REV. DR. TALMAGE. A THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON. Subject: “The Fragrance of the Gospel" —— Text: “Al thy garments small of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory pal- aces." Pralms xlv,, 8, Among the grand adornments of the oit of Paris ix the Church of Notre Dame, with | Heaven. its great towers, and elaborated rose | windows, and sculpturing of the last judg. | |r wanted us to see. ment, with the trumpeting anges and rising dead: its battlements of quarterfoil: its | sacristy, with ribbed ceiling and statues of saints. But there was nothing in all that Lailding which more vividly appealed to my plain republican tastes, than the costly vestments which laid in oaken robes that had been embroidered with gold, and been worn by popes and archbishops on great occasions. There was a robe that been worn by Pius VIL at the crowning of the first Naooleon There was also a vest ment that had been worn at the baptism of Napoleon IL As our guide opened the oaken presses and brought out these vestments of fabulous cost, and lifted them up, the fragrance of the pungent aro- | matics in which they had been preserved, filled the place with a sweetness that was al- most oppressive, Nothing that had been done in stone more vividly impressed me than these things that had been done in cloth, and em- broidery.and perfume. But to day 1 open the drawer of this text and 1 look kingly robes of Christ, and as I lift them, flashing with eternal jewels, the whole house is filled with the aroma of these garments, which “smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces.” In my text the King steps forth. His robes rustle and blaze as He advances, His pomp and power and glory overmaster the specta- tor. More brilliant is He than Queen Vashti, moving amid the Persian Princes; than Marie Antoinette on the day when Louis XVI put upon her the necklace of eight hundred diamonds: than Anne Boleyn, the day when Henry VIIL welcomed her to his pa‘ace; all beauty and all pomp forgotten, while we stand in the presence of this im- perial glory, King of Zion, King of earth, King of Heaven, King forever! His gar- ments pot worn out, not dust bed ragged; but radiant, and swelled, and redolent It seems as | they must have been pressed a hundred years amid the flowers of heaven I'he wardrobe from which they have been taken must have been sweet with clusters of camphire and frankincense, and all manner of precious wood. Do you not inhale the odors? ~ Ay, ay. They “smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces” Your first curiosity is to know why the robes of Christ are odorous with myrrh, This was a bright-leafed Abyssinian plant. It was trifoliated., The Greeks, Egpytians, Romans and Jews bought and sold it at a high price The first present that was ever given to Christ was a sprig of myrrh, thrown on his infantile bed in Bethlohem, and the last gift that Christ ever had was myrrh pressed into the cup of his crucifixion. The natives would take a stone and bruise the tree, and then it would exude a gum that would saturate all the ground beneath, This gum was used for purposes of merchandise. One piece of it, no larger than a chestnut, would whelm a who'e room with odors. It was put in closets, in chests, in drawers, in rooms and its perfume adhered almost intermin ably to anything that was anywhere near it. So when in my text | read that Christ's garments smell of myrrh, | immediately conclude the ecquisite sw etness of Jesus. | Fow that to many He isonly like any his torical person another John Howard: another philanthropie Oberlin; another Con- fucius; a grand subject for a painting: a heroic theme for a poem; a beautiful form for a statue; but to those who have beard His voice, and felt His pardon, and re- ceived His Lenediction, He is music, and light, and warmth, and thrill, and eternal fragrance, Sweet as a friend sticking to you when all else betray, Lifting you up while others try to push you down. Not so much lke morning-glories, that bloom only when the sun is coming up, nor like “four clocks.” that bloom only when the sun is going down, but like myrrh, perpetually aromatic—the same morning, noon afd night ~~yesterday, to day, forever, It seems as 7 we cannot wear Him out. We put on Him all our burdens, and afftict Him with all our griefs, and set Him foremost in all our battles, and yet He is ready to lift, and to sympathize, and to help. We have so im- upon Him that one would think in eternal afiront He would quit our soul; and yet today He addresses us with the same tenderness, dawns upon us with the same smile, pities us with the same compassion, HM no name like His for us Jt is more imperial than Caesar's, more musical than Beethoven's, more conquering than Charlenagne's, more eloquent than Cloero's. It throbs with all life. It weeps with all pathos, It groans with all pain. It stoops with all condescension. It breathes with all perfume. Who like Jesus to set a broken , 10 pity a homeless orphan, to nurse a sick man, to take a prodigal back without any scolding. to illamine a cemetery all wed with graves, to make a Queen unto out of the lost woman of the street, to entch the tears of human sorrow in a lachrymatory that shall never be broken! Who bas pnt 4 an eye to see our neod, such a lip to kiss away our sorrow, such a hand to snatch us out of the fire, such a foot to trample our enemies, such a heart to embrace all our necessities! | struggle for some mataphor with which to express Him. He is not the bursting forth of a full or. { that is too loud. He js not like the sea when Inahed t4 race by the tempest: that is too boisterous. He is not like] the mountain, its brow wreathed with =the a . — ix toe solitary. Give us softer Pe, a tier compar ‘ We have siemed % sen Him ih go and to hear Him with our ears, and to Him with our hands. Oh, that to-day to some other one of our ¥. the nostril shall discover hi i . ter and squeezed | pressed A poor young man! Not so much As a taper to cheer his dying hours. Kven the candle of the sun snuifed out Oh, was it not all aloes! All our wins, sorrows, be. reavoments, losses, and all the agonies of earth and hell picked up as in one clus- into one cup, and that to His hps, until the acrid, nauseating, bitter draught was swallowed with a distorted countenance, and a shudder from head to foot, and a gurgling strangula. tion. Aloes! Alves! Nothing but nloos, | dominated; oh, ye rosses, | upon the | All this for Himself! All this to got the fams in the world of being a martyr: All this in the spirit of stabbornness, because ho did not like Cesar! Nol no! All this because { He wanted to pluck you and me from hell. | Because He wanted to raise you and me to i He | Because we wanted us found, wer= Jost and Because we were blind Becnuss we were serfs and Ho wanted us manumitted. Oh, ye in whose cup of life the saccharine has pre- who bave had bright and sparkling beverages, how do you feel toward Him who in your stead, and to purchase your disenthraliment, took the aloes, the un- savory aloes, the bitter aloes? Your third curiosity is to know why these garments of Christ are odorous with cassia, { This was a plant that grew in India and the adjoining islands. You do not care to hear what kind of a flower it had or what kind of a stalk. It is enough for me to tell you that It was used medicinally, In that land and in that age, = where they knew but little about pharmacy, cassin was used to arrest many forms of ‘disease. So when in my text we find Christ coming with garments that smell of cassia, it suggests to me the healing and curative power of the Son of God. “Oh,” you say, ‘now you ha ve a superfluous idea. We are not sick. Why do we want cassia! We are athletic, Cur respiration fs perfect. Our limbs are lithe, and in these cool days we feel we could { bound like the roe.” [I beg to differ, my | brother, from you. None of you can be better in physical health than | am, and vet | must say we are all sick. 1 have taken the diagnosis of your case, and have ex- amined all the best authorities on the sul» Ject, and I have come now to tell you that you are full of wounds and lruises and putrelfying sores which have not been bound up, or mollitied with ointment. The maras mus of sin is on us—the palsy, the dropsy, the leprosy. The man that is expiring to night on Fulton street—the allopathic and homvo- pathic doctors having given him up, and his iriends now standing aronnd to take his last words—is no more certainly dying as to his body than you and I are dying unless we have taken the medicine from God's apothe cary. All the leaves of this Bible are only so many prescriptions from the Di vine Physician, written, not in Latin like the prescriptions of earthly physicians, but writ ten in plain English. so that a man, though s fool, need not err therein. Thank God that the Saviour's garments smell of cassia. Suppose a man were sick, and thers was o phial on his mantel piece with medicine he knew would cure him, and he refused to taks it, what would you say of him! He is a suicide. And what do you say of that man who, sick in sin, has the healing medicine of God's grace offered bim, and refuses to ta it! If he do he is a suicide. Peonl talk as though God took a man and led bin out to darknss afd death, as though He brought him up to the cliffs and then pushed him off, Oh, no. When a may is lost it not because God pushes him off: it is because he jumps off. In olden times a suicide was buried at the cross roads. and the peo pia were accustome! to throw stones upon i$ grave. No it seems to me there may be in this house a man who is destroying his own soul, and as though the angels of God were here to bury him at the point where the roads of life and death cross each bther, throwing upon the grave the broken law and a great pile of misimproved privileges, so that those going may look a% the fearful mound, and learn what a saicide it is when an imimortal soul, for which Jesus died, puts itself out of the WAY. When Christ trod this planet with Joot of flesh, the people rushed after Him- people Who were sick, and those who, being so sick they could not walk, were broaght by their friends. Here I soo a mother holding up her little child and saying: “Cure this croup, Lord Jesus, Cure this scarlet fever.” And others saying: “Cure this ophtihaimia. (Give ease and rest to this spinal distress. Straighten this club-foot.™ Christ made every house where He stopped a dispensary. 1do not believe that in the nineteen centuries that have gene by since His heart bas got hard. | fool that We can come now with all our wounds of soul and get His benediction. © Jesus hers we are. We want bealing We want sight, We want health We want life The whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. Blessed be God that Jesus Christ comes through this assemblage wow, His “garments smelling of myrrh” that means fragrance—‘‘and alos” they mean bitter sacrificial memories —' and cassia "that means medicine and cure; and according to my text, He comes “out of the palaces You know, or if you do not know 1 will tell you now, that some of the palaces of olden time were adorned with ivory. Ahab and Solomon had their homes fur- nished with it. The tusks of African and Asiatic elephants were twisted into all man ners of shapes, and there were stairs of ivory, and chairs of ivery, and tables of ivory, and floors of ivory, and pillars of ivory, and windows of ivory, and fountains that dropped into basins of ivory, and rooms that had onilings of ivory. Oh, white and overmastering beauty. Green tree branches Sweeping the white curbs, Tapestry trailing the snowy floors, Brackets of light flashing on the lustrous surroundings. Slivery music rippling to the beach of the arches. The Mere thought of it almost stuns my brain, and you say “Oh, if 1 could only have walked over such floors! If 1 could have thrown myself in fuch a chair! If | could bave heard the drip and dash of those fountains” You shail bave something better than that if you only let Christ introduce youn. From that piace He came, and to that [lace He proposes to transport you, for His “garments smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cnssia, out of the ivory palaces.” Oh, what a place heaven must be! The Tuileries of the French, the Windsor Castle of the English, the Spanish Alhambra, the Rassian Kremlin are dungeons compared with it! Not so many castles on either side the Rhine as on both sides of the river of God the Soy palaces | ably bright, charioted : one Ke is Today it seems to me as if the windows of those palaces were iliumined for some great I look and see climbing the and walk on floors from windows of some whom we knew and loved on Yeu I know them. There are father mother, not eighty two years and seven. ¥ nine years, as when they loft [ve : wy li Hh >i HEH i ik bye 1 8s : 2 & } tH ssiziizl ivory : when you carry a Christian out. Jesus makes the bed up soft with velvet promises, and He says; “Put her down here ver gently, Put that head, which will never ot agal on this pillow of hallelujahs. Send up wore that the procession is coming, Ring the Lells, Ring! Upen your gates, ye ivory palaces!” And so your loved ones are there,” The are Just as certainly there, having died in Christ, as that you ars here. There is only one thing more they want. Indeed, there fs one thing in heaven they have not got, They want it. What is ft Your company. But, oh, my brother, unless you change i ur tack you cannot reach that harbor. ou tight as well take the Baltimore and | Ohio Railroad, expecting in that direction to reach Toronts, as to go on in the way soma of you are going and Yet axpeot to reach the { ivory palaces. Your loved ones are lookin | out of the windows of Heaven now, an yet you seem to turn your back | upon them, You do not seem to know the sound of thelr volees ns well ns you used to, or to bs movad by the sight of their dear faces. Call louder, ye de- parted ones Call louder from the ivory palaces. When I think of that place, and think of my entering it, I fesl awkward; | fool as sometimes when I have been exposed to the weather, and my shoes have been be mired, nud my coat is soiled. and my hair is dis. heveled, and I stop in front of some fine resi. dence whers I have an errand. I fool not fit to go in as lam and sit among polished guests Bo some of us feel about heaven, We neod to be washed —wa need to bo rehabilitated before we go into the ivory palaces, Eternal God, let the ! surges of Thy pardoning mercy roll over us, I want not only to wash my hands and my feet. but, like somo skilled diver, standing on the pier-head, who leaps into the waves and comes up at a far-distant point from where he went in. so 1 want to go down an d $0 I want to come up, © Jesus, wash me in the waves of Thy salvation. And here [ ask you to solve a mystery that | has been oppressing me for have asked it of doctors of d been studying theology half they have given moe no satisfactory answer. 1 have turned over all the books in my library, but got no solution to the question, and to-day I come and ask you for an explanation By what logic was Christ induosd to exe hangs the ivory pa'aces of heaven {or the crucifixion agonies of earth? I shall take the first t} ousand million years in heaven to study out that problem Meanwhile and now, taking it as the tender and mightiest of all facts Christ did come, that He came with the spikes in His feet, came with thorns in His brow, came with spsars in His heart to ave you and to save ms. “God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son. that whososver believeth in Him should not perish, bat have overiasting life.” O Christ, whelm this audience with 1 hy compassion Mow them down like summer grain with the harvesting sickle of Thy grace Ride through to-day the conqueror, Thy garments smelling if myrrh, and aloes, and cassis. out « { the iVOryY paiaces 0, sinver, fling everything ole away and thirty years | vinity who have a century, and ost take " uring : Christ! Take Him now, not to-morrow the night follow ng this very day here may bw an excitement in your dwell Bg, and a tremulous pouring out of drops from an unsteady and affrighted hand. and before tomorrow morning your chance may be gone, EE — Tue Chicago Times of a recent date fol H. gigantic scheme removing h at the Counell the Hq icinity contained the lowing: Gord: Nott's for the city's & wage was explained by : to to whom was Mn gentleman yesterday mittee referred of proposes to con project lower-level soware a shaft in the + Bridewell, an fre build a main-sews sink i 3 ym thence feet in diameter which will extend dire ctly south for tw: nty into the Desplaines River eight miles south of Joliet, nel at the beginning will five feet below the level of and at Joliet some of the twenty six miles, emptying The tap of the tun be thereby the ninety foet This will permit a drop of over a foot 1al MARCO, below. per mile, which, it is claimed, will give a grade that will cause a swift current Below Joliet the sewage will be received into a pre cipi- through the tunnel tating basin covering an area of « ighty acres, where all organic matter will be precipitated with quicklime. I: will ering 300 acres, from which it is pro- posed to remove the settlings and sell | them for fertilizing purposes, gest the millions of expense a plan of this magnitude would it involve, is only necessary to mention Mr. Noit's | estimate to labor four years in order to o ymiplete such a work. IN a 10x12 room on the third floor of a ramshackle building near “Gamblers Bow,” in this city, says & Washington letter, lies the famous cavalry officer, the bill for whose relief was tardily passed by Congress. General Plesson- ton is supposed to be dying. His phy- sicians will not permit any one to see him. He has occupied these contract: ed quarters for a long time, and has been dependent for his meals on the kindness of the proprietor of a well known all-night house just on the bor ders of the most questionable and most | central part of Washington. The proprietor of this restaurant was a pri- | vate in General Pleasanton’s regiment, | and once received a kinduess at the | General's hands, which in the latter's | extromity he has Leen trying to repay. The bill that passed through Congress recently makes this old soldier a Major, though in battle he ranked first among | “cavalry” Generals. The House tried | to make the rank Colonel, but to even | that the Senate would not agree, Grant and Pleasonton were great friends, —————————— Tux medical men of Boston are just now puzzled over a strange case of os- that | then pass into the “settling” basin cov. | To sug- | that 10,000 men would have | ¥ LIFESAVING SERVICE The Past Yoar’s Work in Sav. ing Vessels and Crews, A Summary of the Help Rendered by the Station Crews. The following is an abstract of the report i Baving Service: “The number of disasters to documented | | Vessels within the scope of station operationg | 0 i There were on | during the year was 411. | board these vessels 2533 persons, of whom only 12 wera lost. wrecked persons who received succor at the | in the aggrogate. vas afforded. The esti | dlsastors was £5,94,10, | onrgoes $3,631,185, { property imperilled $9,555,255, making the total value of Of this { amount $7,776,405 was saved and 81.778.85% | | was lost, | was 71, “The extent of the assistance rendered in | saving vessels and cargoes was greater than | ever before, 492 vessels having been worked | Off when strands d, repaired when damaged, : [rlotd out of dangerous places, and simi | larly assisted by the station crews, i were beside 220 instances whers vessels, rune The number of vesssls totally Jost | ming into danger of stranding, were warned | {| off by the signal signs of the patrol, most of them thus being saved from partial | or total loss. The expense of maintaining | the service during the year was $925 214. The | General Buperintendent states that tise fore | Boing results of the year's operations are the | best yet obtained since the general extension of the service to the sea and lake coasts The number of Mves lost in proportion the numbers of persons on board the vessels in volved is less than ever before, being only one outof every 202. In the sav ng of prop erty, the exhibit is also very showing more than & saved for « very dollar expended. “The following table gives a summary of the statistics of the service from the intro duction of the present system in 1871 to the close of the fiscal year, The statement below inciudes the Joss of 159 lives at the wrecks of the Huron and Metr polis, which loss, the re- port says, was really not chargeable to the rvioe ‘Number of disasters, 420 erty involved, $75,502, 990: value of property saved, 805 207 0520: value of property lost £20,005,547 : number of persons involve! 29 414; nun ves loss, MM number POTYOnS Suro 1 at stations, 7114 mle days’ su ] Superinter crease whose hardsh value of prop ber of Anis PS and perl dren.” THE COMING ECLIPSE. Who Win Observe It an Inter Mercurial eclipse of th sun which will Looking for Planet opcar on with a will presen The January 1, 1990, is Jook of another opportunity «i forward to great deal interes: it for by observational ns astr ners 10 oN ' f the 8 8 tablish jroot probable anet. The says the Washington Star, Will pass through the northern Calif existonoe of an inter mer ural Pp fine of totality, portion of roia, the point of greatest durst fa MIE A short distance to the north of San Francisco, Already active preparations are bet Wg aie 10 view the phe NOMena Prof, Pickering, of Harvard Usli ge, will have Al harge of one party The astronomers {rom the Lick observatory will allo be on hand, and it is understood that Dr. Lewis Swift of | Warner observatory, will be located within | the limits of the Line of totality and be pre | pared 10 search for inter mercurial planets i The term interme Urial ® one that has been coined. It defloes a body revolving | between the orbit of Mercury and the sun, and the positive determination of which is the aim of several astronomers who will View the eclipse. In March, 18%, a man { named Lescarbault, a physician resding in France, made the statement that he had observed an object cross the sun's disc which he thought might be a small planet. Le Ver rier, the great French mathematician, upon i learning of this observation, determined to have a personal conversation with Lescar: tauit, his meeting took piace, and the sequel of it was that [o Verrier came AWAY | convinced that an inter mercurial planet had been observed. The verification of this so { called discovery has never been made {| The rediscovery of this hypothetical | planet, often caliel Volcan, has been at tempted at almost every eclipse that has oc curred since 155%, If this planet existe it never departs more than eight degrees from, | and must always be within the overpower ing glare of the sun. MM PANIC IN A SCHOOL. Two Teachers and Several Pupils Badly Injured. Louis, a few days since, and nothing but the presence of mind of the teachers prevented great loss of life. The steam heating appa. ratus got out of order, and the rattling in the coils, coupled with escaping steam, alarmed the children, who, fearing an ex plosion, started for the door, Miss Bettina Krolibs, the teacher in charge, got to the door first and vented a stam fo. Boarcely had ped wh been restored, was repeated with increased violence, and second time the terrorstricken children had ned the ball. The faithful teacher was orne to the floor and trampled upon, sus tain serous injuries, The atiumant spr to room 10, just te, presi over by Miss Clara Bickle, and the children became unmanageable there, The shuffl of fest and hisdng of escaping steam 18 punie to roo 14, Miss Mary P. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers