REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Bubject: “Across the Continent’ Spiritual Thoughts Suggested While Viewing Scenes of Majesty and Grandeur Wrought by the Hand of God, » Texts: “Streams in the desert.” Isaiah xxxv., 6. ‘‘He toucheth tho hills and they smoke.” Psalms civ., 32, My first text means irrigation. It mean® the waters of the Himalaya, or the Pyre- nees, or the Slerra Nevadas poured through eanals and aqueducts for the fertilization of the valleys, It means the process hy which the last mile of American barrenness wiil be made an apple orchard, or an orange grove, or a wheat fleld, or a cotton planta- tion, or a vineyard -—‘'streams in the desert.” My second text means a voleano like Vesu- vius or Cotopaxi, or it means the geysers of Yellowstone Park or of California. You see a hill ealm and still, and for ages im- movable, but the Lord out of the heavens puts His finger on the top of it, and from it rise thick and impressive vapors: ‘‘He togfheth the hilly and they smoke’ .» Although my Sirhay dordss the conil- nent.this summer was for the eighth time, mord and more am I impressed with the divine hand in its construction, and with dts greatness and grandeur, and more and more am I thrilled withthe fact that it is all to be irrigated, glorified and Edenized. What a change from the time when Daniel Webster on yonder Captoline Hill sald to the American Senate in regard tothe centre of this continent, and to the regions on the Pacific Coast: **What do you want with this vast, worthless ‘araa, this region of savages and wild beasts, of deserts and eactas, of shifting sands and prairie dogs? To what use could we ever put these great deserts or these great mountains, impene- trable and covered with eternal snow? What ean we ever hope to do with the Western coast, rook-bound, cheerless and uninviting, and not a harbor on it? I will never vote one cent from the public treasury to place the Preific coast one inch nearer Boston than it now {s.” What a mistake the great statesman made when he said that! All who have crossed the continent realize that the States on the Pacifie Ocean will ave quite as grand opportunities as the Stgtes on the Atlantic, and all this realm from sea to sea to be the Lord's cul- tivated possession. Do you know what, in some respects, is the most remarkable thing between the Atlantic and Pacifle? It is the figure of! a cross on a mountaia in Colorado. It is | called the “Mount of the Holy Cross.” | A borizountal crevice filled with perpstua snow, and & perpendicular crevice filled | with snow, but both the horizontal line | and the perpendicular lige so marked, so | bold, so significent, so unmistakable, that | all who pass in the daytime within many miles ares compelied to see it. There are | some figures, soma contours, some moun- | tain appearances that you gradually make out after your attention is eallaed to them. So a man's face on the rocks in the White Mountains, So a maiden’s form cut in the granite of the Adirondacks, So acity | in the moving clouds. Yet you have to | look under the pointing of your friend or | guide for some time before you can see the similarity. But the first instant you glance at this side o! the mountain in | Colorado, you ery oat: “Across! A} eross!” Do you say that this geological {n- | scription just happens so? on the Colorado mountain is not a human | device. or an accident of nature, or the | freak of an earthquake. The hand of God cut it there and set it up for the nation to look at, Whether set up in roek be- | fore the cross of wood was ret up on the bluff back of Jerusalem, or set up at some time since that assassination, I believe | the Creator meant it to suggest the most notable event ip all the history of this janet, and He hung it thers over the eart of this continent to indicate that | the omly hope for this nation is in the | Cross on which our Immanuel died. The clouds were voeal at our Saviour's birth, the rocks rent at His martyrdom, why not the walls of Colorado bear the record of the Crucifixion? I supposed in my boyhood, from {ts size on the map, that California was a few wgrids across, a ridge of land on which one must walk cautiously lest he hit his su.ad against the Sierra Nevada on one side, orslip off int¢ the Pacific watets on the other—California, the thin slice of land, as 1 supposed it to be in my boyhood, I have found to be larger than all the States of New England and all New York State and all Penopsylvania added together; and if vou add them together their square miles fall far short of California. And then all those new-born States of the Union, North and South Dakota, Washington, Montana, Idaho and Wyoming. Each State an om- pire in size, “Bat,” says one, “in calculating the im- mensity of our continental acrpage you must remember that vast reaches of our public domain are uncuitivated heaps of dry sand, and the ‘Bad Lands’ of Montana and the Great American Desert.” I am glad you mentioned that, Within twenty- five years thers will not be between the #tlantic and Pacifle coasts a hundred miles of land not reclaimed either by farmers’ lough or miners’ erowbar, By irrigation, he waters of the rivers and tho showers of heaven, in what are called the rainy sea- spon, will be gathered into great resarvoirs, and through aqueducts Jet down where and when the people want tnem. Utah is an object lesson, Some parts of that Terri. tory which were so barren that a spear of a8 could not have been raised there in a undred years, are now rich as Lancaster Qounty farms of Pennsylvania, or West. ehester farms of New York, or Somerset County farms of New Jersey. Experiments Save proved that ten acres of ground irri. ated from waters gathered in great hydro- ogieal basing will produce as much as fifty acres from the dowpyour of rain as seen in pur regions. We have our freshets and our droughts, but in those lands which are to Peo scientifically irrigated thers wili be neither freshets nor droughts, As you take a pitcher and get it full of water, and then get it on a table and take a drink out of it when you are thirsty and never think of sirinking a pitcherful all at one#, so Mon- ana, and Wyoming and Idaho will eateh he rains of their rainy season and take up all the waters of their rivers in great tohers of reservoirs, and refresh their nd whenever they will, Bat the mast wonderful part of this Amer- jean continent is the Yellowstone Park. My wo visit there made upon me an impres- fon that will Inst forever. Go in by the onelda route as wo did this summer and save 250 miles of railroading, your stage roach taking you through a day of scenery ns captivating and sublime as the Yellow. stone Park itself. Aftor all poeiry has bx. austed itself concerning Yellowstone Park, aod all the Morans and Bieratadts asd the. other enchanting artists Lave somplted their canvas, there wiil be other ons to make, and otherstories of its beauty and Fath, splendot and agony, to be recited. Yallowstons Park Is the geologist’s Jiuadise, By cheapening of travel may it me the nation’s playground! In some portions of it there seems to be the anarehy of the elements. Fire and water, and the vapor born of that marriage, terrific, Gey- per cones or hills of ervstal that have been years gro In HE re ag of ev sixty-five minutes & ‘water g into sheth the ured pleture-gallery. Tho so-called Thanatopsis Geyser, exquisita asthe Bryant poem it was named after, and Evangeline Geyser, love. iy as tho Longfellow heroine it commemos rates, But atter you have wandered along the geyserite enchantment for days, apd begin to feel that there can be nothing more of interest to see, you suddenly come upon the perorationof all majesty and grandeur, the Grand Canon, It is here that it seems to me—and I speak it with reveronce—Je- hovah seems to have surpassed Himself, It seems a groat gulch let down into the eternities. Masonry by an omnipotent trowel. Yellow! You never saw yellow unless you saw it there, Red! You never saw red unless you saw it there. Violet! You never saw violet unless you saw it there. Triumphant bunoers of color. Ina eathedral of basalt, Sunrise ana Sunset married by the setting of rainbow ring. Gothic arches, Corinthian capitals, and Egyptian basilicas built before human architecture was born, Huge fortifleations of granite construeted hefore war forged its first cannon. Gibraltars and Sebasto- pols that never can bo taken. Thrones on which no one but the King of heaven and earth ever sat, Fount of waters at which the hills are baptized, while the giant cliffs stand around as sponsors, For thousands of years before that scene was unveiled to juman sight, the elements were busy, and 18 woysers wors hewing away with their hot chisel, and glaciers were pounding with their cold hammers, and hurricanes were cleaving with their lightning strokes, and hallstones giving the finishing touches, and after ail these forces of nature had done their best, in our century the eurtain dropped, and the world had a new and di- vinely inspired revelation, the Old Testa- ment written on papyrus, the New Testa. ment written on parchment, and this last Testament written on the rosks, Standing there in the Grand Canon of the Yellowstone Park for the most part we held our peace, but after awhile it flashed upon me with such power I could not help but say to my comrades; ‘What a hall this would be for the last Judgment!” See that mighty cascade with the ralnbows at the foot of it? Those waters congealed nnd transfixed with the agitations of that day, what a place they would make forthe shin- ing feet of a Judge of quick and dead! And those rainbows look now like the crowns to be east at His feet. At the bot- tom of this great canon is a floor on which the nations of the earth might stand, and all up and down these galleries ol rock the nations of heaven might sit. And what reverberation of archangels’ trampet there would be through all these gorges and from these caverns and over all heights. Why should not tho greatest of amid the grandest scenery Omaipctence over bulit? I have said these things about the mag- nitude of the continent, and given you a few specimens of some of its wonders, to jet vou know the comprehensiveness of Christ's dominion wheu He takes posses. sion of this continent. Besides that, the valion of Asia, for we are only thirty-six miles from Asia at the northwest. Oaly have three islands, and there are also shoals which will allow piers of bridges, and for the most of the way the waler is The Americo-Asiatie bridge which will yet span those straits will make America, Asia, Europe and Africa one continent, So, you see, America evangelized, Asia Europe taking Asia from one side and America takiog it from the other side. Your children will cross America and Asin and Eu- rope all one, what yvangs of seasickness! and the prophecies But do I mean literally continent is going to I do. Christovher Co- went ashore from the his second brother Alonzo, when he went ashore from the that this American be all gospelized? he he went ashore fromm the Nina, took pos session of this country in the name ol the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, Satas bas no more right to this country than I have to your pocket-book. To hear him talk on the roof of the temples, where lie proposed to give Christ the kingdoms might suppose that Satan was a great cap- {talist or that he was loaded up with real ostate, when the old miscreant never owned an acre or an inch of ground on this planet, summer and ojlier summers in Montana and Oregon and Wyoming and Idabo and Colorado and California. They have given devilistic names to many places ia the West and Northwest. As soon as you get in Yellowstone Park or Californias you have pointed out to you sinces cursed with such names as “The Javil's Slide.” “The Devil's Kitchen” “The Devil's Thumb,” “The Devil's Pul- it,” “The Devil's Mush-Pot.,” “The Yavil's Tea-Kettlie,” "The Devil's Baw. Mii” “The Devil's Machine-8hop,” “The Devil's Gate,” and 80 on. Now it is very much needed that geological surveyor or Congressional Committes or group of dis- tingnished guests go through Montana and Wyoming aud California and Colorado and give other names to these places. All these regions belong to the Lord, nad toa Christian nation; and away with such Plutonic nomenclature! Bat how is this eon. tinent to be gospelized? The pulpit and a Christian printing-presa harnessed to- gether will be the mightiest team for the first plough. Not by the power of cold, formalistie theology; not by ecclesiastical technicalities, I am slek of them, and the world is sick of them. But it will bo done by the warm-hearted, sympathetic presen tation of the faot that Christ {s ready to pardon all our sins, and Leal all our wounds, and save us both for this world and the next, Let your religion of glaciers erack off and fall into the Guif Stream and got melted. Take all your ereeds of all enominations and drop out of them all human Jirassolony and pat in only soerip- tural raseology, and you will ses how quick the peaple will jump after them, On the Columbia River we saw the sale mon jump clear out of the water in differ- ent places, I suppose for the purpose of getting the insects. And il when we want to fish for.men and we only have the right kind of bait, they will spring out above the flood of their sins and sorrows to reach it. The Young Men's Christian Assosiations of America will also do part of the work, They are going to take the young men of this nation for God. These institutions seem in better favor with God and man than ever before, Business men and capitalists are awakisg to the fact that they ean do nothing better in the way ol living beneflcence or in last will and Jestament than to do what Ms 3a uand 4 Lor reo an ho made the Ioung pak ARE nad yy Thess titutions will get our young men nll ver the land into a stampeds for hoaven. Thus we will all In some way help on the work, you with your ten talents, I with five, Lyi throes, It is estimated that to te arid and desert lands of Amerisa as they ought to be frsigated it will cost about one Lundred milifon dollars to gather the waters into reservoirs, Ag much ejntri. pution and effort as that would Jrrigate with Gospel inflyen 1 jhe waste p contribution and right living to fil the reservoirs, You will earry a ait, a ou abd y 1 A Antmbieti nd after & while God will the floods of merey so gathered, A Nation of Dyspeptics. From the Mountaineer, Walhalla, N, Dakota, The remorse of a gullty stomach is what 1 large majority of tho people are su fleriog with to-day. Dyspepajs is a characteristic American diseaso and it is frequently stated hat “wo are a nation of dyspepitics, Improper food, hurried eating, mental worry, exhaustion—any of these produce a lack of vitality in the system, by eausing the blood to Ba its Hfe-sustaining ele- ments. The blood is the vital element in sur lives and should be carefully nurtured, Restores It to its proper condition, dys- popsia will vanish and good health follow, For example, in the county of Pembina, North Dakota, a few miles from Walhalla, resides Mr. Earnest Snider; a man of sterl- ing integrity, whose veracity cannot be doubted. Ho saym The Doctors Disagreed, “1 beeame seriousty ill three years ago. The doctor gave me medicine for indiges. tion, but I continued to become Worse. i had several physicians at futervals who anve me soma relief, but the disease would return with all its accustomed severity, “I read in the newspapers articles re. garding the wonderful curative powers of Ur. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, and finally concluded to try the pills, Five months ago I bought six boxes. The first box gave me much relief, and after using four boxes I was cured.” a specific for diseases of the blood and nerves, For paralysis, locomotor ataxia, and other diseases long supposed incur. thousands of Cases, ms I TI AAA ALLEGIANCE OF CONQUEROR. Colonial Relations. The approaching pain and t ome interest to consider the legal ef- the between peace ect of cession of territory by tate to another, Such cession has AON ations and constitutional law. sontroversgies have arisen on to questions of Many such an be extracted from liplomatic correspondence je writings, There can and juris- be no doubt tory become subjects of the states wo which it is ceded; treaties of seace commonly give them a right to 'otain their former allegiance, though reldom unconditionally. The laws of ome countries do not allow aliens to 10ld landed property, and as a matler but nee on thelr soll of a large number sf persons owing allegiance to a for- dign state. Therefore in ression often provided that all nhabitants who wish to retain their ‘ormer allegiance must quit the coun- treaties of it is 0 dispose of their property. nany the inhabitants who wished to main French subjects were obliged o leave. They were, however, allowed o retain their landed prOperty. When California was ceded by Mexico the ‘Inited States were more liberal to the nhablitants. spe Hidalgo they might within a year slect to remain Mexican citizens, and 10 restriction was put on their right to ~saide or to retain thelr property. Naturally all public property in the seded territory belonging to the stale is transferred {6 the new sovereign. As regards obligations, it is commonly igreed that in the absence of express ‘reaty stipulation no portion of the general public debt is transferred with ‘he territory. There are, however, gev- sral instances of a proportionate share sf the general public debt being trans- ‘erred by treaty, Other considerations apply to local debts, and the better opinion is that they should be taken sver with the territory —London law Journal. ee ect ——————— Korea Taught Japan. It was the Koreans who taught the Japanese the art of making the pottery for which Japan is now justly famous, but this was also a curse to the Ko- reans, as all the artisans, as well as the finest specimens of their work, were forcibly carried away to Japan. For five hundred years none of this fine ware has been produced, but the jooting of the royal tombs caused some most excellent specimens of this rare work to be removed from their place of concealment, where they had lain for six or eight hundred years, and two or three collections have recently been made in Seoul. A Thoughtful Fisace. Jack—"Suppose 1 teach you to play cards now, and then you'll know all about it after we're married.” Marie “Won't that be lovely! What game will you teach me?” “Solitaire.” ~Lile. Don’t Tobacco o Spit and Smoke vo Your Life Away, To quit tobucoo easily and forever, be mag. s and vigor, take No'To druggists, 50c or #1. Cure guaran. Booklet and sample free. 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To him came the enthusiastic Roosevelt. “I want a requisition for 1,000 horses at once, and authority to buy ‘em where they can be found,” said the impetuous Theodore. “We shall have to proceed according to the regulations and advertise for the horses,” replied Ludington, “But we are enlisting these men in every state of the union,” urged Roosevelt, “and we want them 10 take their horses with them where they are enlisted.” “Then,” said Lud- ington, “we shall have to advertise for them where they are bought.” "But it will take ninety days and cost $1. 000,000," argued Roosevelt. “We must conform to the regulations” Ludingfon. “Damn the regulations’ shouted Roosevelt. “You peaple in here are tied hand and foot with your cursed red tape.” Mr. Secretary,” cried Ludington, who had become rather warm himself, ‘do not curse the regu- lations, sir; not the regu- lations. 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