LEY. THE DR. TALMAGE BROOKLYN DIVINI'S SUN DAY SERMON, Subject: “Lhe Sleepers Awakened, I —— lead that TEXT: “Now 1s Christ risen from the and become the first fruits of them slept," =| Corinthians xv., 20, On this glorious Easter morning, amid the music ani the flowers, I give you a Cherise tian salutation, his morning Hussian meeting Russian on the stro «ts of Bt, Peters borg hails him with the salutation, "Christ is risen! and is answeral by his friead in salutation, “He is risen indeed!” In some parts of England and Ireland, to this very day, there is the suocerstition that on Histor morning the sun dances in the heavens, and rell may we forgive such a superstition jlo trates tne faot that the natural seer the 8 LO sympathize with SPA Se Flowers! Fl y “iny, one of the lilies o I hear it say: ‘ nsider the lilies of the fleld, how they grow; thay toil not, neither do they yet Solomon in all his glory was not arraved like one of thes bend over a ross, and It seats to whisper, *'l am the rose of Sha- ron.” And then I stand and listen, From all sides there comes the chorus of flo saying: “If God so clothed the grass of fleld, which to-day is and to-morrow is into the oven, shall He not much clothe you, O ye of little faith? Flowers! Fowers! Braid bride's hair. Flowers! J them over graves rophecy of the resurrection. flowers! Twist Shot Into a gs Lord Jesus on Easter m to the Father, oo. to the Holy Ghost; as it was in the beg now and ever sha Oh, how bright anil how flowers, and how much thes of Christand His character, church, bri with ! are uin spin, wers, the cast mere the wong, SON beautifu make me the wor dead must if © santifully inGs, we want the f the resu Ather and usd and F and sists you have forg & greater conquer erual, a ghastly ox n black Dorse and Chalons, © hearts of nations, It Again and again F NAH than all of thes oe aror He across Water is th has done this work with all generations, He is a monarch as well as a conqueror; h's palacy a sepulcher; his fountains the falling tears of a worl L Hlessed be God, in the light of this Baste morning | see the prophe y that his scepter shall be broken and his Ls dace shall be de molished, The hour is coming when all who are in their graves shall come forth, Christ risen, we shall rise. Jesus ‘the first fruits of them that slept.” Now, around tails 4 trine of the resurrection toere are a great wan y mysteries, You come to me this m runing and say, “If the bodies of the dead are to be raised, bow is this and how is that Anil you ask wea thousand quertions | am Incompetent to anwvsrer, but there are a great many things you believe that you are not able to explain, You would be a very foolish man to say, “lI won't believe aoything | can't understand,” of | ind my strength in this passage, “All who are in their graves shall come forth.” I do not pretend to make the explanation, You can goon and say “Iuppose a ree turned missionary dies in Brooklyn, When he was in China, his foot was ar nputated, He ved yoars after in Eogland. and thers be bad an arm smputated Ha is buried to-day in Green woo, Inthe resarrection will the foot come from China, will the arn come from Eagland, and wiil the different parts of the body be reconstructsd ia the resurrection? How is that possibie You say that “the human body changes eYery seven years, and Ly seventy years of age a man has had ten bodies, In the resurrec tion which will come up?™ You my, “A man will die and his body erurnbils into dust and that dust be taken up into the lifs of the vegetable, An animal may eat the vegetable: men eat the animal. In the resurrection that body, distributed In so many directions, how shall it be gathered up? Have you any more questions of this style to ask? Come on sod ask them, [do not pretend to answer them, [| fall back upon the announcement of Gos word, “All Who are In their graves shall ome forth.” You have noticet, | suppose, in reading the story of the resurrection that almost every accuunt of the Bible gives the idea that the characteristic of that day will be a great sound, | do not know that it will bs very loud, bat | know it will be very ating, In the mausoleum, where sflonos has reigned & thousand years, that volo must pene EFate. In the coral cave of the deep that voice must penetrate, All along the sea routs from New York to Liverpool at every few miles whore a steam ar went down depart ted spirits coming baok hovering over There is where the hy —y who rode on or and Atianta { nung the wolf Death, aqn cne moment hefore that general rising there will be an entire silencs save as you hear the grinding of a wheel or a clatter of the honfs of a procession passing ints the cemetery, Bilence in all the caves of the earth, HNilenca on the side of the mountiin. Silence down in the valleys ant far out into ths sea. Silence, But in a moment, fo the twinklin tr of an eye, as the archangel’s trumpet comes peal. ing, rolling, crashing across mountain and ocean, the earth will give one terrific shud. der, and the graves of the dead will heave like ths waves of the sea, and Ostend and Sebustopol and Chalons will stalk forth in the lurid air, and the drowned will come up and wring out their wet locks above the bil. iow, and all the land and all the sea become one moving mass of life-~all faces, all age . all conditions, gazing in one direction and upon one throne the throne of resurrection, “All who are in their graves shall come forth.” “But,” you say, ‘if this doctrine of the resurrection is true as prefigured by this Easter morning, Christ, ‘the first fruits of them that slept,’ Christ rising a promise and a prophecy of the rising of all His people, can you tell us something about the resur- rected body? I can. There are mysteries about nat, out I shall ted you three or four things in regard to the resurrected body that are beyond gue and beyond mis- take, In the first place, | omark in regard to our resurrected body, will be a glorious body, The body we i now is a mere skeleton of what it would have been if sin had not marred and defaced it. Take the most exquisite statue that was ever made by an artist and chip it hers an 1 chip it there with a chisel and batter it here and there and then stand it out in the storms of a hundred years, and the beauty would be gone, Well, the human ssing body has besn chipped and battered and bruised and damaged with the stor of thousands of years—the phys jeal « ts of other generations coming down [rom generation to generation, we in- hertting tae infelicit | but in the morning « body will be ad g to the original m y difference 1} emaciatal wretch ina | i rence between o nd our resurre ‘here ¥ wii ea the waters of ath | stains of tears and st soo the perfe 4 hanl have been you w and b viel Gai weon a nad ted the untied | soe the f the ens bave gone ¥v God in world ti express: that f in the resurrect) ralgic tering breath, vi then } We Are Is it ty of Ou pa td nh Br iway, New York, of the year at noonday Is n 0 b heaven is all the Grand projects of mercy for other worlds Victories to be celebrated. The downfall of despotisms on earth to be annous k. learned and sung. Great which God shall send forth Plenty to do, but no fad seated under the trees of ft will to rest, but to talk over with some old com. rade old times—t les where you fought shoulder to shoulder, Sometimes in this world we feel we would like to have such a body as that. There is 80 much work to be done for Christ, there are so many tears to be wiped away, there are so many burdens to lif, "there iv 80 much to be achieved for Christ, we sometimes wish that from the first of January to the last of December we could toll on without stopping to sleep, or take any recreation, or to rest, or even to take food-that we could toll right on without stopping a moment » our work of com ing Christ and heaven to all the pe Hut we all get tired, It Is characteristic of the human bo ly in this condition We must got tired, ia it not a glorious thought that after a while wo are going to have a body that will never get weary? Oh, glorious resurrection day, Gladly will | fling aside this poor body of sin and fing it into the tomb, i at Thy bid- ding | shall have a body that never wearies, That was a splen lid resurrection hyma that was sung at my father’s burial Bo Jewns slept. Goa's dying Son's Passed through the grave and blessed the bed, Rest here, blest saint, tii from His throus The morning breaks 10 plerce t5e shade, O blessed resurrection! Speak out, swoel flowers, beautiful Aowers, while you tell of A risen Christ and tell of the righteous who shall rise. May God 8 you this morning with anticipation ! I boar] of a father and son why among others were shipwrecked at sea. The father and the son climbed into the rigging. The father hold on, but the son alter a while loss bis bold in the rigging and was dashed down, The father supposed he had goose hopelessly under the wave, The next day the father was brought sasaore from the rigging in an exhausted state and laid in a bed in a fisher. roan's hut, and after many hours had passed be came to consciousness and mw lying bee side him on the same bed his boy, d Ob, my friends, what a glorious thing it will be when we wake up at last to find our loved ones beside us, Coming up from the same plot in the graveyard, coming up in the same morning light «she fatosr and son alive forever, nll the loved ones alive for SVer, nevermore to weep, Dewrmors 0 part, nevermore to die, May the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make you perfect in every good work, todo His will and Jet this brilliant scene of the moraing transsort our thougats to the grander awéinblags Dae fore the throne, This august asssmblage ie nothi pared with it, Toe one hundred and four thousand, and the “great poeterob A that no man oan wunber,” some of our best Join Joe ie”) Som i AYN 3 pores in the Dusiest season : Isy as time, exped ns on His children, gue if you are life, not be # bat nen He i HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. PRACTICAL HINTS, China may be mended as firmly ag a rock by the following recipe: T'wo persons will be® needed for the work, however, for the manipulation must be rapid. The necessary materials are a little unslacked lime, pulverized; the slightly beaten white of egg, and a small hair brush such as is used for mueilage. Put the white of egg on the broken edges of both pieces to be joined, and immediately dust one edge with the powdered lime; put the two edges acen- rately and firmly together, hold in place | for a minute or two and then lay aside to dry. To keep your silver bright without constant cleaning, which is injurious to the plated articles, dissolve a small handful of borax in a dishpan of hot water with a little soap, put the silver in and let it stand all the morning (or afternoon, as the case may be), then pour off the rinse with clear, cold water and wipe with a soft cloth, Use flannel to wash the children with in winter and they will be good-natured while bathiag. Put a sound, ripe apple in the tin box with your fruit cake, and the aster keep without becoming crumbly o ~New York Recorder. suds, will r dry. TO MAKE HOME MADE CANDIES, Butter Scotch-—Boil iplal of a cupful of mol butter, a ac half a « of soda as the syrup will ASSOR, tablespoonful frequently, and as soon between } them a rier of an nck HICK, 80 Salt and large spooaful of in the hot pan .ay tara with a Potatoes of quality are best pared and fried, he heat «¢ i$ stronger than thal irives the water out ol Small, deep kettles are sold for frying, and the lard is kept and used many times over. The Secret of Chips frying Saratoga potatoes or ‘‘chips.’’ as they are called, is to have them eold, crisp and dry before putting them ia the boiling fat. They are sliced as thin as possible, soaked in 1ce water an hour or more, and each slice dried a towel, fried in very hot fat and drained sieve a moment in a very Lot oven ot over the stove, then cooled in a drift quickly, They are hardly worth the trouble The Virginia Way They taste better to be sliced thicker, soaked in cold water, drained and fried in a covered pan with two or three spoonfuls of suet, turning brown before they are put in, salt and pepper thickly while cooking at leisure, This is a Virgioia fashion of cooking potatoes, 8% not to break in turning pepper, and when the fat is turning brown +} sem in, brown quickly and broad griddle cake and } Dot §OCON Ary iced mw ing fat, b ing { which } r water, u em. in them "The secret of on on A Hoosler Potatoes—For dinner theyare | pared and bolled till nearly done, thea put in the kettle with nice boiling white turnips to finish, As much turaip as potato is the rule, and the turnips mast be put to cook hall an hour earlier to be done at the same time. When done, drain; let the kettle stand uncovered over the fire a moment to drive out the steam from the vegetables, and mash them together, mixing well with two spoonfuls of butter, salt to taste and serve in a well smoothed mound in a hot dish with pepper on the top. This is a nice way of serving turnips, without the strong flavor most persons dislike, and potatoes of ordinary quality are botter ured in this fashion, Kentucky Potatoes Slice the pota. toes as for frying, and soak in cold water for half an hour. Parboil in a frying pan, pour the water off, and let them stand on the fire uncovered till the steam Is driven off; brown a spoonful of butter or fat and pour over them a min- ute after, then cover the potatoes with milk, in which they should boll till dove. Salt and The Hiss and “Spectacies’ or the Coura. It is 8 remarkable peculiarity poisonous reptiles that they seem to have a great reluctance of putting their gead. ly powers into operation, Before in- flicting the fatal bite the rattlesnake ways gives his note of warning, and the same may be said of the cobra di pello the most deadly of the many poisonous reptiles ot India, The Warn i Ci ing is unmistakable-—he and a hiss heard distinctly fifty cobra's 3% fl Xie } MACK crest upon his loud enough to be feet The ble or hood ned AWAY. membrane with two | circulars juine of most | | epectacies, an impish lustre, and the al | i cobra { is not erected ora | | Even no Gapger, | sign that the reptile is angry sil tog repsesentation of a pair of | When the hood or crest is | its eyes seems to blaze ith | contioued hiss- ether #0 84% Lo very god in position ing gives the very air a noisome smell, According to the best never while and so long as that the creature handled with the crest he yutinues in silence (ne authorities the bites closed; part Hay proached and A though creature « impu spread the ther hiss, however, 1s n 8 Ana sen victin Louis Rem : “t r for a The Argument Used Y the makers of the second-class baking powders to induce the them they cost le off on Royal consumers 1s dealer to push that than Roval and afford the dealer much more profit. But you, madam, are for them as for the s TH ried tlv Co ymbined f fri 88 and expensive other MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON'S SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. ovis regs wm nh tk cas RE : ¥ Me us 5 at het ¢ tough 5 dnrabie. ong » f Raoris Ask your dealer for them, sp for & Dom of JOO, aesoris a JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. co., WALTHAM, MASK, GOITRE CURED wt HALL y: i ONE URE. e of Cata Ne HALL > C ATARRH ( HALL'S CATIRH CURE INTERNALLY, aterials charged the same price bsolutely pure Royal, which highly refine d the most fi cost f The low the |A GRAND ENTERTAINMENT, wells 100 § holce 10 s Plnyw, 10, FREE. RETTA LO Garfield Tos rr “Cures Sick Headache - NSIO JOMN WW MORRIS, Washington, BB. «, Successfully Prosecytes Claims, Late Pr pa. Fabheonine » fon PLL wl, . & Chinita ally» * 3 * Ho City of Toledo. Lucas Co.. of Ohio. HUNDRED DOLLARS ASON, NOTARY Pi CATARR THESTIMONIAXLS EB WALT ave, Ky way very one that take CONDI "0 DD LAX) of Hal HALI Ha & OO. Drugs 8 (atarrh {( ste. BH MIS Detroit X & Catarrh « KEV. IP CARSON Two bottles of Hall's (at § tte g KIM I"SON Hall's On _ Mar arth Cure - fall § Catarrh Cure Is Sold by all Dealers in Patent Medicines PRICE 75 CENTS A BOTTLE. Testimonials sent free on application IT WON'T CURE THE ONLY GENUINE MALL'S GATARRN CURE 1S MANUFACTURED DY F. J, CHENEY & CO, TOLRDO, ©O. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. fits, but will ‘prevent “them, as your nolgh. bor's cow will be unable to rest on your flower bed if you protect your wn with a MART. MAN STEEL ® PICK orl TFEN more Lawn Fencing than all other manafacturers combined, because It In the tal A sil \ ow Meket Gate rl aards, and |) xitle Stew Aine * BY unogualed The new HARTMAN WIRE P HANDSOMEST AND BEST FENCE MADE | wes CHEAPER THAN WOOD wee NEL FENCE than barbed wire, and Is Humane, and Ornamental. Mower Nes ais are A page Hastrated estalogue of HARTMAN SPECIALTIES Our Stes malled free on application, Mention this paper, Works: Beaver Palle, Pa, Branches: 109 Chamber 81, New York, Chienge. 81.08 SH It Was Before the Day of SAPOLIO They Used fo Say Woman's Work is Never Done.” {| and palpitation ¢ jeart she - “August Flower” " yw to sta 1am hapr to suffe ring I has use August By lo headache with al years has satisfactory results. Forsever has been a great sufferer, | been under the treatment of eminent | physician 18 in this city and found Pttle ro oe duced to try Au Md 4 AVE 1mIImne dai We of- fer you a ready made medicine for Coughs, 1 atl Cough Byrup, BS Castes Good, Use lo Uns, BS) i odd Ly Drogmista CONSUMPTION Bronchitis and other dis the Throat and Lungs. Like other called Patent Medicines, it well cases of Sw and having merit it has attain- advertised. ’ IS ed a wide sale under the name of Piso’s Cure for Consumption. proved Cream ie per hon EA LE RL RL EE RE IY SS I TLE LOOK FOR Two Beautiful Ladies COMPANION PICTURES HOME TACKS, a. = 3 13785 HOME N AILS, containing several fer ent siged NALS “what are needed for every ue Made solely by the Atle Tack Corp's, Boston Werehouson « Poston, New Yuk Chiongo, Be sowan. Sen Fraoelses, Laos Factorbon « Towmtor, Mas Fulrhuoen, Mom Whitman, Mass, Dusburs, Mass, Plrmsouth, Mass Every home needs them, Every dealer sells them, | Kn dai taatg Wie REE: 5. PALS Aahingion And Ugen. tha and LOW aie LAND ACER, en NTR Land Com, XK, 7 I bn. Pa, EA ents AT ONCE, Samy MUST HAVE [A Yow AY Pree by rie or W amp. Immense. | avivalisd, Only post one ever invented Reats weights, Saies wnparalisle $19 a dar, Wedle guivhk, PBaosans, Phils. Pa Say Phiimdeiphia, ad a a a AACA RC CS I pr uh AN Ea pd ry
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