REV. DR. TALMAGE. BROOKL DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, THE Subject : Text: “Thou shalt remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee" Deuteronomy viii, 2, : Before entering on my subject I wish to say that some newspaper correspondents, referring to a recent sermon in which I wel- comed foreign nationalities to this countey, have said that I advocated as a desirable thing the intermarriage of the white and | black races. I never said so, I never thought 80, and any one who so misrepresents that sermon is either a villain or a fool, perhaps both, But to open this morning's subject to say God in the text advises th wonle to look back upon their past history, It will do us all Bo to rehearse the scenes between this May morning and our cradle, whether it rocked in country or in town A few days ago, with my sister and brother, 1 visited the place my boyhood. It was one of the most © tional and absorbing davs of my life There stands the old hot " and ns I went through the rooms I said: *I could find my way here with my eves shut although 1 have not been here in forty vi ig There was the sitting room where a family group every evening gathered, the of them now in a better world old barn wher the place wi I have je was of 1 LEY vewst eo we hunted for Easter re the horses stood. I where the orchard was, only thres o trees now left of all the grove that once bore apples, and such apples too. There is the brook down which we rode to the water. ing of the h bareback, and with a rope halter. We alio visited the cemetery where many of our kindred are waiting for the resurrection, the old people side by side, after a journey together of sixty years, about three years between the tite of going. There also sleep the dear old ors who used their horses und shed of the country weting he sit at the end of the pew, “Duke Street,” and “Balerma’ “Antioch.” Oh, they were a glori race of men and women who did their w well, raised a splendid lot of boys and and are now as to their bodies in silent pe barhood on earth, but as to their sodls in lant ighborhood 1 { I fe did od 2 is four OF Res to tie gd * a ee ar as Chodd mas ry of thw ¢ ropean artist removed tl frew ng retraced AOA Eraniw manson Looking back th 1orh ugh in sre the loved o sit by the « the mother at ¢ evenin sid sisters, perbans lon inte 8 wk slotting floor or under the maaandi a m the WOT wtorday table, your ts firm voodoo « tence hall a minute thite were good days! $ ) hurt, LE in lastest Wh, Your f you had : your mother always had a soothing to heal it If you were wronged the street, your father w as always “sady to protect you The year was one round of frolic and mirth, Y tout trouble was like an April show t 3 shower The heart bad not been by troubles, nor had sick 4 and no lamb had a warmer she Pr he boise In which your childhood wt | 44° False ~ broken it fold than ¢ nest lod Perham country under the fruit that broucht oF rou sland now oid tree was not were un in the in Inenary You clubbed it for quile ripe becanse you couldn't walt kny longer You hear the brook fumbling along over the pebbles You step nzaln into the *urrow where your father in bis shirt sleeves shouted to the 1ooy oxen. You frighten the swallows (rom the rafters of the burn, and take o one eg, and lence your conscience by saying they won't miss ft Yn take & drink again owt of the vw oy bse kot that the old well fetched up. You go for the vows at night, and find them waging their heads through the bars. Oftimes in the dusty and busy streets you wish you were home again on “het cool grass, or in the rag ear. odd hall of the farmhouse, through which “e was the breath of new mown hay or the biosom of buckwheni, You may have in your windows now bean tifal plants and Powers brought from across the seas, bit not one of them stirs in your soul so much charm and memory as the old fry and the yellow sunBower that stood sen tine! along the garden wall, and the forget me-nots A ase. The father, who used to come in san. & from the flelds and sit down on the doors! and wipe the sweat from his brow, may oave gone to his everlasting rest The mother, who used to sit a “AY Aping hideand.seok mild the Jong | the table morning and night and talked over your plans for the future. The most insigni- cant affair in your life Dacame the subject of { mutual conscltation and advisement. You were #0 happy you felt you never could bho auy hapnier, hovered over your it dwelling and carnate an immortal spirit. Two little feet started on an eternal jourvey, and you were | to lead thom-—a gem to flash in heaven's coronet, and you to polish it; eternal ages of light and darkness watching the starting out ol a newly created creature, You rejoiced and you trembled at the re. sponsibility that in your possession an jm mortal treasure was placed. You prayed und rejoiced, and wept and wondered, and prayed and rejoiced and wept and wondered; you were earnest in plication that vo might lead it through life into the kingdom of God, There was a tremor in your earnest TIO8K, home, There was an additional interest why you should stay there and be faithful, and when in a few months your house was filled with the music of the child's laughter, ¥ St | were struck through with the fact that you | anticipations been g i y There was the | { had a stupendous mission. Have you kept that vow? glected any of these duties® 1s vour home as | much to you as it used to be! Have those ifled? God help you to-day in your solemn reminiscence, and let | His mercy fall upon your soul if your kind ness has been ill requited. God have mercy on the parent on the wrinkles of whose face is written the story of a gin. God have mercy on the who, in addition to her other pangs, pangs of a child's iniquity. Oh, tl many, many sad soun in this sad but the saddest sound that ever he the breaking of a mother's heart, A any here who remember that in they were unfaithful? there wandered off from that early home, the mother to die with a broken heart I stir that reminiscence today [ find another point in you You found one day you were i couldn't sleap at nig) that t > CLAVE child's m has the ere is 1] that those ord it word was aly | ord heard the bre ‘ vot : there was darkness Impenetrable But God dkin't : spoke. As you took the about to put it to your Let it pass.” and forthwith, as | the hand of angels, anofher coup was put into your hands; it was the of God consolation And as you have sometis ifted the head of a woun Hew poured wine into his lps, so God put His arm under your head, and Ris right hand He poured into your ps { Hi comfort and His consolation, and vou looked at the empty cradle and looked at your bron heart, and you looked at the Lord's nl, and you sald ‘Even for 0 It seemueoth good in murky dering leave you a] need Mevey and was God said oun Yel wd wita the wine cha jae Faloer, To) Thy wi. your first trouble How did vou God comforted you You have been a better man ever since, You have been a hotler woinan aver ginoe In the jar oo" the coming gate of the sepulchor vou head the clang the opening gate 0. heaves, and on n hires Thies drawing heavenwn yd {ou have been purer of mind ever since that sight wien the Hitle one for the last Lime put tn arm around your neck and said: Goods might, papa; goodnight mama, Meet me a0 heaven Sut | must come on down to your Intest WOE TOW What was it* Perhaps it was your own tieoness, The child's tread on the stair, or tie of the watch ou the stand dis torosd you Mirocgh the long weary days you counted the figures in the oar pet or the flowers in the wall papep Oh, the woariness, the exhaustion! the burning pangs! Would God it were morning, wonld God it were night, were your frequent cry, But you sre better, or orhaps even well, Have you thanked that fod today you can come out in the fresh air; that you are in this piace to bear God's name, and sing God's praise, and implore God's bolp, and to mak God's forgiveness? Blow the Le who healeth all our diseases’ and re deemsth our ves from destroction Porhaps your last sor-ow was a financial embarrascaent, | congratulate some of you on your icooative profession or occupation, on Orns te 4 denes—overything rooms 10 turn to tover ’ of he One day a dark cloud | got | darker and darker, but out of that cloud the | “Other Days Lived Over." | ining messenger of God descended to in- | i . i There was a double interest about that | ther | MW, | i on a connnodious rele | ! world? Have you, amid all your losses and | discouragements, forgot that there was bread on your table this morning, and that there shall be a shelter for your head from the storm, and there Is air for your lungs, and blood for your heart, and light for your eye, and a nd and glorious and trinmphant re ligion for your soul? id your last trouble was a bereave ment, That heart which in childhood was your refuge, the parental heart, and which has been a source of the quickest sympathy over since, do J lent fore ever, and now ietimes, whenever in sud | den annoyance and without deliberation you say "1 w= | and tell mother,” the thought f os on you: ‘I have no mother" or the father, with voles less t stanch aud earnest and loving tender, but as ns ever, watchful of ally over your with although the old people | themselves, his trembling hand on that staff which you now Keep asa family relic, his memory embalmed in grateful h is taken away forever Or, there was companion in sharer of your joys and sorrow ing the heart an old ruin, where t) winds blow over a wide wilderness tion, the sands of the desert driving across the plies which once bloomed lke the garden of God, And Abraham m for Sarah at the cave of Machpelah, © along your path in life, suddenly, right before yon was an open grave, Py ple looked down and they saw It was only a few feet deep and a fow foot wide, but to you it was a cavern down ich went all you Hations nt do saying much, talk it over by SUCCESS ris your life, Jeav sy ohill of de $5, take Oh Higit ing nforter Did th auld robe ready Blessed the broken |} Blessed the importunats homes hand of Ji array itin a w and branch #t will be your coming home that Jesus beals that Jesus comy wl the woe from wie away the t w"w He Ws nailing Wien & neat sum 8 LO to her ace She is very charitable ar 1 is interested in several homes for sick poor women, - —————————— babies and s1a¥ musical prodigy » Hoffman and Otto Hegne up. Paul Koesalski i and is said to have “n A Ri Joseph soem grown years of age . J terly execution” on a plano made to fit bis fingers — . Tue Vernon (Ala.) Courier offers a prize of #1 for the best snake story These efforts are not to cover over one side of a sheet of writing paper, and are not to be chestnuts, Truth is not essential, ———— ——— A neManrgantE divorce ease will be hoard in Orawford County, Georgia. has been married fifty years, wants to be divorced from his wife, who is 77 years old. "Tur most expensive ready-made cor sot sold in the fashionable stores Is valued ot $35. It is made by hand in Paris and is lined with heavy silk, with the steels covered with down, EE — cm “I am tickled to death!” exclaimed John Grant, a Utica man, as he heard (the climax of a story. Then, consist: ently with the allegation, he fell over mr wavs, exultant | An old gentleman, aged 80 years, who | SABBATH SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL LESSON 1 MAY 12 Ox Lesson Text: “The Anointing at Beth. any," Mark iv, 1-D0-Golden Text: Mark xiv, S8- Commentary, 1. “After two days was the feast of the Passover and of unlsavensd bread.” The more full statement of Mathew is: “And it came to pass, when Jesus had finished all these sayings, He said unto His disciples, ye know that after two days is the feast of the Passover, aud the Son of Man is betrayed to be crucified.” He was born that He might aie as our passover, the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world: He died that He might rise again triumphant over death and the grave, an mortal man, to relgn over the house of wh forever: He sscended that He might return when He shall have received pom, and every step of all the way ns clear to Him from the beginning, His oun 1ife in a mortal body was near and after two days He would prove the true Pas r L b: He saw it all and WARS ULIMOoY the Father's love, doing the supported by the oy tot Ix Paswover lamb to ith day of the ith and urteenth tis four dayy Ooved iy Elmself bes " any, ad . ‘ at the foundation days #000 bout to bs g 20 the first safety holing fellows VERY yell Look Vassover ¥ prinkied % typified by the sbwence of all loaven: Hip in the eating of whose the lmnb $f also IL nmb en that sat i thine wii ™ vi, 57). be an fonr saorilice ut unto Hin r have the po ver ve will Daa ne ) nirary card His word (Luke x nderstood that His enemies would put to death. and that she would, there! ull His friends, be deprived of the p { ministering to Him at His As to the poor Ieing alway His SOCTIIA feet and to have Him vith wat we win re yas written Hever Cos ut and in Prov pon the h an opportunity as this had y mortal man before and never w od Mary Is 8 nly one 10 see it CORDAT He into that hath xix poor lendeth Blessed ath done what she could” So How | would like to do thas and How much AnY say if [only had the power.” ood 1 would 1 bad Mr. B's money, or Mrs. B's opportunities” and while thus thinking and talline about what they would do, others like Mary are doing just what they oan, penembering that “if there be first a willing mind it Is acoeptod according fo that aman bath, and not according to that be hath not” (HH Cor. 8 8) We are not ex pected to uss other people's talents or oppor tunities, but simply to do what our own hands find to do ss unt Him, How much better it would be if the money spent for wople after they are dead to decorate their ww or caskets, or graves ware spout to do them some good while they lived; or If the kind words said about them after death were do if shall be spoken of for a memorial of her.” And #0 it has come to as He sald, that in all ing: “Lord, what wilt Thou “Hey can 1 show my gratitude for Thy great Medical Monopoly Not Wanted, (Boston Dally Globe, Feb, Teh, #8) “In the Legislature of Massachusetts a bill now pending whose object is to prohibit, fs - The World's Zoologleal Gardens There are in the United States six zooe logical gardens— Philadelphia, New York, | under penalty of fine and imprisonment, the | Cincinnati, Chicago, Bt. Louis and Bap i i i Practice of “medicine, surgery or midwifery by any other then the “regular physicians The attempt to pass wach a bill has been made before, but it falled It isn mensurs which ought not to pass, because it invades the por #onal liberty of the citizen: not the personal Liberty of the “irregular physician only, but of the patient . “Only yesterday Dr before the Massachusetts ciety, an organization of ‘regulas Privy whois M pained of the lpnorance of his jore i brethren as shown in the notorious Robinson potsoning ca “This crime, said grenieet in our medical history, have been d red but for the aroused « th gare sion.’ calcd stl he 1 Poison « % the regu the a death to be fever er tas, ix wel Holt, in a paper read Medio Leal Pe oom omal ‘ ii oe quetor the ively how fay being inf: STRIVE : that he LICE ne each ul 4 lied clal tainty gular’ 1 practiosd absurd outilde of the siraplest « less guess work regular or irregular “When Garfield was sho famous reg wp nt three mn re i) A Romance of Wall Street tablets of Once a —-— Destraction of the Lake of Geneva. miles 15 Average ae pth is ad it contadns 89,195, 000, 000 in N : “l 1089 feel. tons of a total effective ice of something than 1,004 + | character in Bristol, Manchester an i i calls for m Bo { Francisco. The National Government has y pothing to do with any of these institu. { tions, which are maintained either by the cities or by local enterprise, There in | scarcely a nation in Europe that has not | its 200" and some of them have several, In Great Britain, beside the famous insti | tution in London, there are parks of this d Duby in Paris, gical col France has two gardens in | lectic ns, and alse | each devoted garde at the Netherlands the an nEterdan Potorges | one in mark aha one at Cal- va $5.5 J Straits’ : Aus in Mel. Tie p Brisbane The " » i Cha Washi wt JBL, pb ————— Oklahoma Journalism. ' { pevey rom Qerringer Boomer. panish Cedar” in West Virginia. A tall 100 Ladies Wanted 3 ist for Medi. discov. CA GA. Fon a © Praises it, AL all drug. Py ADELIEIA banking tions have ey all over the United States A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fire. the Kditor-| form your readers bave a posit remnedy for the above disease which | warrant to out So strong i= my faith § 1 will send {ioe a sar ple bottle treatise to ary sufferer who will OL and Express address, Hesp'r, ROOT, M. C., 183 Pearl 8¢.. New York. ee bs ve ret CRs (ntarrh Cared. ergyman, after years of sulering from sthsome disease, Catarrh, and vainly g every known remedy, at last found ription which com pietaly cured and sa from death, Any sufferer Croan this dread. ful disease sending a sell.addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A, Lawrences, 88 Waren .N bY , will receive the recipe free of charge, Are yout ready to work, you want to makes money 7 Then writs ¥. Johnson & Oo. of Rickimond, Va. soe if they cannot help you 1H aficted with sore eyes use Dr, Isaac Thomp* sens Eye-water, Druggists sell at Zhe, par hottie, Work for workers | That Tired Feeling Is experienced hy almost every one sl this ssaacon and many people resort to Hood's Ssrsapartila to drive 87 ay the languor and exhaustion. The blood laden with Impurities which have been sccumsist tag for months, moves sluggishly through the veins, the mind fails 1o think Quickly, and the body sill slower to respond. Hood's Sarsapariiia is Jost what is needed. It purifies, vitalises and en riches the blood, makes the bead clear, creates an ppvtte, overcomes that tired fesling, tomes the servos ystems, and mparts mew strength and vig to the whole body Hood's Sarsaparilla Ix groves to be so vastly superior to Ray other sare parille, or Blood purifier, that oge has well said: “Its health giving offeots upon the blond and entire human organism are a mach more positive thas he remedion of 8 Quarter of & century ago as the steam powse of to-day 1 In advance of the slow and laborious dredgery of years ago.” “Por years | wan siok every spring, bul Jest year tok Mood's Rarsaparilla and have not been wick snes. 0, W, SLoax, Milton, Mas, X wriy everybody needs a pod spring sndivine ke Hood's Sarsapariils to expel impurities which rermmuiate in the blood during the winter, keep up IRrongth ah Warm weather comes on, create aR ape thie and promote boalthy digestion. Try Hood's Sa sapariiia and you will be couvinesd of Is peculiar merfia. It Is the Mead spring medicine, relintiln, beneficial, plossant to take, and gives fall value for the money. “1 ake Hood's Sarssparilla as & spring tonte, and 1 recommend M10 all who have (iat miserable tired fooling. “"«C, Pamnmues, 348 Bridge St, Brooklyn N.Y, Makes the Weak Strong “My appetite was poor, § could not sleep, bad bend ache a great deal, palo In my back, my bowels did not move regularly. Hood's Sarsapariils in a short thine 4M me 50 mach good that dd feel lke a now man. My pains and aches sre relieved, my appetite improved. 1 say to others who mead 5 pond madi. cine, try Hood's Sarssparilla and wee." lsones ¥, Jacmwon, Roxbury Station, Oonn, KN. Podbe sure to get Foods Sarsaparilla, do not | be Induced 10 buy May other, Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all drageion $1; six for 81 Prepared only by C. 1 HOOD & CO, Apoihesrion, Lowell, Mass. ho Byes! Cun _e Sold by ll draggiets. $1; dic Bw $5. Prepared only ty C. L WOOD & 00, Apothwosrion, Lowell, Bass,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers