I II if I " Wl II nlKili ll II MMaJfcfcSHJL Vwrf '-tiiigrftksstt - p igfcij0f0$!t!V&tiWrv-ft'' r MfiT1 ?j5iVnsf.p.,jSf. if" CAPITAL CI1Y COURIER, SATURDAY MAY 23, 1S91. TAHKUNACI.K PULPIT. n. TALMAGG PRCACHCS A SERMON ON THE MCNDINQ OF NETS. Clitlnllilitt Hliuiilil Look In II Tlntt Their NrU for S1111N n Kept In (IhimI Order Hnnin Mint Tlml Will Ho of Value IlltooKI.VN, May IT.-If proof of Dr. Till iimpi's liunu'ii!) popularity had liocn need ti It would bo ninply furnished by I ho imuiiptlluilo with which tlio people have nvnllnl tliennelves of (do Increased accom modation nlloriled h (do now Tnlrcrnnclo. Tliovnst edifice U n ilonncly crowded nt every service in tlii' older nnil smaller Tnliernaclo was. I)r Tnlmiio this morn lnK piilil liU attention to tlio theological dispute which nro ncltittliiK tlio churches, nml us usual Kiwo hontiil practical mlvlco to both pnrtlci. Ill trvt vvn Matthew Iv, 8I1 "Junto tlio mod of '.uhcilcc, nml John liU brother, In UMlilp with nhodce their father, tneudltiH their netii." "I ko n-IInlilniti" crleil .Simon IVtcr to bin comrades, nud tlio moit of tlio apostles bail bands hard from fishing tackle Tlio IImIi cries of tlio world bao nhrnys uttrncted nttentlon. In tlm Third century thocneen of Kio'l't bad for pin monoy four bnndred nnilhovcnly thousand dollars, received from tlm nliorli'M of Uiko Moerl And If the tlmo should over comii whun tbo Innneii slty of tbo world's populutlon could not bo feil by tbo vcKotnhlc and meats of the land, tbo sen linn an amount of animal llfo that would feed all tbo populations of thu earth, and fatten thorn with a food that by Its phosphorus would tnako a Melioration brainy and Intellectual hoyonil nuylliliiK that tbo werld ban ovor IiiiiikIiiimI. My text takes HH ninoiiK tbo flalllean lliher men. Olio day Walter Scott, whllo hint Inn In nu old drawer, found iuuouk some old lUbltiK tacklo tlio manuscript of Ida Immortal book "Waverloy," which bo bad put nwny there an of no worth, and who knows but that today wo may find somo uuknowr wealth of thought whllo looking nt the llkhlng tacklo In tbo text? TUT VOUII NKTS IN (1001) OIIDKIt. It In not ii good day for fishing, and three men aro In tlio boat repairing tlio broken Hiblng nets. If you aro nulling with a hook nml lino and tbo IIhIi will not blto It la n good tlmo to put tlio angler's apparatus into better condition. Perhaps tbo Inst flih you hauled In was ho largo that somo thing snapped. Or If you woro Mailing with a not thero was a mighty flounder Ing of tbo scales, or an exposed null on the side of tho boat which -broko somo of tho threads mid let part or nil of tho cap tives of tho deep CMcapo Into their natural dement. And hardly anything la mora Krovoktng than to nearly laud a score or a undrcd of trophies from tho (loop and when you Aro In tho full gleu of hauling In tho potted treasures through somo Imper fection of the not they splash back into the wave. That U too much of a trial of patience for most fishermen to endure, mid many a man ordinarily correct of speech la such circumstances comes to au intensity of Utterance unjustifiable.. Therefore no good fisherman considers tho tlmo wasted that la spent In mending bis net. Now the Bible again aud again represents Christian workers as fishers' of ineu, and ws are all sweeping through the sat of kvtmaaltjr UM of a net. lnuaed,UMre'MTa i wwich Beta ot aad esmurii laker i busy to hare landed the wkste htusuus not in the kingdom of God losg before this. What la the matter? The Gospel la all right, and It has been a good time for catching souls for thousands of Tears. Why, then, the failures? The trouble is with the net, and most of them need to be mended. I propose to show you what la tho matter with most of the nets and how to mend them. In tho text old Zebedee and his two boys, James and John, were doing a good thing when they sat in the boat mending tbelr nets The trouble with many of our note is that the meshes aro too large. If a fish cab get his gills and half his body through tho network, he tears and rends and works his way out and leaves the place through which he squirmed n tanglo of broken threads. Tho Bible weaves faith and works tight together, tbo law and the Gospel, righteousness aud forgiveness. Some of our nets have meshes so wido that thu slu ner floats lu and out and is not at any mo ment caught for the heavenly landing. In our desire to mnko everything so easy, we relax, wo looseu, wo widen. We let men after they are once in tho Gospel net escape Into tho world and go Into indulgences and swim all around Qallloe, from north side to south side and from east side to west sldo, expecting that they will come back again. We ought to make it easy for them to get into tho kingdom of God, and, as far as wo can,niike it impossible for them to got out Tho poor advice nowadays to many is: "Go and do just as you did before you were captured tor God and heaven. The net was not tnteuded to be any restraint or any hindrance. What you did before you were j Christian, do now. Go to all styles of amusement, read all the styles of books, engage In all the stylos of behavior as before you wore converted." And so through these meshes of permission and laxity they wriggle out through this opening and that opuulug, tearing the net as they go, and soon nil the souls that we expected to land tn heaven before we know it are back in tho deep sea of the world. Oh, when we go n-gosnel fishing let us make it as easy as passible for souls to get in, and as hard as possible to get out UK A CHRISTIAN KVKKT DAY. Is the Dible languuge an unmeaning verbiage when it talks about self denial and keeping the body under, and about walking the narrow way and entering the strait gate, aud aboox carrying the crossr Is thero to be no way of telling whether a man Is a Christian except by his taking the communlou cbaltco on sacra mental day? May a man be as reckless about his thoughts, nhout his words, about his temper, about his amusements, about bis dealings after conversion as before con version f One-half the Gospel nets with which we have beeu scooping tho sea have hod such wide meshes that they have been all torn to pieces by the rushing out into the world of those whom a tighter net would have kept In. The only use of a net Is to keep the fish from going back to where they were before ami taking them where they could not have been taken by any other means. Alas, that the words of Christ are so little heeded when ho said, "Whosoever doth not bear his cress and eome after me cannot be my disciple." The church U fast becoming as bad as the world, and when It gets as bad as the world it will be worse than the world by so much a it will odd hypocrisy of a most appalling kind to Its other defects. furthermore, many of our nets are torn is pieeea y being entangled with other ata. It is a sod sight to see fishermen Mating about sea room and pulling in watte na, damaged each to get faU net. by the struggle a4 in Inning all tho ildi In nclty llko this of more than eight bundled thousand, them nro at leant vo hundred thousand not In Hahhath schools oruhuruhes. And In this land wbiiio tberu are mom than sixty-four million people, thole nro at least thirty million nut In tho Hahh.it Ii schools mid churches. And In this world of more than fourteen hundred million people, thero are nt least eight hundred million not In schools nml churches lu such nu Atlatitlo ocean of opportunity thero Is room for nil the not and all tho boats and nil tho fish' crme.it mid for millions morn. Thero should bo no rivalry between churches. ICiicli one does n work peculiar to Itself, There should bo no rivalry !! tween ministers. Ood never repeats lilui' self, and ho never makes two ministers alike, mid ench onu has a work that no other man In tho universe can accomplish, If fishermen nro wise, they will not allow their nuts to entangle, or If they donccb dentally get Intertwisted, tho work of tX' trlcatlon should bo kindly mid gontly con ducted. What n glad spectacle for men mid unguis whan nu our recent dedication day ministers of all denominations stood on this platform mid wished for each other widest prosperity and usefulness, but there nro cities lu this country where thero Is now going on mi awful ripping mid rending and tearing of fishing nets. Indeed, all over Christendom ut thin tlmo tberu Is n great war going on between fish' crinen, ministers against ministers. VOIl MUST HIND VOUII OWN NKT. Now 1 have noticed n man cannot fish mid fight nt thu Kiini) tlmo Mo either neglect his net or his musket. It Is uniii. Ing how much tlmu some of thu fishermen havu to look after other fishermen. It Is more than I can do to tnko euro of my own net. You sou thu wind Is Just right, and It Is such a good tlmo for fishing, aud tho fish are coming lu so rapidly that I havu to keep my oyu and hand busy. Thoro nro about two hundred million souls wanting to get into thu kingdom of Ood, and it will require nil thu net mid all thu boats and all thu fishermen of Christendom to safely land them. At Hast Hampton, Long Island, where I summer, out on thu blulTs somu morning wohcuIIiu (lags up, and that Is the signal for launching out Into tho deep. For n mllu tho water Is tinged with that peculiar color that Indicates w hole schools of pisca torial revelry, mid thu bench swarms with men with tbelr coats off and their hea caps on, and those of us who do not go out on the wavo stand on tho bench ready to ru jolco whun thu boats coino back, and In our excitement wo rush Into thu water with our shoes on to help get tho boats up tho beach, and we lay hold tho lines ami pull till wo nro red In tho face, and as thu living things of tho deep coino tumbling In on tlio sand I cry out, "Captain, how ninny?" Aud ho answers, "About fifty thousand." Aud we shout to tho latecomers, "Hurrah, fifty thousnndl" Wo must liavo mi en thusiasm something llko that If wo nro ever to tnko tho human raco for God and heaven. Aye, wo ought to have that en thusiasm of tho beach multiplied a hun dred fold nnd by so much as nu immortal soul Is worth more thau a bluoflsh. Oh, brethren of mlulstryl tat us spend our tlmo In fishing instead of fighting. Out if I angrily jerk my net across your net, and you jork your net angrily across mino, wo will soon havo two broken nets and no fish. Tho French revolution nearly ieotroyed the French fisheries, and ec clesiastical war is the worst thing possible while hauling souls Into the kingdom, 1 had hoped that the millennium was about to dawn, but the Uon is yet too fond of the lamb. My friends, I notlee lathe text that James, the son of Zebedea and John his brother ware busy not mending somebody else's nets but mending their own nets, and I rather think that we who are engaged in Christian work in this latter part of the nineteenth century will require all our spare tlmo to mond our own nets. God help us in tho important dutyl In this work of reparation wo need to put Into tho nets more threads of common sense When wo can present religion as n great practicality wo will catch a hundred souls whore now wo catch one. Present religion as an Intellectuality nnd wo will fall. Out in tho fisheries there nro sot across tho waters what are called gill nets, and tho fish put their heads through the meshes and then canuot withdraw thorn because they are caught by the gills, but gill uets cauuot bo of any servtco in relig ious work. Men are never caught for tho truth by their bends; It is by tho heart or not at all. No argument over saved n man, and no keen analysis over brought a man Into tho kingdom of God. Heart work, not head work. Away with your gill notsl Sympathy, helpfulness, consolation, love, are tho names of some of tho threads that wo need to weave in our gospel nets when wo are mending them. IF Ti: WORLD WOULD DF.LIEVK IT WOULD BCRT.KNDEK. Do you know that tho world's heart Is bursting with trouble, nnd If you could make that world believe that the religion of Jesus Christ Is n soothing omnipotence, tho whole world would surrender tomor row, yea, would surrender this hour? Tho day before James A. Garfield was Inaugur ated as president I was In tho cars going from Richmond to Washington. A gentle man seated next to mo In the cars knew me, and we were soon In familiar conversa tion. It was J ust after a bereavement nnd I was speaking to htm fretn an over bur deued heart about tho sorrow I was suiter lug. Looking at his cheerful face, I said: "I guess you havo escaped all trouble. I should judge from your countenance that you havo como through free from all mis fortune." Then ho looked at mo with a look I shall never forget nnd whispered in my ear: "Sir, you know nothing about trouble. My wife has been lu an Insano asylum for fifteen years." Aud then ho turned nnd looked out of thu window and into the night with n silence I was too overpowered to break. That was another Illustration of the fact that no ono escapes trouble. Why, that man seated next to you In church has on his soul n weight compared with which a mountain Is a feather. That woman seated next to you lu church has a grief the recital of which would make your body, mind and soul shudder. When you are mending your net for this wide, deep sea of humanity, take out that wire thread of criticism and that horse hair thread of harshness, aud nut in a soft silken thread of Christian sympathy. Yea, when you are mending your nets tear out those old threads of grufTness and weave In a few threads of politeness aud genial Ity. In the house of God let all tho Chris tian icces ututm wun a looic tbat means welcome. Say "good mornlug" to the stranger as he enters your pew, and at the close shake hands with him nnd say, "How did you like muster" Why, you would be to tbat man a panel of the door of heaven; you would lie to him a uoteof thedoxology that seraphs sing when a new soul enters. That mau Is a thousand miles from home, and he has just heard by telegraph that his child is sick with scarlet fever, and his boy at college has got Into disgrace, and be has had business troubles and is so home sick he can hardly keep from crying. Jus one word of brotherly kindness from you would lift lilm into n small heaven, I havu lu other dnjs entered a pew lu church, anil the woman nt the other end of tbo pew looked at mo as minims to snyi "Ilowdaro you? This Is my now, and 1 pay tho rent for III" Well, I crouched In' the other corner anil made myself as small lis possible, nml felt lis though I hail been i stealing something. So there aro people who have a sharp edge to their religion, , mid they act as though they thought most peoplu hud been elected to Imj damned mid they vveroglad of It. Oh, let us brighten up our manner and appear In utmost gen tlenianllness or ladyhood, I in: iii:niai I Tho object lu fly fishing Is to throw tho lly far out, and then let It drop gently down ' and keep It gently rising and falling with I tho waters, mid not pluiigu It like a man I of-wnr's anchors and abruptness and harsh ' ness of manner must bu avoided lu our at tempt at usefulness I know a man In Now York who Is more snnsidny and gen lal when ho has dyspepsia than when hu Is nntsuircilng from that depressing trouble. ' 1 havu found out his secret, When lie starts out lu tho morning with such do- presslon hu asks for special grace to keep from snapping up anybody that day, mid puts forth additional determination to bu ' kindly mid genial, mid by thu help of God ' hu accomplishes it. Many of our nets i need to bu mended In theso icspccts, tlio black threads nnd thu rough threads taken out, mid thu bright threads mid tho golden threads of Christian geniality woven lu. In addition to this wu need to mend our nets with more tin ends of patience. It Is no rare thing for n fisherman to spend onu wholo day before ho can tako a St. Law ruucuplku or an Ohio salmon or n Long Island pickerel or a Cayuga black bass or a Delaware catfish, and bu does tbat day after day without paitlcular discourage ment. Hut what ii lack of patience If wu do not immediately succeed In soul catch ing. Wu are apt to glvu It up nnd say, "I will novur try again." Into all our nets wu need to weave nil along tho edgu mid nil i through thu center great, long, ktout threads of Christian patience. How patient God has been with usl Can wo not Iw pa tlont with our fellowsf I had presented mu from Scotland a fuw days ago an orna-1 muntcd Inkstand, thu wooded parts of which were Hindu from n plecoof u tree cut down by Mr. Gladstone, nt Hawnrdon, mid sent uy mm to Scot laud by request. Thu incident reminded mo of tho fact that a woman who had long beeu on Mr. Glad stone's (.'statu had a wayward boy, nnd In her despair shu nsked Mr. Glndstonoto tako thu boy lu baud. Whllo prime minister of England, with all thu mighty affairs of tho kingdom in his hand, ho took that boy In his study and counseled him, mid then knelt down and prayed with him, nnd tho Iwy was saved. If wo nil hud hearts of sympathy llko that, what would bo to us Impossible? "Is it not delightful that I can sing so well?" said Jenny Llnd, In a burst of joy that she could help others. "Is it not delightful that I can sing so well?" And might wo not nil say in thankfulness to God, "Is it not delightful that wo can sympathize with others, nnd encourngu others, aud help others, and snvo others?" Again, In mending our nets wo need also to put In tho threads of faith nnd tear out all tho tangled meshes of unbelief. Our work Is successful according to our faith. Tho man who believes lu only half a Bible, or tho Ulblo in spots; tho man who thinks ha cannot persuudo others; the man who halts, doubting about this and about thnt, will be a failure in Christian work. ..Show me the mar who rather thinks that the garden of Eden may have been an allegory, and la not quite certain but that there may be another chance after death, and docs not know whether or not the Ulblo is in spired, and I tell you that man for soul saving is a poor stick. Faith In God nnd lu Jesus Christ, nnd tho Holy Ghost, nnd the absolute necessity of a regenerated heart In order to see God In peace, Is ono thread you must havo In S'our mended net or you will never be a successful fisher fur men. Why how can you doubt? Tho hundreds of millions of men and women now Branding in tho church on earth, and the hundreds of millions in heaven, attest tho power of tills Gospel to save. With more than tho certainty of n mathematical demonstration, let us start out to redeem nil nations. Tho rotten cat thread that you arc to tear out of your net is unbelief, and tho most Important thread that you nro to put In It Is faith. Faith in God, triumphant faith, everlast ing faith. If you cannot trust tho lullnlto, tho holy, the omnipotent Jehovah, who can yau trust? IT 18 AS IMPOItTANT WOHK. Oh, this Important work of mending our octal If wu could get our nets right wo would accomplish more in soul saving In tho next year than wo havu In thu last twenty years. But where shall wo get them mended? Just where old Zebcdeo and his two boys mended their nets where you nro. "James, why don't you put your oar iu Lnko Galilee, or hoist your sail and land at Capernaum or Tiberias or Gadara, and seated on tho bank mend your net? John, why don't you go ashore aud mend your not?" No, they sat on thu guards of tho boat, or at tho prow of tho boat, or in tho stern of tho boat, aud thuy took up thu thread and tho needle, aud tho ropes nnd the wooden blocks, and went to work; sewing, sewing; tying, tying; weaving, weaving; pounding, pounding; until, tho net mended, thoy push it off Into tho sea aud drop paddlo and hoist sail, and tho cutwater went through amid tho shoals of fish, some of tho descendants of which wu bad for breakfast ono mornlug while wo were encamped on the beach of beautiful Galilee. James and John had no tlmu to go ashore. They were not fishing for fun, as you aud I do lu summer time. It was their livelihood nnd thnt of their families. They mended their nets where they were, in the ship. "Oh," says somu one, "I mean to get my net mended, and I will go down to the pub lic library, mid I will fee what tho scien tists say about evolution and about 'tho survival of the fittest,' and I will read up what tho theologians say about 'advanced thought. ' I will leave thu sliip awhile, and I will go ashore and stay there till my net Is mended." Do that, my brother, and you will havo no net left. Instead of their helping you mend your net, they will steal the pieces that remain. Bettor stay lu the Gospel boat, where you have nil tbo means for mending your net. What are they, do you ask? I answer all you need you havu where you are, namely, a Ulblo mid a place to pray. The more you study evolution, aud adopt what Is called advanced thought, the bigger fwl you will be. Stay In the ship and mind your net. That Is where James the sou of Kobcdce and John his brother staid. That is where all who get their uets mended stay. TIIKV SKKK KOTOItlKTV. I notice that all who leave tho Go.pel boat aud go ashore to mend their nets stuj there. Or If they try again to fish, they do not catch anything. Get out of the Gospel boat and go up Into the world to get your net mended, mid you will live to t-ee the day when you will feel like the mnn.whc, having forsaken Christianity, sighed, "I would glvo a thousand p.mnrrs to reel as i did In ISM." Thu tlmu will coino whon you will Ih' willing to glvo n thousand pounds to feet us )ou did In ISO I. Theso men who havo given up their old religion cauuot help you n bit. It Is my opinion that tho most of those ministers who gave up the old religion are In scinch of noto riety, They do not succeed In attracting much attention They me tiled of oh .ctirlty They mut do something to at tract attention, so they sit down on tho lieacb mid go to tearing to pieces thu fish ing nets Instead of mending them. Thu staid old denominations to which they be long docs not pay them enough attention, so they attract attention by striking their grandmother. Thuy do not get enough at tention by standing lu thu pulpits, so they go to work and break thu church windows. These dear brethren of nil denominations, atUlctcd with theological fidgets, had bet ter go to mending nuts instead of breaking them. Ileforu they break up thu old relig ion nnd try to foist on us a new religion let them go through somo great sacrlflcu for God that will provu them worthy for such a work, taking thu mlvicu of Talley rand tu a man who wanted to upet thu re ligion of Jesus Christ and start a now one, when hu said, "Go and Ihj crucified mid then rnlsu yourself from tho grave thotliird dnyl" Thosu who proposo to mend their nets by secular skeptical books are just llko n man who has Just onu week for fishing, and six of thu days hu spends In reading lsaak Walton's "Completu Angler," and Whentluy's "Hod and Lino," and Scott's "Fishing In Northern Waters," and Hull man's "Vndu Mecum of Fly Fishing for Trout," and then on Saturday morning, his lust day out, goes to tbo river to ply his art, but that day thu fish will not bite, nnd Into on Saturday night ho goc3 homu with empty basket mid a disappointed heart. .Meanwhile a man who never saw n big lllnaiy In nil his llfo has that week caught with an old fishing tacklo enough to supply his own tnblnmid thu table of alt bis neigh bors, nnd enough to salt down lu barrels for thu long winter that will soon como In. Alasl alasl If, when tho Saturday night of our lire drops on us It shall hu found that wu havu spent our tlmo lu thu libraries of worldly philosophy, trying to mend our nets, nnd wo havo only n few souls to ro poitas brought to God through our Instru mentality, whllo somu huuiblu Gospel fish erman, his library madu up of a Ulblo and nn almanac, shall como homu laden with tho results, his trophies tho souls within fifteen miles of his log cabin meeting house. In tho tlmu of grent disturbance In Na ples lu 1019 Mnssaulello, a bare footed lull ing boy, (Implied his fishing rod, and by strimgu magnetism took command of thnt city of six hundred thousand souls. Ho took oil his fishing jacket mid put on a robo of gold in tho presence of bowling mobs. Huput his hand on his lip as a sig nal, and they were silent. Hu waved his hand away from him, nnd they retired to their homes. Armies passed In review bo fore him. He became tho nation's Idol. Tho rapid rlso aud complete supremncy of that young llsherinnn, Massauiello, has no parallel iu all history. But something equal to that aud better than thnt Is nn everyday occurrence in heaven. God takes somo of those, who In this worm were llslicra or men, and who tolled very humbly, but becauso of the way they mended their nets nnd employed their nets after thuy were mended, nnd suddenly hoists them and robes them nnd scepters them nud crowns them nnd mnkes them rulers over many cities, nnd ho marches armies of saved ones before them in re view, Mnssaniellos unhonored on earth, but radiated in heaven. Tho fisher boy of Naples soon lost his power, but those peo ple of God who kept their nets mended nnd rightly swung them shall never loso their exalted place, but shall rclgu forever nud ever and ever. Keep thnt reward In sight. SWEEP ALL THE SEAS. But do not spend your tlmo fishing with hook nnd lino. Why did not James tho son of Zebedeo sit on tho wharf nt Cana, his feet hanging over tho lnko and with n long polo aud a worm on tho hook dipped Into tho wnve, wnlt for somo mullet to swim up and bo caught? Why did not Zebedeo spend hlo nfternoon trylug to catch ono eel? No, that work wns too slow. Theso men were not mending n hook nud line; they were mending tlwir nets. So let the church of God not be content with having hero ono soul nnd next month another soul brought Into tho kingdom. Sweep all tho seas with nets scoop net, selno nets, drag nuts, all encompassing nets ami tnko tho treasures in by hundreds nnd thousands nud millions, nnd nations bu born in n day, aud tho hemispheres quake with the tread of n ransoming God. Do you know what will lie the two most tremendous hours in our heavenly existence? Among tho quad rillions of ages which shall roll on, what two occasions will bo to us tho greatest? Thu day of our arrival thoro will bu to us ono of tho tw o greatest. Tho second great est, I think, will bo tho day when wo shall havo put In parallel lines before us what Christ did for us nnd what wo did for Christ thu ouo so great, tho other so Httlo. That will be tho only embarrassment in heaven. My Ixml nnd my Godl What will wo do mid whnt will wu sny when on ouo side ure placed tho Saviour's grent sac rifices for us and our small sacrifices for him his exile, his humiliation, his agonies oji one hand, and our poor weak, insuf ficient sacrifices on tho other? To make thu contrast less overwhelming, let us quickly mend our nets, nnd like tho Gull- lean fishermen may wo bo divinely helped to cost them on tho right sldo of tho skip. A Spanish Afternoon. A recent entertainment iu n neighboring city was n "ten" which took tho form of a "Spanish afternoon." Theso cabalistic words, engraved on tho Invitations, aroused much curiosity, and almost every guest bidden found it possible to accept. On en tering tho handsomo rooms were discov ered to bu beautifully decorated with yel low and red flowers, interspersed with Spanish flags, which were festooned upon bulls' horns. Tho stnlrcoso was wound with tlio lings, nud Spanish pictures ami effects abounded. A paper was read upon "Cervantes, thu Hero, tho Poet and tlTo Mau," and during tho reception which fol lowed music from hidden zithers and guitars supplemented tho conversation. Tho refreshments comprised as many Span ish daintiej as possible, and were served In Spanish stylo. Tho alTair was n great success, and is n suggestion to iiituro hostesses. It would lie easy to carry out thu saino idea iu other nationalities, nud nu Italian, Swedish oi Greek "afternoon" could bo madu equally eftectlvo and Interesting. Her Point ol View iu New York Times. I'lipit lu rocket. This is tho tlmu of year when the shrewd father observes to his children: "Now, boys, think It over. 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