ER AA. REV. DR. TALMAGE The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon. Subject: “The Fire Worship rs.” ; Texr: “There cama wiss men from the {East to Jerusalem," —Matthew ii., 1. These wise men were the Parsees or the so-called fire worshipers, and I found their desoendants In India last Ootober, Their heathanism ix mors tolerable than any ofthe other fals~ relivions and has more allevia- tions, and while in this round the world serios I have already shown you the worst forms of heathenism to-day Isbow you the leant offensive, The prophet of the Parsoss was Zoroaster, of Persian. He was poet and philosopher and reformer as well as religionist. His disciples thrivad at first in Persia, but under Mobham- medan persecution they retreated to India, whare I met them, and in addition to what I saw of them at their headquarters {in Bom- bay, India, I had two weeks of association with one of tie most learned and genial of their neople on shipboard from Bombay to Erindisi. The Bible of the Parsees, or firs worship- ers, As they are insccurately called, is the Ziend-Avesta, n colleelion of the strangest books that evar came intomy hands. There were originally twantyv-ons volumes, but Alexander the Great, in a drunken fit, set fire to a palace which contained soma of them, and they went into ashes and forget- fulness, But thera ara more of their sacred volumes left than most people would have patience to read, There are many things in tha religion of tha Parsee that suggest Christianity, and soma of its dootrines are are in record with our own religion. Zo- roaster, who lived about 1400 vears bafore Ohrist, was a good man, suffered persecution for his faith and was assassine ated while worshiping at an altar. He ane nounced the theory, ‘“He is best who is pure of hea :.," and that there are two great spirits in the world, Ormusd, the good spirit, and Ahriman, the bad spirit, and taat all who do nght are unaer the influence of Ormuzd, and all who do wrong are un- der Ahbriman; that the Parses must be born on tho ground floor of the housa and must be buiied from the ground floor; that the dying man must have prayers said over bim and a sacred juice given him to drink; that the good at their degeass go into sternal light and the bad into eternal darknee : that, having passed out of this life, tas soul lingers near the corpse three days in a paradisaio state, enjoying more than all the nations earth put together could enjoy or in a pandemonise state, suffering more than all the nations pnt togather comld possibly suffer, but atthe end of three days departing for its final destiny, and that there will be a resurrection of the hody, They are more careful than any other people about their ablutions, and they wash and wash and wash. They pay great attection to physical health, and ft is 8 rare thing to see a siok Parsee, They do not smoke tobaceo, for they consider that a misuse of fire, At the close of mortal life thesoul appaars at the bridge Ci} , Where an angel pre sides and questions the soul about the thoughts ana words and deeds of its earthly state, Nothing, however, ia more intensa in the Parsee faith than the theory that the deaady body is ir A davil is supposad to take possession dead body. All who touch it are unclean, and hencs the straoga styles of obsequirs. But here I must givathres or four questions and answers from one of tha Parsee catechlsms : Question is the most fortunate in the world? Answer-He who is the most tnnocent, Q.—Who is the most innoc2at man in the world? A.—~He who walks in shuns that of the devil, Q.—Whioh is the path that of the devil? A.~—Viriue is the path of God and vice that of the devil, Q.—What vieca? A.-Good thoughts, good words and goo! deads constitute virtue, and evil thoughts evil words and evil deeds constitute vice, Q.—What constitute good aghts, good words and good dee thoagats, evil words and evil A.—Hone of * +h the -Wo man tha path of God ani and whiled of Gol constitutes virfuo andl what " +} ta ovii trathininess constitute the honesty, wan! of charity ! iconstitute the latter And n » you thess Par saes | ye wo things [saw withina ghort tim nbay, India, It was ap afternoon of contr: We started for wealthy classes hav and the Parisecs their stra dead. As we role along tb the sun was descending the siy, and a dis- ¢iple of Zoroaster Parsee, was in lowly posture and h reverential gaze looking jnto the sky. +» would have been said to have been worshiping the sun, as all Par. sees Are said to worship the fire, Put the intelligent Parses does not worship the fire, He looks upon the sun as the eme- blem of the warmth and light of the Creator, Lookinz ut a biaze Hght, whether on hearth, on mountain height or fu the sky, he can more easily bring to mind he glory of God-—at least so the Parsess tell me, ndead they are the pleasantest heathen I have met, They treat their wives as »quals, while the Hindoos and Baddhists treat them as cattle, although ths eattle and sheep nnd swine are better off the women of India.’ This Parses ou the roadside on our way to Malabar hill was the only one of that relig- fon I had ever seen engaged in worship, Who knows but that beyond the light of the sun on which he gazes he may catch a glimpse of the God who is light and “In whom thers is no darkness at ali?” We passed on up through gates into the garden that surrounds the places where the Parsees dispos« of their dead. This garden was given by Jamshidji Jijibhat and is baau- tiful with flowers of nil bus and foliage of all styles of vein and noten and stature, There is on all sides great opulenss of fern and cypress, The gacden is 100 fest above the level ol theses, Not far from the en- trane« is a building whers the mourners of the funeral procession go in to pray. A hight is hers kept burning year in sad year outy We ascend the garden by some eight stone steps. The body of a deceased aged woman was being carried in toward the chiet ‘tower of silence.” There are five of theas towers, Beveral of them have not been used for a long while. Four persons, whose business it is to do this, carry the corpse. They are followed by two men with long beards, The tower of silence to which they come cost £1:0,000 and is twenty-five foet high and 276 feet around and without a roof, The four carriers of the dead and the two bearded men come to the door of the tower, entsr and leave the dead, There are three rows of places for the dead the outer row for the nen, the middle row for the women, the inside row for the chil. dren, The lifeless bodies are left exposed as far down as the walst, As soon as the employes retire from the tower of sllence the vultures, now one, now 1wo, DOW many, swoop upon the liftless form, These vals tures fill the air with their discordant voloes. We saw them in long rows on the top of the whitewashed wall of the Tower of silence. In a few minutes they bave taken the last particle of flesh from the bones, There had evidently born other opportunities for them that day, and some flew away, ns though surfelted, They sometimes onrry away with them parts of » body, and {x fs no unusual thing for the gen. tistuen in their country seats to bave dropped into their doorysrds a bone from the tower of silence In the centre of this tower is n well, into which the bones are thrown after they ars “bleached. Thue hot sun and the rainy season and charcoal do thelr work of disintegrn- tion and disinfection, and then thers are sluices that carry into the sea what * I, on which the their embowerad bones se of the olga w Hs ot of than most of of the daad. The wealthy people of Mala- bar hill have made strenuous efforts to hava these strange towers removad as a nuisance, but they remain and will no doubt tor. ages remain, 1 talked with a learnad Parsee about these mortuary customs, He said : ‘I suppose vou consider them very peculiar, but the fact 18 we Parsees reverence tho elements of nature and cannot consent to defile them. We reverence the fire, and therefors will not ask it to burn our doad. We reverence the water and do not ask it to submerge our dead. We reverence the earth and will not ask it to bury our dend. Anl so we let the vultures take thom away." He conflrmsd me in the theory that the Parsees act on the prinoiple that the dead are unclean, No one must toush such a body, The earmers of this “tomb of silence” must not put their hands on the form of the de- parted, They wear gloves lest somehow they should be contaminated, When the bones urs to be removed from the sides of ihe tower and put in the well at the center, they are touched careiully by tongs. Then these people besides have very decided theo No among the dead. the affluent and ithe destitute must go through tha sama “tower ol silence,” lie down side by side with other occupants, have their bodies dropped into the sams abyss and bs carried out Rou the saree canal and float away on the same sea. No splendor of Necropolis, No seuipturing of maosolsum., No pomp of dome or obelisk, Zoroaster's teaching ro. sulted in these ‘‘towers of silence,” He wrote, "Naked you cama into the world, and asked you must go out.” As I st>04 at the closa of day in this gar- den on Malabar hill and heard the flap of such things as caste Philosopher and boor, funeral custom of the Parses seemed horrible beyond compare, aad yet ibe dissolution o! the human body by any mode is awiul, and the breaks of thess fowl are probably no more repulsive than the worms of the body devouring the sacred human form in cemeteries, Nothing but past, the work of death, whether it now be put out of sight by cutting spades or flying wing. Starting homeward, we soon were in tha heart of the ofty and saw a building all aflash Hghis and resounding with merry It was a Parsee wedding in a bulld- Wa came to the door aud proposed first were not permitted, Parsees, and that So. very polite- doorsteps, This temple of duptials was chisfly occupied by their ears and necks and hands aflame with jewels or imitation of jewels. Ey pantomime and gesture, ns we natives, carious tO sam were married, we ware strangers and ware what process DParsses door. The bailding and the surround. ings were fllumined by hundreds of dles in glasses and ianterns, in qu yaversation ran and all Then thers was a sour i of an ad- band of musie, but the NOSt part were strange 1 eyes, Louder and louder wera th e wind aad stringed processlo ! CA. over, to Our ears until the a the steps. Then ane, and all th still The mother ZToom, with a bridegroom the music voloes were of the platter loaded of food, eoulr ser con and began to address him, : she took from the platter a bottie of per- ‘ume and sprinkied his faos with the re- iolence, All the while speaking in a droning one, shes took from the platter a bandfal s! rice, throwing soma of it on his head, spilling some of it on his shoulder, pouring 8he took from the platter a cocoanut and waved It about hia read, She lifted a garland of fowers threw it over his neck and a bou- Her the 4A bride. fis music, and through another ioor the bridegroom was conducted Tha bride was in the room, but thers was nothing'to designate her. “Wherois the bride? Taald, “Whom is the bride?" After awhile she was evident. The bride and groom wera seated A white cur. tain was dropped between them so that they Then the attend. ryt miaae oe 00K a long rope of linen Lad wound it around neck of the bride and the groom in that they wers to bound to- fe, Then somes slik strings wera wound around the couple, now around Thea the rice across the and the togen ba handful of rice across the curtain on the head Thereupon the curtain dropped, and the bride's chair was removed and ple. afore the priest was platter of rice. He began to address the young man and woman, We could not heer a word, but we understood just as well as if we had heard. Ever and anon be punctu. ated his ceremony by a handful of rice, We wanted to hear the this was only between 7 and 8 recess after awhile in the ceremony, but it We enjoyed what we had seen, but elt incapacitated for six more hours of Silently All ot them seemed bright and appreciative of the ocenslon., The streets outside joyously syme- pathized with the transactions inside, Wa rode on toward our hotel wishing that marriage in all India might be as mueh hone ored as in the ceremony we had that evening witnessed at the Parses wedding, The Hin. doo women are not so married, They are simply cursed into the conjugal reistion, Many of the girls are married at seven and ton years of age, and some of them are grandmothers at thirty, They ean never go forth into the sunlight with their faces un- covered. They must stay st home, Al styles of maltreatment aro theirs, [1 thay becomes Christians, they become outcasts, A missionary told me in In. dia of 8 Hindoo woman who became a Chris. tian. She had nine ehildren. Her husband was over seventy vears of age, And yet at her Christian baptism he told her to go, and she went out homeless, As long as woman i» down India will be down. No pation was over slevated except through the elevation of woman, Parse marriage is an improve- ment on Hindoo marriage, but Christian marriage is an improvement on Parsee mar. riage, A fellow Araveler in India told me he had been writing to his home in England trying to} a law passed that no white woman could be legally married in India until she had been there six months, Admirable law wonld that be! If a white woman saw what married life with a Hindoo Is, she would never undertake it. Of with the thick and ugly veil from woman's face, Off with the crushing burdens from her shoul- der! Nothing but the gospel of Jesus Christ wil} over make life in Indias what itought 0 be, *. But what an afternoon ot contrast in Bombay we experienced! From the temple of silence to the temple of hilarity, From the vultures to the doves. From mourning to hter. From gathering shadows to From . But much of ail is made up ot } 4 in the same from in the same of the dead and the ceremony of espousals, And so the tear meets the smile, and the dove meets the vulture, Thus I have set before the best of all ti religions of the heathen world, and I hav) done 80 in order that you might come 1 + higher appreciation of the glorious religl: which has put its benediction over us aun over Christendom, Compare the absurdities and mummerios of heathen marringe with the plato ‘I wii” ot Christian marriage, the hands joined in pledge "till death do you part,” Compare the doctrine that the dead may not be touched with as sacred anditender and loving a kiss ns aver given, the last kiss of lips that never agnin will speak to ug, Compare the nar- row bridge Chinvat over waich the de- parting Parsos sou! must tremblingly cross to the wide open gate of heaven through which the departing Chris- tian soul may triamphantly enter. Compare the twenty-one books of the Zend Avssta of the Parsee which evan the scholars of the earth despuir of understanding with our Bible, so much of it as is necessary ior our salvation in language so plain that “a way- faring man, though a fool, nued not err therve in." Compare the **tower of silence,” with fts vultures, at Bombay with the Gresen- wood, ol Brookiva, with its sculptured angels of resurrection. And bow yourselves in thanksgiving and prayer ns you realize that if at the battles of Marathon and Sala. mis Persia bad triumphed over Greece jp- stead of Greases trinmphanting over Persia, Parsesism, which was the national religion of Persia, might have covered the earth, and you and I instead of sitting in the nooe- day Mght of our glorious Christianity might have been groping in the depressing inierior lite and rein wus supsrnn i inspiration in oar hope in death as Zoroaster of I's inferior to our radiant and Christ, to whom be honor and glory and minion and victory an i song, world without end. Amen, - A — FRANCE'S LATEST WAR VESSEL. The Carnot, a Unique Work of Military Naval Construction, The Carnot, a new armored vessel fov the French navy, has just been launch- ed at Toulon. The ship was built the plans of M, de Saglio, director naval construction, and the In dent Carnot fastened the first on of te Presi. bolt. It il 7 fess 28 Cr ad) I Pieroni pork Ad OUUO00 Lridics. something Missing. The other night a young couple, fnewlio married and evidently h Yrom the country, put up at one of the alter being signed to ou rom, went up stairs. A few minutes later the young man came down stairs, and, approaching the clerk, said: “That «oom i8 very nice, and all that but there is something missiog that should be there.” ‘What is iv?" asked the clerk, sur prised. “Well,” answered the young man, leaning over the desk and whisper ing, “to tell the truth, there is ng comb and brusa there.” 1t was as much as tue clerk could do to Keep a straighe face. **You baven't travelled much?” he inqured. No,” answered the maa; “this is the first hotel I've ever Leen in” “Then,” said the clerk, ‘tha comb and brush are in the washroom on this floor—for public use, but we do not supply tooth-brushes. The young man wenbaway pleased, rest das Compulsory Education. An original sentence was given lately by a magistrate in Missourl A man who did not know how to read and write, convicted of a slight offense, was sentenced to imprison- ment until he had learned to read. Another offender, who had a good education, was sentenced to keep him company until he had taught him to read. After three weeks they wore discharged, as they had fulfilled their task to the full satisfaction of the magistrate. Every good man is a living monu. ment (0 the fact that Christ has mn — ——— | NX 2 ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO, 106 WALL B8T., REW-YORK, Neither One Nor the Other, Aun elderly Irish woman who was io a Madison avenue car yesterday wished to ger out at Forty-second street. The conductor was on the front platform, so the woman, ad- dressing agentiemanly looking young man opposite her, said: ‘*shtop the car.” The man head. ‘sshtop the car, I say,” peated, giaring an him savagely. Still no response, “Didn't 1 tell ye toshtop thiscar” she shouted, gripping er umbrella “1 am not the conductor, "remarked the young man with sarcasm. while the young women in the tit. tered, “*Faix, an' you're not,” Irish woman scorntully; no gentleman, nayther. Moreover, you're no blessin’ to your wother, you're not. lf you were vou wouldn't i I2v a respectable woman carried tw wa without either.” — New young looked over her she Ie. Car replied the fan’ re You got wks out of an from York Herald Die Lor askin her for their they 1 0 turn out, t tained from the w shi COUNLEY 5a fi wi0:8 COUDLTY are not Wild Fires, 5 4% v and sulle shag v The devastation s flames of tho wild prairie and f lars Reward for be cured by sale Drugeists, Toledo, Manvix, Wholesale Ohio ix taken Internally, act. upon the blood you atarrt ite tiy upon the Bur {he system. is pent free. 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