| Scenes in galveston g 8 After the great Storm | g o 00000000000000000000000000 Galveston has experienced storms be fore, and on several occasions severe damage has been done. But the peo ple have grown used tj the danger ifrom inundation, and even when the storm broke on that fateful Saturday morning they were not unusually dis turbed, writes John Gilmer Speed, in Harper's Weekly. They went fthout •their business in ordinary fashion, confident that tlie storm would soon blow over. At ten o'clock a gale was blowing. By noon this gale had in creased to hurricane proportions, aud those dwelling near the beach began to realize that this was something more than an ordinary summer gust of wind. Great waves were dashed over tlie beach, and the summer re- MOBNING AFTEIi THE FLOOD NEAR BASE BALL PABK, FOOT OF TKEMONT STREET. sorts were 110 longer habitable. Even then the people in Galveston were not apprehensive. But shortly past three in the afternoon it was appar ent that something unusual was in the wind, which was blowing at forty-four milos an hour, while the barometer read 20.22 inches. Business men closed up their places and started for their homes to look after their fam ilies. But before these tardily awak ened people could realize what was happen l : z the full fury of the tropical liurricar- was upon them, and com munication was cut off not only with the outside world, but it was impossi ble to get from one part of the city to another. T.ro great forces were lierce ly at worn.. The Gulf waves drove high upon the beach, and the gale from the northeast pitched the waters against the wharves and abutments, choking the sewers and flooding the city from that quarter. The wind, which had been some fifty miles an hour, quickened to eighty-four, when the measuring apparatus of the Weather Bureau.was wrecked, and the rest can only be guessed at. The streets v.'e ,- e rapidly tilling with water, and each person had to stay where lie was eauplit, as it was nlgli impossible to move from place to place, In times such as this, however, the Impossible is done, and many men did succeed in getting their families into the more suistantial buildings, such as the public scnools, t lie courthouse and tlu- hotels. From three o'clock in the afternoon the wind increased Steadily until it was ai its highest, and certainly not less than 100 miles an hour. 'IT ,• barometer also continued to fall, reaching its lowest, 2N.i»-l I j ; . |; fcKAIiOHINn KOIt Hii|>lK» l\ TILL-: liKUlils 4»N I UTMOST STHKKT, UALVKHTOS, TWO LI AVs aFIT.U I'TLK HUAI. WAVE HAt» lIKCKOKU. lutlica, nt 7'Wt |>. m. Till* XVHit tlit- VIM.V LU LL ii of i In- tfiurin. Inn i lil>i IIU'II ki 111111:1111111 fur muro ilmu two tmur* Tin' ilium; untuiiu Ihc alritfiuivN In Ibe iiiy wt-rc nearly HII IIUWII, kitoeketj luiu kiin'hiiii wiMitl 1»y iln* fury of the Wltlil, ami i vi*ii the 111 I aubataiillul nt lIN bul|illui;a wt'n l I INV tlaiiiugetl Hi ll* « »'aie ruvf win blwwu uET, Ituriv nil Iron roof rolled up and was hurled across the street as though It had been paper; timbers were carried In the air as though the solid oak and pine were only grass or straw, while wires, tele graph, telephone, electric light and trolley, were everywhere, for the poles had snapped like pipe-stems and let their burdens loose. The force seemed Irresistible, as mighty as It was mer ciless. All this was in unrelieved dark ness, which prevented even the most resourcefr' from averting the dan gers that were on every hand. There was little if any change for two hours and a half. Then the barometer be gan slowly to rise and the worst of the storm was over. In two hours more the wind had subsided, and by midnight there was quiet in stricken Galveston —the quiet of death. The water, which In some streets had bern eight feet deep, began quick ly to run out, and by daylight the pavements were again exposed. But what a scene of devastation this day light revealed! Wreckage on every side, wreckage and death. A battle lield lias its dread story to tell, but a city suddenly strlckc 11 as this was is a more pathetic spectacle. When men light ineu the strong are killed alone, for all are strong, but here it was the weak, who suffered inost severely, it was the women an t children who died in the greatest number. They could not reach places of security for lack of strength, and the bravj and willing men wore powerless t > help them. Those pinned down by solid wreckage lay where they had fallen, those drowned while fleeing for safety were carried out by the ebbing waters, while t lie fallen houses each held the secret of those who had been crushed in the downfall. A more pathetically wretched condition never met the eyes of men. As tiie day got older, however, there was other work than grieving. There was 110 drinking water in the town, and the uninjured food supply was short, while commu nication was cut off from the world that was willing to help. But above all was the necessity to get rid of tlie dead, which in so hot a climate began quickly to decay. In very many, indeed in most, instances the dead could not be recognized, and therefore could not be claimed Is relatives. The bodies were buried in trendies, and boat loads were taken to deep water and there sunk, yielding up to the sea the victims it had come ashore to claim. But the vicious in the community, many of them negroes, were as dili gent in evil work as the rescuers were - :od. Hundreds robbed the dead bod ies of what valuables they could find, even cutting off lingers and ears to get linger rings and ear rinjis. The few United States soldiers stationed In Galveston were called upon to do police 'Mty, and State militiamen were sent to help as soon as possible. Every man caught robbing the dead was shot, and some tweuty-tive more were tried by drum head court-martial and shot immediately. The summary ex ecution of these wretches pnt an end to this phase of the awful situation. One of the most thrilling tales of the Texas disaster is told by Miss Sadie Hirshfeld, of New York, who has Just returned from Galveston. She was witti her family In their liomf on Seeley avenue when the storm came, and until she was rescued twenty-four hours later battled with death upon tlie roof of a cottage which had become enmeshed with de bris bound seaward. "'llu- cry, •riu- water'* coming,' n-mliin our t-arn," itai'l Ulh lllrah frlil, "illlil it Mint Hut UUtll tlilit lllo uii-at Hint we 1 tiougiit that noun-thing mi itit mi I liml tia|i|M>ne<l. My fntktr, mother, aiatcra am) brother* all rii*iii-tl tut U>* wlmlow* J nut aa the water awc|ii 1 trough our iiwrt, At my faihvr* rfijuwn all (lie Uuuni wvrv bolted and tho shutters that were not carried away by the wind fastened. "Suddenly the house gave a lurch, creaked mournfully and then began to swing to and fro. Our home was lift ed from Its foundations und sot adrift. The waters rose higher and higher until they reached the second story. "lip the garret stairs we rushed, and soon the nine of us were clinging on the coped roof. "Hundreds of families were in the same plight. We had gone about a block when the house struck against something, which we discovered later was an oid hut. "We remained there all night, while our clothes were being torn from our backs by tho wind, and house after house floated by us, telling its story of misery. "On one coped roof, when Sunday dawned, I saw a mother with a babe, which I judged to be some two months old, clinging ns best she could. The wind had taken every stitch of cloth ing she had had on her back, and the expression on her face was almost heartrending. "AH eyes were turned in her direc tion waiting to see her disappear be neath the water. We had not long to wait. The babe slipped from her arms, and in her effort to save it she also was lost. "On the floating house tops men, women and children knelt in prayer and sang by nips. Our family was half starved and 011 the verge of drop ping into the sea and about to utter a last prayer when I fired a pistol which brought about our rescue. "Two men from the convent for ne gro women a short distance away put . ' out in a raft and carried us to tiui building." Miss Hershfeld said that she saw at least fifty persons lose their lives un der the most trying circumstances. No llmiiU 011 Chlueae Coin*. Numismatics who may in the dim and distant future investigate the coinage of China in order to find some authentic record of the lineaments of its sovereigns will be doomed to dis appointment. A representation of the human head separate from the ligure is there an object of horror; hence there is never an eftlgy of the emperor on his coin. Further, the hermit-like seclusion in which the Son of Heaven traditionally lives is Intended to stim ulate veneration; and there are very few of the subjects apart from the officials of the palace, who ever see his face. A missionary recently returned from the celestial land observes that were it known that In Europe portraits of kings were suspended before Inns, exposed to dust, wind and rain, and to the witticisms and perhaps the sar casms of the populace, we should be held in even greater derision than we are.—London Daily Chronicle. I'owor of Mo«l©rn Gun*. The power of the modern gun Is a tiling that cannot be grasped. The 100-tou projectile strikes with a force equal to eleven-atone meu jtynping from a height of one foot. When the rlghty-one-ton gun tires a shot twelve miles, it Is tired at such an angle that the shell goes up to a height MXi feet higher than .Mont Itlaue. Klg guus have been longer in use than most people think. In the year His they had guns called "bom bard*," which threw projectiles weigh ing a quarter of a ton. They were wider at the tnuzzle thau in the bore, and were used for battering buildings. The English used big gnus at the bat tle of t'recy, and amazed the French, who had never seen sueh wcapous b» fore. Tile Uegilliellt. TrNt'hllm I'lttl# It Is wonderful how much knowledge can be Imparted to small children by a quick nursemaid who has mi Inkling of the kludurgartett system tliilrircu are never tired of usklut; quc»tiou*. and If these are Intelligently au»wen*d they pick up all i«orts of useful knowl edge without any actual teaching. Tim object of the kindergarten system Is to teach the little ones to think for themselves.and >• Is worth every moth er's alid nurse's while In 11111 n some tiling uf It, The custom of talkiutf Dolt* I sense to tticui aud distorting H wtila cuuut Ur two much cwMdcUiUvd. . ... A VINE-DRAPED WINDOW. It Gives a Small Dark Room a Delight, lolly Cool Effect. It was a small, dark dining-room, with only a narrow side yard separat ing it from the brick wall of the neigh boring house. It would have been gloomy and unattractive but for the flowers and vino drapery of the nue window. And tills same window was a discovery well worth describing, and bettor worth imitating; for few beauty-loving housewives seem tore- A WINDOW DItArED WITII VINES. allze that window boxes may flourish even at the most sheltered and shaded windows. As this on-> had only a glimpse of sunshine in the early morning (be cause of the surrounding brick walls), pnnsies and ferns and tuberous bego nias were grown in the box, instead of the bloomers that cfeniand plenty of sunlight. The deep window box was arranged so that the upper edge was even with the glass, that the full benefit of the growing plarts could be seen from the inside, lu one., corner of the box thrifty honeysucK.e roots had been placed, and these soon sent strong branches up to the top of the window where pliable splints had been ar ranged to form an arch. Clematis and other sun-loving Jlnibers could be crown in less shady q'virters.but in this position the honeysuckle proved most satisfactory. With a very thin lace drapery on the inside of the window, to flutter In every passing breeze, and this vine drapery rf green 011 the outside, and the blooming pnnsies and begonias peeping in at the sill, this one window transformed the whole effect of that small, dark dining room. The Karri Tree. It is generally known fo most peo ple that the karri tree, which is now used so largely in paving the London streets. Is the giant tree of Western Australia, but few are aware, how ever, of the enormous proportions which the species sometimes attain, and it may, therefore, be of interest to give the measurements of a tree re cently discovered 011 the banks of the Warren ltlver. The specimen in ques tion is thirty-four feet in circumfer ence three feet from the ground, four teen feet in circumference at the first limb, which is Hit) feet from tho ground, and over 200 feet in extreme height. In other words, the whole of the tree from the bottom to the first limb contains nearly (WOO cubic feet of timber, which means that it lias a weight of over forty tons in all. For street blocking the karri timber is pronounced by experts better than its colleague, tin- in that its surface is less liable to get slippery for the horse's feet.—St. James Ga zette. CRUDE APPLIANCES STILL USED. Clumsy Uazors, Shear* mill Spades Still Mit<le unit So til. After viewing some of the interest ing refinements of modern tools and appliances it is surprising to turn to some of the cxhlbi s und see the crude, clumsy, ineti.'lent articles still in use 111 various lands. The group shown contains - fo./ typical examples. What appears to be u knife is really a razor, that Is made In large quantities in Austri'i and shipped to the Far East—Chiua a*-il Japan. The han dles are exactly sliulh.r to clothes pins, 110 attempt liciug made to finish or pol ish thorn. The blades are crude iu proportion. Uclow you will note a pair of shears that a village blacksmith would hardly be willing to claim hav ing made. These are also made 111 Austria, and llnd 11 ready market la Syria and Morocco. The wooden spade is such as is used in Finland, lu that land wood is fur more abundant than iron, ami. conse quently, If Is utilized wherever possl- UAMfAcrt UBI) KOH fllK AMI?ol>«| hie, only such part* of agricultural Im ph'iufiila being uiade of Iron u» urn subject iu the greatest wear. i hi* clmiisy coiitrhauco U uot a luust-uiu ■IMH'tUicD. but a spado that ia iu ui 111111 eterydu) in**. Aa allow 11, it cuuaUt* of n wedgt'idiapt'd pieen of wood, pointed wlili aii Iron ahcaihtitii. uud l>i\M nicvJ wilu » emtio w iamKu Uaudiv. DR. TALMAGPS SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Bubjmt . Spread tlitt Gospel Kftort* of the entireties Should |tn Directed Toward Saving Sinners—Tim y Should del in Sympathy With Stranger*. ICopyrinUt lttUU.l Washington. D. C.—lg this discourse T)r. Talmagc points to fields of usefulness that ure not yet thoroughly cultivated, and shows the need of move activity. Tho text is Romans xv, 20, "Lest I should build upon another man's foundation." In laying out the plan of his missionary tour Paul sought out towns and cities which had not yet been preached to. lie goes to Corinth, a city famous for splen dor and vice, and Jerusalem, where the priesthood and the sanhedrin were ready to leap with both feet upon the Christian religion. He feels he has especial work to do, and he means to do it. What was the result? The grandest life of usefulness that .1 man ever lived. We modern Chris tian workers are not apt to imitate Paul. We build 011 other people's foundations. If %ve erect a church, we prefer to have it filled with families all of whom have been pious. Do we gather a Sabbath-school class, we want good boys and girls, hair combed, faces washed, manners attractive. So a church in this day is apt to be built out of other churches. Some ministers spend all their time in fishing in other people's ponds, and they throw the line into that church pond and jerk out a Methodist, and throw the line into another church pond and bring out a Presbyterian, or there is a religious row in some neighbor ing church, and a whole school of fish swim off from that pond, and we lake them all in with one sweep of the net. What is gained? Absolutely nothing for the cause of Christ. What strengthens an army is new recruits. While courteous to those coming from other Hocks, we should build our churches not out of other churches, but out of the world, lest we build on another man's foundation. The fact is this is a big world. When in our schoolboy days we learned the dia meter and circumference of this planet we did not learn half. It is the latitude and longitude and diameter and circumference of want and woe and sin that no figures can calculate. This one spiritual conti nent of wretchedness reaches across all zones, and if I were called to give its geo graphical boundary I would say it was bounded on the north and south and east and west by the great heart of Clod's sym pathy and love. Oh, it is a great world! Since 6 o'clock this morning GO,BOO persons have been born, and all these multiplied populations are to be reached by the gos pel. In England or in our Eastern Ameri can cities we are being much crowded, and an acre of ground is of great value, but in Western America 500 acres is a small farm, and 20,000 acres is no unusual possession. There is a vast field here and everywhere unoccupied, plenty of room more, not building on another man's foun dation. We need as churches to stop bombard ing the old iron-clad sinners that have been proof against thirty years of Chris tian assault. Alas for that church which hacks the spirit of evangelism, spending on one chandelier enough to light 500 souls to glory, and in one carved pillar enough to have made a thousand men "pillars in the house of our God forever," and doing less good than many a log cabin meeting-house with tallow candles stuck in wooden sockets and a minister who has never seen a college and does not know the difference between Greek and Choctaw! We ' eed as churches to get into sympathy a uh the great outside world, and let then, know that none are so broken-hearted or hardly bestead that they will not be welcomed. "No," says some fastidious Christian; "I don't like to be crowded in church. Don't put any one in my pefc." My brother, what will you do in heaven? When a great multitude that no man can number assembles, they will put fifty in your pew. What are the select few to-day assembled in the Christian churches coin pared with the mightier millions outside of them? Many of the churches are like a hospital that should advertise that its patients must have nothing more than toothache or "run rounds,but no broken heads, no crushed ankles, no fractured thighs, (iive us for treatment moderate sinners, velvet-coated sinners and sinners with a gloss on. It is as though a man had a farm of 3000 acres and put all his work 011 one acre. He may raise ever so large ears of corn, ever so big heads of wheat —he would remain poor. The church of God has bestowed its chief care on one acre, and has raised splendid men women in that small inclosure, but the field is the world. That means North and South America. Europe. Asia and Africa and all the islands of the sea. It is as though, after a great battle, there were left 50.000 wounded and dying 011 the field anil three surgeons gave all their time to three patients under their charge. The major general comes in and says to the doctors, "Come out here and look at the nearlv 50,000 dying for lack of surgi cal attendance." "No,' say the three doc tors, standing there fanning their patients, 1 we have three important cases here, and we arc attending to them, and when we are not positively busy with their wonnds it takes all our time to keep the flies off." In this awful liattle of sin and sorrow, where millions have fallen on millions, do not let us spend all our time in taking care of a few people, and when the com mand comes. Go into the world," say practically: "No. I cannot. 1 have here a few choice cases, and I am busy keeping oil the flies.'' There are multitudes to il > > who have never had any Christian worker look them in the eye and with earnestness in the accentuation say. "Come!" or they would long ago have been in the kingdom. My friends, reli gion is either a chain or a gn.it reality. It it be a sham, let us disband our churches and Christian associations. Ii it be a reality, then great populations are on the way to the bar of (Sod unfitted lor the ordeal. And what are we doing ' In order to reach the multitude of out siders we must drou all technicalities mil ot our religion. When we talk to people about the hypostatie union and 1 rtiuli en< vc!o|iedianisnt ami Krastinianism and I 'tnuplutcnsiaiiisut. we are impolite and 1- little understood as if a physician should talk to uii ordinary patient about the per icardium and intercostal muscle and seor but'c mpto'iis. Many of us come out of the theoli cat seminaries so loaded up that we take the first ten years to show our people how much we know and the next leu years to net our people to know as much as we know, and at the end we find that neither ol us knows Itliytllllix as we ought know. Here are hundreds of thousands of sinning, struggling and d>ing |»-ople who need to realise ju-t one thing that Jcsua Chiisl came to saw- On 111 af 1 will save them now. lint we gul into a profound and elaborate ileum 11011 of >vbat justili' ition is. and after all the work there are not, outside of llit learned iiroltrssioiis, 10.IKKI people who can tell uh.it justification is. I will read ton the deli ml loll » "Justification is purely a fuiciixe act, the act of a judge sit tin 4 in the forum, in which the Supreme I'iiln Slid Judge, who is account able to liniw, and who alone knows the manner 111 which the ends of His unitrrsal government iau Iwst Is' ohlatued, mkous that which was d.ine h> the salntitut# in the saute ttian Iter as if It had lawn done by those »I|« ixdieve lu the sulwtitute, and puiely on account ol this gracious method of re> k OOIM, grants them ths lull leutiasluit ui their sins , .New, wUt m mui »iJJ you what justification fg—when a sinner believes, God lets him off. One suiniHer in Connecticut 1 went to a large factory, and I Raw over the door written t(!n words, "No Admittance." I entered artd saw over the next door "No Admittance." Of course I entered. I got inside and found it a pin factory, and they were making pins, very serviceable, tine and useful pins. So the spirit of exclusivenewt has practically written over the outside door of many a church, "No Admittance." And if the stranger enters he finds practi cally writt > over the second door. ''Xo Admittance," while the minister stands in the pulpit hammering out his little niceties of belief, pounding out the techni calities of religion, making pins. In the most practical, common-sense way and laying aside the non-essentials and the hard definitions of religion go out on the <!od given mission, telling the peo ple what they need and when and how they can get it. Comparatively little effort as yet ha« been made to save that large class of per sons in our midst called skeptics, and he who goes to work here will not be build ing upon Another man's foundation. There is a large number of them. They are afraid of us and our churches, for the rea son we do not know how to treat them. One of this class met Christ and heard with what tenderness and pathos and beauty and success Christ dealt with him: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thv soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength. This is the first and great commandment, and the second is like unto it—namely, 'i nou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. There is none other com mandment greater than these." And the scribe said to Him, "Well. Master, Thou hast said the truth, for there is one God. and to love llim with all the heart, anil all the understanding, and all the soul, and all tiie strength, is more than whole burnt offerings and sacrifices." And when Jesus saw that he answered discreetly He said unto llim. "Thou art not far from the kingdom of God." So a skeptic was saved in one interview. Hut few Chris tian people treat the skepnc in that way. Instead of taking hold of him with the gentle hand of love we are apt to take him with the pinchers of ccclesiast icism. You would not be so rough on that man if you knew how he lost his faith in Chris tianity. i have known men skeptical from the fact that they grew up in houses where religion " as overdone. Sunday was the most awful day in the week. They had religion driven into them with a trip ham mer; they were surfeited with prayer meetings; they were stuffed and choked with catechisms; they were often told that they were the worst boys the parents ever knew because they liked to ride down hill better than to read JBunyan's "Pil grim's Progress." Whenever father and mother talked of religion they drew down the corners of their mouth and rolled up their eyes. It" any one thing will send a boy or girl to ruin sooner than another that is it. J £ E had such a father and mother 1 fear I should have been an. infidel. The first word that children learn is generally papa or mamma. I think the first word 1 ever uttered was "why." I know what it is to have a hundred mid nights pour their darkness into one hour. Oh, skepticism is a dark land! There are men who would give a thousand worlds, if they possessed them, to get back to the placid faith of their fathers and mothers, and it is our place to help them, and we may help them, never through their heads, but always through their hearts. These skeptics, when brought to Jesus, will be mightily effective, far more so than those who never examined the evidences of Christianity. Thomas Chalmers was once a skeptic, Robert llall a skeptic, Robert Newton a skeptic, Christian Evans a skeptic. Hut when once with strong hand they tool: hold of the chariot of the gospel they rolled it on with what mo mentum ! If I address such men and women to-day T throw out no scoff. I implead them by the memory of the good old days when at their mother's knee they said. "Now I lay me down to sleep," and by those days and nights of scarlet fever in which she watched you, giving you the medicine in just the right time, and turning your pil low when it was hot, ami with hands that many years ago turned to dust soothed away your cain and with voice that you will never hear again, unless you join lit r in the better countrv, told you to never mind, for you would feel better by and by, and by that dying couch where she looked so pale and talked so slowly, catch ing her breath between the words, and you felt an awful loneliness coming over your soul—by all that I beg you to come back and take the same religion. It was good enough for her; it is good enough for you. i\av, I have a better plan than that. I plead by all the wounds and tears and blood and groans and agonies anil death throes of the Son of God, who approaches you this moment with torn brow and lacerated hands and whipped back and saying, "Come unto Me all ye who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.' Again, tnere is a field of usefulness but little touched, occupied by those who are astray in their habits. All northern na tions. like those of North American and England and Scotland that is. in the colijer climates—are devastated by alco holism. They take the fire to keep up the warmth. In southern countries, like Arabia and Spain, the blood is so warm they arc not tempted to fiery liquids. The great Roman armies never drank any thing stronger than water tinged with vinegar, but under our northern climate the temptation to heating stimulants is most mighty and millions succumb. When a man's habits go wrong, the church dro|m him. the social rircle drops him. good in fluetu en drop him—we all drop him. Of all the men who get off the track but few even get on again. Destitute children of the street offer a tield of work comparatively unoccupied. The uncared for children are in the ma jority in most of nui cities. When they grow u;>, if unreformeil. they will outvote voui children, and thev will govern your childra.i. The whisky ring will hatch out other whisky rings, and grog shops will kill with their horrid stem h public > ibriety mill the church < t God rnii up with ou' ,lrehhed arms nnl molds this dying pop ulation in her bosom. I'ublic schools cannot do it. \rt galler ies cannot do it. Itlackwell's Island ran nut do it. Almshouses cannot no it Jails i iimot di it CluiKch of ti.nl. wake up to your niagmiiccnt mission! You i in d'i it! Get somewhere, somehow to work' the Prussian cavalry riount bv putting their right foot in the stirrup, while the \»nci tan cavalry mount by putting their leit )>••.! into the stirrup. I do lint car# how \ i.i Mount your war charger if yon oillt _' i into tin* battlc I'll thill and gel there noun, right stirrup or left .lirrup or tin -11 It up at all Iha iltlon'tlpii I fields ne ill around us, and why should we build on another man's foundation? I have heard .0 what «... called the ' thilll deling lege 'i it was in l?U i part ui t!l« I! in uin\ to which "line Chn.tians belonged, and the players, it was .aid, well aimicre I bv thumb rand lightning and h ill and terii|w.t which ovet threw an invading aimv and saved the empire. Vnd I n.aild I-. God that our thurches might lie so mighty lu piatrr and work that 111. v would liecome a thuudci iug le gion I*l.ue which the lotve* of am might la- routed and the gate, of he!) might tremble launch tie- gospel ship far SH olhii to)age Heave aw is now, laiii! Miake oal the r«vfs in th- ioreto|>M»il! funic II h«aicult wind end nil the can ts.' Jesun aboard will will) otu salstv Ic.im au tlie Ma will Urckwli us forward leu. uu the .here will well, unit Us Mil* iMfW*.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers