ET ——— SWINBURNE’S (DE, The following is the ode snzgested by the forthcoming Chicago Exoosition written by A. C. Swinburne, of England. EAST TO WEST Sunset smiles on sunrise; east and west are one, Face to face in heaven before the sovereign sun. From the springs of the dawn everlasting a glory renews and transfigures the west, $rom the depths of the sunset a light as of morning enkindles the broad sea’s breast, And the lands and the skies and the waters are glad ot the day's anl the night's worx done, Child of dawn, and regent on the world- wide sea, England smiles on Europe, fair as dawn and free. Not the waters that gird her aro purer, nor mightier the winds that her waters know. But Awerica, daughter and sister of Eng- land, is praised of them, far as they flow; Atlantic responds to Pacific the praise of her days that have been and shall be.’ So from England westward let the watch- word fly, So for England eastward let the s2as reply Praise, honor and love everlasting be sent on the wind’s wings, westward and east, That the pride of the past and the pride of the future may mingle as friends at feast, And the sons of the fords of ths world-wide seas be one till the world’s life die. BETTIE THE SEXTON. DY JUNE C. HUNT. HAT'S a good girl, Bettie, wake up!” Mrs. Burke stood beside the rude sin- gle bed and waited for the slow break- ing-up of her daugh- ter's morning slum- bers. “Your pa didn't get home till after midnight, and when he did come—" «‘Oh mother! had he heen drinking again?” asked the girl, now wide awake and sitting up in bed. ¢Yes,” sighed Mrs. Burke, despon- dently. ‘You'll have to go over and get Ben Haynes to do the church work to-day. It’s snapping cold, and the fire'll have to be made early to get the church warm enough, su you must hurry.” ‘Yes, mother. Get me the keys. I'll be down stairs in a minute.” Bettie dressed herself quickly and with a serious face. Hurrying down stairs to the kitchen she tarricd long enough to don hood and cloak, declin- ing meanwhile the ¢‘bite o' breakfast” that her mother urged upon her, and only half heeding the direction that ‘Deacon McNei!l should be called upon if Ben Haynes could not be found. Then, taking a bunch of keys from the table she started, pausing at the door to say: «J won't be back till after Sunday- schcol, mother. Don’t worry about me. I'm going to do pa’s work to-day; he’ll lose the job if they find out he’s been drinking.” And Bettie was away before her mother could utter a word of protest. When Jim Burke's wife was disabled by rheumatism some months before, her earnings as laundress to some of the more thrifty families of the community ceased. The loss was a serious matter, for since Jim, as a day laborer, was not noted for special dexterity, and his use- fulness was further impaired by the un- fortunate drinking habit that occasion- ally caused his prolonged absence from duty, his work was not a source of regular or abundant supply. And though the simple needs of the family did not exceed his income, the uniinished pay- ment for their little, cottage demanded a persistent effort of which poor weak Jim seemed incapable. ‘The family council held to consider this unfavorable state of aflairs was a brief onc. Mr. Burke tersely explained that Bettie's succession to her mother’s work and earnings was the most reason- able solution of the difficulty; that at fourteen years a girl ought to be some- thing more than & child, and he took oc- casion to denounce Bettie's desire to stay at school uatil she could ‘keep store- men’s books for em” as the fruit of that indulgence which his own experience convinced him was 1nevitable in parents of an only child. : Matters might have gone according to this decision, had Mrs. Burke's encrgy declined with her heaith, or had the loss of her wage-earning power exhausted Yer virtues as Jim’s ‘‘better half.” Favored by circumstances, she soon found for him a ‘‘new job’ in the vacant office of sexton in the Presbyterian Church. The committee were won over to his cause by the lack of other candidates, and their apparent readiness gave him some warrant for his frequent boast that this was a rare example of ‘‘the office seeking the man.” So great a mark of favoritism moved him to unwouted fidelity in the discharge of his work, and to concession to Bettie’s ambitious desires. Their treasury was replenished, aud Bettie had been making unmierrupted progress in her school work, when this chilly Sunday morning in March found the sexton temporarily disqualified for his duties. Bettie began her work at the church with much confidence in herself as a substitute official. She found 2 de- lightful demonstration of her power in the atmosphere of the audience room steadily growing warm after her vigor- ous efforts with the furnace. But her courage ebbed as she entered the chapel in the rear of the church. Jim's Satur- day afternoons were always given to re- storing Sabbath order there, and now the silent wall clock, the darkened win. dows and the dust and disarrangement from the mid week sessions betokened the depth of his neglect. he time was toe short for the floor @o be swept before Sunday-school, which convened after the morning service, comparative neatness was all she could achieve; she would come back after dipper and restore the room to its wonted cleanliness before the 6 o'clock chapel service. Ten o'clock found the sturdy Betty in the tower room under the belfry, both hands clinching the thick rope, and her heart beating so loudly that she won- dered whether she could hear the Meth- odist bell. It was the only other church bell in the little town, and 1t must be her sig- pal, in want of a time piece. Suddenly it rang. Bettie pulled her rope, but without producing a sound. Desperation gave her strength. She beat torward in a mighty effort. Cl—ang! Cl—ang! Cl—ang! Bettie bent her head in terrified cer- tainty that the sonorous metal had left its yoke and was descending upon her. Clung! sounded the distant bell. Bettie essayed a responsive stroke that resulted in a strange and uncertain sound. She grew hot and dizzy, but she had no thought of giving up. Agaiu her guide—Clang! Clang! And now a slow sad steady pull brought out a tone more powerful and sustained. «I hope our friend James is not wrest- line with his old adversary this morn- ing,” meditated Parson Brownell, care- fully placing his manuscript in his breast pocket as he stood by his study window. At the same time Brother Wentz was preparing a few pungent remarks upon the *‘shiftlessness” of a board that could appoint Jim Burke as sexton, these to be delivered to his first appreciative hearer. And in a neighboring house a certain member of the fire company, super-secsi- tive to alarms, threw down his razor in the midst of his Sunday morning saave, at Bettie’s first onset. But she soon began to catch the time and motion, and, save some capricious- ness, her bell swung in usual fashion. Then. after the other had ceased, a few more peals for a show of independ- ence, and Bettie, dropping the rope, rested against the wall and clasped her burning and blistered palms together upon her forehead. But it the Preshy- terian worshipers failed to assemble, it was not for want of summons. The morning wore on. Bettie grew calm down in the furnace-room as she heard the service proceeding in custom- ary order, while the atmosphere up stairs evinced no puny handling of shovel and tongs, and inspired the trite witticism, as friend greeted friend after service, that **Jim must have been trying to give a clincher tosome points of the doctrine.” The last attendant at Sunday-school departed, and Bettie locked the doors and hurried home to a dinner whose di- gestion was aided by a comforting sense of relief. Following her determination of the morning and early afternoon hour found the sexton pro tem. back in the chapal, surrounded by the clouds of dust that rose at the swift motions of her broom. Standing against the back wall of the room was an old-fashioned cupboard donated to the uses of a library, when, years before, the Sunday-school needs demanded such a piece of furniture. It was disturned only onrare occasions, such as the removal of carpets, and be- ing raised but a few inches from the floor, to sweep under it was a matter of some difficulty. Jim was not scrupulous in his notions of cleanliness, and the spot was ofién neglected for weeks, but Bettie, impelled by womanly instincts, included it in her dirt-expelling round, thrusting her brush with vigor into the space. Out rolled the collected lint, and with it a rounded, dust-coated leather wal- let. ; She picked it up, dreading the out- come of a new surprise, and opened it. The sight of the bully rolls of bills in- side made her breath come fast. Written in ink upon the inside of the flap was the name and address of Caspar Marlow. 1 The mystery began to clear. Thre town had been agog for weeks over the disappearance of this money and the re- ward offered for its recovery. Caspar Marlow, a wealthy farmer, was also a metaphorical pillar of the Presby- terian Church, further fancied by an ad- miring member as ‘the pillar supporting the pulpit”’—a frequent supply of arrears in the pastor's salary furnishing the an- alogy. T'ne Weekly Intelligencer, a publica- tion whose prosperity sprung from the knowledge possessed by its editor of the kind of news its readers desired, had recently chronicled ¢‘An Unfortunate Accident” as follows: «+Qur fellow townsman, Mr. Caspar Marlow, was the victim of a painful ac- cident Wednesday night of last week, which was attended with a serious loss. As he was passing out from the chapel door of the Presbyterian church at the close of prayer-meeting, he missed his footing and fell with great force upon the icy pavement. He was severely bruised, and though he walked that night the distance ot oneand a half miles to his home, he has been confined to the house since by the severity of his injuries. Up- on reaching home, he discovered the loss of $300 in cash, the partial payment for a carload of his famous fat cattle, sold in the Chicago market. He had arrived home that evening after banking hours, and was thus obliged to retain the money upon his person. ««The liberal reward offered for its restoration ought to be sufficient induce- ment to the finder of the valiable wal- let. There can be no question that the wallet was lost in his fall, since it was 1p the breast pocket of his frock coat, and his overcoat was unbuttoned; and there is no doubt that it was found by some bystander at the time, or by some traveler in the vicinity within the suc- ceeding twelve hours.” The aggrieved Mr. Marlow was re- | membering, with growing irritation, the | discomfiting courtesy of the onlookers | that night, who restored to him his hat, and the fragments of his shattered set of | false teeth, as the dishonesty of some cue of them became more and more evi- dent. Ard the locality about the church tended the radius of their explored ter- ritory as time passed and the pocket book was still missfng. Bettie was filled with dismay at the discovery, fearing that it might iavolve her in some culpable way. Here was a new responsibility, and she was already overburdened with such. There was but one thing to do, so, abandoning broom and brushes, she seized her wraps and hurriedly left the church. «Under the bookcase in the chapel! Well! Well!” reiterated Mr. Marlow in the hallway of his house, pausing thoughtfully in his colloquy with the almost breathless Bettie, who had ‘‘not time to go in, or sit down.” “Now it must have been when I went back for my rubbers; the room was dark, Jim— that is—yoar father had the lights ‘most out when I went back, and I had a bad time huating around for my over- shoes. «You know I always wedge my chair in that angle the bookcase makes with the wall; won't trust my weight to an ordinary chair since one broke down under me at Kitty Wilson's wedding. «Easy enough for it to slip out from my pocket when I was feeling "round fot my overshoes, and for me to knock it under there myself. I had mighty good reasons for not thinking about losing my pocket-bools or anything else just then. Bat I tell you, Bettiej I meant what I said about getting it back,” and stand- ing his cane against the wall, Mr. Mar- low counted out $100 {from the contents of the wallet and thrust the bills into the girl's band, adding, heartily: ¢¢And I’m glad you're tte one to find it, Bettie. You're a good girl!” * 3% * * * * Bettie did not bring about her facher’s reformation at once, as some of her over hopeful admirers prophesied she would. The old habit still occasionally swayed him, but at such times Bettie assumed the sexton’s duties, and, so secared, Jim's re-election to the position was cer- tain. «Jim or Bettie, one of ’em will get the work done, and done well enough for us,” was the ruling sentiment of the church board, and Bettie and ‘*her Sun- day,” as it came to be called, supplied the theme for many subsequent stories, some of which gamed a little on the facts whenever they were retold. [ don’t know,” Brother Wentz used to say whenever the matter was referred to, ‘whether that slip of a girl would have gone into the pulpit or not, if any- thing had ailed the preacher, but she run the rest of the meetin’, bell ringin’ and all, and did it just as well as Jim could have done it, or any one else for that.matter.”— Worthington's Magazine. ees Rr Music at the World's Fair. The Bureau of Music of the Columbian Exposition has issued a list of that por- tion of the special musical demonstra. tious to take place during the World's Fair, for which dates have been abso- lutely fixed, beginning with May and endiag in July. Although concerts by American artists have been arranged, and the programme, as given out, shows a notable representation of American sinz- ing associations, it does not contain the nawe of any work by any American com- poser, nor any hint of any arrangements for the production of any such works during the duration of the exposition. It is not, surely, enough that American music should be represented by its na- tive executants; it should also be repre- sented by native producers, and the ap- parent failure to provide opportunities for such representation will certainly leave both American and foreign visitors to the fair in doubt whether we as a Na- tion possess any capacity for musical productiveness as all. Where the Awmeri- can architect, so to speak, bas been r glorified, the American artist has been given ample opportunity of showing his capabilities and attainments, and the American handicraftsman and inventor encouraged to the greatest possible ex- tent, it certainly seems hard that, so far as one can learn, nothing has been done for the American composer. During September, M. Saint-Saens, Dr. Mac- Muckenzie, and other foreign composers of eminence will visit the exposition, conducting several programmes of their own choral and instrumental works, as well as works of other composers of their respective countries. It would certainly seem only fair that in an exposition pre- sumably intended to encourage American art and industry in all its branches, a like opportunity should be extended to some American composer. Americans may pot yet have attained any commanding eminence as musicians, but certainly something has been done in this direc- tion, and that something is 23 certainly entitled to representation at the World's I"air.—Harper's Weekly. PE Spoony and Didn't Care Who Kuew If. The newty wedded couple boarded the train at a village station and a crowd of about a hundred people saw them off. The groom was a strapping young fel- low with sunburned face and hands and bear’s grease on his hair, while the bride might have beeu the ‘hired gal” on the same farm. They had no sooner taken a seat than he put his arm around her and bezan to caress one of her hands. A voice in rear of them cried out ¢“Spoors!” but the bridegroom gave no sign. Pretty soon he pulled her head over on his shoulder and there was a titter from the rear of the car. The head staid right there, however, and Jo-h got both her hands in his one paw. Three or four voices cried out “Oh!” and “Ah!” but it was fully two minutes before he ten- derly pushed her away and rose up and looked around and said: ‘‘We are mar- ried. It wae a case uv love. We sparked for seven years. She's my violet and I'm | her towerin’ oak. We've got 180 miles | to go and we are goin’ to spoon every | rod of itand if thar’s any critter here who | thinks he can’t stand it he can git out | and walk {”— Chicago Herald. | An interesting subjec’ of discussion in 1 » - . Z . | traflic circles is whetner a bicycle car | he considered baggage. dove wea wi mm 1a ror | | SERMON TO MANKIND ps REV. DR. TALMAGE TALKS pcb To Persons of All Ages in Life's War fare. Text: ‘The daysof our years are three- _ score and ten.”—Psalm xc., 10. The seventieth milestona of life is here planted as at the end of the journey. A few go beyond it; multitudes never reach it. The oldest person of modern times expired at 16Y years. A Greek of the name of Strava- ride lived to 132 years. An Englishman of the name of Thomas Parr lived 152 years. Before the time of Moses people lived 15) years, and if you go far enough back they lived 500 years, Well, that was necessary, because the story of the world must come down by tradition, and it needed lonz life safely to transmit the news of the past. If the generations had been short lived, the story would sociten bave changed lips that it might have got all astray. But after Moses began to write it down and parchment told it irom century to cen- tury it was not necessary that people live so long in order to authenticate the events of the past. If in our time people lived only twenty-five years, that would not affect his- tory,since it is put in print and is no longer dependent upon tradition. Whatever your age, I will to-d:y directly address you, and 1 shall speak to those who are in the twen- ties, the thirties, the forties, the fifties, the sixties, and to those who are in the seven- ties and beyond. First, then, I accost those of you who are in the twenties. You are full of expec- tat.on. Ycu are ambitious—that is, it you amount to anything—for some kind of suc- cess, commercial or mechanical or profes- sional or literary or agricultural or social or moral. If I find some one in the twenties without any sort of ambition, 1 feel like saying: “My friend, you have got on the wrong planet. This is not the world for you. You are going to be in the way. Have you made your choice of poorhouses? You will never be able to pay for your cradle. Who is going to settle for your board? There is a mistake about the fact that you were bora at all.” But supposing you have ambition, let me say to all the twenties: Expect everything through divine manipulation, and then you will get all you want or something better. Are you looking for wealth? Well, remem- ber that God controls the money markets, the harvests, the droughts, the caterpillars, the locusts, the sunshine, the storm, the land, the sea, and you wili get wealth. Per- haus not that which is stored up in banks, in safe deposits, in United States securities, in houses and lands, but your clothing and board and shelter, and that is about all you can appropriate anyhow. You cost the Lord » great deal. ‘I'o feed and clothe and shelter for a lifetime requires a big sum of money, and if you get nothing more than the absolute necessities you get an enormous amount of supply. Expect as much as you will of any kind of success; if vou expect it from the Lord, you are safe, Depend on any other resource and you may be badly chagrined, but depend on od and all will bs we:l. Itisa good thing in the crisis of life to have a man of large means back you up. Itisa great thing to have a moneyed institution stand behind you in your undertaking. But it is a might- {er thing to have the God of heaven and sarth your coadjutor, and you may have Him. Iam so glad that I meet you while you are in tho twenties. You are aying out your plans, and all your life in this world and the next for 500,000,000 years of your existence will be affected by those plans. 1t is about 8 o'clock in ths morning of your life, and you are just starting out. Whica way are you going to start? Ob, the twen- ties! P'wenly” is a great word in the Bible. Joseph was sold for 20 pieces of silver. Sam- son judged Israel 20 years. Solomon gave Hiram 20 cities. The flying roll that Zachariah saw was 20 cubits. When tite sailors of ths ship on which Paul sailed sounded the Mediterranean Sea, it was {athoms. What mighty things have been done in the twenties! Romulus founded Rome when he was 20. Keats finished life at 25. Lafavette was a world renowned soldier at 23. Oberlin accomplished his chief work by 27. Bonaparte was victor over Italy at 26. Pitt was prime minister of England at 22. Calvin bad completed his immortal “institutes” by the time he was 26. Grotius was attorney general at 24, Some of the mightiest things for God and eternity have basen done in the twenties. As long as you can put thefizure “2” before the other figure that helps describe your age I have high hopes about you. Look out for that figure ‘2.” Watch its continuance with as much earnestness as you ever watched anything that promised your salva- tion or threatened you demolition. What a critical time, the twenties! Waile they con- tinue you decide your pi i and the principles by which you will be guided. You make your most abiding friendships. You arrange your home life. You fix your habits, Lord God Almighty, for Jesus Christ's sake, have mercy on all the men and women in the twenties! Next I accost those in the thirties. You are at an age waen you find what a tough thing it is to get recognized and established in your occupation or profession. Ten years ago you thought all that was necassary for success was to put on your shutter the sign of physician or dentist,or attorney or broker or agent,and you would have plenty of busi- ness. How many hours you sat and waited for business and waited in vain three per- sons only know—God, your wife and yourself. In commercial life you have not had the promotion and the increase in salary you anticipated, or the place you expected to occupy in the firm has not been vacated. The produce of the farm, with which you expected to support yourself and those de- pending on you, and to pay the interest on the mortgage, has been far less than you anticipated, or the priczs were down, or spe- cial expenses for sickness made drafts on your resources that you could not have ex- pected. In some respects the hardest decade of life is the thirties, because the results are generally so far behind the anticipations. It is very rare indeed that a young man doas as did the young man last Sunday night, when he came to me and said: *‘I have been so marvelously prospered since L came to this country that I feel, as a matter of gratitude, that I ought to dedicate myself to God.” Nine-tenths of the poetry of life has been knocked out of you since yon came into the thirties. Men in the different vro- fessions and occupations saw that you were rising and they must put an estoppel on you or you might somehow stand in the way. They shink you must be suppressed. From 30 to 40 it is an eapecially hard time for young doctors, young lawyers, young merchants, young farmers, young mechan- ics, young ministers. The struggle of the thirties is for honest and helpful and re- munerative recognition. But few old peo- ple know how to treat young eople without atronizing them on the one hand or snub- PE them on the other Oh, the thirties! Joseph stood before Pharaoh at 3). David was 30 years old when he began to reign. The height of Solomon's temple was 30 cu- bits. Christentered upon His activeministry at 30 years of age. Judas sold himself for 30 pieces of silver. Ob, the thirties! What a word suggestive of triumph or disaster! Your decade is the one that will probably afford the greatest opportunity for victory, because tmere is the greatest necessity for struggle. Read the world’s history and know what are the thirties for good or bad. Alexander the Great closed bis career at 32. Frederick the Great made Furope tremble with his armies at 35. Cortes conguered Mexico at 30. Grant fought Shiloh ahd Donelson when 33. Raphael died at 37. Luther was the hero of the reformation at 35. Sir Pailip Sydney got through by 32. ; The greatest deeds for Cod and against Him were done within the thirties, and your greatest battles are now and between the ime when you Cease eXR=Q:S\DI=Rour age by putting first a figure “2” and the time when you will cease expressing it by putting first a figure *3.” As itis the graatest time of the struggle. I adjure you, in God’s name and by God's grace, make it the greatest achievement. y prayer is for all those in the tremendous crises of ths thirties. The fact is that by the way you decide the pres- ent decade of your history you decide all the following decades. When I wes in Russia I was disappointed in not seeing the battlefield of Borodino. Why was thera fought such a battle at that small village? It was 70 miles from Moscow. Why that desperate struggle, in which 125, - 000 Frenchmen grappled with 160,000 Rus- sians, and 30,000 dead Freachmean and 52,000 dead Russians were left on the field? It was because the fate of Moscow, the sacred city of Russia, was decided there—decided 70 miles away. And let me tell yor people of the thirties, you are now at thé Boro lino, whence will resound its succasses or its moral disasters clear on into the seventies if you live to the threescore and ten of the text. Next I accost the forties. Yours is the de- cade of discovery. donot mean the dis- covery of the outside, but the discovery of yourself. No man knows himself until he is 40. He overestimates or under:stimates himself. By that time he has learnad what ie can do or what he cannot do. He thought he had commercial genius enongh to becom? a millionaire, but now he is satisfied to make a comfortable living, He thought he had rhetorical power that woul | bring him into the United States senate, now he is content if he can suczasstully argue a common casa before a petit jury. He thought he had medical skill that would make him a Mott or a Grosseor a Willard Parker or a Sims; now he finds his sphere is that of a famiy physician, pre- scribing for the ordinary ailments tha’ af- flict our race. He was sailing oa ina fox and could not take a reckening, but now it clears up enough to allow him to find out his real latitude and longitude. He has bean climbing, but now he has got to the top of the hill, and he takes a long breath. He is halt way throuzh the journey at least, and he is in a position to look backward or for- ward. He has more good sense than be ever had. He knows human nature, for he has bean cheated often enouga to ses the bad side of it, and he has met sd many gracious and kindly and splend: 1 souls he also kaows the good side of it. Now cam yourself. Thank God for ths past and deliberately set your compass for another voyage. You have chased enough thistleiown. You have blown enouzh soap bubbles. You have sesn the unsatisfying nature of all earthly things. Open a new chapter with God and the world. Tais de- cade of the forties ought to eclipse all its predecssors in worship, in usefulness ani in appiness. “Forty” is a great word in the Biole. God's ancient people were 40 years in the wilderness. Eli juiged Israel 4) ears. David and Solomon and Jehoash reigned 40 years. 'Waen Josepa visited his bretiaen, he was 40 years old. Oh, this mountain top of the forties! You have now the character you will probably have for all time and all eternity. God, by His grace, sometimes changes a man after the forties, but after that a man never changes himself. ‘Tell me, oh men and women who are in the forties, your habits of thought and life, and I will tell you waat vou will forever be. I may make a mistake onee in a thousand times, but not more than in that proportion. y sermon next accosts the fifties. How queer it looks when in writing your age you make the first of the two figures a “5.” ‘This %is the decade which shows wha® the other decades have been. If a young man has sown wild oats and he has lived to tais time, ha reaps the harvest of it in the fifties, or if by necassity he was compeliel to over- toil in honest directions be iscallel to settle up with exacting nature som2> time during the fifties. Many have it so hard in eariy life that they ars octogenarians at 50. Sciaticas ani rheumatisms and neuralgias and vertigos and insomnias have their playground in the fifties. A man’s hair bezins vo waiten, and, although he may have worn spectacies be- fore, now he asks the optician for No. 14 or No. 12 or No. 10. hen he gets a cough and is almost cured, he hacks and clears his throat a good while afterward. Oh, ye who are in the fifties, think of it! A half century of blessing to be thankful for, aul a half century subtracted from an existence which in the most marked cases of longevity hardly ever reaches a whole century. By this time you ought to be eminent. for piety. You have beenin so many battles you ought to bes brave soldier. You have ‘made so many voyages you ougat to be a good sailor. So long protected and blessad ou ought to hava a soul full of doxolozy. I Bible times in Canaan every 5) yaars was by God's command a year ot jubilea, The people did not work that year. Lf property aa by misfortune gone out of one’s posses- sion on the fiftieth year it came back to him. If he had fooled it away, it was returned without a farthing to pay. If a man had been enslaved, he was in that year emancipated, A trumpet was sounded loud and clear and lonz, and it was the trumpet of jubilee. They shook hands, they laughed, they congratulated. Waat a time it was, that fiftieth year! And if under the old dispensation it was such a glad time, under our new and more glorious dispensa- tion let all who have come to the fifties hear the trumpet of jubilee that I now blow. That was the allusion made by Mr. Toplady, the great hymnologist, when ne wrote: Blow ye the trampet, blow Tne gladly solemn sound; Let all th= nations kuow, Y'o eart1’s remoteat bound, The year of jubilee is come. Return ye raasomed sianers home, r Ye who have sold for naught a Your heritage above a, Shall have it back nabought-; The gift of Jesus's love. i Tae year of jubilee has come, SH Return ye ransomed sinners uomse, : My sermon next accosts tha sixties The beginning of that decade is mors startling than any other. In his chrono.ogical jour- ney the man rides rather smoothly ovar the figures “2” and “3” and “+” and “3,” but the figure “6” gives him a big jolt. He says: Jt cannot be that I am 6). Lot ms ex- amine tha old family record. 1 guess they made a mistake. They got my name down wrong in the roll of births.” But, no; the older brothers or sisters remember the time of his advent, and there is some relative a year older, and another relative a year younger, and, sure enough, the fact is estab- lishad beyond all disputation. Sixty! Now your great danger is the temptation to fold up your faculties and quit. You will feel a tendency to reminisce, 1¢ you donot look out you will begin al- most everything with the words, “When 1 was a boy.” But you ought to make the sixties more memorable for Gol and the truth than the fifties, or the forties, or ths thirties. You ought to do more during the next ten years than you did in any 3) years of your life because of all the experience you have had. You haye committea enough mistakes in life to make you wise above your juniors. Now, under the accumulatel light of your past experimenting, go to work for God as never before. When a man in the sixties folds up his energy and feels he has done enough, it is the devil of indolencs to which he is sur- rendering, and God generally takes the man at his word and lets him die right away. His brain, that under the tension of hard work was active, now suddenly shrivels. Men, whether they retire from secular or religious work, generally retire to the grave. No well man has aright to retire. The world was made for work. There remaineth a rest for the people of God, but itisina sphere beyond the reach of telescopes. The military charge that decided ome of the greatest battles of the ages—the battle of Waterloo—was not made until 8 o'clock in the evening, but some of you propose to go into camp at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. My subject mext accosts those in the seventies and beyond. My word to them is congratulation. You have got nearly if not quite tbrough. You have safely crossed the sea of life and are about to enter the | harbor. You have fought at Gettysburg, and the war is over. Here and there a heart and the sin of the world, but I guess you are about aone. There may be some work for yon yet on small or large scale. Bismarck, of Germany, v.gorous in the eightizs. ' The prime minis- ter of England strong at 84. aydn com- posing his oratorio, “The Creation,” at 70 ears of aze. Isocrates doing some of his t work at 74. Piato busy thinking for all succeeding centuries at 84. William Blake at 67 learning Italian, so as to read Dante in the original, Lord Cockburn at 87 writing his best treatise. John Wesler stirring great audienc2s at 85. William C Bryant, without spectacles, reading in m “Thanatopsis” at 83 yearsofagze. ~~ Christian men and women in all de- partments serving God after becoming septuagenarians and octozenarians and nonagenarians prove that there are possi- bilities of work for the aged, but I think you who are the seventies are near being througn. How do you feel about it? You ought to be jubilant, becauss lifs is a tremenaous struggle, and if you hava got through respeccably and usafully you ouzat to feel like people toward the close of a sum- mer day seatex vn the rocks watching the sunset at Bar Harbor or Capa May or Look- out Mountain. 1 am glad to say that most old Christians are cheerful. Daniel Webster visited John Adams a short tima bziore his death and found him in very infirm health. Hs said to Mr. Adams: “Iam glad % 83 you. I hope you ara getting alonz pretty well?” The reply was: **Ah, sir, quite the contrary. I find { am a poor teaant oc:uoyiag a house much shatterad by time. 1t sways and tram- bles with every wind, and what is worse, sir, the landlord, as near as I can make out, does not intend to make any rapairs.” De. Beman, after passing into ths seven- ties, was asked by my friend, Rev. Dr. Spear, “Dr. Beman, how is your health now?” ani hereplied, “I have on me an in- curable disease.” “What is that?’ asked my frien?, and toe septuazenarian replied, “Old =ge.” Both of ths old men I have mentioned intended their remarks for facetiousness, and old peoole hava aright to be facetious. An acel woman sent for her paysician and told him of her ailments, and the doctor said: ‘“Waat would you have me # do, madam? 1 caunot make you young again.” She replied: ‘“L know that, doctor. Whaat I want you to do is to help m3 grow old a little longer.” 4 The young hava their troubles before them. Thaold have their troubles behind them. You have got about all out of this earth that there isin it. Be glad that you, an aged servant of God, ara going fo try an- other life and amid vetter Rr Stop looking back and look ahead. Oh, ye in the seventies, and the eighties, and tha nineties, your best days are yet to come; your grandest associations are yet to ba formea; your best eyesight is yet to be kindled: your best hearing is yet to ba awakenai; your greatest speed is yot to bs travelec; jour gladdest song is yet to sung. The most of your friends have gone over the border, and you ara going to join them, very soon. They are waifing tor you. They ara watching the golden shora to see you land. They ave watching the shining gate to see you come through, ~ They are stand. inz by the throne to see you mouut. Whata glad bour when you drop the staff and take the scepter; wien you quit the stil joints and become an immortal athlete! But near! hear! a remark pertinent to all people whether in ths twentiss. the thirties. the forties, the fiftiss, the sixbies, ths seventies, or beyond. What wa all nzel is to take the suoernatural into our lives. . Do not let uz depend on brain ani muscle and nerve, We want a mighty suoply of the sunernatural. vine fore» mizhtier than the waters and the tempa2sts, and when ths Lord took two on the winds and the other on the waves, He roved Himself mightier than hurricane and greater than the fires, and when the Lord cooled Nebuchadnezzar’s furnacs until Shad- rach, Meshach aud Abedneszo did not even have to fan themselves He provel Himself michtier than tae fire. We want a divine force stronger than wild beast, and whaen the Lord made Daniel alion tamer He proved Himself stronger than the wrath of the jungles. There are so many diseases in the world wa want with us a di~ vine physician capable of combating ail- ments, and our Lori when on earth i what He coud do with catalepsy and pal sis and ophthalmia and dementia. Oh, tai this supernatural into all your lives! How to get it? Just as you get anything you want—oby application. If you want any- thin., you apply forit. ; By prayer apply for the supernatural. Take it into your daily business. Many a man has been able to pay only 50 cents the dollar, who if he had called in the sup natural could have paid 100 cents on’ dollar. Why do 93 men out of 100 fail business? Becauss there ara not mora than two men out of a hundred who take Godin- to their worldy affairs. *‘Bshind the great, unknown standeth Gol within the shado keeping watch upon His own.” ' _ A man got up in a New York prayer meet- ing and said: ‘‘God is my partner. 1 did business without Him for twenty years and failed every two or three years. ave been doing business with Him for twenty years and have not failed once.” Oh, take the suvernatural into all your affairs! I had such an evidence of the goodness of God in temporal things when L entered active life I must testify. Called to preach at lovely Belleville, in New Jersey, I enterad upon my work. But thera stood the empty par- sonage, and not a cent had I with i to furnish it. After pr2aching threz or four weeks theofficars of my church asked me if I did not want to take two or three weeks’ vacation I said “Yes,” for I had preached about all I knew, but 1 feared they must be getting tired of m2. ony When I rsturiad to the village after the brief vacation, they handel me the key of the parsonage and asked mo if I did not want to go and look av it. Not suspecting any- thing had happend, I put the key into the parsonage door and opened it, and there was the hall completely 1urnishel with carpet and pictures and hatrack, and I turned into the parlors, and they were furnished, the softest sofas I ever sat on, and into the study and found it furnished with book-cases, and I went to the bedrooms, and they were fur- nished, and into tha pantry, and that was furnished with every culinary article, and the spiceboxes were filled, and a flour- barrel stood there ready to be opened, and I went down into the ding room, and the table was sev and beautifully furnished, and into the kitchen, ard the stove was full of fue, and a matca lay on the top of the stove, and all I hud to do in starting house- keeping was to strike the match. God in- spired the whole thing, and if I ever doubt is goodness, all up and down the world, cali me an ingrate. I testify that I have been in many tight places, and God always got me out, and He will get you out of ths tight places. But the most of this audience will never, reach the eighties, or the seventies, or the sixties, or the fifties, or the forties. tle who passes into the forties has gons far beyond the average of human life. Amid the un- certainties take God through Jesus Christ as your present and eternal safety. The longest lite is only a small fragment of the great eternity. We will all oi us soon be ere. Eternity! how near it rolls; 3 Count the vast va.ue of your souls Beware and count the awful cost ‘What they have gained whose souls are 108%. — Two great Corsican families, the most powerful in the island, the Gavinis and the Casabincas, have just been recon- ciled after a political hostility of more than thirty years. During this entire period the politics of the island centered | about the heads of these two houses. : Italy expands every year $96,000,000 for her soldiers, and less than $4,000,- a Aa ad an | skirmish with the remaining sinof your own | 000 for schools. _ X Wo want with us a di- steps on bestormed Galtlee, putting one foot y illow. We want with us a divins force ~E 213 | "ek on. Y 2 15808 | Ye mail