El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 36TH YEAR, Ed. 1, Sunday, November 7, 1915 Page: 15 of 40
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Here Are the Famous Offenders of the Great
Revivalist Whose Place in Everlasting
Tormlent He Has Fixed by One ot His
Fighting Phrases How
Many of Them Do YOU
Think Rightly
Pharaoh of Egypt in the Famous
runung ouuwiDfc mm Alter Killing rv i
the Bearers of Bad News. rV-al
A'
ong in
Hades?
Emperor Nero of Rome.
BILLY" SUNDAYS listing of
mine of the famous dwellers
In Hades. JudgoJ by the Inter-
st It aronses In the mind of our ad-
vanced civilization would seem to ri-
val Davie's majestic view of tho
-ealm of torment. This Interest al-
teady hai resulted In a wider reading
if sacred and profane history so
many librarians declare and the llt-
rature concerning the evangelist's
roster of the condemned would fill a
iroodly sized library.
Nebuchadnezzar Pharaoh. Judas
ind Jezebel the two latter naturally
leading o.iy Hat taken from the Bible;
Vero and' Atllla. two' terrible cbarac-
'ers; Catherine de Medici. Queen of
France: and. the famous group Louts
XIV. and Mms. Malntenotj and Mon-
tespan; Voltaire. Rousseau and Tom
Paine who honestly thought they
were working for the benefit of the
i ntlre ra ( John StuaM Mill thf dl-
'IngulshcJ political ecWopilst; the gl-
ints of scientific research. Tyndall
md Hux'.ey: and fie brilliant Ameri-
tan lnfldl Robert Green Ingersol'
ulte a famous company you must
admit wiatever may be your ethical
nttltude toward the entire group.
Judas nnd Jezebel have been for
enturle a hissing In tha mouths of
-nen the accursed names the arch-
hetrayer and the painted wanton
murderess anj worker of witchcraft
nnd abominations.
Nbüchnlnezzar. King of Babylon
who conquered Jerusalem made Da-
lid ruler of the province of Babylon
for .nterpretlng his dream and he t
vas wh 'ondemned Bl'adrach Me-
shao and Abednego to the fiery fur-
nace heated sever timet more In-
t-. MY s. jfwmm. -amMi us
HiH the pen that ssbbbbbbbssSJL. ' V"4isssi
mrotl the piran.' "The free and In- D Br dffHl
dependent f America.'' His H j ' jPBHrP
paper "The Crisis" distributed to th.- I j !
inspirited .trmlei of Washington In I LV' ítóJMhJr asfl 1
the field gave them inew Inspiration. I fwMCy .erfesasP ssssl
In the nnt numbei were the memo I I PsbbbbbI LbbV
rabia worts: -"Those are the timos I j
that try men's souls'." Washington I j j
li.ilil a high .tribute to the tfork of WM B B
Talne. He served In Congress still Hr j j
publishing the "Crisis." ftrZsBi H
jlllafllH
I Lsesirv I fmm
IJ I w I Wym
m ThomiiB Pnlne. Writer.
In a powerful but quiet study of
blood and violence. Nero who was
Claudius Caesar Drusus Oermanlous
originally Lucius Doinlllus Aheno-t-arbus.
If summarized In molt dic-
tion irles ns "ty tr. nnlcal profligate
matricide and suicide."
Catherine da Medici was a very de-
vout woraf.il and It was this religious
fervor and not Inherent cruelty of na-
ture so t ara now told that caused
Iter to instigate the Massacre of St.
Bartholomew. August 1G72. She was
the daughter of Lorenzo Duke of Ur-
blna. and married Henry It. of Pranoe
In 1583. when ha was the Duke of Or-
leans. Franeolse Athenalse Marquis de
Mantespan. favorite 'of Louis XIV-
as not a stickler for marriage while
another Franeolse and a favorite
too wai This lady was the Mar
quts" de MiUntenona.t the' age of 16
the bride of the foet Srarron who
riled In Iil60. She then became the
governess of Kmc. de Monteapan'a
ohlldren vlth the mother of whom
she quarreled and succeeded finally
In supplanting In the favor of tb
king. Mme. de Montespan withdrew
from the court and became a devote
Mme. de Malntenon was married to
"Le Grange Monarque" in 1Í81.
Jamtn KTftnklln met for the first time
and embraced the greut American
naked the venerable sage to give a
benedlctl v to his grandson. VQltalre
talj his hand on the heat of the lad
nd said: "Qod and liberty la the only
benediction which can be given to the
grandson of Benjamin franklin "
Jean Antoinette Polason le Norm ant
d' Etolle the Marquise de Pompa-
dour Is the lady who "exercised an
unbounded and pernicious Influence
over Louis XV."
Tom Phine's life makes a romance
ns full of action and thrilling specta-
cle as any ever devised (or the mov-
ing picture screen He was born In
England but came to America In his
37th year with letters from Ben
Franklin. - A year later-' In Plilladel-
phla he became editor of the Pennsyl-
vania Magazine During this time he
Dm. de Main tenon.
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Huxi
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t han the dead culm of Ignvfiraace am
faith fíontsh me fromílilen if yoi
will but let me eac of the fruit of th
ties of knowledge"
lii me. oe rompaoux. -"
Thomas
ey Scientist.
John Tyndall Scientist.
Issued hi pamphlet. "Common
Sense." H wrote to George UL in an
ended vu- to show the injustice of
England to the colonies and urged
enloncy. The communication was
Ignored' and his great pamphlet was
the first explicit nrgument favoring
separation from the mother country
the first assault or morarchlal rule
the first advocation of American Inde-
J. J. Rousseau Philosopher.
A recent writer wno while admir
ing the Irllllance of Jean Jacques
Rousseau's mind condemned his het-
Todosy said: "The rnsljfcl has given
Ills 'Con fe.islons. but they will not
r.ave hlni:" There are of' course a
rreat m iv thinking people who. hav-
ing gatned something of value from
what thlF reformer has. accomplished
and aided In. will not endorse this
view J'lt as there are persona who
would listo to think that Thomas
Henry Itizley who Invented the
name Airiontic and applied It to him-
self has eiu-ned hH reward for -all he
vas giver to the enlightenment of the
world by .i plane In torment Ho pop-
Oar'zed the theory of evolution In
"Man's Pl-e In Nature" and became
professor of physiology In. the Royal
lnit'tutlnn seven years before he was
chosen president of thoReyel Society
In 18S3.
John Tynáall was'th rrHh railroad
engineer who beoam an of the
world's greatest scientists.
J-hn Stuart Mill the English phll-
nopher. nnd political economist be-
t;an early to pontjribute to the . "West-
minster Review." of whlh later on
became the editor. Ho contem-
plated writing thi history of the
Frpnch revolution but le the work
to his friend Carlyle. with whom and
John Stirling the Scotcli author he
was verv Intimate. His chief works
are "System of Logic" "Easay on
Liberty" "'Representative Oovarn-
ment" and "Clements of Political
Kconomv.'
Robert Oreen Ingersoll tli dlstln
gulshed Am trican tnfldsi. wan the son
of a clergyman. He waa fearless and
caustic In argument hut won great
affection from those who knew him
"Qlve me the storm - and tem-
pest of thought." said h. "rather
From the Painting ' ' J udas
Bribed to Betray Ohrüt."
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King Look XIV. of France.
Louis XIV. waa involved In wars
with Bnxli.nJ Austria and Spain He
I was wh made the. historical dec-
laration. "L'etat e'est Mol" "I am the
rute." C
When he died In ÍJlí a young man
' anted Fi .ncols M .rle Arouet de Vol-
i Miro waa arrested and Imprisoned for
lampooning the king In a satire set-
ting forth "the sufferings resulting
:roro the united tyranny of kings and
tensely man usual because they priests unrighteous and harassing
M-ouid.not bow to the golden image Jlcrs burdensome taxes and crowded
ota the plain of Dura t rlsons." He wrote Mi famous
Pharaoh and Nero are two of the "League" while In jail and completed
most emlnen.: tyrants In all history his "Oedipus."
nd Comte du Nouy's gnat painting. He was the friend literary guide
tragically epitomises the character end philosopher of Frederick the
"Pharaoh and the bearer of bad news" tlteatfor i while When he and Bn-
Queen Catherine de Medici. The French Cynic Voltaire
John Stuart Mill Philosopher.
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El Paso Morning Times (El Paso, Tex.), Vol. 36TH YEAR, Ed. 1, Sunday, November 7, 1915, newspaper, November 7, 1915; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth198179/m1/15/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting University of Texas at El Paso.