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1 »t TALIAOI. EiQ(?0EN4~ BROOKLYV I YIKD U. LOiDtMf -HE PSSACHES A SERMON V •j . HEAVEN . - 'As Ho Imagines It Will Bo and 1 \ the Ulessetl Will Bo Engaged '' Some Keantifitl Imaginations, July 10—Dr. Talmag spending a very busy season in land. Jvotonly in tho.Lomlon.clmri biit in the provinces enormous cr< have gathered to hear tho eloq American preacher. The great SI cjiteli Tabernacle in tho east oivLon Where Rev. "W. C'ulf preaches, ' .t|w'6uo;cd aliiiost to su (location, and large C'ongr'egational ohiiro "l)"a"ckney district coultl not >the . people Tvho, tried to ^ taoug.hit Was on a Mondsy evening iSr. Talmage preached there. Oud •London the eagerness to hear hiro has boen quite as intense. J n Liverpool, Manchester, N'SH ham, Crew.e and Hauley, no. chi 'cap be found largo onough to accom rao- dste tho audience, and B'r. Ttvlnrag& preached in the tails inwhibh tho g reat tho the has L'he. this I conventions are held, and eajiaeity #f Uieso was tested to \itSnost, Since 'his arrival ho . ••;pr4a6hed seven times each- week. Seijmon.- selected for puMie&Uoh webkis from tho tesv, Iteyelation' v . i^i •°."Aftfei' 1 tbisl beheld, and lo! agjreat Multitude which no man could no: DJ ber, >plo me, 'ith .As, pon act Oi all nations and Tdndi>eds and pe and tongaes, stood before tho thn and before the Lamb,. clothed ^ whiterobes, and palms !n their hai TtncJ cried with a loud voice, Bay •Salyation to our God which sitreth \i thelthrone, and unto the tainb." Tt 13 -impossible to' come in eon with anything grand or beautiful in art siature Or religion without being proi ted fend! elevated. We go. into tho art gal- lery, and our soul meets the soul of the paiijter, and we hear the. hum of hi3 forests and the clash of his conflicts iml see the cloud blossoming of the sky iind t h e foam blossoming ot the ocean, ;md •we come out irom the gallery be .ter Vnen thaii When wo went in. "W'igo >aj:o ! the concert ot music and are lilted Isito enchantment; ior days after our BOttl seems to rock with a very turnui t of Joy, as the sea, after a long stress of weather, 'rolls and rocks and surg :S a great.while, before it comes back to its ordinary calm. On the same principal it is profitable to tliink of heaven, and look oii u )on thati.landscepe of joy and light which. St. John depicts—the rivers of gladm >ss, . the trees of life, the thrones ot pon ef, •the j commingling of everlasting lo tQ. 11 wish this morning that I coukl bring heayen from the list of intangibles find make it seem to you as it really is— .lie all fashio suits o Hive ]?mfed Prices m the Learfc of the season on i&ble a »_. -? A Eelentless Sacrifice of | Tremendous Values f. r \ WE DCIN'T.hesitate in asking-gentlemen of refined thsto-and to compare tliese excellent suits with, the high-priced :IHQ HOUSE ai's All Wool S80& m * All Colors, of iSemst Seasonable . • Usually sold at $15.00, redacted to-$10.00. ifass ! Suits, Of Clay and other Worsteds ens Worth easily $22, cut now tc critics •their sfrell tailors/ Suits Bargai others ,yith th as. T iharge J great fact in. all hist ory, the depot of a£e% the parlor of God's universe: THE HEAVENLY COXCKEUATlOX. This account in my text gives a ] tare of heaven as it is on a holid if a mancame to 2< ow York ilC- l 7- or the. first time on the day t hat Kos&i ith •arriyed from Hungary, and he saw ' ho arclles lifted, and the flowersflungin tfee streets, and he heard the guns boo m- ing, lie would have been- very foolish to suppose that tiitit was tho ordinary pearjance of the city. While heaven always grand and always beautiful think my text speaks oi. a gala day heaven. - Ifrtfs a time of great celebration—p •feapSf of the birth or the resurrection of i JestiR perhaps or the downfall of so: j Li.r _ ~ .1 -• ^- . f n. . despbtisni, perhaps becausa of the ru: . ing in of the-millonnium. I know i ot j blue ribbon of sky around the brow and • -what,.but.it;does seem t o m e i n readijn; ---'-'-• " * ' * " ' •••/-this passage as. if it were .a holiday pg .a i a y i'eaven: After this I beheld, audio great .multitude'which no man cot number of all nations and kindre and people and tongues, stood be!c the. throne, and be'oro the Lan clothed with, white robed, and palms their iands, and cried with a loud voi sayink Salvation to our God wh ith h th d y . sitteth upon the throne, and unto t, ie Lamb." I shall speak to you of the glorified i_ heaven—their number, their antei:e- dontsj their dress, their symbols ai;d >ng. But how shall I begin you of the- number of those .? I have seen a curious esfcinai by an. ingenious man who caloulat js how long the world tfas going to- la :t, and How many people there are in oa :h generation, and then sums up thewhc lo jaattljr, says he thinks there will >e twenty-seven trillions of soula in glw j. -I havj? no faitlx in his estimate. .1 sim- ply tike the plan announcement of ti text-Uit-is "a great-^uititude which man je b' JS Jish, Italiiii, Spanish, Tamil, : - ; Chocta\v, finnncsa Alier men have been long in the land yon can tell by their accentua- tions ii'om what nationality they camo, and I suppose in the great' throng around the throne it will'notbje difficult to tell from what part of the-'earth they came. . • j . GATHERED Oti'T Tfe i'-Ti* KATIOKS. | These reaped Sfciiian wheat fiold3 I hritt those picked cotton from the pods. These, under blistering- skies', gathered tamarinds and ryanis. Those crossed tho desert on camels, raid those glanced j over the snow drawn by Siberian dogs. I and these milked tho' goats far up on I tho Swiss crags. They fought ihe walrus and white bear iii regions sf ever'tosliiig snuw, iiiid thtjs'o-heard tho song of fiery- wihjjed birds in African thickets. They w,ep^ white. '-£hey were black.. -The) r were red. They were copper color. From all lands, from all ages. They were plunged into Austrian dungeons. They passed through Spanish jncjuisi* tions. They were eobftued iii London Tower. Thty fought with beasts in the amphilhoatur. They were Moravians. They were Waldenses. They were Al- bigenses. They were Scotch Coventers. They wore Sandwich Islanders. In this world men prefer different kinds of government. The TJnited States wants a republic. Thfe British government needs t9b& A constitutional monare-hy. Austria wants .absolutism, liut when they come np from earth from different nationalities they will prefer one great monarchy^-King Jesus ruler over it. And if that monarchy were disbanded and it were submitted to all the- Jiosts of heaven who should rule, then by tho unanimous suffrages of nil tho redeemed Christ would be- come the president of the whole uni- verse. J-Iagua Chartas, bills, of right, houses of burgesses, Iritimvirutes, con- gresses, parliaments—nothing in the presence of Clirist's scapter" swaying over all the people who have entered upon that great glory. Ohl can you imagine it? What a strdngo comming- ling of tiist'03, oi -histories, of national- itea, "of all nations and kindreds and people and>tongues." ily subject advances- and tells you" of tho dress of those in heaven. The ob- That h; %f, ^ 9 Y -Confoiuid our excellent .Tailor r hiacle onliiiary ready-made j clothes offered about town as iisis your chance to buyj the Best Clothes at less than "or ordinary kind. >m their appreciation of elin. 1 they shajil be exu| tent,' waving palms. O MORE TO L OKSORROW, ,nd once eld Ihe implemont of toil or wielded tl e sword ef wan but now it plAcis a.bwt brUnoVes from tlib i of lifi S as the'j stand before the ihrono v. aving th< ir palms. Once lie was a pilgrim on ea'th;. he crunched the hardcrus s—he walked the weary way; but it is 111 gone nc w; the sin gone, the weariness gone, the sickness gone, tho sorrow goae. As Christ stands up bs forg theTgreat array bf the- saved and, re- counts his victories it will be like . the rocking and tossing of tt Jbrest in a. tem- pest,'as r.li tlie rede shied Wse Tip, host beyond host, rank 1 eyond rank, waving their palnjs. My subject make i another advance- ment, and speaks oi the song they sing. Dr. Dick, in a very learned work, pays that among otl e.r things in heaven ho thinks [they will give.-a^great de.aLol time to thp study B: arithmetic and the higher bra;nahes of mathematics. I do not believe it. It would upset my idea of heaven Sf I thought so; 1 never liked mathematics; and I. Would rather take the representation of my. text, Which Apart 11 leal tillcS 'lie Ati5ei ; !i ! anS, to tise a •e "ck'alh ou scrm'ons," says the- 'clegraph. In this country ser-. Hums are a good deal played out Fine services, jtoou lansib, gorgeous vedtineiils firaiv bftCpr, in theatrical piirlanco, than pulpit el: qiieuee.. That this should be so is,"jwrliajis, noCredit to .out" spiritual <lc- •70Lio!i oi niincl, but with us preaching by itself IhU.-i flat, iii tl.ic -ttsiited- Slates' it. is different. Life in tlife^ountry villiiges of: tho union ai:d even more ino; owing to in t ! ie smn Her ntunoHS than it towns, is far is over here, we havo secular boatmen's songs, songs; but in song, and that will I t-ion iron ah eternal heaven tbtjmigli the that was slain. 1 see a soul comin deemed in,heaven, the gates' tlio old fr sing ?'• and the new fcion of heaven as be- ."They .ftrjfed v>i*.)< Salvation iiijto our describes fjhe occiipo ing joyful psalmody a loud Voice, saying, God." Inlthisworli songs, nursery songs harvest eoiigs, senth heaven we' will have taste for only ono e. the song of solva- leath to an eternal d of the Lamb ; up to join the re- As it goes through 3nds of Jhat spirit come around it and say, "What shall wo y arrived soul soys. "Sing salvation;" atli after awhile an earthly despotism fa Is and a scepter Of Iniquity is] snapped, and churches are- built where once th ire. were , Supersti- tious" mosques', and ii igel cries to ahceli ''Let iis siiig," and the answer is, "Wiiat sliall we sitlg?" and another voice says, ' i.et us. sing salva ion." And after awhile all the ehureli on earth will rush into, the outspread, ar ns of the church of heaven! and while the righteous are p of heaven,! and whil di h ject of dress in this world'ia not only to ascending and the w< rid is burning and veil the bodv, but to adorn it. The God all things are being w ound up, the gu'e^- ' ' " ' "What shall, we .be a voice 'like who drosses up the. spring morning with. y earrings of dowdrojps hung. from tree n j branch und mantle of ci'ilftson cloud a I fiung over the shoulder and thevioletted d slippers of tho grass for herfeet^-I know ds I that God does not despise beautiful ap- parel. Well,, what shall we wear in heaven? "1 saw a great multitude clothed in white robes." It is white! In this world we had sometimes to have on ;h working apparel. Bright- and lustrous garments would be ridicuousiy out of place sweltering amid forges, or mixing paints,, or plastering ceilings, or binding books. n 5 s r b e ; . . lew years in this country . ..j". ill W^B .take a; census ot the population, and it la very easy to tell howmany peopSo therajare m a eityor a nation; Eufc Who^haU give a census of the greut nation of the saved? It is quite easy : o tel-1 how many people there are in diffe r- c£t - denominations of Christians—ho v jnanj- Baptists and Methodists and Episiopaliana-and Presbyterians; of a l the Mjenominations of Christians W8 •could pnake an estimate. Suppose they were gathered in one - great audience room, how overwheln- ing |he spectaclel - But it would give n •> -.idea; of the grea.t audience roora of •^ea^en—the multitude that bow down andilift up their hosannas. Why, the cottjfe fj'om-all the chapels, from all th' v catHed'ral3, from all sects, from all ages. Theywho prayed in splendid liturgy' nndj those who in broken sentence «tt4red the wish of brohen hearts-!- frorfl Grace church and Sailors' Bethel! ftttia. linder ths shapeless rafters anc| from under high sprung areh—"a great - •- mu^titudd that no man can number." '•' j THE ARMY OFTHE BEDEEJIED. dljeof the most impressive things \ «..; ^Bfl^e looked; Upon is an army. St'andin ' f* JBjfe'ag hillside you see forty thousand -V?" ? orj-3Efffcyji,frlio"usand-' men pass-along, You ' '. can], hardly imagine' the impression if youj have not actually felt it. But you W&f take .all the armies th» earth has . (tvei 1 seett-^-tb,e legends under Sennach- wrilj and Cyrtjs and'C'sesaT, 2erxe§ and ' ; ,Areian|der and Napolen, ond all our wioderrl forces: and put them- in ono great arrays,.and then on soine swift Bte^i- jfbu.inay n^i glpngtho Jlneaaid T«yij»TT |tbe troops; and tist oocuinu- .laSeft host' trom all ages seams like & h*it\ formed regimeht compared with ' .the. pre^t -array of the redeemed. ' -. I. iibod on'e duy at Williamsport, and saw bn|lie opposite side of the Potomao the forces coming down, regiment after . regiiJH/ejit, and brigade after brigade. It. . seerjjiedfas- though there was no end to tfe^jirodeasioni Butiiow let me take. . the jBeJtl-glass of St. John and look, off u.ponthi)-,hos.f:3."-6£ heaven—^thousands i-BJQii./^you'sands,.'ten' thousand times Ven jthotisand, one hundred and forty ' -., andSfour thousand, and thousajids of '' * "i[j^niiisf Bntfl I put down ./we*. field- ' iid|L;-say;' "I. cannot' estimate it^-a •ranltitude that no man can pom- i&K your Imagination, and iagenftit^ andT^reak down c>£' calculation in' sttempt- of the re- all things are being w tion will,feeasked sine?'' and there wil the righteous are id i bi d ths voice of] many waters, like th.eyofee ot mighty I thundering?" **•"* *""' -- spond, "Siiig sa-lv.atioi..' fri this world we hj —songs tremulous t dirgeful ior tho dead; but in heaven there will be no sigl phony. . lsluiah—the dullest of jahguisb, The t-aineat march.' Joy among t ie cherubim! *Joy among the! seraphin 1 that Will re- ,ye plaintive songs ith sorrow, songs lie compiiraltvo scarceiiess of the pnpuliiti'ii ami to tho K>'e;it distances wliicMt seji.ii'ate ono city from another. Aimiseim-jnlR) cnterlttinineiita and soeiat K.atli.- ritigp aid eompai'aliveiy few ill i;nui!n'r. In-cous^qneTire America is the happy hinii-iiis' ^-iMiiitl for l^ct'irersaml prejn-h- i ii ilt-fiiull of any olhcr oppor- tunity foi pu!;liu nicotingr. the Sunday iiullier at clmrcli] chapel or is. fchd" Sooiiil event eff UiG' is at the nic'ling-lionsa that I Wo do r clso^ Iiere, week tlie counli y folk, and "to a considerable extent tlie (mvn foil;,- count upon seein oua anotlior. '.i'here ev^iybody whois niiybx'y puts, in an appearance ot disimte tlml in America) as '• J nilcnd chm-uii "ii-li tiro view- 'of fulfilling their duty and promoting their own. spiritual- welfare, but we'.do I not liesitate to say limb tho, .alteiutacC'.j is lai'x'-Iy stiniiilated by tlio desire to jnoet. uei^hljors, to learn tho gossip of U^p tin.y, nhd in the ^as-e of ti>Q fair.sex to jclispluy their oira dresses and to inspect the'costumes of their sister 'Soclitl null IPJiii'iicial Konaonn for Divorce. Love and romance play little part in the -marriages of Giiina, according to tlie Ostasialisckcr Lloyd. The Chinaman Vrlio euterx. l)i«! liuibor ,of nintl'imony Ipolfflupon the matter as tiio fiiliillmeng of a duty which he owes tojiisaucestors, "The custom of the Cliiuese," contin- ues tlie journal, ."to marry off their sons and daughters at an eurljr hgb does not seem advisable to the Europeans. It is also the rule iii China that unions only take place between families of equal s<>-> cial and financial standing, Disregard of this rule would causo subsequent troukle !BV£fia.bly.' . The custom oC early marriages principles is .founded, rnoreovei 1 ,' incomprehensible to A. Hanged Mfan Exhibits Cmllie Ullorlty on Belnff Resuscitated, It was the rule in Ireland -?t one -tioio that after an execution the body should hang half ail lioifr, hpt"tlso sheriff, from mistaken lenity, would on some occasion^ look away after the prisoner had beeri turned off, while the friends of the cul- prit would hold up their companion by the waistband of the breeches so that the rope would .not press upoa Iii3 throat; When the half hour -was expired tin? deceased was put into a cart, -which was drivon at a gallop along tlile stony j-oad; This jolting generally brought the prisoner to. Oiie such re'epvery. was BO complete that tbo' resuscitated iriatf sat up in the coiEn and gave three cheers. One of his friends was so shocked at this indecent conduct that he hit the ex- . iorpsfe on the. head with his shillelagh tlie } and finished him. The question then r In all Styles and Shade*, Take advantage of our Cut Prices Great Sale. -A Complete Fishing Outfit given with ivory. Boys' Suit. Opposite Lelarid Opera \_ ••-- - - I |-.'.i .^--=-a=»mc= Western mind. The boy audgirl joined I arose whether the assailant could not be" in wedlock do not form a new family, (r j e j for murder, but it was ruled that but rather the youngest branch of tho family tree, upon which thc-y are hence- forth dependent. The duty of: parents tow-ii-ii their *oii? t'ces uo't end with their marriage; they are ohiiged ^ cal ' e for them after that time also. There is ti great disadvantage in this system. The son, being under the eyes of the par- ents as long as. they are alive, really iie^er becomes independent. Al! mem* bS-s of a fataily live, v.-heu possible, un- der one roof, and even after the death of tho parents'the sons continue, as a rule, to live together in ilia, family home. When the father .dies the oiJest brother assumes his place".a3 the head of the fam- ily, anil wiieil Uie-feiotlKV dice ths .wifa of the oldest brotlier takes her place. But, again, the system has- many advan- When q.ii j\iiierican wip-bes to say Ui.a| hnybodyiiip put on what we illicit cal! his or her 'jwnr paint" lie roiiir.rbs that the gc-utleiijiari or hiAy, .as Hip . cuso m.-iy be, ias got I ou "go-l'i mreling"' clothes. Indeed, \va m;ij r fairly .say thai" iu a Yanlue viliageor to.-• nsiiip t!:.e Sunday service rep|es«nts. what Loiig'ohauip does, ."orused ti do—-in Paris. It .you want to sttuly -fcl:ii latest fashiuys; tlis. iiowesc .devices of f;mirii.'io attire, in aiiy city oi' hamlet of .tho Union you can find no more fiWiiis occasion for yoiwiesearoliea. than the Sunday servico at-Che chapel frequented jby the elite of the neighbor- j no man could .be successfully charged with ths murder of a man who was al- ready dead iu law, *li* FtSturo .of Natural Safi. As to the actual amount of gas pro J duced it is difficult to obtain exact fig- ures; too many people are interested in! ^.5 A clover p nrrauged and clock with a timt will repeat a'"a to the possj.sMor"; <!• n fit Petersburg has . on exhibition -sr' plviitograph attachment I I Hour set, accordinw 1, sire, .such orders or ' ,y be ooiumittesi to L it; A boon lo the Irr--,! In" ti;at in theuuuery t could :3einotlier, and ie Solemn timepie."'0] jay, "Cbiklren, it is! y qurqhly, and donjrt t an earlkr ^ y ^ Mary; don't forget;" anU d "You must stai|t in nn -rohuu-s, or I you wiii lose your train " 'i»e dial elf this clock of tho e i- we me tbkl, a human face, Di mouth comes the future from wli.se jusl bang finished b sta:v!iig the other e jr.-ijfecH'i f- """•• tf '<• friend, I WHS told by the iat and material tit ritzU; v.-ao ?6, r.m linfeivcd would sell s r.nJ that was tiie fl:is!iod during half iftl.e 'matpriiil won sils*, the cost would ith the sel i v. ...«1t oa Nerve Tome only o; in hours, KS well pa Bnd attanr , ^ ^ y njir be 5eft with it ! over twohmadrBadol f Milliners. . I boueflt j certjjiblj concealing or misstating the facts. But one tendency cannot be overlooked, the gradual withdrawal of gas for other uses than domestic heatin's.and cooking. The demaudfrom this source alone is already equal to'the supply, especially if conserv- ative notions prevail iu regard to. its per- manence. Such use permits of better prices than to maintain factories, built lo sell iciwii iote'; and that those who .have monopolized the visible Sources of luges. As the girts are married very, youngri they are unacquainted as a rule, with tlie duties oi a-hcucasvifc.' Rut in entering the households of their fathera- in-law they learn Hie needful lessons in I jj" !m as,"m'en should "bear" the nrarietby" family econonty. j working on people's fears as to the per- "Itisnothijig rare," adds the paper, j manence o f the supply. Doubtless tho supply'should seek to restrict its uses to the more profitable channels is not to be wondered at. . Nor is it strange K> in ordar to get the biisiuess .into tlieir own "for bo3 r s twelve to fourteen, years old to marry. The physical) moral and intel- lectual development the contracting parties haS not-lnug vvbatever to do witli fJie matter. Other considerations en- regulate tho affair. An old Chi* i aphorism says that the "groat busi- hood. ing bf Winds, iio net weepirig S*irf- sphg will behal- tune a triumphal f down iu the! water we find ;it eacii depth f j 6fDirpS« Piaili i?isU that ii ve iii deep «tiler "have nd ! eyes atall ot very large ones; As wo go ! Joy among the ransomed I Joy forei er I On ear tli., lie mueje in churches Is often poor, because there is no interest in it or because there is. no harmony. Some would not sin, •„ some- could cot In this world we must havo the work- ing day apparel sometim63, and we care not how coarse it is. It ia appropriate; - but when all the toil of earth is past] sing, some eang too h gh, 6pme sang too and there is no moro drudgery and no low, some sahg bjrfitfl jttd fetarts, bfl.t ill more weariness, we shall stand before I. tie groat aujdiende. of tie redeemed Bn tho throne robed in white, On earth high alS voices Wiil b 5 accordant, and wo sometimes had to wear mourning the manwho on eart i could not tell a apparel—black scarf for the artn, black plantation inelody roin the "Dead veil for the face, black .gloveB•• for tho' March In Sail" will lift an anthem that hands, black band ior the hat Abra-1 the Mendelsshons anc Beethovens anil ham mourning for Sarah;' Isaao mourn-1 the Sob.tnnanjns of eart i never imagined, ing ior Eebocca; Eachel mourning lor and you mayj stand, th; ough all eternity her children; David mourningforAbsa-. and listen and there will not.be onedio^ lom; Mary mourning for Lazarus; Every " cord in that] great ahi herii' thlt foreVeJ second of every ipinute ot every hour 6j rolls up against the gr jat heart of God. «v OTO ,!„„ „ i.o,,,.i. I,—vJ- ii ^.j]i aot jj e a golO jj W JJJ n o t h e a every day a heart breaks. THK RESURRECTION The earth from zono to zone and •from pole to pole is cleft with sepulchral rent and the-esirth can easily afford to bloom and blossom whea it is so ricn rit-fi roolderiag Hf e . Graves! graves I graves! p ga ]i aot j j auet, it will, not be a q lintet, but an in- numberable host befor *""""-• UIJ; u.:o. wraves! graves craves , " t Bat when all tiese bereavements have \ !? n ? th , s ins, "Salvation unto bir Gpdanduntd tneLantti." tneycrovd ail. the tem- ples, they bend o/yer the battlements, they fill all the height t and depths and of heaven with fill Bassed, and there is JIO more graves: to dig, and no more coffins to make.and I no more sorrow to suffer, we shall pull off this mourning and be robed in white. I see a soul going right irom all this scene of sin and trouble into glory, seem to hear him say: Ijourney forth rejoicing •• From this dark vale of toara ~~ To lieavenly ;|oy and freedom, " ?' From earthly dafo tind fears. \ V i Christ my Lord shall gather- his redeemed again, . , His kingdom to inherit— . •• j- Good night Mil-tfien. \ | * I hear my Saviour calling j The joyfulllour has coipej - - The angel guards afo ready *: -z. To gnida me to OMr home. 7 ^ "When Christ our Lord shall gather ' All his redeoxned againj. His kingdom to inherit— ,^__ -^ Good night till then. ' . iih" My subject advances, and tells you of their hosannas. THE DIVIKB (3L0RY. When people were taken into the Temple of Diana it was such a brilliant room tnat they were al guard. Some people ha by just lookirigon the >rilliancy of that room, and °sb the jiaitor When he brought a stronger to t ie door and let him iii would (always cl arge him, "Take, l^rtrt/^l nf Trninv 'ATTAD *' 1 heed of your jeyes.' Oh! when I tliink jubilant, feel .like saying, "Jakb hee-d of your ears." It is so loiid i i sona. it is so blessed an ailthem. They suig a rock song, sfyrtae, j'WKo is 1 e that sheltered us in the wilderness; a id shadowed us m a weary land?" Jnd.the chorus ccariesin, ''Christ the. sh dow of a rook in. a weary Tana." They sing .a star BOI is lie that guiqed us tBii the throne, cry-. that the offsets produced u'poii tho oyes bf fish are steadily progressive in "one di- rection or tl e other. Species that live at <i depth of e, already a g< glity fathoms have the eye od deal bigger thnri their nearest representatives who live at oi* near the sui'ifiice. Down to the .depth of two lnmdrej:! fathoms - davlight disap- peai'S; and I ie eyes get constantly bigger and bigger. 1 -.of lifo is ended' when the sons and ! daughters are married. . The Chinese parents do-not care to run the danger of postponing the marriage of their.child- ren; especially of their sous, Until aftei' Uieir own death. .•"A Chinese engagement dates its -be- ginning from the exchange of red cards between the parents of the contracting parties. The oav\ls in many districts aro ininiense documents almost.the aizg of a horse blanket. They are irapoi-Umt for the reason that they are used as evi- dence in pose of disagreements in the fu- tui'ei MB seldom hear in China of j and bigger. Beyond, that depth, small eyed forms s!et in, with lou^ feelers de- veloped to supplement the eyes. Sight in fact, is hpre beginning to atrophy. In the greatest abysses the fish are mostly blind, feeling their way about, entirely by tlieir sensjitire bodies over the naked surface of rojok- at the bottom. Sonio have still external relics of functiouless eyes; in others, the oldest and most con- firmed abysijial specie, the eye has alto- gether disappeared externally, -though its last representative may still be dis- covered imbedded deep iu the tissues of the head. Tjhereare two wayaof getting around the [ocean's gloomy abyss—by delieate'touch orgaus or by sight that collects the ffew rays of light due tophus- phoresceDce pr other accidental sources^ Kr- —'•.. •'Spcfjcli*' of Ihc Dunil>.* Deaf and dlumb people speak by'means of their.fingars. How many words can r. baud-speaker form in a minute? The average nUiuper' of loiters per Word in the English ready hand-s language is five. Now,, a leaker can make the Eng- f the song that is to say, Mish alphabet ten times in a minute—that " Iiundred and sixty letters, him .to pause for. the spaed ? of one letter J after each word, to show that the word is complete. If, therefore! we subtract poni the total just given about one-styth of- these stoppages, the total will.be ljednced tot-vp hundredaad' fche symbols they carry. If our text! night, and whfen all ot had represented the good iu heaven as ' put arose in &e siy t carrying cypress branohes, that woalij : pqurin<* light Ion the I have meant sorrow. If, my test Had'And the chorus will . . palm Dram* : saying;'"Who iis he thai trighten. they carry, a-nd that victory. When ' our way, and tyeajhod/ weetness »„„, the people came home from WBT in olden' our soul, and bloojne^-'tiroueh frost and time's the conqueror'ro:de : ai the head of tempest?" And. the-choi bis troops, and there were triumphal I "Christ,'-the Jw^of the : arcjies, and the people would come out J slirougn frosf ana tempt with branches of-the palm tree and'a wateraong, paying, "VI wave.them all along the host, What a ; gleamed to us I froi ng he host, What a ; gleamed to.us | fro*-t Mgmncanttypethis of the greetmg.and ' and lightened! theli af-thejoyof thefedeemed in heaven! On . trouble, and broiight' I ^^ d 1 -the dai ,. . ,, a nd vax^jmot polite, circles. They had in- Famous hands strike "them onboth cheeks. Internal. spite spat in. their. aces. Their heart ached with sorrow. Their brow reeked -with, unalleviated toi|.-. How weary -they were! . Some-, times they, broke, the heart of the iaici-:[ nlg&tin the midst of all-, their anguisbj crying out, "O.Godl" .But harfcnow to* the shout of the delivered, captives; as they lift their arras from th« shacldes and they cry out, "Free! free I" They lookhack.uppn all the trials- .through; which., they hive - pasaedr the ibattfes they.- have-fpughti, ftne-< btfrderiW'they 'Carr-ied' ~t\*~ .«.'**«*.,.-.«.".?;;..n~n-~-\-~-..-j.ii~i-^. srouWe, and brought ea pies and refres imeat to , a fountain In-t ie , inidst ness?"'-arid'thibn in, "Christ, the fountain •the wilderness. . •. ..; My-friends.'virilly.oui, Shall we 1 make. ; rehears Ii we cannot'si igthat.L will not ;be. slle. to; sjn .Gaii Jfcbe that our: good land- will walk all tnn throng of WhiqhL I spea truth lies between the two extremes. Tlie better opinion is that there is enougli for legitimate uses, and that it will still be found in new regions; . For nearly three-years the' territory from which' natural gasjlas been prawii has not been sensibly-erilarged; and ex- cept in the new field i;s 'general use for' manufacturing has'generally diminished. And there certainly need be no feaVs that coal mining will become a lost art. But we ai'e inclined to think that the present tendency is niaiuly a halt or reaction, and that natural gas has come to stay. 4fust now its uses are nierely suggestive of the future. It brings to us fuel iu tlis most convenient form—the reiined essence freed from dross, weight, impur- ity ; self-transporting, smokeless, an in- visible potent agent, that once possessed of we can not well part with. If nature canuot bo depended on to furnish it toinake identical out of. broken engagements. Yet if a quarrel i re^fy mado can not be settled peacefully recourse fs j t * or something nearly had to the law, and the judge usually coa j ojj imposes a fine upon the party, who has j fcig 6 ' tiu {he of 6team and , b t broken the contract. .... -.= "The chief incident in a CMuese man- is this to be the type of all future time ? Electricity is already with us, and I there are indications too plain to be disra garded that the coal fire is to* remain un- .riago is the arrival of the bride in her chosen one. That is a de facto fulfill- ment of the contract. The weddiug d3y is determined bv the parents of tho gi'oom. • The imperial calendar names t ,, e n c a n s a y that the of the lucky days, audou such days theso-.j y e t t o come .j , called 'red celebrations' take place, both in the cities and country. The same . ,.,,,,, , / ,,. t uuuws ui mo uuuti uuai «a» ueeu reoKonea bridal clothes may be used several fames; the most i mportant . when we remem ber In ntfihrmtq vrhava it. wictrtmaptr fn ^ol^. ' ., , T . . , r . - ' - ^vw UM der special conditions only, just as the wiudnfill and the water-wheel retain a j place in the world's economy. Who, .When v.-e consider that of all the pi'o- t ducts of the mine coal has been reckoned h i Iu districts where it is customary tocele- brateihe weddings in the forenoon the di ;s of the co-wives take place in or in- the evening-. The Clune^Whus hope to niake tliem less im- Iportant. That the chief part ofa Ch (iiese marriage is the arrival of the .at the house of the groom is illustrated that Lehigh and Lackawanha coiil fields ( alone ha've created fortunes more vast "j#lthe gold mines,of California; when •e realize that it has revolutionized the means of locomotion, that it has.revolu- tionized the means of travel, that It has supplanted the water-wheel on shore and a S ain by the fact that the sons are of S J S . t n^ef an^ & ten married without heuig p^sent at fouudation o f a .nanufacturing system tobe sssst^ir r rs ei^s^of a : Ssfc s? ay w en once ecu j what shall, we say of the future, with'the . ~^ '• ' j possible, ye3, probable, displacement bf Summer sict«hi» jiiiimaia. j coal by something vastly better? Kverybody is aware that a large num- ] •—-— ber of animals sleep in protected places ' •• Glasses for tho Eye». duriug the cold season of tho j r ear and: "When a doctor tells, you to wear O.wake in the summer. A similar pheiiomi : glasses while your eyes are good in order erion is the. summer sleep of different to keepthem so," said an occulist, "you j p fifteen letters! Letthis-be. divided by reptiles-rprineiEally serpents and croco-. may safely set bini down as a liumbu" •fl.ve.Jwe a v e r ^ utimper of letters per dile.8 which-thus pass the time o.f greatest .oraquack. I'aiji-.not saying anything •ex- iieat.in.ti'otiioal rotrions. " ' ' airainst shadflii. m* &van r»l>»in erlaaaaa *n saying: "Who igh the thici r lights.went a. morning star. uVs darknesB.'' I line in, "CKrist, : on the soul's g aflowersong, brightened'all is will come, in/ dley, blopmin| r t.". -They sing' io is he that frowning crag, keet ravine of ilingtothe'tenv the lip, and was oi the wilder >rus will come in the midst o* ithat an;theni? S this morning? ajj; on' earth we, ;7.it...in,heaven. (r.iends.in;that. jgh that great ,. word,..and w^sliall .find that a fairly ex'. pert deaf and. dumb person wilt speak forty-three.w^rds-por minute, A personin possession j of spioch . will probably speak one hundred acd fifty words,in the •Bame.space of] time; but experts in the. sign language use Only the' iniportan't words'of "a Sentence,, and .express a' thought in every gesturp, therefore the odds are by no i.neaus.a-idus.t'thein, then- forty -words doing the, work of -three times that'number as employed iu ordi- nary speech. its IVnvics ot «fce World. ' The. follosying statement of .fighting vessels belonging to. the various powers •was recently computed at the Navy.De- partment from official sources: Nation; .. •Argentine', ^nsti-ia ... Brazil Ohiii Oiiina '•Denmark . Es;.yi)t •Arm- Un- otod.' ar'd. S 7. li> .81 8 ... 4 .. B Bfermany M- 6rea't-Iiritata.es- ifayfil.','.'.'.'.'.'.'.- - - ;Jrm= Un- ryation. oreil. ar'd. NW-hcrtiuids ..23 S) K 5 NW- Kor^vay Ptil-u. Pi Koiihiah Hnssia'.. y i ' .. 1 !!48. Sl'aim 13 Sno<!en ,X7 '. i'tii'kev 18 United States .£9 10 •9 <a '7 m- 14 so .40 ieat.in.ti'opioal regions. againBt. shaded, pr even plain glasses to During July arid August it will be ob- protect tire eyes, from dust,'-'although. served by those who p-i'y any' attention to those are of doubtful value, but the man out-door animal lifo that reptile's and" who says he caa give you glasses to keep amphibians are noticeably few-of in num-. it good pair of eyes incohditionJias either Ber than during'.the spring- niontltu; but 'some glasses left on his hands which ho •lf'.-thty begin to hunt under .largo stones,-. wants to sell, or he don't knosv .what be. iu holes fa the gfouTicI, on the edges of. is talking; about The moment it be? marshes or ponds, under brushwood and comes painful to read i n . a good lisjlit deadleaves,, they will often find these .with the naked "eye glasses are -required, animals in a condition similar, to sleep. but until then they are best left severely -The frogs sit huddled together and alone." It is true that the demand for make no attempt to bop away, only bur- glasses'lias increased very .rapidly since •rowing down into the-earth. Lizards the adoption .of electricity for lighting the head hidden: ' They are the most •' liglits in'a.street car'are luxurious, but quickly aroused, however.'•. '- ' I theyvenoourage reading, and/are from an ..The reason of fiis sninmer sleep is dif- optician's' point' of view- objectionable, ferent, according as tho animal lives ou Everyone knows; or should kuon* by Liud or in the water. Those on laud tbis'time, that reading in amoving vehi- sleep during, the greatest heat; tfiose. in J *bW is undar: any circuinstauces injurious tho water only when their usunldwelliiig'"ti) tile 8ight.-'-' ' ' ; •-.: •' place is dried '-up, which' generally;'I : '•—'•' * - ' ^-^ but not.necessarily,- occurs during high.}' The j- ate O f .progr'ossbu of a' storm is -tomporature. Th» water , salamanders ' otten fifty mi { es f uUo * % ^ A «ro .-dways in a partial summer slumbeB; I I b J ° g p onf iiot-finding.usf do'ft-h;to the Ate rts the water frog, wliicb livesin ponds nud xmnhOL well supplied with ? : -Portsniouthi N. H.... bears th.e. proud' : distincttenajl l h^ " g .haying. hth^io ios of | . distincttenasjlie plaqe newspaper wa| esibli .' jthey/ are delly- * , |tanjl •.:h; Theycojne: 'a whole •j'mfiss. tfbacitft-om time American Hebrew. 3K, Lat Co., TzlB., Bee,! Be?. 3. C. Berii c vouches *or the fa James Eooney, -f \3O -was snfferijig f-om£ Dance in its •R-b^sli form Zcr abect 1^ •w&a trctifedfe;r\ several pbyoleeas oGact. Two l»t ;|iw oi Taster Ec-eaJg'B Sa« Tccio cored bim i Wo-ak^ ESav<9 JViesi. Ho: j-p-CEE, Masa., Ko'miiibor, 18S3. I w6S in p&Sn J-U over, could f.*st ^o zezt eitherc nfsnt or dey an:: i-was sot nbl6 to do &ny ' ff ? r ^ for raon^is, 'JU. iii^tor -.Jtii.^is Pfi^^tor 5ocni§*i4 Kerv« Toiiic only one wevk. i t-ta ab2o t>Qail up .king. I had paid aoc?.9~s &cd got BO esotiu ha?e died or ;t iiat that was : a milliner of high ening, who WHS ea- j j ni'ttcur labor for a It er that tho cost of -jl \vhich v.-eta bcju^jli-fr ,nt a similar hai t from §16 to $18, iir.1 ono sne i:ud ;hs afternoon. No»v jou^ht at tt'hole- oossibly be about ug prlcje at §!&.J cemibj i oiiihad&os.got thin iru-tikian. J ans. ADA 22 iff! This reineayb Pssiur KoeaiK, -t fCOEHEG & SoIdbyDrcn ans. ADA 22XE sses scmt free io ear iddrasa. j>oor p^iftsis caa also obtaia icdlcL'ie free of eJiai^c tD.CO.,OhiessOjKf. iiif mil i. J^Sas^jc ^TITS Est; If Hornbj's C , the best, -the) siothing. ats are ftot | shall cost § Cor,'State srij So eposits & Surplu JASPER VAS WOIlliE P. K SIt-T.. 1 JAMES MOORE, [ JAMES ?'TX. j W. N. S. SAVTJERS ALBERT V. BENSZS, 80 TI8TJSTE JASFER TAK WORM'BE, J. " N. Sn.i.. SSINO HoTAtrsa, SKTH 'VvnF.ELEE, Wjf. B. FAOE. WM. P. UnDn, GEORGE H^RUSSELI,. JOBS J. -WHITE, .TAMES ?.frx, Jons M. EAII^ET, ;SA SAVINGS BANS Pearl Sts, s, $2,100,000. PHESIDEKT. VICE-PRESIDENT . COB L-ROKAHTJ, V. TOBT, C. flFETIS, ns R. OAESELL, -.. N. S SA^BEES, H. LlVTKOSTON, ASLES A. LAWTEH, ausi. S. HATT. Deposits and Snrplis s aceoraance with the lavs York. Interest paia on all aecotu Deposit? conimeiice to firat i&j of each month. and paid April or October FIIESS Disy be sent by press. Money Order or Kei ctirelv inrestefl In if tbe State oi New ts up to ?3.000. raw interest on the Chect. Draft, Ex- :ifiteried Letter, and Deposit Book will tie refa ned by Eegietered Sfall. . . ' Money Loaned en Bond and Mortgage. For fartherInformattoa regatdin? Deposits and Loans .can npon or &ii ress '• W. N.^ S. SAMbEKS, Treasurer. Interest St.. credited Mcney loaned iDtorest nt F(ffB I-'. posits uot ere EACH MONTiET 47 State Street VB U-Y.'VBI.'E JA5T0JS-9'E" AJO). jjui.v i-rstoT. Deposiia may !be ms^afaymsii In port- office orders, tebp thscks, (-r casii in regis- tered letters, orfarexpress, and bank boolts v.iU be returned iW znsjl to saoh deptsi»oo ia registered pa ^leges. P.M. KITBPirri..'. PreskJasS GEORSB I. AalSUEIX, I HO«A.GB B. G£t,L, f EDWARD J. tiLaiLLIEK Tn J P. H. MuKPHT, I , - SSLDEK JS. MAr.yis, GEO. L A3tsz-.Ei.pi FnA2."cis H. Tv oiits, XSBA.KHISS, JOHS E. WAtsi^ JAUSS W. COX, P-ODKKY VOSS, (Jsa U. T^ACBHE, E. DE i. ?J.L«SS2, ALrsnr Hs^scsta, KOKACBS. 3ELU ^ J. M. iSATTKR-iiSF, JS!., J. H. Bncoss, J SuSs When -in want of Er.y Carriers, Forks Pnlhrr. etc., CaT on Jas.' ] West Itcjwnsliip. N. Y. Terms made itnowu j on application. HOME DRESTAURANT FOE LADIfCS i GESTLXMEK, 94 State Stre 65' N.: Pearl Stitet v Albany. Exanmiatiotis Free. AHTIFIGIAL HUJlAEi EYES INSERTED WITHDDT PAIN FAR TRUMPETS 01 HI KISM. ERNEST.W. EIECK, GOJ.tSE-iLOBfiTLM 37 Maiden Lane, Albany N. Y Altamont, Albanj ] I D M W i SALVE. J .• A T Co., N. T. - Albany, 2> T . ~T., Meals Served at all jfl^UTS. J. V,". OPBL.L, Trop : SS- mf\ TT,rip.R of Dm .is. -VSK:?. 4 3 S ' . l.si-s.-.., ..'.'.Uo" * f Dm .is. -VSK:?. J'. l.sis.., .U i.c. niaiiia ic. .^•••!;.- u *'-a ..:. >;'" rsr - !i rea ' \ si) 'Sri: ;i E r: S M'.- .'yS. M. X. . H&si \>i AT- Also Tns Live Stoi aing. stj'iiS * rl sttorn-sy i ' • AITDVi Ail ! . p - •>•.- i'ire sad :' i.EL-\VrD. H. T. IS THE AND THE p^ FAVORITE! ROUTE TO ALL. POINTS m THE'WEST. For full infon u 'tickets, etc., inqt J t t , rates, timetables, Ue. of nfeareat. " D. ? Ticket Agent, or jn-Hfi? to the undersigned, j WIBURDICK, '• Passenger Ag% .BART, N. ?, <• t. J t •» u i. h i

i&ble a f. ens - NYS Historic Papersnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84031266/1892-07-15/ed...Oud •London the eagerness to hear hiro has boen quite as intense. Jn Liverpool, Manchester,

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TALIAOI.EiQ(?0EN4~ BROOKLYV

I — YIKD U. LOiDtMf

-HE PSSACHES A SERMON V•j . HEAVEN . -

'As Ho Imagines It Will Bo and 1\ the Ulessetl Will Bo Engaged'' Some Keantifitl Imaginations,

July 10—Dr. Talmagspending a very busy season inland. Jvotonly in tho.Lomlon.clmribiit in the provinces enormous cr<have gathered to hear tho eloqAmerican preacher. The great SIcjiteli Tabernacle in tho east oivLonWhere Rev. "W. C'ulf preaches, '.t|w'6uo;cd aliiiost to su (location, andlarge C'ongr'egational ohiiro"l)"a"ckney district coultl not>the . people Tvho, tried to ^taoug.hit Was on a Mondsy eveningiSr. Talmage preached there. Oud•London the eagerness to hear hiro hasboen quite as intense.

J n Liverpool, Manchester, N'SHham, Crew.e and Hauley, no. chi'cap be found largo onough to accom rao-dste tho audience, and B'r. Ttvlnrag&preached in the tails in whibh tho g reat

thothehasL'he.this

I conventions are held, andeajiaeity #f Uieso was tested to\itSnost, Since 'his arrival ho

. ••;pr4a6hed seven times each- week.• Seijmon.- selected for puMie&Uoh

webkis from tho tesv, Iteyelation' v. i^i •°."Aftfei'1tbisl beheld, and lo! agjreat

Multitude which no man could no:

DJ

ber,>plome,'ith.As,

pon

act

Oi all nations and Tdndi>eds and peand tongaes, stood before tho thnand before the Lamb,. clothed ^whiterobes, and palms !n their haiTtncJ cried with a loud voice, Bay•Salyation to our God which sitreth \ithelthrone, and unto the tainb."

Tt 13 -impossible to' come in eonwith anything grand or beautiful in artsiature Or religion without being proi tedfend! elevated. We go. into tho art gal-lery, and our soul meets the soul of thepaiijter, and we hear the. hum of hi3forests and the clash of his conflicts imlsee the cloud blossoming of the sky iindthe foam blossoming ot the ocean, ;md•we come out irom the gallery be .terVnen thaii When wo went in. "W'igo>aj:o!the concert ot music and are liltedIsito enchantment; ior days after ourBOttl seems to rock with a very turnui t ofJoy, as the sea, after a long stress ofweather, 'rolls and rocks and surg :S agreat.while, before it comes back to itsordinary calm.

On the same principal it is profitableto tliink of heaven, and look oii u )onthati.landscepe of joy and light which.St. John depicts—the rivers of gladm >ss,

. the trees of life, the thrones ot pon ef,•the j commingling of everlasting lo tQ.

11 wish this morning that I coukl bringheayen from the list of intangibles findmake it seem to you as it really is— .lie

all

fashiosuits o

Hive ]?mfed Prices m the Learfc of the season on

i&ble a

»_.-?

A Eelentless Sacrifice of | Tremendous Valuesf. r \

W E DCIN'T.hesitate in asking-gentlemen of refined thsto-andto compare tliese excellent suits with, the high-priced

:IHQ HOUSEai's All Wool S80& m

* All Colors, of iSemst Seasonable . •

Usually sold at $15.00, redacted to-$10.00. •

ifass! Suits,Of Clay and other Worsteds

e n sWorth easily $22, cut now tc

critics•their sfrell tailors/

SuitsBargaiothers

,yith thas. Tiharge J

great fact in. all hist ory, the depot ofa£e% the parlor of God's universe:

THE HEAVENLY COXCKEUATlOX.

This account in my text gives a ]tare of heaven as it is on a holid

if a man came to 2< ow York

ilC-l7-or

the. first time on the day t hat Kos&i ith•arriyed from Hungary, and he saw ' hoarclles lifted, and the flowers flung intfee streets, and he heard the guns boo m-ing, lie would have been- very foolish tosuppose that tiitit was tho ordinarypearjance of the city. While heavenalways grand and always beautifulthink my text speaks oi. a gala dayheaven.- Ifrtfs a time of great celebration—p•feapSf of the birth or the resurrection of iJestiR perhaps or the downfall of so:j Li.r _ ~ .1 -• ^ - . f n. .despbtisni, perhaps becausa of t h e ru:

. • ing in of the-millonnium. I know i o t j b lue ribbon of sky around the brow and• -what,.but.it;does seem t o m e in readijn; ---'-'-• " * ' * " '

•••/-this passage as. if i t were .a holidaypg .a i a yi'eaven: After this I beheld, audiogreat .multitude'which no man cotnumber of all nations and kindreand people and tongues, stood be!cthe. throne, and be'oro the Lanclothed with, white robed, and palmstheir iands, and cried with a loud voisayink Salvation to our God whi t h h th dy

. sitteth upon the throne, and unto t, ieLamb."

I shall speak to you of the glorified i_heaven—their number, their antei:e-dontsj their dress, their symbols ai;d

>ng. But how shall I beginyou of the- number of those

.? I have seen a curious esfcinaiby an. ingenious man who caloulat jshow long the world tfas going to- la :t,and How many people there are in oa :hgeneration, and then sums up thewhc lojaattljr, says he thinks there will >etwenty-seven trillions of soula in glw j .-I havj? no faitlx in his estimate. .1 sim-ply tike the plan announcement of titext-Uit-is "a great-^uititude whichman je b 'JS

Jish, Italiiii, Spanish, • Tamil, :-;Chocta\v,finnncsa Alier men have been long inthe land yon can tell by their accentua-tions ii'om what nationality they camo,and I suppose in the great' throngaround the throne it will'notbje difficultto tell from what part of the-'earth theycame. . •

j . GATHERED Oti'T Tfe i'-Ti* KATIOKS.

| These reaped Sfciiian wheat fiold3I hritt those picked cotton from the pods.

These, under blistering- skies', gatheredtamarinds and ryanis. Those crossedtho desert on camels, raid those glanced

j over the snow drawn by Siberian dogs.I and these milked tho' goats far up onI tho Swiss crags. They fought ihe walrus

and white bear iii regions sf ever'tosliiigsnuw, iiiid thtjs'o-heard tho song of fiery-wihjjed birds in African thickets. Theyw,ep white. '-£hey were black.. -The)r

were red. They were copper color.From all lands, from all ages. Theywere plunged into Austrian dungeons.They passed through Spanish jncjuisi*tions. They were eobftued iii LondonTower. Thty fought with beasts in theamphilhoatur. They were Moravians.They were Waldenses. They were Al-bigenses. They were Scotch Coventers.They wore Sandwich Islanders.

In this world men prefer differentkinds of government. The TJnitedStates wants a republic. Thfe Britishgovernment needs t9b& A constitutionalmonare-hy. Austria wants .absolutism,liut when they come np from earthfrom different nationalities they willprefer one great monarchy^-King Jesusruler over it. And if that monarchywere disbanded and it were submittedto all the- Jiosts of heaven who shouldrule, then by tho unanimous suffragesof nil tho redeemed Christ would be-come the president of the whole uni-verse. J-Iagua Chartas, bills, of right,houses of burgesses, Iritimvirutes, con-gresses, parliaments—nothing in thepresence of Clirist's scapter" swayingover all the people who have enteredupon that great glory. Ohl can youimagine it? What a strdngo comming-ling of tiist'03, oi -histories, of national-itea, "of all nations and kindreds andpeople and>tongues."

ily subject advances- and tells you" oftho dress of those in heaven. The ob-

That h;

%f, ^

9Y -Confoiuid our excellent .Tailorrhiacleonliiiary ready-made j clothes offered about town as

iisis your chance to buyj the Best Clothes at less than"or ordinary kind.

>m their appreciation of elin.1

they shajil be exu| tent,' wavingpalms.

O MORE TO L OK SORROW,

,nd once eld Ihe implemontof toil or wielded tl e sword ef wan butnow it plAcis a.bwt brUnoVes from tlibi of lifi S as the'j stand before theihrono v. aving th< ir palms. Once liewas a pilgrim on ea'th;. he crunched thehardcrus s—he walked the weary way;but it is 111 gone nc w; the sin gone, theweariness gone, the sickness gone, thosorrow goae. As Christ stands up bsforg theTgreat array bf the- saved and, re-counts his victories it will be like . therocking and tossing of tt Jbrest in a. tem-pest,'as r.li tlie rede shied Wse Tip, hostbeyond host, rank 1 eyond rank, wavingtheir palnjs.

My subject make i another advance-ment, and speaks oi the song they sing.

Dr. Dick, in a very learned work,pays that among otl e.r things in heavenho thinks [they will give.-a^great de.aLoltime to thp study B: arithmetic and the •higher bra;nahes of mathematics. I donot believe it. It w ould upset my ideaof heaven Sf I thought so; 1 never likedmathematics; and I. Would rather takethe representation of my. text, Which

Apart 11leal tillcS 'lie Ati5ei;!i!anS, to tise a

•e "ck'alh ou scrm'ons," says the-'clegraph. In this country ser-.

Hums are a good deal played out Fineservices, jtoou lansib, gorgeous vedtineiilsfiraiv bftCpr, in theatrical piirlanco, thanpulpit el: qiieuee.. That this should be sois,"jwrliajis, no Credit to .out" spiritual <lc-•70Lio!i oi niincl, but with us preachingby itself IhU.-i flat,

iii tl.ic -ttsiited- Slates' it. is different.Life in tlife^ountry villiiges of: tho unionai:d evenmore ino;owing to

in t!ie smn HerntunoHS than it

towns, is faris over here,

we havo secularboatmen's songs,

songs; but in

song, and that will It-ion iron ah eternalheaven tbtjmigli thethat was slain.

1 see a soul comindeemed in,heaven,the gates' tlio old fr

sing ?'• and the new

fcion of heaven as be-."They .ftrjfed v>i*.)<

Salvation iiijto our

describes fjhe occiipoing joyful psalmodya loud Voice, saying,God." Inlthisworlisongs, nursery songsharvest eoiigs, senthheaven we' will have taste for only ono

e. the song of solva-leath to an eternal

d of the Lamb

; up to join the re-As it goes through3nds of Jhat spirit

come around it and say, "What shall woy arrived soul soys.

"Sing salvation;" atli after awhile anearthly despotism fa Is and a scepter OfIniquity is] snapped, and churches are-built where once th ire. were , Supersti-tious" mosques', and ii igel cries to ahceli''Let iis siiig," and the answer is, "Wiiatsliall we sitlg?" and another voice says,' i.et us. sing salva ion." And afterawhile all the ehureli on earth will rushinto, the outspread, ar ns of the churchof heaven! and while the righteous arepof heaven,! and whil

di hject of dress in this world'ia not only to ascending and the w< rid is burning andveil the bodv, but to adorn it. The God all things are being w ound up, the gu'e^-

' ' " ' "What shall, we.be a voice 'like

who drosses up the. spring morning with.y

earrings of dowdrojps hung. from treen j branch und mantle of ci'ilftson clouda I fiung over the shoulder and theviolettedd slippers of tho grass for herfeet^-I know

ds I that God does not despise beautiful ap-parel. Well,, what shall we wear inheaven? "1 saw a great multitudeclothed in white robes." It is white! Inthis world we had sometimes to have on

;h working apparel. Bright- and lustrousgarments would be ridicuousiy out ofplace sweltering amid forges, or mixingpaints,, or plastering ceilings, or bindingbooks.

n 5 s r b e ; . .lew years in this country

.. . j " .

illW^B

.take a; census ot the population, and itla very easy to tell how many peop Sotherajare m a eityor a nation; EufcWho^haU give a census of the greutnation of the saved? I t is quite easy : otel-1 how many people there are in diffe r-c£t- denominations of Christians—ho vjnanj- Baptists and Methodists andEpisiopaliana-and Presbyterians; of a lthe Mjenominations of Christians W8

•could pnake an estimate.Suppose they were gathered in one

- great audience room, how overwheln-ing |he spectaclel - But it would give n •>

-.idea; of the grea.t audience roora of•^ea^en—the multitude that bow downandilift up their hosannas. Why, thecottjfe fj'om-all the chapels, from all th'vcatHed'ral3, from all sects, from all ages.Theywho prayed in splendid liturgy'nndj those who in broken sentence«tt4red the wish of brohen hearts-!-frorfl Grace church and Sailors' Bethel!ftttia. linder ths shapeless rafters anc|from under high sprung areh—"a great

- •- mu^titudd that no man can number."'•' j THE ARMY OF THE BEDEEJIED.

dljeof the most impressive things \«..; ^Bfl e looked; Upon is an army. St'andin 'f* JBjfe'ag hillside you see forty thousand-V?" ?orj-3Efffcyji,frlio"usand-' men pass-along, You' '. can], hardly imagine' the impression if

youj have not actually felt it. But youW&f take .all the armies th» earth has

. (tvei1 seett-^-tb,e legends under Sennach-wrilj and Cyrtjs and'C'sesaT, 2erxe§ and

' ; ,Areian|der and Napolen, ond all ourwioderrl forces: and put them- in onogreat arrays,.and then on soine swiftBte^i- jfbu.inay n^i glpngtho JlneaaidT«yij»TT |tbe troops; and t i s t oocuinu-.laSeft host' trom all ages seams like &h*it\ formed regimeht compared with

' .the. pre^t -array of the redeemed. '-. I. iibod on'e duy at Williamsport, andsaw bn|l ie opposite side of the Potomaothe forces coming down, regiment after

. regiiJH/ejit, and brigade after brigade. It.. seerjjiedfas- though there was no end totfe^jirodeasioni Butiiow let me take.

. the jBeJtl-glass of St. John and look, offu.ponthi)-,hos.f:3."-6£ heaven—^thousands

i-BJQii./^you'sands,.'ten' thousand timesVen jthotisand, one hundred and forty

' -., andSfour thousand, and thousajids of' ' * l £ "i[j^niiisf Bntfl I put • down ./we*. field-

' iid|L;-say;' "I. cannot' estimate it^-a•ranltitude that no man can pom-

i&K your Imagination, andiagenftit^ andT^reak downc>£' calculation in' sttempt-

of the re-

all things are being wtion will, fee askedsine?'' and there wil

the righteous areid i b i d

ths voice of] many waters, like th.eyofeeot mighty I thundering?" **•"* *""' --spond, "Siiig sa-lv.atioi..'

fri this world we hj—songs tremulous tdirgeful ior tho dead; but in heaventhere will be no sigl

phony. .lsluiah—the dullest

of jahguisb,The t-aineat

march.' Joy among t ie cherubim! *Joyamong the! seraphin

1 that Will re-

,ye plaintive songsith sorrow, songs

lie compiiraltvo scarceiiess ofthe pnpuliiti 'ii ami to tho K>'e;it distanceswliicMt seji.ii'ate ono city from another.Aimiseim-jnlR) cnterlttinineiita and soeiatK.atli.- ritigp aid eompai'aliveiy few illi;nui!n'r.

In-cous^qneTire America is the happyhinii-iiis' ^-iMiiitl for l^ct'irersaml prejn-h-

i ii ilt-fiiull of any olhcr oppor-tunity foi pu!;liu nicotingr. the Sunday

iiullier at clmrcli] chapel oris. fchd" Sooiiil event eff UiG'

is at the nic'ling-lionsa thatI

Wo do rclso^ Iiere,

weektlie counli y folk, and "to a considerableextent tlie (mvn foil;,- count upon seeinoua anotlior. '.i'here ev^iybody who isniiybx'y puts, in an appearance

ot disimte tlml in America) as'• J nilcnd chm-uii "ii-li

tiro view- 'of fulfilling their duty andpromoting their own. spiritual- welfare,but we'.do I not liesitate to say limb tho,.alteiutacC'.j is lai'x'-Iy stiniiilated by tliodesire to jnoet. uei^hljors, to learn • thogossip of U p tin.y, nhd in the as-e of ti>Qfair.sex to jclispluy their oira dresses andto inspect the'costumes of their sister

'Soclitl null IPJiii'iicialKonaonn for Divorce.Love and romance play little part in

the -marriages of Giiina, according to tlieOstasialisckcr Lloyd. The ChinamanVrlio euterx. l)i«! liuibor ,of nintl'imonyIpolfflupon the matter as tiio fiiliillmengof a duty which he owes tojiisaucestors,

"The custom of the Cliiuese," contin-ues tlie journal, ."to marry off their sonsand daughters at an eurljr hgb does notseem advisable to the Europeans. It isalso the rule iii China that unions onlytake place between families of equal s<>->cial and financial standing, Disregardof this rule would causo subsequenttroukle !BV£fia.bly.' . The custom oC earlymarriagesprinciples

is .founded, rnoreovei1,'incomprehensible to

A. Hanged Mfan Exhibits Cmllie Ullorltyon Belnff Resuscitated,

It was the rule in Ireland -?t one -tioiothat after an execution the body shouldhang half ail lioifr, hpt"tlso sheriff, frommistaken lenity, would on some occasion^look away after the prisoner had beeriturned off, while the friends of the cul-prit would hold up their companion bythe waistband of the breeches so thatthe rope would .not press upoa Iii3throat;

When the half hour -was expired tin?deceased was put into a cart, -whichwas drivon at a gallop along tlile stonyj-oad; This jolting generally broughtthe prisoner to. Oiie such re'epvery. wasBO complete that tbo' resuscitated iriatfsat up in the coiEn and gave threecheers.

One of his friends was so shocked atthis indecent conduct that he hit the ex-

. iorpsfe on the. head with his shillelaght l i e} and finished him. The question then

r

In all Styles and Shade*,

Take advantage of our Cut PricesGreat Sale.

-A Complete Fishing Outfit given with ivory. Boys' Suit.

Opposite Lelarid Opera\ _ • • - - - - I |-.'.i .^--=-a=»mc=

Western mind. The boy audgirl joined I a r o s e whether the assailant could not be"in wedlock do not form a new family, ( r je j f o r murder, but it was ruled thatbut rather the youngest branch of thofamily tree, upon which thc-y are hence-forth dependent. The duty of: parentstow-ii-ii their *oii? t'ces uo't end withtheir marriage; they are ohiiged ^ c a l ' e

for them after that time also. There isti great disadvantage in this system.The son, being under the eyes of the par-ents as long as. they are alive, reallyiie^er becomes independent. Al! mem*bS-s of a fataily live, v.-heu possible, un-der one roof, and even after the death oftho parents'the sons continue, as a rule,to live together in ilia, family home.When the father .dies the oiJest brotherassumes his place".a3 the head of the fam-ily, anil wiieil Uie-feiotlKV dice ths .wifaof the oldest brotlier takes her place.But, again, the system has- many advan-

When q.ii j\iiierican wip-bes to say Ui.a|hnybodyiiip put on what we illicit cal!his or her 'jwnr paint" lie roiiir.rbs thatthe gc-utleiijiari or hiAy, .as Hip . cuso m.-iybe, ias got I ou "go-l'i mreling"' clothes.Indeed, \va m;ijr fairly .say thai" iu aYanlue viliageor to.-• nsiiip t!:.e Sundayservice rep|es«nts. what Loiig'ohauip does,."orused ti do—-in Paris. It .you wantto sttuly -fcl:ii latest fashiuys; tlis. iiowesc.devices of f;mirii.'io attire, in aiiy city oi'hamlet of .tho Union you can find nomore fiWiiis occasion for yoiwiesearoliea.than the Sunday servico at-Che chapelfrequented jby the elite of the neighbor- j

no man could .be successfully chargedwith ths murder of a man who was al-ready dead iu law,

• *li* FtSturo .of Natural Safi.As to the actual amount of gas proJ

duced it is difficult to obtain exact fig-ures; too many people are interested in! ^.5

A clover pnrrauged andclock with atimt will repeat a'"ato the possj.sMor"; <!•

n

fit Petersburg has .on exhibition -sr'

plviitograph attachment II Hour set, accordinw 1,sire, .such orders or ',y be ooiumittesi to

L

it; Aboon lo the Irr--,! In"ti;at in the uuuery tcould

:3einotlier, andie Solemn timepie."'0 ]jay, "Cbiklren, it is!yqurqhly, and donjrt

t an earlkr^ y ^

Mary; don't forget;" anUd "You must stai|t

in nn -rohuu-s, or I you wiii lose yourtrain " 'i»e dial elf this clock of tho

e i- we me tbkl, a human face,Di mouth comes thefuture

from wli.se

jusl bang finished bsta:v!iig the other ejr.-ijfecH'i f- """•• tf '<•friend, I WHS told bythe iat and materialtit ritzU; v.-ao ?6, r.mlinfeivcd would sell sr.nJ that was tiiefl:is!iod during halfiftl.e 'matpriiil wonsils*, the cost would

ith the sel

i v. ...«1t oa Nerve Tome only o;in hours , KS well pa B n d a t t a n r , ^ ynjir be 5eft with i t ! over two hmadrBadolf Milliners. . I boueflt j certjjiblj

concealing or misstating the facts. Butone tendency cannot be overlooked, thegradual withdrawal of gas for other usesthan domestic heatin's.and cooking. Thedemaudfrom this source alone is alreadyequal to'the supply, especially if conserv-ative notions prevail iu regard to. its per-manence. Such use permits of betterprices than to maintain factories, builtlo sell iciwii iote'; and that those who

.have monopolized the visible Sources ofluges. As the girts are married very,youngri they are unacquainted as a rule,with tlie duties oi a-hcucasvifc.' Rut inentering the households of their fathera-in-law they learn Hie needful lessons in I jj"!mas,"m'en should "bear" the nrarietby"family econonty. j working on people's fears as to the per-

"Itisnothijig rare," adds the paper, j m a n e n c e of the supply. Doubtless tho

supply'should seek to restrict its uses tothe more profitable channels is not to bewondered at. . Nor is it strange K> i n

ordar to get the biisiuess .into tlieir own

"for bo3rs twelve to fourteen, years old tomarry. The physical) moral and intel-lectual development o£ the contractingparties haS not-lnug vvbatever to do witlifJie matter. Other considerations en-

regulate tho affair. An old Chi*i aphorism says that the "groat busi-

hood.

ing bf Winds, iionet weepirig S*irf-sphg will behal-tune a triumphal f down iu the! water we find ;it eacii depth

f j 6fDirpS« Piailii?isU that ii ve iii deep «tiler "have nd

! eyes atall ot very large ones; As wo go

! Joy among theransomed I Joy forei er I

On ear tli., l ie mueje in churches Isoften poor, because there is no interestin it or because there is. no harmony.Some would not sin, •„ some- could cot

In this world we must havo the work-ing day apparel sometim63, and we carenot how coarse it is. It ia appropriate; -but when all the toil of earth is past] sing, some eang too h gh, 6pme sang tooand there is no moro drudgery and no low, some sahg bjrfitfl jttd fetarts, bfl.t illmore weariness, we shall stand before I. tie groat aujdiende. of tie redeemed Bntho throne robed in white, On earth high alS voices Wiil b 5 accordant, andwo sometimes had to wear mourning the man who on eart i could not tell aapparel—black scarf for the artn, black plantation inelody roin the "Deadveil for the face, black .gloveB •• for tho' March In Sail" will lift an anthem thathands, black band ior the hat Abra-1 the Mendelsshons anc Beethovens anilham mourning for Sarah;' Isaao mourn-1 the Sob.tnnanjns of eart i never imagined,ing ior Eebocca; Eachel mourning lor and you mayj stand, th; ough all eternityher children; David mourning for Absa-. and listen and there will not.be onedio^lom; Mary mourning for Lazarus; Every " cord in that] great ahi herii' thlt foreVeJsecond of every ipinute ot every hour 6j rolls up against the gr jat heart of God.«vOTO ,!„„ „ i.o,,,.i. I,—vJ- ii .j]i a o t jje a g o l O jj WJJJ n o t h e aevery day a heart breaks.

THK RESURRECTION

The earth from zono to zone and •frompole to pole is cleft with sepulchral rentand the-esirth can easily afford to bloomand blossom whea it is so ricn rit-firoolderiag Hfe. Graves! graves I graves!

p ga]i a o t j j

auet, it will, not be a q lintet, but an in-numberable host befor

*""""-• UIJ; u.:o. wraves! graves craves , " tBat when all tiese bereavements have \ !?n? th,s

ins, "Salvation unto bir GpdanduntdtneLantti." tneycrovd ail. the tem-ples, they bend o/yer the battlements,they fill all the height t and depths and

of heaven withfill Bassed, and there is JIO more graves:to dig, and no more coffins to make.and Ino more sorrow to suffer, we shall pulloff this mourning and be robed in white.I see a soul going right irom all thisscene of sin and trouble into glory,seem to hear him say:

Ijourney forth rejoicing •• —From this dark vale of toara ~~

To lieavenly ;|oy and freedom, " ?'From earthly dafo tind fears.

\

V

i Christ my Lord shall gather-his redeemed again, . ,

His kingdom to inherit— . •• j-Good night Mil-tfien. \ | *

I hear my Saviour calling jThe joyfulllour has coipej -

- The angel guards afo ready *: -z.To gnida me to OMr home. 7

"When Christ our Lord shall gather' All his redeoxned againj.

His kingdom to inherit— ,^__ -^Good night till then. ' . iih"

My subject advances, and tells you of

their hosannas.THE DIVIKB (3L0RY.

When people were • taken into theTemple of Diana it was such a brilliantroom tnat they were alguard. Some people haby just lookirigon the >rilliancy of thatroom, and °sb the jiaitor When hebrought a stronger to t ie door and lethim iii would (always cl arge him, "Take,l rtrt/ l n f Trninv 'ATTAD *' 1heed of your jeyes.'

Oh! when I tliink

jubilant,feel .like saying, "Jakb hee-d of yourears." It is so loiid i i sona. i t is soblessed an ailthem. They suig a rocksong, sfyrtae, j'WKo is 1 e that shelteredus in the wilderness; a id shadowed usm a weary land?" Jnd . the chorusccariesin, ''Christ the. sh dow of a rookin. a weary Tana."

They sing .a star BOIis lie that guiqed us tBii

the throne, cry-.

that the offsets produced u'poii tho oyesbf fish are steadily progressive in "one di-rection or tl e other. Species that live at<i depth of e,already a g<

glity fathoms have the eyeod deal bigger thnri their

nearest representatives who live at oi*near the sui'ifiice. Down to the .depth oftwo lnmdrej:! fathoms - davlight disap-peai'S; and I ie eyes get constantly biggerand bigger.

1 -.of lifo is ended' when the sons and! daughters are married. . The Chinese

parents do-not care to run the danger ofpostponing the marriage of their.child-ren; especially of their sous, Until aftei'Uieir own death.

.•"A Chinese engagement dates its -be-ginning from the exchange of red cardsbetween the parents of the contractingparties. The oav\ls in many districts aroininiense documents almost.the aizg of ahorse blanket. They are irapoi-Umt forthe reason that they are used as evi-dence in pose of disagreements in the fu-tui'ei MB seldom hear in China of j

and bigger. Beyond, that depth, smalleyed forms s!et in, with lou^ feelers de-veloped to supplement the eyes. Sightin fact, is hpre beginning to atrophy.In the greatest abysses the fish are mostlyblind, feeling their way about, entirelyby tlieir sensjitire bodies over the nakedsurface of rojok- at the bottom. Soniohave still external relics of functioulesseyes; in others, the oldest and most con-firmed abysijial specie, the eye has alto-gether disappeared externally, -thoughits last representative may still be dis-covered imbedded deep iu the tissues ofthe head. Tjhereare two wayaof gettingaround the [ocean's gloomy abyss—bydelieate'touch orgaus or by sight thatcollects the ffew rays of light due tophus-phoresceDce pr other accidental sources^

K r - • —'•— . .•'Spcfjcli*' of Ihc Dunil>.*

Deaf and dlumb people speak by'meansof their.fingars. How many words canr. baud-speaker form in a minute? Theaverage nUiuper' of loiters per Word inthe Englishready hand-s

language is five. Now,, aleaker can make the Eng-

f the song that is to say,Mish alphabet ten times in a minute—that

"Iiundred and sixty letters,him .to pause for. the spaed

? of one letter J after each word, to showthat the word is complete. If, therefore!we subtract poni the total just givenabout one-styth of- these stoppages, thetotal will.be ljednced tot-vp hundredaad'

fche symbols they carry. If our text! night, and whfen all othad represented the good iu heaven as ' put arose in &e siy tcarrying cypress branohes, that woalij : pqurin<* light Ion the Ihave meant sorrow. If, my test Had'And the chorus will

. . palm Dram* : saying;'"Who iis he thai trighten.they carry, a-nd that t» victory. When ' our way, and tyeajhod/ weetness • »„„,the people came home from WBT in olden' our soul, and bloojne^-'tiroueh frost andtime's the conqueror'ro:de:ai the head of tempest?" And. the-choibis troops, and there were triumphal I "Christ,'-the Jw^of the :arcjies, and the people would come out J slirougn frosf ana temptwith branches of-the palm tree and'a wateraong, paying, "VIwave.them all along the host, • What a ; gleamed to us I froing he host, What a ; gleamed to.us | fro*-tMgmncanttypethis of the greetmg.and ' and lightened! theliaf-thejoyof thefedeemed in heaven! On . trouble, and broiight '

I J£ ^ ^ d 1

-thedai

,. . ,, andvax^jmot polite, circles. They had in-Famous hands strike "them on bothcheeks. Internal. spite spat in. their.aces. Their heart ached with sorrow.

Their brow reeked -with, unalleviatedtoi|.-. How weary -they were! . Some-,times they, broke, the heart of the iaici-:[nlg&tin the midst of all-, their anguisbjcrying out, "O.Godl" .But harfcnow to*the shout of the delivered, captives; asthey lift their arras from th« shacldesand they cry out, "Free! free I" Theylookhack.uppn all the trials- .through;which., they hive - pasaedr the ibattfesthey.- have-fpughti, ftne-< btfrderiW'they'Carr-ied' ~t\*~ .«.'**«*.,.-.«.".?;;..n~n-~-\-~-..-j.ii~i-^.

srouWe, and brought eapies and refres imeat to

, a fountain In-t ie , inidstness?"'-arid'thibnin, "Christ, the fountain•the wilderness. . •...; My-friends.'virilly.oui,Shall we1 make.;rehearsIi we cannot'si igthat.Lwill not ;be. slle. to; sjn.Gaii Jfcbe that our: goodland- will walk all tnnthrong of WhiqhL I spea

truth lies between the two extremes.Tlie better opinion is that there is enouglifor legitimate uses, and that it will stillbe found in new regions;. For nearly three-years the' territory

from which' natural gasjlas been prawiihas not been sensibly-erilarged; and ex-cept in the new field i;s 'general use for'manufacturing has'generally diminished.And there certainly need be no feaVs thatcoal mining will become a lost art. Butwe ai'e inclined to think that the presenttendency is niaiuly a halt or reaction,and that natural gas has come to stay.4fust now its uses are nierely suggestiveof the future. It brings to us fuel iu tlismost convenient form—the reiinedessence freed from dross, weight, impur-ity ; self-transporting, smokeless, an in-visible potent agent, that once possessedof we can not well part with. If naturecanuot bo depended on to furnish it

toinakeidentical out of.

broken engagements. Yet if a quarrel i re^fy madocan not be settled peacefully recourse fs j t * o r something nearlyhad to the law, and the judge usually c o a j ojjimposes a fine upon the party, who has j f c i g 6 ' t i u { h e o f 6 t e a m a n d , b tbroken the contract. . . . . - . =

"The chief incident in a CMuese man-is this to be the type of all future time ?Electricity is already with us, and I thereare indications too plain to be disragarded that the coal fire is to* remain un-

.riago is the arrival of the bride in her

chosen one. That is a de facto fulfill-ment of the contract. The weddiug d3yis determined bv the parents of thogi'oom. • The imperial calendar names t , , e n c a n s a y t h a t t h e o fthe lucky days, audou such days theso-.j y e t t o c o m e . j

, called 'red celebrations' take place, bothin the cities and country. The same. , . , , , , , , / , , . t uuuws ui mo uuuti uuai «a» ueeu reoKoneabridal clothes may be used several fames; t h e m o s t i m p o r t a n t . w h e n w e r e m e mberIn ntfihrmtq vrhava it. i« wictrtmaptr fn ^ol^. ' . , , T . . , r . - ' - ^ v w U M

der special conditions only, just as thewiudnfill and the water-wheel retain a

j place in the world's economy. Who,

.When v.-e consider that of all the pi'o-t ducts of the mine coal has been reckoned

h iIu districts where it is customary to cele-brateihe weddings in the forenoon the

di ;s of the co-wives take place inor in- the evening-. The

Clune^Whus hope to niake tliem less im-Iportant. That the chief part of a Ch(iiese marriage is the arrival of the.at the house of the groom is illustrated

that Lehigh and Lackawanha coiil fields( alone ha've created fortunes more vast"j#lthe gold mines,of California; when•e realize that it has revolutionized the

means of locomotion, that it has.revolu-tionized the means of travel, that It hassupplanted the water-wheel on shore and

aSa in by the fact that the sons are of S J S . t n^ef an &ten married without heuig p^sent at • f o u u d a t i o n o f a .nanufacturing system

tobe sssst^ir r r s ei^s^of a :Ssfc s?ay w en once ecu • j what shall, we say of the future, with'the

. ~^ '• ' j possible, ye3, probable, displacement bfSummer sict«hi» jiiiimaia. j coal by something vastly better?

Kverybody is aware that a large num- ] •—-—ber of animals sleep in protected places ' •• Glasses for tho Eye».duriug the cold season of tho jrear and: "When a doctor tells, you to wearO.wake in the summer. A similar pheiiomi : glasses while your eyes are good in ordererion is the. summer sleep of different to keepthem so," said an occulist, "youj p

fifteen letters! Letthis-be. divided by reptiles-rprineiEally serpents and croco-. may safely set bini down as a liumbu"•fl.ve.Jwe a v e r ^ utimper of letters per dile.8 which-thus pass the time o.f greatest .oraquack. I'aiji-.not saying anything

•ex- i ieat . in. t i 'ot i ioal rotrions. " ' ' a irainst shadflii. m* &van r»l>»in erlaaaaa *nsaying: "Whoigh the thicir lights.went

a. morning star.uVs darknesB.''Iline in, "CKrist,: on the soul'sg a flower song,brightened'all

is will come, in/dley, blopmin|rt.". -They sing'io is he thatfrowning crag,

keet ravine ofilingtothe'tenvthe lip, and wasoi the wilder

>rus will comein the midst o*

ithat an;theni?S this morning?ajj; on' earth we,;7.it...in,heaven.(r.iends.in;that.jgh that great

,. word,..and w^sliall .find that a fairly ex'.pert deaf and. dumb person wilt speakforty-three.w^rds-por minute, A person •in possession j of spioch . will probablyspeak one hundred acd fifty words,in the•Bame.space of] time; but experts in the.sign language use Only the' iniportan'twords'of "a Sentence,, and .express a'thought in every gesturp, therefore theodds are by no i.neaus.a-idus.t'thein, then-forty -words doing the, work of -threetimes that'number as employed iu ordi-nary speech.

its IVnvics ot «fce World.' The. follosying statement of .fightingvessels belonging to. the various powers•was recently computed at the Navy.De-partment from official sources:

Nation; ..•Argentine',^nsti-ia ...BrazilOhiiiOiiina'•Denmark .Es;.yi)t

•Arm- Un-otod.' ar'd.

S 7.li> .81

8... 4.. B

Bfermany M-6rea't-Iiritata.es-ifayfil.','.'.'.'.'.'.'.-

- - ; J rm= Un-ryation. oreil. ar'd.NW-hcrtiuids ..23 S)K 5NW-Kor^vayPtil-u.Pi

KoiihiahHnssia'..y i '

.. 1

!!48.Sl'aim 13Sno<!en ,X7 '.i'tii'kev 18United States .£9

10

•9<a'7m-14so.40

ieat.in.ti'opioal regions. againBt. shaded, pr even plain glasses toDuring July arid August it will be ob- protect tire eyes, from dust,'-'although.

served by those who p-i'y any' attention to those are of doubtful value, but the manout-door animal lifo that reptile's and" who says he caa give you glasses to keepamphibians are noticeably few-of in num-. it good pair of eyes incohditionJias eitherBer than during'.the spring- niontltu; but 'some glasses left on his hands which ho

•lf'.-thty begin to hunt under .largo stones,-. wants to sell, or he don't knosv .what be.iu holes fa the gfouTicI, on the edges of. is talking; about The moment it be?marshes or ponds, under brushwood and comes painful to read in . a good lisjlitdeadleaves,, they will often find these .with the naked "eye glasses are -required,animals in a condition similar, to sleep. but until then they are best left severely

-The frogs sit huddled together and alone." It is true that the demand formake no attempt to bop away, only bur- glasses'lias increased very .rapidly since•rowing down into the-earth. Lizards the adoption .of electricity for lighting

the head hidden: ' They are the most •' liglits in'a.street car'are luxurious, butquickly aroused, however.'•. '- ' I theyvenoourage reading, and/are from an..The reason of fiis sninmer sleep is dif- optician's' point' of view- objectionable,ferent, according as tho animal lives ou Everyone knows; or should kuon* byLiud or in the water. Those on laud tbis'time, that reading in amoving vehi-sleep during, the greatest heat; tfiose. in J*bW is undar: any circuinstauces injurioustho water only when their usunldwelliiig'"ti) tile 8ight.-'-' ' ' ; •-.: •'place is dried '-up, which' generally;'I : '•—'•' * - ' ^-^but not.necessarily,- occurs during high.}' T h e j - a t e Of .progr'ossbu of a' storm is-tomporature. Th» water , salamanders ' o t t e n fifty mi{es fu U o * %^A ^ £«ro .-dways in a partial summer slumbeB; I I bJ °

g ponf iiot-finding.usfdo'ft-h;to the Ate rts the water frog, wliicb livesin ponds

nud xmnhOL well supplied with ?:• -Portsniouthi N. H.... bears th.e. proud'

: distincttenajl l h^ "g

.haying.h t h ^ i o ios of

|

.distincttenasjlie plaqenewspaper wa| esibli.' jthey/ are delly-

* , • | t a n j l •.:h;Theycojne:

'a whole•j'mfiss.

tfbacitft-om time

American Hebrew.

3K, Lat Co., TzlB., Bee,!Be?. 3. C. Berii c vouches *or the fa

James Eooney, -f \3O -was snfferijig f-om £Dance in its •R-b sli form Zcr abect 1^•w&a trctifed fe; r\ several pbyoleeasoGact. Two l»t ;|iw oi Taster Ec-eaJg'B S a «Tccio cored bim i

W o - a k ^ ESav<9 JViesi.Ho: j-p-CEE, Masa., Ko'miiibor, 18S3.

I w6S in p&Sn J-U over, could f.*st o zezt eithercnfsnt or dey an:: i-was sot nbl6 to do &ny ' f f? r^for raon^is, 'JU . iii^tor -.Jtii. is Pfi tor 5ocni§*i4Kerv« Toiiic only one wevk. i t-ta ab2o t>Q ail up

.king. I had paidaoc?.9~s &cd got BO

esotiu ha?e died

or ;t iiat that was :a milliner of high

ening, who WHS ea- j jni'ttcur labor for a It

er that tho cost of -jl\vhich v.-eta bcju jli-fr

,nt a similar hait from §16 to $18,

iir.1 ono sne i:ud;hs afternoon. No»v

jou^ht at tt'hole-oossibly be about

ug prlcje at §!&.—

J cemibj ioiiihad&os.got thin iru-tikian.

J ans. ADA 22

iff!

This reineaybPssiur KoeaiK, -t

fCOEHEG &SoIdbyDrcn

ans. ADA 22XE

sses scmt free io ear iddrasa.j>oor p^iftsis caa also obtaia

icdlcL'ie free of eJiai^c

tD.CO.,OhiessOjKf.

iiif mili. J^Sas^jc

^TITS

Est;

If Hornbj's C, the best, -the)

siothing.

ats are ftot |shall cost §

Cor,'State srij Soeposits & Surplu

JASPER VAS WOIlliEP. K SIt-T.. 1JAMES MOORE, [JAMES ?'TX. jW . N. S. SAVTJERSALBERT V. BENSZS,

80 TI8TJSTEJASFER T A K WORM'BE, J." N. Sn.i..

SSINO HoTAtrsa,SKTH 'VvnF.ELEE,Wjf. B. FAOE.W M . P. UnDn,GEORGE H^RUSSELI , .J O B S J. -WHITE,.TAMES ?.frx,J o n s M. EAII^ET, ;SA

SAVINGS BANS

Pearl Sts,s, $2,100,000.

PHESIDEKT.

VICE-PRESIDENT .

COB L-ROKAHTJ,V. TOBT,C. flFETIS,n s R. O A E S E L L ,-.. N. S S A ^ B E E S ,H. LlVTKOSTON,

ASLES A. LAWTEH,ausi. S. HATT.

Deposits and Snrplis saceoraance with the lavsYork.

Interest paia on all aecotuDeposit? conimeiice to

firat i&j of each month.and paid April or October

FI IESS Disy be sent bypress. Money Order or Kei

ctirelv inrestefl Inif tbe State oi New

ts up to ?3.000.raw interest on the

Chect. Draft, Ex-:ifiteried Letter, and

Deposit Book will tie refa ned by EegieteredSfall. . . '

Money Loaned en Bond andMortgage.

For fartherInformattoa regatdin? Depositsand Loans .can npon or &ii ress •

'• W. N. S. SAMbEKS, Treasurer.

InterestSt..

credited

Mcney loaned

iDtorest nt F(ffB I-'.posits uot ere

EACH MONTiET

47 State Street

VB

U-Y.'VBI.'E JA5T0JS-9'E"AJO). j j u i . v i-rstoT.

Deposiia may !be ms^a fay msii In port-office orders, tebp thscks, (-r casii in regis-tered letters, or far express, and bank booltsv.iU be returned iW znsjl to saoh deptsi»ooia registered pa leges.

P.M. KITBPirri..'. PreskJasSGEORSB I. AalSUEIX, IHO«A.GB B. G£t,L, fEDWARD J. tiLaiLLIEK Tn

JP. H. MuKPHT, I , -SSLDEK JS. MAr.yis,GEO. L A3tsz-.Ei.piFnA2."cis H. Tv oiits,XSBA.KHISS,JOHS E. W A t s i ^JAUSS W. COX,

P-ODKKY VOSS,( J s a U. T ^ A C B H E ,E. D E i . ?J .L«SS2,ALrsnr Hs^scsta,KOKACBS. 3ELU

^ J . M. iSATTKR-iiSF,JS!., J . H. Bncoss ,

J SuSs

When -in want of

Er.y Carriers, Forks

Pnlhrr. etc.,

CaT on

Jas.' ]West Itcjwnsliip. N. Y.

Terms made itnowuj

on application.

H O M E DRESTAURANTFOE LADIfCS i GESTLXMEK,

94 State Stre

65' N.: Pearl Stitetv Albany.

Exanmiat iot is F ree .

AHTIFIGIAL HUJlAEi EYESINSERTED WITHDDT PAIN

FAR TRUMPETS 01 HI KISM.• ERNEST.W. EIECK,GOJ.tSE-iLOB fiT LM

37 Maiden Lane, Albany N. Y

Altamont, Albanj

]IDM W i SALVE.

J .• A TCo., N. T.

- Albany, 2>T. ~T.,

Meals Served at all jfl^UTS. J . V,". OPBL.L, Trop

: SS-mf\TT,rip.R

of Dm .is. -VSK:?.

43 S

' . l.si-s.-.., ..'.'.U o"*

f Dm .is. -VSK:?. J ' . l.sis.., . Ui.c. niaiiia i c . . •••!;.- u *'-a ..:. >; '" r s r- ! i r e a '

\ si) 'Sri: ;i E r: S M'.- .'yS. M. X. .

H&si \>i AT-

Also TnsLive Stoiaing.

stj'iiS* r l

sttorn-sy i' • AITD Vi

Ail !

. p- •>•.- i'ire s ad:' i.EL-\VrD. H. T.

IS THE AND THEp^FAVORITE! ROUTE TO ALL.

POINTS m T H E ' W E S T .

For full infon u

'tickets, etc., inqtJ t t , rates, timetables,

Ue. of nfeareat. " D. ?

Ticket Agent, or jn-Hfi? to the undersigned,

j WIBURDICK,'• Passenger Ag%

.BART, N. ?,<• t. J t •» u i.

h i