THE ' MnTTNTItf G OREGONIAN, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23,' 1901. 8 CONTRASTED THETWO MEN ARTHUR VENVILXE, HIS MONUMENT, HIS MOTHER, AND HER THE LAST HONORS PAID HOME IN SEXIWOOD. j -X.H PRESIDEKTT JLXO ASSASSIN COM PARED BY REV. J. E. SIMPSON. .Crime ot One WamiXot Due o Hered ity', Imt "Was Logical OutgrroTrtlx 'at Unbeliefc. The moniing service at St. Mark's Epis copal Church "was a celebration or the Holy Communion in memory of President McKinley. The service -was marked -with solemnity and attended by a large con legation. The sermon was preached by Che Rev. J. E. Simpson from the text, St John xvll:3: "This is the life eternal, that they might know thee the only God, and Jesus Christ, -whom thou hast sent." "If we could only recall a few short years of history," said the speaker, "we could find ourselves at a time and in a home where a "baby born to American parents' brought joy and thanksgiving to an American family. If tvc could go back an even shorter period and place our selves In a home on the Continent of Eu rope, we could find another babe, born to bring happiness and light to a European house. Two babes, though born at differ ent dates, fresh from the hand of God. And yet on a day when both have grown to man's estate, and after years of op portunity, they meet, one the President of these United States, a strong, respect ed, useful citizen and godly Christian man. the other an anarchist with murder In his heart. Was there any difference in the babes to account for such diversity of development? We do not believe in the fatalistic view that one -was born under a blessing .and the other under a curse; that one was born with a true and noble, nature, and the other with perverted and degraded instincts. We believe that one of these lives in its advancing and ma turer years consciously chose to be good and to do good, and looked to God for help; and we believe that the other life, consciously and unconsciously identified Itself with evil, and made no choice for God. Believing that the power of choice lor good or evil, in its ultimate, is free and uncontrolled, and that man is -wholly responsible to God for the use or abuse of it, we must conclude that the one guided his actions under a constant sense of re sponsibility to God and man, and that the other guided his actions on selfish prin ciples or at the dictation of the impulses of the moment. "The late President believed in God, and possessed a wholesome reverence for an over-ruling Providence, to whom he was personally responsible. His murderer re pudiated God and personal responsibil ity, leaving himself without a landmark to guide himself through the mazes of life, save his own desires. The one is the logical outcome of faith; the other the logical outgrowth of unbelief. "There are conscientious agnostics. There may be conscientious atheists. But of one thing I am convinced: the man who 4oes not believe in God Is In a very dangerous position and has the seeds of anarchy In his heart. He who denies the existence of God denies also any responsibility on our part to a su preme being. There Is no life beyond the grave. There is no authoritative stand ard for human conduct here. The ten commandments and the golden rule are simply beautiful ideas drawn from the Christian myth. There is nothing any where to bind a man nor to prevent his doing exactly what he pleases. Why should we be good or pure or law obeying, if there is no God and no future life. This Is the logical position of the man who does not believe in God, and its name is anarchy. "Of all the honors conferred upon. Pres ident McKinley in life or in death, this is the highest, that he was permitted in an eminent way to witness the vitalizing and ennobling power of a sincere belief in the mercy and love of God. His death proves to the world that through life he knew God and Jesus Christ, 'whom he has sent and that in very truth he was a partaker of the life eternal -while living here on earth. All the glories of his life and Administration will in years to come sink into comparative Insignificance when contrasted with the Christian influence -which his example in spired and which his last few days espe-" dally gave forth. "We commend him to God's eternal keeping, in sure and certain hope, look ing for the general resurrection at the last day and the life of the world to come. May he rest in peace." . -"SOWING AND REAPING' .Anarchy tlie Result of Free Thought, Soys Rev. Albyn Esson. Rev. Albyn Esson, pastor of the Rodney-Avenue Christian Church, East Side, preached yesterday morning on "Sowing and Reaping." His text was from Gal atlans vi:7. He said in part: "The thought of this text Is not diffi cult to comprehend. It reminds us of the parable of the sower as recorded In the eighth chapter of Luke's gospel. In explaining this parable our Lord said that the seed Is the word of God, the soil the hearts of men, and incidentally indicated that the avenue through which the seed reached the soil Is hearing. This suggests what Is meant by the term heart in the Scriptures; but other passages make this more apparent. We read of thclmagina tion of man's heart, of the meditation of the heart that Daniel purposed In his heart. Ttfe are admonished to seek a heart of wisdom. The heart is indicated as the seat of understanding. We also read that fMary pondered certain things in her heart. We observe that It is with the heart that men believes unto righteousness. The heart, according to the Scriptures, imagines, meditates, pur poses, gains wisdom, understands, pon ders, thinks, believes. But psychology teaches us that these are all attributes or functions of the mind. We conclude then that sowing the seed of the kingdom was simply imparting the ideas contained in the -word of God to the minds of men through preaching the word. This being the case. It is perfectly natural that our "Lord's last command should be. 'Preach the gospel to every creature, make dis ciples of all the nations.' "This method of extending the dominion of Christ on earth is the method ap proved by the universal experience of mankind. Every reform, real or imagin ary, has been carried forward by such moans. , "It is well here to note the relationship existing between belief and character. I have heard character defined as ideals (belief) plus will power, and I regard this as a good definition. That belief has nearly everything to do with character has been Illustrated again and again. Some cases in point: Saul of Tarsus be came Paul the Apostle through a change in belief; a similar change lifted an ob scure monk to an undying place in his tory in the person of Martin Luther; the lives of suffering service which Carey and udson gave to India were the incarna tion of their belief concerning the duty of the church to the heathen world. And so illustrations might be multiplied indefi nitely. "As the relationship between belief and character Is so close, we. as -.citizens of this Republic and the heavenlyNkingdom, should be interested In the kind of seed that is being sown in the hearts of men today. Looking over our own land and beholding so much that we can commend, a people that are in many respects the salt of the earth and the light of the world, -we feel that much good seed has been sown on this soil but it has not been all good. The murderous hand that strikes down the Nation's Chief Executive is the fruit of some sowing. And whence and where this sowing? We believe that we are acquainted with two sources whence this sprung. They are, first, the coming of a vicious class of foreigners to this country; and, secondly, too much sympa thy shown to this class by the American people and Government. May I suggest a third contributing source? A systematic attempt has been made of late to break down faith in 'our fathers' God, and sub stitute for It a materialistic philosophy, which rules God out of the universe and regards his cognition of man or his pos sible intervention on his behalf as an absurdity. This view disposes of man's accountability to God, andf in my opin ion, contributes to the forces which pro duce anarchy and every kindred evil. An archy finds atheism and agnosticism con genial soil. I believe human experience teaches that where there Is no fear of God there is little regard for man. "The Bible of the Christian teaches him to fear God, honor the King, be subject to the properly constituted insti tutions of government, and Indicate that there Is so necessary conflict between his duties to Caesar and those to God. The American Government is founded on the principles of Christianity; so, from a pa triotic point of view, it is vastly better policy to sow the 'seed of the kingdom' here than to spread the doctrine of doubt. But should policy be considered the full ness of Christianity's jurisdiction? No; for the firm foundation of God standeth sure. The resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead has not yet been read out of history. By the resurrection Jesus was proved divine, and the Father placed the stamp of his approval on all that the Son had taught. This is assuring to us, for j it enables us to know that our system of Government Is not essentially wrong. Indeed, this revelation of the divine will enables us to know the fullness of truth which is able to make us free indeed. "Concerning this materialistic philoso phy we may say that it abounds In un supported, assumptions and unproved hy potheses. Concessions from its own rep resentatives showjthat It Is a. suggestlpn a case not made out. " "Our text indicates that we are to reap what we sow. If we wish to reap in joy, let us sow bountifully the seed of the kingdom of God, so that fu ture generations of our countrymen may sing from the heart: Our father's God, to thee, Author of liberty, To thee we sins. Xoiig may our land be bright With freedom's holy light. Protect us by they might. Great God, our King. "IT IS GOD'S WAY." Dr. J. R.T. Lathrop Analyzed the Words of the Dying President. At the Grace Methodist Episcopal Church the Rev. J. R. T. Lathrop yes terday morning spoke from the words, "It is God's Way," basing what he had to say upon the passage found in first Corinthians xlv:33 "God Is not the au thor of confusion." The sermon was a phllosophyical argument, viewing from many sides the relation of God to the problem of evil, and searching for the meaning which tha dying President must have had in his mind. It Is not possible to set forth more than the drift of the sermon, which was listened to by a very thoughtful audience. The minister,' after describing the solemn scene In the room where the Chief Magistrate lay dying, the man who was leaving questions, National and international, solved and unsolved; questions as pregnant of good or evil as any which had ever been before the world; the one man who seemed to be of great est consequence to the Nation dying, and that not only at" an epochal hour In the world's life, v but at the hand of an as- I sassln; and While dying saying to all the world: "It is God's way." The min ister asked: "How could it be God'a way? How far was the President right? How far was he wrong?" "These are questions which lie deep in philosophy," he said, "and no answer, perhaps, can be satisfactory to all. It may he the President had not thought it through; that it was an expression to which at the time he gave utterance, because of hia recognition of a Divine Mind who superintends all things, and be cause It had been his lifelong custom to submit to that will. Very probably this was the case. For fa was in no mood to think. He was dying. The analy tic powers had not taken up the sentence and traced It through all its ramifications before he uttered It And if so, it is just as well. For, the sentence is a reflec tion of a faith accepted and tried for many years. Mr. McKinley profoundly believed in God Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth; and in Jesus Christ, through whom God is revealed. As a student of history, and an observer of events not yet history, he had never departed from the almlghtiness and all-goodness of God. Now he was the subject of a diabolical and mysterious affliction. Perhaps he re membered Garfield, and Lincoln, and we know he remembered Christ, and these words flowed from him: 'It Is God's way.' "We he right? In what sense? How far was It God's way? "To answer such a catalogue of ques tions, we must flrst posit the fact of God, and admit him to be such a being as he is set forth in the Scriptures, al might, all-good, and all-wise. These attributes will determine his relation to all events. "Being all-good, and all-wise to the same extent that he is almighty the follow ing proposition Is true: "If he Is all-good then is he in no sense the author of evil. Nor is he any wise the approver of evil; nor does he choose evil ways to accomplish his pur poses. This must be true, otherwise he himself is evil, and not holy and perfect as he declares himself to be. Not being evil, or the approver of evil, he does not cause murder, or approve of murder, but condemns it, and says: 'No murderer can enter the kingdom of heaven.' Upon this proposition God did not approve, nor prompt, nor use the assassin Czolgosz. God had nothing to do with that evil act, for God is not the author of con fusion. If he is, he is not God, for he is not good. This position is invulnerable, Mr. McKinley did not mean that God had used the murderer to rid him of the earth. We know his conception of God was altogether different from that. -We have, therefore, reached a most' important truth, it is this: Evil Is not of God's cre ation; he hates it; from the first he has warned against it; he has never ceased to persuade every soul from it. While this does not make evil less It makes God more more to our understanding and affec tion." Here Dr. Lathrop entered upon a phil osophical discussion of evil, and the doc trine of fatalism, and various forms or Calvinism, and the Arminian conception of God and man. In discussing the hu man will he said: "The human will is sovereign in morals. It Is endowed with the power of the alter nate choice, and in the moral domain man is absolutely sovereign. Not that he can create moral truth; not that he can create moral law; not that he can escape con science or God; not that he has absolute intellectual or physical sovereignty (for he has not) but moral sovereignty. That I is he can choose good or evil, at any time, and there Is no power to prevent him. He may not be able to execute his choice outwardly, because of Intellectual or physical limitations, but he is sover eign in the choice. This is the view which Mr. McKinley's philosophy and theology would lead him to take of the awful event in which he was the chief factor had he that day discoursed upon it, for both in his theology and philosophy he was Ar minian. We therefore reach the following clnclusions: "First. The assassin was not an instru ment to execute the will of God. God's plan is not such as to require the as sassination method to consummate it. If the assassin were an instrument, the man who sold him the firearms, his pa rents who gave him birth, his coming to this land, Emma Goldman in lectur ing before him, and all that despicable brood, were links In the necessitous chain. We abhor such a conclusion. Were It true, then were the assassin not guilty; then anarchism and anarchists are nec essitated; then would we have govern ment and anarchy both existing and nec essitated, and each necessitated to de stroy the other. Reason is not muzzled by such logic. "If the assassin were an instrument in God's hands, then is God the assas sin. If the act is defended either upon the 'basis' of fatalism or " Calvinism, then the 'crime is God's, for that which one Is compelled to do, he is innocent for the doing. The assassin had the power of the alternate choice. He chose evil. It was not God's way, but the assassin's. "I admit that whatever takes place does so under Divine Providence, but that Is quite another thing from saying that everything which occurs does so with the Divine sanction. God permits many things which he does not will, nor desire, nor approve, and which he curses. Hav ing made man as he has, and the universe as It is, for reasons deeper than we have time to discuss, he permits evil and evil Institutions and evil men of all kinds. This Is his way, and in that sense Mr. McKinley -was right. But while he per mits things which defeat for the time his purpose, he has a plan. There is a subline event toward which all creation moves. And in the seeming subversion of this plan for the time by evil and evil spirits, there are t.wo things which God always does. "He gives to his servants sufficiency of grace In the hour of their trial, and he makes the deeds of wicked men to praise him, turning to account that which sought to overthrow his purpose. This Is God's way. 'The blood of the martyrs' Is made to be the seed of the church; and al ready the world can see what marvelously purifying and elevating Influences have, by the power of God, been going forth to the ends of the earth from the awful tragedy a tragedy hatched amid the forces of evil, and executed by a malicious man; and executed with the power of the alternate choice in his possession; a trag edy every vestige of which is contrary to the will of God, and despicable In the eyes of all good men. It was God's way to permit It, to sustain the Presi dent In the midst of it, and It will be his way to bring the Nation and the nations, through his Son, Jesus Christ, to a life so blessed; that, in the next hour, would every soul of earth go God's wayt hu mand life would everywhere succeed', and evil would cease." J Palpitation of the heart, nervousness, I tremblings, nervous headache, cold hands i and feet, pain In the back, relieved by Carter's Little Liver Pills. (Continued from First Page.) his country, these were the cardinal prin ciples in Venville's career. He spelt duty with a large D. His pleasure was the service of others; his glory the patri. ot's death. We admire the man who can stand unquailed amid the turmoil of bat tle with the bullets flying past him and his comrades stricken and dying. Ven ville abundantly proved that he could do this; but he possessed heroism of a far higher order. His was the heroism which prempts men to suffer uncomplain ingly from day to day for the sake of a great cause. "Arthur Venville as a young boy, In the period of life when most of us are shielded from responsibility and sorrow, endured the pinch of biting poverty. His sensitive spirit braved, the taunts of his school mates at his meager and unusual cloth ing in order that he might gain the rudi ments of learning which were necessary to fit him for the duties of life and the privileges of citizenship. He was obliged to leave school at an early age and work for a living, but his meager income was not squandered on pleasure nor even on comforts for himself; it was given in its entirety to relieve the burdens of those he loved. The time came when to all his other cares was added the great trial of ill health. About the time of the Span ish .war he enlisted In the American Navy. A mere boy of 17, he had at that age met and endured more trials than have fallen to the lot of many a man of 'mature years. He was assigned to duty on the Yorktown, and with others of the Ybrktown's crew was sent to Baler Bay, In the Island o fLuzon, to rescue a small garrison of Spaniards who were besieged by Filipinos. This expedition was a work of mercy in keeping with the life and spirit of our young subaltern. I have rea'd with deep interest the story told by his superior officer, Lieutenant-Commander Gillmore." Mr. McCamant "repeated the story as published, and continued: "Sick and wounded, Venville was left In the hands of the savages at Baler Bay. His comrades were hurried off and after thrilling experiences of adventure for a period of eight months, they were finally rescued, but his lot was less fortunate. "The meager evidence which has been gathered together as to his fate indi cates that he lived for nearly a year after the action at Baler Bay, but that he was finally put to death by order of Novlclo, an insurgent General. This is his story It Is touching in Its pathos, and it has Its side lights on which we may not linger. Such, for example, Is the anxiety of his poor mother, awaiting through those weary months tidings of her boy, hoping against hope, unwilling to believe that she was never again to see the face so dearly loved. "There seems to be a dispensation of Providence, or perhaps I should say, a rule of fate, that the path of progress must he ever baptized with the blood of the brave and the true. Without the shed ding of blood there is no remission. This is the law of progress and the story of the ages. "With the great body of sufferers whose lot It Is to prove their fidelity by their endurance. Arthur Venville takes his stand. "I am of the opinion that American con trol of the Philippines will bring with It great blessings to America and to the world. The influence of the great republic in the Orient will make for higher ideals, for larger opportunities, for a loftier type of manhood and womanhood than that which has been there evolved in the past. It will mean a broader sphere of vision, enlarged usefulness to Americans at home. When we seek to give credit to those to whom credit Is due for these I blessings, we do well to honor Admiral Dewey, General Otis, General Anderson, General Summers and the army of brave men and true whose victories over Span ards and over Insurgents have made American occupation possible. We do well to honor the memory of General Lawton and the heroes like him who were slain in battle beneath the flag of the Republic. But let us remember that the sacrifices demanded were paid more large ly Viv tho rOnst! tn whlch Venvlllr helones j than by the great leaders whom I have named. He gave his life for his country, ' ...A. V.I t.l -n.n .. n fn Vioy?ai ntiA Vio UUl HIS IUI a.a a. &ui "i"ut. uivi i..uu that of the soldier who Is slain in battle. Wounded and sick and captive, during the last year of his life, he probably did not see the face of a single son of his native country or of the race from which he sprung. Taunted, abused, insulted, cruelly entreated, he was denied the sym pathy of women which makes all trouble easy to bear. Amid all these trials his faith never faltered and there was never a time when he considered for an instant the propriety of winning his freedom by serving in the ranks of those who were fighting the armies of his country: his faith and his patriotism came out tri umphant in every conflict. Murdered at last, in violation of the laws of war, he sealed with his blood a life which had known little but self-sacrifice and the service of others. Can such a life he called a failure? Hear what the 'poet has said: I sing the hymn of tho conquered, who fell In the battle of life The hymn of the wounded, the beaten, who died overwhelmed In the atrlfe; Not the Jubilant song of the victors, for whom the resounding acclaim Of nations was lifted In chorus, whose brows wore the chaplet of fame. But the hymn of the low and the humble, the weary, the broken In heart. "Who strove and who failed, acting bravely a silent and desperate part; Whose youth bore no flower on Its branches, whose hones burned In ashes away. From whose hands slipped the prize they had grasped at, who stood at the dying of day With the wreck of their life all around them, unpltted, unheeded, alone, "With death swooping down o'er their failure, and all but their faith overthrown. While the voice of the world shouts Its chorus Its paean for those who have won. While the trumpet Is sounding triumphant, and high to the breeze and the sun Glad banners are waving, hands clapping and hurrying feet Thronging after the laurel-crowned victors, I stand on the field of defeat, In the shadow, with thosa who are fallen and . wounded and dying, and there Chant a requiem low, place my hand on their pain-knotted brows, breathe a prayer. Hold the hand that Is helpless, and whisper: "They only the victory win Who have fought the good flght and have van quished the demon that tempts us within; Who have held to their faith unseduced by the prize that the world holds on high; Who have dared for a high cause to suffer, re sist, flgt if need be to die." eorrmoMT ioo it the mocrin ouiat t co. cmsmmti A CASE OF EXTRAVAGANCE. OU never cut off BTTTTOr" cake of soap and throw it awayl Yet you pay twice the price of Ivory Soap for a cake of "tinted" toilet soap less than half as large. Your little cake of toilet soap costs you four times the price of Ivory, for it lasts only half as long and costs twice as much. No money can buy purer or better soap than Ivory. If it came in dainty paper, all scented and colored, you would pay fifteen cents for a very small cake of it. Speak, History! Who are Life's victors? Un roll they Ions annals and say Are they those whom the world called the vic torswho won the success of a day? The martyrs or Nero? The Spartans who fell at Thermopylae's tryst. Or the Persians and Xerxea? His judses or Socrates? Pilate or Christ? "In this world we are not always able to see things as they are; our standards are often distorted, but there Is another world where worth has recognition, and those of us who shall be fortunate enough to find a home there in the days that are to come will assuredly find In a place or high honor in the heavenly city this young hero whose devotion to duty we celebrate today, "Memorial exercises are of little avail unless they teach the living the lessons to be drawn from the lives of the de parted. Shall there not then be for us an inspiration In the study of this unselfish life? Shall we not learn anew the great lesson of the brotherhood of man? We cannot tell how many heroes' hearts are hiding beneath ragged coats. We cannot tell how many souls about us, like the soul of this brave mother, have been knighted with the nobility of sorrow. May our hearts be larger and our sympathies more tender. May we love with a deeper devotion the country for which Venville died. As we recall the burdens he un complainingly bore, may our hearts be lighter and our shoulders stronger to carry the trials imposed on us." Unveiling? the Monument. The entire congregation proceeded to Milwaukle cemetery to dedicate the mon ument erected with money contributed by Portland people as a reward for the res cue of young Venville. It is a plain mar ble shaft on a granite base, the whole being about six feet high. The Inscrip tion gives the date of his birth, which was January 8, 1SS1, and also the words: "We know not where his body lies, but we do know that his spirit is with his God." An American flag completely concealed the monument. After music by the pupils of the Sellwood public school, J. E. Reinke and Professor E. D. Curtis pulled the flag to one side, displaying the monument. Then Mrs. Mash, the mother of the boy, silently decorated the granite base, while the assembled people watched with sym pathetic interest. Mrs. June McMillen Ordway, whose son was the flrst Oregon boy to lose his life In the Philippine Islands, stepped forward and placed a beautiful wreath of laurel over tlie mon ument as her tribute. Other beautiful tributes were then heaped about the base. Rev. W. S. Gilbert, who was chaplain of the Second Oregon, delivered a touch ing address. He said In part: "I remem ber when the soldiers I was with captured San Jose that we came to the dungeon In which the captives of the Gillmore party had been confined. Their names had been Inscribed on the walls, and un der the floor we found a diary contain ing a description of their sufferings. It told of their marches and treatment, and urged that if the record be found that every effort be made to rescue them. The soldiers tore the prison Into pieces. Ven ville, I presume, had been there. "We are to dedicate this monument to the memory of this hero boy, who had been a hero in the common walks of life, and who gave his life for his country. I would dedicate it to patriotism because of the devotion of Venville to hia country; to his high character as a Christian boy, as a boy of noble parts, noble Impulses and unselfish motives; and to the larger - v s ', ;sm "It Is a crime to experiment with the health of the people," say3 Dr. J. Henri Kessler, manager of the Old St. Louis Dispensary at Portland. "If I did not know positively and abso lutely that my new home treatment will cure all diseases of men, even when all other methods of treatment fail, I would consider I was committing a crime to make such a statement to the public. Nothing is so precious to a man as his health nothing so horrible as an Insane Asylum or the grave. Little Ills, if not promptly cured, often result In obstinate chronic diseases. I know that my new dis covery is the most marvelous treatment ever known, and I Intend to glvo Its benefit to the world. I Intend that every man, woman and child who comes for treatment shall have it. I propose to tell the sick, absolutely free of charge, if they may be restored to perfect health. I would rather be a benefactor to the sick man than to have the wealth of Croseus." The above are remarkable words, but those who know Dr. Kessler, and have tried his treatment, can vouch for their absolute truthfulness. He restores the wasted power of sexual manhood. He also cures to stay cured VARICOCELE. STRICTURE. SYPHILTIC BLOOD POISON, NERVO-SEXUAL DEBILITY and all associate diseases and weaknesses of man. To these maladies alone he nas earnestly devoted 25 of the best years of his life. He makes no charge for private consulta tion, and gives each patient a legal contract in. writing to hold for his prom ise. Is it not worth your while to Investigate a cure that has made Mfo anew to multitudes of men? If you cannot call at his office, write him your symptoms fully. His home treatment by correspondence Is always success ful. Address, always enclosing 10 2-cent stamps: J. HENRI KESSLER, M. D. ST. LOUIS DISPENSARY COR. SECOND AND YAMHILL STS. PORTLAND, OREGON three-quarters of a new liberty that has come to the country through his and others' sacrifices. So this moment will stand for all these things and will teach a. lesson of deep and last ing significance to whoever looks upon it. It will teH to passers-by the story of this boy's sacrifices, and point to his no ble character and patriotism." The exercises closed with an earnest; prayer by Rev. Jlr. Wright, and th sing- ing of "My Country. 'TIs of Thee." Tho rain did not Interfere, and the entire ex ercises were well carried ou. Poured the X,Iiuor In the Gntter. Philadelphia North American. Ten gatlons or whisky, besides two bar rels and 15d5 bottle3 of beer, were emptied into a -jewar yesterday by employes of the Pennsylvania Bottlers' Protective As sociation. The liqaors, together with a gambling layout, had been confiscated on Saturday night by agents of the Law and Order Society In the Mackey speak-easy. Whis ky and beer were turned over to the Bottlers Association by order of the court and emptied according to custom In sut'a cases. Into a stwer. J. J. Kyle, the Camden bottler, whue goods were found in the Mackey speak easy, will be called upon to pay the Ttot tlers Association 3 cents per bottle be fore the 1565 n:pty bottlea will be re turned to him. Several strange bottles were found In the case3. Including ex penses. the discovery of Mr. Kyle's boU ties in the spoak tasy will eost him near ly J10O; almost as much as the speak-easy, keeper's loss. What a luxury Pears' soap is! It is the cheapest and best toilet soap in all the world. AH sorts of people use it, all sorts of stores flcli it, especially druggists. Regulates the menstrual flow, cures leu- I corrhoca, falling of the womb and all the I a $J boltle from your druggist to-day. MEN No Cure No Pay THE MODERN APPLIANCE. -A poaitiva way to perfect manhood. The VACUU1T. THEATMENT cures you without meUlclne o all nervous or diseases of tho sneratlve or gans, such as Wst manhood, exhaustive drains,, varicocele. Impotency. etc. Mun are quickly re stored to oerfect health and strength. Wrlto for circulars. Correspondence conildentlaU THE HEALTH APPLIANCE CO . rooma 4T-48 SaiB ueposu umiuuiK. jewing, .tuc... il .H 5 ""'" I " JIB M Ull I I I "'""" " " ' Sfinn BnBinri'iwwi ii' nnvtir "tt rim mi mini hi him