THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: “Christ the Conqueror.” Text: “Who isthis thal cometh from Edom 2oith dyed garments from Bosrah--this that is glorious in His apparel, traveling in the greats ness of His strength?’ — Isaiah Ixili., 1. Edom and Boarah, having been the scene of flerce battle, when those words are used here or in any other part of the Bible they are figures of speach setting forth scenes ol severe conflict, As now we often use the word Waterloo to deseribe a decisive contest of a scene of great slaughter, Whatever else most certainly meant to depict the Lord Jesus Christ saying, “Who is thisthat cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Bozrah, travelinginthe greatoess of His strength?” When a general is abont to go out to the wars, a flag and a sword are publicly pre ers, and the young men load the and the train starts amid a huzze drowns the thunder of the wheels and the shriek of the whistie. But all this will give no idea of the excitement that there must have been in heaven when Christ started out on the campaign of the world's conquest. If they could have the siege that wouid be laid to Him, and the maltreatment He would suffer, and the burdens He would have to carry, and the battles He wonld have to fight, I think there would have been a million volunteers in heaven who would have insisted on coming along with Him, But no ; they only accompanied him to the gate ; their last shout heard clear down to the earth ; the space ween the two worlds bridged with a great hosanna. You know there is a wide difference be- tween a man's going off to battle and coming back again. When he goes off, it is with epaulets untangied, with baoner unspecked, with sleek and shining from the groom. Allithat there is of struggle and in Is to come yet, So it was with Christ, de had not yet bt a battle. He was starting out, and tho ! 1 did not give Him a warm hes Ere Was a gentle mother who folded Him in her arms. And a babe finds no stable and a palace, camel drivers, As Jesu it was amid angelic shouts in the galleries and amid the kindest maternal mindstra tions. But soon host forces began to gather. They dep! i from the sanhedrin. They were detailed from the standing semy. They came out from the Cwsarean castles, The vagabonds in the joined the gen- tlemen of the m 4 rode hell, and in long arras ame tugether that threaten put to newly arrived one from ven Jesus, now seeing battie gathering, lifted His own standard, 3 gatherad about it? How feeble the ! A few shoremen, a blind beggar. an with an alabaster box, another woman with two mites anda group of friendless, moneyioss and positionless people came to His What chance was there f« ; against Him, Bethlehes naum against Hin Galilee against Hin » irts against Him, the army against Him, » throne agnair Him, the wond against Him, all Him. No wonder they asked Him te tender, But He conle apologize, He eo He had come to an ensiaved race, an Then they sent pickets to watch Him. Tueysaw in what house He went and when He came out I'hey watched what He ate, and who with bat He drank, and how much. They did dare to make their final assault, for th not but that be- hind Him there a re-enforcement Ahat was not seen, But at last the battle came. It was to be more fierce than Bozrah, more bloody than Gettysburg, involving more than Austeriits more combatants amployed than at Chalons, a ghastiier conflict than all the battles of the together, though Edmund Burke's estimate of thirty-five millions of the sisin be accurate. The day was Friday, The hour was between 12 and 3 clock. The field was a slight hillock northwest of Jerusalem. The forces engaged were earth and hell, Joined as allies on one side, and heaven, represented by a solitary inhabitant on the other, The hour came, I think that day the spirits that could heavenly tempie and could get conveyance of wing or chariot came down from above, and spirits getting fariough from beneath came up : and they Hatened, and they looked, and they watched, Oh, what an uneven bat- tie! Two world's armed on one side: an unarmed man on the other, of the Roman army at that time stationed at Jerusalem began the attack. They knew how to fight, for they belonged to the mast thoroughly drilled army of the world. With aoxnnon, foreseen horses greetin aifference between courtiers between a and ; #3 n hin we 3 % stepped on the stage of this worid ile street up from a force rout this asion. Te standard, Nazareth 15t Him, Caper- 1 against Him, hell agninst Sure not sarreader, He could not iid not take any back steps. for the deliverance of do the work just i i got be Oh, what atime it was! universe looked on. The spared from the bees the hill. The horses prance and rear amid the excitement of the populace —the heels of the riders plunged in the flanks, urg- fng them on, The weapons begin to tell on Christ, See how faint He looks! There the blood starts, and there, and there, and there, If He is 10 have re-enforcements, let Him call them up now. No: He must do this work alone. He is dying. Feel for vourself of the wrist ; the pulse is feebler, eel under the arm ; the warmth is less. He is dying. Aye, they pronounce Him dead. And just at that moment that" they pronounce Him dead He rallied, and from His wounds He unsheathed a weapon which staggered the Roman legions down the hill and buried the satanic battalions into the pit. It was a weapon of love~infinite love, all conquer. ing love. Mightier than javelin or spear, it triumphed over all. Put back, ye armies of earth and heil |! The tide of battle turns, Jesus hath over. come, Let the people stand apart and make 6 line that He may pass down from Calvary tc Jerusalem, and thence on and oat all around the world. The bLattle is fought, The victory is nohieved. The triumphal march is beguu, Hark to the hoofs of the multitude, for He has many friends now! hero of heaven and earth advances, Cheer, cheor! “Who i» this that cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from Boz mah. traveling in the greatness of His strength” We behold here 8 new revelation »f a blessed und a dtartling fact. People talk of Christ as though He wesn going to do some thing grand for us after awhile. He bas done it, Peopletalk as though ten or twenty from now, in the closing hours of our Jite or fn some terrible pass of life, Jesus will pT has done She Tent alread b xy 1861 years ago. You ns t of Washington as tho he were going to achieve oar national ependence in 1950 as to speak of Christ ne though He were going did it in the year of our Lord 33-1861 ago~on the fleld of Bozrah, the of pur salvation fighting unto death flo, your and sy : we havetodo I= to that fact in our hearts, sod we ure free forthis world, are for ‘the world to come, ¥ I r EELS Xi is strength,” not to that He to fight for you some le in the , but to tell you that the battle is fought and the victory already won, Suge amd that when soldiers come | the banner He carries as conqueror the | names of 10,000 battlefields He won for you i and for me, He rides past all our homes of bereavement-«by the door bell swathed in | sorrow, by the wardrobe black with woe, by | the dismantled fortress of our strencth. | Come out and greet Him to-day, O ye peo- ple! Bee the names of all the battle passes on His flag. Yo who are poor, read on this { ensign the story of Christ's hard crusts and | pillowless head. Ye who are persecuted, read here of the ruMans who chased Him ; from His fiest breath to His last, Michty to | calnmitios, mighty to tread down your foes, | “traveling in the greatness of His strength." Though His horse be brown with the dust of the march, and the fetlocks be wet with the earnage, and the bit be rod with the blood of your spiritual foes, He comes up now, not exhausted from the battle, but fresh ns when He went into it—coming up from Bozrah. “traveling in the greatness of His strength.” You know that when Augustus and Con- stantine and Trajan and Titus eame back from the wars what a time thers was. You know they came on horseback orin chariots, and there were trophies before, and there were oaptives behind, and there were people | shouting on all sides, and there were gar { lands flung from the window, and over the highway a triumphal areh was sprang. The solid masonry to-day at Benevento, heroes, And shall we let our CONGUsPOr go | without lifting any acclaim? Have we not | lowers red enough to depict the caanage, white enough to celebrate the victory, fra grant enough to breathe the joy? Those men of whom I just spoke dragged their victims at the chariot wheels, but Christ. our Lord, takes those who once were eaptives and invites them into His chariot to strength, saying, “1 have joved thee with an everlasting love, and the waters shall not drown it, and the fires shail not burn it, and eternity shall not exhaust it.” If this be true, I cannot see how any man can carry his sorrows a great while, If this conqueror from Bozrah is going to beat back all your griefs, why not trust Him Ob, do you not feel under this gospel your griefs falling back and your tears drying up as you hear the tramp of a thousand fllustrious promises lad on by the conquerar from Bozrah, “traveling, traveling in the great. ness of His strength?” On that Friday h church rightly celebrates, calling it i Friday.” your soul and mine were contended f { . whi the Episcopal “Goo for. On that day Jesus proved Himsel mightier than earth and hell, and when the ances struck Him He gathered them up into a sheal as a reaper gathers the grain, and He stacked them, Mounting Apocalypse, He rode down thre “traveling io the grestness of Hi On that day your sin and mine we will only believe if. There may besome “1 don't lke the « garments, You tell Were not only spattered onfliet, but also they were soaked were saturdted ; that they were dved in it," Iadmitit, You say sou do that. Then I quote you two passages of Seripture : “Without the sheding of blood sree 8 Do remiss **In the blood is the atonement.” But it was not your blood, It His own. Not only enough to redden garmenis and to redden His horse, th to wash away the sins of the wo wil on His brow, ths bi the blood on His fee side! It seems as if an Ariery must have ¥ the hor me here who may say »! this conqueror’s that His garments with the blood of that oi they not lke was the bi 2d on is i There is a fountain Sled with blood rawn irom Immanae i's vol » el sinners pluncerd beneath that A poe all their guiity sani od - ‘elock to-morrow afternoon goAmong aces of lusiness or It will bon difficult thing for you to find men who by their show you that they are over worked. They are prematurely old, They are hastening rapidly toward demons, They bave gone through erises in | asinens that shattered their nervous system and pulied on the braln. They have a shortness of breath, and a pain in the back of the head, and at night an Insomnia that alarms them. Why are they drudging at business early and iate For fun? No :it would be diffleult to extract any smusement out of that sxhags- tion. Bocause they are avaricious? In many cases, no, Because their own personal ex- penses are lavish? No ; a few hundred dollars would meet all their wants, The simple fact is the man is enduring all that Iatigue and exasperation and wear and tear to keep his home prosperous. There is an invisible line reaching from that store, from that bank, from that shop, from that scaffolding, 19 a quiet scene a few blocks, a few miles away, and there is the secret of that business endurance, He is simply the Bampion of a homestead, for which he wins bread and war irobe and education and pros. perity. and in such battle 10,000 men fall. OF ten business men whom I bury nine die of overwork for others, Bome sudden disease finds them with no power o! resistance, and they are gone, Life for life. Biood for blood. Sabstitution ! At 1 o'clock to-morrow morning, the hour when siumber is most uninterrupted and profound, walk amid the dwelling houses of the olty, Here and there you will find a dim light, because it js the household custom to keep a subdued light burning, put moat of the houses from base to top are as dark as though uninbabited. A meraitul God has sent forth the archangel of sleep, and he puts his wings over the city. But yonder is a clear light burning, and outside on the window casement a glass or piteher containing food for a sick child—the [ood set in the fresh air, This is the sixth night that mother has sat up with that sufferer. She has to the last point obeyed the physician's prescription, the foil, Ook their most anxious, for she has buried threes ohildren with the same disease, and she prays and weeps, each prayer aud sob ending with a kiss on the pale cheek. By dint of kindness | she gets the little one through the ordeal, After it is all over the mother is taken down. Brain or nervous fever sets in, and one day she leaves the convalescent child with a mother’s blessing and gow up to join the three inthe kingdom of heaven, Life for life. Bubstitation! The fact i= that there are an uncounted number of mothers i who, after they have navigate! a large family of children through all the diseases of infancy and got them falrly started up the | lowering slope of boyhood and giriboo 1, | have only strength enough left to die, They fadeaway. Some call it consumption : some call it nervous prostration ;somesall it inter. mittent or malarial disposition, but I call it | marfyrdom of the domestic eirole, i lite. Blood for blood, Sabstitution ! { Or perhaps the mother lingers long enough fo ses a son get on the wrong road, i | ply when she expresses anxiety about him, | Bat she goes right on, looking carefully after | his apparel, remembering his every birthday with some memonto, and when he is brought home, worn out with dissipation, nurses him till he gets woll and starts him again and bopes and expects and prays and counsels and suffers until her strength gives out sod she falls. She is going, and attendants bend ug over her plilow ask her if she has any to leave, and she makes great affort to say something, but vat of thres or four minutes of indistinet utterance they oan eateh but three words, “My puot boy I" The simple fact is she died for him. Life for fa, Bab ution, sit About thirty-thres Jonss there went forth from pri homes vores ow 2p of thousands of men to do battle for their country, ditches, the buzzards of the summer heat the only attendants on their obsequies, No one but the infinite God, who knows everything, knows the ten thousandth part of the length and breadth and depth and height of angulsh of tha northern and south jorn battieflelds, Why did these fathers { loave their children and go to the front, and | why did these young men, postponing the | marriage day, start out into the probabilities { of naver coming back? For the country they | dind, Lite for life, { stitution ! But we need not go so far. i monument in Greenwood? It isto the doe- tors who fell in the southern epidemics, Why go? Were there not enough sick to be attended in these northern latitudes? Oh, | yes : but the dootor puts a few medical hooks | In his valise, and some vials of medicine, and loaves his patients here in the hands of other | physicians, and takes the rail train. Before {he gets to the infected regions he passes | crowded rail trains, regular and extra. tak- jing the flying and affrighted populations, { Ho arrives in a city over which n great hor- ror i& brooding, He goes from couch to | conch, feeling of pulse and studying symp- toms, and prescribing dav after day, night after night, until a fellow physician BAYH, | “Doctor, yon had better go home and rest - you look miserable,” ut he cannot rest suffering. On and on until some morning | flods him in a delirium, in whieh he talks of home and then rises and says he must go sud look after those patients, He is told to He down, but he fights his attendants until he falls back, and is weaker and wenker, and dies for people with whom he had no kinship, and far away from his own family, and is hastily put away ina stramger’s tomb, and only the fifth part of 8 nawspaper line tells us of his sacrifioe<—his name just mentioned among five. Yet he has touched the furthest height of sublimity fa that three weeks of humanitarian services, He goes straight as an arrow to the bosom of Him who sald, “I was slok and yo visited Me Life for life, Jlood for blood. Substitution! Some of our modern theologians who want to give God lessons about the best WAY to save the world tell us they do not want any blood in their redemption. They want to taks this horse by the bit and hurl him back on his haunches and tell this rider from Bozrah to gp around some other way, Look oat lest ye fall under the fiving hoofs of this horse, lest ve go down under the sword of this conqueror from Bozrah !| What means the blood of the pigeons in the old dispensa- tion, the blood of the bullock the blood of the heifer : the blood of the lamb? It me 10 prophesy the cleansing blood, the pand Ing biood, the healing blood of queror who up from Bezral, Ing in the greatness of His strength, I eateh a handful of the that rushes out from the heart of the Lord, and | throw it over this audience, hoping that one drop of its cleansing powe BY yoursoul, ©O Jesus, in t} wash Woe nod | Conqueror of Bograh, We throw into line ing, travel Blood for blood, Bub What Is that while so many are this con. CON travels red torreat rd VEE 10 i i} i erimeson ti ie Thy sacrifice int et have mer Our garments io the way Ride on, Jesus, ride on nag our souls’ i us We fall “Trave { Thy siniess of MOH is the gr r awhile the returning conqueror | resch the gute, and all the armim of saved will be with Him. I hope you will be there and I will bethere, As we go through the pate and around ab or the review, "a great multitude St BO man can ber” all heaven can tell without asking right aways which ons is Jesus, not only muse of the brightness of His face, but cause while all the other inhabitants In glory are robed in white—salots white, cheru- bim ia white, seraphim in white His r shall be soarier, sven the dyad garments of Jozrah, I eatoh a glimpse of that triumph. ant but the gate opens and shots so quickly I ean hear halt and itis this: “Unto Him who hath washed us in His blood * the ul the ti I — nu LE he $1 in yes »w IY a sentence eT Popular Stones for Jewelry, Through all when stone seems to changes, every the dia- mond stands alone, incomparable, In these dava stones are brought into prominence to meet the demand for variety, and such stones as the ame- thyst, the the chryso- beryl, the n carnelian and many other stones known ss semi precious are a0 wonderfully cut and set as to greatly increase their intrinsic value. These stones are very fashionabale just at present, set in the form of col lar and girdle. The turquoise has been more universally adopted in recent Years than any other stone. The grest- est number, and some of the most beautiful, have of late Years found in our own country. During the last three years $400,000 worth of American turquoises have been used, Aud the opal-—-that exquisite stone with its fairy light dancing over ite delicate surface— just now it is finding ite reward after many years of prej- ndice. Indeed, so far has the old su- perstition regarding this stone been removed that it has become, when set in dismonds, one of the chosen stones for the engagement ring, and the wo- mat who can claim among her associ- ates the most beantiful opal is to be envied, not pitied. ~Jewelers' Circu- lar, have its day RjUsmAarine, golde i WD A Ring's Own Story. Picking up from the sidewalk the other morning what happened to be a gold ring, with empty claws showing thy removal of a stone, the finder took it wa jeweler in Eleventh street for inspection, He examined it for a few minutes under a magnifying glass and said: ““Yes, this is a gold ring of four- been carats. The stone it contained was a three-carat diamond. It was worn a number of years on a slender woman's third finger. Then changed hands and was enlarged by the insertion of a piece of gold of in- on the third finger of a stout voman or the little finger of a man. The | diamond was removed by a clamsy | hand, probably by a thief, who either scoidentally dropped the ring or | threw it away where you found it. 1 | never saw the ring before, but plainly | rend its history by the same process of observation, analysis and deduction that an Indian unconsciously employs {in detecting the testimony of a forest trail." <FPhiladelphia Record. - Ee — Fade of Naval © rs, Naval officers have little fads of their own to help while away time on board ship. Some are experts in photog- raphy. Other make a specialty of something immediately in the line of their profession. Many collect bric-a- brac and eunrios, These smusements are for the most part inexpensive, and sometimes they are profitable. One officer usually picks up enough foreign stamps and coins on a ong cruise to bring in = neat little saul when ho gets os somo where Herald, ENGLISH MANNERS. Shy and Brusque in the Entertainment of Guests. characteristics: Shyness in Kociety and a brusqueness in conversation an’ the entertainment of guests, As an : | England said: “It is rather disappointing to come over here prepared to bow down and duchess at her ease. I asked an En- glishman once whether or not people shook hands when they were presented in England. I told him we did aot do #0 at home, but that English people seemed to have no fixed rule about it. and | wanted to know what was ex- pected of one. ‘Well, you know,’ he said, with the most charming naivete, ‘it isn't a matter of rule exactly: one is generally so embarrassed when being introduced that one really doesn’t know whether one is shaking hands or not,’ ” The same writer continues never occurs 0 the Englishman his manners are 100 brusq £1 “14 that Lie you I am one too many, I fear | am crowd- ing you all,’ you can count upon their ness, ‘Yes, you are, but we didn't know 1or it," and {t never occurs to them that that is not perhaps the best way of putting it. After a bit you | be you earn to be rude yourself, and then 3 get on famously. I have had Americans come into my rooms in London with tears of indignation in their eyes, and tell of the way 3 had been, as they supposed, snubbed and insulted and neglected. they would ask, ‘did they their house if they meant like that? I didn't ask didn't force myself on them, wanted a word now and then, make me feel | was a human being they had only asked “When you going away*" have something: but to leave me standing around in corners, and go whole dinners without m word, without intr ruqe, or you rags ne, it wouid been 10 ns ducing through eh as a me to any that have giv cxpected from WHEN peace comes, how will know the difference? I — A Heue lan Fret, Reyryt bs § 189 easy w she writes thas vary had Very oad rus Imsfing THY Arms were so tO heist lame 1 mysnif, sand became 80 lame he bed. Two and a half bottles Bim. 1 will always prajes § tse this as 3 Ben what is how every bh oar case of Toma? ment, and swyaeho haopy where pain about le He who is firm tLeworid to nd res himself There 1s more Catarel = 1} oountry than - SeRmes tii and untilthe last fou + CATE RAS 5 3 incuratie. For a great msn y Sens doctors pro. Bounced it a loca: d seas, sid prec bee} joven remedios, and by coastantils failing 10 cure with local trea ment, pronounced it incurable Ke lence has proven catarrh to be a oot FEET tional disease and (herefore requires constitys tional treatment, Hall's Catareh ire, Dan. afactured by ¥. J Cheney & Cn. Toledo. Ohio is the oniy constitutions cure on the market, It is taken internally in doses from § drops to & teaspoonful, It acts directly on the blood mucons surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars f IF any case it falls to cure Net; for circulars #0 tent] tial : AS reaiars and imotiiale F.J.Coeszy & Co.. Tol FE Sold by Druggists, “he. + Toledo, 0. sin port on of the ther d 11thon desire to be wise, be so bold thy tongue wise go It your Back Aches, or you are all worn out, good for nothing, it fs genera: debility. Brown's Iron Bitters will cure you, make yon stong, cleanse you liver, and give you a good appetite—tones the nerves. 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