. v, TARIFF TALK. ' Debate on the MoKlnley Bill In the House. lfr. McKlnlrjr Open the llrtiats In Favor of III lllll nnil U rnlltmil Hjr Mr. Mills In Oppo sition, Tho brhalK OfrnMt. WAMtiMiToie) May H. Tho House, oon after assembling yesterday, wont into Committee of tho Wholo upon tho McKlnloy Tariff Mil, reported from tho Ways und Means Committee. Mr. McKlnloy took tho floor In Ntipport of tho hill. In tho lust political campaign tho tarllT hail been thoahsorh Ing question bnfnro tho pooplo. It nconicd to him that no extended iIImciim lon of thin frrcnt principle) wasoxpootod or required or necessary under existing conditions, for If any ono thing was not tied by tho political contest of 188 it wan that tho protective policy us promul gated hy tho Republican party In tho platform, an maintained hy tho Repub lican party through a lontf series of yours, should bo secured in any legislation which was tobohadby aCongrcssehoson in this great contest and on this mas tering Issue. Ho interpreted llio vie tory to moan, ho lntorprctod tho major ilty in this House to mean, bo Interpreted the Incumbency of tho Presidency of itho United States hy tho present Kxocu tlve to mean, that a revision of tho tariff was demanded hy tho people, ami that that revision should ho along tho line and in full recognition of tho prin ciple and purpo.sos of protection. Ap plause. Tho pooplo had soken and they asked this Congress to register their will and embody their verdict into public law. Tho hill presented hy tho Committee on Ways and Means to tho House was a thorough answer to that demand, in full recognition of tho prin ciple and policy of the protective InrllT. The bill, Mr. McKlnloy said, had not abolished tho Internal revenue tax, as the Republican party had pledged Itself to do In tho event that abolition was necessary to preserve tho protective system, because tho coin mi tteo had found tho abolition of the one wan not necessary to tho preservation of tho other. Tho bill recommended the aboli tion of all special taxes and tho reduc tion of tho tax on tobacco and it ro moved tho restrictions upon the grow ers of tobacco. With these exceptions the Internal revenue laws stood as at present. If thoso recommendations wore agreed to, Internal taxation would 'bo reduced a little fH,tMM),(H)0. Tho com mittee also recommended a provision requiring all lmjorlod articles to hear n tatamp or mark Indicating the country In which such articles are manufactured. The reason that actuated the commit too was that It had Income too common tamong somo of tho countries of tho world to copy aonie of tho host known brands and sell thorn In eomietltlon with America's homo mitdo product. The next provision recommended was ono extending and llhorullilng tho drawback sections of tho law. Under ttho existing statute any oltlr.on of tho United Htates could Import an article, pay duty upon It, make it Into a com plete product, export It and tho Oovornmont refunded 00 per cent, of tho duty paid on tho raw ma terial. Tho committee recommend ed that hereafter tho Government hould retain only imhi per cent instead of to per cent. This would give lo the people of tho United States practically freo raw material for the oxjtort trade. Tho committee said to capitalists of the country: "If you think you can go Into tho foreign markets with freo raw ma terial, we give you within one percent, of freo raw material and you try and see what you can do." Laughter. ) This provision completely disposed of what had sometimes seemed an almost un answerable argument, urged by gentle men on the outside that If the manu facturers only had raw material they could compote in tho markets of tho world. Mr. Springer, of Illinois, Inquired whether this provision auplicd to wool. Mr. MoKlnley replied that It applied to evory thing. It win assorted by the minority that the bill would not reduce tho revenues of tho Government, but that on tho contrary It would Increase the revenues. Tnta statement was mis leading. It could only bo valuable on the assumption that the importations of tho present year under this bill would le equal to tho Importation of like arti cle under existing law. The instant duties were increased ton fair protective .point, that Instant the Importation diminished. No one could dispute that proposition. If tho bill should become a law tbo revenues of tho Government would bo diminished from S.M,ooo,ooo to i?U0,O0O,00O. After discussing the bill more In do tall Mr. MoKlnley said that under tho dtitloa fixed by tho bill tho annual im ports of S-AOOO.OOO of agricultural prod iioU would bo supplied the (ample of the United States by tho American farmer rather than by tho Canadian farmer, and that tM.OOO.OOO distributed among the farmers would relievo some of the depression prevailing among them and give confidence, courage and increased ability to raise the mortgages upon their farms. Applause. During tho twelve years of reciprocity with Canada the United Slates had 'bought much mora than it bad sold. What Canada wanted, what other countries wanted, was a free and open market In tho United States. What tho United States wanted, If It ever had reciprocity was reciprocity with equality, re ciprocity that was fair, reciprocity that was just, reciprocity that would give Iter her sharo In the trade or tho bargain she made with tho old countries of tho world. Whenever the United States had freo trade, reciprocity or low duties It had always been tbo loser. Hut ho would not discuss recip rocity. This was a domestic hill; it was not a foreign bill. Applause.) Mr, McKlnloy explained and defended fcne wool schedule und the paragraph In (he saetal schedule concerning tin-plate .end passed to the consideration of tho -freelUt. Ilo said that tho committee had taken from tho free list and placed e the utiablt lUt, eighteen articles, ten of which wero articles of agriculture. If tho Hame quantity should m imported this year as was Imported last year, this would Ineronnn tho rovenue S-J,400,000. It had taken from tho dutiable list and put upon tho freo list forty-eight arti cles which last year paid into tho treas ury Wl.ftOO.OOO, 935,000,000 of which was from sugar alone. Referring to tho growth of tho carpet Industry In tho United States, Mr. Mc Klnloy said that tho prlco of carpotshnd gone down while tho ad valorem equiv alent hail gono up. It was tho hlgn ad valorem that gentlemen on tho other side saw, while thoy shut their eyes to the diminished price. The favorite as sault of tho Domocratio freo trader and revenue tariff reformer was to parade tills high per contngo and ad valorem equivalent to show tho enormous burden of taxation Imposed upon tho people. When stool rails wero 8100 a ton there was an equivalent ad valorem duty upon them of as jtor coot., but tho very in stant the prlco of steel rails had been re duced to ?:( n ton, becauso of this duty of 8 per cent., which had Induced manufacturers to engage In that business, tho ad valorem equivalent went up to M per cent. Tho Democrats looked ut tho percent., tho Republicans looked nt tho prices. Tho Republicans would rather have steel rails nt (50 per ton and an ml valorem of M per cent, than steel rails at PI 00 a ton and an ad valorem of MH per cent. The Democrats pursued tho shadow; the Re publicans enjoyed tho Hiibstance. Ap plause. The Democrats would rather hnvnlnwad vuloromcqulviilnntsandhlgh prices than high ad valorem equivalents and low prices. What was tliocoinplalnt against the bill? Was it that it would stop exportation and Interfere with for eign markets? Tho foreign markets wero nsnccesslhle uuderthnblll nsundcroxlsl Ing law. They wero as accessible under tho hill ns they would bo under abso lute free trade. Tho committee would encourage foreign trade und sustain It, but what peculiar sanctity hung about the foreign market that illd not attach to tho domestic market'.' Was tho foreign consumer a bettor consumer than the American consumer? Was not tht) American consumer a better con sumer, and therefore u better customer for tho American consumer? Under the system of revenue tariff, Mr. McKlnloy declared, this Nation bought more abroad than It sold and paid the balance In gold an unearthly state of alTalrs. The organized opposi tion to the bill came from theeonslguees here and the consignors and merchants abroad. Why? Ilccuuso It would check their business. Tho press of other countries had condemned thoblll. Why? llooauHo It worked against them. Tills bill was an American bill, made for American Interests. Much had been said about foreign tradn and com merce and vast domestic, commerce has been Ignored. What would It boot It that tho produotof tho great West found their markets In New York and Chi cago rather than In Kuropo? Why pass over the best market of tho world the homo market? Notwithstanding alt of these croaklngs, however, the Ameri cans were now exporting mnro products than at any time In their history. America's exports hud Increased !!S per cent, morn than the exports from free trado (Sreat llrliulu. While (Ireat llrltaln had between 1870 and tsso lost lit percent, of her commerce, the United States had gained SM per cent, and with the same aid to shipping that Ureal llrltaln gave, tho ships of the United Stales would plow every sea, under tho American flag, In successful competition with tho ships of the world. Applause. On. the Atlantic coast this year would he produced 100,000 tons of shipping, built hy Amer ican workmen of American material. This Nation had enjoyed twenty-nine years of continuous protection- the longest porlisl since the foundation of the (lovernment and found Itself In greater prosperity than at any other time. In tho arts and sciences, In wealth, In National honor, tho country was ut the front. In I t. after fourteen years of revenue tariff, tho country was In a Htate of depression with neither money nor credit, li had both now und hud a surplus revenue. Under the Mor rill tarllT contldcncn was restored and courage reanimated. With a great war on hand, with money flowing Into the treasury to save tho Govern ment, Industries wero springing up on every hand under the benellcent Influ ence of protection. The accumulations of the working classes had increased und their deposits In savings banks ex ceeded those of the working class of uny other country. The public debt of the United States per capita was less than that of any Nation of the world. Vet men were found to talk about the re stralnts we put upon trade. Tho great est good to the greatest number, the largest opportunity for human endeavor, were the maxims upon which the pro tective system restou. Applause. Mr. Mill Talks. Mr. Mills, of Texas, followed Mr. Mc Klnloy. In opposing the bill ho declared that this wus the tlrst bill t ).-. tm.l come before the American people with Its mask torn off like a highwayman demanding their purses. Applause.) To check Importation was to check ex portation. Split hairs as ono might no man could show that they might sell without buying. When this Nation re fused to take the products of other Na tions that refusal was an Interdiction against exports, and as this country re moved the barriers to freo exchange It Increased its trade. l'mtix'Hnn Iwii..i i down meant more work and less result, 1 and carried out to Its conclusion it meant alt work and no result, rig Iron was the base of all Iron nnd steel manu factures. In lsTl prices wero rising, aiier a periiM ot depression und tho Im (torts of pig Iron wore increasing. From vl.MM.ooo tons In IST0 the Imports of pig iron rose to ?,ooo,ooo In lXTit. If the Republican doctrine was true, then every ton Imported displaced it ton of American Iron. lint the llgures showed that domestic product rose from M.ooo.ooo tons in is-o to 110,000,000 tons In IsTS. That showed conclusively that the Democratic hi1 tlonwAt right that Increased Import. Increased the demand for American la bor. Following out the figure It was seen that from 1880 to 189.1, when the imports of pig Iron dropped off, the do mestic production foil off morn rapidly. Theso figures presented an argumont absolutely overwhelming horse, foot and dragoon all this talk of importa tions interfering with domestic employ ment. Mr. Mills crltlcUed tho provisions of tho bill relating to hides, tin-plate and sugar, and then said that at length thoso gentlemen wero brought to their kneel nt tho confessional and wero bound to admit that there was widespread depres sion throughout the agricultural regions. What did tho bill do to nld agriculture? It put sugar on tho freo list, though all tho Republicans did not come up Ilka little gentlemen nnd take sugar In theirs. Gentlemen on the other side expressed sympathy for the farmer, and their zeal to relieve the distress which they at length acknowledged surrounded the agriculturalist. Two years ugo tho Democrats stood hero and declared that tho country was on the edge of a dark shadow. Tho Republicans ridiculed this and said that tho farm mortgages were only n further evidence of prosper Ity nnd wealth. Laughter. Why did not the committee treat sugar as it treated woolen goods and cotton goods and Iron goods? Why did It not put protective duty on Hiigar and compel In production In this country and carry out tho protective policy'.' Tho committee, Sir. Mills said, had found out that thewheat production was In danger und had increased tho duty GO Kr cent. Tho United States exported 00,000,000 bushels of wheat a year, and It imported tho startling amount of 1,'JM bushels. Laughter. Tho Increased duty was to protect tho American farmer against the patior of India. Corn was to ho protected. Thn United States last year exported 00,000,000 bushels of corn und Imported J.JtSI bushels. This Im mense Importation must ho stopped. The committee proposed to deliver tho ryo farmer from all peril. It was going to speak words of com fort to him und tell him that ho would not have to cotiioto with pauper labor. How much rye did the United States lmMirt? sixteen bushels. Laughter.) Some adventur ous farmer hud bought this rye to im prove his crop and ho was to lie' rebuked for this at the capital of his Nation. Ilo attributed to the majority of the com mittee one bold and audacious move, which meant the deliverance of tho farmers. They cried out, "let the port cullis fall," In order to save the cabbage patch, They had placed a duty on cab bage, and that was to be the panacea for nil Ills. The farmer could stand In his eabbage patch and defy the world. Laughter. This was a cabbage-head bill. (Applause, The Republicans, Mr. Mills declared, must do some something more than this In order to fool the farmers. The farm ers understood that they needed market for their products. This bill would al most stop thooxMirtutlonof agricultural products, and then the Republicans would hear a storm worse than n Ne braska cyclone. In order to Increase the homo muiket and give employment to America's people, the farmers should he given access to the foreign markets, where they could sell their surplus produoU Agriculture was chained like a galley slave. When her bonds wero rended and her products exported to foreign markets, the prlco of her pro ducts would he Increased at home and abroad, and the Increased price would extend employment to production In all departments of laltor. The Industries of the country had developed lalnir. The Industries of of the country had develosd until they produced 1,1 per cent, more than could be consumed In this country. The sur plus was constantly Increasing and tho question was what Congress was going to do about It. The Democratic way was to let down the barriers and let tho surplus go out to tho people who wanted It and take from other people what they did not want and this Nation did. In this extraordinary Mil a new policy was Inaugurated, by which the whole American people were taxed In order that somebody might go Into a foreign market and sell cheap goods to foreign ers. The American Government had a foundation laid hy the grandest and greatest men the world ever produced. They did not build the Government to tax the people In order that homebody might sell cheap goods to foreigners. Discussing the sugar bounty clans, Mr. Mills said that the people who raised corn and wheat and rye would step up to the counter and say: "We will lake some sugar III ours." Tho Democrats were opposed to .subsidies. He wanted to see tho Hag of the Union float In every sea; he wanted to seo American vessels In every port; but ho wanted to see those vessels go Into for eign ports as free ships, representing free American institutions. He did not want to hire anybody todlsplay the flag of the United Slates anywhere In thn world. He wanted to see the flag, when It went Into for eign seas, go as an emblem of tho proudest and freest people ot tho world, who hy their genius had conquered tho seas and brought their commerce when they pleased. '1 he Republicans might pass their bill, but It had a Hell Gate to go through after It left tho House and Senate. Applause. There was a whirlpool iKMieath the surface ot the waters upon which the little craft float ed. The American pooplo wero long sutler Ing, but there was a time when distress was so supremo that tho man stood with his eyes open and was bound to step forth for his own deliverance. That time had altoul come. Applause. He did not expect to hinder the Repub licans from pacing this bill, but he wanted them to take the bill to tho Northwest and show It to tho people whom they were taxing unnecessarily. Ho wanted them to confront those peo ple and when they had preached their sermons and told the people how good the Republicans had been and how In the people's name they had east out tho devils, the people would say to them: "Get thee behind me, Satan." Tho Democrat would not Impede the pass- ago ot the bill, but, when the Republic ans uppcartM before the great American people, after passing this measure, "May the Lord have mercy eu their soul, lApplautv. MUUXT OLIVET. Dr. Talmaire Dincoursos on Christ' Aecenslon. A ftntatitft I'lar In Hsrrfil IIUInry-TIm fcavlmir on Mount nilvrt-IIU Ascent Into llratrn-ltlrstlngt For .til True llrlltttrr Inn recent sermon nt llrooklyn Rev. T. DeWllt Talmage took his text from Psalms xxlv.. 7: "Lift up your heads. 0 ye gates; nnd be ye lifted up, ye ever lasting doors; and the King of Glory shall come in." He said: In olden limes, when a great con queror H'turned from victorious war. the people In wild trunsort would take hold of the gates of the city nnd lift them from their hinges, as much as to say: "This city needs no more gates to defend It since the conqueror has got home. OIT fiom the hinges with the gales!" David, who was (he poet of poets, foretells In his own way the triumphal entrance of Christ Into Heaven, after Ills victory over sin and death and hell. It was as It the celes tial inhabitants had said "Mere He conies! Make way for him! I'usti back the bolts ot diamond! Take bold of the doors of pearl und hoisl thorn from their hinges of gold.! Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lifted up, ye ever lasting doots; and the King of Glory ahall come In." Among the mountains of Palestine no one Is more uplifting than Mount Olivet. It was the peroration of our Lord's min istry. On the roof of a house In Jerusalem 1 asked: "Which Is Olivet?" and the first glance transfixed me. Hut how shall I describe my emotions, when near the close of u Journey. In which we had for two nights encamped amid the shattered masonry of old Jorllho and tasted of the acrid waters of the Dead sea. that crystal sarcophagus of the burled cities of the plain, nnd waded down Into the deep and swift Jordan to haptlire a man, and visited the ruins of the house of Mary and Martha and Laz arils, we found ourselves In stirrups and on horse, lathered with the long and dltlliiiilt way, ascending Mount Olivet. O, that solemn and suggestive ridge! It Is a limestone hill a mile In length, and :too feet high, and '-'.700 feet above the level ot the sea. Over It King David fled with a broken heart. Over It Pom poy led his devastating hosts. Here the famous Tenth legion built their bat teries In heslcgcmcnU The garden of Gethsemane weeps ut the foot of It, Along the base or this hill lla-dicd the lanterns and torches of those who came to arrest Jesus. From the trees on this hilt the boughs were torn off and thrown Into the path of Christ's triumphal pro cession. Up und down that road Jesus had walked twice a day from llothany to Jerusalem, and from Jerusalem to Itethany. There, again and again, He hud taught Ills disciples. Halfway up this mount He uttered Ills lamentation, "O. Jerusalem! Jerusalem!" From Its heights Jesus took flight homeward when He had finished Ills earthly mis sion. There Is nothing more for Him to do. A sacrifice was needed to make ioueo between the reereant earth and the outraged Heaven and He hud offered It. Death needed to ho conquered, and He had put Ills resurrection foot upon It. The thirty-three years of voluntary exile had ended. The grandest, tender est, mightiest good-bye ever heard was now to lie uttered. On Mount Olivet Jesus stands In u group of Galileo llshermen. They had been together In many scones of sadness and had been the more endeared by that brotherhood of suffering. They had e. (tooted Him tostay until the day of coro nation, when He would take the earthly throne and wave a .scepter mightier, anil rule a dominion wider than any David, than any Ciena r. Rut now nil these antici pations collapse. Christ has given Ills last advice. He has offered Ills last sympathy. He has spoken Ills last word, His hands are spread apart us one is apt to do when he pronounces a IsMiedlctloii, when suddenly thn strong est and most stupendous law of all worlds Is shattered. It Is the law which, since the worlds were created, holds them together. It Is the law which holds every thing to tho earth, or tem porarily burled from earth, returns It; the law which keeps the planets whirl ing around our sun and our solar system whirling around the throne of God- the law of gravitation, That law Is sus pended, or relaxed, or broken, to let the body of Jesus go. The law had laid hold of II in thirty-three years before, when HodcHccmlid. It had relaxed Its grip of Him but once and that when It declined to sink Him from the top of the waves on Galilee, on which He walked, to the bottom of the lake. That law of gravitation must now give way to II m who made the law. It may hold the other stars, but it can not longer hold the Morning Star of Re demption. It tuny hold the noonday sun, but It can not hold the Son of Righteousness. The linger of the law are about to open to let go the most lllustrous Ilelug tho world had ever s?cn, and whom It had worst maltreated. The strongest law of nature which philosophers ever weighed or measured mutt at last give war. It will break lie tween the rook of Olivet and the heel of Christ's foot. Watch It, all ye disciples! Watch It, all the earth! Watch it, all the heavens! Christ about to leave this planet. Howl IIU friends will not con tent to have Htm go. Ills enemies -atchlng Him would only attempt by mother Calvary to put Him Into some .vther tomk I will tell you how. The 'haln of the most tremendous natural aw Is unlinked. The sacred foot of our Lord and the limestone rock part, and part forever. Leaning back, and with pallid cheek tnd uplifted eye, the disciples see their laml rising from the solid earth. Then, .ushlng forward, they would grasp Ills feet to hold Hint fast, but they are out of reach, and It Is too late to detain Him. Higher than the tops of the rig trees from which they had plucked tho fruit. Higher than the olive trees that shaded the mount. Higher, until He Is within sight of the llethlehcm where He was born, and the Jordan where He wa baptized, and tho Golgotha where He was slain. Higher, until on stairs offle-cy cloud He steps. Higher, until into a sky bluer than tho lake that could not sink Him, He disappears Into a sea of glory whose billowing splendors hide Him. The fishermen watch und watch, wondering If tho law of nature will not reassert Itself, and Ho shall In a few moments come back again, and they shall see Him descending; tlrst Ills scared feet coming in sight, then the scarred side, then the scarred brow, atrd they may take again His scarred hand. No wonder that for at least 1,400 years tho churches have, fortv davs ufter Kaster, kept Ascension day: for the les- j miii urv most inspiring inu glorious. takes much of the uncertainty out of the Idea of Heaven when from Olivet we seo human nature ascending. The same body that rose from Joseph's tomb ascended from Mount OUvqL Our hu man nature is in Heaven to-day. Just as they had seen Christ for forty days, He us! ended, head. face, shoulders, hands. fiM .nut tlm i.titlri luifiif.fi orir.in. Ism. Humanity ascended! Ah. how' closely th.il keeps ( hrlst In sympathy Willi those who are still in the struggle! Christ leads us nil the way: Through ' the birth hour, for lie was Ijorn in lleth-1 lehem; through boyhood, for He passed It In Nazareth; through Injustice, for Ilo endured the outragesof I'ilato's court room; through death, for He sutTcrtl It on Calvary; through the sepub hn for He lay three days within Us darkened walls; through resurrection, foe the solid masonry gave way on the llrt Master morning: through ascension, fur Mount Olivet watched' Him as He climbed the skies; through tbo shining gales, for He entered them amid mag nificent acclaim. And hero Is a gratify Ingeonsldorntlon thatyoii never thought of. We will see tho Lord Just as llr lookml on earth. Ai lie arose from lh tomb He ascended from Mount I'Mlvet. We shall see Him as He looked onthe road to Kniiiiaiis. us lie appeared In the upjirr room in Jerusalem, us Ho was that day of valedictory on the rldgn from which lie swung into tho skies. How much we will want to see Him. I was reading of a man horn blind'. He was married to one who took care of him all those years of darkness. X surgeon said to him: "I can remove tlmr blindness," und so he did. Ills sight, given blin. a rose was handed to tho man who never before had seen a rose and he was In admiration of It. and his family whom he had never seen before now appeared to him, and ho wns In tears of rupture, when he suddenlycrled out: "I ought tlrst to have usked to see the one who cured me; show me the doctor." When from our eyes the scales of earth shall fall, and we have our llrst vision of Heaven, our tlrst cry ought not to be: "Where are our loved ones?" Our llrst cry ought to be: "Where NCbrlst. who made all this invi sible? Show me the Doctor!" tilery be to God for ascended humanity! ")ur fetlnw sufferer yet intuitu A lellnw Ifflltiii in our pitlm. Ami still relneiiilii'M, la tin- sklr. HWteuii, III iikdiiIi-n ioi 1 1 1 rli's." I am so- glad that Christ broke the natural law of gravitation when He shook olt from his feel the clutch of Mount Olivet. People talk as though cold, Iron, unsympathetic, natural law controlled every thing. The reign of law Is a- Majestic thing, but the God who made ft has a right to break It. and again and again has broken It, and again and uguln will break It. A law Is only God's way of doing things, and If lie chooses to do them some other way He has it right to do so. A law Is not strong enough to shackle the Almighty. Christ broke the botanical law when one Monday morning In March, on the way from llelhanv to Jerusalem, by a few words he turned a full leaved tig tree Into a lifeless stick. He broke Ichthyo logical law when, without any natural Inducement, he swung a great school of flsh Into a part of Lake Tiberias, where the fishermen had cast their nuts for eight or ten hours without the capture of a-minnow, nnd by making n fish help pay the tax by yielding from Its mouth ii Roman stater. Christ broke the law of storms by compelling, with a word, the lingered sea to hush Its freny, and tho winds to quit their bel lowing. He broke zoological law when He made the devils possess the swine of Gadara. He broke the law of eco nomics whim H made enough bread for .1,000 people out of tlve biscuits that would not ordinarily have lcon enough for ten of the hungry. He broke In tellectual law when, by a word, He slleacvd n maniac Into placidity. He broke physlologlc.il law when, hy n totteri. He straightened n woman who for eighteen years hud been benialmost double, and when He put spring Into-the tool of liihumatisl I, .minis, .md when, without medicine, lit gave the dying girl back in health to the Syro PhuMilcisn mother, and when He made the palatial home of the nobleman re sound again with the laughter of hit restored boy, ami when, without knife or battery. He sot cateractcd eyes to seeing again, and tho drum of draf ears ti vibrating again, and the nerves of parslyied arms to thrilling ag.vl. n I , then when. In leaving tint earth. He do-1 tied all atmospheric law and physio-1 logical law, and that law whlrh has In It withes and cables and girders enough I to hold the unlver.se, the law of gravita tion, I The Cnrlst who proved Hlmwdt on so J many occasions, and especially the last, superior to law. still lives, and ovcry day, in answer to prayer for the ginl of , the world, He Is overriding the law, Itlessed le God that we are not the sub-) Vols of blind fatality, but of a sympa- , thliln.1 divinity. Have you never seen a typhoid fever hrvak, or a storm sud-1 J denly quiet, or a ship a-lsani's-end right 1 Itself, or a fog lift, or a parched sky 1 break In showers or a perplexity dlten ' tangled, or the Inconsolable take solace, or the wayward reform at the call of prayer? I have seen It; multitudes have seen it You have. If jou have I teen willing to see it. IVrlde not the faith , cure. llecaUM Impostors attempt It. Is, nothing airalntt rood men whom Gil I hath honored with marvelous reitera tion. Pronounce nothing Impossible to , prajvr and trust. Itecause you and I' can not effect It U no reason why other may not. Hy the same argument I could prow that Raphael never painted I Madonna, and that Mendelssoha never wrote an oratorio, nnd that Phidias never chiseled a statue. Ilecause we can not accomplish it ourselves, we are not to conclude that others may not. There are In Immen sity great ranges of mists which havo proved, under closer telescopic scrutiny, to he the storehouse of worlds, atul I do not know, but from tint passage in James, which, to some of us, is yet misty and dim, there may roll out u new Heaven and a new earth. "The prayer of faith shuli save the sick. ' Tho faltb curlstrtinay. in this war agai'ist disease, be only skirmishing before a general engagement. In which all the- maladies of earth shall Is routed. Sujely allo pathy and homeopathy and hjlropathy und eclecticism neirsj reinforcement from somewhere: Why not from tlf faith nnd prayer of the- consecrated.' Tho mightiest school ' medicine .may jet be the school! of Chrkt. I do nosknow but that diseases, nw by all sihools pronoun 1 Incurable-, may give w.iy un der gospel bombardment. I do not know but that the day may come when faith nnd prayer shall ruii she dead. Strauss and Woolston and Spinora and Hume and Sclilolermueher rejected tho miracles of the fas past. 1 do not propose to be lUv -Jieui nnd reject the miracles of the far future. This I know, the Christ of Ascension day Is mightier than any natural laws, for on the day of which I spcalr Ho tramplisl dow u the strongest of rhein nil. Law la mighty, but who He made It Is mightier. Drive out fatalism from your theology, and give grace the throne. Standing to-duv on the Asvonslon peak of Mount Olivet I am uImi gladdened at the closing gesture, the lut gesture Christ ever made, "lie lifted up Ills bunds and blessed theim" says the In spired account of our Lord's departure. I am so -.lad lifted up His hands. Gestures are often mom significant than words, attitudes than arguments. Christ had made a gesture of con tempt when with Ills finger He wroto on the ground; gesture of repulsion when He .aid: "Get thee behind me. Satan." gesture of condemnation when He said: "Woe unto you. Pharisees and hypocrites." Hut hl's lust gesture Is a gesture of benediction. He lifted up his hands and blessed them. Ills arms are extended and thep.ilmsof lllshands turned downejtt. nnd so He dropped benediction Tfftrtn Olivet, benediction upon Palestine, benediction upon all the earth. The cruel world took Him In at the start on a audio of straw, ami at last thrust Him out with the point if the sjiear: but benediction! As cending until beneath He saw on one side the Itothlchcm, where they put Him among tho cattle, and Calvary on the other side, where they put lltm among the thieves us fnr us the excited und Intensified vision of the group on 'iet could see Him, and after He was so far up they could no longer hear Ilia words they saw the gesture of tho outspread bauds, the benediction. And that Is His attitude to-day. His benediction upon the world'- climates, and they are changing and will kisqiou chunglng until the ulmosphcro shall lie u commingling of October and Jane. Ilenedlctton iimiii the deserts till they whiten with lily and blush with lose and yellow with cowslip and emerald with grass. Ilenedlctton upon governments till they become more just and humane. Ilcncdlctlon upon nations till they kneel in prayer. Ilcncdlctlon iin the whole earth until every mountain Is an Olivet of consecration, ami every take a Galilee on whose mo saic of crystal and opal and sapphire divine splendors -shall walk, O, take tho benediction of His pardon, sinners young and sinners old, sinners modorntn and sinners abandoned. Take thn benediction of His comfort, all ye broken hearted under bereavement, and privation, and myriad woes. Take his benediction all ye sick beds, whether under acute spasms of pain or In long protracted Invalidism. For orphannge, nnd childlessness und w blow hood a benediction. For cradles, and trundle beds nnd rocking chairs of ts-togenarlans a Itenedlf tlon. For life aad for death, for time and for eternity, for earth and for Heaven a benediction. Subllniest gesture ever made, the last gesture of our ascending !ortl. "Anil He lifted up His hands and blessed, them." Is our attitude the same? Is It wrath or is It kindness? Is it diabolism or ChrlstlMii? (Sod give us the grace of the open palm. ocu upward to get the lxn edlctton. open downward to pronounce a benedlctl jn. A lady was passing along a street and suddenly ran Miraln-tt a raggtsl boy, and she said: "I lsg your pardon, my lsy, I did not mean to run against you: I am very sorry." And tli Ny took olt the piece of o uap he had upon his head and said: "Yu hart my pardlug, lady, and you may rwn agin ma and knock me clear down; I won'tcare." And turning to a comraoV he said: "That nearly ttntk me off my feet No body ever asked my pardlng before." Kindness! Kindness! Hit tho world with It. There has always hrn too much disregard for othr. Illustrated In titto, in Kngland. when 0.1,000 acres ot marshes wem dralarU for health and for crop raising and ihc sportsmen de stroyed the drainat work hecausn they wanted to kcew the marshes for hunting ground. whee they could shoot wild duck. The same selfishness in all ages. O, for kindnes that would make our life a symphony suggestive of one of theanc cut banquet w hem every thing was set to music: the plate brought In and removed to the tound of music, the motions ot the carter keep ing time with th" music, the conversa tion lifting and dropping with the rising and falling of th music, (tut. Instead of tho music of an earthly orchestra, It would be the music of a hravenly charm, our words the music of kind thoughts, our tf ps the music of helpful deed, our mlle the mutio of encourag ing looks, our youth and old agf tae first and lat liar of music conducted by the pierced hand that a opened In love and spread dnanward In benedic tion on Olivetlc height on Asornjioe day, -Hy b wty rtroJ. Christ tcouairi to UM tarwM ot .' V w fSj. .)