CHRIST IS RISEN! Or. Talmage's Sermon on the Lescon Embodied in Our Saviour's Resurrection. Awaiting the Day Whea “All Who Are in Their Graves Shall Come Forth." [Copyright 1801, , Wasningron, D. C.—The great Chris tian festival celebrated in all the churches 1s the theme of Dr. Talmage’s discourse: I Corinthians xv, 20, “Now is Christ risen from the dead and hecome the first fruits of them that slept.” On this glorious Easter morning, amid the music and the flowers, I give vou Christian salutation. This morning Rus- nian meeting Russian on the streets of St. Petersburg hails him with the salutation, “Christ is risen indeed!” In some parts of England and Ireland to this verv day there is the superstition that on Easter morning the sun dances in the heavens, and well may we forgive such a supersti- tion, which illustrates the fact that the natural world scems to sympathize with the spiritval. Hail, Easter morning! Flowers! Flow- ers! All of them a-voice, all of them a- tongue, all of them full of speech to-day. I bend over one of the lilies, and I hear it say: “Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow. They toil not, neither do they epin. yet Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” 1 bend over a rose, and it seems to whisner, “1 am the rose of Sharon.” And then 1 stand and listen. From all sides there comes the chorus of flowers, saving, “If God so clothed the grass of the field, which to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you, O ve of little faith?’ : Flowers! lowers! Braid them into the bride's hair. Flowers! Flowers! Strew them over the graves of the dead, sweet prophecy of the resurrection. Flow- ers! Flowers! Twist them into a gar- land for mv Lord Jesus on Easter morn- ing, and “Glory be to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost: as it was in the beginning. is now and ever shall be!” he women came to the Saviour’s tomb, and they dropped spices all around the tomb, and those spices were the seed that began to grow. and from them came all the flowers of this Easter morn. The two angels robed in white took hold of the stone at the Saviour’s tomb, and they hurled it with such force down the hill that it erushed in the door of the world’s ssepulcher, and the stark and the dead must come forth. care not how labrinthine the mau- solenm or how costly the sarconhagus or however beautifully parterred the family grounds—we want them all broken up by the Lord of the resurrection. They must come out. Father and mother—they must come out; husband and wife—they must come out; brother and sister—they must come out; our darling children—they must come out. The eves that we closed with such trembling fingers must open again in the radiance of that morn: the arms we folded in dust must join ours in an embrace of reunion: the voice that was hushed in our dwelling must be retuned. Oh, how long some of you seem to be waiting for the resurrection! And for these broken hearts to-day I make a soft, cool bandage out of Easter flowers. This morning I find in the risen Christ a prophecy of our own resurrection, my text setting forth the idea that as Christ has risen so His people will rise. He, the first sheaf of the resurrection harvest. He, “the first fruits of them that slept.” Be- fore 1 get through this morning I will walk through all the cemeteries of the dead, through all the country graveyards, where your loved ones are buried, and I will pluck off these flowers, and I will drop a sweet promise of the gospel—a rose of hope, a lily of joy on every tomb, the child's tomb, the husband's tomb, the wife's tomb, the father's grave, the mother's grave, and, while we celebrate the resurrection of Christ we will at same time celebrate the the good. i vention name of a congue: an all these—a cruel, eonnueror. He rode on a black - across Waterloo and Chalons and Atlanta, the bloody hoofs crushing the hearts of nations. It 1s the conqueror Death. He carries a black flag, and he takes no prisoners. He digs a trench across the hemispheres and fills it with the carcasses of nations. Fifty times would the world have been depopulated had not God kept making new generations. Fifty times the world would have swung life- less through the air—-no man on the moun- tain, no man on the sea, an abandoned ship plowing through immensity. Again and again has he done this work with all generations. He is a monarch as well as 8 conqueror; his palace a sepulcher; his fountains the falling tears of a world. Blesstd be God in the light of this er morning! I see the prophecy that his scepter shall be broken and his palace shall be demolished. The hour is coming when all who are in their graves shall rise. Jesus, “the first fruits of them that slept.” Now, around this doctrine of the res urrectiop there are a great many mys teries, ou come to me and say, “If the bodies of the dead are to be raised, how in this and bow is that?’ And you ask me a thousand questions I am incompe- tent to answer. But there are a great many things you believe that you are not a to explain. You would be a very foolish man to say, “I won't believe any- thing I can’t understand.” Why, putting down one kind of flower seed, comes there up this flower of this color? Why, utting down another flower seed, comes there up a flower of this color? One flower while, another flower yellow, another flow. er crimson. the difference when the seeds look to very much alike—are much alike? Explain these things; explain that wart on the finger; explain the difference—why the oak leaf is differ. ent from the leaf of the hickory. Tell me how the Lord Almighty can turn the chariot of His omnipotence on a rose leaf, You me questions about the resurrec. tion I cannot answer. 1 will ask you a thousand questions about everyday life you cannot answer. : I find my strength in this passage, “All who are in their graves shall come forth.” 1 do not pretend to make the explanation, You go on and say: “Suppose a returned Missionary dies in this city. When be was in ina, his foot was amputated. He lived years after in England, and there J He is buried today in yonder cemetery. In the res urrection will the foot come from China will the arm come from England and will the different parts of the body be re constructed in the resurrection! How is that possible?” You say that “the human body changes every seven years and by seventy years of age a man has had ten bodies, In the resurrection, which will come up? You “A man will die and his body erum- into the dust and that dust be taken nto the life of the ble. An eat the vegetable. Men eat imal. In the resurrection that body, wa many directions, how gathered up?” Have I any of this style to ask? Come them. 1 do not pretend to an. back upon the an cement of God's word, "All who are their p y : jraves shall Some forth, ve noticed, I suppose read- ing the story of the , that oat the Characters tie of “that be a sound. do not it be very Joud, ESE fer £% HH F that but I that it be , where pee y+ thousand vears, that voice must trate. In the coral cave of the deen that voice must penetrate. Millions of spirits will come through the gates of eternity, and they will come to the tombs of Lhe earth, and thév will ery: “Give us buck our bodies. We gave them to vou in corruption. Surrender them now in in- corruption.” Hundreds of spirits hover ing about the fields of Uativeburg, for there the bodies are buried. A hundred thousand spirits coming to Greenwaod, for there the bodies are buried. waiting for the reunion of body and soul All along the sea route from New York to Liverpool, at every few miles where @ steamer went down, departed spirits com ing back, hovering over the wave, There is where the City of Boaton perished Found at last, There is where the President perished. Steamer found at last. There is where the Central Amer ican went down. Spirits hovering—liun dreds of spirits hovering, wailing for the reunion of body and soul. Out on prairie a spirit alighte. There is where a traveler died in the snow. Crash goes Westminster Abbey, and the poeta and the orators come forth! Wanderful min gling of good and bad. Crash go the pyramids of Egypt, and ths monarchs come forth, Who can sketch the scene? [ sunpose that one moment before that eeneral ris ing there will be an entire silence, rave as von hear the grinding of a wheel or the clatter of the hoofs of a procession passing into the cemetery. Silence in al) the caves of the earth. Silence on the side of the mountain. Rilence down in the vallevs and far ont ints the sea. Silence But in a moment, in the rwinkling eve. as the archaneel’s ‘ramet pealing, rolling, crashing acroee the un tain and sea, the earth | terrific shudder, and the dead will heave like the sea, and Ostend and Sevastana! un long will stalk forth in the luri the drowned will their wet locks above the hillow the land and all the sea became ing mass of life--all faces conditions gazing in one upon one throne, the thron tion. “All who are in coma forth ” “But ” yon the resurrec ine. COME NYY AN craves shal sav, “if this doctrine of tion is true, as prefigured hy this Easter morning, ean somethin~ about the resurrected bod I can. There are mvsteries abont : but I shall tell von three or four things in reeard to the resurrected body that are beyond guessing and beyond nes take. In the first place tn vour resurre-ted hoody, it will alorions body. The body we have ir a mere skeleton of what it have been if sin had not marred an faced it. Take the most exquisite that wa: ever made bv an chin it here and chip it there with a ohi and hatter and braise and then stand it ant hundred vears. and the beauty gone. Well, the human body chipped and battered and nised and damaged with ¢ storms of years, the nMysical generations coming tion to generation, we inheriting the vou fell we T remark in recard be a atatye artist and here and in the sis anf a thors would be has been rusgnds deferts other down from gerera infe licities of nast generations But in the morn the bady will he the there iz no such { the resurrect ¥ and beagtified s And a pen A BY according to model difference hotveen nast and an emaciated wretch in a lazaret to ns there will be a difference het our b lies as they Are now and Wir resur rected forma There vou will the waters of washed out the stains of tears there vou will the knots of the ween see the ner fect eve after have and study: death soe the perfect hand af been intied you will see after the burdes sider most exnressive § but that {sce is wei rerurrected faces ra ihe “rate or look up toward hrone, it will be like the dawnine of » new morning on the hosom of everlasting dav! O glorious, resurrected body! ut 1 remark also in regard to that body which vou are to get in the resur rection, it will be an immortal body. These bodiea are wasting away. Somebody has said that as soon as we hegin to live we begin to die. Unless we keep putting the fuel into the furnace the furnace dies ont The blood vessels are canals taking the breadstuffs to all parta of the syatem. We must be reconstructed hour by hour. dav by dav. Sickness and death are all the time trying to get their nry under the tenement or to push us off the embank ment of the grave, but, blessed be Cod, in the resurrection we will get a body im mortal Sometimes in this world we feel we would like to have such a body as that There is so much work to be done for Christ, there are so many fears to he wined away. there are go many burdens to lift. there i« so much to he achieved for Christ. we somstimes wish that from the first of January to the last of December we could toil on without stopping to sleep or to take any recreation or to res! or even to take food-—-that we could toil right on without stopping a8 moment in our work of commending Christ and heaven to all the peonle, but we all get tired. Jt ia characteristic of the human body in this condition: we must get tired I= it not a glorious thought that we are going to have a body that will never grow weary? O glorious resurrection day! Gladly vw I fling aside this poor body of sin and fling it into the tomb if at Thy bidding I shall have a body that never wearies. That ia a splendid resur rection hymn that we have all sung: So Jesus slept. God's dying Son Passed through the grave and blessed the . Rest here, blest saint, till from His throne The morning breaks to pierce the shade I heard of a father and son who, among others, were shipwrecked at sea. father and the ton climbed into the rig ging. The father held on, but the son after awhile lost hia hold on the rigging and 2h Gashed Sosa. on fathir wu pose e gone hope y under t wave. The next day the father was brought ashore from the rigging in an ex haus state and laid on a in a fisherman's hut, and after many hours had came to consciousness and jaw ying beside him on the same bed his friends, what a glorious thing it will be if we wake up at last to find our loved anes beside us, coming up from the same plot in the graveyard, coming up in the same morning light—the father and son alive forever, all the loved ones alive forever, never more Lo weep, never more to oh never more to die, May the God of Peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that t Shepherd of the sheep, through the Blood of hy everlasting Covenant nals ou perf n every good w 0 do Hie willand lot the Asstiintionn o this morning apart our thoug jfander assem before the ti . / one hund and forty and four thousand and the “great muititude that mo man ean number,” some of eur hes friends among them. we alter awhile to join the tude. Glorious anticipation! Warhed | ly thelr robes n Jarur blond. ter than id and hr Sh, m wonders A tzinates the daT: mar swe To nid the palm to Cares Cancer, Hlivod Poison, Nores—Costs Nothing to fry. Blood poison and deadly cancer are easily eured when Botanic Blood Balm is taken IT you have blood poison, ulcers, bone pains, pimples, mucous patches, falling hair, itching skin, serofula, old rheumatism, offensive form of catarrh, scabs and scales, deadly onneer, eating, bleeding, festering sores, sweollingr, Inwpe, persiitent wart or sore, take Botanic Diood Balm (B, B, B,). It will eure even the worse caso after everything else fails, Dotanie Biood Balm (DB. B. I.) drains the poison out of the system and the Blood, then every gore heals, raaking the blood pure and rich, and building up the broken down body, 1, B. B. thoroughly tested for 30 years. Drug stores, $1. Trial treatment free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mitchell Bt., Atlanta, Ga, De- scribe trouble and free medical advice given until enred. Botanic Blood Balm does not contain mineral poisons or mercury (as so many advertised remedies do), but is eom- posed of Pure Botanic Ingredients, Over 5000 testimonials of cure by taking IB. B. B, Ln Of all nations Great Britain drinks tho ot tea and the United States the most college, Porxax Faprress Dyes do not fain the hands or spot the kettle, Sold by all drug. gists, Some people think twice before they speak, and others speak twice before they think. The miner couldn't earn a living unless was kept down in the world. Catarrh Cannot be Cared With local applications, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. (Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in « cure i vou most take infernal remedies. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure is taken internally, and sola direct the blood and muee Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine, It wm one of the best physicians ir this country for years = a ular pre It {a composed of the best tonics knewn, combined with the best blood acting directly on the mucous surfaces The perfect combination of the tw edients § what produces such wonder ing catarrh. Send for testi F.J. Caexey & Co., Pr Sold by Drugrists, pricey 75¢c. Hall's Family Pills are the best der te ily oa us surface prescribed by and serplion, urners resulis in eu: vials, free Toledo, O. A railway engine is » nine hundred horses Mrs, Winslow's 5 teething, voften the gums tion, aliays pain, cures wind coli Great Britain distinctive ciusite throne and ex Piso's Care for Consumption medicine foreonghe and colds NW Ocean Grove, N. J.. Feb, 17. 1500. s {aval . ¢ jovial sen 3 Ye sill # Wi AS years freight i have deg per cent, fen t's generally the who goes in for ¢ Lumbago Poth disable and crippie, but St. Jacobs Oil is their best cure, SR COROONR ORR CURD SOOT POOCOOO00L00000 00000 avoool than the bowels. Load you must assist nature. and worn out intestinal AOAC OOOO 0000000000000 LOVLVVVV 000000000 C SOOO OOOO GYSPEPSIA yiolds to nature’s medicine, Any Doctor is willing to treat you for rheumatism, If your credit Is good or you pay his fee. But only one doctor will cure your rheumatism, and he charges nothing for advice. This physician Is Dr. Greene, the discoverer of Dr. Creene’s Nervura. If you wiil write to him at 38 West 14th Street, New York City, ke will tell you exactly iow to get rid of rheumatism for good and all. It won't cost you anything fo get his advice. Why don't you write to Dr. Greene to-day? W. L. DOUGLAS | WR $3 & $3.50 SHOE UNION : | . “ iver, Kidney and bowel disorders. An o9- MADE, The real worth of my rivalled aperiont and lnzetive: tgvige and ones the whois system 1 rd oe 08 and FL shoss compared with other makes is $4.58 to 8. My $4.08 Gilt Bage Line cannot bo water of the highest medicine values, oot eonirated 10 make B® easier and cheaper to bottle, uslled at any price. Best in the world for men, #Lip and wz. A Sor Ww make and sell more men's fine shoes, Geodyeny b ® iw sgusi to § gallons ‘eit (Mand. Sewed Process), thas amy other manufne. » of uncondensed water turer la the werild., willpay 81,000 to any one whe can prove that my statement Is not (rue, Migned W. LL. Donglina. Take no subatitnte ! Insist on having W. L. Douglas shoes with name and price stamped on bosom. Your dealer should keep them ; I give one dealer exclusive sales in each town, If he doses not keep them and will not get them for you, order direct from factory, enclosing price and 2%e. extra for carriage. Over 1,000,000 satisfied wearers, New Rpring Catalog free, { Past Culor Byelots used ancinsively. WW. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mees. ACENT WANTED | for the Brohard Sash Lock and Brohard Door Holder Arfive workers svorywhers cen earn big niways a Sleady demsnd jor our Yi Po ~y FREE | CATA : OF 101 postage Tull BHOR ED 0 SPORTING 60003 —Stutinn 0," riltudeiphin, Pa. | § AV, RAWLINGS SPORTING WILLS PILLS BIGGEST OFFER EVER MAD I Foronly 10 ¢ Rb wil re any P.O, al WEE 600DS COMPANY, OT Wit dl VUHL nent ig LL dress, 10 days’ treatment of the best medicine on | G20 Locust 8t., 87. LOUIS, Mo. Bost Cough Syre i # Moid by druggists Svery wheres, O=z5 apule Lrade AE wy FATE On every boilis CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., Louisville, Ky. NEW DISCOVERY: ghee DR quick rolls! sad curs a won of Lmiimorinly and 10 dap’ a Free. Dr. B dH GRIEN ESOUNE. Bex 3, Atiaste, Oa. ny 8 of every despriy y ES tortion (Fpiran for prices Ixus MARE Charles 61 , Bar Ouonld, Mo YThe Sauce that made West Points famons® WCILHENNY'S TABASCO. IT PAYS mc ney Rample TO ADVERTISE LS THis PAPER. EE a 8 J earth, and put ¥ 5 the track how to make Mon. ! ey right at vonr home. Address all orders to The HK. HB. Wills Medicine ( om pay, 23 Eliza- beth %t., Hagerstown, Md, Branch OMocs | 120 Indinnn Ave., Washingten, I}, OC. ard Thompsen's Eye Water A LUXURY WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL! ® The Lion it's human nature to imitate great things. sets the style for many a common dog. 3 LION COFFEE IS IMITATED. But the aroma and strength peculiar to LION ~OFFEE is never found in these imitations. iste LION COFFEE and then taste he others that are glazed and coated with nixtures and chemicals t6 make them ‘“look better” and in order to hide imper- fections. Try a package of LION COFFEE and you will understand the reason of its popularity. Loh nt Watch our next advertisement. of LION COFFEE you will find a fully illustrated and descriptive list. No housekeeper, in Boy or girl will fail to find in the list some article which will contribute to their happiness, . d which they may have by simply cutting out a certain number of Lion Heads from aled packages (which is the only form ia which this excellent coffee is sold). WOOLSON SPICE CO., TOLEDO, OH10. scan DOO COO OOOOCOO00 ives wore fl" treatment ~4Ct, worn out. Then Cathartic. Not a Miwon the diseased andy tablet, after load is imposed until he intestines beco : Do it, and see how easilyyou will be cured by C canal, making it strong, and gently stimulating the liv : Dov't accept a substitute for CASCARE s to | Fu bring a surgeon. —v eweler’s Weekly. haw m=, as chap cay The ite fom cle rOOLOOOOOOOOON Mor» Information. . Tommy~P “at do t* ~~ put ~«ie= ‘n BEST FOR BOWELS AND LIVER. 10c. 25¢. S0c. NEVER SOLD IN BULK. SERENE IE IC IC ICICI HANNAN