REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, ————— Subject: “The Plague of Bad Books.” Text: “And the frogs came up and cov- | ered the land of Egypt. And the magicians | did so with their enchantinents, and brought up frogs upon the land of Egypt.” ~Ex, viii, 6, 7. There is almost a universal aversion to frogs, and yet with the Egyptian they were honored, they were sacred, and they were objects of worship while alive, and after death they were embalmed, and to-day their remains may be found among the sepulchres of Thebes. These creatures, so attractive once to the Egyptians, at divine behest be- came obnoxious amd loathsome, and they went croaking and hopping and Moping into | the palace of the king, and into the read trays and the couches of the people, and even the ovens, which now are uplifted above the | earth and on the side of chimneys, but then werb small holes in the earth, with sunken pottery, were filled with frogs when the Jo useicepers came to look at them. If a man sat down to eat a frog alighted on his plate, If he attempted to put on a shoe it was proe- occupied by a frog. If he attempted to put his head upon a pillow it bad been taken pos- | session of Oy a Frogs high and low and every where; loath- some irogs, slimy frogs, besieging frogs, in- pumerabls frogs, great plague of frogs What made the matter worse the magicians | said there was no miracle in this, and they could by sleight of hand produce the same | thing, and they seemed to succeed, for by sleight of hand wonders may be wrought. | After Moses had thrown down his staff and by miracle it became a serpent, and then he took hold of it and by miracle it again be- came a staff, the serpent charmers imitated the same thing, and knowing that there were serpents in Egypt which by a peculiar pres sure on the neck would become as rigid as a stick of wood, they seemed to change the ser- pent into the staff, and then, throwing it down, the staff became the serpent, So likewise these magicians tried to tate the plagues of frogs, and perhaps smell of food attracting a great number them to a certain point, or by shaking them out from a hidden place, the magicians some- times seamed to accomplish the same mira- cle. While these magicians made the plague worse, none of them tried to make it better “Frogs came up and covered the land of » magicians did so with their nd brought up frogs upon mai by of plague of frogs has come back abroad today, Its It comes in the shape These frogs hop into 4 that the earth, Itis this pation of corrupt literature the store, tha sh office, the bank hoase, the factory--into the home, into b cellar, into the garret, on the drawing room table, on the shelf of the library. While the lad is reading the bad book the teacher's face is turned the other way. One of these frogs hops upon the page. W hile the young woman is reading the forbidden after re tiring at night, reading by gaslight, one of these frogs leaps upon the page. Indeed they have hopped upon the news stands of the country and the mails at the postoffice shake out in the letter trough hundreds of them. plague has taken at different times possession of this country. It is one of the most loathsome, one of the most fright ful. one of the most ghastly of the ten plagues of our modern cities There is a vast number of books and news- papers printed and published which ought never to see the light. They are filled with a pestilence that makes the land sweiter w ith a moral epidemic, The greatest that ever came to this nation is that of an el vated literature, and the greatest scourge has been that of unclean literature. This last has its victims In all ocx as and departments, It bas helped asylums and penil and dens of sh [he bodies tion lie in the hospitals and in the graves, while their souls are being tossed r t tt steruily, an desy The London That counted ims by this modern pest has already shoveled its millions into the charnel hous dead. The longest rail train over the Erie ov Hudson tra '& ich nor large enough to carry the Least liness and the putrefaction whi h have Leen gathered up in bad books an 1 newspapers of this land in the last twenty vyears he Hterature of a nation decides the fate of a nation Good books, morals. Bad books, bad morals I begin with the lowest of all the ture. that which does not even be respectable—~from cover to cover a blot There are many whose entire business it is to dispose of that kind of lit erature. They display it bed i boy on his way home. They get the cata joguss of schools and egos, take the names and postofics addresses, and send and their circulars their advertisements, pamphiets, and their books to every the novelstte The bLiessing pati iow £ this nfe AWWaAanone plague its Yi© Wan of the morally that ever ran £8 was not yg en good litera preten i to of leprosy wre the CLOOs and their one of thew in the possession of literature were found nine hundred thou sand names and postoffice addresses, to whom it was thought it might be profitable to send these corrupt things. In the year 1874 there wore one hundred and sixty-five establishments engaged in publish ug coeap corrupt literature. From one publishing house there wen! out twenty different styles of corrupt books. Although over thirty tons of vile literature have been destroyed by the Society for the Suppression of Vice still there is enough of it left in this country to bring down upon us the just anger of an aroused God, in the year 1868 the evil had become so great in this country that the Congress of the United States passed a law forbidding the transmisson of bad literature through the United States mails, but there were large loops in that law through which criminals might crawl cut, and the law was a dead fallurethat law of 1868. But in 1875 another law was passed by the Congress of the United States against the transmission of corrupt literature through the mailiea grand law, a potent law, a Christian law and under that law multitudes of these scoundrels have been arrested, their property wn fiscated and they themselves thrown into the penitentiaries, where they belonged Now, my friends, how are wi to war against this corrupt literature, and how are the frogs of this Egyptian plague to be slain? First of all by the prompt and inex orable execution of the law Lat all good postmasters, and United States district at torneys, and detectives, and reformers con cert in thelr action to stop this plague When Sir Rowland Hill spent his life in try- | ing to secure cheap postage not only for England, but for ail the world, and to open the blessing of the postoffice to all honest business, and $0 all wessages of charity, and kindness, and affection, for all heaith. ful intercommunication, be did not mean to make vioe sary or to fill the mail bags of the United States with the scabs of such a | rosy. t ought not to be in the power of every bad man who can raise a one-ceut stamp for | a circular or a two-cent stamp [0 a letter to blast 8 man or destroy a home. The postal | service of this country must be clean, must be kept clean, and we must all understand | that the swift retributions of the Unitel Btates Government hover over every viole | tion of the letter box, : Thers are thousands of men and women in | this country, some for depravi these dealers in bad | fos, and warning to conductors, and warn- | and ninety years, and from the fact that | our great cities been purified? { much | arteries, ! a shotgun, and the only argument for theses | the police and the bean soup in a peniten | however good you are. You may, “The in that gave themselves entirely to the publica- tion of vile literature have been stopped or have gone into business less obnoxious What has thrown off, what has kept off the rafl trains of this country for some time back nearly all the leprous periodicals? Those of us who have been on the rail trains have noticed a great change in the last few months and the last year or two, Why have nearly all those vile periodicals been Fops off the rail trains for some time back? Who ef- footed it? These societies for the purification of railroad literature gave warning to the publishers and warning to railroad compan- ing to newsboys, to keep the infernal stuff off the trains Many of the cities have successfully pro- hibited the most of that literature even from going on the news stands, Terror has seized upon the publishers and the dealers in impure literature, from the fact that over a thou sand arrests have been made, and the aggre gate time for which the convicted have been sentenced to the prison is over one hundred about two millions of their circulars have | been destroyed, and the business Is not as | profitable as it used to be How have so many of the news stands of How has so been balked? By You might as well of this moral suasion? iniquity Oh, no. | go into the jungle of the East Indies and pat a cobra on the neck, and with profound ar- gument try to persuade it that it is morally wrong to bite and to sting and to poison | anything. The only answer to your a. gu ment would be an uplifted head and a hiss and a sharp, reeking tooth struck into your The only argument for a cobra is | dealers in impure literature is the clutch of | tiary. The law! The law! invoke to con- | | summate the work so grandly begun! Another way in which we are to drive back this plague of Egyptian frogs Is by filling the minds of our young people with | a healthful literature. I do not mean to say | that all the books and pewspapers in our | families ought to be religious books and newspapers, or that every song ought to be | sung to the tune of *'Old Hundred.” I have | no sympathy with the attempt to make the young old. I would rather join in a crusade { to keep the young young. Boyhood au i girl Hut there wd bi mre if minds hood must not be abbreviated are good books, good histories, ge phies, good works of fiction, good all styles with which we are to fill the of the young, so that there will be no more room for the useless and the vicious there is room for chaff in a bushel measur: which is already filled with Michigan wheat. books Why are fifty per cent the jails and penitsatiaries States to-day under twenty age! Many of them under sevent sixteen, under fiftee thirteen. Walk alk one of the carridor of the Tombs prison in New York and for yourselves, Bad books, bad newspapers bewitched them as soon as they got oul if the cradle Beware of all those stories which end wrong Beware of all those books which make the road that ends in perdition seem to end in Paradise Do not glorify the dirk and the jietod Do not call the desperado brave or the libertine gallant Teach cur young people that if they go down into the swampsand marshes to watch the jack-o’-lanterus dance on the decay and rottenness they will gatch the malaria and death, of the cr iminale in United mder fourteen, under 00K am a business y examine what “Ob.” says some one, “I man, and 1 have no time my children read. I have no time to inspect the books that come into my household If your children were threatensd with typhoid fever would you have time to go for the dos tor? Would you have time to walch the progress of the disease? Would you have time for the {aneral In the presences of my God I warn you of the fact that your chil iren are threatened with moral and spirit ual typhoid, and that unless the thing be wae it will be tothem funeral of hody, funeral mind, funeral of Taree funerals ne day Myw is to this v eonle : soul wi muititud HIF POsseaw ns to book «who Benjamin Frank ttom Mathers him Bb ] (recrge | power? reading of ( Good” § hildhood pave tions for all rest of his life. jeclared that a biography he read in chil hood gav his prosper tien A clergyman, many years ago, passing to the far west, stopped at a hotel He mw A Woman pying somet Dodd ri Rise and Progress sneed that wrowed the book. ar were wanted especially to re s him all sulwaquent lge's she bad t some things she member The clergyman had in his sachel a copy Doddr.ige's “Rise and Progress.” and so he made her a present of | Thirty years passed on {he clergyman came that way and be asked where the woman was he had seen so long ago n that besutifal house." said to her, “Do you remember me She mid, “No, 1 donot” He mid "Do you re member a man gave you Doddridge’s "Ris and Progress’ thirty years ag “Oh, yes | remember. That hook saved my soul. | loaned the book to all my neighbors, and they read it and they were conve: ted to God and we had a revival of religion which swept through the whole community. We built a church and called a pastor. You see that spire yonder, don't you’ That church was built as the result of that book you gave me thirty years ago.” Oh, the power of a good book! Buf, alas! for the influence of a bad book John Angel James, than whom Eagland never had a holier minister, stood in his pal pit at Birmingham an said: “Twenty-five years ago a lad loaned to me an infamous ook de would loan it only fifteen min utes, and then | had to give it back, but that book has haunted me like a specter over since. I have in agony of soul, on my knees before God, prayed that he would obliterate from my soul the memory of it, but I shall carry the damage of It until the day of my death.” The assassin of Sir William Rus soll declared that he got the inspiration for | his crime by reading what was then a new and popular novel, ‘Jack Sheppard.” | Homer's “Iliad” made Alexander the war rior. Alexander said so. The story of Alexander made Julins Cosr and Charles X11 both men of blood. Have you in yout pot: or in your trunk, or in your desk ar ssiness a bad book, a had picture, a bad pamphlet! In God's namie I warn you to de ! stroy it. Another way in which we shall fight back here ’ whom 1 She lives yonder He went there and | this corrupt literature and kill the frogs of Egypt is by rolliog over them the Christian printing press, which shall give plenty of enithful reading to all adults. All these men and women are readiug men and wo- | men. What are you reading’ Abstain from all those books which, while they had some good things about them, had also an admix- ture of evil. You have read books that had two slements in them the good and the bad Which stuck to you! The bad! The heart of most people is like a sieve, which lets the small of gold fall through, but keeps vhe great cinders. Once ina while there Is a mind like a loadstons, which, plunged amid steel and bras flings, pathers | up the steel and repels the brass. Put it is generally the opposite. If you attempt to plungs through a fencw of burrs to get one dackberry, you will get more burrs than blackberries You cannot afford to read a bad book, fluence is insignificant.” | teil you that the swerateh of a rs las sometimes produced look. Jaw, Alas if through cariosity, nt tuant do, you pry into an evil book, your curiosity is ne as that of the man who would | night. | stand | in which you may voyage, all sail set | charge monster seized him, and he drew forth a hand torn and mangled and bleeding. Oh, touch not the evil even with the faint. ost stroke! Though it may be glossy and beautiful, touch it not lest you pull forth your soul torn and bleeding under the clutch od the black leopard. “But” you say, “how can I find out whether a book is good or bad without reading it?’ Theres always some thing suspicious about a bad book. 1 never knew an exception—something suspicious in the index or styleof illustration. This vene omous reptile almost always carries a warne ing rattle he clock strikes midnight. A fair form bends over a romance The eyes flash fire. The breath is guick and irregular. Occasionally the color Jol to the cheek, and then dies out. The hands tremble as though a guardian .pirit were trying to shake the deadly book out of the grasp, fot tears fall. She laughs with a shrill voice that drops dead at its own sound The sweat on her brow is the spray dashed up from the river of death, The clock strikes | four, and the rosy dawn soon after begins to look through the lattice upon the pale form that looks like a detained specter of the Soon in a madhouse she will mistake her ringlets for curling serpoants, and thrust her white hand through the bars of the | prison, and smite her head, rubbing it back as though to push the scalp from the skull, shrieking: “My brain! my brain! Oh, off from that! Why will you go sounding your way amid the reefs an 1 warn- ing buoys, when there is such a vast ocean We see so many books we do not under. stand what a book fs. Stand it on end, Measure it—the height of it, the depth of it, the length of it, the breadth of it. Cou can. not do it. Examine the paper and estimate | the progress made from the time of the une pressions on clay, and then on the bark of trees, and from the bark of trees to papyrus, | and from papyrus to the hide of wild beasts, | and from the hide of wild | until the miracles of our modern paper man- beasts on down ufactories, and then see the paper, white and pure as an infant's « ml, waiting for God's in. scription A book! Examine the type of it. Examine the printing of it, and see the progress from the time when Solon's laws were written on oak planks, and Hesiols posms were written on tables of lead and the Sinlatic commanis were written on tables of st on down to Hoe's perfecting printing press A book It took all the universities of the past, all the martyr fires, all the civilizations, the vi all the de ms, all the brightness, all he osn nake It possiDie A book it is the chorus of all ages drawing room in which kings and queens historians come ne all the battles all ‘Lorion {ea all the gi ti turies tot and poeta and i how f inkquits of be the overt the mortal have a bar Polybius them Jolt perished : POKR i struggle to | wrote forty Thirty books Twenty books of Pliny have per ished. Livy wrote one bundred and forty books: only thirty-five of them remain Eachvius wrote one hundred dramas; only seven remain. Euripides wrote over a hun. dred; only nin remain. Vatro wrote the biographies of n hundred great Romans. All that wealth of biography bas perished. If good and valuable books have such a struggle to live, what must be the fate of those that are diseased and corrup and blasted at the very start! They will di as the frogs when the Lord turned back th piague. ne work hristianizatior go on until there will be nothing | good books, and they will take the suprem of the world, May you ang I live to illustrious day Against every bad pamphlet pamphlet; against every an rilous song AVI it will vets VET sev of ( send a Af anciean picture word agains rising song. against wd book: an ont Tole innocent ture every secur ted i then be as the Toletam in EX Churches, ar jsmmanded that and that the K and the war om that the wh wher IISA WaT 1th 2 OAD miss champions, the of missals with champion of the BK 80 it will be in the 4% cham- ponship for will bring own the evil litarat ta championship for the devil i i eo tips of my flogers and thr os of my t and all my soul tho bos | triumpn how ture (hrist thes nervy 3 jepths of certainty of men amd wou ) are toil purification of soo Toll in the who ean be against us Lady Hester Stanhope was the daughter f the third Earl of Stanhope, and after her nearest friends had died she the far east, took possession « f a deserted convent threw up fortresses amid the mountains { opened the castle to the poor, and the wretched, and the sick who would come in She made her castle a } for t} ' fortunate. She Was a wit Christ woman She was waiting for the coming of the Lord. She expected that the Lord would descend io person, and she thought upon it until it was too much for her reason. In the magnificent stahles of her palace she had two horses groomed and bridied and saddled and caparisoned and all ready (or the day in which her Lord should descend, and be on one of them and she on the other should start for Jerusalem, the city of the Great King It was a fanaticism and a delusion; but there was romance, and there was splendor, and theres was thrilling expectation in the dream! Ah. my friends we need no earthly pal freys groomed and saddled and bridied and caparisoned for our Lord when He shall ome. The horse is ready in the equerry of heaven, and the imperial rider is ready to mount “And I saw, and behold a white horse. and he that sat on him had a bow; and a crown was given unto him; and he went forth conquering and to conquer, And the arm as which were in heaven followed Him on white horses and on His vesture and on His thigh were written, King of kings, and Lord of lords” Horse men of Heaven, mount! Cavalry of God ride on! Charge! until they shail be hurled back on their hagnohes--the black horse of famine, and the red horse of carnage, and She pale horse of death. Jesus forever! oh, the with your faces sunlight God be r us, who, went § Lebanon i dey AD s— —— Electricity Catches Elephants. A novel application of electricity has recently been made in elephant catching. At a recent capture of forty of these animals, when the last of their unwieldy bodies had passed the entrance into the Khedda, the signal for barring their exit | was given, instantaneously and without a word spoken, by means of an electro wire. It is only a short time since pe- troleum superseded native vegetable oils | for lighting throughout the bazars and | Electricity is now villages of India, taking the place both of petroleum or coal gas in the great spinning factocies, for which it is peculiarly suited in a hot climate. owing to ita coolness and absence of swell, London Times, The number of good hairdressers’ places where women go in Boston, Mass. , has ly increased. Perfect ears of the bair and sealp, skilful trimming of Langs aud good colffing are as necewary now as curls and elaborate — Kalakaua and the Mind Reader. J. Randall Brown, the mind-reader, once saw King Kalakaua in the Sand- wich Islands. His Majesty daring the interview, which was arranged in order to give Brown a chance to exhibit his powers, tried to foil the expert by doing his thinking in the native language, but Brown quickly translated the thoughts into Euglish and exploined the matters to the King. Kalakaua was then in vited to secret a buyton anywhere in the room. Instead of hiding it in the room he concealed it in his mouth. Brown was puzzled for a moment, but finally told the King that the button was in his mouth, Determined not to let the mind reader get ahead of him, King Kalskaua attempted to the button, It wis a task difficult than His Majesty had anticipated and he nar rowly escaped choking to death. His physicians and attend Angry and indignant, and blamed Brown, but, the K ny wis swallow more nfs were mind reader Had the been fortu recovering, the 10 Lhe King Kalakaua cheked to death on button, Bre have allay 1 i nliowed leave IRIANUE, win would unte in making his escape. As it was, the King sent him a number of presents, and complimented him upon umphs, tlanta Co a ————— Loegisiat | special 4 ‘ istilulion, The C asked to ene Wifornia provide ourage the culture of nan. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers