6 ACT3 OF SUBSTITUTION. Men and Women Aro Performing Thom Dally. o Principle of Self-Sacrifico Yas Always hy kins Mankind-Many Remarks able Instances Noted Christ, the Celestial Hero, the One Great Sabstitute, Rev. Dr. Talmage, in the following sermon, calls attention to many re- markable instances of substitution re- corded in the Bible and compares them with the great saeritice of Christ for the world. His text is Hebrews 9: “Without shedding of blood is no remission." John G. Whittier, the last of the great school of American poets that nade the last quarter of this century brilliant, asked me in the White moun- tains morning after prayers, in which I had given out Cowper's fa- mous hymn about “The fountain filled with blood." “Do you really believe there a literal application of the blood of Christ to the soul?” My neg ative reply then is my negative reply new. he Bible statement agrees with all physic and ri te P gists, a “9 ey one is ysiolo- ying that life, and in the Christ- means simply that for our life. SY sting, nt what they ans, 11 all ¢ the blood is the ian religion it ‘hrist's life i given ol who speec! I'he day poured fi the har tron a few a shortness of the back of the } nia that alarms drudging For fun? to extract exhaustic avaricious?’ Because In their own win- con the food This the up the inns pre wp too much is sat to has nt ent too soon for ' with the a she prays and v:eeps, na sob ending with a cheek. By dint the little through After it over the mother is taken down or nervous fever sets in, and one day she leaves the child with a n ther's blesaing, and goes up to Join the thee departed ones in the kingdom of Heaven. Life for life. Substitution! Tbe fact is that there are an uncounted number of mothers who, after they have navigated a large family of children through all the diseases of infancy, and got them fairly started up the flowering slope of boyhood and girlhood, have only strength enough left to die. They fade away. Bome call it con. sumption; some call it nervous pros- tration; some call it intermittent or malarial indisposition: but I call {it martyrdom of the domestic circle, Life for life. Blood for blood. Substitu« tion! Or perhaps a mother lingers long enough to see n son get on the wrong road, and his former kindness be- comes rough reply when she ex- presses anxisty about him. But she right on, looking carefully after is apparel, remembering his every birthday with some memento, and when he is brought home worn out with dissipation, nurses him till he ets well and starts him again, and “hopes, and expects, and prays, and counsels, and suffers, until her strength gives out and she fails. She XIous, SORE 01 y pale shi the ordeal i kindness one nll Brain In convalescent | abilities of never coming | ern Is going, and attendants, bending over her pillow ask her if she has any mes- sage to leave, nnd she makes great ef- fort to say something, but out of three or four minutes of indistinct utterance they can eatch but three words: “My poor boy!" The aimple fact is she died for him. Life for life, Substitution, About 38 years ago there went forth from our northern and southern bomes hundreds of thousands of men to do battle. All the poetry of war soon vanished, and left them nothing but the terrible prose. They waded knee- deep in mud. They slept in snow banks. ‘They marched till their eut feet tracked the earth, They were swindled out of their honest rations, dog. They had jaws fractured, and eyes extinguished, and limbs shot away. Thousands of them cried for water as they lay on the field the night after the battle and got it not. They were homesick, and received no message fcom their loved ones. They died in barns, in bushes, in ditches, the buzzards of the summer heat the only attendants on their obsequies. Why did these fathers their children and go to the front, and why did these young men, postponing the marriage day, start out into the prob- ; back For a principle they died. Life for life. Blood for Blood Substitution But we need not go so far. What is that monument in the cemetery? It is to the doctors who fell in the south- go? Were be attended 5? Oh medical vinls leave epidemic there not in these northern but the d« books in of here in end Yes some nedictr patients and the rail ain Yefore s to the infected ied rail trair i r flying He a 24 0a ogre takes "OWL ra, tak lations. + brooding. yin couch to eon feeling symptoms, night after } physician PW, dying presc ing day after day, night, itil a “Do *, you had better go h it; you look 44 t rest while so many a ing. On and on, until some morning finds him in a delirium, in which he talks of home, and then rises an he must go and look after the He is told to lie down; ghts the attendants until k, and is wea dies for people with whom h kinship, and far aw: family, and is hastily stranger's tomb, and only part a newspaper line tells his sacrifice—his na just ment ng five. Yet he has touch furthest height of sublimity in that three weeks of liamanitarian service He goes straight as an arrow to the of him who said: “I was sick and ye visited me." Life for Blood for blood. Substitution! In the realm of the fine there was as remarkable instance. A brilliant but hypercriticized painter, Joseph William Turner, was met by a ley abuse from all the art gal- of Europe. His paintings, have since won the applause of all civilized nations, “The Fifth Plague of Egypt,” “Fishermen on a Lee Shore in Squally Weather," “Cal- ais Pier,” “The Sun Rising Through the Mist,” and “Dido Building Carth age” were then targets for critics to shoot at. In defense of this outrage ously abuse , & young author of 24 years, just one year out of col- lege, came fo with his pen and wrote the ablest and most famous es- art that the world ever saw, or fellow res miserable. cannd tients ba ' Of sam DOsSOmM life. arts an vol of leries which it : Say on John Ruskin's “Modern For 17 years this author fought the battles of the maltreated artist, and after, in poverty and broil enheartedness, painter had and the public tried undo their ceruelties toward him by giving him a big funeral and burial in St. Paul's Cathedral, his old-time friend took out of a tin box 19,800 pieces of paj taining drawings by d painter, d through many and i v [ y 1 ea mons ever will see Painters.” died, ¥ er con- the ol UnCoOm- and ar observa- an Weary assorteq wtever he may tO say Iwiween leave this has any pen for heer ti tute gs ANG ! comparison, 3 inspired and uni: prophetic, apostolic, and human, falls hort, for Christ the Great Un like Adam, a type of Christ, because ame directly from God; Noah, type of Chyjst, becnnge he delivered family from deluge; Mel visedec, § Christ, because he had no pr Or SUNCCesSsOr; a type of Christ, because he Moses aspired, evangelistic, was Ie n 118 Own "RROT Jose ph, was cast out by his brethren; a type of Christ, because he was a de- | ' | liverer from bondage; Joshua, a type 0 | of Christ, because he was a congquer- or; Samson, a type of Christ, because of his strength to slay the lions and | earry off iron gates of impossibility; Solomon, a type of Christ, in the af- fluence of his dominion; Jonah, a type of Christ, because of the stormy sea in which he threw himself for the rescue of others; but put together Adam, and Noah, and Melchisedec, and Joseph and Moses, and Joshua, apd Samson, and Solomon, and Jon- ah, and they would not make a frag- ment of a Christ, a quarter of a Christ, the half of a Christ, or the millionth part of a Christ. He forsook a throne and sat down on his own footstool. lle came from the top of glory to the bottom of hu- miliation, and changed a cireumfer- ence seraphie for a circumference dia- bolic. Once waited on by angels, now hissed at by brigands. From afar and high up he came down; past meteors, swifter than they; by starry thrones, himself more lustrous; past larger worlds to smaller worlds; down stairs of firmaments, and from cloud to cloud, and through treetops and into the camel's stall, to thrust his should- er under our burdens and take the lances of pain through his vitals, and wrappe imseit in all the agonies which we deserve for our misdoings, and stood on the splitting decks of a foundering vessel, amid the drench- ing surf of the sea, and passed mid- nights on the mountains amid wild - \ ! | *s of prey, and stood at the point oll earthly and infernal hostil- # charged on him at once with their keen sabres—our Substitute! When did attorney ever endure so much for a pauper client, or physician for the patient in the lazaretto or mother for the enild in membranous croup, as Christ for us, and Christ for you, and Christ for me? Shall any man or woman or child in this audience who has ever suffered for another find it hard to understand this Christly suffering for us? Shall those whose sympathies huve been wrung in behalf of the unfortunate have no appreciation of that one mo- ment which was lifted out of all the ages of eternity as most conspicuous, when Christ gathered up all the sins of those to be redeemed under his one arm, and all their sorrows under his other arm, and said: *I will atone for these under my right grm, and will heal all those under my left arm, Strike me with all thy glittering shafts, O eternal justice! Roll over me with all thy surges, ye oceans of sorrows?” That is what Paul means, that is what I mean, that is what all those who have ever had their hearts chang- ed mean by “blood.” 1 in this religion of blood! I am thrilled as I see the sugges lor’ in sacramen- tal cup, whether it be of burnished silver set on cloth immaculately white, or rourh hewn from wood set on table in log-hut meeting house of the wilde Now I am thrilled as I see the f ancient sacrifice crimson with blood of the slain lamb, Leviticus : : m H . aly giory Ive ©« ry Ness, altar o uch speals « r with dye who! Apocalyy un Heavenly Was dippes describes “vesture ' and what John, the ay ie, means when he speaks of the cleanseth worn ul means he cries, no [ will In has all not “Without | remission.’ | be saved || the | onco | b ky URE CONSTIPATI 108 ) 25¢ 50 ¢ + ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED to cure any case of constipation, Casearets are the Ideal Laxaf tive, never grip or grive, but cause easy natural resulls, Sam. ple and booklet free, Ad, STERLING REMEDY CO., Chicaga, Montreal, Can, , or Kew York, "i. EDUCATE YOURSELF At the AxDERRON Bonoorn of BUsisess toona ing Foglish Branches for the price of one Free | Al Pa. a gradusting course in Book keep shorthand, Typewriting, Pehmanspip an bok " send for Catalogue eo I MONEY IO LOAN HATCHIN LF barred Plvn LEGAL NOTICE pt through 5 id he never that Christ achieved our liberty! 5 8 most exciting day I bat i { Waterloo, ning train tlefleld rived | one who was in ad heard 6 théusand times recited, accompanied us over field. There stood the old Houg- omont Chateau, the walls dented, and scratched, and broken, and shatered by grapeshot and cannon ball. * There is the well in which 300 dying and dead were pitehed. There is the chapel with the bead of the infant Christ shot off. There are the gntes at which, for many hours, English and French armies wrestled. Yonder were the 180 guns of the English and the 250 guns of the French. Yonder the Hanoverian Hussars fled for the woods. Yonder the ravine of Ohain, where the French cavalry, not know ing there was a hollow in the ground, rolled over and down, troop after troop, tumbling into one awful mass of suffering, hoof of kicking horses against brow and breast of captains and colonels and private soldiers, the human and the beastly groan kept up until, the day after, all was shovelad under because of the malodor arising in that hot month of June “There.” land regiments lay faces waiting for spring upon the foe. In that orchard 2,500 men were cut to pieces. Here stood Wellington with white lips, and up that knoll rode Mars sixth horse, five having 3 i the was said our guide, “the High- down O their the moment n n shot un der him. Here the ranks of the French | broke, and Marshal Ney, with his boot slashed of a sword, and his hat off. and his face covered with powder and blood, tried to rally his troops as he eried: “Come and of France dies From sr direction expected for the French nforce- but he came not. Around those woods Blucher was looked for to rein force the English, and just in he came up. Yonder is the field where sen how the marshal battle fleld. Grouchy rein ments, Napoleon stood, his arms through the | reins of the horse's bridle, dazed and insane, trying to go back.” battle that went on from twente-five minutes to 12 o'clock, on June 18, until 4 o'clock, when the English seemed defeated and their commander eried out: “Boys, you can't think of giv- ing way? Remember old England!” And the tides turned, and at 8 o'cloek in the evening the man of destiny, who was called by his troops Old Two Hundred “1 housand, turned away with broken heart, and the fate of cen- turies was decided. No wonder a great mound has been reared there, hundreds of feet high a mound at the expense of millions of dollars and many years in raising, and on the top is the great Belgian lion of bronze, and a grand old lon it is. But our great Waterloo was in Palestine. There came a day when all hell rode up, led by Apoliyon, and the captain of our salvation confronted them alone. The rider on the white horse of the Apocalypse going out against the black horse cavalry of death, and the battalions of the demonise, and the myrmidons of darkness. From 12 o'clock at noon to 3 o'clock In the afternoon the greatest battle of the universe went on. Eternal destinies were being decided. All the arrows of hell pierced our.chieftain, and the bat- tleaxes struck him, until brow and cheek and shoulder and hand and foot were incarnadined with oozing life; but he fought on until he gave a final stroke with sword from Jehovah's buckler, and the commander-n-chief of hell and all his forces fell back in everlasting ruin, and the vie is ours. And on the mound that cele. brates the triumph we plant this day two figures, not in bronze or iron or soulptured marble, but two figures of living light, the lion of Judah's tribe ond the b that was slain. Philadelphin’s Asphalt Pavements, Philadelphia leads in asphalt paved streets, having 202 miles, ¥ { the hill! Jerusalem was the battlefield | the | from his | 1 whole | to | Ney on his | vii | was | time Scene of a | {| and others North | 6] degrees past ind { beginning | neat I house bank bars 0 feet to Lhe of an ae » story more of frame dwell re y In execution 3 be sold riy of William Miller, George Mi Her, Mary Batler. John M er. d and Curtin Miller, heirs of J deceased ALSO iain tras Centre oo of hip i deseribed as fo thence alo ith 71 1.2 degrees thenoe South 36 1.2 West thence South & 1-2 thenoe alo degrees _ i ence by land of ve 2X degrees West X05 1.2 perches to post, thenee by land of Daniel Runkle North wrehes to stones, thence by land of Benjamin Ripka and John Grove Zi 1-2 degrees East privet ches Lo post South tl to post south 124 perches to the place of containing i178 acres and 57 perehos Thereon erected a dwelll and other outbulidings taken in execution and to be sold as Measure Hg seized { the property of Benjamin Breon ALSO, title and interest of Darius Waite in all that certain messuage tenement and tract of land sitoate in Hall Moon town ship, Centre county, Pennsylvania All the right Beginning | at stones the land of Jeremiah way, South 51 | degrees 2505.10 perches to stones, thence by land of Millers heirs South 42 1-2 degrees West | Will be confirmed & perches to white oak, thence by land of Jos, | Eves and others North 58 degrees West 24 4.0 Jatents to stones, thence by land of Samuel tHlenberger and others North 42 1.2 degrees | East 72 perches to the place of beginning, con taining 10 acres and W perches. Thereon erected a two story dwe ing hope bank barn and other outbuildings wWo-sLory ¢ and other ont Frees west Kn Frees West CEE We site nd aad Half Mo Cent 1 slroetl & ¢ by lot of oc by Jot of r of jot 132. the \ ' A corner, then right angles line 60 feet to Centre street, thetes Centre street 60 feet to the place of beg 6 contal g 60 I 1th and dept I hereon erected oO slory dwe house t ing at J FuAL NOTICH Notioe is hereby given John A. Erb and Wm. W of the license of the sald Jone Erb Wm. W. Thomas, has been filed | Quartier Sessions of Centre county to the Act of Assembly appr the the Cx aceording Tuly 15. 19 SMITH, to Kain rt of | Ba AL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the account Jno, B. Linn, committee of Susan Young, will be presented for confirmation on Wednesday wil 27, 1%, and unless exceptions be filed on tr before the second day of the term, the same W.F. SMITH, Prothonotary of no. is | UAL NOTICH Notice is hereby given that In the assigned estate of israel Confer, the assignor's claim for | benefit of exemption has been filed and eon | firmed nisi, by the court Seized taken in execution and to be sold as | all the right, title and interest of Darius Walte ALRO, All the right title and Interest of John 8 Waite and Darius Waite in all that certain piece or tract of land situate in Half Moon township, | Centre county, Pennsylvania stones, thence North 0 1.2 degrees East Ww Rerches to stones, thenege North 3¢ 1-2 degrees ‘est 3 perches to stones, thenee South 41 1.2 degrees West 104 porches to stones, thence South 57 degrees East 20 perches to stones, thence South 29 1.2 degrees East 57 perches to the place of beginning, containing Jif acres and 13% perches, Seized taken In execution and to be sold as all the right title and interest of Joan 8, Waite and Darius Wale, ALRO, All that certain traet of land situate in Curtin township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, boand ed and described as follows: On the North by and of William Weber, on the Kast by land of Mary Glossner, on the Bouth by land of Henry Thiel, on the Went by land of Samuel Hall ot al. toiaining Hi ACres more or jess, Thereon erected a dwelling house and other out-bulld. ings, Keired taken In execution and to be sold as the property of Mary Ferringer. ALSO, All that certain tract of land situate in Penn township. Centre county, Pennsylvania, bound ed and deseribed as follows: On the North b Brush mountain, on the Fast land of J. HM, Reifsnydor, on the South by lands of same and wee BlOVET and on the West by land of W, C. Hubler, contalnmg about 17 acres. ereon Beginning at | W. FP. SMITH no. is Prothonotary APMINISTRATOR 8 NOTICE In the matter of the estate of John B. Heck man, late of Gregg township, dee'd Theundirsigned having been granted letters of aaministration of sald estate, notice is here by given to all persons knowing themselves in. debted to the decedent to make Immediate pay: ment, and those having elaims are requested to present them duly authenticated for settie- ment. J. M. JKMAN Wm. G. B. HECKMAN, ». Administrators, DYor CE Catharine D NOTICK. Confer ) In the Court of Common hd { Fleas of Contre Co. No, Wesley Conter 198 Nov, Term, 184. Divorce A. V. M ™ Wesley er. BR lend Commonwealth of Pennsylvania | gu | County of Centre, 5 The petitioner, the above libellant named, having filed her application for divoree in the above stated case and scbiteation of said appli: Sie Rereby Hol 8 Appear, pou Co of are here 10 Appear a Common Pleas on the fourth Monday of April 18, then and there show cause, if any, % 1 have, why Catharine 1). Sunder should not be divorend from the bonds of matrimony entered ints with Wes Confer, according to the pray in sad court. or of the petition Ale or CRONISTER, i's Sheriff. al k Pollefonte March 50, "8, ny, ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. In the matter of the estate of Michael Fish burn, late of Beaner township, deceased The undersigned having been granted letters administration on sald estate, notice is here DY given to all persons knowing themselves in debited to the decedent 10 make immediate Payment, and those having claims are reques ed Lo present them duly authenticated lor sey tiement ISKAKL KAUFFMAN, vis, Bower & Orvis Administrator nly ALLorieys Helonte, Pa of be APM VIBTRATOR'S NOTICE deceased lion on sald esis * unders: Are requ g ela TE = tL the present to the t WEBER, Adn Hows MINISTRATOR'S NOTICE | of Pets | the petition of | smas for transfer | i | | Mann, dec'd d final ace 2) roof et aan ~ I GIege town a} acnount of Catherine M Pp, deceased of Peter Bre and Bruce Ripka Hennetta Ripka, late of Po as filed by Perry W tf Breon, «Cort nm fae Lier towns Breon, ex'r of et MY » eased deceased Deborah ¥ George \ ne, Ji of Jacob DD. Valeutine CAMG ent adn late of ough, d« 10. The account of Dr. Geo Iw istrator of et of Allison H Millheim borough, deceased 11. The first and final aoco Rearick, administoator of eta ok, inte of { nion township, de 12, The first M nt of hn OC of Jessie 1. Kear TL and final account of Jacob Bot wi administrator of ete of Thomas Williams, ate of College township, deceased 3 First account of A. A. Dale, guardian of Florence Nef and W_ #8. Neff, minor children of James 1. Neff, late of Ste phenson county, 1 deceased 14. The first account of Mary J. Gates, exes. utrix of ete. of George Gates, late of Hall Moon township, deceased, 15. Second and final account of John P. Tay. jor and Samuae! Mew illlams, executors of ete of Rebeacea M. Brisbin, late of Poller township, deceased 16. First and final account of Ellen II. An. drews, exsoutrix of ete, of Sarah Lindsey, late of Bellefonte borough, deceased. 17. The fourth and final account of Jano. M Keiehline, administrator of ete, of John M. Wagner, late of Boggs township, deceased First and inal account of 8 W. Smith executor of ete, of Mary A. Smith, late of Ven tre Hall borough, deceased 19. First and final acoonnt of WH. Noll. Jr. administrator of ete, of W. H. Noll, 8. late of spring township, deceased, 20. First and final account of A.J Weaver, administrator of ete , of Sarah A. Weaver, late of Gregg township. deceased 21. First and final scoount of John H. Roush executor of ete, of Mary Woesner, late of Gregg township, deceased, 12. Supplemental account of Andrew J. Lytle, executor of ete. of Plersol Lytle, late of College township, deceased. 2. The account of Charles Smith, admins. trator of ele, of Elizabeth Pox, late of Haines township, deceased, 24. The first and partial account of Kil Thomas, exeentrix of elo, of prey 1ate of Philipsburg boro, deceased. shat tretnt! esata): Ser i’, of of ete . Musser, late of Gregg township, deceased. 2. Fist and #8 aocount of Wy . Reeder, axooutor LW ar 5 Ooh. Iate of Bellefonte borough, deceased, 27. The fi and Walkey, lan of 1B. Walkey nor 1% # Walkey, m of ceased. G. W. RUMBURGER, Bellefonte Pa. March Sth, 180s,
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