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A HAVEN OF REFUGE. Heaven Affords Comfort and Pro tection to the Trusting. Dr. Inlnmur Dram n Sermon from *be Familiar 111 unt r:»t ion from the Uariij nrd—Simiile Teaeh logi of Cbrltl. [Copyright, 1902. by l.ouis Klopseh. N. Y ] A familiar illustration from the barnyard is employed in this discourse by Dr. Tultnage to show the comfort and protection thut Heaven alTords to all trusting souls. The text is Mat thew 23:37: “Even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings and ye would not.” Jerusalem was in sight ns Christ came to the crest of Mount Olivet, a height of 700 feet. The splendors of the religious capital of the whole earth irradiated the laudsc«|>e. There is the temple. Yonder is the king’s palace. Spread out before his eyes are the pomp, the wealth, the wickedness and the coming destruction of Jerusalem, and he bursts into tears at the thought of the obduracy of a place that he would gladly have saved and a post rophises, saying: ‘*0. Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gatliereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!” Why did Christ seleet hens and chick ens ns a simile? Next to the apposiie ness of the comparison, I think it was to help nil public teachers in the mat ter of illustration to get down ofT their stilts and use comparisons that all can understand. The plainest bird on earth is the barnyard fowl. Its only adornments are the red comb in its headdress and the wattles under the throat. Tt has no grandeur of genealogy. All we know is that its an cestors came from India, some of titem from n height of 4.000 feet on both sides of the Himalayas. It has no pretension of nest like the eagle’s eyrie. It has no luster of plumage like the goldfinch. Possessing anat omy that allows flight yet about the last, thing it wants todo is to fly, and in retreat uses foot almost as much ns wing. Musicians have written out in musical scale the song of lark and robin redbreast and nightingale, and yet the hen of my text hath nothing that could be taken for a song, but only the cluck and cackle. Vet Christ in the text uttered while looking upon doomed Jerusalem declares that what he wished for that city was like what the hen does for her chickens. Christ was thus simple in His teach ings. and yet how hard it is for us who ore Sunday school instructors and ed itors nnd preachers and reformers nnd those who would gain the cars of audiences to attain that Heavenly nnd Divine art of simplicity! We have to run a course of literary disorders as children a course of physical disorders. We come out of school and college loaded down with Greek mythologies nnd out of the theological seminary weighed down with what the learned fathers said, and we fly with wings of eagles and flamingoes and nlbn t rosses. and it takes a good while before we can come down t<» Christ's similitudes, the candle under the bushel, the salt that has lost its savor, the net thrown into the sen. the spittle on the eys of the blind man nnd tlie hen and chick 1 .frre is not much poetry about this winged creature of God mentioned in my text, but she is more practical nnd more motherly nnd more suggest ive of good things than many that fly higher nnd w ear brighter colors. She is not n prima donna of the skies nor a strut of beauty in the aisle of the forest. She does not cut a circle un der the sun like the Koeky mountain eagle, but stays at home to look after family affairs. She floes not swoop like the condor of the cordilleras to transport a mbit from the valley to tl.e top of the crags, but just scratches for a living. 1 am in warm sympathy with the unpretentious and old fashioned hen because, like most of us. she has to scratch for a living. She knows at the start what most people of good sense are slow to learn that the gaining of a livelihood implies work and that successes do not lie on the surface, but nre to be upturned by poultive nnd con tinuous effort. The reason that soci ety and the church nnd the world are so full of failures, so full of loafers, so full of deadbeats is because the peo ple are not wise enough to take the lesson which any hen would teach them that if they would find for them selves and for thf.se dependent upon them anything worth having they must scratch for it. One flay in the country we saw widen consternation in the behavior of old Dominick. Why the hen should he so disturbed we could not understand. We looked about to see if a neighbor's dog were invading the farm. We looked up to see if a stormcloud were hovering. We could see nothing on the ground that, ronlil terrorize, and we could see nothing in the air to ruffle the feath ers of the hen, hut the loud. wild, affrighted cluck which brought all her brood at full run under lier feathers made us look ngnln around and above us, when we saw that high up and far away there was a rapacious bird wheeling round and ronnd and down and down. and. not seeing ns ns we stood in the shadow, it came nearer and lower until we saw its beak was curved from base to tip and it had two flames of fire for eyes and it was a hawk. Hut all the chickens were under old Dominick's wing«. and either the bird of prey caught a glimpse of us or, not able to find the brood huddled under her wing, darted hack into the clouds. So Christ calls with great earnestness to all tlie young. Why. what la the matter? it J* bright a mu light, and there can be no danger. Health is theirs. A food home is theirs. Plenty of food is theirs. Prospect of long life is theirs. Hut Christ con tinues to call; calls with more em phasis and urges linste and says not a second ought to be lost. Oh, do tell its what is the matter. Ah, now I see; there are hawks of temptation in the air, there are vultures wheel ing for their prey, there are beaks of death ready to plunge, there are claws of allurement ready to clutch. Now I see the peril. Now 1 under stand the urgency. Now 1 see the only safety. Would that Christ might this day take our sons and daughters into his shelter “us a hen gathereth her chickens uuder her wing.” Tile fact is that the most of them will nc\er mind the shelter unless while they are chickens. It is a sim ple matter of inexorable statistics that most of those who do not come ! t<» Christ in youth never come at all. Whut chance is there for the young I without divine protection? There . are the grogshops, there are the gambling hells, there are the infideli ties and immoralities of spiritualism, there are the bad books, there are the impurities, there nre the busi ; ness rascalities, uml so numerous are | these assailants that it is a wonder I that honesty and virtue are not lost The birds of prey, diurnal mid nocturnal, of the natural world arc ever on the alert. They are the as i sassins of- the sky; they have varie ties of taste. The eagle prefers the flesh of the living animal; the vulture prefers the carcass; the falcon kills with one stroke, while other styles of lwak give prolongation of torture. Put we all need the protecting wing. If you had known when you i entered upon manhood or woman hood what was ahead of you, would you have dared to undertake life? Mow much you have been through! With most life has been a disnppoint • ment. They tell me so. They have not attained that which they expect i ed to attain. They have not had the ! physical and mental \ igor they ex pccted or they have mot with rebuffs which they did not anticipate. You ; are not nt 4<i or 50 or GO or 7o or years of age where you thought you would he. I do not know any one except myself to whom life has been a happy surprise. I never ex j pccted anything, and so when nny i tiling eiimc in the shape of human j favor or comfortable position or wid 1 ening field of work it was to me a sur ! prise. 1 was told in the theological i seminary by some of my fellow-stu dents that I never would get any body to hear me preach unless I i changed my style, so that when I found that some people did come to hear me it was n happy surprise. But most people, according to their ' own statement, have found life a dis appoint incut. Indeed, we all need | shelter from its tempests. The wings of my text suggest warmth, and that is what most folks want. The fact is that this is a cold world whether you take it literally or figuratively. \Ye have a big fireplace called the sun. nnd it has a very hot ! fire, and the stokers keep the coals v\ ell stirred up, but much of the year we cannot get near enough to this fire place toget warmed. The world’s ex tremities are cold all the time. For get not. that it is colder at the south pole than at the north pole and that the arctic is not so destructive as the antarctic. Once in awhile the arctic will let explorers come hack, but the antarctic hardly ever. When at the south pole a ship sails in. the door of lee is almost sure to lie shut against its return. So life to many millions of people at the south and many millions , "f people at the north i> a prolonged shiver. But when I say that this is a cold world I chiefly mean figuratively. If you want to know what is the mean ing of the ordinary term of receiving , the “cold shoulder,” get out of money ; and try to borrow. The conversation ! may have been almost tropical for lux | uriance of thought and speech, but sug gest your necessities and see the ther mometer drop to 50 degrees below zero, j nnd in that which till a moment before ' hnd been a warm room. Take what is . an unpopular position on some public question nnd see your friends fly ns , chaff before a w indmill As far as mv j self is concerned, 1 have no word of I complaint, but I look off day bv day and see communities freezing out men 1 ami women of whom the world is not worthy. Now it takes after one and now after another. It becomes popular to depreciate and defame nnd exeernte and lie about some people. This is the best world 1 ever got into, hut it is the i meanest world that some people ever got into. The worst thing that ever I happened to them was their cradle. flnri the nest thing lhat will ever Imp pen to them will be their grave. What people want is warmth. Many years ago a man was floating down on t he ire of the Merrimae. a ml great ef forts were made to rescue him. Twice he got hold of a plank thrown to him and twice he slipped away from it. be cause that end of the plank was cov ered with ice. ami he cried out: "For God’* sake, give me the wooden end of the plank this time!" and, thi done, hr was hauled- to shore The trouble is that in our efforts to sa\r the sold there is too much coldness and Icy formality, and so the imper iled one slips off and floats down. (Ii \ c it the other end of the plank; warmth of sympathy, warmth of kindly asso ciation, warmth of genial surround ing*. The world declines to give It and in many cases has no power to gi\e it. and here is where Christ comes in. and ns on n cold day. the rain beat ing and the atmosphere full of sleet, the hen clucks her chickens under her wings and the warmth of her own breast puts warmth into the wet feather* and the chilled feet of the in fant group of the bnrnynrd, so Christ says to those *ick and frosted and dis- I gusted and frozen of the world: j I “Come in out of the March w inds ot ! the world'* criticism, come in out of the sleet of the world's assault, come in out of a world that does not under stand you and does not want to under stand you. 1 will comfort and 1 will soothe, and I will he your warmth ‘as a hen gutherctli her chickens under her wing.’” Oh, the warm heart of (iod is ready for all those to whom the world has given the cold shoulder. Itut notice that some one must take the storm for the chicken*. Ah, the hen takes the storm. I ha\e watched her under the pelting rain. I have seen her in the pinching fr sts. Almost frozen to death or almost strangled in the waters, and what a tight she makes for the young under wing if a dug or a hawk or a man come too near! And so the brooding Christ takes the storm for us. What flood-of anguish and tears that did not dash upon llis holy soul. What beak of torture did not pierce llis vitals? What barking Cer berus of hell was not let out upon Him from the kennels? Yes. the hen takes the storm for the chickens, and Christ takes the storm for us. Once the tem pest rose so suddenly the hen could not get with her young back from the new ground to the barn, and there she is under the fence half dead. And now the rain turns to snow, and it is an awful night, and in the morning the whiteness about the gills and the beak down in the mud show that the mother is dead, and the young ones | come «»ut and cannot understand why the mother does not scratch for them something to eat. and they walk over ! her wings and call with their tiny voices, but there is no answering j cluck. She took the stortn for others and perished. Poor thing! Self-sncrl | firing even unto death! An 1 does it not make you think of Him who en dured all for us? So the wings under : which wr come for spirit uni sa fetv are blood spattered wings, are r.ight-shad owed wings, nre tempest-torn wings. In Hie Isle of Wight I saw the grave of 1 Princess Elizabeth, who died while h prisoner at Carisbr. ok castle, her fin I ger on an open Ilihtc and pointing to the words: “Come unto Me all vc j that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” Oh, come under j the wings. My text tins its strongest npplicn* ] turn for people who were horn in the country, wherever you may now live, and that is the majority of you. You cannot hear niv text without j having all the rustic scenes of the old farmhouse come hack to you. hood old days they were. You l.new nothing much .if the world, for you had not seen the world. l!y law of association you cannot recall * the \ brooding hen and her chickens with | out seeing also the barn and the haymow’ and the wagon shed and the i house and the room where you played nnd the fireside with the big backlog before which you sat and j the neighbors and the burial and the • wedding and the deep snow hanks nnd hear the village bell that called you to worship and seeing the horses which, after pulling you to cliureh, ; stood around the old clapbonrded meeting house and those who sat at j either end of the church pew nnd, indeed, all the scenes of your first I 14 years, and you think of what you were then and of what you are now. and all these thoughts are aroused by the sight if the old hencoop. ! Some of you had better go hack and start again. In thought return to that place and hear the cluck anil see the outspread feathers and come under the wing and make the Lord your portion and shelter and warmth, preparing for everything that may come and so avoid being classed among those described by the clos ing-words of my text, “as n hen gath eretli her chickens under her wfngs, { and ye would not.” Ah, that throws the responsibility upon us. “Ye would not.” Alas for the “would nnts!“ If the wandering broods of the farm heed not their mother’s call nnd risk the hawk and dafe the freshet and expose themselves to the frost nnd storm, surely their calamities are not the mother's fault. “Ye would not!" Clod would. | but how many would not ? When a good man asked a young woman who had abandoned her home and who was deploring her wretch edness why she did not return, the reply was: "I dare not go home. My father f* so provoked he would not receive me home.” “Then,” said 1 the Christian man. “I will test this.” And so hi* wrote to the father, and I the reply came hack, nnd in n letter I marked outside “Immediate” nnd in side sn3-ing: "Let her come at once; ' all is forgiven.” So Clod's invitation for you is marked "Immediate” on | the outside, and inside is written: "He will abundantly pardon.” Oh, \ ye wanderers from f»od and hnppi ness ami home and Heaven, come tin ! der the sheltering wing A vessel in j the flristol channel was nearing the rocks called the Steep Holmes. I’n ! der the tempest the xessc] was un manageable, and the only hope was 1 that the tide would change before she struck the rocks nnd went down, nnd so the captain Mow! on the deck, watch in ! hnnd. Captain nnd crew nnd passen gers were pnllid with terror. Taking another look at Ids watch nnd an other look r.t the sen. he shouted: "Thank (leal, we are saved! The tide has turned! One minute more nnd we would have struck the rocks!” Some of you have been a long while drifting in the temj»est of sin nnd sorrow and have been making for the breakers. '1 hank Ood, the tide has turned. Do you not feel the lift of the billow? T) e grace of 0o<1 that hringeth salvation has appeared to your soul, end, in the words of lion/ to lluth, I commend von to "the Lord tiod .of Israel, under whose wings thou hast come to trust.” This Is Very T me. Indolence is a sluggish stream, yet it eventually underm nth tl»e last vir tue a man has. SISTERS OF CHARITY rely on pe-ru-na to fight CATARRH WHEREVER LOCATED IN THE SYSTEM. In every country of the civilized world the Sisters of Churity are known. Not only do they — minister to the spiritual and jyp intellectual needs of the ’ charges committed to their SISTERS care, but they also minister to their bodily needs. With so many children WORK. to take care of and to € i protect from climate and * disease, these wise and prudent sisters have found l’eruna a uever-fail ing safeguard. A letter recently received by Dr. Hartman from the Ursuline Sisters .of Cleveland, Ohio, reads as follows : •• He have lately given Peruna a trial, for though the medicine was not new to us, we had not tried It sufficiently to testify to Its worth as we are now ready to do. “He find !*eruna an excellent tonic and a valuable remedy tor catarrhal affections of the throat. He have recommended It to our friends and have good reports from them as to Its merits. ” Yours rcspectfullv, URSULIXE SISTERS. Four Interesting: Letters From Catholic Institutions. Dr. Hartman roeelves many letters from Catholic Sisters all over t lie I'nit fil States. A recommend recently re ceived from a Catholic institution in the Southwest reads as follows: A I ’ rn tn i ( Mother Superior Snyi! “1 can testify from experience to the efficiency of l'eruna as one of the very best medicines, and it gives in*1 pleasure to add my praise to that of thousands \\ho have used it. For years 1 suffered with eatarih of 1 he stomach, nil remedies proving valueless for re lief. Last spring I went to Colorado, hoping to he benefited by a change of climate and while there a friend ad vised me to try l’eruna. After using two bottles I found myself very much improved. The remains of my old dis ease being now so slight, I consider myself cured, yet for a while I intend to continue the use of l’eruna. I am now treating another patient with your medicine. She has been sicl; with malaria and troubled with leucor rhfea. I have not a doubt that a cure will he speedily effected.” SISTERS OP CHARITY All Over United States Use Pe-ru-na Tor Catarrh. From a Catholic Institution In Cen tral Ohio comes the following recom mend from the Sister Superior: "Some years ago a friend of our Institution ' recommended to us Dr. Hartman’s Reruns as nu excellent remedy fur the Influenza of which sv then had *«m era! cases which threatened to be of a serious character. "We began to use It and experienced such wonderful results that since then Reruna has become our favorite medicine for Influenza, catarrh, cold cough and bronchitis. ’’ AnotIter recommend from n Catholic Institution of one of the Central States \\ ritten by the Sister Superior reads as follow: "A number of yearn ago our attention was tailed to Dr. Hartman’s Reruns, and since then x c h:i\ c used It with wonderful results tor grip, coughs, colds and catarrhal diseases of the head and stomach. "For grip and winter catarrh especially H has been of great service to the Inmates of this Institution. ’’ These are samples of letters received hy Dr. Hartman from the various orders of Catholic Sisters throughout the United States. The names and addresses to these letters have been withheld from re spect to the Sisters but will l»e fur nished upon request. One-half of the diseases which af flict mankind are flue to some catarrh al derangement of the mucous mem brane lining some organ or passage of the body. A remedy that would art immediately upon the congested mu . f ■ ■ cons memhrnne, restoring ii to its nor mal state, would consequently cure all tliese diseases. Catarrh Is ratarrli wherever located, whether it he in the heftul, throat, lungs, stomach, kidneys, or pelvic organs. A remedy that will cure it in one location will cure It In * all locations. Perunn is such a remedy. The Sis ters of t liurity know this. When ca tarrhal diseases make their appear ance they arc not disconcerted, hut know exactly what remedy to use. These wise and prudent Sisters have found Perunn a never-falling safe guard. They realize that when a dis ease is of catarrhal nature, I’erunn is the remedy. Dyspepsia and fcmule weakness are considered by many to he entirely different discuses—that dyspepsia is catarrh of the stomach and female weakness is due to catarrh of the pelvic organs the Sisters are folly aware, consequently I’cruna Is their remedy in both these very com mon and annoying diseases. If you do not receive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of I’ernna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a foil statement of your case, and hf* will he pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. ITartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, fid u mbits, * Ohio. No Alternative. ?drnit that you are a tramp, do you?" taiii the crnin«.,t earned to the w;t ne-n. "Tc*. *ir.” “Tell thi> jury, eir. why you lead *uch a wnr*e than uxclc** life.” "The explanation i* eimple. I am too proud to work and too honed to l»ei oine a lawyer.’’ Detroit Free Pre«a. Maternal I.ove. >fr*. Mulligari And *o yon have no fiiot her flow T M »therl« m Floy Vo. nnnn. "Well, me boy, wlienever you feel the >or o good thrashing come to me and I 11 be a mother to you." Tit-Hit*. No Iminollnlenro. He Do you believe in love in a cottrgo? >he Vo, indeed, I don’t. How about love in a palace?’* ' O i Deorge. thi* 1* *o «uddcn!” "Well, it won't be if we’ve got to wait '.ill I can earn the palace.” Smart Si t. Kept on Talking, Hook W'hut ha* become of that office boy of \our* who u*cd to take everything' he could lav In* hand* on? Vye He* in the .Municipal ho*}ritaI— took emallpox. Philadelphia Krc >rd. f St JacobsOil \ 1 FOR ' [ i RHEUMATISM II X TV ChisHj-i Glob* say* :—"A man X employed at Central F.*h Market was , , X for three year* helpers with Rheu- ,, X matl’m, a -d after nrvirtp been se*t , . A to three ri;.'f*rert > j It Is. a '6‘- , , dared l.v ». A 'rf- r' ’m X cf ST. JACOBS CiL. he c .; , ri X h!s arm with-.ut pain. C - t! uirjt! - XI X use cf It. all p m. fv eltire. a-d a' ff X res* disappeared. He la now cured * X and at wont.” | St JacobsOil jj X Acts l:Ve matic. Its curative powers X are simple m-.rveU n. It corners X pitn qu;r y a d rurrly It roe* rifht X tetheapjf It cures when everythl’e X d»e his fat'-d. A etr.^le trial will a ccevi e th” me rt Increduimis, It has X 4, cured tv yu3- -is of car's cf rheuma- X X ttsm 1 ■ d r#,.if3lcla. which have re- X X 'i:t-I fr<~-1■— ert frr the creutre p.-t X X cf a lifetime. 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