0 IDVISKIHG LEDGEB-PftlLAMLPHIA, tfHUUHDAY, JAJNUABV 21, 1915. "BILLY" SUNDAY'S SERMONS Today s Sermon TJBJECT: "TEACH tJB TO PRAT" Textt "Teach u to pray." Gospel of Luke, stl, i. "We live nnd develop physically by exercise. We are saved by faith, but wo inust work out our salvation by doing the 'thlngi Ood will. Tho more wo do (or dod, the more Ood will do through . faith will Increase by experience. , "It you are a stranger to prayer you re a stranger to the greatest source of power known to human beings- If we carett for our physical life In the samo lackadaisical way that we care for our spiritual, we would be as weak physically a we are spiritually. Tou go week In and week out without prayer. I want to be a. giant for Clod. Tou don't even sing; 70u let tho choir do It You go to prayer meeting and offer no testimony. "tou are a stranger to tho great privi lege that Is offered to human beings. Some of the greateit blessings that people enjoy come from prayer. In earnest prayer you think as the Lord directs, and lose yourself In Him. "Some peoplo say! 'It's no use to pray. The Lord knows everything, nnyway.' That's true lie docs. He Is not limited, as I am limited. He knows everything md has known It since before the world was. "Wo don't know everybody who la going to be converted at this revival, but that doesn't relievo us of our duty. "We don't know, and we must do tho work Ho has commanded us to do. "Others say, 'But I don't get wnat i pray for.' Well, there's a cause for everything. Get at the causo nnd you'll be all right. If you aro sick and send for a doctor, he pays no attention to the disease, but looks at what produced It. If yon have a headache, don't rub your forehead. Probably tho cause Isn't there but In the stomach. In Matthew I And It written, 'Ask ond It shatl bo given ' 'Sco!:, nnd ye shall find,' 'Knock nnd It hall be opened unto you.' If your prayers aro not answered you nre not right with Ood. If you have no faith, It your mo tive Is wrong, then your prayers will bo In vain. Many timha when people pray they are selfish. They nre not gripping tho word. I believe that when many a wife prays for the conversion of her hus band it Isn't because she really desires the salvation of his soul, but because she thinks if he wero converted things would be better for her personally. Pray for your neighbors as well na your own fam ily. The pastor of one church docs not pray for tho congregation of another de nomination. I'm not saying anything against denominations. I believe In thorn. I believe they are of God. Denominations represent different temperament A man with warm emotions would not make a good Episcopalian, but he would make a crackerjack Methodist. Oh. the curso of ellishness! The Lord Is dying for relig ion, for religion pure and undenied. Pure and undented religion Is visiting the widow and the fatherless and doing tho will of God without so much thought of yourself. I tell you, a lot of people Bro going to be fooled on the day of judg ment "Isaiah says the hand of Goa Is not shortened and Ills ear la not deaf. No, His hand Is not shortened so that It cannot save. He has provided agencies by which we can be saved. If Ho had made no provision for your salvation, then the trouble would be with Ood; but He has; so if you go to hell tho trouble will be with you. "In Ezcklel wo read that men havo taken Idols into their hearts and put stumbling blocks before their faces. God Is riot going to hear you if you plaeo clothes, money, 'prldo of relationship be fore Him. Ytiu know there Is sin In your life. Many people know thero In sin In their lives. Yet ask God to bless them. They ought first to get down on their knees and pray. 'God, be merciful to me a sinner.' It you ask God for a blessing before you ask Him for forgive ness you are a foot that's what you arc "Some people are too contemptibly stingy for God to hear them. God won't bear you if you stop your cars to tho cries of the poor. You drag along hero for eight weeks and raise a paltry sum that a circus would take out of town In two hours. "When some people give things to the poor they rip off the buttons and the fine braid. Some peoplo pick out old clothes that the moths have made Into sieves and give them to the poor and think they are charitable. That Isn't charity, no. sir! It's charity when you'll glvq; something you'll miss. It's charity when you feel It to give. "Xnd when you stand praying, forgive If ybu have aueht against anyone. It's no use to pray 'if you haveva mean, mis arable disposition. If you are grouchy. If you quarrel in your home or with your neighbors. "If no use to pray for a blessing when you nave a fuss on with your neighbors It doesn't .do you any good. You go to a sewing society meeting to make mosquito netting for the Esquimaux and blankets lor the Hottentots, and Instead you sit and chew the rag and rip some woman up the back. The spirit of God flies from strife and discord. "People say, 'She Is a good woman, but a, worldly Christian.' What? Might as woll speak of 'a heavenly devil. Might as well expect a mummy to speak and bear children as that kind tn m., th world God ward. Prayer draws you nearer to Ood. "Teach Da to pray' Implies that I want to be taught It's a great privilege to be taught by Jesus. A friend of mine was preaching put in Cedar Haplds, la., and had to go to a hospital in Chicago for an operation, hnd' t was asked to go and preach in his place. Alexander was lead 4ng the singing, and one night Charles called a tittle girl out of the audience to sing. 8he didn't look over four or five years of age, though she might have been a. little older. I thought, 'What's tht uso7 Her little voice can never bo heard over this crowd.' But Charlie stood her up in a. chair by the pulpit and she threw back her head and out rolled some of the sweetest music I have ever heard. It was -wonderful, I sat there and the tears streamed down my cheeks. That little irt was the daughter of a Northwestern engineer and he took her to Chicago when her mother Waa away. Some one took her to Patti, who was in the city, Pattl took the little girl to one of her suite of rooms and- told her, tq stand there and sing. TScjj n went to the other end of tho suits and sat down on a divan and listened. The song moved her to tears. She rtn and hugged and kissed the little Ulrl tnd sat her down on the divan and said to her, 'Now you sit here and I'll go oyer there and sing.' She took up her position where the child had stood, and t Jilted her magnificent voice and she sang 'Home, Sweet Home,' and The Last JtO of Summer.' Sang them for that lit tle girt. And Patti used to get a thousand dollars foe a, on, too. She always knew ow many songs she was to sing, for she fcad a eheck before she went on the plat form, It was a great privilege the little (daughter of that Northwestern engineer fcd but U'r a greater privilege to sarn tram Jornu OhrUt how to pray. "A fntnd of njtne told me na went to bear S'aganlnl, and the great violinist ItftHie one qf tho string of his lnatru. mutt, then another, then another, until be had only one left, and on that one ft jUy4 m wonderfully that bis audi uew.feww into terrific applause. It was a sjttater privilege to have Ju teach yr a Jrr "lift U4 UM a few swMoptas fionj the life i Chrun. In Mark w learn tlmt, H jv uf riy La tn wonlu$ utd cut vui t j & soUUur? s al i'i Ht Imbm evn 4y wWn yaurw. Ye i, t a wlUMmt IftmriM Yvt r - JTat.t i s& ?Wt iM MS Wl your hair. You always think of break fast You feed your physical body, why do you starve your spiritual body? If nine-tenths of you were as weak physi cally as you are spiritually, you couldn't walk. "When 1 was assistant secretary of tin! Young Men's Christian Association at Chicago, John G. Peyton came home from the Now Hebrides and was lectur ing and collecting money. He was rais ing money to buy a seagoing steam yncht, for his work took him from Island to Island, nnd he had to use a rowboat, and sometimes It was dangerou.1 when the weather wns bad, so he wanted tho yncht. It was my privilege to go to lunch with him. We would go out to a restaurant ut noon and he would tnlk to us. Sometimes there would bo as many as IS or 0 preachers In the crowd, and now and then some of un were so In terested In whnt he told us of tho work for Jesus In thoie far-awAy Islands that wo forgot to eat. 1 remember that ho said ono day: 'All that I am I owo to my Christian father and mother. My father was one of the most prayerful men I aver knew. Often In tho daytime he would slip Into his closet, nnd ho would drop n handkerchief outside the door, and when we children saw the white sen tinel we know that father wns talking with his God nnd would go quietly nwny. It Is largely becattio of the Ufa ana In fluence of that snmo saintly fother that I am preaching to the cannibals In tho South Sens.' ' "It In an Insult to God and a dlsgrnco to allow children to grow up without throwing Christian Influences nround thpm. Seven-tenths of professing Chris tians have no family prayer and do not read the Dlblc. It Is no wonder boya and girls are irolne to hell. It Is no wonder I tho damnable ballrooms aro wrecking the virtue of our girls. "In the 14th chapter of Mark It Is told that when Jmus had sent tho mul titudes away Ho went up Into tho moun tain and was thero alono with God Jesus Christ never forgot to thank God for answering His prayers. Jesus risked Him to help Him feed the multitude, and He didn't neglect to thank Him for It. Next time you pray don't ask God for anytning. Just try to think of nil tho things you have to bo thunkful for, and tell Him about thorn. "Pride keeps us from proper prayer. Hclng chesty and big-headed Is respon sible for moro failures than anything olso In this world. It has Bpolled many an employe Some fellows pet a Job, and In nbout two weeks thoy think they know moro about the business than tho boss docs. They think ho is all wrong. l never occurs to them that it took Some brains and some knowledge to build that business up and keep It running till they got thero. "Hero's two things to guard against. Don't got chesty over success or dis couraged over a seeming defeat. "And when he prajed he said, 'Laz arus, come forth; and ho that was dead came forth.' If we prayed right we would raise men from sin and bring them forth Into the light of righteousness. "And as ho prayed tho fashion of his countenance was altered. Ladles, do you want to look pretty? If some of you women would spend less on dope, pazaza and cold cream, and get down on your knccB nnd pray, God would make you prettier. Why, I can look Into your faces and tell what sort of lives you live. If you are dovotlng your timo and thought to society, your counte nances will show It If you pray, I can see that "Two famous men walked tho streets of London ono day. Ono was William Pennyfather, tho great philanthropist and devout Christian of Uiutfand, and the other wob Iladcllffe. tho famous in fidel nnd attorney. Pennyfather said to Iladcllffe that religion could bo seen In a man's faco, and Iladcllffe Jeered tho idea. Pennyfather was too modest to offer himself ns an example, but Just men a poor menaicant, a street beggar. upiiruucnca anu icauciinc saw, "Well to It on that follow.' Ah the mendicant reached them ho looked Into the hard face of tho Infidel lawyer with his sneers at religion, and turned away. Then he looked Into the mild and gentle face of Pennyfather, nnd he said: 'Oh, man with God nnd heaven in your fnce, please give mo a penny! Radcliffo was staggered. 'There must bo something In that,' ho muttered as ho walked away. That man didn't know either of us. and ho didn't know whnt wo had been talking about,' "We haven't had A genuine revival In this country alnco 1857. That revival started with throe men on their knees In New York. It spread aulckly. and It spread everywhere. Teamsters would Jump from drays, printers would leave the Bhops with the Ink on their hands, merchants would leave their counters, and everywhere men would quit work for the noon meetings. That rovlval spread to Boston and Chicago nnd Cin cinnati and Pittsburgh and St. Louis and San Francisco and It Jumped the oceans to Europe a'nd Australia, and mil lions were converted. We havo had little revivals local revivals since then, hut not a religious landslide. What the church needs is not a larger member, ship, a new carpet, a bigger plpo organ, but moro men who know how to pray. "Every man who has helped to light up the dark places of the world has been a praying man. I never preach a sermon until I've soaked it In prayer. Never. Then I never forget to thank God for helping me when I preach. I don't care whether you read your prayers out of a book or whether you Just say them so long as you mean them. A man can read his prayers and go to heaven, or he may Just say his prayers and go to hell. We've got to face conditions. "When I read I find that all the saintly men who have done things, from Pentecost until today have known how to pray. It was a master stroke of the devlt when he got the church to give up prayer, One of the biggest farces today Is the average prayer meeting. "Some pray, Thy will be done,' then go out nnd do something to block God's will and keep His kingdom from coming. "Matthew says: 'But when thou pray est, enter Into thy closet, and when thou hast shut the door, pray to thy Father, which is In secret, and thy Father, which seeat in secret, shall reward thee openly. They say that the roots of the trees reach out for many yards around the secret source of their outward strength. If you have no secret religion you'll have no public religion. Bo many people never pray. They do no personal work and they don't teach In the Sunday school. When the revival services come along they're of no use. At the Chicago Y, M, C, A. I used to have to get ministers for the noon meetings, and got to know Doctor Armstrong. One day he told me of a call he had made. When he rang at the door it was opened by a little girl. He asked for her mother, and she asked, 'Are you sick J' He said that be wasn't, and she asked, 'Are you hurtt "Again he said no: then she asked if he knew of any one sick or injured. When he said no, she said, Then you can't see mamma, for she prays from 9 to 10 o'clock. It was then 9:20, but he sat down and waited 40 minutes to see her. At 10 o'clock she came in with the light of glory on her face, and be knew why that home was so blight; knew why her two sons were in the theological seminary and her girl waa a missionary. AU hell can't tear a boy or girl away from a mother like that "A friend told me of meeting In which, when people were asked to name persona for whom they wished prayers made, an old lady always Jumped up and asked prayers for 'John.' She waa asked wWy she was always o noxious about Mm. and she said (hat all of the other mere bma of ber family were saved, and that front the tuns she first took Jtihn in br arms And tlmj 3)lu he Jioui prayed 4ry day ttat be might b ved too M4 & was sttf Uutt OoS wui4 save him some day. She was rewarded when John Morrow, Circuit Court Judge, came down the nlsle nnd accepted Jraus Christ as his personal Saviour. Go homo nnd pray for your husbands, or wives, or son, or daughters, and wo Bhall haVo n great rovlval, " 'And whatsoever ye shall ask the Father In My name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified In tho Bon.' No man can ever bo saved without Jesus Christ. Thore's no wny to Ood unless you como through Jesus Christ It's Jesus Christ or nothing, "At the close of tho battle of Gettys burg the country roundabout was over run by Federals or Confederates wounded I or III, and tho peoplo helped both alike. Itellcf corps wero organized In all the little towns. In ono of them I think It wns York a man who had headed thn committee, resigned as chairman nnd told hli clerk not to send any more soldloru to him. Thero enmo a Union soldier with a blood-stnlned bandage and with crutches that ho had made for himself, and asked to see this man. 'I am m longer chairman of the committee,' said the man, 'and I ennnot help you, for If I were to make nny exception to tho rule I woum lo overrun with applicants. " 'But,' snld the soldier, 'I don't want to ask you for nnythlng. I only want to give you n letter. It Is from your son, who Is dead. I was with him when he died. When ho was wounded I got him a canteen of water nnd propped him up against a tree and held his hand when ho wrote. I know where ho lies.' Tho father took tho letter, nnd he rend It. It sold: 'Treat this soldier kindly for my sake.' Then It told how ho had helped the writer tho dying boy. The father said: 'You must como with mo to hlit mother.' She saw them coming nnd cried out: 'Hnve you nny news of my bo ?' Tho fnther said' 'Hero Is n letter road It' She read It and shrieked. They took tho wounded soldier Into their home, nnd when ho Wns well sho said to him: ' 'Won't you stay with us and bo our son? You uerc his friend, jou wero with him at tho last, you look like him, your voice reminds us of ills. When you speak nnd we turn our faces away wo can nlmost think nc Is here. Let us adopt you. Won't you do It?' Ho henrd their pica, nnd ho wns touched and ho stayed. So heaven will bear your prayer If it I? in tne name or Christ "Lord, teach us how to pray." Last Night's Sermon SUBJECT: "I BESEECH YOU" "Text: 'I beseech you, therefore, breth ren, by tho miracles of Ood, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which Is your rensonablo service.' Romnns IZ'1. "We havo here a cnll for volunteers, not an order for n draft. The nrmico of God aro never mado up of drafted men and women, ordered Into servico whether willing or not. Qod nover owned a slnvo. God doesn't want you to do anything that jou can't do without protest. This Is not a call to hard duty, but an invi tation to the enjoyment of a privilege. It Is not a call to hired labor, to tako tho hoe and go Into tho field, but tho appeal of a loving father to his children to partake of all he has to give. "If thero Is nothing In you that will respond to God's appeal when you think of His mercies. I don't think much ol you. The Impelling motive of my text is gratitude, not fear. It looks to Calvary, not to Sinai Wo nre being entreated, not threatened. That's the amazing thing to me. To think that God would entreat us would stand to entreat us! He Is giving mo a chance to show I love Him. "If you nro not ready to offer It In. gratitude, God doesn't want your ser vice. Ho doesn't want you to serve Him through fear, but because you realize His love for you. nnd appreciate and re spond to It Just think ir God linn been good to us, how many times and how much has He been good to us I "Just think of the things we havo to be thankful for. A visitor to an Insana asylum was walking through tho grounds and ns ho passed one of the buildings ho heard a volco from a barred window high up In the wait, and it said: 'Stranger, did you ever thank God for your reason?' He had never thought of that before, but he says that he has thought of It every day since. Did you ever think that thousands of people who wero Just as good an you are, nre beat ing their heads against the walls of padded cells Did you over think what a blessed thing It is that you aro sano and you go about among men and follow your dally duties and go homo to be greeted by your wife and have your children climb about you? Did you, or you ever thank God that you have a mind and can think. "Did you over thank God for your eyes7 Did you ever thank Him that you can see tho sunrise and the sunset and can see the flowers and the trees and look upon tho atprm? Did you over thank God that you havo two good eyes while so many others less fortunate than you must grope their way in blindness to the coffin? "Did you over thank God for hearing? That you can hear music and ho voices BREEZY COMMENTS HEARD IN TABERNACLE AND NEARBY Scenes and Incidents That Form a Kaleidoscope of Human Interest Centred About the Evangelist. "Eureka!" one man exclaimed. "I hnve found how 'Billy' Sunday does the trick. He makes people split their bMoh with laughter. He then can see Into their souls. The rest Is easy." Marie Tempest made quite a hit her self at the tabernacle. She stood during the entire sermon and appeared inter ested, to say the least Her costume waa the object of considerable attention. She wore a long sealskin coat, short skirt, high white-topped shoes and tan silk hose. Two "kids" would insist on matching pennies near the tabernacle door. One wore a checkered cap and from tho re marks of passcrsby a checkered career Is awaiting the youthful miscreant "I must hear 'Billy" Sunday," one schoolgirl remarked. "My supply of slang Is getting decidedly low, It needs refilling. They say hi language la Im mense." None Fore, a Celestial, living at lOOjl Ilace street, has been to several taber nacle meting. He says that they have nothing like Mr. Sunday in China or elsewhere, as far as he knows. One woman spied Fore on the plat form, and remarked to her friend: "I wonder if he is trying to learn English?" Two youngster make a trip of several miles on roller skates every day Just to hear "Billy." They doff their skates on nearlng the tabernacle, because they "know Ur. Sunday Is afraid of noise." Speaking of nolie, little Gertrude Ack ley, daughter of Mr. Sunday's secretary, had a bad cold. She keeps away from the tabernacle. She might cough and disturb the "boas." A practical view of tba calibre of "Billy" Hunday sud bis pronouncement was overheard in a saloon opposite tbo Cramp Shipyards yesterday wh a crowd sf itnstnpUiyajl shipbuilder and machinists wext aaksd what thr tfeu-ih cf the- v-t tvanceiut of friends and dear oues7 That you can leave your home nnd business and come hero and hear tho songs nnd tho preaching of the word of God? Did you ever think what It would mean to be deaf? "Did you ever thank God for the bless ing of taste? Some peoplo can't tell whether they are online sawdust and shavings or strawberries and Ico cream. Think of tho good thlngB we enjoyl Others hnve tastes so vicious that thoy find It almost Impossible to eat God might have made our food taste like quinine. God might havo made every thing tasto like garbage but He didn't Did you ever thank Ood that we don't havo to hold our noses when we Bit down to the tablo? Did you over thank God that you can breathe without pain? One person In every 10 dies of consuptlon and you can breathe. Think how many woman die of enncer, one out of eight and you aro free from It "Did you over thank God that you can sleep? If not, you ought to bo kept awake for a month. Think of tho thou sands who suffer from pain or Insomnia so that they can sleep only under opl ates? Did you over wnko un In tho morn ing nnd thank God that you havo had a good night's rcst7 If you haven't, God ought to keep you nwako for n week, then you'd know you'vo had reason to be thankful. "Did you over thank God for the doctors nnd nurses nnd hospitals? For tho surgeon who comes with scalpel and trochor to savo your llfo or relievo your surferlngs7 If It hadn't been for them you'd bo under the grass, For the nurse who watches over you that you may bo restored to health? "Did you ever thank God for tho bread you ent, whllo so many others aro hun gry? Did you over thank Him for tho enemy who hna been baffled for tho llo against you that has failed? "Henry Varlev sold to Mondv. uhm that great American was in England, tl at God Is waiting to show thin world whnt ono man could do for Him. Moody Bald; 'Vnrley, by the grace of God I'll bo that man:' and God took hold of Moody nnd shook the world with him God would shako tho world with us to day, if only wo would present our bodies ns living sncrlllco to Him, as Moody did. Aro you willing to present yourself7 I am tired of a church of 600 or 700 mem bers without power enough to bring ono soul to Christ. I believe that tho angels aro leaning out over tho battlements of glory tonight wnitlng to henr how you will answer this appeal to God. "At tho opening of the Civil War mnny n man was willing that tho coun try should be saved by able-bodied mate relatives of his wlfo who made them selves bullet-men, but he didn't go him self. God Isn't asking for other men's bodies. He's asking for yours. If you would all glvo to God what rightfully belo: ngs to Him, I tell you Ho would crcato a commotion on earth and In hell. Ho has a hand In this campaign. If God hnd tho feet of somo of you He would point your toes in different ways than you havo been going for many years MANY DELINQUENTS. "Some people work only with their mouths. God wants that part that's on tho ground. Some soldiers only sit around and smell the coffee and watch the bacon frying. Somo preachers need the cush ions of their chairs upholstored much oftener than they need their shoos half soled. "If God had your hands Ho would make you let go of a lot of things you hold on to with n deathlike grip. If you don't let go of somo of tho things you hold so tightly they will drag you down to hell. Ho would have you let go of somo of tho things you pay taxes on but don't own, and Ho would mako you let go of money to pay taxes on somo that you do own. Somo peoplo aro so busy muckraking that they will lose a crown of glory hereafter. If God had your hands how many count less tears you would wash away. A friend of mine bought a typewriter, and when he tried to use it his Angers scorned to bo oil sticks, but now he con write 125 words a mlnuto. Let God have your hands and He will make them do things that would mako tho angels wonder and applaud. "A young man wont down to Thomas vllle, Aln., and while there wns Invited to a dress ball or rather an undress ball, If what I havo read about such affairs proporiy uescriDes me unirorms. A young lady a young Indy with eyes liko tho aove ond with beautiful tresses, camo up to him and said to tho young man, 'Won't you pledge a glass of champagne with me?' Tho young man thanked her, but said: 'No, I don't drink.' 'Not with me?' she said, and smiled; and again ho answered, 'No.' Then she said: 'If I had thought you would reruse me I would not havo asked you and exposed myself to tho embarrassment of a refusal. I did not suppose you Would think mo bold for speaxing to you in this way, and I thought you might be lonely." A little later sho came back to him nnd repeated her Invitation. Again he said: 'No.' Others came up and laughed. He took it and hesitated. Sho smiled at him and he ...t'J0 ?.. aU right." "He's the goods," He s the biggest thing that's hit the plko since the breadline stnrted," and similar replies were given. Asked why they were all so agreed and If any one of them had been converted by "Billy." the most lo quacious of the lot 'said: .h'lN,la ,conver,t. but any man who say lu 08t p.eop,e ca" flnd Chf'st quicker through a ham sandwich than they can lookln through the Bible knows what he a talkin' about an' don't you forget It." ..TTn8..PPD,lcoJtttJtne "hernacle are among "Billy" Sunday most ardent admlrerB. Besides reminding any one so thoughtless as to become profane that he Is altogether out of style, several of them want to tako an active part in the services. Policeman Weaver, of the lth street and Woodland avenue station, requested Choirmaster Bodeheaver to sing "I've An chored My Soul In a Haven of Best" The hymn was so effective that a marine was able to conduct three civilians up the "eawdust trail." At one afternoon service the congrega tion sang 'The Home of the Soul," at the request of Policeman Taylor, of the zOth and Buttonwood street tatlon. " 'Billy' Sunday i doing a lot of good for the men that come to u.'" said George W "Wllklns, thff uprintendnt of Indus trial work at the Galilee Mission, which is In the heart of the Tenderloin. "Wo see result every day. and are helping the convert to get back to the kind of live that they should lead." "Speaking of graft," said one of the jiahers, "see that minister? He ha three wives here tonight At leat, he said they were hi wives when he was getting reserved seats for them." A woman masquerading as a roan wu ejected from the tabernacle Bunday night All went well with the nuwquerader until It was time for her to take her cap off. The police have been expecting a fw eccentric parsons to turn up at the tab rnaele, but tea? plaits of hair, tiny feat and trouier wore a bit too much, for Un WF. gave In and drnnk the champagne, then drank another glass nnd another, until ho wnm flualtAfl ToltH It. fllPtl tlf danced, At 2 o'clock the next morning n mnn with n linen duster over his other clonics wnmcu back upon ft rnllrond station platform, waiting for a train for the North! and as he walked ho would exclaim, 'Oh, Godl nnd would pull a pint flask from his pocket and drink 'My God,' ho would Jay, 'what will mother say?' Four months Inter In his homo In Vermont, with his weeping parents by him nnrt with four strong men to hold him down, ho died of delirium tremens. BAPTIZED HIS POCKETBOOK. 'The Epworth League's motto Inr 'Look up. lift up, but you'll never lift much Up unless God has hold of your hands Unless He has, you will never put your hands deep In your pocket up to tho el bow and bring them up full of money for His cause. A man who was about to be baptized took out his watch and laid It nslde, then ho took out his knlfo ond bankbook nnd laid them aside, 'Bet ter glvo me your pocketbook to put asido for you,' said tho minister. 'No,' saia tho man, "I want It to bo baptized, too.' "A man snld to his wlfo that ho had heard tho preacher say that religion Is Tvnrth iust what Is costs, nnd that ho had determined to glvo more for re ligion, nnd to deny hlmsolf na well 'What will you give up?' sho asked. Ho said thnt ho would glvo up coffee, for ho dparly loved coffee used to drink sev eral cups at every meal, tho very best Sho snld that she would give up some thing, too that Bho wotdd give up ton. Then their daughter snld sho would give up somo of her little pleasures nnd tho father turned to his son Tom, who wns shoveling mashed potatoes, covered with chicken grnvy. Into his mouth and ho said: 'I'll glvo up salt mackerel. I nover did like the darned stuff anyway.' "Th'-ro nro too many salt mackerel peo plo like- that In tho pows of our churches today. They will tako something that they don't like nnu Hint nonoay piso win have and glvo It to tho Lord. That Isn't enough for God. Ho wnnts tho best wo have. "Tno llttlo girls wero playing Noah's nrk In the bath tub, and after they had become tired of the gnmo ono of them pulled out the plug nnd snld: 'Flood's over.' Noah had a sacrifice. Tho other ono snld: 'Let's havo n sacrifice.' So they took the soap dish and placed a piece of paper on It, and put a broken Bhcep from NonhV ark on top of that nnd set fire to It God wants your body with blood In It. Cain's nltar wns bigger than Abel's, but It hnd nothing valuable on It, while Abel's had renl blood. God rejected Cain's and accepted Abel's. God turns down tho man who merely lives a moral llfo and does not accept tho religion of Jesus Christ. You must como with Jesus' blood. If a mnn gives his wlfo a ton cent pin cushion at Christmas to show how much he loves her, he's n gcozer tho devil's stuck on. How thankful you nro depends on how much you nro willing to sacrifice ' WILL MEN BOB GOD? "If when you make a present you do not mean to glvo it outright you nre not honest Will a mnn rob God? You bet he will a heap quicker than ho will rob nny one else. "Your body, that takes tho head ns well as hands. God wants brains as well as bones and muscle. Wo ought to do best thinking for God. God is In tho greatest business thore is. nnd llo wnnts tho best holp Ho can get. Some of you old dea cons nnd elders mako mo sick. If you used such methods In business as you do in the work of the church tho Sheriff's snlo flag would soon be hanging outside your door. I don't usk nny of you busi ness men to curtail nny of your business activities, but I do ask that jou give moro of your energy to tho things of re ligion. You wnnt to use good business methods In religion. The Republicans and tho Democrats and the Socialists use good business methods In politics. The farmer who hasn't any sense Is still plowing with a forked stick. The farmeV who hnB sense uses a chilled plow. Use common sense "What n f.ico your face will be when God puts His shine on It. If you nro one of these long-faced brand of Chris tians, got rid of it God never put such a faco on you. That'n tho kind of a face tho Pharisees wore, and Jesus said 'they lengthened their faces to make be lieve they had religion. "When a man tries to mako himself without nskinir Ood to help him, ho will make a face as long as a smokestack. I tell you, the devil will bank his fires and go to church to hear a man like that give tes timony. God doesn't want you to look and act as if religion affected you like a toothache, or a corn. If It does, it Isn't God's kind. "If God Almighty only had possession of your mouths. He'd stop your lying. If He had your mouths Ho'd atop your itnocicng. it no nau your mouths He'd stop your misrepresentations. If He had your mouths He'd stop your swearing. If Ho had your mouths He'd Btop your backbiting, If Ho had your mouths Ho'd stop your slanders. There would be no criticising, no social lies, no talking behind backa. "If God had your mouths so much money wouldn't go up In tobacco smoke or out In tobacco spit If Ood had your mouths there would be no thousands of dollars a year Bpent for whisky, beer and wlno. You wouldn't give so much to the devil and you would glvo more to the church, Many of you church pillars wouldn't bo so noisy In politics and so quiet In religion. So many of you fellows wouldn't yell like-Comanche Indiana at a ratification meeting and alt like a bump on a log In prayer meeting, "FEEL ASHAMED?" "If Ood had our eyes we'd bring the millennium. His eyes run to and fro through the world seeking for men to serve Him) and If He had our eyes, how our eyes would run to and fro looking for ways to help bring men to Christ How hard It would be for sinners to get away. We would be looking for drunkards and the prostitutes and down-and-outs, to lift and save them. How many sorrowful hearts we would find and soothe, how many griefs we would alleviate I Or eat Godl how little you are doing) Don't you feel ashamed? Aren't you looking for a knothole to crawl through? If Ood had our eye how many would stop looking at a lot of things that make us proud and unclean and selfish and critical and un christian. ' "Ood wants you to give your body. Are you afraid to. give It to Hlm7 Are you afraid of doctor when you nx$ lok? Your body that thing that sits out there in the seat, that thins that alts up there In he choir and sings, that thing that sits there and write editorial, that body KK80KT8 rOCONO MOONTAINg, FA. BTeAf-IJSAfSrj ROdua, Inclc.eJ porth.r eitnJd Bwthtrn expeur: comfort and .rw Yi,T&-&tit C., n . t...Tiv wuwat. a,, ., ,t,7h .. wwjfc tint nui. V. HKOH'K'B-IIILT.H.IN-TUK.VINKB. N. J. THE INN Fm aesitn. plMuro and net. tlon. travnrtr ran, n tourlits. ,-,r.'I7 T"'""T - - , I. L. M. B. H UPPERS. CltAULESTON. H. C CALHOUN MANSION nmi for txcludva r txeliuiT Miron. pririoal c. urnij(Unjri Bouthtrn CMkliiV, iit. . unnU Mr ua4 lira 1. 11. Cirtouit iaslAl ft MB Ut, celt. sx. AVav&Tisie. sta. THE BARCEU3iNAl'BI' which can show Jesus Christ to fallen sons of Adam better than arty angel tlmt's whnt God wants. Ood wants you io bring It to Him and say! Take It, God, If yours.' If He had your body dissipation, overeating nnd tihdersleeplng would stop, for tho body Is holy ground, wo darn not abuse It. "God wants your body as a living sac rifice, not a dead ono. There's too many dead ones, A time was when God wns riitlsfled with n dead sacrifice. Under old Jewish law a. dead shoep would do. He wants my body now when I'm nllvo nnd not when I nm dead and the Under, taker la waiting to carry It out to tho cemetery, but the day" of that dispensa tion Is past, and now ho wants you, n. living sacrifice, a. real sacrifice. A trav eling man who wants to make his wlfo n present and sits up all night In the train instead of tnklng a berth for J3, and uses the $3 to buy n present for his wife, makes a real' sncrlllco for her. There never was a victory without sacrifice. Socrates advanced tho doctrino of Im mortality nnd died with n cup of poi soned hemlock. Jesus Christ paid with n crown of thorn. Abraham Lincoln paid with a bullet In his heart If you mean to glvo yourself na a sacrifice to God, get out nnd work for Him. Ask men to como to Him. OOD IS HEASONABLH. " 'Your reasonable service.' God nover K? anything unreasonable. Ho Is nover exacting. Ho only nskB rights when He asks you to forsake sin. A man must be an Idiot if ho docs not see that man is unreasonable when unrighteous. God nover made a Inw to govern you that you wouldn't havo made If you had known ns much ns God knows. You don't know that much and never can, so the only sensible thing to do is to obey God's lawo. Faith never nska explanation. "God asks some things that aro hard, but never any thnt nro unreasonable. I beseech you brethren. It was hard for Abraham to tako his son up on tho moun tains and prepare to offer him up as a sacrifice to God, but God had a rea son. Abraham understands tonight and Abraham Is satisfied. "It was a hard thing God asked of Paul of Tarsus to bear witness to Him at Homo and Ephcsus, to faco those Jeering heathens, to suffer Imprisonment and bo uenion wuii w stripes, anu iinany to put his head on tho block and havo It severed by tho order of old Nero, but God had a reason. Paul understands tonight, nnd Pnul Is satisfied. It waa n hard thing God asked of Jesus to leavo tho songs of tho nngcts nnd the prcsenco of tho redeemed and glorified nnd como down to earth to bo born amid tho malodors of n stable, nnd bo forced to flee from post to post, nnd dispute with -tho learned doctors In the temple at 12 years of ago and con fute them, and to still tho storm and te troubled waters, and to say to tho blind, 'Bo whole,' nnd finally to bo betrayed by ono of His own followers nnd to bo murdered through n conspiracy of Jews nnd Gentiles: but now Ho sits on tho throno with tho Father, awaiting for the tlmo to Judge tho world. Jesus under stands, nnd Jesus Is satisfied. "It was a hard thing for mo when God told mo to leave homo nnd go out Into tho world to preach tho gospel and to bo vilified and libeled nnd havo one's llfo threatened and be denounced, but when my tlmo comes, when I havo preached my last sermon, and I can go homo to God and the Lamb. He'll say, 'Bill, this wns tho reason ' I'll know what It all meant, and I'll say, 'I'm satisfied, God, I'm satisfied.' AT THE TABERNACLE TODAY. S p. m.3lr. Sunday delivered his sermon, "Teach Us to Pray." 3 p. m. Miss Baxc met her iBI blc class on the platform. Her sub ject was: "Difficulties of the Scrip ture and Iloio to Meet Them." 7:30 p. m Jfr. Sunday delivers his sermon, "Ilcpentance." For other campaign Information see another column. STATISTICS. Attendance. Yesterday afternoon 10,000 Yesterday evening 20,000 Approximate grand total. . . 020,000 Converts. Yesterday afternoon 102 Yesterday evening 091 Total to date 5,851 Collections. Yesterday afternoon .... J5B0.0I1 Yesterday evening 050.07 arand total S7.070.31 Average contribution from each person.... .0V4 Sermons. Preached to date 33 To be preached before closing the campaign 84 MRS. JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER ILL NEW YORK, Jan. 21. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller Is reported to be extremelv HI at the Rockefeller homo at Pocanttco. It Is said that sho Is suffering ffom malignant anemia. Mrs. Rockefeller is 75 years old. H'lin T..un. J.UU X U&CM Water in the World The Great Health Giver PUROCK WATER CO., 1224-26 Parrliti St EBBBBBsfilS3tfaIk StTsHh .iM'tsr?"i?FT Poultry Page in the Intaglio Photos of prize-winning birds in various parts of the country, A page of unusual interest to the city dweller as well as to the farmer. pmiday, January 24th PUBLIC sm LEDGER Order From Your Dealer Today EVANGELIST'S WPR RECALLED MOTHER! PRAYER TO Former Saloonkeeper Qu TD n - m oooze ousmess tor Kc and Is Now Climbing Ladder to Evangelism. By I-llEDEBICK T. WAlREny Mr. Walter teas nt -.. "! wealth, but more recently a ?,?'W1 outer," an Australian twJkma. "MJ vlct and a saloonkeeper, lie tea., ". Pike BunkaTta7ernZrTerL lng and held a crowd 7 Zl?'??1 KM people Jor nearly an hour ultl xi" 'WJ . . rcrJ I'm out of the booze business for v. and I'm going up the ladd.r ? .' k3 Ism, I went through a fortune jmS another .w'non I went wrnn2."lai"1 lost It all. - "! It all happened because T ,,,,.... .. I could go out for an occwIonVl CS tlmo and beenimn T ii,n,,.i. T .Ju? KalS go oft and forget Christ whenere? ffil like It and nothing would happl J-',! """ miow ii j. was hlttlnr ik. . I thought I was'smart JusuWlS many young fellows today. I had . mother, and hor heart was brok.n i?4 she found It out Sho cried ana for me, but I Just laughs at hW know It all. hut I knew a who!. ..iLf when my moi.ey was trnn. . .Ii7 gang left mo on tho rocks. CWJ1 I was a disgrace- to my nrettr l,.J town in England. I was alwar. in hMl uiu. ujr jnoiners ncart w i.i JBI Then I went to Australia, i' ,?, years in In tho bush nnd was arwiid 2 tlmos that. I havo fotMtaT . 1 many number. Every tlmo I got out f . ,1 jjoozo and dopo ..v. .i,hui ,ii u,o jan. uooze did it tii Of Boozo nnd dopo nro strong alllea flM wnon moy go niter you togethr yc.il stand a good chance of going to hell bJS thn shortest rnntn " "'lal Ono tlmo I was able to get some nonet together, and I went into the 6wi uamurst, out in Australia. The bona for. So I opened a saloon. I thought that everything was n!u1 well. I was making money and drfev Ing booze, but ono day Mrs. C. M, AIu andcr, tho wlfo of tho evangelljt ctaV to tho door of tho saloon nnd pointed ter' iiiiBc m inu mm buiu, --jour mother utd to nrav fnr vnii " My wholo llfo shot before me In i: idh. a ruumiiiucrca mo aays Tvhea 1 was respected at home, I saw the Oi' gone Josh mo because I did not drink. I' runiemncreci now "cocKy I relt after tht first drink. Then I saw mother prayloj1 and rrjlng, then tho dirty Jails. iW was all I could stand, nnd I dropped uuvu uu my nnces anu accepted right there. Slnco then I havo led a Chrlillin life, I havo mndo two trips around the world seeing moro of Chilst's blesjlnit' I went to a "Billy" Sunday meeting if Denver nnd got a Job selling song boolu' so tnui i couiu near him. Then I w to Dcs Moines nnd followed him here. I want to do moro good thnn I couM uo selling song dooics, so I'm going preach the Gospel. The booze game j mo down, but Christ lifted mo up. yiCtcyfi X $faAi& C Unitarian Christianity To tho Unltnrlan, religion Is not way of cscapo from hopeless en tanglements. It Is, rather, a ong that brings tho thought of Ood Into all tho relations of life, a powr tvunin ino soui mnt cnnDics it to in fuse hone into all entanglements. Our religion Inspires us to love God, to loyo our follow men, and to Inn.l ..in., ' tl.,.. T7nfln.tn la tt. M, v:ll4 HUUU KVLa, lhVtl(.IUII , V IM what It was to Jesus. Come and fcol this power tonight at tho First Unitarian Church, 2l Chostnut street Orunn recital st 7:45. Servico nt 8. with a sermon by itev. w. u. Sullivan, or New yorif.on "Tho Splrltunl Power of a Liberal Faith." Mr. Hulllvnn preaches here, also, on Friday evening, and (o brines to an ond this Unltarlin Week of Special Endeavor. Tho Second Unitarian Week of Special Endeavor will open Buna- evening at The unitarian unurca oi Gormantown, Cholten avenue sna Greene street, with Mr. Sullivan tho preachor. Ho will be follows bv Rov. A. R. Hussey, of Baltimore. who apcakB on Monday and TueiiHr evenings: Rev. E. H. Reeman. Of Lancaster, on Wednesday and Thurj dny, nnd Rev. U. G B. Pierce, of Washington, on Friday and Satur day evenings, and also on Bunqtr morning. . . For tho details of this secpnd irtti of Religious Awakening see ear notice among tho church notices of Saturday, , ... Havo you yet visited or written for literature to The Unitarian Bookroom 1815 N. Logan Square J - - i e? Ji3 r ?