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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1916)
THE SUNDAY OHEGOXIAN. POKTLAm 3IAT 14, 1913. finest land in the Owyhee delta, stretching from Nyssa north for four miles and south an undetermined dis tance. Hxcesslve Irrigation from the splen did Owyhee ditch system, lack of car in handling waste water and utter in difference to the right of lower own ers has resulted in drowning about 2500 acres, while impervious clay bar riers cause the water table to rise con stantly and threaten destruction to other thousands of acres. MALHEUR ACTIVITIES INDICATE THAT PROSPERITY IS RETURNING IN FORCE ROSEBURG HIGH BOASTS OF BEST AMATEUR ORCHESTRA IN STATE Since Launching of Musical Organization. It Has Been Commissioned for All Functions of Local Moment. School Principal Is Leader and Director. Prices of Wool, Staple Output, Are Increasing and Herds of Cattle Move to Higher Grazing Grounds New Drainage District With Larger Scope Is Organized. A similar condition is imminent In the section near Ontario and those peo ple are forebandedly taking hold and will soon inaugurate a drainage sys tem comprising 15,000 acres, stretching from Ontario to Mallett, about half way to Vale. While this condition might have waited several years before develop ing, the construction of the Ontarlo- Nyssa pumping system Irrigating 6000 acres of excellent land from Snake River, near Nyssa, to a point about seven miles east of Vale, rendered the danger from sub-Irrigation more im minent. V ater flowing through the f 1 subterraneous channels of an arid re t "-. It's gion accumulates too much alkali to prove beneficial where It comes to the surface, hence the necessity for drain ; - r -r: Yt W- age. - -v , t I Erj SMaaflaaagMia. ktiwimmwiip v .iwii'iyTiinitr.'M,ir'iirt -i--lr-r 1 1 i-- --nri iif.Tiin-Timiiir-r-- I I - - j i ii i- ' - v-' T'? - 3? s - Z?5iZ2' AVAt . A VV""A' irt iTT T-r-; f . - - - - . , ' , -, ' - , v-i" x r rw x - A - ....... . v4 BY JOHN RIGBY. VALE, Or., Mar 13. (Special.) Returning prosperity, predicted and proclaimed for the past two years, seeema about to appear in Mal heur County. Wool, the grreat staple which has done more than anything else to repel the evil of psychological prosperity, is soaring- and great hopes are built on coming season prices. The tremen dous snowdrifts in the deep canyons and on the higrh hills assure grass in plenty for the shepherd's flock and in spire hope for fat mutton and long fleeces this season. While hundreds of carloads -were car ried to markets last Fall, it is expect ed that the Assessor will find more sheep than ever in the county. In the sections where cattle predom inate large herds are moving from the depleted feeding grounds in the valley to th higher grazing fields, their owners leaving a goodly store of ducats with the valley haygrower. Malheur and Owyhee valleys ar Project One of FHrst. Stretching from Malheur Canyon, 16 miles above Vale, to the Snake River at Ontario lies 35.000 acres of fertile land, of which 13,000 acres is under cultivation from the normal flow of the Malheur River without storage reser voirs. This irrigation project was ono of "the first proposed by th Govern ment, but through unfortunate misun derstanding between the settlers and the reclamation officials it was aban doned. The evolution of th present district law, meditations of 10 or 20 years, cooler Judgment and, above all. knowl edge acquired by both settler aTnd rec lamation officials, have started the community on the right track: Co-op eration among themselves and from thence to co-operation with the iVv ernment or state. Klectlong will be held In June to de termine on the formation of a district embracing this valley land and looking to the construction of a great reser voir at the Warmsprlngs, 80 miles above Vale. Government engineers as well as private experts pronounce this the cheapest and most feasible project In America. A cost of per acre-foot will store 120.000 acre-feet. The -nor mal flow of the river will take care of all of the land for two months April and May. Half enough will flow for June and there will be then 120,000 acre-feet ready to be passed down to the head gates for the remainder of the season. Another season, therefore. will in all probability see many new families at work under this system. Private PToJeet Xot Completed. Another district proposition Is on foot with a certainty of inltiat success, on what Is known as Bully Creek. Five years ago a private promotion scheme was initiated on this system embracing about 30,000 acres of fine bench land between the Bully Creek and Willow Creek slopes. The price was $80 per acre. Hard times prevented a complete and immediate success of this venture and many of the settlers have scat tered. The company built, or began to build. a diversion dam, failing to complete It in 191o. In its unfinished state It was nearly washed out this Spring. The tre mendous rush of water from the high hills carried 3000 second-feet into the diversion reservoir and out through the gates, enough water' for 18. 000 acres. Twice has this occurred this Spring, and the real run-off is not until April. With the diversion dam completed and the big storage reservoir at Lam ber son'fl, about two miles above Westfall. holding 75.0OO acre-feet, this part of the great basin will be made to produce fruit and corn in boundless quantities. The Willow Ritfer Irrigation Com pany, having a big dam on Willow River and another at" Pohl Creek, has developed a splendid fruit and corn country at and below Brogan. Through long and expensive litigation the com pany has failed to accomplish the good expected from it. It has, nevertheless. Induced the planting of more than 4000 acres and much of this is In fruit. Litigation has gone somewhat against this company and one of the older contestants has secured a decree giving 38.000 acre-feet of the flood waters. This decree, represented by S. E. C. Brainerd, of Payette. Idaho, has resulted in the active attempt to or ganize an irrigation district compris ing 10,000 to 15.000 acres from Brorfan down Willow River, taking all valley land not covered by the Willow River Company. This proposition has the backing of W. J. Scott, C. H. Oxman. Frank O'Neill and othe pioneer farm ers on Willow River and its success is assured. 100,000 Acres Involved. Thus the three district organizations practically certain of organization this Spring will eventually bring into use nearly 100.000 acres of the best land in Malheur County and equal to any in the great Snake River basin, of which they are part. Regarding the quality of land and its possibilities from Brogan and across the Bully Creek benches may be cited the expert testimony in the case of Douglas Smith et al. vs. S, M. Willis, Mr. and Mrs. Willis owning an 80-acre orchard at Brogan AV. N. Yost, an Idaho orchardlst and large applegrower. and who was one of ' ; --- - - , r ,,, ... - . ... - . J r y ROSEBURG. Or.. May IS. (Special) The Koaeburg High School probably boasts of one of the most efficient amateur orchestras in Oretron. It comprises 23 pieces and hardly a nlpht passes but what it is engaged In furnishing music for some local function. The orchestra was or ganized a year ago. It is under the Krohn. violin: C. It Cleaves, violin; Genevieve Bemls. violin; Ernest Arun. del. violin; Andrew Smith, violin; James Campbell, clarinet: Clyde Car stens, clarinet: Waldo Marsters. cor net; Claude Crocker, cornet: Clifford. Bemls. cornet; Harold Zimmerman, ito; William Bailey, flute; Everett Tester, flute, and Otto Troxel piccolo. leadership of F. C. Fitxpatrick. princi pal of the hlsh school. Following are the members of the orchestra: F. C. Fitzpatrlck. director: Walter Hercher, trombone; Herbert Carswell, trombone; Leo Rapp. trombone; Stella Krcnn. piano: Mildred Henry, 'cillo: Karl Burr, drums; Bernlce JurKens. Violin; Marcus Rice, violin; Helen corners, apple corners, in regard to pro- ! ducing excellent quality, that I have peen anywhere, n ot even excepting Yakima, Hood River or Wenatchee. and my own place at home." Said Mr. Witherspoon. of the Oregon Horticultural Commission: "Regardlns the Delicious apple, I was surprised to find trees of that age in this community bearing like these. The pear trees are in better condition than any pear or chard I have ever seen. I have been throuRh the peach orchard and con sider It the finest I have seen; there Is a most remarkable crop of peaches on tne trees. There are 25.000 acres of such land In je tnree pnjecta. The latt develop ment of the corn industry has added new hopes, to the future .f the county. Alfalfa sad fruit have been proved, and now a heavy production of corn is cer tain, and Its need for water far less than alfalfa. The land is here, the water is available, but lack two neces sities money and men. We hope to induce both to come to us and we are sure that success will attend Intelligent effort. Still another project awaiting the ad vent of some person or persons who can realize the possibilities of the county is what is known as the Star Mountain project. 40 miles from Vale on Cotton wood Creek. This creek has delivered more than 30.000 acre-feet this season. There are 5000 acres Immediately con tiguous to the dam site, and this site is only SO feet in width. The dam will hold 20,000 acre-feet at this elevation. The cost of the' dam would be no more than US, 000. It seems almost incon ceivable that so available sites as this one and the Warm Springs have not been built long since. The reasons are good but the story long. The fact re mains that rney are so and can be seen at any time. completely cleaned of hay. The prices paid were from $6 to 17.50 in the stack on the feeding ground. Some growers have realized as much as $10 for alfal fa five years old. Those matters that are in embryo and almost certain to come to early fruition are drainage and irrigation. The' Xyss a-Arcadia drainage district has been organized. Vsing rather too much haste In their first efforts, set- the organizers of the North Pacific tiers called a halt to reform their dis- Fruit Distributors, said: "I consider trlct and enlarge Its scope. This dis- the little knolis around Brogan to be trict will Include 6000 acres of the one of the best and most valuable fruit If Seven Hens Lay 5 1-3 Eggs Daily, How Many ? Cotttn Grave, rhlrkea Fancier Be lieves 420 In Ttt Uaya From Scrub Chickens In Kecord. iOTTAGE GROVE, May 13. (Spe- I clal..) If seven nens lay 5 1-3 " " eggs a day, how many days will it take seven hens to lay 420 eggs? That sounds like an example from an old arithmetic, but the problem is ot interest In connection with an egg laying record made by seven hens owned by a well-known Cottage Grove man, who, from reasons of modesty, asks that his name be not mentioned. He has seven hens which laid 4-0 eggs in 79 days, and are still at it. which he thinks surpasses any records that have recently been published in the papers. This is about five and one- third eggs a day. Although this man a well-known chicken fancier, the hens that made the record are scrubs. PEDDLER'S KISS COSTS $50 Pica of Gratitude Falls to Win Court From Assault Charge. CHICAGO, 111., May 3. Gust Kekos, of 1460 West Van Buren street, peddler of vegetables, didn't intend to be rough with Miss Henrietta Piatt, or to kiss her on the lips, he said. He was simply extremely grateful to her because the Platts were among his first customers four years ago when he began to ped dle, and he endeavored merely to kiss her hand. Miss Platfs brother. Robert, told Po lice Magistrate Kendall, of Oak Park, that his sister's throat bore traces of finger marks which Kekos had made, and the peddler was fined $50 on a charge of assault and battery. The Piatt residence is at 93S South Clinton street. Oak Park. ache, but said it wasn't like any other stomach ache, that their insides and their tongues burned. In a few mm ules the mother came In and the littl ones appealed to her and told her thejr had been eating Easter eggs. She thought of the tablets and In the front room on the bed she Xound the empty bottle. She caught the babies In her irml and ran to the Emergency Hospital, where the stomach pump was used on both children. Then physicians ad vised they be taken to the Episcopal Hospital and kept under observation. This was done and the little ones wr again given antidotes and kept under observation. They became so much better the next day that the mother begged to take, them home with her, and after releas ing the hospital of responsibility sha carried them off. The family had a happy day. Mrs. Depew rejoicing in the escape of her little ones. She left them with a light heart the next two mornings and went to work. On the fourth afternoon Howard called his grandmother and begged her to hold him. He said he wu burnlnr inside. She gathered the child in her arms and suddenly he gapped, threw bark his head and died. The mother Is agonised not only by the death of her youngest child, but by the possibility of losing her other one. The family is very poor and the, mother has -only her earnings to de pend upon. Twelve Grandparents on List. BEDMI.NSTER, Pa.. May 6.' Grand fathers, grandmothers. great-grandfathers and great-grandmothers are common to lJttle Wllmer Harold Frets, of this place. The list of living ances tors, follows: Two grandmothers. Mrs. William K. Frets and Mrs. Reuben K. Strouse: three great-grandmothers. Mrs. Haxry Frets. Mrs. Reuben Roth. Mrs. George Mood: two great-grand- "EASTER EGGS" ARE FATAL Two-Year-Old Child Dead as Result of Mistaking Poison for Candy. PHILADELPHIA, May 2. One two- year-old child Is dead and his four-year-old brother Is in danger ot death as the result of eating bichloride of mercury tablets In mistake lor master eggs. Little Howard Depew died In convul sions at his home after hia mother and grandmother believed the poison to have been eliminated from his system. His brother Roland, while apparently perfectly well and ignorant of his baby brother s death, may share nis late. TV. .-tl. n u-. r-u nlivln. in the front ,-nom of their home while their h"er. Mrs. Samuel Snyder and Mrs. mother, who has been deserted and who Jefferson Mood: two grandfathers, supports her little ones by working in a mill, was out at her employment. Suddenly Roland spied some small candy Easter eggs on the mantel shelf ! and scrambled up on the bed to get them. Near the eggs was a oottie with five bichloride of mercury tablets in it, and It Is the belief of the mother that It must have come down with the mantel drapery in the children's efforts to get the candy. The youngsters were delighted with their luck in finding more eggs than they had believed were on the mantel, and the baby crammed four of the tab lets into his mouth. Roland says he ate the remaining one. The children played for a while and then both ran crying to their grand mother. They complained of a stomach WtUam K. Frets and Reuben K, Strouse: two great-grandfathers, Harry Frets and George Mood; one great-great-grandfather, Joseph Miller. Sleepwalker Freores Feet. MARYSVILLE. Ky.. May 8 While walking In his sleep J. T. Wagoner, the 16-year-old son of Harvey Wagoner of Bourbcn County. Jumped from the second-story window of his home and In his bare feet and . night garment tramped one mile in the ice and snow to the residence of Watt Kiser. and. knocking on the door, was admitted. He did n-t awaken until after his re moval to his home. His feet were badly frostbitten and he Is suffering from the shock NEED TO REMEMBER BIBLE IS GOD'S WORD CITED IN SERMON Gideons Request Publication of Talk by Rev. Oliver S. Baum, of Calvary Presbyterian Church. s For this cause also thank we God with- out ceasinK. because, when ye received the ird of God -which we heard of us, ye re reived it nt as th word of men, but as It is in truth, the word of God, which effectually worketh also ia you that be liuve. I Thess, 2:13. THIS passage of scripture In itself is a reminder of an imperative need in our lives. "We rte.d to remember when handling the Bible we are not handling tho word of men, but ,hA wnr-H of Ood. f W The question arises. Is there any such thins: as the real word of God ii the world? Says Bur rell, there is & strong presumption in its favor. If there is a O o d anywhere in the universe, and 11 we are his children, he would not leavt us in the dark with regard to the greal problems which havt to do with our spir itual aikd eternal life. If an earthl father speaks to hisRev. Oliver S. Baum children regarding the problems of their earthly lives and discloses to them his purpose and his will in regrard to their lives, is it unreasonable to suppose that our Heav enly Father would do anything less than that? riato lamented that he was adrift tipon a raft upon an open sea. with no rudder nor star above to g"uide him, yet, pasran thougrh he was, ventured the hope that in pood time "the gods would give us a staunch boat to sail in." These thing's express a universal in stinct and a universal belief. If there is a God. he must reveal himself to his children. The presumption there fore is, there must be in the world a clear and authoritative word of God, Where is it? Well, our Bible claims to be that word of God. It lays claim to beingr inspired and that word the opneustos means "breathed of God." "All scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruc tion in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly fur nished unto all grood works." The Bible also tells us definitely as to the meth od of the inspiration. "For the proph ecy came not in old time by the will of man. but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost." Nov can this claim be sub stantiated by what we know, and if so, what are the things in its favor? I. The very character of the boolc puts it in a class all by itself. Bills of many denominations are printed at Washington, D. C. some 1-Qollar bills, some 6. 10 and 100-dol-lar bills, but there is thread woven into the textures of the paper so subtly fixed there that it cannot be counter feited. So there runs through tKe whole Bible, from the first book to the last book, a divine thread which is so ! evident as not to be questioned, and which proclaims and establishes the genuineness of the Bible as the word of God, and no other writinsrs ever have approached this characteristic Sclene Fouil In Rllile. (a) We have certain scientific state ments in the Bible in an age when there was no science. Moses tells us that ir the becinninsr, the world was without form and void. A German scientist has said Moses was a great geologist. Wherever he got his knowl edge, he has not been contradicted in putting plant life nrst. Whence came this to Mopes? At a time when the wisest of men were saying the world was supported by a great giant srand ing on a tortoise and elephant, what led Job --.j say, "He stretcheth out the north over the empty place, and hang eth tKe earth upon nothing?" Why does the Bible, before the days of tele scopes, speak of the stars as beyond number to be counted? The telescope came and it waa discovered that there were 20.000,000 suns In the milky way. I (b) Then there is the word of proph ecy. Strong bibical scholars make the claim that the fall of Babylon. Greece and Rome, as well as their rise and progress, wis mentioned in the Bible hundreds of years before it happened. One scholar says that the Bible named Cyrus before he was born and said that he would be sent to destroy Baby lon. Another says that 200 years be fore Alexander was born, the Bible said he would be the first king of Greece. Tyre's Destruction Foreran. When Tyre was in her glory, the Bible prophesied she would be des troyed. Then think of Egypt in all her splendor, and remember her fall and ruin were prophecy regarding the Jews. For 2000 years the.ce people have been persecuted. robbed and maitreated until you wonder how a single branch can be left on earth. It seems utterly impossible to destroy them. Have you ever thought much of this proposition: "While other nations of antiquity have passed, the Jew abides?" There are promises and prophecies in the Bible which depend upon the con tinued existence of the Jews, and if they had perished from the earth you could not sustain the Bible. Twelve million or 15,000.000 Jews by their ex istence today testify to the Bible being the word of God. It was also prophe sied that the Jews would return to Palestine and become agriculturists. There are more Jews in Palestine to day than since they came from Baby lon, and they are buying up the land and the Zionist movement is attracting the world's attention. It was also prophesied that the Jews would . re ject Christ and the Gentiles would ac cent him. This has been fulfilled. Then there are some minor things not often referred to: For example, going into the museum at Cairo, Egypt, the guide points you to the paper reed (papyrus) that centuries ago grew on the banks of the Nile. He then reminds you that it no longer grows there, and adds this la the fulfillment of prophecy. How did Isaiah know, centuries be fore, that the time would come when the papyrus would not grow any longer on the banks of the Nile? Then the tourist goes into the museum at Con stantinople. You are shown the Siloam inscription discovered by excavation at Jerusalem in 1880. verifying records in K.ings and Chronicles. Going into the British Museum, you see the Moabite stone, which also verifies the records in Kings. It used to be said by hostile critics of the Bible that the battle of the four kings was a'fable, until the spade dug up a royal library In the valley of the Euphrates, bearing date of 640 B. C wherein was shown the names of the four kings. The Vitality of the Bible. The Bible appears all the more won derful, says Van Dyke, when we con sider that it is the work of et race not otherwise potent or famous in litera ture. Josephus is a fairly good his torian, but not comparable to "Hereto tus. Thucydides, Tacitus or Gibbon. The Hebrews are not lacking in talent, but why is it in a world of literature, the only thing that countsis the Bible? v ho gave the book its -itality? The book of Job was written before Cadmus brought his Greek letters into Greece. The book of Job was 8000 years old when our Chaucer first "opened the springs of English undefiled." The book of Ruth was 2500 years old when America was discovered, anil millions read these and the other books and find them as fresh as the morning. This book carries in its life the secret of perpetual youth. Shakespeare's words are applicable here: "Age cannot wither nor custom stale its infinite variety." The ordin ary textbook lasts 10 or 15 years, and the encyclopaedia Is out of date after 16 or 20 years, but this book lives on youthful forever. How is this to be accounted for? The Pruksm and Candor of the Bible and Evidence It !Vao e-rer Written br Man. (a) There la In the Bible an ex pressed hatred for sin. This is not' human. Man does not hate sin. He rolls it under his tongue as a sweet morsel, and this strong antipathy to wards evil would never have been writ ten by man alone. b) The portrayal of character Is not as man would have written. "Paint me as I am," said Cromwell. Human paint ers or writers do not do this. The Divine Word docs. While the Bible speaks of David as a man after God's heart, it also discloses his sin of mur der and adultery. The Effect of the Bible. (a) The inspiration which it gives men. A legend of St. Dunstan says: "On a certain day. as he sat reading from the scripture In his cell, the harp which hung against the wall sounded without hands, for an angel played the gaudeate animl to the great delight and solace of that holy man." The legend becomes fact in man's life, for many in reading the scriptures have had visions and heard music which could never come from merely human sources. Whatever we find in the world of achievement that bears the mark of greatness has the Biblical inspiration for its beginning. In sculpture, there is Donatelto's David; there is Michael AnRelo's Moses; in painting. Raphael's Ktstine Maaonna ana Aiuriuios noiy Family: in music, Bach's Passion and Handel's Messiah: In poetry, you have Dante's Divine Comedy and Milton's Paradise LobL Emerson says that Shakespears leans on the Bible. Mat thew Arnold says that Milton wrote in the great style drawn from Biblical sources. George Eliot says of Ruskin, "he teaches with the inspiration of a Hebrew prophet." A volume of 300 pages has been pre pared containing Biblical passages in Rusktn's writings. "The Bible." lays Ruskin. "was strictly conclusive and protective to me in all my modes of thought." Hallam says Bunyan was father of the English novel. His great work, "Pilgrim's Progress." as every one knows, is based on the Bible. We all know how Tennyson and Browning leaned upon the Bible. In just one of Browning's poems, "The Ring and the Book," there are about 600 allusions to the Bible. Maeauley. referring to the statesmen of Elizabeth's day. says, "their eloquence was the eloquence of men who had lived with the first trans lators of the Bible and with the auth ors of the book of Common Prayer." Perhaps there never has been so much power and pathos and sublime elo quence compressed into 267 words as those uttered by our own Lincoln in his Gettysburg speech. We all know how Lincoln's two books were the Bible and Pilgrim's Progress. What does that sentence "with malice towards none and charity for all" remind you of? Bible Affects Conscience, (b) Some books appeal to the intel lect, some to the sense of humor, some to the dramatic, but the Bible appeals especially to a man's conscience. It is spoken -of as "the helmet of salvation and the sword of the spirit, which is the word of-God." It cuts as & sword: pierces to the "dividing of the Joints and marrow." A young man wrote to his father from college. "I have found that I have to give up my vices or srive un my Bible. The Bible is also a book of comfort. Charles IL Spurgeon said. "I have tested the word of God in great physi cal pain, and there is no pillow lor i aching head like a promise from the word of God." Dr. Haldeman tells of a man who was found with a broken heart, and be said "Give me the Bible to lay my head upon." They said. "What do you want to lay your head upon that hard thing for?" He re plied. "It is the only place that has a voice saying 'Come unto me. all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest.' " How many heart have been comforted by the Hlh chap ter of St. John. Ian McLaren said he read these verses at almost every sick bed he attended, and he never repeated them without a new and pro founder sense of their meaning. Fa ber said of the Bible. "It lives on the ear like music that can never be ior- gotten like the sound of church bells. Its felicities often seem to be things rather than words." Kaulbach's great cartoon represents Luther holding up an open Bible like some Statue of Liberty enlightening; the world. It is a true conception. "Take our own country," says Seward, "the existing Government of this country could never have been In existence without the Bible," Count Okuma. the Japanese Premier, said at the celebra tion of the 60th anniversary of the beginning of Christian missions In Japan: "Modern civilization has its rise in the teachings ot the Sage of Ju tlea, in whom alone we find the dy namic of moral progress." Where the Bible has not gone there Is darkness Where it has sane and been heeded, there ia light. Christ spoke of the Bible as th truth, as the word of God. If Christ believed the Bible to be the word of God, this is ground enough for me to believe It also. There is also a scripture statement given by our Lord that fills us with hope and with great encouragement. It is found in the 10th chapter of St- John's gospel and the 35th verse. "The scripture cannot be broken." What a comment the past centuries make upon this word of Christ! The Bible, untouched, un scathed by fire or by sword, abides In all of Its fullness still. Last eve I paused beside a blacksmith's door. And heard the anvil ring the vesper chime. And looktnp; In I saw upon the floor Old hammers worn L beating years of time.. "Hfw many anvil, have you had." ..id I. To wear and batter all thce hammer ao ?" "Just on.," said he. and then with twlnkllsc eye, "Th. anvil wears the hammer out. y know." And so. thoocht I. th. anvil of Cod's word For wires skeptic blow, havt baat upon. Yet. thou.h th. aolH ot tailing- blow, was heard. The aavil is uahannsd, tha hamznars goas. I