“Hll nBT AUtY." Sucday r.i*coBr»- » y ih< Rev. S^'CTilr
tl<Mcr. ^
•eliien ■ C»silor«|t| Mf»o** Is Those Who Aft Want at ia the Btliel la Retard to
a Ulc tverlaitint.
! TK SABBATH SCiluOI.
oul, and death * -
. r.ivordmtrto tbi^n- Inicrcaflonal Lessen Ccnrccc'.s For
iraraa o[ xi hiW’ |
Uti i» alway.
s.e m> with au infinite panorama of ins «una, ei-olving plaiwta and a.tram
v.iiinlcm, but without the »el(-con«<-iou» 1 S a k|; ( soul life i< nothing, a wries 01 .epuk-hera, I , earth., aabea, duat. Tbeit: nothing ip I If)
■
great man. it ia aaid, will survive in the
die -iiall he live againT" Mr. Heater aaid: ie* bclore Christ, and men like .lob are asking it centunea after Christ. It ia invrsieu with perpetual youth and the world TV-te ilist “K^'" iki. ~i f s,*. J-r* 1 ! grief. I’nder similar eircuaataneea could you^would^y ou, ( w cease of her husband. She huda great comaentonee that bears on the subject of meeting again in the world to come. Her heart is constantly tinging: iJS.'.i :v« in such a position could or would want to give any different answer! The thoughts of men on the subject repeated. reiterated, reaffirmed throu»n thou- ‘ sand, of years of human history, form an accumulation of evidence from which it ia SS? £ •rouses deepest feeling by the very earn ness of its utterance. The anawer of Ji
a Sunday last in all the churchc.. echoes of Easter have not yet died
ne into all the world
sssi .1
realm of the spiritual world and they increase rather then diminish. They grow terfi cfiif ^ ns “fi chll.T rm 'ir."'.*!! '"rii.... ars if firiSYiis sas Ax? sasras*A us it corrcspondi"*’-'
he ends of the earth from the rock-hew
left behind anyway, and those of ui who K.7 js-'sys ATSf profoundeat thinker alike want it to be so. Even when some have lost hope they desire it fondlv as ever. Even when a man has
s .tarjoss
is^iSsvisrsffi i’ “rb“; ns E , f» o 7s.'!au‘5rfias of science. There would be no fins if there were no earth to walk on. Now here is another eound and legitimaU conclustonwhat God promises He performs. His char-sarr-S.rterU'Ss.aisS be a cruel deception. To make this promise and not carry it ont would be a breach of trust as base aa the squandering on eelother care. He ia there warder of those
SWiirt,!
ise he h_
tJJ£ £K
the rtory of two members of the U. fl. ben- ", wbi-triSbrife would meet «nd find relaxation in conversing on subjecU other than shop. Their fa—ite topic was the immortality of the 1. but they could never find any satis-
w.™ WszXi-
7.S3 mra
:uS°\ l s°tIr£
. they could m eason for belii
sr sf.“',s 1 v7i: 0 5«nv, ^. crowded reception in the White House.
sf sifs
^r-A-’TS ,Si isffAss; looked one another in the^rye ir. sileace EiSS?’AS3,“^*S "SS'dSTu
g^srs^ll liZ.Z2tt£»{£J^£7J£j.X izs, .^.rxifrs Orcus of the Homan, were abodes of shades, shadows, ghosU-end sueb a future
i,
provemeat upon this one. The analogies in fe ass 1 X’s.’sj nfsfirs in brighter colors and able to spurn the earth on which it formerly crawled and fly away and then he begins to carve butterte s stetffflss.tbfr
ssnirAsttssrd
'■ ■ f, Anh“hSU!i‘!EL'Sas
a strengthen man's conviction that
the universe at w
hope that
iT.'Sf’J
e wreck of the
srkSSuTt:
t this answer is not nnani-
Modern skepticism and speculative philosophy have propoaed certain anbstitutea for the faith once delivered. Eveu though the comforting doctrine of Christianity be rejected men recoil from the ■peeler of eternal oblivion. They invent new theories and call them by tbe old ■weet name of immortality, which means continuation without break of tbe individual life. One substitute propoaed ia abaorption into God, loas of consciousness of difference between self and another and ' between self and God—a melting of human being into Divine Being, juat as sugar melts and ia lost in the coffee it sweetena. juat as the river flowing to tbe sas is swal-
lowed up in tbe great deep. Now the loas of individuality, f
identity, selfhood, would tie a loas mould be the loss of everything of impor-. lance. If 1 do not know that 1 exist this is practical annihilation, and this does not at all meet or aatisfy tbe longing of my nature. This is • tbeUtic substitute. Now let me mention some atheistic substitutes, substitutes that leave out God altogether. One of these- proposes the idea of absorption into the universe. The particles
r of which wa are rompowd will and air and aea and aky,
May 3.
tcbPan! Ar.-e»:c<\u.; »x'.. 3V39 -G*He* ;»Vd Pel. Ir. A -M <4’jr, Vcrscr,30ji —Sludy V*rs:-, 7-3* Comu.-o -
ary oa the Ucy'a Lesson.
Eavr written no be.uitiful books, who have performed no heroic deeds who have lelt BsS?Sf pSssY-ri, t axia
KlVySJrL"
sm-E. ■izjLxsr, are of all men most miserable. Bet tbe
* r;* h“™ css t s J .
lf,vi
iusc ne is his own. Indeed, this very ict is the strongest sort of reason that r will do just the reverse. We all recog-
sr p, <S7u- u ^
S,-^3TkAWS!lEilS,Ss2 To one five, to another two, to another
EKr'K
stAStsmisr* “
•craal applicati fs—stones, sUc
ir ir
* not mere objects—stones,
shells—but animste, intelligent being . —— whom God breathes and builds something
•-ith Him--'”-—*
a
ssrsaHS
have fully realixcd what the life He. ha* zrtfLZVsxX5?sviz J ffi chenah an ideal of perfection and yet w* never attain it on earth. - We are but beginning to understand -what a grand and noble thin* life may be when we have to
•n and die. We J
lie down and die. We are juat on the point of reaching the rewards for which we have waited and toiled when the end comes, and if we are ever to enjoy them it must be in another world. Now is God in all this and all the while deceiving us* When we desire the bread of everlasting life will He give ut the stone of everlasting death? After we have prayed to Him, treated in Him, lifted up our hearts to Him, tried HU works to do. loved Him and lopged tr be with Him during our residsuca on eartl srfll K *
c . . He U
M \H oo there God If so on tbe throne of the uni-
is nested not a losing father but a jeenng fiend taunting us for our helplessneat and delighting in our miserv. Righteousness. eternal righteousness is against any such supposition. It ia not possible that the devil U supreme. It is not possi ble that man is more kihd. more humane and conaiderate and sympatbetie than tbe God who made him. It U not poaaible that He who made conscience has no conscience. If anythingstands the teat of reason thU does—that He who implanted the aense ol justice within ua moat Himself be juat. Amid all the darkness the sorrows, the riddles of existence, let us not de spend or despair, let ua look confidently for the greatest gift, the gift God owe* it
Himself to beatow—eternal life. "In all the maddening maxe of things
Therefore. Ha will naver leave or forsake us, either in thU Ufa or the worM to com*. Let us bold feat to thU tmth-God is good-and when the end cometb all will be wall with the soul. When stress U applied internally to eggs they give way at a pnaanra of thirty-two to sixty-five pounds per square inch.
MTE-ssJsfsr M'stSs.s :vrl': isfckrsffwrs temple, and then to stand with them while Sr kU'-cT.)- astsT^^iS ss.'SAiSi?. - ; the same time ran the risk of almost certsin misrrnrrsentatioh on the other aide. Th* fi.cl tliat uncxnc'tcd trouble grew out of it does not brand bis actions es unwise •ir wrong, for the Jew« would have found “ wArt2£ ! \’; S’ ‘“.VidT'iVSTAS'ri.*?!, is JS.'SKM? K did not do it to avoid nersecutiou, or even Heath—he was rea ir to die in Jerusalem. He did not take this course to gain favor with the chueeh, or for any selfish purpose. into a deeper Christian life. Head 1 Cor. temple, in or near the room set apart for the ceremonies of n Nazaritc's vow. Certain Jew* who had been Paul’s opponents at Epbescus were watching him. They K 5S the court of the women with sti
Telepbou Offlc# He t0 Office" 1 ' ‘Suto* P
THE
INEW YORK WORLD
THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION.
' Read Wherever the English Ijin-
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Jrofristonal «ird|.
j-^r. Walter a leamiho,
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Uor. Ocean and Hughes Street,
(2d floor.)
Cape Mat, N. J.
rkR- WESLEY KODGERS WALES, ; been steadily growing ever aincc.
| Is tbe test of all things, and has act Its
~tt r A I neat of approval on tbe Tbrlooa-Week
World, which la widely circulated In
United states Pharmacy, ] cvcrr Btatejand Territory of the Union,
... I and wberovur there arc people who cau
WAamjcoroK and Decatur Streets, I read our mother tongue
cp. c. k. x
(one 08 and 84. : if possible, more extensive than over.
All eveots of importauoe, no matter whergjbey happen, anAeported accuratn-
I The
| brilliant au ; been ateadi
•Week World" wa* i i the beginning And ha
3 and 84.
■, 7 to B a.i
.m n 8 to 4, and 7
vheraAber happen, ai
Residence. Wales’ United | lyAO^roroplly.
IT BlUJ
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Tbe anbaorlber, Mr. gets three 1
t dollar a week and
brop papers every week
e news and general reading than moat it dalliea can furnish at five or six
J AMES MEORAT, M. D. ^
p, “ T : “7tsa7i w .k wo,id „ (Opposite Congress Hall.) | ly fair Id Ite political newa. Partisan
«.r c m , h.j. |
Office Houre:— alike can obuln In in page* truthful ao8 to B a. a. coante of all the great political cara-
8 to 4 p. m. paigoa. x
7 to 8 p. m. . . In addition to all tbe news, the Thrice a-Week World furnishes the beat serial
LEWIS T. STEVENS, “ Tbrloe-a-Week V,
COUNSELLOR AT LAW,
609 Washington St.. Cane Mat. N. J.
Master and Solicitor in Chancery.
^Notary Public.
OomnilasloDer for Pannaylvanla. , Surety Bond* secured for contractor*, ,officials and fidelity purpose*.
irice-a-Week World’* regulat
anbacrlptlon price is only 81.00 per yeat and this pay* for 168 papers. Wc offer this unequaled newsper and Cape Mat
IIkrald together one year for $1.70.
Tbe regnlar anbaorlpDou price of the
two papere la $2.00.
CONTRACTORS and BUILDERS.. YORK BROS. Charuuj Yokic. Stjtes York. P. O. Box 661, gape May, X. J. CIRCULATING LIBRARY NOVELS and MAGAZINES. Fine stationery and blank books, toys, shell goods, games, toy boat* M. L. WARRINGTON, 514 Washington Street BOARDING By tbe day or week. Furnished rooms to rent. 830 Washington Street. Mrs. A. M. Richardson. CHEW S COTTAGE ~~ Alexandria Avenue. Cap* May Point. Open for the Season June 1st BOARDING—by tbe day. week or scasoaLODGING Convenient to Beach. Steamboat Landing’, and Trolley Care Mas. ALICE CHEW
JOB PRINTING That brings results Is the kind done at THE HERALD OFFICB
fflmm 30. ^-Waa moved." ThJt°i GroUT?was handled roughly. “Out of the temple." Oat of the women’s court into the court of
the f
■^y H. TflbMPSON, Furnishing Undertaker PRACTICAL EMBAtJHER Cape May, N. <1.
turbanre arise. 31. "SecWng to kiff him." xThire was | Roman officer-lime to rescue him. “Tid-, s SS’.hTh was situated at the northwest corner ol the temple area. He waa nearly equivalent to our colonel, and commanded 1000 men. Hia name was Claudiu* Lymat, aa wc learn fror, chap. „ alaTi ^-. A »pii , r.3s,7% d s 1
'S%
UANDSOMK IIOME . . . PROPfRTT FOR SJILE. Property on South nde of York *venne, West Cape May. Lot 66 feet deep •nd 50 feet front Will be sold at a bargain. Lewis T. Stevens, 609 Washington street, Cape May, N. J., IlfniTr TO-UAY fot free CatVm K| I L alo^ue and price Uat ■ ■ III Ik of great dub offers Of MAGAZINES and PERIODICALS. Ledger Monthly, 1.00, Good Housekeeping, 1.00. Vlck’a Magazine 50 cents. Our price for the three, one year, ONE DOLLAR. A. H. TOWNSEND, SUBSCRIPTION NEWS AGENCY, Cape May, N. J. I (s a P e M 8 * 1W* COR. JACK'OH and BROAD BT8 0APE MAY, N.
l&f IF YOU ARE A FARMER ^
AND HAVE ONE CENT^j Buy a postal card and send to The New York Tri£ine Farmer, New York City, for a free
Trikhne
spaelroen Cdpjr.
Tbe Tribune Fanner is a National Illostrated Agricultural Weekly for Farmer*and their fatniius. and stands at the bead of tbe agricultural pres*. The price U 81.00 par year, but If you like it you can secure it with your own favorite local newspaper, the Cape Mat Heu$!iw at * llir<f4ln ’ Both bapera one year only m^ey to the Cape
troops and at once ceased their murderous attack. "Took him.” The verb implies s formal arrest. The chief captain did not come to relieve Paul, but to protect Kim and give him a hcarinc. 'Two chains." , He was probably bound between two soldier*. 34, 35. "Could not know." It was diffi- , cult fer the mob to make out a charge: igaimt the prisoner which would be intelligible to the Roman officer. If a Greek had : entered into the holy place he' was liable to death, hot Paul was known to be a Jew. nor waa there any Greek to be found on the root. "The caatlc.” Tbe liters] meaning :* encampment or barracks. This was not the castle or tower of Antonia, but only that pare of the tower which war inied at permanent quarters for the soldiers. "The stairs.” Which led from the court of the Gentiles up into the tower. “Wav borne." The crowd pressed oa Paul so at to awaken the fear of some outrage or treachery, and to fully protect their prisoner the soldiers carried him. either is their arm* or on their shoulders. 36, 37. "Away with him.” The apostle ■* i-i the same terms used nearly
the atorm. is the acir-po«sc»«cd master c. bis pndtiom He avails himself with undis"of every advantage within
the chief captain, 1 *- attain
turbed skill - reach, first to
’ then the
and then the people, hi order to attain both safety for himtelf and triumph fm the truth. "Speak Greek." It is probable that Greek was the native tongue of tbe laptain. and when he knew that Paul itood that language tbe conversation
TtST^SS
Joupkn,
- - . , - a* one of the many impostor* of that time, woo announced that hr was a Prophc* nrd gathered an army wfih which he undertook to overthrow the Roman Government. A large number were killed and .>:1.era taken prisoners, but the leadei escaped and the whole city was searching for him. Lysias hoped that he was now caught in the person of Paul. "A Jew.” He was also a Romun (chap. 2S: 27. 28). "No mean city." Tareu* was the metropolis of Cilicia, and a city remarkable for its
culture and philosophic studies.
Enormous Trade in Tobacco. The cLormous extant of the tobacco bueiceas In America may be realized from the fact that 7.000.000.000 cigar* and 3,000,000,000 cigarettes and 2*0,C00.000 peunds of manufactured tobacco and 15.000,000 pounda of —"—ted every year. The re the smoking and chewing to-
prod need every year. The retail Talon pf all the amoklng and < barco in It* various form* $300,000,000 accunity. It I business of royal proportlc control I* worth fighting lie's Monthly. t
Under New Management Open all the Year. Renovated throughout. European plan. FLEIUNS J. CARR, Prop
F. W. WOLFF. Baker and Confectioner 110 WaiMnftcn Etrest CAPE MAY, N. J.
dr 5 ’
Is directed toward
my trade with tbe freshest,
. TIV2’ TTlTElkkt.
To get the Best Grade ot everything at the Lowest Cash Prices. We make a specialty in h tndling Michener’s “Star” Hams and other Salt Meats. Call and examine our Stock H. C. PIERSON ft SON 11 S3 Washington Street
THOS. STEWART. E. H. BARTON. STEWART & BARTON ^■kc A,Ck''A l XC A-T.» f^ouse § S16N gAlNTERS
880 Jaolcson St.. Oa^b XA.Y, N. J.
<THE°H18T0BY°0F°CAPE°I»AY°C0UIITY ^ From THE ABORIGINAL TIKES To ' » THE PRESENT DAY Embracing An account of the Aborigine; The Dutch in Delaware Bay; The Settlement of the County; The Whaling; The Growth of the Villages; The Revolution and Patriots; The Establishment of the New Government; The War of i8i>; The Progress of the County; and The Soldiers of the Civil War BY LEWIS TOWNSEND STEVENS480 PAGES. 48 ILLUSTRATIONS. 31 CHAPTERS. 5 APPEDICES
Seat Postpaid on Receipt of $2.00 by LEWIS T. STEVENS, Publisher, 509 Washington Street, CAPE MAY, H. J.
SAMUEL E. EWING ... Ganeral Contractor ... HOUSE MOVING A SPECIALTY. Post Office Address, Caps Uiy Court House, H. J.
E. BENSTEAD,
Choice good* handled only. Strictly pure canned goods etc. Goods delivered to any part of the city.
Car. BROADWAY and MTRTLB AVB.,
wxar CAPE MAY. K. J
J. n. CRA-IGr,
-RRfAlRXii or—
jewing J/ffaohinos (Si @rgans 420 Washington Street. Paint! Paint! Paint!
.UIHY DON'T YOU PAINT? But • VV nothing hut the beat matcriali
itlon to gUaa contracts, and handle exclaalrely tb* paw PLATE GLASS CO. They are of fineat qnallty^ and ay
-*W nothinff but the beat material*. I mix paint**—® J”*’
properly, apply them thoroughly and rapidly, and exercise
o, good taste In tbe select! tm of color*. Gb area tee all work, cheerfully - a
<f*v furnish estimates, and promptly attend to all orders. A completely
line of Paint*. Oil, Stains, Puttie*. Filler*, finishes, Varuiahe*.
aud other Coloring Materials of highest quality. IlAFAYEOlUlE BENNEOliP
103 Jackson Street, Cape May, N. J. PRACTICAL HOUSE. SICN AND DECORATIVE PAINTER. AGENT FOB J. E. PATTON’S SUNPROOF PAINTS.
MVrf also give a pedal attc
duct* of the PITTSBURG . osrer ia price than the common grade*, which >
kind, of plate, white, window rod colored (UM croiied in ^ock. ~W~ a TjT 1 ZPjkJToemm abtx) Fxot^jxsc Tt^otrzjxasrom.
WM. S. StiLA/W, GENERAL CONTRACTOR. 7 Drai.f.r In LOIR, BRICES. SARD. CEMENT AND BUILDERS’ MATERIALS TttLltHHvjNK No :»C. • 888 fSLMlfTA S'! RMKT).

