‘REV. DR. TALMAGE. BUNDAY'S SERMON IN THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MUSIC, Subject: *‘The Glorious Gospel.” TexT of the blessed God, which was committed to my trust."-I Timothy 1., 11. The greatest novelty of our time is the gos- pel. It is 80 old that it {8s new, As Fotos and artists are now attempting to pitchers and cups and ourlous ware those of 1900 years ago recently brought from buried Pompeii, and such cups and pitchers and curious ware are universally admired, so any who ean unshovel the real gospel from the mountains of stuff un der which it has been buried will be able to present something that will attract the ga and admiration and adoption of all the peo- le, It is amazing what substitutes have been presented for what my text calls *“‘the glori ' There has been a hemi spheric ap There are “According to the glorions gospel ne us § v people in this and all ot who have no more id | really is than they have od in the fourteenth cha; he Bible of the Hind py of which I ever saw I purchas utta last September, The old g feet under, and the k has ¥ the ¢ i hose who have trying to con There is no | matter of faith! have beer have t gion." theol pre] doubts tha POD on yr = 5 = y ‘AP ON CENDHORP SID ® Oo ad] b= . sro That hay y, saving sin Go in peace.” The theological ¢ Upan the plush of the exquisitely pit a le 1 d garden of B mon's Son 1 : rvexi that pul dis the entum and i R31 yer of ; the Atiantie ©O when a 1 y of the Beptember equi nox ft ikes the Highlands of the Navesink The meaning of the word “ge spel” Is ‘good news." and mytext says it is glorious good pews, and we must tell it in our churches, and over our dry goods counters, and in « factories. and over our threshing machines, and behind our plows, and on our ships decks, and in our parlors, our nurseries and kitchens as though it were glorious good new and not with a Clsmal drawl in our voloe, and a dismal | our faces, as though re lgion was a rheumatic twinge, or a dyspep- tie pang, or a malarial chill, or an attack of nervy prosteation, With nine “blesseds” “hapoys,” Christ began anit-hirssed the poor mourner; 1 the meok: blessed the hun gry: blessed the merciful; blessed the pure blessed the peacemakers; blessed the pers cuted; blessed the reviled; blessed, blessed, blessed; happy, happy, happy. Gloriou good news for the young as through Christ they may have their coming years ennobled, and for a lifetime all the angels of God their cond jutors, and all the armies of heaven their allies, Glorious good news for th middie aged as through Christ they nr have their j« rplexities disentanglod and their courage rallied, and thelr victory over « obstacles and hindrances made forever agro Glorious good news for the aged as they may have the sympathy of Him of whom St. John wrote, “His head and His balrs were white like wool, as white as snow,” and the de fense of the everlasting arms, Glorious good news for the dying as they may have mini tering spirits to escort them, and opening gates to receive them, and a sweep of eternal glories to encircle thom, and the welcome of a ving God to embosom them, Oh, my text is right when it ake of the glorious gospel, It is an invitation from the most radiant Being that ever trod the earth mig ur ok on blessed binge Wahon | lke | up | His sermon on | the | or ascended the heavens, to you and me to come and be made happy, and then take af- ter that a royal castle for everlasting resi- dence, the angels of God our cup bearers The price paid for all of this on the cliff o | limestone about as high as this house, about { seven minutes’ walk from the wall of Jerusa- { lem, where with an agony that with one | hand tore down the rocks, and with the other drow a midnight blackness over the heavens, our Lord set us foraver free, Making no apology for any one of the million sins of our | life, but confessing all of thom, wo can point to that oliff of limestone and say, “There was paid our indebtedness, and God never ool loots a bill twice," Christian poets have exerted thelr pen in ex tolling the matchless one of this gospel 1sane Watts, how do you fesl concerning Him? And he writes, “I am not ashamed to own my Lord,” Newton, what do you think of this gospe And he writes, “Amazing grace, h sweet the wound!” Cowper, what 10 yon think of Him? And the answer comes ‘Theres {8 @ fountain filled with blood Charles Wesley, what do you think of Hi And he answers, "Jesus, lover of my soul.’ Horatlus Bonar, what do you think of Hin And he responds, “I lay my sins on Jesns,' Ray Palmer, what do you think of Him? An he writes, “My faith looks to Thee.’ Fannie Crosby, what do you And she writes, ‘Bless mine,” Butl take! ur un nest 1 : ¥ neappie, wordy fone 4 {ded J 1 this sente ught oll ut whom matio at all, d our rans our strit ir strip A we He m. EE ur resurres rious name forever Facing the anthems 8] [ | | | | | Glad am I that all the | resplendont | t, and I will seo ft—the | day of His coronation. On a throne already Methinks the day will come when in somes great hall of eternity all the Nations of earth whom He had conquered by His grace wil assemble again to erown Him. high and immense and upholstered as with the sunrise and sunsets of 1000 years, grea audience room of heaven. of na Adirondack forest the ransomed mult tudes, and Christ standing on a high place surrounded by worshipers and aubjects, shall ¢ the pr. early ge shall ¢ phets; they shall come out us led on by chamg ions of the truth, heroes and heroines yet to be born. And then from that vastest Wide and | Like the leaves | hey | ime out of the farthest past led on by of the spel days lad on by the aposties; they | me out of the centuries still ahead of | audience ever | assembled In all the universe there will go up | the shout: “Crown Him! Him!" and the Fat isa this His only begotten Theo the heathen for the uttermost paria session,’ shall set the crown upon the fore. head yet scarred with erueifition bramble, and all the hosts of heaven, down on the levelsand up in the galleries, will drop on their knees, orying: “Hail, King of earth! King of heaven! King of saints! King of sornphs! Thy kingdom is an overlasting kingdom, and to Thy dominions there shall no endl Amen and amen! Amen and amen” Son, “I will give Thine inheritance and Big Lumber Combine, The lumber manufacturers of the East and North and the forest owners of the same gee. tions met in Boston, Mass, , and organized the | Northeastern Lumbermen’s Association, | Those present represented over $75,000,000 | invested in forest lands, ssw-mills, wood. | working manufactories and the | of lumber generally, y Crown Him! Crown | r who long ago prom of the earth for Thy pos. | manufacture ' Purchase at Afty conts an noes SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON MARCH 3, FOR Lesson Text: ““ The Raising of Laz arus,” John xi,, 30-45 -Gold- en Text: John xi, 25 Commentary, probable that 11.4 wmulng fos is fF 4 whic} ave the Dred fraud t Mn Within ourse wir We Ourselves gr vas waillln for t} adoption » wi 1 AYP RIIYER What a word it is tod isin it ¥Y WAL ID forever settled {no heay beginning, and it sha exix., 59 160; Isa, xl. & 45. Many will still believe they see real fe and liberty bear the name of Jesus, but a mere name to live where there Ia no real life will never honor Christ nor win people to Him. But as in the context this miracle stirred up the hatred of those who were meorely religious without any reality we may be sure that real life will work just that way still Lesson Helper, tan n Jesus when in those who " South's Coal Statistics of the 1 Alabana, Georgian 1894 are given Trade tots al production und North Car in a satement « mm piled bv the United gical Burvey shown that Alabama produced § valued at 3, 082.007, against 5.156 935 1998 worth 85.09. 720 is was a of 758 008 short tons, or fifteen vent, and a loss in valun { 21,114.78 over twenty per cont Che total product of 854.111 short t aint 1803, a decrease of only 18,629 short fs, about five per cont he howeye shows even a sharper decline than that of a) abama, being $365,972 in 189 1, and only #200200 in 18M Extensive Improvement were in progress throughout the year at the mines at Egypt Depot, Chatham Cou North Carolina, and the produ 1 what curtailed in consequence, Anew mine In Moore Coun'y began ahi ping in 18 The total prodiict for the State fn 1804 was 13,150 short tons, worth $20,500 at the mines, inna States Gool near Georgia in ne, yaius Land at Vifty Conta an Acre, Four million meres of Ric nx : Indian reser. vation land are now open ww settiement by | fashion this season.’ { choly f woman who opalescent phantascy ISM was | 172,740 tons in “Brunettes seem much in the the melan- stout wo de rby Large, men Wearing n gmanll make even mile, Ings to Ex-Benator John J wants vote Mrs. Joseph M. White has built a { home at Kensico for the waifs of New York There nro five ( ain Th { , at a cost of ab not Eva Nansen, is a cian, and has lat a {fo meeort 1} YO Dr been bu, that & na A Ale it rments, Hand-painte drut throw sir, or lallions on t $ Ri AUS alle xiravag 1 to this ele sled, In with small dismonds snd « a 2000 Fhe Vass per metr Ar a uniform to be v to consist of Iress be { | | lege, A Dia ith eap, the cost of which mid ww £1.50, Rich students and that dress should cease wr distinetlions of , mit the of the 1ustitution has vetoed form. agreed the Frances Hodgson Burnett o' Lowries " One Administration’ in 1883, and since then has written mainly children’s stories, the best known being “‘Little Lord Fauntleroy.” She was born Lanoashire, England The sununal report of the New York | Woman's Work shows | Exchange for that last year it sold over 813,000 worth of home-taade cakes, and that since 1878 the value of the cakes sold has been nearly $140,000, The Ex- change bas thus far filled 73,962 or- ders for embroidery and fancy articles, and only 271 were "‘un- satisfactory sowing, Lady Randolph Churchill, it is not generally known, had conferred upon her by Queen Victoria some years ago the Imperial Order of the Crown ol India, » distinction exceptional among women, and to be interpreted ni a special mark of royal favor, al beit Lady Chnrehill often refrained from attending the court ‘functions’ «hen it was her privilege and right to ) BO, » alike | ¢ lege | President | uni- estab. | lished her popularity as a writer of | fiction in 1877 by her tale “That Lass | She published ‘Through in | e > % a ‘s od Gd How's This! arch Apri Are the Best Months in Which # & (7% # w/ N, 4 - - AR RS ONE ENJOYS th the method and results when of Figs ken; it is pleasant refreshing to the taste, and acts F nily yet promptly on the Kidneys, aver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels cold head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation, { yrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effecta, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popt ly known. yruj Figs is for sale in 50 cent bottles by all leading drug- gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro- cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA Fi6 SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, BY YN U9 WALL 8T, PRRs} Arno Charlies A, Baldwin & Ce, 40 Wa ENSIO JON W.MoRRIS, Washington, b, 0, Successfully P Lavaprren yb Aa J tes Cixims. Jyrein inal war LU adiodioating claims, sity slos ] | i -s Beware: you an imitation. be honestesemd if back you n mn | sealed by se XI | A Pleasant is no trouble in ke eping thing Pearline is better than soap. 50ap, you need hard work ; for easy work, SE BOO a8 or "the \ \ Pearline is never peadied, if your proces May ”n nariila Id Ca ( } | 03d LITTLE PAINS SERIOUS ILLNESS HEADAC HE, DIZZINESS { RI'PANS ! | TABULES | 00% 99% %%% aa) of Cuffs by mail for Bis 2 Address LLAR COMPANY, by 81, Boelon PTE f m 138 | AV. 1 2. 4 Pe on " 1y Money in Chicken: For nD slamps we send a 100 1 X Perino alee «nod nan working TilsJaring 2 J ww Petes Food Tor Rees wa wis everything re for § able Poultry reals BOOK PUBLIsUING « 134 Leonard Street, New York te parodiy Reflection -~the fact that easy washino has been made safe. i Pearline came, it was danger. ous. Pearline takes away the Until danger as it takes away the work. There is no scour. ing and scrubbing, to wear things out ; there 5 clean, With me unscrupuious grocers wili tell Pearline you, ITs wends IAMES PVE % v Same as hel i] You Will Realize that “They Live Well Who Live Cleanly,” if You Use SAPOLIO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers