i is - Z . t r; rV 1 7T Ml I M t-1 1 r; fc. K -CIIVFIEK. VOL. XLVII ill i ; . '!.. TADLYGK i ii : i. N ni K'S SUN i m s;:o. i ii a re Lifeboats. j ' A i xxnL, - v b -t ! rr.-.-ei . r : -in 1 i ... . ri I t.i.Tt-1 no ' i" T port. - : r i : 1 t rt'oiunt1 Id .- ! ::r r-. ,-i..n. A -Hale : -ri-ii. r.-bi-ion may have -. v.-t will not do lot i : i . .'iir at; i'tit:.ti t. - . II.. i l!itl.l Of til -- i i. '.'i. itii-1 iu-- a I - -r ' - ..' t h-V.iri- , .. i .. . ; .. r ,;y ,.,1-M- t i -,i h Wind and trie . ' . ; .- ;."i'Ti;i'n s. m:i.-l .. . i I'.ml wi the -. ! :t t. th.- liftn:i - ns t njti.-e. 'i v. el h.vl be.-u ' r : i wA'ki, th ; . -I,- .- b.i 1 -v..ut in the fc-.lt water, '. " .1 t ' tfl l's -Hit, - r s a..!: aiiyti.- r i- 1: u" ; t tlis Vr) ! !'i-'v rro'i'.---I anions - i' ;-.-.t ii-i 1 ct into . : ' r ! :; j wn', . ! :..y w r- i-.rin to ' : ,. .; iw down : i I i:.r-' duty. . . t ; ': ji'.ors t 'nit I .l r-:i i ;;!0'A'4 an 1 n -th ;h.- -hip th a lo .t r . .l.i X.irs of uiy T -. trv . t .e i ' i' rr.ire.in l:;t Jan" the T : '.- r ri of t he Camper- ktra. t : -' ! ! thing about that iv j, -:; ;:-at all the s-iilors staid at t.S'ir ' . ;'.-,;r d'iry. As a class all .-rt..e '.' - i - ..:-r nr.' valorous, buttliese r f' T-r ex cntional an I pr- t.c : : ; ! :'v .r.iilc tney were really pre pir Lg f- - :' .; in fi HfeNiat. But fu-nse 4,::.aru. ' i ir'-s-a ? ibiiers had in e-: . ': f :ii:arv who was t:.r-: r.g . ' r f ie anl W.len I t : .- - - . .v t ; f: -k rhe s:ul'.rs were a , . : . .- ;' v .:'V''t tii' cuiiases irorn t:.. j -: . ,i ! . . went tlioe cuf-1,-- . - . t --t':if hel l the lifcboiit, :i i -: -: : r " ; 1 ir.:o tlm s i. : : i: ". - r: :t. " ill" soldiers cut of fi,-r ' : ' ' .t nnd b-t W fell ofT." A f . .: - ' it 1 r ;:' I an.l wis cap 9.7." : .-Ii 'i - . . T-) f-r two weeks win Is an 1 i i . - . . f ' a !.. ' I tiiink tiia; n..r.y jri : : r i"t v--"l felt their ln-::i : , rr b : : :i ' i.a I vanishe !. Ia t i- : : -; ; .- i- i a srua'.I boat couk L ; !:av- I -ri. .: . My : t i "t I.ire!oa!." We ati -t ev..g-.-r.t- t's i::.;1 Ttai. of th'! ilfer. A.i ::..a..r t tft" pieaiory of Lionel I.uki::. t'-.e . . 'ii ii'lii-i- r ft L jng A tc. Lon-i- n. x . : v ".f 1 tie :;--t JiiVboat. an i I do c;: t ; . :: a '. r or !"r;:i t put on bis lonib rf ri'iu ;. t::c in- -r.t-:i "ii tiiat you may 1- T. :,':'! was the flrt whe 1 .'. i!'.- eriifillHl ilivelitol . . - i ' ty by Tv iii 'lt t:: iny i : - ;.. :-:y have been pre. .f at. 1 lie o'.taiti.M ivl . ii. :.ir- of Sir William in t.i isle of M-tn. unl .: i : i '-.va hand in the res- t siupw re -kc 1, stirred r i :-p"!'t to iiii''k action in ( li;e:.oat. i banks to God :, 1 if an I divine U'.i--.:. N i pa wiil iiou 't ;tJ ii -v . t..i r-'a 1 oi tile wre.'k i t..c liiv of His uy, of til :i tl'- r'.F of t'.e Gulf of ..- ( '.in M'Ci.ir'ii on the r "f ti'.'? il :ft' ii ie.i 1 on the '. - r of t.ie Ii -v.: 1 iiarter r.'a. or of tiie Exinouth a.;er. i.r "f th Cambria ou r f tfi Ailaiiti'- on t!i ' ro -a. c' X: I .' 6'TV 'l T it t'.e t. a;; n . ;..- 11-- : cu- -i t:.- Er. tb .- form- -: .-t.r.t i 'i. In'i r : '.r.tT' ati.-V' i .; U:.i4'l 1 To ai :,.; t!. .:. S '!.'.' " ..-'i li.'ol::." : o '-an :. Sll.' J '.t.! i.- I fi- ii :.. . a'iiy:':'': : a.i r--1 . : I in;. . . a tL'I.'. ii'lt .. V-' ' istu. :,. tU. 7 tl - v w;c :i w ; t:.. t ..- toa ou l.o:i r to th- importance oi r- '. "ii'-'-r tb-re arc at least .r 'i: i'iug tl: -a. to say notu-'I'lf'-l 'uiiiious this moment r-. W- "laii'l-Iui bers." as . . n "t knw t'".e ditT'-ren-e :. ."-cike aa l a ringnoit, or ' - t. a !.. or ringing oat .. r lur. mg a ! .; i.l, but we - if' r '-r iess eyt-nt the i;a . it ia ev -ry marine e.fiip- i L'".c I'a p.-rlari -u a lifeboat ft :es.cn s res.-j-y There are .1,1 feci that we are out ut a. aula- ;. :.y i.-t.iroing aril anxious qu -s-Ui'M -tr.e i.s ? wa-.es struck that vesso a,--in-t t.:- "f iT;ib-U tiie liteiiot of my t-xt t, .--! ii. ns a!. -."it the church. Qu-f. - i- if tli'' vr--rid. Oilestins at out Gel. -tl' 'tis aoout our eternal destiny. Evry t - n.nri aa 1 wonia.a lias tbr- l'i!i'!. hi i in'T ortion as they arctaiui Ui ( ti e-., questions an.-e. T,i -re l i wr-ug m thinking, if Go I ha-1 fit i. i- ; ii- t" t link nii-f keep ou t'nink if.g, Ii- v i,-.t i.ave I uiit under tlii! v:.--. . , . t' -. f.;,:ill th s tiiinkiug mi-riiit:-. wue'i li-i.t- id in its revolutions from it:::.--'. r.M-n tile Itli'iBight does tu - ; ; i : . i: i., a -uino, for when we are i.t . : - w ar j ti.inking, although we i . t ;:....; l-t !!. Allot us who ore a n;-: . n. ; i, want to reach some f y - ! ... v- ;.ii 1 c its a -tion, an 1 il ;.v - a g..., tic ' oat that we may h a..-,- . t . ..- 1 .-'i i." v ul-l unswing it f r i : i t - - : nn 1 b t us get into it and pui turf - .... .... ii-.t I l-.v- v. -l fair ii- ti e I mot first ex- -i in- t:.- '.' " it before I ri.sk my soui in it fir : . i to risk your soul in it. Ail t lie ; t: 1 J;.i: -;ife lifci.-'iats, nn l Margate . -. a-. I fioutii .-.iiield Hieboats, nnl A- -r. ;;.. o:,t were teste I before liein;; I it in--, r r i ejei ve as to their buoyancy a:. I - . . i, i -t .wa:. aad self-righting ca-Va-ity. A -i 1 ".u-.-n v'a o.T--r n.y s-ju1 a U.'o-'-' .t I c:.-t :'r-t test it. li re is .i - .i' li iid n-fr lifei.Tit cnlle! T.." - : .. . it lias only a iitti'- w.iiie li-n lau!, -he-!,' i. '.ivuiru of th" p'anks are r-a.. y-'v r.. I ti.e'wan I years old. an 1 trim a w rri ' i;''-n ship, btit tu lire painted cv-r.i'i i .... k lew. Ticv are realty fatalism an 1 ; - - n of olden "time. But we mut (".-.-: t! ,i -i I .-ad them theosophy. The tir.i I ' of this iifei'oat was an oars- w irt.an lv tue nati.a of Mme. I'.lavnisky, -ut tit" i .i -.'nan cow is Annie B-sanr. So many a-.' - 'ting a'-oard the boat it is w rf": v . ' tiu.matlon. both because of the ;'-.'.:. -'-.vuo have entere 1 it and be '.' -.v.-s ar invited to ft in. i'-1:.- ..r-.- is that everything is (io. Horse an i ;ar ...i. j tr- e an 1 man are parts of Go I e Lave t..r. s-juis -an au;'n:il soul, a Im n.as - . 1. , spiritual s ul. Tii animal oti: ta'.--'-!. 1t a.i'-r n-iiiie. n wandering thing, try.r.g to ext.r.-s itseif through mediums. It rs b-a-fs or etit--rs a humain being, ar. 1 v. , a v.. i tin 1 nn effeminate man it is b-L-iu - a wou.au's soul lias got Into the ir.-vi, an 1 when tou find a masculine woman tl s i a,ie a n'aa's soul has taken poss-n-ti- iiof;. T va!i's body. If you rind a woman iuis become a pliitfori K tu-r nn 1 iil.s polities.sha is p s -ss-d by adea I r ..ui-'i.in, who forty year ago ma te ti- ife.-m quake. The f oul keeps wan-ler-l-g'.n an I nn. nnd may have fifty or innn-:t--rr !. .'.i'ir.i.t for.i's. anl tiu.ily is a-i--,jr "1 in (ii!. It Wks Go.1, nt tins al.irt rind iM.oi at the last. But who piv-s til" t.-'orhy f..r the truth of sn -h a religion. ' i- -ui -s living in a cave in central Asia. i--y are invisible to the naked eye, but they continents an 1 seas in a flash. My Baptist brother Br. Hal leman says '-it ath-osophist In New York was vitited I" i'i. r.i tli'-se mv.sierious beings from ' Ural Asia. The gentleman knew it fiom ! ' t that the mvbterious being left hi I ':! i -iTi lker -hief. embroidered with tiU '; ' it;: ! Asiatic residence. The most won- r'"' a-hieveinent of the theosophlsts if ! 1 t fa. v k.p out of the insane asylnm. ' t r tl.etruth of the statement that nt ?'!! -r announced was so absurd bul i." 1 . lis .j:,.s. ! o-u-ties in the Unlte-1 Slates and Englana oth-r 1.,,,-ls have been established fot I "' i t. in. ligation of theo-ophv. Inateaa oi - 'liiigKie rcvelnticn of a Bible you can Mi - tiivjt 3fjy itj froaj a oiTilaep.tral Aa i mmmm si-atM . a. i w v X A 1 , I OtJU Xl V 1 . - -.aw..-. aaa-. a iiin. liniUKUiiMENT OF THE LAWS. Edit - , r - Xr t l I 1 1 . . -.. ,. T.r on -ni m Know, ana rtr : ' I"- T. m,r heco, .ap'rtm. , 'r ? ." "" "r ez11'. " , cn - riil,l., tl, hnv. Kr.t Tarirtr xp-r.cn,... r..taun5 through tu. nnt u-.w rwiuc. now lallin - '1 Will ... . ir.ui.-iii on, and no-rlmorth-rama. ami on an I n. i in -j a t.-xra. , . I)on t you -..? Now, that t'joophic -N..it h t.n launched. It propoi to you oft th. routh -a of donl.t Into evr- ?."",ta ''" How do J"0'' ' ' it My opinion in yoa t,,l ta-trnr imitate I th.Mt b..at an.l let h.-r full off ' Another li(,.Hi:it temptin,- u to enter Ii ni.leof many plant of K.o.t w rL. It ii fa, iv a beautiful tioat almscivin, Drati Ml Byrnnathie for human uffenn" tluht ' wor.1 an.l rihteous de- i. 'i must ijtr.it I he th Iooks of thn prow, and of n rowlo -k and of the paddles, and of th t'-enn:, ir-wr. and of many who are think 11 JT to trust tiiemi-hvs on her bennties. But iia trouole about tnr- "'boat ia It leaks. I iev.-r kn.'W a man yet good enough to earn n-avon by h: virtues or Knerositi. Ii there be one person here present on this -I.ed Sabbath nil of whose thoughts hava een always riclit, all of whose a.nioM have i waj-s been neht.an.l ail of whose wor,ls hav always been richt. let htm stand up, or if al ready standing lot him lift bis haud. and J will know that he lies, paul had It aboul LK .. I" "''--. "liytlie deeds of the lan h:ill no flesh living be justified." David had It atvout ncht when he said, "There is nont bat rtoeth ,ood, no not one. T. ". '. i?ook bd 11 ,lbout --eht when ft fii J, Ail have sinned and come short of tin Jlory of God." Let a man ret off that little !am-r called The Maid of the Mist, which ula up to the foot of Niagara Kails, and thea .iirmh to thaton of the falu on the deaoondiaa 5ooils. for be can do It easier than anr mai jver will be able to climb to heaven'by hi Tood works. If your thoughts have always been exactly -ight, and your words exactly right, and four deeds always exactly right, you can ro up to the pate of heaven, and you need lot even knock tor admittance, but open U rotirself and push the aneels out of your way ind go up and take one of the front seats, lint you would be so unlike any one else thai las i-oae up from this world that you would jo a curiosity in heaven and more fit for i:.veuly museum than for a place where th D'n:itnt3 could look at you free of chnr;. No, sir, I admire your good works, andtha .ifeboatyou are thinking of trusting in is jandsomer than any yawl or pinnace oi vacht or cutter that ever sped out of a boat aouse or hoisted sail fora race. But she leaks. Trust your soul in that, and you will go to he bottom. She leaks. So I imitate the nnriners of the text, and with a cutlass strike he ropes of the boat and let her fall of. Another lifeboat is Christian Incon tlstencies. The planks of this boat an ;omposel of the split planks of siiipwreci.3. That prow is made out of hypocrisy from :helife of a man who profiled one tiling ind r-ally was another. One oar of this iteijo.it was the falsehood of a church mem ber, and the other oar was the wickedness jf some minister ot the Gospel, whose in iquities wero not for a long wbi'e found out. Not one p'.ank from the oak of God's t'Tnal truth in ail that lifeboat. Ail t tic -lianks. by universal a l-nission, are derived a I crumbling aui fallen np irt and rotten n r.-a ly to sink. "Weil, well,' you say. "no on will w;im :o git info that life Koat." Oh, my friend. uu are mistaken. Tfiat is the most popuia tfnbo.it ever contru. -te l. That is the mot lOpular lifeboat ev-r lauucheil. Millions o -opii) want to p't into it. They jostle eaW )t!i-r to et the bot set in the boat. You oul i not ke-'p tiie.n back though you Btoo 1 jt the gunwa;es with a club, as on our ship Greece in a hurricane, and the steerage pas sengers were determined to come up on deck vaere thy would have been washed o J. anc :iie officers stood at the top of the slain lubbing them back. Even by such violence s that you could not keep people Iron: juinpiu - into the most popular liietoat, mad' M church member inconsistencies. In times of revival when sinners flock intc :he inoiiry room the most of them are kep: from do 'id in g arigut be 'ausj they know K n iny Christians who irs bad. Tne inquirj room becomt s a World's Fair for exhibit iol jf nil tiie frailties ot church members, so thil ;f yoa believe all U there told you yoa woub: je afraid to enter a church le.t you gc. you; 'loetreTS r.ieked or L'l't knocked liUWU. This is the way lliev talk : ''I was eheatec -ut of 50i) by a leader o: a uitiie class. -undny-school teacher gossiped about m in t di l her best to destroy my good name. I had a partner in business who swampet our business concern by his trickery and ti:ei rolled up his eyes in Friday night praye; ieetin. as though he were looking foi lijah's chariot to make a second trip anc take up another passenger." Hut what a cracked an l water lorded aic raping ssa'ued lifeboat the iuotisistn-ie of others I I'ut me on ashingle mid-Atlantif and leave me there rather thnn in such f yawl of spiritual confidence. God forbid thai I should yet aboard it, and leet some of yoi make the mistake of getting into it I do ui the mariners did on that Mediterranean s'nt when the saiiors were about to get into tht unsafe lifeboat of the text anl lose tbeii lives in that wav. "Then the soldiers cut o:T the rones of tue boat nnd let her fall off. Well,'' says some on s "this subject is ,-ery discouraging, for we must have a lii'e i it if we are ever to g -t nsliore, and you have air "a ly condemned three." Ah. it if bec.tus" I wantto persu i le you to take tht oniv safe lifeboat. I will not allow you to U ,P .'oived an 1 get on to the wil l wavin and then capsize or sink. Thank God, there is lifeboat tiint will t i':e you ashore in safety, is -lire as GtI is Go I and heaven is heaven, l'.ie ki;el iiud ribs of this boat are made out of a tr"e t'nat was set up on a blul back of .Term iiem a rood many years ago. Both of t lie o irs are ma ie out of the same tree, i'iie rowlo-.-ks arc ma lo out of the sains tree. Pie steering gear is made out of the sa'ne ;re. The plunks of it were hammered to eth'T bv tu hammers of ex-cutioners wno "houglitt ey wereouly killing a Christ, but wer really pounding together an escape lor ill imoi rifed sou;s of ail ages. It is'an old bo it, but good as new, though it has been carrying passengers from sinking iliips to firm shore for ages and has never lost a pass uger. T leso old Christians begin o smile becausT it is dawning npon them irnat I mean. The fact Is that in this way fears ago they got oft a wreck themselves, ind I do not won b r they smile. It is not a senseless giggle that means frivolity, but it is a smile like t'aat on the face of Clir.stians the moment they leave earth for heaven vea like the smile of God Hi uself when He had completed the plan for saving the world. Bight after that big tumble of tne Atlantic r..un i-r or seven weeks ago on tne beach at East Hampton I met the enptain of th life saving station and sai l, "Captain, do vou think a lifeboat could live In a sea like that ?" Although the worst of it was over, the captain replied, "No, I do not think it could. ' But this lifeboat of which I speak can live in any sea and delles all breakers and all cyclones, and all equinox s, nnl a.l earth, and all hell. In twenty years the li.c jnving apparatus along our Atlantic co ist iaved th!) lives of over 45,00 of the ship wrecked, but this lifeboat that I commen. has saved In twenty years hundre !s of mill ions of tbe shipwrecked. Like those u-vi .j invented Knglish lifeloats, it is unsui.m-rg-Ible. self righting and seif bailing. A along our rocky American coat fliln,. wero left to chanoe for centuries, and tsi hli .wrTleed crawled up on the beach to dft un!Us eome on hnnp-neJ to walk along oi some f.slierman's hat rnlgur be near But a:,er t'i Fhip Ayrshire was wrecked at ',n Beach, nnl t ,e Towbatian left herbfl v'ai utrewn aong our coast, and snot net reel went on tbe rocks, 400 lives per:sli,nr, he Un!el States Gov -rnmeut wokenp ami .nfiu-ci"1"!1 .jnn i ui for naie an i. propria-. u " - . i'e Efattons. chnt over tne atim bit i'-. - ..v.,l mrf. nn 1 bnwsers ar-- .. sreck to shore and what with Lyles s g Jn ind six oi.re d snrfuo it. with cork at the . ies o mike it ucsiukahle. nnd patrolmen all 5ght long walking tbe laeh until they meet each other nnd exchange m-tal tickets, so as to show the entire beach has been traversed, 0 1 the C'oston light (lwto. o snfTercr. nn 1 sur.men. incased in Hie saving dress, nn I ltfe car rolling on m" ropes, there are many probabilities o -eseJePf..; the unfortunate of the sea But he government of tho united heavens h nadebetter prov.sion for the r-scue of our u s So Cose by that this mo u-nt we can ?ut our band on its top an t in w It w h go-suel lifeboat. It wid to. tu ou Oore than a second to get into it. ut while in my text stan I w THK nOMCTITniriM-rpup w-.e-r--.-t . -tT-r. -- . MltTLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY. PENNA.. WRnVFSDAY. XfWRni;i? u be marines w,tu i.ieir cutiass.,, P.e,m o sey. r the r..pes of the life.Kiat and let her allot, notice the poor equipment. Only w wlifebont. Tw hundred and seventy-six Msseagers. a Paul couute.1 them, aa 1 only melifeooat. Mytext uses the singular and not he plural, "Cut off the ropi-s of the boat." t do not suppose It would hive held more lien thirty people, though loaded to the a ater's edge. 1 think by marine law all our mo lern ves lels have enough p...boats to hold all the, rew and all the passengers in ease of rmerg ney, but tiie inarm. -s of mv text were standi ng by the only boat, and that a small Umt, md y.-t il76 pass mgers. But what tiirills me t rough and through is the fact that though ve are wrecked by sin and trouble, and there s only one lifeboat, that boat is larireenoncb o bol l all who are willing to get into it. Tht rospel iiyinu expresses it: At! ma - c.-me. vriioever will; l bla Miux -v.vir.ia poar i.no.n still. Ent I rru-t haul in tiiat statement a litt!. itooai ior all iutiiat lifeboat, with just one 'x -. -ption. Not you I do not mean you. but Here is one exception. There have been ;us-s where ships were in trouble, and tne vitatn got all the passengers and crew intc :ne lifeinjats. but there was not room for tue aptnin. He, through the s-a trumpet ihouted ".Shove off now and pull for the leaeh. Good-by!" And then the cnptaiu, vitn pathetic and sublime self-sacrifice, went town with the ship. So the Captain of out lalvation. Christ the Lord, Inuuches the gos pel lifetioat and tells us ail to get in, but Hs jerishes. "It behooved Christ to suffer." Was il lot so, ye who witnessed His agonizing ex liration? Simon of Cyrene, was it not sol Cavalry troops, wlioss horses pawed the lust at the eruciiixion, was it not so? Ye Uar-s who swooned away with the sun ol he midday heavens, was it not so "By flis stripss we are healed." By His death -e live. By His sinking in the deep sea ol iit.Tering we get of! in a sale lifeboat. Yes, ve must put into trils story a little of our wu personality. Vo had a ride in that vi y lifeboat from foundered craft to soiij bore. V i-e on the rafn ' e a I re-.vp-t. t'iie sroi in i. as 1 u.t. tbe nl ht m b dark II'rti'.'M ii-.. aL mil rudely l.lew'i 'i'iie wiu i t.;a: lej d my leuadorina br.r. Cut I got in'o the gospel lifeoout and I got. isuore. No religious spectilatioa for me. 1 ht-se higher criticism fellows do not bother nea bit. You may ask tne fifty questions ibout the s -a, and about the land, and about :ho lifeboat that I eaunot answer, but one ihing I know. I am ashore, nnd I am going to tv ashore, it' the Lord Lv His craee will neipnie. I feel uuder me bometning go'lirnc ;hat I try it with my right foot, and trv II w.tu my left foot, and then I trv it with both 'ei't. au l it is so solid that I think it roi-t U vnatt'-eold folks used to call the Bock o U-es. And be my remnitiing days on earth man) r i-.v I am goihg to s.oen 1 my tiaie in e roiuuieu Sing the lifc'io ;t which fetched :ne lere, a poor sinu'T s.ivej by grace, and in iwinging t ie cutiass.w to sever the ropes of iny unsafe lifeuoat an 1 let her fall oft. My iari-r. w.tfiout Hskiti any ip:.-tiotis, g.-t nto tue irospol ii.c'viit. itoom I and yet inure is room ! Tne n.ggest bo..: on cart u ii :he go.spel liieooat. You u.us re nember t"i iroportion of thing, and ti.at the bhip vrei ke 1 craft is tiie whole earth, nnl tne lifeboat must be in proportion. You talk ar. out your Cainpauias. and yotti .n uiuias. and your Majesties, and your i 'it j jf New Yerks. but ail .f them put tog.'the. .re seia'lcr tium an in ban's canoe on Sea oyri Lake eo up-ire-l '.viiii tltis gospel lifel-oa' bat is !rge enough to take in all Nations, eo.n f. r i.ii' un-1 r'.o-n for all. G 't in "How? How?" you rsk. Well, I ku'iw bow y.iu feel, for sumtnei leioru last on the sea of inland I had th am expertenee. The ship In which w sailed could not venture nearer than a mil roia shore, where stoo I the Buss.an palace of Beterof. and we ba 1 to g-t into a steal uoat and be rowed asuo.-e. rtie water was rough, and as we went down the ladder al the siil.' of tiie ship we h-'id tinnly on to the railing. Lilt in orb-r to get into the boat we lad at last to let go. How did I know that the boat wis rOi and that tiie oarsmen were sulii -lent? Ho did I know that the 1'iulan 1 Sea would nol swallow us witii one opening of its crysta. jaws? We bad to trust, and we did trust, an 1 our trust was weli rewarded Ia tht same way get Into this gospel lifeboat. Lei go! As long as you hold ou to any otuei hope you are iiupt rile 1. and you get no ad vantage from the lifeboat. Let go ! Dees some one here say. "1 gu-ss I will bold one little to my good -v.rks, or 10 a pious parent age, orto sou:- ; h a ; I can do in the way o: achieving tnyowu s i vat on." No, no, let go! Trust the Captain, wno would not puj fou Into a ric'.c ty or uncertain craft. For the sake of your present and everlast ing welUre. with all the urgeney of an im mortal addressing immortals. I cry from the depths of my soul and at the top of my voice, Let go! Last summer the life saving crew at Kast Hampton invited me to come up to the life station and see the crew practice, for twice a week they are drilled in the impor tant work assigned thetn by the United States Government, and they go through all the routine of saving the suipwrecke i. But that would give little idea oi what they would have to do if some midnight next winter, the wind driving beachwr.rd, a vessel should get Ji the grasp of a hurricane. Bee the lights Sara from the ship in the breakers, and then responding lights flar.ng from the beach, and hear the rockets buzz as they rise, and the lifeboat rumbles out, and the gun booms, and the life line rises and fails across the splintered decks, and the hawser tightens, atid the life car goes to and Tro, carrying the exhausted mariners, and the Dcean, as if angered by the snatching of the human prev from the "white teeth ot its surl and the stroke of its billowing paw, rises with Increased furv to assail the land. So now I am engaged" in no light drill, praetic jig for what may come over some of your )ouls. It is with some of you wintry mid night, and your hopes for this world and the lext are wrecked. But see I See ! The lights kindled on the, beach 1 I throw out the life line. Haul in, hand over hand ! Ah, there is a lifeboat in he surf which all the wrath of earth aud hell nnnot swamp, aud its Captain with scarred land puts the trumpet to His lips as He -ries "Oh, Israel, thou hast destroyed thy self, but in Me is thy heip." But what is the ue of all this if you decline to get into .t? You might as well have been a sailor on hoard that foundering ship of the Medi erranean when the mariners cut the ropts t the boat and let her fnll off. A large forgo Hen reservoir ras iappeJ in Lockiort, ". Y., tho other day by workingmen who were excavat- l f. . fonn.lutl'.in It beiOIlL'O.l to a sybtem of water works abrtulnueJ many years ago. . n.n.ln.alv .ee 'Allf fit tllO .vet l i ii i . -... --' reailing men in everv country are. . .11 : ..t .InlVleti.. bUort-stuieii or oineiiau ......v vision. Scientists nay that Lorscs will cat eighty varieties of plants, cows fifty six and sheep 5j out of 1510 ji'iiuts in the test. -runtuloons were originally lon stockings worn in Italy as a sort of religious habit of the devotees of St. Puntuleone. Caesar did not say "Et tu, Brute." Kye witnesses to tho assassination do posed that lie died fighting, but silent, like a wolf." While a baby was being photo graphed in .Leominster, Mass.. seven minutes alter birth, it spoiled the pic ture by sneezing. In boring tho Mount C'cuis aud St. ...... 1 A 1 . ....llnu.tr mua- fl TreVA ivfomani iiiuutis - ! first used, then fiteam iower and li . . . uully ooinpresseu air. Large, long pearly teeth belong to sectimeutal, imaginative people ; small, short yellow teeth to those of un nil poetical turn of mind. The circumference of Jupiter at the ennater is about 275,000 miles, which would make his volume about 1,234 times that of our earth. The prediction is made that within . n-tift.in1 ten will bain finch lull jcniq iniv. " - - - - - - - - - general use thiit paopte will mt cire to Dny tue natural prouuci.. home. fh prince rides nn to the pilae e;ati AoJ his eyes with tenrs are dim. For he thinks of the beggar maiden iweet Who never may wel with him. For home is where the heart is, In dwelling great or imall. An I there's many a splendid palace That's never a bom at all. The yeoman comes to his little oo With a song when day is done. For his dearie Is ttan linx In the door And hie children to meet him run. For home la vh"re the heart is. In dwelling great or small. And there's many a stately mansion That's never a home at all. Could I but live with my own fweetuear In a hut with san Ie 1 floor, I d be richer far than a lovolea man With fame and a fcoldea .tore. For home is whro ths heart is, la dwoiling grout or small. And a cottage lighted by lovellght Is the dearest home of all. Ueoi ,50 Ilorton. in Chicago Heral L TEKR1BLY ACCUSED. I'Y t. c. np.nAron. wjs-.l Iim.EE. more p!ef e- - . in "i.". laa. UlL'U. Ihis is getting a little provoking," and Aunt Jessamine sat down and looked at Jnclc who was mcnu.iig some bar ecss in one corner of the room. Bears 1" laid i 'WW Jacir, wit thout took- I tell you, mother, the varmints are gittin' too numerous for Vi.,i'i" v ' v.'t : tre, aaa we 11 have to lock the larder o' n:ghts ff we want to keep things in 5ai'ety ibere." "It ain't benrs -not of the kind that walk oa "our legs," determinedly replied Aunt Jesiimme. "I tell you, Jack, it's the other Suud, nnd, while I name no cue, I beliove I coulj, if I would, tell you wlirrc tho pies go." ''Diu'i Le suspicious, mother, I'il watc'i to-rnorrow nihf." "OI:, he's aot coming back that soon. I heard him say that he woulJn't bo heck for a week." "Then you susnect some oneJ"' I do." At that moment tbo door opened and EicUcl came in, a sweet backwoods girl, the hello of the settlement and the fa voiiteof a'l. Sl.c stopped at the door nnd swept the room with her blue eyes which liually settled on her mother, vi ho?e prrturbe.i countenance accrued to teil her that something was wrong. "What's the matter, mother V she ftikc l, gently. "Three more p'ei went last night the three I baked for the preacher who wiil be here to-morrow." 'I thought some one was in the larder last night, for when I went in a while ago there wore crumbs on the floor" "Yes, be ate them there there's ap paitut room to believe this. lie must have been very l.tiui'ry." 'Bears are cute animals " Bear?" and Aunt Jessamine glanced at Jack, about who.-e lips lurked a smile which she did not seem to catch. "You remember that Billy saw tracks down in the ravine and that the Wilson girls were chased by a bear in the berry patch lat week. I shouldn't be eur prised it bears had found out your larder ' "I think they have. There, we won't argut this question any longer," and Aunt Jesf-aiuitie rose and swept out of the room leaving 11 c'ael to look at Jack for an explanation. "Do you know whom she suspicions?" ?kcd Jack, stopping in his work and fixing his eyes on his handsome sister, "blether is of the opinion that Josh ate the p:cs." In an instant the face of the backwoods beauty colored and she gave utterance to a cry of astonishment. "Impossible, Jack ! She can't have inch a terrible suspicion. It is nonsense," and then she laughed, but presently con tinued : "It h a pood joke on Josh, anyhow, but I don't like mother's suspicion. What if it should get abroad " "Which it is quite likely to do unless we disabuse mother's mind of it. She really believes that Jo9h, your beau, stole into the outhouse and ate the pies. Strange to say pics have vanished on tho nights of his visits; I have noticed that rr.vsclf, Kachie, and, as mother has heard that Josh is a good band at a feast, you should not blame her so very much." "But he didn't eat them, no, he never went to tho larder, and all this talk about bis eating the pies is unjust." "Of course, it is. I don't believe Josh would do that, but the pics have vanished; you will admit this. Mother is convinced that ho is the deprecator and and " Rachel, unable lo control herself, had fled from the room aud Jack went back to li s tu k. "It"s queer," ho said to himself. "Don't I know that Josh likes pies, es pecially pumpkin pics like mother bakes, and there is just the slightest doubt in my mind that he didn't come back after he bade Rnchie cood-night and tackled the onci in tho larder." " Meanwhile Rachel Palmer was walk ing across the meadow toward tho ravine' that ran through the farm some distance from the home. It was a rich autumn day nnd the sun was painting tho west with his most glowing colors. She was still indignant, and now rd then her wbito bands shut, and her eyes filled with a look which told tho feeling tugging at her heart. Shu mr.de her way down tho ravine till she camo to a creek, the banks of which were clayey and soft. "Here they ore, jut where I saw them a week ago," bhc said aloud, as she stopped and looked at certain impres sions in the yielding ground. "They are bear tracks, but they wouldn't tell I another anything in her present state ot mind. Bears visit larders ana play havoc there, and a feast of pumpkin pies would tempt them. But I'll write) Josh aot to como to see mo till 1 send for him, for I don't want him to meet mother very soon." Rachel did that that very day. In the solitude of her little chamber sh? wrote a letter to hor sweetheart, telling him that he might postpone his regular visit for a fortnight, and ended by saying that she would explain all when jthey E?SiSLa.- This'lcttcf ibewejfo3ted..ta! her brother Jack, who went to ton es pecially to post it. and Michel feit th- . she) bad done bcr dutr. Ia anticipation of the traveling par kin's visit, more p:e were baked and atoscly guarded. When too pa.Mcn cam. ihey were set before him, aud receive 1 (he praise they so well deserved. "You never have trouble wit'i your pies, Mrs. Palmer," satel the s'.icp'ierd of tho backwoods Hock, as he helped him Salt to t second piece. 4,Yc, but we have, Brother Linton. Wo mUs thetn from the larder be for j wj ro ready to eat them. I regret to say that we have some unrccenerafe peoplo it) this neighborhood who nr. so fond of pumpkin pies that they ate not particu litr where they find them when they aro 'tjingry," and Aunt Jesstmiuj gli !?:.! ti R ichel, who blushed, and for n ia tnent hung her head. "I would like to have the-c psoiilo ibme under the droppings of the sauctu-u-y," replied the juir-ton; but the next foment ho was surj.n-e 1 at Rachel's re larks. j ''You would want a guu to deal with icm, I'm thinking," said the resolute Jirl. -"You can't convert a bear with, oft words and " ? "Rachic, IUchie, what are you ssy ng?" broke in Aunt Jessamine. " Accustomed to obey her tnotlieu ths iir girl subsided and in a little Tvuiln cl passed from the house, leaving the Mrs hi and his host to continue the sub joe. they were on. ' N ight seemed to come soon after that real. The long, soft autumn shadows itole ovor the farm house and Rachel jirhted the lamp and carried it to tho lifting room where the parson was dis cussing the needs of his flock. 'As for Rachel, she retired to her room '.;i the gable and sat at tho window. Across the clearing in front of the house aiy the shadows of night; but by and aye the silvery disk of the niton ap peared over the horiz :i's rim. ft was a Beautiful sight aud one which she had nen a hundred timns from thut very indow, and now she watched it as it teemed to crow in beiutv an l the whole lerth became a bed oi sliver in the light jf tbe moon. ; All nt once there appeared on the jl ouiil toward the ravine s un .'tiling that Same fornard, and Rachel watched U as it prow larger. ' Now and then it stopped and for s-:i:is time stood in outline for her inp.'c:iou, ind the more she watched it, tnu surer ihe became that it was an auima'. Treseutiy Rac'ucl Palmer sorjn-T up, ind leaning on tho sill, e.zl at the ob ject with eyes that see uel to start train aer head. . "It is a bear," she cxt'ainiel. "What if it is mother's thief!" Aud as the thing noved on, showing the hugh hull; of its .ong body, the girl ran to a coraer and xok from it a rill?, whisvi she knew how :o ban I'e with deadly ellcct. When she came bac't to the wiudow five bear was gone, and for a moment a feeling of disappointment took poss.-sston jf her, and she feare i she ha. 1 missed her opportunity. Bit suddenly the itiiraal csiuo into view again, and this time in the vicinity ot thu spnug-jou-e, where the larder was. Rachel looked to the primiug of the gun and a?ain the bL-ar vanished. She was now aimost certain the prjw.er in tended a raid, ncd cacr to encounter him and bring his schemes to naught, she slipped doA natairj and out into the night. As she passed from the house she could hear tbe voice of Parson Liuton in conversation in tho little parlor, and thought of Jack, who was paying his nightly visit to town three miles away. The backwoods beauty stopped near the spring-house aud watched it with anxious eyes. The door wa3 reached by s descent of several steps, and it was common to fasten it with a chain, which could be unloosed without much trouble. "Why, the door is open!" exclaimed Richel as she neared the spring-house and ventured to look down the steps. "I slipped the chs.in f.ver the staple wi'.h my own bands; but it is off now." The next moment a noise startled Itachel and she fell back a pace, for it teemed to come from the spring-house. Posting herself, however, with de termined face, she waited for other proof that the larder was I sing attackel at that moment, and it was not long de layed. All at once the hure, dark figure of something came out of the spring-house and as it rose in front ol tho girl, she felt an involuntary thrill, for it was a bear and be was standing on bis binder feet as if masquerading as a man. In all her life she had never seen a bear of such proportions. He looked as tall as Jack, l 1 as he totterod up the ;teps and the next moment stood in the moonlight a splendid target for Rachel's rifle, be was seen to have a face ludic rously daubed with the sweets of the mring-house. Rachol summoned her nerve to her as listance and leveled the rifle at the in vader. At that moment she heard a door be hind her open, aal bcr mother's voice rang out: Rachic, Rachie. where are youl" The answer was the clear, ringing re port of the family rifle, and thera, tot tered from the fair girlau animal, which dropped upon all fours, only to fall to tho ground and roll over in his agony. Mrs. Palmer stood spell-bound in the door, and behind her was visible the white face of the parson. "Tho other gun! quick, mother! the bear will get away!" cried Rachel, ruah intr toward the house. 'Tbj oem i ocar! Heaven helm us all!" and Put-on Linton discovered that he was safer inside than at Che door, and ho ru-ihed back to be passed by Rachel, who snatched Jack's rifle frofn its pegs and turned again toward the yard. As she crossed the threshold she sa the black form of tho bear lumbering off toward the ravine, and taking deliberate aim, she sent a bullet after him which checked his career and Wretched him on the leaves dead. There! I guess you'ro satisfied now, mother!" said Rachol, when the larder bad been examined and the remains of two pies had been found on the floor. "You must recollect that bears as well is men can tell good baking when they tea iu I think you ought to apologize to Josh." "But I named no names," persisted Mn. Palmer. "I didn't say that Josh ata the pies; but to tell the truth, Rachie, I didn't know who else would do it." Three days later when the talj.haade suna-j. UJ(uraui-UMM 4,LLioyj( gi, -v. -- )H'-MllMHUT --.- i ) rr.i m lie m-MMwinriy ui HUM' J Mim,-lWl'-'-'-"i"iMf;rirT-T-im-Trir.'-- ( my mfim I I WMtin"U"lllillfM j in j it wm met at tue ato oy it ,c ie . a ...c . wo nine into mo House toe'rier. "I guesj its got to be doie'-' sail Aunt Jevwm ne. a lit watciiel t i couple. "T.icre'il ba a wel lin,' hen before he goes hack, a id to plene Kica:t; I'll apolog.xs." Aud when J 0i had shaken ban 11 with Aunt Jessamine, she looked up to his honest face and st: "I beg your pardon, ilr. Johnson, thought you ate the pies, but I w is mis taken; it was the other bear!" Ymkea Blade. A DEPRAVED PEOPLE. 4. llarbarous (ai'om of the Ilotoruda Indians, Itraxll. The Ilot'i.'tidus Iiidiliis, inhubltlnt the country along the upper portion it the Rio D.ice, HOD miles northeast t f Rio ;le Ja neiro. It r u 7. II, areliltle known to readers and ire ainonsr the most depraved jeoplc pf the southern repub- llc. formerly vhe-e Indians wore no ciith at all. but now. BOT.K I'lID IIATf. lV?aH IT? "d being to a great the diH-enJcd lobe hang- , T tnirfrce.i cr or less degree Influenced by civilization, clothing is conilfig Into more general u c among them. The children are dirt ect'rs and are sold as slaves, usually for the merest trifles. The custom of wearing lip aud car ornaments Is very ancient anions theni and Is very general. The open ing in trie lower Hp, where the or nament is worn, Is made when the person Is quite young by piercing it with a long, slender thorr. that grows in a-i- klnd of pilra tier: fi this ntienitio U V enlarged with tbe point, or a ceer m.ioci'Dtf woMAe. horn and a Stick l-V.'h both lip and er i, . , nrn-.mcnts of averts! or small stone Is inserted and the wound ij greased with sonic kind of salve. These openings are gradually enlarged by forcing bigger and I Igger plug.J. lrit'.i them until the desired size is at tained. The ornaments worn are green stones, polished bones, and clay burned like pottery. Tha oar ornaments do not essentially differ from those worn In the lips. Tbo plugs are of the same materials, size, and appearance: tHy ?M!Ter only in that they are wjrn in '.be openings made In the lobes of the ears instead of In the lower lip. GREAT FIGURE OF JUSTICE. This May Be One or the Attraction at th Mid-Winter Fair. Among the many applicati-vs fur permission to in ike novel exhibits at the luid-winier fair at San 1'nncisco is one by Edward 51. Greene. Is is a mammoth scales of Justice The fig ure of Justice, according lo the Cbr n'cle, is l..o foot hirh. The cross Veaiu of the scales she holds ia IA-KlTO ritU'M, OF -'JUSTICE ' ter band la 300 feet long. Kaib seale is a car capable of holding fifty people, who may bo carried to a height of 2'1'J fect. The whole ar rangement Is to be manipulated by machinery placed beneath the bane of ths statue. There Is telephonic communication betwenn each car and tho engine-room and everything way be regulated sraooth'y and o.utckljr THE WHITE HOUSE DOCTOR. The Phytiolan to Whom the l'rcaident'l Ilenlth Ia Intratted. Dr. Joseph I). Bryant, to whom the health of the President Is in Vusted, was a member of the Board of Health of New York City for six years, a position which be resigned last5Iarch. While a health comniis t loner he did much to improve the sanitary con dition of New York. Dr. Hry ant and Secretary Dan Lamont mar DH. J. D. B11TANT. ried sisters, and it was through the Secretary of War that Dr. Bryant became Intimate with the President, whose family physician be now is. During the summer he and President Cleveland went on many fishing ex peditions together. Weather Glass. Nitrate of potash and sal ammo niac, of each half a dram; camphor, two drams; rectified spirits of wine, two fluid ounces. These ingredients are to be put into an old-fashioned eau de cologne bottle or tube of triads eight or ten inches long and about three-fourths of inch in dianicter, and the mouth covered wilh pei forated bladder. The following ate the changes which are observed, if the weather promises to be tine, the insoluble matter will settle at the bottom of tbe tube, while the liquid remains pellucid; but previous to a change for rain the compound will gradually rise, the fluid remaining transparent. Twenty-four hours be fore a storm or very high wind, th? substance will be partly on the sur face of the liquid, apparently in the form of a leaf. Tbe fluid in such case will be very turbid, and in a state resembling fermentation. Tiberius made an edict forbidding men over sixty and women over fifty to marry, but so mnny petitions were presented again it by windows that it was soon repealed. cm NTOXDEItS OF XATCIiE. i 1RAND AND ERY IMPRESSIVE N IRELAND. "CEN fw l'Ucet In the World Are Comparable la Wild and Iiucced Gran dear wlita Tortious of the Coast of County An. trim. in the Crern Itie. For wild and nu'ged beauty and grandeur and iiipressiveness of scen ery few pla o- in tho world are com parable with t'uat portion of the coast of County Antrim. Ireland, which lies between Falrhead and Portrush. The promontory of Falr hea l Is grand in the extreme. It is rompised of a range of enormous basaltic pillars, 233 feet high, resting on a base which makes the whole altitude 63u feet The precipice, tow ering majestic over an awful waste of broken columns pre sents to the spectator, says Dr. Drummond, tne most stu pendous colon, nadeever erect ed by nature -feetiS. 43 Antrim boi.'sd towcr. and in comparl on to which tho proudest monu ments of human architecture are but the efforts or pigmy imbecility to tho Dtnnipotence of God. Near the little village of Ballintoy is the picturesque hanging bridge of IMB ASCI GATEWAV, OLENARM Carrick-a-iedo. It is a rope bruigo thrown across a wild chasm In the rocks, through which the waves dash and foam In wildest fury. The chasm Is sixty feet deep and the rock on either side rises to a height of eighty Teet from the surface of the water. Near tho small town of Antrim stands one of the most remarkable of the ancient round towers, ninety three feet high and fifty-three feet In circumference, upon which much learned research has been spent. But the Giants' Causeway, a tern applied to a small portion of the eight miles of basaltic cliffs between Falrhead and Portrush, is the grand- tbe nora bridge or carbick-a-bedk est sight on the coast It Is a plat form of basalt, composed of closely arrauged columns, ranging from fifteen to thirty-six feet in height. The platform extends from a steep cliff down into tbe sea until it is lost below low water mark. It is exposed for 300 yards and exhibits an unequal pavement formed of the top of po lygonal columns. Each column is di vided by joints of unequal length, the concave hollow at the end of one division fitting exactly into the con vex proje'iion of the other and so closely that a knife blade cannot to Inserted between thera. Tho cause way is divided into the Little, Middle, and Grand Causeway. The Grand Causeway, Is about thirty feet wide and runs more than 200 yards from Ms exposure on the cllflC till It If overed by the sea. I'loral Mystery. The Chinese, Japanese and Siaoic-e are peculiarly skillful at botanical feats. One of their wonderful achievements is known as the "changeable rose." ThU bloom is white in the shade and red la the sunlight. After night or In a dark nxuu this curiosity of tho rose family is a pure, waxy white blossom. When transferred to the open air the trans formation immediately steps In, the time of the entire chango of the flow er irom white to the most sanguine of all sanguine lines depending on the degree of sunlight and warmth. First the petals take on a kind of washed or faded blue color, and rapidly changes to a faint blushof pink. The pink gradually deepens in hue until you find that your lily-wblto rose of an hour before is as red as the red dest peony that ever bloomed. If every person on earth spoke the trnth and nothing but the truth npon one appointed day of each year wo would fcco.". revert to barbarism. mk& In n i mmmmm THE COYOTE. the Lean, llnnrry, Keeo-Scmlel 3ratra ter or the I'UIn. The coyote, now fast ditapiK-arlng before civilization, was formerly the scavenger of the Western plains, and still nourishes In the vicinity of small settlements. Its cry Is one of tho most dismal, and, heard in the dark I THE COYOTE. ness and soiitudeof the night, is well calculated to strike a chill into the breast of man. Now tho plaint ceases, but in an Instant it breaks forth with renewed vigor, yelping, howling, crying, strangling, and dying aw.iy like the wail of a lost soul sinking into hatle. Wherever easy prey, dead or alive, is to be obtained, there the eoyote will be found. In the days when herds of I uffalo existed, the sneaking coyote prowled at their heels In great numbers, eagerly watching for a wounded or dying animal In strong bands they would fall upon the un fortunate creature which lagged In the rear and tear Its quivering flesh before life had fully departed. Un tiring, lean, gorging to repletion when the opportunityofTers and again starving to the verge of death, these scavengers of the plains may becomif dangerous when driven to extremities by famine or rendered unusually courageous by large numbers. Ordi narily the coyote is shy and has u wholesome fear of man. It Is only upon rare occasions that the lone traveler Is attacked. The scent ol the coyote is remarkably keen, and the biiim.ils travel very rap'dly tr any place where they expect a feast. - a-SE Tr-Wi 1 .-V- i J-f, D-a-t -- Z I CA6TLF, t OCMV AS TRIM. A HOME-MADE KITCHEN SCALE. Just as Useful a4 One Which Costa Much Money. It is no idle boast that a pair ol kitchen scales can lie made with a ball of twine aud two p'eces of boards. This unique little kitchen Implement recommends itself espe cially for its cheapness. A suitable place from which the scales iu::y b suspended will be found beside a shelf. Two stout nails are driven Into the side of the board, ami i strong piece of twine, two yards long, Is selected, and a knot tied in the center of It, the ends being provided with loops, banginir to the nails. The platforms for the scale may be made from heavy pasteboard or thin pieces of wood, and these r.ro fastened with their hangings to t!n cross-bar, at a distance of one-quart-. r ya'd each from the center knot, which makes the cross-bar one-half yard long. A piece of white cardboard is nailed opposite the kr.ot tin 1 tiie hit ter's position Indicated on tiie paper by a horizontal airow marked w.tti aivcui:. 1CA1.& ink or pencil. The scale is now ready for use. Suppose a chicken or a duck Is to be weighed. It is placed on one side, whereby the knot Is moved from its central position. 'Weight- 9ro then placed opposite until tho knot resumes Ps central position. The sum total of tho weights U tht weight of the article In qucstiox Malijctoa-'s supremacy In Samo. is now completely established, anc bis ancient rival ar.d enemy, Mat-vif.i is not only dethroned, but is to b deported to the Harsh-ill arcblre'ig... The creel thing about hl evpatm tlon is the fact that his wives win not bo ai-owd to a'-compatiy h!m Mataafd ad built up a rourishir.a laundry bu.ir.C33 in Apia. His wive. did the wasMcg and I t. coileclcd tho Lil'. Et this actlm of tiie foreign powers he Is therefore de prived of both realm ard revenue ut one fell swoop. The lives of men who havo been tl ways growing are strewed along then whole course with the things which they have learned to do without, Star dust is not son! food. Vim i -r-a--------p--p-w- mrnmmmm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers