The Clinton News-Record, 1899-04-27, Page 20
s
worm AND commeivri. WATER "WATER I WATER I w 1:940 tO WS MY soul redeemed, t God all wipe $lit tears trtsn thireill, endow 4 ciallow or I will setabe. ores.'p
, •
With the conclueton of tits ;maven -
"A pouts that le mine." Not as the
world. giveth littw the world itivotht
A ABOUTSCHOOL
that purehase ealvetion I" for tim refreelweent, for the roomette
aceept them." God eaye, Away with one that thtratoth, Immo e to the woe utrilteamtat,mir=orvrelarsetot:1440.eits; IS.
sem. &mid works 0,a s pueelnute zor mai- tare.'" time now. ee4ohot lar -even many whose hearts are eentury It may Sem thet there itt
broken and whose cheer is not tie need Malay a. word. pralee of mai-
in the central and western Soudan. a
Water, Troleat er Me famed III Oa a a gone..-110VerthelesS knew froW ss"' two, certain circles, indeed' OIL
ehiet Canoe of contention between the :- monwasee_Ne Devoe vatIon I Take this Gortnel ter nothing,
meg it win 864000 woosted vs or never take it. It ui free? jtud* odf our coast there 10 deo.
two ptavere renloved, and the longiteroue point for the eallere, end a
THE MAY
liab sehool; or X build eel:Lurch. laieSeed he God for the brifhtneite, thaok God, the bright -Wed little boys
CLJ1.411.JRE,
flea defining tte ;IA13000,1/0 woos* a REV. DR. TALMAGE T Ass* "'I will do mum grand. for the abundeam, for the continua;
LK INTERNATIONAL LESSON. APRIL SO. and girls do not yet know, But at these last years of the nineteentb
will of this glorious, Gospel! "Rol even" eeeet Mane' a teacher end znariy an older
tnflitertee et „Great Britain and France TEE WATER OF mriz . good workii end God, know,
rliACTWAX. NOTES. nerienee "how vain are all ihinga here
below." But there le no dieappoint. -
worshln of mature has been tarried to
21�en absurd extent, it Um been consid-
water typifies the cteepel ileum° et ght-houtte has been eet Up. There . you 10Va me, keep oir ment in Any ot the elm of
eeseee, leaat
fleraaletile Qf Reeve tOr African tome- every limes etre There It one Sorrow
tory brought te so end. Under it -1114 Dr* rt.**ell" * "r" Its abundance When We pour the wa 1/8 4rrt 1114tern in that itgitt-liTabuse. commandmente,
mon. eau a OW stiniuiers ere me be, h
s wiz not teara beSairsia et
"Let your love for ef all in hie peace, Let not your heart erecl aa a panacea for al/ °vile, as the
pro ec ton • an
Great Britain ineurea wbat alms has de -
A, despatch iron W,aohlianton, eart: haveto e ea e
ter trona the pitcher inte t kiosk WO is machinery by Whichnhis light ia t bled, Be who leans on God for 0010 rerssay ea bed manners and bad
tmtl" d 'd d
Sin oric_fe on w morale ---the one requisite for a goidele
win reelected over the otea. and my deearture, but 14 obetlimme to my
manded from the beginning of the dia. - - ,- b r Ana or th glass has learned about God through tile
pute, the whore territory anbaeet to Bev, Dr. Talmage preached from the. sten. ;Thrt when (in; that machinery moot, every half hour comManda. True love &Wart loads to revelation of the Lord. jeeue Christ, age, Those who best koow what true
following text :-"Whosoever ..let ter tbe night, be wound. up. If the obedience. 'The love ot Christ 00n,.• has no right to he melancholy about eulture I's will be the last to claim tor
ESTI3t hefore the Manila revolt. and auturamer poDureeorut hiel•laZwelin Qin
possession slt the him, take the Water of ,
life freely .
aeons nouri-g and pourtng on. un -
e man at that post should haPPen tO etre'
eleeP. alas for tin seilore ist the eternal , '
tneth us ' 'the past or apprehensive of tha future.
He us with uet 'to the end. Be not it any such extreme merits; they reaa
with .it complete
Tail 17. e sway the :gather. The errsid. lize too well its nitwits, and oleo Ita .
from ite delta.to the great lakett. Ray • tit ttie gran blades 07, " gamsgh ales tor the eibipi Gocl has lifted a
In effeeti• a lies drawn from the
from the oat kins the carat/int. Dant- trine, "Enouish 1" but God. keeps
th a world's ale, and darkness, and Pother out never be compreltentI- way eafely be affirmed that neither that
Mediterranean • ectuthward along the g ' pouring on a d t'l th
twenty-fifth meridan ot (tap
• Midolesert, the water exhausted Medi the flewers, " Enolighl" and the great lantern to tibiae over the Bea, of myeterions relationship of Son and grand and undeniable toleantagee. It
the feet n po ring on, lle a 9 teMptatio4 and trenble. It needs ;IQ b RRIA coRonoNy IN 14ovpt.
ong u e ftelds are soaked, and the rivers over- hum n to • cl it It hi
a agency win Up. 0 nett y mortal mind. Von't spend time A world nor any individual will ever be
t 1 it d Mg under a, blistering atm,
bent the weitern boundary of Egypt OOnsnieeed he the desert,* what is it flew, and the enterns are all tilted, through all the , darkness of the in trying to explain it, Another Com-
* totter" le In I Wolin 2. 1, translated ee0;;IiinyZeetclelereeptUeld3thal°13FitY7611:nzaepeirneteertire93:41tililientEitilid:Olhber3tQauelLat:ow:e °Itta,stgbECtuaPeargetiatii:i "
that the people most want, For and the great.reeerveisa are euppliea, world's tau/eerily. ; and it says to forter ' The word here rendered "Coma
proper; almoet to the Congo, east of est and there is water to turn the wheel, thee who t tossing an tbe ilea .
which Britain ie to be suprelne, and wha, t weUh"h" give uP the ut' ' Water to elake the thirst ot the DRY. "ICeeep off theareooks 1" "Row thalt we
Wed Of Which, to the British '' and eamahle *ergo ell the book of the water to cleanse the air, water to etiOaPe if we negleat 00 ,great a salve- mortal at all, it is mental. Mortal .
German territorlea on .the Atlantio camels I Water 1 Water I " , as ithemisphere..:0 a En- '
da 6 I on " after i0 water Oa va- g ' • ft the ea.t"Advocate," elielper" has been twig -
extends oto far as to welcome visitors
in Egypt, where Oriental hoopitality
wads rranae gr‘ttY °antral. Darfur. An ermy is on the marble They are fitundhaiiierwiethnet.ntesnleselogrItatilosr sosii.
ji °Thou- uot Vhboloietn egooev,idwee,rweitet,tot, nretreerya ore& word. In Jowl 4. tiele, the
and 'grangers who care to go, although
IrtirOdofed and the whole of the Bahr. tatntIng fro the the 'lung way. The Can- sands have come to thle fountain, and. shall work cie the Spirit is described as
. the motive' may be -nay, usnally drunk to the satisfaotion of . we Jencl our eternity but
th who God has east Pleadingi arguing! emivineing! i_n- only Idle euriceity. WIterests, the
etructing, gukline, and wieneeelog• lee ceremony of "tying the knot" only
Is -
teens are empty. The hour of battle
himeelf had been doing. Aleide with
will do whet jeans takes a row minutes in Ohrierum emu.
tries, it hats in Cairo Iron: seven
is "Another" who
you foxever. Lifelong fellovvshin. o'clock in the evening to eleven, and
17. The Spirlt, of truth. Only a ie like enacting u chapter in the
few minutes before Jesus bad, said, I
" "Arabian Nights," (Writes a Correa-
al-Ghazel thue beeome Britiala noases-
slow, while tbie boundexiee ot the for.
.Mer Nreneh Where are puihed north
Indide Baghircal. and
Kamm, north of Lake Tolled, An area
et about 220,001) squere wIth, a
population of 2,100,000, .
This extension Betties' finaliy the
long, struggle for posseasion of tile
-shiners of Like Tchad, the 'series of
treaties ending in 1894, having seeur.
ed. to .the qorrakn °emersion te peet
of, the south oast, the British Niger
territerlea abutting the lake on the
South and vvest, and Prance now Qin&
la Corning on Forward yet for mane their sonls'.- Other thoueands ooze% one'•
se,weary mile. No shelter from the and yet the fountain will net be ex!" ' While the door •of, mere), is open,
burning sun; pushing on throe& sue_ tempted. But glory be to God! that
focation and heat.. Whet 'is it that come. 0, ye wonderers 1 While yet
ieonetu'hisit freUetrageetheeiretilica earth, the feu:eta-ha is flowing from ilio rook,
forall
winild he give up everything that he haa can not drink it dry.. Oh, ye teMPted re '
wagtWerb4.
the peddler Meat- -Wants, per what 6,nd for all the arraies of heaven. You soover will, let him tke the
•
with him? Whet awful want fills hie souls, coins mut drink of this blessed
miss: " You shall not be tenanted
sumes his vitals? Ask hitn, as he stair every_tenantation God will make a DM 11 TEEN YEARS 1.110
gars on nada the weight of knapsack way of escape, that you etae.be
enough to answer he
Vete* I" ' good to those who love God." "Your .
and blanket, and if he have strength to bear it. Oh, ye bereaved Sonia, -'-- .
will airy, "Water!. .00Me and drenic of this blessed prone MANY FAMOUS PEOPLE . WERE
X was told by a gentleman Who light afflictions are only for a Ince• '
Walked over -one Of the battlefields oie ment, and they work oat a far more Motu wale a Penances Reporter la
mind, and fevers bis tongue, and eons
promise
above that you are able, end tint from •
• India, Stanley :Woman a Ilrlerless
:plating her tenure. of tbe lenders on and an eternal weight of
a hot **summer night after a day of e...7:0"y".1.!rig
oarnage, that the cry of the wou.adecl /6 f 1 I IlarrIster, • Ian Intelaren Inilteard OP
,i ye wretched, hungry, starving poor, and Conon Doyle a Country Doctor.
the north and east. It gives Prance
also ley fat the largest share of Africa, . . It is not neceesary to look back Many
was Absolutely unbearable, and that, Behold •the royal feast!
•
her posseseions ineluclingthe whole of after giving ail supply that he could. Whereetelfreefey spreads her bounteous
Years to find Wen whose names are
to •thes, Congo and east to the asue..val.. Y-, a from os see! Jesus stands with opened arms achieved. both fame• and fortune,
00 -
ley,
all over the plain yea fr m t For every, hum.• bleeir, ueat. household words today, and who have
,
ALTiem trom on meetterrenean south he put his fingers. to his ears, for the
of the dying, "Water 1 Water 1, For He calls; be bids you come: , cupying 'obscure positions and laving
leY,-except Morocco, the small Spanish
strip south of it, Tripoli: - and the God's sake give us water!"
The Bible is all aesparkle with fault- Sin holds you back, and grief alarms, . . . „
no„ indication of the braliant future
tains and wellS, and -rivers and means, GosrupesttlanattdeltilatItillbtsewreheojealtrineft:herrier,er•arwin"ilt jtubsist - thal;ifteen years' ago len Conan Doyle
British end German coloniee on the was awaiting them .
*est wait. It veill be 'interesting • to
note what she will de with it, for al- .They Mae up their brigbtness from al- as mueli confidence that there Is enough was industriously Working .up a meth -
though Mott • every ' chapter eaemon ee_ for tttera as though 'there avere only ,
though she Colonizes fairly well, she I ' .
mem, eat practice, with all the attendant.
elainese."As told water to a thirsty
ex- two or three persons present:
it, ye dying zeen and womeneehear 'hard' work and struggle, at Southsea.
reshed with the story of heaven, Ins thin ear -shown more zeal in ac-
quiring territery than in the more MI- "'The Spirit and the Bride say, Come.. His pen was as yet untried, and • he
making it orderly and .peospeeous. • ' g - • of life freelyec octor., It was four. years later
, cover, as reaps s e areas ap-• •
spring as Willows by the water-, pse water typifies elle Gaspe1 in the
_-,propelated under the new•coniention,
it 'Mist 'be reunite:axed that Great 'r...-8911." In the Centieles; the' ehmich feet that it is. perennial. • I• Itriow that
portant Work. of developing it and soul. so ie good news from a far comae And let bine that is iithirst come; sad seem
ed destined to live and die a coat -
try." Isaiah speakin of the blessed- whosoever will, let him take the water t
. nest: -of Christians, says, "They shall r leadingthought. when he was tempted to try his 'preri-
item. hand at welting, with what result
'the vrorld andlis bankers know.
When Conan Doyle was elispensing
phsylcs at Southsea Mr, S. Ite firoekett
could not even* claire the. doubtful
position of "A. Sticket Minister," for
it was only 1;1886 that he entered the
Free Church of Seotland, in Which la6
served an apprentieeship seven
long years before he found that his
vocation late with. the pen •rather than
in the pulpit.
IAN MA,CLAREN WAS
At this time, too„ only
"Ian IVIaclaren".had won pop art
water ". and "streams from Lebanon." the fountains have dried up; but stand
this hoe. summer weather some of
:
is often spoken of as a "Well of livini . In
* Britain is in. eeteal occupation of the
greater part of her sphere, while ' - ,.-- you on the banks Of the Amazon, or
The prophet, glOwing With the IMatiel- of the St. Lawrence, or of the Missies, -
Prance has ye( to make good her claim n„, .
to :the vast region Passing •under her.,,,r-djelosster7tmrtion :Iy%Bihaitehntehbtraretiaidtktebnonfoludittitihd, ritnusaityehane, .arnu.lani,o,lorry,of Ntoir tGuehyloOrteedbreen ifthey
inflturce., : : ,...._ : ' . .e.• .
- ,
on fin thou:tends Id years, and .they
mitten being an ally of the Semisi sect • rieod,rInl'irlirTyfiwlioerdia;wieh living willprobablyflow on for tilousends of
at $ to reeuerh the bosom of!'
As Watial is Moslem to theciota ite seti
te Yeaavresenee otreih int trees of the fore.*
elf Mussulmans, as fanatical as the that: water be IyptiPtfceth
because of its brightness. .
TlItG°Ifelli It.he::ve:s5ratte°rs, ages
it
aladists, and Ilaghirmi .and genera birds of heaven have dipped their wings
And so it, is with this
task of subjugating its two or 'Wore SI111ri gs to -night from this Iliblei •
city fountains has Ince In. the wave. •
Gospel. It is a perennial Gospel. , On
earretele we !only i steof a portion of :that
g t River. 9 .Li e; but after awhile'
are .vassal 'States of this sultanate, the idashea•fr9eu the'
senre_initecompared with that which
milltone of popuiation is not likely to aqueducieuP T
he an e e • onPretendin fonn.. --h •
easy one. hill, flashing t te rtver will rise, and it will -join the'
In dividing the eon_ tain• breaks forth from the seat of the tides of tile celestial river' that °Ova
' . you Almost clap your hands with 'hard be the throw of GO& e.Aid the
Great Britain have .been :Ivor ing for see it y ' ' • a you Lamb which is in the midst of . the
the f teer '
u eeterther?than for the present
that there is no brightness in w co throne shall lead them te, living foun-
&daces. BM I -have to t 11
amen- Gotipel; for in each failing' are° I'M
° e some of you have found this life a des.'
YEL ,t;aAilihsl°infywadteearibrothers and sisters
pared with this living Omani:- f
__burre jg evident that the latter has
eeouree. the portion meet easily'
*hie to Europeatinfluenees. and that the glory . of ''inaveii,_,,00.---- news! --66 :.sert March. You .have had all your
The angels ebet,intit.
she can deriVe advantage from ',.,e "Behold! I.' bring you glad tidings of .
; troubles, . Is there one in this (Our -
ern 'that has never been bereft-t-thalt
brokenehearted? Not
trance will have iti light long before G°61:1 neWai"
area which passes to the protection of .ngrtttt joy and salvation, which WWI :ha! nSvar been
0 all people." joy or -pardoned , one: , You come to some ono who you
•
suppose is4wa?EbaPPY-,vbr7°u
her deg. Nev6rthelese, the new Dm. I joy of broken bondage1 Theof think.has nevebad anenlaftnles;
yeetioei is to be welcomed is conaplet. a corning heaven 1 Ch i it Is a bright
o vision,ttfountain 'fired fleshed upon bee he will telt you he has had,a thou -
a Gospel 1 Youerentember the time when •
tint, and 06 putting it in the way f and you cried, "Behold 1 I have
your sand trials. Wale. • A Mae of . great many
eou es saw wattepherd in the field
ing the partition of the Dark Cantin-
And there WaS joy. Int eaven°alon ' .hitusel4
evatithireeL the,1:811ceP, and he said to
'AV there is - a man that
,eivilisation, with t ex e .!ion ot foam' Hini whom My soul '1 v th 1,
he C p.. -
Abyssinia, Moroccee_Liberigethe Dutch
republioti and Perhaps a few ‘,_,.. th.e...gtiem hroaa_tive:r...ou„,±_icetiv-ift-,never4a.d-anYthing to-trould •"
to the shepherd and ae-
everr fitet,of Africa being now within elven heat the npple of the wave a d
e'wveavtIeecideoeft gleaadr....abudreir .him,eautalltiarnsnaru here. elvYeoruYthhiaPvge DIOS
desert regions, north of Lake Tch'uttad", 'aiSPeissi. Xte411).1.1on°,11.t°1116
_ glory shall cover the earth as the e the shepherd to the man "you do not
#ussioi ounT4. ' I have /nether to remark that • th ewe that every few days goes off• and
s,
the sphere a some European power.
crystalline brightness and th
• ter the sea, • . . . understand my life. There is a Mack
From this time forth there will be water typifies the Gospe. my i
i !,_ ,ts re- all the sheep of my flook follow' her,
very feW pieties of.the china from the jr,Tia geat, bltick ewe is the Teague or
fteehment. Hew diffeteuteyeeu fee"7
royal fae(ory of Russia seen in this aorralieranydou Patsy ''lr-tekrteto"halePY Mimi's life (hero is a at parable.
oinile every
or any other, Save the fizar's dominions, bath i On a hot el3s - plunged eidayi th tit ewe -one sorrow, one perplexity, one
nothing that 'so soon brings youeraili
as heists given absolute Orders for those disaster, one 'bereavement, one agent!,
&env a bad temper or a disturbed I said, you have fotirtd this life, some
exquisite products of native genius to of you, a deserti maroh. The sun has
spirit, 'd •
every blind eye shalt th troubles; you are to be congratulat d.
or rho see e t°a8 I have SO Many troubles!" "Ahl s:id
be -kept within his boundaries. The. after ion. puto get a glIss-Of cool war,
china corning from the St. Petersburg Blessed be' God for water! I love to
faatorY Is inirpaelsitigly b'ittutiful, and Veltscfeatile itetretshoweetand talh
Is in technique more wonderful tdi The ice -pitcher into the clear ;erase.
Is in technique more woriderfezte'even Raid around We rinetar of the hills,
than their enamels .on gold'ind silver. and drink, all of you, to the praise of
lie the firet place, ttardeldinci are WHine who brewed it among the moun-
s- tains. Thank god for water 1 Clear
tinctly e•thartteter she of the people. water I bright water i beautifol water!
One sees the came in their gorgeous But r have to ten you there, Is a bete
embroideries and other decorative ter refreshment even than ths.t. There
waS a tionewhett you were, hOttrided
work. There is a simplicity a line by muddle:wee Sinai thundred The
and form; yet immense strength, just wrath of God eried, "Ply I" Jus' ties
as one would aped from stioli a Vace. cried, "Fly !" Your own fears cried,
There are oupe and saucers with a, 1713e1" 116r0 said, "C°14e Come
oharaoteristio design of color and this- and you plunged like a 'hart into the
water -brooks, and out of that flood
ed Pastes (Mich as One seeit in their cross,-
stitch embroidery. These are more Van' 8°111 came up cool, and clean, and
intereatieg than beautiful, bat they radiant: and you looked around, and
eee•eerteepy eeepee. Thee were are
said, "Caine andhear, all ye that fear
Mips and eaucers with winter woe_ GA and 1 will tell you what he batli.
seepage daunting and festive actinism °al° f°r znY 8°141`"
These have an ornate border of gold There canie a tiint of perplexity in
your heart. You lost your property.
and Crouriel. Death, like a black hawk, swooped up-.Enthuslaatio antateure are hunting on the family brood, and the children
mit pieces of this choice Russian china were gone. You measured your life
froiu any possible source and copying from groan to groan, from loss to loss,
them as odd pieces for cabinet or china from tear to tette. You said, frora
chmet dieplay. They are so •stimptu. your distressed spirit, "Oh I that I had
In effect, and so muck more DD. the wings of a dove, for then would
joaing the tedious pieces of flow- I fly away. and be at rest." From
ter work which is oftentimes ;scarcely
more beautiful than tho sets purehase
Able for a nominal etun,
Ilussiaii enemas are growing inore
fatthionable each season and comntand,
various degrees of price, depending
upon the place from whieh they are
purchased.
The latest importations are antique
In tribe/re, bowls and bort-bon holders,
haying a curved and impreiteive handle,
teeny- inch of *hit% is MOTS elaborate-
ly decorated with torahs. The %wrong
have an Outline of gold wire, and are
of enamel, which is shaded with line
lines of Color after the enamel bas been
fired. This is on a rough surface of
gold, and is indeed rich. /bre again
We can apply that SAMS idea to China.
Silt united the technique is perfect, we,
will fall ahort of the °Mot, One is
impressed with the accuracy of draw -
AT TITE' ASYLUM, •
Ventale Atteodant (sympathetically)
-That is a vet /tad one. The poor
Creature qttial1y prefers comfort to
is it a ghoul?, There is a tax on the that one `white Lamb And as the
angel of God, !deeding On One of the
Vitsitor-etfoodneeel And won't she city water, bit no tax upon the great
rtvers that roll to rpetual volume to banks of the river, under the Tree of
.ever recover her reasont
the depths of your fevered soul
called oat, "Has God forgotten to be the Eterual City. God hath made every inc present Vieeroy of India was are presently
you told, is to "teach all
gradate? 10 ma mercy dean gone drop of that *water blight, and clear, reading for his B. A. degree at Oxford things, and bring all things to re -
forever ? Hath he in bia anger shut and beautiful. The righteous, robed in 1884, and was already looking for- monbtetice." ,
up his tender mercies against me V' As, in white awl garlanded, sit on its ward to an apprenticeship to polities, B. The Comforter. The Paraciete,
When you have been walking io a thick banks, and watch its tidost, and hear Willa began in the following year as "The oAdvorate," which is the Holy
wood on a hot summer day, you heard the roll of its waters for ever and for astiatitat private secretary to Loed Ghost. In nay Mane. IiiSte_ad of, raY
the dash of fountains and your spirit ever. No unhealthy mitt bovine over Salisbury, and Lord leitcheuer was a personal tiresome. Teach you all
was cheered, too, while you were ost;„, that river; no malaria rifles from its eavalrY Maier in 'elgypt, after a spell things. The human spirit enlighten -
ening for the answert the promise ee surface: tie bleaPhoning crew Olt Di obacure, if useful, stirveY Work in ed by the Spirit of God sees uniteasure
God dropped cool And fresh and sparkle "shine art ths titan for ever" eha
her oars into that Water. Thelynwoohloc Cirtia. ' ed truth and beauty in the Holy Scrip.
three, in the mate of Frevidence, and
ing from the throne: "There is a river,
the streams whereof shall make glad &wit into the glassy wave, and have - vat mutt SECRET. in • personal communion with God,
the city of our God," you rejoiced at 'their tape' reflected. The thrones , to which truth end beenty an unen-
It ti not dark eat:4131e yet,
the thought of the fountain. Your and temples on either bank of that ana lightened soul is absolutely deaf and
blind, Prate:tante, in their stout
fevered tout thrilled With the cool river will bridge it with their ebadows.
In it the trees of life will dip theft whispered as she peered eagerly up
teeth, and you cried, "Eureka 1 Eureka!, amt. down the street, maintenasere of the right a every hu -
of Amaranth will ripple the waves. There e AO Otte ID sight, he replied, man being to, the word of God with -
I have. found it. Water ! Cold water 1 branehee. Breezes from off the hills
Bright water 1 Everlasting wale''', after a earefut survey. ,
I 'go further, and oeY that laiinba' go dOWit to the river to drink,
I suppose you have seen shop and Mit tote one MAY 0001S round that
corner at any minute and recognise
bursa* trom the throne 1"
water tyifies, the Gatpel by IN Hark e I hear the voice of the sheep us, and then I should want to die,
&sense& On a hot Sabbath, When the and latabs of heaven now doming down iWell then, we'll wait a bit.
cOWS break through the alders of the trent the hills, coming through all tbe eVhat,' dreadful deed did thee° two
Meadows to drink, how mtehe do they ,valleys, emieg down to the river Of eontemPlate doing?' • `
PeY ter' that which they drink f The neaVell to drink, led on by one mow. Ile Was about to glee her her first
humming -bird drinks from the Wine. white. Lamb, at whose bleat all the lemon in riding a bioyele,
lass or na h e n hi liow ranch flooks follow. Hear the bleating of
mitten you by day. You have been
consumed, almost of the desert, and
you have istagged wearily
on in the long tramp. Your lips are
parched; yeti'. tongues is fevered; your
heart is sick.' What do you want?
Breed to feed your hunger; water to
slake this all -consuming thirst.
I am glad to know that wbile earth-
ly cities may sometimes run short of • a
supply of water, the New Jerusalem
will never leek 'plenty of water. Have
you. ever • thought minufely Of that
promise of the Bilate tint. there will
be living fountains, in heaven? Not
such' as we. see in our city parks,
sprinkling only a faint baptisra on the
air, but commensurate with the great
city of heaven. On every street, be-
fore every mansion, around the temple
of God and the Lamb, living fountains
of water: , Flowing through that
great city, with- trees of life in im-
mortal
be a river. " London has a river her brain. . • subject ot the Faraeleta"-Plummer. humor A „,%„ At emelt d,e, pettiest desertptuen and masts o
neared leafage. on either bank; there was gradually asserting its presence in ..takes a fresh start, returning to the theime hineeele
'---e " `e smallest talk possible. As a men who
running theough it, but that lathe fil- Hutaphrey Wird wise too busy ,Them things. All the wonderful reve.
thY Maslen. Farie-bas a river running with domeetio cares to recognize the Wiens, benedictions, and prophecies
through it, but that is the tutoleart genius that was waking in bort and which they had been listening la, Be -
Seine. Venice has 'Maar -running had been content to write -only a sine- ing yet present with you. The fellow-.
thronglat...but-that.,Ja...dlettarbeti by ple child's story; and Mrs, F. A. Steel ship of the premat, so precious to the
the filthy gondoliers. Behylon ofold Win an Intlian'"mentsithib," with stave devee,ntustsoon end, no morethings"
had a river miming through it, yet er a thought .of pen or fame. of this sort .could be spokee to them
that wee the bealitned Euphrates. 33ut, some story may be told of scores by the Lordebue that is only because
blessed be God, no reurn or filth shall of men now veorld-famous in Other an everlasting fellowship is to .he
.•
pour int° the river thatflowe through fields of.effort. ushered in, and the Holy Ghost, as we
OWN.
are ago;
iis
minitter of Sefton t'axer phuroh, Lir-
erpc,o1; but oratdozen More -years Iris
pee was engaged in writing sermont
before it turned to the pathos and
/mut,' of "Beside the Bonnie Brier -
Bush.'
Hall Caine, ' who earl' now rely on
making hbs. oWn weight in gold out of
a single novel, was.quite unknown 15
years ago. • After years of ill -paid
journalism in Liverpool he had tome
to London to he Dante Ressetti's pri-
vate•seeretary and to find scope and
inspiration for the gifts that were in
him. The eharige ot environment
Worked a miracle, for in 1885 his pow-.
mild "Shadow of a Crime' introduced
It new "prophet" to the world of read-
ing.
Fifteen years ago Anthony Hope was
a Scholar of Balliol,, and his only am: -
baton. was to folio* in the footsteps of
Ms uncle, Sir Henry Hawkins, as he
then was. It was not,until 1899 -that
he proved hiraself "a Man of mark" in
quite another field 0; labor. -
In 1884 Stanley Weymane the gifted
author of so lamey historical novels,
was wcilting for briefs in Dr. Johnson's
Buildings, and did not even, attempt
.to solace his waiting hours by "trying
his. band" at fiction, of which he is
now such a =ester.
KIPLING WAS A SUBEDITOR.
Itudyard Kipling, in • the early
eighties was • assistant „editor of the
Indian Pioneer, on many less rupees a
month than he now earns pounda a
week, • He was writing his "Depart-
mental Ilitttes" in his few Spare Mo-
ments, and hoped some day, as the
height a his ambitions to induce, the
world to read them in book form. Hider
Haggard had already written one
book, "Cetywayo and His White Neigh --
horse. Mad published it at a loss of
450, need was on the verge of publish-
-lag "Dawn" at a net profit of RAO for
a year's hard work.
Fifteen years ego Mint. 'Sarah
Grand was rambling the world over
with her soldier-dootor husband, and
only vaguely naapping out a novel
which the world noW knowe as
"Ideala." Olive Schreiner was dream-
ing chemist in the solitude ot the veldt,
and the. "Story of an African Valle
am the truth." The world. ThoSe pendent. We drove to a remote part
"They shank from the egreese of the
whose life ' is in , bondage to the
desires of the world. Cannot receivbroad avenue, then by the Nile UP a
of Cairo, down one broad avenue into
e' a narrow street, then aorose. another
sight shrinks from the
BAY Spirit as one that is infirm of narrow street, then intp another, and
brightness of lbsally came to a halt at the entrance
.theediamoseasa-Cttveye:ept
uretonr. latsetahasheimniboite, ot a dark street between two high
0
tvelle and coanpletely filled with men,
spiritual nature as well es 'sensitive the uncertain light cif spates lamps
plysical and intellectual.natures, Awl fallieg upon a sea of tarboosbee, itnd
wile- dwarf intellectual growth, and we made our way to the gate of tbe
j • t as perverse Ignorant!, and folly the whites of eyes, With. difficulty'
just as abuse of .the laws ef health large garden in front of the Paella's'
will paralyze phyaioal energies, so a pelage, the entire facade of which was
life sordid and e base will tend to ex- brilliantly- illurainated, and within
tiriguish discernment, 00 that the which the wedding eerentopy was
worlding may be in the preseeee of about to take Place.
the Holy Spirit:end 'know hint not Making our (Way on feet through
Ye know him. "Are knowing him" the crowd that filled the garden, we
Dwelleth with you. • By your, side,
were niet at the door by the master
Shall be in You. Is - of ceremonies" and his private • Beare -
12. Corafortleas. "Desolater 1:aa or;
tPlatilunsg; .12thGe ""tnommernter0,'-' taken away from us and conducted to
tary. The ladies were immediately
Faraclete of verse 16, and the "corn- the 'harem, our men being shown 'int°
. .
fortleas," orphans, of this veese. ..N0 a roOra beside another reperved for the
one can study the words and deeds of
natives -men everywhere, but not • a
thedisciples while Jesus was withi
w,
them.and not; feel bow like fatherless
Rabbi in the grave; "sheep in the the large dining' all, where we were
and all sat
little bele they would be With their h
here assures them that their bereave- X cannot gi-Ve the menu. The master
oew-olacipaierstiy, but only tee
midst of- wolves," Indeed, and utterly
• e ricieditIsedof boYurth
r ruin, • Jesus dowa to dinner. And Mich a dinneri
should unite for - thei
helplees when Saadueee ..,and Pharisee
runt, and manner of which of cereroonies said. that he presumed
the °a
they .cannot ,yet understand, will. be it• Would.be agreeable to eat our steak
but temporary. I will Demo to you. with our fingers, an injunction with
whieb ave complied: Seep, really deli -
19. Ye't a. little while, and. the world eious chicken broth, was anted in a
"I come." am always coming. .
large tureen, with a ohioken floating
more." Not ta "the world" but onlyto. "witnesses chosen before . of GeV soup from it.-
the middle, each of 'us dipping his
seeth me no more. elleholdeth me no
did our Lord appear after his .elmon in the tureen and eating . his
10 the chicken
i
was taken outof the tureen, torn limb
bold mese! not only the 'few to whose
eyes the. wonders of the forty days
",-Ye b- -ee served. and eaten. The bread was lie
frora limb with the fingers and so
eesnrrectien. Ye see me.
were Manifest,' but every Christian. long. soft .whips, that mild' be Mang
their to and fro like molasses candy: ,
Because I live, Ye shall live also.And-
. ' :
.. ,
Whet took place:in the harem is
Spiritual life brings spiritual 'vision.
Of the resurrection; and more, it IS a
----- said ;-!••"I was 'ushered through a :long,
met told by one of the ladies. She,
ye shall live also." This is a premise
Fether. By unity of manes- Ye in
life -_a eiee over , narrow atone passage, lighted° lly
which death • has no ,power --given • to torches held be negroes, and suddenly
promise of eternal
!souls in the hands found rciyself in a large room, the
all whc trust their
of &elem.; of But* a life the re- harem.' brilliantly lightea by electri-
surrection of. saved -seuts' is a nieces- city, with a num,bew of beautiful woe
sarY aPisOde• ' • enveiled, sitting on richly ,ocricired
teen With &twilled eyebrows and red--
-- 20. At that day. The day of my divans. , ,. , e .
rttaineet finger -nails,. lightly clad and
victory. Ye shall know. It shall be
me. As members. of my body, Eph. 6. dos, and they were °severed with dicS••
worlds and pearls. ,./n the middle of
Their costumes were of costly fah -
demonstrated to you. I aim in the .
avettt in
me,.. Gel. 2. 20, and
jo.rn.i., ,tphetesioaomna wi,e•ea bower o± f mAsfeaterfowr atiht:
a I in .Ynikr; Su Paul says, -"°hrt..- bride. On all sides rciee Oriental car -
aman,Amu, we were hynted into
a dila' keePiatirlsie 4.....avientir in an hour in the harem the e
dwelleth in him!, - and he in 'him, ' • e7 1 - appeared, walked to the bower and sat
John 3, al.
21, , VIE conditions under which the bower,
arnao
istehder •thloengveiwi aloft
prep Ise is aenikizedt ex hce;ler,0 onee„ verse (he'
detite:br'tliondegt.ihtre'oom came. 1 He went .dile
cliseiples tint they that love him will
tat:rehear bnae•kwL'ar'sd.'8Th'"ereeeyeesers leedserhers the brida who was beautiful, and
certainly keep his commandments ; whom.he paw for the first time, placed
here he .says that they that keep bis a munificent diamond necklace over
commandmentri do it from love to him. her head end, led her away. The'
Shall be loved,. A richer pronaise even gayety of the haxera was further in -
than the shisiiiir one in John • 12, 26. creased -by the beating of tom-toms
again to 1 joint 8. 24..)
Will manifest myself to him. Refer
and by the 'ditties du ventre.' After
this ceremony, a procession formed, in
22. judge smith unto him, not Is- the k rden and marched around it to
cariot, The apostle called a 1 Th the -large-
by mat. the sound of mus a en
thew (10. 3) Lebbens 'or, Thaddeus; b groom's best man came out and rriade
Luke (6. 16) "'the brOther of James.' a speech on his behalf; which was re-.
fest thyself unto Us, and not 'unto the plied to by one chosen for the pure
Lord, how is it that thou wilt Man:
world. "'Why bast thou. so loved us pose. neAefvteerrytthhiisucthwescsroinwdiubnegsawnintgo
disperse and all was •over. '
recitation of which, the world is not body•could arran
the electric lights anddenly went out
as to account ' us worthy of a meal-
:. 23. This verse perfectly - answers amid the screams of the beauties. No,.-
ge it but one electrie
accounted worthy?
Judas's question. It may be thus pare- ohm, who had to be sent for. lee his
phrased: "I Will manifest myself to
you, and not to the world, because that
IS the very nature ef things. You love
Ate, and obey me, and ray Father loves
YOU as a consequent°, and the result is
we abide in. your hearts. That IS the
divine Manifestation.rl
24. He that loveth Me not keepeth
not My sayings. And absence. of love
11
culture isemore geoeraely known as re-
ligion -or some may call it philosophy.
A great deal toe mush moral virtue •
has been claimed for intelleotual ould
tura and education. Even the arts, wee
ble and beautiful as they are, are net
in themselves moral, however excel-
lently they may be adapted to moral
purposes. ,Musio,eainting, poetry, ars' y
in themselves. absolutely non -moral,
though one May be ustalsepr anthems -a'
and bylaws, .one for sacred pictures,
and the other for Leaching the high.
ceit . lessons. Before we toellel 010,141
Lor greater culture in .thette, things,
we must learn to estimate them at
their true value. Although, in Use beet
sense only that is beautiful which; le
goad, yet there is a quest of beauty
-
which many entirely miss, and not even .
seek for the noblest good. Reformer*
wheee cry has bash education and art
mhaevreatto:raorfttueneffoeurgeohttelenarbez.sliitgletat tthhee
culture of the heart alone that 'will
reform the world, not that of the imag-,
inative and mental faculties, Having
athd.amtitatehoduitahisbe• itpialyse apotiosi baleen general
LP • -
a just and fair valuation on the part '
tare. This pert is truly a most im-
portant one, and has hardly yet bet*.
'fitly recognized. •
One of thenharges brought againat
England by foreigner* has usually hews
that we have negleeted culture, -that
we are a nation of shopkeepers, with ^
ideas only reaching to the 'limit of
our countere, says an English writer,
The charge as such wholesale acettsa-,
tions must "be, has always been an ex-
aggerated one;' • Yet tberee halt been •
enough of truth in it to give it a gen- •
talit sting. We deserve it • now 'less
than ever' betote, but it may still be
pressed withesome force. In ala &gee,
and countries there Is a straggLe be-
tween the utilitarian spirit' and the'
spirit that makes for beauty adorn-
meat.and
That struggle still- goes on, and
it is often assisted by the binding rie-
°malty of earning daily bread. Oul-..
ture,' the busy tradesman Will say, does
retrkpisys.aie'Culture, orto thsaieesiwequoamallyn,bnaspty
'pearl; little short of an '
Such education as has, been' acquired
at school is forgotten within a, year
a leaving. Young people of 16 or 19
hasten to forget the little that they
learned, and say that their education
is -" finished." It is aatonishing how
Many persons of so-called education aye
profoundly ignorant" even of the hia.
tory .and geography or his own coun-
try and their • knowledge of our gline
ious literature is limited to the latest
novels. But the lack id culture is not
confined to persons of this description,
Person who Neve primed and loaded
themselves with special knowledge;
passing difficult examinations, often ,
prove to as the, fact that the mere do-
qttitiriremiael_ist,theotfr_ibnoaforsnatead_tkilieviedsomgeretiuhenegyr,_
very different treat culture, and that •
are very duli Yolk indeed. To a greet
extent true culture must be -self-aes
quired, coed almost the oztly avenue M-
ita riches is • the study of literature.
Nothing. so truly refines the mind and -
enlarges its vision, as the absorptiore •
of good books., and of books which usu.
ally the specutl, student ignores come
pletelye .
Poetry and the highest litera,ture
raay be of small use in coaching for en
examination, but. their value Ls more •
abiding than that of a thousand '
lege. books.. It is in tbis respect that
the educatee and lettered are often
as uncultured es the ignorant and alit.
orate. There.; -is a utilitarian spirit fp
the acquirement of knowledge, Retire!)
as in ' the,pursnit of commercial pros.'
PeritY ; and both of these are too fond
of sneering at that which, to theii
narrow views, don not appear to lead,
immediately to anything practical
and remuoerative. lid the harvest of
-arrival, after a• short time, there were culture is in the soul of meta 'lode
fresh, screams, 'A man in thee herem l'
and it remunerates even beyond the
On .went the lights, but the Veils had more learning of fads and figures, 01
been put tip, to come down again as the produce of markets.
There are persons who boast witt
soon as the offending male had diactp-
Pared- Cigarettes and sweetmeats great Pride tba,t they never read 6
were handed around afresh and the book in -their lives, perhe.pet not melee
harem returned US wonted charm." ' a novel. Suck are, indeed, to be pitted,
. and, what is more, they will generals
- ' be avoided by people of cultivated
.. - mind. With few exceptions the Pete
HAD TO STAY. pie who do not read, and wile neglect
Makes revelation impossible, for it '
meant disobectienee, all culture are very dull and %minter -
25. "'With this this verse the •discouree 1: fai English ,noblenaan whose enter- esting ; their conversaeloa is of . the
t re te eabl dull is never- . . ,
ed.8.11.•
•
the Sea. ...new Mire Will the world my Wet Innk% down, and tees that one
DEADREADS. for all tile ahowers that this Bumbler wisite Lamb leadlog all the great nook
refreshed the corn -fields Nothing, it nt the redeemeds) takes his harp
vathm to all wigs wili aceept it. Here, 111' than letIven' "8tin hanitrninr
. jaaregglee....yteatattea the Nay igen is 0. num who earn, win par toe bird'. trill : "The Lamb which Is
• to membership stem to be the it or will tlOt have, it. X am an in- the midst of the throfte elan lead
• hggitia-,-Why do you think those free' and so is this gl• orieue Gospel. frWat the willows Y the Water4oureegir
alon't worry eittbs won't be sno- ft is free in ite Perdoth hope and sal- anti strikes this beautiful /strain soft.
beset ,
fellows n never DV r ohts. . dependent Mau; and I Will gill. SO Gm to tIvthg fountftIk 0± water, Un
.041110
, *t
WRY XIS WAS ANGRY, '
Mr. Pegao, the oratorieal
liquor member of the XeW . .,I1
Waled Legislative Amenably, mas
lately made very angry by a misprint.
Whiskey Makes Melt genial for a
Mae, mid Vegan in a speech. The
next day bt read, and hie conetituente
read, in the offielal report of the de.
bete, Whiskey Melte* me getial for *
One evening he was leaning against.
a wall for a few 33111111t6S refreshment,
and surveying the throng of guests
gathered at his wife's bidding with n.
speoulative gate, when 4 voluble young
man stepped up to him.
Peetty slow, isn't itt volunteered the
lively stranger, X wonder if the par-
ties Lord rind Lady -e ---give are neSer
any livelier than this. .
Never, returned the unrecognized
hest . promptly.
- Then I hall make my bow and take
myself off at once, said ths young Man.
Lucky fellow, eatd Lord ----with a
whimsical smile; I'm obliged to stay.
Something in his tone enlightened 'ha
young map, who turned orb:natio and
began to stammer apologies. But his
host waived all such attempts, and
hold nut Itia hand to his unwise guest,
always stays in his native village Must
over have the most circumscribed 00 -
tions of the world, so he who never
toads must have similarly confined
Ideas as to what other persons have
said and, thought and felt. Reading
Is a species of travel for the mind; it
admits us to the minds of others great-
er and wiser than ourselves. If our
eonsieleration of eulture becomes nar-
rowed down to it eulogy ot reading:
this is little wonder, for in a wise read-
ing, does truly exist nine-tenthof the •
best education t Ver our mu Sake, and
the sake of thete-with whore We have
intercourse, it is well for us to seek
stteh eulture. Its acquirement is not
a task, but the greatest of pleasures,
Cultured people are rarely dull, and
rarely become bores. They alone can
enjoy the truest weals of leieure,•and•
their ,-a1...1,is stored with resottrces.
You mut go with OleaT 0011Wietlet But we must never forget enatainiture
said he, pleasantly, for you've give Mote IS not a moral ageney,
016 the only ablimernent I`Vil had this
evening,
A DEFINITION UV A wurrnnurt.
Pa, -said the midi bot with the Ind
out note or ottunent, are sometimes
tempted to ignore, if they do not (mite T1I11 HIT Ob' TIRE FLAY. quirilig mind, what IS an optimist t
An optimist; reined the tiallow-fored
forget, that we need the Spirit of God First Actor (pulliti'g the ttigger of a parent, is a man who never had dys.
to understand the tiaings of God,
27, ream X leave with ifeh. "Mime •revolver SIX tinles)-4:110, you pepsie,
able villain!
in the world to ooze; .petiee ite.leavett with remorse for my many aflame, and Tommy -There's a girl at oy school
he leaves us in this worl saye St.
Attguetine • "Itiapeatle he will give US
het in which, by abiding the:
rein, We may overcome tb6
enemy; ble poets he will give
lig When we shall reign without any
enemy; peace he leaves US, that here
We MOT love one alaothele; Mrs imam
he will. give us, when it willbe no
more passible for es to disagree, Itt
him, and from him, have we our peat%
whether it be that whlah he leaves '
with 11/1 at his ;going to -the rather, ,
or that Width be Will give ns when '
he hringa ni WO the proem* of the
Malta." Sty pima I sly% ttAtto you.
Second. Actor -Your pistol bee mim-
ed, fire, Sir Rudolph; but Ian% smitten JUST FITS 1101t,
will die, &wording to your wish. mamma, they call" roetseript. Do you
Then he rolled tin the stage in agony, know why t,"
while the eurtain, slowly deacerided, Mamma -No, dear.
SAILA the °hetet and laughter of the Tomtesesellecenee her name is Ada,.
au:dienee, . lise Moore.
PARTICULAMY IfttIESSAIVIC.
Friend...4 understand that, in your
lint, a man must be vety plausible and
PeT311441Ye. be °nee told me that She 'wouldn't
prumnier-Yee; especially when he marry the bast Man living 1
explaining to the arta why why he hasn't. ikw*-\VeII 1 cuppeae she'd rade
Nottl DAY PodsOr be happy thee consietent.
•
A SENS/IltE PREFERENCE,
tfra• Drown-6ie, site's engaged. And
•Seiseeloot.