of wr DR. TALMAGE'S SERMON, Wrilliant Bitterness. n, hurn- the third of star from heave ind it fell upon ra, and upon the tains tho star is called il il. Bane (1 ov. 8: 10, nd Lowth, Thomas Scott, iy. Albert Barnes, and mentators say that the i of my text was a type ng of the Huns, dls wormwood, he embit. he touche We have of Bethlehem, and the Morning Star of the Revelation, and che Star of Peace, but my subject this sour calls us to gaze at the star Worm- wood, A more extraordinary character his tory does not furnish than this mal ATTILA, THE OF THE HUNS, One day a wounded heifer came limp- ig through the fields, and a y followed its bloody track on where the heifer was went on back, further ntil he came to a sword 1 the earth, the point downward it had dropped from the hea- arainst the edges of this he heifer had cut. The san pulled up that sword and pre- Att sald from Lie #0 called bed star, and, gered everything studied the Sta i Lil ihe ' i fe BRING Levy Li) ierdsmat Lie grass 10 8ee “a did 1 wierh been 1a that dropped rasp of LH God $ YEIVEL fr al 1" net id govert mighty mel ne called ie rood, demand- appadocian horses, trom the Adriatic He put his iron hee » nt wept everythi he Black Sea. i: Macedonia and He made Milan and | avia and which ia silver table gold. A nhabitants were BASSIvVe sid city « ito three classes: 1.1% he second cl who were made capil . : the third clas Ie cily Ol i given uj dork and her he city was He Was i te iy atid capture with 1 the siece restuinea i y army, inspired ence, 1 } with tears 3 ' themselves the valuable cour most tones, amounting (oo the ingdom. The grave-dig- and hose who burial were massacred, so that it wou " gers ali 1 assisted at the never be known where so much wealth ptombed, The Roman empire conquered the world, but Attila quered the Rowan empire. He Was « Wis instead of being the Scourge of God, he was the scourge of hell, Because of his brilliancy and bitterness, the cou- mentators were right in believing him to be the star Wortnwood of the text Ast most opulent with fountains and streams and rivers, you see how graphic my text is: “There fell a great star rivers, and upon the fountains waters; and the name of the star is call- ed Wormwood,” Have you ever thought how many EMBITTERED LIVES morbid, acrid, saturnine? The Eu- extracted, perennial plant, and all the year round it is ready to exude its oil. And in many human lives there is a perennial distillation of acrid experiences, Yea, there are some whose whole work is to shed a baleful influence on others, There are Atltilas of the home, or Al files of the social circle, or Attilas of the church, or Attilas of the State, and one-third of the waters of all the world, if not two-thirds of the waters, are poi- soned by the falling to the star Worm- wood, It is not complimentary to hu- man nature that most men, as soon as they get great power, become overbear- ing. The more power men have the better, if their power be used for good, The less power men have the better, if use it for evil, . frds circle round and round and round before they swoop upon that which they are aiming for, And if my discourse so far has been swing- ing round and round, this moment it drops straight on your heart and asks “the question: I8 YOUR LIFE A BENEDICTION do others, or un embitteruent, a bless. - | ing or a curse, a balsam or worme- i wood? Some of you, I know, are morning stars, and you are making the dawning life of your children bright with grac- { fous influences, and .you are beaming | upon all the opening enterprises of phil- anthropie and christian endeavor, and | you are heralds of that day of g peli- zaeion which will yet flood all tl mountains and valleys of our sin-cursed { eurth. Hail, morning star! Keep on ning with encouragement and ( hris- tian hope ! Some of you | you are cheering a { TL i hi 81 and old me e 1g stars, the Of comes over you tiuuugh the quernlous- or unreasonableness of ye father and mother, it is only moment, and the star soon comes clear again and 8 seen from all | balconles of the neighborhood, old people will forgive youu occasional short-comings, for they themselves | several times their | you when you were young, you when vou did not deserve ¢ 2 Hang on sky your diamond coronet But are any of you yoou? ness for out the y $ “rh 1081 witience it ib, Hail, darkening § Lilt i! Lag Do COLD Y Ot in the thrones pater Are your child Are you their laug i gh t1:1 . vs ev) $ trickles through al ppressed by into unlimited tion, as in higl i trickled thre | mill-dam, but | and wider breach until { fore it with irres be too much ofl now t children ! you would give your one one step shout tte example 1 sarcasi 1 al that such Pe rect people Like Lhe Nave an healthfu * t nypoct is no improvement 5, needed a ph that are sick.” But what use are you mak Is it beamirched with and uncleanness? Do you employ It in at physical defects for to syst NC used put religion in contempt? Is ital of nettlesome invective? Is it a bolt of Is it fun at other's mis- Is it glee at their disappoint- Is it Litlerness Is it like the squeezing of Artemisia Absinthium into a draught already distastefully pungent? Then you are the star of the Wormwood, Yours is the fun of a . fortune? ment and defeat? ft is the fun of a hawk trying how quick it canstrike out the eye of a dove, But I will change this, and suppose A STAR OF WORLDLY PROSPERITY, You You can improve the fields, horse and cow and sheep. You can world with pomological in the orchards, jconoclasm of the American can endow a college. You can stock- ing a thousand bare feet from the winter frost. You can build a church. Yon can put a missionary of Christ on that foreign shore, You can help ransom a world, A rich man with his heart right—ecan you tell me how much good a James Lenox or a George Peabody or a Peter Cooper or a William E. Dodge did while living, or is doing now that he is dead? There is not a city, town, or neighborhood that has not glorious specimens of consecrated wealth, But suppose you grind the face of the poor. Suppose when a man’s wages are due you make him wait for them bes cause he cannot help hifself, Suppose that because his family is sick and he has had extra expenses, he ghould politely ask you to mise his wages for this year, and you roughly and get it. Suppose by your manner you act as though he were nothing and you were everything. Suppose you are selfish and OVERBEARING AND Your first name ought to be Attila and vour last name Attila, because you are ARROGANT, bittered one-third, if not three-thirds, of the waters that roll past your em- ployees and operatives and dependents and associates; and the long line of car- riages which the undertaker orders for your funeral, in order to make the casion respectable, will be filled with He or § fil are persons occupying them. There 18 an erroneous idea abroad that | there are only a few geniuses, There are millions of them; that is, men and women who have especial | and quickness for some one thing. | may be great, it may be small, | circle nay be like the circumference of the earth or no larger than a thimble, { There are thous 15 of this morning, i ome | you are a star. WHAT KI You will be in { mil | the stay of the 1 oh It geniuses ¥ or one ti 13 ? few eternity earth 1s ¢ ND Of Y Ol this worl ut a utes, i Lr | nol more than a minae, hat are i doing with t! Are we bittering the » or social or 1 “ * POii- ff $314 . ¥ x i » cal Tountalng, or are we liad turned to wormwood Hundred-gated to be the study of het wi glyvphist 4 3» Over tweniv-sen chariot t now [org i nations 3; her Carnac and Luxor, the stupx ples of her pr ide, greatness of Thebes in thos presenti in wien obelisks and « Who can imagine the the hippexdiome rang with and forcign rovalty bowed at her shrines, aml her avenues roared with the wheels of processions in the wake of returning What dashed down the vision of chariots and temples and thrones? What hands pulled upon the columns of her glory? What ruth- lesaness defaced her sculptured wall and broke obelisks and left her indescribable temples GREAT SKELETONS OF GRANITE? What spirit of destruction spread the lair of wild beasts in her royal sepul- | chres, and taught the miserable cot. tager of to.day to build huts in the | courts of her temples, and sent desola- {tion and ruin skulking behind the { obelisks and dodging among the sarcoph- agi and leaning against the columns and stooping under the arches and weeping in the waters, which go mourn- fully by as though they were carrying the tears of all ages? Let the mummies break their long silence and come up to shiver in the desolation, and point to fallen gates and shattered statues and defaced sculpture, responding : “Thebes built not one temple to God. Thebes hated righteousness and loved sin. Thebes was a star, but she turned to wormwood and has fallen,” Babylon—with ber two hundred and fifty towers and her brazen gates and her embattled wally, the splendor of the earth gathered within her palaces, her her Sports, { auquero; “7 TY h nezzar to please his fad country and country round gardens at the heigh Were wos w the built by Nebutchad bride Amvyitt been brought up in a mount anging gardens conld not endure Babylon hes ’ terrace above ter iH t of four hundred feet there built, race, 1 nv vdnre, the if a mountain the glory, the ng foliage, were on King 4 Vi wing. On h Lop iu among tLues Snowy ip at bird brought lit ant AY viride tinier {1 all HI {(UinKin al tankards of wolid gold, or over rivers and lakes ned and tril Hpot 1a tary ing 1 § 3 1.17 it which the world? down Iasi from palace Wii , and called the 1 | and the dan from gronns, orn of iting niting tookod : JIMINES £385 those in the yonder ! The fell from heaven, burning as it and it fel the thin rivers, add upon the fountains amd the anu Wormwosxd 1 agony, the su of ti re upon of the -— The Rival Cleopatras. her plans to open next season with a gorgeous production of ** Cleopatra,” of her least delay, the carrying out programine, magnificence seldom attempted. in a sumptuous galley manned by Nubi- ans and wafted by a silken sail of royal purple. The work of the production was placed in the hands of Mr. David Belasco of the Lyceum Theatre, but he has just been compelled to relinquish the task. It is stated that Mrs, Langtry is also preparing to bring out ** Cleo- tra’’ next season, and in the event of Mrs, Potter being able to find an adap- ter to take up the work where Mr. Bela~ sco has left a the theatre-going public will be treated to the dazzling spectacle of two rival beauties in the same role, Mrs, Potter will keep her time in Call fornia as arranged, under Mr. Miner's management, MISTRESS OF THE Tovar What is this blotch on the wall paper, Bridget? Bridget — That's an oll painting mem. can, JOL LESSON. UNDAY, SUNDAY SCH B MAY 13, 1838 The Lord's Supper. LESSON TEXT. Memory verses TH F'oric ov Ti Corben TEXT POR behold him wl Ti} £1 + on hath Led l i ' han the angels, Heb. 2 : 9. Communing I's Passover, va, 11-20, raya, va 2 rd's Supper, va, 4 For evén C ced for wus.- Jens Outline: 8 i If, Ob -erved : at The Traitor's Exposure : Is it I, Rabbi? . Thou hast said (25). said, He I i . 4 i is. ... he that dipgw Mark 14 with me in the + th dish pod r 5 n betraveth me with me {Luke 22 : fie it is, for whom 1 (John 13: 26), then having out (John 13; 1. “One of you shall The betraval ; (2 The betrayer. A startling announcement. it I, Lord?” (1) A painful possibility ; (2) An unerring judge ; 3) A wise appeal. 3. *Is it I, Rabbi?....Thou hast said.” (1) The traitor's presump- tion ; (2) The Lord’s candor, IL. THE LORD'S SUPPER’ is 1H a hall dip the sop He received the aU, betray me.” (1 The betraved ; 2 2 3 - 9 ls Jesus took bread, brake (20). He took bread,....and gave to them, and said ;....this is my body (Mats, 14 : 22), Jesus said unto them, 1 am the bread of life (John 6: 35). The bread, ....is it not a communion of the body of Christ? (1 Cor. 10:16). Jesus in the night in which he was be- trayed took bread (1 Cor, 11 : 23). IL The Cup: He took a cup, and gave thanks, and gave to them (27). They all drank of it (Matt 14 : 23), Take this) and divide it among your- selves (Luke 22: 17). The Sibu if it not a communion of the blood of Christ? (1 Cor. 10: 16), This cup is the new covenant in my Wood (1 Cor, 11 : 25). and blessed, and My blood, oo .shied for many unto re- nirssion of sins (28), my blood Mark 14 : ti } 24). blo], even if vou { Luke 2: friniked . D. 30, Parallel passa Luke % gives an events of the 53 § neepenael i evening. An Artificial Larynx Gussenbauer, of Prague, invented an IATrynx, which first succe was ye, and by means of which could be done, and, the words were ! ah through «ful sifu roth’s Case ing enough, i with vibrating membrances through which the air must pass to a from the lungs. The natural vee con- gists of tones or sounds produced by the vibrations of the vocal cords in the but modified by the thn tongue, nose, mouth teeth and lips. it is easily understood that articulation does not occur in the larynx. In the artificial contrivance the membranes ua wat, NO air is passed between them with force a tone is produced. As ome & th Liese lax, the tone is always the same-—an he 1 to produce the necessary modifications in it to be understood as words with de- finite weanings, a A Zoological Loss A famous sea anemone--a specimen of Actinia mesembryenthemum-—has just succumbed to parasitic disease in the Royal Botanical gardens of Edin. burgh, after sixty years of captivity. From its great age, and its more than 600 immediate offspring, 1% had become familiarly known as ““‘iranny.’’ This interesting creature is pictured in several scientific works, and was visited by many eminent scientific men and travelers in addition to the usual sight seers, It was fed regularly once a fortnight with half a mussel, and was supplied with fresh water after each of those meals, — Arkansaw Traveler, —— —— Joxes (meeting Smith, with whom he was out the night before)—Ia, me boy! Get home all right? Smith (gloomily)- Yes, but my wife wouldn't speak no me. Jones [enviously) — Lucky fellow! Mine did,