MAGES SERMON. IR TA notions po Ihe Brookiyn Divine's Sunday Sermon, —————————— Subject; “In Jerusalem.” f in enthu- ET LT ™ tes, or the son, or the forget thee, O Jerusaiem, let ; forget her cunning!” You a uglike all others for topage tory, for significa forstyle wm, for water works, for rufus ars, {or domes, for yamparts, for ht , for tragedisg for memorabilia birth. ; , for sepuchers, for {puflagrasions and apium, for victories and defeats, | atm herp at last in this very Jerusalem, and on a housatop, just after the dawn of the morning of Deceiaber 3, With an old in abitant to point ous the silent features of ie goenary, “Now” | seid, ‘where » Mount Zion? ‘Here al your right.” “WhereisMoun| JQlivet!” ‘In frani of whére you sandy wi VE Hare is the Gaildah of Gothsémnmg?” “In yonder valley.” "Whereis Mount Calvary? fore he answered 1 saw it. No unprejuw od mind osm havé a moment's doubt ag bor where 15 §5. Yonder 1 see a hill in tiv are of § human skull, gud the Bible sayi that Calvary wes the “place of a skull” Not only if it skull shaped, but just be peath tha forehead of the hill is a cavers that looks like eyeless sockets. Withip the grotto under it is the shape of the in side 6f a skull. Then the Bible says thal : was crucified outside the gate, and this is eutside the gate, while the site form. erly selected was inside the gate. Besides that, this skull hill was for ages the place hare malefactors were put death, and was gain as a malefactor, Baviour's assassination took place be a Shotoughtire along which people went Q agging thelr heads,” and thebe is the an slept oroughfare. 1saw at Cairo, Egypt, i. mould of that skull bill, made by the wal Gordon. the arbiter of nations ie Helona, eighty years of age, hat upon by baving three cromset B d od before her dim eyes, a8 though ‘ were the three cromis of Bills siof¥, another site as Calvary, recani tavelars that the one I poin e were a thousand things we wanted diagoman proposed this and that and the journey, but I said: “First of all show us Calvary. Something might happen #f we wont elsewhere, and sickness or accident might binder our seeing the sacred mount I we soe nn elm we must see that, and see if this me g" ¢ and some oft mule baok, way fo the most sacred spot skull of ro for there th Lamentations high, and its toy green, brown, hae Coming } ranecus passages we begin to siden of Calvary. and crevices in the rocks, which 1 think were made by the convulsiods of Jess died. mb the ste suggestive of approeiam for a memorial wall in my éhurch, now building in America; and the stone now being brought on camel's back from Biual across the desert, when put under i Mguificant of thelaw and the gospel $hese Hips of stone will contings to speak and mero after all our living 3] A dota the hill aid trans am t day comes for which Bave prayed-—the dedication Tabernacle, the third im- lige Sa Tro Fai nense this, rent ving of the Iaw at relf at the crucifixion on Calvary, 18 Tnpessibie for you to realize what our emotions were as we a 3 of abd women, all , Of & , and there the Gof and here betwedn, I thi on which all our Gopes L the ninstesnth chapter of J 4 ohill blest struck the hill and e hovered, the natural solemnity im. $s tual solo . Treads 8 down. J any emo al Christian man siting u y Gol fotba to feud aloud and with unbroken voice, or with gay voice st all, stools in As to 1 the Whole of that py and John, of which thee are a fragment : oy took Jeans and Jed Him away, and Baie og His cross, want forth into a plate the of a skill, where they crucified Him and two oth wit either side esus wit Sikes al § Yh pagar ad | Bal yo agit oun up po Ld seemed a fom for about five @ found it eight feet ; wide and rtoon focd , The sry where I think our Lord slept. soven foot long, I think that there once the Ki His last slumber, some on att But we must hasten back to the city, There are stones in the wall which Solomon had lifted. Stop here and see a startling roof of the truth of the prophecy. In ereminb, thirty-first cha and fortieth i verse, it is said that i shall be bulls through the ashes. What ashes, people have been asking. Were those ashes put iato the rophecy to fill up! No! The meaning bas mn recently discovered. Jerusalam is now being built out in a ¢ertain direction wher the ground has been submitted to chemical analysis and it has been found to be the ashes animals, scoumulation of émiuries of sacrifices. cover what Jeremiah meant when he said that the oity shall be built to the Lord from the tower of Hanauneal to the gate of the cor ner, and the whole valley of the dead bodies and of the ashes” The people of Jerusalem are at this very time fulfilling that prophecy. One handful of that ashes on which they are the Scriptures! Pas b corner stone of the anclent temple was laid three thousand years ago by Solomon, Explorers have bean digging, and they foun neath the surface. It is fourteen feet long, and three feet eight igohes high, and beauti- fully out and shaped, and near it was an earthen jar that was supposed to have con- tained the oil of consecration used at the ceremony of laying the corner stone. der, from a depth of forty fees, a signetring bas been brought up inscribed with the words “Haggsl, the Son of Bhebnaiah ” showing it belonged to the Prophet Hagga), and to that Seal ring he refers in his prop. walk farthér an far under ground, and 1 find myself in Bolomon's stables, and seo the places worn in the stone pillars by the hal fers of some of his twelve thousand borses Marther on, look at the pillars on which ifount Moriah was bail, You know that { he mountain was too small for the templa, fand so they built the mountain out on pil- jars, and 1 saw cight of those piliars, each bne strong enoug! mountain i} Hore wo eater the { hrone of Moha ot at the door rs that we mu har, les 3 n where we are us who bring silp- go which } fr Moriah to Md , an. ¥ ver kad or rode syers fare is the wait conturien, alin tay time whole tood putting ¢ | ivall of what was it was one of the | kad Impressive soo | roores of thet deco j sars rolling down | Lling with emotion, a book of § | .ofore them, bewal ing ti | [lent temple the tivit | {0d crying © Oud {or the restoration temple in all its original splendor y Tecting scene! And such a prayer as that {smtury = century, I am sures God will fnaver, and In sons way the departed gran wur will return, or something better. | looked over the shoulders of some of them and saw that they wore reading from the mournful # of David, while § have been told that is the litany which some chants For tem aed Hes desoiate, Westin» fe snd mourn; For Ghd pals 2 thal 8 destroyed, We sltin soit 2 and moure; For the wails hal are overhr ws We alt In soto le and mours; Por our ma jos yr shat Is depariad, Wee't in solituie and mourn Por our grea: men that ls dead, We ali In 80titade and moar; or priests « o have Burabie we & in 20 a, ide and mearn., I think at that p again to tha J % it may not recious tural « , but in & © shall eclipse forever all that David or Solo mon saw, But I must get back to the houses I stood early this mornin bol sun sete, that I may catch a wider vision of what the city now is and once was, Stand. ing hereon the housetop I swe that the city was bully for military sa’ely. Some old warrior, I warrant, selected the st. It stands on a bill 200) feet above the level of the sea. and deep ravines on three sided do the woricof military trenches. Compact as no other oly Was compact Only throes miles ourpey round, and y three ancient Sowers, Hippious, Phante! Mariamne, frowning death upon the approac: of all enemies As | stood thers on the housetop in the midst of theaity | said, “O Lond, reveal to me this metropolis of the world that I ma soi it as it ONS Appear : No ome was With me, for thers are some things it D 1 the templs { the Jews, where ily, during the of the Jews hav ip again h wanon's temanl saddest and most solemn ww I ever witnessed $0 ses Abraham, with ine trem. 3 # Wik vi or Kal iants of odr oh ow rea rayer Jerusalem will com. its ancient magnificence: where g. and befors the a self presen mmediaiely the mosque of Omar, which bas stood for ages on peared, and the most honored stricture nll the ages Hfted tas in the ligh sw {6—the temple, the ancient temple! Not Bolomion's le, but something fio pr es 1 more gor a § la, Pai for one a ooit = srohitctural . ’ stood, covert altres apd thousand workmen pad yours in bullding ft. of ad of and and’ ne and scan. a ad into with two bdr eng royal arches, i made out of fro i od Uke a panel of door and sof in, the fasade of 2 PE Ty Ss ory wherein gold | Hitting tho oud Br i and ihe i hi | eam $0 come in alone! | gre of ar ion te are leveled. and palace and dethrone this 0 of the earth all nations plotted. id the throne at Hebron decides that be must have Jerusalem for his capital, and coming up from the south at the head of twe hundred and hty thousand troops he Look, here comes another siege for ibey her 020 v sword, comes upon Jerusalem. Look, an- sther siege! Nebuchadnezzar come down and take plunder from Jerusalem such as no other city pitizens trudge off into Babylonian bond- age. Look, another siege! and Nehuchad- sezzar and his hosts by night go through 8 breach of the Jerusalem wall, and the morning finds soma of thew seated tri amphant ih the temple, and what they eoukl wt take away bacatse too heavy they break ip—the brazen sea, and the two wreathed pillars, Jachin and Boas Another siege of Jerusalem, and Pompeys with the battering rams which a hundred men would roll back, and they, at full ror lorward, would bang against the wall 6f the sity, and catapults huriing the rocks apon thé people, left twelve thousand dead and the city iu the clutch of the Romen war mgle. Look, a more desperate siege of Je- fusalem! Titus with his tenth legion on Mount of Olives, and ballista arranged on bowiders against the walls and towexs, and miners digging under the city making gal eries of Gn underground which, ssf on ire, tumbled great masses of houses and hu- nan beings into destruction and death. All s taken now but the temple, and Titus the sonqueror, wants to save that unharmed, ut a soldier, contrary to orders, huris a woreh into the temple and it is consumed. Many strangers were in the city at the time and uinety-seven thousand captives were ken, and Josephus says one million one undred thousand lay dead, But looking from this house top, the siege that most absorbs us is thatiof the Crusaders, England and France and ail Christendom wanted to oapture the Holy Sepulchre and Jerusalem, then in possession of the Mobam medans, under the command of one of the lovelisst, bravest and mightiest men that ever lived: for justice must be dons him, though he was a Mohammoedan-—glorious Saladin Against him came the armies of Europe, unde Richard Cosur de Lion, King of England Philip Augustus, King of Francs: Tancred laymond, Godfrey and other valiant © n through fe vy breast, having taken the city, h barsbheaded and barefooted to what they supposs to be the Holy Sepuloher, and khm the tamb, Jerusalem the possession of Christendom . But Saladin retook the city, sad for the lest four hundred years it been in possession of cruel and polluted Mobammedanism ! Another crusade is peeded to Jerumlem, a crusade in this Nineteenth Century greater than all those of the past senyty put together, A crusade in which you and I will march. A crusade CGraocoful Trifles that Make Up the sum of Evervday Economy, ates BY M188 JULIET CORSON. sm ——_——— SW ‘What trifle 1s too small for consider- ation? How far ean economy be made graceful? Is luxury compatible with the possibilities of a slender purse? Yes, to all these queries, Experience in all parts of the United States, during all the changing seasons of the year, under the influence of local bearings of product and price, prompts affirmation, Perhaps the least favorable condi- tions will be found where we might the , most earnestly desire them, in the case of young home-makers accustomed to certain refinements of living, who find themselves straitened when the proper accomplishment of their obligations depends upon their being at their best, men and their wives, for instance, to whom the poor and sick look for ecom- fort and help, and who are so often re- quired to entertain the wayfarer. Let see how a sample dinner The | cheapest tneat for roasting is the | } ler entire of lamb or veal, the leg | of fresh pork, or that part ol beef called in the different large cities honlder-elod, eroas-ril er-piece | the price varying from about | a pound, ing to market supply and demand. om the shonlde r-p ece enough can be cut to wake a portion like a thick steak; lay this upon the table, spread over it a thick laver of stale crumbs, highly sea- soned with salt, pepper, and any sweet herb, except save; any of the fat’ por- tion of the beef should be finely chop- ped and sprinkled among the bread, and the beef be rolled and tied com- pactly. The breast of lamb or veal éan be treated in the same way, the us shou twelve cents rd r lamb being seasoned with mint, In brown, with enough of its cwn fat, any good drippings to prevent burn. ing. dust it thickly with dry flour and turn when enough boiling water should be added to cover it; by moving the meat in the sancepsan the flour can be mixed with the hot water to a good, brown gravy, which can be palatably season« like the forcement, and the meat ths very gently stewed in it anti tender; if the meat should v t » $3.0 Vi CEI ir the pot-pie should baking-dish before placing derate oven. meat sift a id of flour with three heaping tea ul of any good baking powder, each of salt and white pepper, rravy | erred 'o an earthen ' crust laid on them the baked pot-pie 1n 8 mu ¢ spoonsf sword of the Spirit. A crusade that will ear of distress, nor inceandiarize one home fend A crusade of Go Pesce! And the Cross again be lifted on Calvary, not i | | | i i of invitation, and mosque of Omar shall pve place to a ohureh of Christ, and Mount Zion become the dwelling place not of David, but of David's Lord, ad Jeruss jem, purified of all its idolatries, and taking back the Christ she onos oast out, shall be mads a worthy oe of that heavi city which Paul styled “the mother of us all "and which 88. John saw, “the holy Jerusalo of heaven from God’ wo all etter when our temple, greater tha sll the sarthly tomples piled in one, may we worship, Russian pilgrims lined all the roads around the Jerusalem we visited last winter, had walked hundreds of miles, and their fost mt their last farthing to got there, and they had left some of those Am started with them dying or dead by the road side. An aged woman, exhausted with the long way, begged her fellow pilgrims not lot her die until she had seen the Holy Clty As she came to the gate of the city she could not take another step, but she was onrried in, and then said, “Now bold my head up till 1 can look upon Jerusalem,” and her head Hifted, she took one look, and said: “Now I die con tent: I have boons it! 1 have soon 57 Some may bo as tired as that, bat angels of me wiltielp usin, and one glimpss of the temples of God and thy Lamb, and one good look at the “king in his beauty.” will more than éompensate for all the toils and tears and h peaks of the pligrimage, Hallelujah! Ament a In Case Yon Break Your Leg. Immediately place something beneath the fractured part of a broken leg to sup- port and keep it motionless. In the ab. sence of a better applisace, the broken leg may be strapped or bandaged to the $0 keep it straight. Of course, » board as wide as the leg and wrap about with even layers of cloth is to be preferred for this pur until the doe- Accidents usually occur out of doors, and, therefore, information regarding the best method of transporting those who are yeriously hurt forms an Important item in & course of instruction in rendering ‘frst aid to the injured.” A chair with two strong sticks placed beneath its seat will arrange a safe ourriage for a wounded person after the injured ble attitude. A ‘‘queen’s chair” is also a convenient means of one in The *4 a oraod about a pint of milk or water; work quickly, and nse the dough immedi After the meat 18 put over the fire boil a cupful of rice in plenty of salted boiling water for ten minutes, and then transfer it tol a fine colander to steam until needed for dessert; serve it with the grated yellow rind and juice of a lemon added to a sauce made of a “un un with a pint of water and a teaspoonful of arrowroot or cornstarch. These dishes, with a little vegetable soup, make a nice little dinner, unpreten- tious but natritious, and entirely satis- factory to the apyetite — vegetable puree, bee! pot-pie, baked, with pota- toes, rice with lemon sauce. -N, ¥Y,.00'r, —————— - Breaking Down. Some men are invincible by nature. No failure can break them down. But intellect who are deficient in this glorious gift. Which of us cannot call to mind some individual of this class, who, after battling manfuliy against perverse circumstances for a time, at gave up, acknowledged himself beat, and tacitly admitted that his life was a miserable failure, Many a man has thus broken down, when one more vigorous essay would have tided him over his difficulties, brought him into smooth water, and enabled him to snap his fingers trinmphantly st a world which scarcely bestowed a pity- ing look on hi:@is he threw up his wrms and ceased 10 struggle. Certain dismal moralists tell us that we should never try to cheat ourselves; that it is unwise to view the world through rose-colored glass; that our surroundings are ‘all a fleeting show for man’s illusion given.” But we maintain that it is always best to look at the bright side of things, if they have one; and if they have not, to believe that they will have, if we rslatently try to light them up. This is the creed in which every boy should be educated. Let the young be taught to trust in Providence and themselves, and to fight adverse circumstances to the last gasp. In a large majority of such gladiatorial combats he who thus s‘champiors fate to the uttermost” wine the day; and at the worst it isa consolation to defeat to feel that noth- ing man could do to secure victory has rr Wg lly mb b wn Te An - ments. Think only of ei over them. Let difficulty find you (as the Scatch ay) always y to “do your possible.” Xr 1x’ always the woman who rises at § o'clock in the morning who 1s the sweetest singer, a amily ourbed, net brok- - last SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 18%. Jsusus nn Gethsemane. LESSON TEXT. (Taike 22 : 39.58. Memory verses: 40-43) LESSON PLAN, Toro or Tue QUARTER: Saviour of Men, Goroex Texr won THE QUARTER: Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suf- Jered.—Heb, b : 8, Jesus the Lizssox Toric: The Son's Agony Ac cepted, 1. Agonizing Frayer, vs 9 4 2 Cn 1 Unfal dine ) Lesson or] 2. Cruel Unfaithfuiness, vs L 4-48, 8 Palin ful Surroundings vs, 40-05, Gorpex Texr: A man of sorrows, and acquainted with gricf.—I1sa. 03 : 8, Darny Hove Respinas M.-—Luke 39-53, agony accep d. T.Matt. parallel nurrative, W.-— Mark 14 : 26-49. lel narrative. John I8 : 1 lel narrative, F.—Isa. 1-12, The Bon's agon- ies foretold. B.—1 Pet. 4 : 1-19. BRC6 OUr ¢ xample, B.—Bev. 7 9-17. warded. The Son's iy en 56, » MY tp I A) Matthew's Mark's .ral- TT i. John's paral- 53 Christ's endar- Sufferers re- a _— ——ns LESSON ANALYSIS. 1. AGONIZING PRAYER, I. Privacy: He was parted stone's cast (41). , .shut the door,. from them about a ...and him (John 18: 12); 11, Evi Triumphant: This is vour hour, sad the power of darkness (53). Behold, the Sons is at hand, and the gon of man is betrayed (Matt, 26 5). For this cause came (John 12: 27). The piace of the world cometh (John 4: 30), The world-rulers of this darkness (Eph 6: 12, 1. “Lord, shall we smi‘e with the sword?” (1) Willing defenders; (2) nnwire defense. —{(1) The submis. give Jesus; (2, The rude rabble; (3) The rash disciples, 2. "He touched his enr, and healed him.” (1) A disciple’s error; (2) A spectators injury; (3) A prisoner's kindness, —--(1) The maiming sword; (2) The restoring touch. 8. “This is your hour, and the power of darkness.” (1) Jesus’ hour of gorrcw; (2) Humanity's hour of peril; (8) Batan’s hour of triumph. LESSON BIBLE READING. THE PRAYERS OF JESUS, (Lmke 9 : 18). Prayi alone In a soiitary place (Mark 1 :3 In a mountain (Matt, 14 : 23 ; ) + 46). ount of transfiguration y oi grave of 43). Yor Peter's restoration ’ Mark (Luke 9 : IN At mzarus (John : 42 At Lazarus (John 11 ;: 4 ¥ 5. {(Lmke 22: 81, hdd in the npper room (John 17 : 9-24). lo the garden (Matt, 26 : 39, 42, 44 ; Mark 14 : 82, 85, 36, 80; Luke 22 : 41-44), At the cross (Luke 23 : 84). In the days of his flesh (Heb, § : SS sy i Th LESSON BURROUNDINGS. prayed (2 Kings 4 : 33). Havingshut thy door, pray to thy Father (Matt. 6 : 6). He went up into the mountain apart to pray (Matt. 14 He was praying alone (Luke 9 : 18), | « nd iy li. Prayer: Father, if thou be willing, this cup from me (42). He fell on his face f ih 3E84 1. "He unto t The SRCTY miss 100; The Lord's purpose. 2 “Pray that ye temptation.” (1) Pre 2 Porting prayer. ‘Father, if thou 1 move this cup from me.” (1) The listening Father; suffering Son; (3) The earnest petition; (4 The complete submission. IL. CRUEL UNFAITHYULNESS, | 1. Neglected: When be rose up, them sleeping (45). { Of the people there was no man me ; 63:3 What, could ye not watch with me one hour? (Matt. 26: 40) | Simon, sleeprst thou? couldest thon | not watch one hour? (Mark 14: 37). | No one took my part, but all forsook me (2 Tim, 4: 16). il. Pursued, Behold, a multitude, . ++ drew near (47). With him a great swords and staves (Matt. 26 | The chief priests sought 1} | might destroy him (Mark 11: 18), The scribes ho The into ssing peril; # Ros 8 + w willing, re- he... found with and 47). « Yet ye seek to kill me (John 8: 37). { 111. Betrayed: Betrayest thou the Son of man with ia kiss? (45), i me (Job 19: 19). Mine own familiar friend his heel against me (Psa, 41: 9). | He came to Jesus, .. Matt. 20: 49), {| The Son of man is betrayed into hands of sinners (Mark: 14: 41). 1. “He rose up from his prayer,.... found them sleceping.” (1) End- ing the prayer; (2) Approaching the disciples; (3) Discovering the neglect —(1) The suffering Lord; (2) The sleeping disciples. 2. “Why sleep ye? rise and pray.” (1) Incisive questioning; (2) lm- perative command. — (1) Repose condemned; (2) Activity demand. ed. 8, “Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss?” (1) The betray- er; (2) The betrayal; (8) The be- trayed.—(1) Judas; (2) Jesus; (3) The kiss, 111, PAINFUL SURROUNDINGS, I. Rash Action: One of them smote the servant of the high priest (50). One... .drew his sword, and smote the servant (Matt, 26: 51), Bmote the servant,....and struck off his ear (Mark 14. 47). Peter therefore having a sword drow it, and struck (John 18: 10), Avenge not yoursel ore (Rom. 12: 19). 11. Unjust Demonstration: come out, as against a rob- Are yo como. . , with LA Lath, 9: 30) ve Yok was w axis ; irnfrery Bie 3 Tg oo IsrerveEsixag Kvexrs.-—The incident about the swords either immediately g discourse 14-175. Part reported in John (John i to Gethsemane, If was predicted twice, then the secong prediction was made way (80 Matthew and Mark), i sorded interven- Robinson, however, places the Lord's Supper n, which the aeniai on wav ng ese Ted Dr Aas open 10 Af any with the eleven 3s with a multi- n soldiers, some chief mixed crowd. are re- slders, and a Maichus verses 50, 51. Ixcip ~The departure to Geth- semane; the withdrewal of Jesus; he prays submissively that the cup be re- | moved from him; an angel strengthens { him; in an agony he prays more earn- { estly, his sweat becoming ‘‘as it were | great drops of blood falling down upon | the ground”; returning tothe disciples, { he finds them sleeping, and bids them | rise and pray. Immediately the crowd { appears, with Judas in the lead; at- | tempting to kiss Jesus, he is rebuked { for his treachery; the disciples ask if | thay shall smite with the sword; Peter | strikes off the ear of Malchus; Jesus | heals him. He then upbraids the rulers for the violent mode of his arrest Otber details are given in the other accounts). Pararrzsn 56; Mark 14 pricsta AIM eer ana ferred te in ¢ i BO John : i i i Passions. —Matt, 26 : 36 : 82-49; John 18 : 1-11, A AI How a Darkey Can Sleep. illustration of the qualities of a negro the other that a genuine sleep on a h his face to the and yt covering for his eves on the July day—and he sleeps as ully as a white man on the soft- t cot and in the darkest room. It ms been said that he could sleep under the mouth of a cannon in operat®n, and I believe it. Or, atleast pl believe the one of which I shall speak could. In going down to Augusta a few days go on the regular day passenger we were a few miles below Union Point when the train suddenly stopped. The fireman jumped from the engine and ran back by the passenger cosch cry- ing, “There's a dead nigger behind.” Every one looked out, and sure enough just behind the rear coach, with his head resting on the cross-ties, was what appeared to be a dead negro man. Two or three train hands and a crowd of negroes ran back to see if the traty had struck him. “Dat nigger ain't dead. He's er sno’in,” said one of the negroes, and he jerked and kicked him until the sleeping negro awoke, arose and walk. ed off, followed by a kick from the hrakeman. The wheels of the engine and cart had passed within a few inches of the negroe’s head, and had not even affoct- ed his snoring.—Atlanta Constitution. ¥ 3 I saw a ping Every queer one Knows Can i GAY, 1 unaduit i erated RegTO sun with The The Queen is so riraits that she picture taken is Tired, tired of sitting for 2 for the is will Gallery at Melbourne; but na ioe