Christian herald and signs of our times . SUNDAY SCHOOL WORK OF THE A. S. S. UNION IN THE SOUTHWEST— REV. W. P. PAXSON, D. D., A Sunday School Building, Indian Territory—2. Chief Keokuk, now a Christian Teacher—3. Indians Outside the Tepee. (Seepage 286.) 274 THE CHRISTIAN HERALD AND SIGNS OF OUR TIMES. May 6, 1891. I HUMDRUM ABOLISHED. PR. TALMAGES SERMON PREACHED IN THE NEW BROOKLYN TABERNACLE LAST SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 3, 1891. • do House Solomon Prepared for his Egyptian Bride—His Magnificence and his Wisdom—His Solution ofthe Puzzles of the Queen of Sheba—The Queens Visit—


Christian herald and signs of our times . SUNDAY SCHOOL WORK OF THE A. S. S. UNION IN THE SOUTHWEST— REV. W. P. PAXSON, D. D., A Sunday School Building, Indian Territory—2. Chief Keokuk, now a Christian Teacher—3. Indians Outside the Tepee. (Seepage 286.) 274 THE CHRISTIAN HERALD AND SIGNS OF OUR TIMES. May 6, 1891. I HUMDRUM ABOLISHED. PR. TALMAGES SERMON PREACHED IN THE NEW BROOKLYN TABERNACLE LAST SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 3, 1891. • do House Solomon Prepared for his Egyptian Bride—His Magnificence and his Wisdom—His Solution ofthe Puzzles of the Queen of Sheba—The Queens Visit—The Spices She Brought Typical of Religion—The Need of Spice in Religion—Why Men Do Not Go to Church—The Damage Lugubrious Christians Do—Spice in the Sermon—In Church Music—The Lament of a Widows Child- The Taj Mahal *• Of spices great abundance; neither was there anysuch spice as the Queen of Sheba gave King Chron. 9 : 9. HAT is that buildingout yonder, glitter-ing in the sun ? Havenot heard ? It is theHouse of theForest of Leb-anon. KingSolomon hasjust taken toit his bride,the princess?>of Egypt. Yousee the pil-lars of the portico, and agreat tower, adorned withone thousand shields ofgold, hung on the outside of the tower—fivehundred of the shields of gold manufacturedat Solomons order, five hundred were cap-tured by David, his father, in battle. See howthey blaze in the noonday sun ! Solomon was not like some of the kings ofthe present day—crowned imbecility. All thesplendor of his palace and retinue were eclipsedby his intellectual power. Why, he seemed toknow everything. He was the first great natu-ralist the world ever saw. Peacocks fromIndia strutted the basaltic walk, and apes chat-tered in the trees, and deer stalked the parksand there were aquariums with foreign fi


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