PE THE POWER OF KINDNESS Victory Through Good Will—-Most Potent of Worlds [SGopyright, 1901. ] Wasuixaron, D. C.—In this discourse Dr. Talmage commends the spirit of amity and good feeling and mentions illustrious examples of that spirit; text, Acts xxviii, 2 “The barbarous people showed us no lit- tle kindness.” Here we are on the Island of Malta. an- other name for Melita. This island, which s always been an important commercial centre, belonging at different times to Phoenicia, to Greece, to Rome, to Arabia, te Spain, to France, now belongs to Eng- land. The area of the island is about 100 square miles. It is in the Mediterranean Sea, and ef such clarity of atmosphere that Mount Etna, 130 miles away, can be distinctly seen. The island is gloriously memorable because the Knights of Malta for a long while ruled there, but most fa- mous because of the apostolic shipwreck. The bestormed vessel on which Paul sailed had “laid to” on the starboard tack, and the wind was blowing east-northeast, and, the vessel drifting probably a mile and a half am hour. she struck at what is now called St. Paul's Bay. Practical sail- ors have taken up the Bible account and decided beyond controversy the place of the shipwreck. But the island, which has go rough a coast, is for the most part a garden. Richest fruits and a profusion of ney characterized it in Paul's time as well as now. The finest oranges, figs and olives grow there. When Paul and his comrades crawled up on the beach, saturated and hungry from long abstinence from food and chilled to the bone, the islanders, though called bar- barians because they could not speak Greek, opened their doors to the ship- wrecked unfortunates. My text finds the ship's crew ashore on Malta and sround a hot fire and with the best provision the islanders can offer them. And they go into government quarters for three days to recuperate. Publius. the ruler, inviting them, although he had severe sickness in the Swouse at that time, his father down with a dangerous illness. Yea, for three months they staved on the island watcl ing for a ship and putting of the islanders to a severe test But it endured the test satisfactorily, and it is recorded for all the ages of time and eter nity to read and hear in regard to the i habitants of Malta, “The barbarous peo showed us no little kindnes«.” Kindness! What a great word that It would take a reed as long as that which the apocalyptic angel used to measure heaven to tell the length, the breadth, the height of that munificent word. It is a favorite Bible word, and itisearly launched in the book of Genesis, caught up in the book of Joshua, embraced in the book of Ruth, sworn by in the book of Samuel, crowned in the book of Psalms and en- throned in many places in the New Tes- tament. Kindness! A word no more gentle than mighty. I expect it will wres- tle me down before I get through with it. It is strong enough to throw an archan- gel. But it will be well for us to stand arommd it and warm ourselves by its gle as Paul and his fellow voyagers. stood around the fire on the Island of Malta, where the Maltese made themselves im- mortal in my text by the way they treated these victims of the sea. “The barbarous people showed us no little kindness.” Kindness! All definitions of that multi- potent word break down half way. You say it is clemency, benignity, generosity; it is made up of good wishes; it is a con- tribution to the happiness of others. Some one else says: “Why , I ean give you a definition of kindness. It is sunshine of the soul; it is affection perennial; it is a cteric grace; 1t is : f the hosmitaiitly JW ination of es; it is compassion; it is the f gentle hin nd wom anliness.” Are vou all You have made a dead failure defini- tion. It cannot be define all know what it is, for we h power. Some of you may | Paul feit it on some cosas ship went to pieces, but more of us have again and again in some stress of life had either from earth or heaven hands stretched out which “showed us no little kindness.” There is kindness of ness of word, kindness of ac is Jesus Christ, the impersonation of all of them. Kindness! 1 cannot affect it; you cannot play it as a part; you ca enact it; you cannot dramatize 1t. By the grace of God you must have it inside y an everias summer, or, rather, bination ¢ une and October, ity of the and the tonic of It canno il with arrogance revenge malevoience, pearan e a the and Gergishites and Hittites and Jebu- sites must quit and quit forever. Kind- ness wishes everybody well, every child weil, every bird well, every horse well, every dog well, every cat well. Give this spirit full swing, and you would have no more need of societies for prevention of cruelty to animals, no more need of protective sewing women's asso- ciations, and it would dull every sword until it would not cut skin deep and un- wheel every battery till it could not roll and make gunpowder of no more use in the world except for rock blasting or py- rotechnic celebration. But are you waiting and hoping for some one to be bankrupted or exposed or dis comfited or in some way overthrown? Then kindness has not taken possession of your nature. You are wrecked on a Malta where there are no oranges. You are en- tertaining a guest so unhke kindness that kindness will not come and dwell under the same roof. The rost exhausting and unhealthy and rumous spirit on earth isa revengeful spirit or retaliating spirit, as 1 know by experience, for I have tried it for five or ten m nutes at a time. When some mean thing has been done me or said about me, I have felt “I will pay him in his own coin. I will show him up. The ingrate, the traitor, the liar, the villain!" But five or ten minutes of the feeling has been so unnerving and exhausting I have abandoned it, and I cannot understand how people can go about torturing them- selves five or ten or twenty years, trying t0 get even with somebody. The only way you will ever triumph over your ene- mies is by forgiving them and wishing them all ood and no evil. As malevolence is the most uneasy and ofitless and dangerous feeling, kindness is the most healthful and delightful, And this is not an abstraction. As I have tried a little of the retaliatory feeling, so I have tried a little of the forgiving. do not want to leave this world until I have taken vengeance upon every man that ever did me a wrong by doing him a Kindness, Let us all pray for this spirit of kind: ness. it will settle a thousand questions. It will change the phase of everything. It will mellow through and through our en- tire nature. It will transform a lifetime. It is not a feeling got up for occasions, « but perennial. That is the reason I like Jatunias better than morning glories. ey look very much alike, and if I should put in your hand a Jetunia and a morning glory you could hardly tell which was the petunia and which the morning glory, but he morning glory blooms only a few hours and then shuts up for the ay, while the petunia is in as widespread a glow at 12 o'clock at noon and 6 o'clock in the even- ing as at sunrise. And this grace of kind. ness is not # odie, it is not intermit- tent, it is not for a little while, but it ir. radiates the whole nature all th and clear on till the sunset of our y ex: Kindness! I am resolved fo get it. as the weed awiuil nd- disposition, Ki t, and there not ou, a com- the genial the other. or spite or At its first Lj soul all these Amalekites i Ave ye resolved 15 ~-t it? Tt doze nol come bv haphazard. but through culture under divine help, Thistles grow without culture, Rocky Mountain sage grass grows without eunlture. AMullein sta'ls grow without culture. But that great red rose in the conservatory, its eaves packed on leaves, deen dyed as though it had been obliged to fight for ita beaniy and it were still reeking with the carnage of the battle, that rose needed to be cultured, and through long years its floral ancestors were cultured. O God, implant kindness in all our souls. and then give us grace to watch it. to enrich it, to develop it! J The King of Prussia had presented to him by the Empress of Russia the root of a rare flower. and it was put in the roval gardens on an island, and the head gar dener. Herr Fintleman, was told te watch it. And one day it put forth its glory. Three dave of every week the people were admitted to these gardens, and a young man, probably not realizing what a wrong thing he =a3 doing. plucked this flower and put it in his buttonhole, and the gar- dener arrested him as he was crossing at the ferry and asked the king to throw onen no more his gardens to the public, The kine replied: “Shall I deny to the thousands of good peonie of my country the privilege of seeing this garden because one visitor has done wrong? No; let them come and see the beautiful grounds.” And when the gardener wished to give the king the name of the offender who had taken the roval flower he said: “No; my memory is very tenacious. and I do not want to have in my mind the name of the offender. lest it should hinder me granting hin a favor some other time.” Now, want vou to know that kindness iz a royal flower, and, hlessed be God, the King of Mercy and Grace, that by a divine gift and not by purloining we may pluck this roval flower and not wear it on the outside of our nature, but wear it in our soul and wear it forever, its radiance and aroma not more wonderful for time than wonder- ful for eternity On vour way to noon luncheon you meet an optimistic merchant, and you say. “What do you think of the commercial prospects?’ and | “Glorious! Crops not sa good as usual, but foreign demand will make big We are going to have such an am nd winter prosperity as we have ne gs On vour w mee back tn «tare merchant. “What ommercial prospects? “Well. T don't you do ’ nA peas: ic think of the « vo k. And he answers kno Whest and blasted in Kansas and Missouri, and the gram gam: blers will get their fi n, and short in some pla “8 part of Wisconsin ar 3 iilstorm. snd our business ig as di vou corn crop the cron 18 southern it ever was,” You will the same difference i racter A m of moot on assailed and charged some evil deed At pessimist will believe in guilt “The papers said so, and that's enough Down with him!” The st will sav: “I believe a word of it. 1 don't man that has been as useful honest for twenty it off track like that two sides to this and J will o hear the other side before 1 him." My hearer, if you are pature a simist, make a special effort by the grace of God to extirpate the dolor hvpercritieal from nothing wrong is establi When you can one. give letter ol Watch {« good fifty vears atter iie has Deon that the first story aptimi don’t think t2 and seemingiv “ 1 I . sa ears could fave ¢ story nes ' ) Lieve Ye - } % speak a good we some speak it. If you ean con tiously five of Introd the Vranken, of New Brunswick Theological nary, wrote for me, a boy under him, when | was seeking a settlement in which to preach the gospel. That letter gave me my first pulpit Dr. Van Vranken has been dead more than thirty years, yet | feel the touch of that magnificent old pro f was it when I ed a kind message from Rev, Thomas i. of Baltimore, the great Methodist orator, six weeks after his death. By way of the eternal world? Oh, no; this world whom he ction Sem Strange sensation gave the message until nearly cended So you that long al at your can start a word al will be on its travel er the funer Hies Kin fifty men all aglow with it should through the lost world would almost abolish perdition! Furthermore, there is kindness of ac tion outrageous brothers showed to Meph Jonathan's sake. That is what Onesiphe rus showed to Paul in the Roman peniten- tiary. That is what William Cowper rec ognized when he said he would not trust obaeq ness! Whe Lacy meth hE That is what David osheth for his crush a worm. That 1s what our assassi- nated President Lincoln demonstrated when hia private secretary found him in the capitol grounds trying to get a bird back to the nest from which it had fallen and which quality the illustrious man ex- hibited some years before when, having, way to court passed on the road a swine fast in the mire, and after a while cried to his horses, “Ho!” and said to the gen- tlemen, “I must go back and help that hog out of the mire.” And he did go back and put on solid ground that most unin- teresting quadruped. Suppose all this assemblage and all to whom these words shall come by printers’ ink should resolve to make kindness an overarching, undergirding and all pervad- ing principle of their life and then carry out the resolution. why, in six months the whole earth would feel it. People would say: “What is the matter? It seems to me that the world is getting to be a bet. ter place to live in. Why, life, after all, is worth living. Why, there is Shylock, my neighbor, has withdrawn his lawsuit of foreclosure against that man, and be- cause he has so much sickness in his fam- ily he is going to have the house for one year rent free. There is an old lawyer in that young lawyer's office, and do you know what he has gone in there for? Why, he is helping to fix up a case which is too big for the young man to handle, and the white haired attorney is hunting up ig decisions and making out a brief for the boy. Do you know that a strange thing has taken place in the pul pit, and all the old ministers are helping the young ministers, and ail the old doc: tors are p the young doctors, and the farmers are assisting each other in gathering the harvest, and for that farmer who is sick the neighbors have made a bee, as they call it, and they have all turned in to help him get his crops into the garner? And I heard this morsing of a poor old man whose three children were in hot de bate as to who should take care of him in his declining days. The oldest son de- clared it was his right because he was the oldest, and the youngest son said it was his right because he was the youngest, and Mary said it was her right because she better understood her father's vertigo and rheumatism and poor spells and knew better how to nurse him, and the only way the difficulty could be settled was by the old man's promise that he would di. vida the year into three parts and sped a thitd of his time with each one of them. And neighboring stores in the same line of s on the same block are actin kindly to each other. It seems to me tha those words of Isaiah are being fulfill when he says, “The carpenter encourage the , and he that smoothed with mer, him that smote the anvil, ng, it is ready for the soldering’ ork In picking Whe. the milion ng up. ust coming in. yh bas vietory., ah COMMERCIAL REVIEW. General Trade Conditions. R. G. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade says: “Universal sorrow placed a calming hand on the rush and turmoil of the market place. Everything that could be conveniently postponed was put aside out of respect for the man whose life was devoted to developing the wonderful activity in all branches of trade and industry. “Mercantile payments continue prompt but it was to be expected that bank ex changes would not show the customary heavy gains over previous years “Corn has met with another setback. After passing through the vicissitudes of heat and drought it was subjected to the other extreme of temperature, How much injury was done by frost cannot yet be determined, but reports were suf ficient to force prices to an exception ally high point on Tuesday. It was not possible to retain the advance, and there was evidence of much manipulation dur- ing the movement. One result of in- flated quotations was further reduction in exports from the Atlantic Coast to 200,801 bushels, against 1,518,820 a year ago and 3,118,215 in 1809 “Wheat is stronger with less specu- lative support and more actual cash de mand. Shipments abroad the past week, amounting tO 4.033.455 bushels, against 3,210,211 last year and 1,242,764 two years ago the United States, and 26 in Canada agains LA EST QUOTATIONS. Patent, $4.00; Grade Extra, $4.10; Minnesot: $2.90a3.10. Wheat Philadel p timore, 7. : refined, : Dairy rator, extras, 2iaz2 gathered cream, 19a20¢: 17a10c; ladle, extra, 154 t4a13c; choice We fair to good. 13a14¢c; hali-pound cream ery, Maryland, Virginia and Pennsyl vania, 21a23c; do, rolls, 2-1 2x Eggs.—Western Maryland and Penn sylvania, per doz, 17%:ai18¢; Eastern Shore Maryland and Virginia, per doz, 7% tern roils West Virginia, per doz, 17c; Western 16%5c; ice-house, closely candled, 16a 17¢€. Live Poultry wChickens—Hens, 11¢: do, old rovsters, each, 2sajoc; do, springs, large, 12%c; small, 12)5c Bucks, spring, 3 lbs and over, 0c Geese, Western, cach, jsasoc. Live Steck. Chicago —Good to prime steers, $6.10 ab.50; stockers and feeders, $2.50a4.30; cows, $2.50a4.75; heifers, $2.2%5a%.00; bulls, $180a4.75; calves, $300a6.75; Texas steers, $3.00a4.50. Hogs—mixed and butchers’, $660a7.20; good to choice, heavy, $6.05a7.30; bulk of sales, $685a7.00. Sheep—Sheep and lambs steady at recent decline. Good to choice wethers, $3b6oajgo; fair to choice, mixed, $3.30a1.60; Western sheep, $3.25 a3.65; native lambs, $3.00a4.75; Western lambs, 3375440, East Liberty. Cattle steady; choice $5.75a0.00; prime, $5.50a5.70; good, $5.20a5.50. Hogs firm; prime heavy and best, $7.15a7.40;: heavy Yorkers, $7.25 7.30; light do, $7.00a7.10; grassers, $6.80 a7.00; pigs, $6.50a6.75; skips, $4 50a5.50; roughs, : 526.50. Sheep steady; best wethers, $3.85a4.00; culls and common, $1.25a2.25; yearlings, $2.50a4.25. Veal calves, $7.00a7.50. ; LABOR AND INDUSTRY Minneapolis servant girls will organ- ize. There are telephones on Alpine peaks, Italy's income from foreign visitors is estimated at $40,000,000 a year, : &« to the value of $27,000000 were imported by England last year. Minneapolis plumbers will withdraw from the Building Trades Council. New Orleans painters work eight frours and earn 31 1-4 cents per hour, Robert Offenbach has Heid $oan00 for a seat on the New York Stock Ex- chavge. Me Broke It Gently, “What do you want, little boy?" “Is this where Mr. Upjohn ma am?’ HY es “The bank?" “He is an officer in the bank.” “The Mr. Upjohn that went down town on a trolley car this morning?” “I presume he went on a trolley car. What"! : “Is he the Mr. Upjohn that was in at hor'ble street car accident?” “I haven't heard of his being in any sireet car accident.” “Didn't hear ‘at he'd ankle jumpin’ out o' the train run into it?” “No, little What has—" “Didn't you hear how he run into a drug store for a piece o' court plaster to stick on a little cut he'd got over the eye? “Not at all. For mercy’ “He isn't in, is he, ma am?” “No, he's" “Name's John U. Upiohn, “Yes, that's his name, “Then he's the same man. He won't be here for an hour or two, 1 guess, ‘cause he's stoppin’ to have one of his teeth tightened that got knocked a little bit } when he umpin’ out o' danger, ¥' know." “Little boy, tell me the whole story; I think 1 can bear it now." “Well, ma'am, he's in the hospittle with ribs broke one leg in a sling an’ his nose knocked kin ' side Ways, he's gettin’ along an’ he'll be out agai a an’ : lives, Mr, Upiohn that runs the + prained his car when the boy, isn't it?’ Ose was four an os but all here's a lette ye all about it, 1 Bridget's Ultimatum. I'm leavin’ : i all work valid Her Vamity. 13 She Comes iv. 1 believe? He—Yes. very nN and was beheaded m reign of a grand estor of hers the four Edward OF The Abu nce of Jt. 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