REV. DR. TALMAGE. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sune day Sermon. Subject: “The Healing Touch.” Texr: *“ Who touched Me? Mark v., $1. A great erowd of excited people elbowing each other this way and that and Christ in the midst of the commotion. the way to see Him restore to complete health & dying person. Some thought He could effect the cure; others that He could not, any rate, it would be an interesting experi- ment. A very sick woman of twelve vears' invalidiam is in the crowd. Some say her is certain, she bad tried all styles cure. Every shelf of her humble home had medicines on it. She had employed many of the doeotors of that time, when medical science was more rude and rough and igno- rant than we « the word physician or surgeon potent and educated skill. foot gives a list of what he supposes may have been the remedies she has applied, stands for foot and had tried used all styles ot bad Been and Iacerated until life to side that the Bibl had run up frightiuliv. money for medicines ance ard f purse was as exh What, poor woman, are vou doing in that tostiing erowd? Better go home and to bed and nurse vour disorders. No! Wan ard wasted and faint, she stands there, her face distorted with suffering, and ever and anon biting her lip with s¢ acute pain and until her tears fell from the hollow eye upon the faded dr. ss, only able to stand because the crowd is way and that. and back! Why do you crowd that poor body? Have you no consid- eration for a dying woman? But just at that time the crowd parts, and this invalid comes almost up to Christ. and His bumanp She h the si thinks will do her good. She will not touch Him on thesacred head, for that might be ir- reverent. She will touch Him on the hand, for that might seem too familiar, She says: “I will, I think, touch Him on His coat. not on the top of it, or on the bot- tom of the main fabric, but on the border, the 1 border, the long threcds of the frinze of that blue border; there can no harm in that. I don’t think He will hurt me, 1 have heard so much csbout Him, Besides that, I can stand t longer. Twelve years of suffering have worn me out, This is my last hope. And she presses through the crowd stiil farther and reaches for Christ, but can- not quite touch Him. She pushesstill farther through the crowd and kneels and puts her finger to the edge of the blue fringe of the border, touches it. Quick as an ic flash there thrilled back into her red nerves, and shrunken veins, and istedd arteries, and panting lungs, and sred muscles, health, beautiful health, rabieund hesith, God given and complete heaith, The 12 years’ march pang and suffering over suspension bridge of perve and through tunnel of bone instantly bat Christ rec that and healthful influence through the um of the blue fringe of His garment had shot He turns and looks upon that excited crowd and startles them with the interroga- tory of my text. “Who touched Me?" The insolent crowd in tance replied: “How do we know? You get in a crowd like this snd you must expect to be jostled, You ask us 8 question you know we cannot answer, But the roseate and rejuvenated woman came up, and knelt in front of Christ, and told of the touch, and told of the restoration, and Jesus said : “Daughter, thy faith had made thee whole. Go in peace.” Bo Mark gives us a dramatization of the gospel. Oh, what a doctor Christ is! Inevery one of our house. bolde may He be the family physician, Notice that there is no addition of help to others without subtraction of power from ourseives. The context says that as soon as the compress astringent herls, and she hacked and cut and her was a plague, Be » indicates her doctor's bills and she had paid r hygieni 1 8 her body. usteq a sobbing 80 St as heard so much about His kindness to and she does feel s0 wretched ; she not be nis no She just $e ed, OZNIZAS SOMeENoOw magnetic medi out. subs or strength had gone out of Him, No ad- dition of help to others without subtraction of strength from ourselves, Did you never get tired for others? Have you never risked your health for others? Have you never preached a sermon, or delivered an ex- bortation, or offered a burning prayer, and then felt afterward that strength bad gone out of you? Then you bave never imitated Christ? Are yoa curious to know how that garment of Christ would have wrought such s cure for this suppliant invalid? 1 juppose that Christ was surcharged with vitality. You know that diseases may be conveyed from city to city by garments as in case of epi- demic, and so | suppose that garments may be surcharged with health, 1 suppose that Christ had such physical magnetism that it permented all His robe down to the last thread on the border of the blue fringe. But io addition to that there was a divine thrill, there was a miraculous potency, there was an omnipotent therapeutics, without which this 12 years’ invalid would not have been in- stantiy restored. without depletion, how can we ever expect to biess the world without sell sacrifice. A man,who gives to some Christian object until he fesls it, a man who in his occupation or srofession overworks that he may educate his children, & man who on Sunday night goes home, all his nervous energy wrung out by active services in church, or school, or city evangelization, bas imitated Christ, and the strength has gone out of him. A mother who robs herself of sleep in behalf of a sick cradle, a wife who bears up cheer fully under domestic misfortune that she may enicourage her husband in the combat against disaster, a woman who by hard saving and earnest prayer and good counsel wisely given and many years devoted to rearing her family hairs and a profusion of deep wrinkles, is lke Christ, and strength has gone out of her, That strength or virtue may have gone out through a garment she has made for the ome, that strength may have gone out through the sock you knit for the barefoot destitute, that strength may go out through the mantle hung up in some closet after you are dead. Ho a crippled child sat every morning on her father's front step so that when the kind Christian teacher passed by to school she might take bold of her dress and lot the dress slide through her pale Singers, She said it helped her pain so much and made her so happy all the day. Aye, have we not in all our wollings Rtnents of the departed, a touch of w rills us through and through, the Ife of those who are gone thrilling through the Jifo of those who stay? But mark you, the jrinipls I evolve from this subject. No of healteh to others unless there be a subtraction of from ourseives, He feit that strength gone out of Him, Christa sensi- Notice also in thi subject & o talk haman disability makes all the nerves of His head and heart and hand and feet vibrate, It is not a stolid Christ, not a phlegmatic Christ, not a preococuppled Christ, not a hard Christ, not an fron cased Christ, but an exquisitely sensitive Christ that my text unveils, All the things that touch us touch Him, if by the hand of prayer we make the connecting line Mark you, this invalid of the text might have walked through that crowd all day and eried about her suffering, and no relief would have come if she had not touched Him. When in your prayer you lay your hand on Christ you touch ail the sympathies of an ardent and glowing currents Two currents, Oh, way do you go un- helped? Why do you go wondering about this and wondering about that? Why do you not touch Him? Are you sick? 1 do not think vou are any worse off than this invalid of the text, you had a long struggle? 1 do not think 1s 80 was this of which my text is “Oh,” you say, it hopeless? God.” There was a whole mob between this invalid and Christ. She pressed through, and 1 guess you oan press through. Is your nl a home trouble? Christ shows Himself especially sympathetic with questions of domesticity, as when at the wed- ding in Cana He alleviated a housekeaper's predicament, as when tears rushed forth at the broken dome of Mary and Martha and Lazarus. Men are sometimes ashamed to weep, There are men who if the tears start They think it is unmanly They do not seem to understand it is a great heart, 1 to ery. ery. The Christ of the text was not asharhed to ery over human misfortune, Look at that deep lake of tears opened by the two words of the evangelist : “Jesus wept I” Be hold Christ on the only day of His early triumph marching on Jerusalem, the glitter. ing domes obliterated by the blinding rain of tears in His eyes and on His cheeks, for when He beheld the city He wept over it, O man of the many trials, O woman of the heart- break, why do you not touch Him? “Oh,” says some one, “Christ doesn’t care for me. Christ is looking the other way. Christ has the vast affairs of His kingdom look after. He has the armies of sin to over- throw, and there are so many worse cases of to Bo His back was turned to this invalid of the text. He was on His way to effect a cure which was famous and popular and wide re- sounding. But the context says, ‘He turned Him about.” If He was facing to the north, He turned to the south ; if He was facing to the east, He turned to the west What turned Him about? The Bible savs He has no shadow of turning : He rides on His chariot through the eternities, He marches Him without From everiast- ing thrones on either side of looking which way the fail ing to everlasting. ‘‘He turned Him about.” He, whom all the allied armies of not stop a minuts divert an inch, by the wan, sick, ners of human suffer. ing turned clear about, Oh, what comfort there ig in this subject for people who are 1 nerve it is a misapplied word in that case, but 1 use it in the ordinary par After 13 years of suffering, oh, what nervous depression she must have had ! You all know that a good deal of medicine taken if it does not our leaves the system exhausted, and in the Bible in DANRY W “had suffered many things of 1 iysicians and was nothing bettered ther grew worse She was Ld She knew and about the awful ap. thing going to happen, al ttle things that in not have perturbed her. 1 war. was not a straight strois she gave garment of Christ, but a trembling peertain ¢ finger with which she ward which she aimed gar: t just where Or eless finger ealle i% |! Of course #0 rds «he as nerve us cold be all abou prehe ne of and insomnia, “ irritability health would rapt you it the fore-aro hand, and missad t did not to ghe expected to When I see ¢ the Lord Je the way for all nervous people, people do pot get much SY patoy., breaks his arp talk about it a us to motion of the & qr he n 2 She the aeh it His DErVYOUS WOman ie Christ, 1 say she is ming to making Nervous If a man ; B% erybody i sOTTY. and they all up and down the street, If a say “That's a dreadful thing.” is asking about her convalescence, iffering ander Everybody Bat when the ailment of they say “Oh, nervous, that's the most agoniz- Ow speaking ;. Rhee a little pon 2 new prescription to give you, you to discard human medion. eve in it penn the slightest in the way © news in ny aiwayw run for the doctor. | deapwe medicine, 1! you can do deasrdgsa bromide of vi Ouse I do not ask ment. 1 be thing bousshold, wi * do not want to not sleep 1 potassium, do not sirens & hits if paroxysa ii wants fo i up not despise quinine as a ton : ht and proper medicines. Bot van » bring your insomnia, sod 3 r irritability, and bring all your s Shenae with them touch Christ, eh Him not only on the hem of His garments, but touch Him on the shoulder, where He carr our burden, touch Him on the vhere He romembers all Our Sorrows Him on the heart, the center of all His sy:npathiesn. Oh, yes, Paul was right when he sald, “We have not a high priest who cannot be toushed, The fact fs Christ Himself {5s nervous. Al those nights out of doors in sialarial districts, where an Englishman or an American dies if he goes at certain seasons. Sleeping out of doors so many nights, as Christ did, and so | hungry, and His leet wet with the wash of the sent, and the wilderness tramp, and the sersecution, and the outrage must have broken His nervous system ; a fact proved by the statement that He lived 80 short a time on the cross, That 8 a lingering death or Aesnine your avd head tytn touen has writhed in pain 24 hours, 43 hours, Christ lived only six. Why? He wasexhausted bo. fore He mounted the bloody tree, Oh, it is a wornout Christ, sympathetic with all poo- ple worn out. A Christian woman went to the Tract House in New York and saczed for tracts for distribution. The first day she was out on her Christian errand she saw a policeman taking an intoxicated woman to the station house, After the woman was discharged from custody, tais Christian tract distributer saw her coming away all unkempt and un- lovely, The tract distrivuter went up, threw | her arms around her neck and kissed her The woman said, "Oh, my God, why do you me?” “Weill.” replied the other, “I | think Jesus Christ told me $0.” “Oh, no," the woman said, ‘don’t you kiss me, It breaks my hoor. Nobody has kissed me | since my mother died.” Bot that sisterly kiss brought her to Christ, searted har on the | road to heaven. The world wants sympathy. It is dying tor sympathy, largeshearted | Christian sympathy, Taere is omnipotence | in the touah, i Oh, Iam so gind that when we touch Christ Christ tounshes us! The kouskies, and the Hobe, and the joints, ail falling apart with that tiving death eatied the leprosy, n man is | brought to Christ. A hundred doctors could not cure him, The wisest surgery would stand lod bejurs that loathsome pa tient, hat did Christ do? He did not am- fy. He touched him, and he was well, The mother-in-law of the Apostis Petor was in a raging fever. Lrain fever, typhoid fever, or what, I do not know, Christ was the physis cian, He offered no fel rifuge | He presarived Bo drops ; He did not put ber on plain diet, He touched per, and she was porivetly well, Two blind men come stambling Into a room where Christ is, They ara entirely sightless, Christ did not 1t the ey id 10 ses whether it was eatarset or opbtbrmimia. He did not put three or four the men into u dards room for ! * weeks, Hetouched them, and they saw avery, thing. A man came to Christ, The drum of his ear had ceased to vibrate, and he had a stuttering tongue, Christ touched the ear, and he heard : touched his tongue, and he articulated, There is a funeral coming out | of that gate—a widow following her only boy | to the grave, Christ eannot stand it, and He { puts His hand on the hearse, and the obse. quies turn into a resurrection day, i O my brother, I am so glad when we touch | Christ with our sorrows He touches us, When ! out of your grief and vexation you put your | hand on Christ, it awakens all human remi- { niscence. Are we tempted? He was tempted, | Are we sick? He was sick, Are we perse. outed? He was persecuted. Are wo bereft? He was bereft, St. Yoo of Kermartin one morning went out and saw a beggar asleep on his doorstep, The beggar had been all night in the cold, | The next night 8t, Yoo compelled this beggar {to come up in the house and sleep in the | saint's bed, while 8t, Yoo passed the night on | the doorstep in the cold. Bomebody asked i him why that eccentricity. He replied «+ “Jt I want to know how MANY IN ONE. fmall Towns United Have Made a Great | City of Brooklyn. | Before the building of the grest bridge | the city of Brooklyn was a string of vil- | lages. The Helghts, overlooking New | York, where a row of house gardens has | been built on the roofs of the river-side | storehouses, was settled by the Dutch | in the old days. They used to pull | away from the bustle of town in row- | boats after business hours. They called | the place variously—Breucklen, Brouck- | lyn, Breuckelen, and Bruckiyn., Buch shipping firms ag the Lows and others followed the Dutch to the tree-ciad | Long Island shore from time to time. In 1790 there was talk of bullding the | National Capitol there, and very much | later Plyrniouth Church and Henry Ward Beecher made the Heights world-fa- i i { { | { He slept on the cold doorstep of an inhospitable world that would not let Him in, and all the tired and all the perplexed, why do you not go and touch Him? You utter your voices in a mountain pass, and there come back 10 echoes, 20 echoes, 30 echoes perhaps-—weird achoes, Oh, groan of distress has divine response and eolestial reverberation, and all the galleries and throngs of ministering angels echo the terunles of the redeemed hearts of God the Father, God the Bon and God the Holy Ghost echo and re-echo. I preach a Christ so near you can touch touch Him with your gullt and get pardon-—touch Him with your trouble and get comfort touch Him with your bondage and get manumission, take hold of an electric chain, A man can with one hand take one end of the chain, and with the other hand he may take hold of the other end of the chain, hen 100 persons taking hold of that chain will altogether feel You have seen that ex , and ech periment, Well, Christ takes hold of of with one end « and with of the other end of the electric chain of Jove, snd all earthly and angelic beings may lay hold of that chain, and around and around in sublime and everiast. ing eireuit runs the thrill of terrestrial and celestial nd brotherly and saintly and cherable and seraphic and archangelic aud divine sympathy. So that if this morning Christ should p His hand over this audience and say, “Who touched Me?" there would be hundreds and thousands of voloes responding “i113 I nc — The Magnetic Water wounded hand {f the electric chain one ios ove, HW ee of Pueblo, A feature of remarkable interest at Pueblo, Colorado, is that of the peonlisar magnetic mineral water found there. This has coverted the whole town to a belief in its wonderful effi nd attracted a great deal of interest throughout the State, Every body to be drinking it, and bathing in it for 8 week or two with the water at a temperature of about 105 Fahrenheit panacea for the most obstinate cases of inflammatory rhenmatism and derauge- ment of the kidneys and liver, also dyspepsia and various other troubles, nervous complaints This water seems to be generally distributed he city of Pueblo at a depth 200 to 1700 feet, and has been or eight wells seats area several miles, all sunk in search for petrolenm and coal, and in no case has a well which has been sunk to 8 proper depth failed to réach the water, which sand in a lnminstion of white sand- So strong is the foree upon the water below that it equals a pressure at the surface of the wells equal to that of from fifty to sixty pounds fo the inch, and rises when confined by an upright pipe to a height of 120 feet, and from one of the wells, whien four five inches in and which is the only one which has been properly cased, is esti- mated at 3000 barrels per diem. The water is considered most agree- able for drinking, and contains an ap- | ble proportion of iron, lithia The particular feature, , in strong magnetic char. | ss it impregnates knife-blades and steel substances held beneath its flow for a few minutes so strongly that they become magnets by which tacks, i other small iron and steel objects are readily lifted. This im. parting of magnetism by water ie I believe, disputed and scouted by scientists whose theories are quite clear, but the fact nevertheless existe, | and incontestably, that the water does, with celerity, highly magnetize steel | substances held beneath its flow. It | may not perhaps do this by the no- | cepted axinms of science, but that it has a way of doing it is highly satis. factory to the boys as well as the adults | of Pusblo, This magnetic quality is | accounted the prime factor in rheu- | matic eases, and it would be difficult | to find in the whole of Pueblo any one | who knows anything about the water | who is not a convert to its supposed almost miraculous qualities, In fact a continnous pilgrimage from the minesand different paris of the State to the water for drinking and bathing is going on, and it is generally be- ¥ CRCY | SEOs degrees is considered a incinding seven f an i which were i | is f stone he flow in or diameter, precia and however word as its acter, need I es and INI The Best Dishes for Pyspepties, Violent cases of dyspepsia are often Never drink at meals, and if water slowly. Little by little, as the person grows better, he or she can Where chronic dyspepsia exists, gens erally the person must be guided by what is found by experience to agree. Simplicity in cooking and a plain is necessary, Pastry, fried and nearly all sweets are to be avoided. The following sre some of the foods easy of digestion. Mutton, sweetbreatls, chicken, pariridges, beef tea, mutton broth, milk, fisl, oysters, stale bread, rice, tapioca, asparagus, French beans, baked apples, oranges, strawberries and posches. — 3t, Louis Star-Sayings mous. The Hill district, northeast and | far back of the original ferry, grew up | and so did Will. inmaburg, which was incorporated as a | Brooklyn in 1856, Greenpoint, beyond | Williamsburg, grew into a town; an- | cient Flatbush, straight back from the | ferry, was a Dutch farming village; | Bushwick was another; East New York | was & suburban outgrowth; and South Brooklyn, a seat of heavy population, | maintained its distinct individuality, Tha growth over the seams belween these places began in anticipation of | the building of the bridge. and to-day not only are these towns but the city is pushing into Jamalea, whi h an- | ecient burgh of the Duteh will be nominally what it already is in fact part of Brooklyn. The growth of very remarkable, Twenty years age the city was smaller than Boston pow, having less than 400,000 souls, 1880 her people numbered 566,689, 1860 the census-takers estimated sumber of residents at B06, 343; jay no one who is familiar with the strides the town has been making, and the number of new houses that have been bullt and occupied, questions that the place contains more than 900,000 inhabitants, { i oineaq " #O0n Brooklyn has i# In the A laugh is worth as hundred groans market, To Cleanse the System Effectually yel gently, when oostive or Mi. to permanently cure habitual constipation, toawaken the kidoesys an! liver toa healthy sotivity, without irritating er weakening them, 10 dispel headaches, 0oid or fevers, um Syrup of Figs ’ 4 A ¢ derwend slee does 1d depend jie 3 FR GS i The taste o i of the plow or the shaw Brown's Iron Bitters cures Dyspemnia, Mala. rin. Billousness and Generkl Debility, Gives strength, ads Dleestion, the ner creates appetite. The best tonie for Nursing Motuers, weak women and chilldren. » rps VP ow denis ir Many persons sre broken Wore or houselio tere rely moves excess of Lille, and wplendid 1onie for women an fram over. 4 cares Hire u's Iron Bite iiids the & digests « laria. iren. Foe A 4 \ . i hinking will kee ir Mary walter Peecham's PV ham Tin « ings Powoes is witha drank of » 5 ite a box thers most vio ya depth of Duris fisturie i the «1 #4 eH galea the s BO foe faMicted with sore eves use Dr. lssar Thom sons 's Eye-waler. Draggists sell at Ze. per bottle There are thirteen sieme nis in ive gaseous and elobt solid, i S to Ill © Dr. Kilme/'s is SWAMP-ROOT It fig Batt] { i MW. MecOY, Van Wert, Ohio, Acted like Magic! affered Years with Kidneys and Liver, LIFE WAS A BURDEN! Mr. McCoy is a wealthy and influential citi. ren of Van Wert, and a man known for miles around, See what he says “For years | was a terrible sufferer with Kid. ney and Liver nlso merveouns prose tration and poor health in general. 1 was all run down and life a burden. 1 tried physicians and every available remedy, but found mo rellef, Was induced to give Bwamp-Hoot a trial, which acted like magic, and today I am entirely cured and as good f man as ever, It is without question the greatest remedy in the world. Any one ta doubt of thisstatement oan addres me." M. MH. McCOY, Van Wert, Ohio, Guarantees — Use contests of One Bottle, If Sonu ary mot benefited, ein will refund 10 you the price jad, “Havallds’ Guide to Health” and Conwsliatton Free Dr, Kilmer & Oo, Binghomton, X. ¥, Pills Tox wives of several prominent citizens of a North Dakota town in- vaded a saloon, intent upon impress ing the proprietor with a sense of his wickedness and the wisdom of re forming. To thelr surprise and bruis- ing the proprietor threw them into the street. Of course, a gentleman would hesitate about throwing ladies out of doors. The conclusion is in- evitable that the proprietor either is no gentleman, or failed to realize that he was dealing with ladies. Juer as a New Orleans colored man of unpleasant temper had lifted an ax wherewith to brain an ac quaintance (the pair having differed concerning the theory and practice of crap-shooting) he had the untoward experience of falling dead. The oc casion had excited him. The lesson seems to be that even the process of praining people should be undertaken calmly and without undue violence. smitiiii— ——— so Fragrane ¢ (¢ what the flower thinks, Adnenen 11/00 Cn W n tartar a Agnenenegnen ~ Powder instead. uniform results, By its flavored, ing Powder we would li f free, aENe een e Ne qu i Mark your re nenreMNe Ne " Thin often equivalent {io getting ill. 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