HEATEN IS LOOKING. DR. TALMACE PREACHES HIS FIRST WASHINGTON SERMON. Chooaee tbe FkmoD) Passage from He brews: "Seeing We Are Alao Com passed About with So Great a Cloud f Witnesses. w N this, my opening sermon In the na tional capital I give Christian saluta tion. I bethink my self of the privilege of standing in this historic church, so long presided over by one of the most remarkable men of the century. There are plenty of good ministers beside Dr. Sunderland, but I do not know of any man except him self with enough brain to have stood successfully and triumphantly forty three years in this conspicuous pulpit. Long distant be the year when that Gospel chieftain shall put down the sil ver trumpet with which he has mar shaled the hosts of Israel, or sheathe the sword with which he has struck such mighty blows for God and right eousness. I come to you with the same Gospel that he has preached and to join you la all kinds of work for making the world better, and I hope to see you all in your own homes and have you all come and see me, but don't all come at once, and without any preliminary dis courses as to what I propose to do. I begin here and now to cheer you with the thought that all heaven is sym pathetically looking on. "Seeing we also are compassed about with so great a. cloud of witnesses." Crossing the Alps by the Mont Cenis pas3, or through the Mont Cenis tun nel, you are in a few hours set down at Verona, Italy, and In a few minutes be gin examining one of the grandest ruins of the old world the Amphitheater. The whole building sweeps around you la a circle. You stand in the arena where the combat was once fought or the race run. and on all sides the seats rise, tier above tier, until you count 40 elevations, or galleries, as I shall see St to call them, In which sat the senators, the kings, and the twenty-five thou sand excited spectators. At the sides of the arena, and under the galleries, are the cages in which the lions and tigers are kept without food, until, frenzied with hunger and thirst, they are let out upon some pcor victim, who, with hi3 sword and alone, is condemned to meet them. I think that Paul himself once stood in such a place, and that it was not only figurative', but literally, that he had "fought with beasts at Ephesus." The gala day has come. From all the world the people are pouring Into Vero na. Men, women and children, orators and senators, great men and small, thousands upon thousands come, until the first gallery is full, and the second, the third, the fourth, the fifth all the way up to the twentieth, all the way up to the thirtieth, all the way up to the fortieth. Every place is filled. Immensi ty of audience sweeping the great cir cle. Silence! The time for the contest has come. A Roman official leads forth the victim Into the arena. Let him get his sword, with firm grip, Into his right hand. The twenty-five thousand sit breathlessly watching. I hear the door at the side of the arena creak open. Out plunges the half-starved lion, his tongue athirst for blood, and, with a roar that brings all the galleries to their feet, he rushes against the sword of the combatant. Do you know how strong a stroke a man will strike when his life depends upon the first thrust of his blade? The wild beast, lame and bleeding, slinks back toward the side of the arena; then, rallying his wasting strength, he comes up with fiercer eye ind more terrible roar than ever, only to b driven back with a fatal wound, while the combatant comes in with stroke after stroke, until the monster Is der-d at his feet, and the twenty-five thousand people clap their hands and otter a shout that makes the city trem ble. To an amphitheatrical audience Paul refers when he says: "We are com passed about with 60 great a cloud of witnesses." The fact is, that every Christian man baa a Hon to fight. Yours Is a bad tem per. The gates of the arena have been opened, and this tiger has come cut to destroy your soul. It has lacerated you with many a wound. You have been thrown by It time and again, but in the strength of God you have arisen to drive it back. I verily believe you will conquer. I think that the temptation is getting weaker and weaker. You have given It so man wound3 that the pros pect is that it will die, and you shall be Tletor, through Christ. Courage, brother! Do not let the sands of the arena drink the blood of your soul! Your lion is the passion for strong drink. You may have contended against it twenty yars; but it is strong of body and thirsty of tongue. You have tried to fight it back with broken bot tle or empty wine flask. Nay! that Is not the weapon. With one horrible roar be will seize thee by the throat and rend, thee limb from-limb. Take this weapon, sharp and keen reach up and get it from God's armory the Sword of the Spirit. With that thou mayest drive him back and conquer! But why specify, when every man and woman has a lion to fight. If there be one here who has no besetting 6in let him speak out, for him have I of fended. If you have not fought the Hon It is because you have let the lion eat you up. This very moment the contest foes on. The Trajan celebration, where ten thousand gladiators fought, and leven thousand wild beasts were slain, was not so terrific a struggle as that which, at this moment goes ca ia many art a soul. That combat was for the life of Die body; this is for the life of the soul. That was with 'wild beasts from the Jungle; this is with the roaring Hon of hell. Men think, when they contend against an evil habit, that they have to fight it all alone. No! They stand in tn( center of an immense circle of sym pathy. Paul had been reciting th names of Abel, Enoch, Noah, Abraham Sarah. Isaac. Joseph. Gideon and Bar ak, and then says: "Being compassed about with so great a cloud of wit nesses." Before I get through I will show you that you fight In an area, around which circle, in galleries above each other, all the kindling eyes and all the sympa thetlc hearts of the ages; and at every victory gained there comes down tin thundering applause of a great multi tude that no man can number. "Being compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses." On the first elevation of the ancient amphitheater, on the day of a celebra tion, sat Tiberius, or Augustus, or the reigning king. So, in the great arena of spectators that watch our struggles and in the first divine gallery, as I shall call it. sits our Klne. one Jesus. On his head are many crowns! The Roman emperor got his place by cold-blooded conquests, but our King hath come to his place by the broken hearts healed and the tears wiped away and the souls redeemed. The Roman emperor sat, with folded arms, Indifferent as to whether the swordsman or the lion beat; but our King's sympathies are all with us. Nay, unheard-of condescen sions! I see him come down from the gallery into the arena to help us in the fight, shouting, until all up and down his voice Is heard: "Fear not! I will help thee! I will strengthen thee by the right hand of my power!" They gave to the men in the arena, In the olden time, food to thicken their blood, so that it would flow slowly, and that for a longer tlms the people might gloat over the scene. But our King has no pleasure in our wounds, for we are bone of his bone, flesh of his flesh, blood of his blood. In all the anguish of our heart, The Man of Sorrows bore a part. Once, in the ancient amphitheater, a lion with one paw caught the combat ant's sword, and with hl3 other paw caught his shield. The man took hia knife from his girdle and slew the beast. The king, sitting in the gallery, said: "That was not fair; the lion must be slain by a sword." Other lions were turned out, and the poor victim fell. You cry, "Shame! shame!" at such meanness. But the King In this case is our brother and he will see that we have fair play. He will forbid the rush ing out of more lions than we can meet; he will not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able. Thank God! The King is in the gallery! His eyes are on us. His heart i3 with us. His hand will deliver us. "Blessed are all they who put trust in him!" I look again, and I see the angelic gallery. There they are: the angel that swung the sword at the gate of Eden, the same that Ezekiel saw upholding the throne of God. and from which I look away, for the splendor i3 insuffer able. Here are the guardian angels. That one watched a patriarch; this one protected a child. That one has been pulling a soul out of temptation! All these are messengers of light 1 Those drove the Spanish Armada on the rocks. This turned Sennacherib's living hosts into a heap of one hundred and eighty five thousand corpses. Those yonder, chanted the Christmas carol over Beth lehem, until the chant awoke the shep herds. These, at creation, stood in the balcony of heaven, and serenaded the new born world wrapped in swaddling clothes of light. And there, holier and mightier than all, is Michael, the arch angel. To command an earthly host gives dignity; but this one is leader of the twenty thousand chariots of God, and of the ten thousand times ten thousand angels. I think God gives command to the archangel and the archangel to the seraphim, and the ser aphim to the cherubim, until all the lower orders of heaven hear the com mand and go forth on the high behest. Now, bring on your lions! Who can fear? All the spectators in the angelic gallery are our friends. "He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways. They shall bear thee up in their hands, lest thou daah thy foot against a stone. Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder; the young lion and the dragon shalt thou trample under foot." Though the arena be crowded with temptations, we shall, with the angelic help, strike them down In the name of our God, and lean on their fallen car casses! Oh, bending throng of bright, angelic faces, and swift wrings, and lightning foot! I hail you, today, from the dust and struggle of the arena. I look again, and I see the gallery of the prophets and apostles. Who are those mighty ones up yonder? Hosea, and Jeremiah, and Daniel, and Isaiah, and Paul, and Peter, and John, and James. There sits Noah, waiting for all the world to come into the ark; and Moses, waiting till the last Red Sea shall divide; and Jeremiah, waiting for the Jews to re turn; and John, of the Apocalypse, waiting for the swearing of the angel that Time shall be no longer.. Glorious spirits! Ye were howled at; ye were stoned; ye were spit upon! They have been in the fight themselves; and they are all with us. Daniel knows all about lions. Paul fought with beasts at Ephesus. In the ancient amphitheatre, the people got so excited that they would shout from the galleries to the men in the arena: "At it again!" "Forward!" "One more stroke!" "Look out!" "Fall back!" "Huzza! huzza!" So in that gallery, prophetic and apostolic, they cannot keep their peace. Daniel cries out: "Thy God will deliver thee from the mouth of the lions!" David ex- claims: "He will not suffer thy foot to be moved!" Isaiah calls out: "Fear not! I am with thee! Be not dismayed!" Paul exclaims: "Victory through our Lord Jesus Clirist!" That throng of prophets and apostles cannot keep still. They make the welkin ring with shouting and hallelujahs. I look again, and I see the gallery of the martyrs. Who is that? Hugh Lat imer, sure enough! He would not apol ogize for the truth preached; and so he died, the night before swinging from the bed-post In perfect glee at the thought of emancipation. Who are that army of six thousand six hundred and sixty? They are the Theban Legion who died for the faith. Here Is a larger host in magnificent array eight hundred and eighty-four thou sand who perished for Christ in the persecutions of Diocletian. Yonder is a family group, Felicitas, of Rome, and her children. While they were dying for the faith she stood encouraging them. One son was whipped to death by thorns; another was flung from a rock; another was beheaded. At last the mother became a martyr. There they are, together a family group in heaven! Yonder Is John Bradford, who said, In the fire, "We shall have a merry supper with the Lord to-night!" Yonder is Henry Voes, who exclaimed, as he died, "If I had ten heads, they should all fall off for Christ!" The great throng of the martyrs! They had hot lead poured down their throats; horses were fastened to their hands, and other horses to their feet, and thus they were pulled apart: they had their tongues pulled out by red hot pincers; they were sewn up in the skins of animals, and then thrown to the dogs; they were daubed with com bustibles and set on fire! If all the mar tyrs' stakes that have been kindled could be set at proper distances, they would make the midnight, all the world over, bright as noonday! And now they sit yonder in the martyrs' gallery. For them the fires of persecution have gone out. The swords are sheathed and the mob hushed. Now they watch us with an all-observing sympathy. They know all the pain, all the hardship, all the anguish, all the Injustice, all the pri vation. They cannot keep still. They cry: "Courage! The fire will not con sume. The floods cannot drown. The Hons cannot devour! Courage! down there in the arena." What, are they all looking? This night we answer back the salution they give, and cry, "Hail! sons and daugh ters of the fire!" I look again, and I see another gal lery, that of eminent Christians. WThat strikes me strangely is the mixing in companionship of those who on earth could not agree. There I see Martin Luther, and beside him a Roman Cath olic who looked beyond the supersti tions of his church and is saved. There is Albert Barnes, and around him the Presbytery who tried him for hetero doxy! Yonder is Lyman Beecher, and the church court that denounced him! Stranger than all there is John Calvin and James Arminius! Who would have thought that they would sit so lovingly together. There is George Whitefield. and the Bishops who would not let him come into their pulpits because they thought him a fanatic. There are the sweet singers, Topiady, Montgomery, Charles Wesley, Isaac Watt3, and Mrs. Sigourney. If heaven had had no music before they went up, they would have started the singing. And there, the band of missionaries: David Abeel, talking of China redeemed; and John Scudder, of India saved; and David Brainerd, of the aborigines evangel ized; and Mrs. Adoniram Judson, whose prayers lor liurman took heaven by violence! All these Christians are look ing Into the arena. Our struggle is nothing to theirs. Do we. In Christ's cause, suffer from the cold? They walked Greenland's icy mountains. Do we suffer from the heat? They swel tered in the tropics. Do we get fa tigued? They fainted, with nono to care for them but cannibals. Are we persecuted? They were anathexaa- tized. ODD ENDS. There is said to be a total of 482 sys tems of shorthand in practical use. Orange growers of Southern Cali fornia have realized $1,850,000 for their crop. The income of the London Daily Tel egraph is said to be about $650,000 per year. Thirty per cent of the iron made in Tennessee is sold outside the Southern States. There are now 249,273 Indians in this country, or were at the taking of the ast census. Illinois stands third among the states in the unmber of It3 milch kine, with 1,087,886 animals. Pomona County, California, will pro duce 750 tons of apricots this year, against 2,800 tons last year. A snake alleged to be fourteen feet long, steals chickens, ducks and geese at Cold Spring Harbor, L. I. The largest map of the world is in fifteen feet wide and 126 feet long. Bucharest has the reputation of being the place of residence of the greatest number of swindlers in the world. In 18S9, 10,250,410 bushels of flax seed and 241,389 pounds of fiber were produced on 1,318,698 acres in this country. Beer frozen and called "hops frappe" is very popular in the Sunday resorts of Philadelphia since the enforcement of the Sunday law. JUST FOR FUN. "And you say your father was wound ed in the war?" "Bad, sir." "Was he shot in the ranks?" "No, sir in the back." Tom "I can't realize, old man, that you are a father." George "Can't you? Just come round and spend the night with me." J THE SUNDAY SCHOOL'. i LESSON VI. SUNDAY, NOV. lO SAUL CHOSEN KING. Golden Txt: The Lord Reignethj Left tbe Kurth Rejoice 1 Samuel, x : 17 37 Samuel and the New Era Pre paring? for Saul. NTRODUCTORY . The section in cludes chapters 8 to 12, the whole story of the beginning of the new era of gov ernment, and the beginning of Saul's reign. Time. 1093 or 1075. Samuel was now about 70 years old, his active judgeship, but not his influence as a prophet and a man of God, being near its end. David was a boy of 10 or 12 years, living in Bethlehem. Today's lesson Includes 1 Samuel x: 17-27. 17. And Samuel called the people together unto the Lord to Mizpeh. IS. And said unto the children of Israel, thus saith the Lord God of Israel, I brought up Israel out of Egypt, and delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and out of the hand of all kingdoms, and of them that oppressed you. 19. And ye have this day rejected your God, who himself saved you out of all your adversities and your tribu lations and ye have said unto him, Nay, but set u king over us. Now therefore present yourselves before the Lord by your tribes, and by your thou sands. 20. And when Samuel had caused all the tribes of Israel to come near, the tribe of Benjamin was taken. . 21. When he had caused the tribe of Benjamin to come near by their fam ilies, the family of Matri was taken, and Saul, the son of Kish, was taken: and when they sought him, he could not be found. 22. Therefore they inquired of the Lord further, if the man should yet come hither. And the Lord answered, Behold, he hath hid himself among tho stuff. 23. And they ran and fetched him thence: and when he stood among the people, he was higher than any of th people from his shoulders and up ward. 24. And Samuel said to all the people, See ye him whom the Lord hath chosen, that there is none like him among Ml the people? And all the people shouted, and said, God save the king. 25. Tlien Samuel told the people the manner of the kingdom, and wrote it in a book, and laid it up before the Lord. And Samuel sent all the people away, every man to his house. 26. And Saul went home to Gibeah; and there went with him a band of men, whose hearts God had touched. 27. "But the children of Belial said, How shall this man save us? And they despised him, and brought him no pres ents. But he held his peace. Explanatory: -The Election of Saul as King. Vs. 17-25. 17. Samuel called the people to Mizpeh, the hill near Ramah, his home, where the great assemblies were often held. 19. By your tribes, and thousands, as the peo ple were organized. - 20. The choice was first made by lot, so that it would be shown to the people that the king was selected by God, and therefore they could safely accept him. Saul was nat urally fitted to be king. 21. When they sought him, he could not be found. Mizpeh.) Knowing that he had been divinely chosen, and therefore that his name would be drawn in the lot, his bashful modesty led him to keep out of sight. He could not know that he would be received by the people, nor just what to do if he were accepted. 22. They inquired of the Lord. Probably through the high priest. Hid himself among the stuff. The baggage. Many of the people had come from a distance, and required some baggage. 23. He' was higher than any of the people. See above. This fact impressed the people who looked at the outward appearance, for they could not see his heart and character. 24. God save the king. These acclamations were the people's acceptance of the divine selection. 25. Samuel told the people the manner of the kingdom. He laid down the prin ciples and limitations of the kingly power. He instituted a limited mon archy with a written constitution. 26. And Saul also went home to Gibeah. Worth Remembering:. Emerson's advice to writers is good. "Expression is the main fight. Search unwearjedly for that which Is exact. Do not be dissuaded. Know words ety mologically. Pull them apart, and see how they are made, and use them only where they fit. Avoid the adjective. Let the noun do the work. The adjective introduces sound, gives an unexpected turn, and so often mars with an unin tentional false note. Most fallacies are fallacies of language. Definitions save a deal of debate." Restitution. WORKBASKET TRIFLES. Three Visitors from the Country Are Shocked. The workbasket of the up-to-date woman of leisure is provided with many costly trifles, the use of which is not directly obvious to the uninitiated, says the New York Tribune. This fact was recently impressed upon the writer at the counter of a jewelry establish ment. A group of women, whose man ner and appointments indicated that they were stangers in the city, were looking at gold thimbles, and, inci dentally, at various other articles dis played by the clerk. "Look here, Mary Ellen," said the oldest of the three, holding .up to view a flat little square of gold with richly chased edges. "What do you reckon this is?" "It don't look like anything in par ticular to me," answered Mary Ellen after close scrutiny. "Well! It's a thread-winder, and it's worth $9." "Nine dollars for a thread-winder!" exclaimed Mary Ellen, aghast at the idea. "Well! I never! I always wrap my old scraps of thread or silk round an empty spool or a piece of cardboard, like the scooped-out piece of wood the boys at home wind their fishing lines on. That's right convenient, though," she added, examining the pretty bauble interestedly. "Here's something else," said the third woman, balancing between her fingers a pencil-like arrangement ex quisitely chased and having a smooth, oval bulb at either end. "I wonder what this is for?" And she glanced appealingly at the clerk. "That's a glove-darner," he ex plained, much amused at her perplex ity. "And how much does it cost?" "Eleven dollars." The trio exclaimed in horror at this revelation of extravagance and Mrs. Mary Ellen remarked sternly that $11 would supply her with gloves for two years. All three examined the glove-darner critically, and then, pursuing their in vestigation, speculated in turn as to the merits of the solid-gold thimble-hold ers, emery-holders, needle-cases and other articles that seemed curious to them. Finally, when a finger protector was shown, Mrs. Mary Ellen's patience became exhausted. "These Idle women ought to be proud to show a few needle pricks on their forefinger," she exclaimed. "I'd like to know how a little needle prick can hurt." She did not conceal her amazement that so Insignificant, everyday affair as a little round tape-measure could be contrived to cost $7, and a small ivory case, equipped with tiny gold-handled scissors, needle-case, thimble and bod kin, the value of which was $100, nearly took away her breath. "It seems outrageous to squander so many dollars on nonsense," she de clared, energetically, as the party left the shop. Is Opposed to Rloomer. A sermon on the new woman, deliv ered last Sunday by the Rev. Father Wilson of St. Joseph's Roman Cath olic church, Terre Haute, Ind., has cre ated no end of discussion among the members of his congregation. Father Wilson does not approve of the bicycle bloomer. He said it was not becoming to a young woman, according to his ideas of a woman, and in the course of his remarks further said that the wom en members of his congregation who preferred to wear the bicycle costume spoken of would not be recognized by him on the street, and further, those who knew him and spoke to him would be Ignored. It is understood that sev eral young women who had decided to come out in the new woman dress have changed their minds on the strength of the sermon. Exchange. Her Deficiency. The new woman has still one thing to learn, and that is to sharpen a pencil without making it appear that she had used her teeth instead of a knife. Philadelphia Record. TEXAS SIFTINGS. It is queer, but a lively bolt often re sults in a dead-lock. Envy is an acknowledgment of the good fortune of others. The wool-grower and the editor know the value of good clipping. The plant of happiness cannot thrive without the aid of cheerfulness. If he were fed regularly the shark would not be half as ravenous as he is. A Lost Cause The clubman's excuse to his wife for coming home at 1 a. m. "What's a temperance saloon, papa?" "It's one with a back door only." Cows are now milked by machinery. Milk 13 adulterated by hand, as usual. The politician who wrote an open let ter wishes now that he had kept it closed. It is clever of us to bury an old ani mosity, but it Isn't the thing to put a tombstone over it. A Boston authoress has published a book which she calls, "My First Loaf." We'll bet it's heavy. That was a very conscientious hu morist who broke dff an engagement because his girl had chestnut hair. It doesn't always follow that a jour nal makes a thundering report because It is printed on a lightning press. Those whom we have compelled to concede our natural advantages are the ones who are best acquainted with our feelings. When a married man buttons his suspenders on eightpenny nails it is sure evidence that he has been disap pointed in love. If there is anything which will mak a young man query whether evolution is not a failure it is to see a pretty girl kiss a pug dog. Texas Siftlngs. To My Joy Hood's Sarsaparilla overcame the effect of the grip, cured me of dyspepsia, and nervoua jtrusui tion. I treated with three differ ent doctors with out realizing- re lief. I resorted to Hood's Sarsa- )arilla and short y my appetite was improved and my rest was not so much brok en at night, get- tjjM ling ur c s a : tho 5 refreshed. After taking three bot tles of Hood's Sarsanarillal was entirely cured and today feel as well as ever in my life.' R. B. Sangster, Ken sett, Arkansas. 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