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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-3-29, Page 310BOONQUERORFROINZRAli itlitAltEaIlIet IN TUE .61tIAA'oNlittee OW HS ensereinnet. .4.0bastlIer Coelho 'mum Ail the Battlers ot the rarth Rut mogeteer-eltartes seen Deleon One Mu, aua an ',enameled Nan a on the Other. Brocedyn, March 4, -Prom the earn :hag tigure of the text elmosea by Rem etar. Talmage in his sermon in the rooklro. tabernacle to -day, the preacher • Meet out the radical truths Ot the hristian. religion.. It was Sacramental •.ilay in the tabernacle. The subject Of ,the serraon was Christ the Conqueror, • the text being Isa. lei, "Who is this that cometh from. Edom, With, dyed garments amen Bozrah? Thai - that is glorious in His apparel, traveilag .irs the greatness of His strength?" 331dom and Bare's. having been the nacene of fierce bottle, 'he those words fere used here or in any other Part of the Bible, they are figures of elteeeh setting forth scenes of severe conflict. Was now we oftee use the word Waior- loo to describe a decisive contest of any kind, so the words Bozrah and leldom in this text are figures of speech descrip• tee of a smite of great slaughter. Whatever else the prophet may have meant to describe, he most certainly meant to depict the Lord hesus Christ, Eying, "Who is this that cometh from lateen. with dyed garments from rale, traveling in the greatness of strength?" When a general ia about to go out to the wars, a, flag and sword are publicly presented to him, and the maidens bring dowers, and tbe yang men load the ;cannon, and the train starts amidst a lzuzza that drowns the thunder of the wheels and the shriek of the whistle. But all this will give no idea tre the exciteneent that there must have been tn heaven when Olarist started out on the campaign ot the world's conquest. If they could have foreseen the siege that would be laid to Film, and the mal- treatment He would suffer, and the burdeus he would have to cam, and the battles he would have to fight, lethink there would have been a million volun- teers in heaven who would have in- sisted on coming along with Him; but no, they only accompanied Him to the gate, their last shout clear down to the earth, and space between the two worlds bridged with a great hostin,ne.. You know there is a wide difference between a man's going off to battle and comingback again. When he goes off, it is with epaulets untangled, with bans ners unspecked, with horses sleek and shining from the groom. All that there is of struggle and pain is to come yet. So it was with Christ,. He had not yet fought a battle. He was starting out, a.nd though the world did not give Him a warm-hearted greeting, there was a gentle mother who folded Him in her arms; and a babe finds no difference be- tweeu a stable and a palace, between courtiers and camel drivers. As hesus ;Mopped on the stage of this world it was amidst angelic shouts in the gal- teries and amidst the kindest materned ministrations. But soon hostile forces began to gather. They deployed from the Sanhedrine They were detailed from the standing array. They came oat from the Cesarean castles. The vagabonds of the street joined the gen- tlemen of the mansion. Spirits rode up from hell, and in long array there 'eam a torce together that threatened to put to rout this newly -arrived One from heaven. hesus, now seeine, battle gathering, lifted His own stoma- ard; but who gathered about it? How feeble the recruits! A. few shoremen, a blind beggar, a woman with an ala- baster box; another woman with two mites, and a group of friendless, money- aess and positionless people came to His standard. What chance was there for; /Real Nazareth against Him. Beth- lehem against Him. °assents= against Him. Jerusalem against Him. Galilee against him. The courts against Him. The army against Him. The throne against Him. The world against Him. All hell against Him. No wonder they asked Him to surrender. 13ut He could not surrender, He could not apologise, He could not take any back steps. He had come to strike for the deliverance .of an enslaved race, and He must de the work. Then they sent out their pickets to watch Him. They saw in what house they went, and when He came out. They watched what He ate, and who with: what He drank, and how much. They did not dere tomake their final assault, for they knew not but that behind Him there might be a reinforce- ment that was not seen. But at last the battle came. It was to be more fierce than Bozrah, more bloody than Gettysburg, involving more than Auster- litz, more combatants employed than at Chalons a ghastlier conflict than all the battles of the •earth put together, thougle Edmund Burke's estimate of thirty-five thousand millions of the slain 'be lima:rate. The day was Fridley. The hour was between teeelve and three o'clock. The field was a slight hillock aorthwest of hernalern. The fortes engaged were earth and hell, joined as allies on one side, and. heaven, repre anted by a solitary inhabitant, on the other. lam hour came. Oh, what a time it ev'as! I think that that day the universe looked on. The spirits that could be spared from the heavenly temple, and mould get conveyance of wing or char - hot, came down from above, and spirits getting furlough from beneath came em; and they listened, and they looked, and they watched.. Oh, what an uneveu 'tattle! Two worlds armed on one side; an unarmed man on the other. The 'regiment of the Roman army at that three stationed at herusalem began the atteck. They knew how to fight, for they belonged to the most thoroughly' drilled armyof all the vvorlaa With spears glittering in the sun, they ckarg- ;led tip the hill. The horses prance and hear amidst the excitement of the popu- lace -the heels of the riders pluziged in the flanks, urging them on. The weep - ons begin to tell on Christ See how faint He looks. There the blood starts, and there, and there, and there. If Ile is to have .reinforcements let Hen cafl them up now. No; he must do this work alone -alone. Ile is dying. Feel for yourself of the whet; the pulee is weaker. reel under the aerie the 'Warmth is less. He m dylng. Y, their pronounce Him dead. And just at that enoment that they prottounced Han death ale rallied, and from His wounds 'no unsheathed a weapon that staggered ,the Roman legions dern, the hill, and puled the 'Satanic battalions into the pit. "Tt was a weapon of love -meal' Jove, all-congnerine lore. Mightier then javelin or spear, it triumphed over all Put back, ye armies of earth aud hell! The tide of gattle tuns. Jesus Math overcome/ Let the people stand apart .and make a line, that Ile may pass -down from Calvary to Jerusalem, and • thence ou and out all around the world. The battle m fought. The vietay is ; achieved. Tho triumphal march is be ..gun. Hark the hoofs of the warrior steed, and the trampieg of a great mul- titudel for he has many trieurie now. Plie Hem of earth awl heavea ed. • vaneee. ;Cheer! Cheer! Who a this that .eotuetle erom Iedoite with dyed gar - 'meats from Barale traveling in the ettreatnees of 1Xi streagth lare eteehOld therh_geheyr jesetelation 014 blessed and startling feet, People teal of Christ as though He were going to 40 something grew] for us after a whileahe has done it. People tallt as though, ten or twenty yenrs from now, in tbe elesing hours of our life, or In some terrible pass of life, Jesus Win help as. Ile has deem the work eh ready. He did it eighteen hundred awl etaty-one years ago, You might as well talk of Ithishington as though he were going to aceieve our nationel incle- : advice in 1900, as to speak of Christ thoUgli hle were going to achieve' Gee etilvation is huo Astaire. 11a die DI in the year of our Lord he, eighteen t'unclred and sixty-one years ago, ox the field of Bozrah, the CaPteln of out ealvation aghtieg unto death for your and my emancipation. All we have td do is to accept that fact in our heart kW hearts, aud we are free for thie !world and we are free for the world to some. But, lest we ;night not accept, Christ comes through here to -day, "trav- eling in the greatness of 1 -lis strength," not to tell you that He is going to fight eor you some battle in the future, but to tell you that the battle is already fought, and the victory already won. •You have noticed that, when soldier,' come home from the wars, they carry', on their flags the names of the battle fields where they were distinguished. The Englishman coming back has on is banner Inkerman and Barad:ma; the Frenchman, Jena and Eylau; the German, Versailles and Sedan. • And Christ luts on the banner He carries pa conqueror the names of ten. thousand battle fields He on. for you and ale. He rides past all our homes of be- reavement -by the door bell swathed in sorrow, by the ;wardrobe black with woe, by tlae dismantled fortress of our strength. Oorae out aud. greet Him to- day, 0, ye people! See the names of all the battle passes on His flag. Ye who tare poor, read on this ensign the story af Christ:a hard crusts and, pillowltass head. Ye who are persecuted, read here of the ruffians who chased Him from His first breath to His last. Mighty to soothe your troubles, mighty to balk your calamities, mighty to tread down your foes, "traveling in the greatness of His strength." Though His horse be brown with the dust of the march, and the fetlocks be wet with the carnage, and the bit be red with the blood of your spiritual foes, He comes up now not eximusted front the battle, but fresh as when He went into it-conain,g up from It ozrah, "traveling in the greatness of His strength." You know that when Augustus, ;tied nionetantine, and Trajan, and Titus came back from the wars, what a time there Was. You know they came on horsebnek or in chariots, and there were trophies before and there were captives behind, and there were people shouting on all sides, and there were garlands flung from the window, and over the highway a triumphal arch was sprung. The solid masoney to -day at Beneventura, Rimini and Rome, still tell their admiration for those heroes. And shall we let our Oou- queror go without lifting any acclaim? Have we not flowers red enough to depict the carnage, wiete enough to celebrate the victory, fragrant enough to breathe the joy? Those men of whom I just spoke dragged their victims at the char- iot wheels; but Christ, our Lord, ta,kes tisose who once were captives and in- vites them into His chariot to ride, while He puts around them tho arm of His strength, saying, "I have loved thee with. an everlasting love, and the waters shall it drown it, and tbe fires shall not burn it, and eternity shall not exhaust it." If this be true I cannot see how any man can carry his sorrows a great wbile. If this Conqueror erone Bozrah is going to beat back all your griefs, why not trust Hire? Oh! do you not feel under this gospel your griefs falling back, and. your Mars drying up, as you hear the trarup of a thousand illustrious promises, led on by the Conqueror from Boma, "traveling, traveling, in the greatnes.s of his strength? On that Friday which the Episcopal ehurc.h rightly celebrates, railing it "Good Friday,' your soul and mine were eon - tended for. Oa taut clay Jesus proved Himself mightier than earth and hell; and when the limas struck Him, He gathered them up into a sheaf, as the reaper gathers the grain, and He stacked them. Mounting the horse of Apodatypse, He rode down through the ages, `travel- ing in the greatness of His strength." On that day your sins and mine perished, if we will only believe it. There may be some one here who may say, "I don't like the color of this Con- queror's garments. You tell me that His garments were not only spattered with the blood of confliet, but also that the were soaked, that they were saturated, that they were dyed in it." I admit iti You say you do not like that. Then. I quote to you two passages of scripture: "Without the shedding of blood there is no remission." "In the blood is the atone - meat." But it was not your blood. It wee his own. Not only euough to red- den His garments and to redden 1 -Xis horse, but enough to wash away the sins of the world. Oh the blood on His brow, the blood on His ha.nds, the blood on His feat, the blood on His side. It seems as if an artery must have been cut. There is a fountain filled with blood Drawn from Emmanuel's veins, And sinners plunged beneath that flood Lose all their guilty stains. weeps, each prayer end sob efling WIth a kiss of ,the pale cheele. Be dint of eineuese she gets the little one tamales the ordeal. After it le all oyer tee rather is taken down, Brala or nese vas fever sets in and oue day she leaves the convalescent cht) a with a enotherte blessing, and goes up to join the three in the kingdom, Life for life! Substitution! The fact is tha there ere an uncouuted number a mothers who, after they leave navigated a large fain - he' of childrea through all the diseases of inhume' and got them fairly started up the flowerieg hope of boyhood and' girlhood, Immo only strength enough left to die, They fade away. Somet cell It consuraption; some call it nervous pros, tratiom sonie eall it intermittent or ma- larial disposition; but 1 cell it martyr. does• of the domestic, cirele. Life to life. Blood for blood. ‘Sabstitationl Or perhaps the mother lingers long enough to see a, son get on the wrong road. and his former kindness becomes rough reply when she expresses anxieter about him. But she goes rigat on, looking carefully after his Apparel, ree Membering his every birthdarr with son* memento, -and when he is brought home, worn out with dissipation, nurses hiral Oil lie gets vrell, 'and starts kine a and hopes, and expects, and prays, an bounsels, and suffers, until her etrengtle gives out and she falls. Ine is gshis, and attendants, bending over her Mir ow, asks her if he has nue' Message o leave, and she makes great effort to say something, but out of three or four minutes of indistinct utterance they can catch but three words, ihrIfy poor boy!" The simple fact is sho! died for him. Life for life. Substitue tient Some of our modern theologians wha. want to give God lessons about the best way to save the world, tell ur they do not went any blood in their redempe tion. They want to take this home ble the bit, and burl him back on hto haunches, and tell this rider from Bos - rah to go around, some other way. Look out, lest ye fall under the flying hoofs! of this horse; lest ye go down under the sword of this Conqueror from Bozrahe What meant the blood of pigeons In the old dispensation? the blood of the butt lock? the blood of the heifer? the blood; of the Lamb? It meant to prophesy tad cleansing blood, the pardoning blood, the healing blood of this Conqueror who, comes up from (Barak "traveling hi the greatness of His strength." I catch tt handful of the red torrent that rushes" taut from the heart of the Lord, and h throw it over this audience, hoping that' one drop of Its cleansing power may: tome upon your soul. 0 Jesus! in that/ crimson tide wash our soulat We, accept; Thy sacrifice! Conqueror of Bozrah,have Mercy upon usl We throw our garments its the way! We fall into line! Ride on, Jesus, ride on! "Traveling, traveling iz the greatness of Thy strength." But after awhile the returning ahone quetar will reach the gate, and all the armies of the Saved will be with Efira. I ,hope you will be there, and I will be there. As we go through the gate andaround about the throne for the review, "a great multitude that a man can number" -all heaven can tell withe out asking, right away, which one le Jesus, not only because of the bright-, ness of His face, but because, while all the other inhabitants in glory are rebed in white -saints in white, client-, bit in white, seraphim in white -His robes shall be scarlet, even the dyed earments of Bozrah. I catch a glimpser of that triumphant joy, but the gate opens and shuts so quickly I can heasi only, , half a sentence, and it is this, "Unto Him who hath washed us in Hi* blood." At two o'clock to -morrow afternoon go among the places of business or toil. It will be no difficult thing for you to find men who, by their looks, show you then they are overworked. Tiny are prema- turely old. They are hastening rapidly, towards their decease T.hey have goue tarough crises in beain.ess that shattered heir nerrous system and pulied on the brain. They have a Alertness of breath, and a pain in sthe back of the head, ane ea night an insomnia that alarms them. Way are they drudging a business early, 'aercl late? For fun? No; it would be diffioult to extract any amusement out ee that exhaustion. Becatate they are avaricious? In many cases ao. Becaum their own personal expenses are lavish? No; a few hundred dollars Nevoid meet all their wants. Tise simple feet is, thes man is endming all that fatigue andr exasperation, and wear and tear, to keep, his home prosperous. There is au invis- ible line reaching from that store, from that bank, from -that shop, from that scaffolding, te a quiet scene a few blocks, a few EniloS away, and there is the seeret, of that business endurance. He is simply the chaunpion of a lioniestad, for %Odell he wins bread, and wardrobe, and educa- tion,, and imosperity, and in tit1th battle ten thousand men fall. Of telt businesa MOn Whern buty, nine die of overworla tor others. Some sudden disease finds them with no power of resistance, and they are gone. Life for life. Blood for blood. Su heti tion ! At one o'clock to -morrow morning the hour when slumber is most uninter- rupted and most profunde walk esnid the ewhling; houses et the city. Mere and, there you will find a dim light, because lt is tae household etuatom to keep a subdaed light burning; but most of the hoases from base to top are as dark as though uninhabited, A merciful God has sent forth the exchange' of sleep, aud he puts his wings over the city. But Yonder is a clear light burning,and outside on the window casement a, glass or pitcher coataining fewel for al sick child; the food is set in 'hes freshl air. This is the sieth tight that mother has sat up with that sufterer. She has to the, last point obeyed the physician preecriptiom not roviag a drop too much reer two little, or a anoirteot too min or too lata hlie is very imixoua for she has btiried thtee children vei the same digeasesand she repos, te 44111i. BYIERGSNOY How to Render ifolok an Brno. tive Help. WHAT TO DO IN YARIODS CAM heeteetrehteleeteous-Iiew to Sten Wool lug -Soothing remedies for Illuras-dro Isislodite Vorelan Ilodhes SHE BAD Efl ON. Sensation Created by a Pair of Divided Skirts San New York street. ° A pretty woman mane near ecuessioning bleceade in the Oitty Hall plea just before 6 o'olock lest evenine. gandrede taunel to look at her, and every sue else turned to atmerbe.ite whist the ethers were koking at until all who a moment before hied their feces turned Brooklynward were faced the rightabent. " dust a bit bow-legged," was the meted observation of a fasbionably °fail 'meg man who has grown hollow chested under the weieht ef a big hunch of violets. "Bed farm," was the sententious reply of tbe young mess middle-aged csompanien, deliberteely given efter a survey of the object ef Itis oritleisra ever Me eye glom& "1 dorat know. Peetty trim," remanded the youth. " Auklo well turne& aleathiog the tatter with that,' "Oh, ib wasn't that, dear boy ; no that, you know. Its seems detweely bad form though, to wear riding metre an a promenade. A group of gigglitag Brooklyn girls, who had been leaking, stuffed their beedker- obiefe into their mouths tied stareat for the. bridge. The youn Italy who onesioned sel the; commotion and possessed suffident attraction to ',top the stream of hanpy Jeanette hurrying to the big beareing house over the bridge was clad ist the Watt dregs reform style in a suit of dark material. A dark Derby bet gum mounted her pert little head. A (ahem - able coat, with wide flowing skirts reaching down almosit to the lames, served to hide ;stub of a pair -if it non be oiled opair-ef divided skirts. Thee letter were rally little better than Turkish trousers with voluminene lege. Way were caught up near the knee land hung in graceful folds, oemesellog the ohf to the top of neet.fitting high gaiter bate. As be ef the vielete remarked, the aisles displayed were fault- less ; but his other criticism, reileobing en the parallelism of the lady's walking apper. abiss, seemed equally jell], far the skirts 'seemed to be rather mere divided than need he. Sbes carried a long -handled umbrella jauntily in her left hand, and, with long owloging Melds% made her way to Broad- way, where she was 1011t 111 the oravvd.- New York Sun. As if Anybody Doubted U? An line* lady has, publiehed & book deraosearsaing,that woman le the superior of man. It would appear from this that in Englcuaa there arta ;Iola extraorelinary and 0001E3003E0 peasone wto hottest this prepo- sition. Conundrums. When 0 a guett like a geed watch ? When he gate Whet pillar never mappable anything! Oaterpillar, woo of Plobbes, Notions. Hobbes lose a greet contempt for rare reatilog men. Ho said that if he bad read as much as they ho would hove been se Ignorant. Why We Wink. A welter itt the "Medical Review" also 1,000 wattle to explain Why We Wink." Tab ortiole will htsve little inberesb for any man who hat lived in a prohibition Siete.-- Ohicago Despatch. Thitt yen the radians will celebrete the three hundredth anniversary of ate peadaso Nen of the fireb opera. reeotnitther-I Wouldels fghb my gad mon. First Oembateate-ele OA iodate Iler, sun, Second Combetent-AM he ailed me a it zy Joaret. Festoon:es ker.-Well, 1 eve Ada fight over A difference et Opinion ; you bobh raw be tight HEN an esooldent hap. peas there le usualy net much Um to deolde what 0 beet to be done. Help, to be effeottual, meet be prompt, end often delay implies fur- ther injury or ions of life. It is well to fix ie the mind a few general prinotple* of breatmeat in the mere women aeadente. When the emergence' arises, these are recalled. in. eldnotively anti form Mee baste of adieu, The means by whieh they are be be omitted into effete] fellow teetotally, and the woe- eity is met. IN CASE OP POISONINE. Empty the stemeoh give an antidote if It MS be had; when there is muoh panto. bion stimulate the sufferer. Au emcee° its the readied way to SE' complieh the flub objeet. Give one tatble- opeenfra of =there stirred in a tunthier of tepid water, repeat several times 0neoes- sary ; two tablespoonfuls of syrup or vela ef ipeeme repented; a smell helatea- ;manful (30 pains) of whitevitriol (sulphate of Mame in hail a tumbler of tepal water. 031okle the back of the throat with a father, oameleehair brash er the finger. Some poll:ions paraarze theater:moll se fent emetics will nob set, in which axe the etomaoh may be wathed out if a long piece of rubber tubing or a feudal!' spina can be obtained. Pet a little oil or vamline en the end of the tubs, held the tongue dowa with a teaspoon or teeth -brush handle, push the tube es far book in the south as pos- sible, that lb may enter the food poop and net the air trot When about eight or nine inches ham paned down attach a funnel to the end, and holding that or the bag of the fountain mine above bhe head, pour in tie or three plats ef water. Ltswer the funnel below the level of the stemma and the water will run out. Repeat the process until 0 comet away clear. In a oese of pelsoning from strong %oldie when the lining of the mouth and etennach are cor- roded, this metns oannob be need. SPECIAL .ANTIDOTES. In poisoning by opium. Meng coffee should be given, the viebim being kept roused and awake, if peasible, until medetal ata may be obtained. Tee antidotes to anemia aro tablespoon- ful dotes of dielyzed iron, magnesia and aster cal. Cerbolle acid ; Give a tablespoonfal of Epsom salts stirred in water and repeat. 0 calio add: Give chalk, lime, lime -water or magnetite. freely. Corrosive sublimate: White of egg sad milk in quentibles. Itx pawning by add the use ef alkalis te indiased, as setae maw:seam oheak, lime and anemias. When the mischief bas been wrought by throng elluelie add musb be used, S3 vinegar, lemon juice or herd eider. When the muttons membrane of the month is muoh infle.raed or dittreyed give raw eggs, flour stirred in water, ffaxseed tea, arrowroot, or any soothing drink. Stimulation au be %WWI by meant of hot water bottles tr begs te the feat and ever the heart, and by rublang the extremities. Abelson., stimulant should be tidatinistered very oeutionsly. aleraeleg. In °billow they proceed Oen a treriety *f 0016011 NM* of •Vgliteii are 0100- Peretivele liaimpertselta A at of itedigeOlott Or the ifrItellitet beet getting *tit Men redoes theta. 11111.7 War leilklite the woe. onocennent of Mimeo, hat they are made)* 4001; and while the doctor shliald be sent for, there is no ;mese for immediete alarm. lifhe obild is rigid for a moment, with fixed oyes, olonohed hands en4 contracted fit00. Then the mussels/it telex, and oho the littils peeked S110 Wit 13 heavy Sleep. ' The ohild ehealn be pieced in a hob het& a equlokly as posible, a tobleepooaful of mueleed beteg edded to the weber. A °loth wrung oub of oold teeter Ishoold be wrapped &round the heedand changed as it become* warm. After being !monied he eleould be lifted out, wrepped in a bleaket and left to eleo. 11 there Is another canoeist= the habit ehould be repeated., =mese The pain from slight beau is veri, great. An expellent application is a thiels piste of common basking see% moistened with water, spreal on a plena of Hosea or cotton, and bound on the pert. Mete cos be kept wet by anatezing water ea it from a vane or cloth itetli the smarting it seethed. A thick °exiting ef mbar& atm be need in- stead of the oda, or wheat fienr, 11 teething boater on be heti, bolt neither should be ap- plied if the skin is broken. Iva this case Ole Debtor to toe onetime, olive or Booed ell. The doetor wIll apply scene preparation °entailing =hellcat/JAL 11 the air oan be offeetuellyemauded from a burn the pain 0 relieved. Blisters should be prteked and the Mad absorbed wlth a soh death before applying a If the clothing adheres to the 'skim the loom parb shoald be an away, and the pathos of =aerial soaked elf with ail er warm avatar. When the 'Diary Is extensive the sufferer will be preabrated, and may die front the ehook. Hersh should ee applied to the ex- tremities and over the heart, and hot drinks given nribil the &saber caws. In brume from strong acid the part should be covered with dry baking oda or lime, as the alkali will neutrelize elle acid. No water should in used, bub & dreesitig of costneliee or il applied after the alkali has been brushed off, When the horn has been amused by an alkali an mold must he used. A person recovering from the effaces of es burn requires very nottrohing food. Roomer UODIES In TEE ME. These do not venally otemelon much tis - comfort for a time, end, so the pessage of the canoe ear is olosed at the end by a mem- bream, they cannot penetrate bother, and may sefely be left until they man bo re- moved by a competent person. When an lama ha enteral, tram the heed on one cede, with the affeated ear uppermost, and gently poar in a little warne water. When this rani out the drowned tatender comes with it. • Water should not be mod wisee a pee or bean has been introatmea, beams° they sWell when motets. POREIGN WEIRS IN TEM TEROAT. This may be a very serious accadent whether it; ewers in the windpipe or the feed passage. Its domande imendlesto action or the reinab may be a fete" sons. Send for the doebor at ones, 01 ha meet have to epen the windptpe to gave the viothee life. Montle:so slap the rarer= en the bar* between the shoulders. insert the fingers as far down as namable be try to grasp the obitruotien and remove to Turn the persees head dews:sward and clap the book feasibly. 11 breathing citage3 tea patient ;hoed be lead en the back, the armee palled upward, the handle rutting an tee top of tke heed, then brought down ana premed an the chest, repeating the marina:sate 16 times icr, a min- ute. trourearo. TO ORE= REMOREVAGES. Step the homorrhege by meant of pres- elects, position, hese or cold, and if neo - eatery, n types. When it large vein or artery ha e been (severed it le sornetimea s diffietat matter to step the floe of bleed. If bile cab Is en a limb tie a hard knot in ca, towel, place the knot inside the arm or leg as high al possi- ble and twieb the towel firmly roared the limb. A stiek aan be thrust through it and. used as a handle to twieb by if netamary. This stops the clrouletion an4 oats off the supply of bleol. It should uet be kept up more them an hour en the arra and rather longer en the lag. Ioe, or very hob water applied with a spenge or cloth will cheek the bleeding when lb oomes frem & nu saber of emelt points. When possible the wounded pot should be raised so bhe blood will flew away from it toward bhe heart. Bieding a buneh of oebwebs or a handfed of flour on the wonad,or bathing its in strong *Jaeger, is sometimes effetentel. Bleeding dope from the blood oottnalottog or elating. Alt our shortie should be direoted towerd helping it to acoomplish this by every available means. Hetnerrhage from the lunge is always lamming, but unless 0 is very violent seldom threatens life imeiedLetely. Reim the head and stoaldere slightly with pil- low. Fill a &ober with boiling water, pour in a teaspoonful of opirits of turpen• tine and let the fumes be brawled. Give small pleas of lee and enferee petfeob cella. Blood from the lungs is bright resi aud frothy, and le (soughed or spit up. Blood foam tbe stemma le dark, mixed with partiolet of food, and cosset la the s.ett of vortabing. Ma person should be kept perfectly quiet, lying down, and toe wrapped in a Moth or Ma bag pieced ever the stomach. Epletexte, or bleeding from the non, ha sometimes very trenblesome. Keep the head thrown back, holding a web cleth or sponge to resolve the bleed, at the mane time ralsiag the atm above the heed. Frew the finger', firmly en each ids of the nom where 0 Joao the ttpper hp. Paseo some cold autumnal) as a lump of toe, at the beak of the web, or on the forehead, at the bridge of the nose. If these remedies are leeffeetinal luxe is little fine alb or powdered alum sniffed into the nostril& MIEN BONES ARE 1333033331. A broken boas need nos be set hatnedi- shay. Teel knowledge eaves muoh ussuoses- eery auxteby when the hooter omelet bo pro- cured tets ooce. who patio 1558.00 prat inset comfortable a position ae possible, reed meets nearly tar - responding to the aatural one. lb is Ocoee. eery to give eappert above and below the hassle Mutate ate injared petty very tunefully, net to force Ova rouglz eade of the bone through the eine. Improviee spliete of Mune kind -tem Arlo of Wood, a coople of Maras book coverts, er pieces of patateboad. Plea etie On each fade, theta it is a lirab theta 18 in- jured, and bind theca in plaeo with hosed. itterohiefs, A lotsg ptliove firmly filed will auseorta the permute, or in ate of Jujuy to a leg ib may be fattened to its follew if nothing better Oln be dote, teniembeeiseg to tie it stove end below tbe lajurry. nOsittMeionS. (lonvidalene tn grown pinions are eleneyet Feinting is caused hy sn irtterenaptIon of the supply of bleed to the brain. The head should be lowered immediately. Often laying the person down will revive her without othet nweetares. The heed may be allowed les bong over the side of the couch for a few neemeats. Smelliog• mite may be held Me the nose and heat applied over the hearts be stimulate it's notion. Open a wtadow or eater door to admit plenty of freak airs end unfasten the clothing to primal free emulation. In sevens awes when uneentoloatness it pre- loaged, a mustard paste may be plaited over the heart ; 0 the brathleg step artificial respiration can ha began. Lb le mien to try to give atimulenbe by mouth tolesthe permit is aufficiently coattoteue to be able to swallow. The attack tuntelly penes off in a few minute*, bet the iuvelid should be male to lie shill anal be kept, quiet for some time after 0. ABOUT NERT-DAEIVIELS. .1 Little Philosophizing on tho Hainan Enigma. GIBBER OF TR FAMILY BLACK SOK? • It le said etv807ytbfl°elltnAll;heria:a' itenWalk shostere and pliortichtheiricritak izipD3skiealr holo bblaeokaele•hh bhe itepveortait all thr quotable, weledoing faraillee. ns ough. olif:sins beeemee te skeleton its the eleeell Of tato The nenr,daleweel is a caries/a. physfee logleel being, and an outgu He pray gat a fair etarb in the World, after the aura preliminary ;whaling, 13na, be alt atiaPeP;Irrecleartildi4hPirs'IpItia.:hatiass safrealf:libbaraidghhbtt hope'. Ltdas his neighbor's', when, jest es he eine fearly started In ts beacons or profusiond eereer, kte mildesay brake do we, and never. reoevere blmeelf. Wktether 0 is conetteationa, or a weak - nets inherited from hie pregenttere'who. cen rosy l Bab the facet remains, hed this nhende,e-weel maidenly oellespees, never to regain his eqeilibrium in this life. A large number of these what failureares main burdens en their friends end orpoita tanceu for many yews; and although they as never able to provide for themselves:re, (inept at rare intervals, they nevertheless coatinne decent, if not reopeeteble menet bers af emsion in bheir own way. A number, however, gradaatly fall Mins dissipated habitt wad diegreoe themeelves, and all oennectecewith them. ()there lapse into oricainel courees and mks frequent appeeraneee at Police ()envier, and perhept ultimetely get transpertea for a term ef years, only to re -appear in pnblio- as returned convicts with a tiokethalseve. It is this latter class that may be an- sidered the skeletorebotheoleset to father, mather, brother and caster, and a respeet- able family feels bitterly the degredetlen of having v. retereed conviet as a member of the household. The meet numerous clam, and the one we have principally In view at present, is the. goodotetured, geod-for-nothing, idiot lazy, thriftless seemp, who will not work and, cermet starve. A welt...educated, bright and intelleotena lad, the favorite of the family and.bhe hope, of the louseheid, is sent to college. 11 Into, be the rest of the family dint themselves to give him a, profeseloa ; and after yore at melees, when it is expel:Mira he will enter on his °erect: as a (looter, or olergymen, and reply the old folios at home, for their ungruiging generosity, 0 0 dis- covered their impels are vain. One ouch the writer hea in hie mind's eye.. Ha Emeriti ten yeara at the mayoralty, helped throngh long yeare by a doting mather and ambibleue orothera and eaten. Ho was the Ben al a %barer Whe herl Emmet mealy years of his life etenahreaking, while the glrle were empleyed in mills and • the two b. -ethers as tradesmen. eke a youth he heel theme spatial Mall - ties, and taken many prizes while at soheol; it was therefore expected he would dis- tinguish himeelf at college. Five years posed, and apparently hie • progress was how, 1 or he had to, rennin setalon after Beeriest without getting his diploma, as 0, deotor ; and although he walked the infirnaeriess and appeared to be getting all necattery heowledge, atber ten yeara he gave it up and returned to hie father's house, be remain a burden on the old man while he lived. Atter hia father's dem% he wants to reside with one brother'end when he grew tire& of keeping the ettuiatea etu lent he Impend on hie dater]] ia the s ene wey, till they also grew restless esder the burden and insisted that he should work for himself. Far a number of years he had lived wlbh the saeond brother, who le married and has a large fatally. Under the plea of ill -health he /les in bad till midelay, and then wanders about the streets, "chumming" with everyone Ilke himself, or, by preference with anyone better off than himself, vele could stand " denim " and pest for a genes at billiards. The foregoing is perhaps an exeeptIonal case; but) there are meny chronic eaves among a the unemployed who prefer to go about looking for work with no desire to find it, and (sponge" on relatious who are little better off, exempt in willingneis to work when they can get 0. • Tee toeless neler•daeweel may he helped in various ways be earn an honeat liveli- hood, acid time after time misted with. money; bub 11 is all to no purpose -hie anabiblen does not lie in the direction of labobre. T nenadae•weel may drink, and proba- bly does drink when he gets a chance; ha cannot in all eaten be mid to love lb for its own sake -at lamb he 19103 Osna and idle, neseise. more,tnol 11 sla impossible to oure bit after he has become a chronie idler. You may lecture, adviee, scold, laselt, and oven fling him mat of the house; he knows when he is well off, ho waver, and taint ib cal in goad part, ant comes is ab rtetts nieel-time with a baleen appetite than theee who have worked hard during the interval. Rice and intimential people ship the neer- dae,weel off to ems foreign actuary, or to one of the 001011(138, where he is expected to make a living in anycepaoitywIthout bring- ing &agrees oa hie relatioes. Ten °hawses to one he returns to the old country, having grown homatelok ea soon as his Inostey was clone. Wean more can they do with him ? Whey may sod hitn off again to "teeth fields and P9'Ilitit'hueryeanssusseywe2;en dere Idea in badmen], or on a farm of hie own, with the reselti thee 10 a very short time, 'through miensetrage- snent or Iszlnete, he becomebatakrupt, and retina again to the bosom of hie family. Sons of c'ergymen, doceoro /101' real nod gezblem an (who aro ladepandent ef lassie or pretest:eau), drib into the reeks el neer- dae-weels, as well as village wastreie area city loefera. 17 uelly, however, the waleto-do on af ford to keep the bleak heap of the fleck In the beokgronsel by provitliag face wish the necessaries of 110, ani time keeping temp - taloa taut of hie path. 'Maus he has lob all mama of raped - ability end deo may he is q ate co tbant bo tato away his time wisheab bringtog open diegrace art hie kith end kin, so bog at they provide for his wade. The neeralemweel °rens fro sa year to year by boreowlog mon ay, if he lie athelned to b,g. As long Si frienels are wliliog to help tarn he dem net karat Ede snot or bramble his ruled ab sus the future, mrt.al get time of lett importrattittett ulhm .tely, rule asquatibermes eefuse lent Mee even a citatclag, and thea he mate either beg or go tee the poorhate ; the ilea.. of Weaning to Veork aver °Mare hie hglitda'd se, oat before his time, he duke isa the °veto ;sloe of ell vegan able poreenzi, awe at leaath Atoka inS4 ht grave ot the mai of as Wee toe, w llama Ws. Whey 'rafted. Jams -We 1 ol& fellow, how aro you Jamb heard that yea had gene into the nem - paper badness. Sineett--Itesijest bought a caentry paper. ,Tenee--Thet se ? Why, you eau retve me an °ecotone' puff then. Smith -Certainly; what are yen bnly with new 1 sIonee-i am itt the clothing bustness-ready-mada eletbhlug. Smith - Reel Them you. ion give me an occasioned stale of Mahe& honee-Well, daunts about the. It cabs money fics menufaeture clothing, yea know. Smith -Math true; end it costs tiothiug to menufactinre news- men i Theft they p note Grass Mac GEartn. 121 swa io lienbctoky when a yew% 'lady =tete 9, elranele weering e, ring she tarns It *roam! ttree sammos. Tele she repeats until she here tensed 2tt raigt. Tan she turns the weietng rate of some reeentlyonerrial lady, eel the firm owe she shekes hands whl . anerwerd wet be hot latere hasand. If nob, the rings, hems not been tensed duet eight. -Nem York Recorctar. erennanos Deadw sysamathy. " Weather/ nether -They say that no ma- te, hew oae name, awe a ono bee mattered more. All the came they oeuldeb beet me la taste bustaertee for I hems walked this child oho enters taght for fatly eix hours. Mother (oebnly)-Yee, Henry, dear; but supp sae yen heel me neer eh° Pole, where the nigets are OE audits long? Jug. Whir - Oh, 1 may, Seelbhers, why 13/0 gas melmee lIbzg (she AVA41? 2" "Dean knelt, Jettessy. Because every meth heed is agetate theca 2" "No. Boom they evidenbly silently Baal away." teeth yeer359 people died on the steamers en route frova Herette to the Melte& Mabee. Whoa a pabtha aloe -holder cameo to feel that he is a big goo 0 is elate for him be be fired. Mr. Balton] (In 0303 corner of the hall. toona-By geethst boy et mita hat dettoed with more globs then any. other awing foliose' /Os the teem He le ma his steelier over ;waits. Idea Deiccon tita emotion °some of bbs heliteeett -It is lot mooing to note ho rrettefteltut end how ihpuler Willie ie welt the mann/ leallet. He !gnat bit like his f tame was ab hie age. There Were 45,00happ1icanorei for prstents lest yens al whie1e25,,00.0 Were gtatsted, The origiusl trampat was a coves h