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1 iw «^<*»»jj Igbt make that Thousand Dollars, but I feW s\inga on OW shoos to pay me ^[Blacking If : m H»t~W \\' leathtr *° A \ j$/or PiV-Eon, «Afi* Su>» NCW Fu\>S 1TU \ E feiiBOLD BASKETS RB» B, ' S COACH AMD If:* RANDOLPH. Philadelphia. at tt. « Mme. COUQHORCOLD JHITIS Throat'Affectlon & - WeurtingofHeA toteM (ha TTiroae and XMngt ; lac* </ Strength or Norm lion tt relieve* and v /-ed b y IULSION OF COD LIVER OIL nth Hypophosphiliei. (TABLE AS MILK, |Scotf'» EmuUion, and let no «av Jor «o!ici(otio)i indue* you to tliilifute. jld by all Druggists. iBOWNE,Chemists, N.Y. I HON SCHOOL AND mts' Academy, pDoNALD, - Principal, Assisted by a full corps of be of instruction is com- [being uniform with of all the Regents' pademies in the —STATE fchool Building IRE, LIBRARY, AND APPRA- •11 new anil in the best condition. |tITION RATES! ic, $7.00 per term, 6.00 \ \ ment, 5.00 \ \ •ment, 4.00 \ \ fcrtment, 3.00 \ \ [EXTRA CHARGE FOR AND DRAWING I liculars address: J.GEORGB HARRIS, Sec'v Board of Education. -AND- FUEN1SHINGS. TH© -w- WE ARE WITNESSES! 10 BXJY of'Furniture of the Itrns and the latest jarlor and. Bed Room P-bles, Chairs, fancy I Book Cases, Writing lain and plush Picture Paby Carriages, Wall 1& Curtains. Picture N made to order; |8PECXAJL.TY. Mm Depot, N. Y. 8A.II> t H- Mate a Note <rf\ |*yftJ History of the ]||i«>d espfepiiiMf '-0 pnpllB in ri5iWMientn^iHtWaf;«f»SA«S*V:.r't D3. TALMAGE'S OPEN AT BEATRICE, AIR SERMON NEB. T*e Logic of the Skeptic Is Met by th« Overtiming Testimony of Million, of Christians and Proved to Be False. BEATRICE, Neb., July B ._ Dl . TaJ . mage preached here in the open air tc an immense congregation which had gathered from all the surrounding country t o hear the famous preacher His text was, \We are witnesses\ (Act. HI, 15). Following is his sermon- In the days of George Stephenson, the perfector of the locomotive engine the scientists proved conclusively that a railway train could never be driven by steam power successfully and with- out peril; but the rushing express trains from Liverpool to Edinburgh, and from Edinburgh to London, have made aU the nations witnesses of the splendid achievement. Machinists and naviga- tors-proved conclusively that a steamer oould never cross the Atlantic ocean; but no sooner had they successfully proved the impossibility of such an un- dertaking than the work was done, and the passengers on the Ounard, and the Inman,.'and the National, and the White Star lines are witnesses. There went up a guffaw of wise laughter at Professor Morse's proposition to make the lightning of heaven his errand boy, and it was proved conclusively that the thing could never be done; but now all the news of the wide world, by Asso- ciated Press put in your hands every morning and night, has made all na- tions witnesses. So in the time of Christ i t was proved conclusively that it was impossible for him to rise from the dead. It was shown logically that when a man was dead he was dead, and the heart and the liver and the lungs having ceased to perform their offices, the limbs would be rigid beyond all power of friction or arousal. They showed it t o be an abso-. lute absurdity that the dead Christ should ever get up alive; but no sooner had they proved this than the dead Christ arose and the disciples • beheld him, heard 3 his voice and tallied with him, and they took the witness stand to prove that to be true which the wise- acres of the day had proved to be im- possible; the record of the experience and of the testimony is i n the text: \Him hath God raised from the dead, whereof we are witnesses.\ THE SKEPTIC'S ARGUMENT. Now, lot me play the skeptic for a moment. \There is n o God,\ says the skeptic, \for I have never seen Mm with my physical eyesight. Your Bible isapackof contradictions. Therenever was a mimcle. Lazarus was not raised from the dead, and the water was never turned into wine. Your religion is an imposition on the credulity of the ages.'' There is a-i aged man moving over yon- der as though he would like to respond. Here are hundreds of people with faces a little flushed at these announcements, and all tlu-ougli this assembly there is a suppressed feeling which would like to speak out in behalf of the truth of our glorious Christianity, ias in the days of the text, crying out: \We are wit- nesses!\ The fact is that if this world is ever brought to God it will not bo through argument, but through testimony. You might cover the whole earth with apol- ogies for Christianity and learned trea- tises in defense of religion—you would not convert a soul. Lectures on the harmony between science and religion are beautiful mental discipline, but have never saved asoul, and never will save a soul. Tut a man of the world and a man of the church against each other, and the man of the world will in all probability get the triumph. There aiv a thousand things in our re- ligion that seem illogical to the. world and always will seem illogical. Our weapon in this conflict, is faith, not logic; faith, not metaphysics; faith, not profundity; faith, not scholastic exploration. But then, in order to have faith, we must have testimony, and if live hundred men, or one thou- sand men, or five hundred thousand men, or five million men set up and tell me that they have felt the n ligion of Jesus Christa joy, a com fort, a help, an aspiration, I am bound as a fair minded man to accept their testimony. I want just now to put before you three proposition-, the truth of which I think tiiis audience- will attest with over- whelming unanimity. RELIGION BRINGS A CHANGE OK HEART. The first proposition is, Wo are wit- nesses that the religion of Christ is able to convert a soul. The Gospel may have had a hard time to conquer us, we may have fought-It back, but we were vanquished'. Yon say ^version is only an imaginary thing. We know Setter \Wo are witnesses.\ There never was so great a change in our Eand life on any other subject as on this. People laughed at the mission- aries in Madagascar because they JSriR'd ten years\ without one con- vert; but there are 33,000 converts in M ^ri: r ugStB,Ado ri ijud e son the Baptist missionary, be-ause he kept on preaching in Burmah live yeare wttfaort a single convert; but there are SK thousand Bap^in Burinah today. • People laughed at Di. Morn S China, for preaching there seven tSri without a single conversion, bat «h!« are twenty-flve thousand Clyris- ShfchinaSay. People laugh* Ke missionaries for preaclung at'Ta- MfTfifteeB >arfl without a single con- SLdat Cessionaries foj >bjW m Bengal Beventeen yean are multitudes of tho.e lands there Clirlr.tiaus today. But why go so far to find evidence of the Ciospel's power to save asoul? \VvV i.ru witnesses.\ Wo were so proud that no man could havo humbled us; we were so hard that no earthly power could havo incited us; angels of God wore all around about us; they could not overcome us. But one day, per- haps a t a Methodist anxious seat, or at a Presbyterian catechetical lecture, or at a burial, or on horseback, a power seized us, and made us get down, and made us tremble, and made us kneel, and made us cry for mercy,' and we tried to wrench ourselves away from the grasp, but we could not. It flung us flat, and when we arose we were as much changed as Gourgis, the heathen, who went into a prayer meeting with a dagger and a gun to disturb the meet- ing and destroy it, but the next day was found crying, \Oh my great sins! Oh, my great Saviour!\ and for eleven years preached the Gospel of Christ t o his fellow mountaineers, the last words on his dying lips being, \Free grace!\ Oh, it was free grace! CONVERSION DID IT. There is a man who was for ten years a hard drinker. The dreadful appetite had sent down its roots around the pal- ate and the tongue, and on down until they were interlinked with the vitals of the body, mind and soul; but he has not taken any stimulants for ten years. What did that? Not temperance soci- eties. Not prohibition laws. Not moral suasion. Conversion did it. \Why said one upon whom the great change had come, \sir I feel just as though I were somebody else!\ There is a sea captain who swore all the way from New York to Havana, and from Havana to San Francisco, and when he was hi port he was worse than when he was 011 the sea. What power was it that washed his tongue clean of pro- fanities and made him a psalm singer? Conversion by the holy spirit. There are thousands of people in this assem- Jdage today who are n o more what they orfce were than a waterlily is a night shade, or a morning lark is a vulture, or day is night. Now, if 1 should demand that all those people hore present who have felt the converting power of religion should wise, so far from being ashamed they would spring to their feet with more alacrity than they ever sprang to the dance, the tears mingling with their exhilarations as they cried: \We are witnesses!\ And if they tried to sing the old Gospel hymn they would break down with emotion by the time they got to the second line: Ashamed of Jesus, that dear Friend On whom my hopes of heaven depend? No! When I blush, be this my shame: That I no more revere his name. THE GOSPEL'S POWER TO COMFORT. Again 1 remark that we are wit- nesses of the Gospel's povfer t o comfort. There are Christian parents here who are willing to testify to the power of this Gospel to comfort. Your son had just graduated from school or college and was going into business, and the Lord took him. Or your daughter had just graduated from the young ladies' semhiary, and you thought she was going to be a useful woman and of long life; but the Lord took her, and you were tempted t o say, \All this culture of twenty years for nothing!\ Or the little child came home from school with the hot fever that stopped not for the agonized prayer or for the skillful physician, and the little child was taken. Or the babe was lifted out of your arms by some quick epidemic, and you stood wondering why God ever gave you that child at all, if so soon h e was to take i t away. And yet you are not repining, you aro not fret- ful, you are not fighting against God. What has enabled you to stand all the trial? \Oh you say, \I took the rnedicine that God gave my sick soul In my distress I threw myself at the feet of a sympathizing God; and when I was too weak t o pray or to look up he breathed into me a peace that I think must bo the foretaste of that heaven where there is neither a tear, nor a farewell, nor a grave.\ .Come, all ye who have been out to the' grave to weep there—come, alL ye comforted souls, get up off your knees. Is there no power in this Gospel to soothe the heart? is there no power In this re- ligion t o quiet • the worst paroxysm of grief? There comes up an answer from comforted widowhood, and'orphanage and childlessness saying: \Ay ay, we are witnesses!\ GOD EASES SORROW. When a man has trouble the world comes in and says, \Now get your mind off this; go out and breathe the fresh gu-; plunge deeper into business.\ What poor advice! Get your mind oft it I When everything is upturned with the bereavement, and everything\ re- minds you oE what you have lost. Get your mind off it I They might aS well advise you to stop thinking. You can- not stop thinldng r and you cannot stop thinking in that direction. Take a walk in tl 10 fresh air 1 Why, along that very street, or that very road, she once accompanied you. Out of that grass plat she plucked flowers, or into that show window'' she looked, fascinated, : saying, \Come see the pictures.\ Go ' deeper into business 1 Why, she was associated with all your business am- bition, and since she has gone you have , no ambition left. , Oh, this is a clumsy world when it tries t o comfort a broken heart. I can build aCorlear's, engine, I can paint a ' Raphael's \Madonna I can play, a Beethoven s Eroica Symphony'* ai 1 easily as this woild oauoomfoit a brok- en heart. Andyetyou havebeen conv foifcedi How was it dope? BidOhri* , come to you and say, \Get your mind off this; go out and breathe fresh air; plunge deeper into business?\ No. There was a minute when he came t o you—perhaps in the watches of the night, p'erhaps in your place of busi- ness, perhaps • along the street—and he breathed sonietlnhg into your soul that gave peace, rest, infinite quiet, so that you could take out the photograph of the departed one and look into the eyes and the face of the dear one and say, '^It is all right; she is better off; I would not call her back. Lord, I thank thee that thou hast comforted my poor heart.\ ' WHEN THE LAST MOMENT COMES. Again, I remark that we are witness- es of the fact tb^at religion has power t o give composure i n the last moment. I never shall forget the first time I con- fronted death. We went across the cornfields in the country. I was led by my father's hand, and we came to the\ farmhouse where the bereavement had come, and we saw the crowd of wagons and carriages; but there was one car- riage that especially attracted my boy- ish attention, and it had black plumes. I said: \What's that? what's that? Why those black tassels on the top?\ and after it was explained to me I wag lifed up to look upon the bright face of an aged Christian woman, who three days before had departed i n triumph; the whole scene made an impression I never forgot. In our sermons and in our lay exhor- tations we are very apt, when we want to bring illustrations of dying triumph, to go back to some distinguished per- sonage—to a John Knox or a Harriet Newell. But I want you for witnesses. I want t o know if you have ever seen anything t o make you believe that the religion of Christ can give composure in the final hour. Now; i n the courts attorney, jury and judge will never ad- mit mere hearsay. They demand that the witness must have seen with his own eyes, oflieard with his own ears, and so I am critical in my examination of you now; and I want to know whether you have seen or heard anything that makes you believe that the religion of Christ gives composure in the final hour. \Oh yes,\ you say; \I saw my fa- ther and mother depart. There was a great difference in their deathbeds. Standing by the one we felt more vene- ration. By the other there was more tenderness.\ Before the one you bowed perhaps in awe. In the other ease you felt as if you would like to go along with her. How did they feel in that last hour? How did they seem to act? Were they very much frightened? Did they take hold of this world with both hands as though they did not want to give it up? \Oh no,\ you say; \no I nein'ember as though it were yester- day ; she had a kind word for us all, and there were a few mementoes dis- tributed among the children, and then she told us how kind we must be t o our father in his loneliness, and then she kissed us good-by and went asleep as calmly as a child i n a cradle.\ \SHE HAD FAITH.\ What made her so composed? Nat- ural courage? \No you say; \moth- er was very nervous; when the carriage inclined to the side of the road she would cry out; she was always rather weakly.\ What, then, gave her com- posure? Was it because she did not care much for you and the pang of parting was not great? < \Oh you say, \she showered upon us a wealth of af- fection ; no mother ever loved her chil- dren more than mother loved us; she showed it by the way she nursed us when we, were sick; and she toiled for us until her strength gave out.\ What, then, was it that gave her composure in the last hour? Do not hide it. Be frank and let me know. \Oh you say, ' 'it was because she was so good; she made the Lord hex portion, and she had faith that she would go straight to glory and that we should aU meet her at last at the foot of the throne.\ Here are people who say, \I saw a Christian brother die, and he tri- umphed.\ And some one else, \I saw a Christian sister die, and she tri- umphed.\ Some one else will say, \I saw a Christian daughter die, and she triumphed.\ Come, all ye who have seen the last moments of a Christian, and give testimony in this cause on trial. Uncover your heads, put your hand on the old family Bible from which they used to read the promises, and promise in the presence of high heaven that you will tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. With what you have seen with your own eyes, and from what you have heard with your own ears, is there power .in tins Gospel to give calmness and triumph in the last exigency? The response comes from all sides, from young and old and middle aged: \We are witnesses!\ MILLIONS OF WETNESSES. . You see, my friends, I have not put before you today an abstraction, or chimera, ©r anything like guesswork. I present you afndavits-of the best men and women, living and dead. Two witnesses in court will establish a.fact. Here are not two witnesses, but thou- sands of witnesses^-on. earth milhons of witnesses, and in heaven a great multitude of witnesses that no man can number, testifying that there is power in this religion to convert the soul, to give comfort in trouble and to afford composure in the last-hour. * If ten men should come to you when yon are sick with appalling sickness and say they had the same sickness, and took- a certain medicine and it cured them, you would probably take it. * Now suppose ten other mea should come up and say, \We don t believe there is anything in that medicine.\ \IV-iilV I say, \have you e'ver^trwd !^tipk - • K r it?\ \No I never tried it, but I d.on't believe there is anything in it.\ Q* course you discredit their testimony\ The skeptic may come and say, \There isnopow^rin your religion.\ \Have you ever tried it?\ \No no.\ \Then avaunt!\ Let me take the testimony of the millions of souls that have been converted to God, and comforted in trial, and solaced in the last hour. We will take their testimony as they cry, \We are witnesses!\ Some time ago Professor Henry, of Washington, discovered anew star, and the tidings spread by submarine tele- graph, and all the observatories of Europe were watching for that new star. Oh, hearer, looking out through the darkness of. thy soul today, canst thou see a bright light beamhig on thee? \Where?\ you say; \where? How can I find it?\ Look along by the fine of the cross of the Son of God. Do you not see it trembling with all tenderness and beaming with all hope? It is the Star of Bethlehem. Deep horror then my vitals froze, Death struck, I ceased the tide to stem, When suddenly a star arose— It was the Star of Bethlehem. Oh, hearer^ get your eye on it. It is • easier for you now t o become a Christian than it is t o stay away from Christ and heaven. TWO STORIES. When Mme. Sontag began her musi- cal career she was hissed off the stage at Vienna by the friends of her rival, Amelia Steininger, who had already begun t o decline through her dissipa- tion. Years passed on, and one day Mme. Sontag, hi her glory, was riding through the streets of Berlin when she saw a little child leading a blind wo- man, and she said: \Come here, my little child, come here. Who is that you are leading by the hand?\ And the little child replied: \That's my mother; that's Amelia Steininger. She used t o be a great singer, but she lost her voice, and she cried so much about it that she lost her eyesight.\ \Give my love to her,\ said Mme. Sontag, \and tell her an old acquaintance will call on her this afternoon.\ The next week in Berlin a vast as- semblage gathered at a benefit for that poor blind woman, and it was said that Mme. Sontag sang that nigiht as she had never sung before. And she took a skilled oculist, who in vain tried to give eyesight t o the poor blind woman. Until the day of Amelia Steininger's death Mme. Sontag took care other, and her daughter after her. That was what the queen of song did for her enemy. But, oh, hear a more thrilling story still. Blind immortal, poor and lost, thou who, when the world and Christ were rivals for thy heart, didst hiss thy Lord away—Christ comes now to give thee sight, t o give thee a home, t o give thee heaven. With more than a Son- tag's generosity he comes now to meet your need. With more than a Sontag's music he comes to plead for thy deliv- erance. His nig Gravestone Stalled 2S Horses. Three years ago Henry Eberle, of Frankford, died, and the will which he left behind him created considerable stir at the time. „ It provided that the entire estate of some $16,000 should be expended in placing over his grave and that of his wife already dead a stone which should be four feet thick, cov- ering the entire surface of his burial lot in Cedar Hill cemetery.\ Deceased had no children, and his will cut off all rel- atives and left no legacies whatever. The strange direction was much talk- ed of at the time of his death, but was gradually lost sight of by the public until on Friday it was revived by the arrival at Bridesburg station of a gran- ite stone which was wider than the car on wliich it was transported. This stone is said t o be the largest ever used in this city for any purpose. It is 17 feet long by 11 • feet wide, 2 1-4 feet thick and weighs thirty tons. It was quarried and dressed in Ver- mont, and brought to Philadelphia on a vessel from whioh it was taken by a special car and locomotive t o Brides- burg station. On the top of this stone, in order to comply with the directions in the will, another stone of equal thickness, but three inches less in width, will be placed, the whole mass aggregating nearly sixty tons. The other stone-is now being prepared at the quarries. The contract for the two stones placed in position is $10,000. The work of transplanting this huge block of granite by land carriage from Bridesburg station t o Cedar Hill ceme- tery, one mile distant, was begun yes- terday. A four wheeled truck, weigh- ing .many tons, known as a ' 'catama- ran,\ drawn by twenty-five horses, was used. _ Everything went \well until the Bristol turnpike was reached and the steep rocky hill was to be climbed. The twenty-five horses gave up exhausted. Tackle was rigged to the wagon and passed around the trees, and hi this way at last the top of the lull was reached.—Pliiladelphia Record. ODDS AND ENDS. A dumb woman at Marthas Vine- yard owns and manages a small schoon- er, living i n it with,a kitten and a huge Newfoundland dog for company She supports herself by fishing and her lob- ster pots, and J>y peddling thread and buttons and such small wares along the coast when tho fishing, season is over Among the various charity sooieties of Moscow there is one for the endow- ment of poor brides. The funds of the society are constantly increased by the gifts or bequests of benevolent persons, but only the interest of the, money is used for the designated purpose The cable to connect Halifax with Bermuda has reached the lattei place Its length is 871 miles, and throughout it is of much greater weight than has hitherto been used. A careful survey of the bed of the ocean will be made, so as t o discover the most suitab 1 posi- tion for the cable. The temperature at different depths will at the same tim« be determined. A process for marbleizing silk plush without pressing or embossing it has been discovered. By this pro'ec^s the light and dark effeets are reversed when looked at from opposite points The finish is nicely preserved and does not give the appearance of having been wet, as shown in many goods of this character. There are sixty-four churches of the Church of England, besides those of other denominations, within a quarter of a mile of St.- Paul's cathedral Most of them have more seats than there are residents i n the parish. Many of the clergymen five far from London. One, whose income .is £1,050 a year, has not visited his parish for fourteen years. It is said that there are thirty-five kinds of granite in Maine, each of which possesses distinctive character- istics readily recognized by workmen acquainted with monumental and builing stones. There are all shades of what are termed white granite, the most beautiful of which is the Hal- loweh, together with the red granite of Red Beach and the black granite of Addison. \The Passion Play\ at Ober-Am- tuergau was \discovered\ by English- men i n 1850, when two Oxford fellows, who were, staying at Bad Gadstein, heard of it by chance and decided to be present. They lost no time in de- scribing i t to their friends in Oxford, and Dean Stanley, then an Oxford tutor, visited the play and wrote a de- scription, which made it well known. A theatrophone has been set up in Paris, whereby persons at a distance can hear the performance at any par> ticular theatre or concert. At present the apparatus 01 dy communicates with one house, the Nouveautes, but it will soon be extended to all the theatres and halls, and connected with the chief hotels, clubs and restaurants. By dropping half a franc into a slot people will be provided with five minutes' en- tertainment, a longer hearing being charged in proportion. The larynx of the great tenor Gayarre, who died not long ago in Madrid, was removed after his death, and was found to bo of such peculiar formation that it will probably be preserved hi some Spanish museum. Gayarre received $1,400 a night in opera, the largest sal- ary ever paid a tenor, and his fortune is estimated at $800,000. He was the son of a blacksmith a; id a common workman when his voice first attracted attention, and ho was only 40 years old when he died. The Vatican, is garrisoned by a com- pany of eighty gendarmes, including officers, and by a company of seventy- five Swiss guards. The pope has also, for state occasions, his papal guards, composed of former officers i n the pon- tifical army, and the guarda nobile, or corps of gentlemen-at-arms. These last two corps serve gratis, but the gen- darmes and the Swiss guard have to be paid at the rate of about sixty centimes a man per day, besides being lodged, fed and clothed. Hose Mender . An acceptable accompaniment t o iha garden hose, whioh is apt t o break or leak at such inopportune times, is a simple hose mender, whioh consists of a metal tube to put inside the hose, bands t o bind the hose to the menders and pliers with . which,, to fasteti the bands.—New York Commercial Advert tiser. Opinion from a One Night Stand. Iiarry Atte (of Devil's Gulch^ coming out of the Jjheatre^-An' how long has {his play been runnhVt Hoffman Howes—Over a hundred nights tiarfy 1 Atte—Goshl I should tmnk w>u New 1 «, ikers 'd have it by heart t — d.aiced ng upon g easily ling up Hold Prisoners by Electricity. Aj,marvelous case of electrical par- alysis is reported from the Hosuier road, near Lockport, and it takes the edge off most of the fictitious stories of light- ning's freak* ever told. The house of Jasper Brown was the, scene of the phenomenon. The electricity was so strong that tho air was luminous and qt a distinct blue color. Though there was no lamp burning in the house every person and every article could be out- lined in the cerulean atmosphere as if through a haze; great balls of stelmos fire, such as is sometimes seen on the rigging of ships, played and about the furniture, now perch: the back of chairs, now slidh; along the mantel top, now si: and down the chandeliers. The family were so frightened that they could not speak. The electricity . in the atmosphere made their hah\ stand on end like the quills of a fretful porcupine, and the strangest thing of all was that they could not move. The whole family had lost the power of lo- oomotion. Every member was tenv porarily paralyzed by the electricity. Few mortals have ever experienced inch, a night, of terror. Thek mindi were filled with fear and apprehension^ l)8st their power of locomotion was gone' •forever and they would be perman'enif cripples. v BuTi at last, after a duration of about four or five hours, the storm bagan toj subside, the use of their lnubsgiaduaQf\ Rfturned to them, and when the stonm was over they were $£le to move abotij •B freely as ever.-kOof fikk, ictoGld'he* itenDOciafc * $ \ t\ -*•&? I'- ll f i \ \ I J t > ,i H <\ »>