'DB. TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDA V, S DISCOURSE BY THE NOTED DIVINE. Subject: "The Path of Safety"—Menaces to Our National Existence—Tlie Dan ger* of Monopoly, NlhllUm and In fidelity Pointed Out. [Copyright. Louis Kiopscb. 1899.1 WASHINGTON, D. C.—ln this discourse Dr. Talmage speaks of some of the perils that threaten our American Institutions and points out the path of safety; text, Isaiah lxil., 4, "Thy land sliull be married." As the greuter Includes the less, so does the circle of future joy around our entire world include the epicycle of our own re j.ublic. Bold, exbllarant, unique, divine imagery of the text. At the close of o week in which for three days our national capital was a pageant, and all that grand review and bannered procession and na tional anthems could do celebrated peace, it may not be inapt to anticipate the time when the Prince of Peace and the Heir of Universal Dominion sbHll take possession of this nation and "tby land shall bo mar ried." In discussing the final destiny of this nation, it makes all the difference in the world whether we are on the way to a funeral or a wedding. The Bible leaves no doubt on this subject. In pulpits and on Flat Forms and in places of public concourse hear so many of the muffled drums of evil prophecy sounded, as though wo were on tbe wny to national interment, and beside Thebes and Babylon and Tyre in the ceme tery of dead nations our republic was tc be entombed, that I wish you to under stand It is not to be obsequies, but nup tials; not mausoleum, but carpeted altar; not cypress, but orange blossoms; not re quiem, but wedding march, for "thy land shall be married." I propose to name some of the suitors who are claiming the hand of this repub lic. This land is so fair, so beautiful, so affluent that it has many suitors, and it ■will depend much upon your advice whether this or that shall be accepted or rejected. In tbe first place, I remark: There is a greedy, all grasping monster who comes in as suitor seeking the hand of this republic, andtbat monster is known by the name of monopoly. Ills scepter Is made out of the iron of the rail track and the wire of telegraphy. He does everything for his own advantage and for the robbery of the people. ThiDgs went on from bad to worse until in the three legislatures of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania for a long time monopoly decided everything. If monop oly favors a law, it passes; if monopoly op poses a law it is rejected. Monopoly stands in tbe railroad depot putting into his Dockets in one year $200,000 In excess of til reasonable charges for services. Mo nopoly holds in his one hand the steam nower of locomotion and in the other the ■lectriclty of swift communication. Mo topoiy has the Republican party in one pocket and the Democratic party In the >ther pocket. Monopoly decides nomina lons and elections—city elections, state lections, national elections. With bribes le secures the votes of legislators, giving iem free passes, giving appointments to ?edy relatives to lucrative position, em oying them as attorneys if they are law ers, carrying their goods 15 per cent, less ( they are merchants, and if he find a case ery stubborn as well as very important ut's down before him the hard cash of ribery. But monopoly Is not so easily caught ow as when during the term of Mr. Bu innanthe Legislative Committee in one our States explored and exposed the .inner in which a certain railway cora any had obtained a donation of public nd. It was found out that thirteen of the inators of that State received $175,030 nong them, sixty members of the lower juse of that State received between £SOOO □d SIO,OOO each, the Governor of that ate received $50,000, his clerk received 5000, the Lieutenant-Governor received 10,000, nil the clerks cf the Legislature eeived SSOOO each, while $50,000 were di ded amoug the lobby agents. That thing l a larger or smaller scale is all the time >ing on in some of the States in the Union, it it is not so blundering as it used to be, id therefore not so easily exposed or ar sted. I tell you that the overshadowing irse of the United States to-day Is mo- Dpoly. He puts his hand upon every ishel of wheat, upon every sack of salt, ion every ton of coal, and every man, jmon and child in the United States feels e touch of that moneyed depotisin. I re ice that in twenty-four States of the lion already anti-monopoly leagues have en established. God speed them in the >rks of liberation. ? have nothing to sav against capital s. A man has a right to all the money can make honestly—l have nothing to - against corporations as such; without I in no great enterprise would be possible, . what I do say is that the same prin des are to be applied to capitalists and corporations that are applied to the orest man and the plainest laborer, jat is wrong for me is wrong for great rporations. If 1 take from you your operty without any adequate compensa n, I am a thief, and If a railway mages the property of the people with t making uny adequate compensation, it is a gigantic theft. What fs wrong on mall scale is wrong on a large scale, jopoly in England has ground hundreds bousands of her bestlpeople Into semi rvation and in Ireland has driven multi linous tenants almost to madness and the United States proposes to take the •ilth of 00,000,000 or 70,000.000 of people 1 put it in ii few silken wallets, lonopoly, brazen faced, iron fingered, ture hearted monopoly offers his hand his republic. He stretches It out over lakes and up the great railroads and rtbe telegraph poles of the continent says, "Here is my heart and hand; be to forever." Let the millions of the pie North, South, East and West forbid banns of that marriage, forbid them at ballot box, forbid them on the plat n, forbid them by great organizations, )id them by ihe overwhelming senti it of an outraged nation, forbid them he protest of the church of God, forbid n by prayer to high heaven. That od shall not have this Abigail. It shall be to all devouring monopoly that this 1 is to be married. lotbor suitor claiming the hand of this iblic is nihilism. a owns nothing but a knife for uni al cutthroatery und a nitroglycerin b for universal explosion. He believes o God, no government, no heaven and 11 except what be can make on earth! ew tbe czar of Russia, keeps many a , practically Imprisoned, killed Abra- Llncoln, would put to death every ; and president on earth, and If he had power would climb up until he could e the God of heaven from His throne :ake It himself, tue universal butcher, ranee It Is called communism; in the ed States It is called anarchism; in la it Is called nihilism, but that last is aost graphic and descriptive term. It is complete and eternal smash up. It d make the holding of property a e, and it would drive a dagger through ■ heart and put a torch to your dwell ind turn over this whole luud into the ession of theft and lust and rapine and ler. i?re does this monßter live? In all the •sand cities of this land. It otters its Ito this fair republic. It proposes to to pieces the ballot box, the legislative the congressional assembly. It would this land and divide it up, or rather le it down: It would give as much to dler as to the worker, to tbe bad as to •ood. Nihilism! This panther, having led across other lands, has set its paw ur soil, and It is only waiting for the In which to spring upon Its prey. It lihillsm that bur ed the rallroa<* prop at Pittsburg during the great riots; it lbllism that slew black people in our Northern cities during tlie war; It was ni hilism that mauled to death the Chinese immigrants years ago; It is nihilism that glares out of the windows of the drunker les upon sober people as they go by. Ahl Its power has never yet been testedl 1 pray God Its power may never be fully tested. It would, if it had the power, leave every church, chapel, cathedral, school house and college in ashes. Another suitor for the hand of this na tion Is Iniidellty. When the midnight ruf flnus despoiled the grave of A. T. Stewart in St. Mark's churchyard, everybody was shocked, but infidelity proposes something worse than that—the robbing of all the graves of Christendom of the hope of a re surrection. It proposes to chisel out from the tomb-stones of your Christian dead the words, "Asleep in Jesus" and substitute tbe words, "Obliteration—annihilation." Iniidellty proposes to take the letter from the world's Father, inviting the nations to virtue and happiness and tear it up Into fragments so small that you canno'. read a word of it. It proposes to take the conso lntlon from the broken hearted and the soothing pillow from the dying. Infidelity proposes to swear in the President of the United States and the supreme court and the Governors of States and the witnesses in the courtroom with their right hand on Palne's "Age of Reason" or Voltaire's "Philosophy of History." It proposes to take away from this country the book that makes the difference between the United States and the kingdom of Dahomey, be tween American civilization and Bornesian cannibalism. If infidelity could destroy the Scriptures, It would In 200 years turn the civilized nations back to semibarbarism, and then from semibarbarlsm into mid night savagery until the morals of a menag erie of tigers, rattlesnakes and chimpan zees would bo better than the morals of the shipwrecked human race. The only impulse in the right direction that this world has ever had has come from the Bible. It was the mother of Roman law and of healthful jurisprudence. That book has been the mother of all re forms and all charities—mother of Eng lish magna charta and American Declara tion of Independence. Benjamin Franklin, holding that Holy Book in his hand, stood before an Infidel club in Paris and read to tbem out of the prophecies of Habakkuk, aud the infidels, not knowing what book it was, declared that it was the best poetry they had ever heard, That book brought George Washington down on his knees in the snow at Valley Forge and led the dy ing Prince Albert to ask some one to sing "Bock of Ages." I tell you that the worst attempted crime of the century is the attempt to destroy this book. Yet infidelity, loathsome, stench ful, leprous, pestiferous, rotten monster stretches out Its hand, ichorous with the second death, to take the hand of this re public. It stretches it out through seduc tive magazines, and through lyceum leo tures and through caricatures of religion. It asks for all that part of tbe continent al ready fully settled, and the two-thirds not yet occupied. It says: "Give me all east of the Mississippi, with the keys of the church and with the Christian printing presses—then give me Wyoming, give me Alaska, give me Montana, give me Colo rado, give me all the States west of the Mississippi, and I will take those places and keep them by right of possession long bo lore the gospel can be fully Intrenched." But there Is another suitor that presents his claim for the hand of this republic. Ho Is mentioned In the verse following my text where It says. "As the bridegroom re joiceth over the bride, so shall thy God re joice over thee." Before Columbus and his 120 men embarked on the Santa Maria, the Pintn, and the Nina, for their wonderful voyage, what was the last thing they r a Fromentin. The loud cannonade ;aused by the beating of the horses' loofs on the surface of the ice terri ies the sturgeon and they swim juickly in advance of their pursuers, mmbling finally in swarms into the let that waits their capture.—London Telegraph. 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