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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1898-04-21, Page 34 � . __ ___ - . k. . ., , � . . - T!howanda of t1lem cried for water all God; NO&h a type Of 011,40t, because he th"T lay field the �Jght the delivered lkis own family from delugp; otta4a' empt or o�tent;atloo, but a Chrlis� on the after bat to and it They were home- MaIcUsedeo a type of Ch,riet, because he . . .."Irlll, got not. sick and received no message from their bad no dec-essor or successor; Joseph ,� THERE CAN BE NO REMISSION OF ioved ones. They died in barns, inia ty-pat TChxist, because lie was cast SINS WITHOUT IT. bushes, in ditches. the buzzards of the I olut by his brathres; Moses a type of , srunimer-heat the on] y a.ttendants, on Christ,, because he was 9, deliverer from I — . I A Powerttre, Sermon Which heratles and their obsequies. No one but the infin- bondage; Joshus a type of Chwllat, be- Ito God, who knows everything, knows cause he was a conqueror; Samson a . , Reiterates like Central Doctrine of the the ton thousandth part of the tength't,ype of C%xis4 becomes of his stirength � suhstitutionary sacrifice for sin and and breadth, and depth' and height of I to slay the lions and ca,rwy off the iron 1. linvidanially Imulbits No 4c scir- anguJah of the northern and southern'gates of impossibility; Solomon a type , Sacrifice - or. Talmage"a Eloquent 111� battlefields. Why did these fatherslof Christ in the affluence of his dom- . words. � I I Washington, Dr. Tal- leave their children and go to the � inion; Jonah. a type of Chwist, because front, and did these men, 'of the stormy sea in which he threw , April 10—Rev. I � why yonng 1� - . mage this morning preached a power- , pastponitig the marriage day. start himself for the rescue of Others, but oat into this proLabilitles of never 1 pu, I; togethiar Adam and No" and Mel- _'� . ful. sermon from the text Hebrews I I LKI li . 22, "Without Is - coming back ? For a principle they I chisedic and Joseph and Moses and I, Joshua Samson � shedding of blood no died. Life for life I Blood for blood and and Solomon and � I � . remission." He said: Substlitution I I Joasib and they would not make a frag- �� � John G. Whittier, the last of the , But we need not go so far. What is Mont of a Christ, a quarter of a that monument in the cemetery? It ls'Christ. the half of a Christ or the mil- l. I great school of American poets that to the doctors who fell in the southern lionth part of a 0hrist. � � made the last quarter of this century epidemics. Why, go? Were there not I ' He forsook a throne and sat down on � , brilliant, asked me in the White Moula- aniough sick to be attended in these Jais own footstool. He came from the ,; 'i tAirks one morning after prayers, in northern latitudes? Oh, yes ,, but the I top of g4ory to the b .ottom of humlli- doctor a few Medical, books In Ilia I ation and changed a oi,rouniference seLr- 11 � which I had given oat Cowper's! fam- � puts 1. d'aphic, for a circumference diab,olio. valse, and soine vials of medicine, an . 41n about "the fountain filled 1'17 leaves his patients here in the hands, Once waited on by angels, now biased , iall.,�Inwd," "Do you really believe . ., of other physivians and takes the rail at by brigands. From &far and high trai'a. Before be to the Infected up be came down, past meteors, swift- � t L� i I'll .0 Is a literal application of the tb h gets . , blood of Ch.rist to the soul?" My regions be passes crowded rail trains,, er Ilmn they; by starry thrullcies, him- regular aad extra, taking tile flying self more lustrous; past larger worlds .1 negative reply then is my negative re-- and affi-Lglited liopu'ationi. He arrives to smaller worlds, down stairs of firm- �, ply now. The Bible statement agrees in a city over which a greab horror Is �, aments and from cloud to cloud and brooding. He goes from couch to through treetops and into the camel's I with all physicians and all physiolo- couch, feeling the pulse and studying stall to thrust .big shoulder under our ,11. gists and salemUsts Ili saying that the I blood is the life, and in the �Christian symptoms and prescribing day after burdens and take the lances of pain day, night after nighb, until a follow through his vitals, and wrapped himitelf I i - religion it means simply that Christ's �:,, life life. Hence physician says: "Doctor, you had bet- in all the ruglonles wthich we deserve for ter go home and rest. You look miser- ouir misdoings and stood on the split- . was given for our able.'! But lie cannot rest while so ting decks lof a foundering vessel amid all this talk of men who say the Bible . many are suffering. On and on, un- the r1ren-ohing surf of the sea and pass- til in the tlar story of bLood is disgusting, and I t ' morning finds him a tie- ed midnights on mountains amid � they don't wunt what they call a lltriusmomtlln which he, talks of home and wild 1,easts of prey and stood at the I "allaughter house religion," only shows .. then rises and says be arust go and point Where all earthLy and infernal � look after those yatlents. He is told hostilities charged on him at once with 4" , their incapacity or unwillingness to �, , to lie down, blat be fights his attend- thoir kecla sabers--ouir substiLutel �.' of speech to- ! ants untoil he falls back and is weaker When did attorney eiver endure so � 1� ward the thing signified. The blood that and weaker and dies for people with Much for a paupex client oi- physician !, 1 on the darkest Friday the world ever t l whom he ba.d no kinshil and far away for the 1:atient in the lazaretto or mo - from his own family an(li is hastily put ther for the child in meatbramou-9 I � I I saw oozed and trickled or poured from away in a stranger's tomb, and only croup as Christ for us and Christ for Ir I the brow, the side, rind the hands, and ��,.� the fifth part of a new-spaper line tells you and Christ for ma? Shall any man the feet of the illustrious sufferer back us of big sacrifice -his nearto ,'ust men- Or woman or child in this audience who Cloned among five. Yet her U3L touched has ever sufferod for another find it i, le­ elf Jerusalem in a few hours coagu- the farthest height of subijacity in hard to understood this Christly suf- , - ,,, lated and dried. tip and forever disap that three Week,,; of humanitarian. ser- fering for us? Sl:all those whose sym- I " peared, and if man had depended on vice. He goes straight as an arrow to iiathies have been wrung in I,ehalf of I- , the application of the literal blood of , , , i " , the b6som. of him who said, "I was sick the unfortunate have no appreciation and ye visited me." Life for life! Blood of that one moment whi(-h was tifted ; Christ there would not have been 91 Is ' for blood I Substitution I out of alll the ages of et�,rnity its most ", , , soul "ved for the last 18 centuries. * !�'... In the legal Profession I see the same conspicuous, -when Christ gathered lip , , , , , , , �,,� In order to understand this red word , principle of self sacrifice.. In 1846 Will- all the sing of tho.,ie to be redeemed , �, � , I'�. . I � - ,. of my text we only litave to exercise as iarn Freeman, it pauperized and idiot- under big one arm a,nd all their sor- . I, I, - - 'i I - I ` I-, much common sense in religion its We �; I I e negro, w -b.s at Auburn, N.Y., on trial rows under ails other arm and said: for murder. He bad s'ain the entire "I -will atone for these under my right I` I , I I L do In everything else. Pang for pang, Van Nest fainily. The. foaming wrath arm aad will �beai ,tit thowi under my I, "I - 1i hunger for hunger, fa,tigue for faLigue, I I t Of the community could lie kept off him left arra, Strike me. v.ith 0,11 City glit- tering shafts, 1 Roll � . � I � � tear for tear, blood for blood, life for 1, only by armed constables. Who would oh, eternal justice volunteer to be his counsel ? No attor- over me. with all Lily surges, ye oceans . . I. life, we see every day illustrated. The ney wanted to Aaorifice his popular- of sorrow." ,I , ;.. sob of substitution is no novelty, al- ity by nuoh an ungrateful task. All That is what Paul means, that is what 1 , , - as thou , though I hear men tal-k gh the ilent save one, a, young lawver I mean, that is what all tho. were s se who have _ . 14 ; � idea ot Christ's suffering substituted with feeble voice, that could hardlv be ever had their heart changed mean by heard outside the I-ar, pale and -thin "blood." I glory in this religion of bloodl : i for otir suffering Were something a.b- �, and awkward. It was William H. Se- I am thrilled as I Bee the suggestive I ,; , " � norma,I, Something wildly eccentric, a "I , ward, who saw that the prisoner was color iii sacramental cup, whetb(Ar it be " � " , so-litary episode in the world's history, 11.�_ idiotic and irresponsible and ought to of burnished .silver, sat on oloLh imma- � I qj�! when I could take you out into this , 1�1 I I be put in an ii.qylum- rather than put oulately white or rough hown from to death, the heroic ,,ounsiel uttering wood set on table in log hut meeting I ., city arid before sundown point you to , , ' these beautiful words: house of the wilderness. Now I am 'I, 5W oases of substitution and Noluntary ,A, I "I spea,k no", in the hearing of a thrilled as I ace the altars ot ancient , 1, - suffering of one in behalf of another. peop!e -who have prejudiced prisoner sacrifice crimson with the blood ofAbc ,1 11 At 2 o'clock to -morrow afternoon go !-­ and condemned me for pleading in his slain lamb, rind Leviticus is to me not � �!7 . I I - among the places of business or toil ft .behalf. He is a convict, a pauper, a ne- so much the Old'restament as tbe New. �1. i'�� will be no difficult, thing for you to gro, without intellect, sense. or emo- Now I see why the destroying angel , ,,, find men who by their looks show you tLon. My child with an affectionate Passing over Egypt in the, night spar- ��. 11 that they Lre overworked. They are smile disarms my careworn, face of its ed all those houses that had blood '1�.',', . prema,tuxely old. They are hastening frown whenever I cross my threshold, sprinkled on their doorl;osts. Now, I ;!" rapidly Loward their decease. They , The beggar in the street obliges me know what Isaiah means when he , �. have gone through crises in business to give because lie says, 'God bless speaks of " one in red apparel coming .1�1* stem 11 that shattered their nervous sy you I' as I pass. My dog caresses me ,with dyed garments from Bozrah," and L.� . and pulled on the brain. They ,have with fondness if I will but smile on wbom the Apocalypse means when it A�*, a shortness of breath and a pain in the L him, My horse recognizes me when I describes a heavenly chieftain whose 11, t back of the- head and at night an in- , fill his manger. Wbat reward, what " vesture was dipl�ecl in blood," and � somniEL that alarms them. Why are � what John the apostle gratitude, wh,at sympathy and affection means when he , � , they drudging at business early and can I expect herv? There the pri,,,on- speaks of the " precious blood that 1:. late? For fun? No. It would be dif- "' er &its, look at him. Look at the as� cleanseth from all sin," and what the ( � . ficult to extract any amusement out . 1, semb'a,ge around you, Listen to their old, worn-out, decrepit missionary Paul ,I' of that exhaustion. Because they are ill suppressed censures and excited means when, in my te'xt, he cries, I 1w avaricious? In many cases no. Be- fears, and� Ceti me where among my "Without shedding of blood is no re- 1� :1.. can,% their own personal expenses ars neighbors or my follow men, where mission." By that blood you an (I I ,will �,� � lavish? No. A few hundred dollars 0 ,van in his heart I can expect to find be saved -or never saved at all. In all I wou.1d meet all their wants. The sim- a sentiment, a thought, not to say of the ages of the world God has not once PLO fact is the mgLu is enduring all reward or of a,eknowledgment or ev- Pardoned a single sin except through that fatigue and exasperation and en of recognition. Gentlemen, you the. Saviour's expiation, and he ncver I wear and tear to, keep his home pros- may thlnk of this evideme.,what you will. Glory be to God that the hilt back �' perous. There Is tin invisible line please, bring in what verdict you can, of Jerusalem vvas the battlefield on 1. . reaching from that store, from that but I asservate before. heaven and Which Christ achieved our liberty I I 4� IL: bank, from that shop, from that scaf- you that, to the best of my knowledge It was a niost exciting day I spent 6 I folding, to 9. quiet scene a few blacks, .81 and belief, the prisoner at the bar does on the battlefield of Waterloo. Start - K a few miles away, and there is the see- not at this moment know ,why it is ing out with the morning train from i � - rert. of that business endurance, He is tba,t my shadow fal Is on you instead of Brussels, Belgium, we arrived in about ,� � simply the champion of a homestead for _` ],is own.o, an hour on that famous spot. A ion - I �,_ whIch he iVins bread and wardrobe and I ,;, I The ga-Ilows got its victim, 4ut the of one who was in the battle, rind who I , e-clacation and prosperity, and"ia such I'. I 1r;ost-mortem examination of the poor had heard from his father a,thousand I battle 10,000 men fall. Of ton business �'e he surgeons times the whole scene recited, accom- .1 r men whom I bury nine die of overwork anti to all the world that the public panied us over the field. There stood �,. for tithers. Some sudden disease finds " them were wrong and William 11. Seward the old Hlor,goniont cliateau, the walls � . with no power of resistance, and -was right and that hard, stony step of dented and scratched and broken � .1 th�cy are gone. Life for Life I Blood ob!o,,Iuy in the Auburn courtroom was and shattered by grapeshot anti cannon `�'- for blood I Substitution I 1� the first step, rif the stairs of fame up ball. There in the well in which 300 � . At I o'clock to -morrow morning, the Which he Went to the top, or to wit b- d and (lead were pitched. There is ying .1� , hour when slumber is most uninter- in one step of the top, Chat last denied the chapel with t be head of the infant -, rupted and profound, walk amid the , him through the treachery of American Christ shot off. There are thc� gates at f . dwelling houses of the city. Here and politics. Nothing sublimer -%vas ever which for many hours Englisb and I there you w Ill find a dim light, because seen in an American courtroom than h rmies wrestled. Yonder were �, It is the bo,usi�hold custom to keep a� William H. Seward, without reward, the 160 guns of the English .rind the 250 � . au,bilued light burning, but most of the houses from base to top are as dark standing between the furious populace guns of the French. Yonder the Hano- and the loathsome Imbecile. Substilu- verian bussars fled for the woods. � I ,� as thuttgh uninhabited. A merciful, tion I Yonder was the ravine of Ohain, ., God has sent forth.the .archangel of ': sleep, and he puts his wings over the - Jn the realm of tfh,e fine a,rts there where tb eFrench cavalry, not know- - ��, � City. But ycrider is a clear light . was as mmaxkable an instance. Abril- ing there was a hollow in the ground, liant huit. hyper,criticised painter, Jo,s. rolled overancidown, troop after troop, , � , � burning, anti ou Iside on a ,window case- . , . I mcnta, glass or plt-�.her containing food eph Willi -am Tu.rincr, was met by a vol- i tumbling into one awful mass of auf- . '. for a. sick child. The food is set in ley of Oman from the arlt galleries of fering, hoof of kicking bor%s against brow ''I I , the fresh air. This is the sixth night 11 that mother has s&t up wtth that suf- Europe. His paintings, Which have and breast of enptains rind col - � since won the applause of all civilized I Deis and private soldiers, the human , � ferer. She has to the last point obey- I . nations, "The Fifth P!agueof Egypt," and the, beastly groan kept up until "Fisherinein on a Lee Shore in Squally the day after all was shoveled under , e,d the physician's prescription, not giving U drop too much or too little Weather," "Calais Pier," "' ' Phe Sun because of the malodor arisingin that "Dido hot 1. , ?r a moment too soon or too lat'e. She Rising Th,rough Mist" and Build- month of June. � ing Carthage," were then targets for "There," said our guide, "the High- . , - is very anxious, for she has buried 11, three children with tile same disease, critics to shoot at. In defense of this land regiments lay down on their faces ' i and she prays and vveeps, each prayer ,, outrageously abused man a young Waiting for The moment. to spring up- auChor of 24 yea.,rs, just one year out Oil the fOe. In that orchard 2,500 men I" . and sob ending with a kiss of the pale � check. By dint, of kindness she of college, Ca,Me forth With his Pei and were out to pieces. Here stood. Wel- gets i;�, the little one through the ordeal. Af- wrote the ablest and most famous es- lington, -with ,,vhite lips, and up that say on axt that the world ever saw or knoll rod Marshal Ney, on his sixth I '� ter it is all orver the mother is taken down. Brain or nervous fever sets in, ever will see -John Ruskin's "Modern horse, five having been shot under him. ., I I and one day she leaves the convalescent � Painters." For 17 years t1his author i Here, the ranics of the Prench broke, fought t1he heAtles of the maltreated i and Marshal Ney, with his boot slashed 1: obiLd with a mother's blessing and �. goes up to join (he three departed ones artist, and after in poverty and broken � by a sword, ,rind his bat off and his face I �� , in the kingdom of heaven. Life for I heartedness tile painter ha� died ,a tpd I covered with powder and blood, tried the public. tried to undo their crue ies to rally his troops its he cried, 'Come . lifel Sul,slituti(ml The fact is that : there are an una,evounted number of toward him bygiving him a big funer- I and ,Ree how a marshal of French dies �._ mothers who after they have navignt- . I al and buTial in St. Paul's cathedral, I on Che hattlefield." From yonder direc- hia old-time friend took tin' tion Grouchy was expected for the ed a large family through all the (lie- :, eases of infancy and got thern fairly outt of a );ox 19,000 pieces of paper containing French re -enforcement, but lie came ,. I , started tip the flowering slope of boy- d not. Around those woods Blucher was .9 by the old painter and looked hood find girlhood, have, 6nly strength emaugh left to (lie. They fa& tLN% ay ,r,a.w ,�Jg for to re-onforce the English I .a-ny weary and uncompensat- ed months a.9sorted and arranged them and just in time he cam cup. Yonder is . :, Some- call it etinnumption, some call . it for public observation,. People say the field where Napoleon stood, lit.,; . nervous prostration, some call it in- , . termittent or malarial Indisposition, Jobra Rudkin in his old days is cross, arms through the reins of bin horse's misanthropic rind morbid. Whatever bridle, (lazed rind insane, trying to go , " but I call it martyrdom of the dolple&- he may do that he ought not to do back." ,Icene of a battle that went on from I � tic circle. Life for lifel Blood for and whatever be may say Chat he 25 minutes to 12 o'clock on Cho . blood I Substitution I ought not ito r,ay between now and 18th of June until 4 o'clock, when the Or perhaps a mother lingers long bin death he will leave this wtorld in- English seemed defeated and their cam- enough to see a son get on the wrong lolverit as far as it has any capacity mRnder cried out: "Boys, you can't :, . I _� road, and his former kindness becomes U? pay this autbor's pen for its ebivat- think of giving way? Remember old , 1, rotigh reply when she expresses anx- rie and Christian defense of it poor Fnglandl" And the tides turned and !, l foety about him. But she goes right paintcr's�pt,tkcil, John Ruskin for Wil- 'tit R o'clock in the evening thn man of .1 . on, looking carefully after his appar- I iam Tuirner I Blood for blood I Substi- destiny, wit() was called by ilia troops ; oil remembering his every birth(finy tution I Old Two Hundred Thiousand, turned � . with soate memento, rind when he is What an exalting principtc this away, wilh broken heart, and the fate � brought home worn out With dissipa- whinh leads onp, to suffer for anot,ber I of centuries was decided. . tion nurses him till he gets well and Nothing so kindles (athusiasm or No wonder agreat mound has been I , . -starts him again and hopes and expects hwti,ke.ns eloquence, or chimes poetic reared ther�!, hundreds of feet higb-.t rind prays rind counsels and suffers e anto. or moves nations. The principle mound a,t the expense of millions of . I antil. her strength gives out and she is the dominant one in Our religion dollars rind many years in rising, and � (a its, She to going, and attendants, -Christ the maTtyr. Christ the celesti- on the top is the great, Belgian lion . bending over her pillow, ask her if a I hero, Christ the defender, Christ the of bronze, and a grand old lion it is. I ,she has ,any message to leave, and She sul:stitute. No new principle, for it But our great Waterloo was in Pales - I makes great efforts to say something, was old as hiarnam nature, but now on tine. There came a day when all hell -40 I Owt out of three or four minutes of in- a gr d tinder, wider, higher deeper an rode tip, led by Ariollyon, and Cho cap - .. 11 .. distinct atterance they can catch but more -woirld resounding scale. The Cain of our salvation confronted them � three words, "My poor boyl" The a P srd boy as a ohampioba for Israel alone. The rider on the white horse I .simple fact is she (lied for him. Life with a sling toppled the giant of Phil- of the Apocalypse going out against . . for I Ito I Substitution I istine, bTagirga, to In Cho dust, hilt here the black horse cavalry of death, and . . About 38 years ago there went forth is another David whol, for all the Cho battalions of the demonitto and the I from our northern and southern homes armies of chwethes militant and trium- myrmidons of darkness. Prom 12 O'clock . hunoreds of thousands of men to do phant huTis the Goliath of perdition at noon to 8 o1olock in thre afternoon I battle. All the Poetry of war soon van- I into defeat, the crash of his braven the greatest battle of the universe went . .1 Wiled and left Warn nothing but I he ter. &rmat like an explosion at Mill Gate. on. Eternal destillitiA were being decid- � : rible prose. They ,wo,ded knee deep in All good men bawe, fort ceiltutries been ed. All the arrows of hell, pierved out I . arad, They slept in ano,tv bankp. They firying to tell w4wm this subatitute was Chieftain, rind* the battloaxei; struck mArobod till their oat feAt tracktid the like, and every compturigan, Inspired and ham, until br6w and check and ablouldor . � earth, They wer,) swindled out of their Uininspire(L evs,rigelhitio, prophatle, apo. and han(I and foot were incarnaillned honest, rations and lived on meat not fit stolic aind hwmmLn, falls short, for Christ with) ooilng life, but he fought, on un - I for a (log. They hat] jaws fractured and was Me Great Unlike, Adam a type of til he gAve a final stroke witif sword I,.,, � ,,iftyes extinguished and limbs shot away. "I Christ, beeauso he came directly from fffim StihOve,li'a buckler, a4d the coin - mander In chief of Uall and all his forces fell back in everlasting ruin, and TH6 SUNDAY SCHOOL. otta4a' empt or o�tent;atloo, but a Chrlis� - ­ XWN the victory in oars. And on the mound ."-4lllA � Imu-it do it from love. Our Lord nourale of three times or seven tion of war being made before actual , that celebrates the triumph we plant this day two figures, not in bronze or INTERNATIONAL I,ESSON, APRIL 24. . es, 1, C enjoins hearty, full for- Er giveness. V -.V" . VISIT TO THE SMALL ARMS FACTORY iron or sculptured marble, but two fig- fttm " ges(Ive Illustrations of the power oA AT ENFIELD. ures of living light, the Lion of Judah's AL teasen or ivorat veneatt.- natt. is. si-33. — � __ - - 15, and on the following day the Frenrt tribe and the Lamb that was stain. t1olden Text. Luke 0. .,.I. A TURKISH HERCULES. - Process of maulng These Iss"ratments of Mrs. Jinks, meaningly,-T asked Dr, PRACTICAL NOTES, T_ war-Dauxers in Its mail U raeturo-The WHERE GRUB COMES HIGH. Verse 21. Then, During the discour- lilaring necd of U Voting 41111liCer 90 PICALOC ffilaking or These weapons Almost as got a cold anylilow, We somethin se on humility V%Dd forgiveness. Came His Clansman tier. Deadly as ilia Use of Them. __" Prices lit the Klondike Itan WaY UP hat Peter to him. 6ome have supposed (Ahmet, Boy, a Tur1kish officer who A writer In the London Daily News. WIdsUy Is Cheap, that now, a4s on several other clocas- served againat the Ruasians'in the cam- In an account of a visit to the Enfielil MAny is the man who, when hungry ion&, Peter apted as spokesman for the . paign of 1877-78, was (handsome, Well- Small Arms Factory, gives the follow - has wished he could eat hay like a twelve; but, 9.4 we have seen in our ProPoirtioned and of extrdordinavy phy- ing interesting account of how bay. horse that he might fill himself cheap- ilatroductory note, it is not unlikely sical stwe-ngth, aid was not only a Her- Onets are ma,de: . ly, but hay was 25 cents a pound In that he had become,an, object of their vuleg, but the beau -ideal of a soldier, It is a big bu,siness, this bayonet mak- Skaguay last fall, and even hay eaters OPOciali envy-tlia,t some of his twelve one whose milit&ry knowledge seemed Ing. The, raw material comes in the Were not well off. "brothers" had sinned against him, Lnstinctivo. Doctor 11yan, an English form of bars of steal, which are cut up Prices have been running up and and being a conscientious man, he surgeoA, who served with Ahmet Bey, Into the necessary lengths and -rolled, down ,in, an extraordinary way at wants to know how to treat them. tells in We book, "Under the Red0res- Thle, strips of stecti. are then borne oft Dyea, and ever the trails and down In Lord, how oft shaji my brother sin coent." the following story of his to a tremendous press, which stamps the miniaW camps. At one time there %zaitrist me, and I forgive him? A at-rength and dwxing: oneenct for the "tang," and from thert) everyone was talking "horse" and question often asked even by Chribt- I Abdul Kerim Paghu, the commander- they go to the grinding department of doga. couldn't be given away then. As lans. Till seven times V Jewish rabbis in -chi at, while inspecting big troops one the factory. Here, in the first plazoo : food for horses rose horses felt in , genora I ly taught that forgiveness . morning, casualty exprt_,ased the wish a, rather lumbering looking "trough. . price. ;should be granted to the second and to capture a Servian prisc;nor f rom the Scrovian lines. Ahmet Bey overhearing ing" machineautomatically scours the When oats reached $60 a sack and i third offeuse,lkut not to the fourt h, Pet- hay was 25 cents a and horse- I er know tl,at Jesus wouldt extend for- far beyond tl4s, him . wad asked pe -mLs- I sion to got the communder a prisoner. d e- ge with elmery until the embryd aword-bayonot will just fit into a# po-und I giveness but with shoo nails 25 cents a piece, horses were , It ,A as atilt a question of degree. Jes- He received it, -though Abdul Kerim ,,vandered at the ,request. Ahn.iet guage or "trough." This ensures that I not In demand. Then it was dogs, And us proceeds to tea,ob him that as there whraeled his charger, dashed spurs in- the metal is exactly the proper size are no boun(ts. to thie love of God so it stiII is dogs, except for a few peo- there must be noun to the Love of'his to its flainks, and galloped straight for amd shape. ' plo who are taking upwith the rein- ohildrea, thp nearest Servian outpost. Next comes the grinding by hand on deer. 22. I bay not, unto thee, 'Until. seven i As he approached, half a dozen rifles the big grindstones, of which there are Good clogs now bring $250 to $300. times. Peter's Christianity reached asicracked; but. Alitmet galloped on un- harmed and marked down (,ne gentry thirty in one long 8ky-lighted buildingA It is claimed they are the only ani- far as that of thousands nL)wadays; Quil"a as far as that) of any Chri8tianifor his prey. The evatry fired WC Lhe each weighing, when new, it couple oA tons, though mals for the climate. They cut any- i I who, preferring law to Gospet,, asks, � audacious horsema;a, i.nissed and started of course tkay rapidly, thing they can swallow. They do not , "How far inay I go wLtbaut transgras- to run. Ahmet swooped on hini like a wear away -as well as the grinders em, flaunt a fire to sleep by, but lie dov, n sing?" But we axle no longer under tl;e hawk upon a chicken, ployed at them. These men sit, astride In I he, snow. They can't be coa.xed in- i ,aw., but undor grace. Iflatit seventy I lle bent down, grasped the Servian their seats as they would on horseback, to a heated room. , times seven. That is, probably, four �Tot long ago cigars were �2 to $5 1 bundred and ninety, though it may be by the collar, and flung him across the sadd le in f ron t. T hen he galloped back bending, towarldst tile wet stones that alitece along the Yukon, an(t mighty � - rare. Now the same richLy flavore( I I interkweted neventy-aeven. In either again. bending over his horse's neck tie escape the bullets, and banded over whirl round at a speed of something , It means ani indefinite, number of articLe, is to be bad for less than it; (age of- times; just as frequently as the his prisoner to the Turkish commander . like 3,500 times a minute, when theyl are, full size -about two-thirds costs to take it them. The market . ftaiidi,o brother lltsks to be forgiven. is overstocked. i amid the shouts of the soldiers. of th mile a, minute. Woe betide the un - 23. Thereforc. %N'Lth referent-(.- tothis Flour has been selling at a dollar a I dpty of unlimited forgiveness. The ­ -- lucky grinder if there should happen pound ,rind canned beans for 75 cents kingdom of heaven. To Peter's simple to $I. Hams have been up to $10, rind ABOUT DECLARING WARi to 1>5 a flaw in the atone. Whirling mind this would mean our Lord's gov- 0998 two for an ounce, of dust, which round at such a Pace the centrifugal. exlanient, for he still expected to see would make a breakfast cost about his beloved Master enthroned, crown- — &train upon it is, of course, very great, $25 -two eggs, $17; a aline of ham, ft ed, and sceptered. lXe had nat yet . HOSTILITIES OFTEN BEGIN WITH- ,rind If the- atone were not pretty sound broad and butter and coffee, $5. ' learned that strange lessfin, "My Whiskey is cheap, It usually is the OUT WARNING. it would fly to pieco,s-as they are kingdom is not of this world." To us cheapest thing to be had In mining - also "the kingdom of heaven" means — known to do occasionally in Huch camps. The quantity, however, ex- ' the Lo -rd's government, only that we In Olden Times a neclarntion of war Walt places. There has Wen at least one . oele cis the qunlity. All sorts of fancy have better opportunities than had a Soletan Functlon-flow It Was Done occurrence of the kind at Enfield, Such prices have been offered for canned Peter to understand how thb, govern- ltelmweett France. and l9ritaln. it burst UP is as destructive In Lila fruLls and for lemon and lime juice, ment, would be exercised. A certain which are excellent to prevent scurvy. Notwithstinding the fact that line OX motion as a cannon would be, king which would take account of his -out these can hardly be quoted as servants. Round Judea in the most people consider a formal declara- and the stonles In this building are ar- al,out market values, Tomatoes have fetched first half of the. first century kings tion of war necessary before active ranged so as to minimise the mischief 020 a can, oranges $10 aldece, lemon were plentiful. This king's "ser- syrup $15 a pint, roast beef �5 a can, measures can be taken, it is usually oX such a. mista,ke. Each is inspected vants" wore. big officers of state, es- roast mutton 810 a can, stra%Nberries . pecuffly those engcige� in collecting his the case in these go-ahead times that every morning before staxting ,,vork,t �3 and $12 a. can, and salmon is 60 cents I , revenue, and his "ta.king account" of no warning whatever is given. It is not the bursting of the stonesi a, can. i them means his making recko,ningwith When Rome wan mistress of the. however, that constitutes ­ __ ------&— - - - - ­ them. Governors of petty provinces world a declaration of war was a THE GR,P,,AT&,iT PERIL FABRIC'S NAMES TRANSLATED. -were appointed quite " much to draw taxes from the people an to administer � solemn function, aLt.ended -with so . . Co the workmen here. Men cannot Many of oux fabric, a and dre-sa goods justice, and often they farmed out ch ceremony that a special ma. college be bending over swrord-bLacles that are have French names -and we ivie thein' thAr provinces to lower officials. The � time has come, perhaps at the end of of !heralds Was always kept in readiness to' perform it when necessary. fn, me- heitig'f4bbect away in brIlhant. trails Nvi tbout much idea. that they origin-; . ):ad I thrl� (-Lv ic year, when this king cal Is for diaevat times letters of defiance serv- of sparks all day long, year afteryear. Withlout, getting accumulations of steel ally any meaning. . , regular reports. God is our King. By Arolum is a matorial -woven so Chat overy crisis in our lives he would take ed to give -warning of 'hostile inton- dust into Cho Itings, and if the truth , account of us, and our returns cannot the cloth has the effect of being wov- tions, and stfll later heralds were sent, could W known it, might be found thut the i : be made in coin, but by words and to throw down the gauntlet and make Making ckf the weapons for Europ- en ,with small seeds on the thread. i deeds. a verbal declaration of war. can a.rmie-s and navies is almost as deadly as the use of them. It in said, a ric crossed by i 24. One wits brought, unto him. The bars of a contrasting color. I : phraseology indicates that this wan I In suich times formal declarations howover, to be partly the men's own I . . , wits a notorious wrongdoer. Perhaps Bayadere comes from the (lancing , , were necessary to differentiate be- fault.i A good deal of the mischief Mlgli� be obviated by the use of niag- I li,o had plundered the revenues. The girls, of the East, who." garments are governors of other districts had ap- tween -the priva,to brawls of a few Itar- .. nettsed respirators; but they won't made of stuff crossed from selvage to pea -Ted promptly, but he did wt,t appear on, and a national war for which the community was responsible, but at t1he wear them. or goggles for the eyes either. All the work here is done by selvage With stripes, and when Worn with them, rind had Lobe brought by force. Owed him ten thousand talent$. present (lay total concealirlont its long thtl, piece, and the men are of opinion with stripes appear to run around the' An tinormlous. sum,lardly short of ten as possible is the almost uni'versal that thew protectors seriously inter. body. , I I millions of dollars; perhaps far beyond rule. The objects of this are. usually fere with their earnings, so that, like it, good many more of us, in different Belge-Coniposed. of yarn in -vilhirh it. It expresses an unlimited amount, two colors I and represents the debt of sin, for either to anticipate the designs of some , ways. they kill themselves in order are mixed. Bourtle-A fal,ric having a marked . which it is inilx)ssible any man should Other power, .to avoid the onus of ad- that they may live. Probably by the timb that we have learned to do with - i make satisfaction. curt or loop in the yarn, which is; 25. He had not to pay. Flo had wast- mitting a ,state of war as, long -,is pos- sible, or to gain time by swiftness of out bayonets, we shall also have learn- old to be content to give a. man a fair t,hxown to the surface, Boucle, Lg'ed the revenues of his province. His ill-gotten gains were gonp. Command- attack. living for the best he can honestly do French for curl. e d him to be sold, and his wife, and THF LATEST fNSTANCES Without choking himself with steel dust, Bouretto--This puts a lump instead' children, and all that he had. Sold as of a curl on the surface. The word slaves. This barbarous custom was al- Of formal declaration by Ilierald were If one takes in hand one of those comes from bourer-to stuff. l most universal in ancient times. The Jewish law it, Lev. 25. 39, In 163-5, -when Louis X111. sent aher- modern sword -bayonets which ba� (3 -superseded the old three -cornered Carreati-The .name as checks, car-! moderated 9,id to declare war against Spain, and skewers, he will see that it is a flat reaux meaning squares. i but, as the law was practiced, slavery Chene-A effect. . as a result of debts, does not seemi to it) 1657, -when Sweden declared war ' bladeleach sideof,A-hit-h has a, central printed Crepon-A crepe or crinkled effect.'have been infrequent. Besides, Many of against Denmark by herald sent to i�,itllgeabetween two hollows. Tbe.so but- ws re, ground out of. the solid ste,el Damaztse-A figured fal.,ric, showing' the Jews close to Palestine, as well as Copenhagen; %vbi!e as late ai� 1671 war by a millstone zibbled all round ,ipecial- a, contrast in luster between the� those in farther countries, were gOv- between England and Holland was de- ly for the purpose, thpae ril;s, or ridges groundwork and the figure, We have orned by Gentile despots, and the action Lhe idea in damask' Of this king would be familiar to them. clared �y solemn proclamation. in the surface (4 the stone correspond - same carried utit linen, t The horrors of slavery have only lately As the most recent on.ses are'those Ing to (he hollows in the blade, When the, grinding has bep.n carried up to . Drap tl�.Fte-An P.11 -wool fabric with' been gradually abolished by the influ- i likely to Influence the oonduct of na, a Gertainpoint the weapon, or the piece a, twiLled faf,�- and broadcloth back, wo- ence of Christianity. tions in the immediate future, I be wars of steel in proccss of be�.oming the ven as a twill and finished its a broad -1 26, Worshiped him. Did him abject reverence. There is no of the present century are of the great- weal)on, is carried to another depart- eloth, with the gloss mhowiug on the� penitence back of the fabric. i shown here, only fear of pun- est interest at, the prosent crisis. ment to undergo some change in its compositio'n, Thus far it has been Drap do Paria-A twit Lori armure, In i i8hmRnt- Have Patience with me, In the quarrel. between Russia and a pilece of ordinary cast steel. Now Cho weaving the seed -like effects are and I will pay ttw.e all. A wild prom- . . Turkey ,which immediately preceded that. the- thing has been rolled and given a twill effect. as in a serge. I Ise. He Undertaken to (to what lie Etamine­-Open work effect. , c(�Uld not (10, or tit least could do only the Crimean War, a, formal declaration was Issued a . t Moscow by proclamation stamped and ground into its general form it has to be hardened. For t his Friese.-A fabric in which the pile; by Still greater extortion froin. the of the C7.ar, and three days later, after purpose it is put. into it sort of )aker's , stands up from. the surface in uncut! poor. I loops. Frieser is to curl, or, as we 1 Move,d with compassion. The king the Turks were well aware of the state ovo,n-an oven, that is to say that is divided by a. fire -brick wait inLol two .27. say, to friz. I did not expect. his f i ii,,litened-servil nt of affair, al operations were rommemed in earnest. parts -ono. for the fire and the. other Gloria is a silk and wool material. to keel) this promise; he pitied him, Tn the cases of Britain and France for the, reception (if the stect to be Jarquard-A weave called after its, Loosed him. Ordered the chains to lie I as consideration was shown: Warl c' bc,ated. inventor, in which every warp thread: dropped from his wrists and ankles. was ,formally declared by Britain on I Th*-, isleapons lie in here and get red ran be, made to move independently of: Forgave him the. debt. Not exact- March 22, 1854�, and onk the 31st it was hot and 1hen are plunged into a i any other, intricate figures being this ing even when he might afterwarfl. be All figured fa- I able to pay. proclaimed by the High Sheriff of Tmn- � BATH OF OIL produmd. anch. complex 1,rics. are (flassed under the broad name I 28. Servant . . fedlow-servant, don from the ateps .-of tile Exeliangre, � which h:Ls a sh-'ain. of cold wider run- . ,, of Xacquards. , These %sords we naturally refer to But, these . devlaiations were made, merely to justify the step to the peo-' Ding round it to keep down the tem- perature. This hardens (bo steel, but Matelmse--A fabric whose face is.sLaves or employees of a menial .sort, broken into rectangtilar figures and� but. in the phraseology of the Orient ple and to ask for, thei r approval and i leaves I(, brittle. It would snalt off puffed up so as to resAmble (Iullting.ith,(,,y Nvould be, ii.sed of high govern - bell). l3crore that time active opera- Lions Itad eominenved by the ""It"Y Of If any atteatipt, were made to bend it.. It has, therefore, to be tempered by 'boil, I he haught lest of w I me n t of f it -hom. Matelmse may b,esl; he tra-rislated as tuf ted. as ri0ated to the king, wits it slave. � the British and Prew-h flef4s into the Plunging it into motten Lead. Thi'si Melange (literallir, mixed) -A fabric I Pence. Coing v,orth about fifteen or 'rn Pardanelles, vontniry to treniy, and the forcefl retreat of the R ussian fleet gkv,s U. tho necessiry elamtivity awl, flexibility, an(l. it, comes out of its produred from ya that has been � sixteen ci,nfs, a,) thfit the ,A hole sum. would be about sixtetn dollars. to Seiastopol when The allies reached leaden brith a lovely bIU4- color, ;A either Printed in tile wool or dyed of owe(t different colors and mixed together I The proporl inn between the ft mount of is, the 11'a,k Sea. On 14'pbruary 8 the Rumian Mink -1 real award blade, but only a lilaifil, and som,cwhat trough too, anti without any this del,(, and jIthe dobl to tho king before being spun, I T(K)k Iiiiii )y the, throa(. Satin Berber -A sa(in-faned wool fit- start I I ng. i � ; � ter -%� as wi t lid rawn f rom f,ondon, it nd � the llritkh an(I French Ministers from' edge. It goes back to the, grinding . ,I,hp ni Throttlod him. Such )rWalky brio with a, wool backj , effect i. is a I St. Petershurg. Although -9!1(,h a roloin now for tile finishing touch, to gel; Poino(hing approximating to a one, of finish, rat -her than of W(lave , common incifh-nt in the.,criminal courts the Rast. step usualy precedes war, and is orten , cutting edge, not .sufficient for pur- Satin Sovil-A satin -faced armur, fa. bric woven with, it ribbed of2 9, Fell down at his feet. Humiliat- lingibimself regirded as Pquivalent to a devlara-1 tion, it. only ,signifies that all liopA otl Pose.14 of war, but, such as inny he safely cntlunt,ed to soldiors in piping I imes Sicilian. -A p!ain-weave. I asabjently asbis creditor successful diplomatic negotiation liris� of pe,ace. posed of a cotton ),�arp and mob4iir fill- had bumiliated himself Iwfare the king. iag, with the filling threads less twist -J+ isRsdifficult to pay a hundredponve been abandoned and Chat ,i%ar is likclyl im-1 When The grinding isfinislict-1 itonly ed and hroader on the surfacei than I as ten thousand talents if you own no - to ensue. It, does not nece,ssarily a. state of war. such it state re -1 renuiins to polish the blades tind it) "crosspieve.9" in regular mohair. - -.1'.. Ithing .11iv.-n. patience wIt4h- me, tin(, I ply quiring sorne definite ant of hostility, mc,Uut, (hein i%hh nrid pommets,""gri1W aad"springs,' thlit 'v'crUablp ill pay then all. 7h,ere is lia,rdly a Twill -A raised cord running in a -1 .! count,ry, hardly dia,gonall direction in the fabric from! (own oir village in th IN TffE, OPfTTM WAR I ,,%ill comlcr( Cho mere blode into a left to right. Any fabric, With' thin a Cliurch,no matter ho%� sniall, hardl.j Of 1840, the. Italian Avarn of 18-17 and sword-bayonal tin(] permil of it.% being nilaelied to the rifle. The weave may be ralled a twill. The num-! a Illtle social g,roup, but. firom their ber of twills to the inch in ca-shmere, heaxtn n1a.ny of Rs memben-4 *tter this 1849, the Anglo-Pongian war of 18.56. the %vant between Aw9tria, and Prance � � . Polishing looks as I bough it rimst. bet morn detrimentlil to (he benl0i of the and other standard fabrics is often us- piliful ery to nome, corporw(ion or per- in 1859, Prussia, and Schle. c4w ig-TTOI- I stein in 1863, anti Srazil, rind Uruguay workman i han t lie grinding, hecause it od to indicate their quality. Vigoureux.-An effect, produced liy lson. 30, Went and cast ,'him into prison. � in 1864, varion,; hostile acts were ooni- , . I , ,4 all (try i�ork. whoreas llin grind - Rl"n's ire run in a trough of water. Printing the yarn of which the fabric Doubtless be jusilfied himself in so do- 'mitted before any declaration of war although in some. cases man -1 Thn Polishing is done by meiins of Is composed and u,sing it, without any rogard to order or design. inig as most men -w1blo do wrong for Che love of moiney juRtify t1hemselves. Was made, . ifestoes were issited to neutral powers. small Nvooden wheels, cove red wit li hands of leather %%it.11 ;in einery sur - Zibolfias- A wool material used In imitation fur. It has on the "Busifness in business; I 9,m not respon- sible for ollheir foUk's affairs." Tul he fn the Austro -Italian war of 1950, tile ,l Ausfro-Pruqsian %Aar of 18BO and the fare,, and every whoet thrown off a of sable face long hairs that givet it it fur -like ,slhiould pay blie debt. One (A the dee p- Rumso-Turici4h IN -Orr of 1�77 the dev'arnl tion Were trail of sparks that gives tho Vast f loor on u hich I lir� work in ca rried on spPearan"., and may be produced in but the same est sta ins on huma al Ly's reenird. in moil- I ern anti Western civilization as well as and active OTterations prnc-1 tically synonymous, In the last men-, an almo, at uncanny appearan",. 'hiero several waya, all give distinguishing fleature-a "earriells- in ancient oTiental hfurbarism. is t,hat I licrind case, for example, the Purl-� Is it, freat amount of dust given off, too, )ut the greater Part of it in hair" fabrin. most. vu ni,tive measures .ire not reform- received a copy of the dee'arntion on I sucked awa,y f rom I Ito worlun- 's 1- I _- .- - - -a- __ ­­ I SHOOTS RVERYTBTF, Hl? EXPLAINS I The most awkward man in the World without doubt lives in Tennessee. -He recently shot a, dog, and explaining the accident to the dog's Owner shot him, . Later, in showing how the tragedy oc- ourred, he shot the Coroner. He has been libern.ted now for fear he will try to explo in It to somebody else. - --.*— MATCH MACHINES. Some of the machines for making matches which are used In these daTs make goo revolutions & minute each, and turn out about 2,500,000 matches daily, or about 900,000,000 annually. __ . 'or—, Q111101t WORK, Soues-I marrIed my wife a Mont,)) after she a"epted me. Prown-And I married mine three da a attor alie refimed me 'y I . . � , \ . " I I � � -W, . I � . I I � . . I e ?A, I �1. . I . I 1. I I I . . N�X' I I I I ­'..­ - . __,.Aiit_.________,A,d_ � . I ­..6..__.__ViL­�L%"�.1 ­L­...AwiiisbiL�_ -11— ­ .__­___­ ­ ­­_ ­­­ ____ some actually make amendment impos- sible. al. ffis fellow-seirvan-ts. Doubtless some of them sigt,posed that) their turn wan . coming text. 82. r forgwe thee all Chat debt, be- caulso thou desired4t me, In fact, 1.136 king bad granted far more than the man bad requested; be had asked for forbearance, tbe king had remitted the entire debt. 3.3. Shouldest not, thou also, Every reason w%y be should receive mercy was an argument why he should grant uVroy, 44. The tormentors. Our Lord re- fers to methods familiar to oriental d,eipotism, Thase wers the ;aiters,whosc offloo It, often was to afffiet and tor. ture their prisoners, Till he should pay. 71at la, for life, beeause payment jivas utterly impossible. 35. From your IwArts. Tho act Is no- Vhing it It be bet willingly and kindly done, A, maill may remit debts from I ) , I , - - I ,­V�0­1 _._f_,_&,- 1.1,11 ­­­­ ._­__Jid�, the evening of April 24, thp. very (lay I n xv ,, oil which 15411,000 Russian troopq crossed : by a po:werfut revolving fan operat- the Rouirtanitia frontier. Log through iin air ehnnnel, running . _ The mr)qt' notaible instance in I hn along bonea,th the benebes, no that. i he li prPsent cenhiry of 9. formal declarn- m6whiof is probably reduced to a inin- tion of war being made before actual , inium. I't is F, most, Interesting Place operattoria were begun, was Chat of the for a leisurely .4troll, full of queer ma- Frame.o-PrussiYLln -wP r in IFT). In thin � chinery and curious proeesses and sug- cage the declarntLon was almost forced, ges(Ive Illustrations of the power oA as tile French, who were the aggres- the organization of industry. sors, voted large war credits on Jul — � __ - - 15, and on the following day the Frenrt RPTAP-DTAGNOSTS. Minister returned to Paxis, A format intimation of hostile Intentions was Mrs. Jinks, meaningly,-T asked Dr, then sent to Berlin, and laid before Aqua,pura if whisky wan gcod for the Parliament .of the North German coldia, and he -ciaid no. . Confedera,tion on July 20. Mr. Jinks-Woll, I don't. believe Pird On November 12, 1885, Britain was got a cold anylilow, We somethin honored by a dee'aratlon of war from else. Did Lbe doctor mention (N%haf King Theebaw, of Burmahl, but, it was 0"niten Whisky was good for? a needlem formality on the part of his dusky Majesty, for 'the British Croopa COST Or CAVALRY. were already on thin way to his capital, and the only reply to his challenge wits The cost of maintaining a eavalry )its deposition, which Ilmmedlately on- soldier antri horse in the Ilritish army sued. , is atiolat $500 per anaun)6 I , , . I . � I . Za. A.."'. .­_____.�__­1_­ I � . I ., ,� . " , - -1111101-1. ..... . -11-.--___.A