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REV. DR. TALMAGE.
“How to Conquor.”—(Preached at
Late Maxintnckee ' ’ Tnd l
Text: “When shall I awake? I will seek
it yet again.”- Vrov. xxiii., 35.
With an insight into human nature such as
no other mail ever reached, Solomon, in my
text, sketches the mental operations of one
rectitude who. having stepped aside from the path of
recuuuu. desires aesiiesTO to return letuin With vvun a n wish wisn for ioi
something better, he said: “When shall I
awake ■awah-e. 1 ' When .v nen snan shall I i come come nut out of oi this tnisnoiriu horrid
nightmare uneradicted of iniquity?” But, seized upon by by
habit, and forced .down hill
nX °Our SS1 fwill trwlt once mon" “ ^
libraries are adorned with an elegant
sffis&iENS hasalreadv made shin-wreck
suppose sunnose a a men m r .n nasaneaaj mane smpwrecK,
suppose he is already oil the track; suppose
g'ttacK he has alreadv xt.fiȣ <rone astrav How is he to
I propose to address myself to suclr
every passion or tueir 5*‘5S5S5i’!Si agonized soul, 'St are
ready to hear such a discussion. They com
pare themselves with what they were ten
years ago, and erv out from the bondage in
which thev -ire incarcerated with Now an' if therp
'
be anv here eome earnest lievmill
numose vci feelina tliev 'and nrp
thenale of cmf Christian svmoafhv that the
sermon hardly be exported to address
them, then, at this moment, I give them my
right hand, a ud call them brother. Look
up. There is glorious and triumphant hope
for you yet I sound the trumpet of Gospel
deliverance. The church is ready to spread
a banquet at vour return, and the hierarchs
of heaven to fall into line of bannered pro
cession at tho news of your emancipation.
So far as God may help me, I propose to
show what are the obstacles of your return,
and then how you are to surmount those
obstacles. The first difficulty in the way of
your return is the force of moral gravitation.
Just as there is a natm-al law which brings
down to the earth anything you throw into the
air, so there is a corresponding moral gravi
tation. In other words, it is easier To go
down than it is to go up; it is easier to do
wrong than it is to do right. Call to mind
the comrades of your boyhood days
wmo nf tbom rv 0 o(] cmno nV thom
which most affected you? Call to mind the
anecdotes that you have heard in the last
five or ten years-some of them are pure
and some of them impure Which the
more easily sticks to vour memoi"-?
During the years of your life you have
formed.certain courses of conducG-some of
. them good, some of them bad. To which
style habit did you the more easily
vnM 1 * Ah mv “f fripnrlq seTf-ffispTction wp hnvp to ket
a moment to find
tvmt, fiiprn, ic in all nnr srml^ n for^p
moral gravitation! But that gravitation
may be resisted. Just as you may pick wp
from£he earth something and hold it in your
hand .toward heaven, just so, by the power
of God’s grace, a soul fallen may be lifted
toward jieace, toward pardon, toward heaven.
Force of moral God’s gravitation in every one that of
us. but power in grace to overcome
foree of mnnl cn-nvititir,n
The next thiiw fvil in the wav y of vour return
is the power of habit. i know there are
np°evB those who tbtl rav it I is do verv not easv bleve^eT for tliem to K ^ive
Is disscaJLo- « limn ffiven to intoxication He knows it
is ortv‘. “amiuiSg his family Wdy,' destroying: his prop- soik
him. mind and
If that man, being an inteUigent oecil(- man,
..J 1 s f«miiv eoniri
trive im that j,ahit would lie
not do so? The fact that he does not give
it avSy up proves that it is hard to give streaul it ub It
is easy thing to sail down the
tide carrying vou^urn vou with great force-but is’itsoeasv sun
thento^ow™^ksw“Vield nose the boat upstream
our°hearfe to&e
evil inclinations in and our but S bad
moment we try to turn, wc put our boat in
the rapids lust above Niagara and try to
row up stream. Take a man given to the
habit of using tobacco, as most of you do,
and let him iresdlve to stop, and he finds it
very difficult. Twenty-seven years ago I quit
that habit, .and.I would as soon dare to put
my right hand in i the fire as once to indulge
in it. Why? Because it was such a
terrific struggle to get over it. Now,
let a man be advised by his physi
cian to give up the use of tobacco,
He goes around not knowing what to do
with himself. He cannot add up a line of
figures. He cannot sleep nights. It seems
us’if the world had turned upside down. He
feels his business going to ruin. Where he
was kind and obliging he is scolding and
fretful. The composure that characterized
him has given way*to a fretful restlessness,
and he has become a complete fidget. What
power is it that has rolled a wave of woe
over the earth and shaken a portent in the
heavens? He has tried to stop smoking or
chewing! After a While he says, “I am going
to do as I please. The doctor doesn’t under
stand my case. Frn going back to my old
habit.” And he returns. Everything assumes
its usual composure. His business seems to
brighten, the world becomes an attractive
place to live in. His children, seeing the
difference, hail the return of their
father’s genial disposition. What wave
of color has dashed blue into the skv, and
greenness into the mountain foliage, and the
glow of sapphire into the sunset? What en
chantment has lifted a world.of beauty and
iov on his soul? He has gone back to to
Oh, the fact is, as we all know in our own
experience, that habit is a taskmaster; as
long as we obev it, it does not chastise us:
but let us resist, and we find we are to be
lashed with scorpion whips and bound with
ship cable, and thrown into the track of
bone-breaking Juggernauts! During the war
•of 1812 there was a ship set on fire loose just from above its
Niagara Fails, and then, cut
moorings, it eame on down through the night
and tossed over the falls. It was said to have
been a scene brilliant beyond all description,
Well, there are thousands of men on fire of
evil habit, coming down through the rapids
and through the awful night of temptation
toward the eternal plunge. Oh! how hard it
is to arrest them. God only can arrest them.
Suppose a man after five, or ten. or twenty
vearsof evil doing,resolves to do right? Why,
all the forces of darkness are allied against
him He cannot sleep nights. He gets down
on his knees in the midnight and erics, “God,
help me.”’ He bites his lip. He grinds liis
teeth. He clenches his fist in his determine.
tion to keen his purpose. He dare not look
at the bottles in the window of a wine store.
It was one long, bitter, exhaustive, hand to
hand fight, with inflamed, tantalizing and
merciless habit. When he thinks he is en
tirely free, the old inclinations pounce upon
him like a pack of hounds with their muzzles
tearing away at the flanks of one poor rein
deer. In Paris there is a sculptured repre- He
mentation of Bacchus, the god of revelry.
is riding on a panther at full leap. Oh, how
suggestive! Let every one who is speeding riding
on bad ways understand he is not a
docile and well-broken steed, but he is riding
a monster, wild and bjoodthirstv. going at a
death * • leap.
But one young man with bravado, after all
the rest had stopped, cried out: “One round
more!” He swept around and went down,
and was brought thousands out a corpse. My friends,
there are and tens of thousands of
men losing their souls in that wav. ‘ It is the
one round more.
j have also to say that if a man wants to
retarn Horn evd practmes somety repulses
nun. iiesiring to lciorm. ne says. ' AO* i
^vill sliukcoil my old sssocifltos, and 1 will
. Christian corrmmiionshin ” Ami he
nna vmisuan compamonsnip. ! m ,P e an- a P
pears * at the church door some Sabbath , day, ,
aua 1116 ustiu greets o-reets him him with with a a wk look, as as
ver Secl^tosee a JZvhl
****** of saying: “Good morning; f am glad
with more zeal than common sense, savs:
, • tVlifif
wiaa to see you. me ay mg mier wfl was „
saved, and I J suppose there is mercy for you ”
TW }om e chiuk tlfrow,
StjSZm7SS££S'i6Z 3££ PoSS
i J &
non, ne siaes up Dy some hitrhlv m niy respectatne resneetahlc
man he used to know going down the street,
and immediately the respectable man has an
errand down some other street! Well, the
prodigal, Christian wishing to association return, takas by- some hand, mem
ber of a the or
tries to. The Christian young man looks at
him, looks at tho faded apparel and the marks
of dissipation, and instead of giving him a
S»P of the hand offers him the tip end
of the long fingers of the left hand, which is
eo Oh, ’"I^ how few Christian m the people Her. understand
how much force and Gospel there is in a
g°° d - honest handshaking! Sometimes, when
T some ou ^T Christian 6 .^ the man Ileedof has encouragement,and taken you heartily
! hy the hand, have you not felt that thrilling
through every fibre of your body, mind and
30ul - an encouragement that was just what
you needed? You do not know anything at
aV ' out thls ualess know wh ® n a ma ”
f ncs to retu rn from evl1 courses of conduct, ,
he runs against . repulsions innumerable. We
f? man ’ he lives a block or two
from the church, or half a mile from the
church. There are people m our crowded cit
ies who h ve a thousand miles from the church
Vast deserts or indifference between them and
the respectability, house af ,»? d - /£ though he thousands >ve must and keep tens
of thousands perish Christ sat with publi
eans and sinners. But if there comes to the
house of God a man with marks of dissipation
upon him, people throw up their hands in
horror,_as much as to say: Isn’t it shock
ln S ? Haw thes e dalnu >'- fa - stldloa s Chris
tians m . all our churches . are going to get into
heaven 1 dont know, unless they have an
especial train of cars, cushioned and up
bolstered, each one a car herd to himself! they and
cannot go with the great of publicans
sinners. Oh, ye, '' d 1 °_ '; ar 1 y® ar J u ‘
scorn at the _ fallen, I tell . I you r plainly, r . n if you
had ^surrounded by the same mfluenc^
ins “ of sittingto-dayamid the cnltuied would
and tha reflucd „ and the Christ a,, you
ditrtq covered with ibth andabommaton! „ L w
It is not because you are naturally any bot
ter, but because the mercy of God has pro
***** Who are yo^ that broughtup
m Christian circles, and watched by ChriB
«an parentage, you should be so hard on tho
fa llon.
1 tliink men a)so are often hindered from
r etura ^. tke ? act that churches are too anx
ions about their membership and too anxious
about their denomination, and they rash out
when they see a man about to give up his
si ^ an f
going to be baptized, whether by sprinkling
? r immersion, and what land of a church
he is going to join. Oh, my friends! It is a
P° or Gme to talk about Presbyterian Metho- cate
chisms, and Episcopal liturgies, and
dist lovo " foasfcs ’ and baptisteries to a man
™ coming out of the darkness ofsin into
the glonous light of the Grospel. ^ by, it
reminds us of a man drowning in the sea, and
a lifeboat puts out for him, and the man in
the boat says to the nmn out of the
boat: --Now, if I get you ashore,
ar e you going to live in my street,
First . get him ashore, and then tail: about the
non-essentials of religion. AV ho cares wliat
church he joins, if he only joins Christ and
starts for heaven? Oh, you ought to and have,
| my brother an illumined face, a
hearty grip for every one that tries to turn
from Lys evil way. Take hold of the same
book with him, though his dissipations shake
the book, remembering that he that con¬
Terteth a sinner from the error of his ways
shall save a soul from death, and hide a
multitude of sins.
Now., I have shown you these °b
staeles because I want you to under¬
stand I know all the difhculties in the
way^* but I am now to tell you how
Hannibal may scale the Alps and how
the shackles may be unnveted and
how the paths of virtue forsaken may be re
gained. First of all, my brother, throw
yourself on and God. tell Go Him to Him, these frankly habits and
earnestly, Him, help you all
have, and ask if there is any in
the resources of omnipotent love, to give it
to you. Do not go with a long rigmarole
people call prayer, made up ot ohs and
“ahs” and “forever and forever amens!’ Go
to God and cry for help! help! help, and if
you cannot ery for help just look and live,
I remember in the war I was at Antietam,
and I went into the hospitals after the
battle, and I said to a man, -VV here
are you hurfcf’ He made no answer,
hut held up his arm swollen and splintered,
I saw where he was hurt. The simple tact
i s » when a man has a wounded soul, all he
has to do is to hold it up before a sympathetic
Eord and get it healed. It does not take
any long prayer Just hold up the wound,
Oh, it is no small thing when a man is nerv
ous an ^ and exhausted, coming from
hp evil ways, to feed that (rod puts two om
nipotent arms around about him and says:
“Yo V*? uian, I will stand by you! The
mountains may depart and the lulls be re
moved, but I will never fail you. And then,
as the soul thinks the news if. too good to be
true, and cannot believe it, and looks up m
God s face, God lifts His right hand and takes
au oath, an affidavit, saying: "As I live,
saith the Lord God. I have uo pleasure m the
death of him that dieth.”
Blessed be God for such a Gospel as this,
“Cut the slices thin,” said the wife to the
husband, “or there will not be enough to go
all around for the children: cut the slices
thin.” Blessed be God. there is a full loaf for
every one that wants it; bread enough and
to spare. No thin slices at the Lord’s table.
I remember when the Master Street hos
pital m Philadelphia, was opened during the
war, a telegram came saying: ‘There will be
three hundred wounded men to-night; be
ready to take care of them: and from my
church there went m some twenty or
thirty men an ^ women to look after
these poor wounded fellows. As they
came, some from one part of the
land, whether some this from man was another,^no from Oregon, one or asked from
Massachusetts, or from Minnesota, or from
New York. There was a wounded soldier,
ind the only question was how to take off the
bandage,
moral distemper. In all the ages of tlio
church there has not been an instance where
» man kept one evil associate and was re
formed. Among the fourteen hundred mill
ion of the race not one instance. t»o Home
to-day, open your desk, take out letter paper,
stamp and envelope, and then write a letter
^My^ld .^^ companions- mn^rsuaSyS I start this will day for
job,
. this ’ farewell.”
Then sign . vour name, and , send , »■ the v ^ letter . ■
with " the tlle first first nnst post. {livn trive im up vran- youi bad Dau tom- com
panions, “tA, or give up heaven. It is not ten bad
cZpanhms * | t . rov a man ’ nor five bail
nm three bad companion,
£ut one. What chance is there for
gjJ men wiftm ha'tfnjlu
suinmci mgnt ana me uooi was held ieit him open, fast,
and I saw tho ,Y process. They hie nnd thev
and they put the cup to ms lino lips, and tney
f Wt!h ““
^aA.m I c«tS S .1.1, “o'k “ri.tim advice.
First of all, seek God; S j.t then ir i seek m*™. Christian
’
counsel, ( rather all the , . oflbody .., ,
up energies God for
mmd and soul, and appealing everlasting to
success, declare this day gambling war
against all drinking habits, Half-and-half all
practices, all houses of sin.
work will amount to nothing; it must bo a
Waterloo. Shrink back now and you are
lost. Push on and you are saved. A Spar
tan general fed at the very moment of vic
tory but ho dipped his finger m his own
blood and wrote on a rock near which he was
dying “Sparta has conquered. ’ Though
your struggle to got rid of sin may «
be almost a death struggle, you can dip your the
finger in your own blood and write on
Rock of Ages, “Victory through our Lord
Jesus Chi 1 st.
Oh, what glorious news it would be for
some of these young men to send home to
then- parents They go to the postoflico
every day or two to see whether there are
any letters from you. How anxious they are
to hear.
borne one said to a Grecian general:
‘ VVhat was the proudest moment in your
life?” He thought a moment, and said:
“The proudest moment of my life was when I
sent word home to my parents that I had
gained the victory.” And the proudest and
m0 st brilliant moment in your life will be the
moment when you can send word to your pa
rents that you have conquered your evil habits
by the grace of God and become eternal victor.
Oh, desjuse not parental anxiety! The
will come when you wil have neither father
nor mother, andyouwil go around the place
where they used to watch you and find them
gone from the house, and gone from the field,
and loud gone from the neighborhood. Cry the
as for forgiveness as you may over
mound in the churchyard, they will not
answer. Dead! Dead! And then you will
take out the white lock of hair that was cut
from your mother’s brow just before they
buried her, and you will take the cane with
which your father used to wal k, and you will
think, had ami think, and wish that you
done just as they wanted you
to, and would give the world if
you had never thrust a pang through
their dear old hearts. God pity the poor
young man who has brought disgrace on his
father’s name! God pity the young man
who has broken his mother s heart! Better
if he had never been born—better if, in tho
first hour of his life, instead of being laid
against the warm bosom of maternal
tenderness, he had been coffined and
sepulchered. There is no balm power
fl ‘! f, n0U f h hoai the heart of one
who has brought parents to a sorrowful
gi-ave and who wanders about through the
dismal cemetery, rending the hair, and
wringing the hands, and crying: “Mother!
mother!” Oh, that today by all the
memories of the you' past and yielf by all tho hopes rt^,
of ^° the ^- future, would your Ima
( y° UI father s bod and your
mothers brod be your God forever!
Making the Best of lt.
...
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I. Hasty flight with the prize.
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II. Stuck fast, but bound to get away
with that watermelon.
Judge (to prisoner)—“So you were
drunk and disorderly? What have you
to say 9” ? Prisoner—“I've a good deal
to say, your honor, if you’ll only give
me time to say it.” Judge—“Certainly,
with pleasure. Sixty days will Vie enough,
won’t it? Our object is to please.”—
Washington Critic.
Xing Humbert, of Italy, squandered
more than $100,000 during his lour days'
visit to Berlin.
5-Ton Cotton Gin Scales, $60 '
■
t 0 nES of BINGHAMTON, Binghamton, N. Y.
—------- •
la oui-c, /WEEK
If »Club System irw R 1 Ih.-acH/J
L|P§i! i while as convenient V ^ SSs/w
'gflSfli t0 ^ ie l )u y er as any V C 0 ./ 10 )
jy31| 'IrwHJl instalment wholesale system, spet cash is ^ J* 7 m
a Q\\w,
system to us. The
I djgggw co-operation of the
jlffl n club members sells us
* 38 watches in each
: cash ------- _
i i 038 Watch Club, and we get from
i | out, the Club though for each each watch member before only it pays goes j'Sig fgfa
$x a week. This is why wc give you lie
IB' m more for your money doing than any the one largest else Ip ffilg
[watch and why we arc IMp
yimijT business in the world. We sell
llllftlonly prices first about quality what others goods, but for ournilljj
r are SilverWatcli get sec- |w, jpg
1 ond substantial quality.Our$10 Silver {not imitation of
I is a ghj j|j»
any kind) Stem-Wind American Lever
I Watch—either hunting case'or open, raffi
j 1 !i I | OpenFace, Our $‘35.00 first \Vatcli quality, is stiffened a Stem-wind. Gold I|S Wfe
j) L ii ! American Lever W atch , guaranteed toanyflU|| to Isp
| wear 20 years. It is fully equal We find
I I watch sold for $38 by others.
| I m a first-class satisfactory Stiffened and Gold serviceable Case much than I
more
. any Solid Gold Case that can be sold at
less than double the money, as cheap IS
i sS m solid cases are invariably worthless thin, weak, after
o! low quality, and
short use. Our $38 Watcli contains
numerous important patented im¬
provements, of vital importance to accur¬
ate Wind, timing— Patent which Dustproo/ control exclusively. t Patent Stem It
&*c., we
is bility fully equal for accuracy, appearance, Watch, either dura¬
and service, to any #75
Open Face or Hunting. Our $4r3.00 Rail¬
, road Watch is especially constructed for
| the most exacting use, and is the best Rail¬
road Watch made, Open Face or Hunting.
All these prices are either all cash or in clubs,
$1.00 a week. An Ajax Watch
Insulator given free with each Watch.
! The Keystone Watch GlubCo Wh ■Xj
Main Office in Co'i Own Bullilina
004 WALNUT Wanted. ST. I’HILADA. PA. ^ fp
Agents Vq 0
Ajax Watqh Insulator, $1.00 magnetlam.
A Fit perfect Watch. protection Sent against by mail receipt Y " ” "W
any on
of price. (£y* re / er t0 a,, V Commercial Agency.
Ryan’s Patent Post-hole
DIGGER AND TRANSPLANTER.
Lislit. Simple. Strong and Effective,
A
It is the only i>e self-cleaning Digger of
made, anil can used in any kind
soil, no matter how sticky, great with perfect ndvan- I
ease. It thus possesses
tages ket. over With all it other diggers easily in the dig mar- 300 j
III ,. a man can
to 400 holes per day. It is exceedingly
ff 2 light, ranted. yet Price very strongly $4. made and war
G. PETERSEN S CO.,
MOLUSTB, ill.
HAlUUtii 1 G IU.nIU
’iliis Tonic is prepared from Pore
Selected Jamaica Gioger. togaher with
< »1 her root* an I lierlm. and f >rms a l’lc-o
ant nnd RfUe.U'i >us Toitie ns a cure tor
and as un A|ip.r*t4/R*r m,™. ititf .......... unc*xct*llt*U. ijewu.,
tfiiiVrJ I)v Plivsici ilM. I r y h. ,
Manuiaeiured l>v ilie Barren Drug Co
.\n^Uhta. G.i
For sale hv !:u.r.v ^ Wii.i.i.niH
OLD STYLE
GORDON
The Best Press for general
work ever made. Prices $150
and up.
W. C. DODSON,
Southern Agent,
AtUata, Oeorcri*
THE VACUUM TIPPEU ARROW
PISTOL.
Harmless, Arritratc, Suro. Caro anil trouble xanlsh when
this toy Is plai t'll w ith the Children, or Parentis. It has no
Equal for the home, , no no sluirp sliarp with with safety safety corners eorners or < points windows, to mar tin
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heres wherever it strikes , leaves no mark. Pistol, Arrow,
and Target sent post-paid to any address for 50c.
BOYS’ ARCTIC DRIVING REINS.
This was
\ gt just the
m article I
fH II when ivanted
a
!i i; Boy.
It is very
jli strong, pretty,
m and durable.
' 25o.
Post-paid,
VELOCIPEDE BELL
YOU
cannot do
without it ;
if you lildw'U II
have a !i
wheel.
Sent Post¬
paid for
25c. or the
articles
complete
for $1.00.
8AMITEL KIRBY,
Manufacturin' of Bells, Toys, Etc.,
MIDDLETOWN. CONN.
I CURE !
ex
I
y; -
I
When I say Cimr. I do not moan merely to
stop them for a time, and then have them re¬
turn again. I mean A KAD1CAL CUXtL,
I have made the disease of
FITS, EPILEPSY or
FALLING SICKNESS,
a life-long study. I warrant my remedy have to
cuu K the worst cases. Because others
Q f my Infallible Kjcmisuy. Give Kxpre»» for
and Post Office. It cools you Address nothing a
trial, and it will cure you.
H.C. ROOT, M. C., 183 Pearl St.. New York
rHOMAS F. FARLEY
Furniture, Stoves
— ANU —
Ill Kinds of House Famishing
GOODS,
'248 Bkoad St., 2nd door south
of 13tu Strkkt,
COLUMBUS, - GAi
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r- Treated with Preservative.
\ ^3* Any one can apply It.
V. RESERVATI t3T Send for Prices and Catalogues.
Trade Mark Registered; March 9th, 183A
OFFICES: e5T S. E. Cor. 3d and Walnut St’s., Phila., Pa. 12 Broadway, N. Y.
HUGHSON & SULLIVAN’S THREE-QUARTER ROAD WAGON.
\
t£
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No. 105.
This U a light and tasty Buggy, well built in every particular, to carry oue or two passengers; and
nr large mles on it allow us to put the price Very tow.
Send for Illustrated Catalogue and Brice List showing a full line of Carriages, Buggies. Carta and
•utter*.
HUGIISON SULLIVAN,
Wholesale Manufacturers, ROCH32STEB, N. TT.