AIR IER RY. Oh, TALMAGE'S SERMON I'he Brookivn Divine's Sanday Sermon, “The 1vead Sea and The River Jordan,” Subject: Tex?: “A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho,"—Luke x., 30, David the poet here pictures a volcano, and what Church's Cotopaxi does on painter's canvas this author does in words. You see a hill, calm and still and for ages immovable, but the Lord out of the heavens puts His finger on the top of it and from it rise thick vapors intershot with fire, “He toucueth the hills and they swoke.” God is the only being who can manage a voloano, and again and again has He em. ployed volcanic action. The pictures on the walls of Pompeii, the exiinmed Italian city, a8 we saw then last November, de- monstrate that the city was not fit to live, In the first century that city, engirdled with palaces, emparadised with gardens, pillared into architectural exquisiteness, Was at the foot of a mountain, up the sides of which it ran, with vineyards and villas of merchant princes, and all that marble and bronge anc imperial baths and arbori- culture and rainbowed fountains and a coliseum at the dedication of which nine thousand beasts had been slain, and a supernal landscape in which the shore gave roses to the sea and the sea gave crystals to the shore, yea, all that beauty and pomp and wealth could give was there to be seen or heard. But the ! morals of the city had shocked the world, In the year 79, on the 4th of August, a black column ross above the adjoining mountain and spread out, Pliny says as he saw it, like a great pine tree, wider and wider, until it began to rain upon the city first thin ashes and then pumics stone, and sulphurous fumes scooped, and streams of mud poured through the streets till few people escaped, and the city was buried, and some of the inhabitants etkhteen Jhundred years after were found embalmed in the scorie of thatawful doom. The Pe called upon voloanic forces to obliterate that rofligate oity. He touched the hills and 8 smoked, Nothing but volcanic action can explain what I shall show you at the Dead Sea uncn which I looked last December, and of whose waters I took a bitter and stinging taste. Concerning all that region thare has been controversy enough to fill libraries, science thing, empioyed and both testimonies are one and the same. Geology, chemistry, geography astronomy, iehthyology, ornithology ane eoology are coming ons by one to confirm the Scriptures. Two leaves of one book are Revelation and Creation, and the penman- ship is by the same divine band. Our horse back ride will not be so steep to-day, and you can stay on without clinging to the mel of the saddle, but the scenes amid which we ride shall, if possible, be more thrilling, and by the time the horwes sunff the sulphurous atmosphere of Ashaltites, or the Dead Sea, we will be ready to dismount and read from our Bibles about what was done that day by the Lord when He touched the hills ani they smoked. Take a detour and pass along by the rocky fortress of Masada, where occurred some- thing more wonderful in the way of heard of that Herod built a palace amid Shese heaps of black and awful rocks which like a tumbled midnight A great band of about one cussnd olading fami afterward held the fortress the Roman army stormed that and the bandits could no longer hold the place, their chieftain, Eleazar, made a pow- speech which persuaded them to die before they ware cantured. First the men kismed their families a loving and tearful goody and then put a dagger into their and the women and children were slain. Then ten men wers chosen by lot to slay all the other men, and sach man lay down by the dead wife and children and waited for those executioners to do their work. This dons, one man of the ten killed the other nine. Then the survivor committed suicide, Two women and five children had hid them- selves, and after all was ove: came forth to tell of the nine hundred and sixsy slauph- tered. Great and rugged natural scenery makes the most tremendous natures for good or evil. Creatstatesmen and great robbers, great orators and great butchers, were nearly alli born or reared among mountain recipices. Btrong matures are hardly sver upon the plain, When mea have any- thing greatly good or greatly evil to do they come down off the rocks. Pass on from under the shadow of Masada, the scene of concentrated diabolism and come along where the salt erysials crackle under the horses’ hoofs. Yon are near the most God forsaken region of all the earth, You to whom the word lake has heretofore sug- gested those bewitchments of beauty, Lu. sarne or Cayuga, some great pearl set by a lo God in the bosom of the luxuriant val ley, change all your ideas about a lake, and tee this sheet of water which the Bille calls the Salt Sea, or Sea of the Plain and Josephus calls Lake Asphaltites. The muleteers will take care of the horses whije we go down to the brink and dip up the liquid mixture in the palm of the fend The watars are a com miagiing of brimstone and pitch, and have six times larger centage of salt than thoes of the Atlantic C the ocesn hav ing four per cent. of suit this lake 26 pi pnt, Lake Bir-i-kol, of India, is the ghest lake in the world. This lake, on the banks of which we kneel, is the lowest lake, It empties into no among other things, for the simple reason thas waler cannot ru up hill. It swallows up the river Jordan makes no response of thanks, and never re- ports what it does with the twenty millions cubic feet of water annnally received from that sacred river. It takes the tree branches and logs floated into it by the Jordan and pitehes them on the banks of bitumen to de eng there. he hot springs near its banks by the name of Callirhos, where King Herod «une to bathe off his illnesses, no sooner pour in- to thissea than they are poisoned. Not a fish scale swims it. - Not an insect walks 8 ft hates life, and if you attempt to swim there it lifts you by an unnatural buoyancy to the surface as much as to say''we want no lifes here, but death is our proference death.” Those who attempt to wade into this lake snd submerge themselves, come out almost maddened, as with the sting of a hundred wasps and hornets, and with lips and eye« lids swollen with the strange ablution. Yhe sparkis of its waters is not like tha sparkle of bgauty on other lakes, but « CT A nv lis dripped with pitch most inflammable fl'hey say, { think, on a ridge of hills, They | stood high up and conspicuous, radiant fy their sins, ostentatious in their debaucheries, | four hells on earth. ' Oneday there was a rumbling in the earth, and a quaking. “What's that? cry the af “What's that®™ The foundations of the earth were giving way. 4 voicano, whose fires had been burning for ages, at God's command bursts forth, easily setting everything aflame, and first lifting these cities high in the air and then dashing them down in chagns fathomless. The fires of that eruntion intershot the dense smolk: and rolled unto the heavens, only to descend ugain. And all the configuration of that country was changed, and woere there was a hill there came a valley, and whore there had been the pomp of uncleanness came wide spread desolation. fhe red hot spade of voleanic action had shovelel un ler the cities ©f the plain. Before tha catastronas the cities stood on the top of the salt and sul phur., After the catastrophs they wore Wrder the salt und sulphur. Belenes rigat Heveistion right. *‘He toucheth the hills and thev smoke," No sciences ever frightened believers in Boa velation so much as geolozy., They feared that the strata of the earth would contradict the Seriptiares, and then Moses must go un der. DButasin the Dead Sea instance so all cases God's writing on the earth and God's writin in the Bibly are harmonious. The shelves of rook correspond with the shelves of the American Bible Society Boienes digs into the earth and finds deep down the remains of plants, and so the Bibie announce plants first. Sciences digs downand says. “Marineanimals next,” aud the Bible savy, | “Marine animals next.” Science digs down and says, “Land animals next” ‘Then comes man!’ says science ‘Then comes man” responds the Bible. Belence digsinto the regions about the Dead Sea, and finds result of fire and masses of brim stone, and announces a wonderful geslogi cal formation. “Oh, yes,” says the Bible, | ‘‘Mos#s wrote thousands of years 20, ‘L's Lord rained upon Bodom and upon Go morrak brimstons and fire from tae Lord out of heaven,’ and David wroty, ‘He tguch- eth the hills and they smoke.” B85 I guess | we will hold on to our Bibles a little longer A gentleman in the ante-room of the Whoite moruing, got thers fifteen minutes early, and | raked the servant, “Wao is talking in the aext room? “It is the President, sir.” “ls anybody with him? “No, sir; he is reading the Bible. He spends every morning from & to 5 o'clock reading the Scriptures.” My text implies that God controls vol canoes, not with the full force of his baad, Etna, Btrom- boli and Vesuvius fawn bounds before the hunter. Thess eruptions Humboldt counted two hundred of them, but since then the Indian archipel- these great mouthpieces. They are on every continent and in all latitudes. That earth- quake whioh shook all America about six or seven sunuMpers ago was only the raviag around of volcanoes rushing against the to break They seem re FProfligacy was the chief characteristic of the soven cities over which they put their smoth- pail, Herculaneum, Stable, If our American cities do not quit their ‘ome a crime, if wealthy libertinism con inues to find so many doors of domestic life ypan to its faintest toucs, if Hussian and ped in fanished from the wows stands and ladies’ pariors, God will Jet loose some of these suppressed monsters © And I tell these American cities tuat it will be more tolerable for Sodom judgment day of judgment be in this f or fa the closing century sf the earth's continuance The wolcanic forces are already in existence, but in the chained in the ken profi mretio or whelael 1 auch ug a faded shaw! under the street gas light or w wrapped in the fines” array that foreign molGary over une of God they are ous fire Yet let stagger into a in nmercial throne M3 ever wrougnt nr wmno walting for it, whether in domestic life or in the founda yn which sprang out the astations that ywallowed the cities of the He touchyth the hills and they was of the earth Ir * . zh of this volcanic region of march prancing and neighing for de We are off 1 taem the salutation * Paace be with you," Salaam Aleikoum, their smile sometimes doubt as to whether it is of the Arabic. Oh, those Bedouins ruffaniam and poor pronunciation commingling of When a band of them came were about to taks ting upon her horse, took out her note-book ands, and sesing this composure the bandits thought it something supernatural and fed is all When Martin Luther was told Ledpsic if it rained Dake Georges nine days.” Now wo come through regions where ther are hills cut into the shape of cathedrals, and puipit and dome and architecture of the Perhaps it is boonuse God loves the church s Yellow. that unseen spirits may sometimes worship there® shall we seo the Jordan? I ask All the alert, and lookin willows for the The Missie through tamarisk and groatest river of ail the earth, re plotaresqus, the Thaties has mor . what Jeremiah says, ‘‘Bebold, he shall gou like a lion from the swelling of Jordan, No river so often changes its mind, for it turns and twists, traveling two hundred pales to do that which in a straight We might be done in sixty miles. Among banks now low, now bh, now on rocks, now of sand, laving the feet of the terebinths and oleanders and acaciss and reeds and pine tachios and silver poplars. This river mar ries the Dead Bea to Lake Gallilee, and did ever so rough a groom take the hand of so fair a bride? This is the river which parted to let an army of two million Israelites across. Hers | the skilled major general of the Assyrian host at the seventh plunge dropped his lep- rosy not only by miraculous cure, but wug- gesting to all ages that water, and plenty of it, has much to do with the sanitary im- provement of the worid, Here f8 where somo theological students of Kiisha's time were outting trees with which to build a thas ogical seminary, and an axe head, not sullic ently wedged to the handle, flew off inio the river and sank, and the young urn deplored not s¢ much the loss of the nro aend as the fact that it was not his own and cried, “Alas! it was borrowed” and the prophet threw a stick into the river, and in defiance of the law of gravitation the iron axe head came to the surface and floated liks a cork upon. the water, and kept float- | ing until the young man caught it. A min | ac.e parformed to give one an opportunity to return that which was borrowed and a rebuke in all ages for those who borrow and never return, their bad habit in this respect so established that it would bs a miracle if thoy did return it. Yes, from the bank of this river Elijiah took a team of fire, showing good, and that there is no need that a child yf God fear anvihing, for if the most de. structive of all elements was that day fash. joned inton v for a departing saint, nothing can ever burt you who love and trust Y ama #0 glad that that chariot of Elijah | was not made out of wood or crystal or any- thing ordinarily pleasant, but out of fire, and vet ie went up without having so much as t i . When stepping from amid the folinge of these oleanders and tamarisks on the banks of the Jordan, he put his foot on the red step of the red equipage, and took reins of vapor in bis hands and ypen gate of heaven, it was a scens forever memorable So the hottest afflictions & your life may roll you heavenward, Bo the most burning persecutions, the most flery me uplifting. Only be sure that when you pull on the bits of fire you drive up toward God and not down to- ward the Dead Bea. When Latimer and Rid- shariot of fire. When my friend P. P. Bliss, rail train than broke through Ashtabula bridge and then took flame, I said, “Another Eidah gous up in a chariot of fire™ wt this river is a river of baptisma Christ was here baptized and John baptised sions the candidate for baptism and the of- this river, and then while both were standing the water was tipped in the hand of one and sprinkled upon satire form of the one baptised disappeared for a moment beneath surface of the Sood, 1 do not bow declare. think without deep smotion of the fact that my parents held me in inf to the tismml fons in the old meeting at Bam srville and assumed vows on my behalf I tsm observed in tne “iver Jordan on that afternoon in last December, the particulars +f which I now for the first time relate. It was a scene of uniroaginable solemnity, ap by oy side that day and told me thats young man who is nr studying for the jospel ministry would like to be baptised b me in the river Jordan I got all the facts [ could concerning his earnestness and faith, and through persooal examination made my- wif confident he was a worthy candidate. aptistries, and thess were olitained. As we were to have a large group of different antionalities present [ dictated to my faughter a few verses and bad eGpite mough made to allow all to 4 i tar dragoman bad a man familiar w the depth and the swiftness of the priate place for Then | read from Bible he accounts of baptisms in that sacred stream, and implored the presence of the the ceramony at the Jordan, Then as the candidate and sn the banks sang in full and resounding On Jordon's stormy banks | stand And cast a wishis! eve To Cansan's fair snd Bappy land, Where my possessions le, Oh, the transporting. raptorons scens Tust rises to my sight Sweet flo'ds arrayed in liviog green And rivers of delight, By this tine we had reached the midis of Ag the candidate sank un@y¥ the anne of the Father, and the Son, and the s tide of holy emotion such as we shall not until we step into the Will those tides be Friends on th m the other » ore to help us off. Friends to see us land See! Thay root us. How well we know their stept ank to bank wa hall them with tears sad vo ball us with paim branches. They my © us, “is toat you, father™ “Is that yea nother? and we answer by asking, “is Conld we bat stand where Moses stood And view the landscape o'er, Xo: Jordan's stream nor Death's cold Sal) Conld fright us froma the shore. Emperor Wiliam Guyed Thea I heard of a funny story in connection o him- introduce various of the town dignitaries to his Majesty. Fourteen of them were standing in a line aud the where the Burgomaster took itu “Herr Peter Paul Schmidt-His PU SS — 7, A TINY REBEL IOUVIS i L BDO 1, trom “‘gatuems’” into “‘plaits,” any longer the “baby.” Never when once be could walk, searching and prying and trying all day long; frankly di-obedient. but ro sweet and simple withal, yon feit like begging his pardon for accusing him of w rong-do- ing. If be came to you bringing the broken fragments of some precious trinket he had been forbidden to tonch, he said so ewrnestly, ‘Me didn t bake it,” with a look of regret, not re- morse, it seemed absurd to think that be had really done the harm, It was this seeming lack of moral sensibility tiat led his mother to plan and carry out his first severs punish- ment, use the words ‘‘carry advisedly, for the attempt to brought to light a number of conflict ing elemen s of character. It was after one of his wild days that he was to be punished. He Lad been other, as fast as the hours bnoyant and merry. A happy-hearted domestic laws pr stitutions, 1t was decided that p must be put to bed, early and alone, for punishment. He was delighted with his four-o'cli ck tea, cheerily un. observant of the grave faces of his mother and nurse, Tea over, h.s mother took him by the Land and was leading him towards the hall, when he asked, with a vague note of alarm in lis voice, ‘Where'd Betty and Tradie?” “They've not had their supper,” his mamma answered, seriously. *‘You are to go to bed alone, dear; mamma He sat down on the stairs in instant rebellion. His sweet, chubby face was quiet determination to resist was ex- “Me won't doe up tairs he said and said But rebellions little boys ean be up stairs after all. “Me won't be undessed, me won't” sod quickly taking his protests and soothing him only by her silence and strong touch. between his sobs. “Me undess ‘oo an’ ms. Me don'tlub ‘oo any more, me “Me won't teep dat night-dess om, if ‘oo put it on,” he exclaimed, buffeting the garment with his fists ss it surely came down over his head. His and struggles and many words, ““Me won't tay in de bed if oo put His mother hesitated to command obedience in every detail of the punish- inevi- result. His mother’s patience measured by his sturdy ob- stinsey. Four times she tucked him up in bed, and as many times did he hop out again. Tiring st last, he lay still & fow minutes, his mother sitting beside him with her hand on has shoulder. Then he thought » “Me won't tay up tairs, me won't, The dently, aud this was the place for the principal command. “Whatever yon do pp here, Percy,” come down stairs again With that she left him, at once. As she stairs, he piped up, Once up in bed, then half submittiog and still protesting, the little rebel sobbed, “Me didn't bab nuff supper, me didn't.” This was the last shot in the locker. and his mother was only too She waited till all was silent in the nursery, aad then went very slowly up staira. She caught a glimpse of the li. tle prisoner mtling on the top stair, waiching for the bun, and then heard little fat, bare feet pounding quickly yhen she reached the nursery Percy was stowed away in his erib, with eyes shut tight. The next morning, this dear little disobedient boy went tumbling isto his mother's bed, lovingly patting her face, and whispering in her esr, **Dood Put him to bed mate him dood." 2he Homemaker. IN THE FIRELIGHT. BY EUGENE FIKLD. The fire upon the hearth is low, And 18ers is stillness everywhers, While, like winged spirits, here and there The fi-elght shadows fiuttiering go. A childish treble breaks tha gloons, (Luke 23 : 1.12. Memory Texr vor THE i 4 Then M.—Luke 23 nocence aflirs T.—Matt, 27 pa allel narrativ W.- Merk. id) lel narrative, lel narrative, F. John Bavioar, 8.—Heb, Saviour. model. I. JESUS BEFORE im Luke 3 : 1 John 18 : 28 for the face of Pilate Mark 15 : 3). ion (Lake 23 : 2 (Luke 23 : 5). 19: 7). (Matt. 27: 28). fault (Luke 23: 14). (Luke 23: 32). in him (John 18: 88, up, sand bronght him Inte.” the Jews; (2) Arraigne Gentiles —{1) structive wickedness, a king.” kingsbip (1) As made king. insion. I. JESUS dwelt in Nazareth 23). Jordan | Matt 3: 12). areth of Galilee Christ 3:1). 3: 20). is this? (Luke 9: 8), thee (Luke 13: 31). Pleasure (Matt. 12: 38). alter wisdom i A T—— wy TE him (Mark 15: 14), They were the more urgent, (Luke 28: 5). They cried out all together, Feaying— (Luke 23: 18}, They were instant (Lake 28: 24, 11, An Evil Friendship: Herod and Pilate became friends. . ., that very day (12). The rulers take counsel against the Lord (Pua. 2: 2). Though hand join in hand, the evil man shall not be unpunished (Prov. 11: 21). He that maketh many fnends doeth it destruction (Prov. 15: 24). The friendship of the world is enmity wit God «Jus 4: 4 1. “He answered him nothing.” (1) The questioning king; (2) The si- lent prisoner, “Herod with his soldiers set him at nought.” (1) Herod's great op- portunity; (2) Herod's glaring in- justice; (3) Herod's supreme blun- der. “Herod and Pilate became friends with eacu other that very day.” (1) An old grudge; (2) A mollify- ing set; (3) A new friendship. ———— LESSON BIBLE BEADING. "HE HOLINESS OF JESUR, saying— with loud voices together, to his own From peculiarities He was separate i pe He did no He utter: Pet, 2 He did LESSON SURROUNDINGS. IxrervENinG kvexrs.—There are no events recorded as intervening. Mate thew, at this point, tells of the remorse and suicide of Judas, but it is very un- likely that these occurred so early in Le day. 18 : 28-38) men- ions some details not given by Luke. Prac. —QOur Lord was led from the seting-place of the sanhedrin to the judgment-ball of Pilate, then to the residence of Herod. Where the san- hedrin met is altogether uncertain. Pilate's “‘pretorium” (Mark 15 : 16) was either in the Castle Antonia, at the north-west corner of the tempie, or in the summer palace of Herod (the Great), on the north side of Mount Zion. ‘l'hose who socept the former view think Herod occupied the palace. The latter view, which 1s otherwise pre- ferable, loaves the residence of Herod altogether undetermined. Time. — Early on Friday (before nine o'clock in the morning). According to the view that our Lord ate the passover at the regular time, this was the 15th of Nisan, 78; A. U. C.; thst is, April, 7. A. D.30. John (John : 1 J erus, the sanhedrin, Vi- oman procurator of Judes), j « the *‘tetrarch” the multitude; Herod, with bis sold sled to Pilate, he Jewish rulers of polit- of Galilee, IscipeNTs, CBE snd acen cal crime. ate questions him, and ben declare hat be finds no fault in tion is renewed, men- of Galilee. Pilate, is a Galilean, sends lerod. lerod is glad, hoping but Jesus is silent, nt accusations of the lus soldiers mock Jesus array | ‘in gorgeousapparel,” and send him back to Piste. The ‘wo rulers become friends that very day. Pararurer Passaons Matthew 27 : 2 11-14 ; Mark 15: 2-5; John 18 : 28- 88. Verses 8-12 are peculiar to Luke. $101 OG AR 10 despite the et A etme “Parpox me, sir, but 1 think you are carrying my umbrella 1 could swear 10 that ivory laidle any where. 1 I bad not recognized i} instantly, I should not have presumed to stop you. That carving was done” — “Spare me the details, please. It is sitogether probable that this is your property. I have no particular claim upon Ww" “Then how did it come to be in your possession?” “it was left in my hall last night by a burglar who got away with most of the family silver.” “II guess my umbrella was a size larger than that, after all.” First Chicago Man (in a New York Hotel: “You registered from Boston. Why don't you register from Chica of second Chicsgo Man (an old traveler): “Becanse I've got tired of having these New York hotel clerks tell me not to blow out the gas.” - witli Wax the song's gone out of your, life, you can’t start another while i's a- ringing iu your ears; it's best to have a bit o' silence, and oul ©’ thai maybe a metallic Su re like uate the Sash of " plen on its banks the Tiber mggests sword shat would tarust you. The gazalied | mors imperial procession, the livesus has anid iho hates that ive on the hills beside lsssio memories, and the Nile feeds acd cranes and wild ducks toast fiy across lations hv § irrigation. but th: for, con ¥ to the old be won of rivera and rans by wing r way over i kro by tiie . Bible, Paily ¢ thread strun: psalm’ll come by aud by. Tar idea thet jus where love § dwelt at the © Majesty the German Bangers, King of k 1 i pe t , 1 - 2 | And softiy from a further room . | Pr aesia, Margrave of Brandenburg. Herr | C0 ow I lay me down to seep.” Jesus a tenshor: 113 His Hei ica Wilheim _Laverkrant ~ his omehow, with that little prayer His lessons: (3) His influence. i Ma jest y the German Emperor, Kit g of | that sweet treble In my ears, “Whe hie: r. y Reandani "» thoughts go back to distant years 9 S. 3 ! Prussia, Margrave of Brandenburg. Ee Ee re An exceedingly glad (1v The | When the Burgomaster proceeded to in- ild's amen, ruler: (4 § : ¢ omes back fo me; y 3 : i i trodace Herr Leiberwursi, to ‘his, ele, TL aoem x PB mej oe anhallowed gla and, Jacob and Joshua and Johan | sie * the Kalser interrupted him, laogh- nas again. a “Hel i “That will de, done by / niracies ose the gentler of Jesus; (3) Lhe hoy i Herod. Just mention ! ~{ 1} A006 aivive u t ' will bo some Set, us the sh and me ereep, 2; The hums ite for miracles. | shment belote “Teaching thronghout all iz superflunons » worm that has many a fair house hold and many a warm {neudship, and i wrought wm them decay 1 4 reign inf, biris do sales tierod saw Jesus, he bse 11] ¢ they thin 4 t J hg, 1 ph Evi i HT , fn nore n ¢ drink out of L 8 a ¢! ¥ ¥ i i & x jah fri ' hi ET he i me i ay 5 vi : Celio as 1 B= aad bitleracss. . 3 BEDTIME SONG. vos two trees] got a plimn miracios, preoeEe able tons Now § lay me down te sleep! ¢ of that t 11 REC PE i ———————————— i. The silent Pr THE WOUNDED HERO. | He auestioned h i gwored him nothapg (95. HEROD, ' And SONGS saEmPD eB NIOAT YOU | \ a'e my sword, xi snd strong. | \ $5 s (rubaubly my dram vioice in ib, and, as yon to amitate it, and your {sue poi like dead loaves | grow up a man, es mpg iA ars ar Co] i* glancing dim, what Vit do then! 441 A oH PUR ’ ) i 3 y 4 ai vend aod stim 3 hie fe WwW 0g wd In, G8 Loe winiow sil TAR OI Se 07 35% iy on SARC, ov Hved t ih of 1% At the seas + beanon madi tie rac : ) ONLY Tex, What hnndred hooks are best, (think your’ Baan, 11 meat a Tark-a pirate ehitale- sa over there An Indinn with his byw ee 11] wave my sword above my head, And down I'l teikRe hiss] £30, on! Oh dear! ve prigked my thumb! # Bo more answered (Mark 15: 0) Hi. The VehamantiAccusary: Dos’ Hide passenger, Cay good right, Tie chief pricsis and soribes slood, We've renciied te bath, of Shadowtown. vehemently securing him (10), rederiek Now, anything A 3 bad Ww. more slow, th the gre Ele Buobhor day snus wi A ig one devatodiot : § tle thwunht a monert, then be raieed bis heady a 8 Sitio Wers 4 ; J OORT se » 1 4 : Ben, a 4 ; ay vt pardatiad wf the will basis Thar hist th ¢ 3 my fetny i 4d 1 : : ' yo : y a . i . ‘oa ghar eing You Bid thal pin there, Di ait ul of vires kat : 4 . nay be near run Cor the hills explaining I hardly kuow-1've w " Jorn K. Bangs Oh, mama, eve and He 16 ap, SROC UAT WAS 8 Bituaren saul : ' 3'11 bleed to doath, 1 willl Kain ABS 350 A a ey ee
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