Cape May Star and Wave, 11 April 1908 IIIF issue link — Page 2

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IRON ROSE BIBLE CLASS Br WILLIAM B. RIDCWAY. lrMaatcr. i MATE TOOK BIBLES AND K SORE TO FIND THE j " . REEEIENOS. | ADDRESS ALL QOESTIORS TO TEACHER AT 1 COATESYILLE. PA. ^ — ISSSON 2.— APRIL 12.— THE RAIS- : ING OP LAZARUS. —John 11 : 32-44. j Copyright. 1906. bx 8. 8. T. Co. PAfaM ■ SUr aa4 Km salr WHAT IS, TROUBLE? Verse 32: "If thou hadst been here." This chapter gives a little peep into the home of Christ's dearest friends. The disciples were more like professional and business friends. Butj these were heart friends. A prosperous , family. Matt. 26: 6-8. That ointment wsa worth 6400. Owned their own house. Had many friends. Was Laz- . srus that rich young ruler of Mark 10: ' 17-22, as tradition says? Was Simon | the leper. Martha's husband? This | home was Christ's home when in Jeru- , salem. "Why, then, did he allow death and sorrow to enter it?" I don't know. George. la death trouble? When ; 8 Christ dwells in a home nowadays is , - "sorrow barred out? Suppose Christians really and truly believed what they profess to believe when a dear one | goes to glory, would there be sorrow or ' ■ a .rejoicing? Note what Christ said in !■-- John 14: 1-2. Christ always comes1 ! when he is sent for. This time it meant death to him as per verses 8 and ; 16. Note the "if." Mary like all of W OB. If so-and-so bad not done that ; ""^Tbfwould not have done this. Never whine. Never cry over spilled milk. Never ran an excuse factory. Think- ■ ing of what might have been only adds to sorrow. "Wait until tomorrow, , ■ and thy present sorrow will lie down j and rest " Best always yet te come for the Christian. THE UNNECESSARY QUESTION. ' Verse 34: "Where have ye laid him. " Is^it so that this is the only place in | , w Scripture where Christ ever asked for i information? Of course .he knew the ' . place. There are situations in life | where one must say something, and j thfi- Unnecessary question is an easy I ' way out. Did you ever mash' your j , finger with a hammer, and as you | danced with pain your mother said "Johnny, dear, does it hurt?" That is j only her way of expressing her loving j sympathy. Never get funny on the | ■object of unnecessary questions. We i all ask them and we have a divine . example for it. I wish the members 1 1 of this class "would ask questions, r.ec- : 9ssary or unnecessary, makes no < difference, the teacher will take care . of them. 1 have always thought the < human side of our Saviour comes out ! stronger in tiha chapter than anywhere I else. He groans in spirit in Verse 83, ■ asks the unnecessary question in verse i 84 to hide his emotion, and then bursts 1 into tears in verse 35. And isn't this : the usual order of our sympathizing i -human nature? Boys, the point IJam i trying to make with you is that Christ ■■ was human Just like you— a man, every ; inch of Rim, a* well as God. I want ' you to love him and feel hU^aameaa. "Jesus, of Nazareth, a man." Acta 1:2*. THE HAND UPON THE SHOULD EE i

J! Verse 35: "Jesus wept." ' Is th^re a Sunday school'boy or girl who can not answer the question that I hundreds of teachers will ask today. -J Yes, it is not only the shortest verse I in the Bible, but it is one of the three j times where Jesus is said to have wept. I Find the .other two and* compare. I (Luke 19: 4: Heb. 5: 7). Jesus | answers Mary's tears with his own. ' Sign of genuine sympathy. Unless j you feel the same way your sympathy - is ail "hot air," as you boys say— and this is one of the cases when slang . e::actly fits, for what is so desert-like as tearless sympathy. There is no virtue in suppressing emotions. Jesus j did not The cold and reserved man | may have lots of dignity, but he has ' few friends. Single out such a man you > may know snd try to' imagine anyone giving him a friendly slap on the • shoulder with a hearty "hello, old fel- ■ low, how are you !" That sort don't i shed tears nor attract men. Obey the • book. Give a tear if you1 can't' give ' anything else (Rom. 12: 16). It has ■ »been my privilege for a number of 1 1 years t"> look after a large number of , ' I people through the good times and bad 1 times, of a manufacturing town. I can j deliberately write down the fact here i : that in many cases where I had to help, that it was smypathy that was i needed— the tear kind— more than ma1 terial things. The baud upon the j 1 boulder puts iron in the blood. Read I Riley's little poem. I consider it the 1 best thing he has writteu : "When a man ain't got a cent and he's feetin' kind of blue 1 An' the clouds hang dark and heavy i and won't let the sunshine through, ! It's a great thing, oh. my brethren. 'for | a feller just to lay hand upon your shoulder m a friendly sort of way. It makes a chap feel curious, it makes the tear drops start . : An' you feel a sort of flutter in the | region of your heart, . You can't look up into his eyes, you j* I don't know what to say. When a hand is on your shoulder in a j friendly sort of way. | Oh, the world's a curious compound. | with its honey and it gall, I With its care and oitter crosses, but : , a good world afte>- ail, ! An' a good God must have made it. 1 1 I leastways that's what I say, j When a hand is on my shoulder in a j j friendly sort of way. I By permission Bobbs, Merrill & Co. SINCERITY. I VerseS 7: "Some of them said." There they are- Same old critics. Always have them with us. Always! remember it tajces less brains to find j fault than to do anything else on earth. Thought Christ was in a hole. Judged him by themselves. Supposed Christ's tears as unreal as their own. radish tears I call them. You ! find them nowadays at many funerals, where people go because the funeral : is an event— and in some parts of the land has a big dinner attachment. If i can't truly mourn, don't go. The : don't care heart behind a long face is in its true » nse. Cultivate { a sympathizing heart The world needs actual kindness and not fine : words and long faces. Ool. 3: 12; 2 Dot 1 : 7 Bom. lfi 10. I A PARTNERSHIP. Veraoo 39, 48: "Take ye away the : stone. . . .Lauras, come forth." I

thing we can all do. We have a little muscle if not other gifts. We can plant the seed if we can't make it rain. We can speak the good word if we can't make it tell. If we do as we are commanded Christ will do the rest But why not say to the . stone "roll away" God always wants men in partnership with birr, whenever possible. (2 Cor. 6:1). God is the greatest busy body in the universe. Wants to - be in everything, in every nhn, in every gatheringNin every enterprise, in every government, in every home, in every life. Yes. George, io every game and at every party. (Heb. 2 : 10) It iant* the fashion to print It so, but the best and enduring firms are God & Jones grocerk; God & Brown, "bankers. The God -Johnson Mfg. Co., pure drags and spices ! IS DYING EASY. Verse 44: "He came forth." And we have always wondered how he felt. We can all know some day. (1 These. 4: 16). Perhaps the coming back was worse than the going. I know a man who was buried ^under a fal1 of earth. He was dug oat and resuscitated after much labor. Said be to me: "All I know about it is I was busy digging and then I found myself lying on the grass with a crowd of men standing around me. I expect my folks would have said 'what a terrible death, buried alive !' But nothing could be easier or nicer. I hope when God calls me for good I may have as good a going." And I wonder if we are not all too much afraid of death. Christ called it sleep 6ee -Uth verse. 1 What Paul says, 2 Cor. 5 : 8, and who would want to come back? i FISHING CREEK. What did Sarah do when Johnnie; came home without daughter? 'Miss Emma McPherson was an over! Sunday- visitor wiJJi her mother. Miss j McPherson has been spending the win- j 1 ' ter with her aupt at Holly Beach. j ' ^ Mrs. Annitf Wooisorr .visited her sis- j ter, Mrs. Sarah ^Foster, at Cape May, ' Monday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. George McNeill, of I ' Erma. were Sunday guests with Mr. J ' and Mrs. Enoch Miller. Miss Rena Miller spent Friday with ! | her friend. Miss Florence Snyder" at I ' Cold Spring. ' J [ For the first time in three weeks . services were held in the church Sun- j ' day, and school was open Monday after 1 , three weeks vacation, caused by the j 1 epidemic of measles. 1 Sarah Woolson was'presented with a | 1 fine organ last week.' [ Rev. and Mrs. B. F. Sjieppard, j ! took tea with Mr. and Mrs. John Bate ' ' Sunday evening. I | Miss Ruth McPherson entertained * j friends from Holly Beach Saturday. p Quick climatic changes try strong i ; constitutions and cause, among other . ■ evils, nasal catarrh, a troublesome and I offensive disease. Sneezing and snuftl- i i ing, coughing and difficult breathing, j , and the drip, drip of the foul discharge into the throat— all are ended by Ely's ' Cream Balm. This honest remedy 1 i contains no cocaine, mercury, nor other . harmful ingredient. The worst cases , , yield to treatment in a short time. All ' druggists, 50c,Tor mailed by Ely Bros., ' ' I 56 Warren street. New York Notice! ■j . i The Way To Save Money J Dont miss it. A special sale for I i 21 DAY5 | I ' Goods will be sold at lowest j icost. Try once and you will 1 :i come again. j ( I Prices same on wagon. At > j I LAVENTHAL'S , 1 '319 WASHINGTON STREET, -T J CAPE flAY. ; Rest for 1 ; Tired Eyes 1 M glasses accurately V F hued, which necessary \ YKl kus&sdmkl I

* tag her father, 5Cr. Fwmoe, of Phila- ; delphia. this week. I Peach and plum trees are in bloom. Mrs. Minnie Hobeen, of Boston, A visiting at Alfred Creese's. She is a | niece of Mrs. Lydia Hewitt. , Joseph Camp has raised a large flag . pole and will let Old Glory {waveJrigb. t Douglass Robinson, of Sooth DdSnis. , spent Sunday with Alfred Crease. , Richard Hoy, of Bias Creek, was here on Monday delivering fruit trees. Rollin Stiles and family spent 8unr day with Cant House relatives. , Mr. and Mrs. George Stiles, of Court t House, passed through here on Monday. . Mrs. Mary Holm*. who has -spebt the winter with her daughter, Mr*. , Enoch Hand, has returned to her home here. Mrs. Lizzie Foster, who has been with her daughter at Goehen several , weeks, came borne on Monday. Her daughter accompanied her. j Steward Lowe entertained company" . on Sunday. v ( Ed. Holltngsead who has been sev-" . enth man in the life saving service^ is I now at home. . S. C. Norbury, mate of Rob Roy, is [ spending several days st home I while the vessel is in Philadelphia. Mrs. Mattic Hand, of Cape May. ' spent part of the week with her , father. Joseph Brown. | Henry Bennett and Rollin Stilee have 1 pet up a pound on the shore of the Learning farm at Fishing Creek. Mrs. Clarence Selover and son Roy, spent last week with Philadelphia j friends. Roland Smith,, of Philadelphia, is spending a few weeks with his Grandma Selover. The Ladies Aid Society, of the I Methodist church held its regular ' . meeting at the home of Mrs. Francis . j Cresse on Wednesday. I Mr*. Clara Wall, of Camden, is | spending this week with Mrs. I James Swain: • Mrs. Carrie Scheltze, of Dias Creek, , J was here Friday. J House cleaning is claiming the at- . tention of our housekeepers. George Mixner has had a cement walk put down at his home. I Rev. Elijah Tozer, the new pastor j of the Methodist flock, was making I pastoral calls at Rio Grande this week, j James Swain made a business trip to Philadelphia on Tuesday. ,[ Mrs. Alice Ludlam, of Wilmington, j is spending this week with ber father and brothers. Mrs. Laura Howell, of Dias Creek, I was here on Tuesday afternoon, j Ed Compton and family spent Sunday at Dias Creek. 4 j Mrs. Maggie Hickman and Miss MilHie Robinson rode their wheels to Holly Beach on Tuesday to visit their sister, Mrs. Julia Parsons. Joseph Camp and Nathaniel Newton each lost a work horse. Mr. 'and Mis. Lehman Richmond, who haue been spending several weeks in Bridgeton and Dividing Creek, returned home Monday and he is now engaged in putting up his pound. Charles H. Loper, Captain Nathan Doughty and Edward Fisher have each Had the side walks put in good shape fronting their property. Are Vou Venous. Nervousness ar.d sleeplessness are usually due lo the fact uiat the nerves are not fed on properly nourishing Flood: they are starved nerves. Dr. i'ierce's Golden Medical Discovery makes pure, rich blood, and thereby the nerves are properly nourished and all the organs of the body are run as smoothly as machinery which runs in oil. If! this way you feel clean, strong and strenuous— you are toned up and invigorated, and you are good for a whole lot of physicaljor mental work. Best of all. the strength and increase • vitality and health are lasting. ;;The trouble with most tonics and medicine which have a large booming sale for a short time, is that they are largely composed of alcohol holding the drugs in solution. This alcohol shrinks up the red blood corpuscles, and in the long run greatly 'injures the system. One may feel stimulated and better for the time being, yet in the end weakened and with vitality decreased. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery contains no .alcohol. Every bottle of it hears upon its wrapper the Badge of j Honesty, in a full list of its several [ ingredients. For the druggist to offer I you something be claims is "just as | good" is to insult your intelligence. PARKER'S HA 1 1 R BALSAM^ 0. ft MERCHANT, JR. I COMMISSION BROKER STOCKS HID BOHDS 06 WASHINGTON ST., CAPE MAY, N. J. BELL PHONE 86 KEYSTONE 88D ;• 2 r

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