ELS 1 DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON. | quite certain that it was —— | 50 he said to the manufacturer of that | { cont of mail: “Put it on now yourself | and let us try ity” and with shot after | shot from his own pistol the Emperor | a price.” RIN- | f that it was just what il 3). ! pretended to be—a good coat of mail, Your friend takes you through his | Then the man received a large reward. | valuable house. You examine the | : (od that the same coat of mail arches, the grass-plots, the struck : back the weapons of {ish ponds, the conservatories, the parks | temptation from the heart Christ of deer, and you say within yourself, ol all now wear: for Je COMES you say aloud: ‘‘What did all this “1 have been tempted, and 1 | You see the costly apparel, Or | know what it is to be tempted, Take | you see a high-mettled span of horses | this robe that defended Me and wear it harnessed with silver and gold, and you | for yourselves, 1 will see you through | begin to make an estimate of the value. | 41] trials, and I will see you through all The Ransomed. aro bought with THIANS 6:2) ound out the fresco, of i118 CoO © man who owns a large estate can- instantly tell you what it He says: *‘I will estimate for the house, so much for 1 ure, so much for laying out the ds. so much for the stock, so much for the equipage as one might up, in all making this aggre- | of Antwerp and k 1 t brought ( y HSI is further to some and I will show you some- | and after a came to all , 111 ail | ‘Bu savs Satan, still HO he 1 MM? journey thie vn and to the go up into the tower looking so muct ' ' } Much {f the Temple, iO barn, 1 Wok off upon Belgium, fl 15 LO atan hear 80 heaven, al surround how much i Some y one 1 the face, N 41 word for Him. 11 until I ean look into His and heart beats in sympathy for thi the world ever had, fe iis friend HOW 1 friendiess, wart ¥ ver Verily LOOM Comes 1 suth, I} In and to f alls traveller ith knife or Jes Wits O the w,. .} Wa there that and pray, and it was monster of hell « than anvihing th fret TY COUniYy between sentence, but what cares the law ? “The man hirist, let him die!’ says the jue Hunger must have agonized every | ruflians outside the rail bre of the body and gnawed on aha! that's what we want gdomach with teeth of death, The | Hand him out here to us, hought of a morsel of bread or meat Him ! away with Him |" must have thrilled the body with some- Oh. I bless God that amid ying like ferocity, Turn out a pack of | injustice that may be inflicted pen, us in this world we have a sympathizer, The world cannot lie about you nor abuse you as much as Nore that prowled in thi an himself, met Ho has i s { ge, ery: ‘Alu iis blood. Away the all the upon HUNGRY AS CHRIST a-hungered, and, If they trength, with one yell they would eyour you as a lion a kid, It was in hat pang of hunger that Jesus was ac osted, and Satan sald: “Now change hese stones, which look like bread, io an actual supply of bread.” Had he temptation come to you or me | pder those circumstances, we would | that two-o'clock morning scene, anve cried: “Bread it shall be!” and | the stroke of the ruffian on the mouth, ween almost impatient at the time taken | and the howling of the unwashed crowd, for mastication: bus Christ with one| then He will forget you and me in the and beat back the hunger, and with | injustices of life. he other hand beat back the monarch | Some of you want deliverance from ff durkness, hirist was tempted. enough of them, We are told that Napoleon ordered a | domestic troubles; wat of mail made; but he was not | financial troubles, «ng had in every court-room, in every home, in every store, and says: * ‘ourage ! by { all ny hours of maltreatment, I will | protect those who are trampled on.” And WHEN CHRIST FORGETS Physical troubles; Sha) troubles; “ have been gathering them up, some perhaps for five, or six, or seven years, and you have divided them into two classes: Those you can talk about and those vou cannot talk about; and as those | pressing which you cannpt mention, you get condolence for the things you can speak of, while you get no condol- | ence for the things that you cannot, In | your school days you learned how to | bound the States and could tell what rivers and lakes and mountains ran | through them, vou were asked to- | day to bound your worldly estate you | would say it is bounded on the north | by trouble, and on the west by yuble, | and lakes of woe, | ntains of disaster run through W hat are you going to do with BLES 7 I . of tear 4 and mou it ©] YOUR TROL Why and mind absorbed in some trag- | “Oh,” you ‘everything I have seen on the | lage 18 ragedy of my why do you and closets and ntoes of your de- them out of their pictures from do you not go 1o the theatre say, ' wards of the tame compared with the t Well, then, i BARE. Owl he frame a harvest and put, i wound nd sOeIns $hiat Lila that sorrow, a And so it yrist hears the h ed tog Wel and his sor Hell leviate it. to me that Jesus ( of our sorrow, the Oan } i th or he groan of our HTosAn § ir wretel in comes to the diet. He comes to the the battlefield, he arm of His everl love: that arm and hand are as le puts thatarm over leat Him say “] have loved with an everlastin over sin and sorrow we lie Rn 15 1 can thee ag love.” ”» { of a sympathizing Jesus ! Further, 1 remark the LAST GREAT INSTALMENT paid for our redemption was the demise of Christ. The world has seen many dark days, About fifteen summers ago there was a very dark day when the sun | was eclipsed, The fowl at noonday went to their pereh, and we felt a gloom | as we looked at the astronomical won- | der. It was a dark day in London when | the plague was at its height, and the | dead with uncovered faces were taken in | oxen carts and dumped in the trenches, | 1t was a dark day when the earth open- i ed and Lisbon sank; but the darkest day since the creation of the world was the day when the carnage of Cavalry was enacted. It was about noon when the etirtain began to be drawn, It was not | the coming on of a ufght that soothes | and refreshes: it was vhe swinging of a great gloom all around the heavens, God hung it. As when there is a dead Lone in the house you bow the shutters | or turn the lattice, #0 God in the after. noon shut the windows of the world. As it is appropriate to throw a black | pall upon the coflin as it passes along, so it was appropriate that everything | should be sombre that day as the greal hearse of earth the | rolled on, bearing A man’s last hours kept sacred, However hated or caricatured a hear he is dying si nre vou TIAL, lence puts its hand on ordinarily may have | vhen you ing for the man who could stand by deathbed making faces and scoffing. Ih CHRIST IN HIS LAST HOUR. cannot be left alope. What! pursuing | ] a pursuit? You have | been drinking Fis tears, do you want to it him after so long up cioseiy, | darkness, | #0 1 notwithstanding the their revenge His countenanc fopl. whether They put spikes, 3 i hat UAL, contortions of examinoe 5 out their hands | and | i0e Lien oO Wij Lil really : and tou wring them | thiell Ww garmnen gladness 3 world and ba l'o«lay we arching Christ ob } cross of 3 z fe iS ANY ae the people sta i work will (sod bend down § the F We could iy one sp ope and faith, that would be heard ments of heaven, and ts Keep jubilee because between { n your nature that has beel has been lifted in the | joy of the Gospel. Wwe wWol open to er ——— — From the Sea Cow. an oil that is rare because the animal | yorses a i | agreeable odor and flavor from such ex- posure, its original odor and flavor | being in themselves pleasant and agree- | avle. This oil Is taken from the mana- | toe or sea cow of the South Awerican rivers. ‘This animal has a layer of solid fat an inch thick next to its skin, and from this the oll is extracted by boiling. The fat in the manatee’s tail is of a much more delleate character than the body fat, and from it an oll that is unequalled by olive oll for the table is obtained. Manatee oll is in great demand in South America and the West Indies as a {ine inbricator, an illuminant and for cooking purposes, I have my doubts whether there is any manates oll in this country besides these few ounces. SUNDAY SCHOOL LES RUNDAY, Marci 6, 1857 Abraham Offering Isaac, 1-14 COMMOR VERRION 1. And it came 10 ufo pass tempt Abra ham, st 1 Biahold 2. And he said, ” whom t} offering upon thee of And Abraham ros and sade oung 1 inve the Hp early in iif d 5 Bs and to i en with wood for And Abra jde ye hore go yonder 4. And Abra Ba inc yok Lhe fire | oth of th And Isaac spake My fat a ———— LESSON ANALYSIS. 1. THE REQUIREMENT 0 1t you Exod, 20 tried (Psa. 66: 4 tation (43 1 : . cometh upon you 0 prove you 1 Pet. 4:12). 11. The Beloved Son Thy son, thine only son, whom thou | lovest (2). i In Isaac shall thy seed be called (Gen. | 21; 1). { Abraham gave all that he had unto | Isaac (Gen, 25: This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased (Matt, 3: i7). This is my beloved son: hear ye him (Mark 9: 7). 11L Th» Reguired Offering : Offer him there for a burnt offering {2 Abraham bound Issae his son, and laid him on the altar (Gen, 22: 9). Though he slay me, yet will 1 wait for him{Job 18 : 15). Whatsoever he sail » oh h unto you, do it {John 2 : 5). He. . .spared not his own son (Rom, 8: 32). 1. “Gol did vrove Abrgham. (1) Codd ’8 purpose in ving man: i } Conl’s methods roving of proving | ("2 y man, A Grovinge proving . n Luke 24: 1 A Complete Preparation: ‘ ‘ x 4 Historical Fact Ii Wasl alia went back to England from with Sir Francis Drake, carried them the first Loa who Virginia with y EVE Seen in that ana companiens country, Of the colonies now f United States, the English Nation set. tied seventeen, the American six, the Dutch one, the Swedes one, the French ten, and the Spanish three, John Milton (1608.74) was the great. epic poet of modern times, His greatest poems, ‘Paradise Lost™ —_—T rai ng the two ten in poverty and blindness, a Danger in New Houses, New houses are liable to be damp from the evaporation from the plastes and mortar, which contains a large A Sp nish proverb says of new houses: “The lrst year for your enemies, the second year for you friends, and the third you may live there yourselves,» This tells the whole story. Aguip, cellar air is apt to be unwholesome; and this is another rea- son why basement rooms are bad, It is very unwise to store vegetables in cellars until they decay. 1 ama king when I rule myself. When you speak to a person, lool him in the face.