"REV. DR. TALMAGE The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. Snbject: “The Dangers of Pessimism." Text: “I said in my haste, All men are tars." —Psalm exvi,, 11, Swindled, betraved, persecuted David, in a paroxysm of petulancs and rage, thus in. suited the human race. David himself falsi- fled when he said, “All men are liars,” He voked, and that he was hasty when he harled such universal denunciation, “I said in my haste,” and so on, mentary triumph of pessimism, ever and anon, and never more than now, a disposition abroad to distrust everybody, and because some bank employes defraud some police oZlcers have taken bribes to be- lieve that all policemen take bribes, and be- cause divores are in the court to be- lieve that most, if not all, marriage relations are unhappy. Cases to adopt this creed: All men are seoundrels, thieves, libertines When anew ens of perfidy coms to the surface, these people clap their hands in glee. It gives disnloses They newspaper new arrest, A NeW exposurs or a grow fat on vermin, recreancy and pollution. 1f some one disappointment, evil than good. They are vultures, ferring carrion. They would }ike to be on a committee to find something wrong. They to improve the sight, and ear tn the nose, to bring nearer a malodor, Pes sm says of the church, **The ma- jority of thes members are although it is no te 8 no temptation to hypoerisy.” says that the influence of newspapers is only bad, and that they are corrupting the world, when the act is that they are the mightiest of intelligence, and the pri lar and religious, is setting the nations free, The whole tendency of things is ard eynicismo, and the gospel of Bmashap. exous » David of xt for a disgust, be z centuries, but it i many have taken the attitude o distrust and anathematization, wa must a mit, deplorable fs and would not hide minify them We not much encouraged to find that ths groat ng press, seca- th rahle Fr that fact ole or gins by a proposition to the liquor dealers to break the law by keeping tneir saloons open on Sunday from two in night, was asnlt to sobriety aad de- than that pre {is equal to saying: re been a cency snd rel That propositio law and orderand Sunday for Ons open all the Schiedam set “Let . Sunday afternoons ates to gin and alcohol and ps and sour mash and Jer. sey lichtnir 1 variegated swill breweries and snness and crime, secratethe first h of the Sunday to and the last kaif to the devil, At the ehil- dren on their wa ols in New York at 3 o'cloc) meet the aleoholismn tant other eauses combined fathers and bhalpless or JRE, ean kill en propie families an houses nn wees wit panperi ne but tha tas irunk God * to Sunda k inthe aft 14] 0% More % more all to rob ehi ot ers AD and des'r wwently crowd iaries in six ds : it an extra half day for assassination, we are not very that ope Ftoram, w » fall God and in the gospel wh will all iniquity as the Atlantic Ocean flake of snow. “What we wan', believe wa will have, i2 a gre awakening that v noralize ar iza our great pog ions superior to tempiations, wi or 80 I Sea no heartenment, and thoas bo yield 10 it hemsasives War, on one & the fo ol darkness, je other ai the of “light, lel 3 nnip risk the statement that the vast majority of fools are doing the best Fr ean, None undred and ninety-nine ¢ a thousand nif I and the at, thousand bank presidents and e¢ashiers, nine hundrad and nioety-nine are worthy the position they occupy. Out of a thousand merchants, mechanics and profes- sional men, nine hundred and ninsty-nine are doin 1 Out of one t sand engineers and conduc tors and swilchimen, ired and nine. ty-nine are true 10 their responsible posi. tions, It is seldom that people arrive at positions ol responsibility until they have been tested and over again. If the theory of the pessimist were accurate, so- ciety would long ago have gone to pieces, and civilization would have been submerged ith barbarism, and the wheel of the cen- turies would nave turned back to the dark ages, A wrong impression is made that be- cause two men falsify their bank accounts those two wrongdoers are blazoned before the world, while nothing is sald in praise of the hundreds of bank clerks who have stood at their desks year in and year out until their beaith is well nigh gone, taking not a pin's worth of that which belongs to others jor themsaslves, though with skilinl stroke of pen they might have enriched themselves and bailt their country seats on the banks of the Hudson or the Rhine, It is a mean thing in human nature that men and women are not praised for doing well, but only excoriated when they do wrong. By divine arrangement the most of the families of the earth are at peace, and the most of thoss united in marriage have for each o.her nfiinity and affection. They may have occasional differences, and here and there a season of pout, but the vast ma- jority of those in the conjugal relation chose the most appropriate enmpanionship, and are happy in that reiation. You hear nothing of the quietude and happiness of! such homes, though nothing but denth will them part. But one sound of marital discord makes the ears of a continent, and perhaps of a hemisphere, alert, The one letter that ought never to have been written printed in a newspaper makes more talk than the millions of leiters that erowd the offices and weigh down the mall carriers with expressions of honestlove, Tolstof, the great Russian author, is wrong when he prints a book for the depreciation of marriage. If your observation has put you in an attitude of deploration for the marriage state, ons of two things Is trus in regard to you. You have either been un- fortunate in your acquaintanceship, or you yourself are morally rotten, The world, not as rapid as we would like, but still with Jong strides, is on the way to the scenes of beatitude and felicity which the Bible de. oiets. The man who cannot ses this is wrong, either in his heart or liver or spleen, Look at the great Bible pioture gallery, where Isaiah has set up the plotures of arboreseence, girdling the world with cedar and fir and pinaand boxwood and the lion led by a child, and Bt. John's pietires lof waters and trees, and white horse eavalry, and tears wiped away, and trumpets blown and harps struck, and nations redesmed, While there are 10,000 things I do not ke, I have not seen any discouragem n for the eause of God for twenty-five yrnis The kingdom is coming, The earth is pre. Pating to put on bridal array. Wa need to gett onr anthems and grand marches ready. our hymnology we shall have more use for * oct” oan for “Wind- liant over a orm yet sink malts a 1 ¥ wad what 1 legalized, TRS Pessimism is a sin, es forces of the sinis of the m United States governments are Out of a nige hun over ham," for “Ariel,” than for ‘“NaomL"™ Tet “Hark, From the Tombs a Doleful Cry I" be submerged with ‘Joy to the World, the Lord is Come!” Really, if I thought the human race were as utermined to be bad and getting worse, as the pessimists repre. sent, { would think it was hardly worth saving. If after hundreds of years of gos- pelization no improvement has been made, let us give it up and go at something else besides praying and preaching, My opinion is that if we had enough faith in quick results and could go forth rightly equipped with the gospel eall the battle for God and righteousness would end with this nineteenth century, and the twentieth century, only five or six yenis off, would be- gin the millennium, and Christ would reign, either in purson on some throne set leghanies and the Rookies or in the institutions of mercy and grandeur set up by His ransomed people. Discournged work will meet with defeat, JFxpectant and Start he ean be, and that soclety, and the church, and the only use you will ever be to the world will be to increase the value of cemetery. We need a more cheerful front in all our religious work, People have enough trouble already and do not want to ship another eargo of trouble | It religion has | been to you nn peace, un defense, an inspira- | Say ft by word mouth, by pen in your hand, by face {liu- divine satisfaction, If this world is ever to ba taken for God, it will not be by groans, but by halleluiahs, It we could present the Christian religion as it really is, in its true attractiveness, all the people would accept it, and accept it right AWRY. The cities, the nations would ery “(hive us that, give it to us in all 1s holy magnetism and gracious power! Put that salve on our wounds! Throw back the | shutters for that morning light, Knock off these chains with tnat silver hammer! Give | us Christ—His pardon, His peace, His com- | Give us Christ fu song, Christ in book, Christ fn | of | Corist in sermon, living example I” As a system of didaoties religion has never gained one inch progress, As a nicality it befogs more than it irradiates, As | jut as a of tech is the descendad fre Exe mightiest thing m the heavens or tous plify itin the life of a y good wn help A city missionary visited a houss | in London and found a k and Thers was an orange Iving the missionsry said, “Where did you He ssid : “A man brought it | He comes here often and reads the | Bible to me and prays with me and brings me niles things to “What name?’ sald the city missionary. I his name,” sald he makes great great building.” of L sionary assed, “Was his “Oh, yes," said the dying boy. } and | on his bad, Ret to me, ant, “bat that on like that and not There {8 an old fashioned Perhaps she the seventies, paraaps enty-<ix. It i= the Throu rh spectacles No, 8B she 1s reading a newspaper until toward bedtime, when she lke | mother in a | is somewhers aty-fl Ls BOY Or 8ove early in her reading the thanksgzi or in Revelation the story of ths After awhile she closes hands and thinks over wing the names ol some of them oan and | Now un smile ison | and sor Tae se to her, Onn fildren smiling the {Hlumination free one ol she is paalms, ving her children, aarth comes back sees nll the ¢ ar UO Then she remem! several down sick with infantile on she sees a short grave, bu in marble, “Suffer ta Then thers is the O18 0, an ors then a scene of hard times, and scant and struggle. Ther vears with gush of sunshine and dark shadows and viel Then sho kneels ears have stiffened tt nesses of nu Jifet ’ Her prayeris a sustaining she thinks flittis saitndes, fown slowly, s joints, A mn je sixtars o during all those vear good and Ct and kind, and a prayer for the wanders boy, whom she hopes to fora ber departure. And then her trembling lips speak of ths land of reunion, whereshe | expects 10 meet her Joved ones already | translated, and after telling the Lord in very | simple language how much she loves Him, | and trusts Him, and hopes to tea Him soon, | I hear her pronounce the quiet “Amen "and | she rises up-—a little more difficult effort than kneeling down, And then she puts her head on the pillow for the night, andthe | of safety and peace stand sen about that couch in the farm | house, and her face ever and’ | anon shows siuns of dreams about | he heaven she read of before retiring, Ini the morning the day s work has begun down stairs, and seated at the table the remark is | made, “Mother must have oversiept her. salf.,” And the grandchildren also notice that grandmother is absent irom her usual piace at the table, Oneol the grandehildren goes to the foot of the stairs and cries, “Grandmother !™ Bat there 18 no answer, Fearing something is the matter, they go up to gee, and all seems right. The spectacles and Bible on the stand, and the covars of the bed are smooth, and the face is calm | her white hair on the white pillow case i snow on snow aiready fallen, But is gone dp to look upon the things that the night before she had been reading of in the i Seriptures, What a traneporting look on her dear old wrinkled face! She has sean the “King in His beanty.” She has been wel- | comed by the “Lamb who was slain.” And | her two oldest sons, having hurrisi up I stairs, look and whisper, Henry to Georg “That ia religion I" Georgeto Henry, “Yes, that is religion !" There is a New York merchant who has | been in bus ness I should say forty or fiity | years, During an old-fashioned revival of | religion in boyhood he gave his heart to God. He did not make the ghastly and in- | fiuite and everlasting mistake of sowing | “wiid oats,” with the expectation of sowing | good wheat later on. fa realized the fact that the most of thoss who sow “wild oats" | never reap any other crop. He started right and has kept right. He went down in 1857, wher the banks failed, but he failed honestly and never lost his faith in God. Ups and downs—he sometimes laughs over them but whether losing or gaining he was grow. ing better all the time, Ho has been io many business ventures, but he never ventured the experiment of gaining the world and los. ing bis soul, His name was a power both in the church and fo the business world, He has drawn mora checks for contri butions to asylums and churches and schools than any one, except God, knows, He has kept many a business man from falling by lending his name on the back of a note all the crisis was past, All heaven knows about him, for the poor woman whose rent he paid in her last days, and the man with consump tion in the hospital to whom be sent Sowers and the coriials just belors ascention, and the people he encouraged In many ways, af- ter they entered heaven kept talking about it, for the immortals are neither deat nor dumb. Well, it is about time for the old merchant himself to quit earthly residence, As it is toward evening, be shuts the sale, puts the roil of newspapers in his pocket, thinking that the family may like to read them after ho gots home, Hae folds up n #5 bill and gives it to the Loy 10 earey to one of the cur men who got his leg broken and may be in need of a litle money ; puts a steno on a letter to his grandson at college, h ple, yf grace gos come home bee ke | her soul ; ndvine, and n letter with good an inclosurs to make the holidays bappy, then looks around the store or office and says to the clerks, “Good evening," and starts for home, stopping on the way at a door to nsk how his old friend, a deacon in the same church, {8 getting on since his last bad at- tack of vertigo. He enters his own home, and that is his last evening on earth, He does not say much, No last words are Necessary, His whole lile has been a testimony for God and righteous- ness, More people would like to attend his obsequies than any house or church would hold, The officiating clergyman be- gins his remarks by quoting from the psalm- ist, **Help, Lord, for the godly man ceaseth, for the faithful fail from among the children of men.” Every hour in heaven for all the million years of eternity that old merchant will see the result of his earthly beneflcencs and fidelity, while on the street where he did business, and in the orphan asylum in which he was a director, and in tho church of which he was an officer, whenever his gen- {ality and beneficence and goodness are re- ferred to, bank director will say to bank di- rector, and merchant to merchant, and neighbor to neighbor, and Christian to Christian : “That is religion, Yes, that is religion.” There is a man seated or standing very near vou. Do not look at him, for it might be UNNECesSATY embarrassment , Only a few minutes ago he eame down off the steps of as happy » home as there is in this or any other city. Fifteen years ago, by reason of his dissipated habits, his home wasa horror toe wife and enildren. What that woman wen bility and hide her husband's disgrace is a tragedy whish it would require a Shakes- peare or Vietor Hugo to write out in five tremendous nets, Shall tell t7 He struck her. Yes: the one who at the altar he had the tremble! He struck her! He mads the basutiful holidays “a relgn of * Instead of his supporting her, she suppurted him. The children had often in prayer —only in profanity. It was saddest thing on varth that { oan think of— home! Walking along day an impersonation of wretchedness, he saw a signat the door a Young Men's Christian Association, “Meeting For Men Oaly.” He went in hardly knowing why he 80, and sat down by thes door, sud a an was in broken volee and poor grammar yed had saved him from a the man back by the “Why eannot nye street one of did dissipated life, an the Lord d hands, all a4 “0 God, | want that | I must and God said, "You shall have ambie, over his bloated face and said have that!” you and we thea of MAN and thoug ! and looked t he mother and began to with Iright th saw that wns a enanged wt homes has tury od “Paradise I to “Parnd} Rw gained,’ The wifa sings all day long at her work, for she is so happy, snd the eali rush out into the hall at the t rattinof the iather'a key in the door | h 10 weleaom: ory y man. “0 fre iren ight mey They have fan are allogether on and when journey of «y will live forever in gach companionsnip. Two of t r dar a thers already, waiting lor What wield that Was a have you bre prayers. a ungnt tha the ¢ a up. onstr home? RAVE ¢ Ar AD ira took that 1 this assemblage “That's relig- My and know whe fon! my G Why, earth, 3 not get t! ful and r aot and bliss! thing for yoursel telling all your neight in Nova Seotia, or ya na, ne, or Brazit, or England, or (aly, or at part the fr Lord hearers f the engl from all parts is bright and il and triumph ves, then go home ant re Mind alarmed and afraid of | fore and heart His vo 1a befors 1 got thre ftand back and o He ot scars in the center Out to gros YOU ; SCATS ON the instep he feet with which He advances ; renst whieh throbs bios feals for ¥ ines Him to you, Jesus 3d Olivet and Golgotha, Why 1 hither this winter day, Toou of ime and sammery heavens! Hoe Answers : I'o give all this au tience pardon for guilt, eon lolence for grie!, whole regi. ments of help for day of battle and eternal life for the dead! Waoat responss saall | In your behalf and In my own “Un- and washed us blood, ol both of both BOATS ON he 1 under the great I an- nounss His ecomest T1 the spring to Him who hath loved us, from our «ins in His own Father Amen.” a — Invented the Artificial Leg. In a quaint old house at 6090 Mar- 0. Deschamps, who, although over seventy years old, has been inventing things all his life. as active as a boy of twenty, lives ail alone amid his models and contriv- ances, cooks his own meals, acts as his own housekeeper, and is as happy as the day is Jong. Mr, Deschamps's first nvention of note was the artificial leg. It was over fifty years ago when Mr. Deschamps, then an apprentice, was asked by his master to see what he conld do for a foppish Frenchman who had lost a leg. At that time only wooden legs were known, and the Freuchman was dissatisfied with this by no means elegant substitute. In two days young Deschamps had fin- ished a complete model of an artificial leg, with every movement of the na- tural limb duplicated. His master had it patented, and it yielded him » fortune. *'I got fifty cents ont of it,” Isughingly remarked Deschamps, “The Frenchman gave me that and told me to go over to Smith's Island and enjoy myself, And thought I was in great luck.”—New York Ad- vertiser. a—————— — A Goat Smuggler, Some years ago a tame long-haired goat formed part of the regular erew of a passenger steamer on service be- tween an Eoglish port and a Conti. nental one, After a vime the enstoms authorities discovered that it wore a false coat, many sizes too large for it. The goat's own hair was clipped very close; round its body were packed cigire, lace, ete., and then the faise cont was skillfully put on, and fastened b hooks and eyes, Notes and Quer. MADE THZ DLACTALEG WEAKEN arimier's Nealy tia Gubler Challenged Hi, F.C. Chatterton wis a prosperous farmer In Hancock County, Kentucky, visits to New products of his farm Is was In the days when the duello was a part of the education of A Kentucky F Who to nunal Or COL gentleman. The headquarters of in New the old St. says the Courier-Journal. lonngers at this hb who was known as the most desperate nian in the eity and the duellist with either sword or pistol in the South. No had ever age and even the The mi: the resorts friend the gambler to every nll Kentuckinns haginess w Orleans on Hotel One of the f a gambler, Chuarle ag tel was most expert Oni dared to question Lis cot him gumblers feared +t nl i i Now ‘hatterton's took well known (leans, { pains to point out and warn him against giving the black leg any pretense for a challenge. Chat terton assured his friends that If a chal lenge were Issued it would be through no fault of his, and dismissed the Jeet without showing excitement sub- two men were not thrown tog of that day until near supper time Then, as they both entered the big din brushed lightly gland ing-room, Chatterton ngalnst the gambler ed sharply at Chattert ug. scattered Chatterton half a friends and game of cards with Interest, when one of the porters of the hotel approached him, an small silver which peatly folded E. C. Chatterton. ton tore open the note, and, motioning the porter, who started to leave, to wait, read 1t out loud. When he fin Jalied his friends stood looking at with scared had hb rhallenge from the gambler Kuests out over £41 cardroom with went to the dozen watched a bearing tray, on ad Chatter was no note fressed to eyes, to Chatterton and demanding a Y i if the only satisfaction a gent demand for being pushed aside | dining-room. The “No one note ended with these words but a refuse t 8 ex Chat. of coward will fair tern The friends of meet a gentleman on the acted by a duel.” terton that cowardice was more than a thrust to him, knew tion fits the lmputs “cy nevertheless arouse A BRIGHT STAR. A BKTTON MARY OF "HE MAN WII ANDERSON TO FAME. “ED Also Played Le ding Holes With Booth, Barrett vad Thorne, (From the Bt. Louis Chroniele One of the most conspleuous figares in the ¢ t Stagelnr i of A neriey to-day Is John W. Nor- ton. Porn io the seventh ward of New City forty-s x youth York yoars ago, the friends of his Thomas W, Keone We flud Evene a sitar at the Norton in the flower of enrly man- Booth Theatre, wera and Frank Chnnlran, of 25 an Ho hood the leadin es man for the Winter wns starred witn Lawrenos the with win at Ho early in famous Garden jarrett 70:2, and alternated lending roles Thorne at te Yard r Theatre in New Orleans, Charles Early Centennial M iry Anderson, then a fair young girl who aspired year, in Louisville, Norton met our for stage nme, 100k her under his guidance and, as everybody knows, led her to fame, Mr, Grand Norton is now House in 8, Quesne Theatre, Pittsburg, stockholders fn the American Company. One afternoon early in June he hobbled into his New York OfMleos on Broadway and encountered his business manager, George MeMunus, who had also been a rheumatic suf- ferer lor 1Wo Years, orion was surprised that McManus had di rded his cane, Who cured x “f cured myself,” re “with Dr, Pink the proprietor of the Opern Louis, the Dau shld one of the Extravagnuza ou? he asked, eManus, iinms’ encouraged by Mr, McManus i Inst resort tried the Pink Pills J osald Mr. Norton to 8 Chronicle porter, “You have known me jor five years and know how 1 have Why, aur ing the summer of 15803 | was on my back the Mullanphy Hospital, in this weeks, 1 was put on the old system ing, with a view to clearing those a properties in my blood Fay i8 the cause (< my the Hospital stronzer, but the damp wenther brought with it those excru- einting pains in the | and back, It was the same old 1r¢ Alter down for a stretch of the pa hg d suffered, rheumatism. 1 left a first sitting { ninuies pains porewed my ies 010 knot when 1 and I hobble had taken me that the pains wer tried another consciously 10 have I improyed sitting at my twinges of rheumatism tba rising were so 1 them During the past Iwo weeks bad much rainy weather in 81, Loo the dampness fins not had the slightest in bringing = consider o : and reliable vMoncy of I iis. 1 maj the Pi = As A somal, ¥ ought was ¥ After 1 it struck aus pain aliy as ever, nk Pils jens began almost sO rheumatisn Lem? acted Congress Can't Do o1. ix an greneral HOD that Congress will do some for the dis suffering o #0 many baplens people to bs hoped employment sertain k io nothing isery nlwayy Just think tortures that , which cs tis ness will start up nnd SAD UE, hut iffering which Cr There is Jewrislat on LYyv, whicl men crippled sedation Auli Jueoks Oil is a no of or ils wi eh she Know Bt, rou Salvationists in Finland. The Balvation army in | t Finlan consists £.00 Revrard, 8100. urative y ilars for any t of testin 1. Kiimer's sil Kidney Yamphiet Lat rene fwanr-Roor cures Bladder troubles neultation rea sore eyes use Dr. [saac Thom» Druggistis sell at Zhe per Lottie 3 with the 1 and states t tions, 1 i. » from Powder for a POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST, : aking | 1 1 an act of m speak A MA AY AAA A A PW hin said the they besought to lenge. They gambler was in vincible, both with the sword and pis tol, and attempt to him wus slinply to throw his life away. “See Chatterton,” they of family, wife You to neet here, said, “you are na children gambler is a sure shot and a desperate man, and will stoop to anything. Stick that challenge in the fire, and get out of town in No will be the wiser.” Chatterton listened quietly to every word that was said, und then asked for a pen and ink. His friends saw that further words would man depending upon This fiR SOON a8 You « one him, He wrote for a few moments then handed this note to the nearest to him: “Sir, 1 will meet you to night on the plaza with my who is an honorable gentleman. will bear two revolvers, one of which you may select. We will stand toe to toe, While the revolvers are still un cocked, each shall place his between the other's teeth. At the word ‘fire’ the hammers shall be pulled back and the shells exploded. The pistols may be discharged until one or the other of us is dead.” The man who read the note looked startled, and again tried to persuade his friend to think better of his condi- tions, which would certainly compass the death of both. No words could dis- sunde Chatterton, however, and the note was sent down, In half an hour this answer came back: “I never fight duels with fools.” and second, Tso II A Queer Plant, The only known variety, species, or genus of plants known to botanical in. vestigators in which the flower grows from the leaf hax just been described in the Paris Journal de Botanigue. This queer plant is a native of tropical Af. rien, and In it the flowers are borne along the midrib of the back of the leaf, The description referred to above is by Prof. Hua, and ig a real treat to all lov. ors of the odd and curious in nature, Wiss AINA, It Pays. The writing of “popular songs” is more profitable lo this country than in { i | Shelters an Army. ver 7.00) men have been sheltered at one time beneath the branch Indian banyan tree, es of the s— AI An Impartant Difference, To make it apparent to thousands themsolves {i1, that they are not affect { that the system simply cleansing, cured t hearts, nsing up of Af A Costive condition is easily Figs. Manufactured by HL 0 He lives a thankiess iife who can expl Binck Rings under the eyes and a sallow complexion show biliousness. This is one of the most disagree able of stomach disorders and if alloned to have its own way will result in great harm. Cure bilionsness at once by using Ripans Tab ules, One tabule gives relied. Mack "What's he matter, Higbee ocked yt? Higbee Yes; my wife bas the key 0 the situation.” ETITACLE to all farms; 25 years In largest tobacco seed farm in the world. Reputation of our sods soond none. 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