"REV. DR. TALMAGE. BUNDAY’'S SERMON IN THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MUSIC, LJthject: “Words With Young Men,» vow York Academy many hundreds part St every of In his a of Music of y Uniol and profes addressed ti 1diences ull Cuanres T, Rungar. ER MAN en who If : nts in the containe have a war: surety of a noble career? chapter of the Bible of your life, Word the “How are y friend of min Ono flation. or woman From 1 being a ’ I read the afore recuperation men of 0 up sin LL | than in a 10 will nes "Yeu d ment » terrifl rd the next i Hers o va flood of nov f i red belittli As Lhe, H re vel ors, submerging good ericean journalism, a perdition of prints a str IRRI® OF : ng to me de and Hers comes ominati @ and tea ta least one good rial and reporters ) no upled with helpful in. telligence, announcing marriages and deaths end reformatory and religious assemblages and charities bestowed, and the doings of good people, and giving but little piace to nasty divorce eases, and stories of rime, which, like eobras, sting those that touch them, Ob, for more newspapers that put virtue in what is called great primer type and vice in nonparell or agate! You have all seen the phot grapher's nega - tive, He took a piotars from it ten or twenty years ago, You ask him now for a pleture from that same negative He opens the great chest containing binck negatives of 1885 or 1875, and bo reproduces the picture, Young men, your memory is made up of the negatives of an Inimortal photography. y edit edit t Iv “tiy make pletures for the future, with you till the judgment day the negatives of all the bad pletures you have ever looked | at, and of all the debauched scenes you have | read about, Show me the newspapers you take and the books you read, and I will tell ou what are your prospects for well being n this life, snd what will be your residencs | a million years after the star on which we now live _Zsall have the constellation, I never | went to the apothecary's to get | ventitive { crowded with invalids, and we had no confi | the Hindoos, hundreds of miles * {in Oying from the | bridge that is all All} that you see or hear goes into your soul to ; You will have | on Sunday unless it he a cage of necessity or mercy, city plague struck. people were down with By the fearful hundreds the fllness, of the faver, and the place was dence in the preventive we purchased from The mail train was to { Sabbath evening, I sald, “Frank, I the Lord will excuse us if we get out of place with the first train,” and we took it. not feeling quite comfortable till we were away. 1felt wo wereright « Well, tho alr in tk through with a of corrupt and away from it as already rained the 11s of a multitude solid column, would fork Battery to Golden The plague! Never go to any ould be ashamed to die, u will never go went nor be found in surroundings, H many vears of men rid, and } : ] ood 1 from New The plague! the next startling El calle | su i- the news irprise urpnri . “1 have been the oatalogue his wife arose wmrged with every sxcept drankenness in the ba that sthat weare t ir finger nadl vinpared is the life on enith next life, I sup re half a dozen 100 old. Buta y country reach eighty The majority of the human race expl fore thirty Now, what an eq iipoise in such a consideration, If things go wr ng it is only for a little while, Have you not enough moral pluek to stand the | wiling, and the injustices, and th of the small pare between t) eternition? Itis a rood thing to get ready for the one mile this marble s it more important to 1p for th wminable miles which out inte listances beyond He Biab, IW yours ago on the and New Orleans railroad we waked up in the morning, told we must take carriages for distance, “Why? we all asked, we AN W for ourselves whilsa the first four or five of the bridge were up, farther on there was a span that had fallen, and we conld not but shudder st what might have been the possibilities. When your rail train starts on a long bridge you want to be sure that the first span of the bridge is all right, | but what if farther on there is a span of the wrong: how then? what then? In one of the Western cities the freshets had carried away a bridge, and a man knew that the express train would soon come along. Bo he lighted a lantern and started up the track to stop the train. But before he had got far + nongh up the track the wind blew vut the light of his Inntern, it is only ) PASS on Ian Years enthesis side the get xed streteh ab, | the mari Nashville were and ROMO But that, spans Cary S000 {| And standing in the darkness as the train cams up he threw the lantern into the loco. fLotive, erying, “Stop! Stop!" And the warning was in time to halt the train, if any of you by evil habits are hastening on travel | throw this Gospel lantern at your mad | sion for the jut last autumn I was in India in a | We | SOMO pre- | start | think | this And | | the said line, it is lost at the elbow within dropped out of | toward brink or precipice or fallen span, I! earser: Stop! Btop! The end death! Young man, you are caged many environments, but you will awhile got your wings ont, Some ono caged a Rocky and kept him shut up between unttl all the and courage | out of it, leased one day to want to return to former prison. » fact was that had all gone out of him. He kopt his wings down. But ufter awhile he looked up at the sun, turning his head first thi and then that side, and then pread wing and then the other wing, and began to mount until the hills were far under his feet, and he was out of sight in the pyrean, My brother, when ] if by the of God yo will { ne out of the ¢ tality, and lo | heights you fight, leaving sun and moon an stars | neath in your aso fad in now by ir after ntain eagle the wires had gone the dage, Mon fron the eagle seem {de one Erno and spler h are able to Mars f the uw distance, and instead of he tothelir canals sn hieh ® HART in balling iF KNOW ie i right, your brain We will hand our « our mechanism, arts and sciences, our professions, our inheritances, We in trust you, We pray u. And though the the thickest of the righteousness we may from earthly soenes, in your strug- excuse us for right, mmeroe, our believe for j by int and disappeared we will not ur interest gle, and if the dear Lord will a little while from the temple service and the ho many mansions we will come it on the battiements of jasper and cheer you, and perhaps if that night of this world be very quiet you may hear our voices drop ping from afar as we ory, “Be thou faithful unto death and though shalt have a crown!” lone 180 of LECAL DEFINITION OF "ELBOW." A Line Around the Arin at the Base of the Hadias, Assistant Secretary of the Interior John M. Reynolds has decided a pension ease which defines in medical phrmseclogy the lines of the elbow. A pensioner was draw. ing #80 per month for the loss of tho left hand, but contended, under the act of Aug ust 4, 1884, that he shoud receive 838 pet month, ns his arm was amputated two and a half inches below the albow, In his decision | Judge Reynolds says that the word “elbow in the act was evidently used in a conven | tional rmther than a technleal sense, and, therefore, n Hoe drawn around ‘he arm at | the buss of the head of the radius will be held to mark the lower limit of the “elbow.” Where the arm is amputated at, on, or above the meaning of the act, and the rate of pens thereof it | immortal ! | | ite | the eagle | samo will be $36 per month, SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL MAY LESSON 20. ron Lesson Text Mark xv., Text: Commentary “Jesus on the Cross,” 22.87 — Golden Romans v.. 5 som net still had a es, “How is it tha 21 And it was i before that He had sald to been 80 long time with you, thou not known Me, Philip?” (John xis 38. As one ran to give Him drink, pr ably because of Hix ory, *‘1 thirst Joh xix., 28), another hard heart said, ‘Let nione; let us see whether Elias will come t take Him down They conid not under stand one willing to dic if He had power t save Himself, They were believers of satan's doctrine, ‘All that a man bath will he give for his fe” (Job ii. 4). 87. “And Jesus eried and gave up the ghost, Notioe als loud voles of verse U4 He was in His strength, but died of a broken heart, a foretold in Ps, Ixix., 20, and manifest in John xix., M4. Bo it was fAnished, and commend. ing His spirit to God (Luke xxill., 46) He died. Compare Acts vil, 59, and believe that “absent from the body” means “pres ent with the Lord” (II Cor. v.. 8) if only we are redecmed by His blood, — Lesson Helper. eT ved { Mark viii, with a joud v full Was - ns — Peltedd by Hall, Captain D. Ridley, a leading citizen ving near Paris, Texas, was caught out in the hallstorm quite a distance from home, Thinking to reach shelter as quickly na pon. gible, he attem to go through a barb. wire fence, but he was impaled on its prones, He could neither go forward nor back. ward, nor in any manner extricate himself, In this condition he was unmercifully pelted by the huge chunks of fos, He \ nearly dead when he was reseund, - I —— wns No Mare O11 tor Fae, The Standard Of) Company served notiee on a number of factories at Cleveland, Ohio, which had beeg using petroleum for fuel oil The recent advanes in prices is the cause ns. signed for this move, nnd as the Standard has A monopoly on the trade this means that the use of oil as a fuel must be abandoned. Highest of all in leavening | Economy requires that for baking powder the will go further and make the food lighter, of finer flavor, d morc 1 & Cockle-Nh i Real ABSOLUTELY PURE strength, — Latest U, 8, Gov, Food Report, Baking Powder in every receipt calling Royal shall be us weete ] igestible an ile Jurors in California, ————— Forked. Tail WE ing ~=@GIVE AWAY < Absolutely free of ¢ for a LITUTED TINE ONLY, 13 | COUPON No. [ Z ES NE ENJOYS 0 method and resul the taste, promptly on th and Bowels, clean ectually, dispels ¢ and fevers and « tipation, Syrup of only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its | many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. | Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50 | cent be by all leading drug- giste. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any | substitute, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KY NEW YORK, N.V. when R ’ $4 . LLies i = PEARLINE THE GREAT INVENTION Fon Save Ton & Exmewer Wormour Insuny To Tw Covom On Manos, NEW YORK \ “this is as Beware you an imitation, be honeste-send ¢7 back, And th rise up glass, woo { meta pe off with the least trouble and labor. FALSE~Peatline is New J 27 Kilt 7 Pranklin 8t., New York, rasa UP T RUSS ay. Has bile Pad which pealed by G.¥ ase Mf | It bristles writh . good points. e minute they spy dirt they No matter it's on—lin wees, silk, I, marble, china, or your own rson, Pearline will get the dirt "9 and go for it | y Hann : 1 : It saves that ruinous wear and tear that comes from rubbing. But there's another point to think about, more important still : Pearline is absolutely harm. ess to any washable substance or fabric. Peddiers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you, good as™ or ‘the same as Pearline.” IT'S never peddied; Hf your grocer sends ot JAMES PYLE, New York, “Cood Wives Grow Fair inthe Light of Their Works,” Especially if They Use SAPOLIOC
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers