Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 28 Apr 1898, p. 3

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rt;':_b{ 5. 1d with- yaw-.v va. uuuwuny vvu-2 uuw u.I.u_vIun VI. vuuv Bnptif deddminatiny the world _o.'vez1.) )1; was 0119 `or thn 1a.rga`st.-_ puigdingg iii; * LLo'uidoMn.. .mhe1ro:mda.e:on, atom; o:'the% >1-...{1`.l:...... ....... '|..:`.r 1.`... n:._ 0.-;___;'_r `ll-.. ---V-`-V-\--. `|"*P"" fv-MIAMI-|I'A-van` uvuujq` VI.-,`_ uuw` j. swas laid by Sir Samuel` Mon . ton Poto on AunustT16thL.l859. 1: mm! ` `.A......,_...... ...q.... ....w.\.w..~u -.:u,v,uvu. Sir Michael than pointed out that th ' ; total expdndituxw. exceeded the record. I beiixg 115,0s0,000. or 395,000 above the estimate; "Yet," he added. .t1ie mu." |.suz-y is not depleted and could 50111 1 maiun unforeseen .ca.1l'."` !|`I._ ni_,,,..n `Tho lfrlllslgi lindggep I :-eaelllctl by Ilse! : (`h:uu'.ellor (`willie Ilxelxvqller. . ` Q Sh` Michael `Hicks-Bewch, Chancellor. : of the British Exchequer, presentd the z . budget statement in the -House of Com- : Inons on 'l`hx_nisdu,y.. H6 said the coun- ` try was prosperous, and that the apex ` of prosperity hudmot yet` ben reach-` ed. The surplus: he added, amounted fro 3,678,000, of whichsum 2,550,000 g `had been appxjopriated for _pub1iu E b.i1'Lld_ings. The Chancellor Of the Ex? I ].cl1equ.er' also informed the House that` ; thevnutional debt had` been reduced by ; 6.605.000.- Continuing, the Chancellor : said that the -posboffio andtelegraph l _1eoe'Lpt.s hztd increased 410,000. i -:,,1u:,v ucur. ' ` Just as ` sometimes an enizranvxng strain of music will linger In yourenrs for days after you have heankit and - just as a sharp cry of pain I unoe heard wrhile passing through Bellevue hospital clung to my ear for \`voeks,_ aml just as a horrid blasphemy in the street sometimes huusnts one"s ears for days,` so God not. only lmars. but. holds the songs. the; prayers, the groans. the worship. the blasphemy. How we have all avomlerml a.t"tlhe phohogwaph, which . iholds not only the words you umar. huic t.he vary tonzas of your voice, so that 100 yezus from mew, that instru- tment. t-Ul1'nL'd.. the very words you now {I11-C81` amt, Lhe very tone uf your voice Iwill be rproduced. Amazing pcho-my `graph-vl But more wonderful is God's 1 power lo hold.-to retain. Ah, wlmt'de- _;lig`l1t.ful encouragement tour our pray- jemsl What. an awful trigllgyfor our `hard speeches! ~.Wh`at asgurance of y-warm hearted sympathy or all our g'riefs! He that plmnted hhe em`, gshall he not hear?" -' V I Raffm--hzlrn hm`? `A.-.-mu. nun... c....... - than :1 l;i:s. Ah yes, he hears the cn.p-- `:in's mir-. and uh:-. dying syllables of when a soul prays. God don: _1_iot all hot: upright mail the pm: or Duals" lmIIlI1:iil)' and olixnbs to h an. 'I'he_ Bible says he bends claw over. In more thagn one place Isaiah said he bow- ed down his ear. In more than pl21ce',L.`ne psalmisb said be inclined his ear. By-~w-hich `I come to believe that God puts his eat so closely down to your lips that he can hear our minn- est whisper. It in not Go: away off up yomler; it is God_ away dnwn here. - close up. so close up that when yqu} prziy to him it is not moire 11 wghispgr live :-1 sigh an_l the splash of the urph-' ~the shipwrecked uailar driven on the 100. He that planted the ear can i Skerries. and the infants "Now I lay i me down to sleep." as distinctly as he i hears {J18 Fortissimo at brazen bands in the Dunseldovrf festival, as egsily as 5 he hears the salvo at artillery when the 13 squnriea Engligh troops up- ( an all their batteries at. once at Wziter- heat. ` Tun: n..-..........L:._.... -_ ___i._.__ v, L _$h'a:-iasvxv yohlucl: . . .033 IV *i!v`.`lh'nn- it V sptiniizdiifcixuxcii Bfuxmin. SURPLUS OF $l8,000,Dw00,r. ;h'(x:L11yl.:a.v`I|h ' mun 7 Lmwmmaa : ` S9!B t ?.i11.? 15-. , `_i9M last two uionths, is at the Santa. Clara.` l>a.t.tery, the strongest of Lhe-diiIy s de-' fehpes. With him am all the officers 1: of the staff, :mci't.he chief officers of all the, v0limbee1"- regiments. 01' am rushing tln'ou`gh the city shouiing ' the call ,to_ arms and carrying arms to 5- the ha.tteries and reports tcrthe C-up- tain-General. Ominous is the situation. Everybody grams .tha fact, but every- body is rushing out of the city or to . the-iortificnxtionsh The number who ` ' have sought tfie. latte-r_ placs-to fight, i` is enormous. The United States ships I could not possibly hams selected a. bet- , bar place for landing memthan \tl1ey can nd in hp ngipghlmrhoud to zyvhich ':_ th:ey_ are pointing. Blzmco realizes the ildmnger, and has mshed large bodies r wrftroops to the S_zg,n _t`a. 0l:u'a_battery. . He has sentWnth'erEs`in9. hurry by mil- ` mud to Vetlado and Clarmelo; The gur- ` risons are we`a.k there, and even,-_wit)1` . `the mino1'cements could not last. long, 5 because {the defences are not strong. 'T'l\A.S1ii1niRh- N:1vVnl'(`nxnmi.a.s:inn nnw " I "'*`f."" ` - ` Hm'a.nu's weak point `lies dead ahead of file .~\1neriv'zu1 fleet. The cmtrse of: - the ships is in direct. a.::co1'da.nca with `tlhe plan 91 wan`. It means. and av-` : erybody hserevadmits` it, the hum- ` , lmrdment of aviiin, unless the city lsurrenders in sight of .3. suyeriur force. General Blzmco, in full uniform,.,}vh1_ch; land fu-n v\\r\ n i-Lu _ The "Ayuerlcim lbleauves` lung" Kong for < K uimna. * `a..,:_r.. , ____- AL '0' `up... UV` ..,_..,..,. ;...... 5?, _u-. ullQl_$,l-SLR-Lllglll 7 sq;1ml_1`on cqmiixandez), by ,Commodo_'n; G,- - Dwgy `by j,unSday'.'next. Official V C ipfprmqt-iqn. it is ; undarstood_, hu"s_ ` ;;'gm: hed1\Vashingntoi1 oE . -the departure 3 fog;Sztx1;1jdgty of `the? '_squ,ud1't> ;1`; frog; L xvvhera it-hzisheen izguklhg 3 irg';35rg1tfo : f9r t'Iie aye Iwnilx tvlgex 2 Navy ?'_Dapart_ggentf.hs~ 1ai1iToa1;:i:f_Io;f.;`(;. 120- 1 ` potion; .tlae:;=L.i?x1:_i-nV<>f;-:s % war are, the. rgv`enmeV c_u1;tg1;.McGn1p!1:-` ; and a; n\1mber~pt col'1i9rs,. nonvexinm: Soul and other._ston$=. 'naetlc5i=.for:~`1:h6' ; ; eet im its.opemtiqna ag8_i!!s,|igtha. K as ; iab; `naval ,o_noe`._ an t;haj4iv,,te1:!&_o thg ; i',Ph3:lip9in_ns and agai_nstj_ tbs mt Z ;;g1g5n,3.9t.Mani11aAV;und%qther; _ 1: %h0se!IAl_galdg 5.-"\' ; UECWLIBB ll.Lll5 Q618IlCES are IIUL sarong. ThB;S1mt1i8l1.' Na.vi1l'Commission, now ` in London. has been officially informed from Madrid that the forts at Havana ` lmve fined on American warships and that the "latter replied, Ruhr Adv-hii-nl K-nmvmatun-`u Pnnnrf ` llnnuna Forts I-`Ire an the American War- sl|ip.~`- l`l1"(-Nlnrins-n Relnrn the Fire. A from I4-Izwzxnat. Cuba, says: 7 --1*`1'om the hills o{VGucu1a.juy I\ saw; t.l1e'1.'niied States Wa1_`shi1>s Friday at.- ` lernoun, advancing km Havana from the m>st.wanI._ The news has feuched Morro c'nstl_e. There all is alert, but fear is in the 1hea;r_ts of the city s de- dee-ndprs. ; 3 n,........-.v,. ...,...l. .._:_. 1:. ` ,1...) ..\......1 ` 9 ;CUBAN~CAPlTAL_l-N A STATE OF GREAT EXCITEMENT. Barrie & Sh-_oud ` Orders by telegraph or telephone promptly attended it: Cotns and Caskets of all kinds kept in stock Robes and Grape, and all Funeral Rriulftea furnished la. a. sum. %[{{{{oa;..p:ee smx.A%{r{`{` Books. Stationery & Wa|| Paper !S00_Tf 8 BUUKSTURE ` Spain's possessions u v in- the ' mi` Eiit .._.._....-.-.- ATTACK. on THE PH1,L'11>1=mEs.~_ HAVANA IS BLUUKADED.% Iiznpure baking powders are r'ep6nsible for much had coob ' ery--bad cookery, is `responsible for much ill health--than tile one -and prevent the other-not a harmful in Pure GoId"+a perfectly pure cream oftarw DOJWU`. ' ` Tr/17.: -omr ----% .47 gm. -cnomaty D u D0LM5LGE, Managr, Stn'oud Show Rom and vork Shop,` Colliexf St. Barrlqo I UHOERTAKER --r-- . Dluliny on Board um Brllinll` Ba-rqle F Samoa. From Taltnl. A despatch from New York. says:.-- - The British barquo Snmoaortived on ' .. Tuesday mo.\rning`from Taltal. On Jan- uary 9th, while in. port at Taltal, a. s: mutiny broke out on board. and as it N , result two of the crew are dead. The 5.`. cause of the mutiny was owingxtn sev- ' erul of the seam:-'n being refused shore elave; one of the ringleaders, named d Sanderson. got into an altercation with ;t Chiaf Officer seurls. and the latter shot ,_}Sanderson dez1d;_ shortly afterwards. I when Searls learnmi that Sanderson was Ldead, hepluced his revolver to his tem- l1,. ple and killed himself. Captain Fret- f= Wurst. succeededdn queilingthe mut- h` iny. and had two of the ringieodiern _; arrested and lodged in prison hshore. , . IVBSIY IISKU In "16 IVIOUITI. If you ha\ve.Dizz'!`S`)eI|s, Headaches. Bad Dreams,-- ea Dull, Dr0W8y,.'. Weak and Narvo.u:._ Then you. have Kidney `Complaint. -' ,1.-. The sooner you` start taking: . ` ` HIIIIIIQ :III- III! I Q ' um I|1u`:'quu_.'1uy vuu yt. . _,They .ve-cm-e_d thou- - sands of cases of kit!- . ._n: nnivf vvnnu Tfvinuuorn I Perhaps th$f're the source of you'r`iIl I health and you don't know it. 1 - Here's how on can t'ell`:'-- ~ . Ifyou have ack Ache of Lame Bick_.:. N` vnu have Pufnmn unddr Mm Evnia Of DWQIIIYI OT .13 F98`-. ' ) If your rina containfsedhatent of ' .any kihd or is H_igh_CoIored and scanty. . . 9` ` If you have Coated `Tongue and" Nasty Taste in the Mouth. ' lfvnu have Dizzvnnlls. Hnndanhnm IgllllIII' w `IIIIIIIK I rnnhw the more quickly will yqur health rctum. Thn\r ,ue,m)imd Mann- ' V "a A ' `,n: past yea_r.~ If youju} ` Ia. sufferer -t1xiy7cI.11e` Cllre -ydu. . ` ' `fookrthat tells` all About Doanfs Kidney` V Pills sent freuto any . -n.- n...... 1n.a..... um ' 11 you nave uacx Acne or Lgme Dlcl| _.`_. If you have Pufness under the Eyes Swgllin of th}: Feet. ' If unnu I -inn nnu-15:-\`n"Qnl"nnAnv) I8`- -ae|=ess.-,-- . , The Doag Kidneyn Pill; cm. `|`oronto,_ Ont. Disordered 1.; auuuux Jvu anal: uuuus Tfonuvs _llIlEY I-n.Ls PI-up mnrnn|I;1`ltlv mm vnnr Imnllh "rah"-n. nun I: no man or ml `or; mun, mum. on =:xtuIm., um mu-muzn Um. not al- mvz. , - Cook our FOR ummoua AMI} 1 I`-. aTn'u7ss.' ruuteaumntlo LI annsn-us NAM_I_, ~ A RINGLEADER snow DEAD _p:n,nv7oA\"ns 1. son. ALWAYS IIIP OI IMII new woma sum. 1 consulted I num- ber of physieiensmnd took many remedies, . but wxthont eecs. I noticed Milbum's 9 ear! and Ham Pillssdvertised, end as j ey seemed to suit my oas'e,.I got 2: box and began their me. Before taking them I was very weak and ebilitsted, and would some- times wake oni of my sleep with 3 dis- tressed, smotherin feeling, and I was fre- quently seized wi egonxzing pains in the region of the heart, sndolten could scarcely muster up courage to keep up the stru vie for life. In this wretched condition il- resous, and to-day I state, with gratitude, lhst I am vigorous and st ng, and all this Improvement is due. to ' is wonderful . buxn s Heart and Nerve Pills oemno the medy, -\ ' z T for Kidney Disease; B1a;dde1!\'and Urinary diiculties, La.m Back, and this number- I_,._ ._-___n.. -1-:1:`__..:_....1 17.-:|..___:_ n-._u_ Vluvnvhlg nuvnnauv uu-vu, uuuu vuv uuuauvh' raaults of isbrdered Kidneys in Do&n V Kidney Pills. Ba into to gas Doan i. ttyoents pd: box`. F0; 5;! uu V- . genited ; It cures Constigon,-Sick Head-T ;-_;rLl_3gs,_1'3:g1i_t;g_,qt: '1`iredne`ss, and all 1he"evfd'e`nces of Sluggish _ Liver` and [Impurd Blood, vqhicvh at; so pY_ea.- gloat in thgspring.` ` It. nxakgsg rich. {red blood and giv'es_-bugyancy and" gtzengfh 19 the gntir systep; j 5 uunun ox me most sxepucm: _ " For uveral year: I have been moon- mm sufferer from nervous headache, and` Ike pain was so lntene that sometimes` I was almost cmzy. I read] thou ht that I mv hand would hnnt. I onynnnlf n nnm. ..._ `.._. .._- -- ..._-........ Unanlu u nu.-.u..u slm really th` u lm; my haul would bum. I consul ber of nhvaininm: mu)! Qnnlx mum I-Arno-(on The cloggechi-gp macllinefy of tllg system. requires cleaning` out after tlie wear andtear of the` winter s worT.V Nothing will do thisAso thoroughly` . and perfectly as theold reliable W In. 6:9. Doa1nrx_.,te.lls the following uunrhblo of relic! from merin ml -`clan an to henlth. which nlmnl ...-.-",...,;."*'..y,"::;:;;';;:':.;7,.: mt Anton to health, which \ T` may `:11 donbtsn to the emcacy of ` burn : Hetrt sud Nerve Pillafmmthn minds of the moat skepticnli "For uvenl nan I hmm ham mann. V` . Kidney Pills rst proved to `the people _&a$ Kidney disease is curable. Being the original Kidney remedy` in gill form, the cares they have made. and the fame they hnveettained have opened the vmy for I ~ host of imitations ~g_1_1d substitutes. ha! I who have been cured at Com;slaihta~thrdugh the use 6! this won- derful medicine, those whose lame back in "now frag from pain, those who now have no headaches, those whd.have escaped "Ytoni the death grip of Diabetes `and Bright : disease. by the use of Donn : Kidney '~ Ire he ones whose opinion is valuable. Wheh sooreaof auoh'peop1e come forward nndytall publicly that Doan s Kitlney Pill! om-ad them after othermeana failed} it it gvident -that the only Spring Puri atio%n.% wnlgn aunsr," 7:h3uour in who A rndmcan Lu'ty=s1'on-into En "ark: nu Kl DN EY Buird9%ck Blood Bitters- DOANA S CURE6 vandj? there the. op.;tsin>s1r ps.`. and :9- . hu.hd17891_E'i-$08 shut.. and: the yoicfej pf- TGod.segxmzLto-.sauv to &ll.+_~l1u.ma.n- in- - speotion, .'1`hus far and. no fa11thaer.M"' In this '7vantihnl'n ..nf than nulm-A nf 33""? hi); lnnsin gm or? 3. L D,!i_`W`%y U] l_l9l V0"V.9,5KOW` %mto` the eaJ.'.o.t V . * , 000 A ;a. e.ond; small. " :. inatmmhntf 91! on which in pmyg. V .n&ra.vl'l~`f:ha.1mnnin ran; mm Iuihnd Jsmmr ` L;;$h}`. ii.'z'a7:f?a; ~0tR1&11`h9.?.IlB3&;!03.1;9!$1% hmd.. tromi L xib~'nai'1rs-'6f*`an 'A*nnti11ii:`f3\ni1`nr.` L ~ _u.rso'm@u:1nit.i.,:\1n: r,~~ & idwlgif an A t.M?otenhA 9?. . claw g3:m=g9i..-~ '?%ot mhdioinc. `at i$h'yeiotoy-, \ha.iie :,a'one ; -Tgliasdce, pf" _1i._o:loixgA_s_t.1z,d.y- 9291; no. ; rtherthm jhe` v.est1b_u1e.!* mysteriaua `hometof reverbamtion; anweoho. Grgng * ~Cga:m-9.1 V{Iepo.Qf" sound. ; - Hesdquzg-. Tiara .-nf'>whinh'-.~thar ' :3` nniok (ha. - btmo.avt thnw~n.v hv nmsm....hhnx aw. lllll 91. I`B.VH11l!alfti_|vl.Ull: MM); B0110: urzgngz ' solanslg. Hesdd -- I\`J e.1's' ~-6,0,7 : whih,`-ger; =t:iirl 1eA .quivt:}x ms, -, _ ,y.T:_cz_u:V:.1a.gez~1. mrh.tMg:&.by air. `po,.rt;- the. wa by- ' T57~T:." bono.papt.,tha:wuy by nerve?-theV own ..a'ni:-diamf.dh nlnnitinnw into. the an at I that 5 pm- `iJ.i'i2i(g fmnk Spine ' have aban- 3 well now in (1 with, I show logical n.Ger- Lothing Lt` it is of the . eiror uussrengcn ana uermnceg c 5- _ The ear so strange u contrivance `that by the eatima.t_e of one scientist it_q_ca\n catch the sound of 73.700 v;ibra.- tions"in"a." second. ?".l`hen oube1*1T'ca.r taking in . all kinds of sounds. whether the `crash of an avalanche 0l_` . the hum of a. bee. ; The: sound passing` to the inner door ofthe ontside ear ha.lts.u.nt_ilc another mechanism. divine mechanism. passes itfon by; the gone`- `.1t"6tv"lilJ`b"nTli13Ie.ear, can rcomlng to . the inner d.oo.r_of that secondeazr. the sound has no. poymr to come .fu;ji:_her ; until another div1nc.mecha.nism passes it/on through into the inner `ear, and .tlwn the sound. comes to the rail track`. M `offythe brp."m_ bmnohlet; and rolls on ' ' ' ' mni ,_ _p60ElD1l9 7'_.L`nll I941` ERG I10 I8v1'.l':I13l ."" ' thia'~ve,5t_1bu1evLoi the.-.pa.Iaoe of howf. L ` y-\ki.ngs.oi thought.(! 01? .!n?I;di3oin3. 0gny1.yaioIogys_ ;-`dono. ; of" lifalnim. study ml Jami. nn 1 jewels found m rpmpeiiun 4 museum` `and Etruscan vase. But while the ~ the hand of `the Lord Almighty. The outer ear ma_._v_ he adorned by human g itrt, the middle and the lnternalears em adorned and gurnisimd only by stroke of 2:. key of yonder organ sets the vibrating. and the external ear catches the undulating sound and -pessesit onthrough the bonelets of the middle ear to the internal ear, and I the3.000 fibersbf the human brain take ' nipfthe vibration and roll (the sound on into the soul. The hidden machin- ery of the ear. by physiolgists called by the names of things? familiar to us. like the hammer. Something to` strike; like the anvilpsomething to be smit- ten; like the stirrup of the saddle with drum. beaten in the marclaylike the harpstringe. to be swept with music. Coiled like a. "snail shell," _by which one of the innermost passages of the `eztris ectua.lly'cs.1led; like a. stairway [the sountl to ascend; like a. benttube of-u heating apparatus. taking that which enters round and `round; like a.` labyrinth with wonderful `passages in- to which thethought enters only ctc be lost in bewilderment. -A muscle contracting-when the nei.seis`te`e loud`, ' just as the pupil of the eye contracts whenthe light is too glaring. "The nn.externa.1*e:_3.r is%defanded: bymi`x*wich with its bitterness discourages` insec~ tileinvasion. The internal ear im- bedded in, by. what is tar the `hardest ~n.-`f.hn h'nm:1.n mmfnm avm-v rnnlz I 'which;we mount the steed; like the ueuuuu U1, uy.` WIIJLE [8 R11` I}I13'.I1l}I'0.95C I I `o%h9 human system. avgry rock , otstrength and defiance; - The am` so strange in nnntrivnnr-'n uu on unv uuuusu wan. r Among the mostnkillml and -8381-fp E dnous physiologists of our time have #5 been those who mm given their time to the examination 0; the ear and'the .7 t study of ifs arches. its walls. its floors, ' _ its canals. its aqueducts, its galleries. 7 its intricacies, its convolntions. 2 its! divine machinery, and yet. it will take ; Junother thousand years before thei world comes to any adequate apprecin- . tion of what God did when he planned 1'lnd"execnped the infinite and overs"- mustering_0.rchitecture oi the human ear. , The most ofkit is invisible. and the microscope breaks down in `the attempt at exploration. 'l'_he oartilage_ which we call the ear is only the storm door of the great temple `clear down 0 out of sight. next door to the immortal. _l;; ......I n Buck have attempted to walk the; Ap- ._ piunnay of the human ear_, but the mysterious pathway has never been Conte undDe Blainville and Bank and hilly troilden but by two feet-the foot g of sound. and the foot of sea. Three ears on each side the head-the exter- nal ear, the middle ear. the internal, e-a.r-bu.l:.aIl connected by ui'<"st won-If darfixl telegruphy_ ` l`hn nu-Qnvtvnnl nun n. H ......n ...l,......\.J Such sciehtlsts -us Helmholtz and ` I-um x.-4.. I.axIJ5).u-`npng . The exLerna.1ea.r in all ugesggorned by precious stoes or precious metals. The temple of Jerusuiem partly built by "Life contribution of earrings. and Homer in the ""Ilfu.d"- speaks of How. the three bright drops, her glittering gems suspended Iron; the our," and. many_of the aaornmuus at modern :-nan` uIvAI\4| n-In AA-\:An n Inna nu- -raw 3-uu_.a.uu wuvuvu any Uuv uovuunuvuuo 3 M to theignini x7h6 buiIt. them. 3 But more wonderful than any arch} they ever lifted or any transept win- 5 dorw they ever illumined ox nny,Cor- lnthiun column they ever crowned or i any Gothic cloister they ever elaJorat- 9 941 is the human ear. ` E L`,s.:n;,.I ,4 1 _-.,x . THAT WONDE unwuu Iv- "L,1L, ,,. ,,_ ,1 .\L,_ I; v Aialltahlhu LLIISI uJuAuAu nauau Iruv _ 6 text: Psalms xciv, 9, "He that planted? the ear, shall he not hear?" He said:} _A`_rchltAcure isone of the most fascin- I atlng arts and the study `ot`Egyptian. Grecian. Etruscan, Roman. Byzantine, Moorjsll. Renaissance styles of building ` has ben to manyaman asublime life- work. Lincoln and York cathedrals. St. Paul : and St. Peter. a and arch of , Titus and Theban temple and Alham-l bra a'nd_Parthenon are the monuments En; ;_|._,. I \1,u\ vv ;hr. it :1 ffom he dust V. lT`V33T_13"_lE ,1 A Very lock or zunutl and Belnct. and Yet at Back` lllllte Meaty `cl Conslruton that It In Wide Open :0 use not of Cpl and 9! Bond. IE1 Dr. Txlnugc _u luring.` ` __Waabington, April 17.-Rev. Dr. Tnlv ; mags preached this morning from the ? +,.-;. D...|..... -..:.. a nu. n...+ ..I....+..a0 ngms sum.` IECHANISI. [Inn ` ,;1_.uu.u bur: ' ` . ` _ v ,.How'surpo.ss1ngIy` sa.cred the. human ' gar! You had bette; be ea'r6_ul how ; you let the sound `obblgsplmmyyor un- _ ' c1e&_nIiness_ step intd that ho1y'oE hol- . The BibIe.'_so.ys' that in`the' ancient. ` -, V `V " ':"'". "RI: '1' 1: ` putting _fjthe blood `of 8.-.,m`m'on the? M tip of_the earythe . r_jght+_ . , 1gri et.'But. my` friends, xsreneed all o1_?.n'.s to`.ha.ve` the sacred touch abor- vvldmatloxy. 9n the hanging 19be.'ogbotli . ` fears`. "nd-on,tbn u`mlge's- -i1the, aura` " " *on bhe cu5ta.cl1La.n tube of theverar, on a ' the f111ast0in_ij cans of. the ea.)--. on` `t,he_- L ,ty$xnp'anic_ vca.vit`y`_)' the: ear. and on - everything from thagoutside. gimgit 7 ' _the" 9u.tside;`ear~c1ar in tharpomi: ` whm;hnum1' steps oft. the Va;udittor,`y.L. Tnerve "q.nd**'zolls:ioxrtIow1i fn_'p"o"t1i6=uii -f ` fanvt-h0In;5bl'0 Zdythg. oi` rthe immoxtgl 1 Soul. '13;ha Bblc{apeNt_s of f`quu`.eqxa.?? - ja9tc%(h ltigV"uno1r,ou.mci:s:g~' `:a."V` and o'_tx ' ,_"1 `6$l`S_`;,'I ._ Q,,,29Z iomears-,_' : ` :%v;nr1`s`,o.>?fone1ze.:7e;`:%`;': ;qng1.`_. otatlmo. who \ ies unvnwl uuu I.) . IILIUI LIUUU UL 1` `"1 um und *9 t great Wong always Iirefe: ielarg:r. The King of 1 earth -and heaven may have larger the "Creation" performed he was car.- ried out to die, but leaving as: his leg- acy to the world 118 symphonies, 1_53 pieces for the baritone. 15 masses 5 oratorios. 42. German and Italian songs. [ castles and greater palaces, but I do l 39 canons. 365 English and Scotch songs not think there is any one more curi- ously wrought than the human ear. The heaven of heavens cannot con- tain him, and yet he says he finds room to dwell in a contrite heart..and I think, in. aChristian ear. We have been looklng for the infinite-- the infinitesimal. God walking the corridor of the. ear, God`.-sitting in `the gallery of the human ear. God speaking galong the aulditory nerve of the ear. God dwelling in the ear to hear that which comes from the outside, and so . near the brainand the soul he can hear `strain of hearing his own oratorio of` - with accompaniment and 1,536 pages Of libretti. will that `to capture the gate of the body that swings in from the liymllanum to the "snail shell" lY}D`:' on the beach of the ocean of the un- `mortal soul. To conquer the ear Handel struggled on from the time when his father would ' not let him go to school lest: he learn 3 the gamut, and become a musician, and l i {"m- the time when he '35 i1'9d "1 lall that transpires there. The Lord of t , U19 OTB?!-I1 10 just C0 D133 fterpthe L,,ll0SlS encamping under the curtalns `audience had left to the time Whell he l of u1eml)ra.ne. Palace of the Almighty left to all nations his 1lnD!1'illl8l9d 0` in the human ear. 'l`he rider on the - torios of . Esther, " Deborah." Sam- ; wmtg horse of the Apocalypse thrust- 1 ,B J ephthah." " Judas Mi1C0l`.3e' ing his foot into the loop of bone which _ l5:" " 1817181 in EKYPV 31111 the "M'~`5' the physiologist has been pleased to '9l*1~l1-" the 80111 Of the "SW9-t German -= call the stirrup of the ear. t y 0mD05er, Still weaving in The d`*F-My Are you ready now for the question I march`~of our great obsequies and ~tr1- ; of my text; Have you the endurance llmplling in the rapturesv of every Ea3- 5 to bear its overwlhlalming suggestive- ter morn. M "l lness? Will you) take hold of some pill- To conquer the ear and iake thisiare and balanceyoarself under the gate of "the immortal soul Sehul)e_rt ;semmmnipotent stroke? He that composed his great Serenade. writ.- f planted` the"ear, shall he not hear 3 ing the sta,ves.of the music ogwthe bill ;Shall the God\who gives us the appara- of fare in a mgmumnt, and ant on !' tus with which; we hear the sounds of_ } until he could--1ggyg-gg a; legacy. to the the world himself not be able to Catch God in 3 world over a. thousand magnificent f up song and groan and blasphemy and L ear and take this gate of the souls . lcastle Mozart ntrna-irlmi nn through `liar rmrl '|`nvnhnn ;.m..n+.,: as... nnnnnvn- let us look for him in` : . o `4 l he has not himself? Drs. Wild and Gm- Eauiul ue !l0[- I168: F" _ Q Bet.ter;_take that organ away from zlall sin. Better pwt it under the best ;soutnd. Better take it away from all gossip, from all slzunder, from all in- .`nuendo. from all bad influence of evil associatioml Better put it `to school, ,` to -church._ to . philharmonic. . Better gpu-_t that ear under the blessed touch- lolf Christian hymnologyz. Better con- secrete it for time alnd eternity to him 5 who plzunted the ear. Rousseau, the in- l. _ fidel fell asleep amid his skeptical moan- uscripts lying all around the room, and ,in hisdream he entered heaven and i.heardul.he song of the worshipers. and I ;It was so sweet he asked an angel . V what it mealnt. "Phe angel said. "This is the paradise of "God." and the songl_ 1 Y 0u- hear is t.h'a-authen1 of the redeem- ` ed. _' Utndenanotlher roll of the cel- ` estial music. Rousseau wakerned and got V` my in the. midnighzt and, as well as he 1 icould, wrote` down the strains of the muster that he had heard in the wond- ` verful tune called "The Songs-of the 1 `Redeemed_" God G1-ant that it may not be-to you and to me an infidel dream but a glorious reality. , When; : we` `come to the night of death and mag` iliedown `to 01111` last sleep. may our l ears really be wakened l)Y`tl.`lI8 can- `i ticles of the heavenly temple, and the songs and tlhe anthems and the carols I tlhe doxologies that sI1 ii1l climb -the musical ladder of t11at,hea.venly 5 gamut. r V ( t ,4 `i . .:.. l $ls,ooo,ood.. , l - wulu [LU 121118 ua.y is ,ep1l'.a[Jnl8S$. la For the ear everything mellifluous. ls - from the birth hour when ourearth `.1 was wrapped in swaddiing clothes of ii `Night and serenaded by other woi-1dS."',` > from` thetime whenwiubal thrummed ii the first harp and pressed at key of the '1 first organ down to themueic of this `I Sabbath day. Yea; for the ear the com- [i wing overtures of heaven, for whatever. }< rotherpartof the body may `be leit in II thdjdust. the ear. we know, is to come ll to celestial life; otherwise, Why the :5 "harpers harping with their harps 7 'i FIor" the ear carol of 13.131: and whistle 1 '05 quail and chirp of cricket and: dash :1 of cascade and roar `of tides oceanic I: and doxology of worshiptul assembly "a and minstrelsy. cherubic, semp`iiic,Tn.d ,1] archangelio. For the ear all Pandean `1 pipes, all flutes, all clarinets, all haut- boys, all_bassoons, all bells, and all 51 organs-Luzerne and Westminster ab-_ vbew a.ndFreiburg and Berlin and"zill the organ pipes set across Christendom; the grea.t`Giai1t s Causeway for the monarchs ofmusic to pass over. For ,the,en.r,all chim'es,.a1l ticklings of'chro nometers. all anthems, all dirgesyall glees. " all choruses, all lullzibys, `- hbnoredear. grooved with divine sculp- ture and poised with` divine `graceful- ness and upholsteredwith curtains of divine embroidery` and corridored by divine carpentry and pillared with--di`-~- vine architecture and chiseled in bone . of-. divine`. ma.som=y end; eonquered%-~-by~ processions of divine`_nmrsha1'ing. The ear! A perpetualpointrof interroga- ' .'.tion; asking,:`How.? A perptual'point of apostrophe appealing to God. None but God could work it; None but God nrmlrl Irann H 'Nnn'{ kid` Cm-I mful nu- cIna.n ear! ' ` IJ'm.. `...............:.`...1..` ..--......1 u... `I... uu_u.xu xt:ep..1I;. none but uou cQuu1un- 1 e1'taac{-it:--V N"one'btit~God~ 1:o1'1ld eX'- ' Plain it`. `Oh ,--the woqde1'.'s of the _h\1- ` Hub uou B01110. W0l'K IL` `.N0!10 Dill; U00: co_uld keep..lt'. Non but God could un- l'1%tu-nH--H`:--- N`nnm-}\\i$--(lnd~ 1-nI`IIr]--av. E1_`__o1'n. uni . `W1 sum was ems gate or we souls castle Mozart struggled on through; ,P0Verty until he came to apauper's; igmve, and one chilly, wet afternoon; the body of him who gave to the world 1 the Requiem ' ; nd the -.',.'G"Minor 5 Symphony w crunched -in,-on' the I tom of two--other paupers into agmve whxoh to this day is opitaphless. the Mr evarvthinnr malliflunus. ` ....... ` l`o . gig G0` lwm and ea when was in i an `the loft just play after the 41303 Wot , ora- Deb0rQh'xv.;s9X` f wlll Jephthnh," ? u_B. "Israel and `~ 'B1ah. `great Germancan c0mposer_ A mu'ch`~ofVou1' ~tri- : 1 mlling in 3 [neg] , down in death one whom many consid- ered the greatest `musical composer or the century, Struggling on up from 6 years; of age. when home left fath- werlem Wagner 1-one through the oblo- . lquy of the world. and otttimea all: no- ytions seemingly againnt him. until he {gained the favor of I king and won ` 1 th'e enthusiasm at the onera houses of - l Europe and America. Struggling all the 9W8] an to 70 years attest; to conquer _ j the world : ear. In that some attempt _ g to master the human ear. and gain an,- pmmzioy overthis gate of the immor- ' tel soul. great battles were fought: by . Mozart. Gluck and Weber, and by Bee- thoven. and Meyerbeer, by Rossini and 3*)! all the roll of German and Italian! and French composers. some of them in lithe battle leaving their blood 0 thei _ , r. - p -`About 15 years ago;.in Venice. Mil l i1iy'no't`J and the musical soores. (Jreut E t R battles fought for the ear--tought with `baton, with organ pipe, xypl_:_h trumpet. 3 5 with oornet-a-piston, with all ivory and ; ` brazen and silver and-golden weapons 1 `lot the orchestra; royal" theater and ,Cu_thedral and academy of music the lforesses for the contest for the ear glingland and Egypt fought for the su- "l31`8macy of the Suez canal, and the bvlirtzius and the Persians fought for {the defile at 'l`hormopylae. but the {musicians of all ages have fought for . If the mastery of the auditory canal and `the defile of the immortal soul and while Thermopylae of struggling cad- iencee. . ; .... u. S I Fonthe conquests or the ear Haydn 9 rtrllggled on up from the gun-et where ` ihe had neither fire nor food. on and I .on until under the too great nervous] of the "Creation" w:1scnr.- ried out to pieces masses. the shell lying _on of of im- lmortul rn-,,, .. '._ .. . .,u um. apiiimx world; we lacing um ihnhmnk :1: CM: and the bx-Mara. but urmgo. wnnpermg gauery or we ` The human voioe is God : eu- logy the ear. Thu; mine capable of prodmilng 17.592.186.044,-L15 aounds.and all tint variety mule. not Iofthe re- galament of bent or bird. but for the human ear. \A}\i\n IK :1;-run gun in Vnninn Inn nun spmcuau worm; in mung we jzbnhnenti st this and the bridge. but than (no nf an nnliffn mvnfnrv hidimr .IQnlHEl1 II [DE Ell} IE Dflll. Dub the fog of an unliftod mystery hiding the abutment ontho othorend the bridge. whhperins aauery of the non]. "Fin hnmnn vnina is God : THE` BARBIE ExAil1NE'n{ THURSDAY, APRIL 23; 1898. 41!`) uus nut nimsein urs. w mi and uru.- , ;her and Toynbee invented the uocoum- 1` Water and other instruments by whicyh ;to measure and_ examine the car, and v 1110 these inst:ru:ments know more than : .th'e doctors who made them? Hef ltihet planted the ear,` shall he not; hear?" Jupiter` of Crede was e1ways_ `represented in statuary and painting- ;e.s ivithnmt-~ea.rrsuggesting` the idea; ihhet he did not want to bebothered` Iwithi thetaffai-rs of the world. Burt our has ears. "His1eo.~rs are open to; ftneirs cry." The Bib1e~intimates' that `two wo'rkmen~ on Satanrday night 1105 not get their wages. ,Their'_oompIaint;' jinsfantly strikes the emr of. God. "The 3 `cry of these the.t'=reaped.hath enteredi [the ears of the Lm-d of Sa.bbath."Didi ;God `hear that pom` girl last night as ; threw hexrself on the prison bmnk I `ma t'he'city' dungeon and cried in the, midnight. 'f'God have mercy 2" Do yowi "I'80.HV t'hi i]k'Go'd nmI:M`hc>.mr`hAr? "Van. I Emf him ' ejufaiz 3? 7; . Innn -.'|- ;uuumg'mr.. Tuoa IIEWG V" no yow ;-really _t'hii1k'Go`d cou:1d`hea.r`her? `Yes, ,just as easily as when 15 yea.rs ago; ' She was sick with scarlt fever, andi fher mothea` heard` Iir when ait mid- `n.ig'h:t she asked. for a. drink of water. ! "H!et that planrted t;he_ ea)`, shall he got hear `P A V ..3:ine_fpx`wo I; who auh-`:n`this.way.-` `It ~ - dogs any wn .th'e necessity fo_rth&I try-_ ~i prdealu, and mpybe used in tint; ac? 0 ='th home. It: am diKcctlg on? _e del - ante on'm1s' cancemed. `and mnluin um... 1 QPQBMI, and my DC Md In U1! If!!- 4th acb ' ante organs` concemed, and malls : them` ntron migotoup $114 h'e',I1thy. It baniaha --ma bm-t`th taut -V-toa df .126... .;::.. V `1`ea,s.' `It. _ qformswu;k,`neIv` ua..pctn ant ; iuvalids to happy win: 531?, `mothers. Thaimnda `of ymemheve teotived-,, uvqr their.dwn? isnntnres,-t?-this fact. The Fgvotitu; ?resgr4 tionf; thy, bg 'fr'cm~anyIWd'i ne `cin diler. taxman- I the-delicate` f7ind1mpdtTt ofan that bear tlf"burd'ena of nmtermty. ' .'l`kmm:mrln of-"mnmm`:' mm`... in f`|:u .......' .01 nmtermty. -ThoI1sanda_qf;'Wom;:n' suffer iii this way and do not recognize-.the cause, or if they. `do understand tlgeir condition, neglect it rather than aubmat to the obnoxious :xmn~ ixiatioxis and local treatment insisted uyon I-_by, the`m-t:Eer:e_ physfcinn. ' Dr.-` I -ieite s nmnderhnl |11I>(.. cumu sou mum or nun, tnrougn me microscope of an aurlzit. No king is set; iafied with only one` residence, and in} ' France it has been St.Cloud and Ver-` ; sailles and the Tuileries, and in Great 5 Britain it has been Windsor and Bel-g moral and Osborne. A. ruler does not: prefer the larger. of: lurgeri cnstles~a.n do; vuri-1 ear`! con-` finds,` : . . t In lmxm lmmn 1nny~I...- 1-,. FA, .. land into the orilieeo! the right ear of the patient and agitated the tym- Mnnm. and startled the bonelete and ivith a. voice that rang clear through into the man : soul cried. Ephth- etha !" and the polyphoid growths gave way, and the inflamed eoricle cooled off, and that man who had not heard 3 sound for many years that night herd the Wash of the waves of Galilee g the limestone shelving. To show w much` Christ thought of the human ear, when the apostle Peter 80$ mad and with one slash of his sword dropped the ear of Malt-hue into- the dust Christ created A new exter- an] ear for Malchue corresponding with the middle ear and the internal ear that no sword could clip away. And to show what Gm! rhinl.-A nf thn uh uu sworu could any And to show what God thinks of the eat We are informed of the (art that in the milennial J une \Vhil`h shall rose- ; nta all thenarthl the enrsbf the deaf wiil be tmstopped. all the va.s\;ui:n: growths gone, all deformation of the listening organ cured, corrected,chang- ed. Every being on earth will have a. hearing apparatus as perfect as God knows how to make it. and all the lens will be ready for that great sym- phony i_n which->a.ll the musical instru- iments of the earth shall play the ac- $co_m1:'animent nations of enrt_.h and 5 empires of he9.ven"mingling their voices together with the deep bass of the sea ;and the alto of the woods. and the ' tenor of the winds, and the` baritone of the thunder, "Hallelujah 1 surging up meeting the "Hallelujah!" descending. I Ch. 3'88 my friends- we have` been : -mweuug we ".u311elll)&n I" descex;u1ng.l yes my friends, have been-i looking for God too far away instead of Iookimr for him close by and ip cu: om: organism! We go up into` the observatory and look through the: telescope and see God In Jupiter and? God ni Saturn and,God in Mars. but wa' could see mom of him, through the micmsmne nf an smrisit Nn lzimr in u:If-x exnaustea; wno has _a, poor and variable a pc- tite and no strengt `or nerve; who suffers from _pgins and aches, drag- ` `:23 down and` urging `sensa- tions; and who I %. ! recognlzes, herself, that shevlms become -' .12: irritable,rmss,' ""' blue and de- CL) smnndmnt In {n _"F11e woman whirfr weak, nervous, hredand Lexlmusted: who has a Iweak, nervous, t:iredand `exhausted; who has a, nnnr nut? um-inhln ann}n_ almost eve_ry., `case auering -`from weakness and (Anna M` m weakness and qlsggae of the d_9lxc utg`_ art am` An: nue and ue- `I s ondent, is in I l as: every. 358 , a -usury us not; aepieceu and could suu `Wu! 911 1"-ref `-`1 ~ * meet an unfdmseen, mun > " Rear Admiral &1mpsq1r's Repoxft. _ = ,.` v .. ' - `A despatoh` from WashLng~t0n'..says:-- 1he_Chuncel1or estuna-fed the expen- 39. Admin} Sampson 51,33 fgportgd to j diture for the coming year at 106,829.~ the Navy Depertmenm that he had `es- : 000. and the revenue at 108.615,000,If9~b1,i8hJ8d `S15 `18 !1'01`U1t8l'l% He proposed ae reciuctiqng in taxation iggavggtfgr a,Sei:onx:[E;ex;f; ts1)r1:itf1:l<::%(u;>`t . a.babemen._es of the income tax upon_1n- lenougm. vessels to blockade the 1.93;; of i oognes up to 700. instezuioi 400; abhe coast line. on aceou`iF 0f ilhis in- ` reduction of oneper cent. in the death formation, the proc1ama.'t:i0n issued did I duties, where a.-[egzwy d1i t$if`iis (a1so-:not;'declare -:1 blockade of all Cuban ' | paid; 9.` reduction of sixpnce. per 3 ports, but merely of those which have pound` tan nufactmfed tobacco ` axxtually been cutoff from*eommun.ica- hand other cl 5 .of jobacco propor-f't,ion wvirbh. the outside. The Admin- ,- Liunzxtelykexeept,,:ciga.1s.i.,He.wal3o '11-ll-5}`lSi2I$iOll~"daI!i pmciaim-~_any-- < ineunced that it was proposed 7120 re- !-piper blockade; - V .. _p . .. e duce the legal percenta'ga'o moisture A despatoh from: Key` West says:- 1 int oiracco in favor of the consumer. A cazblegmmvis `reported to have been- adding that after th8S6*9i1aD89S'the 7received here. saying thalb three gaufns Mt Surplus WQ|11d be*.331.000- ' _ ' "~had. been fired-from Cabahaa, as u eig~ . _ ` ` nel -fm` lling him yoluxgfbeens. and - ~ --.- - - - ta mr were .nsieirr:: ffixT . " SPURGEON S cnuncn BURNER. ` I . . - ~ 3 9 .0u,uamc mu. my binr aumuot M01 ii Petoofn Au1gust`i16thz.-1859.`:It vms = rem}! ior ocpupgdn; in 1_861,an< open; giant vservioesg-"\vhic-h lastpd V for five. -1 commencelt onVMa.mha: 251:1: of ` 7WIliV-'3fes.r:.*A.t thaand 0f_thtf>s.a,msat-_ - 8158:6611 ml Wen >9ntg;jI_l1ut;ad.,,;,B1 J .tmaL.ta.b&Arnw0le` was free t1"om.3,ebt. ' * lhn 146 feet long; 81 oe.M_mroed.~62~teat high. and in; nami- Lborlnm-hnda et3&tin8`_9-99:? .:emoo.. U gdtlition to the mam gwyarc 5 hj9.l1 aout _ Ygronma` :woummommng 1:, -% ohildxi. . worln-roqma, eto.I._ . K. " this mum Tin} m....I' Tabqrnnclc In" Lounon Ile- .-s_tro_yul by 'l'?ln:, '. ` , `A despatqlr from Londo1L'says:.-' ` Spu.1'g~eon's -ta.`bernn_cl was destroyed ..., .. ........w....q u.-:5._v-vu-If!`-VII-.` -mar" W`- "."-'.".*`~ ' rings ind. o.;a`~I#' }

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