<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XL" id="CHAPTER_XL"></SPAN>CHAPTER XL</h2>
<p class="center">THE MENNONITES</p>
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<p class="cap_1">DURING the first half of the sixteenth
century, Menno Simons founded a denomination
of Christians in Friesland,
a province of the Netherlands. Many
of these Mennonites settled in Northern Germany.
This religious belief was opposed to military service
and about the close of the American Revolution
the Mennonites began emigrating, until more than
fifty thousand of their number had found homes
west of the Dneiper, near the Black Sea, in Southern
Russia, around Odessa. These people were fanatical
in their belief, rejected infant baptism and
original sin, believing in baptism only on profession
of faith, and were opposed to theological training.</p>
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<p>In Russia, as in Germany, they led lives of great
simplicity, both secularly and religiously and lived
in separate communities.</p>
<p>The gently rolling lands, with a rich soil, responded
readily to cultivation, and history proves the Germans
always to have been good farmers. The
Mennonites found peace and prosperity in southern
Russia, until the Crimean war. Being opposed to
military service, when Russia began levying heavy
taxes on their lands and heavier toll from their
families, by taking the strong young men to carry
on the war, the Mennonites became dissatisfied under
the Russian government, and left the country in
great numbers, removing to America, and settling
along the Jim river in South Dakota.</p>
<p>Among<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</SPAN></span>
these settlers was a family by the name of
Wesinberger, who had grown prosperous, their
forefathers having gone to Russia among the first,
although they were not Mennonites. Christopher
the youngest son, was among those drawn to go to
the war, but the Wesinbergers were prosperous, and
paid the examining physician twelve hundred and
fifty rubles (about one thousand dollars) to have
Christopher "made sick" and pronounced unfit
for service. With the approach of the Russian-Japanese
War, when it was seen that Russia would
be forced into war with Japan, the boys having
married, and with sons of their own, who would
have to "draw," the Wesinberger brothers sold
their land and set sail for America. At the time the
war broke out, John and Jacob were living on homesteads,
in the county adjoining Tipp county on the
north, Christopher having settled in western Canada.</p>
<p>It was while they were breaking prairie near my
sister's homestead, that I became acquainted with
the former, who, at that time owned a hundred and
fifty head of cattle, seventy-five head of horses,
hogs, and all kinds of farm machinery, besides a
steam prairie breaking outfit and fifteen hundred
acres of land between them.</p>
<p>During rainy days along in April, to pass the time
away, I would visit them, and while sitting by the
camp fire was told of what I have written above, but
where they interested me most was when they discussed
astronomy and meteorology. They could
give the most complete description of the zodiacal
heavens and the different constellations. It seems
that astronomy had interested their ancestors
before<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</SPAN></span>
leaving Germany nearly one hundred and
thirty years before, and it had been taught to each
succeeding generation. They seemed to know the
position of each planet, and on several occasions
when the nights were clear, with a powerful telescope,
they would try to show them to me, but as I
knew little or nothing of astronomy, I understood
but little of their discussions concerning the heliocentric
longitude of all the planets, or the points
at which they would appear if seen from the sun.</p>
<p>Before many months rolled around I had good
reason to believe at least a part of what they tried
to explain to me, and that was, that according to
the planets we were nearing a certain Jupiter disturbance.</p>
<p>"And what does that mean?" I asked.</p>
<p>"That means," they explained, "It will be dry."</p>
<p>"Jupiter" said John, as he leisurely rolled a
cigarette, "circumnavigates the sun once while
the earth goes around it twelve times. In Russia
Jupiter's position got between the sun and the constellation
Pisces, Aries, Taurus and Gemini, it
was invariably wet and cool and small grain crops
were good, but as it passed on and got between the
sun and the constellations Libra and Scorpio it was
always followed by a minimum of rainfall and a
maximum heat, which caused a severe drouth."</p>
<p>They had hoped it would be different in America,
but explained further that when they had lived in
Russia it commenced to get dry around St. Petersburg,
Warsaw and all northern Russia a year or so
before it did in southern Russia.</p>
<p>They had relatives living around Menno, in
Hutchinson<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</SPAN></span>
County, South Dakota, who had witnessed
the disastrous drouth during Cleveland's
administration. Jupiter was nearing the position
it had then occupied and would, in sixty days, be
at the same position it had been at that time.</p>
<p>While few people pay any attention to weather
"dopsters," I did a little thinking and remembered
it had been dry in southern Illinois at that time, and
I began to feel somewhat uneasy. According to
their knowledge, if the same in southern America
as it had been in southern Russia, it would begin
to get dry about a year before the worst drouth,
then a very dry year, the third year would begin
to improve, and after the fourth year conditions
would again become normal, but the concensus
of their opinion was there would be a drouth.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</SPAN></span></p>
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