f HE FULTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURQ, PA. TURKS PREPARED KEYSTONE STATE IfflmnoNAL l WORLD'S GREATEST WAR TUC nilPCIHlIC I FRENCH GAIN LOST GROUND IN DANGEROUS STRAITS FOR LAST STAND IN CirwruvCninn JUlWAliJUlUUl ML nUUUlnli Lesson (By F. O. RKLI.rrtB, Acting Dlrnrtnr Sunday School Course, Muody Bible tltute, Chicago.) French Claim To Hold Advances Made in Belgium Still Gaining In Champagne. LatestNewsHappenlngsGather ed From Here and There. Defense of Constantinople Turn ed Over to Germans. r. SORT ORDER FIGHTING J O. I. ' r -l 1 5 t Claim to Have Stopped the Ger man Flanking Movement BORDER MAY BE CROSSED Unofficial Advices Say Capital Of Au Ulan Crown Land Has Fallen. Austrian Attacks In Carpath ians Reported Slackened. London. Except In the cent nil Beskld Paw of the Carpathians, where the fierce Austrian attacks have mod erated somewhat, the Russians are now on the offensive along the whole 1 .U ..1. ln.1i litlO lengui ui men r a li i-im-ij ivuft rrom tne liallic ea to tne iiuummuuu border. Apparently they have definitely tlls- pos( d of the German and Austrian at- tempts to outflank their two extreme wings and having turned are making slow but steady progress westward Czernowitz Reported Taken. After retiring to the Dnelster river, the Russians again bae crossed into Itukowina and are uiintliciiilly reported , to be back In Czernowitz, which mili tary men say is extremely probable, as th. v Birpn,1ir h!.,l mniured Sadauora. a few miles t the northeast of the part where the Germans still hold their ca; ital. Farther to the west they are ground. again in possession of Stanslaus and "In the forest of Le Prctre. a t.er have crossed tve Lukwa river, a for-1 man attack was repulsed easily. In ward step which. In the opinion of the region of Baclonvilters and in the military experts, probably will compel t region of Celles, our attacks made the Auttrians to evacuate Bukowlna. In the Beskid, Tukholha and L'zok Passes, the Austro-German are In pos session of strong positions whence they are continually attacking the Rus sians, while in the western passes, especially the Dukla, the Russians are o.i the Hungarian Elopes, where the fig'.:ting has degenerated into trench warfare. The Russians are sending large reinforcements to thia southern line. I Russian Advance In North. In NoiUera Poland the Russians are advancing slowly westward from the Nlemen river ami the Germans are fighting a rear-guar I action. Only at one i oii'.t is the German attack being seriou.-ly pressed apainst the fortrtss French continued attacks north of Le of Ossowttz. Here the Germans can Mesnil. All their attacks were re use their railway from Luck and there pulsed and our positions were main Is a good road across the marines, but talned. witn tneir armies falling back cn "Attacks on our positions at Vau- either side they cannot remain long, quois, east of the Argonue. and in the British military experts say. Forest of Consenvoye, east of the To the south, according to a Berlin Meuse, failed. All attempts to dispute dispatch, the Germans have evacuated our possessions of ground captured in Myszynlec, which is right on the East the last few days in the district of Prussian border, northwest of Lomza. Badonvlllers failed. Several night at- while further west, near Mlawa. they tr.rks also were unsuccessful and over are believed actually to have crossed i.poo dead Frenchmen are lying before the border after a defeat at Przemylsz. our entanglements." The Russians also have attacked the Germans east of Plock and near Skier-, nit-wice, southwest of Warsaw. I Russians Claim Victories. Petrograd. The following olTicia ommunication from the General Staff of ti e Kiissian Army was issued: "Along' the entire Nietuan-Vlstula from obstinate fighting continues. In certain sections our troops have made progress, particularly In the region of Mocarze. where we captured six ma- chine guns and four otficers and sev- eral hundred soldiers,. We also cap- tured a number of German troops when we occupied the fortifications at Konojkl. "In the Carp.it' lans, at Zakllcryn, southeast of Cracow, we captured some fortified positions of the enemy "In East Galicia on March 4 the Russian troops entered Stanlsiau, hav ing successfully crossed the Lukwa." i Concerning l.nports. riCCT AnVAWrCC1 Washington. Agreement by the LAil3 rLttl HUVAKbLO members of the Textile Alliance to con- . 'ditlons under which the British Gov- Battle With Turkish Warships De- ernment is willing to permit exports fending Approach To Constant!. j of blackface and merino wool from nople In Prospect. 1 Great Britain and her colonies to the r United States was announced by the Tnrfnn The Russian Black Sea British Embassy. The British Govern- fleet is steaming toward the Bos- phorus, fays a dispatch from Rome. Should the Russian fleet attack the Bosp' orus it presumably would have to deal with the Turkish fleet, which Is supposed to be In that region, and the most powerful member of which Is the cruiser Sultan Selim, formerly the German cmiser Goeben. ' The Bosphorus is about 18 miles long and from one half to one and a' half miles wide. It Is defended with 1 modern fortifications, which guard the approach to Constantinople at the western end. there was announced here, the troops Turks Report Three Ships Damaged, are made up of the Sixth Canadian Berlin, by wlrel'ss to Sayville. Field Artillery, composed of units from Dispatches rf aching Berlin from Con- Quebec, E-astern Ontario and the Marl- tantinople continue to controvert the time provinces; the Twenty-third repdts being given out hi London con- (Westmount Battalion. Thirty-second eernir.ff the damage doie to the Dar- (Winnipeg Battalion and the Thir danelles forts as a result of the per- teenth (Victoria) Battalion. slstent bombardment of the past few days of the allied fleets. Two Turk-1 BRITONS DIVERT COTTON SHIP. Ish newspapers. El Tanin and Tafiri Ekfiar, have published reports of eye- Steamer Pacific. With Cargo For Rot witnesses of these operations who de-1 terdam, Taken To Deal, clare among other things that threa i Boston. The steamer Pacific, carry British warships, badly damaeed, have nK cctton from Galveston for Rotter been lylnn ln the port of Salonlki dam, has been held up by a British for a week. One of these is the warship and taken to Deal, according Saphlr, whose smokestacks have been to a message received by the Emery hot away and whose machinery has steamship Company, owner of the been destroyed, t ' vessel. PLENTY OF FLOUR AND BREAD. Otrmany Can Accumulate Reserve, Says Minister. Berlin (by wireless to Sayville, N. J.). The Overseas .News Ager.cy gave out the following statement: "i t the Prussian Diet the Ml lister cf Agriculture declared that on the pres nt basis of allotment of flour and bread Germany would not only be. sui flclently .provided but probably wuuid be able to accumulate a reserve for ail ventualitles." raris. Tho fallowing Kreuch official statement was issued here: "In Belgium, In the region, of the Dunes, we have organized solidly the advanced trench taken by us. The Germans attempted to push forward their trenches into contact with ours, but 12 times our lire dispersed them. "To the north of Arras, our centre attacks !n the region of Notre Dame de Lorctte were crowned with complete success. "In Champagne, In the region of Perthes, we made marked progress. On Thursday evening a company ol the German (iuards became surrounded in our lines and was captured. On Friday we gained ground on the whole front, carried a trench to the north west of Perthes and occupied, to the north of Perthes, a salient where we took prisoners. "We captured 600 meters (about 6T.0 yards) of trenches with a depth of 200 meters beyond the group which lies northeast of Mesnll, and made progress in the adjoining woods. Finally we gained possession of several trenches In the ravines northwest of Beause jour. According to prisoners' bc- counts, the Demy's tremely high. The troops was excellent. losses were ex morale, of our In the Argonne region at Vaii'iuois, we made important progress In the western portion uflhe village. I. e oniy Headway having brought us into Im mediate contact with the enemy's wire entanglements. We repulsed a counter-attack. ' "In Alsace, at Hartmanns Weiler kops, we captured a trench, a small fort and two machine guns." Brit sh Suff:r Heavy Loss. Berlin, via London. The War Office gave out the following statement : "South of Ypres we inflicted con- siilerable losses on the British wit.i artillery fire. In tho positions in the I orette h l'.s which we took away from the French a counter-attack was te pulseJ. "In the' Champagne district the WILL PROBE DUMDUM CHARGE. State Department Offered New Evl. dence By Cerman Embassy. Washington. Investigation of al- j,,e(1(j manufacture of dumdum iullets ln t,ie United States for the use of the AujP9 has be,.n undertaken by the gt.,te Department as the result of the submission 0f new evidence by the Q,.nan Embassy. Secretary Bryan an- nollnre(i that an inquiry had been or- j,,,.,, when the embassy sent a pro- ,e!;t wlln exhiblts to the department Fon,e wor);g ae0 jjr. jiryan said if it rol,d be established that such ammur.i- lion was being sent out of the United slate3 the President would use his lu- nuence to stop It. BRITAIN TO LET WOOL COME. Textile Alliance Accepts Conditions ment. It was stated at the embassy, has agreed to accept the guarantee of the otficers of the Textile Alliance that the Imported wools and yarns will be used In American manufacture only, and not for re-exportation. 4,000 MORE CANADIANS LANDED, Dominion Troops Went To Join Forces England, Montreal. Four thousand Canadian troops have reached the British Isles on the steamers Megantic, Southland and Missanabie, whose safe arrival BIG ORD-R FROM RU33 A. Head Of Baldwin Locomotive Works Arrives With Contracts. New York. With $500,000 worth of on'ers f:o:n t ' e iiu.sslan Goyrt-nment, I 'i. Vatc'ai.i. vice-prefplnt of the 'hiwln Ircp olive Company, arrived li t i Perrr :il oVthe Scandinavian Hr rn ' ' i j'i', ' States. Two weeks a?o M . . i:i's company made the rf ru '. rf 400 locomotives for Hue? la . ahl?. Capl. R. Coetsche- I had ji e 22 boxes of gold tCtiyi Hi la. CONGRESS ENDS Two Supply Bills and Cther Cig Measures Fail. A RUSH AT THE CLOSE No Extra Sescion At Least Till Oc tober Pi esident At Capitol To Sign Last Legislative Fruits. Washington. After two years of al most continuous session the Sixty third Congiess, which revised the tariff and the currency system of the nation, supplemented the trust laws, created an Income lax and demonstrated the first popular election of United States Senators, ended at noon March 4. Whcu gavels lell in the House and Senate signalizing adjournment, thej marked the close of half of Presideia Wil.-on's administration, the first under domination cf the Democratic party since 1M'5. Strenuous scenes enlivened the fading hours, devoted chiefly to completing the appropriations, for sub sistence of the Government. Important measures, the Postoffice and Indian Supp'y bills, failed ln the final legislative crush after desperate i (Torts had been made to Have them. In the emergency occasioned by their failure Joint resolutions were passed and signed by the President continu ing in force appropriations for the present year. While tired Senators and Represen tatives were devoting their energies to final essentials. President Wilson spent more than an hour in his room at the Capital, surrounded by members of his Cabinet, signing the last fruits of legislation. In the closing hours, President Wil son signed the Seaman's bill, the neu trality resolution empowering him to prevent ships leaving American ports w ith supplies for belligerent warships, promoted Colonel Goethals to be a major-general for his services as build er cf the Panama Canal (and gave promotions to other officers associated with the work. Many Important Bills Failed. Besides the Government -Ship Pur chase bill. Important measures which w ere forced over until another time In cluded the Philippine enlarged Self Governmpnt bill, rural credit leglsla tlon. the bill to prohibit interstate com merce in goods manufactured by child labor, and the conservation bills. A resolution which contemplated an In vestigation into Senatorial campaigns in Pennsylvania, Illinois and other States, and which had been recom mended by a Senate committee, also failed. Little General Legislation, Very little general legislation Is car ried in the appropriation bills. Much was proposed, but most of the meas ures were practically cleared of such provisions by points of order. The Postoffice b.'ll, which failed to pass, contained mire new legislation than any other. SITE FOR TITANIC MEMORIAL. Will Probably Be Erected In Potomac Park, Washington. Washington. The memorial to be erected here ln memory of the women who perished in the Titanic disaster probably will be located in Potomac Park. The Fine Arts Commission In charge has Informed a Senate commit tee that a suitable site can be had in the park. The cost of the memorial Is to be defrayed by public subscriptions, which already total $40 000. MOTHER AND THREE BURNED. Snow Cripples Fire Alarm and Ob structs Firemen. Quebec. Mrs. Arthur Talbot and her three children were burned to death in their home here. lv,e recent storm had so crlppied the fire alarm system and blocked the streets with snow that firemen were unable to reach the house ln time to rescue the family. MEANS WORK FOR 5,000. Hazel-Atlas Glass Factories To, Start Full Time This Month. , Washington,. Pa. According to an nouncement just made here by O. G. Oliver, general manager, the Hazel Alias Glass Company within the next two weeks will resume in full at its plants, both here and at Clarksburg, W. Va.P giving employment to nbout 5,000 men. It Is understood that the closing down of all glass plants ln Belgium baa made more work for American glass manufacturers. ' 5 -I D BOMB OUTRAGE F0ILE0JfP0UCE Anarchists Had Planned to Kill Many Wealthy Men. REIGN OF TERROR F03 CITY Assassination Of Andrew Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller and Hi Son and Cornelius Vanc'erbilt Part Of Plot New York. An era of bloodshed and lawlessness which the police say, anticipated the assassination of John D. Rockefeller and his son, Andrew Carnegie, Cornelius Vanderbilt and other rich New Yorkers, and. the raid ing of numerous banks, was stifled at its birtli by the Detective Bureau, when about 7 o'clock a lighted bomb was extinguished in St. Patrick's Cath edral at Fiftieth street and Fifth avenue. Seven hundred people were attend ing at early mass at the time. Another bomb, unlighted, was discovered im mmcdiately afterward on the nort.i side of the church, ready to blow to pieces any one who unwittingly touched it with his foot. Arrests Dramatic. There were Intensely dramatic scenes when the detective, who had been shadowing a gang of anarchists for three weeks, arrested three men. one of them a detective in the con fldence of the bomb-makers, charged with the plot to devastate the Cath edral and kill Its occupants. The nipping of this anarchist plot was accomplished by detective work along the old-time melodramatic lines. Captain Tunney of the Detective Bu reau directed the plot and a dozen de tectives worked on it for months. So carefully had the police worked out their plans that the anarcnist was even allowed to light the fuse of one of the bombs which he carried Into the cathedral despite the fact that the ex plosives were powerful enough to have badly damaged the edifice and possibly killed many ln It. Scarcely hnd the bomb carrier ignited the fuse when one of half a hundred disguised de tectives, who were stationed ln and about the church, crusaed the sputter ing thread under his heel and ln an other moment the plotter was taken Into custody Just as he was about to light the fuse of the other des'.ructlve instrument. Organlxed For Outlawry. It was part of the plot, the police assert, for gangs of r.ien armed wit' rifles and revolvers to appear simul taneously in various parts of the city to shoot and pillage the biggest banks of New York city were to be blown up and many wealthy men were to be slain. The wrecking of the Cathedral was to be the signal for the opening of the elaborate campaign of murder and looting. The next move, according to the police, was to place bombs ln the homes of Andrew Carnegie, the Rocke fetlers and Cornelius Vanderbilt. So far had the plot progressed toward this end that the manufacture of the bombs, the police say, bad already been started. With these and other capitalists dis posed of, the anarcuists planned, ac cording to the police, to Invade the financial district and lay their bombs I in the city's biggest banks. General looting was to follow. POSTOFFICE SHOWS SURPLUS. Burleson Turns Over $3,500,000 For Last Fiscal Year. i Washington. The Treasury Depart ment received a check from Poetmas-ter-General Burleson for .$3,500,000. representing the surplus ln the reve nues of his department for the fiscal year, which ended June 30, 1914. For the fiscal year of 1913 the postal reve nue surplus was $3,800,000, which also was turned over to the Treasury. In acknowledging the receipt of check Secretary McAdoo said these payments were the first representing actual sur pluses made by the PostofBce Depart ment since 1836. WOULDN'T TAKE DARE; DEAD. Seventeen-Year-Old Boy Drank a Quart Of Whiskey. Philadelphia. Drinking a quart of whiskey on a dare William Pfeil, 17 yearB old, of this city, died in a patrol wagon while being taken to a hospital. According to the police, Pfeil an five young men were walking on Broad stret when one of the youths found a quart bottle of whiskey on a door step. John Loftus dared Pfeil to drink the whiskey. Pfel drank the whole i;uart while the crowd looked on. SULTAN OPPOSES FLIGHT Ships, Pounding At Dardanelles Forts, Expected To Reach Sea Of Marmora In Two Weeks. Ixndon. "According to the latest advices received here," says a Reuter dispatch from Sofia, "the Sultan and the Government are still In Constanti nople. The Government Is prepared to cross to Asia Minor at any moment, but the Sultan Is In favor' of remaining in the capital. ."It Is understood that It has been decided to Intrust the defense of Con stantinople exclusively to the Germann under command of General Llman von Sanders, the Instructor of the Turkish Army, while Bedri Bey, the Prefect of Police, will be Invested with the gen eral control of the city with the powers equivalent to those of a viceroy. Troops Sent To City. "Measures of precaution already have been adopted to prevent the cap ture of the city. It Is reported that all the troops nt Adrtanople and De motica have been liurriedly dispatched to the Gallpoli Peninsula." Ilavliig damaged two of the forts on the Kuropenn sit'e of ti.e Narrows pre viously, the British battlerhlp Queen Ellzabet.i and others of the allied war ships Saturday started a bombardment by Indirect fire on the forts on the Asiatic side of the Narrows. As had been expected, theso forts arc proving hard nuts to crack. In addition, the Turkish army, with modern German guns, is concentrating on the Gallipoli Peninsula to oppose nny landing, and until It Is disposed of, naval experts declare, the ships will not be safe in the straits. Bulgaria is said to have been aroused by this attack on the Dardanelles, and is looking to the future. It is stated that King Ferdinand is considering the formation of a coalition government to direct the affairs of the country through the crisis which Is expected. GERMAN LOSS PUT AT 3,000,000. Paris Makes This Estimate From Casualties In Ten Regiments. Tarls. An official note issued by the French press bureau declares that the German losses since the beginning of hostilities ln killed, wounded, sick ind prisoners reaches the enormous total of .3,000,000 men. This calcula tion Is based on the known casualties in 10 German regiments. "Analysis of the German losses dur ing five months ln 10 regiments taken from ariy corps on both the eastern and western German fronts shows a total of 36,281 officers and soldiers: that Is, an average per regiment of 725 monthly," says the note. Applying this percentage of losses to the entire German Army, Including the landwehr, landstrum, new formations and marines, the deduction Is made that the total German losses during the seven months of the war must ex ceed 3,000,000. GREECE NEAR BREAK FOR WAR. She Is Apparently At the Parting Of the Ways. London. Greece apparently Is at the parting of ti e ways, with her King exerting his influence to main tain the neutrality of his country In opposition to Eleutherios Venizolos the retiring premier and the man to whom Greece owes her revival. M. Venlzelos announced the reslgna ''on of himself and his cabinet, as King Constantine did not approve the policy of the government. In the Chamber of Deputies M. Venlzelos clearly Indicated that the tlif ferences between him and tne monarc' were over the question of peace and war. He said he had advised the King to select as a new premier M Zalmls, governor of the National Bank who, he said, "will follow a policy of neutrality, which I hope will not en danger our newly acquired territory." BUILDING MORE SUBMARINES. Germany Reported To Have 15 Of New Type Under Way. Copenhagen, Denmark. Germany Is reported here on what appears to be good authority to be building at Kiel 15 small submarines of a new type which will be used for reconnoltering the homo const ln the Baltic Sea. PETROLEUM RUNNING SHORT. Germany Reported To Have Curtailed Purchasing Privilege. Copenhagen. Reports received here from Schleswig are to the effect that the supply of petroleum ln Germany has become so small t' at persons who formerly were permitted to purchase one botue a week now have been de prived of that privilege. The stock ln Schleswig has been virtually ex hausted. INSANE MAN KILLS DVE. Monro Phillip Shoot Everyone In Sight At Brunswick, Ga. Brunswick, Ga. Five men wore killed, six other seriously wounded and about a score more slightly wound ed here by Monroe Phillips, a local real estate and Umber dealer, who ran amuck on the principal street wlt'.i aa automatic shotgun. Phillips himself was shot dead by E. C. Butts, a law yer, while be still was trying to Ore on citizens who appeared on the street. TOLP IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS 6olon Hurl By Fall In Capitol Motor cyclist Hits Pole; Killed Lehigh Canal To Open March 15 Mother of 6 End Life. -' Clarenco Snyder, the Reading Rail way brakeman, of Philadelphia, was absolved from blame by the Grand Jury ln connection wl'h the death of Charles Fisher, one of the two engi neers of the passenger and freight trains which collided at Royersford In December. Snyder, v. ho opened the awltch, claimed he acted under or ders of Fisher. With every prospect for a busy' sea son before It, notices were posted an nouncing that navigation on the Le high and Delaware Divisions of the canal operated by the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company would start on March 15. During ti e last few weeks extensive Improvements and ' repairs have been made to the, locks and tl" canal Itself. At a meeting of the General Com mittee ln charge of the coming Stough evangelistic campaign to be held In Reading, Jertmiah G. Mo'hn, leading manufacturer, tendered his resignation as chairman of the. Important Finance Committee. Mr. Mohn was ono of the big moneyed men of tho campaign. A. M. Sampsel was elected to succeed him. Tatrlck Murphy, serving ten month for burglary, walked out of tho Lack awanna county prison and Is still at liberty. Murphy was a trusty and went outside the prison to scrub the stops. The sunshine and crisp air offered a temptation that was too great for hlra to resist and he was several blocks away before the prison attaches took up the pursuit. The Catasnuqua Town Council end ed Its police probe by exonerating Chief of rolico William H. Sheefcler. who Is probably tho oldest police chief ln the State, having filled the position for more than thirty years. He was accused of not arresting an Allentown athlete who while officiating at a foot tall game assaulted a player. Mrs. Ray Silberman, mother of six children and wife of Harry Silberman. a prominent local merchant, commit ted suicide by Inhaling gas. She had been 111 for two years and brooded over the fact. Taking a rubber tube. she attached one end to a gas Jet and then, crawling Into bed, put the other end lu her mouth, Austin V. May. aged twenty-eight, of Mann's Choice, was Instantly killed on the pike, Dve miles west of Bed ford, wheu his motorcycle crashed In to a pole. Both his arms and Jaws were broken and his head crushed. Accompanying him were two other who were uninjured. May Is survived by a young wife. As a result oX the street riots which have characterized the strike at the Reading Hardware Company's plant, Oscar M. Croff, former member of the Stnte constabulary and now an ollicer of the Reading police department, was held for court by- Magistrate Breen on a charge of assault and battery pre ferred by Stanilous Jnneszewskl. The striking full-fashioned knitters of the Noldo & Horst hosiery plant ln Reading filed exceptions to Judge Endlicn's decree granting an Injunc tion against them because their meth ods of "peaceful picketing," and other actions about the riant resulted In street riots and general disorder. Rotarian Billy Sunday wrote to the Allentown Rotary Club that It would be Impossible for him to arcept an Invitation to bo the guest of the or ganlzatlon while he was ln Pblladel phla. but promised to run over during his Paterson engagement. At a meeting of the Reading Rotary Club, a movement was started for the purchase of the Pendora Park prop erty In East Reading, to be used Tor park purposes and especially a a playground for children. It will cost about $20,000. After having apparently recovered from the effects of an operation made necessary by blood poisoning which followed a Ellght scratch on the knee restiltlna from a fall, Frank Kunkel man, of Kissinger's Church, suffered a relapse and his condition Is critical. Archibald Courtney, for more than fifty vears an Iron worker at Catasau qua, long suffering from the effects of a fall, died while on the way home from the M. E. Church, of which he was sexton. He was eighty-two year? old. Representative James Bergy, of Juniata County, was painfully Injured by a fall on the marble step ln the Capitol rotunda while leaving tne House. He was taken to a hospital and later went to his home. The Board of Director of the Read nir Tnherriilnnls Sanitarium, whlc"' operates an institution on Neverslnk Mountain held meeting and decided not to consolidate with the Berk County Tuberculosis society aner tne latter had started plans to tnat euu. Jonathan Hartzell, proprietor of the planing mill at Bally, Berks County, was replacing a joiner knife in a ma chine when he accidentally Hemicd on te pedal, turning on the power, with the result that all the fingers of nt left hand were cu' LESSON FOR MARCH H SAUL GAIN8 HIS KINGDOM. 1.K8HON TICXT-t HamuM, chapter II .OOI.OKN TEXT Ho that Is Blow Ini R.-r is batter than the nilitlity: aii-1 that rulrth bis spirit, thun lm that UU a tity.-I'rov. IC:31 In order to repay Israel's Tlctory t dor Jepthah, Nahash tho Au monitor manded the right eye of thoe besieg ln Jabesh ln Gllead, knowing that i left; eye would be hid by their ahiei and they would thus bo Incapable warfare. For Israel to niako any c enant with the Ammonites was c trary to God's commands (Ex. 12;:. Deut. 23:3). I. The Cry of Jabesh, vv. 1-3. Ti event probably occurred about a nior. after the previous lesson. It waa proud, haughty demnnd niado of tht Israelites. Exhausted and hopeU they had offered to become servantu order to live. So today we frequoi ly find men willing to comprom w 1th the world and tho devil, who or hold them In derision and contr.tr (v. 2). Compromising Christians i ulwpys blind leader of the blind (Ma 15:14; 0:22). Tho demand of Nali: would also bring reproach upon Ian. yet this same king afterwardj sho kindness to David (II Samuel 10:: History records that Emperor U II actually Bent an army of II,' sightless men back to the king of I garlu, who died of grief and horror II. The Conquest of Ammon, vv. 11. Nahasli granted the request ! a seven days' respite. Here waa Sai opportunity wrorws to be righted o people to be saved. Saul had held peace since being anointed by flami employing his time in everyday t and duties (v. 6), for the messcng did not find Saul at home idlo.. 1 tidings of this insult wcro told to I people who lifted up their voices ? wept. (v. 4). The news of this thr. ened calamity reached Saul's ears i his conduct effectually put to sIK- those "worthless fellows" who splsed him and had brought no pr ents at his anointing (10:2i). Inst' of tears Saul is moved to deeds. L Clncinnatus and Israel Putnam, he 1 the plow to take up the sword. ? did not, in his own strength, u:i take to relievo Jabesh, for "the Sp of God canio upon him" (v. 6; see a Judpes 3:10; 11:29; 13:23; Luka : 49; Acts 10:3K). This moved Saul anger, not alone nt such an oviile of cruelly, but more at the conter Nahash had for God and his pco: Saul associated himself with Sam the man of God, and summoned the tion of Israel to his side. The Holy Snlrlt gave Saul clear suranco of a call from God, end he sponded with unquestioned t (Rom. 8:31). The peoplo refipon; with great rapidity, for the fear God cutne upon them also. We h the good news of a better dellvera: from a more subtle foo to proch in the present age. They all resor to Dczck, west of the Jordan. messengers returned bearing a b sage having two meanings (r. 10) that helped to keep Nahash Ignor: of Saul's actions on the other side the river. Dividing his army Into c pcnles Saul attacked tho enemy the morning watch," and coniph'i overwhelmed them and put them rout. As the Ammonites had refu: to show any mercy, they lu turn judged unworthy, of mercy (t. 11, also James 2:13; Matt. 7:2). III. The Crowning of Saul, vv. 12 Saul' victory so impressed the per that they demanded to know of ? uel who It was that had refused I as king, desiring to put tbem to de:. Saul showed his wisdom by not l mitting such a course of action. M today refuse God's divinely appoln king who w ill yet be glad to acknr edgo him (Luke 19:27; Phil. 2 In the next place Saul did not rl.. credit for the victory for, said "The Lord hnth wrought dellvera: In Israel" (v. 13 R. V.). All real tories-come from God (Ps. 44:4 S Cor. 15:10). This was the true k ly spirit. Saul reaped the reward bis humility, his forbearance, cr age and activity ln the loyalty M pride of the people. Samuel gls Ahared ln the success of Saul and the people to Gllgal for the crown ceremony. This was the place wb Urael had first encamped under leadership of Joshua and where twelve stoned from the river had b set up as a testimony to God's pesence and dclivctunco. , Saul had natural and physical c' actcristlcs calculated to make blr. great and UBOful king self-restrn modesty, military Jnventlon.anJ paclty for leaders i,p. Ho was slirewd, patient and srE ous He thus stood on the threshold his kingdom with the possibility untold usefulness and blessing. We are "kings and priests f God " He has UBhered us Into 1 kingdom. Power, usefulness. It' ence. helpfulness, victory ove- sin 1 before us. "Napoleon said that 1 nobility dated from Arcole and Ms"f go. May ours dato from the victor; of love over the evil within us am); the world,' "This Is the victory i? overcome! h the world, even faith" (I 'ohn 5:4). Serve Him Right. The difference between a crank .a gentleman Is that the latter al1 agrees with you, while the crank v er agrees with anyone not even b self. Schenectady Union-Star, Dally Thought. The mind that is cheerful i present state will be- adverse to euuviluuttB Ly lug iuiuiq, auu meet the bitter occurrences with a placid smile. Horace. of