly in session in Columbus, Ohio, declare. Five robbers held! up a loan bank in the heart of the downtown district of Chicago, overpowered three employ ees and escaped with diamonds and Jewelry estimated at between fifty thousand and one hundred thousand dollars in value. The quintette bound the employees and practicaly cleaned out the stock of diamonds. Following an investigation into al leged graft among federal and police officers. Police Lieutenant William J. Labar of headquarters; Louis C, Rus sell, federal dry agent, and Harry L* Atchley, said to be a salesman, were arrested on charges of conspiracy to violate the prohibition act and extor tion in Rochester, N. Y. W. B. Warren and H. M. Richard son, charged with using the malls to defraud a Memphis, Tenn., concern, have been ordered released from cus tody by the federal court here for lack of evidence. The men were charged with being Involved in a con spiracy to obtain sums of nioney on padded drafts in the sale of logs. The Elk Hills naval oil reserves were obtained by E. L. Doheny*s Pan American iPetroleum and Transport company by fraud and conspiracy and must returned to the government? that is the decision handed dawn by Judge Paul J. McCormick at Los An geles, Calif., ordering the return of the vast oil properties after holding that the Doheny companies were not lawfuily entitled to develop them. Lieut. Roland D. Hill, Jr., was found guilty by a court-martial at Norfolk, Va., on two charges and was acquit ted of another charge growing out of the finding of liquor aboard the naval transport Beaufort. Business interests of Kansas City, Mo., oppose the least of the Alabama and Vicksburg and Vlcksburg, Shreve port and Pacific railroads by the Illi nois Central system. One hundred and thirty person, eleven of them -women, were tried at Fairmont, Va., before Judge W. S. Meredith. One hundred and six teen men were found guilty of violat ing an injunction which prohibited In timidation of employees of the New England Fuel and Transportation company and were fined $1 and costs. The women wire found not guilty. William F. Edwards, 46, motorman, was burned to death ln^Bl&t of res cuers, another motorman was Serious ly injured and almost a ie&e of pas sengers hurt when two interurban cars sollided Arfd partly telescoped esfch other on a, 25-foot high trestle near Louisville, Ky., the other night The so - called oleomargarine bill enacted by the recent California legis lature, which provides for a tax of two cents per pound upon cotton seed oil products, in addition to the present license fee, has been signed by the governor. Charges $hat modernism khad crop ped out among Presbyterian mission aries In foreign fields were made on the floor of the general assembly of the Presbyterian church in session at Lexington, Ky. . Hope that a single one of the three score or more miners entombed In the mine of the Carolina Coal com pany, near Coal Glen, N. C., by a se ries of three explosions was a^lve has been abandoned by rescuers who bad entertained the hope that the men might have ^escaped suffocation fol IWtotttlMfc Officials Ask That Pension Building Be Made, Recep tacle for Exhibits. Washington. ? Establishment of a Civil war museum In the Pension office building, the world's largest brick building In the court of which several Inaugural balls have been held, prob ably will be authorized by congress soon after It meets in December. The last survivor of the Revolution ary war was Daniel F. Bakeman, who died at Freedom, N. April 5, 1869, aged one hundred and nine years and six months. The last widow pensioner of the war was Esther S. Damon of Plymouth Union, Vt., who died No vember 11, 1906, aged nlnety-lwo years. The last survivor of the War of 1812 was Hiram Cronk of Ava, N. who died May 13, 1905, aged one hundred and five years. If history repeats Itself, at least a quarter of a century will elapse be fore the chronicler of events will note the death of the last survivor of the Civil war, and the Twentieth century will be drawing to a close before the last widow pensioner will have passed away. 21,854 Veterans Die In Year. In the last fiscal year 21,854 veterans of the Civil war and 21,296 widows of veterans were claimed by death. These figures give rise to many serious thoughts, the commissioner of pe?; slons points out. What shall be done to preserve to future generations the history, traditions, lessons and inspi ration of the ware, the Intimate per sonal history of which is found In the 4,000,000 pension claims in the files of the pension bureau? In years to come, this bureau will be the mecca for thousands upon thousands seeking Information concerning the men who fought in the Civil war. By act of August 7, 1882, the con gress made provision for the Pension building as a memorial to the men who bore the brunt of battle In war, and especially. In the Civil war. The cor ner stone was laid on March 19, 1888. and In May, 1885, the operations of the pension system were transferred to the new building. The exterior frieze of the building, showing a pro cession of soldiers and sailors of all branches of the service, was designed by Casper Buberl, and Is Indestructible evidence for all ages of the purposes for which the structure was author ized, designed, bnllded and dedicated. P In Washington . and elsewhere throughout the country there !? a wealth of material that can be brought together for display within the pen sion building, showing the distinctive accouterments and implements of each of our wars; also models, paintings, heirlooms and relics. The pension bu reau would thus become one of the attractions of the national capital. Now that the ranks of our Civil war veterans are fast thinning, it is thought fitting that steps be taken to make the Pension office building a last ing museum of our nation's wars, from whose honored dead, as the martyred Lincoln voiced his thought in his Geti tysburg address, "we take increased' devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion ; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died In vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom, jind that got ernnteEt of the people by the people and for the people, shall not perish from the earth." . ?17. v ? . .. .,J. ; , Desert Auto Transit Grows in Mesopotamia Bagdad.? -Tourists are showing an increasing fondness for traveling over the desert In automobiles. Various cross-desert Services have recorded a total of 1,000,000 miles of transit Something of a mild motor boom Is beginning In Bagdad. New hotels are going up, one English and one French, and better tourist business Is confi dently expected. Nevertheless, general business Is far from satisfactory. Pov erty among the working classes Is acute In both town and coutatry. Since the opening of the desert line between Syria and Mesopotamia two routes have been followed by automo biles. In leaving Damascus, one fol lows a straight line through the desert to Bagdad, while the second route points slightly to the north to pass through Palmyra, the well-known his toric site, which attracts thousands of tourists, and then comes direct to Bag dad. Figures Eclipses 3 Years Ahead * f Naval Observatory Works Them Out After Study of Sun and Moon. Washington. ? Prolonged study of the vagaries of the son and the moon has enabled scientists of the United States naval observatory here to work out their eclipses for the next three years. Under the direction of Capt W. S. Elchelberger they now are start ing on the 1929 eclipses. An annular eclipse of the sun ? an eclipse where the rim of the sun shows outside of the eclipsed area ? is fore cast for July 20-21, this year, but will be Invisible In the United States. A partial eclipse of the moon Is due Au gust 4, being more or less visible In the eastern states, and wholly visible on the Pacific coast. There will be no eclipses of the moon next year, but there will be a total eclipse of the sun on January 14, 1926. It will be visible only from Africa to the Indian ocean, and the naval ob servatory will send a party from here to Sumatra to observe it An annular eclipse of the sun will Color Organ Devised by a Woman Mrs. Mary Hallock Greenewalt, pi anists, operating tbe electric light "color organ" which she invented after fifteen years of study. It play* light as an ordinary organ plays maslc. NEW RUSH TO &OLD FIELDS IN BRITISH COLUMBIA STARTED f , T Alleged New Diecovery In Northwest ern 8ectlon Lures Prospectors to 8eek Riches. Wrangell, Alaska. ? Breaking of the Ice In the Stlklne river and the con sequent opening of water travel was thfe signal for the exodus of a large number of gold, seekers who have gathered here on their way to newly discover^ fields in northwestern Brit ish Columbia, Three boatloads of prospectors, the first to leave, have started out for Tele graph, B. 0. From Telegraph, which Is the head of navigation, they were to travel by automobile to Dease lake, which is within a few miles of the new gold territory near Casslar creek. More than 150 tons, including caterpillar tractors, automobile trucks, horses and oxen, were to accompany the stam pede rs to Casslar. A noticeable feature of the rush Is Homesick Spaniel Caught Hoboing Back to Canada Stamford, Conn. ? Homesick for his former haunts In St. John, N. B., Finn, a pedigreed cocker spaniel owned by Murray McHugh, 94 Lincoln place. White Plains, was "arrested" here sev eral days ago on a charge of hoboing. Finn was coming down the highway with his nose pointed straight for Canada and a typical tenderfoot tramp limp in Ills lope. He reached the farm of Robert L. Case, who saw at once that Finn was not a hobo, but a dog of pedigree. He I took Finn In, bathed and lodged him' and took the home address on the tag. The Connecticut Humane society wired New Brunswick and learned that Mr. McHugh bad recently moved to White Plains. He came here and took Finn home today. Finn, displayed a well-bred Interest in seeing bis master again, but when be left he constantly turned his nose toward Canada. t To bellevt in t be heroic make* ibwM* - ? ? that only a small number of the pros pectors are new to Alaska, practically all being experienced sourdoughs. Customs officials representing both Canadian and American government* have been here some time making ar rangements to expedite the passage of the stampeders over the International boundary. Besides the local customs representative, F. W. J. Reed of Se attle. M. S. Whlttler of Jupeau and F. J. VanDewall of Skagway, are Ameri can cystoma officers. T. Mason and J. E. Miller of Victoria, B. Cn are here for the Canadian officers. A motion picture photographer ls*jhere filming the preparations for the stampede. The river schedule after this week calls for a boat from W range 11 up the river every eight hours. - A thousand men have mushed through from Wrangell to Casslar, British Columbia, since Christmas to seek gold In that region, Oscar Slther, p be visible July 9-10, 1028, In the cen tral Pacific ocean, and as a partial in nerthern Australia, the eastern edge of Asia, the United States and Mexico. In 1927 there will be five eclipses ? three of the sun and two of the moon. Seven eclipses In a year Is the maxi mum, five of the sun and two of the moon, and the least number In a twelvemonth is two, both of the sun, as will be the case In 1928. An annular solar eclipse, viable in the southern Pacific, will occur Janu ary 8, 1927. A total of the moon, June 15, will be visible in the Atlantic ocean. North America, except the northern border, South America and the Pacific ocean. ' A total of the sun, June 29, will be visible in Europe, ap pearing as a near-total at Nome, Alaska. Another total of the moon In 1927 wil take place December 8, vis ible generally in the Pacific ocean and in the northern part of North Amer ica. A partial eclipse of the sun will occur on December 24. Mercury Dot on 8un. Another heavenly phenomenon will be seen In 1927 in the transit of Mer cury, which will appear as a dot on the sun. On November 10 the transit will take place, visible generally in the Pacific ocean, Australia and Asia, except In the northern and western portions. It will be visible at Hono lulu, Manila and Samoa. In 1928 three of the sun and two of the moon will be the order of eclipses. Captain Eicheiberger considers that the total solar ellipse of May 19 that year will be a curious one, only part of the resulting shadow falling on the earth, appearing as a piece on the south of Africa, and as a partial in South Africa and the southern part of South America. A total of the moon, June 3, will be visible In the western parts of North and South America, the Pacific ocean, Australia and the eastern bor der of Asia. Partial solar ecHpses will occur June 17 and November 12, a total of the moon transpiring No vember 27, visible in the western hemisphere. Primitive Russian Homes The typical stove in a Russian peas ant's home has no chimney, the smoke finding Its way out through the door or holes in the roof and walls. Petersburg lumberman, declared. Caa slar is 100 miles i up the Stlkine river from WrangelL. "Hundreds of sourdoughs camped at Wrangell when I left April 29, were waiting for the river to clear of ice so they could make the dash by boat," Slther declared. "Wrangell stories were that 1,000 men mushed through since Cbrlitmu in spite of snow and ice," he said. "No reports have come back and no one knows what is there, but last fall ru mors came out of Oasslar and spread over Alaska and British Columbia that a 25-mile strip of rich placer gravel had been found on a bar in Oasslar creek. Sourdoughs and prospectors have been collecting for the spring rush ever since." Thief in Church York, Pa. ? While members of the Union Lutheran church, in this city, were at worship in the auditorium on the second floor, a thief worked quietly in the lecture room below an/1 stole three pocketbooks from coats. About $25 was stolen. Last Saxon King's Tomb <4 This year is the eight hondred and sixty-fifth anniversary of the consecra tion of Waltham abbey. Within the abbey chnrch of the Holy Gross was laid to rest the body of the last Saxon king, Harold. The nave only of the ancient chnrch remains, and this was restored by the architect, William Burges, In 1800. ***?***-? Repeating Slander as * - Bad om Starting It * Atlanta, <5a.? "Tale bearers * are* as bat! as tale makers," * thinks the Georgia Court of Ap- * peals. This statement whs * made In a decision upholding a ? * -Judgment In the Stephens Su- * X; perior court, In which $2,000 * was awarded in a suit alleging * * repetition of slanderous re- ? * marks. * jjj The court held that even * * though the original slander * | started with a third party and * * the* repeater had accepted the J * statement in good faith, every * * repetition was a willful slander. * WOMAN DIP TELLS OF HER THRILLS Fascinated by Excitement of Going Into Pockett. New York. ? Mrs. Tillie Dorf, Brook lyn, who declares she became a pick pocket when eight years old, will ask clemency when she goes before Kings County Judge McLaughlin for sen-, tence. She is in the Raymond street jail, having pleaded guilty of picking the pocket of a woman in a Brooklyn department store. She took $10.30 and was caught by a store detective. At the jail Mrs. Dorf gave an ex hibition of her skill by extracting a vanity case from the pocket of a woman reporter. "I have done that since I was eight years old," Mrs. Dorf said. "I began with relatives, and I have kept it up ever since. It gives me a thrill I can't get In any other way, but thrills don't count in the end. Sometimes I go straight for months. Then my fingers begin to tingle ? I want to see if they can do again what they have so often done. "As I grew older I began to think how many pocketbooks there were in the world, and how easy it would be to open them. I began to operate In cheap stores and on the sidewalks. After my marriage I promised to re form, but I was unable to break my self of my habit. I have no excuse to offer ? I just can't help it." Mundane Fire No Treat to Miss Spore's Spirits New York. ? The familiars of Ma rian Spore, psychic painter, failed to apprise her that rubbish had begun to smolder in the ground floor hall of the former Delmonico's at Forty-fourtji street and Fifth avenue, on the sec ond floor of which Miss Spore has her exhibition. The apparition that suddenly mate rialized at the doorway of the studio yelling, "Fire, beat it!" was plain flesh and blood. And it wore spats. About thirty persons who were watching Miss Spore's methods of painting or staring at her plump and i colorful canvases, obeyed the warning promptly, joining the rush on the stairs from a golf school on the third floor, which met at the street level the exodus from a real estate office. Miss Spore, however, who depends entirely on spiritual guidance, knew better than to flee. She began swath ing her paintings in canvas to pro tect them from smoke, which already was drifting into her studio In ever thickening waves. All the time the smoke rolled blacker and denser up the stairs and into Miss Spore's studio. All the time Miss Spore, with never a glance out of window or into the, hallway, coolly wrapped up her pictures In canvas. There were 175 of them, and by the time she finished the Job the last fire men were placing up their hose. Miss Spore missed the fire completely. His Teeth in His Lungs Send Man to Hospitals New York. ? Attacked by a violent spell of coughing, Conrad Wlmier, 187 Thirty-second street, Brooklyn, swal lowed his upper teeth. His wife took him to Norwegian hospital, but physi cians there were unable to locate the plate*-and suggested that Wimjer re turn home until later, when an X-ray could be taken and the teeth -removed. He returned home, but the pain be came so Intense that his wife took him to the Brooklyn Eye and Ear hospital. Physicians there said the work would require specialists and ad vised him to go home and wait until 9 o'clock. Wimler did. At 9 o'clock he again appeared, so weak that he was put to bed while the pulmonary region was X-rayed. Lat6 that night the plate with a full set of teeth was removed by Dr. John Auwerda, fourteen hours after Wimler had swallowed them. Neither the plate nor Wlmler's throat were Injured. Woman Tramps Country 2 Yearn Dressed at Man ' St. Louis, Mo. ? How a woman has been trampini throughout the country In the guise of a man for two years was revealed here last night when sev eral transients sckight shelter at a po lice station. Qlose questioning re vealed that "he" was Grace Crow, for merly of White Eagle, Okla., who roamed in men's clothing, because It helped her obtain employment. Dressed In an old stilt, tattered shirt, wornshoes and cap, and with her hair cut short, she said she had readily pssBed as a man since the death of her parents several years ago. S : , Finds $120 in Old Sofa Holyoke, Mass.? An old sofa formed a part of a load of waste dumped near the Beech street grounds re cently, and within a few minutes the excitement in the neighborhood was comparable only to the discovery of some part of the world. In fact, that particular 'part of the worjd was never found t* be so well supplied before. Oifo'of die workmen uncovered $120 In' Wils tn the sofa, which apparently hi#- been used as a safety vault by a former owner. TheJInder denied he Plans It jMkt a tote of ttia world. life" liihi'itliV A I ' I " ?' ' TEXT ? <'hildr?n ,)b? In th* Lord f.,r u.it thy father an<i m-,'.h*r flrBt nSiw it may W w-ii v, ;-h x?*?\ may est live- Soi.* <jn lij( ^*>4 ye father!- vrovik* not to wrath lut bring i nurture .ir.'l ailiucnti El)htb 6 a-\ Our i- ?<r,f ot terest t? d ay. U is jo J '??in tHifcJ 18'h^^J dAMr* bOiim u s,'K|?Ut Un tlm (>"4 sun,airj U? fcfe. ' ?> CHH^ Rev. L. W Gosnell. ^ matter. It > the only Denihcue with a in, mi# J Israel's lor.? ? ? win lattcebtn Palest it"' was Unk.-.i ^3 of this l!i)nii?".,.?,n. 1- w-w" - ^ Is still ' when su?h honor ami uU^J wanting, the t.;,r?ls 0{ breaking up am! the elnaMl tional pros.per.ty readj^^ solved." Obedience to i-arcnta onfo children is. of course. hea^ Is enjoined ii. the text ast?f It was required under tfc severe penalties merely belllous son. Under tte should be more certainly up, children should oh'-y the?"? the Lord. The Christian &a( nlzes Oud its the "ripnal Fi all nat ural relationships,^ makes the will of a pamt k law, so hiiijc as it demandii flee of his higher (ibedleati , The fact that his "Miencti' Lord," that is. as united to Ha.) it sacred and secures tin t prompt and cordial. The mother as well as'btll to be obeyed: the j, arena J God to their children In fi|| days, and both are nee<M:t His perfections. Su?h <?!*?. here required, when tecderH, a blessing. As obedience c!ianitteriw|| dren, the parents sh-u.d be dl lzed by a judifious self-resafl rents are r.ot to provoke tits by undue hardness <>r t>y rajrt yet maintaining: pmper M Encouragement VerwH| couragemert In Colossians 15 .21 I'aulpn Bon for his ;iijun<ti'iD ijiii] lng children, namely, "M 3 discouraged." < 'hildrvn arm couraged by <iveruiufl: sevfrj as encouragement will tort' A gentleman once In! i children beyond their usa?i J They began to tret uwrydi to him tu carry them on til I because of their mu.'.itadt I not do this. "But." he nit! horses for us all." Then, cftai wands out of the hedjre them, and a great stake for himself, new strewM come into tlieir little lep.M^ rode cheerily home. On the positive side. bring up (It. V. nourish) tMr< fn the nurture (H. V. cb?? admonition of th* Wi - up, or nourishing, will wiwl pains, that they rim? bi'j require for life and po . elude the Word of <1^ God in all things, a phere, and home life m*" "Nurture." or chasten!^ ? Idea of discipline andsw*" tlon in general. for suc calculated to make life unselfish. Tl.echMUj.l'l that Is needful i? " J charge Ills duties r /jj church and the ???? "1 volves the use of wartJtfl as to the future, and Pa ' Example for J How beautiful the tb J nurture an?l a<ln,on!1t'^il those "of the Lo^- .J have first l^rn-d th J Children of God In J ther's school. Here earthly ^thers\uD;d>l love and patient ^1 .d, even to and holy klndne" " :/l children I* to I* ' ,4 Christian 'athet'i^^J nlvance at his one hand. <? ?jl bltrariness of ^ on the other, BjrtJ remote from the A monition of to God, through t (t*J should make t he &o0gi the rule of the M'? I Cf. I Sain. 2. 3). ^ajj It is evident fll up children for know least r(,gdy usually the nios ^ andpronouure^therW4 us help one y M heavenly go parents of thi- ? ' ^ dren may bP ^J'^nlti00^ cipllne and a' fuUies^ With all the d stgodi the promise A la the simpl^1 ^ found word w jt)lt J who"H: depth of 'ts lnflue? measure of - ^ uf? keynote of ? q{ ence. away, and ?e Helplines* pre but mak g bei*V ;oald we

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