——-———— WEBKLY SERMONS. Rev, T, DeWite Talmages Weekly Discourse, Rev. George HH. Mep worth Preaches In the | Naw York ¥lerald's Columns on “An Ennobling Falth" Rev, Dr, Talmage Tells About “The Bare Arm of God,” With the return of Rev, George IH. Hep- | worth to New York from bis Armenian mis- | slon the Herald closed {ts series of compoti- tivesermons, fifteen altogether having ap peared in {ts columns on consecutive Sun- | ays. Dr. Hepworth resumes his regular | Sunday sermon as the leading editorial in the Herald's colummns. The first ous Is en- titled “An Ennobling Faith," and appears | below In full. Text: “Now faith is the substance of | things honed for, the evidencoof things not seen," Hebrews, xi., 1. On a bitterly cold day I was recently rid. fog witha comrade through one of the | most exquisite bits of sesneryon the face | of the earth. We were toiling np the last | spur of a mountain so high that the slouds | would baverested on {ts summit had there | been any in the sky. But thaheavens were | cloudless, the sun shone in dazzling splen- | dor on the snow covered ridges which sur- rounded us on ali sides, and we seemed to have laft our little gioba bshind us and to be on our way to another world, Naturally we talked of that Great Be- | yond, which was apparently not far distant, Conversation under such ciroumstances must needs be serfous, One cannot be tri- vial when he is looking on the grandest of God's great works. It was an time when gouls were in close relations toeach other; when inmost thoughts came to thelips and uttered themselves almost unconsciously, as in soliloquy. My comrade spoke freely of a loss he had suffered. A little ebhild had been called from the family circle, shad sped away in the night and gone where no human eyes could foow her. With a broken heart, but still in somewhat stolcal langoage, he re- ferred tothat vacant chair. ‘Gone! gone!” was his despairing exclamation, [listened to the story. and at e088 quietly re marked: “Yes, gone, but not gone far! In the brighter land you will see her again.” its broken by the sound of the horses’ iron shoes on the crisp and frozen snow. “If I could believe that,” he said after a little, “nine-tenths of the burden would be removed. Bat te fael that such farewells | are forever, that strong man trembled with suppressed emo- | tion, while tears made it impossible to con- | tinue the compensation. ! I thought to mvweilf after all world is of very little in tance uless we | have another world to i look forward to. | What makes the present fe endurable is firm and unshaken another life, | If love can die, then Jove 1s only prolonged | agony: yi~tion that love can | never die strengt , broadens and en- nobles the soul. : It would be an aet of unspeakablecrusity | on the part of God to teach us howto love, to place us amid eireumstances in which | love develops all that is chivalrous and | grand, and then teil us fo the supreme mo- ment of parting to say goodby for time and | eternity. The Lord’s Prayer would become | ibility, navy, than that, farce his Innerm man would not only retel, loge his sall.-respect and his reapect for the It is clear th much better to 1 incapable of affection thau to annihi- late the object of his affection, and bid him go home from the ehurchyard adespairing, hopeless creature. Faith can do so much for a man, | necessary to his spiritual and sven to hi phisical well being, that {if youtake itaway 3e 12 in a worse plight than the animals the flelds and forests loss and they do to die a dog is maneand then which a just not ask of have earned quite right {a ment libellous, You ‘rovidenca is thebest o It is worth your social | t than relations od 1% something whial child has for its mothe a feeling t knows who and what I am, that at my call He will come to me—that every day He | leads me and every n protacis me-—and there is very little me n ask or desirs, 1 havethe 1g in the world, and therefore am The plant that has will blossorn before with God, the sun of my soul, to shine me, I shall not only blossom into ne boughts, but bear the fruit of good deeds, ian becomes a miracie worker from the moment when scious of presence and love. Life may be hard, but at the same time it is glorious, Even siok- ness and death are the miry spots which lead to the eternal upland, There fs a repose in the soul, a vigor, an enthu- | siasm and a power of endarance which nothing else in this wide world cao give. Tell how to doubt-—that is, how to eutloose from my trust in Providence—and | you teil me how to be miserable, On the | other hand, confirmn my belle! {a God, in the ministration of His angels, in the pos- | ibility of a continuous, and unbroken communication with heaven, and you make roy life more beautiful than words can ex- | press, Aslong as I «dread the future, my present is leaden; if I am sure of the fu- | ture, and know that my dear ones will greet me there with undimiulshed love, my tears are like the rain cloud on which the sun shines and makes a rainbow, Take from me what you will, but leave me my Iaith, for it is my only real posses. sion. All else will pass like 4 dream —a riensant dream, bat still a dream, To-day am rich, to-morrow I may beyoor, Iam well to-day, to-morrow I may beill, Bat | faith remains with me, is closer to my | heart than the closest friendship, and gives | me good cheer when I walk in darkness, | It is ail [ bave, all I ean keep throughout | eternity, the one thing of whichdeath can- | nat rob me, the prophecy of a better home | on high when this earthly home is broken up. Itis God who has given that gift, and it must be jealously guarded, In their last analysis faith is heaven and doult is heil, Georor H, Hervonra, belief in but the cor he Lt more 1 in ny ana laws of the universe. uld have been so t it tent Creator unlike what a8 that we a slate we Are r wealth —wor m nbined, 1 3 yr Give me in my tha - i that mysteris dew | and sunshine and the frost comes, — he is ec God's nie OnLy for Is me “THE BARE ARM OF COD.” Eev. Ur, Talmage Tells What It Will Ae- eomplish, Texr: “The Lord hath made bare His holy arm.”—Isalalb iii. 10, “It almost takes our breath away to read of the Bible imagery. Theres is such bold- ness of metaphor in my text that one gust | rally nis courage to preach from it, Isalah, the evangelistic prophet, Is sounding the Jubilate of our planet redoemed, and cries | ont: ‘The Lord hath made bare His holy arm.’ What overwhelming suggestiveness | in that fignre of speech, ‘the hare arm of | God!’ The people of Palestine to this day | wear much hindering apparel, andl when they want to run a special race, orlilt a ppecial burdep, or fight a special battle, they put off the outside apparel, as in our land when a man proposes a special exer. tion he puts off his coat and rolls up his | sleeves, Walk throggh our foundries, our machine shops, our mices, our factories, | and vou will find that most of the toilers | have their coats off and their sleeves | rolled up, “Isaiah saw that there must be a tremen- dous amount of work done before this world becomes what it ought to be, and be foresees it ull accomplished, and secon. plished by the Almighty: not as we ordi. narily think of Hira, bit by the Almighty | with the sleeve uf His robe rolled buok to | His shoulder, “Nothing more {‘npresses me In the Biblio than the suse with which God does most things, There {3 such a roserve of power. He has more thunderbolts than He 1as ever flung; more light than He has ever distribute); mora blue than that with which he has overarched the sky; more green than that with which He has emer. nlded the grass; more crimson than that with which He has burnished the sunsets, I say it with roverenco—{rom all that I can 1 has never haif tried, “My text makes it plain that the rectifi. eation of this world [a a stupendous under taking, first, first creation, bat for the now creation unslegvad and Almighty, The reason of that I can under In the shipyards of Liverpool, or Glasgow, or New York, a great vessel is constructel, plan, the lo of tonnage, the rotation of wheel or serew, the cabin, the masts and all the appoint- monts of this great paince of the deep, The finishes work without aay A word was only necessary for the the *hiteot his oll on the craft so many hours a day, each one dolag his part, uatil, with fags flyiog and thousands of people cheering oun the docks, the vesss! {a launched, Bat out on the sea that vessel breaks her shaft and is iimpiog siowly along toward harbor, when Caribbean whirlwinds, those mighty hunt. the looking out for prey of unded vessel coast, aud she lifts and wkers uutll every joint is avery spar is down, and over the hurricane deck as Would {t not require ers of deap, falls in the b loo=e and wave sweeps she parts amidship. not skill and power to get that splintered off the rocks and reconstruct it than it required originally to build her? Aye! “Our world, which started out with the flags of Edenie foliage and with the chant of Paradisaleal bowers has been six- ty centuries poundiog in the skerrios of sin and sorrow, and toget her out and off, and to get her on the right way aga wiil re quire more of omnipotenocs than to build her and launel surpr that, though one word our worid was the unsieeved arm of the r and pat her It {s evident on with ) great An nstellation of worlds, galaxy of worlds, and av if worlds, and swing the or®its, as to take this we stranded world, this t vd worid, and more vessels all "mii I am not he drydock of wiil take y iift her from be right course y text that it i LLEL IS iia it ks fron ite ther texts and wi in ik undertaking to make a and a whole 1 iplished Lins ore the great re than ne will put to the sb I for the wy make in resuit vah dos ores the | Jeh watched the of Mairy. Between a runing and 1 Hepteu her the shells th host {a the walley 1 R73 000 tured by the hills, At f Sedan the ¥ hearted in a poor wo when she sald in do for you? he repli pull down those in the mi of y $ pped noon 1%:0 the ire shatterad the French army eap- se of that sant Lroken- rotiage, sad poror EVADE blinds so Sedan in this conflict lioness and zin 11 t Down hers in earth we must be valiant soldie eroas, but the Commander of walks the heights, and views the scenes better than we can fo the valleys, 1 at the right day and the right Lour all heaven will open its batteries our side, and the commander of the hosts of sin, with all hia followers, will surren- der, and it will take eternity te faily celebrate the universal victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. ‘Oar eyes are unto the hills.’ It is 80 certain to be accom plished that Isaiah, in my text, looksdown and and stand where the prophet took iis stand, and look at it se all done, See! Those al 85 tween b bs Hil ’ the hills, on Why, those and Great Sahara desert—are all irrigated into gardens where God walks in the cool of the day. The atmosphere that encircles our globe floating not one groan. All the rivers and Jakes and oceans dimpled with not cos falling tear. The climates of the enrth have dropped out of them the rigors of the cold and the blasts of the heat, and it is universal spring. Let us change the old world’s name, t it no more be called the earth, as when it was reeking with everything pestiferous and malevolent, scarieted with battie-fleids and gashed with graves, but now go changed, 80 aro- matic with gardens, and #0 resonant with SUFFERING IN ALASKA, The Klondike Adventurers Are Meeting With Fearfal Experiences, are aving a fearful experience with cold and days. Freight is blockaded, and many over the mountains were badly The worst reports come from the Copper Biver country, for which several e : tons have sailed, Angeles prospected the river for sixty miles, aud found nothing for their labors, The snow was fifteen feet deep, and mot even skin clothes could protect them from the bitter wind that swept over the Nine of the party ae oes pita; An Electric Road Wagon. (‘assler's Magazine calls attention by W, which G. it of Reno, Nev, is suggestive of The system double trolley ar two wires are run Caffrey, representa involves using and a the e¢ ground, The trol- of a metal overrunning trolley wheels under- the top wheels and still do not gage of the frame the n the poles, On the lower wire a similar device is used ard both wheels are connected by an insulated pantograph arrangement which effectively pro- for unequel of the trol- Connection between the the wagon is made by ca- run on an reel hé wagon. This permits the ca- un only a few hundred feet, necessa or winds them up to a rt length, and the wagon thus has freedom of it out of obstacles ng of the though ley device with havi which pre from leaving the wire free pa supports « proper consists frame Arain an two wheels, locking neath, vent over cote § wey 1 iar sets Ol troiliey VIiUes tension ley wires, trolleys ¢ which automatic tor ry considerabl¢ dire in tion travel to readily turn and road the I le different convenient enabling way to follow without line omewhat and cout the axle for | motor on Wagon ropel- nnmon of ro Lion on transportation farm in place remoy- growing propositic culation, of the dying. light the Klondike. Naval Messages by these ieft Gt When the fleet Guif Mexico the from that fr HW pr sel tg 2) py # the fia y, and it is the in w Key West for other Y. a of pigeons elation was €n on tion of Lieutenant an aide-de-camp, to send daily rep to the station at Key West by pige to be telegraphed to the Secretary the Navy Washington. Pige: have been successfully used for so years by the European navies, and are becoming important adjuncts of mar. ine warfare —The Washingion Carre. spondent of the Chicago Record, Admiral Sicard, for Harlow wh ig pow acting rio s al Plowing With Smow on th: Ground. A number of persons who were out driving west of Reading on Sunday, witnesged an unusual sight on the farm of Albert Eyrich. Three men, with as many plows, were tilling a large field. Some of the oldest res. tents of that section say that thay never before saw or heard of plowing while the spow was on the ground and in midwinter. Corn will be planted in this fleld next May. Some farmers claim that plowing while snow {2 on the ground makes it more productive, ~Philadelpiiia Public Ledger, Where Horszilesh is Popular, The consumption of horsefiesk ae human food has slightly decreased during the year in Paris, being 4.472 tons. 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