i RACIPN R uh REY. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DAY SKERMON., Sohject: “Royal Bleed.” TEXT: “Each one resembled the children of a king."—Judges viii., 18, Zebah and Zulmunna had been off to battle, and when they came back they were asked what kind of people they bail seen. They answered that the people had a royal appearance; ‘“‘each one resembled the child. s*n of a king.” I stand to-day before many who have this appearance, "Indeed, they are "he sons and daunzhrers of the Lord Ale mighd, though now in exile, they shall yet com to their thrones, There are family names that stand for wealth or patriotism or intelligence, The name of Wasnngron means pariotism, although some of the olood of that race bas bhecon very thin in the ast generation. Th Meaicl stood as the representati The tan cant of w family of ve of letters, Rothschilds signifi forty millions of dollars putting them to no venience: and within a few yours they have loaned Russia twelve mi Naples twentv-five miiions and 4 is 1. the 0340 in INS neon. lions of dollars, Aus ria ftorcy sant two hundred millions: of their pen on the counting : erything from the Irish They open their hand, and there is war they shut it, and there s peace. Toe uouse of Hapsburg in Austria, the house of Stuart in Eu zland, the houe of | Bourbon in Frauce were families of imperial | suthority, Butl come to preach of a family more tential, more rich and more extensive e royal house of Jesus, of whom the whole family in heaven and on earth is namei. We are biood relations by the relatiouship of the Cross; all of us are the cbildren of the Kinz. First, Ispeak of our family name, When we see a (descendant of some one greatly cel ebrated in the last century we look at him with profound interest. To have had con- perors, kings or princes in the ancestral ne give luster to the family name, In our line was a king and a conquaror, The Star in the East with baton of ligat woke up the eternal orchestra that ma ie music at His birth. From thence He started forth to con- er all nations, not by tramping them wn, but by lifting them up. 8t. John saw Him on a white horse. When He returns He will not bring the nations coained to His wheel or in iron cages; but [ hear the stroke of the boofs of the snow waite cavalcade that bring them to the gates in triumph, Our family name tages luster (ron the star that heralded Him, and the spear thas jerced Him, and the crown that was given im. It gathers frazrance from the frag ¢- incense brought to His craile, and the llies that flung their sweetness into His sermons, and the box of alabaster that broke as His feet. The comt , Batoany, The res. arrector at Nain natural ocnli ur of one world at Bethss . and the cuief joy of ther. The storm His frown. lig 1 sulle, The soring porning Ihe earthquake tne stamp of His foot he thar of His voice e ocean a drop & TT: fa - $1 a ot Eis anger iEAN 1 A bosom i Ly of His r fhe u ree the fivin His ¢ A bre or flo ot an il millious, rte for tue wi spar on toe sparkie on t Pp 35 ihe twink a 1 yf ng da i 190 & COA. IAW Td Great ia dress helmet and er a lion of ar ter si it an escutcheor Yeoats of arms have it blazing or cross, the lam 1 1 4 fall wrap mes in that good old ( hristiawn flag, so that the fam- ity coat of arms shall be right over my reas, that ail the world may see that I looked to | the dove of the sp nd clung to the cross, | and depended the Lamb of God, whica | taketh away tue win of the world. i tof al battie mus the dove, to 2 Asharoed of Jams—~that der friend, i Om whom my hopes of {ifs depend; : No! when | bias oe hiv my shamig es { That I no move revere tis name. i Next 1 speak of the family sorrows. If | trouble come to one member of the family, all feel it. It is the custom, after the body iz lowered into the grave, for all toe reia- tives to come to the verge of the grave ani look down into it. First thos nwarest tae departed come, then those next of kin, uatit they bave all looked into the ave. So | when trouble and grie! go down throuzh the heart of one member of ths fauily, taesy go down through them all. The sadness of one fs the sadness of al. A company of persons join hands arouad an electric bmtlery; the two persons at tae ends of the ine touza the battery, and ail the circle feels the shook Thus, by reason of the filial, maternal and paternal relations of life, we stand so clos together that wasn trouble sets its battery ail feel the thrill of distee ss. In the creat Christian family the sorrow of one be the sorrow of all. Is one persecuted? All are psrsecuted. Does one suffer loss? We all «affer joss. Is one bereaved? We are all bereaved Their srreaming eyes together flow For human gait sad mortal woe, It vou rejoice another's misfortune you are nol one of the sheep, bat on» of toe goats, and the vulture of sin hath alighted on your soul, and not the dove of me spirit, Next I notice the family {Foperty. After a man of large estate dies the relatives as | semble to hear the will real. So much of | the property is willed to his sons, and so | rauch $0 his daughters, and so much to be | nevolent societies. Our Lord Jesus hath | died, and we ars asmsenbled today to hear the will read. He save “My peace [ give | unto you" Through His apostles He save, “All are yours” What! Everything? | Yes everything! This world and the next, | In distinguishing families there are old pic- : tures hanging on the wall They are called the “heirlooms” of the estate. They are very old, and have come down from genera tion to geaeration. : 80 1 look upon all the beauties of the nat. ural world as the heirlooms of our royal family. The morning breaks from the east, The mists travel up hill above hill, mountain above mountain, until sky lost. The forests are full of chirp and buzz and song. Tross's and bird's wing flutter with gladness. Honey makers in the log, and beak against bark, and squirrels chattering on the rail, and the call of the hawk out of a clear sky make you feel glad. The sun, which kindles conflagrations among the castles of clouds and sets minaret and dome aflame, paint the lily white, and the butter ellow, and the f not biae, t can resist the sun? t for the voyager over the desp! Light for the shep- the Baris ale! Light for 05 # | listen, and the sea, No mother ever mors sweetly guarded the sick cradle than all nizht long this pale | watcher of the s<y ben is over the weary, hearwsiock, slunbering earth. W 10s is this black framed, black tasssied picturs of the night! It is the heiricon of our faniiv. Ours, the gran leur of tae spring, theorys- tais of the snow, the coal of tas oewca, the the harmonies of tae | odors of the garden, air You cannot see a large estate in one morn:ng. You must tase several walks around it. The famuly property of tals royal house of Jasus is so great that wa must take several walks to get any lea of its extent, Let tha first walk bs aronad this earth. All these valleys, the harvesis taat wave in then and the cattle that pastures the n—-all thse moun ains and the precious things hid lea beneath them, and thsorowa of glacier thay cast at the feet of the Alpines burricane—all toese iakes these islan is, these continants, are ours. ln the secon | wk 30 among the street lamps of heiven, and ses stretening off on every side 1 wil leraess of worlds, for us they shina, For us toey sangata Save four's nativity, For us they will was! into line and wita thar inr torchs all to tae spuendor of our 4 upd on tas day for whico all other days ware made, in the third walk go around the Eternal City, As ws ar if, oars to tas rasa of its char sani tos wad linz pau of is great towers, i1ae osl of naaven ais struck tweive, [tis hiza noosa. We look off ua DAD elf Walga Navar Ia ia, the eyes coat never weep, tae te np 08 thal never ¢. oss tae love iones that never ovarc tas Oricon THAR DAVEE OR 4 0 @ Was » 186 Java Wao an the walis taas never can be capturel. tas SOLS, until, wa can no longer and we hids our eyes aad exclu a, “HKve hata noc sean, nor ear head, nataer have eoterad into the beart ol waa, tae things winich God hata vreparel for then that love Him!" As these tides of gory rise we have to retreat an ( hold fast est we be swept off and urowoe t in the emotions of gla ness and than<s ving ani triumpa. What tinng youo! tas (amudy propariy? It is considered an honor to marry into a family where there is great wealth. ine Lord, th - bridegroon o earth and heaves, offers you His heart and His hand, sayiag in the words of ths Caaticles, “Rue un, My love, My fair one, and coms away,” ani once having put on tay hand toe siguet rag of His love, you will be endowed wita ali the wrealth of eartn and all *he nonors of neavea. A most evary family looks back to a home. stead—some country place wiers vou grew un, You sat on the doorsill. You heard the footstep of the rain on the zarret roof. You swang on the gate, You ransacked the barn. You waded into the brook. Yeu thrashed the orchard for appes, and the neighboring woo is for nurs; ani evervihing around the old homedtead is of interest to you. [tell vou of the old bomestead of eternity. In my Fatner's bouse are many mansions, When we talk mansions wa» think of Chatsworth and its nina miles 1a circu aferen es, and its io the world; its . as the ra npas , Canova ani Thorea of Lae gus wao ve walked itn stat ¢ vi ar - t Cu De ne gaieri td B 8 Of Ar that cont hantrey —— : st hop ave uu y Frouss, Bat all tha Low aii 4 An l Qa sens nao: tal ; Ths aad sai swung Anes ares. | Ara a8 n fare PAP (8, ul ani the n and the yr Chatow a8 flower Vio. is aster, ur a xl ani all heaven Arona saall mdswan sr bf ire sors. | have not ma land. Bat my eons homs | there. in the telling me matiers not much to me waetner [ am rich or poor, or wasther tos world hates me or or whether I gv by land or oy sea, if only [| nay litt my i ad i nasi no sister ys wardsas of iro oon aad its brothers 4 a I have lattor ron th Bi AEE loves me, It is not a fraud house, built in a month, soon to crumble, but an old mansion walca is as firm as the day it was bulit, [ts wails are grown with the ivy of many ages and the urns at the gateway are awooa with the The Queen of 8 woe oath walked its aalis, and Bstoaor and Marie Antoinette and Lady Huating ion and Cecil and Jeremy layior and Samuel Rate erford and Joan Milton, and the widow woo gave two mites, and the poor mean from the hospital—taese inst two peroaps oulsbining A family manson means reunion. Sous of your fanliies are very much soatbarsl. The calldren married aad weat off to 38 Lous or Chicago or Charlston; out per- Bus Ones & Year you oo ue together at tae place. How you wage up the old piano {Father and mother do not play in it) How you bring out the old relics, and rammare the gar ret, and open old serapboo .g, aad shout and laugh and crv and talk over old times, sud, though you may be forty-five years of age, act as thouzh vou were sixteen! Yet soon it is goodbye at the car window, and goodbye at the steamooat wharl, But how family It is a good walle since you parted at the door of the grave. There will be Grace and Mary and Martha and Charlie and Lizzie and all the darlings of your househoid-—not pale and sick and gasp ing for breath, as wisn vou saw than ast, but the eye bright with the luster of heaven, and the cheek roseats with the flusa of celes- tial summer, What clasping of hands! What em- bracings! What coming together of lip to lip! What tears of joy! You say, “I thought there were no tears in heaven.’ There must be, for the Bible says that “God shail wipe them away.” and if there were no tears there, how could Hs wipe them away? They cannot be tears of grief or tears of dis- appointment. They must be tears of glad- ness, Christ will come and say: “What! child of heaven, is it too much for thes’ Dost thou break down under the gladness of this reunion? Then I will help thee.” And, with His ons arm around us and the other arm around our loved one, He shall hold us up in the eternal jubilee. While 1 speak, some of you, with broken hearts, can hardly hold your peass. ou fosl as if yon would speak out and say: “Oh, blessed day | on. Toward thes I press with foot over the desert way. My oyes fall for their Saaping. I faint from k for feet that will not coms and the sound of voloes that will not spasak. peed on, ob, day of reunion! And then, 4 Jamas, benot angry with me if after [ have just once by blassad fest [ turn around to gather up tha long lost treasures of my heart. Ob, be not an with me! One look at Thee wero heaven. But all these reunions are heaven heaven, heaven overtopping heaven, heaven ocom- mingling with heaven ™ 1 was at Mount Vernon and went into the in which our first Prosident en- the inent men of this and lands. it was a very interesting spot, But oh, the banqueting hall of tae family of whica I spk! Hproad the ta it wide, for a great maititude are to sit at it. From the Tree by ths River twelve manner of fruits for that ake the clusters from the them vineyards and The Gon for that table. On baskets carry in the bread of which, if man eat, he wosll never hunger, Take all the shot-torn flags of earthly con. vest and entwine them among the arches, David come with his harp, and Gabriel with his trumpet, and Miriam with Whe more, for the prodigais are at home, and prives are free, ani the Fatnor asta inv: the mighty of heaven ani the fe assed of plore | to come and SLIENTIFIO, nll Mp oo Tinv ineanlescen lights are now ol Ape Eleatrie wieldiue vas baen aprlied to h wasnuiactu:e of proj ctiles for light nave discovered wood pulp de- Two Maine women “eaches per, alsin engineers of im- iu a Thu asace'ation of civil h Ovo! Megico bas voled uta yusiy to attend the expugition £7 ole le Inmber of the aud of 0 strae'bom anufactures More than 1 bs wilb or HE 1.0 0 fed Ha 1h Led butt ting for Toe al au by, sel A New Sonth W o, sid dd to part eypaile in the exposition atid h 8 ap tel a com alsin Of twelve 10 collect ex) ibis, yvustra'ia, has de- Lh erg rpg a The Calamet and H «ela works ave A wine ting works in Buffalo, +. Y., the cup city of which wilt be 250 tous Or wont, — toaiing through Jee fields in the ocean you may go v ry slowly, The Jeannette drifted through the Arc'ic Ocean at ths rate of two miles a day. ls When vou ure rll As Lhe wear upon the Caps Cod, Mass, cost Is shown to be at the rate of 755,- 766 cubic yards per year, or an anno ial wear of the ~oast equal to a distance of about eight feet. sll Mn G. W, Daun, the U«'ifornia natnral- 1st, bas ¢ ihcted over 700 0 ins 0 8 he- loging to the horn winged tawily, 540 of th= ericket tribe and about 490 butterflies and pumerous rare Plans aud au mals, ss —— tharles Garrett, of Ark., will ¥xtitet ire Hot Springs, falr his e«- ralogical fawous iiot a! the of g the bn ive edi» min pee iime ns, if tron pip il Bei ly Vie, The Dusse dart ee «a the rig! 0 pear Baleuwe jer Germauy, Wi ghty and the re 1. ng tg £ 0 dis ove . tS i t 8 Ore oh I Cenl, vad, SIX if copper t wiver. rs A —— - steel tnasts or rods are to be used 10 dghting the public squar-sin Brussels, Belzium. The oljet of Tuis 8y8 el. 18 UL) preserve the beauties 01 Lhe parks io the dast me settiha— The effective range of the modern mages ve rite is not lvss than a mile aud the maximus range not less than two miles, There is danger from rich- ochet up to a « istance of a mile, Telese ple ss A may mention un-alcined As heat resistants we ashwsios, plast r of pans, suap-stone, puwsice stone, chalk, infus- arial earth, wineral wool, rock, wool. pelicano The Majestic is th most economical conl burner of any of the Atlantic dy ers. She burns bat 220 tone a shaug 180 5 0 horse power and m Kes an average of over twenty-three miles an Your, | —_— The Agricultural and Art association and tre Block Breedars assocation of and government of Oatario fu take measures to have the prov nce properiy represented at the exposition. —-—— A patent hs recently been taken out for the manufacture of agood substi tute for ivory. The ingredients used are mostly those of which natural ivory is compose ', and the addition of differ- ent coloring matters enables objects of - —— - ‘he aquatic plant, the bladderwort, foods on animal life. The tiny bladders att wched to the leaves and leaf stalks a door, principle. io the clutches of is at once a ——— The hair that is tiken from hides at this hair was of little value. By a wide, m——— A sixty-seven-ton gun on board the British armored vessel Howe has de- veloped a defect in the inner tube simi- lar to that recently found in one of the big guns of the English ironclad Anson, the flagship of the Channel Squadron. British guna, ————— APS The new artificial quinine produced by Messrs, Grimaux «nl Arnaud, of Paris, is mentioned as one of the great- ost discoveries of the year. It is obtain. ed by treating the base cuprein of = Brazilian shrub with sodium, then treating the resulting compound with chloride of methyl, The product is quinine aheolute y identioal with the substance that has become so familiar and so indispensable, { TO-DAY IS YESTERDAY'S TO~ ! MORROW, ind pain the morrow ; thu< in viel noe troubls In trouble, in sorrow To warry and sigh jo Oh? Why do we strive With our troiibles We know pot wit is Nor can we if ¢ For all o the yeurs gone helore Only bint at the futus Ww guise 3 10 borrow? in sto! Vir Koy wise; If He's gky look ever a9 dreary Drive not from ye When, ton orrow i Hs troubles mg Lot's smile a As We can Nor drive the fair prese nt away And tomorrow let fc llow the ys) 20 make it the gladsome t 4d FPortl a —— THE TERRIBLE "BLACK DEATH. ¢ ur face the glad bloom; the present is hero, aud 1t with gloom, in in ind Transcript Black Death derives its name from the gaogrenous scr. 3 formed by the carbun. cles that accompany the disease, The cau .3 of it are manifold, and for the most part atmospheric. Alluvial or marshy grounds, a hot, moist air, bad ventilation, poor drainage, unwholesome diet, 1nsuf ficient or ill-cooked food, and irrational ways of life generally are given by medi cal authorities as specific causes. The incipient development of the discase lasts some eight days. After that the course varies in different cases, A mild fever sometimes follows, and small spots like inscct bites appear on the body, especially the parts exposed to air, These spots swell, turn black, ad are finally an ad or an ioch and a half in diameter. After the scabs from these sores fall away, the fever subsides, In other cases large car- buncles come in the groin and armpits and occasionally on the neck. The fever is then very high, and headaches, dizzi- ness, chills, redoess of the eyes, and symptoms, varies. Many cases are on record of deaths within twenty-four hours, two. ‘It is transmitted,” says a report of the French Academy, “by means of missmata given out by the bodies of the sick. These miasmata, in close, ill-ven- tilated places, may create centres of pes. tilential infection, It results from the observations made at the Iazarettos for more than a year that merchandise does not trapsmit the pligue.” The origin: of the plague dates back, in the opini nan ) gray antiquity, Others beliove first appeared in the East in me The climates a 3 ¢ in the { Fil A : 04 In AY 0 the nort A (HM In rey were swept away in « year, courta were deserted, public places were closed, and whole villages were de- populated. Tobolsk, the Hussian city just resched by the scourge, is at the junction of the Irtish and Tobol rivers, sad has about 20,000 inhabitants forsk, near the mouth of the Obi, is a amlet of some 300 ighabitants, —! Dos. wa Trasscript. od 70.000 i Siena R03 of the chk (ily —————— THE FARM AND GARDEN, CULTURE OF VIOLETS. A New York correspondent writes to the Plorists’ Erchange that light soil is mast suitable to violets, which ought to be planted in ground that hase fait drainage. He planted them where they will reccive the benefit of rain, dew and in a place quite by themselves. says: “Violels do pol care for company and hall the failures come from placiag thew with other plants.” PAINTING WAGOX WHEELS, asserted by those who have tested the walter, says the Furm Journal, that painting wagon wheels once in two years &nswers as well as soaking in beiling oil to keep them in shape and avoid the cx- pense cf resettiog tires. A qaart of raw livseed oil and ten cents’ worth of cheap paint, and you have the cash expense, Take off the wheels and lay them on a bench and paint the upper side, allowing the paint Lo work in between fell and tire. By the time ail four ere treated, Lis for painting on the other side. Laying them down is much better than paintiog with the wheel on the wagon. SHRED DITING THEIR WOOL. When sheep sro found biting thei¢ wool or nibbling the skia they should be examined at ouce. the skin is irritated and inflamed as the | tonsequence of dry feeding or lying | upon damp beds or upon masure, If the | ticks cause the trouble, the sheep should | be dressed with a strong decoction of to. bacco, one pound in a gallon of boiling water (but not boiled); adding two ounces of flowers of Siphur, and stirnog fre. uently until the is reduced to 120 . The liquid is then poured slong | the back and guided down under the wool along the sides. Buttermilk used in the same way has Leen fonod useful. if no ticks aré found or any vermin give tan two drams of byposulphite of soda daily in some scalded bran, feed some sliced potatoes or turnips, and use 00 Baty hat, which vigen Cate this trouble. sheep are fed upon cloves bay, which is mighty ni , they pre frequently thus troubled, aad some oily or starchy food as linsced mesl or potatoes will be found useful, «New York Times. aioe H— C. W, Wynkoop has been sent out b a London syndieate to find the gol | mines in the biblieal lands of Ophir, i where King Solomon and the Queen o/ | Sheba got their riches. He will repor | to Ohief Skiff the result of his investi | gations, and p to furnish some | fateresting matter for the mining de | partment SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON, EUNDAY, DECEMBER £5. 1331 FOURTH QUARTERLY RE HOME READINGS, TITLES AND GOLDEN TEXTS. GoLoen Texr 1 hese are written, that Je VIEW, FOR THE that ye vrei lid le. the Christ. Lelieving He an ght Jiis John (JUABRTER: RiLR 18 ihe Non have life 24) through TULITLS aL I, CHRIBET BAIBING LAZARUS Jesus said nnto her, I am the re rection, and the life. John 11 yA] CHI i ORETELLING if oil Wii And Ek i ted up from earth JO Ir iI. WA Lot this mind be in also 1n Christ Jesus yon, Phil, CHRIST COMFORTING HIS Dis pray the F unpotuer CO with you and he shall tha he John I wil give may abide : 16. nt 18r, muforter, for ever. vot 1 ia THE TRUE VINE. Herein is ny Father gorified, that ye bear much fruit. —John 15 : 8, Vv, CHRIST TH HK OF THE HOLY SPIRIT. He will guide John 16 : 13, VIL you into CHRIST'S PRAYER FOR He ever liveth to make for them. — Heb, 7 : 2 ViIL CHRIST BETRAYED. The son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners, — Mark 14 : 41. CHRIST BEFORE PILATE. Who was delivered for our offences, and raised again for our justitication. Rom, 4 : 25. IX. X. CHRIST CRUCIFIED, also hath suffered Pet. 3 : 14. CHEIST RISEN. ¥ or Christ for sins, —1 once t 18 Christ 18 ish that died, Yea rather, that AERIN ~~ fom, BN; REX OOH son 2 —Saperintendent: Verily, verily, I say unt you, Except a grain cf wheat fall into the earth and die, it abideth by itself alone; but if it die, it fruit. He that loveth his life Is life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal (Johan 12 : 24, 25). Scholars: And I, if | be lifted up from the earth, will draw al men unto me (John 12 : 32), Teachers: The love of Christ con- straineth us (2 Cor. 5 : 14). All: Greater love hath no man than this, that 8 man lav down his life for his friends (John 15 : 13. lerson 3, —~Superintedent: He said to you? Ye call me, M ster, and Lord: and ye say well; tor so I am. 1f I then, the Lord and the Master, have washed vour feet, ye also ought to wash another's feet (John 13 : 12-14). Scholars: which was also in Que Let this mind be in vou, Christ Jesus (Phil Teachers: Walk in love, even as Christ also loved you, and gave himself up for us (Eph. 5 : 2). All He laid down his life for and we onght to lay down our live the brethren (1 John 3 : 16 Superintendent Father's hose are many mansi us In yas; if it Lesson 4. go to prepare a place for you. I go and prepare a place for 3 Scholars: I will pray the Father, ever (John 14: 16). Teachers: He shall teach you all things (John 14 : 26). All: Take not thy holy spirit from me (Psa. 51 : 11). lesson b—Supcrintendent: 1 am the true vine, and my Father is the husbandman. Every branch in me that bearcth not fruit, he taketh it away: and every branch that beareth fruit, he cleanseth it, that it may bear more fruit (Joha 15: 1, 2). Scholars: Herein is my Father glorified that ye bear much frait (John 15 : 8), Teachers: The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, pesce, long suffering, kind. ness, goodness, faithfulness, meek vess, temperance (Gal, 5: 22, 23). All: Against such there is no law (Gal, 5 : 29). Lesson, Superintendent : Never. theless | tell you the truth; It is ex. pedient for you that I go away: for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you; but if I g° I will wend him unto you (John 16: 7). Soholars: He will guide yon into all truth (John 16 : 18). Teachers: Yo shall know the trath, and the truth shall make you free (Jon B Ad, | All (Prov. l.eanon i, Mnperin'c am no more in the worl in the world, and | com Father, keep them ia thon hast given me, ti one, even as we are (Jo Scholars: He ever intercession for chem (H Wherelor« the utterm: unto God Buy the truth, and sell it not 23 : & lent: Aud | and these are to thee, Holy ¥ name which ut they may be nl? 11. liveth to make eb. 7 25). also he is able wt them that through him Teachers to save to draw near (Heb. 7 : 25). All 42. fe band and officers of the Jesus, remember me Linke 24: Bo the aud the lent plain, Jesus and son XK, —Superinte inf 4 J wh, bound him, and led him to Annas first for he was fatter in luw fo Calaphas which was hizh priest that year (Joh 38: 12. 1 “cholars: The traved into the 14 : 41), Teachers Woe through whom the traved! ( latt, 26 All: Good were it fe had not been bora (24 I essnn, Baperinge therefore eried out Pilate sah Bhall I eracify your K priests answered, We us Caesar, Then therefor: them to be 19 : 15, 16). Seholars: the ef Be zandd f in be (Mark man ier Son hands of in that man hat man if he ' } 1 £ y with him, nnto them, The chief a no king but delivered aeified (John ant y ay & 9 he Who wae de vered for our justification (Rom. 4 : 2 Teachers: Believe Jesus Christ, and thon (Acts 16 : 31 Jo All: Lord, 1 believe (John 4 Lesson 10, Superintendent this Jesus, knowing that all r.ow finished, that the seript the Lord halt be saved 35). After things are might There vinegar; vin hyssop, and brought it to his When Jesus therefor had re- said, I: is fin- Lead, and 30, y hath once ceived the vinegar, he and be bowed hi gav= up his spirit (John 19: 25 Reholars: For Christ als suffered for sins (1 Pet. 3: The hath laid on isa 53: é . I'hat life whic | now live in flesh I Live in faith, the faith whieh the Bou of ved me, me (Gal, 2: - I'easchers All: fr n who Jesus why we pest hou? Soe sup- ardener, said rne him hast laid Jesns rned her- Hebrew, er (John erintende wher him and 1 will t saith unoto her, ry. oS {ie self, and said him Habboni; which 1s to 8aY, M > Bo 18 15, 16), ¢ hit a 9 Ma nnto Sel It risen again hath ( olars is Christ the died, yea Eom. 8B: 34). hrist been Teachers: Now 1 Cor. 15; 20). satisfied, when 1 keness (Psa. 17: 15). Superiutendent: Jesus unto them Children, The v answered And be said nutc them, Cast the : et on the right side the boat, and ye shall find. They ca! therefore, and now they were not able to draw it for the multitude of fi hes. That disciple therefore whom Jesus loved said anto Peter, It is the Lord (John 21: 5-7). Scholars: If ye then be risen with Christ, seck those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God (Col. 3: 1). Teachers: Heckon ye selves to Ye dead unto unto God in Christ Jesus All: For to me to live to die 1s gain (Phal 1: 21 All: 1 shall Tse with thy Ii 12. ~ saith LAOBRBON also your- ‘n, but alive tom, 6: 11; Christ, and Took Undue Advantage. They were sitting in 8 Jimly-lighted under the bal v in the hall hureh fair wa« being held ight good. Mr. Folli- she asked Wha does it sav over the table away ball.” JE RAYE YT-A<R- raid Mr. Fol the letters LE FOOW orner where ik your eve that sign Eo-%-8. Miss Fiyrte,” libud, slow spelling ont I ! ou are!” said she admiringly. And then | e took the hint, bat instead of taking one Kiss the horrid thing took twenty-three. -—8om- erville Journal. harp-sighted —— Patti's Domestic Life, I met Grau vesterdsy st the Galt House and had a very pleasant conver sation with him about the Queen of Song. He tells me that Mme. Nicolini is by no means the conceited conglom- eration of melody and self-esteem that her enemies would live us believe, On the contrary, she is a very pleasant. spoken, warm-hearted little woman, who feels kindly toward the world mt iarge, from whom she has received in the past some measure of unkindness, and reserves a big warm spot in her affections for Ler friends. Her voice i® her fortune and she makes it pay » rich percentage, but she does no for a moment forget the obligation she owes to the public. She has never denied herself to those members of the who sre properly introduced, thoy she is bound to draw 1" line at those impetuous young mer Who think that a more business card, Without any in. dor-ement whatever, i* a snfficient credential for admission (0 her boy. doir. He says Mme. Nicolini is an affectionate, dutiful wife, a good Chir. tian woman and a thoroughiv refined and pultared Indy, an that her voice possessor the samo fop-like tones thay first charmed the ears 0f the musical world a score and a MIL years ago. Louisville Post. :
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers