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Coogsstloos, InflammatloUK. .ZS WoruiN, U iirm Kcvit, Worm Coll,-.. . .'ij 3 Trethlnn. Colic, Crying. Wakef ulueai .'iS 4- niarrhf a. of Children or Adulu 'iS T-Coaihs, Coida, Broncbltii 25 h Nearalsla, Tcsithai-hc, Fsosaobs 'is A-Hcausi-hi'. sick Headache, Vertigo . .'23 10 DyspssalSi bkdlassUoa,WeakBtoraacb.!0 1 1 uppren.eil or I'nlnflil I'erloda . .. .'J5 1 -i Whiles Tisi Profuse I'erlmls '23 13 t'roup. I.nrv nsills. IloarseDcsR 23 14 fcsii ii in -on Erysipelas, Eruptions. . .23 15 Rhruiiinii.nl. Ithcumatlc Pains 25 lO-Malarla. Chills, Fever and Airue . .25 IO-4'aiarrh. Influenza. Cold In tho Head .23 120 V tioonliitf.i'outfh 23 lll io-t lllHensea 23 W-MsnoM DeMllty l.oo SO Vriaars Weakness, Wetting Bed... .23 77 Jrln. Hay Fever 2.i Dr. HiimphrcvJ' Manual of all llseaacs at your DruKKlstsor Muileil Eres Humphrey' Med. Co., Cor. William & JohnSU., Sold iiv dftunrlata. or sent on receipt of price. New York Our Latest Music Offer. IMprho send ns the iinmes uiul ad drearies of three minic tesvshen or performers on the piano or organ and twenty live ceutH iu silver or oostace and we will semi you all of tbe following new and most popular pieces full sheet music arranged for piano or organ : "The Flower thai won my Heart" now beiui? Huiif by tho best known singers iu tho coun trv. ".Mamie O'Hourke' the latest Eopular waltz sontr, "March Manila, lovvey's March Two Step" us play ed by the famous U. 8. Marino Bund of Washington, D. C, aud live other pages of popular music. Address, Podulak Music Co., Indianapolis, Ind. tf. Dr. Fenncr's Golden Relief. KG A rues spccinc IN all INFLAMMATIONS Old Hors. Wounds, Rheumatism, Neuraliria oias. A SURE CUHE Or'P For am PAIN Inside or out. r Vdsalaws, W.laby mall saa.rralonia,NY 'I Si A SERVICE OF SONG. Rev. Dr. Talmage's Sermon on Music in Religion. Thr nest Made Rrntrrrt rnder Trouble Hod Mi-mil All to lilit-Tlie I'ruprr Mualc fur a Church. Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1S99.1 Vuhint;ion, Sept. i. Dr. Tatanagc to-day discussod a must attractive department of re ligious worship the service of sonp. Ilia Ideas will lie reoalved with interest by ull who love to lift their voices in praise in the Ixird'h houfe. The text is Neheiniah T:CT: "And tbey had two hundred forty and five singing men uml srftgtng women." The liest musio has liecu reinlercil un der trouble. The tirst duet that 1 know anything ot was given by Paul and Silas when they san;,' praises to Qod und the prisoners heard them. The Scotch Covenanters, hounded by the dogs of persecutionf sane; the psalms of David vith more spirit than they l.::vf rver since been rendered. The captives in the text had music left in them, and I declare that if tiny could tlud, amid all their trials, two hundred and forty and live singing men and singing women then In this day of Gospel sunlight and free from all per SeOUtlon there ought to he u great multitude of men and women willing tu sing the praises of Uod, Ail our churches need arousal on this subject. Those "ho can sing must throw their s.iuls Into the exercise, and those who cannot sing must learn bow, and It shall be heart to heart, voice to voice, hymn to hymn, anthem to anthem, und the music shall swell juliilaut with thanksgiving and tremulous with par don. Have you ever noticed the construc tion of the tinman throat as indicative of what God means us to do with It? In only an ordinary throat and lungs there arc 14 direct muscles and lit) in direct muscles that can produce a very great variety of Sounds, What dm s that mean'.' It means that you should tvingl Do you suppose that God, who ives us Mish a musical lustrumen as that, intends us to keep it shut (sup pose some great tyrant should get pos- easioa of the inn.sic.il Instruments of the world and should lock up the or gan of Westminster abbey, and the dfgan of Lucerne, and the organ nt Haarlem, and ths organ at Freiburg, and all the other greut musiral instru ments of the world. You would call tuch a man as that a monster, and yet you are more wicked if, with the human voice, a musical instrument of more woudcrfol adaptation than ull the mu sical instruments that man ever cre ates!, you shut it against the praise of Uod. Let those refuse to sing Who never knew our Ood. But children of the heavenly King Should speak their Joys abroad. Music seems to have lieeu horn in the loul of the natural world. The omnipo tent voice with which God command id the world into being seems to linger yet w.th its msjssty and sweetness, and you hear it In the graintield, iu the swoop of the wind amid the? mountain fastnesses, in the canary's warble und the thunder shock, in the brook's tin kle and the ocean's paean. There are soft cadences iu nature and loud notes, some of w hich wo cannot hear at ull and others that are so tcrrilic that we cannot appreciate them. The animalculae have their music, and tiie spioula of hay ami the globule of water are as certainly resonant with the voice of tiovl 115 the highest heavens In which the armies of the redeemed celebrate thiir victories. When the breath of the flower strikes the air, and the wing of the firefly cleaves it, there is souud and there is melody; and as to those utterances of nature which seem harsh and overwhelming, it is as when you stand in the midst of a great orchestra, and the sound almost rends your ear because you are too near to catch the lilendiug of the music, ao, my friends, we stand too near the desolutiiig storm and the frightful whirlwind to catch the blending of the music, but when that music rises to where God is, and the invisible beings who float above us, then I suppose the harmony is as sweet as it is tremendous. In the judgment day, that day of tumult and terror, there will be no dissonance to those who can appreciate the music. It will be as when sometimes a great organist. In executing some great piece, break down the instrument upon which he is pluying the music. So, when the great murch of the judgment day is played under the hand of earth quake, and storm and conflagration, the world hscli will break down with the music that is played on it. The fact is, we are all deaf, or we should understand that the whole universe is but one harmony the stars of the night only the ivory keys of a great Instrument on which God's ringers play the music of the spheres. Music seems dependent on the law of sjousties and mathematics, and yet Where these laws are not understood at all the art ut practiced. There ure U- day sou musical journals in China. 1 wo thousand years before Christ the Egyp tians practiced this art, Pythagoras learned it. I.asus of Hermione wrote essays on it. Plato and Aristotle intro duced it into their schools, but I have not much interest in that. My chief in terest is in the music of the, bible. Tbe bible, like a great harp with in numerable strings, swept by the fingers of inspiration, trembles with it. So far bock as the fourth chapter of Genesis you find the first organist and harper jubal. So far back as the thirty-first chapter of Genesis you find the first shoir. All up and down the Bible you find sacred music at weddings, at In augurations, at the treading of the wine press. Ths Hebrews understood how to musical signs above tea musical .When the Jews came trot their distant homes to the great festivals at Jerusalem, they brougbi harp and tim brel and trumpet and poured along the great Judean highways s rirer of har mony until in and around the temple the wealth of a nation's song and gladness had accumulated. In our day we have a division of labor In music, and we have one man to make the hymn, another man to make, the tune, another man to play it on the piano and another man to sing it. Not so in bible times. Miriam, the sister of Moses, after the passage of the Ked sea, composed a doxology, set it to music, clapped it on a cymbal and at the same time song it. David, the psnlmist, was at the same time poet, musical composer, harpist and singer, nnd the majority of his rhythm goes vibrating through all the ages. There were in bible timc stringed Instruments a harp of three strings playing by fret and Ikw, a harp of ten strings resounding only to the fingers of the performer. Then there was the crooked trumpet, fashioned out of the horn of the ox or the ram. Then there were the sistrum and the cymbals, clapped in the dance or beaten in the march. There were 4,000 Levitea, inc hest men of the country, whose only business it was to look after the music of the temple. These 4,000 Lev! tea were divided Into two classes und officiated on different day. Can you Imagine the harmony when these white robed I.cvitcs, before the symbols of God's presence and by the smoking altars and the candlesticks that sprang upward und branched out like trees of gold and under the wings of the eherublm, chanted the One Hundred and Thirty-sixth Psalm of David'.' Do you know how it was done'.' One part of ttiat greut choir stood up and chanted : "Oh, give thanks unto the Lord, lor He is good!" Then the other part of the choir, standing in some other pari of the temple, would come ill with the response: "For His mercy en dureth forever." Then the first part would take up the song again and say: "t'nto him who only doeth great won ders." The other part of ihe choir would come In with overwhelming re sponse: "For His mercy endurcth for ever," Until in the latter part of the sung, the music floating backward nnd forward, harmony grappling with har mony, everj trumpet sounding, every bosom heaving, one part of this greut white robed choir would lift the an them: "Oh, give thanks unto the God of Heaven!" und the other part of the J.evite choir would come in with the re sponse: "For His mercy endurcth for ever." But I am glad to know that all through the ages there has been grent attention paid to saered music. Ambrosias, Augustine, Gregory the Great, Charle magne, gave it their mighty influence, and in our dny the best musical genius is throwing itself on the altars oPGod. Handel and Mozart and Bach and Du rante nnd Wolf nnd scores of other men und women have given the best part of their genius to church music. A truth in words is not half so mighty as a truth in song. Luther's sermons have been forgotten, but the "Judgment Hymn" he composed is resounding yet all through Christendom. I congratulate the world and the church on I he advancement made in this urt the Edinburgh societies for the improvement of music, the (twits' slng iug societies, the Fxcter hall concerts, the triennial musical convocation at Dusseldorf, Germany, and Birmingham, England, the controversies of music ut Munich and Lcipsie, the Handel und IIbmIii nnd Harmonic nnd Mozart so cieties of this country, the academies of music in .New York, lirooklyn, Itoston, Charleston, New Orleans. Chicago and every city which has any enterprise, Now, friends, how are we to decide what is appropriate, especially for church music? There mny be a great many differences of opinion. In some of the churches they prefer a trained choir; in others they prefer the melo deon, the harp, the cornet, the organ; in other places they think these things ure the invention of the devil. Some would have a musical instrument played so loud you cannot stand it. and others would have it played so soft you cannot hear it. Some think a musical instrument ought to be played only In the interstices of worship, nnd then with indescribable softness, while others arc not satisfied unless there be startling contrusts and staccato pas sages that make the audience jump with greut eyes and hnir on end, ns from a vision of the witch of Lndor. Hut, while there may be great varie ties of opinion in regard to music, it seems to me that the general spirit of the word of God indicates what ought to be the great characteristics of church music. And I remark, in the first place, o prominent characteristic ought to be adaptiveness to devotion. Music thai may be appropriate for a concert hall, or the opera house, or the drawing room, may be inappropriate in church. Glees, madrigals, ballads, may be us innocent as psalms in their places. Hut church music has only one design, and that is devotion, nnd that which comet w ith the toss, the swing and the display of an opera house is a hindrance to the worship. From such performances we go away saying: "What splendid execu tion! Did you ever hear such a soprano Which of those solos did you like the better?" When, if we had been rightly wrought upon, we would have gont .ay saying: "Oh, how ray soul was lifted tip in the presence of God while they were singing that first hymn! never had such rapturous views ol Jesus Christ as my Saviour as when they were singing that last doxology." My friend, there is an everlasting dis tinction between music as an art and music as a help to devotion. Though s Schumann composed it, though a Mo zart played it, though a Sontag sang it, away with it if it does not make the heart better and honor Christ. Why should we rob the programmes ot worldly geytty when we have se many appropriate songs snd tunes composed in our own day, aa well aa that mag nificent inheritance of church psalm ody which has come down fragrant with the devotions of other genera tions tunes no more worn out than they were when our great-grandfathers climbed up to them from ths church pew to glory? Dear old souls, how thy used to sing! When they were cheerful, our grandfathers and grandmothers used to sing "Colches ter." When they were very medita tive, then the boarded meeting house rantr with "South Street" and St. Ed mund's." Were they struck through with great tenderness, they sang "WoodSloek.M Were they wrapped in visions of the glory of the church, they sang "TAon." Were they overborne with the love and glory of Christ, they sang "Aric'.i." And in those days there were I certain tunes married to certain hymns, and they have lived in peace a great while, these two old people, und we I have no right to divorce them. "What j God hath joined together let no mar put asunder." born ns we have been, amid this great wealth of church mu sic, augmented by the compositions Of urtists in our day, we ought not to b tempted out of the sphere of Christian harmony and try to seek nnconsecrated sounds. It is absurd for a millionaire to steal. 1 remark, also, that corcetness ought to be a characteristic of church music. , While we all ought to take part iu this service, with perhaps a few exceptions, j we ought ut the same time to cultivate ourselves in this sacerd art. God loves . hnrinony, und we ought to love it. There Is no devotion In a howl or u yelp. In this day, when there are so j many opportunities of high culture in i this sacred art, I declare that those parents arc guilty of neglect who let their sons anil daughters grow up knowing nothing about music. Iu some of the European cnthedrals the choir assembles every morning nnd every afternoon Of every day the whole year to perfect themselves in this art. and shall we begrudge the half hour we spend Friday nights in the rehearsal of sacred song for the Sabbath? Another characteristic must be spirit nnd life. Music ought to rush from the audience like the water from a rock clear, bright, sparkling, if all the other purt of the church sen Ice is dull, do not have the music dull. With so ninny thrilling things to sing about, away with all draw ling and st upidity. There is nothing that makes me so nervous as to sit in a pulpit and look off on nu nudiencc with their eyes three-fourths closed, and their lips almost shut, mumbling the praises of God. During one of my journeys I preached to an audience of 2,(1110 or 3.CII0 people, nnd all the music they made together did not equal one skylnrk! People do not sleep at a coronation; do not let us sleep when we come to a Saviour's cmw ning. In order to n proper discharge of this duty, let ns stand up, save as npe or weakness or fati;;ue excuses us. Seated in an easy pew we cannot do this duty half so well as when uprijrht we throw our whole body into it. Let our song be like nn acclamation of victory. You have a right to sing do not surrender your prerogative. If iu Ihe perform ance of your duty, or the attempt at it. you should lose your place in the mu sical scale und be one (' below when you ought, to be one C above, or you should come in half a bar behind, we will ex cuse you! Still, it is better to do I as Paul says and sing "with the spirit nnd the understanding al io." Again 1 remark church music must be congregational. This opportunity must be brought down w it bin i he range of the whole audience. A song that the worshipers cannot sing is of no more use to them than a sermon in Choctaw, Whnt an easy kind of church it must be where the minister does all the preach ing nnd the elders ull the praying nnd the choir all the singing! There nr but very few churches where there arc "245 singing men und singing women." Tn some churches it Is almost consid ered a disturbance if n man let out his voice to full compass, and the people get up on tiptoe and look over between the spring hats and wonder what that man is making all the noise about. In Syracuse In a Presbyterian church there was one member who came to me when I was the pastor of another church in that city and told me his trouble, bow thnt ns he persisted in singing on the Sabbath dny a committee, made up of the session of the choir, had come to ask him if he would noj Mist please to keep still! You have a right to sing. Jonathan Edwards used to set npnrt whole days for singing. Let us wake up to this duty. I.ct ns sing alone, sing in our families, sing in our schools, sing In our churches. I want to rouse you to an unanimity In Christian song thnt has never yet been exhibited. Come, now; clenryour throats nnd get ready for this duty. I never shall forget henringa Frenchman sing the "Marseillaise" on the Champs Elyseee, Paris, just before the battle of Sedan, In 1870. I never saw such en thusiasm before or since. As he sang that national nir. oh, how the French men shouted! Hnve you ever In tin English assemblage heard a band play "Ood Save the Queen T' If you hnve, you know something about the enthu siasm of a national air. Now. I tell you that these songs we Sing Sabbath by Sabbath are the na tional airs of the Kingdom of neaven, and if you do not learn to sing them hcrn how do you ever expect to sing the song of Moses and tbe Lamb? I should not be surprised at all if some of the best anthems of Heaven were made up of some of the best songs of earth. May God increase our reverence for Chrls tisn psalmody and keep us from dis gracing it by our indifference and friv olity. "Bramble Dobbs thinks he is a good poker plsyer, doesn't he? Thorn Yes, but It costs him a good deal mt money to think so. N. T. Jour- Scfflsskrlollege rm iv I ' Prominent Business Men IlOVei' 1000! Who have employed o:ir graduates tell us that we are too modest In our claims of superiority in training young men anJ women for business 0H 0t A TKCiJSA.VO "Ycur Cnltige cicr.U'j inderi.:n!s fie nrf of moA "7 Its graritiatts of MACTKM vse to PRACTICAL nwn, If I itiatt judgv fruav.afas d6Sfl M. Leonard who has nit st nrcentttblt; fitted the position i f ater,a.)rzphrr cr1 fcc keeper In my oflicn since leaving yuur Colirn-?. I thank you fof having tjioen me such a$$ht ance and shall certainty recommend Sehisslrr College to any oa fa need vf coi-petcni and thoroughly practical help. Ycur; vcr:j 4.r:ihj. " ELI H. EWRCDGC. Typewriter Repair Works, 16 S. VrocdSt.. Phlla. Don't you think it would be wise to pre pare for business at Schlssler College? Send for Illustrated Prospectus. A most complete ami successful mall course Is provided for those wh) CUUMt attend petsoiiallu- Particulars mailed on request. 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