REV. DR. TALMAGE, THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN« DAY SERMON. Subject: “Hadasssah.” ——— Texr : Esther §1,, 7, \ heautifal ol of Persia, Sha was An orphan anda captive her parents having heon stolen from Fehel ; Isranlitish home and earriad to Shush ar 1 had dint, leaving their on in an stranee land, But an Isranlite w heen oarriod into the an tracted by the ease of ented ber in his holy po ronf of that good man this ad Fan to develon a sweetness of character, If ever equaled. on furpassed., Boautifal 3 that adontad fnther over honeahold? ho had tha orphan, Hadassah! * Oonld i spare ner from his or artlessneas her { : : girlish porte, her fnnocencs, her orphanage, had wound themselves thoroughly around his heart, just as around each parent’ aan, parent's heart f ong us thers are tendrils elimbing and nstenine and n mt do i and growing [ expect ho was loved ones at home blossoming like others who hava OY, ~wondering sometimes if Rickness will coma and death and boreave ment, Alas, worse than anything that the at er expects happens to his adopted child? Anasneras, a prinesly secon Tiare, J healy mundral, demands i ) sassah, the fairest one in all the kKinedom hernm le {fa of . death "A — ; : o his wie, Worse than HEAR Wark marringe to such a monster of inf. 1u ty How great the ohunge when this younz woman loft the homs whers God was worshiped and religion honored to enter a 1 alaca devote vi a paiaca devoted to pride, idolatry and sensu. slanghter alftv! “Aq a lamh to the Ahasuerus knew not that his wife wns a w At the instieation of the infamous me i.e the king decread that all the lends the enuse of her Mn. Hadassah h the roles of the some ats breaking ] and present. 1! in the very face of death, erying perish, 1 Oh, it was n and ed peopla! They had nearning thelr {eath, , sat in thousands ers wildly pressed reasts as the days of on, praying thatthe same h slew the mother might . rosebud and bud perish. ing Ye perish ™ nal ns 3 , tis busy at court, he king is touched by her story u th ha could not reversa his do J an aviog of the Jews ho gant forth ribat they should arm themselves on mules, on ors sped through the g's dispatches, and a f that enslaved esq, I doubt ken down and grow stout as ug mothers ards grasping the eradles, a the blow in be- The hard y about 1 ution Govern. cowed hao god peop nt officials, re the are and 4d attle shout of the oy la, feat ran iountains 18d and mangle vh of the del enthusiasm was resrmya the t i rorpses, sounded rine ivered Jows, and their when the highlander eare to the relief of Lucknow, and an lish army, which stood in the very jaws of death, at the sudden hope of assistance and rescue ifte 1the shout above belching oan- hon and the death eroan of hosts, erying : Wo are saved! Wo are saved I" 8 My subject affords me opportunity of fl. y ewint Christion ehnraotor ey ander the greatest disadvantage, ns There is Bo Christian now exactly what he wants to be. Your standard is much hizher than any thing you have attained unto, If there be any man so puffed up as to be thorough! satisfied with the amount o has already attain to such a one, by filed with past attain under disadvantag them from being w have a message fron labor under ¢ in your temps stan { exoeliency ho have nothing to say thoss who are dissatis- , who tin are tolling are keeping at they ought to be, I yl. You each of you There is something worldly elr- OR that acts pow- . iN lly against A #10 y no notwithstanding gigantie diffisuities. 8he whom you might have expected to be one of the worst of wo- men is one ofthe best, In the first place, our subject is an {lins- tration of what Ohristian character may be under orphanage. This Bible line tells a long story avout Hadassah. ‘She had neither father nor mother.” A nobleman become her guardian, but there is no one who ean take the place of a parent, Who so ableat night to hear a child's prayer, or at twilight to chide youthful wanderings, or to soothe youthful sorrows? An individual will go through life bearing the marksof orphan- age. It will require more stren more persistence, more grace to make sach a one the right kind of a Chhristian. He who at forty years loses a parent must reel under the blow. Even down to old age men are accustomed to rely upon the counsel or be powerfully influenced by the advice of parents, il they are still alive, But how much greater the bereavement when it comes in early life, bolfore the character ia malf re. fant, and when naturally the heart is unso phisticatad and easily tempted ! And yet behold what a nobility of dispost. tion Hadassah exhibited! Though fathe mother were gone, grace had triumphed ovey all disadvantages, Her willingness to sell sacrifice. her sontrol over the king, hes humility, her iaitbful worship of God. show her to have been one of the best of the world" Christians, There are those who did not enjoy re markable early priviloges, Perhaps, like the beantiful captive of the text, you were an orphan. You had huge sorrows In your lit. tle heart, You sometimes wept in the night when you knew not what was the matter. You felt sad sometimes even on the play ground, Your father or mother did not stand in the door 10 welcome you when you came home from a long journey. You still feel the effect of early disadvantages, and you have sometimes offered them asa reason for your not being as thoroughly religions as you would like to be, But thesa excuses are not sufficient, God's grace will trinmph if you seek it. He knows what obstacles you have fought against, and the more trial the mora After all, there are no orphang ia [+1 le Christian wh b gth, m ne in the world, for the great God isthe Pather of us all, Again, our subjoet Is an illustration of what religion may bo under the pressurs of poverty. The captivity and erushed condi tion of this orphan girl and of the kind man who udopted her suggest a condition of poverty. Yet {rom the very first avquaint- | ance wo had with Hadassah we find her the same happy and coutented Christian, It | was only by commision she was afterward | taken into a sphere of honor and aMuaence, In the humble home of Mordecal. her Adopted Mather, She was a light that il lumined every privaticn, Ia some period | in almost every man's life there comes nn | season of straltened elrcumstances, when | the severest ealenlation and most scraping economy nee necessary in order to sabaist- ence and respectability, At the commenoe- ment of business, at the entrance upon a profession, when friends are low and the world is afraid of you because there is a pousttAiy of failure, many of the noblest have struggled against poverty and are now struggling. To such I bear a message of good cheer, You say it Is a hard thing for you to be a Christian, This constant angiety, this une resting caleulation, wesr out the buoyanay ot spirit, and although you have tol no one about it cannot I tell that B. “And he brought up Hadassah," | Mid was born in the capital | daughter poor and | ma captivity was at. | He ody. | “Helton, and under the | opted child be. | and excollopoy | rtainly never | correct Christian prineiy companion dis aseribe hypoerigy, | ber of the family to rightly kes i { wren others are peo SURASRELG WR Bob peveIry, OF 10 INOnieAts propriety of spans in the minds of ohildren when thers are ot P T i sah | trees al iy but grace you are to ¥ and every other crowbar and bLiast, tian thorough Christi | utterly destroyed | Hatan takes them to the top of the pinnacle | out branch and moderate this 1s the very trouble w you from being what you ought t& You have no time to think about laying treasures in heaven when it is a matte oat doubt whether you will be enabied tf vour next quarter's ront, You eannot tif striving niter a robe of righteousness § you ean Ret means enough to buy an dat to keep outthe cold, You want the b f life, but you think you must get alonfihcut that until you ean buy another bat flour for your wife and children, Bodhes you ait down discouragod and almosgh you were | dead, | Again, our subject fliustrathat relicion may be under the temptatiordersonnl at tractivanese, The inspired fd savs of tha heroine of my text, “Sts falr and baautiful," Hor vory nan mifled “a myrtle.” Yet the admiration] praise and flattery of the world Ald notght her hu- mility, The simplicity of hdanners and behavior equaled her ‘extraofary attrao- tions. Tt Js the same divine Bness which puts the tinge on the rose'sgek, and the whiteness into the ily, and tReam on the wave, and that puts color inp cheek and sparkle in the ave, and majdin the fore- head, and symmetry Into § form, and eracafulness into the gafhut many, through the very charm ofr personal appearance, have been dodrad What simporings and Affoctatiognd fmpert- fnenees have often bedithe result of that which God hj sent as A blessing! Japonioas, anongs and hel fotropea never swagger tha beauty which God planted in thelrly leat, sepal, | SABBATH SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR OCTOBER 21, ————_— Lesson Text: “A Sabbath in Caper naum,” Mark 1., 21-34 Golden Text: Mark 1., 22-Com- mentary, 21. “And they went into Capernanm, and straightway on the Sabbath day He entered into the synagogue and taught,” This los- son probably comes in order after the eall of the four from mending their nets, ote, rather than after the call from the draft of fishes, but let us see Jesus, and the order of events may not matter so much, Capernaum signifies the village of Nahum, the comforter, and the true Comforter has come to His own oity (Math, ix. 1). It was His enstom to be in the synagogue on the Sabbath (Luke lv,, 168), and we may bo sure it was His custom never to be late, 22. “And thoy wera astonished at His doo trine, nnd He tanght them as one that had authority, and not as the seribes,” Io al- ways preached the word and in the words which the Father gave Him to say (John xii, 49: xiv,, 10), His worls were the as. sertions of absolute confidenss in God and in the Seriptures. He sald, "Wa sneak that wa do know" (John #1. 11). We also, if axil and stamen. There arfany flowers that bow down so modestly eannot sea you lift np under thelr of personal of! the may becomn rariness and logloal story nirrored in a f his appear s llastrates sands of both yf their own maeltios cause who have valley on the yf consump the color In their cheek thelr head, pu ting your hs round chin. Indeed any k attractions, whether they body, the mind or the hea temptations to pride and foolish assumption. Them of a man who, seeing himse stream, became so en ance that he died of ths » the fatalities under which t sexes have fallen superiority, extraordinary good moral health down in tog nountain are sel tion, Monimia, the wife of strar 1 her o di most of us will not tar n that from her attractis us of ne eT) Ire by the vi Extraord tam nts temp ir) ns »of the t hridntes, was While the gled with wn \ have t aah anasan ance, there may be an advantage to } beautiful captive whe miiity and earnest world’s admirat secret of away down in the 1 1s t the end to another, it never ml a violet, Again, our subject ex} may be under bad Hadassah was sgnate homs into whieh introtin of which wick What a whirl o noses and leention er, no Sabbath, 4 re many or thw obliged to with tig Mdomestio nose $ grown up into ths love of frown of parents, and un of bad example, milvy having professes is the subject « by bre was not ORT [en } 4 yah sister of the fasth of Jesus anded satire inflicted hy nd alate Toa, Hadassah y= Lae only Christian who had a queer sushand ! Ir matter to maintain nes when thers fa a sed 10 scoff at them and to rariection of character to a hard thing for one meme 1 8 1 the y§ unt nhars and rd 8 no Snav iS DO onsy every I What ors to offset the instructions by loose or ane giterances, orto be regularly in ate hureh when ¢ is 4 Bar iaere dans upon © ousahold moro AN me ‘here are bad . fir roots hea w if ah ta yi vor levalop ad § htc isbandman and Glassware fs th 10 Way 18s a vessel of n ¥. The have on it saw and gous e foundat ol { yours ouse came out only under Fi 1d wrenches and nmeors belong to the chur Chris. victory will be bright just In proportion ¢ Never despair being a n in any household which is not worse than the court of Ahasuorus, Finally our subject illustrates what re. ligion may be in high worldly position, The last we see in the Bible of Hadassah is that she has become the queen of Persia. Prepara now to see the departure of her humility and sell-gacrifl and religious principle. As she goes up you may expect grace to go down, It Is easier to be humble in the obscure house of her adopted father than on a throne of dominion. But you misjudge this noble woma: What she was before she is now-—the myrtle, Applauded for her beauty and her crown, she forgets not the cause of her suffering people, and is a thorough 1 faise a crop anywher ded over the fire, and wt tl and he at I n ne bh sh. The ns the battle is he re with all simplicity of heart still remains a worshiper of the God of heaven ! Noble example followed nly by a very few, 1 address some who, rough the good ness of God, have risen to positions of iIn- fluence in the community where you live in law, in merchandise, In medicine, chanics and in other usefu professions, or for evil, LE much simplicity of character as ones you evidenced ? ence upon God, as much ness, as much your aceountability for talents Intrusted, manding and thetio and worldly and in me wapations and You hold an (aflasses for good Let us sos whether, like Hadas ah, you oan stand elevat Have you nas ! Ml. Do you feel ns much depend- ur own woak- or are you proud and overde- ungrateful and unsympa- sopsunl and dev lish? Then you have Leen spoiled by your success, and you shall not sit on this throne with the heroine of my text. In the day when Hadassah shan come to the grander coronation, In the presents of Christ and the bannered hosts of the re. deemed, you will be poor Indeed. Oh, there | nro thousands of men who can easily sndare to be knocked down of misfortune who are if lifted up of success, of the temple and shoves them off. Their head begins to whirl, and they lose thelr balances and down they go While Inst autumn all through the forests there were luxuriant trees, with moderate holght pretending but little, there were foliage shafts that shot far up, looking down with contempt on the whole forest, clapping their hands In the breeze and shouting, “Als, do you not wish you were ns high up as wo are?” Dat last week a blast let loose from the north came rashing along, and grappling the boasting onks hurled them to the ground, and as they wont down an old tree that had been singin psalms with the than. der a huna summers eried out, Pride goeth before distinetion and a haughty spirit beforan MIL" And humble hickory and plue and chestnat that had never said thelr prayers bafore bowed thelr heads as much as to say, “Amen [" My friends, “Good resisteth the proud, but giveth grace to humble,” Take from my subject encouragement, Attempt the service of God whatever Your disadvantages, and whatever our lot lot us gesk that grace which outshone all the splendors of the pals aces of Bhusham, sent by God, may sneak holdly the messages {| which He elves us (Ex. iv., 12; Jor, L. 7, 8; | Acts Iv, 81), 23. “And there wan in their synagogus a | man of an unclean spirit, and he eriod out.” | Evil spirits still zo to ehurh and Sunday | school in the bodies of men and women and | boys and girls, but not without the consent | of those In whom they go. Anger, wrath, mallee, worldliness, deeelt, hypoerisy, are | surely evil spirits, In fact, all that is not | holy and true most be evil, | 24. **Saying: Let us alona, What hava | wo to do with Thee, thon Jesus of Nazareth? Art Thon to destroy us? I know Th who Thou art, the Holy One of God." Lat us alone is still tha ery. Wo will go to 1 contributes to the eause if you about tha theatra and , Sunday nawspapers receiving Jesus, pre i su Hike, 1 it is to do with Jesus, yf the devil (I John ie any of us , 4 come wy and Sunday driving, paring to meet Him an we No wee must all have i., 8), an hen w 25. "And Jesus rebu thy poenos an me to the spirit wie He hates sin, but nlso son to t} N ' clinging the Lor oe destro nner persists in i, insomanh NEN YeR SRY. What new doo ne ther for whosver heard of tr 1 by a word whiel His word he now reos in al and moeekness, and no evil spirit ling, fretting, slander or evil can abide ia that person, T wil | have to say, “What new doetrine is this?” dwt AiodPatallr Js, Jame spread | shout Galilee,” If the preaching in any | ehmreh to-lay should eure even the majority of its members of the evil spirits which seam to possess so many, what a nama Jesus won id got in the o unity! Why not with our hearts determine that by His grace we will way to magnify that h callad uoon ne ailed upor { 31 les in simopll ved il i somos ne w nargin “And forthwith, IY Ware oo whan th reyes Bs i a in and An the avi LE foes & of Bi If susoh sho with them, the afternoon, novels sn. “p a fever, and an haps a poor day for Sim (tomar to dinn iis wile might think so, with her her sick In bed but we will hops she was ane of those bleasad women whom some us know, who ara | alwa re glad to exercise hospitality, who live to minister, 81. “And He eame and took her by the han i rnd lifted her up, and immediately the fever left her, and ministerad unto them.” It was a good Aay to have come pany, after all, especially Hiskind, Marx fs specially the gospel of service, and Josus is here, in a very marked way, the servant | ministering ; benoe m touches like this, “He took her by the hand.” Note also the words straightway, anon, immediately, forthwith, all the same word in the Gresk { sen BR, V.<tisod over forty times in this gos and only about eighty times in the | whole New Testament, | 832, 83 “And at even when the sun did set they ought unto Him all that were dis. eased and them that were possossad with devils, And all the city was gathered to. gether at the door.” The Babbath ended at sunset, so they could then do this without, fn the estimation of the Pharisoes, breaking the day. Bee chapters fl, 241i, 2 N° manifest power of God will draw the p¥o- ple, There are weary and heavy laden ones | everywhere, sick in body and in soul, and | this Jesus fs to-day the very samo Jesus (Heb, xiii, 8), waiting to give rest of soul | and quietness of mind to every weary heart, | and when He giveth quietness who then ean make trouble? daob xxxiv., 20). 34. “And He healed many that wore siok of divers diseases, and east out many devils, and suffered not the devils to speak, beeauss they know Him." The margin says that He suffered thom not to say that they knew Him. The testimony of the evil spirit in Acts xvi, 17, sounds well. What could be better? Yot it was not tolerated. God ro. quires no help from the devil, When will His people see this and stop seeking help for the Lord's work from those who are not His ehildren, and therefore must be children of the devil? (John will, 44. Lesson Helper, — - Callfornia’s Frult Crop: A review of the Callfornia fruit crop Bearetaryllelong, of the State Board of Hort eulturs, shows that the orchardists lost &1, 000,000 by the great railroad strike, whieh prevented the shipping of much fruit and canusad low prices for poars and peaches A glatting the markeis, The prone crop thirty por cont, below the average, and this shortage has induced the fruit exchanges to fix the minimum price at six cents, The bad service given Ly the commission men will stimulate the formation of co-operative for shipping and curing fruits, The South's Prospects. from all parts of the South show a steady tendency toward improvement in business ciroles, Net earnings of Bouthern ralironds are showing an increase over the corresponding tims last year, The stook- holders of a leading New England eotton mill company having voted to spsnd $500, 000 In bullding a now cotton mill in the South, syveral other Now LL are expoctod to follow the example, “hat Simon's wife's moths n they tell Him ¢ nto bring company mien) home to mot nt n she yool , ! Ea pl { ment | Eastern road advanced the charges of | the | warded the | tion. | no market for the horses, and they | were finally sold for 80 a head. | at suction. | even coins EE a LT BN | little “ Pellet" is a laxative. two are mildy | eathartic. | readily take them Horses Are Very Cheap. Electric lines and bicycles have re- duced the average valne of horses in the United States from twenty-five to fifty per cent. In the Western range country the loss is felt the worst, for the surplus has formerly been sold in the East, Now the East is a clused market to ordinary grades of horses, and there is a surplus everywhere. In ensen of forced sale prices are some- times ridiculously low. Recently a number of car loads of range horses of good grade were re- ceived by an Eastern road for ship to an Eastern terminal. The allele el el e_ = lines which had for- horses, and added the amount to its charges for transports | Arrived in the East there wos | Western The astern rond was paid the entire pur- | | chase price, and was then compelled | to charge 8800 to profit and loss for | | its experience in the horse business, | | In the future it will advance | charges on horses. no more | p J § The telling of this story brought ont a recent experi of a railroad | official in Kansas City. He wanted o | good, small-sized riding horse for his | boy and found exactly what he wanted neo BD it in Officially reported, after elaborate com- petitive tests made under authority of ee ee Congress by the Chief Chemist of the United States Agri- cultural Department, Superior to all other Baking Pow= ders in Leaven« ing Strength. I PL, et ABSOLUTELY PURE. a The most Careful Housewife will use no other. ce Tew, =~ 4 ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL BT. NEWYORK, ta ——— > J TT Ti Li i Loh Lier Liu i Lie Loi Lp i on 6) FED SN oD an © Gh 0p CP Gp We On 00 Eh Ge Gb Tb ] in a Kansas City horse market. He wanted to buy the horse immediately, | but was informed that he must buy it | As n special favor, how- ever, the anctioneor agreed to put up the horse selected to be bid fir t, the railroad official being in a hurry. As it was lead out the anctioneer an- “Lot No. 16,” and the es sparkled as he noted the form of would The island on | built su bed and t made more in fre of th but nounced : official’s ey springing gait and graceful his prospective purchase, He willingly have given $100 for the horse without a bid, but carelessly called out: “Fifty dollars” a starter, | CO He was jubilant wh fi knocked down to hi decided to lead his prize mediately and so announced to the barn manager “What will you have done wit others?’ asked that functionary. There were six 1 the railroad off startis livery stable, ald. NK it er was ) 1 1orses in lot ial is thir LH { iC - seecettlli— Her Heart Was on It does War. for the fair i! Are tak ! € 15 are wholly or partially ten miles in circumference, is mostly | , ccted etersburg is built on a peninsula and | Yenlee Xot the Only One, A Penniless Queen, ire are four cities in Europe that The widowed Queen of Charles IL built wuron | of England, when an exile in France, Amsterdam in Hol'and, a city had a pension allowed her, but it was small and her 80 wor that she wes often reduced to the st straits On OCCARION, hen the Cardinal De Retz waited on er, & told him that her danghter, | the Princess Henrietta, was obliged to | remain in bed for want of a fire,— | New York Advertiser. is which are | iges, the city strecte. St. 4 is. 0 credit became on piles driven into the san Yo iil, but the flowing of the a he debris of the Ainsel River have ninety islands, and the city has canals than streets. Amsterdam quently referred to as the Venice North. Ghent, in Belgium, is niy-six prents { | | | { ww i he tl ol n pe islan eighty br tw b on TE —— Diflerence in Welght, y ic | ' ! AK NADY CANALS A mass of 1000 wel pounds’ nnected by several large | po summer by) water and the tog i hich are lands co ose exactly two AT 18 y of This, it the force « high. + 38 becanse much 1% 15 at sea l | New York Journal JERE ® BEECHAM’S PILLS What They Are For Koeg cin to of gh fiet ut reminiscence of when and langer melted they could lay their hands and metal ornacents, wehsila Abe man. fired at | the Kaffirs from behind the wagons. - Everywhere. balls the shoe h ail on, and | to} sti] ASSIST NATURE a little now and range fasrs ments and will } less frequent of your ke MIYVICE Of all known agents for this pur. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the best. Once used, they are ale ways im favoir. Their secondary ef. | SC Ny rea EASTMAN COLLEGE WwW sSKin {whan thace conditions are caused by constipation - and cone nt HL cause of all of them. thines fo ang yation is the most freque - iL v yy mporiai | One of the most ¥ > constipation cause i Write to B. F. Allen Company, 1e little book on Const “ y i PAT causes con- uences and correction); sent free. If you are not within 1 ' ch of a druggist, the pills will be sent by mail, 2 POUGHEKEEM Bert ed uration Thor er BXGLIS BANKING, OOHRES] igh OAT fect is to keep the bowels « pen and regular, not to fur ther comstipate, as is the case with other pills. Hence, their great popularity with sufferers from habitual constipation, CiAl ing » ard Ee noite For Diploma awarded at World's Fair, » SAINES, SiFert, Ponghkoopaio, New Yo 1688, for best course of sindy and plan of rperation. Bush resident, 30 Washington Sui EASTMAN COLLEG piles and their attendant discomfort and manifold derangements. 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