AUTUMN SUNSET. Across the wheatflelds o'er the western hi’l, The blood-red sun is sinking s crimsen bright : Along the valley floods the sunset light, And then reflected from below, until The whole wide sky the sunset colors fill— And on old woodlands far along the right Steals down the deeper giades the ap- proaching night, And down the vale where glides the glim- mering rill. Along the west the fleids of ripening grain Stretch over dale and upland, hill and plain, And, tossing plumed heads of golden green, Drink the rich pure nectar drops that run From the upturned goblet of the sun, And mix their golden with its crimson sheen. —James T. Shotwell, in Toronto Week. Closer Than a Brother. BY BURT JOHNSON. » ERCIVAL WAR- RB cley seemed to exist only to en- joy life and to make life en- joyable to oth- ers, and by all who knew him it was admitted that he succeed- ed wonderfully at his chosen duties. He never was seen without a cheer- | ful expression { kept bachelor’s hall together, and no for my sake, that I'm going to merry amount of contriving sufficed to get Drock out of the way while Percival should be ‘let into” some grand money-making scheme ‘“on the ground floor.” Ladies fared rather better, for Per- cival’s bosom friend was not an eves- dropper, yet the women who were longest headed had no faith in ever resuming their blandishments just where they had dropped them at the end of a chat, for they felt sure that Percival unbosomed himself to his friend, snd that Drock’s counsel would go a long way with a young man so impressionable and so entirely desti- tute of obstinacy. Desperate cases require desperate remedies, 50 a couple of experienced and businesslike belles one day formed an alliance for the purpase of securing Percival and his money; one of them was to marry Drock, who himself, ac- cording to the younger man, was well off, and thento bring her bosom friend and her husband’s together at her own house. It was a well laid plan, and neither woman doubted that it would succeed for each, just for fun, had brought dozens of men to her feet; it failed, however, through Drock’s utter inability to perceive that a handsome woman was making love to him—he was so stupid about it as to spare her the mortification of thinking herself deliberately rejected. It was a great disappointment, aside from the financial loss, for the belle had been in society long enough to have learned that a matter-of-fact fel- | low without any vices was the most satisfactory material from which to | make a model husband, especially if on his face, and, although he was not | he had the virtue of constancy to the at all brilliant, his conversation was go thoroughly in keeping with his countenance that almost any one was glad to exchange a few words with him. heard Percival’s praises sounded by young women, insisted that they could be quite as agreeable and light-hearted as the popular youth had they noth- ing to do but enjoy life and spend the money that a busy father had saved for an only son. Probably they were mistaken, for Percival was not the only young man in New York who had plenty of money and no business oc- cupation, yet some of the otherslooked quite as dull and unhappy as the poor- est people they met on the street. Nothing, though, in this imperfect world seems quite as it should be, so there was a drawback to the entire en- joyment of any one who sought Per- cival Wareley’s society, and who were willing to help him spend his money. It was the young man’s closest friend, Mr. Henry Drock. This person was | at least fifteen year’s the senior of young Wareley, who was only twenty- four, and he took all the pleasures of the rich so calmly that pzople won- dered if he enjoyed them at all. Yet Percival seemed fonder of him than of any other man and took him wherever he went, introducing him into society and proposing him at clubs as if there was ho doubt that- others would enjoy Mr. Drock’s society quite as much as Percival himself. People will stand a great deal from young men who are rich as well as agreeable, so Drock was endured politely, some middle-aged people remarking that there was 100 times as much to him as to Percival himself, for the fellow seemed entirely sensible, and could talk fairly well upon the affairs of the day, whereas Percival’s interest in any- thing which did not produce amuse- ment in large quantities were limited. Meanwhile, that Drock reciprocated his young friend’s regard could not be doubted for an instant. No matter how uninteresting anything might seem to the older man, his eye never rested upon Percival without display- ing an active and honest fondness. Some people were mean enough to suggest that Droek’s regard was that of a well-kept dog, and for the same | Some young men, when they | i { degree which Drock manifested in his regard for Percival. A month or two later all the m:n raged, for Drock and his young friend went into business together as part- | The theory that Drock intended | ners, himself to get all of Percival’s money was spoiled by the new firm securing as confidential cffice manager a man who occupied a similar position for many years with Percival’s father. The partners in the new firm took business cares lightly, but while at the office or on the street they still were almost inseparable, going downtown together and lunching together. Then society and every one else who wanted anything from Percival would have given up had not the young man still spent his money freely; he gave yachting parties and coaching parties in good style, and seemed to delight in seeing people enjoy themselves; but one condition of the enjoyment remained, that Drock should be one of the party. Still, this slowly became less a penalty than apleasure to people who regarded the younger partner as anything but a gold mine to be worked by any one who could get at it, for Drock slowly but surely took to city ways and manners, until he became quite as good company as most of the men of leisure who helped women to kill time. Suddenly, however, the fateful day that awaits any young man was reached by Percival Wareley, the fate taking the form of a young woman whom Percival thought far prettier and sweeter than any other. So quickly did the affair take shape that scciety did not have an inkling of it until the engagement was announced, for the lady, although well born and well-to- do, was of a retiring disposition and out of the rather lively set into which the accident of birth and of a gayety loving mother had placed Percival. The society that had known and enjoyed Percival did not intend to be robbed of him, for if the young man had done so much entertaining while a bachelor, what could he not dowhen he had an establishment of his own? The young lady who was to become Mrs. Wareley was suddenly loaded with attentions and overwhelmed with calls from ladies who knew her yet had reason; but Percival had insisted at | one time, when conversation chanced | to be about his friend, that Drock was i one of the hardest men in the world | to do a favor to, for his tastes were | few and his means ample. Young women of the class that says | anything that comes to mind had ex- | pended much curiosity and some ques- | tions upon the couple, but zll they | learned was that Drock had known his | nd from early boyhood, and | zed him; he had first met! town where Percivals | d az wife, and where the | h or two of every | never had met a open-hearted es being | pected them gas Drock) 2 lot | of good to rson enjoy life so hes id persistently, in- stead of z 2 TRInE t on bein gstizted with pleasure, i ght it did men good, any ‘ times in the society $hzn themselves, Drock evidently meant zl] he said, but his fondness for Percival did not meet the approval of some men and women who wanted Percival to become fond of them. Young and impression- sble men who are rich in their own right and searce in any society, so there were handsome women some years older and a hundred times gmerter than Percival Wareley who matter how strangers might object. would gladly have married the young | “But,” said Percival’s fiance one man for his money. | evening, in tones which sounded as if Likewise there were scores of men, | there was a flood of tears impending, voung and old, who would have given | ‘some of the girls insist that you their very souls to coax the youth and | won't be sble to live without him, his money into business with them, | even after we're married. I don’t even if their highest ideal of business | want any other man beside my hus- was to get ahead of the bookmakers at | band in the honse all the while.” the race tracks, or to try some *‘sys-| “The girls don’t know anything tem” on the proprietors of other gam- | about it, my dear,” the young man re- bling establishments. But Drock was | plied assuringly. ‘“You shall be ruler always in the way; he never talked | of the Louse and no one shall come business himsclf and seemed to have | into it, not even my dearest friend, no business fraining. | except when you like. Drock thinks To see Percival without Drock was | too much of me to offend any one pext to impossible, for the two men | whomI love. Besides. he’s verv havo rather ignored her in earlier days as being dreadfully uninteresting and spiritless. Sad to relate—but the truth must be told—several determined efforts were made to break the match on the principle that a young man who has broken with one girl is easier than any other to snap up. Then, how- ever, Drock, who had become rather an old story, resumed his original prominence, and some spiteful maidens wondered whether he was present during all the formalities and delights of courting. There was one place where he could not be, women thanked their stars, and that was at the house of the young man’s intended during the hours in which women exchanged calls; all of the fair sex, therefore, who owed him grudges did their best, in their own skilful manner, to excite curiosity and suspicion in the mind of the young lady who had secured the great catch of the season, and they succeeded far enongh to prompt her to make many {inquiries which seemed to annoy | Percival, whose general answer was only that when he liked any one he liked with 2ll his might, and never changed, as the bride would find out to her own satisfaction. Me also said that Drock had long been known and trusted by the elder Wareley, and a son ought to be &llowed to be fond of 2 man whom his father had liked, no ot rr eT nen younger he such a love of a girl, and I've heard him say, over and over again, that the | happiest husbands and wives are gen- | erally those who see least of other peo- | ple. | “But how is he going to get accus- | tomed to the change, after heving been | closer than a brother to you for sev- | eral years?” “I’m sure I don’t know. Perhaps he'll follow my example and take a | vife. To tell the truth, I—well, I'll | tell you some other time.” | “Ox Percival! A secret! keeping something from me.” | “Only for a little while, and I assura | you there’s nothing dreadful about it | ——’twill make you laugh when you hear { it, I'm sure.” “When will you tell me?” “Just as soon as we're married my | dear ; husbands and wives mustn’t have any secrets from each other---so Drock himself says, and I'm sure he knows.” The young woman would no more have repeated this conversation to any one than she would have drowned her- | self before trying on her wedding dress, but somehow the impression was passed from one to another that there really was some secret behind the inseparable companionship of Drock and Percival: So.male gossips tried at once to ex- tract it from Drock himself, but that honest fellow met all the insinuations by the assertion that Percival was a real good fellow-—the cleanest hearted young man he knew—and that no one was gladder them Drock that he was | about to get a sweet and trustworthy | wife, and to be as happy as he de | served. | Drock kept close to the young man richt up to the wedding day, which | was also the twenty-fifth anniversary | of Percival’s birth. He even acted as | “best man” at the ceremony, during which he looked as happy as if he were not giving away a friend. When the | young couple were at last securely { bound together for life and had es caped from the church to the seclusion of their carriage, Percival’s attempt tc kiss the bride again was frustrated by a small but determined hand, as the young woman said : ‘Not until you've told me the secret about Drock.” ‘Oh, I don’t want you to langh at me so soon after marrying me. Do let me wait a few days.” “No—not even a few minutes. You promised to tell me as soon as we were married.” “Very well, then; I'll keep my word, although there’s really nothing to it. You see, when I came of age myfather declared that I hadn’t sense enough tc go in when it rained. Wasn’t that funny?” ‘No; I think ’twas real horrid.” *“Well, dear, perhaps he was right. You see, he was a very matter-of-fact man, while mother, although as good as gold, was a gay, thoughtless, care- less creature, and every one said I was her right over again. She had died a year or two before I came of age, and father failed rapidly a year or two after, and had lots of money, and 1 was the only child, and he was afraid I'd go to the bad. He had no rela tions to leave me toe, but he remem: bered Drock as a man who had always seemed very fond of me when I was a boy up in the country, where mother came from. “One day he sent for Drock and had a long talk with him, and then he told me he had turned as much as possible of his property into cash and given it to Drock to give to me whenI reachec my twenty-fifth year, if I'd previously acted according to his advice, and formed no habits of friendship of which Drock didn’t approve. Iwas tc be allowed to spend all th: money 1 liked in any decent way, but not a cent on any sort of vice or dissipa tion.” ““Drock has really been your keeper then,” said the bride, instead of your friend, as every one has supposed ?” ‘Really, my dear, he has been ¢ big-hearted, sweet-tempered friend, in spite of his position, and, as I look back, I suspect that I tried his pa- tience awfully at times. To tell the truth, as I got some sense, little by little, my patience was tried, too— not by anything he did or say, but be- cause I really seemed unfit to go about without a keeper. But Drock did his best by me, and I—" “And you turned out so well,” said the bride, suddenly volunteering a little shower of kisses, ‘“that I think all rich young men should be treated just like you, and not be allowed to run at large without some sensible person to take care of them.” —Oncea Week. You're rr Berri How the Apple Taris Went. Meyer, the confectioner, stood be- hind his counter and gazed sadly at the huge pile of apple tarts which were beginning to grow stale, for during the last few days business had been wunac- countably slack. Suddenly he be- thought himself of a plan. Sitting down to his desk he wrote out the fol- lowing advertisement and sent it to the newspaper office: “Genuine Offer of Marriage—A young man of agreeable exterior and ample means desires to form the ac- quaintance of a lady with a view to making her his partner for life. Beauty and wealth are not so much an object as a good character and an amiable disposition. Young ladies who may feel inclined to cast in their lot with him hereby requested to call at Herr Meyer's confectionery establishment to-morrow afternoon at three o’clock, and, as a means of recognition, to eat an apple tart.” A few minutes after three the whole stock of apple tarts was cleared out.— Sheffield (England) Telegraph. ee —— ree 14 is estimated that last year 1,285, 000.000 bananas were consumed in the Taited States alone. KEV. DR. TALMAGEY SERMON ONLY ONE LIFEBOAT That Will Safely Carry Your Soul From | This World’s Wreck. TIEXT: of the boat and let her fall off.” —Acts xxvii. 32. While your facesare yet somewhat bronzed by attendance on the international boat con- test between the Vigilant and the Valkyrie I Good things when there is no betting or dissipation, thoss outdoor sports. We want more fresh air and breeziness in A stale and slow and lugubrious religion may have done for other times, yet will not do for But my text calls our attention to a boat of a different sort, and instead of the Atlantic it is the Mediterranean, and instead of not wind enough, as the crews of theVigi- day com- plained, there is too much wind and the address you. our temperaments and our religion. these, lant and the Valkyrie the other swoop of a Euroclydon. I am not calling your attention so much to the famous ship on which Paul was the distinguished passenger, but to the lifeboat of that ship which no one seems to notice. For a fortnight the main vessel had been For that two weeks, the the passengers had ‘‘contin- I suppose the salt water, dashing over, had spoiled the sea biscuit, tossed and driven. account’ says, ued fasting.” and the passengers were s2asick anyhow. The sailors sai must go down,” it and take ths chances for reaching shore, although they pretended they were going to get over the sides of the big ship ahd down into the lifeboat only to do sailors’ duty. That was not sailoriike, for the sailors that I have known were all would rather go down with the ship than do such a mean thing as those Jack Tars of my text attempted. Vhen on the Mediterranean last June the Victoria sank under the ram of the Camper- down, the most majestic thing about that awiul scene was that all the sailors staid at their posts doing their duty. Asa class all over the world sailors are valorous, but thess sailors of the text were exceptional anid pre- tended to do dpty while they were really pre- par.ng for flight in the lifeboat. But these “marines” on hoard —sea soldiers—had in especial charge a little missionary who was turning the world upside down, and when these marines saw the trick the sailors were about to play they lifted the cutlasses from the girdle and chop! chop! went those cut- lasses into the ropes that held the lifeboat, and splash! it dropped into the sea. My text describes it, ‘“The soldiers cut off the ropes of the boat and let her fall off.” As that empty lifeboat dropped and was cap- gized on a sea where for two weeks winds and billows had been in battle I think that many on board the main vessel felt their last hope of everreaching home had vanished. In that tempestuous sea a small boat could not have lived flve minutes. My subject is “Unsafe Lifeboats. We cannot exaggerate the importance of the lifeboat. All honor to the memory of Lionel Lukin, the coach builder of Long Acre, Log- don, who invented the flrst lifeboat, and Ido not biame him for ordering put on his tomb- stonein Kent the inscription that you may still read there: “This Lionel Lunkin was the first who built a lifeboat and was the original inventor of that principle of satety by which many lives and much property have been pre- served from shipwreck, and he obtained for it the king's patent in the year 1785.” All honor to the memory of Sir William Hillary, who, living in the Isle of Man, and after assisting with his own hand in the res- cue of 305 lives of the shipwrecked, stirred the English Pariiament to quick action in the construction of lifeboats. 1'hanks to God for the sublime and pathetic and divine mis- sion of the lifeboat. No one will doubt its important mission who hasread of the wreck of the Amazon in the Bay of Biscay, of the Tweed running on the reefs of the Gulf of Mexico, or of the Ocean Monarch on the coast of Wales, or of the Birkenhead on the Cape of Good Hope, or of the Royal Charter on the coast of Anglesea, or of the Exmouth on the Scotch breakers,.or of the Cambria on the Irish coast, or of the Atlanticon the rocks of Nova Scotia, or of the Lexington on Long Island Sound. To add still further to the importance of the lifeboat, remember there are at least 3,000,000 men following the sea, to say noth- ing of the uncounted millions this moment ocean passengers. We ‘‘land-lubbers.” as sailors call us, may not know the difference between a marline spike and a ringbolt, or anything about heaving a log, or rigging out a flying jibboom, or furling a topsail, but we all realize to greater or less extent the im- portance of a lifeboat in every marine equip- ment, But do we feel the importanceof a lifeboat in the matter of thesoul’s rescue? Thereare times when we all feel that we are out atsea, and as many disturbing and anxious ques- tions strike us as waves struck that vessel against the sides of which the lifeboat of my text dangled. Questions about the church. Questions about the world. Questions about God. Questionsabout our eternal destiny. Every thinking man and woman has these questions, and in proportion asthey arethink- ing people de these questions arise, There is no wrong in thinking. If God had not intended us to think and keep on think- ing, He would pot have built under this wheelhouse of the skull this thinking ma- chine, which halts not in its revolutions from cradle to grave. Even the midnight does not stop the thinking machine, for when we | are in dreams we are thinking, although we ! do not think as well. All of us who are ac- customed to thinking want to reach some solid shore of safety and satisfaction, and if any one has a good lifeboat that we may honorably take I wish he would unswing it from the davits and let us get into itand put for the shore. But I give you fair notice I must first ex- . amine the lifeboat before I risk my soul in it or advise you to risk your soul in it. All the splendid Ramsgate lifeboats, and Margate lifeboats, and South Shield lifebosts, and American lifeboats wera tested before being put into practical use as to their buoyancy and speed and stowage and self-righting ca- pacity. And when you offer my soul a life- boat I must first test it. Here is. a splendid new lifebout called Theosophy. It has only a little while been launched, although gome of the planks are really several thousand years old, and from a worm eaten ship, but they are painted over and look new. They are really fatalism and pantheism of olden time. But we must forget that and call them theosophy. The Grace Darling of this lifeboat was an oars- woman by the name of Mme. Blavatsky. but the oarswoman now is Annie Besant. So many are getting aboard the boat it is worthy of examination, both because of tho safety of those who have entered it and be- cause we ourselves are invited to get in. Its theory is that everythingis God. Horse and star and tree and man are parts of Cod. We have three souls—an animal soul, a hu- man soil, a spiritual soul. The animal soul becomes, after awhile, a wandering thing, trying to express itself through mediums. It enters beasts or enters a humam being, and when you find an effeminate man it 1s because a woman's soul has got into the man, and when you find a masculine woman jt is because a man's soul has taken posses- sion of & woman's body. “Then ihe soldiers cul off the ropes vid, “It is no use; this ship and they proposed among themselves to lower the lifeboat and get into intrepid fellows and i by one of thesa mysterious beings irom | central Asia. The gentleman knew it from the fact that the mysterious being left his i pocket handkerchief, embroidered with his | name and Asiatic residence. The most won- l derful achievement of the theosophists is {| that they keep out of the insane asylum. They prove thetruth of the statement that no | religion ever announced was so absurd but || it gained disciples. /| Societies in the United States and England and other lands have been established for the promulgation of theosophy. Instead of , | needing the revelation of a Bible you can havo these spirits from a cave in central Asia to tell you all you ought to know. and after you leave this life you may become a prima donna, or a robin, or a gazelle, or a sot, or a prize fighter, or a Herod, or a Jezebel, and so be enabled to have great variety of experience, rotating through the uni- verse, now rising. now falling, now shot out in a straight line and now deserib- ing a parabola, and on and on. and up and up, and down and down, and round and round. Don’t yousee? Now, that theosophic lifeboat has been launched. It proposes to take you off the rough sea of doubt into ever- lasting quietude. How do you like the life- boat? My opinion is you had better imitate the mariners of my text and cut cff the ropes of that boat and let ber fall off. Another lifeboat tempting us to enter is made of many planks of good works. Itis really a beautiful boat—almsgiving, vracti- cal sympathies for human suffering, right- eous words and righteous deeds. I must admit I like the looks of the prow. and of the rowlocks and of the paddles, and of the steering gear, and of many who are think- ing to trust themselves on her benches. But the trouble about that lifeboat is it leaks. I never knew a man yet good enough to earn heaven by his virtues or generosities. If there be one person here present on this blessed Sabbath all of whose thoughts have been always right, all of whose actions have’ always been right,and all of whose words have always been right, let him stand up, or if al- ready standing let him lift his hand. and 1 will know that he lies. Paul had it about right when hesaid, “By the deeds of the law shall no flesh living be justified.” David had it about right when he said, ‘‘There is none that doeth good, no not one.” The old book had it about right when it said, “All hxve sinned and come short of the glory of God.” Let a man get off that little steamer called The Maid of the Mist, which sails up to the foot of Niagara Falls, and then climb to thetop of the falls onthe descending floods, for he ean do it easier than any man ever will be able to climb to heaven by his good works. Ii your thoughts have always been exactly right. and your words exactly right, and your deeds always exactly right, you can go up to the gate of heaven, and you need not even knock tor admittance, but open it yourself and push the angels out of your way and go up and take one of the front seats. But you would be so unlike any one else that has gone up from this world that you would be a curiosity in heaven and more fit for a heavenly museum than for a place whera the inhabitants could look at you free of charge. No, sir, Iadmire your good works, and tha lifeboat you are thinking of trusting in is handsomer than any yawl or pinnace or yacht or cutter that ever sped out ofa boat- house or hoisted sail fora race. But she leaks. Trust your soul in that, and you willgo to the bottom. She leaks. So I imitate the mariners of the text. and with a cutlass strike the ropes of the boat and let her fall of. Another lifeboat is Christian Incon- sistencies. - The planks of this boat are composed of the split planks of shipwrecks. That prow is made out of hypocrisy from the life of a man who professed ons thing and really was another. One oar of this lifeboat was the falsehood of a church mem- yer, and the other oar was the wickedness’ some minister ot the Gospel, whose in- iquities were not for a long while found out. Not one plank from the oak of God's eternal truth in all that lifeboat. All the | planks, by universal admission, are decayed | and crumbling and fallen apart and rotten I and ready to sink. { Well, well,” you say, ‘no one will want to get into that lifeboat.” Oh, my friend, you are mistaken. That is the most popular lifeboat ever constructed. That is thos most popular lifeboat ever launched. Millions of people want to get into it. They jostle each other to get the best seat in the boat. You could not keep them back though you stood at the gunwales with a club, as on our ship Greece in a hurricane, and the steerage pas- sengers were determined to coms up on deck, where they would have been washed off, and the officers stood at the top of the stairs clubbing them back. Even by such violence as that you could not keep people from jumping into the most popular lifeboat, made of church member inconsistencies. In times of revival when sinners flock into the inquiry room the most of them are kept from deciding aright becausa they know so many Christians who are bad. The inquiry room becomes a World’s Fair for exhibition of all the frailties ot church members, so that if you believe all is there told you you would be afraid to enter a church lest you get your pockets picked or get knocked down. This is the way thev talk: “I was cheated out of $500 by a leader of a Bible cluss.” ‘A Sunday-school teacher gossiped about me and 4id her best to destroy my good name.” “I had a partner in business who swamped our business concern by his trickery and then rolled up his eyes in Friday night prayer shipwrecked erawied up on the beach to die unless some one happened to walk along or some fisherman's hut might be near. But after the ship Ayrshire was wrecked at Squan Beach, and the Powhattan leit her 30¢ dead strewn along our coast, and another vessel went on the rocks, 409 lives perishing, the United States Government woke up and. made an appropriation of $200,000 for life stations, and life lines from fak- ing box are shot over © the wild surf, and hawsers ares stretched from wreck to shore and wkat with Lyles's gun and six oared surfboat,with cork at the sides to make it unsinkable, and patrolmen all night long walking the beach until they meet each ther and exchange metal tickets, soas to show the entira beach has been traversed, and the Coston light flashes hope from shoras to sufferer, and surfmen, incased in Merri- man life saving dress, and life car rolling on the ropes, there are many probabilities o rescue for the unfortunate of the sea. But the government of the united heavens has made better provision for the rescue of our souls. So close by that this moment wa can put our hand on its top an1 swing into it. is this gospsl lifeboat. It will not taks you more than a second to get into it. But while in my text w» stand watching the marines with their cutlasses, preparing to sever the ropes of the lifeboat and let her fall off, notice the poor equipment. Oaly one lifeboat. Two hundred and seventy-six pussengers, as Paul counted them, and only onelifeboat. My text uses the singularandnot the plural, “Cut off the ropes of the boat.” I do not suppose it would have hsld more than thirty people, thouzla loaded to the water's edge, I think by marine law all our modern ves- sels have enough lifeboats to hold all the crew and all the passengers in case of emerg- ency, but the marines of my text were stand- ing by the only boat, and that a small boat, and yet 276 passengers. But what thrills me through and through is the fact that though we are wrecked by sin and trouble and there is only one liteboat, that boat is largeenough to hold all who are willing to get into it. The gospel hymn expresses it: All mav come, whoever will; ‘+ his Man-receives poor sinners still. But I must haulin that statement a little, Room for all in that lifeboat, With just ons exception. Not you—I1 do not meun you, but there is one exception. There have been cases where ships were in trouble, and the captain got all the passengers and crew into the lifeboats. but there was not room for the captain. He, through the sea trumpet, shouted : ‘‘Shove off now and pall for the beach. Good-by!” And then the captaii, with pathetic and sublime self-sacrifice, went down with the ship. So the Captain of our salvation. Christ tne Lord, launches the gos- pel lifeboat and tells us all to get in, but He perishes. “It behoovsd Christ to suffer.” Was it not so, ye who witnessed His agonizing ex- piration? Simon of Cyrene, was it not so? Cavalry troops, wnoss horses pawed the dust at the crucifixion, was it not'so? Ye Marys who swooned away with the sun of the midday heavens, was it not so? “By His stripes we are healed.” By His death we live, By His sinking in the deep sea of suffering we get off in a safe lifeboat. Yes, we must put into this story a little of our own personality. We had a ride in that very lifeboat from foundered craft to solid shore. Once on the raging seas I rowed. i The storm: was 1 ud: the night was dark The ocean yawned end rudely biow’ ¢ The win 1 toat toss*d my foundering bark. But I got in‘o the gospel lifebout and I got ashore. No religious speculation for me. These higher criticism fellows do not bother me a bit. You may ask me fifty questions about the sea, and about the land, and about the lifeboat that I eannot answer, but one thing I know, I am ashore, and I am going to stay ashore, if the Tord by His grace will help me. I feel under me something so firm that I try it with my right foot, and try it with my left foot, and then I try it with both fest, and it is so solid that I think it must be what the old folks used to call the Rock of Ages. And be my remaining days ou earth many or few I am .going to spend my time in recommending the lifeboat which fetched me here, a poor sinner saved by grace, and in swinging the eutlasses to sever the ropes of eny unsafe lifeboat and let her fall off. My hearer, without asking any questions, get into the gospel lifeboat. Room! and yet there is room! The biggest boat on earthis the gospel lifeboat. You must remember the proportion of things, and that the ship- wrecked craft is the whole earth, and the lifeboat must be in proportion. You talk about your Campanizs, and your Lucania, and your Majestivs, and your City of New Yorks, but all of them put together are smaller than an Indian's canoe on Sch- roon Lake compared with this gospellifeboat that is large enough to take in all Nations. Room for one and room for ail. Get in! ‘How? How?” you ask. Well, I know how you feel, for summer before last on the sea of Ainland [ had the same experience. The, ship in which we sailed could not ventures nearer than a mile from shore, where stood the Russian palace of Peterof, and we had to get into a small bout and be rowed ashore. The water was rough, and as we went down the ladder at the side of the ship we held firmly on to the railing, but in order to get into tne boat we had at last to let go. How did I know that the boat was good ‘and that thé oarsmen were sufficient? How did I know that the Finland Sea would not swallow us with one opening of its erystal jaws? We had to trust, and we did trust, and our trust was well rewarded. In the game way get into this gospel lifeboat. Let go! As long as you hold on to any other hope you are imperiled. and you get no ad- vantage from the lifepoat. Let go! Dces some one here say, *‘I guess I will hold ona little to my good works, or to a pious parent- age, orto something I can do in the way of achieving my own salvation.” No, no, let go! Trust the Captain, who would not put you into a rickety or uncertain craft. For the sake of your present and everlast- ing welfare, with all the urgency of an im- mortal addressing immortals, I ery from the depths of my soul and at the top of my voice, Let go! Last summer the life saving crew at East Hampton invited me to come up to the life station and see the crew practice, for twice a week they are drilled in the impor- tant work assigned them by the United States Government, and they go through all the routine of saving the snipwrecked. But that would give little idea ot what they would have to do if some midnight next winter, the wind driving beachward, a vessel should get in the grasp of a hurricane. See the lights flare from the ship in the breakers, and then responding lights flaring from the beach, and hear the rockets buzz as they rise, and the lifeboat rumbles out, and the gun booms, and the life line rises and falls across the splintered decks, and the hawser tightens, and the life car goes to and fro, carrying the exhausted mariners, and the ocean, as if angered by the snatching of the human prey from the white teeth ot its surf and the stroke of its billowing paw, rises with increased fury to assail the land. So now I am engaged in no light drill, practic- ing for what may come over some of your souls. It is with some of you wintry mid- night, and your hopes for this world and the next are wrecked. But see! See! The lights kindled on the beach! I throw out tha life line, Hsu! in, hand over hand! Ah, there is a lifeboat in the surf, which all the wrath of earth an hell cannot swamp, and its Captain with scarred | hand puts the trumpet to His lips as He cries, **Oh, Israel, thou hast destroysd thy- self, but in Me is thy heip.”’ Bat what is tas use of all this if you decline to get ingo it? meeting, as though he were looking for Elijah's chariot to make a second trip and take up another passenger.” But what a cracked and water logged and gaping semmed lifeboat the inconsistencies of others! Put me on ashingle mid-Atlantic and leave me thers rather than in sucha yaw! of spiritual confidence. God forbid that I should get aboard it, and lest some of you make the mistake of getting into it I do as the mariners did on that Mediterranean ship w hen the sailors were about to get into the unsafe lifeboat of the text and lose their lives in that way. ‘Then the soldiers cut off the ropes of the boat and let her fall off.” **Well,” says some one, ‘this subject is very discouraging, for we must have a life- boat if we are ever to get ashore, and you have already condemned three.” Ah, it is because I wantto persuade you to taks the only safe lifeboat. I will not allow you to be deceived and get on to the wild waves and then capsize or sink. Thank God, there is a lifeboat that will take you ashore in safety, as sure as God is God and heaven is heaven. The keel and ribs of this boat are made out of a tree that was set up on a bluff back of Jerusalem a good many years ago. Both of the oars are made out of the same tree. The rowlocks are made out of the same tree. The steering gear is made out of the same tree. The planks of it were hammered to- gether hy the hammers of executioners who thought they were only killing a Christ, but were really pounding together an escape for all imperiled souls of all ages. It is an old boat, but good as new, though it has been carrying passengers from sinking ships to firm shore for ages and has never Jost a passenger. These old Christians begin to smile becausa it is dawning upon them what I mean. The fact is that in this way years ago trey got off a wreck themsslves, and I do not “yonder they smile. It is not a senseless giggle that means frivolity, but it is a smile like that on the face of Christians the moment they leave earth for heaven— yea, like the smile of God Himself when He had completed the plan for saving the world. Right after that big tumble of the Atlantic | Ocean six or seven weeks ago on the beach | at Bast Hampton I met the captain of the life saving station and said, ‘‘Captain. do you think a lifeboat could live in a sea like that?” Although the worst of it was over, 1f you find a woman has become a platiorm gpeaker and likes politics, she is possassad by a dead politidian, who forty years ago made the platform quake. The soul keeps wander- ing on und on, and may have fiity or innu- merable different forms. and finally is ab- sorbed in God. It was Cod at the start and will be God at the last. But wito gives the authority for the truth of sucha religion? Some beings living in & cave in central Asia. They are i sible to the naked eye, but they cross continents and seas in a flash. My Baptist brother Dr. Haldeman says that a theosophist in New York was visited the captain replied, “No, I do not think it gonid ’ But this Benoa of which I speak can live in any ssa and defies all breakers, SPAT: has >. 2 Lo ie | and all eyelonss, and all equinoxes, and all | i Whe the maniusrs cus ERG ropes earth, and all hell. In twenty years the life | ebeat and let her7oll of. | saving apparatus along our Atlantic coast | | saved the lives of over 45,000 of the ship- | | wrecked, but this lifeboat that I commend | ‘has saved in twenty years hundreds of mill- | | ions of the saipwrecked. Like those newly | invented English lifeboats, it is unsubmerg- | ible, self righting and self bailing. : | All along our rocky American coast things | were left to chance for centuries, and the You might as well have been a sailor on board tbat foundering ship of the Medi aE i reservoir was in Lockport, N. Y., the other day by workingmen who were excavat- {ing for a foundation. It belonged fo a system of water works abandoned many years ago. A large forgotten tapped