Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 3, No. 232, Ed. 1, Wednesday, April 5, 1905 Page: 5 of 6
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LEW WALLACES BENHUR
Hon
llic Cmeritl Famous
nut to tlir IlHriiera
The death of General Lew Wallace
recalls the circumstances of his tirst
isit to the establishment of Harper
Itros In Now York with tile inauu
bcript of Kcnlliir under hit arm He
was personally unknown to the Har-
pers it tlut time unit after introducing
himself he explained to Mr 1 llenry
I hit per that he hail written a book
uliicLi dealt with the lire of Christ Mr
Harper asked him if Christ actually
appeared in the story and General
Wallace replied that lie did Mr Har-
per then remarked that this subject
was a delicate one to treat In a novel
and General Wallace answered that if
Uiere were anything in tiie story which
could offend a fellow Christian lie
would rather cut off his right hand
than publish it
He then explained to Mr Harper
Unit the book had resulted from a spir-
ited controversy he bad held with Itob
ert O Ingersoll on the subject of rcll
giou In which Ingersoll bad defeated
him in argument General Wallace
went away from the dNctisIon with a
troubled mind For some time he con-
templated writing a theological work
which would sticugtheii religious faith
at the point of liiucrsoHs brilliant at-
tack I ut lie decided that theologian
could do tiiit work much belter than
he and besides his desire was to reach
mid help the masses lie lay awake by
night pondering the iiiestiou which hail
taken possesion of his mind and event-
ually dccidisl to write a religious noel
in which In could embody his under-
standing of religious truth BenHiir
was the result When General Wallace
had lold these interesting facts to Mr
Harper be left the manuscript express
lug the hope that his own estimate of
the work would be indorsed by the
house
Work
J he manuscript was read in the imi
an fllrthcr
al way by be readers of he Ann and 0lle f J of
was promptly accept 1 Genera Wal ft w
lace old Mr Harper later on that he
u u urfnw
lt
so close In fact that men have built
high fences about their mines to pre-
vent persons from running away with
the ore So rich l the ore In gold that
it Is frequently shipped a express in
slend of freight
had written the hook In all sorts of out
of the way places on boats railroads
in carriages where er he hail an op
poitunKy afterward correcting ami
levislng with the utmost patience and
care It seems astonishing that he had
never been to the Holy Jatnd when lie
wrote Heiillur but worked out the
minute topography of the country as It
is presented In the story entirely from
maps ami reading He once said to
Mr Harper that whin eventually he
did visit Palestine he was himself sur-
prised at the absolute accuracy of his
descriptions which tallied exactly with
the facts mid be was fond of telling
how he found the very stone which be
hail Imagined as a resting place for
Benllur at a certain point of the sto-
ry Hie book was published on Xm
12 1SSO and for the iirst year the sales
hung tire It showed no signs of gen-
eral popularity Then It began to grow
J car by year and it has now sold well
II million copies
Ten Hour flir Sprint rioirrr
Already it is easy to tell the tea rosi >
will be the favorite adornment of
spring bats says the New York Press
Perhaps the most popular of all the
tea roses used by the milliners will be
tie exquisite JIarechal Nell judging
from advance orders flusters of the
Marechais are to wac on the crown of
Mrs iddie He Uinccys spring head-
gear their stems bound with riblioii of
sable velvet The tea rose lends Itself
to siih a wide variety of settings that
it will be easy for the arbiters of fash-
Ion to design becoming frameworks
for all sorts of faces Heliotrope
bronre blue from pale to dark rose
color In all Its shades green anil nat-
urally the various straw hues are ac-
ceptable as backgrounds Wise wo-
men will draw the line at purple mid
red of course and she who knows how
to make herself really fetching will
make her milliner Intwine it Spanish
lace scarf with the artistic cranial bou
quet
Mnxlm Gnrlcro Itrljultr
Anecdotes of Maxim Gorky the Itus
slan author are on the wing says the
London Chronicle Here is one they
tell In Paris He went to the theater
at Moscow one e oiling to sec a play
by a popular writer Instead of paying
attention to the stage lie entire audi-
ence rose and greeted Gorky witli pro
dlglous acclamation Then he delhered
this address What oil earth are you
staring at me for I am not a dancing
girl nor the Venus of Mllo nor a
drunkard just picked out of lie rirer
I write stories They haw the luck to
please you and I am glad of It but
that Is no reason why jou should keep
on staring We have come here to see
a charming phiy He good enough to
attend lo that and Icnve m alone
More delighted than ever th audience
shontd with joy Perhaps they I bought
Ibev would get another speech but
Oorky Jumped out of bis seat and left
the theater ill disgust
Clinrnlrlallc ftonixM < lirlil < nl
When the Wasliincfiurs birthday ex
ercl es at Ihe Academy of Mus lc in
Philadelphia had closed the oilier day
and President Ifooscwit was tearing
he stjise at the side r Provost Jlnrrl
sun nf Peunsyhiiinla university fol-
lowed by the other dtstiiiguislici
guest with stately mien mid solemn
air imiIi prufiiiiinlly Impress with
Hie dignity of the occasion the pres
idejil suddenly espied PriilVvsir Sjin
ilel MiCune IiniNir of the university
modestly elisiiinrisl tiehilid one of the
wing snys the Philadelphia Public
Ledger Itroiklng away from the as
tonishiil provost the president rushed
up lo Ihe professor with the evclama
lion Hello old boy Ity love Im
glad to see yon and gave him n hand
grasp whlib made him wince with
pain Me then returned to the side of
the provost and the procession pro-
c eded
LIFE AT GOLDFIELD MINES
Jllnrra In SrnUTnnn Mtr In nieo
trio ltshlrd Trnt
W II Thomas a Denver attorney
who Is Intereded in the minis at Gold
Held Xev where the latest gold fever
has broken out recently arrived at
Kaunas City Mo He says that the
camp although only fifteen months
old has a population or 10000 now
Hie majority of the inhabitants live
in louts said Mr Thomas to it reporter
or the Kausai City Times yet these
crude dwclllugs are lighted by elec-
tricity Ilunulng water Is another of
the modem Improvements furnished
While the community Is without a rail-
road It Is supplied with automobiles
big motor cars being tweil a stage-
coaches between that town and Tono
pah the terminus of the nearest rail-
road
Already stone buildings are being
constructed We have four banks and
two now opapers At bile the other bus
ness institutions needed In a town are
already Installed So great has been
the yield that prospectors have come
In droves until the country Is now
staked out for 100 miles around Ore
has been shipped that brings 10001
a ton a phenomenal figure As there
Is no railroad and tiie ore ha to be
carted twentysix miles lu wagons
nothing Is shipped that bear Icx than
100 a ton ami thousands of ions of
this arc piled up there waiting for the
buildiiii of stamp mills
Itemarkable stories are told of the
fortunes hat have eome to many Two
of the II tM persons In there were Har-
ry Wel > er ami Mrvlu Isb newspaper-
men out of work They rode the
bumpers out of Portland and went
to Goldttold because liiey knew no-
where else to go Today each of those
hoys can write bis rheck for half a
million dollar and cash it and they
will be worth millions when their prop
SAVING SOUTHERN PINES
nnrrnu of Korrnlrra IVnicrraa In
31 ffi iil of Tnrp ntlnine
Tiie old system i r boding southern
pine trees for tiie production of tur
pontine and resin lias Aery greatly re-
duced the pine timber wealth of the
southern slates says A Washington
dispatch Threo jears ago the bureau
of forestry determined that something
should be done to eliminate so destruc-
tive n method of procuring naval
stores
Its three years of experiments to-
ward this end have demonstrated that
system of turpentining which
a ne v
tile use of earthen cutis and
metal gutters not only greatly con
serves the life of the timber tapped
but nlso gives an increased yield of
resin and therefore a greater profit
tlimi Is possihle by boviiig
The bureau of forestry feels that a
still more conservatUe method of tur
pentining can lie found which consist-
ent with a maximum yield of turpen
Hue will Indict the smallest possible
Injury upou the trees With this in
view the bureau has begun an entirely
new line of tieid experiments in order
to determine to what extent the wound
now made In tapping the trees can be
lessened
Through the cooperation of a land
company in Jacksonville Iia a stand
of about lOnOi pine trees In Clay
county Ila with other facilities
have without cost to the government
been placed at the disposal of the bu-
reau for experimental purposes
TO MAKE WAR IMPOSSIBLE
What Smitoftniiiuoiil Irnllcfii For-
t rlnl Am fiTHtlon
In an article In the new French mag-
azine Je Sals Tout II Know Every-
thing Jl Santos Dumoiit says that the
present generation will see a perfect
flying machine which will make war
Impossible There will also lie trans-
continental aerial expresses with Paris
as the great aerial station He adds
What would you wiy If I told you
that next summer 1 am confident of
giving a new Impulse to aerial naviga-
tion that I myself hop to be able be-
fore ending my experiences to cruise
oier lairopp for a week at a time
without descending to earth in a yacht
that will be In Itself a living house
sprilnt stamp Knr sIillrr
The Italian government has Intro-
duced what may be called military pic-
ture stamp says the Philadelphia
Public Ledger Kaeh regiment or the
Italian army Is now proWded with a
specially designed stamp for the exclu-
sive u c of its own soldiers The stamp
of one regiment how the portrait of
Its colonel another bears the regiment-
al colors another the regimental motto
and io on The Itu lau war otllce is
adopting a similar idea and it Is be-
lieved lliit these stamps Increase regi-
mental esprit de corps and civilian In
terest in the army
Worm 1irm in Prnl Sitiit lllrla
O Kiietld of West Soiuerville JIa s-
Is making big money from a worm
farm whore be breeds thousands f
tliem to be used for food for song birds
say a Snmervlllc Class dHpntrh to
the New York Tribune The worms
are bred to a large Hire on men and
when big enough are shipped to Xew
York dealers Ibciice they find their
way chiefly into the homes or the Ger
lnnns who hne song blnls Mr Huettel
ny fliHt birds living on worms make
better and clearer singers than thoie
fed on prepared food
t
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W fflWI
THE BURNING QUESTION TO FRANCE
You Nay Be Cured
544 Garfield Avenue
Chicago Jvl October 91902
After doctoring for eleven months and taking
fortvtkreo bottles of medicine and finding no relief
for leucorrhcea resulting from irritation of a fallen
womb I took Wine of Cardui and fourteen bottles
cured me Thi3 seems strange bnt it is the simple
truth Wine of Cardui helped me from the time I
began taking it and Laving heard itpraised
bo highly by friends who had tried it I felt
satisfied that it would help me and it did
It cured me Took every bit of ache rain
and headache cramps and dragging down sensations
away till I felt young strong and happy once more
Itisawonderfulmedicineand a true friend to women
When I look back on the months of torture I had it
seems like a hideous nightmare Wine of Cardui will
cure any woman 1 believe I have more faith ia it
than all other medicines combined
rVlcePio Chicago Historical Clab
Eow can yon refuse relief when you know yon are growing worsa day af-
ter day Shooting pains irregularity inflammation and bearing down pains
make thousands of women miserable Why drag through life never enjoy-
ing anything Wine of Cardui ba3 made over 1500000 weak and suffering
women well and strong Weaskyoutogo to your druggist today and secure
a 100 bottle of Wine of Cardui and begin to take it at once Do that and
the health 3frs Kingsley writes about will soon be yours If you think spe < >
ial directions are needed in your case address giving symptoms Ladies
Advisory Department The Chattanooga Medicine Co Chattanooga Tenn
mn <
2500 COLONIST TO
CALIFORNIA
One way Daily to flay 15th
Tourist Car Privileges
Los Angeles or San Francisco
50 Round Trip April 10 11
12 13 and 14 Liberal Stop-
overs Return via Portland
1250 higher
One Fare and 2 St Louis and Return
Baptist Conventions May
14 15 and 16
One Fare and 2 Kansas City and Return
Baptist Conventions May
8 9 10 11 and 12
Only Line With Through Sleepers Texas io Chicago
PHIL A AUER G P A Fort Worth
> ttf t tttrt tMlilMIIIDMUHIItMM
YOU
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Hamilton, W. M. & Hamilton, H. V., Jr. Palestine Daily Herald (Palestine, Tex), Vol. 3, No. 232, Ed. 1, Wednesday, April 5, 1905, newspaper, April 5, 1905; Palestine, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth67795/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .