The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
TheCeilarvilleHerald. w . IJ- UI.Allt. Publl*lwr. CEDARVILLA, a u i a SWORN FOES. a'li'.' > at BVtwcti yrw at aplondfd icnairn, Uu. nunocandIds fumo-were world-wide; Hep lre*:ittre«. ,wtoM 3 >t JrigU^iperkim? cold, AsiLmftnypossessions,beside, ... Hlsiirndes wereetisrtered all'over theporter ThroyghAfiil«*.,OWa*. Japan, * On limdmnl on sea "twas admitted thatbe • , ■ JV’tw* vi^y,^mark»W«,«a*!»,:..\ ; v? « teflWSb <?;t Son-up! ' For there’* nothing newunder the ami. s And this wai»fcts grievfijifo; jyw cao^ hfc - woeV « * 4 ■■’ ■ Thatmade aosh a martyr of him; ■ f ; . HU ^InOdcHfn'aOttalr. fato corapyicd him to; * share*’ '''’ *' ; Alus! with the knight of lJuUUm. 'Now, the ifeyof sun.iip was n ioily old soul, - And fondot warmcorners andsuch, •-■AlWrold, ley looks; and iShow-Cnwrediibolts Wuuld all melt away at Ills touch. , AndduTSotd'to himself, w ith ifctwrlblCftltirLsjfe •' ■ And hfljish of his sillier, so bright:* 4 J | *• If 1 se t on his trnolt I’ll soon drive him bach. ’ Si- look toyijur laurels, Sir Kn!|?ht!” ■H ft >,■-^ *l * '/j •. Hi ’>» The 1kt.i 4 hty'uut-dim'was'1is jealous, for sooth, • And Ills armies Insomber array HeWould gather fhp.ut'tdm; and boldly »<jt out •' •* *• 1 * ' ; ’ To make an attack on the dey. And tj? »*aid to .him self, w lth.-a • * ' ' ' ' ' I - terrible. Tfownf-' Ills face was a eight to see; A vttlO frF .eater. th o fle ld lw U lto rc e him to- ' yield, Aha surrender his swdrd tom e !”■ So dully the conflict goes on between ‘ Aittl-strsHfeo6srelate,- it.lh-fihed'hy fate That each shall a victory win. . For u>^oon as.tec evening houmcomc. pn’ . ‘ 'fhe'kricht liSirVcliartce torelgn; Tll,f .the iyelj, Is ijwltjjdriprn.' test hides the dawn Anil the iley’s onteethronvuipiti., —'Jtf«cpjilno Poifurdr lhK V. Independent. ANCAMBER SCARF PIN. It' Brought About tt Gruel Separa tion of two Lovers. JP&.U? h a l f a year ago I left E n g l a n d f o r , J f r a n e e In ft .singutdrly hap py mood. I hud just become en- g h g u d ' t o a charming girl, and the object of my visit to Paris was to p u r c h a s e , as presents to ray bride, a quan tity of those ar ticles so delight ful to the fair sex which Paris alone produces. Wc had an excellent crossing, and, after a hasty supper at Calais. 1 had got into a first-class carriage in the ex press to Paris. At Amiens a French gentleman en tered the train and seated himself dh rcetly opposite me. He was in a talk ative humor, and it was not long be fore we were engaged in conversation. Five minutes later he had introduced himself to me as the Marquis de Ker- garmice, and it was not long before I was fully acquainted with his opinions on the general variety of Parisian topics. ' When we had spoken together for a little, 1 noticed that he was staring at me in a manner that was almost offen sive. I lls eyes vrero flrfedon my collar. While 1 was Wonderingwhether any thing In my linen was exciting the cu riosity and interest of thfc carefaily- aUiretl old gentleman, he bent forward and saTd, in a quiet and altered tone of voice: *i beg your pardon, sir, but what » curious sfckrf pin that is that you are westing. Would you mind showing it tonic?” 1 willingly complied with his request- » cab and drove at once to (he Grand \ hotel, As Xwas leaving the bureau of the hotel, where 1 had registered, to go to the room assigned to me, 1 met the old gentleman again. He stared hard a t me as 1 passed, first at my face and than a t my pin. m * had no inclination to tronble hand as to the reasons of. his eccen- and dismissed him. once more my m ind' . ten o’clpcV J rose, dressed, and arted dnt for tiie bon- the slvoptl I bad deter mined to - As I passed tinder the pordh df the hotel, * man laid Ms hand on my shoblder, and throht a pa- - T i " iV ' . .“ f t i s ja .wansiat o f ■ arrast. acred to secure'your person.” ?.... * ’ “ 1 *m perfectly ignorant of your laws,'5" I said, ^“ wtiat am T to do?” ' “To follow me,'* perintendent his warrant, had iq§> se^-ehed and my pockgta emptied and locked me up in a cell.' It was four vnoqftAvhcn l..yw s rdes Jfe Pitifis td un-1 in sjhe a: byfl^vo :gi ,y|ig(|irnin a|^tp»tc n mtej 4 igi my answers with ence.. H% j^ i|^ ^ iie « |^ d raw jK iift’# ‘^ table a t whieh ha Wis-«ittingi‘to61c..biit ‘‘Very good. I t j* well to be frank. As a matter o f fact, you stayed there on the twelfth, as we have learned by ex amining the hotel woman’s register for that year. You left the hotel on the morning qf the thirteenth, and after- wards disappeared. Whom did you go?” ■‘I! ■ “ I stayed in Paris a week and then went to London, where 1 1 have since lived.” ' 1- .liV.V f;i “ Well, how about that pin? Have ybu’remefmbered hoyv you got jd?V}n •*TKAve been dudgelllng fp y .% -^ a ll1 bight on the subject, bat 1 ‘ipi^iffjre- taeuibcr.^ -y,r *T' ’ *• / > $ i§( fact, a number of unfortunate biccum- |itances .ire’ agaipst'you.," B y the iWay, what haa befcoine of Pierre UaHtide'.’"/ rlchstraatie, his lutstC Watt Ad blMd’thiftt he sb rop to “ Pierre Bastide? name before.” I never heard that th eS lu n g tgetsa®e,pight.tJfatyOU.v6Brc'1, and who is suspected to be your accotu- you 'really think, Monsieur le “ Do \$tn i e p I L . edi fiy l fi gficeiaadifo: eredvdous indiiler- dpdg-e,’- i sshl>r“tim tif^hpd mustered M * cbiint’ t o ' ipb, -him1;I j would1barry Can you tell me when and how this .et> wherc.^tliat ?^>Ip :comes;rfrom- ; «„ ■ days dgd lh turning <>v'er 'the Contents ’ 'tfeStnttl thw" pin." .1 did j-uot yare very inucli for’ its. Style and cttU.iom^y aetmuht for i t being in my possession at ail by the fact that I dressed in'a very gi-eatliurry pri the cveningthftt I’ljBlft'Londop.’’ . “ Perhaps.: yon\know when.and lu>W; yod eanie into possession id this b<H»k?” said the magistrate, (>i-o<lu!tSnga volunie and laying it before ihtv "s' -ij' ■ It was an old copy of the “Memoirs of.Abbe.de C’roisy/’ ivlilch I had brought tiv ir from Paris with mb and had left in my valise at tlm hotel. “Yes,” I said ,‘T picked it , up on a bookstall bn .the Qdui dee Urnndo- Augustinc about sciven year's ago. It—” “ About seven Years ago.” said the magistrate, slowly, as if-to give, his scrivener time to get rpy answer writ ten down. “ Where were you living in Paris*seven years, ago?” ■ ” 1 don’t remember. I t was Some hotel in tlie Latin quarter.” ■ “What were you doing?” “ I was trying my hand at literary work.” ’ The magistrate here rose and touched a bell, To the usher wlio answered his summons, he. gave the order to in troduce Murqitis de Kergarndeu. It was the old gentleman who been my traveling companion morning. “Monsieur de Marquis,” said magistrate, “d o . you recognize hud thnt the this pin? ME EXAMINED it t ’AnEFin.I.Y. took the pin out o f m f tie, and handed It to liiin. lie examined it carefully, turning it round and round. At last lie handed it back to me .with a curt: .“ Thank you.” “ It is a curious pin, la it not?” I said, mystified his change of manner. But hiihnade mb answer. Finding- if' igitfoaaiMb to get hVford ■out dFhtnV f shrugged my Shotrifderii and wlAled down to my tkdogbitf., C■ Whrni^k’reaahsd Fa*is I jbtt]HidiaM» I do. It is the one which belonged to my late brother, Comte de Ker- garodcc. lie brought this stone from. China and liad It mounted in the Rue lapa ix . I recognized It all the more readily inasmuch os the setting, which* is by no means a common one, was ex ecuted from a design I gave him. ” “ And this book?” “ As certainly. That book belonged to the count, 0ft tint fly-leaf is a dedi cation from the abbe to Mmc. de l ’ora- nouc, our ancestor in.the time of Louis XV . Besides, the Kergaradcc arms are on the cover.” . “Quite satisfactory. .These two ar ticles were among the contents of the valise .stole® from the count, your' brother,®* t|ie hotel in Senlis on the night he wa®murdered?” “ Theyvwm*.” \ “ Well, theh, all that I have to ask of you now la to sign the paper on which my clefrteh&t written my questions and your answers.’* ' i „ . The mWN|uls Signed .and departed, rwith a bow'to the judge and a withcr- Jng glance a t me. “ Whet’s all this nonsense?” I said, When the door hail closed on the old gentleman. “ 1 am here to question,” said the magistrate, “ not you/’ “ You might a t •least tell me of what I am accused.” . ; “Of the willful murder of Count Louis de Kergaradcc in'the hotel Of the Itun- tiifig Stag at Sctilia, oif the night of Septcmlier HI, 18 : 11 , uiul o f tlie robbery of his valise, which contained, among other valuables, the tvto articles found in yourposscssion. ” I bnrst out laughing. “Nothing else?" I said. “ Not that 1 know of.” said tlie mag istrate. “ I must ask you to sign this paper after reading it I t is our con versation just now,” 1 signed, and ns I was leaving the room the magistrate added in a most paternal tone: , “ Yefl, just try and remember how that amber pin eigne into your pos session, It will really ba wortli your While to account for iti" r, Th-»t evening 1 was transferred from the depot to Mariis.< jail. The lin t question ’ { 3 ia magistrate asked me oH I m iolloblng itaeriung wps: “What were yoti doing at Ncnlis on the night o f September 13, 1881 ?” “ 1 don’t feebiket having b«be there at all in that year.* . 1 was in Berlin, and was walking down the Behr entraese, when I passed a man whose face I seemed to remem ber, without being able a t all to recall when and where I ban seen it for the first time. Suddenly, and I'should bo puzzled to say by what inspiration, I turned round and called oat; “Hi, Pierre. Pierre Bastide!” The man stopped ua if struck from behind, and looked- around at me; his face was very pale, and he was trem bling in eyiirypait'i&f'HI*5body. A fter % eeeobd’s hesitation Hd started off run ning like a madman, as vt ■ Mir object was to^ put ho groat7distaued;ail possitdo betwedh irntWO.’ - He not/bowCve r, dCStmedfo i-ttrt ■ firr for" in' diildtig' ie^W the! Frf^d’ it,*? “ Your statement w ill he testeA Mein.’Whill let md^of .before you the positioh in-f which you' stjind. I must warn ypu that ittis a yery serious 1 Wiejij 10th| p| Jfe^m^er^'ll 1 $ 81 , C^n.l'fcnpis ^ ^ tg w iN | |^ a 'r i 5 f#»u - tile oid gentleriiari, arrived at the ltun- nlng Stag:liOteL j l i a valise. .besides a .ohimge’of liueo, contained a quantity o f ,bank notes n||4', |w''ifew of the ahti- quarlarii treasures cofr.the count |le' Was a great collector'' of curios of hil s o n g ^ J ./ I ‘ itiie 11th wiUiihi .passing by the rUMue.of ricrreBa^tide.' aittddescriliing himself a s.q oate ®kno-to the hotel ahd Apok’l p i t h e ' iw»d of. tlie liouse. ’ On the lAtfe you came, Und after inspecting several room* insisted 0*1.having the one xdjoiniug the one in tlie .occupation of the c o u n t. You re fused, supper and went to.bed at a re markably early hour. “ The next day you le ft the hotel hur riedly a t jftvti' ip the moiuipg, while it was yet dark. A t eight o’clock Bas tide came d*>wn to breakfast, ate quiet ly, paid his bill and went away with hiS' knapsack op his bapk. At eleven o ’ c I ock the woman of the house went to wake the count,-but was. unable to do so- The woman, seriously alarmed, had the door broken open, und found the old gchtleman dead, ip his .bed, with his right, ternpip fractured. All the valuables contained in his valise luul disappeared. Suspicion immediate ly attached itself to Bastide and to you. You word both searched for by’ tlie po lice, but 'in vain, when by the merest liuxard the other morning the brother of the victim recognized.the count’s piu in your ciavut You w ill admit that there is a t least reasonable, ground lor suspicion. By the way, hop '.did. you get the money td pjty yonrbiH tit the, hotel and got your ticket to London?” “ J pawned a gold watch Which hud belonged to - my father. The pawn broker lent, me one hundred and sixty francs on ft. My bill at the hptcl was uighty francs, and my ticket cost about thirty-five.” “ At what date did you pawn this watch?" “ i t wus about a week after I left Scnlis. On the twentieth or twenty- first of September.” I was not brought up before the mag istrate again until after several days. In the meanwhile mischiefhad been at workr The English and American newspaper correspondents had got hold of the stoiy of my arrest, and of the odious crime of which I had been acbusbd. The tbost aeippitltmal reports had beCh printed and, as I afteiward learned, my portrait had Beetf given by aeVcral journfcls fh Londqn and Now York, Homo imaginative “ specials” went so far as to state that 1 had con fessed and attempted anicide. On my thihl visit the magistrate re ceived me With grtajep courtesy than before. He said: ' “ 1 have examined your statement and find you have kpoken the truth. The official record o f the pawnbroker makes mention of yob. having pawned yodr watch. Tha hotelkeeper remem bers you; and, finally one of my agents has succeeded in discovering the book seller who sold yon the ‘Memoirs o f Abbe de Croisy.’ The only circum stance now against you is that of the possession of the pid.” ' “ And that, l an sorry to say, l can not explain to you.” “On the other hand,” continued the1 magistrate, benevolently, “our inquiry/ ies in London have produced satis factory results, as far as your character is concerned, if only you could ex plain that one obscure tpoint I could proclaim you Innocent.” ’ The same evening, after various for malities, I was set free. I returned forthwith to London, and went straight to the house Where my fin nw lived. I was received by her father, who said under tlie circumstances he could not tliink of letting me marry his daughter until t had completely vindicated my character. 1 turned on my licel indig nant at tliifl Injustice, and wrote to Clare: but the young lady left my let ters unanswered, ahd when I called to see hey, during the ahience of her father in tlie city, siie rafftstd to see me. It was only throe days ago that some solution o f the Mystery of the amber pia pc'UJinbid Itself to my mind. hfe did Abt notice thd close'approach of »aheftvy bmnibus / ; ‘ From Where letdod 1 heard ab iy/And theu (hb”MiftA^#'ent ■ downUnder the hbrses* -feet, aud thp grtiat wHefelS rolled qvCr his body. ” ;•Thhncxtmdrning T read in the Tagc- blStt that'the person wh*}had been run over-’in .the" FrJedriChstrnSSfe Was ” a •Frehehmau 'who hud been a resident in ■ Berlin for seven ydare; -where hto Wad acted as valet in'several hobBCis, pass ing-binder the naihe> of 'Michael Doriat. Immediately after this -accident' he hsd been'carried to- the hospital/where he had diediu the evening. 'Before dying* he liad been able:to state tha t his teal name -was Piccro Bastide, adding that . - Ss" K “ f? *. '<? »* 1 / i't «. » * PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL THE VAI.KT / HETUn.NF.P TIE. WITH A BLACK \ he wislicd to m:ike confetj-sion of some crime to the proper authorities. Befo.ro these, however, could attend the man died. Among other houses where this valet hud served was mentioned that of a certain Dr. II-— where he hud stayed three years. “ Dr. 11—— !” I cried, jumping to my feet; “ but 1 know that house, I dined there five years ago; when I was over in Berlin, as correspondent to the — . Let me think. Ah! 1 have it now.” My memory recalled-in a wonderfully vivid manner the event which happened five years before. I saw the .whole mystery in a flash. I had brought an introduction to .Dr. H----- from a mutual friend in London, and, not having been-able to see him on-the day I called, le ftit with my card. Thu next morning 1 received a tele gram from the hospitable doctor, in viting me to.lunch,at his house that day. The telegram found me in bed, and it was then only twenty minutes of the liunr fixed for tlie lunch. I jumped out of bed, dressed in haste, ..and drove off to the doctor’s house. As 1 was giving my hut and coat to the valet in the ante-chamber, I noticed that the man was staring at me in a curious way. “ What are you staring at me like that for?” I cried irritably. “ I beg monsieur’s pardon,” said the valet, with dll the politeness of his countrymen; “ but if monsienr w ill look iU thq; glass.” “ Dear, dear,” I cried, when I had ex amined myself, “ I was in such a hurry, I have forgotten my cravat. What shall 1 do? 1 say, my good fellow," this to the valet, as 1 handed him a thaler, “you must have plenty of ties to spare; run and get me one out of your room. Anything w ill do, so long an it looks tidy,” Tlie valet hastened off, and presently came back with a black tie, a ready made sailor’s knot, very stiff tend large. I put it on hastily, and giving the man another piece of money, asked him if I might keep it to go home in. “ Oil, certainly,” he said; “monsieur has given its value twice over.” * Having a repulsion for other people’s wearing apparel, I had taken it off as soon as I reached my hotel and flung it into my portmanteau. It was the same portmanteau in which, several years later, 1 had found the scarf pin which had got me into such trouble, ' I imagine that the pin had slipped down between the Cardboard frame work of the tie and its silk cover, and that Bastide thought It lost when he gave me his black sailor’s knot. In flinging It into my trank the pin must have fallen out, to remain undisturbed until th a t unlucky day. Unlucky? Well, yes, inasmuch as what ensued brought about this cruel separation between Clara and myself, Perhaps, though, a girl who could cast off a lover, as I was, on such a sus picion is not worth troubling about.— B. F. Barnes, In Yankee Blade. —Guest—“ Hec here, Walter, I ordered a young duck and yon hava brought -a tough old hen,” Colored waiter—"Xo, sah, dat .war a duck; but de dock egg was Imubrated b y a hea, sah; and when de tiiteit came but, he ’done gone swnmed ds proettviUs* of * han, '•<£*• —Emperor William baa offended the noble army of deadheads. He has given orders that no person shall be per mitted to ride free on the government railways unless actually engaged in the service of the government, and that officials allowing any violation of that rule shall be dismissed. This older af fects a great many of the nobility who have been getting free rides. T-Cfainose Minister. T s u i. said to Ulysses & Grant, Jr„ upon being intro duced to him: “ You are the son of the g r e it Gwllani i'ahd yodr place is in China, whiyro the covcrnment, would do every thing for you, because they loved your,,i ^ e r v jXlM CJhinew; ^word for the iiame Grant/ it teeros/fe one that is . pronounced “ Gallant,” which is singu larly appropriate-jtn this instance. — Dr, Livingston*’* faithful black ser vant, Susi, died recently in With a companion he carried th f explorer’s body 1.500 miles, terior of Africa to the COast^suffcring many privations and risking dangers in hostile territory, in order that he might save hismaster from anunknown grave. Parliament thanked 8usi for his per formance, and even the queen took notice of his courage and fidelity. —The great falling off in the con sumption b f chewing tobacco is mainly owing to the growth of refinement in” cities, add therefore it is the tin-foil Upd - fine-cut trade that’ has suffered most .In’vthe country at, large the amount of chewing tobacco consumed is still-enormous, but countrymen are fondest of plug tobacco, either sweet plug or the,dry kind tea t can be used ‘both to cliow and, te-sm^lse. in pipes. —Bouquets’ a re ‘ very" original this year- id ' "London society; bu t are not more admirablc'on'that/ account Tri angular itid pointedferns are concealed under a heavy mass of'flowers and are more -potent as weapons than as addi tional charms. A'"bouquet, worn at court Tjy ’ Lady Caledon recently to match her gown'was o f .exquisite pink roses with their own foliage, tipped with brown and tied with pale pink and silver ribbons. —Says a-florist: “ Were I restricted • in my gardening operations to the use of four species of plants, ,then, without hesitation, I should choose hardy roses, lilies, rhododendrons 'and clejnatis. Lilies-I should give si second place in importance, roseS the first; but if I con sider results in proportion to labor and expense, then lilies should'have the .first place. And In every garden these four plants should predominate and should be relied upon for grand ef fects.” —Home one asked Sir Frederick Leighton and Sir John Millais, among others, ns to whether there was such a thing as genius in art'without' a hnrd apprenticeship. Sir Frederick’s letter was this: “ In answer to your letter I write*to say that nothing considerable has yet been done in this world without the bestowal of« infinite pains.” Sir John wrote: “ I have qo belief in what is called genius as generally under stood.' Natural aptitude I do believe in, but it is absolutely, worthless with out intense study and continuous la bor.” " A LITTLE NONSENSE.” — “ Papa, what does c-o-l-QjW^spcll?” “ Kernel, my son," “ Andraq^'c-a-l-o- in-e -1 spell camel?”—Harper's Bazar. —An “ ad.” lately appeared in a Con necticut paper headed: “ Iron bedsteads »nd bedding.” Qnite likely the linen was of shoet iron.—Drake’s. Magazine. — Rubbing It In.—Clerk (assigning rooms to party just off the Etruria, af ter a very rough passage)— “ FrontI Show these gentlemen up to C., 0,”— .Puck, , ■ —Fashionable women who go to tha fashionable balls are more afraid of Wliat the reporters w ill not say about them than of what they might say.—N. Y. Recorder. —Almost a Proposal.—Ajoy--^-‘ ‘Don’t you think that -I- am a self-possessed girl?” ' Jack— “ Yes; bht why not bs possessed by someone else?”—Saturday Evening Herald. —She Had Several.—Mrs* Wickwirs —“Mary Ann*, If I hear o f , you flirting fr6m the window with1that policeman again we.wBl have to p a r t” Mary Ann —“ Which one, ma’am? ' The day officer or the night officer?’— Indianapolis Journal. —A Plausible Explanation,—Miss Calumet (from Chicago)— “ Why is it that you New York Men always crease your trousers?” Cleverton—“ They of fer less resistance to the wind, and we can get around faster,”—Clothier and Furnisher. — “Why, Ficlo, Fido,” called the young lady of an uncertain youth to her pug, who was growling a t an acquaint ance who had just accosted her, “to think that yqu would bark at Mr. Greneum, who is rich, young and un married.”—Philadelphia Times, —Mr, Noo Makes a Mistake;— "You have a brother, I believe. Miss Hark ins?” remarked the new admirer. “ Yes. Why?” “I have brought him a box ol gum drops,” “ Better keep them and offer him a box of cigars, Mr, Noo, He is over forty yepra aid.”—N. Y. Hun. —Husband andwife, recently married have a spat, during whioh he tells her to go to the devil. After a five hours’ absence the wife returns, pouting, but seemingly w illing to “make up” “ Whete bnve you been?” he, ask* “ To ■ flfif tnAtfcwtV’ (Two teantfehase each other down the w ife’s »oea) “ My dear, iJM®t*keAj^nffs 4 <qfHbsealkri' Yonknow 'XEMPERANCfii^ FASH»PNAND~ fisasratlmw ««r 1 — t B a d J’i ■ soi u i • tus veil Tn»»e«t ad J* j , Alcoholic f i n k h ; d. wood and coal of IwH t that drfnk und caub<’eo drink because they »tEI tog. Everybody dran on* W .fireat roeafiureftre sdrink also, und Jyh ow "a re willing y g r e a c h . liv e ) ’ . ' y ‘ Slij *■ . within reach KIUIW* , bee stumbled on what jna ^ him, the genesis of Jet) fashion and then starts the practice, fashion appetite keeps (fQ fr • ... • ceding and passing g« sponsible^for th e dn JZ have \ among u . w>e hft¥e , 1 tmJ same waxVli? i tog to be, r t it does sponsible for. the eration th a t is C°un,|k coming generations tW“ s i fluence. A nd tO beac' : Xwant to say th a t tl tion"means me, and 3 j the next roan; Apai L Christ and the cliur, « common human nut- ” aritv of the-race. “v\ “ one of another;’’ wp ) other language, acetate ners, and among th.?™1 notion ana most m * } of th e drink. '1 "“ -‘i natural law has “ every man th a t src* drinks a professor, ‘orj moter of drinking, .'me, lows. And, furthei h'ai alence the drink fa fen has, every one th a t of 1 to be counted out is ion; as a silen t bu t c.boi This is w h a t vast led| and are, “ ignorant of If the evils result vn drink were, as the wil some p la c e s .and t haps be even no>v.‘\V< and trifling, there vorat special efforts to anti actually these eviehol the sins (and drill.ns, original sin) and <a J the cause of most c fii the sufferings it oe jrti incomparable, ubi. slj The sufferings rel *vei dynes and all tin pi nothing beside all »on| drink alone. Wliei is onr show to cla, at{ benevolence if we 0hti fairly can to stop r tjil generous compas(ki;fc | for a few snlfer. j,., Johnstown! ile n cr i liundred tliousaiidpfcj,] men had to do q thl had to reduce families to po',0 ^ reputation or heals ^ even to practice standing solf-decfy ,| some excuse for an(x actually all they i •two things; First “ r ronizing the fash _ j let it be ltnf&vn tlSL,.,i k*t And then <%iAmi TiioMi ing, tis l otaas '_naj ically a prosel; ap. would naturallyetk | get others to do ^ ‘ jj the easiest th ing.j^1 very good tliirig, ^1 attendance at evQ„ | ing, to pass aro | plead fricndlily L^* get some conipt Drink is no inhe but as plain am111015 done it as is tin lro.. feet among the Jva ion-power is ent leJ strong and gref ] against it. So *M»| and forever, v *“ 'i nip, or coni hp or social 1 * great punishn hardship, and il-—- any at all, esj car the accompan; ith doing good.” ' lq p hard to qnit -m? ought on that oer? his own, and h the grip of tlilLxp ever strangloiljragc not only as resolution t. safeguard tton, not o weak o f the to the tho one, to be f minders and learning the larly as a me actual or pr inflicting ut ers, they sli keep away 1 the bar. i would lie dc porarity aflli and still me would be This would humanity a most effect, grace of Got dcsi -otosavi liony, in Tr ■ phi* 0 t A w o n o u j Christian nil the pagans] by those term whiel •hame wni
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