The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
• * The -THE BATTLE .g ^ T O a ? ■ -rRMPERAN . r "■' • " ' * ^Bufc I don’t w w t to WO J BUp* . "■ . . a . j » UudllV.oftkflBfttfclfirri«plrKttnUApIniv. -irr~ W, H. BLAIH, Ushar, A MAN QF WAR. CEDARVILLE, n o ,’ (.ocortUn* THE VALUE OF jbND-HORKI si '<■ I ne’ >ymeri? In impartrtvith hahas won’t e'xngge" culareq^ nrney in' ulman. ttiraa ybn kno any g a Ion pright, , u,,m \ _^ jAQY Cloio. AUiwice- « £ ' y&S*A ^ “““^Ywon’t exnggefsfc^them, an _ One token of advancing intelligence th a t he won’t try to in civilized nation* and especially iri cheat you a t card* « our own, is tlie increasing respect paid , A p t a duel if you seemed bored with to ' handwork. The foolish contempt, bis company. in ulhic&! it was once hold has, to a j a steamer a t M cnqfcttlor.theran down! great extent, passed away, and the !to New (Means, and the^captain offer •killed WoritmaVnaw'rtcrives»degre«*d t o introduce me t o ll s ] of honor and consideration that would “But I don’t 1 pose yon. i Bah. sup- am Ar- P I *S- itilHIufMlid commanded Even newt stronj ker i r f f Bnabairtd; lie ' divisii sen the arker j,tterJpP|luaV. to occupy-T"d'^m^aer level former. His efforts, it is assumed, aro directed to the higher life of man, while those of the former are^ centered chiefly in supplying his material wants. Thus they are hot expected to make many invasions on each other’s, terri tory, and tlia excessive division of labor ^rtehtiGes tne -distlacftoji',-' The sep ^ ration;^ however, is''1perilous' to the # i K down Vicki Davis, the biggest liar in the late southern conted- litssmaswdkiMHheuB ir.m iaiM is rcelyjHPMPfiaiids whe: hointJHo ttiji A flb isas ijihoro and cji^W^B^over ^ a r fP^wberri I swath •shore after, the gun-boat battle above. “Then you were iA>,tha&bBtt]£?& “Do you doubt m; I shall be happy Hicks, chief clefk ^ will consult with any ohe'yoi name)’’ ., ‘‘PjS,-ho, hO, n°» mijpri . ... tioriyriur Word in thdleast. Tt was h hot p 'J Ah! ho,do. p th e “And where washer first fight?” . “At Baton Bonge,hah. I sunk three Yankee gun-boats thar.” “Why, that’s curious. Porter says tha tfbA lJrjflf^ 5* f i l i a l * “Sah!” • “Porter says th e . Arkansas'was built a t Yazoo City,” A WORD TO GlftLS. Porter coi ovfi d bp somistaken.' “* '-Mistah manded .» ■s Wne by Lieut. interests of both. Mr. Buskin says: , person befi ably.” kansas Brown, of the old i.o£;i I t was, salt. I had commit fifteen confederate gun-boafsd1 “Fifteen? Why, Admiral Porter’s naval; history «<&»?there <Sn&?1 eightif’f- * i i « f * i | $ , , “Mrfery iah? .Noy-gWheard'o|.Port«F>; “We want one man to always be thinks iug, and another to be always working, and we cpU one a gentleman and the other |n s *operatiy|,|. wffitrea®, the w o rkm a ||| ought pftew tq j f h f thinkljpgV "and thfe, i,thi^rer t „, w•— to bp "-working, Add. &«h ^cnxl^ \ H« » * . , he gentlemen in thebferiseb^. ‘M,,POspo ^ $ JQr l £ t y o d ^ b e r c I t is only by labor that thought can be • ^ e re fifteen, that settles it, o f course. ,made, healthy, and only by thought tha t Jo rte f probably left obt seven just to labor can be mode happy; and tlie tiyo Bpetf, majpr, ,. cannot 'be separated , with impunity.’.! j : I whs on the Beauregard, ;:;Wd suiik One half of this truth is becoming very ■ three of your craft, and then struck a ' gdnerally realized, liPOce the spresdof . w*dSf *»$????*■ down ourselves,» p ^ w h r t h j t a to m , t° odneite •the I *'««* ***** say# th e ttnmn ram Mon- . whofe .^ o p le .^ T h a t. hand-yvprW ! th§ BpampgAwi and sent ^ her to the bottom,” I protested.’ “Sah, you will please call on Col. . HicksT’ enid the major, as he stiffly iArose and handed me his card and .•movedatyay.. -ff I simply changed chairs, so as to keep it' Porter on this boat?" .- f ; '■ ‘•Will meet us a t “No." “Then,- <j sab, I you to ’day ttiencH d ^ iA iifjilttk ,' will bevpleisejl to ;^ p h i|e 'a ll;detajij»..l You- ' h |v e 4 ;'^ue^ianed§ m^ ’j^raetty,^ pah!” J ■ ■^ j - r a f l i A awaaii I/TT9^ Every Young Thoraugl Uatlieuiv Although and said op this my little might perhaps i ” one who has not noticed practical discussion. Girls, your -heads a re all right, you have plenty of brains, plenty of splen- d|d|i^d?d^r#ni|lt | Ovalities that, if you knew how" t p Bring out and develop them, would odd greatly to the general 'good a n ^ y o u r hi^iplmssa AhdAhriSSij; Tl»o trouble is j- o u don’t know how use your You i^K lik e fiHHcmi ly and grem^M ttH ||^p(0 n of them, andWflifiv li rusty as time wish I could fflSk8V®eh you^fcel tha t jinc^ucnchable fire fop d not le t you rest ned a first-class col- 1 itil your minds were could use the tools God has given you to build your own ofiUM charactcr of those !*& r l W ' f i f Do you,ever think tha t it is your duty ^ soMniifc and cultivate yourself, es " l peciany-if you contemplate marriage, which of course all well-balanced young women do?, ..Yon liayp np.right tohatHd . dtfwn an '' nAol^i gl^^^vel|pEsd!)nM>d! lapy more 1 |^ ia ^ n j|^ f p § r |l^ p e l lx I,to Jafrkfabwl- should have their knowledge increased, their thoughts aroused, their minds de veloped, is now admitted by all intelli gent persons,' and the facilities for this are constantly multiplying. But it is not yet so manifest that those whose ordinary occupations tax their brains rather than their muscles require the opposite kind of development Yet they do need it, even for the best suc cess in their special employment. Dr. Brown Sequard, an -authority on the !brain, ‘ls said to haPe’affirmedthat “the left side,of the brain, which co-operates with the right hand is more fully de veloped than the right side of the brain, which correSjjihttdCwitl^'thelelt ^ahd.’^ EvidanjOy tkis JA 'diia to the- greiior ^ exercise which is given to the right!City. Sod hand, and if it shows anything it i s ; you know. oemy. ijjfbwigai ,v „ a # n o ," * „» Oh! No, no, holG’ How cou lal?” ’ surprised atvthe (TnSei;w ithw h iehyo ii| “See my friend, /sah, and the sooner grasp subjects, before out of your reach, j^t’s over, the hetlcri!’ #* , , ,. Every gijd.ought to.have a thorough ?I went in and, sa^. the c^lef pietk ^od -(raining '’•c-la^skls' and - mpthe- . told him that I had been challenged to matics; then tliey "would he ready to' fight a duel by his friend. j dive into their chosen study or business “Tell him to go to grass,” ho replied. >and bring up sompfliiug wprth thetime “But he—he—*’ and labor. ^ “He wasn’t five years old when the ] Education makes the moral nature war broke out. Bigges’ liar in America. 1more sensitive toiithe true, the . benuti- The only tiling you need he afraid of is % ;ful, tlid perfect. As for more practical lending him five dollars.*.’—Washington -things,- an 'educated business woman .becomes twice as bright; a domestic dimply ijoi" them and Star. in the shade, and dropped the major’s card overboard. He was absent about twenty minutes, and then returned wip ing off his chin. As near as I could figure he had taken whisky. “See that bluff over thar?” pleasantly queried tlfe major as he sat down. , , “I d a ” , , ' “Well, -1- htfd’ a battery of ten guns thar for several months; and it was my own eye which sighted the. .gun that >Tb#,:.np the Yanke* giin^oat^Moqnd affair that, but' war Is r, The shell which entered A FATAL KISS. tha t the use of the band produced a di- her furnace and exploded resulted in rect effect.ugon the development of ,the brain. Tliw fsJriot strange wiieri wC remember that xqqpuril ^exterity in any province requires the exercise of many faculties. The observant bye, the en forced attention^ the act of comparing and weighing and deciding^ the habit of perseverance, the unwearying repeti tion,in order to ,.attain.>excellence, ore all.efTorts of the brain, and yet no good hand-work can be accomplished with out thtm. The -fact is- t h a t , manual Work; and what wo call., mental work, are'far more closely allied in their op erations, and more $interdependent, than we, ore accustomed to consider them; hnd wri riori'e df ua kaoW how mtich ^bought itself, and all mental work, aro,improved and. strengthened by the very efforts winch are’pu t forth, in >th e ' interests of manual employ-/ ments. NoL.only the brain, however, b a t the morfit isense, the’heari 'arid life Itself are all pnrifflfd rind strengthened by the conscientious performance of band' world I t is'said that a large pro portion of the inmates of Our pris- onji are ignorant of any handicraft, and doubtless this ignorance has a shard in leading them., to the commission:of the crimes for which they are confined- Industry drives away a multitude of evil suggestions that find an easy lodg ment where there are, idle hands. Doribtless the knowledge of a trade; bringing with ft self-respecting habits, has saved many a youth from tetn tk>n and Influences which would have be«a Jria.ruin. Apart from- 'this; how ever, the happiness, the contentment, the iridripehdenM tnat results from adtria knowledge of hand-work are In valuable to, every,one- ,,H it.b e the dally occupation, Intelligently pursued mud well performed, it is’Wftnmdidion on which the promotion qf the worker is only limited by ’his Industry and tatetits. Many of the most errilnsrlt wad useful men have begun .thalr lit#* in ^iis way, a n d 'a lt their prosperity and valued can be trrieed back toi tho thorough kaowl«4ge arid skillful l>iir- auH ef some branch of manual work. lf,‘however, the life-work lies in quite , a different/ direction, ths po»*e»«lon, of aome maaual ability will still be of calcniable #aluri. Deft and skillful fiqger* arp a blessing to any map onto any womkn.—Phlladclpnli Ledger. -: ., FswtUsr KreeU., Fasser-l^f—W iiat kind of that? * Small Boy—I ain’t quite sure,, bu t 1 think he’s whht'e ra lird a watch dog of the treasury, “Humph! Good dog, eh?”, “YossOr, Ho won’t lo t anjr other dog take anything ho w ants htesoitt’—Good Hews. ... „■„ ... . .... —AHatural Supposition.—Ted+-“Ona of the dime museums advertises a phan tom hen." Nod—“What docs she do?” Ted—“Lays ghosts, 1 suppose.”—lif e ’s Calendar, a ’dog is the death of soven huridred men.” ''"'■'“Let’s Bee. ' tnajorf i -If I remember aright, the Mound City disaster occurred a t S i Chrirlos, on the White river,” “Sahi” “And the shell exploded in her steam chest.” . " , “Sah!” “And the killed and injured numbered pnly one hundred, and eighty-five,” . “Sah! . You sccmito doubt my word, and I therefore——” - “Oh; but I don’t, major! Let mo beg of you to believe that I don’tt I was simply wondering how Forter could make so many blunders in bis history.” “Porter, sah? Never heard of Mistah POrte’r in my life. In the commissary department, I prosumo.” I managed to change the subjectafter alittle. and by and by the major went to sleep ill his.choir, and I got away from him until evening. Then, as I 'sat smoking, he dropped into the chair be side mcrand Bald: “Ever meet Mistah Farragnt, of ybur Bide?” “Admiral Farragnt?” “May have called himaelf such.” “No, »I never did.” “Sorry. He’d havo probably told yon about the battle on the rlvef above New Orleans:” “Were yon there?” “Sahi’1 f*That & you were there, of course.. What command did yon have?” “Commanded the Confederate navy, •of co’ae.” “You did! Why, I thought Commo dore John K. Mitchell Commanded there.” , ‘.‘Look heah, sah—do yon doubt iny word?” “ph ipo iiia, major! How can I? You were there, and ! wasn’t I have often rtad of the irohclad Louisiana o f that fiee i” t t . n „.. “ She was my flagship, sah. I steered ber when she ramuiad and sunk six' of Mtstkh Farragut’svesselL” 5 “Is it potslblC? Why, Porter says he did not even figs agu e ,bu t drifted down the river and blew up.” , ; « ‘“Sah! Porter, sah! Will your friend Mtstkh Porter s* tfe ryou In this .emer- geacj?" ^numdfjd.Hm major, as he jumped up. 1 “Sit dbWMr, htrijor;' Wdaae tttti doWrit Porter baa evidently gqt i t s i t wrphg, or was actuated by sectional malice. Please give me the particulars.” ' ’ . Bpt he went-away and:I did not see him again until next morning. Then he dMwbto me just as we were passing aq Ma»4 and said ;,. , « . ' “I had One of the nottestlights of the War ori tMat' isiaud. I had two regi- menta of cavalry under, me, and we whipped a Ynnkee guh-boht fair ind square and captured her.” ’ “Indeed! Well, you hustled around a good deal. - You wars a commodore, a •oouadnder, agencral of infantry and a general of cavalry,” The Terrible Effect, of s Soldier’s Orste- fal Caress- ’ Washington has a wealth of war rec ollections that probably never will all get into print. One of the best known, of the younger newspaper men ;of the* city has a face thpt buqrs many of the marks small-pox leaves! *“I was a lad of eight during the war,” he said, “but I rcmembfC tlmsoldierabuingAuajp^red my way~home from’ school with my brother, and we stopped to see the sol diers that *Were quartered in the city halt. There were hundreds of them ^here. The'placC vtow used M ' S-'hes-' pita), and the criminal court and old circuit court roomswere full*o f oritsoc* ---- - ............ copied by sick soldiers. They got. V>“re 8i>.te»nyAnK“ 1Fc,lt a" d attractive - - :ITe urimavried womonTn this dountrywhen woman'twice as quick; a society woman 'more fascinating; a lover more lovable. If you are not yet out of your.teens and think your school days over,-let me im plore you to start this very day, to study and work with renewed energy. Don’t marry, don’t think yourself pro- Pfrcd fo r..any great work unless you feel 'that 'you'have a mind trained to- kfcepyotr from;thq,quicksands of Ignor ance and doub t—Jean Bollins, in Chica go Inter/Qcean. Kt, . ^ > _ ue st io n a n swe H e p l Ufo Why So/lWnnjr''intelligent and Attractive Wom^n i|i Tbtu Country..Itemaln Unmar- riedLC-' 1*"® '3 * '"■* *'i-s .:Tho.iqdit^c .of ;Ahe .Cha^tauquan.rc- ccntly received from an" unknown cor-’ r^sponflcnt the question, “Why are A n New Occupation l-'or Won Iss'dciatipn^ iI|6ridoh; scarcely any thing to e a t and I believe sqme of the poor follows died' for Want' of proper food. My brother and I wore very sorry for them, and. when .wo got homo we told our mother about i t She asked us if we were Willing to go With out our supper rind give it to the sol diers. \Ve were,, and she filled a basket with food arid I carried it to the sol diers. They rite What I had like wild beasts, thejAvere so ravenously hungry. Some pf tljem cried and one .of the sol diers kissed me. I went'home and in a few days Wos'dowri With the smatl-pox, My brothers’and sisters a ll took it tOo, and one of ray sisters died from i t ”-—, Washington Post '. ; ■ .... v t SCRAPS FOR SOLDIERS. , I t is told tha t ope day during the war a squad of confederates, wearing, cap tured blue overcoats, rode up tO a house in Tennessee .arid greeted the owner with:- ‘AVell, old man, what are yon, feb or Yank?” puzzled .by rtho bine coats arid gray pants, .and riot knowing to which aririy his visiters belonged Old Caution answered: “ Well, gentle men, I ’m nothin’, very little Of t h a t ”—New Orleans New Delta, t fiav. AnriitxEAD L ikdsat L oxo , who was B,. E< Lee’s chief of staff a t the time of the surrender a t AppBmatox, died' recently a t Charlottesville] Ya,f He was born in Campbell county, Va., in 1827, and was graduated from the military acadecdyrit Wrist P6irii in 1850. At the outbreak of iba war he waa a first l(a«etfnaot<qttaohed to the Second artillezy. He resigned and became ,a major in the Confederate service, and a y e ir tsAek.waa made Gen. Lee’s milBs- rysesretary with the rank Of colonA. In September] 1883, he was’ promoted to bet brigadier grinerat of! artillery. An attack of paralysiejicapsed-his ’-re-1 tirementfrom field service in NovrilriP her, 1804; He Wrote aHMs of iOWi. L#0 tfvh^rili Wf» pwMlsked |n, tf8#.r , ?. T he late Geri. Joseph E. Johbsten; was a distinguished figure in tliri sdkth^ there urc mqro men.tiirin women?!] An* editorial ip a recent issue of that.maga zine contains the reply, from which we quoted The argument is that tho nlper cultivation of the taste and of tlie crit ical faculty has extended in.our day far heyoud the social-limits within which it was confined oven, .at generation ago. The standards by which it1judges peo ple aro higher and severrir, rind accord ingly tlic number Of satisfactory and complertientriry mates *fo r those who possess | t is; greatly reduced, since, wide as lias been tho extension of re finement, the circle Of the cultivated and -the delicately' iscneitivo still ex cludes the.great m ass,o f, society, .with whom the finer triinds and the choicer spirits find little congenial association: Their own intellectual and spiritual de velopment also tends’ to make them self-»ufflcicqt, and it opens up te them occupations and brings to them distrac tions which make compririt&tloh lo i the loss of the support and, companionship Of marriage.! In prqof of t^ia general ization, statistics are adduced to show that the decline in the marriage rate Is among the more cultivated, and not among the humble and simple. I t is, undoubtedly t.true,, also; that In our day the spread of refinement and of intellectual cultivattbri, in this country more especially, his? -been greater among women than among men-Criti cal foreign. visitors generally agree Ip; the opinion that our American Women arcssuperior to fhem cn ih those partic ulars, probably because"they have more leisure in which to -gritffy their ufribi- ttbri fgr such improveaeaL. • The yast majority o l the readers .of books ars wotrieri, not merely 6 1 fiction, bu t a t all' literature which cultivates -the* taste ate oaVghtcns .the spirit The meb, .willingly o r unWillingly,,ara engfged tii ri fight for material pntes; the wom- Stt ate acCtimalatilig ihtellecitaaV and Wpk'teal trcmiures by the treading and tt^e thought for.which they havegreater j . . u , . . . . . . . . . . „ pp^rirturiif^, Arid.'&us rite ctefttitig d e rn army during th s la te «lviijWir. JI* ariprirWibri betWeeu thrimsfflves was a graduate a t West Point and had serired in’111’oHdk mid •'M'^xlidVrith )ao- tab le gallantry. Like Gen. Lee, a Vir ginian, he resigned his army ^omirilaf sion When tils" statd' deftarWl tor the oonfedm'icy^ a»d after participating in the first Bull Hun h a conducted oprira1- tlohs UriUi teiieved? ttbia riohhfiandlby jhfferribri Davis;*' This proved disas trous to* the t South., Johnson ranked with Lee arid Jhckson for military ge nius and effleiriney, abd w ss a Wold# typaof :th«cdltured American soldier. He was one of The chief mourners: a t the futferal o f Goa. itw ra id # *his bM adversary, with whom he waa on term# of friendly prirsoual Intercourse and the men with yihwur tljsy . are brought into association,. l! “ ■<.„ * $ V a1lf -J *.^ - ’r ■ a, <i ' z .'M bs . Aa-v^H- ?Co»|ki.iS| said, iwhpiri pep lately, read before the PolittcU .Equality Chbfbof Jametwjwri, If/ Y.: *‘I Wohdd ’havri-VIrOftisa -grorir’i fatete bom fidentof their own powers; more, tgristr ful of their own intuitions; more equal to cdriyfng forward their oWn Work In th eh owflWfcy. To-this snd ll kriow Of .■pothiijg moija wlscaUousi tliaa tho ex- pSridriccs afforded hyta«well-fconducted rilnbr I t yotf stick to t t iong^ enoU^i, ym w th weisbdtolihtf# yfcmjsympatiiutf rinlati^dv and tihte teof kturisk- edoutofyO a;” « v Tlndsar, o l tha EsttleCreckBaoItarluni. nnMt emphatically in c<h oflHo sexes, For one rcatoq is ln y thing like separation te r of education, it Induces a tional feeling, as of oneparty "ainst anotiier; and, again be no such tiling as a of knowledge on ttiq part of one sex over that of the other, and un- less our young men and Women are trained together there will be parts of th e education of each more or less neglected. Girls who are'.educated Ja convents are never broadly educated. JJeitbpg ».rf unit kind of school* which separate them from' the other educated. JrJSMSjJa. _ sti highe ' t tii saying edge of a certain class belongs to wom en because they are women, and knowl edge of „a certain superior class belongs to men befiuse they are men. It is not .sex but ability which should gov ern. ^ Jjifms^:|Dg,iip,of f a p ii^ s those which •lufesitlife- xdjW .hlj^triqniqi#laAd.Ak1dly and happy are those in, which there are hotll brothers and sisters, and there is no reason why any portion of the hu man family should be isolated during .school life ;pr ithereafte^ j Wpen girls Ire brougM i i c | » * 4 ^ f " 1| hoys in 'competition fp c ^ la ^ s fii^m g fer prizes, "they look fjupipl ili^n |m i fhfey are, fel low hmnap l|fcings^i|fs|eqd df trying mfik® aii ,siiripres’sibn upon to win from them admira- ^ o n l !v'The men and the women who are dhrijV'best educated morally, mentally and physically are those which have the .advantages of co-education. Ths b $ ie -q f Aomori lias been in taking Knowledge rat*'steoud hand, and since they have come to think and investigate for themselves'they havo'-miide noble strides, not' Only iri their own bolialf, but in that;-of humanity in general. Give women the same stimulus,j for study and the 'sattle1conditions for ac quiring an education, arid they 'will be in the best position to makeAUe most of their own lives for themselves, the world and.their Creator.—Reported. by Helen L. Manning. . .... , men. women U abput tq open a new , business as con- traetdrri^for the care ot city conserva tories, window boxes, balconies and' <small gard^is^. - |t wHl personally sup- and super^ten^'«iroijrs, employing men only for the (figging. Once* a week one of the lady gardeners will calls to i,attend!-,Ip ,-Jtffe conservatpties. valuable plants in rooms, etc,, and brdersforwhatristojbedoa^in- til she comcs again.. People wishing to dose thfeirs toivri homes rleavC their plants- in tliO'charge of the ladies. SWahltey ifhrti(Jultrirnl> Icollege ‘is to open a ladies’ departmcnt, so popular is this!*work .becoming ,]among* Women, when the' women will jpccupy aseparato residence anddevote tlie days to theoret ical and practical work, FOR FEMININE READERS,. ” " ' '43 - -1 . . T here are 40,000 women studyiug in tlie ’various cdllcfees Of the" country. Arid* yet it is oply twenty-five years since the first college in t^e. land^vas opened to women. In London -tlic number o f iwdmen on school boards increascs and this year 13 women have been elected in ' 11 differ ent- districts, In three of these the women elected, are themselves school mistresses. " ’ THe woman’s clnb of.Chicago has giv en $1. ”>00toward an a rt scholarship for women. It will be invented "by the di rectors of ths a rt institute and .used to help deserving students through a three-years’ course *a t the local “a rt pphool, „ ,!'f . M rs . J eiiwii ; M, L ozier , tlicrac^vly- clected presidririt of SoroaTs; li a physi cian and the wife of a physician. 'She is admirably fitted for the position. Mrs. Ella Dietz Clymef, who resigned th s pteiidsney on sqcourit pf ill health, has accepted the office o’ first vice president. F emihiks sdneation is making rapid strides in France. Higher examinations were riot formerly Opcn to Women,* but the m w university fo r women, which was started a year or tw o ago, is be coming a very beneficial institution, making it pOssible fo r womeri te teach in higher girls’ classes. ■» Miss' C orzow , a graduate’pf Toronto (Ont) Uttfvet‘iifty,‘ihas beeh acting as lisristant pttblkt analyst siririri'het grad uation in 1888. She is also taking the lectures a t the Toronto wofrien’s medi* cpdjtegri;. aa far a a her ’professional dutisa will allOw, arid intends to enter tile mfedltel prOfessiOti iri dud time. ' DA B az )E KofTinr,AliioKr4iAXt’M, a yoring Mohammedan woman, whoMvas born in tha. Crimsfw rricentiy passed a cmlitable -examtaafckm jqs physician (madsurgeonrat Odessa, and iww eqjoys the cUstinctidnAf'helrig the first woman bfHW cteed to'dri^agb iri;theffrafetlec of «MriMne|Arip4«tetqod by sfsetertb na* tions. “ o Miss L ovi SA PAVrtOSft, isiiperitltend- jkofetirion.1. dhe. ritfdirid Florenoe, Nightingale a t Hi. Thomas hospital'm Lortdtra, arid Was tm'e of,tlie riumSVriLthe Egyptian expedition, . On her. r e t u r n s w a s drioorated by the queen with tWVoyilted arose, aticf’wss later engaged In tha Jvttng Hopkins h o sp ita l, Tktp *EAUTII . J «l)il»^.l (,1rV Stolwre. wind beami: Vflicn zrcund In the And baliC’d with »UU glifce it wcl! as a f Do you? But oh, what mUerab iWheo i>s*sed throi, A«d.fasWoncd.told] yo pever a drop ol In Would youl Behold the barley, ul Wh^n ?e(i to the ho] Dr even the doifs. , Tbcy fatten, but nevj po-you? Bere are* v 4 t HL^heos The Lora wade them all I But not for tho poisons 1 •—Dr. Jfl. T. Cass V, A BIBLICAL^ ICow D efender* «r th« to r t Scripture, to II argrxthStM ® th®se<‘j defend the rum powd to Say that if the, use been considered sinfi been prohibited in ei Scriptures. They that the denunciatio against those who I that woes are denoj 8rds,. bufc nothing, is whri^ipe wine! Wj slso^p’olnt tc> the i Galilee,,the first of 1 of Christ-? where Ik winoticrt,'the weddtij .claim tl»at if the ' wrong, lie certamlj creised Ilis miracubj it. Again, they pq fact that wine in was then a.commoil te-da#; #< l >riUnipj argument by sayir1 mod cannot contr becomes a druukaa that all other md who do possess ths trol, #hail.b»depr|J of drinking in mo . This sounds we bear clbse^analyfil of Ili|»lijai fiayB'VI w« hayaixbwf brifeI ancients knew riej lng or of distilling of alcohol; it had] . from the wine •duced by fermcnl bly was not A win tine, or. in any ofl of the ancient wf over tweiv.e.per is more glan 'pt< preportiptfwas l 'They had* zibthj wlii6ky or brand tilled liqqprs; in I TliesaftarrimentJ has’murilr^probal summers of Pall ' ripens there weather—to exp tempt to formenj from tiro rilfiohe of fcripciitatioD during, vfnbgarj .Hence,; it".is prl gi-ape ,juice Wl boiled, aiul tils earthen jars, a l which means is Such wine woul verj' slowly; al continued to tlq of itself xvpulci and the sirrip \ | with Water begin. I t is undoulj sneient worlc and possessed when drank tl argument, fori ence to drunl The evidcncel never intoxic| will not stanc amination; thl fact th a t th* consumed orcl juice, preset haps a very s | and which w" of immense i time to prodi The difflciJ as quoted el (hat the cdtuf regarding it ly the samel tha t there tilled liquo* ness was h i vice it is say that dll (hen as cof time. The to take the I the Bible, and See W judgment modern ah No argud snmes thc| . Jng a t tho Even if tlte the largerJ certainly by the in< triesris gh tlm ritr. v bmmiy, 1>, texieatingj which wex
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=