The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, May 02, 1889, Image 7

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    National sermon.
L WHOLE LAND A PAIXADI9I
mug rrcachea ILconrfl Ar
rroprl to tha Centennial.
L it j ftff Ihf Lord o)nrd th "f
' ... rmnntl Alld
Uf-mo rapt- " . .
fc ' ' min"ter, IWon-pVrta '-.-Jure
ow rjt, ?. Y)urlnI thf night
"3yUrthS whrt. the prophet was
of I"4"' ,, Havbreak the trow
I"1- . .-...hed In and laid:
",';" a,. then.
there is a
IV". ..... to destroy you.
tr.ro i " 1
Wi must
f"-"-. Vh. " Hut Klisha wm
not
I "'". . . w. looked tin and
un ana saw
".r "a hV knew "that then.
twi - --... .i,,,t him
there
k '"Y." "V km. a,
and in
1" ' "L ... '.... ! lhAlf of
b,.,.., me - '-': man
rHoofHreh-nlohar.
f Are. nn.l driver of lire pulling rein
Ire "n hit of Are: and warrior, of nr.
b,,nd.-h- nre.and the br.ll-
' . ... .....rtiinir eunriiw wm eclipsed
th galloping
kile. "Ana in. u,Tr. -i ."
, Young man: mm n.-. -
...untnin was full of homes anil rhnriot
11 ' m!?..V.l l.,nt F.'isha." I have often
1,-ntov.m of the Assyrian porila which
L, .-n inTi. nti institution. Nit now
.. nr.' ii-cini.uiig " '(' ' -..,
nf th- inauguration of ashingtoii,
k ..f tli- i;p-r force of the t-xt that
, Ih'ht tl our sl'ie. ii no 7
J.it lt:l nun"! .'"'".
,h'il tl:-' in. imtniinof otirhoi.'-MKl -oiir-
L.., fi.:ti: lire f"" "' 0""ai aim t iwir-
f In r...--M.. ,
t i i.l notice Hint tlie III" piliase H
. , r ., iii.il n .-icimriot f tire. l-.-
,V. I- H i1: .lll'l .l.illll. wll"ll tin V iMino to
,) t ! I 'n in.' eiiiiifitfe, nlivuyit ri ic
i't '. : te ''I'"!, a Imni-wl. mi npliol-
L n iil'.i'i ition. It i-lint u clmri"t like
i.u: l " i"'i' Tors or I'lirtn liii'iint. imt nil
in.-.-.l mi. I n ininpre--i lire. 'I'hnt in-.iti
., ju-t rliiiM !- ni' iu. iieiniTiiini.
h l.tirn .''iiih-h. t'linri..t of r.'M'iii.
in.r i liiir.ot of tire. All o.ir imtiiuml
thrnlhi' ills have lie n throiishmnreliiir'
m;. 1 nil ilwtslim. Throiich tril.e
. tli" i:ilt i'itml I'i'K- Through trilm
: nnti'.ti ri t'hiiriot of n-icue, l.ut
..f tire
i h" 'I" I know tlmt thl Divine eul
i.on t i.r M.l'.i.foiir in vt 1 1 lit i hlk 1 know
the ln-t. ry of the lust one hinulred uii'l
vr. Tlie AnuTtean revolution Mart!
the p'M "f John Hiiii'iH-k. in liule-
Lin-e Hull, in 1 '. In' colonic without
I'ith'iit iiiiiimiititii.u, witlmut pitK,
ut train.il iirrir.s without nion-y.
ut pi!ice. 'Ml the other Hide, tile
ti.t im"i"ii or me enrin, me iirp'i:
and tli' trrandint nnvie hii.I the imt
iiisiml cMtuiniiiider, and riour(fK in
L.l.i.. r.ti.l ticarlv nil HHti.iiiH reiulv to
his'
them up in the light. Nothing asnKaiimt
nuty.
.;.'!. . f the American roloniin, which
k 1 at 7 i". 'Ir-..K"I still lower through
ii anclii.i; of tlie ttenerais, ami through
..il..i:i.-s nl small iuitiwj, and Ihrouijli
nil. r wlucli Mirjinssi a all their pnle-
in .lepth of kiiow ninl horrumof 'oi
n ut. Klisii.".. n. roiinil'il ly tin- li .le
ruin nriiiy. li'l not n." iii ti I worse olf
II I the thirteen colonleit .n,oniiissiM
ftMrsliadownl liy furdicn uxxuult. What
hi til
ninU'st in .ur luvnr?
The ui;ier
the uiiiKT armies. The rreen nnd
ai'iurtaiim of New KiiRlnnd, the hlih-.il..ii-
the llil'lson, tliu inountaiiiN of
(na. all the Appalachian rani(e were
re- iiforoemcnt hich the young limn
intoii saw tiv ran ii, uiul iiut men
r-1 the frozen feet, ninl the can-
il m.iimiiIs. and the exhausting huu-
ami th long march l.ecnuse "the
"p. mil the eve of the youn- in;ui; ami
i ami, Ih'IioI.I, the mountains were full
ii's ami chariots of tire round uls.iit
i'ashintoii himself wan u miia-
What Jci.hiia was iu wicriil history tin.
ktn. ri.'ati IYe.i'lcnt was in secular hi.
A tii.'iiind other men excelled him in
t-nt things, hut he exc.-. il them all in
ii"ss and completi.iicsM of ehara 't -r.
nrlil ic ver mi w his lil;, nn.l proluilily
will - i. his like uiliiiii, liecause there
U.lv ii. v. r will l.i. another such exi-
Ii.. ie. let down a Divine interposi.
II.- a from tosl .iir.s't.
f not l.u. nv huw niiv man can read the
t of th"-e times without H.lmitti.."
lli" ".'M't waii ilwiilvj ly the t!.per
ki in W l. when our Civil War oiiened.
it the Norih aiid ut the South i.ro-
t. i'. ii'.tioinl sulci. ... It v.as not our-.-.i'i-1
. oM.ir.li. e, it was not wealth
Ut I'.'t'TtV. it WAm llol lltrir.. Sl..l..d
pi um'l Stat. s. It was lieioisui anainst
it imis th.. r..:jiurces of iiianv u. u, r-
iiaic t the f.-Miui'c 'i of iiianv Hcii'Ta-
H was the in-avcr of the North n -..n,.i
v. : f th Soutli.it was one-half of the
in iiiMit.l wrath mivtiii s theoih -r half
nation in aruml iinli:ii:.tiou. What
Uo:e l.'.t . Xt...'.Mi.nit i. .ii
h- .. ' !:!!)' of the War the P:mm...i,l.iv-
t of the I 'lilted StaU'S fore.w ivns
li.iha.1 l i ii crmt in lut1le, hut old
I eijine witii many intlruuties, and he
riKiit to .piietude. He could trnt
a Uitj., and he rode on the
tielil i.i ....p.. ...... ..l.:....
ri.jt to mil. it t.u. itn,..l.
t, . . uaf iiin
tlie r.iur years of the contest, -tin the
in ide wuit a man in mlil-lif.. wl...
Ilia vciim the IiIimh) of many euura-
lV:rlorw hi. .inl. ...... t... .
r ... in,, uitoih
ruliiiM-o and I'erro tionln, ('otitrera
"iuiu-ks-. jh m years xvxse.l on
p isroli .f ijtrnae uiiroll.il, them
Hit (rum l-.'V. u..l. u i -7 . . .
I. o....-- i linroLSIII IUH1 a
.tl ailll a l..tir:.,it.tl,n !... u .
' .urn norm
v Tvi n tnnrhalil. And what hut
Jjnn'iou ixiultl coma when I'hillj.tjh.iri-
nuiii naii jacKson met, and Nathan-
I Ullll S11I1...V ..1.. i s
nil Sidney Johiuou rode in from
" l ""nth, and Grant and t.-, the two
....... iHiinu, ciasiie.1 7 ) et we nre
p. Mel j. t we are at ihvm-v. Knrthlv
k .......... .1 . . .
ms-iiio me rotitlii't. The ute
of the text. They t-ll us there was
I'llltlit II hove tl .,11, U.... I ....I,. ...1
.... ,,,, ,niK,
via; l.ut there mm .nti..f i.o.. 10. .1...-
bit.
the h..rs.. and clmi ioUi of Hod ciuno
1 . '", "u nation m ps;t; the
1 1 ref.lile.11 .;.... 1
ten. Ity, A 1 in ker el. ....I v., ...ttl.-l
J"" tms nntioii. The riilt of the
pws 111 ih.puu., ami revolution, not,
in, or three Ke. tiomi, l,t revolution
7 "hn ami villnKe and city of the
S I '.."iil Imminent. The
ErkT. I" i T ,Y"r ""'' throttle
t a,,. ' f'"""" "wM k'flp New
th. . I w1 "", Kva'nuah,
t hl M, ,,!V,,n1"". .VVudiinKU,,,:
J"d Ml. lildeu wa. elected; other.
:m and how
.aiue u univeiiml maaaiuTo
f U"B", Imt tiod rtUjr
U i.ur nt u the hou-
Zl , r 'ill1,iunM of infuriated
7, l',,t TUe It to the upper
tbZhfr ,l',"V'"Uof nnwyriW
f'a'Ut,!! the wheel were not heard and
I and the wt, though th. hoof, aid
1 a.,n tu Wurti tbou . th- huofg a
Z -valry uf Ood galloped ,y.
W .iciumient at the uuuwer. of IJn-
C .Ti 1 W,W ' l'roI'-t tht irreater
KlS ?i,,r.."- 'wfu'
l.nnrUo,'i " u-nUott, Ood
Iv. tlZ n ,."T',, 1,1 ,ha eyow
that (1,m1 u on th. 0f thU na
V from th. laat .lKht ornlu.-Wt
Urv1 and from Ui. oaJ,
health of th. laxt quarter at wmtnry pW
idmnica verv excsmttonal and from the great
revival of rellfrion. and from the apreadinK
of the Church of Ood, and from the onntinent
Moimnlng with anytuma and reforniatnry in
atitutinrui, and from an Rdenixatlon which
promt, tliat thut whole land i to be a I'ara.
rlie where God shall Walk In the cool of th
dnv.
If In other aermona I ahowod you what wa
the evil that threatened to upwt and demol
ish American Inrtifutlona, I am encouraged
more than I can tell you aa I aee the regi
tnonU wheeling down the aky, and my lere
min i turn tnto doxoloiea, and that which
waa the Good Friday of the nation' crucifix
Ion becomes the KaMer morn of ita resurrec
tion. Of coume God work through human
Instnimentalities, and thl national better
ment 1 to come among other thitiK through
acrutlnixed ballot box. By the law of reg
it juration It la almot Impoasible now to have
Illegal voting. There waa a time you
and I remember it very well when drove
of vagabond, wandered up and down on
election day and from jxill to poll, and
voted here and voted there, and voted
everywhere, and there waa no challenge; or,
if there were, it amounted to nothing, lie
cause nothing could ao auddenly lie proved
upon the vagabond. Now, In .very well
organised nelghWhood, .very votur i
watched with aeverest scrutiny. I must
tell the regirtrar my name, and how
old I am, and how long I have re
Kiled In the 8tato, and how long I have re
sided in the ward or township, and if I mis
represent, fifty witnesses will rise and shut me
out from the ballot Imx. Is not that a grent
advance? Aud then notice the law that pro
hibit. man voting it he has liet on the elec
tion. A atop further need to lie taken and
that man forbidden a vote who has offered or
taken a bribe, whether It be in the shnpe of a
free drink or cah paid down, the auspicious
cases obliged to put their hnmi on tin Bililc
nnd swear their vote in if they votu nt all.
ho through the nacred chest of our nation'
suffrage redemption will come.
God also will save this nation through mi
aroused moral sentiment. There has never
lu-eii so much discussion of morals and im
morals. Men. whether or not th.-v ncknow I
c.Ik'c what is right, have to think w hat it
nvtiit. We have men who luie had their
hands in public treasury the most of their
lifetime, stealing nil they could lav th-ir
hands on. disomming do-picntlv ntH-ttt lis
honesty in public servi.-e, nnd men with two
i.r three families of tlu-ir own, pr.-iicliinr; do.
ijticntlv iiliout the l-niitii-i of th wventli
1 oiiitiianilmcnt. T'i. qus1.ni of M.bri.-'y
mid ilriiiil;..'imcss is thru-t in tin luce of this
nation as never Is-fote, nnd to take a ( art 111
our tHilitii -il i-oiilests. The iiu.-stioii of 11a-
tioti il sobriet v is gojtnj to be respectfully and
ileierciitially licnid at the lir of i-v.-ry l--ui--lature
nnd every house of r-pi .-s.-ntti cs
nnd every I'nit-! States Setiat.-. and an on:
liiHit.-iit voi.v wi1! rint; down the sky ami
across this land and back lu-am. saying to
the rising tidi- of drunkeniHiH whi'-h
threaten to whelm home and church and na
tion: "Thus far shnlt thou come, but no fur
t'n.T, ate! hero .shall thy i roud waves I c
toy. si.'1
l' have not In my mind n shn-Iow of li--heiirtenuient
a larf;e a the shadow of a
house lly's wing. My faith is in the upper
for.vs, thu upin-r armiraof the text. liisl is
imt dead. The chariots are not unwhi-el-il.
If you would only pray more mid wiu.li your
eves in tin cool bright, water, frcsti from
tiie well of (.'hristian reform, it would Is- said
of you as of thi one of the text : "The It.I
os-ii.il the eyes of the young man; and If
saw; and, Ix-liold, thn mountain was full of
horses nnd i-huriots of Hie round all nil
Klislm."
Wlu-iithc nrmy of Antignnus went into
battle his soldiers wero very much licoiii'.
aue.l. and they rushetl up to the (o-neral ami
ivinltohim: "Don't you see wo have a few
forocsandthey hive,iiiany tnoro'f'' and thn
soldiers were uffrighteJ at tho sinalliicx of
their iiuiiiUt nnd the cieutncss of tlieeneiny
Anticoiius, their iiniiiniiniler, straighu-ncd
hinis.-lf up nnd wiiil, with imiig-iatioti nnd
Vchenii-nce: "How many do you reckon lie.
to be?" And when we see the vnst nrmies
arrayed against the cause of sobriety it iiiuv
sometimes lie very discouraging, but I asi;
you in making up your estimate of tlie forces
of righUsiusness 1 ask you how ninny do v.ni
reckon the Ijord Uil Almighty to !? if-- is
nor .siMiniaiuler. The Iord of Hosts is His
name. I have the Is-st authority for saving
that the chariots of God arc t .ventv trioii
minil. and th" inouiitiiitis lire full of tlieiii.
You will take without my saying It that
my onlv faith is in Christianity and in tin
npMr force nugested in tho text. Political
parties isiiiio oi'.d go, and they may In- right
and tln-y mav be wrong; hut G.sl lives and
1 think Ho lias onlain.il this nation for u
i-aiMV of prosperity that no ileinaoxism
w ill Is-..hie to halt. I i-xiHi-t to live to s a
political tui'ty which will have a pstform of
two plank the Ten ('ommtinilmeiitsutid tho
ricrimm on the Mount. Wln-n that party is
formed it will sweep across this l-uiil, like a
loniailo I was going to say, but when 1 think
it is not to li. il vnstution, but tv.-uscit.ition,
I change the llnura and say, su. ii 11 party as
that will sweep iter.), this laa 1 hi;j spied
!!; f''i i'i heaven.
Have you any doubt aboui tli" tu-t .1 of the
Christian religion to purify and make ilecent.
Am. rii an imhtics At ev.-rv yearly oe.iund-r-'iiui.il
clu-tioii we have in this country gn at
nm-miac torics, manufactories of lies, and
I hey nr.. run day ntid night, and th.-y turn
out half 11 do, -ii a day all cipupix-.l iiu-l r.-a !y
for full sailing. Nu ge lies nnd small lii s.
l.i.-s privat" uml lies public ninl lies prurn nt.
l.i.n cut bias and li.-s cut diagonal. long
liuibe'l lies and lu-.s with doiilile-back nctioti.
l.i.-s complimenlarv iin.l lies defamatory.
I.i.'S that some people b -11. ve, iiiid lies that
all the people livlieve, and lies that tiolxslv
Is-lievcs. I,is with humps like camels aud
scales like crocodile and necks 11s loti as
storks and feet as swift as an i.iiteh pe s and
stings like adders. Lies raw and scallopul
and paniinl and stew,sl. Crawling ties and
jumping lies and soaring lie. Lies w ith at
tachment, screws and rattlers and braiders
and rcadv wound Ixil.txin. Lies by Chris
tian p-'.-ple who lu-vcr lie except durinr; elec
tion, and lies by people who always lie, but
heat tht-m.u'lves in a Presidential campaign.
1 confess 1 um ashamed to have u foreigner
visit this country in such time. 1 should
think hi would stand ilaznl, hi liunil on hi
pik-ketbook, ami dare not go out nights'.
What will the humlrisls of th nis.inrts of for
eigner who coniu b-re to live think of us?
AS lint a disgust they must have for the land
of their adoption? The only good tiling
nlsiut it is, ninny of them cannot understand
the English liuiguage. But X up(wo the
(iennaji. aud luilian, and Sw.sbsh, nnd
French papem trniulato it all and peddle out
the infernal Muff to their subscriber.
Nothing but Christianity will ever stop
nich u IIishI of ind'tsfiicy. The Christian re
ligion will ss.-ak after a while. The billings
gate and low ac-audal through which we wad.
icvory year or every four year, must be re
buked'by tho religion which sxuk from it.
two great niountaiiu, from the one mount
ain intoning the comuuind: "Thou shult not
ls-ar false witiu ssist against thy neighlsir,"
and froi 11 the other mount making plea for
kiii'lncs and love ond blessing rather than
cursing. Yes, we nro youig u have a na
tional religion.
There aro two kinds of national religion.
The one is upxirtej by the State, and U a
matter of human politic, and it has great
patronage, and imilcr it men will struggle for
prominence without refereiice to (pialitica
tain, aud it archbishop is supported by a
salary of tTn.OOH a year, and there ore great
cathedrals, with all the machinery of music
land canonicals, and room for a thousand h
pie, Tut au audience of fifty ooplo or twenty
Kople or ten or two.
Ve wont no such roligiou a that, no WK'h
nutloual religiou; but we want this kind of
national religion; the vast majority of the
MHiple isinvertetl and evangelirtsl, and t lieu
they will maiiuge the secular a well a the
religiou.
Do you say that this U impracticable? No.
The time 1 coming Just a certainly a there
is a God and tlmt tliuti Ilia book and that He
ha the strength ami the hotiukty to fulfill Hi
promise. One of the ancient Emperor used
to pride himself on performing that which
hi counselor said waa Impossible, and I tiave
to tell you to-day that man'a iniptmsihle are
OtsJ's eosie. "tlath He said and shall He not
do it? ilath He commandtxl and will Ho not
briug It to pu?" The Chriatiau religiou i
corning to take possession of every ballot box,
of .very school house, of every home, of every
vallev. of everv mountain, of every acre of
our national domain. This nation, notwith
standing all the evil influence that are trying
to destroy it. Is going to live.
Never since, according to John Milton,
when "Satan was hurled headlong flaming
from the ethereal skies in hideous ruin anil
combustion down," have the powers of dark
ness been so determined to win this continent
as they are now. What a jewel it is a jewel
carved in relief, the cameo of thi planet 1
On one side of us the Atlantic ocean, dividing
u from the worn out governments of Kurope.
On the other side the Facifio ocean, dividing
it from the superstitions of Asia. On the
north of us the Arctic sea, which is the gym
nasium in which the explorers r nd navigators
develop their -mrage. A continent ten thou
sand five hundred miles long, seventeen
million square miles, and all of it but
atsmt one-seventh capable of rich culti
vation. One hundred millions of popula
tion on this continent of North and South
America on. hundred million, and room
for many hundred million more. All flora
and all fauna, all metal and all precious
woods, and all grain and all fruit. Th.
Appalachian range the Imckbotie. and the riv
er the ganglia carrying life ail through and
out to the extremities. Isthmus of I)arien
the narrow waitst of a giant continent, all to
be under one government, and all free, and
all Christian, and the scene of Christ's p-r-sonal
reign on earth if, according to the ex
pectation of many good people, be shall at
last set up his throne in this world. Who
shall leave this hemisphere, Christ or Satan?
Who shall have the snore of her Inland sea,
the silver of her Nevedas, the gold of her Col.v.
radon, the telescope of her observatories, tin
brain of her univemitie, the wheat of her
prairies, the rice of her savannas, the two
gn-at ocean Iwiche tbe one reaching from
Itnltln's bay to Terra del Ku-go. ond, th.
other from Ilehring strait to Cam Horn
nnd all the normal and temporal and spiritual
nnd everlasting interest of n jsiptilation
ast U-yotid all human computation" Who
shall have the hniiisiirrc? Yil and I will
ilis-tde that, or help to il"-iil it by coiisclen
tioii vote, by cT-nest prayer, by maintenance
of Christian institutions by support of great
philanthropies, by putting Issiy, mind and
M ill on the right side of a'l moral, relt tious
mid national movement ...
Alii it will not be long before it will not
tnake any-difference to y..ii or to me w hat I
. limes of this continent, so f ir 11--.-i;-. Ii' v com
fort is coneer lied. All we will want of' it will
11- seven f.-'t by tlite , and licit wiil take in
I h" largest, nnd there will b-.1 roo!.i and t l
i.pare. That I aP of this coti'itrv will ne.sl
ery mioii the youngest of us Hut welmvt
nn anxiety ills. ut tho welfare and the happi-
ii.siii inn generations that ar coming on,
and If w ill bea grand thing if. w hen the arch
angel's tmmtK-t -mints, we tin. I that our sep.
uli'iier, like the oii Joseph of Anmntheii pro
vnl.sl for Chi ut, is In the midst of a gni-.leii,
n" of the seven wonders of the world wn
the white marlile w atch touer. f Pharos of
Kgypt. Sostratus, the nrohit.s-t ami sculptor,
after budding that wnt.-h tower out his niuno
011 it. Then he covered it with plastering,
nnd to plea the King he put the monarch's
inline on tho outside of the plastering; and
the storm Is-nt, nnd th ens.lashnl in their
fury, and they washed off the plastering, and
they washed it out, ami they washed it
lown, but the name of Hut rat us was d.s-p
ettt in tho Imperishable rock. Ko across the
fmv of thi lint 1011 thero hnvo lieen a great
ninny iitime written, across our finances,
ncross our religions, names worthy
uf remembrance, names written on tho
architecture of our cliuivhus, and our
uliools, nnd our asylums, uml our home
ii mercy, but God 'is the architect f thi
.'"iitim-nt, nnd he wnsth - sculptor of nil it
grandeurs, nnd long after, through th" wa-h
.ii the ugi-s and the tempi-Ms of .s ntiiri.-. all
..'her Haines shall Is. obliterat.si, the I'mne
(i,'tiature and Divine name will Is. brighter
md brighter a the millenniums go by, and
tiie world shall sen that the G.sl who made
this continent has redecmi-d it bv Hi gra.se
from all it sorrows and from all its crime.
Have you faith in such a thing as that
After nil the chariots have ls-en iiuwlui-ied,
ami after all the war chargers have been
?rippl.l, the chariot which Klisha saw on
the morning of his p-ril will roll on in tri
umph, followed by all the armies of heaven
jn white horses. Gisl could do it w ithout us,
imt He will not. Tho weakest of 11. the
faintest of us, the smallest brauinl of us,
hall have a part in the triumph. We may
not have our name, like the nnine of Sos
li utus, cut ill impcrishutilo ris-k and co:ipis
nous for centuries, but wo shall I si remem
ImthI in n bettT pine than that, even in tho
In-art of Him who ram, to reil.s-ui us and re
ileem the world, and our names w ill Is- seen
close to the signature of Hi wound, for a
to-diiy He throws out Hi amis toward u He
lay; "Kehold, I have graven thee ou the
palms 011 My hand." l!y tho mighti.wt of all
agencies, the potency of prayer, I beg ym
e-k our national welfare.
Some time ago there were 4.iiim,iio letter
In the d.-ad lett-r jiostolllce at Washington
letters that lost their way but not ono
prayer ever directed to the heart of tiisl uus
carried. The way is all clear for the as.s nt
uf your supplications Innvcnward in U half
of this nation, liei'ore the postal iMiiimutil
cation wassoca-sy, and long ai;o. on a r.li
ore hundred f.si'f high on the cast of llng
lanil, tnere was a barrel fast. -nsl to a p-st,
and in great, letters on the snl" of tlie rock. s
it could he M-.-n till' out at sea, were the
words: 'Tostotlioe;'' and w ii.-n ships came by,
n Ismt put out to take aud letch letters. And
so viuT.il were those depisit of ulf-s-tion in
that barrel that 110 lis k was ever put uii
that barrel, although it conuiimsl in.-s-sag.-s
for America, ami Kurois-. aud Asm. and
Africa, and all the islands of the sea. Many
u kUiiin tinvs.il sailor, homesick, got m.-jssMgo
of kindness by that rock, and uiauy a hum.
s.eiiil heard gissl new from a lsy long ",0110.
A 1 ubl that all tho heights of our national
prosperity were in interchange of sympathies
prayers going up meeting i.l.-ssings coming
down! Postal celestial, not by a nTurin struck
rook oa a wiutry coast, but by tbe Ujck of
Aes.
Ttr-RtTLTd OF PllOIIIIlITION I KANSAS.
Governor Martin, of Kansas, in hi last
niissago to the I-gislature, nays: "Kully liino
tenth of the drinking and drunkenue prev
alent in htaiisa eight yeur ago hnvo been
als'lishi-il, nnd I ntllrin with earnisstness and
emphasis that thi State is to-.lay tho most
tcnis'iate, orderly, oU-r coniniunity of k
plo in tho ctvili.ed world. Tho uboiitiou of
tho saloon has imt only proiuoUsI tho s-r-soiuil
hapiiiness and general prosperity of our
cilizcux, Imt it has enormously diiniiiisho.1
crime, flllisl thousands of homes, where vice
and want nnd wicIcIuhIikis omv i revailcl,
with peace, plenty and contentment, and ho
inati'i udly inci'Hasoil the trade and busim-s
of those t'ligagisl in tho sain ot useful and
vholcMimo urticliM of nierehanilc'. Not
withstanding the fact that tho population of
the Statu is steadily incivasiui;. tno nuuiber
I of criminals conllneil in our ciiitciitiury 14
st.saiiuy uis-rensiug. .Mauy 01 cur Jails aro
empty, mid all show u marked fulling olf in
the number of priroucr contlnnl. Tliedis-k-i-t
of our coui'U aro no longer burdened with
long list of criminal cos.-. In tho capital
district, nuitaiiiing a p.pulatioii of nearly
tio.ooo. not a single crhuiiial cast was ou the
docket when tho present term U-gan. The
busineN of tho pilii-e iinirt of our larger
i-itios ho dwinillisi U one-fourth of it former
proortiouH, while in citi.w of tho sixsiiud and
third clua tho occupation, of polioo author
tie. is practically gone."
BnUNKCHNKSS MADI A CK1MB.
The Minnosota House foil in very grace
fully with Senator tiuerffer's pmptsotuui to
make drunkenness crime. There waa no
discosfckm and the roll rail resulted In 01 yea
and 3 nays. Tho Governor's siguature will
mako th. measure a law. The poualtiu pre
scribed, aro for the tlrst off jiuo. a hue of not
lora flu nor more than KJ, or imprisonment
for not loss than ten day nor more than forty
days; for the wound offense, a tin. of not lee
than f-X nor more than $50, or Imprisonment
for not less thirty days nor mora than sixty;
for the third and later otTeusea, luipriaou
uiont for not leas than sixty nor ww. tuuu
tiiuvty day.
SUNDAY SCHOOL.
8TJDJEOT FOR SUNDAY, MAY S.
" I 8 I'nto Yon All, Watch," Mark
Sill., 2l-a7-Oolden Text t Mark
Sill., 83 Explanatory Note..
TTils Is a (sfttitlnuatlon of the sermon, th.
Seginnlng of which we had in last week's l.w
inn; the Saviour is sitting iimn the Mount of
Olives over against the tctnpln, tho disciple
are with Him, Jerusalem Is before them ami
little Ivneath them if they are on the top of
Olivet, and as He answer tho question of
th. four (v. lii.), He sees in prophetic vision
all the future of the nation of Israel and
tbelr Holy City, and with special reference to
thorn He is speaking.
1H "In those dnya, after that tribulation.'
In vs. W He had simken of it as an aillictiott
or tribulation such as never had lvn licforo
oor ever will be again, llocause of the very
Ijreat sufferings of the peoiile, as recorded itt
ilstor y at the time Jeriisnlem fell, A. 1). 70,
I here are many who think that that was th.
great tribulation here referred to; but 8cri
lure Is a better expositor of Hcriptnr than
any history ixwsihly con lie, and however
(rcat were the allliclions of the people at thai
time, our lesson todny in the lightoprophecy
makes it very dear that the tribulation here
poken of is yet future ond will come in t ho
last week of Daniel's prophecy, the last seven
years of Israel history ere the kingdom Ii
restored to her.
IW. "The stnm of heaven shnll f nil, and the
power that are in bee. vim shall be shaken.''
This In addition to the darkening of the sun
and moon, mentioned in the previous verse.
In l.uko xxi., 'i 'gil, the Spirit says then
shall Ix signs in the sun and in the moon, and
ntoii tho cnrtli distress of nations with p r
plnxity. Similar laiigimi.e is found in refer
ence to Ih'-se very times in bn xni , 1- III;
sxxiv , 1-M; Jis l ii., :iii; iii , !; nnd in cn'-li
place It i in connection with the punishment
tif the world for ini iiitv. vengeance tipoti
tho eneliiii of God's people, an. I the .sl.-mp.
tii.n of lsrii"l. Dean Alford say on Matt,
xxlv., that sin-li proih-si"s nre t l)
understissl literally, otli.rw im- thev lose
their truth nn.l signili. .111. .-; the h sn nl
signs shall liapin-u as a i ' iiipamiueiils nr. I
iiitensili, at ii in of the aw fnl - t-it. of thing
Which the .lesetiptioll tvpilles.
'sU'i. "And then ihall lin y 1.1' the Son of
IM 1111 coming in tin. cloii ls, with great powir
nnd glory." To iinileritim l this coming of
the Sn of Man In x.wer and glory we must
fee from the Scritur. that -ie II" thus
conn's with His saints lb- gathers them to
meet Hun ill the nirnt the r.-siirm ti'.ii of th"
just, the llrst liurr.M-tioii, rewards lln-m ..r
their service, nps. nit tin in positions in lln
kingdom according to tlu-ir faithfulness, and
the mnrtiage of tho Ijunl. take plic e it
Thos. iv., HUS; Lit. xiv., H; It.-v. xx . '.;
II Cor. f., PI; Lii. xix.. l.i u,.v. ,
11 1) ; then when Christ who is our life shall
apMar, shnll we also apsmr with linn in
glory (Col. iii., 4i; then shall the bird build
up Z I. hi when Ho shall appear 111 Ihs glorv,
IP, rii.. 11 1
'!. "And then shall He send His angels',
and shall gath.-r togeth'-r His elect from the
four winds " A large rny of light falls upon
this from the words of I -a. xi , 1'2: "And lie
shnll set up nn ensign for the nntioiis, and
shall iiKsemlile the oute.-ists of Isra-I. an I
gather together the dispersed of Jtidah from
the four corneis, of the earth '' lli-cl.s t
1 liuri-h of ull nations liawng be 11 gather. I
out of the 1. nth Irf-fore the great tribulation,
a.si.r.bng to l.nk" xxi., :'.; Il. v in., M; Imi.
xxvi., P.i, 'sii; He now gathers His du t n.i
lion, w) long lejii tnl and sent 1. 1. .1 anion,; all
nntioiiK, ami taki-saway their rebuke from olf
all the earth.
iH. "Nowliarn n parable of the flg tre.
Nature its'lf hns many thiifg to say to us if
we only hn l ears to hoar, or time l.i stop and
listen; and our Saviour wn always finding
illustration in everything nls.ut linn, tie
tree, tho birds, tho flowers, the seasons, t lot
weather the chsldreii, the farmer oil had for
Him some likeness to spiritual thing. Put
tho fig tree, like the vine, was n sps ial syin
Ih.I of Israel, so iisw.1 by the prophets dsn. v ,
; Joel I., 71; and the tig tree to which lb
came pxp ting fruit, Us nils.- it tno-l" great
professions, and which withered away at Hi
word (chap, xi., l i 'ill, was n syintail'of what
brai l then was and was als.iit to Is-.
-.1 ".So ye in like manner, . . . kiciv
that it is m'gh '' Just as thev could t.-U that
siiinmer was near w hen the lig tr.i- put forth
leave, so thev might know that the kingdom
was near wlien these sins and wonder
.should come to vss il.uke xxi.. ;ili
;m. "Verily I say unto you. that thn
generation shall not pass, till all these thing-
Is done." While it is true at.. at maiiv in
were then living must have I..111 living at
tho destruction of Jerusalem, there is noil;.
Ing in this verse to limit 11 to that t -m
Generation signifies race or family and 1 in
11ml in told tlint tli" mils lievmg Jew ish 1.1. .
Mill continu, iiiiiong all nation- and -t
s. paroto, ibstmi t. tin- miracle of tl." a,...-,
ui.aiting th" fiiirulni.-nt all tlt.-s thing-
Id "llcaeu and eiirth shall p.i-s aw.iv,
I ut My w.t.Is -hall ti .t isis..aw.-i ." In what
j s-iiso heaven and earth ar-t- pass away w.i
IllllV l.-alll ll'olil II let. III. w li-Te we al .' t. 1
of the (perishing "f the world th.i was l.. f..n
the deluge, and of the -i islnng .,f the w..i Id
that now is, the f. rtner bv water, this by
lire: but as there cam it of tie- .l. lug" tin
earth on which we u..w live, there shall c ui..
out of the d.-strui ti. .ii by lire and the sis.-ing
nv there ihwrilssl u n.-w .;uth, wh.-rem
dneil.'tli righ.susiies.s
.'C. "Uut that day and h air l.nowcth 111
nan; 110. not the angels w In.-h are in h.-avon,
lieitlna theSon, but the l'atiu-r " There 1
no authority in the S, rip'uros whereby we
niay say that lie ill coin" 111 sudi a year,
or niontU or day; we only know that though
He tarry 11" will surely come, aud we may
know w hen Ho is near.
Itt. "Take ye li.sl, watch and pray; for y.
know not when the time is." Luke say that
wo aro to tako hetl lest we U tilhsl with the
pl.tkiure or care of this I if", but that we
are to wuU-h and pray always, so as to
cao the grwit tribulation. iLuke xxi , y.r-sk)
;;4. "To every man his work.' The "far
j iiiruey" of this verso ri'ininds us of the "far
country" of Malt, xxv., It; Luke xix., l;,
nnd the parables of tho talents an 1 puinds in
those chapters. U is all one story, tho kllig
1. .111 is jKstH'iisl becaust tho King was re
jn Uil. Ho hud goiie back to heaven until
this time of lesioiuli .n of the kingdom to
Israel, and meantime He is gathering out of
nil nations a company of trie I and faithful
follower, to whom Ho gives work to do and
talent according to their several ability,
commanding thm to he faithful and to -
cupy or du liusiuce (Ills busiuessi till Ho
is .uen.
id. "Watch ye then-fore, for ye know not
when the Master ot the lbnis" isnnelli ."
Matthew -ak of the davs "f N silian.l
tells us that us it was then so will it be nl the
coming of the Sou of Man; In.lilfci em-e to
eU-rnal things und pis'ii' ' uiindi wholly
taken up with the thing of this lite.
ml. "Ltt .Mining suddenly. He bam, I voil
klivpiug." It u cry uut" G.sl to awaken
11 ana keep 11 awake; let us do with
our might what our hands tind to
do; lot U not be dishearten. si by
the failure or InconaUloitcifK of our
selves or other; but rcmciiiUrliig tlmt
we serve tho Lord Christ, mid Willi rvs t
to tuo rocouissne of tho reward, luay His
love eonstruiu u to be ever wakeful anil
watchful
37. "And what I say uuto you I say unto
all, watch." This i tho fourth time 111 the)
last itv. venea; how inteuHtily Ho must moaa
it, how Uumrtejit it miut bo. Would you b
surpried if tie nhould come a yea read this?
It no that i a proof that you at Icotl are uot
watching. XsusMMt lluliun:
Mail. Akao.N, au old resident of Sheakley
villu, Peuu., i a pauiKir. She is the mother
of the celdirattsi '-Cistl Oil Johnny" Stud.
At ditforaut tiuiv he J,.sl his mother u.
chotMM a farm for herw-lf and he would buy
it, but shewalttsl t.u long, and before the
farui had teii bought JoUnuv mUllous baj
been wjuaudered.
RELIGIOUS READING.
ooon ron ytu
When on a fragrant sand) tree
Tbe wnod'tian's ax. desxsnnd
And ah. who bloomed sn iMsauteoU'ly
Keneath the weapon Iwnds,
Ken on tho edge that wrought her death.
Dying she breathe her sweetest breath,
A If to token In her fall,
I'eaca to her foe and lov. to all
How hardly man this lesson learns:
To smile aiid blue tho hand that spurns,
To see the blow, to feel tho pain,
And render only love again!
One had It, but He came from Heaven,
Itcviled, rejected and Iwtraved,
No curse He breathed, no plaint he made.
Hut when In death's dark pang Ho sighed,
1 'rayed for Ilia murderers, ami died,
J. dnun(on.
ritATBH AS, A HAnMoimra.
Pr. Htorrs, at one of thn Cleveland prayer
meeting, said the briefest arguin ut and the
nint dn'isirn he ever listened to was one
made fortf ysr ago by Dr. Spring of Now
York. Kor over thirty year the mcetitma
of the Ibhle society were never oMncd with
prayer, there wnreso iniinv sorte of rhnrclusj
repn-ente.l in it. The Kpis.-opnin did riot
waut an pxti'tup re praver and th. f.ther
did not want a b siklsh prayer. Tlie de
bate over the iinestion of having praver
la.te.1 for two nights in the old Nassau stn t
nsm wh.n at I st. Dr. Si .ring r- se, and.
folding hi hand, said: 'Mr. President, I
have listcn.sl nttet tively to ev ery argument
SH.keti; but there has b i n a Voii-n sounding
In my enr all 'h- while; It is the voieeof th.
Hon of G.sl: 'Hitherto ye have ask-il liotliing
of me; wliHtjsM-ver ve 'ask in my until ye
hall ris'eivn it.' " 'f but was enough; there
wa no need of at gum nt ngainst that voice.
We, t, now n.sl n listen bi th. saint
Voice. Iit in moiiT or ituvt.
A few mo nt lis ago, dii' ing on" of the seyern
storm that v si c. Colorado, a young man
p-l hi d ill si- ht of hotti". In his Ih m il ler-
Ineiit h ' i-s.i and r.'pns.. i his own eottag...
to lie .1 w 11 and die nlm.r.t 111 range w ith the
"light in th" w ttid'.w ' wln.-h t.u voting w fe
l.n I plae. I thi" t. guide him b me. All,
al .i.e s'i" watched th" long night through, '
listening in vain f. rthe foot st pthnt would I
c .inn no nior; for, 1 ng U.'orn the morn- I
ing d.iwnel, the icy touch of death
had lor. v.-r Mihsl "that warm, lov
ii I e irt. Th. s el d.-ath was
miele st,n vii i.ter by ii-.. f n't thnt h" wa lost
in sight of home How many waiid-rr
from the Pat - el 's lious-are lost in sight of
home. In th" f'l.l glar" of the Gos el light!
TIli'V linveth" open llll.l", overflowing Wltll
its i -ill and promi"t, the faithful warning
from the pulpit, ti mainf.staiiotis of G .ps
irovid nee, all tending t dir.s-t the.r st- p
lenvenward, and yet from ail tlcse they turn
away, waiting for th" more convenient sea
son, and nre l t 111 sight of th. many uiau-
loiia ui'u ui ii.
WHAT MI'lT I IK) T fill T.OST'
What must I do to l os ".S'..gV, tr,
gr.-at sn v a-! n." It is not ti.i-e.sai y to d
nu thing. We ar-' ,,st nln-a.lv. J'-.u of
fers to save us. but if w. p'j.-'t Hi olT-T
w. remain as we wi-r" "How- shall w.i
ran if we ii. .gl. s t. grcit silv.itioii ''' Ls-
Clli' is impossible if ve ll.-gl.s t til otllV
lie-ans of s.,f.-t v If ad-nl'v s'r-nt bit.
011, an 1 on refuse tl nl,- r;ii.slv, y .u
.in.. If vo l .ire .how n;ng, 1111 1 will not s. in
tl.. life l.ii'.y throw n to ..ii. y. nl sink. N.-g-I'
ctisr'iin J'-u alo-ie . au -av.i tno soul.
Ne th. r is there s 1, v at ion m any other. O
kinner, your damnation is sure if y. .tij'glect
Jesll. If lie that despised Min i iw ill.il
without m.r.-y, ..f how iiiudi s.n-r
punishm-tit shall h- Is. thought
worthy who hath tr.il.len under
f.s.t the Son 'f Go!? Dost thou think G.sl
w ill not execute lb thr.nteniiigi, or that
thou canst tsscais Hi pu ri-iug eve, or that
the r.-k will cover tin'? Vsin hoa.
There 1 no -s a'si t ut to come to J.-u. and
simi le negl.c-t is ce-iuin p-rdition. "IWmu
1 call.sl. but ye r filv-d th"U shall th"V
call, hut 1 will not answer; th.-v shall ek
111. -, but shall not llnd me " ( sint.r, .sni
this awful threatetiiii 1 J -m n .w stands
with op. u nrin. II. en'rea you to Is
fried. Com., with nil your sins and sorrows!
t oini. ju-t a you are! Cm., at once! lit
'till in uo wi.su cat out. Come 1-j Jesus,
Tttr JiriMri Kssi siiNi.
On a eld, .lark nig' t, wlien the wind was
blowing bar I otir el. a worthy it i.-ti of a
littl'.towii in G.-rm.inv, s.it . living his thl'",
win!" I'rsule, ins w ,f... w 11 preparing sup
t Tliey lear l n iw.i'l 1 1. suig.n cut
i 1" '
T- -ir flll-'-l th" g. - sl rn'i ,r as he said '
" Ivit a tin-., ..' iui.'h' Wti'.r, a pitv it
h u! I U sp. .ii.il by being tin. I ui such
' 1 thinl: it 1, th" 1.
- 11 tl... .1 - r and s..
"ft chit I I.et u
sail h.-H if., who
t I ng bef .r", and
o a" pity i n tie l.t-
li I-1 i I. f!" I-'V ;
w I;..-. t, art wxi "i ll
t." WMI-I' rT
t '. urn I . .n.s th" '!'t. a 'id saw a raggo-l
clul.L wl; ., sai l -'i i anty, fc -si sir, lot
Chr.-t sake'"
"'mem, my littU oti','" sail he; "y..ii
shell rst w.th 11," t' r th" 111.! '. '
Ti.t.. sail, '-rhnnk G l ' an I .ii'i-hs!
H' WIU- given vlll" Slips-r. all I t .lell t.e t. id
them t. at I." a- the oti f n p.s r nrie r ,i:..
"ni t.- to l. a 1'i asst Ibi wuii-l r. .1 nl.. nt
and sung, ai-d in.-I n the m .1.. y ii pi"g-iv
I 1111. lin km ! fri. n S w .M 11 1. tiu::i
bilk tuu.'h, but sent h.m t bed. Wtiou ne
1. ii tt .-v i. .je.i in upon r.iia, and
phase, 1 iii'h hi hieasa.'it fa.-e thjsl
tie
.let. rui :-nl to keep him, if he
In th" ru Ti.i-ig they f uind he wu ualy too
gl I to r.-msin.
They s. i.t linn to n-;.d, an ! afterward
he entr.sl a monastery Then he fcund tti.
Pil l", !r. n r.iuea I e learned the wav of life.
He Iss-ai-ie 'he gr.ar prem-h-r and reformer.
Martin Luther Little ilid 1'onra.i and I'r
nila th us of what they weru Uoin,; wh"a
they 1 arod f r this "lsv-t uf these my lr(2k-rcu."
That Tired Feeling
U (Uirrkmvl Iiji lni.l t-i'ni mic at tliu
aal iiisUi i rvsx'rt !(.! ,arwkirtiU to
dfivi KM4.V hf lis'jir auil th4uti ti. I t'l.-tl,
Itvlfii tviili liiipuriiictf vtrhltti hj b ti a.vumulal
tti fr tuoniht, uisf Ium"'it ihriuifh tiu-
In, ih in I ml full- tn Uwuk i)u.tl. uiivj ih tly
U ttll .lt'tT to nas(H-lll. ll d .NsU-asvApOTlII b
JUI MhM ! UtHtll. It l'Urlll.1, ltii H4J1 I B
rtt he tin- hl.astl mailt the hl el r, cr,t xu
m iaritii tliAt iirci ft vlniat, w-iic tin
iivrvou ic 11 1, auJ iuiirij urw irt'ugtti snJ
Hood's Sarsaparilla
U ppivfii ti Ik? ti vuily mi.riur Ui may utliff aarna- '
LvMaTill. .-r t'lunai urltltr. Ibtl wu hsM wcil Kjuii ;
lt btalili ifivluc I'fTorU Ua tbt bimji aui cuurw
humau orxuuLkUi mrv u uiu.'ti mr .nlj Ustvu
Uie rvim-sjic o( 4 qutwU'r uf m tvutury tfu m tb
team p.Mcr uf tuJy i lu svlvtuis.- uf tb !.' uiU
l2j,-rku slrudtforjr uf y - 141
"i'tw )vtr) 1 wu ak-at cwry tpfiui ut la I y
t(.'k HuvKt't Swm1jU1m Uitt ba U Lh-U aKk
E3ood's Sarsaparilla
SpIu bjr all .triirfu.1. $1, u fut kj. I'rvpatssl ealy I Hold b 1) .Irass" tl. us V l'rsiisvsl mils
b) C I. II'D A CO., Avllis-tlsi, Ls..ll, Msio. I l C. 1. Uv.sjtl CO., viuuicsHs, liweU, Msm.
100 Dosoa Ono Dollar L, 100 Dosos One Dollar.
1
TEMPERANCE.
1yis; sjoT trms ma vm t
Toolt not upon the win. when it
Bfay not for ulensure when she fin
Her tempting beaker up
Though clear its depths ami rich itt glow.
A spell of uiadnes. lurks below.
They say 'tis pleasant on tbe lip,
And merry on the brain;
They say it stirs the sluggish Mood
And (lulls the tooth of pain.
Aye; but within it glowing deep
A stinging serpent, unseen, shvp
Its rosy light will turn to fire.
Its coolness change to thirst;
And by it mirth, within the bra la
A sl.sipl.w worm la nursed.
There's not a bubble at the brim
That doe not -arry fisxl f()r him.
Then dash the brimming rap asije
And spill ita purple wine;
Tnke not its matin to thy lip,
!ct not Ita curse tie thine.
Tia red and rich, but grief and wo.
Ai. hid those rosy depths Mow.
tf.V. muu.
rnu TWLvnan about atonoi..
For considerable time the doctor havo '
been diridxd into conflicting ramps over the
value of alcohol as a urntive ageut. Many
of them hnve ssitivrly refusal for year b
MTitiit it use und.T any circumstancca, tho
veN-ran Dr. Iavi l ing of this uumlsr.
Others, while opKing it -inl usn ail re
isigiiiinglhe dangers that attend exs in
it consumption, have not claimed that it del
not posw-w a. me merit in certain complica
tions. The huiiiIkt of the lntt.-r ha l-u
growing smaller by di-gris-. A ts.nviction 1
still abrond in the 111.1ii. nl frati-rnity that
tin less alcoholic concoction of nny sort
ns the Is. tt.-r, nnd the indications are that
th" tune is ii it far distant w hen it w ill lx) ex
iliid'sl from the pr.s riptioii card.,
Wlu n that time I-r.-.e h.-l the public wh'
11-e it, 11 is lonsrallv li-lieied for iii.i-.-inl
i'tl'i-t. will l-atti Iha leu." has bin slowly
but certainly etpl'-hng nii'.ib. r am cnt de
lusion. 'I he belief is ail but uiilwr-al that
whisky. Inr. w me-, nn.l the i-nt ne ea'al.gn..
of nhs.holie ilrihks impart aMi'i'-tial l.e.-it,
th.T. foni Ilf", of r- -Istalieo to c hl. It I
1 iaiin.-l now that whii.' nl- . le lie ill ink d i
give bent it i a ti. a. in r.nis no.) mischiev
ous, n t'tnp rary nnd wast.-lnl on". It leal
the surface of tie I..-.U. It expamls b...
v.-ssi ls. ;m it . hills the center of life the
heart -and so in. r. .imi for n 'ims the pa-s- of
that organ as seriously to weak.-n it by in
rs itnble reaction.
'I h" .s rvatioii f tnv.-l. rs ci.Tu in-tlm
eT-ri'ii. nts of science It i-w. i! kii"W n tlmt,
ScMll'll WHO go UltO b-fe I1m.H ah. 'Il' 'II.'
stimulant may mak" a bnihiuit onset, but
thnt thiy have leu en-iuraiii than tlnM? w hr
prefer simple f l with only cotree as a
warming drink. In cases of injury re-iuir-ing
surgery and l .ng n-nv ,-il.- .-n.sji tti.im
who have ii .t hoi neak.-n.sl by almhol
have a mu.'li larger . hance of recovery. In
th" Arctic explorations it is well establish"!
that alcoholic bp: .r iu.-t-ad "f hi t.-L-ing;
the strength of tne 1 xpl.-r.-r dimim.shl it.
(iii" ..Hi. it has r.i'.r.l.il that mi a --rtniii
night when all w.T" exiianst.il with hunger
and thr.-it-ii.il w itli denth by fn-vmir tlm-m
who drank cope iisU is fora lying down to
il.i p were found d.ii.1 111 tiie moruing. thosn
who par' .ok slightly w.r.i d.uigrously
rhUled. while tie s., who h.a-1 not toil hnl th.
stiiii'ilant wok" up warm and as well a
could lie erp.1t.1l.
The most vi. -imis prolong-r of lhi d.-liisiott
alsmt ai'i'liol istl.es.-mi habit of tint only
drinking often but paying f r others' drink.
Men w ho have moral 00 n ag.- enough to def y
this vulgar nnd iiijiir.ous cu.-1oni have Imi
gri.-at.-r ts-nefa' ti ri than th.-y may havo n
alijsl. The delusion alsnit th" revivifying
power of alcohol will di" slowly, lint it will
die, an 1 IL. xiut tho better Cni.no
Tv.MrF.nANr; xrw and Jott-,
More than "1 yoimg women at Lynn,
Moss , are loyal whit nhboncr,
A gr.-at headliit for the prohibition
train the Light of Age on Intoxication.
Mr. Knnlv I'itt St.-vens. State l.-tnrer of
California, has undertaken the tusk of raising
IIo,iif.,r ti.e general w ork and the cTpn.na
of the next Nate nnl Convention of th.
1 W. C. T. C.
The wluf.' ribb ti ba lg" i no r.-sp.-'tcr 'if
r.- or . .lor A branch W f T I"., -n-i..i
etitir. iv ..f M 'tlcs.ii w tii-a. h.n b.en
Tga.-iiiii at. S.s-ou... .Sew M-xi. o. Dil in
ii.p...-.it to be tl-.- tir-t orgiiniation of th.
kind ov.-r f .niio'l among this m pie.
Miss ICat.' K.ehl a.lvocat.-s he u. . .f I'ali
f.Tiu.i win.-, but Mr l'haii'-s V W.tm.-r.'.
who wa, t Ttiicr! at th" hea.1 "f the 'itt-.-ultural
C .tiimiss..n ,.f 1 ahf "i-iii.i. aud 1
therefore m 1 11 - ii iv -pial-.tl-sl t 1 prig., state
his . 1 0111. 11 Mi, n not iii.T" tn.iii one g-ii!"ii of
wine r .s ii 1-i. v ..ii' i f a Imndr'sl 111 acra
n. ti ... r un 1 le i- en -,- is pure, and that re
tail T. !;.-'-p ti. ; r st .a,., mad", "w i.idi
:ir" tli" v il'-si .i.i . tlolls llll.lglll.ll.il-
The r- I' l' the N W V I ii I'. Ill'll.tt.-e of
M.n. r i'. .oi s tin .i pa.lm. -t.it. ii.eiit:
' 1 ar.-i il in. est .gut i.-ii .ii. -, th. ,t a leoet
! "si. 1 . i hil'I'-en. u. uiv . 1 t-'ii'i. rest . -;u's. axe
m the habit . f .la: v i;-.',.ig tlie -stl. mist of
th" citv It is ,1 ;,i, t Well un.'Wti 10 your
1 wnir. - ta.i 111 1 Urge 'linn!..'.- ( .li'ink-
111 pi. 1. I art. 1: I rs .ir.- ,11 tin h.ibit I giv
nig til" hi : . -n.-s . .'indies an. I p. nciU . us in
ducements ;' 1 at r "i..- th.-ir put-.''
' "ugfit Hi t tin- f li-oviiig cal.-tiiiiti.-tjj ntitk
us ashani.il "t iUfs..ivcs W;tu tn money
spin t on dnnk hi 1 .rear I'.rii.uu tln-r.. cotiiil
l maintain. -i ii.oii niiv.ionari.-s at ti'sl a
y.LT. .Vio.oiil s. h.i'liiia..t..rs al J!!'', 'SK
church's at i"J'i. "s-i schools 111 jt-!. Is
would give to the world Jummi.ish) shilling;
bible., jt4,nMi.'M) trvt at four shUhng
hitn.lr.sL woiul give Ioo. kni widows jCII
vear, and ps.r f;uiiilin lib) .1 y.r.
Vhicb Jo we value moNt our gUiMs. or our
UibleN-fJ.itjt IPifnej
"Thi store for rent; no li.pior selling." wai
the ununial sign lat.-ly dispiav-.i 111 tne win
ili.sr of a vacant store pr"tTtv. w -il i. c-i . d
for saJ.siii purposis, mar br..ud str.i-; dcoi,
I'hlladniivluik.
A .1evur Aran woman mis a.sk"d fn her
l.'tst illness h"iv she etidur.sl such su-f.,rtng,
an l r't'li"d. " I h.-y who looit u;sin i.l.nl i foi.-a
JO uu f -l H.s hand. '
N url k it Nisi' y ri.it ft ht'"! uxtiias ui-
It iu
"P UK
lk' 1Im-4' W,ij,.Uina to l tnurtitt
i t tllliul HI tuc tti.ii J'irillK' tilt wlU'tT, Ut
ttr'-ugiii u ;ir 111 . i-aUit-r 'Ults) ii, civ!' .ui
tltc uul nr iiMti- !i-.iJ.ti .11.1.11.111. Try HiauU
u,'t-iila sUi'J u Hl ti ct.ii uicttl isf Um jk
iiirii. It It the hii.iil t-niisi nit-ti( iin1, r-
. mur
iluK.
iu- fur
iUI I I
b n-lti .ui, pU'tbsaul lu 'a.-. 4U1 lv full
tht- ui-'in
nxviniut'U'! it Uj ml tu ha-t' iliut ruinst ritl
Ui-vU
ffvltui !'4JiKutK. m Hn.igt at.. Hr.klo,N Y.
Makes the Weak Strong
' ltsVlittJ WB (eisur. 1 CmUiitJ Uttipilp laj twi
( BrlW tflCtU slt'Ai, HUJIB Ml HtJ UM'4t, Uf tauwulft lk
nui mutt rvtfulsr0 ll-i satiariJi lu tbtr
IUu iUi inu u much KsMhI tbitt 1 frvl llk't a um
m&u. My (uuiiB aii tu bf v rvllvvtti, mjr ftucilttf
IfllplVVVai. I U t(J UllKTt AilU tttia.! ft gIUtJ iu.il
i In., try ll'.J'. bsnrMiMtrill 411U .."-Um
Jm.osi, IUiury Mtkiioii, i'tuu.
N. U. Ik- urc to lift Mvi 1 --, a Jtv Jo 04
bm lulwvJ iu buy au uLb.j-.