R DAY DR T Al M AG |) ft. No nnuwer Getting Into a boat with \1LVY. > Xd +JMAXLY | some of the erew, he pushed out for the I mysterious eraft, Getting near by, he saw { through the porthole a man at a stand, as SUNDAY’S DISCOURSE BY THE | though keeping a loghook. He hailed him. NOTED DIVINE, | No answer, Ho went on board the vessel pud found the man sitting at the loghook, frozen to death, The loghook was dated 1782, showing that the vessel had been wan. wring for thirteen years among the jee, { The sallors were found frozen among the {| hammooks and in the cabin, For thirteen years this ship had been carrying its burden of corpses, y Bo from this gospel eraft to-day I desery voyagers for eternity, 1 cry: “Ship ahoy PUBLIC DEBT STATEMENT. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S, Gov't Reporl »,; Royal Baking. ABSOLUTELY PURE SABBATH SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL AUGUST Delivery Lost in Cash Kend It Up B38,435,038, of Bonds and LESSON 18, Fon The mr ment of the public onthly United States Treasury state debt sh tal d t on July 81, lesa cash in the Treasury, to been $040,108 006, nn {ncrease Canaan,” Deut. vi, 3-15--Gold- f $28 435.088. This Increase is duo t en Text: Deut, viii, 10 lelivery to the London syndicate during the Commentary. month 157.700 in four per cent, bonds, oaether with a loss of the avallable cash, The debt is re apitulated a { ws: Interest-hearing debt, yn which interest ha 1.699.650: debt bearing wa the te have Sabject: ** Man Overboard,” Lesson Text: “I'he New Home in for the month y the Text: “S80 the shipmastet eame to him and othors paid unto him ‘What thou, © sleeper? Arise, call upon thy God, if so be that God will think upon us, that we perish yg... nal 3 not. Jonah i., 6. : Ship ahoy!" No answer, They float about, that it may be well God told Jonah to go to Nir ho A te and ground by the feebergs of sin, ind { thay fl wa } pleasant errand. Heo hoisting no sall for heaven, I go on board, \ Bon ' s addy thought to get away from his duty I flad all asleep, It is a frozen sleep. Oh, | 49 ray 19 to sea. With pack under hjs arm that my Lord Jesus would come aboard and h vi ¢ \ , on his way to Joj a rt. lay hold of the wheel and steer the eraft | , os if won A hn down among the pping and says down into the warm gulf stream of His ly rya ave G3 Ha : men lying 1 onthe docks, “Which of | merey! Awake, thou that sleepest! Arise our God, hi is) these vessels sails to-day?” The sailors an from the dead, and Christ shall give thee SL ARC swer, “Yonder is a vessel going to Tarshish, | life, Wed them I think if you hurry vou Again, notice that men are aroused by tha Shovel Sm! her.” Jonah steps on b unexpected means, If Jonah had been Asks the fare A vs it, Id one vear that a heathen Anch sails are aptain would ever awaken him to a ging begins to rattle in of danger, he would h sy soofTed at the (dea, of the Mediterranean. Joppa is an ex; ut here it is don 80 now men in strangest harbor, and it does not take long for the ves- spiritual stupor, gel to get on the broad sea, aught to conviction : } | what they call a “spe ' and y of a comrade, A mi ; " iy i Fhe disburse luring i 1805 3 pia plunge of the vessel from the crest of a nd hearing | acs he in ly knoweth his wave xhilarating to those at home « dee it the strong breeze becomes a gale, | goes home impressad, ssing his barn- the gale a hurricane. The affrighted passen- | yard, an ox up and licks his hand, and gers ask the captain if he ever saw anything “Thereitis now. ‘The ox knoweth hike this before vner and the ass his master’s erib,' but “Oh, yes," SAVS, I do not know Go The careless remark Mariners are slow admit da: of a tes man to thoughtful men. Bat after awhile erash a I'he child's remark: and the ves pitches so far “abeam’s en avers at uncle's house, there is a fear she will not be righted. " has brought salva- captain answers few questions, and the throwing out of boxes and bundles and of so much the cargo as they can The captain at last confesses there is b tle hope and tells the passengers that had better go to praying. It is seldom that a sea captain is an atheist, He knows that of 841 oanest ¥ £8.000.622 in ear, therefore, O Israel. and ob w—— with thee with milk and chapter v,, order to blessing £747,560,400 consed Hunt for a Meteor, sed Mnoa mat interest und A party of gentlemen under the guidance of Dr. Dekyne, of Philadel- phin, nas senrch for meteor which fell Wedne | ®ix miles north of West Che 55.854 065: silver. #514 ‘ : 3.876.791: bonds meteor was observed ote, B15 lred persons nt was of ] soaj righteous. commenci | n ny ter, by several hun - Around nber that Go I'ronsury | Hn » until yv the bl may VATIOUSs and points, and brillianes sinner must A mi hrf for rig ki? nu wfors sen fore tha rights filled fn Him (R id doing « mp 4 ris weighed, ople at sense | like the y Satiors on that the tall 150 poun nthe ] A serm d it is] worth its meteors | past cen (Ff, AL owner," ete, it will be almost but, ¢ weight in go only two zr the th of II are now on « Washing he says have been tury, 1 biti ton Sti his “This is nothing.’ goes the m , | NPAs ) ' “Father, they hav Why don't we hav y the dwell strangest wa > nanner v, 1864 5 li : Danish Precautions as to Meat, CRISP AT HIS BIRTHPLACE sand in the most unex- y and swine nen are awakenad, The gar f Huntingdon was vy hearing the countess on in Den gid veterin » and after | efore ment slaughter L4) cattle, shee i to undergo a get at, it lit- they ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR VIPERIAY RANUM m- | ITS ‘! ¥ THE | He Visited SheMeld, England, Dined by and Was Gully. mark have ntoss Speaker Are be they rdoak was can aroused bya dream. in there is a God, for he has seen Him at ever which he saw the last day, and the judge sit. 1 heard h wn with point of latitude between Sandy Hook and | ting, and name ealled Queenstown. ptain Moody mmanding | terrible phasis, > the Cunard line, at Sanday se udgmen The { waking f Angers Ren I BEST x FO OD FOR Dysnentic Delic ate In y and J . AGED PERSONS * JOHN CARLE & SONS, New Vor ” DAIRY WORK PROFITABLE LE r od FR A nis wanted DAVIS & RANKIN BLDG. & MFG. CO. Cor. Randolph & Dearborn Sis, Chicage ath wasn hat dark da he n. STUDENTS STEAL AN EDUCATION ‘ in t a was ready--all ready, peraaps your father was a bad man—prayer- less and a blaspheme of Bim now with Ry 2 pressing tigh tighter will keep on until they wear to the bone. } You paid your fare to Tarshish, ba m—TYs TIER do%n THURS Taldet of & sen | of disquietude and perplexity, One hundre m dying _ tw ar New Form of Theft Discovered at the Uni | Ten Coliars or Five Pairs s for Twenty Five kil Cotter and Putr of Ons by mall for Bix por Sie wy Le Address REVERSIBLE 77 Franklin Bi, New §¥ ad } Paul was a sel to bear His name (Acts ix, 15), and we , rangi fest ly “ all times as if | Ho Wor. Tam wip His at all times ne. il | d Harper pas dimaovorod-a wow 4 A Lad is name written on our fore ] shiped the world or hi wn Ap] n iy ell. 4). Where we ; wot then, I beg ers God, but John xvi versity of Chicago. woul t | Apecies i w is peculia uca t braces 1 system, and restores health and vi Rockland Collegiate Institute, AYACRKAONTHE-HLDSON, The heapest a t e Best HIGH. GRADE ~~ HOO Bear New York ’ le | ti 1 al A ¢ nk 1 ur father o RUPTLRE ® iar. Fas bie which reer or t changing f RUPTURE Bt mecurely way XY.Ciy TY 3 soe Xie. NSION WILLS Successfylly Progecytes Claims. & thinking it never t fail, ate admits 10 BEST 4 OLA bE, x ete EQ ENTRIA SOEPARTM ENT APT, JOEL WILSON, A, Ma. §'TLATIONS When QI ALIFIED. Met t and se s “Pros | H slog [] Principal Late Princip miner Pennion Buresa, Ager V. WHITEMAN, Chatha SYTRLE at war A adh sins WILY Mino I'alks glibly Christians as, , hypoerites of eternity ' “the everlasting now it." Some day he finds himself that roning has a hot nas mustar ‘Read the Bil t believe in the and sitting iment that l.amen, I, Ix i ny last will It is certain where the sirk be In Jess th K It is who will get his pr perty FE me his iid It will into great to be." or “the everlasting now," “the infinite what is it.’ His soul is in leep waters, andthe wind is “blowing great guns,” Death cries, “Overboard with the un. believer! A spiash. He goes to the bots tom. He paid $5 for his ticket to Tarshish when be bought the infidel books, He landed in perdition. Every farthing you spend in sin satan will swindle you out of, He promises you shall have thirty per or a great dividend, He lies, He will sink all the ital, You may pay fall fare to some sinful success, but you will never get to Tarshish Learn how iadly men will sleep in the mids: of dang ha worst sinner on ship- board, considering the lght he had, was Jonah, He was a member of the chureh, while they were heathen, The sailors were engeged in their lawful ealling, following the sea. The merchants on board, 1 sup- fone were going down to Tarhish to barter, ut Jonah, notwithstanding his Christian profession, was flying from duty, He was sound asleep in the cabin, He has been motionless for hours—~his arms and feet in Cig wnt, | him in, the same posture as when he Iny down—his | breast heaving with deep respiration, On, | how could he Bleap? What if the ship struck | tw a rock? What if prang aleak? What if the clumsy oriental eraft should capsize? What would become of Jonah? 86 men sleep soundly now amid perils infinite, In almost svery place, 1 suppose, ne is long enough to fathom the profound beneath every impenitent man, Phngion n thousand tathoms down, you eannot touch bottom, Eternity beneath him, before him, around him! Rocks close by and whielpoois and hot breathed Levanters, Yet sound asleep! We try to wake him up, but fall, Tho great surges of warning break over the hurricane deck, the gong of warning sounds through the cabin, the bell rings, “Awake!” ery o hundred voices, Yet sound asleep ip the cabin, In the year 1775 the captain of a Green. land whaling vessel fouand himself at night surrounded by feebergs and “lay to" until morning, Spotting avery moment to be ground to pleces. In about and saw » ship near by. He hailed they let her down Ah, I think from your right track. Awake upon thy mother's Ge But perhaps werd depraved, rocked by sin an that from such a sta respectability. The both inded th within their in the r the ya he. f thean } men and w the fact that their ther had a it they nen Are unm ¥ father had a God, God, and their f have no G livine goodness for nothing Il warning for nothing. They arn sound asleeg d of the ship, though the sea and sky are in mad wrestle, Many years ago a man, leaving his family in Massachusetts, sailed from Boston to China to trade there, On the const of China in the midst of a night of storm he made shipwreck. The adventurer was washed up yn the beach senseloss—all his money gone, He had to in the streets of Canton to keep from starving For two years there was no eommaanieation between himsel! and family, They supposed him dead, He knew not but that his family were dead, He had gone out as a captain, He was too proul to rome bok as a private satlor But after a whilo he choked down his pride and sailed for Boston, Arriving there ha took an evening train for the center of the State, where he had left his family. Taking the stage from the depot and riding a score of miles, he got home, Ho says that, going up in front of the eot- tage in the bright moonlight, the place looked to him like heaven, He rapped on the window, and the affrighted servant let Ho went to the room whers his wife and child were slesping. He did not dare to wake them for fear of the shook. Bending over to kiss his child's cheek, a tear fell upon the wife's fase, and she wakened, and he said: “Mary!” and she knew his rd beg | volee, and there was an indesoribable soens of welcome and joy and thanksgiving to | hod, the Mediterranean might be sounded, but no | | | | | i To-day | know that many of you are sea tossed snd driven by sin in a worse storm than that which eames down on the coast of China, and yet [ pray God that you may, like the sallor, live to get home, In the house of many mansions your friends are waiting te mest you, They are wondering why you do not come, Escaped from the shipwrecks of earth, may you at last go in! It will be a bright night<a very bright night wm you put your thumb on the lateh of that door, Ones in you will find the old family faces sweeter than when you last saw them, and thers it will be found that He who was your father's God, and your mother's God, und your children's God, is your own most blessed Redeemer, to whom be glory and the morning he looked | dominion throughout all ages, world with. outend. Amen, | kindness, they had to | God, | God ame | “zeal | chased.” will seek His mott approved 1 14. "'X¢ I not go after Jehovah true God, the living Oo and King ornity (Jer, x., 10, margin and other so called gods are but vanity, He brought them out Egypt (Deut, v., 6). He alone is worthy to be praised They were chosen to be a special people unt Him above all people (Deut, vil, 6), a peo ple for His own pousession, that they might make Him a Name Yet after all His loving confess, “Oh Lord our ther lords beside Thee have had do minion over us’ (laa, xxvi., 13 156. “For the Lord thy God is a jealous ng you Just saven times is Goo be jealous (Ex. xx., 5; xxxiv., 14 4; v., 9; vi, 15; Joshua xxiv. 19 The same word is translate and also “bought.” or “pur It is surely a resonable thing tha ons should use as he pleases and possess for his own use that which he nas purchased Bee Ex. xv. 16; Pa. Ixxiv,, 2, and compare Titus ii., 14, R, V. and Jas iv. 5. RV. margin. Let us neknowledge that we are all His for His pleasure. Lesson Helper, other G said to Deut, iv Nah. A WISE CREEK JUDGE. How Me Silenced Disapproval by a Neat Bit of Flattery, There is still a philosopher among the Greeks whose wisdom is able to silence the murmers of the masses, A Greek judge on the Island of Selo, the other day, decided two claims against a raliroad for damaghs enused by a collision, One olaimant was a man who lost an arm and the other was a widow whose husband had been killed. The judge awarded 6000 pilasters to the man, but only 2000 to the woman, When the spectator began to protest louds Iy the wise judge explained “Hy dear peo in, the verdiet must remain, for you will see t is just, Nikola has lost an arm, and noth- fog can restore it, but you (turning to the woman) are still young and pretty. You have now some money, and you can oasil find another hugband who may be as g even better, perhaps, than your dead lord, Bo saying, the Judge left the hall and the people cheered him, President Harper « been small it tt YROWNE DROWNEI 140 SOLDIERS A Military Train in Japan Swept Over the Sea Wall in a Storm, storm running hich the tracks immense sea leaped ting the train and 4 eleven oars, which thebay. Most of the 1 drowned, he accident urred at abou in the morning, and it was pit sen was running so high that it gible to render any assistance to the men in the cars. A few who got out of the cars were dashed to death against the wall WAL was M nid, an AO PAIR and into were nine s wall ars look dark. The was impos. A CLOUDBURST AT SILVER CITY. Half of the Business Portion of the Town Washed Away By the Flood, A large portion of Silver City, New Mexico, has been destroved by a cloudburst. The town is located on the side of a hill, and in a gulch, The cloud burst above it, and almost without warning a tremendous avalanche of water swept over the town from several points Probably half the business part was washed away, and in the main street the sand and debris was piled up to the windows of the houses, he PostofMos Building was de stroyed, and the Tremont, Timmer and Brodway Hotels were wrecked, Houses tumbled down all over town, Gillette & Bon lost $12,000 worth of stock, Bridges were washed away, and five miles of Santa Fo track was torn up, The loss was esti- mated at $150,000, The Leg Was Exempt, The Collector of Castoms at Ogdensburg, N. X., recently assessed duty amounting to #15 on an artificial log worn by an old sole dier who had crossed the border from Cannes da. The soldier bought the Jot Jn Canada aod wore it on hisreturn trip, o oolleotor beid that it was dutiable na a foreign manu factured artiole, An appeal was taken to the United States Treasury Department and the oollestor was overruled, here it was heid that the leg was exempt from duty as an ar ticle necessary to the comfort and conven. fence of the wearer, | “ay > A W it. mm. who Manu- It's only a on of time Pearline uses it nm factured only by Jas. Pyle |B! how mucl “N.Y. ANS ENCANNRG, A An elegant book for Send for New reference, NOW, It's Nica, . postage money. Yes, it's ready! OUR NEW brimming full of illustrations, and show- ngs ga Sent by mail on receipt of 10 cents in stamps or \) your table and constant and it CATALOGUE thousand-and-one th You'll like that, ing how the really look. Thera are Guns, Rifles, Pistols—from all over the world, and som? of our own make—Fishing - Tackle, Dog Collars and Chains, Tennis Sets, etc., etc. You can see our LOVELL DIAMOND BICYCLE—The Finest Wheel on Earth,— [ the Williams Typewriter—you ought to have one. There's lots of other things too. JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO. MASS, Sole 1, 8 Agent for “STAR” AUTOMATIC PAPER FASTENER, BOSTON, [ A * Forbid a Fool a Thing and that he will do.” Don't Use SAPOLIO -
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