——— ~ REV. DR. TALMAGE. dhe Brooklyn Divine’ Sune day Sermon. Subject: “Crooked Things.” raight. "Isa, xl. 4 ¢ Geometry, from the time it was discove {overflow annually obliterated the landmarks, {and the restoration of these landmarks made Such a sciente necessary--I say otry over since then has been busy with lines, straight lines, curved lines, lines in angles and cones and spheres, but has never been ‘able to evolve any beauty from a line that was merely crooked. The circles and the square was always considered admirable, Isaiah Mecognizés the circla and says, “The Word sits upon the circle of the earth.” The altar of the ancient tabernacle was “four square,” and the breast plate of the priests Ep squara,” and heaven, according to St, John, is “four square.” But the Bible admiration for lines that arem Indeed my text in prophesying complete ] a shall be n here tion decle quakes that: rit Opposite equal. than in th financial aCguis gverbearing, their million ing an affluent, bu glad th Much world w them, Wi while they ploy te them ar built gre bridge tl the th in wh i orn their endowed braris crippled for ther IMUSIC Or a steamoos Who put the yond wi In eo sum 18 od thin The 1 it somes bh y Net oben r MTs by tox the ro pu’ the I n° ‘ . bY ol el pl og MRE ing TOR nto ln a whe has amassed und a surplus wil! sa There is erchant without any capital: I will rn on Fulton street.” and here is unschanic who has no means of | nd I will put hun on a career of pros ty" and “There Is a farmer with too & mortgage on his land, and I will ther w eucuubragce.” The fact is that i be sindliness and generosity manifested | yi syed men ard the struggls ~ during vt fifty y increases in the sae ratio or the vext fifty years there will be a condi ion of society paradisiac We are going to bay» « multiplication of William E. Dodges sand Peter Coopers and James Lenoxes and George Peabodys. So will come redistribu- tion, and the crooked will be made straight. Mind this: (God never yot undertook a fail’ ure. The old book, which is worth all other books put together, makes it plain that God has undertaken to regulats this world by gospel influences, and if He has the power Ho will do what He says He will, and no one who amounts to anything will deny His §orwen God bas said a hundred times “1 will” but never once bas said “I cannot™ We may with our tack hammers pound away trying wo mend and improve and straighte: the financial condition of the warld, and 1» disappsinted in the resul!. because our arm is too weak and the hammer we wield too siall: but the most deflant difficulty wil flatten and disappear when God with a bam. mer made of summer thunderbolts strikes it, saying, “The crooked shall be made strad ht In your business concerns there are influ ences perplexing. Your affairs may seem all right to outsiders, for business firms do not advertise their private troubles; but where one firma has Vaby teing Just as it wants it there are a hundred firms ab thelr wits’ end what to do with that partner wher draws more than his share of the on with shat stockholder who comes in just enough to w thi or with that disap. yearence of La which you cannot account or, although you have suspicions you can. not mention; or with that investonens which cr a Tea a Shuss thers Was 6 push Huong or because you are going mon month, without any ox The trouble is putting a wrinkle on your fotehead that ought not to there for ten years yet, and you will be years old when you t to be only thirty, or sixty when yououzht to be only ay seventy when you ought to be only \ Stop worrying: either by the dissolation of Ir matters you will be ely it you put your commercial houses fail the suspen. sion is advertised, but of the tens of thous of men who are fay extrieated ne is y was Sat. nd, “Tarrant tha a he stores, rooms for The trast of every city God ape 3 when with 19 OW bier AE rh coed Lye Son th they I never asked God to do anviitog bu, He did it, If it were best, and In all the cases where my prayer has not been answered | have found out afterward that it was best pot to have been answered in my way. But one of us has tested the full power of pray- . Tt is a force very like some of the forces pf nature that were in existence but not em- ployed. For ages electiicity wa: thought good for nothing but to burn barns and kill people with one fell stroke. The lightnin rod on thetopof houses was the spear with which the world charged on the thunder. storus, as much as to say: “If you dare to poms» this way 1 will hurl you into the groumd.” But now electricity lightens homes and churches and cities and Christen- mam who mentions anything as {impossible Yo this natural energy. Ho the power of rather a frightful if is power, was it will be used in all , and there will be a fr Ww 1 1 the qu setinn Wi he w vowed in that prayer WAS A st the door, and a map your paint the 1 and sai ‘Ang tha Has it been Wm Ie ted: gh?” more ur hun ware i is Yours ago an evan mt-door meeting Ae Many thou ‘ i open air, and heavy storm clouds began to gather. There wore no shelter to which the multitude could ret~emt. The rain had already reached the niug fields when John Easter eried out, “Brethren, be still while I call upon God & stay the storm till the Gospel is preached this multitude.” Then he knelt and prayed that the audience might be spared from the rain, and that after they had gone to theit homes thers might come refreshing showers, Behold, the clouds parted as thoy came near and passed to sither side of the crowd and then closed again, leaving the place dry where the audience had assembled, and the next day the postponed showers came upon the ground that had been the day before omitted. Do you say it only happened so? 1 cannon soe what you keet for the wi jo rour Bibles and the God sou worship 1s not my God. Your Go is an autocrat snd he is so far off and « far up that the world cannot touch him. and hia throne is an «tf eraal jcelw My God is a father, here and now, an father will ive his child what be asks fn to have it. Fray about everything that concerns you, secularitios as well as spiritual jtien. Take to Oud all your annoyances and perplexities. The crooked shall made straight. Some people talk as though God comtrolled things in general but not ticular: that He started evervthing under certain laws and then let it take care of it salf, as an engineer might start his lsoomo tive on an fron railroad track and then jugp off. What would happen to such a locoilio or 1 wry i to our world If God had started it and alter ward allowed it to look out for itself dence. It is a particular providence has no general care for a forest, of every cullof every leaf and root in that forest. God has no general care of the ocean, It is a care of every drop of water in the mitude. God no general care the human race. It ls a care of every in and North and South Carolina and Virginia and Pennsylvania, and I have shaken han with tens of thousands of people and talke with men of all sections and degrees, and I have to tell you it is all peace, and in all the States of the Union you could not now mar. shall a military company of ons hundred sol- diers to fight against the United States Gov- ernm mt unless you got your men out of the peniténtiary. Di politioal partie do this work of rectification and pacification? No! It was by divine in- straight, On the 24 of December, 1851, Louis Na poleon Bonaparte rode down the Champs Elysee of Paris, and under the hoofs of his horse a republic was trampled as the rier went to take g throne t was the outre _» of the century. For nineteen long years the wrong triumphed. The will .! one man who wanted to remain Emperor kept down But Sep- tember, 1870, arrived, and Sedan unrolled its crimson scroll, The Emperor surrenders with 83,000 troops, 419 fleld guns, 6000 rses and 00,000 muskets From that day he ballot box was up and the throne was lown., Free institutions ha sti tad for an infamous mon Thank {| The crooked has been 1 6 straight, 1¥ 20 80 far to find { ment of my are croozed go and rch v In many adomestic and somo ries Hs bwin wrch teain and y hoon # been xy Ww er to hav t in sentiment, 1 norta pole y pole n Cuno finan will nade straight . But to those wy sil are v % the same thought comes ia good cheer Not long separated! Tradition says that two bells were molded and sent from Spain for a dis tant land to chime in a church tower, But while in a storm at ses ¥ united nee hing mrated on aria tut ne of these bells was wrecked and only one reached the shore asd was hung in the church tower And some people thought that, when standing the for worship of in a wedding peal they could « the same time bear from the sea the lost bell ringing as if in response. Some of our friends — kindred have crossed the stormy sea and are in & per of God on high But we are gtill in Jie tempest, and sotetimes the surges beat over us but our souls are still in accord with those who are gone, and they ring down to as and we ring up to them, and there ia sympathy baiween us that cannot die THOR" says some one, crook in my lot you have not mentioned, and 1 #4 clear outs®e of all the consolations you have offered.” Well, [ will take alter you with Gospel comfort and reach you before | close Do you think your wound is so deep the Di- vine Surgeon cannot treat it? Hav: youa trouble that svermastors God? Is your an- noyanoce of such nature that you must sup- pross i6? Ah that is what is killing you. rouble must be told, or it stings to deat’) the one who carries it. If there is no man or woman that you can trust with the secret you oan trast God. Him all about it. Lock your door and tell Him aloud, and if you do not get relief you will be the first soul ars of the world's existoncs and the only on $5 “the maf race, who ever called on God for brooding and commence praying. 1 bless my God in that, while there are make them straighter. Divine help comes straight t~ thoss who will have i, She angels of mercy fly straight when shat a rescues, The hour of your fi deliverance a a arn hud of the carpenter puts ruleon a timber! wd whh bis a0 bows morn develo i and irregular wo when dod the last great Sy down His unfailing measuring role that event which seetned the most twisted fn our lives or in the world, it will be found that the last om sso. 4 A Canine Birthday Party, A canine party doesn’t begin to cost ns mu. 658 6 lady's afternoon recep. tion, wh is ever so much jollier, Wi ited terrier has a birthday, eh 1 il out to every lady cn his “iting list who keeps a wr ber heart for a favorite ;o, and the replies are te dog's name Gifts are whether the invitation is or regretted. If doggie i any maid, or if he is too Ch be trusted to strange "ands accompanies him to the La person. og ago Mrs, York, wn the ii 3 che LGR or £ Ah [erative ' wiamma’’ NO Eugene Clark, of whose douse have never { prize, will serve ag a model I'he host, born in Hnire, w irable months to com HH EON most sagacious little anima if far HAWAaY Japanese 18 in receiving his «¢ i 1tkes on the Ege Shells, al i ® the British next apPeared at St, ame 3 » Minister. Petersburg, £1 mpion, then at Constantinople. Finally he became a jo st and member of Parliament fou Southampton, rnagl Some of the Yanderbilts, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt walks ever in a lane of bowing heads. Tobe sure she stands for a fortune of & hun- lions more in the family behind her, all this she Ree her moving jut above and bevond charming personally. with a cordial greeting for every one. She #3 small of figure, though dignified withal. fail of charmingly. expression. She dresses Vanderbilt. She is taller and heavier, She dresses rather Vanderbilt. necklace of Among her jewels is a magnificent diamonds A similar vecklace was among the wedding presents of of Wales, but neither royalty nor American billion- airesses, can buy such baubles reckless. ly, for the waste incurred in simply as to string them represents a handsome fortune, mei ————— Well Paid Evangelists, “The pay evangelists,” says Evan. bered how exhausting and responsible their work is. 1 mean the ordinary evangelist—the man who fs without a National reputation. Ihave preached in a Missourl town for a week and crowded the church four times a day, receiving only $60 at the end of my work. Of vourse, the evangelists whose fame is spread over the whole Sountry Hake ) more Hegey than this, ut even r pay is nothing like what it is made by extravag popu lar stories. Rate, ant preach. er, is Always in demand, and #10 a day for his services, w he 18 worth Abont $00,000, Moohy mak is abont $60,000. PAPEL Ta WR ¥ much better than SUNDAY #CHOOL LESSON. BUNDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1800. Parabel of the Vineyard, weap LESSON TEXT. (Luke 20 : 9.19. Memory verses: 13.16. LESSON PLAN, Torro ov AR QUARTER: Saviour of Men, Jesus the Gomoex Texr von Tar QuaAnrTER: Though he were a Non, yet learned he obedeince by the things which lh suf- Jered, —Heh, b : 8, Liessox Tovic: The Son's Mission Reject. Servants, ESSON BIBLE READING. REJECTED BERVAN1T « The Amn out (9. He planted it with the choice (Isa. 5 : 2). et a hedge tower { Matt " Digged a pit 1 r the wineg let it out (Mark 12 : 1 I am the vine, (John 15 : 5 ment: Owner's Arrangen fed 8 vind G1 Ian Bil Pall Yard, and about it, 91 “l ITORS, are the branches il. The Sarvants’ Errand: Heo sent that they should give him fruit (10 hear I 1 ¥ him ( Mat fa This Son, him ke 3: 30) Freely bestowed on us in the i (Eph. 1:6), {1L. The Wicked Plot: | Let as kill him (14). { The rulers take counsel against the Lord (Psa. 2: 2 { That they might take Jesus by subtil- ity, and kill him (Matt. 26: 4). | Go hence: for Herod would faih kill thee (Luke 13: 31) t i hear iB ny Beloved together, him to death (John 11: 53). il. The Cruel Murder: | They cast lum forth, him (15). They took him, (Matt, 21: 39), | There they erucified him (Luke 23: 33). | Ye by the hand of lawless men did crucify and slay (Acts 2: 93). | Jesus, whom | a tree (Acts b: 2M, 1 “I will send my beloved son.” (1) A serious emergency: (2) A hope- ful expedient; (3) A sad failure, — (1) God’s claim; (2) Man's refusal (3) Christ's intercession. and killed him (2) What men plot against Jesus, — (1) Recognition; (2) Cons iracy. 8, “They cast him forth, and killed him.” Jesus (1) Without the city; (2) On the cross; (3) In the tomb. ill. THE DESERVED PENALTY. I. Destroyed: He will come and destroy these hus bandmen (16). All the wicked will he destroy (Pea. 145: 20). Fear him which is able to destroy both eoul and body (Matt, 10: 28), He will miserably destroy those miser- ae men (as pa a ¢ sent arm ostroyed those murderers (Matt. 22: 7), IL. Disinherited: He... will give the vineyard unto wither hv others (16). o vineyard un They that ¢ i iy He _.. wll let out Ni sans Shai: the 111, Soptterea: 4 5 3 5 ! i i : ! ! 3 : Make them like the whirling dust (Pes. 83; 12). .... brake tiem in pieces (Dan 2:8 As the chaff thet is driven with the whirlwind (Hos. 13: 8). 1. “He will come and roy these husbandmen,” (1) Certainty of the Lord's coming; (2) Purposes of the Lord's coming; (3) Fenaltier at the Lord's coming. 2. ‘The same was made the head of the corner.” (1) The stone reject- ed; (2) The stone oxalted 1 in disfavor with th» worldling; (2) Ip honor with God. 8. ‘They feared the jeople.” (1) Jesus’ popularity witl, the masses; The rulers’ apprehension of the tnnsses, —( 1) Jesus Likes: (2) The people feared, ANALYSIS (2 “J WESSON TEY REJECTION OF Justus da pr J: Mark 11 long series u ers cl the parable 25-32). Th temple at Jerusalem, wrt of the Israelites; must be placed in the A Napt'al Multiple of Three. & 5 sed ex WIVES a 1 imporiance } i 8 nag in private Ii i imited by his lity support them, but the number of wives which the King may have is limited by modest number of 3,338, be usually does not far exceed this limit. Atany rate, be must have more wives than any of his subjects, or his respes fa bility will suffer. 1 was told by thd American consular agent at wa that the present king actually has th wives, and ife may have is | . t ab 0 purchase and AW we that he has 600 chil- ad eta) All the king has to do to geta wife is to choose any female he pleases, no matter how young she may be. Girls are often cho‘en when less than ten years old, and in such cases they are left with their mothers until of mature age, at which time they are taken te join the rest of the 3,858. No man is ever allowed to see any of the king's wives, and should he even is death. These wives, during the working season attend to the King's plantations, hut the rest of the time they live at Coomsie, the Ashantee Elr eels. When they go out for a walk ins body, as is =fian the cas. they are preceded by a number of ennuchs, who herald their coming, that all men may disappear and avoid looking upon them. When this is impossible they must fall upon their faces to the ground. If a white man happens to be there, and understands not the law, the eunuchs turn his face away from the advancing women. A Dog's Wonderful Instinet, About four weeks ago Bill Webb, of Iron Mountain, traded his bulidog Jack for an irish setter belonging to Prof. Williams, a travelling showman, Williams took Jack with him to St. Panl, Minn, This morning