REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN~- DAY SERMON. Subject: ‘“‘Mothers in Israel.” Text: ‘The molher af Sisera looked al a window." Judges v,, 28, Spiked to the ground of Jael's tent lay the dead commander in chief of the Canaanitish hast, General Sisera, not far {rom the river Kishon, which was only a dry bed of pebbles when in 1889, in Palestine, we erossed it, but the guliles and ravines which ran into it in- dieatod the possibility of great freshets like the oneat the timeof the text. General Sisera had gone out with 900 iron chariots, but he oul locked with the wheels of could not retreat fast other chariots, he enough, and so he ed, he went into Jael's tent for safety, had jast been churning, and when he asked for water she gave him buttermilk, which in the east is considered a most refreshing drink. Verv tired, and supposing he was safe, he went to sleep upon the floor, but Jael, who had resolved upon his death, took a tent pin, lonz and round and sharp, in one hand and a hammer in her other band, and, putting the sharp end o he tent pin to the forehead of Sisera, with her other hand she lifted the hammer and brought it down on the head of the pin with a stout stroke, when Sisera struggled to rise, and struck him acain, and he struggled to risa, and the third time she struck him, and the commander in chief of the Canaanitish host lay dead. Meanwhile in the distance Sisera’s mother sits amid surroundings of wealth and pomp and scenes palatial waiting for his return. Every mother expo: r son to be vietori- ous, and this mother looked the win- dow expecting to sse him drive in his ehariot followed by wagons loaded with em- broideries and also by regiments of men van- quished and enslaved. Isee her now sitting at the window, in b expectation. Bhe watehes the farthest turn of the road, looks for the flying dust of she ts | out at up the swilt The first flash of the bit of the horses b she will cath. The ladies of her court round, and she tells them of what they have when her son comes up-—chains of gold and earea- nets of beauty and dresses of such wondrous fabric and splendor as the Bible oaly hints at, but leaves us to imagine. ‘He ought t« be here by this time, vs his mother. *“That battle is surely over. I hope that freshet of the river Kishon has not impeded him. I hope those strange appearances we saw last night in the sky were not ominous, when the stars seemed to fight in their courses, No! No! He is so brave in battle I know he has wou the day. He will a be here,” alas for the disappointed mother! not see the glittering headgear of at full gallop bringing her from victorious battle. As a solitary messenger arriving in hot haste rides up to the windows at which the mother of Sisera sits, he cries, ‘Your armies are defeated, and your son Is dead.” There is a scene of horror and anguish from which weturn away. Now you see the full meaning of my short text, “The mother of looked out at a window.” Well, my friends, we areall out the battle of life is raging now, and the most of us have a mother watching and waiting for news of victory or defeat If she be not sitting at the window of earth, she is sitting at a window of heaven, and she is going to hear all about it. By all the rales of war Sisera ought to have been triumphant. He had 900 iron chariots and a host many thousands vaster than the armies of Israel But God was the other side, and the angry freshets of Kishon, and the hail, the lightning and the unmanageable warhorses, and the ecapsized chariots and the stellar panie in the sky discom- fited Sisera. Josephus in his history describes the scene in the following words “‘When they were come to a close fight there came down from heaven a great storm with a vast quantity of rain and hui! and the wind blew the rain in face of the Cangssnites and so darkened their eyes their arrows and slings were of no advantage to them, nor would the coldness of the air permit the sol- diers to make use of their swords, while this storm did not so much incommode the lsra- elites because it came on their backs, They also took sach courage upon the apprehen- sion that God was assisting them that they fell upon the ve »f their enemies and slew a great number of them, so that some ol them fell by the Israelites, some fell by their own horses which were put into disorder and not a few were killed by their own char- hots. Hence, my — jut she will he horses son home Risera our ¥ al on the ¥ ry midst hearers, the bad news to the mother of Sisera looking cut window. And our mother, whether sitting at a window of earth or a window of heaven will hear the news of our victory or defeat wot according to our talents or educational equipment or our opportunities, but accord- ing as to whether God is for us or against us, “Whereas mother?” at the is the question most frequently asked in many households. It is asked by the husband as well as the child coming in at nightfall, “Where's mother?’ It is asked by the little ones when they get hurt and come in erying with the pain, "Where's mother?” It js asked by those who have seen some grand sight or heard some good news or received some beautifal gift, “Where's mother?’ She sometimes [feels wearied by the question, for they all ask and keep asking it all the time. She Is not only the first to bear every case of perplexity, but she is the judge in every court of domestic appeal. That is what puts the premature wrinkles on 80 many maternal faces and pow- ders white so many maternal foreheads. Yon see, it is a question that keeps on for all the years of shildhood. It comes from the nurs. ery, and from the evening stand where the boys nnd girls are learning their school les- sons, and from the starting out in the morn. ing, when the tippet or hat or slate or book or overshoe is lost, st night, all out sters come in and shout until you can hear door to the back fence of the back yard, “Where's mother?” #0 full of that question that if he be taken away one of the things that the mother most misses and the silence that most oppresses her is the absence of that question, which she will never hear on earth again, exespt she hears it in a dream which sometimes re- stores the nursery just as it was, and then the voles comes back so natural, and so sweet, and so innocent, and so inquiring that the dream breaks at the words, ‘Where's mother?" If that question were put to most of us this morning. we would have to say, if we at the palace window. She has become a queen unto God forever, and she is pulling back the rich folds of the king's upholstery to look down at us, We are not told the par- ticulars about the residence of Bisera's mother, but thers Is in that scene in thebook of Judges so much about embroideries and needlework and ladies in waiting that we know her residence must have been princely and palatial. So we have no minute and par- ticular description of the wo at whose srindow our glorified mother site, but there i8 80 much in the closing chapters of the good old book about erowns, and pearls big enough to make a gate out of one of them, new songs and marlin sup- pd and harps, and white horses with kings the stirrups, and golden candlesticks that we know the heavenly residence of our mother is superb, is unique, Is colonnaded, ds domed, is embow ’ fountained, is glorified beyond the power of I or pen or tongue to present, and in the window of that paiace the mother sits watching for news the battle, What a contrast be- tween surrounding and her once earthly sn ings! What a work to Bring up 4 family, in the old time way, with tie or no help, except perhaps iE There wasthen no reading of elaborate treatises on the best modes of rearing ehil- soe if the principles announced are being car. down the load in the mow, They were at the same time caterers, tailors, doctors, chaplains and nurses for a whols household all together down with measles or fever, or round the house with coughs and croups and runround and earaches and all the distemipers which 2 some time swoop upon never got rested in this world, foot on the rocker sometimes hall the day or half the night —rook ~—rock —roek rock. stead of our drug stores wonders of materia medica and ealled up through a telephone, with them the only apothecary short of four miles’ ride was the garret, with its bunches of peppermint and pennyroyal and catnip and mustard and wamomile flowers, which were expected to do everything. Just think of it! vears of preparing breakfast, supper. The chief music heard was that of spinning wheel rocking chair. Fagged out, headachy and with ankles swollen. Those old fashioned dinner they they wera the folks, and they got there, and they are rested, for they have their third sight —as they lived long enough on earth to get their second sizht—and they do not breath after going up the the emerald stairs of the Eternal palace, at whose window they now sit waiting for news from the battle, But if anyone keeps on asking the ques tions “Where's mother?’ I answer, ‘‘She's in your present character.” is that your physical features suggest If there be seven children in a housebold at least six of them look like their mother, and the older vou get the more you will look like . But I speak now especially of your sracter and not of your looks, This is ly explained. During the first ten years of your life you were almost all the time with her, and your father you saw only mornings and nights, There are no years in any life so important for impression as the first ten. Then and there isthe impression made for virtue or viee, for truth or hood, for bravery cowardice, for religion or skepticism. hind a door and frighten the child, and you may shatter his nervous system for a life- time, him enough sg oward till ho dies, ens {alse Or spook stories to Act make before him the left ywwor from + the s will never perstitions, You may give that girl before ten vears old a foudness for dress that will make her a mere ‘dummy frame.” or fashion plate, for forty years, xvi.. 44. “As is the mother so is her daugh- ter.” Before one decade has passad you ean decide whether that boy will be a Shylock or a George Peabody. Boys and girls are gen- erally echoes of fathers and mothers, What an incoherent thing for a mother out of temper to punish a child for getting ¢ f moon over shoulder, and the ree r she is mind, or for a father who smokes to shut his boy up in a dark closet because he has found him with an old stump cigar in his mouth, or for rebuke her danghter for staring at herself too mach in the looking glass when the mother has her own mirrors so ar- rauged as to repeat her form from all sides’ The great English poet's loose moral char- acter was decided before he left the nursery, and his schoolmaster in the schoolroom overheard this conversation: ‘‘Byron, your mother is a fool,” and he answered, ‘I know it.” You ean hear all herole life of Senator Sam words of his mother when she in the war of 1812 put a musket in his hand and said “There, my son, take this and never disgrace it, for remember I had rather all y sons should Al one honorable grave than that ons of them shonld turn his back on an enemy. Go snd remember, too, that while the door of my cettage is open to all brave men it is always shut against cow- ards Agrippina, the mother of Nero, mur deress, you ars not surprised that her son was a murderer, Give that child an over jose of catechism, and make him recite verses of the Bible as a punishment, and make Sunday a bors, and he will become a stout antagonist of Christianity. Impress him with the kindness and the geniality and the loveliness of religion. and he will be its advocate and exemplar for all time and eter- nity. A few days ago right before our express train on the Louisville and Nashville rail- road the precading train had gone down through a proken bridge, twelve cars falling 100 feet and then consumed. [saw that only one span of the bridge was down and all the ther spans were standing. Plan a good bridge of morals for your sons and daughters, but have the first span of ten soars defective, and through that they will erash down, though all the rest keep standing. O man, O woman, if you have preserved your integrity and are really Christian, you have first of all to thank God, and I think next you have to thank your mother. The most impressive thing at the my Court and the Senate of the United States kissed his old mother. of this audience, and I proportion of you who could ask what God to maternal fidelity, 1 three-fourths of you would spring to your feet, “Ha! ha!’ said the soldiers of the “What has made the change in you? You used to like sin as well as any of us.” Pull sent him, she concluded, “We aro all pray- tain.” he said, ‘‘Boys, that's the sentence,’ The trouble with Bisera’s mother was that, tiasflald, she had the two bad qualities of be- ing dissolute and being too fond of personal adornment. The Bible account says: “Her wise ladies answered her yea, She returned answer to herself: ‘Have they not sped? Have they not divided the prey--to every man a damsel or two, to Bisera a prey of divers colors, a prey of divers colors of needlework, of divers colors of needlework on both sides” ” Bho makes no aaxious utterance about the wounded in bat tle, about the bloodshed, about the dying, about the dead, about the prinel- ples involved in the battie going on, a battle 80 important that the stars and the freshets took part, and the clash of swords was an- swernd by the thunder of the skies. What she thinks mo#t of Is the bright colors of the wardrobes to be captured and the needle work, “To Sisera a prey of divers colors, a prey of divers colors of needlework, of divers colors of nesdlework on both sides,” Now neither Sisera’s mother nor any one side oan suy Soo much in eulogy of the neadle, It made more useful nests than the sword, Pointed at one and with an at the other, whether of bone or ivory, as in earliest time ; or of bronze, as in Pliny’'s time ; or of steel, as in modern time ; whether laboriously fashionad as formerly by one hand, or as now, when 100 workmen in a facto ars employed to make the different parts of one ie, it is an instrament di- ordered for the comfort, for the lite, the health, for the of the human race. The eye of needle hath seen more domestic comfort and more gladdensd | pover- ty and more Christinn service than any other The modern machine hag in no 6 iss abotishad the , bat mn on~ throned it, Thank God for the Awor from the time when the Lord Almighty from the heavens ordered in regard to the ems- broidered door of the ancient tabernacle, “Thou shalt make a hanging for the door of the tent of blue and purple and searlet and finn twined linen wrought with needlework.” down to the womanly hands which this winter in this tabernscle are presenting for benevolent purposes their needle work, int there was nothing cept vanity and worldliness and socini splash in what Sisern’s mother said about the noes would bring home from the battle, am not sure prised to find that fought on the wrong side when his mother at the window of my text in that awfal exigency had her chief thought on dry ement and social display. God only knows how many homes have made shipwreck on ths ward. robe. And that mother who siis at the win- dow watching for vainglorious trinmph of millinery and fine colors and domestic pa. FS And I Risora goods nohie from her children out in the battle of life as Sigsara's mother heard from the struzgie at Esdraeion, jut if you still press the question, “Where's mother?’ I will tell you Some of you your face and But you awful thing for started with her likeness in That was an her. If you had seen any one strike her you fatal ; have struck down but, my boy, you her principles from your soul You struck her down! The tent pin that wns not 80 eruel as the stab you have But she is waiting yet, for are slow to give up their boys walting at some window, it roay be & window on earth in heaven. may cast vou off. Your wife divorce and have no patience with you, Your father may disinherit you and say, “Let him never again darken the door « house." not give you up may God and mother, How many disappointed mothers waiting at the window! Perhaps the panes of the window are not great gloss piste, bevel edged and hovered over by exquisite lam- panes, I would say about six them. in summer wreathed with trailing vine and in winter pictured by the Raphaels of the forest, a real country window. The mothhr sits there knitting, or busy with her needle on homely repairs, when she looks up and sees coming across bridge of the meadow brook a stranger, who dismounts in front of the window. He lifts and drops the heavy knocker of the farmhouse door. He gives his name and “There in the DO SKYE, the Come my Yom! is nothing the mattar with Bon elty, is there?” she asked, “Your son got into an unfortunate encounter with a young man in a liquor saloon last night and is badly hurt, The fact is he can not get well. I hate totell you all, I am sorry to say he is dead.” “Dead!” she cries as she totters back, “Ob, my son! my son! Would God 1 had died for thee ™ That is the ending of all her eares and anxie- ties and good counsels for that boy. That fs her pay for her seif sacrifices in his bahalf, That is the bad news from the battle, So the tidings of derelict or Christian sons travel to the windows of earth or the windows of heaven at which mothers sit, “Bat.” says some one, ‘are you not mis. taken about my glorified mother hearing of hy ovildoings since she went away?” Bays some one else, “Are you not mistaken about my glorified mother hearing of my soif sacri floes and moral bravery and struggle to do right?’ No! Heaven and earth are in con- There are trains run- trains of immortals ascending and descanding spirits going from earth to heaven to live there, BSprits descending from heaven to earth to min and help. hey hear from us many times every day. Do they hear good news or bad news from the battle, this Sodan, this Thermopyle, this Auster. Htz, in which every one of us is fighting on the right side or the wrong side. © God, whose I am, and whom 1 am trying to serve, as a result of this sermon, roll over on all mothers a now sense of their responsi. bility, and upon all children, whether still in the nursery or out on the tremendous Eadraslon of middie life or old age, the fact that their victories or defeats sound clear out, lear up to the windows of sympathetic maternity. Oh, is not this the minute whes the cloud of blessing filled with the exhaled tears of anxious mothers shall burst in showers of merey on this andienee There is one thought that iz almost too I almost fear to start it lest 1 have not anough control of my emo- tion to conclude it. As when we were chil dren we so often came ia from play or from a hurt or from some childish tnjustios prac ticed upon us, and as soon as the door was opened we cried, “Where's mother?’ and she sald, "Here I am,’ and we buried our weeping faces in her lap, so after awhile, when we get through with the pleasares and hurts of this life, we will, by the pardoning mercy of Christ, enter the heavenly home, and among the first questions, not the first, but among the first, will be the old question that we used to ask, the question that is being asked in thousands of places at this very moment the question, **Whers's mother?’ or for her to find us, for she will have been watching at the window for our coming, and with the other children of our household of earth we will again gather round ber, and ghe will say : “Well, how did you get through the battle of life? 1 have often heard from others about you, but now I waut to hear it from your own souls, Tell me all about it, my children!” And then we will tell her of all our earthly experiences, the burials, the heartbreaks, the losses, the 1 sow each one of you has a crown, which was given you at the gate as you came through. the ages of eternity you will never again have to ask, ‘Wheres 2 mother” ” sin II —— A Coin Recovered After Thirty Tears, It is not often that a marked coin once put into circulation is returned to the person who marked it. George Troup, Superintendent of Forest Lawn Cemetery, before he left Bcotland, had his name stamped upon a coin of the issue of George IL. It was done in fun, and at that time he never dreamed that the coin would ever be returned to him, The coin was put into cir. culation, and a short time afterward Mr. Troup came to this country. More than thirty yoars passed by, and he thought nothing more about the circumstance. One day recently a friend of his at lodge ssid to him: *“1 have a coin with your name upon it.” “I asked him to let me soothe coin,” said Mr. Troup, “snd when I looked at it I found it was the identical piece that IT had marked so long ago. I wrote to the man who was nt when the coin was marked in Seot- land, and he recalled the circumstance, the coin from my Buffalo friend, and now I would not take a good sum of for it. Where years no one knows, but it is a strange coincidence that it should have turned u to me in ufinlos the atmo 1 it Ofter. Happens So *So that's Josiah's picter that we had tuk in the city,” said Mrs. Corn tossel’'s visitor. “Yes” “Wal, I can't say thet it looks much like 'Siar. 1t hez askeery expression ‘round the eves, an’ a drawed aroun’ the mouth thet ain't nachural. An’ 1 never saw his hair like thet in all my born days.” “Yes,” answered Mrs. graph man an’ git his money but I told him they wan't no doin’ it. ez he was, but 1 can't deny ez thet's how he looked when the picter tuk.” nnn back, Which Won the Prize’ Three students of the Ecole des Beaux Arts, Marseilles, were talking in a cafe. “My dear fellow,” said one; “I painted the other day a little piece of pine wood in imitation marble so perfectly that it sank t« the bottom of the water.” said another. “Yesterday 1 pended my thermometer on the easel that holds my ‘View of the Polar Regions.” It fell at once to twenty below zero.” the last: “my portrait of the marquis is 80 lifelike that it i twice 4 week Of oR wa To Measure Ocean's Depths, An instrument has been for sounding the depths of the without using a lead line A sinker is dropped containing a which explodes on touching the report Is registered in microphone apparatus and the di reckoned by the time at whicl explosion occurred. the bot tom: Electrics, learn to forget it at should be like now suffering the Rapia Molecular Movement, I'he average of the mission of earthquake shocks 1s near- iy 18,000 feet per second it ve @ speed Favs Huwert Hood's has made is more heaulil CRIenOaRr, nm BOW ana natura beauty, it eral informatic The figures are pininiy and barons satisiactory of any drug stamps f ¢ and te Hood & Co A3Wend lions of them were immense demand These calendars issued y the pro- prietars of Hoods Sarsapariiia, » weil known wh has y fs wonderful renown 3 where the blood was The great laboratory in bas a oapae for thes a day, si world devoted fo the medicine, he in all sections of the The proprietors have would cure every aillme but they sha bv thousands of on Sarsaparilia purifies and vits builds system and eases caused by impure bl such as serofuls rheumatism, ete, It of the grip, restore forces after a siege of 1} fortifying the system he fact that great preparation of the ig ing has ever been it except as warranted by previous has much 10 do with the confidence felt by the public in i= curative po 8, The m the pre prietors is, “It is not what we say, but what Hood's Barsaparilia that the story,” and wid's Barsapariiia ublished state. ments of persons whom it has cured, that bas placed it at the head in the field cine in the present day. aly girl ju ene Hy vaiuabie presented are medicine ; . : oy Brine sauce ures 1 Gre wisoned or Impure swhish it § mage fifty 4 = the largest § sales of Teoml uy the i i sgainst sod In the that moth- are is exere i , and ned for {res tto of TORE, {ells jt i= what H he p of wedi The earth, in revolving on its Axis, QOS almost ns fast, reckoning st the equator, as a eapnon ball—that is in a little more than thi ee seconds, The Most Pieasant Way Of preventing the grippe, colds, headaches and fevers Is to use the liguid laxative remedy gentle, yet effective cleansing. To be benefited by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. For sale by all druggists in 5c. and $1 bottles, A gross outrage Finding it 5 low packages Millions of Deliars Ars annually lost becatse poor seed fs planted Now, when yon sow yon want to reap. For intance, A. M. Lamb, Penn., made $550 on ten acres af vegetables: RH. Bey, Cal, cropped 1210 bushels Salzer's onions per acre: Frank Close, Minn, 10 bushels of string wheat from two mores: A. Hahn, Wik, HM boshels potatoes per acre; Frank Winter, Montana, 216 bushels ® pounds oats from one bushel planted. This is what Salzer calls reaping, IF YOU WILL CUT THIS OUT AXD 8FXD 17 with 10~ to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wie, yon will receive their mammoth cata. togue and ten sample packages of farm seeds Catalogue alone, fo postage, A No Check on the Rhymster. Copyright does not prevent a pocm or song from being parodied. A TERRIBLE CASE OF DROPEY CURED. ¥0. 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Few persons suspect that the com non moth may be ut deco rative artist, but he may be, if only be watchful, pati and quainted with the cre: e's habits, The larva of i 14 1 ’ - PAZ OS 4 3 3 your in O1i¢ . ac 4, ¥, i f dissatisfied have . ings are, a habit of es 4 ort of which es this sac bY P takes a it and inserting new ma if a moth-worm that itself In re ward transferred, sac white flannel the growing iusect will ¢ its red flannel covering and large it with a covering of whit nel If, then, the worm and transferred to blue i are yh grt An illion persons need itself patriotically in red, white WhO beets 2 In: blue. Entomologist Southwick, ¥ree Press the Park Department, says that it If v a 16 great trouble tw u you have not re- REE. 1 through this * ceived one of the York Sun. August Flower and Ger- man Syrup Diary Alman- acs for 189.4, send your name and address on a postal at once, asking for. 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