Mi w—————_—— Na a ————— REY. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINK'S SUN DAY SKIRIMON, Sahject: “Royal Blood” Text: “Each one resembled the children of a king." Judges viii., 158 Zebah and Zulmunna had been off to battle, and when they came back they were asked what kind of people they had seen, They answered that the people had a royal appearance; “each one resembled the child- ren of a king.” 1 stand to-day before many who have this appearance. Indeed, they are the sons and daughers of the Lord Al- mighty. Though now in exile, they shall yet come to thelr thrones, There are family names that stand for wealth or patriotism or intelligence. I'he name of Washington means patriotism, although sowe of the blood of that race has become very thin in the last generation. The family of Medici stood as the representative of letters The family of the Rothschilds is signifi- cant of wealth, the loss of forty millions of dollars in 1848 putting them to no incon venience; and within a few years they have loaned Russia twelve millions of dollars, Naples twenty-five millions, Austria forty miltions and England two huadrad millions: and the stroke of their pen on the counting room desk shakes everything from the Irish Sea to the Danube, They open their hand, and there is war; they shut it, and there is peace. The house of Hapsburg in Austria, the house of Stuart in England, the house of Bourbon in France wers families of imperial authority, Butl come to preach of a family more potential, more rich and more extensive the royal hous of Jesus, of whom the whole family in heaven and on earth is named. Wo are blood relations by the relationship of the Cross: all of us are the children of the King, First, 1 speak of our family name. When we see a descendant of some one greatly cel. ebrated in the last century wo look at him with profound interest. To have had con. querors, kings or princas in the ancestral line give luster to the family name. In ou line was a king and a conqu ro The Star in the East with baton of light woke up the eteraal orchestra that made music at His birth. From thence He started forth to con quer all nations, not by tramping them gown, but by lifting them up. St, John saw Him on a white hors When He returns He will not bring the nations chained to His wheel or in iron cages; but I hear the stroke of the hoofs of the snow white cavalcade that bring them to the gates in triumph, Our family name takes luster from the star that heralded Him, and the spear that yierced Him, and the crown that fim. It gathers fragrance from the frank incense brought to His cradle, and the lilies that flung their sweetness ir His sermons, and the box of alabaster that broke at His feet, The comforter at Bethany I'he res urrector at Nain, The supernatural oculist at Bethsaida ar of one world, The storm Hix Was given and the chief } frown. The sunlight His sail The spring morning His breath. The earthquake the stamp of bunder the whispe of His voice, drop on the t of His finger sparxle on the bosom of His love the twinkling of His eve. The universe the flying dust of His chariot wheels. Able to heal a heart- break, or hush a tempest, or drown a world, or flood immensity with His glory, What other family name could ever boast of an illustrious personage Henceforth, swing out the coat rms! Great families wear their coat of arms on 8 dress, or on the door of the coac! © on ti helmet when they go out to battle, oronfl and cosigns. Tue heraldi a lion, or a dragon, or an eagle of ars, worn r wer the bh ter sball be a cross, a 1b it and a dove flying over it. Grandest of all escutcheons! Most significant of all family “coats of arms in every battle | must have itbhlazmug on my fSag-—the dove, the cross, the lamb, and whea [ fall wrap me in that good old Christian flag, => that the fam My coat of arms shall be right over my breast, that all the world may see that 1 looked to the dove of the spirit, and clung to the crow, and depended upon the Lamb of God, whie taketh away the sin of the worl such sign & netimes Our coat art, heroaf standing under Asbamed of Joins that fn whom my hopes of No! when | L}- That I no Next trouble « all feel it is lowered Into tives to com look d departed « they wn It have all troublo is the sadness of all, A company of per an electric battery ends of the line touch the circle feels the shook } maternal and paternal rel the of filial, of life, we stand so close together that trouble sets its battery all feel the thrill distress. In the great Christian family sorrow of one ought to be the sorrow of al Is one persecuted’ All are persecuted. Does one suffer loss? We all suffer loss. Is one bereaved! We are all bereave Their streaming eyes togather flow For human gulit and mortal woe, If you rejoice at another's misfortuns you are not one of the sheep, but ons of the gouts, and the vulture of sin hath alighted on your soul, and not ths dove ol the spirit, Next | notice the family property. After 6 man of large estate dies the relatives as semble to hear the will read. So much of the property is willed to his sons, and so much to his daughters, and so much to be nevolent societies. Our Lord Jesus hath died, and we are assembled today to hear the will read. He says, “My peace | give unto you." Through His apostie He says “All are yours” What! Everything? Yeu, everything! This world and the next. In distinguishing families there ars old pie- tures banging on the wall They are called the 'beiricoms” of the estate. They are very old, and have come down from genera. tion to generation Bo 1 look upon all the beauties of the nat. ural world as the heirlocms of our royal family. The morning breaks from the east, The mists travel up hill above hill, mountain above mountain, until sky lost. The forests are full of chirp and buzz and song, Tree's loaf and bird's wing flutter with gladness, Honey makers in the log, and beak against the bark, and squirrels chattering ou the rail, and the call of the hawk out of a clear sky make you feel glad. The sun, which kindies conflagrations among the castles of clouds and sets minaret and dome aflame, stoops to paiat the lily white, and the butter. cup yellow, and the forget-menot blue, hat can resist the sun? Light for the lif i | will we act at the reunion in the ] your househod ao ] lip! | thought hai —— beneath the throne of God, sending up her soft, sweet voles of praise, while the stars liston, and the sea, No mother ever more swoetly guarded the sick cradle than all night long this palo watcher of the sky bends over the weary, heartsick, slumbering earth. Whose is this black framed, blaok tasseled pleturve of the night! It ix the heirloom of our family, Ours, the grandeur of the spring, the orys tals of the snow, the coral of the beach, the odors of the garden, the harmonies of the alr, You cannot sea a large estate in ono morning, You must take several walks around it. The family property of this royal house of Jesus is so great that we must take several walks to get any idea of its extent Lot the first walk be around this earth. All these valloys, the harvests that wave in them and the cattle that pasture theme—all thes mountains and the precious things hidden beneath them, and the crown of glacier they cast at the feet of the Alpine hurricane—all these lakes, those islands, these continents, are ours. In the second walk go among the street lamps of heaven, and see stretching off on every side a wilderness of worlds, For us they shine. For us they sang ata Bav jours nativity. For us they will wheel into line and with their flaming torches add to the splendor of our triumph on the day for which all other days wore made In the third walk go around the City, As we come near it, hark great towers, twelve. It is high noon. We look off upon the chaplets which never fade, the eyes that never weep, the temples that never close, the loved ones that never part, the procession that never halts the trees that never wither, the walls that never can be captured. the sun that never sets, until we can no longer gaze, snd we hide our eyes and exclaim, “Eve hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him! As these rise we have to retreat and hold fast lest wo be swept off and drowned in the emotions’ of gladness and thanksgiving and trivmph What think you of the family property? It is considered an honor to marry intoa family where there is great wealth Ihe Lord, th bridegroom of earth and heaven, offers you His heart and His hand, saying m the words of the Canticles, “Rise up, My ove, My fair one, and come away and once having put on thy hand the signet ring of His love, you will be endowed with all the wealth of earth and all the honors of heaven, Almost every family looks back to a home stead-—-sowe country place where you grew up. You sat on the doorsill, ou heard tho footstep of the rain on the garret roof. You swung on the gate You ransacked the barn You waded into the br Yo thrashed the orchard for apples neighboring woods Ww : everything around is of interest to v the homestead f house ars mar The hand » pillars and swung Parks oH all ages a millic and ul speaks in an anthem a n eternity a Paxton to build toria Regia, five feet Lily of the Valley sh the blast, and in the shall put forth its full bi shall come to loos at it, be as though the cher » en, and its aroma shal abim had swunz befor the throne a thousand consers. [| have no seen it yet. | am in a foreign land. Butm Father is waiting for me to come home, | have brothers and sisters there In the Bible 1 have letters from there, telling me what a fine place it is. It matters not much to me woether [ am 1 OF poor, or whether the world hates me vie me, or I go by land eves at last It is not soon to crumt ha : i mans is as grown wheothe mly | may Wt m nanson built in y family a firmnast & bull wit means reund yery mu i and wont w Uh ra or ily mansion senttored off to Louis harieston, but DAps once a Year you old plac How you wake up plano that has been silent for years Father and mother do not in it How you bring out the old eli and rummage the gar ret, and open old serapboo is, and shout and laugh and ery and talk over old times, and theugh vou may bs forty-five years of age pot a* thouzh wore sixteen! Yel sooni it is goodbye at the oar window, smd goodbye at the steamboat whar Bat how old family mansion of heaven’ It is a good while sine you parted at the door of the grave There will be Grace an! Mary and Martha and Charlie and Lizzie and all the darlings of pale and sek and gasp mg for breath. as when you saw them last but the eve bright with the luster of heaven, and the cheek rossate with the flush of celes pe come together at the the old | tial simmer hands! What em oming together of lip to of joy! You my, “Ii no tears in heaven.’ Bible says that od and if there wears no What clasping of braciogs! What What tears there wer There must be, for the shall wipe them away | tears there, how could He wipe them away They cannot be tars of grief or tears of dis appointment, Chey must be tears of glad ness. Christ will come and say “What! child of heaven, Is it too much for thee! Dost thou break down under the gladness of this reunion? Then | will help thee” And, with His one arm around us and the othw arm around our love He shall hold ue up in the eternal jubliee While I speak, som» of you, with broken hearts, oan hardly hold your pmes,. You feel an if you would speak out and say: “Oh, blessed day! spread on, Toward thee | pres with blistered feet over the dmert way, My ses fall for thelr weeping. | faint from Mataning for feet that will not come and the sound of voles that will not speak. ol on, oh, day of reunion! And then, Lord Josue, be not angry with me If after { have Just ones kime | y blossad foot 1 tara around to gather up the long lost treasure: of my heart. Ob, be not with me! One look at Thee were heaven, t all those one, t into thy “room in whion our first President en. f ths prominent mm of this and other lande. it was a very Interesting spot, But ob, the banqusting hall of tae family mansion of Whica | spak! Spread ths ta. ble; spread it wide, for a great multitude are to stat it, From the Tree by the River gether the tweive manner of fruits for that table, Take the clusters from the Eterna! | to the rash | of its chariots and the wedding peal of its | The ball of heaven has struck | tides of glory | | | that has been much nse | or less grease, is likely to appear in the HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS, TO TAKE BRUMES OUT OF FURNITURE. Wet the part with warm wator; double a piece of brown paper five or six times, soak it in warm water and lay it on the place: apply on that a warm, but not hot, flat-iron till the moisture is evaporated, If the bruise be not gone, 1cpeat the process, After two or three applications the dent or bruise will be raised to the surface. If the bruise be small, merely soak it with warm water and hold a red hot iron near the surface, keeping the surface continually wet; the bruise will soon disappear, —Doston CUul- tivalor. TURKEY. into the breast, cut slices from each of the breast down to the ribs; then slip the knife under the legs, and lay it over and dis- joint, Divide the thighs from the drum. sticks, which are dry and tough; the thighs are often considered, by those who prefer dark meat, the choicest part of the bird, Detach the wings in the same manner, with a good slice of the breast. The stuffing is generally put in the breast of a turkey. When the merry-thought has been re. HOW TO CARVE A Fix the fork firmly sido the may be turned over and the knife trunk thrust and the neck bones divided, through the backbone. To carve ly and requires a ensily little practice, and it will be well to | watch the operations of a good carver, — Chicago Herald. DECORATING OLD CHINA. The difficulty in decorating old china i, Says a de tor of experience, 18 that through « ra stant washing that part of shina not well covered with “glaze” and when "wm bisck spots on the surface of effect of the de be : 8 rain the times the grease can soaking the di CORNING 1 A very superior mode of is the following: Take a round of of eighteen or twenty Pp nds corning beef bee | and rub it over with common salt: let it Meanwhile, mix sal-pruncila, three r remain a day or two, ’ an ounce and a half of ounces of brown sagar, hall an ot black pepper, six ounces of fine salt, a quarter of an ounce of cloves pounded, the same of nutmeg, and half a pound of common salt, After has re mained salted in a cool place or twa, rub into it the verized mixture resulting together ingredients already named ; let the meat thus taking care yald next the beef! th th remain for tara i% L 34 A beel 1 mae an brown yurteen walter: K pil simmering un oun s of Pack the en Lhe over it. I Wl i 3 1 to a boil; thea add four peter and give it a boil vessel, and wi we pice pour it much salt ill make meat hard. Courier RECIPES, Cut cold meat Make a Latter milk and flour, dip up a spoonful of bat ter af put in a few pieces of meat cover and drop in boiling fat, Put in a many as will cook at a time. Skim out in a colander to drain them, remove to a hot platter for the table. Meat Fritters dice and season, Rice Cakes-—-Ten ounces of sitted loa sugar, one-half pound of good rice, fifteen egus, two lemons, orange water Lu flavor, a whisk for nearly nalf an hour; add the sugar, the the orange-water an grated rinds of the lemons. Put into a vessel and bake in a quick oven for hall an hour Beofsteak Pate—Chop one pound ol best round steak till it is a soft pulp. Season highly with salt and pepper. Add a little of the tender fat alse chopped fine. Mix two beaten eggs with one plat of milk. Pour this slowly into one cup of flour mixed with one tesspoon of baking powder. When well mixed, stir it thoroughly into the meat. Bake in a moderate oven sbout an hour, White Lemon Cake-—S8ix ounces o butter, one and one-fourth pounds ol flour, one-fourth pint of well beaten ogee, one pound of pulverized sugar, twelve drops of essence of lemon, two drchma of carbonate 8{ ammonia. Rab the flour and butter together, and the other ingredients, with as little handling ne bie, roll out the mass as thick a a silver dollar, out in cakes and bake in buttered tins with a gentle heat, Curried Veal Cut a pound of cold roast veal into small pleces, not over hall an inch square, Into your chaling dish put two tablespoonfuls of butter, one onlon, A sour a and a clove ol garlic—all minced Stir into this rice, +. | Again, which have been moved (which it may be by slipping the | 787 a ™ knife through at the joint of the breast) | absorbs more | fired the grease | | third street {| rough and Beat the yolks of the eggs with | J Effect of Too on Animal Life. Professor Henry 8. Bodeman, of San Francisco, when asked by a reporter about the effect of ice on animal life said: “Frogs ean be frozen in all con- ditions to solid ice, so that the slightest trace of life no longer exists, so that no sign of vitality can be elicited from them, by the greatest irritation, and then again come to life after having been thuwed out, and appear just as hefore the experiment, Dument in 1842 per fermed such an experiment with great success, Many fishes we know, espec inlly the pike, canbe frozen through and through or be left lying in the air and still be revived on being molstened with water. With warm-blooded animals only a few experiments of this sort have been tried. Still, it is known that a few may be frozen, even to the entire cessa- tion of the heart's uction and breathing, even to the complete disnppearance of nervous and muscular sensibility, and then by careful heating become, for a time at alive again. And the chicken in the egg. before hatching, can be so greatly reduced in temperature that the action of the heart ceases, with out suffering injury, if after a couple of days the normal heat is restored. It merely hatches so much smaller, since it cannot regain the lost t Fresh egye frozen to solid ice, have developed, after gradual thaw ing, with « cess of ir Sayings, least, mplete regularity in St. Louis Star the pro cubation.” — r—————— Castor O11 Tablets. A Chicago the manufacture Each 5 nl neh w a quarter of sixty house is now stor oil tablets. jusre and about ontains per « other components Ih discovered by ventor's st sick child ne vied 144 i IDUGLOeGE § First Mention of Football. he origin of 1 Cogt langer attend : Ire violent exercises meester for the as Ianein bail, able users theroo! | Hila. - ————— A Good Heritage. fist “He nn, $20 ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts finyyet promptly on the Kidneys, or and Bowels, cleanses the ayn tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitus constipation. Byrup of Figs is the only remedy of fea Find ever Gute, Haein to the taste a ceptable to the stomach, in its action and trul beneheial nits offects, prepared only from the most healthy and agrecable substances, its many excellent qualitios com mend it to all and have made i De snssseseste X ey S inrger '® | and is taken internally, | the blood and mucous surfaces of | In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure 3 | States 85K oh | ence, April 25, '90 Five hundred theatres have been burnt down all the world over in the last 100 years, entailing a loss of about 4000 lives ————— EE ——m—— A The figures given by the French Gov- erument show an immence deficiency in wheat, both in area and yield, 1050 The average number of American patents issued yearly is about 20,000, sies———— - Beware of Olntments for Catnrrh That Contain Mercury, As mercury will surely destroy the sense of | smell and completely derange the whole sve. | tem when entering it through the mucous sur- { faces. | cept on prescriptions from reputable physi. Buch articles should never be used ex. clans, nx the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Caturrh Cure, manufactured by ¥. Jd. Cheney & Co, Toledo, O.,contains no mercury, and acts directly upon the sy n, the genuine, It is taken Internally, si lu Toledo, Ohio, by ¥., J. Clu y & Ck 9 Sold by Druggists, price Ti per bottle, Dunixo 180 there were bullt in Archies, Thousand wen treated by | teoor p that y Uroug Address Fhe Conveuivnoe of Dolla rarus, The Erie running solid trains over tween New York and Chicago Cars JOT any { Wer wer han vie. auy olber of passer is Lhe 1y raliway its own woke be 3 ' Arsl-Clias line. Dine bhiis T- pies (roe, FITS stooped free Du. Krane's Great Neuve Hesrouen, N s alter first day's use, iarvelous ¢ BWAN'S VARTLLES Cur Tablets cure chit Dr. Bwar 1 3 ires MT. Raine nd class | \ CoPYRILHY IgM A Jeeling of dullness, langnor, and depression means that your liver isn’t DL ite part. That means impure blood, to » gin with, and all kinds of ailments in the end. But you can stop them in advance, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov- ery invigorates the liver, purifies and enriches the blood, and rouses every organ into healthy action. It pre- vents and cures all diseases arising from a torpid liver or from impure blood. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Bile iousness, Scrofulous, Skin and Scalp Discase 3 (or Lung-scrofula), in its carlier stages, all yield to it. The makers of the “Discovery” claim for it only what it will do. that it will do it. or cure, in the money. ns to purify this way ; matter what nothing else Therefore, — even Consumption the blood 18 which proves, dealers may offer, that can be “j 15t i ’ " . don’t accept a substitute, ty S. S. S, is the only permanent cure for contagious Taint are cured in every trial. | honestly believe that S. S. S., saved | was afflicted with the very my life. worst type o fr $ contagious bloo and was almost a solid sore fre to fo ot The physi ~1ans dec! case hopeless and well, Old chronic cases that physicians d instance where S. S. S,, has om head | quit everything else and commenced taking S. S.S. After taking a few bottles | was cured sound leclare 1 Send for our new book on constitutional or Blood Diseases, mailed free. | The Swift | Specific Co., i poison ared my Thos. B. Yeager, Elizabethtown, Ky. | Atlanta, Ga. DR.TALMACE’S “LIFE OF CHRIST.” Oevering bis great trip Teo, Threagh, 5 Esciasive territon o capital needed 1000 AGENTS WANTED. “German Syrup” Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Par- 2 “My with ly Boschee's made al fourteen when I contracted a Col ited 1n a Hoarseness ¢ ne from a number of trying a Physician without aining relief—1 cannot say now what remedy he prescribed I saw the advertisement of you: remedy and obtained a bottle, J received such quick and permanent help from it that whenever we have had Thr t or Bronchial since in our family, Boschee's Ger- man Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. 1 have never hesitated to report my experience of its use to others when I have found them troubled in like manner.” Rgv. W. H. HAGGARTY, of the Newark, New Jersey, M.E. Coufer- acquaintance out troubles A Safe Remedy. fl LC CREEN. Sole Man'fr. Woodbury X.1 — IN THE SELECTION OF A CHOICE CIFT or of sn addition to one's library, elegance and usefginess will be found combined In i 2 « SUCCRSSOR OF THE UNABRIDGED, Ten yours revisin 100 editors em od Critieal prin A invited. Got the Bold by al! Booksellers, Pamphist free |G. AC. MERRIAM & CO, BpringBeld, Mans. ma ———- AY 8 Umd® MORE VALUABLE THAN GOLD aa ma Sa a OOK. Comortten er ee TR AERATED OXYCQEN CO, ud from thet hrist. Land, ful engravings, also a grand fhe re of Jerusalem on the day of the crucifixion, in BIG FAY. Also send nemes and out of work and get Talmage's [instrated Biography FREE. Addr HISTORICAL PUB. CO. PuiLa Pa IMhustrated oith over ON) wenden. 2 aclors an ten feet in FO of B agents or hose (German | | UNEXCELLED! APPLIED EXTERNALLY Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Pains in (hg Limbs, Back or Chast, Mamps, Si) Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruisss Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It nets like a charm jor Cholera Marbas Piarrhen, Dysestery, Colic, Cramps, Nass sen, Sok Headache, do. Warranted periectly harmioss, “ee aath accompany ing each bettie, anise directions for use, ts SOOTHING and PENKTHRA- TING gunlities are elt immediately, Try Mand be convinced, Price 43 wud ov cents, plistn, DEPOT, 40 MUKRAY ST, NEW YORK DEANE STEAM PUMP £0. | 72 Cortlandt St., New York. STEAM -:- PUMPS. Fon wold by all drag wend tor Catalogue, SS Service. AND DAY! Flodds the worst rudy ture with sass ue wn
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