WESHOULD FORGIVEAN The Sunday Sermon as Delivered by the : Brooklyn Divine. TrEXT: “Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more.” —Hebrews viil., 12 The national flower of the Egyptians is the heliofrope, of the Assyrians is the water lily, of the Hindoos is the marigold, of the Chinese is the chrysanthemum. “We haveno national flower, but there is hardly any flecwer more suggestive to many of us than the forgetmenot. Weall like to be remem- bered, and one of our misfortunes is that there are so many things we cannot remem- ber. Mnemonics, or the art of assistinz memory, is an important art. It was first suggested by Simonides of Cos five hundred years before Christ. Persons who had but little power to recall evints, or put facts and names and dates in processions, have turough this art had their memory reinforced to an almost incredible extent. A good memory is an almost in-’ valuable possession. By all means cultivate it. I had an azel frieni who, detained all night at a miserable depot in waiting for a rail train fast in the snow banks, entertained a group ol some ten to fifteen clergymen, likewise detained on their way home from a ‘meeting of presbytery, first, with a piecs of ebalk, drawing out on the black and sooty wails of the depot the characters of Walter Beott’s Marmion,” and then recitinz from memory the whole of that posm of some eighty pages in fine print. My old friend, through great aze, lost his memory, and when I asked him if this story of the railroad depot was true he said, I do not remeinbér now, but it was just like me. Let me sce,” said he to me, ‘‘have I ever seen you before?” “Yes,” Isaid, ‘‘you were my guest last night and I was with you an hour ago.” What an awful contrast ia that man between the greatest memory I ever knew and no memory at all. ‘But right along with this art of reesllec- * tion, which I cannot too highly eulogize, is ene quite as important and yet I never heard it applauded. 1 mean the art oi for- getting. There is a splendid faculty in that direction that we all need to cultivate. We might, through that process, be ten times happier and more useful than we now are. ‘We have been told that forgetfulness is a weakness .and ought to be avoided by all possible means. So far from weakness, my text ascribes it to God. It is tae very top of emnipotence that God is able to obliteraie a part of His own memory. If we repent of sin and rightly seek the divine forgiveness, the record of the misbehavior is not only erossed off the book, but God actually lets it pass out of memory. “Their sins and their iniquities will I re- member no more.” To reinember no more is to forget, and you cannot make anything else out of it. God's power oi forgetting is #0 great that if two men appeal to Him, and the ene man, after a life all right, gets the sins of his heart pardoned, and the other man, after a life of abomination, gets par- doned, God remembers no more against one than against the other. The eatire past of both the moralist, with his imperfections, and the profligate, with his debaucaeries, is as much obliterated in the one case as in the other. Forgotten, forever and forever. *“Their sins and their iniquities will I re- member no more.” This sublime attribute of forzetfulness on the part of God you and I need ia cur finite way to imitate. You will do well to cast out of your recollection all wrongs done you. During the course of one’s life he is sure to be misrepresented, to be lied about, to be'in- ured, There are those who keep these hings fresh by frequent rehearsal. It things have appeared in print they kesp them in their scrapbook, for they cut these precious paragraphs out of newspapers or books and at leisure times lovk them over, or they have them tied up in bundles or thrust in pigeon- holes, and vney frequently regale themselves and their friends by an inspection of these flings, these sarcasms, these falsehoods, these cruelties. I have known gentlemen who carried them in their pocketbooks, so that they pould easily getat these irritations, and they put their right hand in the inside of the coat cket over the heartandsay: ‘‘Loox here! Pet me show you something.” Scientists eatch wasps, and hornets, and poisonous in- sects and transfix them in curiosity bureaus forstudy. and that is well. But these of whom 1 speak catch the wasps, ani the hor- nets, and the poisonous insects, and play with them and put then on ta emseives and on their friends, and see how far the noxious insects can jump and show how deep they pan sting. Have no such scrapbook. Keep nothing in your possession that is disagree- able. Tear up the falsehoods, and the slan- ders, and the hypercriticisms. Imitate the Lord in my text and forzet, actually forget, sublimaly forget. There is #0 bappiness for you in any other plan of ae You see all around you, in the phurch and out of the church, dispositions acerb, malign, cynical, pessimistic. Do you know how these men and women got that disposition? It was by the embalmments of things pantherine and viperous. They have spent much of their time in calling the roll ‘of all the rats that have nibbled at theirrep- atation. Their soul is a cage of vultures. Everything in them is sour or imbittered. The milk of human kindness has been surdled. They donot believe inanybody or anything. f they see two people whispering they think it is about themselves. If they see two people laughing they think it is about themseives. Where there is one sweet pip- pin in their orchard there are fifty crab apples. They have never been able to for- a They do not want to forget. They never will forget. Their wretcaednsss is su- preme, for no one can be happy if he carries petually in mind the mean things that have been done him. ‘Un the other hand, you can find here and there a man or woman (for there are not many of them) whose disposition is genial and summery. Why? Have they always been treated well? Oh, no. Hard things Bave been said against them. They bave been charged with officiousnsss; and their genecrosities have been set down to a desires for display, and they have many a time been the subject of tittle-tattie, and they have had enouzh small assau'ts like gnats and enough great attacks like lions to have made them perpetually miserable, if they ‘ would have consented to be miserable, But they have bad enough divine philoso- by to cast off the annoyaucer, and they Pe kept themselves in the sunlight of God’s favor, and have realiz>d that these oppositions and hindrancas are a part of a wichty discipline, by waich they are to be prepared for ussiuluess anl heaven. The secratof it all is, they hava by the help of the eternal Godlearned how to for et. Another practical thouzht—when our faults are repented ‘of lst them go out of mind. 1f God forgetsthem, we have arigat to forget them. Hayinz once repented of our infeiicities and misdemeanors, thera is no need of our repenting of them azain. Suppese Towe you a large sum of money, and vou are persuaded I an incapacitated to pay. and you give me acquittal from that obligation. You say: “1 cancsal that debt. All is right now, Start again.” “And the pext day I come in and say: :‘Xouw about that big debt Towed you. I have in to get you to let me off. I feel about it 1 cannot rest. Do let me oft.” ly with a litte impatience: 1 did let i rept Don’t bother yourself and bother with any more of that discussion.” “The following day I come in and dear sir; abour that debi. 1 can over the iact that I owed you that ‘mone It is something that weighs on my mind like a ‘miistont.! Do forzive me t )t This time. you. lear. 10s. say: “You. are a nuisance. mERN by this reiti am smo: | 1 DEFORGET tians guilty of worse folly than that. W 1616 Might that they ova pan of recent sins, what is the use of yourself and insulting forgive sins’ that lonz forget them? you and 365 times a year, if you As far as life drop. ture to disturb us without running a special train info the great gone-by to fetch us as special freight things left behind. Some tan years ago, when there was a graat railroad strike, I remember seeinz all alonz the rouse from Omaha to Chicagoand from Chicago to New York hundredsand thousands of freight cars switchel on thas side tracks, those cars loadsd with all kinds of perishable material, decaying and wastinz. After the strike was over did the railroad companies bring all that perished material down to the markets? No, they thraw it off whera it was destroyed, and loaded up with something eis2. L2t the lonz traia of ycur thougzats throw off the worse than use- less fraight of a corrust and destroyed past, and loai up wita gratitude and faith and holy deter.nination. We donot pleas2 Gol by the cultivation of the miserable. He would rataer ses us haspy than vo se usde- pressed. You would rathsr s2e your cail- dren laugh than to sae them cry, and your Heavenly Father has no fondness for hys- terics. Not only forget your pardousd transgres- sions, but allow others t> forgat tham. The chief stock on hand of maay people is to recounts, in prayer meetinzs an.t pulpits what big scouadrels they oace were. They not only will not forget their torgiven de- ficits, but they seam to ba determined that the courch and the world shall not forget them. If you want to declarz that you have bean tha chief of sinners and extol ths graca that could save suca a wrelca as you wars do so, but do nos go info particulars. Do not tell how mny times you gos drun’s, or to what bad places you want, or how many free rides you had in the prison van before you were converted. Lumpit, brother; give it to us in bulk. If you have any scars got in honorable warfare, show them, bus if you have scirs got in ignoble warfare, do not display them. I know you will quote the Bible raferen:e to the horrible pit from which you avere digged. Yes, be thankful for that rescus, but do not make displays of the mud of that horrible pit or splash it ovar other psopie. Sometimes [ have felt in Christian meetings discomfited and unfit for Chistian servics because I had dona nona of thoss things which seemad to be in the estimation of many necessary for Christian usefulness, for I never swore a word, or ever got drung, or went to compromising placas, or was guilty of assault or battery, or ever uttered a slanderous word, or ever did any one a hurt, although I know my heart was sin- tul enough, ani I sail to mysszlf, “Theres is no use of ny trying to do any good, for I never went througn thos: depraved ex- periences;” but afterward I saw consolation in the taought that no ona gained any ordination by the laying on of the hands of dissoluteness and infamy. And though an ordinary moral life, endinz in a Christian life, may not be as dramatic a story to tell about, let us be grateful to God rather than worry about it, if we hava never plunzed into outward abominations, It may be appropriate in a meeting of re- formed drunkards or reformel debauchees to gnote for those not reformed how desperate and nasty you onca were, but do not drive a scavenger’s cart into assemblages of people, the most of whom have always been decent and respectable. But I have been sometimes in great evangelistic meetings whare peoples went into particularsabou? the sins that they once committed, so much so that I' felt like putting my hand on my pocketbook or call- ing the police lest these reformed men might fall from grace and go abt their old business of theft or drunkenness or cutthroatery. It your sins have been forgiven and your life purified, forget the waywardness of the past and allow others to forget it. But what I most want in the light of this text to impress upon my hearers and readers is that we have a sin-forgetting God. Sup- pose thaton thelast day-—called the lastday because the sun will never again ris3 upon our earth, the earth itself beinx flung into fiery demolition—supposing that on that last day a group of infernal spirits should soms- how get near enough the gate of heaven and challenge our entrance, and s:y: ‘How canst toon, the just Lord, let taocse souls into the realm of supsrnal gladnsss? Why, they said a great many things they naver ougat to have said, and they did a great many things they ought never to have done. Sinners are they: sinners all.” ) And suppose God should deign to answer, He might say: ‘‘Yes. but did not My only Son die for their ransom? Did He not pay the price? Not one drop of blood was re- tained in His arteries, not ons nerve of His that was not wrung in the torture. He'took in His own body and soul all the suff:rings that ttose sinners deserve. They pleaded that sacrifice. They took the full pardon that [ promised to all who, through My Son, earnestly applied for it, and it passod out of My mind that they wera offanders. I torgot all about it. Yes, I forgotallabout it. ‘Their sins and their iniguities do I re- member no more.’” A sin-forgetting God! That is clear beyend and far above a sin- pardoning God. How oiten we hear it said: “I can for- give, but I cannot forget.” That is equal to saying, ‘‘I verbally admit it is all right, but I will keep the old gruige good.” u- man forgiveness isotten a flimsy affair. « It does not go deep down. . It does not reaca far up. St does not fix things up. Thecon- testants may shake hands, or passin each other on the highway thay may spz2ak tae “Good morning” or “Good nigat,” put the old cordiality never returns. The relations always remain strained. There is somstainz in the demeanor ever after that ssems to say, ‘I would not do you harm; indeed, I wish you well, but that untortunase affair can never pass out of my find.” There may no hard words pass be- tween them, but until death breaks in the same coolness ramains. But God lets ous pardoned off2nses go into oblivion. He never throws them up to us again. = He feels as kindly toward us as though we had bezn spotless and positively angelic all along. Many yearsago a family, consisting of the husband and wife and little girl of two years, lived far out in a cabin ona western prairie. The husband took a few cattle to market. ‘Before he started his little child asked him to bay for her a doll and he promised. He could after the sale ‘of the certainly would not forget the doll ho had roniised. t & cold toe cattle and obtained the groc:ries for his household and the doll for his little darling. He started home along the dismal road at nighttall. As hs went along on horseback a thunder yo never gab f the road, and in tha heaviest part of the 7 rm, he “heard a child cry. Robbers hal ugat be des] =, but the child's cry be Tri ay and so he pri ‘the darsness al little one faggadiputan orm and almose p as well ashe 4 TOSRINE SL [s SERMON Well, my friends, thereare many Chris- REV. DR. TALMAGE | pi, us Ci 5 ere 1orgiv God has forgotten te, Why do Ly not Noy. you drag the load on with : pray every day, you ask God to recall occurences which Lhe has not only forgiven but forgotten. Quit thisfolly. Ido not ask you less to re- aliza the turpitude of sin, but I ask youtoa higher faith in the promise of God and the full deliverance of his mercy. He does not. givea receipt for part payment, or so much received on aczount, but recaipt in full, God having for Christ's sake decreed, “your sins and your iniguities willl remember no more.” ossible, let the disazre2ables of Ve have enough things in the presentand there will be enough in the fu- cattle purchase household necessities, and In the villaze to which he wens storm broke, and in the most lonely part wn to do some bad work along that d it was known that this herdsman money with him, the prics of the cattle uated nd all in ht of a hollow that he ad where the child ur | fort. —New York Pros, ‘husband through the ‘darkness. Bat, no. -4 the wife of the house, who was. insensible as from some great calamity. On inquiry the returned husbani found "that the little child of that cabin was gone. She had wandered out'to mest her father and get the presant he had promised. and the child was lost. Taen the father unrolled from the blanket the child he had found -in the fields, and lo! it was his own child and the lost one of the prairie home, and the cabin quaked with the shout over the lost one foun. ow suggestive of the fact that once we wera lost in the open fields or among the mountain crags, God’s wandering children, and He found us dying in the tempest and wrappad us in tha mantle of His love and fetchad us home, gladness ani congratula- tion bidding us wslcome. The fact is that the world do2s not know God, or they would all flock to Him, Through their own blind- ness or the fault of some rough preaching that has got abroad ia the centuries, many men and women have an idea that Godisa tyrant, an oppressor, an autocrat. a Nana Sahib, an omnipotent Herod Antipas. Itis a libel azainst the Almigaty; it is a slander against ths heavens; it is a defamation of the infinities. I countad in my Bible 304 tims: ths world “mercy,” sinzle or compounded with other words. Icouated in my Bible 473 times the word ‘‘love,” sinzle or compounded with other words. Then I got tired counting. Perhaps you might count more, being better at figures. But the Hevrew and the Greek and the English languages have been taxed till they cannot pay any more tribute to the love and mercy and kindness and grace and charity and tenderness and friendship and benevolencs and sympathy and bounteous- ness and fataerliness and motherliness and patience and pardon of our God. hers are cartain names so magnetic that their pronunciation thrills all who hear it, Such is the nama of the Italian soldier and liberator, Garibaldi. Marching with. his troops, hie met a shepherd who was in great distress becauss ha had lost a lamb. Gari- baldi said to his troops: ‘‘La3t. us help this poor shepherd find his lamb.” . And so, with lanterns and torches, they explored the mountains, but did nov find the lamb, and after an unsuccsssiul search late at night thoy went to their encampment. The next morning Garibaldi was found asleep far on into the day, and they wakenzd him for soms purposa and found that he had not given up the search when the soldiers dil, but had kept on still farther into thenightand had found it,and he pulled down the blankats from his couch and thers lay tae lamb, whica Garibaldi ordered im- mediately taken to its owner. So the Com- mander of all the hosts-of heaven turned aside from His glorious and victorious march throug the esnturies of heaven and said: “I will go and recover that lost werld, and that race of whom Adam was the pro- genitor, and les ail who will accompany And throuzi ths night they came, but I do no’ s2e that the angelic escort came any farther than the clouls, bub their most illus- trious Liz2ader cams all the way down,and by the tims His errand is done our little world, our wandering and lost world, our world flaecy with the light, will be found in'the bosom of the Great Shepherd, and then all hzaven will take up the cantata ani sing: *‘The lost sh29p is found.” So I set open the wide gata of my text, inviting you all to coms into the mercy and pardon of God; yea, still further, into the ruins of the place waere onc: Was kept the knowledge of your iniquities. . . Tne placa has boagn tora down and the records destroyed, and you will find the ruins more dilapidated and broken and prostrata than th ruins of Melrose or Kenil- worth, for from thsse lash ruins you can pick up some fragment of a sculptured stone, or you can see the curva of some brokea arch, but after your rapentancas and your forgive- ness you cannot find in all the memory of God a fragment of all your pardoned sins so large as a needle’'s point. ‘‘Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more.” And none of that will surprise you if you will climb to ths top of a bluff back of Jern- salem (it took us only five‘or ten minutes to climb it), and see what went on when the plateau of limestone was shaken by a par- oxysm that set the rocks, which had been upright, aslant, and on the trembling cross- piecas of the split lumber hung the quivering form of Him whoss life was thrust out by metallic points of cruelty that sickened the noonday sua till it fainted and fell back on the black lounge of the Judean midnight. Six different kinds of - sounds were heard on that night which was interjected into the daylizht of Christ's assassination. The neighing of the war horses—ror some of the soldiers wera in the saddle—was one sovad, the bang of the hammers was a second sound; the jeer of malignants was a third sound: the weeping of friends and coadju- tors was a fourth sound; ths plash of blood on th rocks was a fifth sound: ths groan of the expiring Lord was a sixth sound. And they all commingled into one sadness. Over a plaze in Russia where wolves were pursuing a load of travelers, and to save them a servant sprang from the sled into the mouths of the wild beasts and was de- voured, and theraby the other lives were saved, are inscribed the words: ‘*‘Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friend.” Many a surgeon in our own tims hasin tracheotomy with his own lips drawn from the windpipe of a diptheric patient that which cured the patient and slew the sur- geon, and all have honorad the self'sacrifics. But all other scenss of sacrifice pale befora this most illustrious Martyr of all time and all eternity. ' Aiter that agonizing spectacle in behalf of our fallen race nothing about the sin-forzstting God is too stupendous for my faith, ani I accept the promise, and will you not all accapt it? *‘Their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more.” Cats as Swimmers. Many cats are fond of, rather than averse to, water, and take to that ele- ment freely. Some years ago, when re- siding on the banks of the Thames (writes a correspondent of Land and Water), I bad a cat which used regularly to swim across the river toan eyot which was infested with rats, the distance be- ing forty yards. I often used to carry her acrbss the broadest part of the stream, opposite my house, at least 100 yards, in a punt, and land her on the opposite bank, when, regardless of weather or flood, she would boldly fol- low the punt home. She always swam very low inthe water, with tail erect, and used to shake herself like a dog upon coming ashore. She was well known ih my neighborhood, and many people ‘used to come and see the per— formance. Although a dread of water is instinctive in cats, 1f broight up ona riverside they lose all fear of wet and, once the aversion is overcome, love to dabble about and swim. Biting the Nails. The habit is comparaively easy to break off if one goes at it in the right way. A middle aced woman, after hav- ing bitten her nails almost her entire lifetime, broke herself of the habit by beginning on one finger. This she per- sisteatly left alone and carefully culti- vated the finger nail, giving a certain amount of attention to it every day. When this finger nail had grown to the usual length she took up another, andso. on, until all her nails except one were lin perfect shape. It took months of the | most: persistent effort to break up the last remaining scrap of this tenacious ef- Mn ARTEL fi Silinesis gh! were zatherad and stood around LESSON FOR:SUNDAY, JUNE 12." “The Den of Lions,”” Daniel vi, 10.28. Golden Text, Danial vi., 28, Jommentary. 16. *“Then the king commanded, and thoy brought'Daniel and cast him into the den of lions.”” After the kingdom passed into the hands of the Medes, Darius made Daniel the first of three presidents over 120 provinces. But the princes and other presidents hated him and sought to accomplish his death, as recorded in the previous part of this chap- ter. Daniel is fearless of man, and faith. fully waits upon his God. The result is that Daniel i cast into the lion’s den, and to all appearance has perished. The kind words from the king are a hope that it may Ye so, rather than an assurance that it will © SO. “17. “And a stone was brought and laid upon the mouth of the den; and the king scaled it with his own signet.” So the un- godly prosper in the world, and the devil is permitted to put the saints of God in prison and ofttimes to kill them (Ps. lxxiii., 12, Rev. ii,, 10; Jobn xvi., 2). But the child of God is to be prepared for these things, and not to think them strange nor be offended when they come (Math. x.,28;.I Pet. iv.,12,13; John xvi., 1). 18. *‘Then the king went to his palace and passed the night feasting.” Although the king loved Daniel and labored hard to deliver him (verses 14, 15), yet even the king, with all his power, was powerless against the law, from which let us learn that love cannot always deliver,nor can the law save any one. Even the law of God, which is holy and just and good, cannot give life nor justify the sinner (Gal, iii., 21; ii., 16; Rom. 1ii., 20). 19. “Then the king arose very early in the morning and went in haste unto the den of lions.” This early morning victory and deliverance of Daniel is very suggestive of a morning of deliverance for Daniel's people, which is now drawing nigh. See Ps. xxx., b; xlvi., 5, margin; xjix, 14; cxxx., 6; II Sam. xxiii, 3, 4. 1t is also seen in the early morning deliverance of Mark vi., 46-48. There is a class of people, however, for whom there will be no morning (Isa. viii., 20, R, V, 20. “O Daniel, servant of the living God, is thy God, whom thou servest continually, able to deliver thee from the lions? It wasa great and lamentable cry from the greatest earthly monarch of the time, a cry of hope, but not ot assurance. be known the God of Daniel and of David he would not have asked if God was able to deliver. Read the experience of David and Paul in I Sam. xvii, 34-86; II Tim. iv., 17, 18, and let your own heart say, ‘I am persuaded that He is able” II Tim. i., 12), ; + 21. “Then said Daniel unto the king, O king, live forever.” With what eagerness must the king have listened for a reply from the den, faintly hoping for yet hardly dar- ing to expect’a reply. But there is a reply prompt and clear and the king’s heart is exceedingly glad (verse 28). Whatever may have been the significance of the words, “Live forever,” the believer in Jesus knows thatthe has eternal life (John v., 24: vi., 47.) 22. “My hath sent His angels, and hath shut the lions’ mouths, that they have not hurt me.” Blessed be God and ees fas holy apgels that excel In strength; g_ His cotiimands, harkening to His word (Ps. ciil., 21,22). Consider the power of ona angel as seen in the case of Hezekiah and of Peter (Isa. xxx., 86; Acts xii, 6-10), and remember that these same angels are your ministering spirits ever with you, serving unseen and unthanked (Heb. i., 14). 238. *‘So Daniel was taken up out of the den, and no manner of hurt was found upon him, because he believed in his God.” Dan in a figure, suffered the extreme penaity o the law, and came forth from the place of - death, beyond death and judgment, without any manner of hurt u him. Every true believer in Jesus is now dead with Christ, risen with Christ and has passed from death unto life, (Col, iii.,1-3; John v., 24). There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ, nothing can separate us from His love, and in the morning of resurrection it shail be found that not a hair ot our head has per- ished, (Rom. viii., 1, 89; Luke ii, 18). 24. **And the king commanded, and the; brought those men which had accused Daniel and theyeast them into the den of lions, them, their childrea and their wives.” The triumphing of the wicked is short, and the joy of the hypocrite is but for a moment (Job. xx., 5). This is a sample of those for whom there is no morning, or who in the morning of victory of those who trust in the Lord shall be punished with everlasting de- struction from His presence (II Thess. i., 1-10). See how many were affected by their sin. No man liveth unto himself. earealways affecting others either for good or evil. 25. “Then King. Darius wrote unto all people, nations and languages that dwell in all the earth, Peace be multiplied unto you.” That which caused Darius to make this proclamation to all nations was the power of the God of Israel manifested on behalf of Daniel, the Jew The time will come when the power of this same God shall be so mani- fest on behalf of all Israel that all nations shall thus know God and honor Him as the God of the whole earth (Ezek, xxxvii., 26- 28: xxxviii., 23). 26. *IL make a decree that in every do- minior of my kingdom men tremble and fear before the God of Daniel.” Thus Darius does the noblest thing any man every did or could do, he exalts God, he glorifies God be- fore all nations, and speaks of His eternal kingdom. He makes us think of the time when ‘‘all Kings shall fall down before Him; all nations shall serve Him?” (Ps. Ixxii., 11; Ixxxvi.. 9, 10). “The lofty looks of man shall be humbled, and the haughtiness of men shall be bowed down, and the Lord alone shall be exalted in that aay” (Isa. ii, 17), 59. ‘He delivereth and rescueth, and He worketh signs and wonders in heaven and in earth, Hs hath delivered Daniel from the power of the lions.” Darius had seen the deliverance of one man from a lion's den: but Daniel could tell .of the deliver. ance of millions from the bondage of Egypt, of their food coming from heaven every day for forty years, of sea and river divided for them to pass through on dry land, of walled cities falling down as men shouted, and many such wonderful works of a wonderful God. We can tell of dead bodies actually raised from their graves as Lazarus and oth- ers, and of a time when all in their graves shall come forth, and of some who will never die. Let us magnify the name of Him who only doeth all these things. o 28. **So this Daniel prospered in the reign of Daring, and in the reign of Cyrus the Fersian.” And all because he was a man of prayer, and God was with him. He feared not the face of man, nor did he fear death; but he feared only to sin against God. He honored (God, and God honored him, even in this wortd (I Sam. ii, 30).— Lesson Helpers Habit establishes no right. There are per- sons who seem to suppose that what they do is right because it is their habit. One never goes to a funeral; another never makes a wedding gift; a third never attends evening church. But specific duties cannot be evaded by an *‘I never do that.”” The best way is not te get into the ~habit-of never doing that which it may sometimes be one’s duty to do. — [Sunday School Times. ‘Whilethe Society for the Suppression of Vice is maintaining an uncomprising war- fare, as it has done for years, against those hydra headed mousters, gambling and drunkenness, is it ton much to ask Christian men and women, philanthropists, parents, and good citizens to sustain them by fur- nishing them with the sinews of war to fight with? Tax Electrical Dapartment of the United States Patent Office is overecrowde | with ap. ications for patents, some oi whica have. THE CHRISTIAN WARFARE. Thou fichtest the Christian warfare—so théu sayest; ? . : Fight vu. anu conquer—Heaven youchsafe thou mayest; . But’ ark the Captain's orders, lest thou The lawless warrior ne’er is crowned at all. There are who seek, but never enter in; There are who fight and fight, but never win; : There are who soar, but never reach the skies; $ Who run—run all—but one receives the prize. : Thou fightest; ’tis well—beat not the air in 4 3 Thou runnest; obtain, Gird up thy loins, and to thyself take heed, That thou’rt a soldier of the cross indeed. so run, that running thou The Thijstian warfare? Satan fain would fee Some other warfare would do just as well! Wouldst thou at such a bold suggestion start? Then waicn lest he beguile thee with his ait. Fightest thou the Christian warfare? Dost hou know What is the Christian warfare? show The spoil, the trophy. and the glorious scar, The mark peculiar to that wondrous war? A spot thou hast—is it the halo bright That rests upon and seals the sons of light? Thou find’st an inward conflict! Who does not? He does who murmurs at his earthly lot, Who feels an aching void within his breast, Yet spurns the Saviour’s meek and lowly rest. Thou find’st an inward conflict; so does he Whose bosom, restless as the raging sea, Still foams up mire; who, goaded, feels the Canst thou smart, The war of conscience with a graceless eart. He does, whose dead profession mars his mirth, Who, heaven-bound, loves his treasure on the ex ‘Whose zigzng aim 'twixt right and wrong to steer Meets only censure and unholy jeer. He do~+ who loves the world and holds it ast, But k..u ns he must resign it at the last, And, anxious to escape a dreadful hell, Reiuctantly consents in heaven to dwe 1, And, both worlds vainly seeking to his cost, Too late repentant, finds that both are lost! —| From a Very Old Manuscript. = 1S THE BIBLE INSPIRED OF GOD? Says one, “I think that the Bible may be a true history, but that is no proof of its in- spiration. It does not require divine inspira- tion to write a true history.” So you think it an easy matter to tell the truth do you? 1 wish you could make other people think so. Suppose vou go and read a file of the newspapers published just before the last election, and see if you do not think it re- quires divine inspiration to tell the truth, or even to find it out after it is told. Truth is mighty hard to get at, as you can see by per- sing the daily papers on the eve of an elec- tion. HR Li ARE SiG There are certain things in the Bible which to my mind, bear the impress of Divinity. A skeptic will fell you what a race of old sinners we read about in the Bible! Noah got drink ; David was guilty of adultery and murder; Solomon was an idolater, an wrought folly ; Peter denied his Lord, and Judas sold him for 30 pieces of silver; all these people that the Bible talks about se much to us, are a pretty set of men! Very well; what kind of men do_you ex- pect to read about in the Bible? Noah got drunk. Is that strange? Did no_oue else ever get drunk? Peter cursed and swore. Are there not other men who curse and swear? Judas, an apostle, sold his Lord, who said he had chosen twelve, and one of them was a devil. Do you not sometimes find a Judas in the church even nowadays? One in twelve was a thief and a traitor then, and we need not be surprised if we find about the same average Now. > But you seem to think that when you read about a man in the Bible he is sure to be free from sll kinds of errors, frailties, fauits end sins. You have formed this idea of men from reading in Sunday-school books about good children, who usually die young; or perusing excellent biographies, which as oy read them cause you to exclaim, “I wish I could be as good as that person was, but 1 never shall.” No, I presume you never will, and if you knew the whole story about the person you might not feel so deeply on the subject. ; ; Do you suppose that if the Bible had been written by some learned doctor, revised by a committee of eminent divines, and pub- lished by some great religious society, we should ever have heard of Noah’s drunken- ness, of Abraham's deception, of Lot’s dis- grace, of Jacob's cheating, of Paul and Bar- nabas’s quarreling, or of Peter's lying, curs- ing, or dissembling? Not at all. he good men, when they came to such an incident. would have said, “There is no use in saying anything about that. 1t is all past and gone; it will not help anything, and will only hurt the cause.” a com- mittee of such «eminent divines had prepared the Bible you would have had a biography of men whose characters were patterns of piety, and propriety, in- stead of poor sinners, as théy were. 'Some- times a man writes his own diary and hap. ens to leave it for some one to print after e is dead; but he leaves out all the mean tricks he ever did, and puts in all the good acts be can think of; and you read the pages, filled: with astonishment, and think, “What a wonderfnlly good man be was!” But when the Almighty writes a man’s life he tells the truth about him; and there are not many persons who would want their lives printed if the Almighty wrote them. You find a man who will tell the truth about kings, warriors, princes and rulers to- day, and you may be quite sure that he has within him the power of the Holy Ghost. And a book which tells the faults of those who wrote it, and which tells you that “‘there is pone righteous, no, not one,” bears in it the marks of a true book; for we all know that men have faults, and failings, and sins; and among all the men whose lives are recorded in that book, each man bas some defect, some blot, except one. and that is “the man Christ Jesus.”—[H, L. Hastings. GOD'S WAY. . If a man has a statue decayed by rust and age, and mutilated in many of its parts, he breaks it up and casts it into a furnace, and after the melting he receivex it acain in more beautiful form. As thus the dissolving in the furnace was not a destruction, but a re- newing “of the statue, so the death of our bodies is not a destruction, but a renovation. When, therefore, you see as in a furnace our flesh flowing away to corruption, dwell not on that sight, but wait for the re casting; and advance in your thoughts to a still higher point—for ‘the statuary easting into the furnace a brazen image, bpt makes a brazen one again. God does not thus; but casting in a mortal body formed of clay, he returns you an immortal statue of gold.— [St. Chrysostom. Some men cheat themselves out of a hap. piness by an erroneous. notion that all’the wood in the world belongs to the past, and that the present is a degenerate age. Others rob themselves of much comfort by distrust. ing the future. An abiding faith in God, who is the same yesterday, today, and for- ever, promotes hea.th of body and peace of mind, and secures everlasting salvation.— {New York Advocate. THE monument erected by the people of New Orleans, to the memory of ‘ths late Su- who was a: een on file since last fall without receving ipary examination. | perintendent of Police, David. Heanesay, ssassin by tha Mafia ia Oso. Ror, 1890, was unveiled a few days since, ab ; 2 C5 BL A SOLEMN CEREMONY. , . In the Johnstown Cemstery. The " Monument to the Undentified Victims. = of tne Great Flood Unveiled. . The monument to the unknown dead ‘was unveiled at Grandview cemetery, Johns- ; town, Pa., in the presence of 10,000 people, most of whom had lost relatives in the great flood. Eight hundred unknown victims of ; that dreadful catastrophe lie in long rows beneath the monument’ which represents faith, hope and charity—Faith with the right arm outstretched toward heaven, charity holding an orphan in her arms, and hope resting on an anchor. Gov. Pattison gave the signal for the veil to fall. = ASE fell the band played a funeral dirge..: © The entire population of Johnstown The procession was composed of various secret and church societies, national guards- men and others. Sa A great crowd of people had gathered im the Grandview jemetery and was crowding te around the speakers’ platform when the processson got to the end of its long march. After the devotional exercises Mayor Rose, of Johnstown, introduced Gov. Pattison. Among other things he said: ‘We meet her to-day to recall the events of three years ago. When we remember the calamity and the magnitude of the disaster which visited your city, we recognize again the human kind- ness that lives in the hearts of the people, not only here, but the world round. They heard your cry of distress, and from the north and the south, the east and the west, upon the speed of the wind, relief cameto you. And so to-day, as we meet, we recall the wonderful kindness of the human heart upon all occasions. The old. city of Johns- town fell before the flood: but the visitor city. But no one can recall the lost ones; no amount of contribution—no relief that the people can offer can give back to you theas- sociagtions of those who were by your side; and all that we can do here to-day is to re- call their memory, recall their pleasant as- sociations, and, as we dedicate this monu- ment to the unknown dead. bear in mind and keep ever before us the dear associa tions of the past. ; Mr. Ogden was introduced as the orator of the day. His oration proved to be a master- ly effort, and there were tears in the eyes of many of his hearers. When he had finish- ed, the procession formed again, and march- ed around the monument, he formal un- veiling followed. Ex-Governor Beaver made the closing address, in which he paid a high tribute to the flood commission for the man- ner in which they had performed their duties. The monument is built of Barre (Ver- mont) granite, the lower base being in size 12 feet 8 feet, resting on a solid concrete foundation. Ox this base restsa second and third base and a plinth, on which 1S set an inscription block. The inscription is: “To the memory of the unidentified dead, lost by the flood of May 31, 1889.” _ Above the inscription is a plinth, hané- somely carved, and above this rests the cap, which extends over the inscription block and is carved in graceful mouldings. Teo this is added anothers plinth on which rests two sitting figures, representing Faith and Charity. In the center of the plinth is set a pedestal nearly four feet in: height on wd 3 stands a ligure six feet Ligh, and this -surmounts the whole, representing Hope. These figures are of White Western Rhode Island granite. The entire monument is 21 feet 8 inches high, weighs 35 tons and is a beautiful specimen of the sculptor’s art. FRIGHTFUL MINE DISASTER. Two Hundred Men Bslioved to Be Dead. Twenty-Five Bodies Recovered. PRAGUE, June- 2.—The timbers used in supporting the roof of the famous Birken- berg silver mine in Bohemia caught fire yesterday and the flames spread to the whole interior, where 500 men were working. All but 40 of these escaped, the latter being suffocated, Fourteen bodies have been re- covered. Reports this evening show that the mine disaster is far worsethan was sup- posed. -It was believed that only 40 men were missing, but inquiry revealed the fact that nearly 200 miners were left in the pit. ‘A second rescue party went down and Tre- turned with 11 more dead bodles. They said that they could hear shouts and groans far off in the mine. A foreman and seven men who tried to make their way in the direc- tion where the shouts and groans had been heard, were enveloped in a gulf of fire and smoke. Four men fell unconscious. Their four companions tried to drag them away, but were compelled to tun for their lives and leave the men to die. Thousand of men, women and children are in the fields around the pit. 400 1.0ST THEIR LIVES, The latest reports concerning the disaster at the Birkenberg silver mine show. that fully 400 of the employes lost their lives. Among those who werekilled were five stu- dents of the Mining academy, who were studying the workings of the mine. Many ot the bodies were almost completely «des- troyved, on'y a few fragments remaining. Later—One hundred and thirty bodies have been taken out ot the mine and 280 are still missing. The bodies were raised in batches of three. The faces of the victims are scorched and blackened and show traces of a desperate struggle for life. Thescenes at the pit’s mouth were heart-rending. One woman fell dead and another went wad. Serious Railroad Wreck. PITTSBURG, PA., June 4.—The Titusville express on the Allegheny Valley railroad, which left here at 1:30. p. m, Friday, ran into a bad washout near Foster station, nine miles below Franklin. The engine and two baggage cars went down and Engineer AF. Reed and Fireman Harry Shearer, both of Oakmont, were fatally injured. © Reed has since died. The storm that caused the acti- dent is reported as one of the most severe for years. Only one passenger was hurt,and ot seriously. THis is the first accident 5 7 ia 5 5 Metarie Cemetery, ph frig legheny Valley road for’ many to-day admires another and more beautiful :