REV. DR. TALNAGE. | THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S DAY SERMON, Subject: “The Battle of Creeds” SUN- Text: “He that passeth by and meddleth swith strife belonging not to him ix like one that taketh a dog by the ears,” —Proverbs xxvi,, 17. Solomon here deplores the Labit of rush. ing in between contestants; of taking part in the antagonisms of others: of joining in fights which they ought to shun. They do no good toothers and get damage for them. selves. He compares it to the experiment of taking a dog by the ears Nothing so irri tates canines as to be clutched by the lugs Take them by the back of the neck and lift them and it does not seem to hurt or offend, but you take the dog by the ear, and he will take you with his teeth, In all the history of kennels po intelligent or spirited dog will stand that, “Now,” says Solomon, ‘you go into quarrels or controversies that are not yours and you will get lacerated and torn and bitten, ‘He that passeth by and med dleth with strife belonging not to him is like one that taketh a dog by the ears.” This is the time of resounding ecelesiastionl quarrel, Never within your memory or mine has the air been so full of missiles The Presbyterian Church has on hand a con- troversy so great that it finds it prudent to postpone its settlement for at least one more year, hoping that something will turn up, Romebody might die or a new general assem bly may have grace to handle the exciting questions, The Episcopal Church has cast out some recaleitrants, and its digestive or gans are taxed to the utmost in trying to as similate others. ‘Shall preach “Or be sent as delegates to conferences? are questions that have put many of cur Methodist brethren on the “anxious seal.” And the waters in some of the great baptistries are troubled waters lecause of the controversies throughout Christendom the air is now like an August afternoon about five o'clock, when it has len steaming hot all day, and clouds are gathering, and there thunder with gm voices and flashing eves coming forth from their cloudy lairs, and people are waiting for the full burst of the tern pest I am not much of a weather prophet, but the clouds look to me mostly like wind clouds. 1t may be a big blow, but 1 will be over In ry ard to the Battle of ti 1 am every day adked about it. 1 make it s pin this morning wha that no i ever Ask again Let those who are jurvmen mean those who in different ec urts have stions pat before them fecide of us keep out on earth is r oy women are hwons of mong wud hope it SOON Creeds want to t 1 think in the ease--1 the the qu weigh and The most HILO controversy out of it as good a Nome of the ministers who | esinsti- eal directly Let the rest damaging thing RN man in wiiore the present a 0 One r comes goes in BS Ds all de erbity iq | and kind and useful. now seem a most ng mad. These brethren | notice fiways open thelr violent meetings with praver before devouring each other thus saying race before meat. They have a moral hydropholsia that makes us think they bave taken a dog by the ears They never read the mprecatory Psalms of David with such zest as since the Briggs and Newton and MacQueary and Bridgman and Brooks ques sion mto full swing May the rams of heepfold soon have their horns sawed Before the controversies are settled a any ministers will, through what they Ais Tuer nto practioal in th gh what they on nominations Were SWent $ 21 landed LASER Will sarin Ip int gots Light and hard as the mummies { Egypt which got through theu thou sand years ag This trouble throughout Christendom was directly inspired by Satan, He saw that too much good was being done Re cruits ware being gathered by hundreds of the the Gospel standard, The viet God and the truth were tx near together Too many churches being dedicated, Too many ministers were being ordained. Too many pbhilanthropies were being fostered, Too many souls were being saved It had beens a dull time in the nether world, and the arrivals were too few So Satan one day rose upon his throne and said “Ye powers of darkness, hear And down the caverns the ory was “Hear ' Satan said: “There is that American Board of Commissioners for For eign Missions, It must either be dem dished or crippled, or the first thing you know they will have ali nations brought to God, Apo lyon the Younger! You go up to Andover and get the professors to po ussing whether the heathen ean be smved without the Gos pel. Divert them from the work of missions and get them in angry convemtion in a room at Young's Hotel, Boston, and by the time they adjourn the muse of foreign missions will be gloriogsly and wagnificently injured, Diabolus the Youn ger! You go up and get Union Theological Seminary of New York and the general assembly of the Presuyterian Church st De troit at swords’ points and diverted from the work of making earnest ministers of religion and turn that old Presbyterian Church which has been keeping us out of customers for hundreds of years, lato a splendid pan demonium on a small scale Abaddon the Third! You go up and assault that old Epis copal Church, which has been storming the heavens for centuries with the sublimest rayers that were ever utterel-church of shop Leighton, Bishop White and Bishop Metivane, and get that denomination discuss ng men instead of discussing the eternities Abaddon the Fourth! You go uo to that old Methodist Church, which bas, through her revival, sent millions to hemven whith we would other wise have added to our pula tion: the church of Wesley and Matthew mon, agninst which we have an espacial grudge, and get them so absorbed in discuss ng whether women shall take part in her conference that they shall not have so much time to discuss how many sons and daughters she will take to glory.” What amazes me most is that all people do not see that the entire movement at this time all over Christendom is satanic, Many of the infernal attacks are sly and hidden and strategic and so ingenious that they are not easily discovered, But here is a bold and uncovered attempt of the powers of darkness to split up the churches, to got ministers to take ench other by the throat to make religion a laughing stock of earth and hell, to leave the Mible with no more respect or authenticity than an old almanac of 1820, which told what would be the cha of weather six months ahead and in what guarter of the mouth it is beet to plant turnips. In a word, the effort is to stop the evangelization of the world It seems to me very much like this: There has been a railroad accident and many are wounded and dying. There are several drug stores near the scene of casualty, the doctors and drug needed right away. anesthetion, medicines of all sorte, What are the doctors and druggists doing’ Dis cussing the contents of some old bottles on the ye , bottles of medicine which rd and druggists hundred years ago, ‘Come "Come druggists ™ ory the these wounded and d brought from the timbers versies three sands t ries for wore all up and Hear on, stimuinnts, In a little while it will be too late, | | Ing! mized two or dostors™ | people and help | ap Didi By the sufferers by the accident, and in that drawer, easily opened, are bandages and splints for the lack of which fifty people are dying outside the drug store, Before I apply this thought every one sees ita appli- cation, Hers is this old world, and it is off track, Bin and sorrow have collided with it. The groan of agony is fourteen hun dred million voiced. God has opened for relief and curs a great sanitariun, a great house of mercy, and all its shelves are filled with balsams, with catholicons, with help—glorious help, tremendous help, help #0 easily administered that you need not get | upon any step ladder to reach it. You can reach it on your knees and then hand it to | all the suffering, and the sinning, and the dying. Comfort for all the troubled! Par- | don for all the guilty! Peace for all the dy- But while the world is neading the re lief and perwshing for lack of it, what of the church? Why, it is full of fighting doctors. On the top shelf are some old bottles, which several hundred years ago Calvin or Armin. | ius, or the members of the synod of Dort, or | the formers of the Nicene creed filled with | holy mixtures, and until we get a revision of | these old bottles and find out whether we | must take a teaspoonful! or tablespoonful, | anl whether bafore or after meals, let the nations suffer and groan and die. Bave the bottles by all means, if you cannot save any- thing else Now, what part shall vou anil I take in this controversy which fills all Christendom with clangor? My advices is take no part, In time of riot all maydrs of cities advise good citizens to stay at home or in thelr places of business, and in this time of relig wus riot I advise you to go about your regu- lar work for God. Leave the bottles on the higher shelves for others to fight about, and take the two bottles on the shelf within easy reach, the two bottles which are all this dying world needs; the one filled with a potion which is for the cleansing of all sin, the other filled with a potion which is for the soothing of all suffering. Two Gospel | bottles! Christ mixed them out of His own and blood. In them is no human | admixture Spend no time on the mysteries! You, a man only five or x feet high, ought not try an ocean a thousand feet deep. My exoerience has been viv I devoted the of my time for vears in trying to un lerstand God fecroos, and | was de termined to find out why the Lord let come into the world, and [ set out to explore string of the Trinity, and with a yard | stick to measure the throne of the As with all my predecessors, the attempt was a dead failure, For the last thirty years [| have pot spent two minutes in studying the of theology, and if tears to wade wn most 's eternal the doe Infinit | mtroverted points i . $ rity years longer | w sandth part of a secon I know two th things, al @ years of my will through Jo He will co 0s nfort tr via bale but just You Creeds bave their uses, hurch is creeded to death. The entering the ministry are going inunched in the thickest fog that tied on the coasts. As 1 am told that in all ur services stodents of Prinseton and Un on and Drew and other t ogical semi. nares are present, and as these words will ome to thousands of young men who are | soon to enter the ministry, let 7 such and through them to their associates, keep out of the bewildering, belittling, de stroying and angry controversies abroad, The quest our doctors of divinity are trying to settle will not be settled until the lay after the day of judgment. It is such a poor economy of time to spend years and years in trying to fathom the unfathomable when e minutes in heaven we will know ill we want to know Wait till we get our throne, Wait till the light of eternity flashes upon our newly ascended spirit. It is useless for ants on different sides of a mole hill to try to discuss the com- | arative heights of Mount Blane and Mount | Washington Lt me my to all young men | about to enter the ministry that the | greatest novelty in the world will be the an adulterated religion of Jesus Christ. Preach | that and you will have a crowd The rid is sick to regurgitation with the modern quacks in religion I'he world has been swinging off from the old Gospel it will swing back, and by the time you young men go into the pulpits the ory will be coming from all the millions of mankind, “Give the bread of life; no sweetenad bread, no | bread with sickly raisins stuck here and there into it. but oid {ashione] road as God wir mother mixed and baked it © Now, what is the simple fact that you in the pew and Sabbath-echool class and re formatory associat on and we in the pulpite have to deal wita? Is is this: That God has somewhere, and it matters not where, but | somewhere, provided a great heaven, great for quietoess for the » who want quiet ; great for vast assemblage for those who | ever ae! JN me say Hs in hv SOON w bs 10 ¥ 13 like mul titades; great for architecture for those win like architecture; great for beautiful land scape for those who like beautiful landscape great for music for those who like musi great for proossions for those who ithe armies on white horses, and great for anything that one especially desires in such a rapturous dominion: and through the foings of who was: burn about five miles south of Jerusalem and dicd about ten minutes’ walk from its east ern gate all may enter that great heaven for the earnest and beartfelt asking, Is that all? That is ali What. then & your work and mine’ Our work is to persuade people to face that way and start thithe ward and finally go mm. But has not reli glon something to do with this world as well as the next? Oh, ves, but do you not sw that if the people start for heaven on their way there they will do all the good they can’ They will at the very start of the journey get 80 much of the spirit of Christ, which le a spirit of kindoess and self sacrifice and | generosity and burden bearing and helpful. | ness, that every step they take will resound with good deeds, Ob, get your religion off of stilts! Get it down out of the high tow. | ers! Getiton a level with the wants and woes of our poor human race! Get it out of the dusty theological books that few people read, and put it in their hearts aud Hivos Good thing is It to profess religion when you join the church, but every Jay, some how, we ought to profess religion, A ular patchwork quilt was, during the Civil War, made by a lady and sent to the hospitals at the front. She had a boy in the army, and was naturally interested in the welfare of soldiers, Bul what a pateh. work quilt she sent! On every block of the Guilt was a passage of Seripture or a verse of ahymn, The months and yearsof the | war went by. On that guilt many a wounded | man had lain and suffered and died. But | one morning the hospital nurse saw a patient | under the blanket kisdng the figure o. a leaf 0 the quilt, and the nurse supposed he was only wandering in his mind, But no; he was | the son of the mother who had made the | quilt and he recognised that figure of a leat nn of a gown his mother uss to wear, and it reminded him of home. “Do you know where this quilt came from™ be asked. The narse answered, “1 can find out, for thers it. and 1 will find confirmed whit he one | the | Him | to f | the final glories roll in | of ! ous ey os | on | go forth to do our K | pardon, i baptised | that Christos {| march | floats on the surface of the water, | land is made by fallen timber and grasses, oe holesof a great palace which has above ground one hundred roosas floode! with sun. shine? It takesall my time to absorb what has been revealed, so that I have no time to upturn and root out and drag forth what has not been revealed, fort to solve mysteries and explore the inex plieable and harmonize things is an attempt to help the Lord out of theological difficul- ties, Good enough intention, my brother, The most of the ef- | no doubt, but the Lord isnot anxions to have | vou help Him. He will keep His throne with- out your assistance. Don't be the Bible will fall apart from inconsistencies, It hung together many centuries before vou were born, and your funeral sermon will be preached from a text taken from its undis- turbed authenticity. Do you know that I think that if all min- isters in all denominations would stop this nonsense of ecolesiastioal strife and take hold the word of God, the only question with each | of us being how many souls we can bring to Christ and in how short a time the Lord would soon aopear for the salvation of all nations? Why not all at once light all the torches of Gospel invitation? Why not ring all the bills of welcome? Why not light up the long night of the world's sin and suffer. ing with bonfires of victory? Why not un. limber all the Gospel batteries and let them boom wmcross the earth, and boom into parting heavens The King Is to land if we are ready to receive Why cannot we who are now living soe His descent? Must it all pan Inter Has not our world roaned long enough in moral agonies? lave there not been martyrs enough, and have not the lakes of tears and the rivers blood been deep enough? Why cannot HOW Why cannot century feed the incoming tides eAns heavenly mercy? Must close in death and our ears take deafoess of the tomb, and these beat their last throb before the day in? O Christ? Why tarriest Thou? Wilt Thou not, before we go the way of all the earth, let us soe Thy scarred fest under some poonday cloud coming this way? fore we die let ux behold Thy hands that were spiked, spread out in benediction for alost race. And why not mortal ears, bear that peace as Thon didst go up, emancipati and los to ail nations as to not part reany be ng ow poor this dying the of the hearts COs let us which sg with our volo . peak pa and oi and joy to ving of hariot wheels coming sapphire Ww s po Hash of + } APPAR IRNONS till I hear nothing but the yw heart as | pause between The King does mw wot ready the ail "a A Hoss var the battlefield, his lying and dead, aw for water, | stand his language tl fellow pat ! | tramp © thess © nt nnd because and th fom wav! did not i Knew and wan tad Mit the offices 8 poor soldier oried Christos, word meant » mpathy and the Russian officer diunounted and the lips of the sufferer a cooling Be that the charmed word with whol uty ‘ help, snd put to irsught which wa in many | lsnguages it has only a little diff srence of { termination Christor! [It It stands for help It stands for hope Christos’ In that In that name we took our first That will be the battie shout win the world for God! Pat it on our banners when we Pat iton our lps when we Put io the funeral palm at Pat it the plain slab Christos! Blessed be His gl ever! Amen stands {or svn. It stands for It stands for name we Wore pathy heaven asmorament, will whole iw our or Our grave ious name § Ol wp (ven on or Ea ———.—.———— Wigs Are Popular Again “Mor since | have Wigs Are worn now 3 the business, (uarter of 1 maker, ‘Perhaps crease in baldoess which we hear so much time been in which is nearly a said a wig the in. of, makes men sshamed to be seca with a shiny pate now-a-days, so they cover it Very few people Wee imitate a head of hair so perfectly that it is difficult to detect except by the closest up with artificial hair, realize how common wigs are an the artificial hair, scrutiny I often sell as many as a dopen wigs in en or one day Of course, there is a good pro fit on each one, so there is still money in You must have noticed Indies who wear short curly hair this spring Well, much of it is false There a great pneumonia, typhoid fever and other dis last that the hair, leaving it dry that nothing short of shaving the head will restore it to its natural condition. From two to three months is required for a head of har grow, and during this time nothing but a wig will properly conceal the unsightly head As curly looks more natura easier to keep in order than a dressed wig, most young people prefer it. Elder ly ladies use Freoch twists and pompa. dours, Wigs can be bought from $1.50 up, but a good one costs at least $5, — New York News, the business of the number was deal of faced winter seriously injures and harsh, so to short, hair and is HE ———— Floating Prairies of Lonisiana. A curious phenomenon is to be wit sessed at the Ames crevasse, says a New Orleans letier, and, indeed, is one of the cnuses of the great damage it has done Under any circumstances the water from this crevasse would overflow the nch country lying between it and the Gulf of Mexico, esusing damage to the amount of several million dollars, but, to the sur. prise of many, not conteat with running down stream and overflowing the country below, it has taken to running apparently up stream. Some curiosity was felt over this phenomenon, and the case on exam- ination shows it to be due to the praines tremplanets—the floating or trembling prairies of southern Louisiana. All along the gulf const the large border of land The It gradually accumulates dirt, and be. comes in the course of time sufficiently firm to support brushes and even troes, but the soil is only three inches or less thick, and below it is the water, upon which it floats on account of its light. ness, Occasionally pieces of trembling rie are detached and become floating slands, There are quite a number of these in Salvador, these lands, Sosting from side to side, being frequently car. ried at a rapid rate by the wind breeze, trees noting as sails to catch the wind. — Commercial Adeertiser, afraid that | NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. Sleeves are very long. Loose fitting gloves are the latest, Many chamois gauntlet gloves are sold to travelers, Copper bronze is to be the fashionable sande of hair this season. Artificial birds for trimming hats and dresses are made to cater to people who | are so very humane, For ladies in mourning, the black | enameled bracelet with a pansy having a | dinmond centre in front, has found favor. Women are now allowed to become | notaries public in New Jersey in accor- dance with the privilege granted by the Benate, Children’s hats have no wire, no fac. ing, no binding, nothing but a half wreath of flowers, a crown lining and a rubber. Queen Victoria of England delights in water color sketching and playing duets with her favorite Beatrice. A wide field for selection is afforded in table cutlery, which is now furnished with handles of china, ivory, daughter, Princess pearl, | silver, stag, ete. Ribbons to hold fans are fastened to the shoulders with a bow, and are long enough to fall nearly to the ground, the fan being carried in the hand, The first woman honored with equal position and pay with men professors is Harriet Cook, of Cornell, who holds the chair of history in that university. For dress linfog there is no better ma terial than linen. It ls cheap and durable, does not cling or split and ter foundation for a skirt makes a bet than silk. The gentle wife of of England is fond dressmaking, tograph Crown Prince playing tie ¥, and has a pretty painting A moman was recentls y Bt. L Ue of Brooklyn, } been so successful that will appoint more. New Or naa most Mrs. Pemberton -Hincks, loans, is at present the prima de the rage” in London society. She 1s a creole of remarkable beauty, as well as the fortunate possessor of a magnificent voice. The most fashionable garment of the season is the long cape or “‘camail,” per fectiy sqaure at the reaching waist, high on sd with jet Flounces placed at the foot of a skirt should be narrowed in front the back, in order to not the height of the wearer. and wide at from a.d + . Ruffled pig ings are a new form of decoration, effec tive in sik, detract he widowed Countess Lowenhsupt, ex-Secretary Bayard's daughter, is re- siding Wilmington (Del.) home provided for her prior to her marriage She inherits 875, presented to her husband by his father, in the OO A Honesdale (Peon.) lady has a full set of carpenter's tools, which she uses with remarkable skill in making useful and ornamental articles for her home, a full set of chairs being among the pro ductions of her mechanical genius, Countess Aymery de la Rochefou cauld, of France, is said to be the most beautiful womer of this century. He profile is strikingly like that of Marie Antoinette, and her hair is of the real shade possessed by the martyr queen. Mrs, Marianne Stokes, the clever Eng. lish artist, is said to have begun paint. ing when hardly more than an infant, and if she was ever without a pencil or a box of paints she would, squeeze flowers on a sheet of paper until they gave up | their colors Some of the well-connected nursegirls who frequent Central Park, New York City, wear smart little kangaroo bags slung over she left shoulder, a Ia tourist, | containing a flask of sweet milk and a supply of Graam crackers for the tod dlet's lunch The London ‘lady florists,” Mrs. Ar. thur Wellesley and Mrs, Herbert Smith, were employed to decorate Lord Bea consfield’s statue for the celebration of the founding of the Primrose League. The decorations were said to be particu. larly successful, A daughter of Congressman Breckin. ridge, of Kentucky, baving graduated | with honors at Wellesley several years ago, has now taken up the study of law in ber father's office, havi ia the meantime taught geometry and algebm in a Washington school, Annie Louise Carey, at one time con. sidered among the greatest of co itraltos, is a large blonde woman in whose hand. some countenance beams the benevolence of her heart, Domestic affairs and char. ity work now engage the »hare of ber daily time and attention. “Creates An Appetite There Is nothing for which we recommend oot a Le oahlibenes than for Jom of Indigeetion, sel and other In the most satura! i i Free Vacation Trips to Furope, A handsome! Bi this teow Hberal premium offer, sent 116 to those willing to get up ciubs for the best of Ine dies’ maguzines, Address Editor E.7T. 1 OLE fre tion, Minor or Fasmions, Hochester, N.Y Din. 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