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THE VACATION PSALM Sermon by th* ** Highway and Byway- Preacher. t (cop/ujjut, »«y j. a. tnoa.T Chicago, Sunday. July 24. 1904. *ex*: *"^et the word* of my mouth, and tr.r meditation of my heart, hr acceptable In Thy sight. O Lord, my Strength and my Redeemer."—Psa.m 19.14 E have indicated the last verse ol the n i n e t eentb Psalm as our text because it should voice the uesire ana prayer of every soul, but we wish to take the whole Psalm for our theme, and we are froing to call It. "The Vaca tion Psalm.” The -- vacation ts the time for roKt and meditation The time when we love to get off into the heart of Natnre and linen to the harmony of her manifold voices, to drink in the thousand and one beauties of the vaulted heavens and the verdant earth, to fee] the gen tle inlluences stealing in upon our souls as fair Nature comes and cheer fully and faithfully ministers to our needs and srtiles with indulgent grace upon our whims and exactions. How patient she is as we take all she has to give us and never so much as voice a "thank you” with life or lips. As we enjoy God’s Nature, our hearts ought to turn in grateful thought to Nature's God. The words of our mouth should sneak some message back to Nature and to God; our hearts should find their meditation in chan nels that lead Godward and that will prove acceptable to Him. Nature is ret of herself a sufficient teacher and repealer of God. She bears her faith ful »i»8timony to the reality and the personality of God. but in the fullest sense of the word she is not a revealer of.Him. She gives lavish evidence that there is a God. The heavens declare His glory and the firmament showeth His handiwork. The voice of Nature everywhere whispers of a great and all-powerful and all-wise Creator and ruler. The message has gone out into all the earth, so that we find the con sciousness of a Supreme Being to prevail among the most benighted peo ples. But this evidence and testimony of Nature are not sufficient revelation of God. if they were, why should not the untutored savage, who has Nature as a teacner, even as those of more enlightened conditions, know as much of God as l be laf.ter? rI'* HE Psalm beiure us places Nature 1 in her right relations to God anil man. The full, lofty, graceful lines of its opening verses, with their po etic figure of the splendid sun riding through the heavens in strength s«,j majesty and beauty, even as the care ful ly-Rroomed bridegroom eometh forth to seek his bride and rejoiceth as be goes with strong, stately, grace ful tread to her abode, give us a rare picture of Nature at her best, ami ■peak to us of God’s glory, of ll.s handiwork, of His wisdom and power Uut it does not 0 op there. It goes on from the visible evidence of God to the revelation of God. The trouble with so many people is that they never t get beyond the sixth verse of this 1’salin. 1 hey see God in His created universe, but they refuse to hear Him out of His written Word. They Jove to walk abroad at night and trace the stars in their course, but they reluse to walk with the Psalmist as n^ traces the evidences of God in Hie Word. But it is not sufficient that you should rejoice in Nature and Na ture’s God; your soul must receive His revelation, and revelation brings ob ligation. The three divisions of this Psalm cover the ground of the soul's need. The evidence of God in Nature, verses 1 to 6; the revelation of L * God in His Word, verses 7 to 11, ' and the obligation oi man to God. verses 12 to 14. Thin, then, is the ideal Vacation Psalm. It lures off into the heart of Nature aaad speaks of God there. It hold* up tJbe Word of God as perfect and sure, as righ. •and pure, as clean and holy and true, and then speaks of its con verting pow er, of its gift of wisdom, of its fill 1 Ing the heart with rejoicing and the «ye with a new and glorious lighi, of itr, perpetuity, of its value above gold and Its sweetness above honey, of its faithf •) toss in guarding from fcarm and danger, and 01 the great re Witrd which Is to he realized from obe dience yielded thereto. 'pjIE thought of Jaw and order runs 1 through the whole Psalm Tin* law governing nature and the law gov ernJ«£ man. Nature obedient iu the Divine will, and graceful and Ixautjfui hatraony prevailing between the Dod besd arud His created worlds. Man given lb/* Divlr.e law nod revelation which Uj obey would produce a har mony that would All earth with paace and Joy and prosperity of millennial promise, and Heaven with the music of the glad angelic hosts, but man vio lating that Jaw. and despising that rev elation. As we walk abroad a; night and lift appreciative ga/.e to the star studded he?vena, we are conscious of a law which keep? them faithfully In their place and steadily upon fh/ir course. Day after cay we see the glori ous king of the day enter the eastern gate of the morning and ride Jn splen dor through the heavens and then re tire majestically behind the ramparts of the western horizon, whip* front Its bnylements there stream forth the gold and crimson signals of the approaching night, ar.d realize that that splendid »un U obediently traveling the pathway i ' of a Divine Taw. 8pr!ng follows unfaTl-* ingly upon the retreating footsteps of stern winter, and unfolds the buds Into the fullblown blossoms of summer, and autumn brings her gifts of fruits and grains, and paints the landscape In crimson and gold. We have learned Nature's unfailing manifestations and know that spring will follow winter, and summer spring and autumn sum mer. We know that she operates In obedience to a mighty law. ’ ¥ T IS but an easy ana orderly step 1 I from Nature and htr laws to man and the laws which should govern him. God is revealed as a God of law and order In His universe. Man recog nizes this relationship and this har mony. and why should it be deemed strange and unnatural that God in Hia relations to man should have laws, which if obeyed issue in beauty anu harmony, but which, if disregarded, bring discord and violence? The Psalmist, sensitive to the Divine reve lation. passes from Nature and her laws, to man and his laws. He could sit out on the Judean hillside amid all the beauties of that marvelous land scape and enjoy it only as he sang the complete song of man and his rela 1 tions to God. and yo_. 1 must do the same thing. We must not be cou tent with the revelation of God in Na ' ture, but we must seek the fuller reve lation of God which is to be found in His Word. See what David thought or God's Word; how he loved to view it (rom all sides. It was law, perfect ' aw, converting and restoring the soul. It was testimony, sure testimony, j bringing wisdom to the Fimple-heart 1 ed. It was statutes, right statutes, I making the life to rejoice under their | beneficent rules. . It was command ment, pure commandment, making the i eyes quick to see the good and to put aside the evil. It was holy, Godly ! fear, cleansing In its power, and endur ing forever it w os judgments, true and righteous, bringing deliverance to the obedient heart and punishment to the unrepentant and ungodly. To him this Word was better than the riches of the i world, and more satisfying than ail the sweets and dainties of the world. It was the danger signal, the guide post, which would keep the feet from slipping into the bypaths of sin, and it was the bearer of rich gifts to those who remembered it to keep it. : How much David saw in God’9 Word! How he loved to look off upon the fate of Nature and discover some new revela tion of God there, and then how eagerly he would Rcan his bit of scroll crmtaln i ing God’s Wort} ar.d there find some new I thought, some ne w secret, of God In His relations to him and mankind. Put hovi little we enjoy God’s Word. As we go off for our vacation rest, let us learn of God not only In Nature but in His Word; let ns seek that harmony with God which prevails between God and Nature, and | gives to her such irresistible charm. It may be our privilege to find God’s Word meaning to us ail that it meant to David. \ ND without God’s Word, there is no i V recognition of the personal nin ticraship which exists between God and men. How vague is the thought of God to multitudes of people. Why Is It so? Why is it that people like to get lost in the crowd and falk in a vague sort of way of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man? Why is it that men like to think their own thoughts of God, and not God’s thoughts for them and about them? Is it not because there is not the sense of the personal relation ship which should and must exist be tween God and man? Is it not because tnan does not know and dors not care to | know God? 1 J car it is Study yourown r heart and seek to discover the reason vou do not -want to know God better, is it not for the reason We have stated above? The contemplation of Nature | gives convincing proof of the exlstenco of a God. The contemplation of His Word bring* revelation of that God which we have discovered in Nature. And that revelation brings sense of ob ligation to God. Hear the Psalmist as he i closes. He has b»*he]d Nature and ex claimed, how lovely; how the glory of | God is manifested. He has beheld God’s perfect, pure law and has exclaimed: It is better than gold aua sweeter thar. ' honey. Put what an X ray it has been to his soul! How it has revealed the . true condition! How it has brought to i light the hidden sins! rT' HE greatest dieoovery which man 1 ever mal.«*K is th# discover^ of him self; that is tbe discovery of his true condition and need before God. Man never does this of and within himself. It takes the Word of God to rev# a] it to him. David never knew what manner of man he was tintII he had looked into the mirror of Clod’s Word and there he saw reflected and revealed hlR true like ness. And ns he realized what he had thought he wac and ILin what God han revealed him to be he exclaimed: ‘ Who an understand his errors?” And the | answer throughout the ages has been No man! No ma:j can know himself ex crpt as God reveals that self to him through Mis Word. And with ihe rev elation comes the consciousness of hope j lens and heiploss state of sin. and the prayer: "Cleanse thou me from secret aunts.” David as he uttered this prayer saw- the blood of the sacrificial lamb as i if pointed to the corning of the Ferfrct I One who was to become the J^arib of God to take away the sin of thr. world And to you and to me comes the re\cio ' tion of the saving and keeping Christ And the note of true harmony i« then i struck. "I^et the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart he a< - i ceptable in Thy sight. 0 Iy.rd, mv Sfrtngth and my Redeemer.” We rec ognize the harmony which exists between God and obedient Nature, i Oh. that we would realize and rec- I j ognize the harmony which should I exist between God and man. But such harmony can only prevail at we follow the example of obedient Nature, and in turn become obedient to God * laws and God's will. What a world this would be If we would! SENATOR CLARK MARRIED. Romantic Adoption of Girl by Mon tana Multi-Million*i»e Leads to the Altar. New York Special. Senator W. A. Clark, of Montana, recently made public tbe fact that be • had married his ward. Miss Anna E. La Chapelle. in Marseilles. Franco, 1 May 25. 1901. Following the formal announcement by the senator himself came the fact that there is a little daughter in j France who is now about two venrs old. The announcement adds another chapter to a romance that bc-fan about nine years ago In the city of Butto r i MRS. WILLIAM A. CLARK. (Wooed bj Multi-Millionaire Alter lie Hod AUutilwl tier.) ■ nd iu which the batidsome child of the western mining Helds and the many times millionaire United Stale* senator are the leading characters. Senator Clark informed his daugh ters, Mrs. Clark C'uivc-r and Mrs. Lewis Rutherford Morris, of his marriage shortly after his arrival Irom Europe on tlie Teutonic on June 3d. He then was on hia way to St. Louis to take part in the convention proceedings. His daughters were much surprised when tlieli father made known the se cret he had kept so well for three years. Their surprise was particularly keen, because they never objected to their father remarrying. It was while tn one of the mining towns where his interests lie that Sen ator Clark'about nine years ago was present when the miners and their wives and families were enjoying a Fourth of July celebration. There were ail manner of costumes worn by young men and women, but that which particularly caught the eye of Senator Clark represented a goddess of liberty. It was gracefully worn by a young woman, probably 3!> years his junior. Senator Clark made inquiries and learned the goddess was impersonated by Miss Anna E. La Chapelle. Senator Clark pursued his inquiries. He learned that La Chapelle, the fa ther of the girl, was a Fronch-Canadi an physician who, with his wife and famMy, pa(j [urn0(\ to United States and its western fields for a live lihood. La Chapelle died suddenly in j Chicago and sixm after this Senator ■ Clark decided to extend financial as sistance to the family, not for Anna La Chapelle alone, hut for her wid owed mother and children. He was introduced to Mrs. La Chapelle and thus met her children. He recognized Anna as a girl endowed with unrsual Intelligence. Senator Clark made the girl his ward and soon after this provided her with opportunities for such tuition as he considered she should have. It be gan ir. seminaries in tills country and finished in schools abroad and In ex tensive travel. DAIRYMAN BY OCCUPATION Republican Candidate for Governor of Michigan Is a Practical Modern Farmer. Lansing (Mich.) Special. Hon Fred M Warner, the republican candidate for governor of Michigan, has ! been in public life for many years. He Is a capable office holder and has the reputation of being thoroughly honest. He is the owner of a large farm, and is particularly Interested In dairying. His i specialty is the manufacture of brick ' ■■ — * Ml N. KKKI/ M WARNKR. <R*>|iuli.ii .<(, (anJIi.air* f..r Oi»v**inor ot MicftUia/i.j h«*«*se. For many years he has been president of the Michigan Htate I)air> association. If elected, he will he an other fanner governor, of the tjpe ol ex-Oov. Hoard of Wisconsin. Mr. War ner is In the prime of life and numbers frierds amonp all classes of society. When Cork Ceases to Float. If cork la sunk to a depth of 200 fe«\ in tbs sea it will not rise a^ain to the surface, owing to the great pressure of the water. At any less depth it will iiae i« the surface, — - i THE SUNDAY BIBLE SCHOOL. Lesr?n in the International Series for July 31. 1904—“Oinri and Ahab.'* ^Prepared by the “Highway and By* ! way” Preacher.) lCop>fight. 19cm. h« j m t!d*cn.: LKSSON TEXT. <1 Kina* 1* 23 S3: M> n\i r> Vers* *. 30 33 » 23. In the thirty and first year of As* king of Judah begun Omrl to reign ovef Israel. 12 ycara; s.x years reigned he :n rirsah. 2f. \nd he bought the hill Samaria of * Sh. rn« r for two talents ot silv. r. and btnit on ti e hill, and called the name of the city which he built uttir the nutuc of iahennr. owm« r of the hill. Samaria. But t»trrt wrought evil in the eyes ot the I Old. and did worse than all that were before him. 2t> For he walked in all the way of Jeroboam the son of Nebat, and in his Mn wherewith he tmule Israel to sin, to provoke the l.crd dud of Israel to anger their vanities. -7. Now the rest of the acts of Omrl w ijlch he did. and his might that he «h. w. d. are they not writun in the book ot the chronicles of the kings of Israel? 2V So Omrl slept with his fathers, and Was buried In Samaria; and Atubhisson f « Utned in his stead. 31* And In tie thirty and eighth year of •Vtt king of Judah began Ahab the son of tiitiri to rrtgn ovtr Israel; and Ahab the son of Omrl ndgiu-d ovir Israel in Samaria twenty and two years. 30 And Ahab the son of OntH did evil 111 the sight ot the 1-ord above all that wire b< fore hint. 31 And It came to pa.-*«. as If a had bren a -iRM thing tor him to walk in the sins of Jeroboam the son of Nebat. that h< took to wife Jtsrbcl the daughter of Kthbanl king of i hi Zldonlnns. aim went and a i Vi il lta.il. and worshiped him. s- An‘i be reared up an altar for Haiti in the house of Haul, which lie had built in Samaria. 33. And Ahab made a grove; and Ahnb -id more to proV" kr the f.ord God of l«rn. 1 to anger than ail the kings of lain., that w • r before him. Till: I.KSSON includ* s 1 Kings 13;2f»l<t:S4. ! giving a portion ot the history of the upper I kingdom which Is no: gl\.-it in t'hronlch < GOLDEN TEXT 'Righteousness sxalt« I c11; a nation; but sin is a r ptoacli to any i people."—Pro V. 14:34 FlMh - Thirty-live yenra, irom the nr. i cession of Nadub to that <h Ahnb. and ths beginning of A hub's reign. Ahab . mn. to ! the throne 91k IJ. c. We go buck over I twenty ><ars In time from the Uoson of I last Sunday, to luki up the story of Ahab and Elijah. Events in Israel Included in This j^esbon. Ixrael win plunged Into a bloody period ' of Interim! .(r!f« follow In* tin. iHrii of ' liaasha llaaslm dl«*d in the twi nty-sixth ' y.i.r oi the r* lien of Ann. king of Judah, and j M* son. J .lah, i - t ana klngand relKtud hvo year*. when Zlniri, captain of half l.ls ,,rmy. murdered him. r iz*d tht throne, and then slaughtered all of thi royal fam U>. /.Imrl i • Ik it w d seven days, and then burntd hInis. It i„ death In the palace <>i 1 Tlrzah to ««cnpo capture by Omrl. cap- j tain of th. host of israe. Half Israel |h. n < hni. ai.d i I Wai.i.i, i e tw. in the two divisions of unhapp) Israel n,,ul|y < ndtif In th. diath of Tll.nl, when t)mrl he. arm. ro.e king. I'pon hl« death Ahali, h!s non. became kin* in th. thirty- ! elvhth j car of th.* r. l^n of A*u k.nt; of Judah. Comparing’ Scripture with Scripture. “bought ih» hill Samaria... .and built on the hill”— the palace at the capital of Tirzah was in ruins (see verse IK), and Omri selected this desirable site, com bining as if did strength, beauty and ler tiiity, for the royal buildings. A WICKED FATHER. Omri... .did worse t han all that were before hint.”—Note the steady decline in the moral and religions conditions in Israel. The seeds of Idolatry which ; Jerebonm had sown are bringing forth ! u terrible harvest. Gnl. 6:7-8, Sin's road always runs downward. "Acts of Omri-written."—It Is a sol- ■ emit thought to realize that God records j the nets of men. Korn. 14:12. Even tlie I words spoken. Matt. 12:6. Kev. I 20:12-15. The record left for man’s i reading was hut a small part of this ; wicked sing's most Iniquitous reign. 1 God has the complete record, however, and it will be brought forth someday. "Ornrl slept w ith his fathers.”— Iv ath must come to all. The w leked may es cape God in this life, but death’s hand drags into the presence of God.—2 Cor. 5:10. A MORE WICKED SON. "Ahnb... .did evil in the sight of the I-orri above ail that were before him.”— There were two reasons for this, his 1 wicked father, and his most wicked i wife. It issald that a w ife rnakesor mars a man. Ruin came to Israel again nnd again through matrimonial alliances. See Josh. 22:12. 13; Neh. 23:13; 23, 29. 1 Even Solomon made shipwreck In this 1 way. 1 Kings 11:1-5. and .fehoshnphat j fell Into this snare later. See 2 Chron 21:*. J9U bel th« daugbft r or th»- Zidonlan king. was utterly given to the devil. She it was who brought all the licen tiousness ronnected with the worship of naal and Aphteroth. The connection j between the Indulgence of Impurity and i the declension of the spiritual life ia very close. In Romans 1 Paul tells us that men that refuse to retain flod in their knowledge are given up to the j workings of passion. They lose the sweet, clear Impression of the truth and nearness of the Christ Re pure? •Tleared up an altar for Raal " The sun was worshiped under various Im- 1 ages. Reference Is made to the one set jp by Ahab in 2 Kings 3:2 The priest* offl< lated barefoot and dancing and kiss- . i ing the linage were among the chief rites. From passive share In the wor- i ship of Uaal, ha quickly passed to the active participation and lent his encr- ! gies and kingly wealth and Influence to i establish and spread this abominable j heathen worship. Seed Thoughts. Sin, like noxious weeds. ?s a rapid grower and prolific seed producer. God sees evil when man Is hilnd to It. Omni and Ahah may have been winning the approval and applause of their pees j pie, while they were Incurring the con demnation of God A fair face ma> mask a wicked heart j Many a man has been captivated by the I first, only to find disaster and ruin j through the influence of the second A bad woman la always worse that; a had | man because woman Is cast In a finer j mold and more readily runa to ox I teem* goodness or extreme badaesa A Beautiful Young Society Woman's Letter. St. Paim., I 01 Wabasha St, l>r. ITart man, Columbus, O., Doar Sir: '41 took Peruna last summer •when / was all run down, and had a headache and backache, and no ambition for anything. / now feel as well as I ever did in all my life, and ah thanks is due to your excellent Peruna.Bess F. Healy. i tie symptom* or summer ca tarrh arc quite unlike in differ ent cu sen, but the most common ones are (general lassitude, played-out, tired-out, UM'il-np, run-down feelings, combined with more or loss henry, atupid, listless, mental condition. llelish for fo«si and the ability to digest food neentn to be lost. Skin eruptions, sallow com plexion, biliousness, coutid tongue, titful, irregular sleep, help to complete the picture which is so common at this season. IVrunu so exactly meets all these conditional lintthe demand is so great, for this remedy at this of the year that it is impossible to supply It. idContdinsNo Narcotics. reason why Pertinu lias ernmnent use in so many s that it contains nontir f any kind. Pc run a laper inrmlcss. It cun he used ugth of time witlioi:* tg the drug hubit. Thousands of women suffer from pelvic catarrh and catarrhal nervousness and don’t know It. If you feel fagged out, begin at once taking Dr. Hartman’s Peruna. It will relieve your catarrhal affliction and all your organs will be restored to health. Buy a bottle to~day, as It will Immediately alleviate your case. rNCffB$TEM M. ‘NEW RIVAL” BLACK POWDER SHELLS. iftr J* 8 the thoroughly modern and scientific system of load UeL0^ ing and the ur.e of only the best materials which make W winchester Factory Loaded “New Rival" Shells give bet r *er pattern, penetration and more uniform results gencr _ *!ly than any other shells. The special paper and the Win —' Chester patent corrugated head used in making “New Rival" shells give them strength to withstand reloading. BE SURE TO GET WINCHESTER MAKE OF SHELLS. BEST FOR THE BOWELS MflAN.TEf DwCirR? '"*’•11 bowrl tTOTjblo*. 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Veetibuled Trains, Elegant High Back Seat Coaches, Pullman Drawing Room Sleeping Cara and Company'e Dining Cart. All Traino via Waahington, D. C. Aok Agento for Descriptive Folder Con taining Tim# of Trains, List o4 Hotels, Etc., or Address, O. P. McCarty. O. P. A., Cincinnati r* T.SJS ELECTROTYPES In T»rlHy for Ml* At th» lnw« prW> by *■ * *•»»•»» O*.. Ill W. PWIH, **~-*- 'ntl A. N. K.-M 20,32