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MAKE FEIENDS. tr. Talmage Advises Everybody ; to Do So. First Oct Your Heart Right and the Rest la Kaxy-When a Man Does Well Tell Illni So The Friendship Between Christ and a Believing Soul. - In the following sermon Dr. Tal iraige endeavors to show that the ob tiiuing;of good friends is not occidental but is the result of intelligent selec tion. The text chosen is Proverbs 18: 24: "A man that hath friends must how himself friendly." About the sacred and divine art of making and keeping friends I speak tt nrwbject on which I never heard of any one preaching and yet God thought it of enough importance to put it in the middle of the Hible, these writings of Solomon, bounded on one side by the popular Psalms of David, and on the other by the writings of Isaiah, the greatest of the phophets. It seems all a matter of hap-lmzurd how many friends we have, or whether we have any friends at all, bitf there is nothing accidentaf about it.' There la a law which governs the accretion and dispersion of friendships. They did not "just happen so" any more than the tides just happen to rise or fall,, or the sun just happens to rise or set. It is a science, an art, a God given regulation. ; Tell ine how friendly you are to oth ers, and I will tell you how friendly others are to you. I do not say you will not have enemies; indeed, the best way to get ardent friends is to have ar dent enemies, if you get their enmity in doing the right thing. Good men and women will always have enemies, because their goodness is a perpetual rebuke to evil; but this antagonism of foes will make more intense the love of your adherents. Your friends will gather closer around you because of the attacks of your assailants. The more your enemies abuse you the bet ter your coadjutors will think of you. The best friends we have ever had 'appea:': 1 at some juncture when we were v.ecially bombarded. There have been times in my life when un just assault multiplied my friends, as near as I could calculate, about fifty a minute. You are bound to some peo ple by many cords that neither time nor eternity can break, and I will war rant that many of those cords were twisted by hands malevolent. If, when set upon by the furies, you can have grace enough to keep your mouth shut, and preserve your equi poise, nnd let others fight your battles, you will find yourself after awhile with a whole cordon of allies. Had not the world given to Christ on his arrival at Palestine a very cold shoulder, there would not have been one-half as many angels chanting glory out of the hymn-books of the sky, hound in black lids of midnight. Had it not been for the heavy and jagged and tortuous cross, Christ would not have been the Admired and loved of more people than .any being who ever touched foot on 'either the eastern or western hemis jphere. Instead, therefore, of giving up in despair because you have ene. mies, rejoice in the fact that they Tally for you the most helpful and en- TI1US1U9I1U III! 11111 CI o .Ill Ullici nuiiiii, there is no virulance that can hinder my text from coming true: "A man that hath friends must show himself friendly." I It is my ambition to project espe cially upon the young a thought which may benignly shape their destiny for the here and 'the hereafter. Before you show yourself friendly you must be friendly, I do not recommend a dramatized geniality. There is such a thing as pretending to be en rapport with others, when we are their dire destructants, and talk against them, nnd wish them calamity. . Judas cov ered up his treachery by a resounding kiss, and caresses may be demoniacal, Uetter the mythological Cerberus, the three-headed dog of hell, barking at -us, than the wolf in sheep's clothing, its brindled hide covered up by decep. -tive wool, and its deathful howl ca denced into an innocent bleating. Before you begin to show yourself friendly you must be friendly. Get your heart right with God and man, and this grace will become easy. You . may by your own resolution get your nature into a semblance of this virtue, "but the grace of God can sublimely ift. you into it. Sailing on the river Ti ha. nes two vessels ran aground, Tne owners of one got one hundred norses, and pulled on the grounded ship, and pulled it to pieces. The owners of the other grounded vessel waited till the tides came in, and eas. ily floated the ship out of all trouble. ;So we may pun ana haul at, our grounded human nature, and try to ,get it into better condition; but there , is nothing like the oceanic tides of God's uplifting grace. If when under the flash of the Holy Ghost, we see our foibles and defects and depravities, we will be very lenient, and very 'easy with others. We will look into their '-characters' for things commendatory, .and not damnatory. If you would rub your own eye a little more vigorously jou would find a mote in it, the extrac tion of which would keep you so busy you would not have much time to shoulder your broad-axe, and go forth to split up the beam in your neigh bor's eye. In a Christian spirit keep on exploring the characters of those you meet, and I am sure you will find .something in them fit for a foundation of friendliness. ' You Invite me to come to your covin try seat and spend a few days. Thank youl I arrive about noon of a beauti ful summer day. ...What do you do? As soon as I arrive yau take me out under the shadow of the great elms, . "You take tne down to the artificial : lake, the spotted, trout .floating in and out among the White' pillars of the - pond-lilies. You take me to the stalls and kennels where you keep your,flne . tocK and here are the Durham cattle . rtd the .Gordon steers and the hlgh :stepj)ing steeds, by pnwingland neigh ing, the only hmguage they can speak, Asking for harness or saddle, and A liurt turn down the road. Then we go back to the house, and you get me in the right light, and show me the Kensetts and the Bierstadts on the wall, and take me into the music room and show me the bird cages, the canaries in the bay window answering the robbins in the treetops. Thank you! I never enjoyed myself more in the same length of time. Now, why do we not do so with the characters of others, nnd show the bloom and the music, and the bright fountains? No. We say, "Come along, and let me show you that man's character. Here is a green-scummed frog pond, and there's a filthy cellar, nnd I guess under that hedge there must be a black snake. Come, let us for an hour or two regale ourselves with the nuisances." Oh, my friends, better cover up the faults and extol the virtues; nnd this habit once established of universal friendliness will become as easy as it is for a syringa to flood the air with sweetness, as easy as it will be further on in the season for a quail to whistle up from the grass When we hear something bad about somebody whom we always supposed to be good, take out your lead pencil and .say, "Let me see! Before I accept that baleful story against that man's character, I will take off from it 25 per cent, for the habit of exaggeration which be longs to the man who first told the story, then I will takes off 25 per cent for the additions which the spirit of gossip in every community has put upon the original story; then I Will take off 23 per cent from the fact that the man may have been put into cir cumstances of overpowering tempta tion. So I have taken off 75 per cent. But I have, not heard his side of the story at all, nnd for that reason I take off the ramaining 25 per cent. Excuse me, sir, I don t believe a word of it." But here comes in a defective max im, so often quoted: "Where there is so much smoke there must be some fire." Look at all the smoke for years around Jenner, the introducer of vac cination; and the smoke around Co lumbus, the discoverer; and the smoke around Martin Luther, the Savonarola, and Galilee, and Paul, and John, and tell me where was the fire! That is one of the Satanic arts to make smoke without fire. Slander, like the world, may be made out of nothing. If the Christian, fair-minded, common-sensi-cal spirit in regard to others predomi nated in the world we should have the millennium in about six weeks, for would not that be lamb and lion, cow and leopard lying down together? Nothing but the. grace of God can ever put us into such a habit of mind and heart as that. The tendency is in theoposite direction. This is the way the world talks: I put my name on the back of a man's note. I gave a beggar ten cents, and five minutes nfter I saw him entering a liquor store to spend it. I will never again give a cent to a beggar. I helped that young man start in business, and lo, after a while, he wvme and opened a store almost next door to me, and stole my customers. I will never again help a young man to start in business. I trusted in what my neighbor promised to do, and he broke his word, and the psalmist was right before he corrected himself, for "all men are liars. So men become suspicious and saturnine and selfish, and at every additional wrong done them they put another layer on the wall of their exclusiveness, and anoth er bolt to the door that shuts them out from sympathy with the world. They get cheated out of a thousand dollars, or misinterpreted, or disappointed, or betrayed, and higher goes the wall, and faster goes another bolt, not re alizing that while they lock others out they lock themselves in; and some day they wake up to find themselves im prisoned in a dastardly habit. No friends to others, others are no friends to them. There's an island half-way between England, Scotland and Ire land, called the Isle of Man, and the seas dash against all sides of it, and I am told there is no more lovely place than that Isle of Man; but when a man becomes insular in his dispo sition, and cuts himself off from the main land of the world's sympathies, he is despicable, and all around him is an Atlantic Ocean of selfishness. Be hold that Isle of Man. Now, supposing that you have, by a divine regeneration, got right toward God and humanity, and you start out to practice my text. "A man that hath friends must show himself friendly." Fulfill this by all forms of appropriate salutation. Have you noticed that the head is so poised that the easiest thing on earth is to give a nod of recog nition? To swing the head from side tp side, as when it is wagged in de rision, is unnatural and unpleasant; to throw it back invites vertigo; but to drop the chin in greeting is accom panied with so little exertion that all day long, and every day, you might practice it without the least semblance of fatigue. So, also, the structure of the hand indicates hand-shaking; the knuckles are made so that the fingers can turn in, as in clasping hands; and the thumb divided from and set aloof from the fingers, so that while the fingers take your neighbor's hand on one Bide, the thumb takes it on the other, and, pressed together, all the faculties of the hand give emphasis to the salutation. Five sermons in every healthy hand urge us to hand shaking. Besides this, every day when you start out, load yourself up with kind thoughts, kind words, kind expres sions, and kind greetings. When a man or woman does well, tell him sq, tell her so. If you meet some one who is improved in health, and it is demon strated in girth and color, say: "How well you look!" But if, on the other hand, under the wear and tear of life he appears pale and exhausted, do not introduce sanitary subjects, or say anything at all about physical con dition. In the case of improved health, you have by the words given another .impulse toward the robust and the jocund; while in the case of the failing health you have arrested the) decline ' by vour silence. ' '' My dear sir, my dear madam, what do y6u mean by going about' this world with disheartenments? I Why not plant along the paths of others the brightnesses instead of the glooms? ' Do not prophesy misfortune. If you must be a prophet at all, be an Ezekiel, and not a Jeremiah. In ancient times prophets who foretold evil were doing right, for they were divinely directed; but the prophets of evil in our time are generally false prophets. Some of our weatherwise people prophesied we would have a summer of unparalleled heat. It has been a very comfortable summer. Last fall all the weather prophets agreed in snying we should have a winter of extraordinary sever ity, blizzard on the heels of blizzard. It was the mildest winter I ever re member to have passed. Indeed, the autumn and spring almost shoved winter out of the procession. Heal troubles have no heralds running ahead of their somber chariots, and no one has any authority in our time to announce their coming. Load yourself up with hopeful words and deeds. The hymn onee sung in our churches is unfit to be sung, for it says: "We should suspect some danger near, Hnere we possess delight. In other words, manage to keep mis erable all the time. The old song sung at the piano a quarter of a century ago was right, "Kind words can never die." Such kind words have their nest in kind hearts, and when they are hatched out and take wing, they circle round in flights that never cease, and sportsman's gun cannot shoot them, and storms cannot ruffle their wings, and when they cease, flight in these lower skies of earth they sweep round amid the higher altitudes of Heaven. At Baltimore, I talked into a phono graph. The cylinder containing the words was sent on to Washington, and the next day that cylinder from an other phonographic instrument, when turned, gave back to ine the very words I uttered the day before, and with the same intonations. Scold into a phonograph, and it will scold back. Pour mild words into a phonograph and it will return the gentleness. So ciety and the world and the church are phonographs. Give them acerbity and rough treatment, and acerbity and rough treatment you will get back. Give them practical friendliness, and they will give back practical friendli ness. A father asked his little daugh ter, "Mary, why is it that everybody loves you?" She answered, "I don't know, unless it is because I love every body." "A man that hath friends must show himself friendly." Oh, what a glorious state of things to have the friendship of God! Why, we could nfford to have all the world against us and all other worlds against us if we had God for us. He could in a minute blot out this universe and in another minute make a better uni verse. I have no idea that God tried hard when he made all things. The most brilliant thing known to us is light, and for the creation of that he only used a word of command. As out of a flint a frontiersman strikes a spark, so out of one word God struck the noonday sun. For the making of the present universe I do not read that God lifter so much as a finger. If, God is your friend you cannot go out of the world too quickly or sud denly, so far as your own happiness. Is concerned. There were two Christians who entered Heaven; the one was standing at a window in perfect health, watching a shower, and the lightning instantly slew him, but the lightning did not flash down the sky as swiftly ns his spirit flashed upward The Christian man who died on the same day next door had been for a year or two failing in health, and for the last three months had suffered from a disease that made the nights sleepless and the days an anguish. Do you not renlly think that the case of the one who went instantly was more desirable than the one who entered the shining gate through a long lane of insomnia and congestion? In the one case it was like your standing wearily at a door, knocking and waiting, and wondering if it will ever open, and knocking and waiting again, while in the other case it was a swinging open of the door at the first touch of your knuckle. Give your friendship to God, and have God's friendship for you, and even the worst accident will be a vie. tory. How refreshing is human friend ship; and true friends, what priceless treasures! When sickness comes, and trouble comes, nnd death comes, we send for our friends first of all, and their npearance in our doorway in any crisis is reinforcement, and when they have entered we say: "Now it is all right!" Oh, what would we do with out personal friends, business friends, family friends? But we want some thing mightier than human friendship In the great exigencies. When Jonathan Edwards, in his final hour, had given the last good-bye to All his earthly friends, he turned on his pillow and closed his eyes, con fidently snying: "Now where is Jesus of Nazareth, my true and never-failing Friend? Yes, I admire human friend ship as seen in the case of David and Jonathan, of Paul and Onesiphorus, of Herder and Goethe, of Goldsmith and Reynolds, of Beaumont and Fletcher, of Cowley and Harvey, of Erasmus and Thomas Moore, of Lessing and Men. delssohn, of Lady Churchill and Prin cess Anne, of Orestes and Plyades, each requesting that himself might take the point of the dagger, so the other might be spared; of Kpnminon dns and Pelopidas, who locked their shields in battle, determined to die to gether; but the grandest, the might! est, the tenderest friendship in all the universe is the friendship between Jesus Christ and a believing soul. Yet after all I have said, I feel I have only done what James Marshall, the miner, did in 1848 in California, before its firold mines were known. He reached in and put upon the table of his em ployer, Captain Sutter, a thimbleful of gold dust. "Where did you get that?" asked his employer. The reply was: "I 'got It this morning from a mill race from which the water had been drawn oft." But that gold dust, which could have been taken up between the finger and the thumb, was the prophecy and specimen - that, revealed California's wealth ,to all nations, . And to-day I have only put before you a specimen of the value or divine friendship, only a thimbleful of mays inexhaustible nnd infinite, though all time and all 1 eternity go on with the exploration. THE RETURN OF OUR SOLDIER BOYS. A Scene Which Is Now Being Witnessed Daily in Scores of Western Towns. IT IS CRITICAL. Situation In the Philippines is Dangerous. Admiral Dewey Asks for Reinforcement! Aguinaldo, Chief of the Iusurgents, Wishes Americans to Leave the Islands so that Ills Follow ers May be In Control. Manila, Sept. 13. Rear Admiral Dewey says he considers the situation critical. It is understood he has asked for an additional cruiser and a battle ship. The last Spanish garrisons at Ilocos and Laguna have surrendered and the whole island of Luzon is in the hands of the insurgents, except at Manila and Cavite. Aguinaldo has announced his inten tion of convening an assembly of the Filipinos on September IS, in order to decide upon the policy to be adop ted by the insurgents. Ihe correspondent here of the As sociated Press has had an interview with Aguinaldo, who said there were 67,000 insurgents armed with rifles. He added he could raise 100,000 men. Indeed, the insurgent leader pointed out, the whole population of the Philippine islands were willing to fight for their independence. As to the Americans, Aguinaldo re marked thnt he considered them as brothers and that "the two sovereign republics were allied against a com mon enemy. . Aguinnldo continued: "We have been fighting for independence for a long time. The natives who profess to favor annexation are insincere. It is merely a ruse to ascertain American views. Asked if the Filipinos would object to the Mention of Manila, Aguinaldo declined to answer. He denied receiving a request from Gen. Otis and Admiral Dewey to withdraw his troops to a prescribed distance from Manila and Cavite, and declined to discuss the effect of such a request. Aguinaldo further as serted that he had never conferred with the American authorities since the capitulation of Manila, and that he had never authorized the insurgents to search or disarm Americans cross. ing the lines. The correspondent closely questioned him about the in cident when the Pennsylvania troops proceeded to establish a new outpost The Filipinos objected and nearly pre cipitated hostilities, ordering the Americans to withdraw in 20 minutes. They issued ammunition and inter cepted the American reinforcements. Finally Gen; Hale ordered all the Penn- sylvanians to advance and the rebels withdrew. The local governor has explained that the incident was a mistake and has repudiated his subordinates' ac tion. Aguinaldo declared to this cor respondent that the Filipino who made the trouble merely pretended to be an officer and is unconnected with the in surgent army. Aguinaldo complained that the Spaniards were "dissemina ting false reports for the purpose of fomenting antagonism between the Filipinos and Americans." The whole interview conveyed the impression that Aguinaldo desires absolute independence, regards the mission of the Americans here as ac complished, and expects their with drawal, "just as the Frenchj with Lafayette withdrew after helping the Americans in the war of independence, a war of humanity." Just now Agui naldo maintains the role of extreme friendship. It was a Great Calamity. Preseott, Ariz., Sept. 13.. Sunday's fire in Jerome was one of the greatest calamities in the loss of lives and de struction of property that ever oc curred in Arizona,' Among those who lost their lives are a Mexican woman nnd her two children; Wilford, an un dertaker; a dry goods clerk, name un known; two laborers, names unknown. The number of missing is 15. Many people familiar with Jerome place the1 property loss at figures ranging from $500,000 to $750,000. There was but little Insurance, the total aggregating less than $50,000. A GREAT IMPROVEMENT. The Conditions In rniy Hospitals Have Changed for the lietter Preparing to Receive Sick Soldier at Fort Monroe. Washington, Sept. 13. Surgeon Gen Sternberg has furnished some details of the plans of the war department for the establishment of two large well equipped winter hospitals for the troops. He says that the medical de partment has for some time been at work erectiig such a hospital on the government reservation at Fort Mon roe and he is plensed to be able to an nounee that Lieut. Col. Woodhull, the surgeon in charge, reports that the hospital will be ready for the reception of troops next Friday. There is al ready at the fort a tent hospital in ex cellent shape, capable of accommodat ing 500 patients. The new hospital will be additional to this, will be con structed of timber after the style of regular barracks and will contain 1,000 ; beds. It is intended for the reception of Bick soldiers returning from Porto Kieo. Lobking ahead to the possibility of an extended occupancy of Cuban ports by the United Statos army, Gen. Stern berg is planning for another hospital on even a larger scale at some southern port below fortress Monroe and more accessible from Cuba. In view of all that has been said of a critical character respecting the con ditions from a sanitary point of view existing among the United States troops quartered at Huntsville, Ala., the war department has made public the following letter, which has been received by Surgeon General Stern berg from Maj. Gen. Coppinger: "We are camped in an attractive open valley, the fresh, cool, invigorat ing air of Huntsville's hills steadily winning our poor, enfeebled men back to life and strength nfter the poison ous, fever-luden swamps of Tampa. Our corps and brigade hospitals are well supplied and surgeons nnd at tendants are doing line work. Their work has been long and arduous. Drs. Reynolds, Lippitt, Strong and Rich ards, now fever stricken, were espe cially noticeable for their zeal for the well-being and their tender solicitude for the welfare of those to whom they ministered. Our condition while strug gling nt Tampn with typhoid and malarial fever was sad. I cannot too strongly express my gratitude to you for the extraordinary success with which you supplied the corps with doc tors, immunes, nurses and medical stores." . . FATAL PLUNGE. A Trias A Pacific Train Ron Into a River, Killing One Man and Wounding Several. Texarkann, .Tex., Sept. 13. About noon Sunday rain began falling here nnd continued for 30 hours, the coun try adjacent to Texarkana being flood ed. Sulphur river rose 12 feet. All trains entering Texarkana have been delayed on account of washouts and especially in Louisiana and Texas, south and west of here. Passenger train No. 4 on the Texas & Pacific rail road lies in three to six feet of water near Ruchanan, 12 miles south. It was running at a high rate of speed when it switched around a curve into a washout on a feeding spur to Sulphur river. The trestle work and several hun dred feet of track were gone and the engine, mail, baggage, express and smoking cars went into the water. Prof. Caldwell, a school teacher, of Queen City, Tex., was crushed to death in the forward end of the smoker, while J. E. Cotheran, of Fort Worth, was badly injured by a flying ice tank in the same car. They are Making Frogres. San Juan, Torto Rico, Sept. 13. The two evacuation commissions held a session Monday and adjourned until Wednesday The American commis sioners made known their position re garding the evacuation and transfer of the Island. The Spanish commission erg did not disclose the nature of their InBructions. They manifested, how pvpr willingness to secure as much ex pedilion as possible end our commis sioners are satisfied with the way In which their demands have been re ceived. The adjournment gives the Spaniards time to prepare a reply. The Home Savings Bank Co., WELLINGTON, OHIO, Transact a general banking business, baying and selling notes and bills of ex change. Money loaned on satisfactory collateral, mortgage, or personal Becur ity. Interest at 4 per cent, paid on all savings deposits, interest credited anna ally. YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED. Safety-deposit boxes situated in our main vault at $1.50 per year. 'm. Vischer, Pres. G. E. Spitzer, Vtce-Pres. J. II. Rust, Cashier. THE Guarantee Building & Loan Co. No. 313, The Arcade, Cleveland, 0. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. 86,0(10,000. SUBSCRIBED CAPITALrJl.000,000. WELLINGTON LOCAL BRANCH. Chairman, J. fl. Otterbacher. Collector and Local Agent, J. T. Haskell. Par value shares, J100. Monthly dues. ISO cents. All dues payable on or before the first business day ot each month at the office ofj. T. Haskell. Money loaned on first mortgage only. 1 percent, on paid up stock. For further Informaliou call on local col lector. Wheeling & Lake Erie R. R. Slyron T. Herrlck. R. BUckensderfer, Bet-elver. FAST FREIGHT TRAINS DAILY LEAVE TOLEDO, 7:00 P. M. ARRIVE WHEELING, 8:15 A. 91 LEAVE WHEELING, 0:00 P. M. ARRIVE TOLEDO. 7:80 A. M. 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