"REV. DR. TALMAGE. 4HE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, Sabject: “God Among the Centu- ries." a———r—— Text: “Consider the years of many gen- erations.” —Deuteronomy xxxii,, 7, At 12 o'clock last night, while so many good people were watching, an old friend passed out of our homes and a stranger en- tered. The old friend making waledictory was 1802: the stranger arriving is 1802, The old friend was garrulous with the ocour- rences of many days, but the stranger put his finger over his lip and said nothing and seemed charged with many secrets and mys- teries, I did not see either the departure or the arrival, but was sound asleep, thinking that was for me the best wav to be wide awake now, Goodby, 1802! Welcome, 1803! As an army is divided into brigades and regiments and companies, and they observe this order in their march and their tread is majestic, so the time of the world's exist- ence is divided into an army divinely com - manded; the eras are the brigades, the cen- turies are the regiments, and the vears are the companies. Forward into the eternity past, out of the eternity to come! Forward s the command, and nothing can halt them, even though the world should die. While obeying my text, “Consider the years of many generations,” I propose to speak of the ‘Chronology of the Bible,or God Among the Centuries.” We make a distinction between time and eternity, but time is only a piece of eternity, and chronology has been engaged in the sublime work of dividing up this portion of eternity that we call time into ments and putting events in their compartment, tis as much an injustics against the past to wrongly arrange its events as it would be an injustice if, through neglect of chronological accaracy, it should something in quite another place, you gain the victory, and infidelity has tried to prove an alibi by contending that events and cir« cumstances in the Bible aseribel to certain times must have taken place at some other time, if they took place at all, But this book's chronology has never been caught at fault. It has been vroved that when the Hebrews went into Egypt there wers only seventy of them, and that when they came out there ware 3,000,000 of them, Now," says infldelity, with a guffaw that it cannot suppress, “what an absurdity! They went down into Egypt sevénty and came out 8,000,000, That is a falsehood on the face of it, Nations do not increase in that ratio.” But, my skeptleal friend, hold a moment, The Bible says that the Jews were 430 years in Egypt, and that explains the increase from seventy persons to 8000, - 000, for it4s no more, but rather less than the ordinary increase of nations, The Fil- grim Fathers came to America in the May- flower, one small shipload of passengers, less than 800 years ago, and now we have a nation of 60,000,000, Where, then, is so called impossibility that the seventy Jews who went in to Egypt in 430 years became 3,000,000% Infidelity wrong and Bible chron- ology right, Now stop and reflect. Why is it that this sublime subject of Bible chronology has been so neglected, and that the most of | you have never given ten minutss to the consideration of it, and that this is the first sermon ever preached on this stupendous and overwhelming theme? Wa have stood by the half day or the whole day at grand reviews and seen armies pass, Again and again and again on the Champs Elysees Frenchmen by the hun. dreds of thousands have stood and watched the bannered srmies go by, and the huzza has been three miles long and until the populacs were so hoarse they could no longer, Again and again and again the Germans by hundreds ofl thousands have ocompart- | right | i in the far distant future be said that Ameri. | ca was discovered in 1770, and the Declara- | 100 | ANTS, tion of Independence was signed and Washington born oa the 224 of nd the Civil War of the Unite fought in 1840, As God puts all the events of time in the right us be careful that wa do not put them in the wrong place, The chron- ology of the Bible takes six steps, but they are steps so long it makes us hold our breath as we watch the movement. From Adam to Abraham, From Abraham to the exodus out of Egypt. From the exodus to foundation n's temple, Fro foundation temple to t struction of that temple, From the des tion of the temple to the return from B lonish captivity, I Babylonish tivity to the birth Chronology takes | Ing astrono and h “Let us fix « nt from which to late everything. Lot it be a star, the lehem star, thes Christmas star that we go \ the created 4004 yes came 24S years be out of Egypt Christ, and Sol 886 years before Christ, Chronology enters the first chapter of Genesis and says the day mentioned there is pot a day of twenty-four hours, but of ages the word there transiated as *‘day” in other places meaning ages, and so the Bible ac- count of the creation and the mnt of the creat in March, States was place, let of Solomon's de- truc- oy cap- and call to lp : ne ev amo » Uhirist; th occa years © was destr wed geologists’ ao mn are completely har- Chronology enters the book of | vd says that the words “time and wan a year and a half, ironology enters at another point and ws us that the seasons of the year were then only two—summer and winter, We find that the Bible year was 380 days instead | of 365: that the day was calculated from | 6 o'clock in the morning to 6 o'clock at night; | that the night was divided into four watches ~pnamely, ths late watch, the midoight, the | cock crowing, the early watch. The clock and watch were invented so long after the | world began their mission that the day was pot very sharply divided in Bible times Ahsz had a sundial, or a flight of stairs with a column at the top, and the shadow which that cole threw on the steps beneath in dicated the hour, the shadow lengthening or withdrawing from step to step. * But the events of life and the events the world moved so slowly for the m part in Bible times that they had no need of sucn timepieces as we stand on our mantels or carry in our pockets in an age when a man may have a ball dossnor a dozen engagements for one day and needs to know the exact minute for each one of them. The earth itself in Bible times was the chief timepiece, and it turned once on its axis and that was a day, and once around the sun and that was a year It was not until the Fourteenth Century that the almanac was born, the almanao that we toss carelessly about, not realizing that it took the accumulated laogenuity of more than 500 years to make one. Chron ology bad to bring into its service the monu ments of Egvpt and the cylinders of Assyria, and the bricks of Babylon and the pottery of Nineveh, and the metals struck at An tioch for the battle of Actium, and all the hieroglyphics that could be decipherad, and bad to go into the extremely delicate busi. ness of asking the ages of Adam and Seth and Enoch and Methuselah, who after their 800th year wanted to be thought young. I think it must have been in recognition of the stupendous work of making an alma nac that all the days of the week are name! after the gods. Sunday, after the sun, which was of old worshipad as a god. Mon- day, after the moon, whith was also wor shiped as a god, Tuesday, after Tuesco, the por of war, Wednesday, after Woden, the chief god of the Scandinavians, Thursday, after Thor, the god of thunder, Friday; after Frea, the goddess of marriage. And | Saturday after Saturn. The old Bible year | an with the 2th of March, Not until 1752 did the first of the month of January got the honor in legal documents in Eagland of being called the first day of the year, Improvements all along have been made in chronology until the calendar and the almanac, and the clock, and the watoh seam to have reached perfection, and all the Na. tions of Christendom have similarity of time | calculations and have adopte!l what is called “new style,” except Russia, which | keeps what is calle] the Yold style” and is | twelve days different, so that, writing from there, if you wish to be accurate, you date your letter January 1 and January 13, or December 10 and Dacomber 22. It is some- thing to thank God for that the modes are so complete for calculating the cycies, | the centuries, the decades, the years the months, the days, the hours, ths seconds, Think of making appointments as in the Bible days for the time of the new moon, Think of making one of the wate hes of the night in Bible times a rooster crow ing, The Bible says: ‘‘Jefore ths cock crow thou shalt deny me thrice,” If the Master com- oth at the cookerowing,” and that was the way the midnight watch was indicated, The crowing of that barnyard bird has al ways been most uncertain, The crowing is at the lowest temp arature of the night, and the amount of dew and the direction of the | wind may bring the lowest temperature at | 11 o'clock at night or 2 o'clock In the morn. ing, and at any one of six hours, Just be fore a rain the crowing of chanticleer in the night is almost perpetual, Compare theses modes of marking time with our modes of marking time, when 12 oelock is 12 o'clock, a 6 o'clock Is © o'clock, and 10 o'clock is 10 o'clock, and in- dependent of all wea and then thank God that you live now, t notwithstand- ing all the imperfect modes of marking hours or years or centories Bible o ogy never trips up, never fal tradicts itself, and here is one futons for the authenticity of ” If you enn prove an alibi ¢ ¢ beyoud doubt and 0s 084 prov belo bt | What almost wil vancing 8 | the i Lrrecian | with Queen | {| home life as pure as their pabile necessary before | for the closing year and the other for tht | new year, | vies will begin stood on the palaced and ‘statued Under den Linden, Berlin, and strewn garlands under the feet of uniformed hosts led on by Von Moltke or Bluch w Frederick the Great, When Wellington and Ponsonby and the Scots Grays eame back from Waterloo, or | Ww Olseley (rom Ev pt, or Mariboro igh from Blenbsim what military processions throagh it street and along palaces of mn and over the bridges of the Th nable lines of Ameri . hy the Lond arm on the streets of our le Mayorsand G with uncovered heads, all those grand revi a e compare i r Year's from the pulpit w Hear an capitals, looked on! ws together, and with the review iay you [rom the pev they ness in chronological order the flood; all the abreast: them pass years csmturies } huzza | vernors and Presidents, | But put | bille, ix not half so bad as the thief of time. Dr. Rush, the greatest and busiest phy- siclan of his day, appreciated the valus of time, and when asked how he had been able to gather so much information for his books and lectures he replied: *'I have been able to do it by economizing my time. I have not spent ons hour in amusement in thirty years.” And taking a blankbook from his pocket he sald, “I fill a book like this every week with thoughts that occur to me and facts collected in the rooms of my patients.” Napoleon appreciated the value of time when the sun was sinking upon Waterloo, and he thought that a little more time would retrieve his fortunes, and he pointed to the sinking sun ana said, “What would I not give to be this day possessed of the power of Joshua and enabled to retard thy march for two hours!” The good old woman appreciated the values of time when at ninety-three years of age she sald, ‘The Judge of all the earth does not mean that [ shall have any excuse for not being prepared to meot Him.” Voltaire, the blatant infidel, approsiaved the value of time when in his dying mo- ments be said to his doctor, **I will give you half of what I am worth if you will give me six months of life,” and whan told that he could not live six weeks 'he burst into tears and said, “Then I shall go to hell!” John Wesley appreciated the value of time when he stood on his steps watching for a delayed carriage to take him to an appointment, saying, “I have lost ten minutes forever.” Lord Nelson appreciated the value of time when he said, “I owe everything in the world to being always a quarter of an hour beforehand.” A clockmaker in one of the old Eaglish towns appreciated the value of time what | he put on the front of the town clock the words, “Now or when? Mitchell, the as- tronomer, appreciated the value time when he sald, *'l have been in the habit of calculating the value of a thousandth part of a second.” That minister of the Gospel did not appreciate the values of time during a season of {llness, instead of employ - ing his time {on useful reading writing, wrote a silly religious romance, which in | #ome unknown way came into the possession { of the famous Jos iit who introduced | the book as a divine revelation, which be- lo the founiation of Mormonism, the mstly abomination of all time, best appreciate the value of time Sabbaths been wasted and tie y pentance ar ee , and who have baleful and elegia sak September, with { a reaped Of ” ’ 0 who, or my ne They whi ha whose opportuni fulness are all g left ie wheat ‘The harvest ls past { And sutumal the niums | n, Babyloulan | cl : Armia rusaders o ow last avalanche of nber epaulets and ds of diver and pain, France America, 1 lal Aor HU AAL O | i the brighter ages th helmets of gold: Italy, ia, Germany, England dynasties, ublic iny D0 mo colnmns, 3 squal now gariandel ence, crimson with slaughter, now orrid rhastliness, n tiant with love and joy iis chrom study affords, ame other practical especially One SUCOUragin the other starth wazht is that the has betierment, with here apd re a stout reversal civilization was a vast improve ment on Egyptian civilization, and Roman iviiization a vast impro nent on ization, and Christian civilization vast improvement on Roman civilization What was the boasted age of Pericles sompared with the age of L fellow and fennyson! What was Queen sabeth as a men o nanhood compared has 1 p Dow with. ng aghts, LW Ome to the inst degree and T encouraging the rift of the cen turies bean nly th ae 5) SD warriors of olden time: compared with the most distinguished warriors of the last half all of them as much distinguished ss and good morals as for prowess the two military leaders of our Civil War on northern and southern side communicant members of Christian churches, and their | fife? Nothing impresses me in tats chronologi- oal review more than the fact that the regi nents of years are better and better regi ments as the troops move on I thank God that you and I were not born any sooner than we were Ix How could we have endured the disaster of teing born in the Mighteonth or Seventeenth or Sixteenth ury! Glad am I that we are in the regi- ment pow passing the reviewing stan i. and that our children will pass the stand in a better regiment. God did not build this world for a slaughter house or a den of infamy, A good deal rn. stl of cleaning houses will be this worid becomes as dean and sweet as is ought to be, but the brooms and the scrubbing brushes, and the upholsterers and plumbers are already busy, and when the world gets fixed up, as it will be, if Adam and Eve ever visit it, as ] ex- pect they will, they will say to each other, “Well, this beats paradise when we lived | there, and the pears and plums are better | n we plucked from the first trees, and the wardrobes are more complete and the | climate is better.” Since | settled in my own mind the fact that God was stronger than the devil I have never lost faith in the emparadisation of this planet. With the exception of a retro- gression in the Dark Ages, the movement of the world bas been on and on, and up and | up, aod 1 have two jubilant hosasaoas—one But the other thought coming out of this subject is that Biblical chronology, and in- dee 1 all chronology, Is urging the world to | more punctuality and immediateness, What | an unsatisfactory and indefinits thing it must have been for two business men in the time of Absaz to make an appointment, say- ing, “We will settle that business ruatter to morrow when the shadow on the dial of Abhaz reaches the tenth step from ths top.” or I will meet you in the street called Straight in Damascus in the time of the new moon,” or when asked in a courtroom what time an occurrenc) took place sho uld answer, "It was during the time of the latter rails.” or “It was at the time of the third | growing of the barnyard I You and I remember when ministers of the Gospel in the country, giving out a no | tioe of an evening service, instead of saying “The ser. candle light” at 8 or 7 or 8 o'clock, would say: at early Grecian | What were the cruel | | warm blood, and cause the | tremity by the woeal mpany fonally y wo sald to ea y this mighty rminate, wrnostioate what ivon again the ani nun deatht dying | have seen them cremated, both from the We world's chronol ! later come to ita last chapler The flual century will arrive and pas on, | and then wi the final decads and then the final year, and the final month, and the final da [he Inst spring will swing its conser of apple blossom # and the last winter bank its snows, The last sunset will bura like Moscow and the last morning radiate | the hills, The clocks will strike their last hour, and the watobes will tick their last ad No incendiaries will needed to run hither and yon with torches to set the world on fire Chemistry teaches us that there is a very inflammable element in water, While oxy- | gen makes up a part of the water, the other part of the water is hydrogen, and that is very combust The oxygen drawn out from the wale ammable hydrogen will put jostactly ito conflagration the Hudsons and Savanaahs and Missdesrippls and Ruines and Urals and Danubes, and Atlantic and Pacific and Indian and Mediterranean YORK, And then the angel of God dee scending from the throne, might put one mn the surt the sea and ther on beach and ory %o the four winds of heaven, “Tine was, but time shall be no longer Yot, found in Christ, pardoned and sanctifiel we shall welcome the day with more giadness than you ever wel- wned a Coristmas or New Year's morn, Whet And Eg up i attend ol worlds, am certain, ind sclanoe, Will sOOner or ma that the me is a | —t bo foot the the oo 5 fire the rea’ ms of ether gio set | shakes (De rapt Beaven's wl, undismared, shalt o'er the rain smi And light thy torch st nature s funeral pli ———_———— Nose and Throat. ander hou, In a recent lecture before the Chem- ists’ Assistants’ Association, London, by | Wilham Hill, M.D., London, the throat was described in detail, and the pharynx and the larynx pointed out as the two most important parts. The nose has a very important connection with the throat and its disorders, It contains a series of called the turbinated bones, which expose a large surface of air inhaled to be warmed ready for the lungs; more- over, the cilia of the nose cause the se- bones | cretion to move and reject the solid par- | ticles it has collected. The nose is the proper organ for breathing, not the mouth. The larynx, which is the air passage, is bounded at its upper ex- cords, and has, therefore, the double function of breath- ing and phonation. The epiglottis, by altering its form, causes the food to pass down the pharynx, and keeps it from the larynx. In speaking of proper | breathing, the author pointed out that disphragmatic breathing was the proper method, and not clavicular. It was re- ported that Rubini bad broken his clavicle during singing, by persisting in this method of breathing, Throat dis- eases are often caused by germs, by in- halation of sewer gas, etc. Fortuostely, Thank God for chronological achievements | there are other organisms in the throat which have ushered in calendars and al manacs and clocks and watches, and at so cheap a rate all may possess them! Chron. ology, begloning by appreciating the value of yours and the value of days, has kept on until it ories out: “Man, immortal; woman, immortal; look out for that minute; look out for that second” We talk a t deal about the value of time, but will never fully appreciate its value until the last fragment of it has passe | out of our possession forever. The greatest fraud a man can commit is to rob another of bis time, Hear it, yo laggards and re pent! All the fingers of chronology point to notuality as one of the graces, min. fter or the lecturer or business man who comes to his place ten minutes alter the ap- pointed time commits a crime the enormity of which can only be estimated by gitiply - y ten, _¥yoa were charged with doing or | always ready to attack these germs. The throat was well provided with tonsils, | both faucial and lingual. The tonsils produce phagocytes or leucocytes, amam- bold corpuscles which actually swallow | up the germs, Why, then, should ton- | sils be cut out! Because, when they be- come enlarged and horny, they lose this function, and by removing the horny surface, the newly ex portion can go on produciug the corpuscles. The decay of teeth is largely due to germs. This shows the importance of keeping the teeth in order, Obstruction in the nose is the cause of many throat dis- orders. People liable to throat disorders should be very chary of eating piquant or hot dishes, Irritating remedies, too, such ne cayonne and (except in special cases) tannin lozenges or nitrate of sil- ver, should be avoided, Hot tea, too, is bad, ~Bcieatitic American, — More than 700 lives of Columbus have been written in «= ‘ous languages, The Yosemite Valley in Winter. Bunow storm follows snow storm, Winter has spread his icy mantle over the Yosemite, The mighty cliffs and domes look down upon the valley as in the summer months, but it is with for- bidding stateliness and with threatening nspect, How changed the nnd different the attractions! The smiling vale no longer gay with g bowers and bright with green meadow. lands; no longer is it resonant with the hum insects, the murmuring Jullables of slumbering streams, and the joyous songs of summer birds; zephyr no longer whispers to the pine fronds as he gecone is Oorgeous of busy floats softly through the forest; and echo | no longer repeats the exclamations of glad visitors, The Merced rolls its swollen current impetuously through the valley, flooding many an acre of meadowland- 1 ne BNOW has protesting ston for ri well the against the the Lin AS hoarse with of the fallen; woods are flerceness snow-slide holds the it with the downward plunge, and slabs of talus and unshapely chunks of rock their of their parent cliff as water and weather do their blnsts beholder in awe as races waterfall in its 1008€0 hold and hertlong It is true and are washed with din spead down into that such terrify! with frequer nessed by the valley. g storms do not occur one such wai wit gs and his family during 1567, when they the were the wall On nie ant resuits in t chemists to obtair of great value. The Andes Nowly Sinking. 1 ne st that the whole nade artiing an: : einent a the Andes range y Seed Wg } i Uralzelle » WAS YouUL n the wl I" 18040 and 15831 had the ne years 1 betweer been City 8 jevel ) feet above Ocean. To sum u hat Ecuador's capital has sunk six feet in 12 the highest inhabited (40 feet which is the seventy. & sana » Farm, pot or : + An Quito itself city on authority lower than it was in 1745 years, Ant 0 higher thar highest real I% 8ai4 by the same the globe to be 218 feet a | sre the | | somet | 19 provide | of thick-trunked and Work | | Elwood Meade, the PROMPT, COOD WORK. Mr. Wi morning wit reliefs for became insufierable et § hs sudden 10 WUr'k ;, Cure pern Cook, ¢ exCTue JACOBS OIL; effect magical, pain ceased, agent RIHNEUMATISM. anajoharie N.Y pains in my shoulder is without effect ; wer writes Awcke one Tried various office ; the pain and used ST. and at 1 o'clock went lating it 10 ty me st 11 «¢ went Iu NEURAI.GIA. My wife suffered with such intense neurals She bathed ber face and head with 87. would die four hours, Weeds a8 Big as Trees. Sage brush is known to scientists as irtemisia tridentata, Most persons familiar with it think of it as rdinary weed of small size, and even so high the Encyclo. pedia Britannica to it as growing in ‘treeless valleys and slopes.” Jt will that it rt ri who un an authority as refers ABLONISH OAL persons Lo Know propo country times grows to a section { ii trees of its own wood, ) Im pa rat tall mere weeds State Er vely trees, iustead of vit { iginecr LH Lirrie Rarios, Wis ie ping the face, she the "JACOBS OL, and it cured b CARL SCHEIRE. ug DRKILMERS oducing groves | Protessor | Wyoming, while exploring the northern | th and central parts o ' mer, it Bate ia CRIN brush of the upon a trict thrived where i sage thus CH Many eigt LET Nerd i, feet |} a foot in diame Horn Basin, ea stone Park and r Indian d River or Mead teen Hugh, ‘roles ’ sf Examiner. { The Mont Pleasant Way nting the gr How's This ? Weoffor One H f alarrht 51 ski starr ™ Cresey & (4 3 y reseed GnGersigned th : 1 8 DO re Pre © last 1D years i Wataawo, Kixxax & Manvix, WI Dru | There are a large ians who claim 1 t re Tow ! 0 Connie Hrow 3 Wy in boxes f afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. lssas Thome ton sEyscwater, Druggists seu at Zhe, per bottls ay the Price of the oyal for Royal only. Actual tests show the Royal Baking Powder to be 27 per cent. stronger than any other brand on the market. If an~ other baking powder is forced upon you by the grocer, see that you are charged the correspondingly lower price. Those baking powders sold with a gift, or advertised or sold Roval,” are invariably at ‘half the cost of made from alum, and are dangerous to health. . Every can of Royal Baking Powder contains a ticket giving directions how to obtain, free, a copy of The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook, contain. ing 1000 of the best and most practical cooking receipts published. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers