The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 05, 1894, Image 7

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    REV. DR. TALMAGE,
THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN-
DAY SERMON.
Subject: “Easter in Greenwood.”
TEXT: ‘‘And the field of Hebron, which was
in Machpelah, which was before Mame, the
Sield, and the cave which was therein, and all
the trees that were in the field, that were in all
the borders round abowl, were made sure unio
Abraham.” Genesis xxiii, 17, 18,
Here is the first cemetery ever laid out,
Machpelah was its name.
rescent beauty, where the wound of death
was bandaged with folinge. Abraham, a
rich man, not being able to bribe the king of
terrors, proposes here, as far ns possible, to
cover up the ravages. He had no doubt
previously noticed this region, and now that
Sarah, bis wife, had died—that remarkable
person who, at ninety years of age, had born
had reached 127 years, had
ham is negotiating for a fam
last slumber,
Ephron owned this real estate, and after,
in miock sympathy for Abraham, refusing to
take anything for it, now sticks on a big
rice—400 shekeis of silver. The cemetery
expired-—-Abra-
ily plot for her
presence of witnesses in a public place, for
there were no deeds and no halls of record
in those eariy times. Then in a cavern of
limestone rock Abraham put Sarab,
few years after himself followed, and then
Isaac and Rebekah, and then Jacob and
Leah. Embowered, picturesque and mem-
orable Machpelah! That “God's acre” dedi-
eatod by Abraham has been the mother
innumerable mortuary observa 4
necropolis of every civilized land has
with its metropolis,
The most beautiful hills of Europe outside
the great cities are covered with obelisk and
funeral vase and arched gateways and col-
umns and parterres in ho inhum-
ated. The Appian way of was bor.
dered by sepuichral commemorations, For
this purpose Pisa has fts arcades of marble
sculptured into excellent bas-reliefs and the
features of dear faces that have vanished,
Genoa has its terraces « into tombs. and
Constantinople covers with cyprus the silent
habitations, and Paris has its P
on whose heights rest Balzac and David and
Marshal Ney and Cavier and La Place and
Moliere and a mighty gr of warriors and
poets and painters
foreign nations utmost g
expended in the work of
fleation and incinerati
Our own country consen y be second
none in respect to Hr bod
city and town and ne
lHgenee or virtue hb
ifs sacred inclosure,
gaged sculptor's ch
and arlifioer in me
shown its religion as
manner which it he
who have passed forever
Hills, and its Evergree und
and Holy Cross and |
All the world knows
with now about 270.00
among the hills t
by lakes embosomed fu s i
our American Westminster a
pclis of mortuary architecture
of mighty ones ascended,
Iliads in marble, wh
waiting for other gensrations t
No dormitory of breathless sies
world has so many mighty dea
Among the { the Gospel,
thune and Thomas De Witt ang Bishep J.
and Tyng and Abeel, the
Beecher and Buddington,
and Inskip, and Bangs and Chapin,
Noah Schenck and I Hanson :
Among musicians, the renowned Gotrschalk
and the holy Tonomas Hastings, Among
philanthropists, Peter Cooper and Isanc
Hopper, and Luecrstia Mott and
Graham, and Henry Bergh, the apostie of
merey to the brute
litterati, the Carys
James K. P:
Among journ Bonnett
of
oR
vied
nor ol the
noma
3
sry db
ut
rians,
i sides is
sammie
to
th LTery
§ iy :
art in
ry of th
its Cypress
its { i
comete
Ids th Vo
sivary
ir Grreeag
1
}
3
i
preacasrs
missionary
Neg
Isabella
sraatie
- Alles and
and John
ong the
he
niXe,
{ Ravrmond
(z
sb ty oe
nang
ists,
lever, and then coma forth the very tones,
the very song of the person that MN rontied
into it once, but is now departed. If a man
can do that, cannot Almighty God, without
hall trying, return the voles of your depart.
od? And if he can return the voice, why
not the lips, and the tongue, and the throat
that fashioned the voice? And if the lips,
and the tongue, and the throat, why not the
brain that suggested the words? And if the
brain, why not the nerves, of which the brain |
is the Headqpastossy And if he can return
the nerves, Why not the muscles, which are |
less ingenious? And if the muscles, why not
the bones, that are less wonderful? And {f
the voice, and the brain, and the muscles,
and the bones, why not the entire body? It!
man can do the phonograph, God can do the |
| resurrection, !
Will it be the game body that in the last
day shall be reanimated? Yes, but infinitely
improved. Our bodies change every seven
Fours, and yet in one sense it is the same
ody, On my wrist and the second finger
of my right hand there is a scar, I made
that at twelve years of age, when, disgusted
at the presence of two warts, I took a redhot
fron and burned them off and burned them
out. Since then my body has changed at
| least a half dozen times, but those soars
| prove it Is the same body,
i We never lose our identity. If God ean
| and does sometimes rebuild a man five, six,
! ten times in this world, is it mysterious that
{ Ho ean rebulld him ones more and that in
{ the resurrection? If He can do it ten times,
I think He can do it eleven times, Then
| look at the seventeen year locusts, For
seventeen years gone, at the end of seventeen
years they appear, and by rubbing the hind
log against the wing make that rattle at
i which all the husbandmen and vine dressers
tramble as the insectile host takes up the
march of devastation, Resurrection every
seventeen years —a wonderful fact!
Another consideration makes the {dea of
resurrection easier. God made Adam. He |
was not fashioned after any model, There |
had never bean & human organism, and so
there was nothing to copy. At the first at-
tempt God made a perfect man, He made |
him owt of the dust of the earth, If out of |
ordinary dust of the earth and without a
model God could make a perfect man, surely
out of the extraordinary dust of mortal body
and with millions of models God ean make
esch one of us a perfect being in the resur- |
rection. Surely the last undertaking would |
pot be greater than the first, Bee the gospel |
algebra, Ordinary dust minus a model
equals a perfect man, Extraordinary dust |
and plus a model equals a resurrection body. |
Mysteries about it? Oh, yes, That is one |
{ reason why I believe it, It would not be
much of a God who could do things only as
faras I can understand, Mysteries? Ob, |
yes, 3ut no more about the resurrection of
your body than about its presant existence, |
I will expiain to youthe last mystery of the |
resurrection and make it as plain to you as |
that two and two make four ff you will tell
ne how your mind, which is satirely inde
pendent of your body, ean act upon your
body so that at your wili your eyes open, or
your foot walks, or your hand is extended
So I find nothing in the Bible statement coun
ning j1esurrection that me
a moment, All doubts n omy
I say that the cemeteries, however
il now, will ve more beautiful when
lies of our ved ones come up in the
ing of the resurrection,
they will eom
They wiil
them lay down at the last ve
often vou
®
the singers
clear frot
+4 ify
a in
in improved condition,
of
OTIS most
y tired. How |
have say, “I am so!
tired The faect is ft isatired world, Ir 1}
wuld go through this andienczs and go |
round the world, I could not find a person in
any style of life rant of the sensation of
I
¥ 143 rasan
fatigue,
ap rested, I'he
heard then
gn
I do not believe thers are fifty persons in
this audience who are no i. Your head
or vour foot is
or your brain is tired, or your nerves |
. Long business ap-
piieation or hersavement or sickness has put
on you heavy weights, Bo the vast majority
of those who went out of this world went
out Iatigued. About the poorest place to rest
is this world, Its atmosphere, its sur.
roandings and even its hilarities are exhaust -
ing. So God stops our earthly lHfe and
mercifully closes the oye, and more espe
inlly gives quiescence to the lung and heart,
£8
tired,
are tire journeying or
in
lanted no trees and twisted
no garlands, and sculptured no marble for
thelr Christian ancestry. But on the day of
which I speak the resurrected shall make the
place of their feet glorfous. From under the
shadow of the church where they slumbered
nmong nettles and muliein stalks and this. |
tins and sinbs nglant, they shall arise with a |
glory that shall flush the windows of the!
village church, and by the bell tower that
usad to call them to worship, and above the
ful generations
ascended, What triumphal procession never
did for a street, what an oratorio never did
for an academy, what an orator never did
for a brilliant auditory, what obelisk never
did for a king, resurrection morn will do for
all the cemeteries, §
This Easter tells us that in Christ's resur-
rection our resurrection, if we are His, and
the resurrection of all the plous dead, is as-
sured, for He wag “the first fruits of them
that slept.”” Renan says He did not rise, but
580 witnesses, sixty of them Christ's enemies,
say He did rise, tor they saw Him after He
had, If He did not rise, how did sixty armed
soldiers let Him get away? Burely sixty liv.
ing soldiers ought to be able to keep one
dead man. Blessed be God! He did get
away.
After His resurrection Mary Magdalene
saw Him. Cleopassaw Him. Ten disciples
in an upper room at Jerusalem saw Him, On
a mountain the eleven saw Him, Five hun-
dred at once saw Him. Professor Ernest Ree
nan, who did not sea Him, will excuse us for
taking the testimony of the 580 who did see
Him, Yes, yes, Ho got away. And that
makes me sure that our departed loved ones
ourselves shall get away. Freed
eclod He is not
going to leave us and ours in the lurch,
There will be no doorknob on the inside of
our family sepulcher, for we cannot come out
ot ourselves, but there is a doorknob on the
opening, will say: ‘‘Good morning! You
haveslept long enough ! Arise! Arise!" And
then what flutter of wings, and what flash.
log of rekindled eyes, and what gladsome
rushing across the family lot, with cries of :
“Father, is that you?" “Mother, is that
you?" “My darling, is that you?’ “How
you all have changed! The cough gone, the
‘ome, let
us astend together! The older ones first,
the younger ones next! Quick, sow, get into
line! The skyward procession has already
started ! Bteer now by that embankment of
cloud for the nearest gate
And, as we ascend, on one side the earth
gots smaller until it is no larger than a moun-
larger than a
ship, and smaller until it is no larger than a
wheel, and smaller until larger than
a speck,
Farewsll, dissolving earth! Boat on the
other side, as we rise, heaven at Orst appears
no larger than your hand, And nearer it
looks hike a chariot, and nearer it looks like
a throne, and nearer it looks like a star, and
nearer it lod and nearer it ks
like a universe, Hall, scopters that shail al-
ways wave! Hall, anthems that shall always
roll! Hall, ever again to
part! That is what resurrection day will do
for all the cemeteries and gray
the Machpelsh that was opensd by
Abraham in Hebron to the
terday consecrut od,
Huntington's
fr fan
it iE No
ins Hikes asun
ampanionships,
eyards frong
Father
shpelal yes
Lady
ap po-
MaAses
most
oe
Wie s ti nes am
be found a: Thy
fra 4
ilgat a
nts je! me be i
wrecangel » telomph shall ¢
srsiling Yaow
fet wrong JU 2a nv
i In pre ow ring
iid of SUV ITRIEE 78 @
EE —
An Eccentric Physician,
Among Thy
VWwhenser tn
fossa Toy
Then | dst
Wail hear
W.tashs
reo
Professor Zakharin, of Moscow, who
attended the Czar during his recent
serious illness, is almost as wellknown
in Huassia for his for
his" eminence ns a physician. The
British Medical Joarnal that
when he is called to attend toa patient
escentricitios as
winless
shall be
a -.
cn
An Example in Nature,
A little girl living on 61st street,
in Chicago, who has great taste
for drawing, was exhibiting one of
her pictures to a lady visitor the
other day when the visitor asked if
the little girl in the picture
standing up.
“No, she's laying down,” said the
artist
“You shouldn't say laying,” inter
posed her mamma. “Say lying.”
After amoment's reflection: “Well,
hens lay, mamma. and I should think
a little girl could do arything a
chicken could.”
Hairs.
who de-
h great patience to
un different
average pum-
Counting the
A German physiologist,
voted himself wi
the counting of the hairs
heads to ascertain t
on a human d that
taking four heads hair of equal
weight, the number of 1 accord.
ing color, was fo Hed,
80.000; black, I 109,
fair, 140,000,
he
ber foun
head
of
1IAIrs
WUOIWs
brown,
to as
i. 000:
DO
|
:
i
Periunmes.
clean, sweet
Violet
ly agreeable than the
odor of orris root.
80 faint as to be Lhe
of a perfume, i8 generally pleasant
give many an unpleasant
of faintness or even nausea,
always open 10
and
Henry
ig ne
As
ail, as
“There
pleasing
ute
al
ing purposes. After
Ward Beecher sald;
stneil ve really
smell, id
persons attract {
perfumer;
Dispatch.
BO uni
al aban
st. Louis
all GO,
erences
Unfair to Her Papa.
ikes 4
this
hence
Mul
tory.
“did you
Broadway to-day?”
Molly, “and 1 was rea
They might
GUC. KO
rch
hing uj
“Yeth,
mad, papa.
have um 10 play on, same as th
others had.
said -
have let vi
a ai
J
Driving the Brain
at the expense Re
of the Jody, 4, Fa
While we drive 2p
- ”
Tedild
the 1
must build
7
refreshing
are methods. When
h and nerve
come
will dor less tell vou
{
ss 1s 3 >
uickest builder of
Scot's Emulsion
f Cod Liver C h not only
. t aard i itself but
if, bu
sh ¢ i LSC
other
the
that
Lilal
q
:
(
:
jiates the for
sred hy Boott & Bowne, MW VV. All drogrivte
Unlike the Dutch Process
Gh No Alkalies
Other Chemicals
5
oa sre used in the
BW preparation of
W. BAKER & C0.S
\BreakfastCocoa
which ds absolutely
pure and soluble,
{ It has more than three times
§ the strength of Cocoon mixed
with Btarch, Arrowroot or
™ Sugar, and i» far more eco
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
It is delicious, pourishing, and EasILY
DIGESTED o——
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
W. BAKER & C0, Dorchester, Masa
that have not had ten minutes’ rest from the
first respiration and the first beat
If a drummer boy were compelled in the
army to beat his drum for twenty-four hours
without stopping, his officer would be court-
martialed for It the drummer boy
should wat his dram fora
week without ceasing, day and night, he
and Greeley, Among
Mitchell, warrior as well
lovingly called by his soldiers
Professor Proctor and
splendid men, as I well know,
wy teacher, the other my classmate,
Among inventors Elias Howe, woo
the sewing machine did J 5
worentisis
Hy special arrangements must be made in
the house ; all dogs must be kept out
of the way, all clocks must be stopped,
ail doors wnust be thrown
The professor on entering begins =
process of gradual undressing,
Ormsby
as astronomer and
“Old Stars”
Drapers
{ them
the
ons of wide open,
srueity.
cough be commanded to | :
ugh : leav-
o i
i#viate
the toils of womanhood that
Plann al nan
ever lived, and Professor Morse, who gave
us magnetio telegraphy, the ¢ rr doing
his work with the needle, the lalter with the
thunderbolt, A hysicians and
geons Joseph C. und
Sims and Dr. Valent ith the
lowing epitaph, wh
honor of Christian religi
faith and hops is In &
who is the resurrection and
and Amen.” Thais is our American
Jah, as saersd 10 as the Mache
Canaan, of which Jacob uttered that p
poem in One verse
Abrabam and Sarah, his wife; :
buried Isase and Rebebkab, his wife, and
there I buried Leah.”
At this Easter service I ask
what may seem a novel question, but it will
be found, before I get tarough, a practical
and useful and tremendous Whar
will resurrection day do for the cemeteries?
First, I remark, it will their supernal
beautification. At certain seasons it is cus.
tomary in all lands 10 strew flowers over the
mounds of the departed. It may have been
suggested by the fact that Christ's tomb was
in a garden, And when I say garden I do
not mean a garden of these latitudes. The
late frosts of spring and the sariy frosts of
autumn are so usar each other that there
are only a few months of flowers inthe fleld.
All the flowers we see 10-day had to be
petted and eoaxed and put under shelter, or
they would net have bloomed at all. They
are the children of the conservatories. Bat
at this season and through the most of the
year the Holy Land is all ablush with floral
opulence,
You find all the royal family of flowers
there, some that you suppose indigenous to
the far north and others indigenous to the
far south—-the daisy and hyacinth, crocus
and anemone, tulip and water lily, geranium
and ranunculus, mignonette and sweet mar-
oram. Inthe college at Beirut you may see
r. Post's collection of about 1800 kinds of
Holy Land flowers, while among trees are
the oaks of frozen climes, and the tamarisk
of the tropics, walnut and willow, ivy and
hawthorn, ash and elder, pine and sycamore,
If such floral and botanieal beauties are the
wild growths of the field, think of what a
garden must be in Palestine! And in such a
garden Jesus Christ slept after, on the
soldier's 8 . His last drop of blood had
econgulated, And then ses Low appropriate
that all our cemeteries should be fHoralized
and tree shaded. In June Greenwood is
Brooklyn's garden.
“Well, then,” you say, "how can you
make out that the resurrection day will
beautify the cemeteries Will it not leave
them a plowed up ground? On that day
there will be an earthquake, and will not
this split the polished Aberdeen granite as
well as the plain slab that can afford but two
words—‘Oar Mary’ or ‘Oar Charley? ’
Well, IT will tell Jou how resurrection day
will beautify all the cemeteries. It will be
up the faces that were to us
by bringi
once, and our memories Are to us now,
more beautiful than any calla lily, and the
forms that are to us more graceful than any
willow by the waters, Can you think of
anything more beautiful than the 1eappear.
anes of those from whom we have been
sd? 1 do not care which way the tree
in the blast of the judgment hurricane,
or if the plowshare that day shall turn under
the lust rose leaf and the last china aster, if
out of the broken sod shall come the on
of our loved ones not damaged, but irra
diated,
The idan of the resurrection gets easier to
understand as I hear the phonograph usroll
some voice that talked into it a year ago, just
before our friend's decease. You touch the
Rr
Marion
ott, {ol-
out in
“My implicit
ifal Radeemer,
he ordersd
on
the Amen
us AN in
storal
buried
there they
“Taers they
and answer
question
be
would die in attempting it, 3at under vour
vestment is a poor heart that began its dram-
beat for the march of life thirty or forty or
sixty or eighty years ago, and it has had no
furiough by day or night, and whether in
onscious or comatoss state it went right on,
for if it had stopped seven seconds your life
would have closed. And your heart will
keep going until some time after your spirit
has flown, {for the auscultator says that after
the Iast expirntion of lung and the last throb
of pulse, and after the spirit is released, the
heart Keeps on beating tora time, What a
mercy, then, it is that the grave is the piace
where that wondrous machinery of ventricle
and artery ean halt!
Under the healthful chemistry of the sol
all the wear and tear of nerve and muscle
and bone will be subtracted, and that bath of
good fresh clean soil will wash off the last
ache, and then some of the same styie of
dast out of which the body of Adam was
roustructed mav be infused into resar.
rection body, How san the bodies of the hu.
man race, which have had no replenishment
from the dust since the time of Adam in par-
adise, get any recuperation from the store.
house from which he was constructed with
out our going back into the dust? That |
original life giving material having been |
{ added to the body as it ones was, and all the
| defects left behind, what a hody will be the |
| resurrection body! And will not hundreds
{ of thousands of such appearing above the
Gowanus heights make Greenwood more
beautiful than any June morning after a
| shower? The dust of the earth being the
original material for the fashioning of the
; first human being, we have to go back to the
| same place to got a perfect body, :
Factories are apt to be rough places, and
i those who toll in them have their garments
grimy and their hands smutehed, But who
cares for that when they turn oat for us
beautiful mus«ical instraments or exquisite
upholstery? What though the grave is a |
rough place—it is a resurrection body manu.
| factory, and from it shall come the radiant
i and resplendant forms of our friends on the |
{ brightest morning the world ever saw. You |
put into a factory cotton, and it comes out |
apparel, You put into a factory lumber and |
{ Jead, and they come out pianos and organs, |
| And 80 in the factory ol the grave you put |
| in pneumonias and consumptions, and they
| come out health. You put ia groans, aad
| they come out hallelalahs, For us, on the
| final day, the most attractive pisces will not
{ be the parks, or the gardens, or the palaces,
| but the cemeteries,
| Weare not told in what season that day
{| will come. II it should be winter, those who
i some up will be more lustrous than the snow
| that covered them. If in the autumn, those
| who come up will be more gorgeous than the
| woods after the frosts had penciled them, If
in the spring, the bloom on which they tread
wiil be dull compared with the rubicund of
their cheeks, Oh, the perfect resurrection
body! Almost ev y has some defec-
tive spot in his ph | constitution «a dull
ear, or a dim eye, or a rheumatic foot, or a
neuralgie brow, or A twisted muscle, or &
weak side, or an inflamed tonsil, or some
point at which the east wind or a season of
overwork assaults him,
But the resurrection body shall be without
one weak spot, and all that the doctors and
nurses and apothecaries of earth will there
after have to do will be to rest without in.
terruption after the broken nights of their
earthly existence, Not only will that day
be the beautification of well kept cemoterios,
but poma of Jve graveyards that have hah
neglected and been the pasture groun
eattle and roosting place for swine will for
the first time have atteactiveness given
It was a shame that In that place ungrate
he
ing his furs in the hall, his overcoat in
next his goloshes in the
third, ete insists on perfect
room,
He
tions, when their must be
literally “Yea” and *““Nay.”" Ie has
a theory which he expresses in the
maxim ‘“Take a rest before you are
tired,” and accordingly he sits down
every eight or ten steps. His de-
meanor towards doctors with whom he
happens to be unacquainted makes
him greatly feared by them, and some
eight vears ago a kind of public agita-
tion was got up in opposition to him
in which many hundreds of doctors
took part. Resolutions were passed
and addresses were presented, and
eahoes of the gathering storm made
themselves heard in the press. These
manifestations of feeling were speedily
repressed in a way characteristic of
Russia. The then General-Governor
of Moscow, Prince Dolgorukoff, sent
for the editor of the medical journal
in which the addresses were printed
speech
word more about Zakharin he would
have to leave Moscow in twenty-four
hours’ time. His eccentricities, how-
ever, cose at the bedside of his
patient; there he is courteous and
considerate, most . painstaking and
minute in his examination, and very
So sue-
that he 1s believed to be worth some
82, 500,000,
san I —
New Method of Producing Pictures,
Art students in this city are devot-
ing a good bit of attention to a new
method of producing pictures. The
giant fungus that is found growing
from the sides of trees is gathered and
allowed to dry and then the yellowish
growth that covers it is scraped away.
This leaves the face of the fungus cov-
ered with an ivorylike substance that
cuts cleanly under a graver,
A design is sketched on this face of
the fungus and cut through it. The
deeper the cutting is made the darker
the color of the heart exposed, and
this variation in tone lends the artist
the degree of light and shade essential
to make a picture,
The results gained in this class of
art work remind one of the first cut.
tings in the process of cameo making.
After the picture is finished the fun-
gus is mounted in silver or plush and
the effect is beautiful.
Portraiture seems to be the most
popular subject for this sort of work.
. Louis blie.
sn II iesonn. i
London has about ove hundred and
reventy-eight rainy days in a year,
fe
at
Era
’ ae atl
7 $d 11 HT
Li
ib sds stated
[14 +44
Pi
whose rait beads this article
ary F. Covell, of Seotiand, Bon
Nee Ni
your medicines, 1
jerce's Favorite Pre
rhoea previous to takin
bottles of Dr.
six months ; it is four years this month,
A. Guthrie, of Oakley, Overton Co., Tenn,
writes : “| never can thank you enough for
stronger now than I bave been for six years.
When I began your treatment 1 was not able
to do anything. | could not stand on my feet
long enough to wash my dishes without suf.
thing for my family of eight. Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription is the best medicine to
take before confinement that can be found ;
or at least it proved so with me. 1 never
1 recommend your medicines to all
ly ‘Favorite
Prescription’ to all women who aresuffering.
Have induced several to try it, and it has
proved good for them.” Yours truly,
Lora od, Suthrie
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription isa
itive cure for the mos, complicated aad
: leucorrhea, ex ve flowing,
painful menstruation, unnatural su -
sions and i
adapted
is purely v
ok A pe its effects in an
ion af the system,
saa FTA BE
pt le ES
any time; $20 to $1000 oan be Invested:
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'$40-
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| Ben 7 and 308 This serie srtravagent offers will be
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BNU 14
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A Grama J dweater,