OCTOBEE, 1915 t: The Commoner Impressions of Billy Sunday Charles L. Goodell, D.D., New York City, in Homiletic Review. What do you think of Billy Sun day? is the question that is asked me by ministers an I laymen and editors. I answer in a sentence: I think he is a man sent of God. To he specific, he is the greatest influence in America today in stopping the liquor business. His efforts are put forth at the point which all must agree to. the most vital in all this work. Do all wo can by legal enactment, if men really wish to drink they -will find & way. Sun day assails the drinker himself and makes him give up his booze. After that the saloon-keeper and the brew er must go out of business. That is the effect which attends Billy Sun day everywhere. In the year after he was in Wilkes-Barre the breweries of that place sold 23,000 less barrels of beer than the year before. No man is so fearless and out spoken against the social evil and all uncleanness as he. Preaching on the commandment, "Thou shalt not kill," he said, "There are thousands of mothers whose hands are red with the blood of unborn children." One of the greatest preachers in America said to me: "I can not say that in my pulpit, but I am glad he has said it, for it is terribly true." You can track Billy Sunday across the coun try by the homes he has made happy, the hearts he has healed, the families that he has united. He is the uncom promising foe of every unholy pas sion. We are talking about the need of an ethical revival. Here we have JL The grocers and merchants in the towns where he has labored will tell you that his converts pay bills that had been forgotten and outlawed, that a reign of common honesty is ushered in. Ought there to be any question about the value of such a man to society, especially as he brings his message to more people than any other evangelist? Is his work permanent? In answering that question it is necessary to know what are the influences which sur round his converts after he has gone. When the church has done its part to nourish them, it is wonderful how steadfast they have been. Dr. Guth rie, speaking of Sunday's work at Wilkes-Barre, says that a canvass of the Methodist churches in that dis trict showed that 83 per cent re mained faithful to their work in the church at the close of the first year, and there had been more than enough converted during 'iat year to make up for all defiectioLS. As against1 all this, two objections are urged. First, that he preaches an antiquated, theology. He is not a theologian at all; he is the voice of one crying in the wilderness, "Pre pare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight." He knows only two things ma a sinner, Jesus Christ a Savior. He speculates on heaven and. hell as we knows as much and as little as we do about them. He is not always sound on higher criticism; but his appeal is to the highest criticism, namely, to the vindication which the old Book makes for itself as the power of God unto salvation to every one that be lieveth. The chief point of his offending is that he uses words which are "coarse, irreverent, and highly offensive to good taste." The charge Is possibly true in part. When you reel his blaz ing passion against evil you do not wonder at the words he uses. They are the words of the man in the street, the man whom he Is trying to reach. That mas will never go away and say h did not know what the Treacher meant. Strange to say, wfeite the man In the street appreciates the message the men most moved by it are men of Soiowr a?iBcIal position. The Uni versity of Pennsylvania was never so moved as by Billy Sunday. The gen eral conference of the Methodist SrClVYent Wild with capture over nnm,TUe rePre8entativcs, senators, and judges of the United States thronged the greatest auditorium of Wwint0n t0 !iear him at a meting where the sneaker of Mm !,., -,r sided. Presidents of coneges and the- 3 wiusii;! scnoois and thousands upon thousands of the most cultured and spiritual men of the country indorse mm. He is thf mnot i.t. preachers. Let him get at the Phil- ? in ??lns hIs own BlinS. while we judge him by the results of his work. BOUQUET FROM THE ENEMY There is no escaping the fact that Mr. Bryan is the idol of the Chautau qua circuit, and it is equally true that every bit of the success he has achieved therein he has earned many times over. I am not, never have heon, and see no possibility of my ever becoming, a devotee of Mr. Bry an's political fortunes; but as a plat form speaker he is far and away the most brilliant and likable personality in the public eye today. Ho ia an ex pert in playing upon the emotions of an audience large or small prefer ably large as ever was Dudley Buck in the manipulation of the keys and stops of an organ, and he can at will strike chords in the human heart as searchlngly appealingly as any pro duced by an Elman or a Kreisler on the violin, or a Paderewski at the pi ano. The keynotes of his platform work are absolute sincerity and a magnetic kumanness that are irresistible, and no individual who has ever listened to him In matters outside of political controversy, however reluctant to ad mit his greatness, has failed to fall beneath the winning spell of man, matter, and method. He is a good man, and has a greater number of points of contact with the general run of humanity than any other pub lic speaker of today. It is a stimu lating thing to know that in this line of human endeavor he has got his reward in the assured position he holds in a movement at which it is the fashion in some uninformed and cynical quarters to sneer, but which in point 'of fact has had a supremely awakening effect upon the American people, and for which we are all of us better off. "All of which," as a friend of mine once put it after I had expressed my self in similar terms concerning Mr. Bryan, "is some tribute for a narrow minded, hide-bound, bigoted, old standpat, reactionary, antediluvian republican to pay to a hated rival.'" John Kendrick Bangs. n 1 gAl MM, V, rrv M,f8K W m usra6 1 mil wM L ---- NO ROOM FOR PESSIMISM Denver Field and Farm. ual or potential passenger or ship per. Scarcely anything Is spared in the way of persuacion and pledge if thereby the good will of the commun ity that has becomo critical can bo won, and justice to the road and its owners also be conserved. Representatives selected for the work are not of the Cassius type but are persons who can mix well with all sorts and conditions of men, and who, before they have said a word, nevertheless havo helped their case by their air of radiant good will and fair play. It is a "please-the-public" atmosphere that they carry with them as they tour tho states and fol low the schedule that emanates from tho central office. They want friends for their road among the farmers, storekeepers and manufacturers of the region, and they intend to win them by friendliness based on justice. So before grievances can become lawsuits and before untoward Inci dents can becomo magnified into in iquities they run their train on to a siding in the home town of a poten tial enemy and talk tho affair out. Of course the road profits by such an attitude officially declared and handsomely supported. Its legal de partment's expenses are lower, its station agonts can serve patrons bet ter because of fower wordy feuds, its shippers forward goods with more al acrity and in greater volume becauso confident that justice will bo done, and the number of passougers carried rises Bomqwhat because residents along the line feol .more friendly to ward railroad corporations. ' To be fair to the officials of this and other roads pursuing this policy, let it be said that their motives are not wholly prudential and self-regarding. Like a great many other business men in the United States they see that justice and good will are good in themselves, and admir able entirely apart from any close re lation they may have to ultimate busi ness stability. Kansas City Star. CONSOLED A rector In South London was vis iting one of his poorer parishioners, an old woman, afflicted with deaf ness. She expressed her great re gret at not being ablo to hear his sermons. Desiring to be sympathet ic and to say something consoling, be replied, with unnecessary self-depreciation, "You don't miss much." "So they tell me," was the discon certing reply. Kansas City Star. A GOOD WOiL TRADT The economic values that inhere In good will between men are driving corporations, business firms and in dividual employers into many sorts of welfare work that two decades ago, if urged upon them, would have been scoffed at as being as Improvident as they were sentimentally siuy. ior instance, consider the good will or "harmony train" which one of tho leading railways of the middle west and southwest now keeps moving over its main line and Its branch lines. The staff aboard have for their task Investigation of all complaints and prompt settlement of the same when justified; and tho point i usu ally stretched in the patron's favor. The humblest resident of any town along the line may draw near, tell of his needs and difficulties as an act- Speeches of f William Jennings ryan Revised and Arranged by Himself In Five Uniform Volumes, Thfn 12mo Ornamental Boards Daintv Style FOLLOWING ARE THE TITLES I THE PEOPLE'S LAW A Discussion of State Consti tutions and what they should contain. THE PRICE OP A SOUL THE VALUE OP AN IDEAL THE PRINCE OF PEACE MAN Reprinted In this form Volume II of Mr. Bryan'a Speeches. Each f these four addresses has been delivered before many lar&e audiences. These five volumes make a most attractive series. Price of Each, SO Cents, Net. Postage, 5 Cents TWO OTHER NOTABLE SPEECHES t THE SIGNS OP THE TIMES; To which is added "Faith." The most important address by Mr. Bryan since his two volumes of "Selected Speeches" were compiled, with one of the best of those added. 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