"REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, Subject: “Heavy Weights’ (Deliv ered at San Francisco). Text: “Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and He shall sustain thee.” Psalms lv., 22, David was here taking his own medicine, If anybody had on him heavy welghts, Da- vid had thom, and yet out of his own experl- ence he advises you and me as to the best way of getting rid of burdens, This is a world of burden bearing, a mighty and good man fallen, A man full of the Holy Ghost was he, his name the sy- nonym for all that is good and kind and gra- cious and beneficent, A scourge sweeping off hundreds and thou- During the past | few days tidings came from across the sea of | | the coal shalt, out right! Ielp me to-day—help me this morning.” The young man arose, nnd hards ly knowing why he did so opened a book that lay on the desk, and there was a leaf troubles that wear ns out! If wo loss our property, by additional Industry perhaps wo may bring back the estranged fortune, It wo lose our good name, perhaps by re containing a line of figures which explained | formation of morals we may achieve again everything, tainad him Ob, yos, God has a sympathy with any- body that is in any kind of toil! how heavy {8 the hod of bricks that the workman oarries up the Indder on the wall, | eo He hears the plokax of the miner down in tompest strikes the sailor at masthead, He sees the factory girl among the spindles and knows how her arms ache. ment, and louder than all the din and roar He knows { In other words, he cust his | reputation for integrity, but who will bring burden upon the Lord, and the Lord sus- | back the dear departed? Young man, do you hear that? | - Alas, me, for these empty cradles and thesa {trunks of childish toys that will never be used again! Alas me, for the empty chair and the silence in the halls that will never ho again to those familiar footsteps! Alas! | for the ery of widowhood and orphanage! He knows how strong the What bitter Marahs in the wilderness, what i { eltles of the dead, what long, black shadow from the wing of death, what eyes sunken Heo seosthe sow- | with grief, what hands tremulous with be. ing woman in the fourth story and knows | how few pence she gets for making n gar- now hee instruments of musio shut ausoe thepe aro no fingers to play on Is there no relief for such souls? reavement, what them! of the city comes the volee of a sympathetio | Aye, lot that soul ride nto the harbor of my God, “Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and | text, { He shall sustain thee," Thon there are a great many who have an | weight of persecution and abuse upon thom, Word eomes to us of | sands of people, and there is a burden of | BOTrTOW, the land, there may he no sign of sadness or sorrow, Sorrow on tha sea and sorrow on Cowling into the house of prayer but where is the man who has not a con- | flict? Where is the soul that has not a strug- gle? And there is not a day of and there is never an audience assembled on the planet where the text is not gloriously appropriate, “Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and He shall sustain thee." In the far East wells of water are so in- frequent that when a man owns a well he | has a property of very great value, sometimes battles have been fought for the ossession of one well of water, but there is one well that every man owns, a deep well, a perennial well, a well of tears, If a man has not a burden on this shoulder, he has a bur- den on the other shoulder, The day I left home to look after myself and for mysel!, in the wagon my father sat driving, and he said that day something which has been with my life “De Witt, it is always safe to tr have many a time come to a crisis of dim culty, You ruay know that, having been en years, it was no easy thing ort a family, but always God 1@ to the rescue. I remember the t he said, I didn’t know v and I saw a man on horseback ri and me a I “when lane, and he ann had I been nominated | in all the gift ty, and to ti God in that way Fou it is always s Ob, mv Nee r the 1 of the pe "0 forint . What Wa wan this assemblage, an 58 them face, not perlunct ut as ons brother | talks to anoth by r, “Cast thy burden upon the Lord, an » shall sustain thee." | There are a great maosy men who have business burdens, When we see a man wor- ried and perplexed and annoyed in business | life, we are apt to say, “He ought pot to | AYS attempted Lo carry so maneb.” that | MEN may not be to blame at all! When a man piants a business he does not know what will be its growths, what will be its roots, what will be its There is many a with keen foresight and larg: business fa wn flung into the dust by an! upon face to 4 branches, 1 . What will be p. and a thousand business men anti leep wrinkles are stocks go up valleys, and stagger like 1 wa by 3 ends and drunken men There never has been a time when there have been such rivalries in business as now It is hardwars against hardware, be against booky, ol Mery against ehandlery, imported articles against imported artie A thousand stores in combat with another thousand stores, N ver such advantage of light, nev h variety never 1 assortment, 1 plendor o never £6 mach show window, iroitness of salesinen, never 80 mush acuteness of all these severities of riv { and amid | airy in business how many men bre down! Oh, the burden on the shoulder! Ob, the burden on the heart ! You hear t is avarice which drives [ business through the street, ily ancepted iden. | fit. The vast multi on are tolling on for their children, to ver their household y when they pass out of and children will not ouse-—-that is the way sto Girly Ka a. ma r su 14 80 nu = Yvartiain vivertising, AK at pat 8 to this life have tc t ) I translate this eo street and —~the vast majority of that energy Gouge & ( do all the business Bome of r when the Central America ne from California it was wrecked lent Arthur's father in-law was the herole eaptain of that ship and went down with most of the passengers Bome of them got off into lifeboats, but there Was a young man returning from California who had a bag of gold in his hand, and as the last boat shoved off from th ship that was to go down that young man shouted to a comrade in the boat : “Here, John, eatoh this gold, There are 83000, Take it home to my old mother ; it will make her comfort. able in her last days.” Grip, Gouge & Co. do not do all the basiness of the world, Ab, my friend, do you say that God dows not eare anything about your worldly busi nessa? | tell you God knows more about it than you do. He knows all your perplexi- ties; He knows what mortgage is about to foreclose ; He knows what note you cannot Yi Ho knows what unsalable goods you ave on your shelves ; He knows all your | trials, from the day you took hold of the first yardstiok down to that sale of the last yard of ribbon and the God who helped David to be king, and who helped Dantel to be prime minister, and who » iped Have Jook to be a soldier will help you to dis charge all your duties. He ls going to see | you through, When loss comes, and you | find your property going, just take this book | and put it down by your ledger and read of the eternal possessions that will come to you through our Lord Jesus Christ, And when your business partner betrays you, and your friendsturn against you, just take the in. sulting letter, put it down on the table, put your Bible beside the insalting letter, and | then read of the friendship of Him who | ““stioketh closer than a brother.’ A young accountant in New York City got his accounts entangled. Ho knew he was honest, and yet he could not make his no counts coms out right, and he tolled at them day and night until he was nearly frenzied, It seemed by those books that something had | boon misappropriated, and he kaow belore God he wis honest, The last day same, He | knew if he could not that day make his ae. counts come out right he would go into dis grace and go into banishment! from the busi. ness establishment, He wont over there very early before there was 4BTvbAY the place and he knelt down at the and sald “0 Lord, Thou knowest I have tried to be hauest, but I cannot make these things come us was o all the year | when my text is not gloriously appropriate, | | Sometimes soclety gets a grudge against a man. All his motives nre misinterpreted, and all his good deeds are deprecated, | | With more virtue than some of the honored and applauded, he runs only agalnst ralllery | and sharp criticism, When a man begins to £0 down, he has not only the fores of natural | gravitation, but a hundred hands to help | him in the Men precipitation, Aro perse. rermanieus sald he had Just as many bitter tagonists as he had adornments, The haracter sometimes fs so lustrous that the weak eyes of envy and jealousy cannot bear to look at it. It was their integrity that put Joseph in the pit, and Daniel in the den, and Shadrach | In the fire, and sent John tho Evangelist to | solace! { about ft, | and Korah after Moses, desolate Patmos, and Calvin to the castle of D soution, and John Huss to the stake, and Saul after Dae vid, and Herod after Christ. Be sure, if you have anything to do for church or state, und you attempt It with all your soul, the light- ning will strike you, The world always has had a cross woen two thieves for the o who ¢ it. High and holy rprise has al- been followea by f {is bo. t ne mes to —_ ways sublime tragedy o burlesque, LLWAaVsS The graceful ga lowed by scoff and The sweetest r written has com long as ther travesty mon will become as David was men are lars, Oh, that be the effect If you cannot endure a sing at all my not lot upon your souls! little persecution, how do you think our | fathers endured parssoution? Motley, in his “Dates Republie,” tdlls us of Egmont, the | martyr, who, condemned to be beheaded. unfastensd his collar on the way to the saal- fold, and when they asked him why he Aid that he said, not y be read S50 they will ey 4 I want to ta tained OO LO or "2 have ne befo “1 yf earth and pe Badge not ons in t 2 its vengeance, get for devils to arst w all 3 kn on hissad yt “They spit up He understand what in? Ast thy burden upon the Lord, and He shall sustain thee hen there Are oth fens of physi | ors who earry great wl aliments, When asadden siekness has come, and sholeras and malignant fevers take the castles of life Ly storm, we appeal to God, but in these chron alimants which wear out the strength day after day, and week after week, and year after year, how little resorting to God for Then people depend upon their , And their plasters, and their cordials or than upon heavenly stimulants Oh, how few people there are | Bome of you, by dint of pe and care have kept living to this w you have had to nants ! Ir. flares " tonics well War saainst Antediluvians, without loge and Infirmary and apothecary shoy multiplied thelr years by hundre but he who has gone through the gaunt lisnase in our time and has come to seventy years of age is a hero worthy of a palm, Fhe world sooms to be a great hospital, and you run against rheumatisms and eo mn sumptions and serofulas and neuralgzias and scores of old diseases baptized by new n 1enaciat Oh, how heavy a burden s ness is! It takes the color out of the sky, the sp out of the wave, and the sweet. ness of the fruit, and luster of the night, When the limbs ache, when the res piration is painful, when the mouth Is hot, when the ear roars with unhealthy obstrae- tions, how hard it is to be patient and cheer. ful and assiduous ! “Cast thy burden upon the Lord.” Does your head ache? His wore the thorn, Do your feet hurt? His were crashed of the spikes, Is your side palaful? His was striok by the spear. Do you fee! like giving way under the burden? His weakness gave way undor a cross. While you are in every pos- sible way to try to restore your physical all is, ¢ of ire, X and arkle ut out | vigor, you are 10 remember that more sooth- | ing than any anodyne, more vitalizing thaa | any stimulant and more strengthening than | any tone is the presoription of the text, | “Cast thy burden will sustain thee, upon the Lord, and He suted for their virtues and thelr successes, | Wo hear a groat deal of talk now about | faith cure, and some people say it cannot be done and it is a fallure, Ido not know but that the ohisf advance of the church is to be in that direction, Marvelous things | come to me day Dy day which make ma think that If the age of miracles Is past it is be- enusn the faith of miracles is past, A prominent merchant of New York sald [to a member of my family, “My mother wants her ease mentionsd to Mr. Talmage,” This was the case, He sald: ‘My mother had a dreadful abscess, from which she had suffered untold agonies, and all surgery had | been exhausted upon her, and worse and worse she grow until we ealled In a fow Christian friends and proceeded t0 pray Wo commanded her onso to Gol, and the abscess began immediately to be | cured, Bhe ls entirely well now and without knife and without any surgery.” Bo that | eno has come to me, and there are a score of other sargy coming to our ears from all parts of the earth, to Christ! Oh, yo who are worn out with agonles of body, “Oust thy burden upon the Lord, and Ho shall sustain thee I Another burden some have to carey Is the burden oi brreavement. Ab, these are the | herself, { mistake and lays another, { of thing is repeated until the | the chicken buds in The soul that on Jesus usth leaned for repose I will not, I will not desert to foes, | That soul, though all bell shall endeavor to shakes, I'll never, no uever, no never forss ke { Now, the grave is brighter than the ans | clent tomb whera the lights were perpetually kept burning, was ‘the resurre { the broken grave ction and the life” are on angels ring down the sky at the coronation of another soul come home to glory, | Then there are many who carry the bur- den of sin. Ah, we all carry it until in the appointed way that burden fis lifted, We nead no Bible to prove that the whol ols ruined, What a spectacle it woul { could tear off the mask of human d¢ or beat a drum that would bring uj whole army of the world's transgressions-- the deception, the fraud, and the rapine and the murder, and the of all centuries! Aye, it I could sou r rection in the i in this audience, and all the dead the past mid e np, we coul th Bin, grin a immorta unless ame to destroy t orime Stir. men jure the and dire, has pu Juteh 10 y have a m » way to have th Hast thy bu peatedly to start, for a few aays, when quite certain—it wonid quit contrary and work like a charm, proved perfectly correst, and now all three engines are working uniformly Mecha re a interesting « mm of this gine BUgR he being alone was wall, 106k eal engin have nat: Dia In electri r which there ren i ping n be learned i ns easily se- that may wchinery, whiel the m be the Gay article is good as ne al 18 and a , ALIN Os. hin a QT great deal vet to pherie and other ¢ count for arise, but in steam 1 nN eat diff any didion 3 lorst od, We. is much betler un ’ . to cular the ry seems Wood as Food, 1 von sve ’ food?” | a “Di r hear of wood being red Amion IL. f Pensacola, Fla, of the D rat re- “‘I traveled rather extensively and natives along od in rtain st common and constant article of diet [he natives eat it be- cause they like it. Even when fish are plentiful it forms part of the evening meal, as many ele anly stripped larch logs near every hut testify. These people know hy experience that the fact of their eating wood arouses the sympathy of strangers, and shrewdly 190d fi wr Vandervate, St. Louis Globe porter through Siberia a few found that among the northern coast w “4 tel YOArs ago, the ¢ form is a m The sacred feet of Him who | hillock, while the volees of | He i af use it to exite pity and to obtain gifts | of tea and tobacco thick layers immediately under the bark of the log, and chopping it fine, mix it with snow, a kettle, —————— A Patent Hens Nest, Charles Johnson has invented a patont hon's nest that is a vory groat convenience to “Biddy,” and it is an automatic persnader for her to do good work. When the hen approaches the nest a wicket door gently opens, and after she passes in it closes, snd the hon has private apartments all to The egg of its own weight opens a trap door and rolls noiselessly out of sight, Then when the hen arises, puts her hands in her pockets and gets roady to walk out, not seeing the egg, she thinks she has made » This sort the box below | touches off a spring and Biddy is fired Oh, y» who wre sigk, go | | out of the apartment. Mr, Johnson the manufacture and sale of hens nests, and he richly deserves success ~ Hannibal (Mo,) Journal, It is then boiled in | Sometime a little fish roe, | miraculons things tor Mis | i milk, or butter is mized with it.” They acrap oft ] | heft of | aroes the borderwith arms and oqa! granted State daiogat | anticipates earning a large fortune by | SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON JUNE 10, FOR Lesson Text: ‘‘Passage of the Red Sea,” Exodus xiv, 19-20 Golden Text Hebrews xl, 20 Commentary, 19. “And the angel of God, which went before tho camp of Isracl, removed and went behind them, and the pillar of the cloud went from before thelr and stood bee hind them." They kept the passiver nccords« ing to the last lesson, and that night the angel of death visited every house whers there was no blo y the door, as God had anid then was gypt pind to thrust Isranl forth, nor did they send them away ompty but loaded with spol we d Is row of the Fevp faco, ris I mskod and ree chapter xii, started t) pliar ol them TT . : " the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and the sland, and troabied ths host of the [x - ", “He ’ hav] bes a big 1 found that rel was . . 3 1 H Onis 1 rk = ' the | {the 1 w they { and His servant Mo 22. "Bat the n dry and in the waters were n wall an! hand and on their lef I'h tional with verses 22 but! neodioss ropititic Nn, and when doubling confirms a matter (Gon becomes us to give spacial hee dl or the message, He Himsoll is 1 iia paople as the mountains and fire (Py. oxxv,, 2; 200h, I, § Pos N ni anin rit Ha» xi 0 " nakos no thas hy 5) he Ki the waned at ws a wall and will do tosdny there is any need for the same Lat us sing, ““T'he Lord is my strength an song, and He Is become my sslvation” 7 Nx. xv, 2), ~laos- oon Helper, wat ’ ol opie ——— The Exhibition at Lyons, Franes. The great Exibitl of Arts, and Indusiries wes op iat L 29. A throng of sonsplogous men the ceremonies, w NAPA, ins, Aj il The wholes Cabinet way present, but the Président was unable to come. The Exhitation, aitheu sh opened, is far from ready for the pablis, The taterior of the malin butidia ¢ is still (a the hands of the earpanters and ths desora. | tort. The main building rovers 5000 square arde, and fi» surmounted with a fine cupola, here are large pavillons for exhibits of viticulture and agricalture, groenhoubes, and buildings for the fine ae, —— Redcoats to Celebrate the Fourth, Ths State riment has granted per mission to the tia of Deitish Columbia jo to participate in the Fourth of July celehrae tion at Heattle, Wash, The pernission is at the request of the Washington averal rogimonts of the fon, expected Li Irom over, wold Frouuction, : attended | formally {" The uotion of gold in the United BD 000,000 a year, T biscuit, bread of indigestion have HOSE who could not eat cake, hot and pastry because found that by rais- ing them with Royal Baking Powder they are enabled to eat them with per- fect comfort, Royal Baking Powder is compose: of chemically pure bicarbonate of soda, an ™ -h preve Pod Luminous Night Clouds, i 5S and whic were proved ¢ due to the dust ejected from Krakatoa | in "3 autumn of that year I p ] asi tale turnal clon seems thst thes r Gear m after her of Russia mes Gag “lie tive of dysp PAYING POWDER €0., 100 1 A cream of tartar and 1 l 1s an actual eo ' J Oolek, A WALL BT, + TEN Eleetrie Trea Plants, 4 LH - WOREN WHO SULFER | relief cures Weak- Bearing wn Sensations, Backache, Catarrhal Inflammation, Ulcers tion and kindred maladies. For those about to become mothers, it ise priceless boon, for it lessens the pain and perils of childbirth, shortens * and the period of nf the secretion of an abundan for the child TroMis THIRLYELL. NE i t ses of cant my grat Crescri} ter Of late thw I HALMS seme Chowino Gum AAA ARE IT Re STI / : . Jan i eS ENE OE. A. M. LEGG & CO, 2% CLOATTORNEYS FOR VENTORS, ¢ Bott Anes n ¥ : & ™ h Pate » —- » or A wt y ¢ ® - ¢ ache. IN. y and nal every. Ww sere XY 23 RS, RITHRARANZ, : v eX perien Pe shes ladies kilt JOHN W. MORNIN, Washington, B,C, Claims, w Buress, ALLY loots ENSIO SonenslylLhrotwpytes al _ onting cle CURLS WHR ALL ELSE FALLS. wh Brrup. Tastes Good, Use Sold by drogiista Rl DNB UMP TION Dest Fee. B99 N NNN NNN eae ¢ Sell on Si N 4 fant | BICYULE CATALOGUR FREE, HICH GRADE BICYCLE FOR $43.7 ahowe low pries gain, Thay are full 3 toe eX rons charge, and we w 11 ship C ¥ to our agents or Aireet to ue nwetrated Int. LOVELL DIAMD High Grade in Every Particular LATEST IMPROVEMENTS We stake our business reputation of over Aft is mo better wheel made in the world than the I O10, $88.78, with the Send be, In stamp (une, Milles, Revolvers, skates, Cetiory ND CYCLES, y LIGHTEST WEIGHTS, pears that there JOVELL DIAMOND, WARRANTED IN EVERY RESPECT. uh i a Lonttew® Light Poddser, WE 9 Be AGENTS WANTED, We have a limited number of our PASE season wheels of Mmandard A TR hanes to sine gents’ whosls, ball bemrdne and make and high grade quality, which we Bin Seat lav durabide wheel at 8 bar ted with pneamatc tires, Send §5 to privilege of examination, f or money for our LANGE his catalogue any one own sit le thelr own home We gusrantos it worth ten ther this Amount, ten cepts JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO, BOSTON, MASS, AB BBW BB BVIVCEBBnN i i “THE CLEAN ER 'TIS, THE COSIER 'TIS.” WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT SAPOLIO
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