{ title: 'The Sea-side times. volume (Southampton, N.Y.) 1881-1920, January 28, 1897, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn96083556/1897-01-28/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn96083556/1897-01-28/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn96083556/1897-01-28/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn96083556/1897-01-28/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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rEecogN mon in >* the Ev¥idermes;of $he BHBlo, 'the bying to as t ac d Stoel s betiove it; theo Tur * ~ and Paris and Dresden and Berlin, but | i nder every sky, 'by every { bis conversation implies it. And so this every zong, the theory is adopted. ; Bible doesinot. so positively state this ' so I Say aprinciple universally im: i ' theory as all ub and down. its chapters | ed muse bu Cod iraplanted, an . take it for granted |__ | right belicf. . The arguments What does my tort. imply? \I shall ble. _ oke t hele C | go tochim. \~ What consolation would it ; - Again, I -adopt . this theory ; | be to David-to go 'to his child\ if. he there are fortures of moral-tom _ : | would not know hii? Would David and featiigs of the foul that will have been allowed. to record this antici- guish ns forever. How do we 2 8 pation: for the inspection-of, all ages if it , other in this w orld? Es. it merely bj wore a groundless anticipation? We read .golor of the. eye, or the leng! 1 i © g gh‘fifim ggiéoémmgfbw 'hair, ror'thoéaéial proportion t x the 4 poor ang | Bcd and was gathered to \his people. . It is by io isposition as well, -by-ma . puts It? amotherin hugafggpfigrgg Jacob died and was gathered to his peo- _ unrd aMinity, using the word in thexery nostril of the wan and. waste d, nis) | PIG. Moses-died and was gathered to his best sensonmadnet inthe bad s -~mounts: the palace\ staies and, bendin g | people. __ Whab. people?. Why, their if in the dast 'our body should : p gvar the pillow, blows'intarths Pace og a | fTionis; thg their old com- | and lo thre forever, and there Ah young pfincgi‘jfié frosts of pain agg | Pamions Of coutse it means that, It be no resurrection, Still the I ~- doeth Teas ave wing to the \king of | cannot mean anything else. So in the © enough featmres and \thé dis -~ ferrom. - Alss, for Dasid-the kangt #, | yerf of the Bible four times enough feaferies to make as-disths ~ * nn. neither Sleep n6F oat and ‘Eeg prog | hat is taken. for gri.nted. The wholo able. L 'can andérstand kow in si \Tu \Viicérs’w’eé‘r in g and walling - Now Testament is an arbor over which a man will become so delirious L* palacehngsgfiui thie oute 5 | this doctrine creeps like a lnxuriant , will not now his own friends, b alle ret. {fly vine fall of the purple clusters of con- we be blirmsted with such, insoudferg) *~ Ca ~IBhalil Go to Hime, -__ | Bolation Jamés, John and Peter fol- idiscy that, standing beside onur C C _, are 'couftly bomdan -_; . | lowed Christ into the mountain. A light friends fot all eternity, we v $_; ___ -; enat aro conttly attendants: or ¥ao- | 2.1; Arom-heaver on-that moountiim- and -: fong rybape one s * “Tilofibfis’zirbfieé‘bi‘fooiifiuéfed provinees | 14 85, \Our 8\ on nat mananl and ~guess who they att or Batia® 50002 : Ander such ciroumstinces? What tawny. Mtg 1p; into the glories. of the ce}gst;a_l, | . ___ Reason For Belish, ° | \ qabent is-alleplefdid surronidizg. w hen Christ's garments glow, and. his face i Again, I think Ahat one reason why L. _- $15 éhi’l‘dv Isslck? S days hav B Bed 'Ehines like the sun, The heaven we ought to accept this. doctrine is b¢- & $45”; 53h ore, iit that afi'hg flew” e\ swings open. . Two spirits come down cause we never in this world bse: Alp ~~ as {nil}; ofdéé‘éetm little bias | and alight on that mountain. The diss opportunity to give thinks: to those to. DL gdiiifldiéfiffg‘ .. ond heart | ciples look: at them and recognize them - whom. wo iro spiritually indebted, . The- f=. jififiwl‘fie serval ‘13‘mfi3mt6 bear the td. | % Moses and Elias Now, if those dis- joy of heaven, we afe told, if to 5002}? * Ange to the kin Qfi‘i’é th‘é‘. cannot gt ciples standing on -the earth conld recog- ~rugurated by a review of life's work; . . 53] oif min a? fQH tell 351mm an (1115119 mize theso two spirits who have been for These Christian mon fnd women who: TC astind “fa door whisperin ' about thy years in heaven, do you &ell me that , have been toiling for Christ, have they ' Imntter, and David mpinfii‘m nou. “1° we, with our heavenly eyesight, will ~sech the full result of their work? OH; t> “Bung-5:6) iD and a 'to them “brig“? not be able to recoguize those who have ' ug! - - ~> e az done? p,@~\g§§$ “gig; ' * [ gone ont from among us only 5, 10, 20, | _ In the church at Somerville, M; J., | - Davi 6s, 10 is dond. =, | 80 years ago? ° * Tohn Vrederburgh presitked for a great f cl _- - avid ronsee himselfup, washes hin | \~ \ **\. __ - Recognition, . = ~.~i many yeam. -- He felt that. his ministry. -_ if, 'or new appatch and sits down | ~ Thy Bibl indicates, over and over was a failure, although he was a fifth! th a od, - What power hushed that tem. agoin, that the angels know each other, ful minister preaching the gospel all\ hele; Whatatrougth was it that lifted andthen the Bible says that we are to the time. Ee died, and died amid: § -|- 7 225 e om flfmrmg whom grief had dot hroned? be higher than the angels. And if the couragements, ind went home to (God, f_ ___ Oh, itwasthe thought that he world | angels have the power of recognition, far uc one ever doubted that John Vréz | ~. - <pme-again into the possession ff that | shall not we, who are to bo higher than - denburgh wasn good Christin mEHigtan - p e:: Child! - No-gravediggor\8 8029s | thoy in the noxt fealm, havo as good A littic white-after-his death there daing~ % ‘*Wfld.hida hir, The wintry blasts of eyesight and as good caproity? What did & great awakening in _ ___ _fiosth could not put out the bright ligt | Ghrist mean, in his conversation with one Sabbath 200 souls stood up at the. a ummmu Bau'fQXgOSQI-DOWIIQN that Mary md Martha, when he said, “Thy Christian altar espousing the cause (If? __ sliver hammer would weld the | brother shall riso again?\\ It was as Christ, amorg them my own fatherand ~ _. Aideen Hinks, In a city where tho 106 | mach as tosay: '*Don'tery. Don't wear mother. - Armd what was peculiar #i.re«, - 1 . f Fhe palo loese never strike the piye- yourselves out with this trouble You gard to nearly ill of thoso 200 souls was L ** mont lis would clisp his lost tremsure. | will seo him again. Thy brother shall , that they dated their roligtous -_, - Ho weipée awayr tho tears from Iris | igo again. *\ ! sions from tho-ministry of John Vr}. wand ho- clears the thoking griof from HH | _- Tho Bible describes honren as a great denburgh - Will that poodg-Chrittiah hroat and excfaims, Ishall goto him?\ | nome circle. Well, now, that would be man befée the throms of God, over | | Was David right or wrong? If wopazt | a very queer home circle where the mect thos souls brought to Christ , at “Wm: g'wiII wo meotigain in the next | members did not know erch other. The through his instramentality? (Ol; -of $o .world? ''Well, \\ says-somo one, \that Bible describes death asa sleep - If wo courso he will mow them! I remember ~~ sons to: bean imponsibility: Heaven 39 | imow each other before we go to slgep. - one Sabbath afternoon, borne downwith 3 : ao largo & place wo never could find our | shall wo not know cach other afte? w8 tho seuse of my sins and knowing not p__.\ Kindred there\\ Going into some cit} | veake up? Ob, yes! We will know each . God, up Doddridge's \Risefind ~ \ifi‘rfithmtfigww—mqmmfifimm now. - Progress.\ Oh, what a dark afteribon - ped e you might wander\) For not' anys tho apostle, 'we see it was, and I read the chapters. and 1 ... _ sround for wee s and. for.. months. ard... ; -8. darkly, .bat: then face to . read the. and I tried to m *_ porbape'fer years and never: see- cach 11W \It will be mp.purified enthroned \the prayers . Ob, T must Beg | e other, \wod -heseven \t#-vaster-tFsad H and glorified body gazing on your puri-, Philip DoddridgeL. A glorious old book.. my cities together. And how 'to find wour departed friend in that couniry? If is so vast :a reaim. aspiration, anl ho lookid of upom tho TALMAGE PrEH®S-oN- T ~ wont up on one- monntiin.. of. iz | doctrine of fature recognition: is not | oftefl positively at God as implied, . ends,. that 'that -is; after all, the {strongest mode 'of afl ~ { friend travels in foreign lands. He comes home.. He does not begin by ar- | going | fed, enthroned and glorified body.. :_ Now, I demand, if you believe. the Bible, that. you take, this theory of fo- -> ~turo- recognition qut~ of-tho-realm. of ; speculation and surmise ihto the region / so | If L:seemed to boar hisdeath afimaation. Your | by -; ho wrotel It. is out of Hyson nowr, \aet ke because I was y tho consoliig reflegtion not long be separated.\ ©. , The Norwegian lieves it; the Greurlander belioy@@it; '\'tained. - It «vas with you, to prove that there are Thore is a « mother before the thromse of God. | You sy ber joy is fall. | Ix it? You sy thretvim bo no augmentation | of it. Cannot there bo? Hor son was a 1) Setting day a | child p AB <0 Aa: ve a ignal back. ane j files, earkene where hung the picture of her mother. A hile died. good.man,; and he suid he Heard the an- haven't mach poetry about me, but lis- | tened, and I hrard them too.\ Said I, ,. we are | §. j to be taken up to heavén at last by min- Who are they to be? \I haye no doubt of it,\ Astering spirits, : Souls that went up from Madras or An- ptioch or Jerusalem? Oh, mo, our glori- & |: fled kindedare going totroop around us. . _Heaver: is not a stately, formal place, ~s Trommetimes hearit desoribed, a very 1 frigidity of splendor, where people stand hy fon cold formalities and go roundapout with heavy crowns of gold on their heads.\ No, that is not my idea of heavy- ' m. My idea of heaven is more like this: You are seated in the eveningtide. by the j Greplice, your whole family there, or nearly all of them there. Whileyour are ; seated, talking and enjoying the even- Jing hour, there is a knock at the door, Aud the door opens, and therecomes in 'm brothor that has been long absent. He has been absent, for years you have not seen him,-and ng sooner do yor maiko ' up your mind fhat it is certainly ho than you leap up, and the question is ho shall give him the first emBrace. -That is my idea of heaven-a great home civele where they are waiting for os. Ob, will gou not know your moth- 'f ar's voice there? She who always called son by your first name long after others gad given you the formal \Mister? You were never anything but James or John or George or Thomas or Mary or | to her. Will you not know you'r child's voicoe-she of the bright cye 'and the ruddy cheek and the quiet step, | who came in from play and fung her- eelf into your lap, a very shower of [mirth and beauty?\ Why, the picture is grawn in your soul 'It cannot wear 'out. If that little one should stand on 'the other side of some heavenly hill and all to you, you would hear her voice above the burst of heaven's. great or- j Consolation, “v, NOWI bring you this glorious con- d Hft a great many shadows that I used to go out to the railroad ack and put my ear down on the track, watt ] could hear the express train ram- bling miles away and coming on, and Nahum—$110? say, * ? mes, and. our. departed Om arth we say, \Let chim down in -| carsinen, the fires of the tingeing the tops of the pad- |, Ob, Have you never sat by ~such a deathbed? In that hour you hear the de- arting soul-ery: *'Harkt Look!!\ You. and you looked. A litle ing away because of the death of its mother, getting weaker and weak- EP cvery day, 'was taken into the room T Bho seemed fo enjoy logking af it, and {then she was trkon away,. and after In the last moment that wan and wasted little one lifted her hands, while her face lighted up with 'the glory of the nest world and cried out, \\ Mother1\\ Do you tell me she did not see her mother? Shedid. So ining 'first settiement at Belleville aplain man f said to me: ** What do you think I heard Jast night? I was in the room where one tof my neighbors was dring. He was & gels of God singing before the throne. I Know it? You could not help | [[ Mrs Olivo Thorne Miller tells cf tw ~jfretching across it. When I was n ; 'the ground.\ | In. heaven they say, '*Eloist him on On earth it is, \Farewell farewell.\ In heaven it is, \Welcome welceoms.\\ And so I-see a - Christian soul, coming down to the arakle. s death?\\ ''No,\ suys Christ, \\this is het death.\\ And he wades still 'deeper down into the watery until the food Jesus, tell me, tell me, is this death?\ Asid Christ suys, \No no, this is not seah'' And ho wades still Farther down rntil'the wave comes to the gir is not.\\ And deeper in wades the soul till the billow strikes -the lip, and the this death?\ ''No,\ sars Christ, \this is not.\ Bat when Christ had lifted this soul on a throne of glory and all the pamp and joy of heaven came surg- ing to its foet then Christ sarl, **This, O transported soul, this is death?\ __ ISLAND PYGM1iES. Animals, Itis corioos that almost all of the 'animal pygmies, whether of the prosent geor of the past, seem to como from islauds, asunlly the islands of the south- orn seas, although@he Shetland and the Orkney isles, where the dwarf pouies scramble over the rugged rocks, ard ex- | coptions, . In the island of Ceylon, with its giant spiders, with their nets spun with yellow silk twisted as thick as a rope in comparison with our filmy, gossamer threads, and giant batterflies with emer- ald wings, are also wonderful pygmy creatures - There are little bulls, the Brabman, or sacred azen, not more than 80 inches in height at thelt\largest growth, and genorally only 22. and their legs like \those of the deer, though they have deep Gdewlaps and humped necks, like the zobu breed. for great distances without food or wa- ter, if necessary. - Reins aro fastened to a ring in the cartilage of the noso, and most of the freight of the island :s car- ried by theso little creatures in their Sm wo wheeled carts. Another pretty pygmy found in the Ceylon forests is the graceful musk door, not more than 10 inches in beight and 1% or 14 inches in length. It is exqui- sitely formed, Tike the antelops, and is gray, dappled with white aspets, In the Sumndiy fslands is another species of deer, not rouch larger than a cat. The pygmy marmoset does not come | from an island, bat {rom Brazit, whose forests many of the conditions of island life. These dwarf monkeys are. ouly . 4 Apches tall when standing op. and that could wrestle and~tamble-in an la dy's open palm, sit on the olfge of atom-~ 'cap, hide in all kinds of vamall places anG perch togéther on & lead poncil. - They are fall of fon and . mischief? and SifGHve him 's palit.\ river of defith, and\ he. steps into the |.; river, and the water comes up to the | He says, \Lord Jesus, is this | _révmics to the knee, and ho says,, \\Lord | \Ale aind tho soul sys, \Lord Jesus, is | this No, '* says Christ, \this | departing eme cries, \Lori Jesus, ds | A Familiar Talk About Some Very Little. ThPy - are very pretty, with their silky hides These bulls aro swift, keeping up-n - long, swinging trot or ran, and thoy go : great river, bowbver, gives itatorderimg } mails Mt-HO C | S8 to 44 Court St... Opp. Gity Hall, tos sSCOOKLYN, N.Y. O+ Reopons Tuesday «Sept. L. , Do Yor wish to make your life enecesafal? - 20. 'Do yor whi to do something and be-rome- | _ f thing» f R > Do yor manow that these aro the days of spes- tnd zation Lot 1 = s Da you s that i bean nbso-tute necessity ~ for vouto be able to do somes one . wells - uC Do yor isn to he a good husiress man? THEN you must havea L PREPARATIO] | since the \hiivant & STHatroN\ course. ( stimly. known the world over has yet fé. ~ be equalled, why not go to the .. BRYAR®P - & \tueAttos'\ Brsisgss COLLEGE, the ~* only institution in Brooklyn fmaking @ aperialtv of a purely business coursef _ ~~ rhov this INSTITUTION get good t __ pestGon« and stick. a 0C - ~ Class and Individual instruction. Stufenfie: _ Tmay eneral any fime. @uarter atdate- -~ of entrance. | Iicycles cared for, Send for Sat . - c rlogue. C CLAGHORN, lL Principal and Proprieta® Schol, Soittaupton, NY P. A. JOHNSON, PRINCIPAL; l t 4 As 1 . he |_ FAL. TERM COMNMENCES SEPT. 91, | H TUITION: Co iA\ _ !Grummaw«vp’tformrm of 18 weeks,S4.00 ;» pal | Academic _\ «0 6 a a 0 Shor OC .- ' Foradditional information addross e l I ~ aro. R. CoO i Secretary Board of Education,... <a egt | , Roys ' Ling Island Business College, _> | 148-149 South Sth St.. . Brooklyn, ¥; ¥, _ This Instirution occuptes an entire building --_-- , ano hftm twflmmum attondance MW i Ared students | -fr.affors suprrior cilities t < => \ yo ung men and Women four obtainirig a. busi- .- R and fnrercurifii Hicrativeait= - uattuoh's for its graduates. \Its conrse of study . | embraces commercial arithmetic. theorstiont. t_. cond practical hook Heeprrp by doubfe&Nnd alm*~~* 1C gle entry. spelling, business penmanship, _L ut: correspondence, Ming“ fix J zmmulaha w. gta hy, typt-wth Og & FTI nc cany e T 4 (lutagf‘xomnfiflgemrnfintfia‘g-1:3 eas ed $5 par tarm for war 4 e ctuir y orElevased road at Raut. wk Driggs Avo: | Waite orcall for \ _, ~ w -_ BENRY®U, WRIGHT, Principal } okéd 0 ! % g on, and are incessantly scolding, chattering and NTs fee - mnlfihlfigrganilmlmdgfiom: ds ox | of positive-certainty, and no more keep © wanderer ait a vagibond un them today, my friends, if we only had faith lonping from one tall object tonuother. CEMETERY WORK‘famu ° thomsands.\ 'Then- ho Camo HPOD 4 umying: \I hope it is so. I bave an ide® | when that good mother died. He broke Lenough, wo could put orrear. dosyn to -Their eederm te- a mrd-they cools 000 csc .ll, - , ofinspimtifmgndgflgpk¢5Lm _I.guess 1t..is-80. '- --Bo-ablo-to- - tor oll Hoart Sho. lenvcing nim in | Bhe grave of\ our dend. and listen and. have very long tails, ringed with black | - m | Trenae tres «~ _ ~off mpon cit-igatn, anid. ha 'sild, \Ten say, with all the concentrated energy of | the wilderucss of sin.. Sha is. befor tha gar in. fhe distance the-rum bling. on of ana. gray,. also fonnp Jlittfe~-datk ygaf £334}: PHANMEPT/ Hm: ._ Shousand . tines. ton. tiggsand '* | Ard mind and soul. ' \I now it is ~ throne\ of- (Cod. now. - Years pass: and i ¥h8. charioth o\ virtory. ca if BAL, on . azlo of, be uous tot\ CHAMPTOR . A a oar ug 61 mus evant dni 0 6 on nn fy 9 < n (p ay conn by eer 0 poop! ., pes 1h NL inn wiliishers, on =n of un e ere e w & +, 6 * 4 - x - - R , oe a & tg \ n mols. I C Ape. . Fo reagiey < p a. ' . Toa 4s { f a wo nop ey s y % s+ aft, gas 0 fP skh a+ 1 ites dh y e oar n hha s 2 ul 9C \ \ge | + +99 wat WTP a (k c\ afi>. - wep rge a in a: .4: \Cc cy *a reg? 1: T a vkt‘ .“:“ if eaii‘k-fl‘\ C 5313‘s\v;_° :.é;g;.d_wwia gag??? . friifi‘r. fig + ififfiw. aA _g;. B%M@‘~V&Wofi\w emm, fi_€,§€;‘% Aim «fit-0)“. wey ) 5 C ~B £°€~A'. aW, Tus C s (is 5. it + u‘ not. w . Pl -, ft“ . ‘: ...: 5 :\ fray\ \ _-\ ~ 10 “W:§Rnnrvw_ ;-_'_$*‘t=w' 4 the An, -¢; a a v7 « - H1,» hi i , * mfifig, fi'tw'wffi'mfiéffifim ,mmmt§§ aes ¢ Tanie. gfinflth ta | side by side the, faces, of. Abe Innogh ones 3 cas qerourot \ To TiC * # ___& i * ,* unufi'xe locked off\: ISMUD - posuble that wo shall fo ct furever confront . omlo. atres, Abn span e '_£~'m;&,,,-.wm.; wera sa nace iWiiafion 6 pot Malta the fossil remaws ero fennd of ; Go we an ¥ A r I bine HEE * not: v. \'Oh tho nugel¥o® Bight ind love and beauty and joy you ruos int? od \ ~ --- can farmbér. \\. - -.. -Now, Lask how are you gnmg to fina --- -our Srionds in- such-a- th#ong as that? fillet this ides wo havo been entertain- - . - Ing after all a falsity ?- Is this- dextrine ~af faturoe recognition of friends in hear- l . «en a guess, i myth, a whim, or is it a ~ agits may builG- a glorious hope? Intenso question! Every in this andience throbs right into it. There SaAdw every soul-horp the fornlyof-set least | we bave been so long familiar? Will . death come and with a sharp, keen blade | hew away this faculty of imemoly? Abrahain said to Dives, \Son remem- : boy. **. If thé exiled and tho lost remem- | ber, will not the enthroned remember? ~- You know very well that our joy in ; ' companionship of our Friends. We can- . not gee a picture with lesa, than , yes or hear a song with less than four { \cars. Wo want some one besido as with - God, \rejoice with me! The dead fsalive agnin, and the lost is found. Halleln- inh, E never expected tosce this lost ons: come back.\ 'The Bible mys nistions are . to be born in a day. When China comes | OH to Ged, will it not know Dr. Atedit When India comes. will it not know Dr. John Seadder? When the Indians come. to God, will they not know David Brainerd?, ' fe _I see a soul. entering _begven. at Inst. with coverbd Lace at the idea that it has fr ahoreyou will falk it all over. them when once you mest them! gince.you saw them last! (n the shiny heartaches, the loneliness, the sleepless Hights. the_weeping . until__you had no - z3 [ #poH it out as never beforo in songs and. halleluishs - O ye whose hearts are down under the sod of the cemetery, ghceer up at the thought of this reanion! OH,; how much you will have to tell ~ How much yon have been throu gh The | a |a ruse of pygmy elephants no bigger | than a sheop, and the babies of this spe- bold on tho palm of a man's band. An- other fossil pygmy is that of a borse, said to be no larger than a fox. Wo rarely hear of ocean pygmies, but | a pruuwy whailg, perfectiy formed, with ; all the ohnracteristics of its kindred, the sperm whales, the largest living animals known, has recently bee digcovered:~~ The largo whalo 1s 80 | ~- y cles might no doubt favo beey ensily|. ~ - u cP -» nne cae sn no patek WWW B Meksages and telegrams for f nerat in any Locality will recei¢ tton. lnstructions quickly «hd complied with and every detail of i; ments carried out under experienced, - frt ieas nt 3 N to weep berause the hoftt | feet in lengtb, while the pygmy one is | _ For faherals to of froth distant places an' 7 L. -Tremendous questioni! 1% | whom. to exchauge glances and done so little for Christ and feeling iwas withered and dried up. Story of - only 8. - rangements can be effected with the W *e kes \the lip - qui¥or, and tho- chou | Ehies and I sttpposo the joy of heaven is ~bortitdown with unworthiness, arnd it | vacant chair and exapty.<zaslle and lit | The human pygmies-at least, the | P8! bome and foreign undertakers whereby ... . to {MB’W and the enmnam thrill. | Shald A to be (lamented bythfi fact that we are. says to itself< \'I m3 Es W‘gé g—fiefihflfi 931V half wore out, mover to be pyémy Vrac‘e‘srsnof} as the ljtflefefk of | the cost of 8P8Mp0mt-iflni3 {TERI}? MM sile know each other thero? I get lotters | to bave our friends with as when there | here.'' A voice from s throns says: ; worniigain, just the shape of the foot | the bamana forests in Africa and the | - Arterial Embaliming when wanted. | _ _. vor- aimostcvery mounth asking mo to dis- | riso before us the thromes of the blessed | \Op you forget that Sunday echool {fhat once pressed it. And dreams when undersized Rock Veddalis of CeyIlon-| . Ordors left with either of the undersigned _. -__. cuss this fubject. , I got a lotter in ® ) and when there surges up in. ourear the , class you invited to Christ! I wasone- you thought that the departed had come | ro mot at fll intelligent and scens like | will receive prompt attention. , @ ~ <. _ ~bold, scholarly hand, on gilt edged ps- jubllate of the saved Heavenis not & of them.'' And another _ voico siys: , backagain, and the room seemed bright | children arrested in their earliest st ages, Folding Chairs for all purposes, ~ . . - _ _.__ per gakingimo todiscuss this question, | contraction. 'It is an expansion. If I - \You forget €hat pour man. to whom | with their faces, and you started upto | but individual dwarls have been very 1 -C; R. FITZ, Manager. . .._ C_ ~~ ait Ah, that is a curious man, | know you here, I will know you better | you gave a lonf of brea@ and told of the greet them, and in the effort thoe Gream quick witted and of a flery spirit; like * - W. H. ROGERS, Undertaker, - ;> aid he wants aearjous questionsoived.'\ | there, _ Here I see you with only two heavenly broud. L was that man.'* Afid . 'brokg, and you found yourself standing | the valiant little Geoffrey Hadson, who Not b C £0a 000 ' But E get anther letter Itis writter® | eyes, but thero the soul shall have another says: *'Youforget that sick one | amidroom ~in the midbight | was knighted by King Charles -Elia ore. with ~a trembling hand and on what | 1,000,000 eyes. It will bo immortality . to whom you grave medicine for the body\ Falling if all over, and then, hand in | p. Mosby in Philadelpbia Times. . Con t 10 Sp, setins to be a tom out leaf of gazing on immortality, ransomed Spirit and the soul _ I was that- one'\ Au T-FBand, iaiking up and dOWR {Z2 the I4@Ht: - [-:- --- --- am ne nfe ~ ye - intinn in- 167 there amthers is the marka of tear, | in colfoguy with rantomed spirit, victor | then Christ, frrom a. throne overtopping . No Borrow, no tears, no death Oh, The \Lampist® | _ ~ ~ _- | __| Bfiflflgmfl M aad £ say, 'Oh, that is a. broken \hoart Mfidefim‘r} - When Jom _ sants , ild Aho, rail a= 30 wore, . s | <- »ébrvatecnt ' RSN 18 boutto be | **\ \\\\ ese \a auld ® * *%nt it wants to be:comforted.'\\ T minister, was Seated in his study, . did it to one of the feast. of these, where our friends are; hoover wherewe | chaff@n for the postofice building. As oft : \yy ___. . .. Froim Theory to Certainty ~ -_ | his wife came in and said to him, \ My _ did it to ma** And then theseraplé mt’tggk In the east they tako a ingrented dr hia title. be will op3 \ r E bl B Accent is TB re ain Colne, Foil). Pawar nes , ~ th A. Me rent \To Nos\ bE - Felt t Cte rt red stike ans fa aenise: ~- Fife y REUDT | ;, «Aims Siad tige to csevil bo Rive cother in hentenp\ Hetamia gher aad - 'this theory out of the region of sarmise tive certainty. People say: \\It would be. £ sory pleasant if thit doctrne were tru. - ut wery pleasa tie 3 oe ( . @ h. it were true.\\ But E belfeve thst es ¢ ue. as. maxim mulation of - argu- gu zi sht to bear upon.this maatter which I1 grove the doctrine. of future xécog- tlon as plainly is that thero is any , ~neurgmrat all, and that tho kiss of ro-. nior at. the celestial gate will be as o dying kiss at the door of . '€h, Bremgo 9 e sre -__ Now, when you are going. to build a. ''Whip you must get the right kind of tim- ber--You lay- the keel and make the . ' of \the very best materials | «yves Tw elson, atanolaions, plank shear, | <=. tol 4 oxkc. You may build a ship. el lighter, m al, but when the of-: > N a asndepotulation into the'region of. posi- | feeling;. an anticipition, universally | planted,. musthave been -God implanted, - [implanted - Socrates - writes: \\Who {dies his servant sometimenslays himself ° \\ coming, said: \'Oh glorious . \| day when T ghall retire from. this low- ; _| and sordid scene to. with the: o | diviné assemblage of departed spirits, - tand not only with the ome T have just id, \My dear, do you think wo will 'be Digger fools in heaven than we are - C2 . ..- The World Expacte $400 _ _. .. Again, Iacceptthisdoctrine-of futare récognition because the world's & ancy affirms it In all lands and 'and if God implanted it is rightfully would not part with & groat deal, to purchase a moeting with Orpheus and Homer? If it be truo fhat this is to be | 'the consequence of death, I. eould even - be able todie often.\ . -__. _ . . Among the ban“; when (a master. 'that he may serve the master inthe fu- - ture world. . Cicero, living before {mentioned, but with my Gear Cato, the | down to the Hiver of death and give & . | best of sons and most fxithful of men: | signal to our friends on the other shore; | *. - H \_ . & L aet > it bo?\ - And Clirist; bending overthe harpérs, shall siy, \I | Harvest Home.\ ~~ - \to novept thirciectrine of fitire recogni u ages * tion is that. so many is: their last. hour this theory is. received. - What: form of (on carth have Coifirmed this theory. . I - religion planted it? No form of religion, ' speak not«of persons who have been des er it is recefved mnder all forms of re- | lirious in their list moment and knew . 'Higion. Then, I afgue, a sentiment, a\) pop what fltywere about, but of por- eti sons who died *n calmness and placidity, 'end -who were - not- naturally supersit= | tious.\ Often tho glories T | struck. tho dying pillow, and the depart- ing man 'has maid - he saw and heard - those who 'had gone awaiy from hit... How often itig in the dying moments parents see their départed children aid { okildren see their departed parente! |] 'camé down to the banks of the Mohawk giver. It and I wanted to 'go over the river, and so I waved my . { bat and shouted, and after awhilo I mw | 'some. ofeo warimg on the opposite bank, -- and, I heard Hiim\ shout, and ' came Across, amd I got in -and was tweln ported.. ~Andwo'l. suppose it will be in. | hart tho evening of.. Ga¥-life;- We «ril the throne ard ory, «'What shall. It shall be the - . Theory Comiimed by the Dying.. -- - Oné mare -renmon why I an disposed\ . ilovies of heaven hnve - my: dead, and then they open the door . of u door 'and let fll all the air with the music of their voices, - . before the throne! Some shout with gladiiess.\ Somé break forth into uncon- | trollable weeping for. jay. Some stand | in their shook of delight | _ king. They quiver with excessive | ~~ gladness. They gaze on the temples, on 'the - palaces, on the walére, on each. 7m“ Am\ nA Logs eve s N9 Cg M HtaeAtiest We say, \Close his eyce.\* In ge, and the birds, flying out, I wonld today bring & cngs'] 'consolations to the grave < Joved ones, and 1 would -_ «~. From Karth- to Heaven. Oh, how they bound in, theso spirits They weave their joy . into gar«{ heaven when. a Chris 6 yeag it is in - . Theré is not a hospital in the United States the proceeding is that the department, a new word into .the languagé. Ft has taken the ordinary ward \lamp wan: | touly added '\'ist\ to it and called the result. a. person \'who doesn't know tho yell posted to bo designated a Iamp is to care. for the lamps, of as man . yas | convenient. -Chicago Tribune. oe ~*~ An' Error Corrected, _ ~~ or an ywhere elsa which was not built by peo- ple 'who believe in the deity: of the \Jamar? hrigt.-ingerior. they spring. it into triumphal Not quite right, brother, not quite. | 2. arché« they strike on.timbrels, and thet | Mount Binal hospital, in this. dity,..is:n |-- .-- R P wil the loved ones gather in a greg cir- | -very good hospital. If you ever get in- |*~' E | cle ardundthe throne of Go@-father® | jurad in this city, you could go to. GE . ep po 'mothers, brothers, Bisters, mons\. and | worse.place than Mount Sinai hospital. | t An dwaihters; lovers and frinds, hand t | Ther Rabbi Gottheil would call upon | e hand around about the throne, thecirole, | you, and wouldn't he have you some- | * qf hard. to hand, joy-to joy, fubd1e6 to Jn | what at a disadvantage! Christian | - a Ls t 'biloé, victory to victory, \untilthe day: | Work, . ace p Treak and the shadowsfleeaway. Turn (| -> ~ (-=-_-------~ | ias. '| gay beloved, and be like arce orayoung | . ___.. 'The bolstil One - } . . h = \. \m. at mpon the mountains of Bether; ** ~ | He who thinks to entertain the work | *; < ~ vrith . talea his hard luck las quoe? | ~- idsas :of ve hat const he t ned ng 0 nstitulegamnscmcit..- \ Milwaukee Journal. b,c C cme tain. .s imc . presumably through the personal-efforts | St of Postmaster Hesing, is trying to force enough to be an electrician, but who is | < ~ trimmer. ** The-work of the |- buindred - ~All wrk gUatintéed 'to givesat to mthey required. % 1 &) Young) hereafter beé-continued by the subscriber, w tas bad an ( + e a at- th the quarry. at one half stock. styles and quality % <0 Headstore ... 30 se . as §0 16 ... 46 00 } . -Other desiora who want t j HIB&ALD: * CHARLES K. ARC » bre 2890.00 -- . Bag Harbor. L \a-.