—————————————————————— REV. DR. TALMAGE. The Brooklyn Divine™ Sune day Sermon. Sahject : “Ohrist the Surgeon.” Text: “Ihe dnd receive their sight, and he lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear.” Matthew xi. 5. “Doctor,” I said to a distinguished sur goon, ‘do you not get worn out with cons stantly seeing so many wounds and broken bones and distortions of the human body?’ “Oh, no,” he answered: “all that is overs come by my joy in curing them.” A sublimer or more merciful art never came down from heaven than the art of surgery. Catastrophe and disease entered the earth so early that one of the first wants of the world was a doe- tor. Ourcrippled and agonized human race called or qurgech and family physician for ANY Years fore they cams, The first surgeons who answered this call were minis ters of religion, namely, the Egyptian priests. And what a grand thing if all clergymen were also doctors, all D. D's were M. D's for there are so many oases whera body and soul need treatment at the same time, conso lation and medicine, theology and therapeu. tics, As the first surgeons of the world wers also ministers of religion, may these two profes sions always be in full sympathy ! Hut un- der what disadvantages the ly surgeons worked, from the fact that the disssotion of the human body was forbidden, first by the pagans and then by the early Christians! Apes, being the brutes most like the human race, were dissected, but no human body might be unfolded for physiological and ana- tomical exploration, and the surgeons had wo guess what was inside the temple by looking at the outside of it, If they failed in any surgical operation they were persecuted and driven out of the city, as was Archagathus because of his bold but unsuccessful attempt to save a patient But the world§from the very beginning kept calling for surgeons, and their first skill is spoken of in Genesis, where they employed their art for the incisions of a saored rite, God making surgery the predecessor of bap tisin, and we see 1t again in Il Kings, where Ahaziah, the monarch, stepped on some cracked lattice work in the palace and it broke, and he fell from the upper to the low- er oor, and he was so hurt that he sent to ue village of Exron for ald; and Esculapias, who wrought such wonders of surgery thst he was deified, and temples were built for his worship at Pergamos; asd Epi. us and Bodelirius introduced for relief of the world phlabot- : and Damocedes carsd the dislocated ankle of King Darius and tas cancer of his i and Hippocrates put successful hand on fractures and introduced amputation; and Praxagoras removed obstruct and He rophilus began dissection; and Erasistratus removed tumors: and Celsug Roman surgeon, removed cataract from the eyo and wed the Spanish fly; and Heliodorus arrested disease of the throat; Alexander, Tralies, treated the oy azas canters rad for the prevention of rophobia, and Percival Pott came to cor lisoases of the spine: and in our own « have | a Roux anda Larray in Fran an Astley Cooper and an Abernethy in Britain and a Valentine Moft and Willard Par and Samuel D, Gross in Ame and a gal axy of living surgeons as as thet prodecess rs. What mighty g nt mffting of disease since th sick of ancient cities were lai streets, that peonla who had ev sv disordered in the same way what bad better be done for th the priests of olden time who stantly suffering from colds rece walking barefoot over the temple; had to prescribe for themselves tures ware considered human cure that instead of surgeons the people only avo But notwithstanding all tf medical skill of the w the old diseases hang on and moat of th and in our BH buncles of J of the heart sunstroks of a chi shunem, crying: King Asa's diseass © asothing but gout: defection of teeth, that rallied for dental surgery, the skill of which juite equal to anything modern, is still seen + daur the omy the ol 10 avemeanis and bevond al forme the falda of head 11 Was my £ , whi mummies; the ophthaimia caused by the fice of the newly ripe fig leaving the people lind at the roadside; epilepsy, as in she cmse of the young man often falling into the fire, and ofS into the water; bhypochon- dria, as of Nebuchadoezzar, who imagined aimsalf an ox, and going out to the flalds to pasturs, the withered band, which in Bible limes, as now, came from the destruction of ihe main artery, or from paralysis of the shief nerve; the wounds of the man whom the thieves left for dead on the road to Jericho, and whom the good Samaritan nursed, pouring in oil and wine—wine to clease the wound and oil to soothe it, Thank God for what surgery has done for the alle viation and cure of human suffering! Bus the world wanted a surgery without pain, Drs Parre and Hickman and Simp- son and Warner and Jackson, with their amazing genius, came on, and with ther anmsthetics benumbed the patient with nar- eootics and ethers as the ancieats did with hasheesh and mandrake, and quieted him for a while, but at the return of consciousness distress returned, The world has never seen but one surgeon who could straighten the crooked limb, cure the blind eye or recon. struct the drum of a soundliess sar or reduce a dropsy, without any pain at the time, or any pain after, and that surgeon was Jesus Christ, the mightiest, grandest, gentlest and most sympathetic surgeon the world ever saw or ever will see; and He deserves the confi. dence and love and worship and hosanna of all the sarth and halieluiahs of all heaven, “The blind receive their sight and the lame walk: the lepers are cleansed and the deal hear.” I notice this Surgeon bad a fondness for chronic cases, Many asurgeon, when he has bad a patent brought to him, has sald: “Why was not this attended to five years ago’ You bring him to me after all power of recuperation is gone. You have waited until there is a complete contraction of tha muscles, and false ligatures ars formed, and ossification has taken place. It ought to have bean attendwd to long ago.” But Christ the Kurgeon seemed to prefer inveterate cases. Ones was a hamorrh of twelve years, and He stopped it. Another was a curvature of sighlsen years, and He straightensd ft. An- other was a eripple of thirty-sight years.and he walked out well, The sighteat-year pa- tient was a wornan bent almost double. If you cond call a convention of all the sur. ne of all the centuries, their combined skill could not cure that body so drawn out of \ Perhaps they might stop it from getting Bny Worse, haps t contrive braces by which she might be made more comfortable, but it is, be onrable mth cannot restore Lon, Why. thirty-eight jyoars is more than the average of jhumerr life! Nothing but the grave will cure you. But Christ the Surgeon walks along these baths, and I have no doubt passes by some patients who have been only six months disordered, or a year, for five years, and comes to the mattress of ithe man who had been nearly four decades helpless snd to this shirty-eight years’ in- valid said: “Wiis thou be made whole?” The question asked, not because the Burgwon did not understand the protractedness, the desperateness, of the case, but to evoke the mans pathetic narrative. “Wilt thou be made whole’ ‘Would you like to get welll “Oh, yes,” says the man, “‘that is what I came to these mineral baths for; 1 have triod everything. All the surgeons have failed, and all the prescriptions have proved valuneless and I have got worse and worse, and I ca® neither move hand or foot or heal. Oh, if I conid only bo free from thi pain of thirty-eight years?’ Christ the Surgean could not stand that, Bending over ths than on the mattress, and ina voice tender #ith all sympathy, but strong with all omnipotence, Hesays, “Rise” And the invalid instantly scrambles to his knees, and then puts out his right foot, then his left foot, and then stood upright as though ho had never been prostrated. While he stands looking at the Doctor with a joy too much to hold, the Doctor says: ‘Shoulder this mattress! for you are not only well enough to walk, but well enough to work, and start out from these mineral baths, Take up thy bed and walk!” Oh, what a Burgeon for chronic cases then, and for chronic cases now! This is not applicable so much to those who are only a little hurt of sin and only for a short time, but to those prostrated of sin twelve vears sighteen years, thirty-eight years. Here is a Surgeon able to give im. mortal health. “Oh” you say, & am so completely overthrown and trampled down of sin that I cannot rise.” Are vou flatter down than this patient at the minaral baths! No, Then rise. In the name of Jesus of Nazareth, the Surgeon who offers you His right hand of help, I bid thee rise. No cases of acute sin, but of chronic sin-—-those who have not prayed for thirty-eight years, those who have not been to church for thirty-eight years, those who have been gamblers, or libertines, or thisves or outlaws, or blas- phamers, or infidels, or atheists, or all these together, for thirty-eight vears A Christ for exigencies! A Christ for a dead lift! A Surgeon who never loses a case! In speaking of Christ as a surgeon, [ must sonsider Him as an oculist, or eye doctor, and an aurist orear doctor. Was thers ever such another oculist? That He was particularly sorry for the blind folks I take from the fact that the most of His works was with the dis | sased optic nerves. 1 have not time to count { up the number of blind people mentioned | who got His cure. Two blind men in one | house. also one who was born blind; so that it was not removal of & visual obstruction, | but the creation of the coroea, and ciliary | muscle, and crystalline lens, and retina | and optic nerve, and tear gland; also the | blind man of Bethsaida, cured by the saliva | which the Surgeon took from the tip of His wn tongus and put upon the eyelids ; also | two blind men who sat by the wayside. In ar ized lands we have blindness enough, the ratio fearfully increasing, according to the staten of Boston and New York and P i oculists, because of the reading ning and evening newspapers on the yl tw . iy wo joiti the « Fat and come in business, n the lands w 1is Divine Sargeon rated, the cases o ines nd every t ware multi- ything by the particls of smnd Soating in t it i : Oo the eval is » air, and the night dews re of those who slept on { their bh 1 it is estimated and tat neopie are totally # n some of t twenly oul a hiind Amid all rowd of visionless peopia, what work And 1 not believe that f a hundred of that Sar. ried He wansup and 1 among those psopie who feeling aT. or lel by the hand and ingroducing them yw household, to the and the eve 19 #1 rs of both windows wars ; reel went hom “1 wee wank God, | ses t is the ocu wa all need, il He we are blind a # a Soap p 2 ocuiist ao than ons out UTes Ware reg wWara sdowiy their way by «8 of man Pin the faces or rope of dog, of their » and the sunset Lt ran His hand over t and the shut and the I a ing ata roan oes a list ME OF es ind. By f we soo them at all. O put bel and The gloris of a loving are projected, and wa do Or wo have a defective sight which natures we ar i wia are ore them r and pardonis Sharia sen, | the things of the futurs, time bigger than y. Or we are color blind and cannot wo the differeace between ths blackness: of iar kness forever and ths rossats morning of an everlasting day. But Christ the Burgeon | somes in, and though we shrink back, afraid have Him touch us ye: He puls His fingers on the closed eyelids of the soul | and midnight becomes midenoon; and we | understand something of the joy of the young | man of the Bible, who, though he had never hafors bean able to see his hand belore his | tace, mow, by the touch of Christ, had two | headlights kindled under his brow, cried out | in language that confounded the jeering | crowd who ware deriding the Christ that | had effected the cure, and wanted to make | Him outa bad man: ** Whether He be a sinner ! or no, 1 know not; one thing I know, that | whereas [| was blind, now | se.” | Bat this Surgeon was just as wonderful aa an aurist, Very few people have two good ears. Nine out of ten people are particular to get on this or that side of you when they sit or walk or ride with you, because they have one disabled ear, Many have both ears damaged, and what with the constant rack- to | troubles that sweep through the land, it is all, Most wonderful instrument is the hu. man ear. It is harp and drum and telegraph and telephone and whispering gallery all in one, struction that the most difficuit of all thingy to reconstruct is the auditory apparlus The mightiest of scientists heve pul their skill to ita retuning, and sometimes they stop the progress of ita decadence, or remove temporary obstructions, but not more than one really deaf ear out of a hundred thou. sand is ever cured. It took a God to make the ear, and it takes a God to mend it. That makes ms curious to ses how Christ the Sur. geod succeeds as an sured, We are told of only two cases He operaten on as an ear surgeon. His friend Peter, nat. urally high tempered, saw Christ insulted by a man by the name of Malchus, and Peter let his sword fly, aiming at the man's head, but she sword sli and hewed off the out. side ear, and our Sur, touched the iscera. tion sod another ear med in the place of the one that had been siashed away, Bat is not the outside ear that hears. That ie only a funnel for gathering sound and pour. ing it into the hidden and more siaboraie sar. On the beach of Lake Galiles our Bur. geon found a man deal and dumb. The pa- tisat dwelt in stual silence, and was » hiess, Ho not hear a note of mu- or a clap of thunder. He could not eall {ather or mother or wife or children by name. What power can waken that dull tympanum or reach that chain of small bones of 1erive that auditory nerve or ween the brain and the outsid world? The Sur. in the deaf ears and agi. agitating them until ve vital energy to all the dead parts, and they ded, and when our Surgeon withdrew dis fingers from the sere, the two funnels of sound wers clear for all sereet voioes of music and friendship. For the first time in his life he heard the of the waves of Galilee, Through the desert of | silence had been built a king's high- way of resonance and acclamation. But yet he was dumb, No word had ever leaped over his Ui pan was chained under his .. Voeali and soccentuation were to him an impossibility. He could neither I ar barred his ear, will a , having un oar, now mn the shackle o his tongue. The Surgeon will use tho same or salve that Fe used on two teats for the cure of blind sm RH application is made, And ky, the rigidity of the dumb tongue is relaxed, and between the tongue and testh were born a whole vocabu. lary, and words flew into expression, Henot oaly heard but he talked. One gate of his body swung into let sound enter, and the other gate swung out to let sound depart, Why is it that while other surgeons used knives and forceps and Jrotes and spectros scopes, this Surgeon used only the ointment of His own lips? To show that all the tive power we ever feal comes straight from Christ, deaf as a rock and dumb as a tomb. and help us to speak! But what were the Burgeon's fees for all these cures of eyes and ears and tongues and withered hands and crooked backs? The skill and the painlessness of the operations wers not think that the cases He took moneyless, Did He not treat the nobleman’s son? Did He not doctor the ruler's daughter? Did He not effect a cure in the house of a centurion of great wealth, who had out of bis own pocket built a synagogues’? They would have paid Him large fees if He had de. wealthy people in Jerusalem, and among the would have given this Burgeon houses and lands and all they had for such cures as He could effect, For critical cases in our time reat surgeons have received a thousand dol- vy five thousand dollars, and, in one cass | know of, fifty theusand dollars, but the Bur. goon of whom I speak received not ashelel, not a penny, not a farthing, In iis whole earthly life, we know of His having had but sixty-two and a ha f cents, When His taxes were due, by His omuis clence He knew of a fish in the sea which had swallowed a piece of silver money, as fish are apt to swallow anything bright, and He sent Peter with a hook which brought up that fish, and from its mouth was extracted a Roman stater, or sixty-twoand a balf cents, the only money He ever had: and that He paid out for taxes. This great Surgeon of all the centuries gave all His services then, and offers all His services pow, free of charge. “Without money price’ you may spiritually have your blind eves opened, and your deaf ears unbarred, and your dumb tongues loosened, and your wounds healed, and your soul saved it Christian people get hurt of body, mind or soul, let them remember that surgery is apt oan afford present pain for future glory. Beside that, No ether or chloroform or cocaine ever made ons so “All things work to those wh » love God for good to t “Weeping may endurs for a night, but joy What a grand thing for our poor human the world's wounds] when there will sw there will bs no more sick more eye and ear inflrmaries there will bs no more blind or deaf, more deserts, for the round earth will bs expurgated of scorch and pruning hooks, While in the heavenly country we shall soe those who were the victims of ach dont or malformation, or hereditary ills on letes in elysian flelds Who is that maa with such brilliant eyes, ecloss before the throne’ Why, that is the near Jericho, was blind and our wohthalmia! Who is that oful and quesnly woman bee That was the wind bent almost double y herself, and He that listening + of heave Bs Buargeon cured his and gra fore the th eral one whom ani mais roae nasil that pay He to all heaven pay Him with that shall ’ the crowas! In Hi ead be all ni and at His feet be all the Om His hb ars worlds! Concerning Forests A recent writer presents some interest. of forestry. In the earliest times the first pe ples unt in the Asiatic highlands. That region in those days was very fertile, and was able to support a large population. It was but in time the trees disappeared, and the land became almost barren, and great changes in climate took place, Coming dowa to a later period, we have abundaat evidence of the élimatic changes wrought by the destruction of the foresta, The old his. torians tell us how great armies crossed the Rhone, Rhine and Danube on the ice, but after fifteen centuries it is plain that the climate in the vicinity of those rivers is materially warmer. Our civilization is not old enough ia well wooded, fluence of forests upon the climate. But it is fair to assume that the propertéen of region. Snow and ice remain longer in a forest becomes more erratic. Tim winters are short, but the weather is fitful, Cold winds and hot winds blow unexpectedly, and drought is not uncommon, Water courses shrink at times to mere threads, and as others swell into the most appal- ling floods. These general rules, according to the writer whose statementy we have here outlined, are enough to awaken the peo- ple to the importance of the preservation of a large percentage of our forests. The wholesale and reckless wasta of nature's upholstering means the destruction of human life and property. Whem we are warned against a coming evil we should lose no time i® discovering and applying the remedy. —Atlants Constitution. ~ A Young Lady's Marvelous Memory. I know a young lady ia New Torx, the daughter of a well-knowa editor, whose marvelous memory is literaiiy ber fostune, She is an omnivorous y N> book escapes her, and, oudy read, is Never Jongutien. This extraordinary girl saat with the literatare of ages as with the two- y novels of to- day, sod is employed by one of the lead- ing publishers for the sole purpose of tending manuleript and upon its originality, Not only bonowed plots, but borrowed styles, borrowed phrases, are instantly detected and their source is noted down. She Women and Money Earning. The following article is so suggestive that we are sorry we cannot give credit where credit is due. We find it afloat simply ss “selected.” Fortunately the range of choles in avooations widens every year, and it seems to be generally socepted that a woman may do whatever she will. The world is willing to pay for almost any- thing that is done in a superior manner, while slipshod work is the first to go to Whether she recognizes the { ability, latent or known, in some direct- may well be: “What do 1 like to do?” umption in favor of doing it I'he next query should be: i it well ?"' If she finds she ean do one succeeding. Then comes the vital, crucial ques- { tion, “How shall 1 get it to do?" of those who need that very thing, and { ean pey for it. It requires ity. It must always be pro its « essential to the best results, | successful in any department, is pressed with the attention pad to min- { ntiss, without losing the grasp broad, general principles. Probably Miss wil out estates, design gardens an little thought of ever pursuing the business. jut she supports herself Her demgns are carefully { made, and she 18 said to combine A lady, with some skill at painting, while traveling abroad, became interest. | ed in cathedrals, and then in the whole subject of architecture, and resolved to bean architect, She had already achiev ed distinction by designs for houses and While successfully pursued household Another nnusnal business was chosen 30, reduced from af. | fluence to wage earning. Experience had peculiarly fitted ber to be a direc- She provides trous. seaux if desired, and is competent to solect everything, from wraps to alip- She plans the gowns of the bridal party, from the mother to the lit | tle sister who is maid of bonor, or the little brother who is page. Bhe tends to the wedding invitations, ranges the house, plans the floral dec orations, and superintends the wes breakfast or the the case may be. A Washington lady, foresecing the loss of her income, oarefully considered her capabilities, aud ear] decided to put her en making of preserves, pickles and jellies She knew ladies of social prominence and secured their names as references, She salars printed, which she je likely to respond with » put an advertisement n a few newspapers. She received or- h to guarantee her enter- , but presuming on further sales she "made about thirty gallons of pickles of various kinds and 350 glasses of jelly and jars of fruit. Her energy and courage brought a success that warranted ber enlarging the business. » at- ar- ing Hp + i i ry y evening collatio ¥ in the spring Tey dt ergies 100 the had sent to orders, 15 class came to America. Bhe had no near relatives and knew she must sup- port herself here. In ber distress, she went to her rector, whose first inquiry was, “What can you do well?” Grad- ually he drew from her the fact that she had learned earpentry in a parish { school for training women. A bright | thought struck him as he recalled his wife's impatient waiting for a carpenter " house, I'be woman gladly accepted | his suggestion of testing her ability at | repairs the next day. | The rector's wife was greatly pleased land said, “She's worth a dozen men, she is so handy, and she never leaves a | bit of dirt.” The rector recommended | hor to other families and she soon | found herself in good demand. She | her. -—-—— wi - Trees Planted by Artillery. The Duke of Athole consulted | father as to the improvements which he desired to make in his woodland scenery near Dunkeld. The duke was desirous that a rocky crag, called Craigybarns, should be planted with trees to relieve the grim barrenness of its appearance. But it was impossible for any man to climb the crag in order to set seeds or plants in the clefts of the rocks. A happy idea struck my father, Having observed in frout of the castle a pair of small cannon used for firing salutes, it occurred to him to to deposit the seeds of the various trees amongst the soil in the clefts of the © A tinsmith in the village was ordered to makea number of canisters with covers. The canisters were filled with all sorts of suitable tree-seeds, A cannon was loaded, and the canisters were fired up against the high face of the rook. They burst and soattered the seed in all directions. Some years afver, when my father revisi the place, he was delighted to find that his scheme of planting by artillery had ved completely successful, for the were flourishing Inxoriantly in all the recesses of the chil. From James Nasmyth's Autobiography, The chair of chemistry at the French Museum, one of the places occupied by Chevreul to his death, will scon have an official oceupant. On March 8 the Academy of Sclences selected as ita first choles for the position M, Arnaud, second M. Maquenne, snd sent the names to the minister for his decision, The nomination is equivalent to the appointment of M. Arnaud, who at one time was au aid to Ohevrenl SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, SUNDAY MAY «4, 149), The Ruler's Daughter, { | LESSON TEXT. (Luke : 41, 42, 40.58. Memory verses. 54.54) | LESSON PLAN. Toric or tae QUARTER: Jesus the | Saviour of Men, i QUARTER : the Saviour | | Goupex Texr ror THE {| This is indeed the Christ, of the world, John 4 : 42. Lizssox Toric Awakening to Life, | f 1. The Dis i vs. 4], 42. J 2 The Bleeping Child. vs, 6.58 { 2 The Child Awakened, L ve, oh GorLoex Texr: Fear only, and she shall be made Luke 8 : 50, tressed Parent, y Lesson OUTLIRE believe whole, — | not Dany Hour BrApiNGs : M.—1Luke 8 : 41, 42, 49-56. eningy to life. T.— Matt, 9:18, 19, thew's parallel narrative. W.—Mark 5 : 22-24, 35-43. parallel narrat T.—~Dan. 12 ; foretold. F.—1 Thess. 4 : 13-18, ers awakened. B.~1 Cor. 1b : 51-bR, gle ep. 8.—Acts 7 fell Awak- 3.28. Mat- 9 . €¥) Mark's v 1-3. Awakening Not all shall : 54-60, asleep. How Btephen LESSON ANALYSIS, 1. THE DISTHKESEED PARENT. 1, Earnest Entreaty: He fell down at Jesus’ sought him (41 I intreated thy favor with my whole heart ( Psa. Come and lay 9 : 18). He falleth at his feet, him (Mark 5 ; 22). The supplication of a righteous man availeth mach (Jus. 5 : 16). feet, and be- 1 hy hand upon her (Matt and beseecheth I. Alarming liiness: He had an only daaghter,....and she lay a dying (42) He said unto hi head (2hings 4 . My daughter is even n 9:18, My little daughter is at the poi death (Mark 5: 29 Lord, behold, he whom thon sick (John 11 : 3). Il. Attendant Tnrongs: As he went the hi ni42), There followed him Matt, 4: 25). Jesus followed him, Matt. A great multitud b: 24). Great multitn Luke oO: 15 1. “He fel besought #8 father, My head my 149 31 dead (Matt Ww rong muititunde tha ow ma great ltitades disciples tude; (3 . “He had & luv child; { sad home multitudes The Lord's errand; (2) The Lords One, iil PUTIOnSs Of THE SLEEPING CHILD, i. A Natural Conclus' on: Thy daughter is dead (49), Be sat on her knees till noon, and then died (2 Kings 4 I know that thou wil death (Job 30: 23). All flesh shall perish together (Job 34: 15). mand Te ay “ttl, bring me to (Heb, 9: 27 iI. A Christian Truth: She is not dead, but sleepeth (52). The damsel is not dead, but sleepeth (Matt. 9: 24), The child is not dead, but sleepeth {Mark 5: 39). Our friend Lazarus is fallen asleep (John 11: 11 Them also that are fallen asleep in Jesus (1 Thess, 4: 14). i 11. A Natural Doubt: | that she was dead (53) 14: 14. | They laughed him to scorn (Matt, 9: 24.) If thon hadst been here, my brother had not died John 11: 21). { But some one will say, How are the dead raised? (1 Cor. 15: 85). L. “Thy daughter is dead.” for Jesus. —Death (1) As viewed by man; (2) As viewed by Jesus, 2. “Fear not: only believe,” (1) Com- fort; (2) Counsel.—(1) Fear for- bidden; (2) Faith enjoined. 3. “She is not dead, but sleepeth.” (1) Dead, as the world sees; (2) Sleeping, a¢ the Lord sees -—(1) The gloominess of death; (2) The graciousness of sleep. 11. THE CHILD AWAKEXED, I. Command: Maiden, arise (54), Young man, I say unto thee, Arise (Luke 7: 14). All that are in the tombe shall hear his voice (John 5: 28), Lazarus, come forth (John 11: 43). Wherefore he saith, arise from the dead (Eph. 6: 14), iL Awaking: She rose up immediately (55). He that was dead sat up (Luke 7: 15). And shall come forth (John 5: 29), He that was dead came forth (John 11: 44). Youn did he guidken, when ye were dead (Eph. 2: 1). 111. Astonishment: Her parents were amazed (56), were astonished exoecedingly (Matt, 19: 25). They were amassed wrsightwer with » great amazement (Mark 5: 42), And fear took hold on all (Lake 7: 16). They were nll astonished at the of God (Luke 9: 48), 1. “Maiden arise.” (1) A voice dead ears hear; (2) A command dead bodies obey.—(1) Prostrate in death; (2) Erect in "He iy — sm we ns Death vanished; (2) Life trinmph, nas 1) Rising from the dead; Rising into life, 8. “Her parents were amazed.” (1) Borrow dispelled; (2) Joy restored; (3) Amazement aroused LESSON BIBLE READING. DEATH A SLEEP, Bo described by Jesus (Math 9:24; Mark 5:89; Luke8 : 52; John 11 ¢ | In dying eaints fall asleep (Acts 7 : 60 ; 1 Cor, 15 6, 18 : . 1 These 4 : 18-15 ; #3 10, 21:16; 28am. 7:12; 1 Kings 1: 31 ; Job 7:21 : Pua. 12 : 3) 514. 2;Jdohn ll : 11 Cor. 15 Ali, LESSON SURROUNDINGS. Isreevexing Evens i the sowe oduced a long 11 livered partly from a boat and partly in a house [uthe eve ning. our Lord desired to de part to the other side of the Sea of Galilee, probe ably to obtain rest after tl. day. of discourse he parable routs parables, « ARIWITIONR According to Matthew (Malt, 8 18-22), certain persons wished to follow him. Luke, however, inserts a similar incident later (Luke 9: 57-62). A storm arose as the boat was erossing the lake, our Lord be ng asleep. Awaken Arriving at ths country of the other side, Gadarenes, or Mat- A legion of demons from the demoniss were permitted to enter and destroy a herd of swine, The people besought cur Lord to depart from their country, but the healed man, wishing to follow him, was sent home (Luke 22-39). Returning to he west side, Levi (Matthew) made a feast, during which the discourse men- tioned in Luke 30-39 was spoken “While be spake these things” (Matt 9: 1%; Jeirus came, Prace, Evidently Capernaam, appears from Matthew 9 : 1. mse of Levi, and then in » AK First in that of or two after the last of A. U. C. 781; day autumn Ba lesson, in t) that 1s, A. Prusoxs, tude Jairos: Jesus and a multy- following him; Pete, John, sand the her of the sick girl; the mourners in the house; the maid- en who was raised. Ixcrpests. —Jairos eomes, asking the Lord to come and heal his sick dangh- ter; they go (on the way, a poor wo- man 1s healed by touching the tassel] of our Lord's garment); a message comes that the child is dead; our Lord savs, “Fear not,” three disciples enter the house be savs the girl = Mourners [sugh him to i: our Lord bids them food, aud enjoins silemoe about mit James mot hired sleeping rn. give BOY =" Matt. , 35-43, Passaors a M3 — ER + -——— AN UNKNOWN REGION. White Men Never Trod There. f The state of Washington is shat in by the Olympic mountains, which in- elude area of about 2,000 sjuare miles, which has never, to the positive knowledge of old residents of the terri- tory, been trodden by the foot of man. These mountains rise from the level an the stra ts of Ssn Juan de Fuea in the Pacific ocean in the west, Hood's eanal in the east, and the basin of Quinault lake in the south, and, ris. | ing to the height of 6,000 or 5,000 feet, | shut in a vast unexplored area The Indians have never pemetrated 1t, for their traditions say that it is in- habited, by a fierce tribe, which mone of | the coast tribes dared molest. Though | 1t 18 improbable that such & tribe eonld have existed in this mountain country without their presence becoming known to the white man, no man has ever as- ceriained that it did not exist, White men, too, have only vague sccounts of any white man ever having passed | through this country, for investigation | of all the claims of travellers has in- varisbly proved, that they have only | traversed its outer edge. The most generally accepted theory | in regard to this country is that # oon- | sisted of great valleys stretching from | the inward slope of the mountsins to a | great central basin. The theory is | supported by the fact that, although | the country round has abundant rain {and clouds constantly hang ever the | mountain top, all the streams flowing | toward the four points are insignificant, | and rise only on the outward siopes of | the range, none appearing to drain the | great lakes, shut in by the mountains | This fact appears to support the theory | that streams flowing from the inner | slopes of the mountains, feed a great in- | terior lake. But what drains this lake? | 1% must have an outlet somewhewe, and as all the streams pouring from the mountains rise in their outward slopes, it must have a subterranean outlet to the ocean, straits, or the sound. There of Washington's explorers. —-—- An interesting Combat. A terrier dog and a large cobra snake were the unevenly matched principais in a fight described in the Rangoon Tirnas. The snake began hostilities. Tt darted at the dog, which was playin about his owner's grounds, but mi its sim. The dog thereupon grasped the reptile by the hood and ran off home with it, terribly frightening the people there. The dog then commen. ced shaking the snake, during which operation he released his ho d only to a second grip, but this time he no- ortunately caught it below the hood, thus giving him a bite on the lower lip. Thisso infuriated the dog that he tight. ened his grip and served the sanke in two. The suake's bite, however, did its work for the brave little dog f from the mouth and died in a fow tow, ning gh ni A —-— a dl A mioro-onERN ISM has recently beea discovered which ie power | 4 ‘She rose up . of conferring luminosity or phophor esoenoe upon different crustaceans