RN = REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, Subject: “Palaces in India.” Text: “Who store up violence and rob yery in their palaces,” —Amos iii, 10, In this day, when vast sums of money pre being given for the redemption of In- iia, I hope to increase the interest in that t country and at the same time draw or all classes of our people practical les- pons, and so I present this fifth sermon In | the round the world series. We step Into the ancient capital of India, the mere pro puneiation of fts name sending a thrill rough the body, mind and sou! of all ose who have wsver read its stories of splendor and disaster and prowess—Delhi, Before the first historian impressed his frst word in olay, or cut his first word on marble, or wrote his first word on papyrus, Delhi stood in India, a contemporary of Babylon and Nineveh, We know that Delhi existed longer before Christ's time than we lve after His time, Delhi built on the ruins of seven cities, which ruins cover forty miles, with wrecked temples, broken fortresses, split tombs, tumble down palaces and the debris of centuries, An archmolo could profitably spend his lite here talking with the past through its lips of venerable masonry, There are ought to see is Jst things here Delhi, but three things vou must see, he first A I want od to see the Cashmore gate, for that was the point at which the most wonderfu deed of daring which the worjd has ever seen was That Wis the turning point of the mutiny of 18! lady at Delbl put into my hand an oll pair A ou r of about eight- een inches squ ire, a ploture well execut but chiefly valuable w t sented, It was a scene from mutiny; two horses at full run, nessed to a carriage in which were persons, She sald: “Those persons the front side ars my father and mothe The young lady on the back svat fog in her arms a baby of a y¢ my older sister, and the ba! sel’, My mother, who is Syva fever | a . "ye ¥ ng )OCAUSH We mother is driv standi vou hundred oity of n in this lone, ’ for the time enrs R's recovery purde w WO unti own you in the pleture the horses were wil ot only because the 18, but the horses were struck and pounded by sepoys, were the 1 Across way, and the savage hallag and the shout of revenge made all the way of our f t a horror.” The books fu > recorded the fsm displaye and approxim t re , but ie ne mention of this fam- fiy of Wagentreibers whose flight I am men- tioning. But the Madras Atheneum printed this : “And now! entroibers, though he wore a round hat and the servants r of us. This this scene of took place, with fright, 0 tise bh arg rer ns m tre ir she a erinoline, as worthy of imperishable | verse as tl tials grace + of the herole pair whose nup- { Charlemagne? A » than that ol the ling with well perv inck and ng fate his wife and Here was no stri YW has nquest ourt o 1d assall naman ne gray in front of sudden and peril, and in ancient days ourage a matter of he ustinet that we read In of heroes struck with H{ re the But the with their hoarse warory wasps around the Wagen ao terror into the brave His heroism was not the mers lespalr, but, like that of his 1 wise—standing upright that ight 1 iis arms better.” A« an incident will sometimes im- ne than a generality statement, | resent the ri ght of this one family from Jeihi merely to {llustrate the desperation ot the times, The fact was that the sepoys had taken possession of sity of Deibs, and they were, with all their artillery, fighting back the Europeans who wera oa the o ering all the EBaropeans w sity of Delhi has a three sides, a wa mi ig. andthe fourth side sided by the River Jumna, | two defenses of wall and £0,000 sepoys, all armed British soldiers were take that Nicholson, the immorta General, mnded them, and you must visit his grave before you leave Delhi, He fell leading his troops, He commanded them even after being mortally wounded You will read this inseription on his tom! Ti John son, who led the assault of Delhi, but ii In the hour of victory mortally wounded, and died 234 September, 1857, aged thirty-five years," With what guns and men General Nichol son could muster he had laid slege to this walled oity flliad with devils, What fearful odds’ Twelve hundred British troops un. coverad by any military works, to take a city surrounded by on the top of whieh ware 114 guns and fended by 40,000 foaming sepoys, A larger percentage of troops fell here than In any great battle I happen to know of, The Crimean percentage of the fallen was 17.48, but the percentags of Delhi w 357.0. Ym that efty must be taken, and it can only be taken by such cournge as had never bee “a re. corded in all the annals of bloodshed, charge of the British regiments against the walls and gat+s had bean beaten back. The 3 have! “te RO rol im panie sav and Oe ¥ enamy. 14) So) struck art. triebers man's he ebullitie .ealm an mor» » ot the erenuln flveanda tl the city is « addition t Water there Twelve He vee NL) hundred elty nm com Nichol wiehol | fell Inscribed thareon, and ropes | | of Delhi, I thought to mysel! | an 11f the heart * | Every | to the Lord Almighty, hyenas of Hindoolsm and Mobammedanpm | bowied over the walls, and the Eaglish army could do nothing but bury thelr own dead. Bat at this gate [ stand and wateh An exploit that makes the page of history tremble with agitation, This clty has ten gates, but the most fam ous Is the one helore which we now stand, and It is ealled Cashmere gate words In red Ink beosuss of the sarnage. Write them in letters of light for the {lias trioas deeds, Write them in letters of blaok for the berelt and the dead, Will the world ever forget that Cashmere gate? Lieuten- ants Balkeld and Home and Sergeants Bur. geese, Carmichael and Smith offered to take bags of powder to the foot of that gate and set them on fire, blowing open the gate, al though they must dis in doing It. There they go just after sunrise, each one Sutviing (4 an sack containing twenty-four pount of | r powder, and doing ths under the snemy, Lieutenant Home wos the first to jump | into the ditch, which still remains before the gate, As they go, one by one falls under the shot aud shell, One of the mpttally wounded ns he falls hands his sack of der with a box of lucifer matches to —- other, telling him to fire the sack, when, with an explosion that shook the earth for twenty miles around, part of the Osshmere wo of the | oitlos Write the | gate was blown into fragments, and the bodies of some of these heroes were so scattered they were never gathered for fun- eral or grave or monument, The British army rushed in through the broken gate, and although six days of hard fighting wore necessary before the olty was jin Sowpiate possession the crisis was past, The Cash- mere gate open, the capture of Delt and all it contained of palaces and mosques and troasures was possible, Mr. Lord Napler, of Magdala, of whom Gladstone spoke to me so affectionately | Xion 1 wns his guest at Hawarden, England, has lifted a monument near this Cashmere gate, with the names of the men who there That Eoglish lord, who had seen courage on many a battlefield, visited this Cashmero gate and felt that the men who opened it with the loss of their own lives bught to be commemo- rated, and hence this cenotaph, But, after all, the best monument is the gate itself, with the deep gouges in the brick wall on the lett side made by two hombshells, and the wall above torn by ten bombshells, and the wall on the right side defaced scraped and plowed and gullied by all styles of long reaching weaponry. “Cashmere gate,” as a synonym for pat- riotism and fearlessness and self sacrifice, go Into all history, all art, all litera ture, all time, all eternity! My friends, that kind of courage sanctified will yet take the whole earth for God. Indeed, the mis slonaries now at Delhi, toiling amid heathen ism and fever and cholera, and far from home and comfort, and staying until they drop into their graves, are just as brave in taking Delhi f Christ ns Nicholson and Home and C t Delhi for Great Britain, the first sermonlie Another thing you n Delhi, though you leave seen, is the palace ofthe m inclosure 1000 yar 1s by 500, You enterthro « vaulted hall nearly 400 feet long. FI of Florentine mosale and walls once em eralded and sapphired and earbunoisd liamonded, I sald to the guide, ‘Show where stood the peacock throne.’ “Here was,” he responded, All the thrones of the earth put together would not equal that for costliness and brilliance, It had steps of sliver, and the seat and were of solid gold. It cost about $150,000, WX). It stood between two peacocks, the feathers and plumes of which were fashions ut of colored stones, the throne wns a life sizs parrot cut ve all w w Tako this for lesson, 15t sen if you g many things gules, It is onoa it | this, is this, is t! that stood 1! r, taking all the whites sinughter, anldn wa wither an ts fruits while lox ing at the brilliant n and standin 1 the vanish | of that thror yn that some miter change little that Persian 1 the wall and nake it read : If there be a place whe That place is this, is this, As I came out of the palace into the street paradises are not built out of ston not out in souls ture ; are not paiited on walls ; are not fash oned out of precious stones ; do not spray the sheek with fountains; do not offer thrones r crowns. Paradises are ballt out of na- tures uplifted and ennotl what leoay, nach you miss, is this, is this, 06; are ed, and architect's compass may not sweep, aod | A hn iad the Wag ' sculptor’s chisel may not cut, and painter's may not sketoh, and gnrdonar's skill may not lay out the graces of God can achieve, and if the heart be right all fs right, w wrong all is wrong. He endeth the sex But I will not ye The third thing y that you ! lied JTumm ) leave Delhi, nust soa, or never admit India, is the sue It the grandest wque I ever saw axoopt S& Sophia at Oc stantinople, but it surpasses that in son respects, for Sophia was rigin all Christirn church and changed Intoa while this of De hi was origioally bal the Moslems : As I entered 1000 or m were prostrated in nes when 5000 me sttitade, in st. wre Mohammedans worship There are nay bo seen here in the Each ne of the floor ls ne and a hall wide, ana one of these slate for ! The erection of this bullding reg tired 5000 laborers for six years. What a built up immensity ot white marble and rad sandstone! Wa descended the forty marble steps by which we ascended 1d took another look at this wonder of the rid, As I thought nust have had “1 at w what a brain the architect who first built that mosque in bis own imagination, and as | thought what an opulent ruler that must have vho gave the order for such vastness an try, I was reminded rfectly explained al he arct wnned this was the sams anned the Tha) namely, au -—-and the king wh nsructed was Ta] ~namely, grand mogul lsred bullt the most endid palace the dead when * ifit the Taj at Agra, he here ordersd bulit the most splendid palace ot worship for the living at Delhi, here what sculp nod architecture can accomplish, They link Yagether the centuries, They successfully defy tin Two hundred and eighty years AKO Aust in de Bordeau and Shah Jehan « quit this life, but thelr work lives and bids falr to stand until the continents crack open, and hemispheres go down, and this planet show ers other worlds with its ashes I rejoles iu all these big balldings, whet her ladionted to Mohammed or Bmbhma or Bud dha or Confucius or Zoroaster, because as St. Bophia at Constantinople was a Christian church changed into a mosque and will yet be chang] back again, so all the MOM] Nee and temples of superstition and sin will yet be turned into churches, When India and Ceylon and Chins and Japan are ransomed, as we all believe they will be, their relfghons structures will all be oon verted into Christian asylums, and Ohristian schools, and Christian libraries, and Chris tian churches, Dallt at the expense of su- perstition and sin, they will yet be dedionted Here ondeth the "wal been Syma orderad the md king who ord Jahan, As tha Shah w for ” Hea ture third lesson, AS that night we took the rallrod train from the Delhi through the city now living over the aster buried under this anciant capital, oities under sities, and our tuaveling ser. vaut had unrolled our bed, which consisted of a rug and two blankets and a plllow.and as | In a minaret, where a Mohammedan priest | had mumbled his call to prayer, I seemed to and | away | thers | for Let the words | | and controversy and jo! FADSOL were | wrmiohael in tak- | | and all the in! - | a populatio and | us i Arms | i re | aturs ha losed on | | problem is stated and solved by station and roiled out | y | 100, : we wore worn out with the sightseeing of the | day, and were roughly tossed on that uneven Indian rallway, I soon fell into a troubled | sloop, In whish | saw and heard In a con- | fused way the sosnes and sounds of the | mutiny of 1887, which at Delhi we had boen recounting, and now the rattle of the train seemed to turn into the mttle of musketry, and now the Hght at the top of the ear de- lauded me with the idea of a buming eity, saw dead sigiment fallen across dead gh ] ment, and heard the rataplan of the hoofs | of Hodgson’ 8 horse, and the dash of the | Bengal artillery, and the storming by the im | mortal fourth column, and the roughar the | Indian railway became and the darker the | night grow the more the scenes that I had been studying at Delhi came on me * like an incubus, But the morning began to look through the window of our jolting railcar, and the sunlight poured in on my pillow, and in my droams I saw the bright colors of the Eagilsh flag hoisted over Delhi, where the green banner of the Moslem had wavea, andthe volees of the wounded and dying soomed to be exchanged for the voices that welcomed soldiers home again, And as the morning light got brighter and brighter, and in my dream I mistook the bells at a station for a chureh bell hanging hear a chant, whether by human or angelic volees in my dream [ could not tell, but it RN aide Sse: RRR x RR Aa HE U. S. Governinient Chemists have reported, after an examination of the different brands, that the ROYAL Bak- ing Powder is absolutely pure, greatest in strength, and superior to all others. ROYAL BAKING POWDER COMPANY, 108 WALL 87, NEW-YORK. ~~ ENE NNN EINE > * - 4) i ER DRA De ON OO OF /n German Toy Industry. An Interesting Relie, Senator Perkine, of California, has was a ch ant about “pence and good will to men,” And as the speed of the rail train sluckenod the motion the 80 easy as we rolled along the track that it seemed to me that all the distress | ting and wars of the world had oceas»d, and in my dream I | thought we had coma to the 34 of thie Lord shall return and come to Zion with songs and everlastipe joy upon sir heads, and sorrow and sighi shall los away.” Halt here at what you have 1, A depopulated city, the India, I'he strange fact is that a ruler abandoned his palaces at Amber and move Jaipur, wbitants of the city followed, hers and there a house in Amber by a hermit, the city is as silent n as Pompell Herculaneum, but those cities were emptied by voleanle isastor, while this city of Amber was va- ated because Prinos Joy Singh was told | + Hindoo priest that no city ald ited more than 1000 years, and 170 years ago 3 ind all his people moved 4 ou visit A ar hh f r Pr .rmission ot tained for your v fore at Jalpur, an elephant is for you about six miles out to take up the steeps to ber. You pass rough the Awh uilly qu stroots, all the t that trod them in the days of theirs having of the ng never seen bo. ty of Amber, Excapt weupled of “ shot hie 80 the maelf on an els ny 3 ing , but for the sake yas whim the 1 fore . yf Amber | pol th ity m the dav jy it, Its flora ) monstrogs and savage oative, | ita idolatry so tion so ken! Q& ita aplendo HS 80 uplif ting, its architec old, so grand, so educational, so potent, that India will not be a COW pros bended until science has made Is last sx. wriment, and exploration has ended fos Inst Frome and the library of the world's liter. its last door, and Christiane anYe ig so flam! eo, is ralogy so! Lure so muiti ny t st ao } Aas strae book now kn wh, © opolis, where once the h of P tips means for increasing hair, prepared f hesch of Teta, the King of Upper a Egypt.” Dog's tecth, over and asses’ hoofs were care! in oil, and then grated. As befo re Cheops, for hs older than at pyram: (dizeh, and i to dats more than 6 The | Venom held portant place iu m A str broth made from them and mixed + salt and spices and andred remedies, mplo: name of rine, As i ais Uso ir Sel this the gr 8 supp sod JN) years re 18 ad it “ us rpen an WAR 0 Ih ivable the blood of relief to the epile; mal preparations are of sperm, wax, tallow, musk, cochineal, nasty mixtures Ev en leeches are than formerly. cupping were considers leeches held the third pl for 1 purpose ; and in the Paris hos; between 1820 and 1836, from 000 to 6,000,000 leeches were used an nually, drawing from the unfortunate patients 1700 handred weight of blood. These examples indicate the legree of the changes that made in the science of Pathfinder, C 4 at OANe LM ) 1m 4] HWind 1 laoel to ineches, ete., have disapp sh loss When bl empl important, Ae itals, 5 000 . have been medicine, m— Eating lee, The following thermodynamical the “A boy oats two ounces of Let us soe what is the approxi- mately thermodynamio equivalent of Engineer: | the work he has made his interior do. assuming he takes five minutes to eat it. In melting the ioe he will re quire eighteen units to reduce it to water. To raise it in temperature to that of his inside he will require seven more unite, or a total of twenty-five British | equivalont as and then the loud thump of the rallroad | brake war In dream mistaken for » booming battery, and the voloes at the dif. ferent stations made me think | heard the loud cheer of the Dritish at the taking of the Cashmere gate, and as we rollsd over | bridges the battles before Delhi seemed going on, and ns we went through dark tun- nels | seamnd to sen thetomb of Humayun in which the King of Delhi was hidden, and in my dreams I saw Lieutenant Renny of the artillery throwing shells which were handed to him, their fuses burning, and Campbell and Reld and Hops i with blood, and Nicholson falling while ral. | much heat work as would, | chine having unit efficiency, raise him {104 feet high, or a rate of Lest ex- thermal units, Taking the mechaniosl 777 foot pounds, this will be equal to 19,425 toot pounds If the boy weighs 100 pounds, he will have called upon his stomach to do as with a ma- traction equal to nearly an eighth of n horse power.” I — The flesh under the nails looks red — Grant eoraiod | beeanse the nails are almost transpar. ent, and thus the color of the tissue Iving on the wall bls wavering trooos. and 1 | beneath in viaible ear became | time when “‘the | The history of the toy industry in | | Germany extends back to the middle Ages, In the thirteenth century | | Nuremberg toys were celebrated, and | | to this day it is the centre of the Ger man production. Berlin Stutt | mart De manufacture quanti | ties, and, in addition, in the thickly wooded districts, wherethe pe poor and agriculture bad, toy-ms has become a household industry, tends to keep the wolf from the door. Indeed, the industry in Germany is essentially a domestic one, in every member the family part, and it is carried on with the work of the field. The for special articles pictures, picture DOOKS, diers, and the like. In Fra: dustry is comparatively is concentrated in Paris, where 4000 operatives are engs business, over 2400 They Are by far the n the production of toys. Their fing and n handlix the ntag ud t ) AVETRS given to the Washington Geographi- cal Society an interesting relic shap y of the was found in a whale taken in Bering { Ben in 1890, bearing the the old Montezuma | Wh of the old filled with stone and sunk in Charles ton Harbo: the Federal Govern- ment during the War of the Rebellion, and had not hs en in Bering Bea for ten vears pre Yigusly, 8 long years the ,whal { weapon with it in all its New York Post, r. PIERCE’ Golden Medical ISCOVERY Cures Ninety-eight per cent. of all cases of Consumption, in all its Earlier Stages. head of a harpoon that and ‘ name ol This Ips that large whal¢ r one sh were ple are king ph y nnd which N 4 this wanderings tal y carried LCE B bv side aud the f Oi side ar such large factories 18 IR Oae peel mgh by m One Remedy for Insomnia, i or other, away the o { time, tho iden the heads of the human family y that it was injurious to eat just bef *o bed. This peculiar and unn w had caused many a ale es night ane a weary day. Just how it ever obtained its general stand: ing among intelligent people might | i be an inberesting study for some-one- who likes to delve after mysteries, As be d! hun | thi ng % ntur him IGADY ” | p ites had also been o faikisfuily tried 18 vain The photographs of a large number of those cured of consumption, bronchitis, Yiogeriog coughs rr tremit catarth and kindred maladies, have been skillfully reproduced in a book of pages which will be mailed to ¥ on re matter gry that a guilty of. eat { as ut sol 0 to i going is abe XxX Cet sil " heartily eat to [| "1 LA petite and who frequently kep ess nights o the The d during sleep, and, indeed, are carried on in the best | possible manner at this time, there be- other forces at to draw ity from what is for the its most important business be well i every fs provision for this could Keep f ready cold, or a eup of broth or It would take very little ti » do this, and the lelicate memt SF om have 18 the never eat 8 Ww neartiiy, are awake and pass sieepl 0 aoe . stoms 138 | yO ORR What pre ing no # work the vital ment would SOME y It He yer me mental and “W rs im freque hold would be S New } greatly proved rk Le: of the most ——— The Oldest Hal « Trade Secret, . worl ] : and t The oldest secret trade process now in existence is in all probability either that method of inlaying the hardest steel with gold and silver, which wecms to have been practiced at Dam- nscus ages ago, and is still known only to the Syrian smiths and their p upils or the ture of Chi red or vermillion ‘hicago Herald reach of : the book. Write York, Seq : to B for the ¥ little book on ences and correction) elae nese gist, th * A Fair Face Cannot Atone for an Untidy House.” Use ~~ SAPOLIO oo Blood Diseases such as Serofula and Anmmia, Skin Eruptions and Pale or Sallow Complexions, are speedily cured by Re0tEs : Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil. Xo other rem- edy so quickly and effectively enriches and purifies the blooa and gives nourishment to tho whole system. It is pleasant to take and easy on the stcmach. Thin, Emaciited Persons and all suffering from Wasting Diseases are re stored to health by Scott's Emulsion, Be sure you get the bottle with our trade-mark on it, Refuse cheap substitutes! Send for pamphict on Scott's Emulrion. FREE, Soott & Bowne, N. Y. All druggists. 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FRIC 210% VEED 160 | BEECHAM’ “PILLS { Veg They £ tal le Are For CONe e of all thines for e than half - 365 Canal stree CoxstiraTioN (its If vou are no it Ca 1e pills will be sent b v mail, 2% cents. DOUGLAS HOE 2 nee, 5, CORDOVAN, FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALF, 42350 Fine CAL BXANoARDD $3.89 POLICE, 3 SoLES, wee. WORKIN EXTRA FINE. WL w. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are Squatty sattstaciry i I he hut yutus Er CH. supply you we can. HOTELARAGON Atlanta, Georgia. THE PALAGE HOTEL OF THE SOUTH. Every modern improvement known to FE tect calsine and « Most uniform UNITED STATES, _MEXD FOR ROOK
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