"REV. DR. TALMAGE, THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN: DAY SERMON, Subject: *“The Stek General.” Text: “He was a leper.”~II Kings v., 1, Here we have a warrior sick, not with pleurisies or rheumatisms or consumptions, but with a disease worse than all these put together, A rod mark has come out on the forshead, precursor of complote disfigure- ment and dissolution. I have something awful to tell you, General Naaman, tho commander in chief of all the Syrian forces, has the leprosy! It fs on his hands, on his face, on his feet, on hig entira person, The eprosy! Get out of the way of the pesti- ence! Xf hie breath strike you, you are a dead man, The commander in chief of all the forees of Syria! And yet he would be glad to exehanee conditions with the boy at his stirrup or the hostler that blankets his charger, The news goes lke wildfire all through che realm, and the people are sym- | pathetic, and they ery out, ‘Is it possible that our great hero, who slew Ahab and around whom we eame with such vocifera- tion when he returned from victorious bat- tle—ean It ba possible that our grand and glorious Naaman has the lepresy?” Yes, Evervbody has something he wishes he had not—David, an Absalom to disgrace him ; Paul, a thorn to sting him ; Joh, ear- buncles to plague him: Samson, a Delilah to shear him ; Ahab, a Naboth to deny him ; Haman, a Mordeeal to irritate him : George Washington, a childlessness to afiist him; John Wesley, a termagant wife to pester him ; Leab, weak eyes; Pope, a crooked back ; Byron, a elub foot; John Miiton, blind eyes ; Charles Lamb, an insane sister, and you and you and yousometh/ng which you never bargained for and womid like to get rid of, The reason of this is that God does not want this world to be too bright, Otherwise we would always want to stay and eat thess fruits and lie on these lounges and shake hands In the pleasant society, Wa are only in the vestibule of a grand temple God does not want us to stand on the dooe step, and therefore He sends aches and annoy- ances and sorrows and bereavements of all gorts to push us on and push us up toward riper fruits and brighter society and more radiant prosperities, God i= only whip; us ahead, The reason that Edward Payson and Robert Hall had more rapturous views of heaven than othe wople had was bee : through their aches and pains, C pushed them nearer up to it. If God dashes o of your pictures, it is only to show brighter If Ho sting your gout, your brain with neuralgia, yor with an Inextingu } cause He is preparing to substitute body than you ever dreamed of, mortal shall put on immortality, It is to push you on and lo} toward something grander and God sends upon you, as He did upon Gen- eral Naaman, # thing you do Beated in his Syrian mansion, all the walls glittering with the shields which he had eap- tured iu battle, the corrid crowded with admiring wisi wanted to see him once, music and mirth and banquet filling all the mansion from tessellated floor to pictured ceiling, Naaman would have for- gotten that there was anything better and would bave been glad to stay there 10,000 pears, But, oh, how the shields dim, and Io the visitors fly the hall, and how the music drops dead from the string, and how the gates of the mansion slam shut with sepuichral bang as you read the closing words of the enlogium! ‘He was a leper! He was a leper!” There was ons person more sympathetic with General Naaman than any other per- son. Naaman's wife walks the floor, wring. ing ber hands and trying to think what she can do to alleviate her husband's suffering. All remedies have falled, The surgeon gen- eral and the doctorsof the royal stafl have met, and they have shaken thelr heads, as ud 8570 EY. “NG ture io cure. think that the office ssekors had all folded up their recommendations and goons home, Probably most of the employes of the establishment had dropped their work and were thinking of looking for some other situation. What shall now become of poor Naaman's wile? Bhe must have ipathy somewhere, In her despair she goes to a little Hebrew cap- tive, a servant girl in her house, to whom she talls the story, as sometimes, when overborne by the sorrows of the world and finding no sympathy anywhere else, you have gone out and found in the sympathy of some bum! nestio—Rose or Dinah or Bridget—a help which the world eould not ve Ange one, when Lh yush you up beter that ®t want, rs rs who just whole a dor vou. wi at a scene it was-—ane of the grandest women in all Syria in cabinet council with a waiting maid over the declining health of the mighty general! ‘I know something,” says the little captive mald, “I know some- thing." as she bounds to her bare feet, “In the land from wolch I was stolen thers is a cerinin prophet known by the name Elisha, who ean cure almost anything, I shouldn't wonder if he could cure my master, Send for him right away." “Oh, hush I” you say. *‘If the highest medieal talent in all the land cannot eure that leper, there is no need of your listening to any talk ol a servant girl,” But do not scoff, do not gneer. The finger of that little captive maid is pointing io the right direction, She might bave said: “Ibis is a Judgment upon you for stealing me from my native land, Didn"t they snatch me off in the night, breakine my father's and mother's hearts, and many a time I have lain and cried all night beenuses I was so homesick?” Then, flushing up into childish indignation, she might bave said : “Good for them, I'm glad Naaman’s got the leprosy, I wish all the Syrians had the leprosy.” No orgetting her persons! sorrows, she sympathizes with the suffering of her master and commends him to the famous Hebrew prophet, And how oiten it is that the filager of echiidbood has pointed grown persons in the right direction! © Christian soul, how long fs it since you got rid of the leprosy of sin? You say, ‘Let me see, It must be five years now.” Five years, Who was it that pointed you to the Divine Physician? “Oh,” you say, ‘it was my little Amie or Fred or Charley that clamered up on my knees and looked into my jace and asked me why I didn't become a Christian, and, ail time stroking my cheek, so I could not get angry, insisted upon knowing why I didn't have family prayers.” There are grandparents who have been brought to Christ by their little grandohildren., There are hundreds of Christian mothers who had their attention first called to Jesus by their little children, How did you get rid of the leprosy of sin? How did you find your way to the Divine Physican? “Oh,” you say, “my ¢hild, my ‘dying child, with wan and wasted finger, pointed that way, Ob, I never shall forget,” you say, “that pone at the erndie and the erib that awful night. It was hard, bard, very bard, but if that little one on its dying bed had not pointed me to Christ I don't think 1 ever would have got rid of my leprosy.” Go into the SBabbath-school any Sunday, and you will find hundreds of iittle fingers pointing in the same direct.on, toward Jesus Christ and to ward heaven, Years avo the astronomers ealeulated that there must be a world hanging st a certain point in the heavens, and a large prize was offered for some one who conid discover that world, The telescopes from the great ob- servatorios were pointed in vain, but a girl at Nantucket, Mass, fashioned a telescope, and ooking through It discoverad that star and won the priz» and the admiration of all the astronomical world, that stood amazed at her genius, And so it is often the case that grown people cannot see the light, while some little ohild bebolds the star of rdon, the star of hope, the star of conso- tion, the star of Bethlehem, the morning star of Jesus, “Not many mighty men, not many wise men are oalled, but God hath Sind he muIeY aid pass this afd tHIDES the mighty an t an that are not to bring to naught things that ot and | overarching, are,” Oh, do not despise the Patil of little children when they are speaking about God and Christ and heaven, You see tho way your child is pointing, Will you take that pointing or wait until, in the wrench of some awful beranvement, God shall lift that child to another world, and then it will beckon you upward? Will you take that pointing or will you walt for the beckoning? Blessed be God that the ttle Hebrew captive point. ed in the right direction, Blessed be God for the saving ministry of Christian children, No wonder the advice of this little He. while the poorsiek man lifts his swollen feet and pain struck limbs into the vehicle, Bolster him up with the pillows and let him take a lingering look at his bright apart- ment, for perhaps the Hebrow captive may be mistaken, and the next timo Naaman comes to that place he may be a dead weight on the shoulders of thosa who earry him, an | expired chieftain seeking sepulture amid the | lamentations of an admiring nation, Good. by, Naaman! Let the charioteer drive gen- tly over the hills of Hermon, lest he jolt the invalld, Here goes the bravest man | of all his day a eaptive of a horrible disease, As the ambulance winds through the stroets of Damascus the tears and prayers of all the people go after the world renowned {nvalid, Perhaps you have had an invalid go out from your house on a health sxcursion. You know how the neighbors stood around and sald, “Ah, he will never come back again brew captive threw all Naaman's mansion and Ben-hadad's palace into exoifement, Goodby, Naaman! With face searified and ridged and inflamed by the pestilence and aided by those who supported him on either side, he staggers out to the chariot. Hold fast the flery coursers of the royal stable alive,” Oh, it was a solemn moment, I tell you, when the invalid had departed, and you went into the room to make the bad, And to remove the medicine vials from the shelf, and to throw open the shutters, so that the fresh alr might rush into the long closed room. Goodby, Naaman ! There is only one cheerful faco looking at him, and that is the (as the li Hebrew captive, who is sure he will gat cured, and who is so glad she helped him As the chariot winds out and the escort of mounted courtiers, and the mules, laden with sacks of gold and silv and broldered suits of apparel, went through the gates of Damascus and out on the long way, the hills of Naphtalia and Ephraim look down on the procession, and ti tinue goes right past the Naaman in the davs of his rally his troops for fearful tue procession stops and the groves of and General Naaman so slek, so How the countrymd« sion passed! They had past like a whirlwind in day md stood aghast at the elar ipments ut now they co fan of tt in ome : : olly Mm gRped BOT some alive ! Por General Naan rightens up at the prospect They drive up to it. The charioteers the horses, and tramping bh wheels conse shaking the ear Elisha's house, informed Elisha that the sick soming and how to treat him, you aresick and the Lord wants well, He always tells the doctor bh you, and the reason we have bungling doctors is because they deg apon their own strength and instructions nd not on the Lord God, and that always makes malpractice, Come out, Elisha, and attend to your business, General Naaman and his retinue wailed and waited and waited, The fact was, Naaman had two diseases—pride and leprosy, The ons wns as hard to get rid of as the other. Elisha sits quistly in his house and does not go out. After awhile, when he thinks he has humbled this pro man, he says to a servant, “*Go out and General Naaman to bathe seven times in river Jordan, out yonder five miles, and will get entirely well.” The mes out, “What !" says thecoun of the Syrian foroes, his eye an animation which it had no weeks and his swollen foot stamipir bottom of the chariot, regardless “What! Isa't he coming out Why, I thought certainly he y utter some eabalistio words ov some enigmatioal passes over Why, I don't think he knows am, Isat he cnming out? the Shunamite woman cams rushed out and ered : ‘Is it well with thea? Is it well with thy husband? Is it well with thy child?” And will he treat a poor un- known woman like that and let me, a titled personage, sit here in my chariot and wait and want? I won't endure it any longer, Charioteer, drive on! Wash in the Jordan! Ha, ha! The slimy Jordan—the muddy Jor- dan—the monotonous Jordan! I wouldn't be seen washing in such a river as that, Why, we watered our horses in a better river than that on our way here—the beautiful river, the jaspar paved river of Pharpar. Be- glides that we have in our country anothor Damascene iver, Abana, with foliaged bank and torrent ever swift and ever clear, under the flickering shadows of sycamore and ole- ander. Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel?” I supposa Naaman feit very much as Amerieans would feel if, by way of medioal presaription, soma ote should tell us to go wash in the Danube or the Rhine, We would answer, “Are not the Connecticut and the Hudson just as good?’ Or as an Eaog- Hshman would feel if he were told, by way of medionl prescription, he must go and wash in the Mississippi or the Bt. Law- rence, He would ery out, “Are not the Thames and the Shannon just as well?” The fact was that haughty Naaman needed to learn what every Englishman and every American needs to learn-—that when God | tells you to do a thing you must go and do | it, whether you understand the reason or not. | the {| Take the prescription, whether you like it or not, One thing is certain, Unless haughty Naaman does as Elisha commands him, he will die of his awful sickness, And unless 3 i 1 ill be | you do-as Clirist comatantis you you wiih { must have become a Christian. seized upon by an everlasting wasting away’ Obev and live: disobey and die, Thrilling, undergirding, stupendous alternative | Well, General Naaman could not stand the teat, The charioteer gives a jerk to the right line until the bit suaps inthe horse's mouth, and the whir of the wheels and the flying o! the dust show the indignation of the great commander, ‘He turned and went away in a rmge.” So people now often get mad af religion, They vituperate against ministers against churches, against Christian people, One would think from their irate behavior that God had been studying how to annoy and exasperate and demolish them. What has He been doing? Only trying to eure their death dealing leprosy. That is all Yet they whip up thelr horses, they dig ix the spurs, and they go away in a rage, So, after all, if seems that this health ex. eursion of General Naaman is to be a dead failure, That little Hebrew captive might as well have not told him of the prophet, and this long journey might as well not have been taken, Poor, sick, dying Naaman Are you going away in high dudgeon and worse than when you came? As his ehariot halts a moment his servants clamber up in it and coax him to do as Elisha sald, They say: “It's easy. If the prophet had told you to walk tor a mile on sharp spikes in or der to rid of this awful diseass, you would have done it, It is essay. Come, my ford, Just got down and wash in the Jordan, You taks a bath every day anyhow, and in this saite 1 1g 40 het that it i do you good. on our account, sake of the army you command, and for the | the | wild | ness has gone out of his throat, | the sixth time and | soreness and anguish have gone out of the | body, but I will make a complete cure, and so he | bows the seventh time {nto the flood and he { Lord God of Elisha, have meroy onus! my tord!| “Well, | nation that admires you. ing try this Jordanie ® says, ‘to pleases you I will | do as ou say.” ‘he retinue | drive to the brink of the Jordan, The horses | paw and neigh to get into the stream them- ' selves and cool their hot flanks, General | Naaman, assisted by his attendants, gots | down out of his chariot and painfully comes | to the brink « the river and steps in until the water comes to the ankle, and goes on deeper until the water comes to the girdle, and now standing so tar down in the stream | Just a little foliation of the head will thoroughly immerse him, Hoe bows onge | into the flood and comes up and shakes the ! water out of nostril and eye, and his attend. ! ants look at him and say, “Why, general, ow much better you do look!" And he bows a second time into flood and comes up, and the stare is gone out of his eye. He bows the third time into the flood, and comes Come, bath." { up, and the shriveled skin has got smooth | agnin, | and comes up, and the hair that had fallen | out Is restored ; there are thick locks aga'n | all over the hoad. He bows a fourth time into the flood Ha bows the fifth time Into the flood, and comes up, and the hoarse. Ho bows and all the comes up, “Why," he says, “Iam almost well, comes up, and not so much 0s a fester ora scale or an eruption as big as the head of a pin is to bs geen on him, He stops out on the bank and says, “Is it possibler™ And the attendants look and say, ‘Is it possible?” And as with the health of An athlete he bounds back inte the chariot and drives on there goes up from all his at- tendants a wild *““Hozsa, huzea!' Of course they go back to pay and thank the man of God for his counsel so fraught with wisdom. When they leit the prophets house, they went off mad, They have coma baci People always think better of ter they are converted than th conversion, Now we aro to them an int able nuisance because we tell them t things that go against the grain, but some o as have a great many letters from tell us that onos they were angry at wi preached, but afterward gladly rec the gospel at our hands, The us fanatics or terrorists or they call us friends, You sald he would He sald t} 3 i once o oy never at two urch Heo said, wore again if saved amon i to think that the & 3 i # at 4 11 by F 3 you poor, mis leprous n Rot fe all come in way. We axpoot t kingdom of God, get down wir knees will we 0 The Lord h unhorsed Get down out ol y sinner a haughty 1 the y ride Never ad un- pride, ir solf righteousness and pour hyperoriticlsm. We have all got to de that, That is the journey we have to on ue us, ur ir J on our knees, It is our infernal pride the koeps us from getting rid gin. Dear Lord, what have we to be pr oi? Proud of ourscaiess? Proud of our un- sleaniiness? Proud of this killing lafection? 1 : ol the leper | Bring us down st Thy fed, weepifig, pray itant, believing supplisnts, or sinners, Lord, Thou eam’st to bleed, And I'm a sinner vile indead, Lord, I bolleve Thy graos is free; On, magnify that grace in me, But he had not only to get d his chariot, He had to wasl my, “Iam very ¢ iv Every day 1 plun ful bath.” Ah, my he brighter than It is the { ng, ANG SOTTOW. AWAY ! io ;04 not wn now glorious wil, deeper, deeper, Plunge once, four times, five times, six ti ron times, It wiil take as much as that to s your soul Oh, wash, wash and be cl I suppose that was a great time at Damas eus when General Naaman got back. The charioteers did not have to drive slowly any longer, lest they joit the invalid, but as the horses dashed through the streets of Damas- cus I think the peog to hail back their chieftain. Naaman's wife hardly gnizged her husband. He was won. ly changed she had to look at him TWO hres times before she me out that it was her restored husband the little cap- tive mald, she rushed out, clapping her bands and shouting : “Did he cure you? Did he cure you?" Then music woke up the pal- aoe, and the tapestry of the windows was drawn away, that the multitude outside might minglowith the prioeely mirth inside, and the foet went up and down in the dance, and all the streets of Damascus that night echoed and re-echoad with the nows : *‘Naa- man's cured! Naaman's cured!” Bat a gladder time than that it would be If your soul should get oured of its leprosy. The swiftest white horses hitched to the King's chariot would rush the news into the eternal city. Our loved ones before the throne would welcome the glad tidings, Your chil. dren on earth, with more emotion than the little Hobrow captive, would notice the change in your look and the change in your manner and would put thelr arms around your neck and say: “Mother, I guess you Father, think you have got rid of the leprosy.” © se, thrice an rushed out oe »O ort - SE " Utility of Compressed Als, In the West Shore shops, at New Durham, N. J., compressed air i utilized in various ways. Oil is emp- tied from barrels into tanks by its means, and ears are rapidly and el. fectuaily cleaned. It is the mos$ thorough duster, reaching every crack and erevico and rooting out dust, dirt und shreds with lightning rapidity. It even penctrates to the depths of up- holstery and tufting. There is talk | of introducing it into the hotels, where instead of the maid with broom | and dast-pan we may soon see a stal- | wart man with a hose blowing %ao | dust out of the rooms and cleaning ! them as beater and whisk-broom have | never been able to do, -~New York | Ledger. s———— The big ditoh excavated for the par. pose of draining the Tow Head Lake and contingent swamps ia Calhoun County, Towa, is twenty-six miles long and twenty fect wide and eight feet deep. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. 8. Gov't Report Baking Ye ol Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE o— ———————— Size ol Farms, | Small farms are decreasing, whil the ratio of bonanza farms is increas ing. Despite the great farms from 1879 to 1889 the numbe Nature the Sculptor, Rueben Bailey, a son of George B. Bailey,of Mill Creek, says the Deseret (Utah) News, has brought down from Parley Park a stone head of peculiar interest. It was obtained at Snyder- ville, where the young man observed the face above the surface of the ground. He was struck by its appear- ance, land on endeavoring to pick it up found that it had to be broken off a ledge of rock. In the profile the forehead 1s retreating, the nose large, and the mouth and chin full. The head is full except from side to side, | rn, at the National Congress, 1 and is somewhat flattened on top. A that the average size of farn remarkable feature about it is that | for 1890 was 137 acres in lien both present the same vic ) | for 1880, that the number From the front the face is quite thin, from cheek to cheek being not more than three inches, the head widening it It not possible that so perfect a human face and head of a natural size could have ai ud, each decreased by 87,1 and thos from ten to twenty by those from twenty to 66,140, From 1880 to 1890 they dec ereased respectively in the order abov named Ti the last census are not basis as those of 1880, said Profess Dann BLOWS sides w. mn i numbers more thar BI1Ze8 COLIN from 100 by the most « onomieal size assumed that the fittes New York World. Water as Fuel, It may well appear to be the extrem has increased those of other showing that farms are regarded farmers ne the A | It 1s ments, though it is ~vident the 0 | | has survived. nade their impress on the sandstone. | I'he cols also presents a striking Appearance. he bulk of the head is f light s, but the chin, | parade that are of a reddish brown | which tempers the excess of | '# on the nasal protu- | i rest an old per, | in y red and round point in 1 1 nll ! back. does Feem ns HOOH | ACTOR ILAasE own. ring gray of : . 3 4 month snd nose golor. TI berane a ) 8 en —e Yarying Weight of Fleece f the Depart: riat Beware of Ointment That Coniain « far Mer rtnrrh "ry. ‘el rent 4 tba free. | Will be pe PE y Drugiciata, price 150 per tie. winter sea inerease of | of small farms from three to ten acres | 89,826, and | fifty acres by » statistics thus far published for on the same of 15 of farms between 100 and 500 acres each the same element Keep the Feet Warm, Tt is the great sceret of health, T firmly believe, to keep one's feet warm and dry, and then not to coddle one’s self otherwise. So far as I have been able to observe, the feet require differ ent treatment from all the rest of the body, Woolen is good for the feet; but beware of it elsewhere, Father Kneipp is undoubtedly right in forbid- ding flannel next the skin in the form of undereclothing ; it makes most peo- ple tender, and gives some of them the o|fidgets. But the writer has seen no - | people who have adopted woolen stockings who have not been glad of them, All this on the supposition of course, that people who wear shoes; for if they could discard these utterly and go barefooted, as they do in Woerishofen, no doubt that would be - | better still. — Boston: Transcript. ¢ r | | 6 | @N Society 8 women often feel the of too r C4 gayety— t oR. bg bal heatres, and x by SN eas in rapid 3 Dik, 5 cession And effect f 4 i rn . They suffer from nervousn y 200) of spin £0 | the pirits take fight It is time acce help offered Doctor Pierce's Fa- t resc? n t's a medicine which in in @ | scription’ is : it 1e tonic and . woman's i promotes ids up, invig- so-called +s which pt ut get a 's Favorite « FEMALE WEAKNESS.” iA HOOVER, of Bellville, Imperfect BELEC (Vegetable) What They Are For J “ar hi 11 of them. that consti ne in the world , nte d. the 1 all be preve 1 ook. Write York, for the sequences and corr Compa Canal street N Ce 110. (its sent free. 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