— Wo ae REY. DR. TALMAGE. ————————————— is THE BROOKLYN DIVIN DAY SERMON. Subject: “Our House on the Hills" (Preached at the Hamptons, Long Island.) TEXT: “Inmy Father's house are many rooms." John xiv,, 2, Hero is a bottle of medicine that is & cure all. Tho disciples wore sad and Christ of- fered heaven as an alternative, a stimulant and a tonic. He shows them that their sor- rows are only a dark background of a bright picture of coming felicity. Ho lots them know that though now they live on the lowlands they shall yet have a house on the uplands.” Nearly all the Bile descriptions of heaven may be figurative, I am not positive that in all heaven there is a literal crown or harp or pearly gate or throne or chariot. They may be only used to illustrate the glories of the place, but how well they do it! The favorite symbol by which the Bible presents celestial an hid is a house. Paul, who never owned a house, although he hired one for two years in Italy, speaks of heaven asa “house not made with hands,” and Christ in our text, the transla- tion of which is a little changed so as to give the more accurate meaning, says: “In my | father’s house are many rooms." This divinely authorizod comparison of heaven to a great homestead of large accom modations I propose to carry out, healthy neighborhood a man very commodious habitation, He must have room for all his children The | rooms come to be called after the different members of the family, That is mother’s room. That is George's room. That is Henry's room. That is Flora's room. Thatis Mary's room. And the house is all occupied. But time goes by and the sons go out into the world and build their own homes and daughters are married or have talents enough singly to go out and do a good work in the world, After a while the father and mother are almost alone in the big house and, seated by the evening stand, they say: “Well, our family is no larger now than when started together forty years ago.” But time goos still further by and some of the children are unfortunate | ahd return to the old homestead to live, and the grandchildren come with them, and perhaps great-grandehildren, and again the house is full. Many millennia ago God built on hills of heav- In some | buikls a the en a great homestead for a family innumer- able, yet to be. At first He lived alone in that great house, but v while it was occupied by a very , Cherubie, seraphic, angelic, 4 nities passed on and many of tho wmbitants b 2 WRY. ward and left never to return. And many of the apartments I refer to the fallen angels apartments are filling up again, The at the old homestead of Ge wilds day, and the day will come when be no unoccupied room in all ti As you and I expect to and make there eternal residence, I thonght you would like to got some more particulars about that many-roomed homestead. “In my Father's house are many room soe the place is to be apportioned off tents, We shall love all who are in | there are somes very good people whom we would not want to live with in the same room. They may be better than we are, but of a divergent temperament like to meet with them on streets and we i with them in the temple and walk with them on the river banks, bat I am glad to say that we shall live in different apartments. “In my Faiber's house are any room You see heaven will be so large that if one want an satire room to himself or herself, it can be afforded. An in- genious taking the statement made in Revelation, twenty-first chapter, that the heavenly Jeru m was measured and found to be twelve thousand furlongs and that the length and bh and breadth of it are equal mt would make heaven in pox tillion =s quintillion eubic feet, wm hen reserving a certain portio heaven and the streots, and the world may last a hundred t be ciphers out that { e are over fi Hon rooms, each room sixioon foot wide, fiftden feet high no faith in the accuracy « » makes the rooms t mall. Fi ad the rooms will be palatial have not had fngh room in this world will have plenty of room at the last. The fact is that most people in this world are crowded, and though out on a vast prairie or in a mountain district peopl \ tamil mio 3 appar aven, but rship wrht |mys wventeen f thm Mm Wnat « wo en AY BAYS mare room than they want, in most cases it is house built close to house, and the streets are crowded and the cradle {3 crowded by other cradles, and the graves crowded in the cemetery by other graves, and oue of the richest luxuries of many people in getting out of this world will be the | guining of unhindered and uncramped room, I should not wonder if instead of the room that the statistician ciphered out as only seventoon feet by sixteen, it should be larger than any of the imperial rooms at Ber- lin, 8¢t. James or Winter Palace. “In my Father's house are many rooms.” Carrying out still further the symbolism of the toxt let us join hands and go up to this majestic and see for ourselves, As we ascend the golden steps, an invisible guardsman swings open the front door and | we are ushered to the right into the recep | tion room of the old homestead. That is the wheres we first meet the welcome ven. There must be a place where departed spirit enters and a place in which it confronts the inhabitants exlestiat The re ception room of the newly arrived from this world—what scenes it must have witnessed since the Sint guest arrived, the victim of | the first fratricide, pious Abel. In that room | Christ lovingly greeted ail new com. | ers. He redeemed them and He has the | we tothe first embrace on their arrival, | What a minute when the ascended epirit first soes the Lord. Better than all we ever read about Him or talked about Him or san about Him in all the churches and through all our earthly lifetime, will it be, just for one secotdd to see Him. The most rapturous had of Him on sacramental days or at the height of some great revival : HU - SE i F i ii 10 Hi Ho | amining the gates of the | severely the throne room | mountains and India’s coral strand.” verse or song, | cradle, and many who child for whom ho once fasted and wept; Mary and Lazarus after the heartbreak of Bethany: Timothy and grandmother Lois: Isabella Grabam and her sailor son, Alfred and George Cookman, the mystery of tho sea at last made manifest; Luther and Magdalene, the daughter he be- moaned; John Howard and the prisoners whom he gospelized; and multitudes without number who, once so weary and so sad, parted on sarth but gloriously met in heaven. Among all the rooms of that house there is no one that more enraptures my soul than that reception-room. are many rooms.” Another room in our Father's house is the throne room, We belong to the royal fam- ily, The blood of King Jesus flows in our veins, 50 we have a right to enter the throne room, It is no easy thing on earth to get “Inmy Father's house through even the outside door of a King's residence, During the Franco-German war, one sventide in the swomer of 1570, I stood studying the exquisite sculpturing of the gate of the Tuileries, Paris, Host in admira- tion of the wonderful art of that gate I knew not that I was exciting suspicion, Lower- ing my eyes to the crowds of people I found myself being closely inspected by governmental officials, who from my com- plexion judged me to be a German, and that for some belligerent purpose I might be ex- mince My 0X- planations in very poor French did not satisfy them and they followed me Jong dis- | tances until I reached my hotel, and were not satisfied until from my landlord they found that I was only an inoffensive Amer: can, The gates of earthly palaces are care. fully guarded, and, if so, how much more A dazzling place it for mirrors and all costly art No one who ever saw the throne of the first and only Napoleon will ever forget the letter N embroidered in purple and gold on the up holstory of chair and window, the letter N gilded on the wall, the letter N chased on the chalices, the letter N flaming from the cell ing. What aconflagration of brilliance the throne room of Charles Iinmanuel of Sardina, of Ferdinand of Spain, of Elizabeth of Eng land, of Boniface of Italy, But the throue room of our Father's house hath =a glory eclipsing all the throne rooms that over saw scoplor wave or crown glitter or foreign Ambassador bow, for our Father's throne is a throne of grace, a throne of mercy, a throne of holiness, a throne of justice, a throne of universal dominion. We need not stand shivering and cowering before it, for our Father says wo may yet one day come up and #1t on It beside Him. ‘To him that overocom eth will I grant to sit with Mein My throne.” You wo are Princes and Princesses. Perhaps now we move about incognito, as Peter the Great in the garb of a ship carpen- ter at Amsterdam, or as Queen Tirzah in the dress of a peasant woman seeking the prophet for her child's cure; bu will be found out after awhile when we get into the throne we need not walt until by praver is a] who we are room Aye! thon Wo may and spirity enter Lhe forever! and prostri The crowns } world are tossed 1 generation to wration on ily to family s are childy four ves wd fn Berlin have see on three Emperors wis of this world rise meet in one place oming from north the Spanish rown, the It AN yen, the English eTown, the Turkish Russian or Persian crown, aye y OTOWnS der the great archivolt of Geaven I watch and wo of diamonds a sever i And | | and 3 and south and east wn, the from un and while wher they are all flung in rain wand the pierced feet All reign wher'er th wa his on His Kingdom strew un hall rise thr are m LAIR UR Jewns a Cossive jJouraeys ra bh from Till an ared Bt Bo more ¢ Oh, that ne room of PE] { ’ - LR LE pe i from touch of something Christian posers and ( tron t no mus N wony? I cam first bar of th ’ heaven I can gin the doxology But heaven 1 can mean nothing music bas escaped lying at Beaufort, not hear” Hear the bystander The mausde! Lift up! Open the windows! In that music room of our Father's house, you will some day met the old Christian masters, Mozart and Handel and Mendelssohn and Beethoven and Doddridge, whose sacred poetry was as re- markable as his sacred prose, and James Montgomery is plrivuai Cowper, at last of rnd of his ritual melancholy, and Bishop Heber, wi sang of “Greenland’s icy ima TANS Muse astomally ofan SC said what? Dr. Raffles, who wrote of “High in realms of light” and Lsaac who went to and wife for a week but proved himself so agreeable a guest that they made him stay thirty-six years; and side by side, Augustus Toplady, who has got over his dislike for Methodists, and Charles Wesley freed from V atta, his dislike for Calvinists; and Geurg w. | © Was Bethune, as sweet as a song maker as t as a preacher and the author of “The | “ilage Hymns." and many who wrote in in church or by eventide were passionately fond of masic but could make none them- selves. The poorest singer there more than any earthly prima donna, and the poorest players there more than any earthly Gottschalk Oh that music room, the headquarters of cadence and rhythm, symphony and chant, psalm and antiphon! May we be there some Haydn sits at the keys of one of his own or- atorios, and David ¢ r ist fin the harp, and Miriam of the the cymbals, and Gabriel puts his lips to the trumpet and the fourand- twenty soldiers chant, and Lind and Parepa redder matoh.- less duet in the music room of the old beav- It may correspond some. what with the family room on earth. At . Ba Whether it gs! divans and ous with ottomans and Russian F In TT IH 852 § Hl i i £ § { separation the windows and door { of the heavenly homestead, “In my Father's | house are many rooms | you in that family room { tory | marinly { richer than Venetian and | onder | oi mething in the paper the other day visit Sir Thomas Abpey | our when | ‘ | stride | looked for. wea banks clags | want to know of thom right away such things as those: Did you seo us in this or that or tho other struggle ? Did you know when we lost our property and sympathize with us? Did you lnow we had that awful sickness? Wears you hovering anywhere around when wo plunged into that memorable accidents? Did you know of our backsliding? Did you know of that moral victory! Were You pleased when we started for heaven? Did you celebrate the hour of our conversion? And then, whether they know it or not, we will toll them all, Buf they will have more to tell us than we to tell them, Ten years on earth may bo very eventful, but what must be the biography of ton years in heaven? They will have to tell us the story of coronations, story of news from all imunensity, story of conquerors and hierarchs story of wrecked or rane somed planets, story of angelic kindled and swung, of stranded comets, of worlds on five, and story of Jehovah's ma- | If in that family room of our | jestic reign, Father's house we have so much to tell them of what we have passed through since we arted, how much more thrilling and arous- | ng that which they have to tell us of what | they have passed through since we parted. | Surely that family room will be one of the most favored rooms What long shall never again be in let moe open a window” gid bumble Christian servant to Lady Raffles who, because of the defth of her had shut herwelfl up in a dark and refused to seo any one: ‘‘yvou been many days jn this dark room. Are you not ashamed to grieve in manner, when you ought to be thanking God for having given you the most beauti- ful child that ever wag seen, and instead of leaving him in this world till be sliould be worn with trouble, has not God taken him to heaven in all his beauty? Leave off weet ing and let me open a window.” So to day i am trying to open upon the darkness of oar thly and rooms lingering there, for 0 have How would # do for my sermon to leave i to-day? Tam sure there is no room in which yon w I rather stay than in the enraptured circle of your as oended nnd gh rifiod Kinsfolk We might visit other rooms in our Father's hous. There may be picture galleries penciled not with carthly art but by unknown in this ing for the next worl the wt and most stupendous on of human his And there may bo lines and forns beauty preserved for hes Fpection in some J ter and ctlptrire ev Wry Rooms over Majestic rooms, opalescent thystine 1 nmy Father's ROY r r me of us will 1 Liang total n f } ! pol PrOCeRs Mang wi Rooms Large ! rooms, an) Ise are 1 besdde 1 ns Ope Wt getting thes ewilig nlsolu way |] at Lhe and we must star ouly hour you ar now strikes and the enter y door you, as the “My dying mm neighboriod, 1 have bu residence It full furnished them as nished Pearls nothing, cohry mined nothing: yet tal of t for ve i= Are hrysoplirasas panes of Li ielg tl the aurora heavens, nothing con dor with which 1 But you mast be ol there, and «0 where you yw LH] ir Fo. tt wirthern rar eplen has ier ain FILS AWAY Come n roared foot on Lhe pward pathway : you not d the heavenly howmeetend In MALY rooms see anid the thick foliage on hilltops the old far my Father's house are EY lated of Matihe iterature dispute with him portentons di Over A Rreat pe his hand, and with equ “Do let me admirer of my favorite poet.” kind is told of Doctor Wendell Homes. Traveling to he dragged into a long conversation, which ended in a couniryman's taking the “antocrat’s” hat and shake hands with the only A story of a different Oliver down Gloncester once, was saving, “I read about the size of great men’s heads, and I thought I'd like to know the size of yourn. But what bothers me is, | my head's the biggest of the two!” ———— Tie newest thing in electric looo- motion the Ward omnibus, which runs by electricity on all of tracks, up or down grade. are 1s sors Rails | dispensed with, and all special tracks: and the yan is run over asphalt or wood, or pavements of stone, or com This in advance of what had been non macadam, is a wonderful Are we to be entirely rid of the cost of laying rails for cars? Probably mot yet, but ere long. A | system of electric carriages, self guided ns well as self-propelled, is sure of coming soon intouse. Then we shall have wrial navigation, and between the two rapid transit is solved. The ex- pense of travel will, at the same time, be reduced to a small fraction of its present cost, Dr. HamMoxp protests against the American habit of gulping down a great quantity of ico-water. Ho says that it induces eatarch of the stomach, which underlies a dozen other troubles and, very possibly, cancer of the stomach. Too, used in small quanti tes, is a valuable remedy; but any one had better swallow coals of fire insure temporary then, can wedo? Swallow instead an ; victory | over diabolie revolts, of extinguished suns, of | obliterated constellations, of new galaxies | in all our Father's house, | we | hurry. | an | child, | room this | SABBATH INTERNATIONAL LESSON JULY 14, Lesson Text: “The Sorrowfal Death of EW" 1 Sam, iv, 1-18 -Golden Text: 18am. fii, 13 Commentary. SCHOOL. ron ————— 1. “I'he word of Bamusl came to all Israel? That is the word of the Lord through Samuel, for he, as the Lord's prophet, would speak the Lord's message (Hag, 1., 18): and thus all Israel would know through him the will of the Lord. In studying any portion of the history of Israel we must remember that they wore chosen by God from among all the nations of the earth and placed in that good land in order that He through then might { make Himself n name and be magnified by | SFI, IDA fuss slat seine them In the eyes of all the nations (11 Sam, vil, 28; I Chr. xvii, 21; Isa. Ixiil, 12), He 3 I YOU WISH A GOOD | i showing in every way that He had made | them a peculiar people unto Himself (Kx. xix, 5), “Isracl wont out against the Philis tines to battle.” It was during a forty years oppression of Israel by the Philistines that son was enabled by the Bpirit of God to do his mighty works, and it was by the Phil istines that lsraol was defeated When Saul and his sons were slain; if we judge from I Bam, xvil., 35, 45, we are to look upon them as deflers of the living God, the God of Israel, over wham true Israclites should al ways have the victory, (Deut, xxvili., 7.) 2, “Israel was smitten before the Philis tines." This indicates that God was not with them, for had He been in thelr midst victory would have boen certain: “one should chass a thousand and two put ten thowand to flight” He had promised to fight for them when He sent them forth (Deut, 1, 30; fii, 25; xxxil., 50), so that this going out against the enemy and this defeat was not the result of God's leading. When they were defeated at Al it was because of sin fn the camp, and the sin which EI knew and did not put away may have been partly the cause of this do- foal; butoyr next lesson will tell us that they had as a nation forsaken God (chap. vii, 9), and this judgment reminds us that “the hand of our God is upon all them for good that seek Him; but His power and His wrath is against all them that Jw Him.” (Ezra viii, 22) 3. “Lot us fetch the ark of the covenant of the Lord; * * * It maysave us” They did not look to the Lord to save them, they wero not at this time worshiping Him, but idols, and they speak of this holy vessel as if it were an idol which perbape may have mare power than the other idols which they worshiped ; bul their inlquities had separated between them and God, and their sins had hid His face from then (la, dix, 2: Jer, v., 25 4 "So 8 ant to Shiloh, that they the ark of the cove he Lord of Hosta, which dwelleti between the oh Thus they add » 0 sin aml are » nded that they see not th enormity of th Hin { lor the cance of this holy veel mentioned eleven times in this chapler, and that its place in the tabernacle was in the Holy of Holies into which the High Priest alone entered but a year and never without the blood of the sacrilios, typif ying the blood of Josws Christ: ootider alec the ax pression 'dwelleth between o chorutdm™ found here for the first time, 1 only seven Himes lu all Seriptare (11 Sam, . Be f1 Kings xix. 15: 1 Ch xiil, 6: 1s t, 1: meix, 1: Isa xxxvii, If carrying us back to Ex. xxv, 28 where wo find its origin. The Lord of Hosts will | nireated by, and do great things for, every penitent heart that humbly seeks Him. but when such blind and blasphemous hands approach Him they cau only expect His wratl “All Israel shouted with a gre Lhe prenl wld or when abd (J oud WAS A» wring from theses nant of t anos Hike fle was then it rd was Wu thelr midst a for His wit this of lerael without refs God: it may have boon 8 Jou on the other cooasions, bat with n power to i 0.0 iend glory was dmg eq; ! wl is nto ths the Philistines beard the shout stood the cause of it, they were afraid, sup posing the ark was lara Chon was th but although possible results, res heard of siilers wilderness, the power « and urge the tw Can and under. re we ew { ng and a Bi : H va NAT vans 0 the Hebrews i ot to ba wo dered at that the Philistin knew pot the Goa of Israel nor His y power, when Israel knew » God nor relied upon Him. Had He indeed come into the cmp of Jersel that would have settled the matter 10, “larael was smitten there foil of larael thirty thousand footmen.” Is racl was chosen to rely upon that He might shew forth His power, and whenever she failed to do 0 her defeat was sure. Two things wore required of her; that she should be holy and by implicit reliance upon, and obe- dione 10 her God, magnify His same. The same two things are required now of every Christian and of overy church. IL “The ark of God was taken: the twosons of Ell were slain” » * God | sat upon having the penvine srtioke | plicaton. The next | two chapters tell of the journeyings of theark | in the land of Philistines, and how the hand of the Lord was against the people wherever | it rested until they were glad to return it to Israel with an offering own glory and will care for His even if Hie soem for a time Lo prosper 1917. “El sat upon a seat b own ark, the wa yeide, watching, for his heart trembled for the ark {of God” Only twice outside of thee firet fon | | chapters of | Samuel do we find the name of { Elin the Bible i | 20), yet he lived to be 85 yearsold and odged i | Israel forty yours, , xiv, 3: 1K He does not seem to have God will see to His | ple despise Him and the enemy | walked very closely with God or to have beens | very intimate with Him The glory of Israel was not the house of El, of which four died that day, nor even the ark itself, precious holy vessel though it was; but God Himself, the Lord of Hosta, the God | of Israel, whom no Philistine could | and whom the death of all the srophets that ever lived could not affect, | us fix our eyes upon Jesus, rely wholl upon Him, keep His commandments, magn { fy His name, sock His glory, and losing sight \d i - Hi i : git EF 3 E I E i tH Bryer Winriass, one of the fow sur. vivors of Waterlog, died recently in Perth. He piped to the Seventy-ninth Highlanders on the field, and also took part in the entry of the victorious ‘away in the memory, and a BS OJ, FOR STRAINS AND SPRAINS, NEW AND STRONG CASES. Boston, Mass, June 13, 1988, you of what { consider most wo. e 1 spreined my ankle 08 8 curb. stone and at night could only step ou my foot with grahieds Bain: got » bottle of Si Jacets 1) snd applied 1% freely; today I a about wy business oF nous! without feeling soy incosvenienes F. A. GAYLORD, Strained Ankle. Cleveland, 0, Jens 29, 1888, Was in bed with siratnod snide; used coma completely cured by Bt. Jacobs Ql. Wo return of pals, 1. 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BL.00 HAND-SEWED WELT SHOE. 5 # POLICE AND FAEMERS SHOE. 82.50 EXTRA VALUE CALF SHOE. ®2 82.00 and $1.7 5 WORKINGOMAX'S SHOE, 00 GOOD-WIEAR SHOE. 5 BOYS UCHOOL SHOES. All made in Congress, Bution and Lace. W. L. DOUCLAS FOR $3 & 52 SHOES oes. Pest Material, « L. Dougins” ; ff Sue Cl DOT G Ww. kK. the bottom of & factory; this pre inferior goods. If your desler offers you shoes wit and price stamped on thom, apd says they are bis Serelved thereby. Diesiers make more profit on ue ranted by anybody indooed tien. Bay obly those that slampad on the botlom, sod You sre Thousands of dollars are maved annual) : Le DOUGLAS SHOES, CAUTION therefore do pod B viol in this cous . have W. L. DOUGLAS Best Style. Best Fitling. R20.00 Shoe, shows ia cut below, is on lasts modelled for the foot! smooth wdmrwead slaw nnd po tacks oF wax Every pair warranted, o foot price are stamped y Bjon bet euving wh; : and nee 1 be * that are pot wars hoes thal have bo repute name kod the price slur for your money ry by the wearers of t your desler will not pet you the kind or style you want, send your order direct to he factory, with the return mall, Lage Tree cons can always Ww L. DOUGLAS SHOES, wd with ou wear: if set sure, send for an order giving full Instractions how 10 pet & perfect it, price ened pently, Do mutter wh W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. A. and they will be sent you by ore you ve, you Pe sure and gate sine Wlask SHE NEGLECTED AX OPPORTUNITY AND SHOWS IT IN HER FACE. Don't you be equally foolish, dub send at once Jor the CHEAPEST FAMILY ATLAS KNOWN. ONLY 25 CENTS. ——— 191 Pages, 91 Full-Page Maps. i 85 i ios Colored Maps of each State and Territory in the United States. Also Maps of every Country in the World, The letter press gives the square miles of each State; time of settlement ; population ; chief cities ; average temperature ; salary of officials and the principal postmasters in the State; number of farms, with their productions and the value thereof; different manufactures and number of employes, etc, ete. Also the area of each Foreign Country ; form of government; ; prin. cipal products and their money value; amount of trade ; religion; siz. of army ; miles of railroad and telegraph; number of horses, cattle, sheep, and a vast amount of information valuable to all. All n readers are constantly needing an Atlas for reference in order to intelligently understand the article they are perusing. It is surprising the chief how much information is thus She N
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers