The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 21, 1889, Image 2

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    REV. DR. TALMAGE.
The Brooklyn Divine’s Sun
day Sermon.
Subfect : “I Must Also Sea Rome.”
Preached at Rome, Italy.
Text: “l mst also ses Rome" Acta
1m, 21,
Here is Paul's itinerary, He was a travel
ing or circuit preacher. He had been mobbed
and insulted, and the more good he did the
worse the world treated him. But he went
right on, Now he proposes to go to Jerusa-
lem and savs: “After that | must also see
Rome.” Why did he want to visit this won.
derful city in which 1 am to-day permitted
to stand? “To preach the Gospel,” you an
swer, No doubt of it, but there were other
reasons why he wanted to see Rome. A man
of Paul's intelligence and classic taste had
fifty other reasons for wantiog to see it,
Your Colosseum was at that time in process
of erection, and he wanted to see it. The
Fornm was even then an old structure, and
the eloquent apostle wanted to see that
building in which eloquence had so
often thundered and wept, Over the
Appian Way the triumphal procession had
already marched for Ev of years, and
3 The Templo of Sat.
turn was already an antiquity, and he wanted
to see that The architecture of the world
enowned city, he wanted to see that, The
places associated with triumphs, the
cruelties; the disasters, the wars mili-
tary genius, the poetic and the rhetorical
‘ame of this great city, he wanted to see
wim, A man like Paul so many sided, so
he wanted to sve that,
the
the
sympathetic, so emotional so full of analogy,
could not have been indifferent to the antiq-
pities and the splendors which move every
rightly organized human being. And with
what thnil interest he walked thess
streets, those only who for tha first time like
ourselves enter Rome can imagine. If the |
inhabitantsof all Christendom were gathered |
into one plain, and it were put to them which |
two cities they would above all others wish to
see, the vast majority of them would vote
Jerusalem and Bome. Bo we can understand
something of the record of my text and its |
surroundings when it says, Paul proposed in
the spirit when he had passed through Mace- |
donia asd Achaia to go to Jerusalem saying
“After that I must also see Rome.” As some |
of you are aware, with my family and only |
for the purpose of what we can learn and the |
good we can get, I am on the way to Pales
tine. Binoe leaving Brooklyn, N. Y., this is
the first place we have stopped. Intermedi
ate cities are attractive, but we have visited
them in other years, and we hastened on, for |
I said belare starting that while I was going
to see Jerusalem must tome
Why do 1 wa to sea it?
by visiting 4
great aposis dR
my faith C
There are th
expenditure to have
In my native land I bh
very limited means t
to hear
of
nlso sea
Becau
associated
ntiles, to
confirmaed
will go through large
faith weakened
wi persons of
pay fifty
1 vias
stianity
wa who
their
ive kn
cents or
dollar
mrney of
tional evi-
dence that our Christian on is an au
the ted grandeur, a solemn, & joyous, a |
rapturous, a stupendous, a magnificent fact,
Bo 1 want to see Rome. 1 want you to show
me the places connecled with Apostolic
ministry. I have heard that in your city
and amid its surroundings, aposties suffered
and died for Christ's sake. My common
sanise tells me that people do not die for th
sake of a hoo) ed They may prac
tice a deception for purposes of gain,
but put the sword to their heart
or arrange the halter around thelr neck, or
kindle the fire around their feet, and they
would say my life is worth more than any- |
thing I can grin by losing it. 1 hear y
bave in this city Panl’'sdungeon. Show it to
me. I must ses Rome also. While | am in
terested in this city because of her rulers or
her citizens who are mighty in history for
virture or talents, Romulus, and |
Caligunli, and Cincinnatus, and Vespasian, |
and Coriolanus, and Brutus, and a bundred
others whose names are bright with an ex
ceeding brightness, or black with the deepest
dye, most of all am 1 interested in this city
because the preacher of Mars hill, and the de
fler of Agrippa, and the hero of the ship
wrecked vessel in the breakers of Melita, and
the man who held higher than any ons that
the world ever saw the torch of Resurrection,
fved, and preached, and was massacred here
Show ms every piace connected with his
wemory I must also see Rome.
But my text suggests that in Paul there
was the inquisitive and curious spirit. Had
my text only meant that he wanted to preach |
here ho would have said so. Indeed, in |
another place, he declared: “Il am ready to
preach the Gospel to you who are at Rome
also.” But my text suggests a sight seeing
This man who had been under Dr. Gamaliel |
had no lack of phraseology, and was used to |
saying exactly what he meant and he said: “1
must also see Rome.” Thersissuch a thing
as Christian curiosity. Paul had it and some |
of ua have it. About other people's business |
I have no curiosity. About all that can con- |
firm my faith in the Christian religion and |
the world's salvation and the soul's future |
happiness, Lam full of an all absorbing, all |
compelling curiosity. Paul bad a great curi- |
osity about the pext world and so]
have we, I hope some day. by the
grace of God, to Ro over and see for |
myself: but not now. No well man, no pros |
pered man, I think, wants to go now. Bat |
the time will come, I think, when I shall go
over. | want to see what they do there, and
I want to see how they do it. I do not want
to be looking through the gates ajar for.
ever, | wont them to swing wide open.
There are ten thousand things I want ex |
plained about you, about myself, about the |
government of this world, about God, about |
everythi Westart in a plain path of
what we know, and in a minute come up
against a high wall of what wedo not know
I wonder how it looks over thers. Some
body tells me it is like a paved city--paved
with gold: and another man tells me it is
like a fountain, and it is like a tree, and
it is like a triumphal procession; snd the
ls me it is all figurative,
I really want to know, after the body is
resury what they wear and what the
sat; and I ble
yi
Yiie or
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Er
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our lives? Who shall not clap his hands In
the anticipation of that blessad country, if
it be no better than through holy curiosity?
As this Paul of my text did not suppress his
curiosity, we hey not suppress ours, Yes,
1 have an unlimited curiosity about all relig-
fous things, and as this city of Rome was so
intimately connected with apostolic times,
the incidents which emphasize and explain
and augment the Christian religion, you will
not take it as an evidence of a prying spirit,
but as the outbursting of a Christian carios-
ity when I say I must als: ses Rome,
Our desire to visit this city is also intensi-
fiod by the fact that we want to be confirmed
in the feeling that human life is brief, but
its work lasts for centuries. inded for ever.
Therefore show us the antiquities of old
‘Rome, about which we have been reading
for a lifetime, but never seen. In our be-
loved America, we have no antiquities. A
church eighty years old overawes us with its
age. We have in America some cathedrals
hundreds and thousands of years old, but
they are in Yellowstone park, or Californian
canon, and their architecture and masonry
We want to
see the buildings, or rulns of old buildings
that were erected hundreds and thousands of
years ago by human hands. They lived fort
or seventy years, but the arches they lifted,
the paintings they penciled, the sculpture
they chiseled, the roads they laid out, I un.
derstand, are yot to be seen, and we want you
to show them to us, I can hardly wait until
Monday morning. I must also see Rome.
We want to be impressed with the fact that
what men do on a small scale or large scale
lasts a thousand years, lasts forever, that we
God is the only old liv
But itis an old age without
infirmities or limitations of
There is a passage of Sorip-
speaks of the birth of the
for there was a time when
of
old age.
ture which
mountains,
the
because He always existed. Psalm
xe, %: “Before the mountains were brought
forth, or ever Thou hadst formed the earth
life, what antiquity attaches to
uities, the things that were old when Amer.
jca was discovered, old when Paul went up
and down these streets sight seeing, old when
I must. I must also see
Rome!
Another reason for our visit to this city is
wrought for our Christian religion. We have |
told in America by some people of |
pusillanimous thing, good for children under |
intelligent and swarthy minded, |
heard of your Constantine the |
who pointed his army to the cross,
‘By this conquer.” 1f thera be |
re connected with his reign or
show it to us. The
the ages was the au
text, and, if for
was
mighty,
fntellnct of
the Christian |
willing to labor and suffer
must something sxalted
and sublime and tremendous in it, and show
me if
idl, and which of
Ostia, that [| may
ses wheres he wont out to die We expect
before we finish this journey to see Lake
Galilee and the places where Simon Peter
and Andrew fished and perhaps
may drop a net or a book and line
walters ourselves bat when fol
the track of those lesser apos-
will learn quite another lesson. I
while in this city of Rome to study the
religion of the brainiest of the apostles, 1 |
want to follow, as far as we can trace it, the |
track of this great intellect of my text who |
wanted to see Rome also, He was a logi- |
cian, he was a metaphysician, he was an all
conguering orator, he was a poet of the
He had a nature that could
swamp the leading men of his own day, and,
hurled against the Sanhedrim, he made it
tremble. He learned all be could get in the
religion he
be
$
you can where he was tr
your roads leads out to
wae
nto
those
lowing
tles 1
want
to a higher school and there had mastered
tha Greek and the Hebrew and per-
fected himself in balles lettres, until, in af
tor years, he astounded the Cretans, and
the Corinthians, and the Athenians, by quo
tations from their own authors. | bave
never found anything in Cariyie, or Goethe,
or Herbert Spencer that could compare in
strength or beauty with Paul's epistles. [ do
pot think there is anvthing in the writings
of Sir William Hamilton that show such
mental discipline as you find in Paul's argu-
ment about justification aod resurrection. |
ing in Milton finer in |
the way of imagination than [ can find |
in Paul's illustrations drawn from the
amphitheatre, There was nothing in
Robert Emmet pleading for his life
or in Edmund Burke arrsiguing Warren
Hastings in Westminster Hall that com-
mred with the scene in the court room when,
elore robed officials, Paul bowed and began
his speech, saying: “I think myself happy,
King Agrippa. because I shall answer for
myself this day.” Ir £, that a religion
that can capturea man like that must have
some power init. It is time our wiseacres
stopped talking as though all the brains of
the world were opposed to Christianity,
Where Paul leads, wecan afford to follow, [
am glad to know that Clirist bas in the Jif
forent ages of the world hed in
His discipleship a Mozart and a Han.
del in msde. a Raphael and
statemanship: a Blackstone, a Marshall and
a Kent In the law: anil the time will come
when the religion of Christ will conquer all
statesmanahip: a Blackstone, a Marshall and
a Kent in the law, and the time will come
when the religion of Christ will conquer ali
the observatories and universities, and ils
osophy will, through her telescope, behold
tory see that “all things work together for
1." and with ber geological hammer
tscern the “Rock of Ages” Oh, in
stead of cowering and shivering when the
skeptic stands before us, and ks of re
ligion as though it were a pusillanimons
thing instead of that, let us take out our
New Testament and read the story of Paul
at Rome, or come and see this city for our.
selves, and learn that it could have besn no
weak that actuated such a man, but
that it is an all \: , Aye!
for all the powar of and the wis
dom of unto mivation.
In her own right Mrs, William Astor
owns real sttute valued ‘ut $6,000,300
She dresses particularly
fond of ‘diamonds, of ‘which the has a
THE RISE OF THE SHADDOCK.
An Excellent fruit from China That
is Becoming Generally Liked.
The Shaddock, or “grape fruit,” as it
is sometimes called, is a tropical fruit
that people in this country are just
coming to know and learning to like.
Everybody has seen the big, light yel-
low globes on the fruit stands in the
streets, and about everybody has tasted
them. The verdict is usually disapprov
al. Most people, when they bite into
their initial shaddoek, have their mouths
made up for the taste of an orange. The
sciduious, piquant flavor of the shad-
dock is 1n the pature of a disagreeable
surprise, and the fruit is at once set
down as not enticing.
Shaddocks must be eatenrightly, and
really to like them is in most instances
an acquired taste. Very few of the
people who eat shaddocks habitually,
and shaddock eating isa habit with
some people, but had to learn to like
them. Another cause for the slow
growth in popular favor of theshaddock
1s that it is imp ssible to tell by the ap-
pearance of a shaddock whether it is
ripe or not. An unripe shaddock is as
disagreeable to the taste as a ripe one is
pleasant, and it often happens that an
experimenter’s first eh wk is a green
one, and because it is so sour as to make
his jaws seem loosened, he condemns ull
shaddocks because of this The
color of the shaddock is a pale yellow,
almost green in its paleness, and this
color deepens but little after the shad-
One.
that of a small foot ball, though it takes
Shaddocks grow on a tree
much like an orange tree,
like it being an evergreen.
all over the
more thickly than oranges,
“J have seen a little twig no bigger
my little finger,” said a frut
y “with five or six big
The twig didn’t look
troe,
shaddocks on it.
comparatively small tree will often bear
as many as 2,000 shaddocks ata time.
hey grow rapidly and easily wherever
and they are rapidly
favor with the public.
coming nto
But in
1 pre
nearly everybody eats them.
here in Washington i ach Week,
sales this season have not
Their
y
inst, SORK0ON 18
them is
the
ai
taste
the tomsto is. A Florida fruit
paper a short time ago printe {an arti
ele to the effect that there was a fortune
y had nerve enough
grove. They are
in popular favor,
surprised if they
as much eaten as
not be
should come to be
oranges are.”
The shaddock is a native of China, it
and liked them there
brought home some of the seeds and
n Florida. For a long
while the trees were valued only for
their picturesquencss
grape fruit, on account of their tart
flavor, snd there is a quite general im-
yrossion that shaddocks grow on vines;
but Southern people, so the story goes,
for want of a better name, gave them
docks are also grown in Lower Califor
nia, though most of them come from
Florida. They are sold on the fruit
stands, according to size, at from five
for very large ones, 15 cents apiece
They vary in quality as much asoranges
do, and while the good ones are very
good, the bad ones, if green, are very
bad. Those with smooth, bright skins
are the best, and as to getting green
ones, it is impossible to tell whether a
shaddock is ripe or not without tasting
it.
——————— A AIA AI
Women as Suicides
A fact interesting to women is de-
veloped in the comparison of old and
recent statistics of suicide. In the old
works on suicide the causes of self de
struction among women were given:
ease. Late investigation shows a mark-
ed decrease from the two first named
causes. This is encouraging, as it
shows & corresponding increase in wo-
man's mental and mortal
children proved unkind the woman
had no resources.
what men formulated as to faith with
out question. Their minds, like those
of children, were unprepared to grap-
ple with new ideas. All this is changed.
Girls are educated with their broth-
ers. Women are in sympathy with
thoir husbands profession or business,
or they earve out independant lives for
themselves. Women have grown less
personal, and they recognize other
claims than their own. Love may be
lost, but humanity, friendship, work,
and books are left. Love may die, but
the sun will still shine and the earth
hold much of happiness,
Women no longer pin their faith ex-
elusively on interpretations of men.
Women are working out problems for
themselves. They no longer consider
it a sin to read, and discuss, and think
for themselves. That minds have
strong enough to grasp a new
without Growing hysterical and be-
coming insane or committing suicide.
Only » weak woman kills herself for
love; only a silly one in religious ex-
citement.— Washington Post,
A max of integrity will never listen to
any reason against conscience.
Wosax is a lovely creature, and she
knows it, too, but she is always
10 be told of it once more.
“Edith will
sive-—Juck:
a have me?! The Heiress: “Thanks,
tH
Too Expen
ack, 1 can’t afford you,”
»
THE USE OF SOAP.
Great Care Should be Taken to
Guard Against Impure
Materials.
The use of soap is as general as the
use of bread. It is used by all classes
and conditions of modern civilization;
it is a necessity in every household,
alike in toilet and kitchen, and if there
is one thing that more than others
should be used intelligently in everyday
lite it is soap. According to the Phila
delphia 7imes, however, there is noone
article of general use that is used as ig-
norantly, and as injuriously because of
ignorance, as this universal household
necessity.
It is safe to say that two-thirds of all
the soaps used by the people are posi-
tively injurious, aud some of them are
sources of disease. The cheaper fancy
soap used by the masses are, as a rule,
manufactured from impure and more or
less injurious material, and their im-
often cause diseases which are
tO cure,
face or hands without the best intorma~
tion as to its purity.
————————————
The Influence of Home,
eminent financial suthority in that city,
eInarg
mpiary
Had I known he had not a happy he
I would not Ian
such a capacity who did not live happily
at home.’
Here is {food for reflection.
involved, which of the
greatest importance and wildest appli
cation. The home life isthe basis of all
fo, and a happy home is essential to
department
Occasionally 8 man or woman
is strong enough and sufficiently self-
contained to endure disquiet and 1
have any
There is
15
il
of duty ut the
1 hey bee ne dimen
and st last break
Are not so,
heart,
to this cause. 3
one finds tied fo
life to a home, and has become conv
cod that there is no rest or
for him in it, it is not
he becomes discouraged and
down. That is the natural result, |
ever much we may depl
is more true of the
WOIman.
On the other hand a me
to stand almost any storm, m
endure any hardship or suffering,
may fall to his Jot in the world,
ses are to be traced
x: \
himsell
hat
SAY
surpr
BYILDS
*
Ie
In it he has
%
wTEaL.
trinmph, are to be attributed to the
happy homes in which they live
much like
ACH BO heaven
y home.
Home,
——— --— ’
Whata Woman Can Do.
What can 8 woman do?
She can langh with her lips
man think she is the merriest ericke
n the world, while her eves full of
unshed tears and ber heart 1s beating
as if it would burst
She can forgive a great sin
angel, and nag a man about
make sn
§
Rig
She ean fix over old fro
thers with a cheerful heart {
help somebx iy, and she oa
first money that she
she can for herseld
matines and on sweets,
she needs a new pair of shoes,
She can quiet a baby with one or two
reassuring pats, when a man might al
most knock the life out of it, give ita
real
Tima
when sh
She can employ a whole day looking
the time of trouble, she could buya
monrning outfit in half an hour and her
shroud for somebody's baby.
She ean ery out her troubles on a
man’s shoulder and feel a relief that is
only possible from masculine help, and
made for.
Sho can smile over a dinner of bread
that's all she
ia to the fore, she can turn up her nose
at any game below canvas-back duck,
and wonder at people caring for any-
thing but the best Die of Burgundy.
What can't she do? I will tell you.
She can never wear trousers with any
grace, and she will never be able to re-
sist either the man or the baby who has
gotten the love of her heart. — Bab.
Frw people are aware that pianos
suffer as much from over-dryness as
from over-dampness. At this time of
year it is particularly necessary to see
that the atmosphere of the room is moist
enough to prevent the sounding-board
from cracking or from losing its reson-
ance, and the felt of the hammers from
drying up. The sudden rattling sud
“tin-pan’’ sounds which often surprise
pianists who neglect fheir sxpenaive pi-
anos is often due to over- ms,
A piano tuner recommends that a grow.
ing plant be kept in the room, and says
that as long as the plant thrives the pi-
ano ought to. This plant will require
more water than a plant in any other
place. Another remedy is to put a wet
sponge in a vase near or under he pi-
ano, nge thoroughly
we Home Jowrnal,
Harrisnss is of a negative kind--no
SCHOOL LESSON,
SUNDAY
. Buspay NovEMBER 24, 1343,
Solomon's Wise Cholce.
LESSON TEXT,
( Kings 3 : 5-15. Memory verses, 12, 11)
LESSON PLAN,
Toric or THE QUARTER :
and Adversity.
Prosperity
Goroex Texr ror Tue Quanren: As
long as he sought the Lord, God made
him to prosper.——2 Chron, 26 : b.
Lizssox Toro The 1
tight Choice,
rf 1. God's Offer, ve
|
Lessos OUTLINE J 4
1
Solomon's Choice,
His,
L. God's Bounty, vs. 10-15,
Goroex Texr: Wisdom is beller
than rubics,—Prov. 8 : 11.
Daruy Home READINGS
M.-1 Kings 3 : 5-15,
a right choice.
8:1-10.
wrong choice,
Num. 14 : 1-12, 26-39.
ties for a
T - Chron. 1
choles
10,
Hewards of
T. (len. Penalties for a
Ww
wrong choice.
: 1-17.
Rewards
He ward
A right choice
ANALYSIS,
1. GOD'S OFFER
LESSON
I. Cod Manifesting Himself ;
The Lord BP Pear ito :
The Lord BPPEar ad to Bolog
ond time (1 Kings § : 2).
In that nightdid God appear 1
mon (2
The only |
clared hime
a who was manifested in the
Tim. 3 : 18).
. God Manifested In Dreams
Lord appeared. . . .in a dream by
H flesh
it! fim
isa HA
| speak inadream {Num
11. Cod’'s Offer Announced.
God said. Ask what 1 shall give
thes
sk what I shall
BA WN A0% Baie
1
.
God to 1
1
SRI UNAVG Din
Oi
uro
and it shall be g
ive thoe (2
§
Ask, iven you (Matt. 7:
Whatsoever ve shall ask
oeive (Matt, 21: 22).
Ask, that your
(dohn 16: 24).
1. “In Gideon the Lord sppeared to
Solomon.” (1) Solomon's errand to
Jehovah's errand to
1) Gibeon; {(2)Solomon;
r may be fulfilled
(ribeon; (2)
Solomon.
(3) Jehovah,
“In adream by night.” (1)
nethods of manifesting himself; (2
God's seasons for manifesting him-
self,
“‘Giod said, Ask what I shall gi
thee.” (1) A 1
wailing servant; (3) A
"
profier §
God's
14
ai
ETRCIOus Cron; (2)
3 gener
Cod sabundantatnlity
23 God's sbundant will
11. SOLOMNMOR'S CHOI
i. Mercy Recognized:
The
great Kindness
sn hast shewed unto my father
61.
Pea. BY. IR),
nore
{Paa. 119: 64
Even the sure
55: 8).
1 will give yon the holy and sure bl
ings of David (Acts 13: 34).
mercies of David (Isa
Ble
I am but a little child (7).
Solomon my son is yet young and
tender (1 Chron. 29: 1).
so great? (2 Chron i: 103,
(Jer. 1:0).
I am the least of the apostles (1 Cor. 15:
£3
11. Wisdom Desired:
Give thy servant an understanding
heart (9).
(Jive me now wisdom and knoviedge
{2 Chron. 1:10),
Happy is the man that findeth wisdom
tov. 9: 1
i
ws
f 1s
of God (Jas, 1: 5).
vant David
Blessings for the father; (2) Praises
from the son.
ered; (2) Praises expressed,
“I am but a little child.”
royal speaker; (2) A lowly estimate;
(3) A wise utteranoce.—{1) A grest
king: (2) A little chald.
“(ive thy Servant... .an under-
standing heart.” (1) A great op-
portunity; (2) A wise improvement.
<1) All treasure offered; (2) Heart
treasure asked,
111 GOD'S BOUNTY.
i. Pleased With His Servants:
The speech pleased the Lord, that
Solomon had asked this (10).
The Lord taketh pleasure in them that
four him (Psa. 147; 11).
The Lord taketh pleasure in his people
{ Pan. 149: 4).
Well done, good and faithful servant
{ Matt. 25: 21).
He had been well-pleasing unto God
(Heb. 11: 5).
11. Exceeding Their Requests:
have also given thee that which thou
hast not asked (13).
Knowledge is granted;....and I will
give thee riches (2 Chron. 1: 12
Grace did abound more
{Rom. Bb: 20).
Exceeding abundantly above all that we
ask or think (Eph. 8: 20).
pr. _ Tin 4
ti. ron Al Their Oraitude:
Solomon awoke, and,... he... stood
before the ark, . . and siftred 16
pot all his benefits (Pea. 103: 2),
ex.
SL ————— EI 8
What shall 1 render unto the Lord fo
all his benefits? (Pen. 116: 12.).
O the depth of the riches... .of God,
(Rom, fi: 88).
Thanks be to God, which giveth us the
vietory (1 Cor. 15; 57).
1. “I'he speech pleased the Lord.”
(1) It was RA (2) It was un-
worldly; (3) It was fundamental;
(4) It was devout.-(1) It qualified
Solomon; (2) It blessed Israel; (3)
It honored God.
. **I have given thee a wise and un-
derstanding heart.” (1) The infinite
(river; (2) The splendid gift; (3)
The favored recipient; (4) The
benificent results. —{(1; What God
gave: (2) What Bolomon gained,
“If thon wilt walk in my ways,
I will lengthen thy days.” (1) Con-
dition: (2) Consequence. —{1)God's
ways; (2) Many days; (3) Heart{elt
vraise,
“ESSON BIBLE READING.
Wise
1. Demanded:
By Moses at Sinai (Exod. 3
By Joshua at Shechem
14, 15),
By Elijah st Carmel (1
3v Malachi at Jerusals
CHOORBIRG,
Kings
By John at Jordan ()
By Jesus at Nain
By Solomon
By Peter and
ois,
iv Mary (Lui
t 10.04
By Matthew
b
.
At Pailin
Rewarded:
»
closing
3:8 to
“¥ od be-
sible that
yudd be
Kings
iat th
narrated
ipter 24 be
t Naths
cisim
King rm
anlar:
in in ““the tent of
tne Lord” at Gibeon, but i= slain there;
| Shimei i commanded not to leave Jer-
pain of death, but three
| years later disobeys this command, and
{1 Kings 3 : 1). BSacri-
BAYEe 1 bE, CHE
usalem on pe
is put to death
| fices are offered in the high places, and
during a visit to Gibeon, ‘the great
high place,” the events of the lesson
about six miles
often ntioned in
now called
i
Piraces {3ibeon,
h of Jerusalem,
pe Old Testament history,
d-Jib. There is,
cussion as to the site
however, some dis-
of the Hgreat high
whether it was
mountain close to the city, or Neby
Samwil, a higher peak about a
BWAY, The the
probable site
I've, — Apparently,
year of Solomon's reign,
X i dated from
margin of our Bibl Lenor-
Many good authorities uphold
1017 as the correct date.
Solomon, to whom
in & dream
While Sol
sacrificing,
to him, and permits him tos
what he will, Solomon as “an un-
derstanding heart.” Jehovah not only
| grants his request, but promises him,
in addition, wisdom, riches, and honor.
Length of days is also promised to the
| young king, but upon a condition.
Panarrzn Passaoe, 2 Chronicles 1 :
{ 7-13
place’ in Gibeon; on a
«1
nie
more
first-named is
0 15 (On the
EL Y
mant
B.C.
PERSONS,
Lord sppears
Ixcipuxrs.
(:ibeon
the
mon 18 at
Bppears
k of hum
Je hovah
¥
&
» —
Married or Single.
|
| Takmg faces in the mass, they are
i marked by very distinct characteristics.
| One of these 1% the married, and the
| other the unmarried face. Of course
| these *two classes do not include all
| faces. There are many countfenances
| which cannot be said to belong to
| either. Among those which do arrange
themselves under one or the other of
these heads there is also a vast differ-
| ence. Some of them possess the char
| soteristic more and some of them less.
| In some instances the married look is
| strongly pronounced; 1% is as definite
and decided as midday. From the
more marked kind the married expres-
| sions lessen, and finally fade away or
| disappear in something else, as sunset
| merges into twilight and twilight into
| moonlight or darkness.
There 1¢ no mistaking the married
jook, or the unmarried, for the type is
invariable, Each is prominent, mark-
ed, individualized, and in many
of its expressions is the exact
opposite of the other. The prevail
ing quality visible in the married
face is indifference. This trait is never
absent, but its strongest development
is when the husband and wife mt, stand
or ride together. If one will sup a
line passing through the head
at right angles to the axis of the ears,
and prolonged fore and aft for a short
aistance and then place the heads side
by side, it will cecur that, as a rule,
the ends of the line converge in the
rear of the heads and separate in front
of the face. ol
This exy ent is based, of course,
on the of 0 wil by the side of
her hus and not t of some
other woman. In the case, the
probabilities are that the scute angle
would be formed in the front of the
oon:
meeting of the lines at the back
of the heads of the husband and wife
may rly be termed the matrimon-
inl angle. 11 grows more obtuse as the
married par recede from the honey-
moon, — Chicago Herald.
Mex would be less wicked if they