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ALMAGE’S SERMON
iminent Divine’s Sunday
Discourse.
■ “Tlie Acidities of IAfe”—The Cup |
Biegar Which Christ Took is Typl- !
■ Life's Bitterness—flits is the Lot
■a Distressed.
■“When Jesus therefore had re-
■ie vinegar.”—John xix., 30.
■gandsof It Jerusalem had douo their
w.as almost sundown, and Jesus
lig. I Persons in crucifixion often
on from day to day, crying, beg-
■irsing, B but Christ had" been ex-
lorly by years of maltreatment. Pillow-
la fed, flogged—as bent over and
low post His hare baok was in-
Twith the scourges interstleed with
of lend and bone—and now for whole
the weight of His body hunoon dffii-
[ udons, and, noeording to custom, a
stroke under the armpits had been
jy the executioner. Dizzy, nausea-
^■erish—a ^■in the two world words, of agony “I thirst!” is com- 0
^Kludmn, Hong tongue! let a drop O world, of rain with strike rolling on
^Hnd ^Ks, give sparkling Jesus something lakes and to spraying drink!
^^■be Hit now any lie pity demonstrated in earth or heavon in helmlf or
^Hiyal ^^Kealthy sufferer. women of Jerusalem used
Hi fund of money with which they
wine for those people who died
^Hlxlon, but Christ a powerful would opiate not take to deaden it. He
^Hio die afterward sober, and they so He refused to the of
^Huudsoak go a cup
^Ktick a sponge in it and put it
of hyssop and then press it
He the hot lips of Christ, You say the
^■as Hr deaden an anaesthetic the pain. and But intended the vinegar to r«-
insult.
Home lives the saccharine seems to
Hniuate. Life is sunshine on a bank
^Bers. H. In December A thousand hands in January, to elap look- ap-
Hross or
Hpresent. their table, they see all their
Hjyaut. Health rubicund. Skies
■ Days resilient. But in a
many cases there are not so many
■rs Btlons as acids. The annoyances and the
and the disappointments of life
Ipower tel the successes, There is a
Ind in almost every shoe. An Arabian
Imon’s says that there was a worm in
|y, staff, gnawing its strength
and there is a weak spot in every
ply support of England that forgot a man all leans the grandeurs on. King
)rge
his throne because one day, in an inter-
w, Beau Brummel called him by his first
ne and addressed him as a servant, cry-
;, i, “George, ring the bell!” Miss La ns-
| honored all the world over for
Reports poetic genius, is so worried over the
"^pund set afloat regarding her that
dead, with an empty bottle of
i acid in her hand. Goldsmith said
*&st. p life was a wretched being and that
j want and contempt could bring to
been brought and cries out: “What,
8 there formidable in a jail?” Cor-
!s (sign. line painting is hung up for a
Hogarth cannot sell his best
g except through a raffle. Andre
yto makes the great fresco in the
i of the Aununciata at Florence and
r pay a sack of cdx-n, and there are
Inees and vexations in high places
as in low places, showing that in a
bets. nany lives are the sours greater than
“When Jesus therefore had re-
y ithe vinegar!”
absurd to suppose that a man who
yays been well can sympathize with
vho are sick, or that one who has al-
ieen i-hose henored can appreciate the sor-
who are despised, or that one
p been born to a great fortune can
Itand [who the distress and the straits of
are destitute. The fact that
Himself took the vinegar makes Him
i> sympathize to-day and forever with
[trp acids of this life. He took the
, 1 *.
|e ayal. first place, The treachery there was of the Judas sourness hurt
is feelings more than all the friend-
His disciples did Him good. You have
tny friends, but there was one friend
whom you put especial stress. You
I him. You loaned him money. You
Ldedhim in the d,ark passes of life,
le especially needed a friend. After-
le turned upon you, and he took ad-
;e of your former intimacies. He
against you. He talked against you.
eroscopized your faults. He flung
lpt at you, wnen you ought to have
sd nothing but gratitude. At first,
uld not sleep at nights. Then you
bout with a sense of having been
That difficulty will never be healed,
ough mutual friends may arbitrate
matter until you shall shake hands,
d cordiality will never come back,
commend to all such tho sympathy
trayed Christ. Why, they sold Him
5 than our $20! They all forsook Him
id. They cut Him lo the quick. He
that cup to the dregs. He took the
R : is also the sourness of pain. There
■e
■ne lor of you who have not seen a well
land many years. By keeping out of
lontinue by carefully studying dietetics
lilies, to this time, but, oh, the
Iches, and the side aches, and the
Ivour and the heartaches whiohjhave
III! accompaniment all the way
I You have struggled under a
listead mortgage of physical disabilities,
Iterized of the placidity that once
you it is now only with
(effort lity and that sharp you retort. keep Difficulties away from ir- of
Ktion, lip of digestion, of locomotion,
lu the great obstacle in your life,
tug and sweat along the pathway
■yonder when the exhaustion will
Bdy ■: friends, the brightest those crowns who in
Is will not be given to in
dashed to the cavalry charge,
I:be, General applauded and the sound
piling |e brightest sabers crowns rang through in heaven, the I land, be-
Iwill lid be given to those who trudged
Itrength, chronic ailments which unnerved
Idr yet all the time maintain-
ly faith in God. It is comparative¬
liharging to tight in a regiment of a thousand
lof up the parapots to the
I) martial music, but it is not so
lie endure when no one but the nurse
linn dootor are the witnesses of the
Lions fortitude. All the pangs of all
is of all the ages compressed in¬
sour cup. He took the via-
[re fineome is also does the sourness of poverty,
hat not meet your outgoings,
always gives an honest man anx-
There is no sign of destitution about
[pleasant for you—but appearance God only and knows a cheerful what
I a
you have had to manage your private
[:es. Just as the bills run up the
s seem to run down. You may say
pg, but life to you is a hard push, and
[you sit down with your wife and talk
ne ■ expenses you both rise up dis-
I fld. You abridge here, and you
/i there, nnd you get things snug for
[a [doctor’s sailing, and, Io, suddenlythere is a
bill to pay, or you have lost
poeketbook, or some debtor has failed,
lout are thrown abeam end. Well, broth-
lu are in glorious company. Christ
d not the house in which He stopped,
i eoit on which He rode, or the boat
lick He sailed. He lived in a bor-
l house. He was buried in a bor-
I', grave. yet He Exposed bad only to all kinds of
ler, In one suit of
is. He breakfasted the morning,
io one could possibly tell where He
get anything to eat before night,
uld have been pronounced a flnan-
i.iiure. He had to perform a miracle
money to pay a tax bill. Not a dol-
d He own. Privation of domesticity;
■on (table of nutritious food; privation of'a
I couch on which to sleep; pri-
ft>f of all worldly chased resources! The
the earth had chalices out
of which to drink, but Christ hud nothing
but a plain oup sot before Him, unrt It was
very sharp, and It was very sour. He took
the vinegar.
There were years that passed along be¬
fore your family circle was invaded by
death, but the moment the charmed elrole
was broken everything seemed to dissolve.
Hardly have you put the black apparel in
the wardrobe before you have again to
take *t out. Great anil rapid okuuges in
your family record. You got tlie house
and rejoiced in it, but the charm was gone
ns soon as the orapo hung on the doorbell.
The one upon whom you most depended
was taken away from you. A cold marble
slab lies on your heart to-day. Once, as
the children romped, through the house,
you put your hand over your aching head,
and said, “Oh, if I could only have it
still!” Oh, it is too still now. You lost
yqiir patience when the tops and the
strings and the shells were left amid floor;
but, oh, you would be willing to have the
trinkets scattered all over the floor again
if they were scattered by the same hands.
With what h ruthless plowshare bereave¬
ment rips up the heart! But Jesus knows
ail about that. You cannot tell Him any¬
thing now in regard to bereavement. He
had only a few friends, and when He lost
one it brought tears to His eyes. Lazarus
had often entertained Him at his house.
Now Lazarus is dead and buried, and
Christ breaks down with emotion, the con¬
vulsion of grief shuddering through all the
ages of bereavement. Christ knows what
it is to go through Christ the house missing a
familiar inmate. knows what it is
to see an unoccupied place at the table.
Were there not four of them—Mary and
Martha and Christ and Lazarus? Four of
them. But where is Lazarus? Lonely and
afflicted Christ, His great loviug eyesfllled
with tears! Oh, yes, yes! He knows all
about the loneliness and the heartbreak.
He took the vinegar!
Then there is the sourness of the death
hour. Whatever else we may escape, that
acid sponge will be pressed to our lips. I
sometimes have a curiosity to know how
i will behave when I come to die. Whether
I will he calm or excited, whether I will be
filled with reminiscence or with anticipa¬
tion. I cannot say. But come to the
point I must and you must. An officer
from the future world will knock at the
door of our hearts and serve on us the
writ of ejectment, and we will have to sur¬
render. And we will wake up after these
autumnal and wintry and vernal and sum¬
mery glories have vanished from our
vision. We will wake up into a realm
which has only one season, and that the
season of everlasting love.
But you say: “I don’t want to break out
from my present damp associations. It is so
chilly and so to go down the stairs
of that vault. I don’t want anything
drawn so tightly over my eyes. If there
were only some way of breaking through
the partition between worlds without tear¬
ing this body all to shreds! I wonder it
the surgeons and the doctors cannot com¬
pound a mixture by which this body and
soul can ail the time be kept together. Is
there no esoape from this separation?”
None, absolutely none. A great many men
tumble through the gates of the future, as
it were, and we do not know where they
have gone, and they only add gloom
and mystery to the" passage, but Jesus
Christ so mightily stormed the gates of
that future world that they have never
since been closely shut. Christ knows
what it is to leave this world, of tho
beauty of which He was more apprecia¬
tive than we ever could be. He knows
the exquisitenMss of the phosphorescence
of the sea; He trod it. He knows the
glories of the midnight heavens, fer they
were the spangled knows canopy about of His wilder¬
ness pillow. He the He lilies; He
twisted them into His sermon. knows
about the fowls of the air; they whirred
they way through His discourse. He knows
about the sorrows of leaving this beautiful
world. Not a taper was kindled in the
darkness. He died physicianless. Hedied
in cold sweat and dizziness and hem-
morhage and agony, that have put Him in
sympathy with all the dying. He goes
through Christendom and gathers up the
stings put of all the death pillows, and He
puts them under His own neck and head.
To all those to whom life has been an
acerbity—a dose they could not swallow,
a draft that set tbeir teeth on edge and a-
rasping—I preach the omnipotent sympa¬
thy ot Jesus Christ. The sister of Her-
schell.the astronomer, used to spend much
of her time polishing the telescopes
through which he brought the distant
worlds nigh, and it is my ambition now
this hour to clear the lens of your spiritual
vision so that,, looking through the dark
night of ycftir earthly troubles you
may behold the glorious constella¬
tion of a Saviour’s mercy and
a Saviour’s love. Oh, my friends, do not
try to carry all your ills alone! Do not put
your poor shoulder under the Apennines
"when the Almighty Christ is ready to lift
up all your burdens. When you have a
trouble of any kind, you rush this way and
that way, and you wonder what this man
will say about itand what thut mau will say
about it, and you try this prescription and
that prescription and the other prescrip¬
tion. Oh, why do you not go straight to
the heart of Christ, knowing that for our
own sinning and suffering race He took the
vinegar?
There was a vessel that had been tftssed
on the seas for a great many weeks and
been disabled, and tho supply of water
gave out, and the crew were dying of
thirst. After many days they saw a sail
against the sky. They signaled it. When
the vessel came nearer, the people on the
suffering ship cried to the captain of the
other vessel; “Send us some water! We
are dying for lack of water!” And the
captain on the vessel that was hailed re¬
sponded: “Dip your buckets where vou are.
You are in the mouth of the Amazon, and
there are scores cf miles of fresh water
all around about you and hundreds of
feet deep!” And then they dropped their
buckets over the side of the vessel and
brought up the clear, bright, fresh water
and put out the fire of their thirst. So I
voyage*thirsting as'you 0 are a for S
and thirsting for comfort, and thirsting
for eternal life, and I ask you what is the
use of your going in that death-struck
state, while all around you is the deep,
clear, wide, sparkling flood of God’s sym-
pathetio mercy? Oh, dip your buckets
and drink and live forever! “ Whosoever
will, let him come and take of the water 01
life freely.” f
Yet there are people who refuse this
divine sympathy, batties, and they try to fight
their own and drink their own
vinegar, and carry their own burdens, and
their life, instead of befng a triumphal
march from victory to victory, will be a
hobbling on from defeat to defeat until
they make (Inal surrender to retributive
disaster. Oh, I wish I could to-day gather
up in my arms all the woes of men and
women, all their heartaches, all their disap¬
pointments, all their chagrins, and just
take them right to the feet of a sympathiz¬
ing Jesus! He took the vinegar. Nana
Sahib,• after he had lost his last battle
in India, fell back into the jungles of mortal Iherl
—jungles so full of malaria that no
can live there. He carried with him also a
ruby of great lustre and of great value.
Hedied in those jungles. His body was
never found, and the ruby has never yet
been recovered. And I fear that to-day
there are some who will fall back from
this subject into the sickening, killing jun¬
gles of their sin, carrying a gem of infin¬
ite value—a priceless soul to be lost for¬
ever. Oh, that that ruby might flash in the
eternal coronation! But, no. There are
some, I fear, who turn away from this
offered mercy, and comfort and divine
sympathy notwithstanding that Christ, for
all who accept His grace, trudged the long
way, and suffered the lacerating tlioDgs,
and received in His face the expectora¬
tions of the filthy mob, and for the guilty,
and tho discouraged, and the discomforted
of the race took the vinegar. May God
Almighty break the infatuation and load
you out into the strong hope, and the good
cheer, and the glorious sunshine of this
triumphal gospell
ARRESTED FOR SPENDING MONET.
The Hoarded Coin of an Old Negro Landa
Him in Jail as a Counterfeiter.
It seems hard for a man to hoard up
Ids money for nearly half a century
and then when tho time comes l’or
spending it to bo arrested on a crimi¬
nal charge in connection therewithh.
That Is exactly what has ihapponed In
tho case of an old negro man In Geor¬
gia, according to his story in the Sun.
Recently the people of Marion county,
Georgia, noticed tli appearance in the
community of some bright, shining
silver half dollars. The coins looked
suspiciously new, and the fact that
they bore dates of the earlier years
of the century added to the mystery
concerning them. Nobody could say
that the coins were not genuine pro¬
ducts of the United States Mint, and
yet the circumstances were such that
tile banks refused to take them. In¬
vestigation slliowed that the man re¬
sponsible for the circulation of this
glittering coin was one Marion Minter,
an old negro about eighty years old,
who lived in the country, and who was
ignorant and apparently unsophicti-
catod. Minter admitted readily that
he had circulated the money which
was causing all the trouble, but de¬
clared that it was good. The circum¬
stances were such, however, that he
was arrested by a deputy marshal of
the United States Revenue Service
and was taken to Columbus, Ga., on
the charge of having in his possession
and passing counterfeit money, At
the preliminary investigation of his
case before United States Commis¬
sioner Williams, Minter was bound
over to the regular term of the Fed¬
eral Court. Meantime, tihe coins have
been sent to Washington where they
will be tested thoroughly.
Minter was born in Texas, where he
spent the first eighteen years of his
life. When a young boy his father
gave him some money. He was ambi¬
tious, and determined to make more
money to save up for old age. He
picked cotton and did odd jobs and
altogether accumulated the sum of
?220—a small-sized fortune for the
average darky. Every time his new
savings amounted to os much as fifty
cents he would swap off the change
for a bright half dollar. He took only
coin that had never been much in use,
and thus his accumulation became a
curiosity. When he came to this part
of the country he brought his money
with him, strapped around his waist
in a girdle. He went to Marion county
where he spent several years at differ¬
ent places. He buried his money at
each place of residence, digging up
his treasure every time he made a
move. He has been in his last home
for several years.
The first time Minter buried his
treasure in an earthen jar. The next
time he kept it in a paint keg. and on
the las<t occasion he hid it away in a
fruit jar. The money was kept for
old age and poverty. This year the
times were hard and old man Minter
decided that bis treasure would have
to be used at last. He dug up the
money, which, off and on, had been
burled for thirty years, and began
spending it, only to be arrested on a
charge of passing counterfeit money.
The money is dated from 1801 to
1834. In fineness, weight, style and
technical details, the half dollars
seemed to be all right. If they are
genuine there is a premium on them.
An expert in the Secret Service, Mr.
E. P. McAdams, of Atlanta, who made
a careful examination of the coin,
could not say that they were not gen¬
uine. It was the theory of the offi¬
cers that the old negro, who is igno¬
rant, who cannot read, and who can
only tell a coin by its size, was made
the dupe of a gang of counterfeiters,
who hoped in that way to palm oft'
their spurious money on the commu¬
nity.
Meantime, Minter is in jail. He is
poor and cannot give the required
bond. The Federal authorities hardly
felt warranted in turning him loose
until the question of the genuineness
of the coin is settled officially by the
Treasury Department. Min tor has
340 half dollars left, and he is await
ing the decision of the experts with
great r oxiety.
The Czar’s Plan.
Tlie Czar sees it all now. He ins
come to the very wise conclusion that
the best way in which to induce nil the
rest of the world to disarm is to arm
^ own government so heavily and so
formidably that the others would have
no chance in an armed contest. It is
on the same principle as the keeping
of . community , by appoint-
peace in a
ing all the troublesome citizens to po-
gitions on the police force.—Indianap-
ohs ,• Journal. T 1
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The old pickerel under the hank witnesses
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To Cure Constipation Forever*
Take Casoarets Candy druggists Cathartic. 10c or 25c.
If C. C. C. fail to cure, refund money.
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AN
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The Mexican In Old Age.
When a Mexican grows old he seems
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Life in one of these towns is as ab¬
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Edited by Henry Chadwick.
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VBK/ %/J. di ‘ iiiillflTir EMtMaBlOrCLE - - rrrt 1 - "- ——
*90 by helping us oJrertiw our enprrb line ot
models. We give oae Rider Agent In each town FREE USE
of ample wheel toiutrodooo them. Write at once for our special offljt.
K. F. Mead Cycle Company, Chicago, Ill.
SUMMER LAW SCHOOL
... UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA ...
3<rtJi Summer. July 1 to Sep ember l, 1099. Espec¬
ially helpful to beginners; to candidates for admis¬
sion to the bar; and to yonng practitioners who
have locked systonaatJc instruction. For Oat»-
lotrue, ttddre s SECRETARY SUMMER LAW
SCHOOL, CHARLOTTESVIIXF, VA.
on w Allamsn, Wa. Office < B.M.WOOLLKY, cured out ticulars and patn. Whiskey 104 at sent N. Book home Pryor FREE. Habits of with¬ M.D. par- St.
D R O PSYSSSS and lO (In treatment
cases. Book of testimonials vs’
Free. Dr. H. H. GREEN’fi 6-ONB. Box D, Atlanta. Ga.
MENTIONTHISPlPER^^W
FOR We wish to 14 gain GEIssYS this 200,000 { 9
and year offer
new customers, hence J x
1 Pkg. 13 Pay Radish, 10c 9
1 1 Pkg. “ Early Earliest Ripe Red Cabbage, Beet, 10c lUc
1 “ Long Lightn’g Cucumber 10c
1 " Salzer’a Beet Lettuce, 15c
1 *' California Early Fig Onmu, Tonwtto, 20c 10c
1 " Dinner
3 *’ Brilliant Flower Seeds, 15c
Worth $l.QO , for 14 c ents, IJil.U)
Above 10 pkgs. worth together $1.00, with we will
mail you free, and Seed Catalogue our
at receipt Pia^it of this notice «fc 14c
pon We invite trade and
postage. your Salzer’s
know when you once try
8eed.«youwil! them.. Onion never Seed get alongwith- 6Se.
wi.-out ami
a- Catalog Potatoes at $1.20 No. AC
a HOI. alone 5c.
SAI.ZMIl SKI-D CO., LA CROSSE. UTS.
Our Smalley and Bat*
tie Creek aelf-leed
l>ra# Saws aro world. tha
standard of th®
Also aii sizes of Circular
Sawa, and the celebrated
B. C. Picket Mill
Horse Powers for oper¬
ating. Silo Machinery*
Feed Mills, Root Cut¬
Corn Shelters.