THE- AN EXCELLENT ) Advertising medium) Official Organ of Washington County. '' FIRST OF ALL THE NEWS. - Circulates extensively in the Counties ef ), Job Printing In ItsVarlous Branches. Washingtoa. Martin, Tyrrsii and BsiuforL l.OO A YEAR IX ADVANCE. 44 FOE GOD, FOR COUNTRY, AND FOR TRUTH." SINGER COPT, 5 CfWfTS. VOL. X. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1899. NO. 32. 1 r THE STREAM'S Some say that I'm a babbler and I chatter ou my way, O'er the sands through many lands with heart of stone. Dut there's music in my babble, and my chatter is a lay, : That I love to sing when quiet and alone. Oh, the woodlands are my playgrounds and the dales my sweet delight, And the shaded nooks my rapture as I steal along from sight. Some say I'm never quiet; that I always fret along, Through the glades and in the shades, with discontent, Dut because I like to ramble is it such an ar rant wrong Must I fret in some secluded channel, pent V But I have my drenniing hours, and the bab ble of my song Brings its pleasure to the flowers and its treusures to the throng. rw-1 t, JL. -rfk. There was a sad group of ladies gathered in the parlor of a pretty ; house on the outskirts of the town of Topham. Miss Martha Joyce.spiuster, of uncertain age, sat in a low rocking chair her sweet face clouded, her ten der heart sore; while her two nieces, May and Bessie Joyce, twin sisters of 18, blue-eyed and pretty as rosebuds, sat one each side. The three ladies nil wore mourning and bore in their pale faces and heavy eyes the traces of recent sorrow; but while Aunt Mat- tie meekly folded her hands aud sighed May and Bessie gave voice to consid erable inward indignation. "I don't care for ourselves," said Bessie, using the plural that meant the inseparable twinship; "we are young and can work, but it is too bard to have Aunt Mattie turned out of house and home after all she has done for Mr. William Otdfield." "Don't blame your uncle, dear," began Aunt Mattie. "We wasn't our uucle," snapped out May. "He did what he promised to do," continued Aunt Mattie. 'And then uudid it," said Bessie, angrily. "We are not sure of that, dear." "Now, auntie! He made .a. will, leaving you this house aud $10,000 and 810,000 apiece to Bessie and me," said May; "but afterward, if he did not destroy it, where is it?" "Yes, where is it?" echoed her sis ter. "If it was in the house, surely it would have beeu found in the general turning out of our household posses sions today." 'Well, dear, it can't be found, and we must go back to our old rooms and try to re-establish the little school I left five years ago. We have had a comfortable home for that time. " For the facts of the case were these: William Oldfield, a widower of rnauy years, possessing large means, had "been attacked late in life with a pain ful, incurable sickness, trying to nurse, distressing to witness and having an irritating effect on the nerves of the sufferer. After euduring the trials of dishonest servants and nurses, incom petent housekeepers aud careless at tendants for a time he had persuaded his dead wife's maiden sister to give up a small but flourishing school, by which she supported herself and her brother's orphan girls, and keep house for him. In default of regular salary.he gave a home to the aforesaid nieces, who supported themselves by sewing, aud promised a legacy to Miss Mattie, who, however, hardly expected and never demanded it. Yet, most assuredly, she had earned it, for her brother-in-law, by reason of pain and bad temper, made her a slave to his sick whims, keeping her actively employed as nurse, as he grew worse and worse, till, during the last year of his life, she rarely left his room. Faithfully and patiently she en dured the mouotouy of her life, the caprices of her patient's temper, the fatigue of nursiug, till death claimed the invalid and released her. The promised legacy had beeu left to her and the girls in a will made a year be fore William Oldfield died; but the lawyer said the document was not in trusted to his care. Failing to find it in the house, the ladies were notified that William Oldfield, Jr., the nephew aud heir-at-law of the dead man, would take possession of the entire property at once. It was well known in Topham that this heir was by no means the one to whom the uncle desired to leave his property, as the remainder of his es tate, after the legacies mentioned, passed, by the terms of the last will, to the town to endow a hospital. The young heir-at law had been on ill terms with his uncle for years, being a spendthrift, a gambler and a man ad dicted to drinking, heartlessly indiffer ent to his uncle's sufferings and laugh ing boisterously when the lawyer pro posed to him to make some compensa tion to Miss Mattie for her services. "The old maid was fishing for my nncle's money, of course," he said, "though she is not even a relative. Let her go back to her proper place and learn to keep her busy fingers out of other people's pies." ,&o'Uhe lawyer, Mr. O'Byrne, of kiudly heart and great legal knowledge, was obliged to give Miss Mattie notice SOLILOQUY. Where I glide along at evening softly o'er the shallow pool. As they go, cattle low and quench their thirst, And the plowboy gets a hatfull of the water clear and cool, Standing where the summer posies blos som first. How I love to see the bossy with her pretty soft gray eyes, And a coat as red and glossy a3 the sunlight in the skies. If a stream can fall in.lovo then I have sure ly lost my heart To a maiden, sunshine laden, who each day comes to the wood. From the banks she looks with laughter whore the light and shadows part, And I'd tell her of my passion if I could. But I'm just a restless follow, and my love must go unknown, So I chatter on forever just a little stream, alone. TT rtn T rfk. TTT 9 9-J -m- JL J 7 . to quit the house she had been prom ised should be her own, giving vent as he did so to some opinions of his own in the matter, not strictly profes sional. "You are sure von have searched faithfully for the will?" he asked. "Quite sure." "He certainly had it," said the law yer. "I drew it up myself ten thou sand apiece and the house and person al effects and furniture to Miss Mar tha; the rest of the estate for the use of the Topham hospital. Dear! dear! why won't clients put such papers in proper keeping instead of clinging to them as if they were life-preservers? I am very sorry, Miss Mattie. I havo represented matters to the heir.but he fails to see them in a proper light." So the ladies . packed their trunks and gathered in the little parlor to spend their last evening, preparatory to au early start in the morning. And while they sat, mournfully conversing, a strange event occurred. A shock headed boy rang the bell and handed in a note, which ran in this wise: "Miss Martha Joyce: I do not know t'at the disease of which my uncle died was contagious, but I have a horror of illness in any shape or form. I therefore beg of you, before you leave his house, to burn the bed stead and beddiug he used, that I may not find it when I take possession. Yours, very truly, "William Oldfield." "Well!" cried Bessie, "if impudence can reach a sublimer height thau that I am mistaken." "Burn the bedstead! that splendid black walnut bedstead that matches the chambsr suit!" said Miss Mattie. "It really seems a pity!" "Let him do it himself," said May; "we are not his servants." "I'll tell you what I-will do, dears," said gentle Aunt Mattie; "I have had everything washed but the tickings; I'll just empty the mattresses and have those washed, too. But I really can not reconcile it to my conscience to burn up things that are perfectly harmless." "Oh, Aunt Mattie, give the bedding to old Peggy! She will be delighted. The blankets are soft and fine and the sheets all clean. The young sinner only wants them out of his way." So old Peggy, an aged woman, pen sioner to all the charitable folks in Topham, was sent for and told of this stroke of good fortune. "We will go with ou," Bessie said, "and help you carry them." The four women ascended one flight of stairs to the room where William Oldfield died. Everything was in order there, aud over the mattresses was spread a white Marseilles quilt that Bessie put with the rest of the bedding, while Aunt Mattie and May dragged the mattresses to the floor. "They are all stuffed with hair, PegS.Y." Aunt Mattie said. "I or dered them myself." "Yes, marm, " said the old woman, feeling them carefully and nodding her head; "I'm thinking I'll sell the hair. Husk stuffing will do for my old bones, and I cau buy some flour and coal, likely, with the price of the hair." "Just as you please," said Aunt Mattie, tying the mattresses securely with a stout cord. "Now, girls, are you ready? Hannah will help Peggy with this bundle, and we will carry the sheets, blankets and spreads." So when William Oldfield took pos session the next day he found the bedstead bare and a note from Bessie tied to it, respectfully declining to make a bonfire of the furniture and stating the fact that the bedding had been given away for a charitable use. "If he doesn't like it he is welcome to dislike it," that young lady said, graciously, as she signed the dainty epistle in her finest handwriting. The heir said a bad word, locked up the room aud occupied another apartment, where there had been no "confounded sickness," as he said, aud there reigned in the house where Aunt Mattie had kept dainty neatness the confusion of a young bachelor's household, the disorder following fre quent late suppers, 'when the city friends of young Oldfield came down to "make a night of it and help him spend the old man's money." Quiet Topham was scandalized and sighed over the days xrheu the dissi pated nephew was a far-away disgraoa for mild gossip, but there seemed to be no help for the trouble. The funeral had been over nearly three months, aud Miss Mattie had collected a goodly number of little folks once more around her, when one morning, while Bessie was busy in the little kitchen baking pies and May was running a sewing machine in the sit ting room, there came hobbling up to the door old Peggy. "Come in, Peggy," Bessie said, cheerily. "You are just in time for an apple pie I baked for you." "Bless your kind heart and sweet face," said the old woman. "You are never so poor yourself but you re member those who are worse oft. But it's Miss Mattie I want to see." "You are just in time, then. There's the noon bellringiug, and here comes Auut Mattie and May to help about dinner." "Miss Mattie," said old Peggy, "did you ever lose a paper when you were at the old house?" "A paper!" screamed Bessie and May in chorus. "Oh, Pegsy, did you find one?" "i'es, dears. I can't read myself, but here it is." And from the folds of her shawl Peggy drew forth a large folded docu ment, indorsed in round legal hand on the back: "Last will and testament of William Oldfield." Aunt Mattie sat down aud cried softly. Bessie danced around like an iusaue Indian, aud May, seizing a hat, darted off to Lawyer O'Byrne. "How did you find it?" Bessie cried at last, when she was exhausted with her solitary dauce. "Well, dears," said the old woman, "I've been waiting till the warm days to empty the mattresses, for they were wonderfully comfortable for ray old bones in the winter, and so today I ripped them open, as Mick Calloran said he'd give a fair price for the hair aud fill them up again with husk. Aud pushed in one of them, near the middle, in a little slit cut with a kuife, I found the paper. Aud it's thankful I am this day that's it's good news I bring, if your face tells the truth, honey." "Good news! the best of news!" saia Bessie. "You shall have the warmest shawl next winter to be found in Top ham, Peggy, and the softest bed." And here May entered with Mr. O'Byrne, and the whole story had to be told again. "It is the will, sure enough," said the lawyer. "And so Mr. Oldfield wanted you to burn the bed and bed ding! H'm! I shouldn't wonder if he was afraid of this very discovery and was too great a coward to risk hunting for it himself. It is my opin ion that he will burn the whole house down yet if he keeps possession long. Topham never heard such rioting." The will was given to Mr.O'Byrue's keeping and in due time proved and executed. The heir-at-law made a great bluster, but knowing his rage was useless left the house once more, considerably the worse for his brief sojourn in it. The fact that even the temporary enjoyment of his uncle's money was an altogether unexpected event probably aided his acquiescence in the legality of the will. The house wa3 cleaned and purified and once more given over to Auut Mattie's quiet rule and the happy oc cupancy of the twin sisters, who gladly gave up sewing and teaching to join in the social pleasures of Topham. The hospital flourishes, and old Peggy never tires of relating how she found the fortunes of the Joyce ladies in the hair mattresses William Oldfield or dered to be burned on the day when fear made him too cautious. The Secret of the Dreyfus Case. The fact that Dreyfus is a Jew fur nishes a key to the mysteries of the cause celebre which is connected with his name. It is impossible to under stand how the French nation an im pulsive, generous people, who, although blind in their anger, are temperament ally incapable of remaining deaf to the appeal of justice after the initial fury of their wrath has spent itself can persist in withholding from the con demned officer an opportunity to jus tify himself before the courts of his country. The paradox may be under stood when it is remembered that, after the memory of Sedan, the great est passion of the French is a deep and enduring hatred of the Jews as a race. The cry, "A bas les juifs!" is almost as potent in France today as was that other cry at the close of the last century the cry that gave utter ance to the hot resentment of more thau a hundred years and drove the disdainful Marie Antoinette to the guillotine "A bas le roi!" S. Ivar Tonjoroff, in The Arena. The One Who Didn't Dorijre. A woman evangelist is converting many sinners in Missouri. In one of her addresses the other day she said: "There is a man in this house who is untrue to his wife! I am going to throw this hymn book at him." She raised the book as if she was going to throw it, and every man but one in the h mse ducked his head to avoid the book. Then she blistered the dodgers and lauded the one true man. It was afterward learued tbet he w deaf and dumb. THE STOREKEEPERS OF CUAM. An Interesting Keport from the Surgeon of the Itetinington. The navy department has received an interesting report made by Surgeon Ward of the cruiser Bennington, at Port San Luis d'Apra, Island of Guam, in the Ladrones, just before that ves sel left there to join Admiral Dewey the last of January. Sui ge Ward had been ashore in vestigating the commercial products and mercantile establishments during the stay of the Bennington iu the har bor, with a view to determining what dependence could be placed ou the local markets for maintaining the force to be kept there hereafter by the United States. He says he found, eight so-called stores iu Agana, the chief town, besides a number of small huts, where the native aguardieute, made of fermeuted cocoanut milk, is sold, but he did not ascertain whether or not these bars were licensed. He classed the stores under five heads, according to the nationality of the men owning them. In the Manila stores, conducted by men fioniMauila, three in number, it was possible to buy cotton clothes of various hues and dyes, embroideries, a few ready-made articles of apparel, buttons, shoes, paper, pens, ink, matches, and a small assortment of canned goods of poor quality and expensive, as well as soap, caudles and aguardiente. In one of the Manila stores cigars made of na tive tobacco, which was of poor qual ity, were purchasable. The Japan ese store is the largest and best in the town. It contained all the goods to be had in the Manila stores, and in addition sugar, Japanese beer and imi tations of imported wines. It also sold eggs and bread, the latter baked every other day, of exceedingly poor quality. The Chinese store was a poor one, and was patronized only by Chin ese. In the chamorro (native) store Dr. Ward found native coffee of fair quality, excellent chocolate and a few cheap cotton dyed stuffs, pipes, matches, etc. The single American store, though a more pretentious establishment thau any of the others, was inferior in many respects to the Japanese. A greater variety of goods was kept, in cluding a large assortment of canned vegetables, meats, kerosene, oil, rice, accordions, hats, stockings, lamps, lamp shades, crockery, trunks, paints and nails. Dr. Ward says that shoes of fair pattern could be made to order by native shoemakers, and the natives could also make comfortable furniture. Flour, which was difficult to find, and butter and lard, which naturally did not keep well in such a warm climate, were expensive. Milk could be pur chased in small quantities, chickens aud eggs were plentiful, but the beef was poor, aud there were no sheep iu the island. Pigs are abundant. Yams and sweet potatoes grow freely, as well as corn, the latter being used, by the natives to make bread. Bananas, cocoanuts nd bread fruit are the chief sources of native food. Fishing is but little attempted. A good clam i3 found, and a small oyster of sweet taste. Deer and goats abound, and wild tur key, plover, ducks and other edible birds are plentiful. Chinese Enterprise. "I happen to have a dress coat," said a man about town, "that was made by Poole, the famous Loudon tailor, and I've preserved it with o good deal of care. To tell the truth, I attached less value to the garment itself than I did to the sign niauual of the house, emblazoned on a strip ot white silk and stitched inside the col lar. It was a trifio snobbish, I dare say, but if so I've received my punish ment. "A few weeks ago I took the coat along with me on a trip to Florida, and while at a small coast resort I noticed the buttons were getting worn. The only tailor in town was a Chiuaman, and I gave him the coat with instructions to repair the dam ages, which he did, very neatly. I had forgotten all about the incident, aud one evening during Carnival was at the club chatting with some visitors from Detroit, when somehow or other the conversation turned ou high art tailoring. One of the strangers sang the praises of a chap at his home, and I like a fool, couldn't resist the temp tation of remarking thnt my suit was made by Poole. Thereupon the other fellow expressed curiosity as to how the English tailors inserted the shoul der reinforcements of dress coats, and I obligingly slipped mine off to allow him to examine it. He looked it ovei and when he handed it back I noticed that he wore a peculiar smile. It was no wonder, for, by Jove! in place of the signed silk strip below the collar was a great hideous pink tab bearing the legend: "Charley One-Lung, Merchant Tailor, Wayback, Fla." New Orleans Times-Democrat. The Population of Japan. The official census statistics for Japan, exclusive of Formosa, have just been published, showing a total population exceeding forty-three mil lions. That of Tokio is nearly twe millions, and two other cities, Kobe and Osaka, each exceed a million. The increase since 1896 is about hall a million. There were 305,000 mar riages in the same period, and 134. 00C divorces.' DR. TALMAGES SERMON. SUNDAY'S DISCOURSE BTH NOTED DIVINE. Subject: "floM Fast to the lilble" Ty sons Drawn From the Sword of Eleazar As He Grasped Ilia Weapon So Should We Cleave to the Old Gospel. Text: "And his hand clave unto the sword." II Samuel xxiii., 10. What a glorious thing to preach the Gospel! Some suppose that because I have resigned a fixed pastorate I will cease to preach. No, no. I expect to preach more than I ever have. If the Lord will, four times as much, though in manifold places. I would not dare to halt with such opportunity to declare the truth through the ear to audiences and to the eye through the printing press. And here we have a stirring theme put before us by the prophet. A" great general of King David was Eleazar, the hero of the text. The Philis tines opened battle against him, and his troops retreated. The cowards fled. Eleazar and t&ree of his comrades went into the battle and swept the field, for four men with God on their side are stronger than a whele regiment with God ngainst them. Fall back!" shouted the commander of the Philistine army. The cry ran along the host, "Fall back!" Eleazar, having swept the field, throws himself on the ground to rest, but the mus cles and sinews of bis hand had been so long bent around the hiit of his sword that the hilt was imbedded in the flesh, and the gold wire of the hilt had broken through the skin of the palm of the hand, and he could not drop this sword which he had so gallantly wielded. ''His hand clave unto the sword." That is what I call magnificent fighting for the Lord God of Israel. And wo want more of it. I propose to show you how Eleazar took hold of 'the sword and how the sword took hold of Eleazar. I look at Eleazar's hand, and I come to the conclusion that he took the sword with a very tight grip. The cowards who fled had no trouble in drop ping their 6words. As they fly over the rocks I hear their swords clanging in every direction. It is easy enough for them to drop t heir swords, but Eleazar's hand clave unto the sword. In this Christian conflict we want a tighter grip of the Gospel weap ons, a tighter grasp of the two edged sword of the truth. It makes me sick to see these Christian people who hold only a part of the truth and let the rest ot the truth go, so that the Philistines, seeing the loosened grasp, wrench the whole sword away from them. The only safe thing for us to do is to put our thumb on the book ot Genesis and sweep our hand around the book until the New Testament comes into the palm and keep on sweeping our hand around the book until the tips ot the fingers clutch at thewords "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." I like an infi del a great deal better than I do one of these namby pamby Christians who hold a part of the truth and let the reet go. By miracle God preserved this Bible just as it is, and it is a Damascus blade. The sever est test to which a sword can be put in a sword factory is to wind the blade around a gun barrel like a ribbon, and then when the sword is let loose it flies back to its own shape. So the sword of God's truth has been fully tested, and it is bent this way and that way and wound this way and that way, but it always comes back to its own shape. Think of it! A book written nearly nineteen centuries ago, and some of it thousands of year3 ago, and yet in our time the average sale of this book is more than 20,000 copies every week and more than 1,000,000 copies a year! I say now that a book which is divinely inspired and divinely kept and divinely scattered is a weapon worth holding a tight grip of. Bishop Colenso will come along and try to wrench out of your hand the five books of Moses, and Strauss will come along and try to wrench out of your hand the miracles, and Renau will come along and try to wrench out of your hand the entire life of the Lord Jesus Christ, and your associates In the office or the factory or the banking house will try to wrench out of your hand the entire Bible, but in the strength of the Lord God of Israel and with Eleazar's grip hold on to it. You give up the Bible, you jrive up any part of it, and you give up par don and peace and life in heaven. Do not be ashamed, young man, to have the world know that you are a friend of the Dible. This book is the friend of all that is good, and it is the sworn enemy of all that is bad. An eloquent writer recently gives an incident of a very bad man who stood In a cell of a Western prison. This crimi nal had gone through all styles of crime, and he was there waiting tor the gallows. The convict standing there at the window of the cell, this writer says, "looked out and declared, 'I am an infidel.' He said that to all the men aud women aud chil dren who happoned to bo gathered there, 'I am an Infidel.' " And the eloquent writer says. "Every man and woman there be lieved him." And the writer goes on to lay, "If he had stood there saying. 'I am a Christian.' every man and woman would have said, 'He is a liar!' " This Bible Is the sworn enemy of all that Is wrong, and it is the friend of all that is good. Oil, hold on it! Do not take part of it and throw the rest away. Hold on to all ot It. There are so many people now who do not know. You ask them if the soul is immortal, and they say: "I guess it Is; I don't know. Perhaps it is; perhaps It isn't." Is the Bible true? "Well, perhaps It is, and perhaps it isn't. Perhaps it may be, figuratively, and perhaps it may m partly, and perhaps it may not be at all." They despise what they call the apostolic creed, but if their own creed were written out it would read like this: "I.believe ia nothing, the maker of heaven and earth, and in nothing which it hath sent, which nothing was born of nothing and which nothing was dead and burled and descend ed into nothing and rose from nothing and ascended to nothing and now sitteth at the rii?ht hand of nothing, from which It will come tojudge nothing. I be lieve in the holy agnostic church and in the communion of nothingarians and in the forgiveness of nothing and the resur rection of nothing and in the life that never shall be. Amen!" That is the creed of tens of thousands of people in this day. If you have a mind to adopt such a theory, I will not. "I believe In God, the Father Al mighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and in Jesu " Christ and in the holy catholic church and in the communion of saints and In the Ufo everlasting. Amen!" Ob, when I eeo Eleazar taking such a stout grip of the sword in the battle against sin and for righteousness, I come to the con clusion that we ought to take a stouter grip of God's etornal truth the sword of righteousness. As I look at Eleazar's hand I also notice his spirit of self forgetfulness: lie did not notice that the hilt ot the sword was eatiDg through the palm of his hand. He did not know it hurt him. As lie went out into the conflict he was so unxlous for the victory he forgot himself, and that hilt might go never so deeply into the palm of his hand, it could not disturb him. "His hand clave unto the sword." Oh, my brothers and sisters, let us go into the Chrlstlun conflict with the spirit of self abnegation. Who :area whether the world praises us or de nounces us? WDat do we caro for mfsrep resentation or abuse or persecution ia a conflict like this? Let us forget ourselves. That man who is afraid of getting his hand hurt will never kill a Philistine. Wha CHres whether you get hurt or not if you get the victory? Oh, how many Christians there are who are all the time worrying about the way the world treats theml They are so tired, and they are so abused, and they are so tempted, when Eleazar did not think whether he had a hand or an arm or a foot. All he wanted was victory. We see how men forget themselves in worldly achievement. We have often seen men who, in order to achieve worldly suc cess, will forget all physical fatigue and all annoyance and all obstacle. Just after the battle of Yorktown In the American Revolution a musician, wounded, was told he must have his limbs amputated, and they were about to fasten him to the surgeon's table, for it was long before the merciful discovery ot anaesthetics. He said: "No; don't fasten me to that table. Get me a violin." A violin was brought to him, and he said, "Now, go to work as I begin to play," and for forty minutes, during the awful pangs of amputation, he moved not a muscle noz dropped a note, while he played some sweet tune. Oh, Is it not strange that with the music of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and with this grand raerch of the church, militant on the way to become the church triumphant, we cannot forget ourselvei and forget all pang and all sorrow and all persecution and all perturbation? What have we suffered In comparison witb those who expired with suffocation or were burned or were chopped to pieces for the truth's sake? We talk of the persecution of olden times. There Is just as much per secution going on now In various ways. In 1849, in Madagascar, eighteen men were put to death for Christ's sake. They were to be hurled over the rocks, and before they were hurled over the rocks, in order tc make their death the more dreadful in an ticipation, tbey were put ia baskets and swung to and fro over the precipice thai they might see how many hunarea teet tnej would have to be dashed down, and while they were swinging in these baskets ovei the rocks they sang: Jesus, lover of my 30ul, Let me to Thy bosom fly. While the billows near me roll. While the tempest still is high. Then they were dashed down to deata.. Oh, how much others have endured for Christ, and how little we eadure for Christ! We want to ride to heaven in i Pullman sleeping car, our feet on soft plush, the bed made up earlv, so we can sleep ah the way, the black porter of death to wake us up only in time to enter tin golden city. We want all the surgeons to fix our hand up. Let them bring on all the lint and all the bandages and all the salve, for our hand is hurt, while Eleazar doer not know his hand is hurt. "His hand clave unto the sword." As I look at Eleazar's hand I come to the conclusion that he has done a great deal of hard hitting. I am not surprised when I see thut these four men Eleazar and his three companions drove back the army of Philistines that Eleazar's sword clave to. his hand, for every time hestruok an enemy with one end of the sword the other end ot the sword wounded him. When he took bold ot the sword, the sword took, hold ot blm. Oh, we have found an enemy who cannot be conquered by rosewater and soft speeches. It must be sharp stroke and straight thrust. There is intemperance, and there is fraud, and there Is gambling and there is lust, and there are 10,000 bat talions of iniquity, armed Philistine in iquity. How are they to be captured and overthrown? Soft sermons in morocco, cases laid down in front ot an exquisite au dience will not do it. You have got to call things by their right name. You have got to expel from our churches Christians who eat the sacrement on Sunday and devout widow's houses all the week. We have got to stop our indignation against the Hittltes and the Jebusites and the Gir. gashites and let those poor wretches ga and apply our indignation to the mod ern transgressions which need to be dragged out and slain. Ahabs here, Herods here, Jezebels here, the massacre of the infants here. Strike for God so hard that while you slay the sin the sword will adhere to your own hand. I tell you, my friends, we want a few John Enoxes and John Wesleys in the Christian church to day. The whole tendency is to refine on Christian work. We keep on refining on it until we send npologetio word to iniquity we are about to capture it. And we must go with sword silver chased and presented by the ladies, and we must ride or white palfrey under embroidered hous ing, patting the spurs in only just enough to make the charger dance gracefully, and then we must send a missive, delicate as a wedding card, to ask the old black giant ot sin if he will not surrender. Women saved by the grace of God and on glorious mission sent, detained from Sabbath classes be cause their new hat is not done. Churches that shook our cities with great revivals sending arouud to ask some demonstrative worshiper if he will not please to sa "Amen" and "halleluiah" a little softer. It seems as if in our churches we wanted -baptism of cologne and balm of a thousand flowers when we actually need a baptism ot fire from tho Lord God ot Pentecost. But we are so afraid somebody will criti cise our sermons cr criticise our prayers or crlticiso our religious work that one anxiety for tho world's redemption is lost in the fear we will get our hand hurt while Eleazar went into the conflct, "and his hand clave unto the sword." But I see in the next place what a hard thing it was for Eleazar to get bis hand and his sword parted. The muscles and tha sinews had been so long grasped around the sword he could not drop it when he proposed to drop it, and his three com rades, I suppose, came up and tried to help him, and they bathed the back, part of his hand, hoping the sinews and muscles would relax. But no. "His hand clave unto the sword." Then they tried to pull open the fingers and to pull baftk the thumb, but no sooner were they pulled back than they, closed again, "and his hand clave unto the sword." But after awhile they were suc cessful, rfnd then they noticed that the curve in the palm of the hand corresponded exactly with the curve of the hilt. "Hia hand clave unto the sword." You and I have seen it many a time. There are in the United States to-daj many aged ministers of the Gcspel. They are too feeble now to preach. In the church records the word standing opposite their name is "emeritus," or the words are "a minister without charge." They were a heroic race. Thej had small salaries and but few books, and they swam spring freshets to meet their appointments, but they did in their day a mighty work for God. They took off more of the heads of Philistine iniquity than you could count from nooa to sundown. You put that old minister of tho Gospel now into a prayer meetiDg or occasional pulpit or a sick room whera there is some one to be comforted, and it is the same old ring to his voice and tb same old story of pardon and peace and Christ and heaven. His nana has so long; clutched the stord in Christian conflict he. cannot drop Ifc. "Hla hand clave unto th sword."