rT?Zq&Fy ,"3gPB:,W5gn pfra 7 'Ssk&'pS ifi'r1" WONDERS OF NUBIA. Evidences of an Advanced Civiliza tion in the Dawn of Time FOUKD ALOKG THE DrPEE KILE. The Black Man Gave Greatness to itfjpt, and ""irjpt to Greece. MISTEKIES OF THE GREAT KIVEE. IWBITTEX rOB THE DISPATCH.l Our knowledge of the ancients ii con fined to those people who lived in the neigh borhood of the Mediterranean, and hence the word meaning "Sea in the middle of the earth." Ancient history is said to be'a his tory of murders, conquests and crimes, and is onlv interesting to us when it treats of the advancement of religion, learning and the arts tand sciences, and consequent re finement. The learning displayed by the Egyptians 2,300 years before Christ was much greater than that of the Asiatics of a far later date, and was spread to Greece, to Borne, and finally to Amend. The word Egypt came from the Greek word Aijryptns, but in the heiroslyphics it was called Kemi, or the Black Land, from the color of the soil. The cultivated part of Egypt is only that part which is annually inundated by the overflow of the Nile. The Valley of the Nile, which contains all ot Egypt, is inclosed by the Libyan Mount ains 1,000 feet above tide on the west, and the Arabian Mountains on the east. The parched land of Egvpt is refreshed at night by heavy dews, which make the nights cool and comfortable, and by varying winds dur ing the day, which come as regularly as do the season. THE OTEicrLOW OP THE XILE. The great phenomenon of Egypt is the annual overflow o! the Kile. About the end of June the red water appears, and gradually, but steadily rises until the end of September, when it rapidly subsides, leav ing a deposit of black alluvium and of calcoreous matter which is used for a fertil izer, for pottery, for bricks and otherwise. The crop are sown in November and reaped in Marcb. There are two instruments called Kilom eters in use on the Nile, one on the island of Rhoda, opposite Cairo, and the other at Elephantine, near Assuan. They are used to measure the height of the water, all of the irrigating canals are kept closed until the water in the Kilometers reaches 38- feet, when they are opened and the water spreads all over Egypt, and as the water rises the whole country becomes an inland sea. If the water rises to 52 feet, the crops will be ruined and consequently the taxes also. The Kilometer acts in two ways it measures the water and the amount of taxes, for as the prospects of good crops increase, bo do the prospects of a large tax. Accord ing to Pliny, if the inundation did not reach 13 cubits a famine ensued 14 cubits caused rejoicing, 15 was safety and 16 was delight, which last number is symbolically repre sented by the figures of little children play in" , 'around the river god in Roman states. The Cairo Kilometer consists of a stair way down a wall to low waterlevel. On one wall is engraved a series of lines indicating the rise and fall of the river during the time that the Caesars were in possession of Egypt "WHEBE THE WATEK COMES FBOSI. The Blue Kile rises in Abyssinia, while the White Kile rises in the lake region of Eqnatoiial Alrica at Victoria Kyanza. 3,800 feet above tide. It flows thence into Albert Kyanza down a tremendous cataract. At Khartoum the two Kiles meet. The equa noxial rains fall early and very heavily in Equatorial Africa and cause a general over flow ot the whole country, so that it is in winter a series of lakes and bogs. Such a tremendous amount of water comes from the equatorial .country that the Kile for 460 miles above Khartoum is from one to two miles wide and qnite deep. The largest tnbutaryis thcAtbara river, which flows into it from, the west and con tains all the rich deposit' which washes down the Kile 1,500 miles, enriching the country on both sides. It comes from Nubia, and without it the whole of Egypt would be ruined, because the Kile does not seem to collect otherwise any of the enriching de posit which it distributes annually through out the valley. For 1,500 miles from the Atbara to the sea no other tributary flows into the Niie, but yet it rolls on at the rate of three miles an hour, fighting the hot, sandy desert and its fiery winds, the burning sun and us rapid evaporation, and enriches the Mediterranean with scarcely any dimin ution in volume after traveling 3,300 miles from its source. It iurnisbes more good to more people than any other river in the world. Many rivers flow through great populations, but no people depend for life itself oil the annual overflows of anv river. The changing of the course of those lakes in Central Africa would destroy Egyptand all of her people. The god Nilus was a lesser divinity among the Egyptians and his at tributes were the Sphynx, the crocodile, hippopotamus and dolphin. THE GREAT BEGULABIXJ. The annual overflows of the Nile is one of the great phenomena of the earth, for it has for many ages risen within a few hours of the same time, and a few inches of the same height year after year Bince and probably before history began. Four leet of a rise at Damietta or "xhe Rosetta branches indicate a rise of at least 56 feet at Thebes. The whole valley from moun tain range to mountain range is covered with water, while the villages" which nave been built upon their own shores princi pally for so many ages, have gradually at tained a high altitude above the surround ing plain, and look like islands in the uni versal flood. Sometimes dikes are required around the villages to keep out the water if it is unsually high, especially of late years, for the river has been coming down a little stronger or higher daring the past few years than for many centuries. , In some sections there are many cause ways running from village to village, giv ing communication during inundation and allowing of travel. It is very seldom that a village is lost by a flood, it being watched too closely during high water. The accumula tion of soil in this great valley is estimated at 40 feet in 4,000 years one foot in 100 years. In Middle and Upper Egypt there are numerous canals used in commerce and for irrigating purposes, to reach localities where the flood would not touch. On ac count of hot, dry, sandy winds, the filthy manner ot life and general listlessness of people in very hot countries, many diseases prevail, such as opthalmia, dysentary and cholera. Opthalmia is so bad" that most of the inhabitants have only one eye and many none at all, while everybody has sore eyes. Foreigners and even Africans are hard to acclimatize. DKIXKIKG THE NILE WATER The natives claim that no traveler can drink of the sacred waters of the Kile with out wanting to return. "What champagne is to other wines, is the water of the Nile to other waters." An Arab proverb is that had Mahomet drank the water of the Nile he would never have been prevailed upon to go to Paradise. Harvests follow each other in rapid succession, according to the kinds ot grain. The cold weather, so called in winter, lasts during December and January. February brings springy During lour or five months of the spring and summer Egypt is the hottest country in the same lat itude on earth. The theraometer averages 90 in summer and 60 in winter. Between the sea and Cairo rain, thunder storms or hail would be a phenomenon, as they seldom occur during the year, but irom Cairo toward the Soudan and Central Africa storms increase in number and volume. Hailstorms are accounted by the laborers as disastroni to crops in Lower Egypt. Lightning loses its deitructiveness, and is not so terrifying as in other parts of the world. Earthquakes have been felt fre quently, but there are no volcanoes, no cy clones, no convulsions of nature except heat 80UBCE OF THE GEEAT SXTEB. The source of the Kile has long been a mjitaj, on account of the Ignorant, vicious, barbarous natives, the intense heat and the long distance. Livingstone suspected that the Lualabt was the Kile, but Stanley proved in 1876-77 that the Lualaba was the Congo, and by his subsequent explorations proved that Sir Samnel Baker was right, and that the Victoria and Albert Kyanza were the soutce of the Kile, and that its course is 3.300 miles from there to the sea. A remarkable thing in this age of re search is that a newspaper man, H. M. Stanley, from the great est, should go almost' to the cradle of civilization to find the source of the oldest known river in the world. Granitic dykes cross the Nile at several places and form great cataracts. A very beantiful pink granite comes to the surface at Assuan, or ancient Syene, from which comes the name Syenitie granite. From these great quarries come the mag nificent monoliths and colossal monuments of Egypt. From Assuan to the sea sand and limestone are the principal rockST and from this limestone are built most of the pyramids and palaces of Lower Egypt. Building or ship timber is scarce along the Kile. Even in the Pharaohs time they had to send to Greece and Syria for timber and to Alrica lor ebony. CIVILIZATIOK OF ETHIOPIA. On the upper Nile ,in Ethiopia monu ments exist which goto show that originally the people livinjr in the upper river country, in Ethiopia, or Nubia which is the same thing, were farther advanced in the sciences and arts, tha'u from Thebes down. Ethiopia was far ahead of Egypt in all of the graces and refinements although the skins of the people were blacker. So, really, the black preceded the white races in knowledge, re finement and architectural intelligence, al though the white races arc now in the ascen dency In Hoskins' journey up the Nile he men tions that he found wonderful specimens of architecture on the island of Meroe which is about 300 miles long. This island is in Ethiopia and contains, savs he, "several groups of pyramidal structures of extra ordinary magnificence. The appearance of the pyramids in the distance announced their importance. The pyramids of Tizeh are magnificieut, wonderful for their stu pendous magnitude: but for picturesque effect and elegance of architectural effect Meroe leads them all." These sepulchres were built many years ago for the Kings and Queens of Ethiopia, lor Meroe was its capital. "From every point of view pyramid rises behind pyramid, and other magnificent groups amaze the eye. There are beautiful porches on the east side of each pyramid, which contained many objects of art and hieroglyphs." There are the remains of 80 of these pyramids in tnree groups. Most of these stupendous works are almost destroyed or buried, but traces of their beauty remain. THE ABCH OF VICTOBT Anyone who has been a traveler and has seen through Europe many beautiful arches of victory in different nations, would be astonished to learn that Ethiopia was the author ot the arch long before Europe came out of barbarism. All of the nations learned from Greece, Greece from Egypt and Eypt from Ethiopia; the white learned from the black. On this once populous island the gazelles now feed where a mighty nation had its capital city, and where a vast multitude of people passed daily. The city of Meroe is now only a pile ot bricks,and her sepulchres alone remain to tell of the frailty of human life and glory. Not a palace or temple is left to tell the tale simply the Acropolis. Abnusambul, a town on the lelt bank of the Kile, in Nubia, contains two rock-cut temples, which are considered to be the old est samples of architecture in the world. The largest contains 14 rooms, cut out of the solid rock. The largest is 52x57 feet and the ceiling is supported by two rows of massive pillars 30 feet high. Each pillar has a Colossus reaching to the roof. There are in front of this temple four colossal seated figures, which arc larger than any Egyptian sculpture yet discovered. They are each 65 feet high. Thev are supposed to represent Barneses the Great and Sesos tris. TVONDEBFUL BUISS AND MONUMENTS. Abydos, in Upper Egypt, was even in Strabo's time in ruins; but it contains the wonderful ruins of the Memnonium and a grand temple of Osiris. In Abydos was discovered in 1818 the celebrated tablet which gave the history in hieroglyphics of the eighteenth dynasty. All along the Nile are wonderful monuments, but the traveler seldom gets above the cataracts very far and consequently the Kile, through Ethio opia, is almost unexplored. Many Egyp tian scholars are anxiously waiting for the day when some adventurous man will eive a new revelation as to that singular dark people whose intelligence and wonderful knowledge increase as the dark folds of antiquity reveal them to us. The lower Nile has been described and visited by so many people that its ruins and antiquities are well known. One thing which they loved dearly, which is carved beautifully in every temple, and which has come down in all its ancient beauty, is the romantica water lily, lotus flower, or, as they call it in tneir unmusical language, snnin. Wherever there is an island in the Nile it contains the outlines of stupendous temples or colossal remains, many of them of great beauty. Parallel with and near the river are lonr great oases, two of which contain beautiful temples. One of them contains what is supposed to be the cele brated temple of Jupiter Ammon. There is also parallel with the Kile, probabfy 100 miles west of it, the bed ot a dry river named Bahr Bela runnibg for about 500 miles into the Nateona lakes, near Alexan dria, which was certainly in some mys terious past time a river as large as the Kile. TKANSPOBTINO THE GBANITE. There are many lazy boats traversing the Kile now, bnt during the pyramid, temple and palace building age, what must have been its activity in floating tremendous quantities of stone of size almost inconceiva ble 1 AVhen the river ran near the great quarries they used the water to float their immense stones, bnt if the quarries were far away from the river and the place of build ing, they would draw them. The lintel over the door of the temple of Karnak, which is 40 feet 10 inches iong by .five feet square, was drawn by slave or other labor as dorses were unknown. They had slaves to pull, guards to Watch them and. men to throw water on the sand in front of the block of stone, and a person whose duty it was to mark time by asong intended to make effort simultaneous like the negro or sailor ot our day. In one case 2,000 men were employed three years in bringing a stone from "the quarry to its resting place. TBEASUKES OF AN ISLAND. Elephantine, a small island in the Nile, opposite ancient Syene, near the Ethiopian border, was once the chief ivory market of Central Atrica. It has the rains of a beau tiful gateway of Alexander's time, a small temple and a Kilometer which was credited to one of the Cresars. It contains an in scription of the heights of the Nile in dif ferent years under the Boman Emperors. On tlijs small island are many interesting monuments, among which is a calendar re cording the rise of the Dog Star during the reign of Thothmes III. in the year 1445 u. C. Alexandria at one time contained about 600,000 inhabitants and was the rival of Borne and Antioch after it came under the Ptolemies, and from it were radiated intelli gence and learning over the known world. It has always been the Greek capital. After it was conquered by the Bomaus in 30 B.C. it at once commenced to decline. Alexan dria has under most of ner houses a vaulted cistern which in cases of danger will hold a year's supply of water, which is let in from thi.'lresh water canal lrom the Kile. The days of Alexandria's glory were be fore the discovery of America and the Cape of Good Hope route to India, after which she rapidly declined until she bad only 8,000 inhabitants, bnt the opening of the Suez Canal awakened her again, and' she is now the halfway station for all steam communi cation between the East and the West. Ne cropolis (a place of burial) is a suburb of Alexandria. It has many places for the re ception of the dead on the surface, beautiful monuments, obelisks and temples, while great caverns and galleries are cut in the soft rock: under the lower city, making a vast receptacle for the dead. , Btmbalo. THE lESSONS OF EASTER. Dwelling Place of the Soul on Earth and Beyond the Grave. THE PKOOF OP A RESURRECTION. That Christ Rose From the Dead Was Siiffi cient to Satisfy Paul. THE APOSTLE'S IDEA OP THE MANNER fWB'.TTEW TOR TEX DISPATCH. 1 Thirty years after the first Easter, St. Paul who had spent the better part of a long life going about proclaiming the Easter truth, ottered a prayer that be might know the power of Christ's resurrection "that I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection." Concerninc the fact of Christ's resurrection, there was not in his mind the shadow of adoabt St. Paul is sure of that from the bottom of his heart. But yet he is not satisfied. He desires to know the power of that supreme fact, that is, its bearings, its relations, its inferences, its meaning. He never expects in this life to know that fully. He has no expectation here of getting anywhere near the end of its infinite significance. But he wants to learn more. And he accounts it among the joysof the life to come that he will then "know Him and the power of His resurrection." Such a desire as this every Easter Day should brine: into the heart of every Chris tian. St Paul's prayer should be ours, that we may know not only the fact of the resurrection but its power. Accordingly, a year ago, in these pages, I spoke of the power of the resurrection in human thought, that is. as the fonndation of the Christian faith. I spoke of it as the proof of thesupernatnral, and showed you how it sets its seal to the divinity of Jesus Christ. THE EESUKBECTION OF THE DEAD. And I purpose speaking to-day regarding the power of Christ's resurrection in its bearings upon human destiny, as ittaffects and reveals our personal future, as it brings to light, life and immortality beyond the grave. My subject is the Besurrection of the Dead. Concerning the resnrrection of the dead, there are two instructive questions. First, as to the fact, will the dead indeed be raised? And then as to the manner. Hnw? We can state these two imperative questions in words taken from the Bible. "How say some among youihat there is no resurrection of the dead?" That is a question as to the fact. "Some man will say, how are the dead raised np, and with what body do they come?" That is a question as to the manner. Let us see how St. Paul answers these two Easter questions. First, as to the fact. AVill the bodies of the dead be raisea? The form of the question as 1 quoted it out of the writings of St. Paul shows that the fact had to face some men's denial. This denial has taken two shapes in the long course of hostile criticism of the creed. That the dead will be raised has been denied from the side of the soul and from the side of the body. In Corinth, in St Paul's day.f there were some who thought very highly of the soul and very meanly of the body. The Chris tian religion, almost at the beginning, had to meet an Oriental teaching, which had a peculiar fascination for the people of the iand and the time in which the Apostles preached. The purport of this teaching was that the body, and indeed all matter, is es sentially evil. The greatest misfortune which the human soul had to encounter was the fact that it was somehow tied to this miserable human body. The body was the source of all sin and wretchedness. ABHOBRENT TO SUCH BELIEVESS. To such believers the resurrection of the body was a monstrous and abominable doc trine. It was not only materialistic and de void of all spirituality, bnt it carried over into , heaven itself that which evjery good man ought to pray to be delivered from. It bound upon the soul of man an eternal burden of a body. In our own day denial of the resurrection of the body comes from exactly tne other side. It is the position of people who em phasize, not the soul, but the body. It is maintained by those whose whole thought is ot the body, and who do not believe that man has any soul at all. They have looked over the whole anatomy of man, they say, and a soul is nowhere to be found in him. Man is body and nothing else beside. When he dies he returns again to the earth, and then all His thoughts perish. The body is resolved into its original atoms so much oxygen, so much hydrogen, so much car bon, so much of this and that, and these atoms pass straightway into new combinations, and. a part goes into a blade of grass, and a part into a tree, and a part into the soil, and a part into the air, and there is an end of identity; the man has ab solutely ceased to be. To such thinkers the doctrine of the resurrection of the body is simply impossible. Kow, of these two forms of denial of the fact of the resurrection, one from the side of the soul, the other from the side of the body, one has almost entirely disappeared, and the other is gradually disappearing. FAILURES OF MATERIALISM. There are no modern thinkers who main tain that the body is essentially evil. How ever, that old notion may linger here and there in practice as asceticism, it has no longer any place in modern thought. And materialism, on the other side, which a few years ago reached its highest point of as sertion, and after showing that "man is not only a vertebrate, a mammal, and a primate, bnt he belongs as a genus to the catarrhine family of apes," was just on the point, as it seemed, of demonstrating by scalpel and microscope and various chem icals that the soul is only "the product of the collocation of material particles" ma terialism has been sorely, if not fatally, wounded in the house of those who were taken to be its friends. "For my own part," says Mr. Jokfa Fiske, the leading exponent in this country of the doctrine of evolution, "I believe in the immortality of the soul." And Mr. Herbert Spencer, the foremost teacher of ev olution in the world, maintains that the soul is "in the deepest sense a divine efflu ence," something, that is, which God Him self has given' us, and which is a part of His own being. But when we have noted these two philo sophical objections, one from the side of the soul, the other from the side ot the body, we have by no means taken into account all doubt which exists regarding the doctrine of the resurrection. Probably the largest amount of scepticism is found not among the thoughtful bnt among those who are quite uutrained in thinking. There are a good many people who reason if we can call it reasoning in some such lashion as this: "I don't believe that can be so." "Why?" "Why, because I don't see how it can be so." The best answer to such an undefined but still very troublesome doubt is a good, solid fact. PBOOF OFFERED BY PAUL. Accoramgiy. ou x-aui, wno Knew men, answers the objectors to the resurrection ot the dead by the statement of one clear, proveable and convincing tact. Christ, he says, rose from the dead. "If there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen." But Christ is risen. St, Paul is perfectly sure about that. And Christ being risen, "the first traits of them that slept," how shall any say now, that the grave and gate of death is opened that there is no resurrection of the dead. But is this fact a fact? Let us look at it from the side of reason first, and then from the aide of history. We begin with reason. If Christ be not raised, see what conclusions follow. The first conclusion is that then the Son of Man was wrong. 'Ton are driven to this," sayi Frederick Robertson, drawing out the argu ment of the apostle, "that a pure, and just and holy life is not a whit more certain of attaining to God's truth than a false and selfish and hypocritical one. iubu sou ujpocrwc&i one i And the aecond conclusion is that the I PITTSBURG- DISPATCH. Christian relicion is false. It is all for nothing. "If Christ be not raised, then is our preaching vain, your faith also is vain." This whole religion, which takes the name of the Teacher of Kazaretb, and has all these centuries been shaping the destinies of nations, and to which the best and wisest men who ever lived have given their alle giance, is simply a "fatal, tremendous, awful failure." It is nothing but a great sham, a stupendous lie. Again, there is a third conclusion: "ir Christ be not risen," de clares St. Paul, "then are we found false witnesses of God; because we have testified ofGod that He raised up Christ, whom He raised not up if so be that the dead rise not." FACT OF CHRIST'S BESUBRECTION. There was no room for mistake touching the resurrection of Christ. He had risen or He had not. It rested neither with imagi nation, nor with faith, nor even with reason. It was a simple matter of the Benses. Peter, James, John, Mary of Magdala, the two going out to Emmaus. the company of the apostles, the assem bly of 500 beholders declared openly and without reserve that they had seen Christ, walked with Him, eaten with Him, touched Him, after He was murdered on the cross. It was a matter about which mistake was impossible. Those men and women spoke either the truth or a lie. And still again, there is a fourth conclu sion "If Christ be not raised then they also which arc fallen asleep in Christ are per ished." The dead are lost. Well adds the apostle, "If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miser able." - These are some of the conclusions, from which all thoughtful people shirkfwhich are involved in a denial o'f Christ's resur rection. We turn to history. St. Paul sums it all up in a sentence or two. "He was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve; after that He was seen of about five hun dred brethren at once, of whom the Greater part remain unto this present (that is, more than 250 men are still living, when St. Paul writes, who actually saw the risen Christ), but some are fallen asleep. After that he was seen of James, then of all the apostles. And last of all, he was seen of me also." Now, con cerninc this historical evidence, notice sev eral definite points. CHARACTER OF THE WITNESSES. Notice first the number of the witnesses. And remember what very different people made r.p this number. There was Peter, the impulsive. We have his words in the Acts and in his own epistles that is to say, in two ancient and independent writings tes tifying that he ate and drank with Christ alter He died on the cross. There was Thomas, the hard-headed, the doubter, one who looked always on the dark side. He cried. "My Lord, and my God," when he saw Him. There were James and Jude, Christ's brothers, of whom it is written that before His death "neither did His brothers believe on Him." After His death we find them enrolled among Christ's disciples. Something, plainly, had occurred to change their views. Notice, again, that none of these people had looked for a resurrection. The two going out to Emmau's represented them all. They had heard that His grave had been found empty, and that some women had seen there a vision of angels, but they were so entirely snrc that the cross had ended all that they thought it not worth while to stop to investigate the matter, and were going home, and were sad, and said to thestranger who met them, "We trusted that it had been He which should have redeemed Israel." But that trust was all in the past. The women who went out to visit the sepulcher in the early morning carried myrrh to em balm the dead body of their crucified Master.' And when they brought the Easter .tidings to the apostles, they were received with incredulous looks and questions, as the tellers of idle tales. Observe a third point. These witnesses saw the risen Christ in many ways and many places in the upper room, talking, eating; along the roadside, walking and teaching; calling to them from the lake shore; now alone, and again in a large company of 500. They had long conversations with Him, in which He taught them things which affected all their after lives. There was no room for delusion. THE TIME AND PLACE. Still again, remember where and when these witnesses bore their testimonv. In the very city where He had been tried, con demned, crucified and buried, in the very faces of the men who had judged and exe cuted Him, and but six weeks after the day of His death, these men declare the fact of His rising from the dead. In a com paratively small town, removed from the great centers of the world's life, before the days of railroads, and telegraphs and newspapers, it can be imagined how almost everybody would know about almost everything that was going on, and how hard it would be to hide any such stupendous falsehoods if these were falsehoods beneath the cloak of even the stoutest assertion. Somebody would find it out and tell it, if there were anything to tell. Had the witnesses anything to gain by their evidence? Only unpopularity and persecution, and a martyr's death. Where can we find one of them who won, or even so much" as tried to win, anything which ambitious men account worth having? And if their witness wss false, and Christ be not risen, how is it that we look back, century after century, and find a hundred Easter days in every hundred years? How was it that the Jewish Sab bath suddenly lost its significance in the estimation of a multitude of previously devout Jews, and a Christian holiday, a day with a new meaning, took its place? How can the existence of the Christian Church be possibly explained? Something happened. That is as plain as the sun in the" sky. If Christ did not rise, what was it which changed failure into victory, the cross of shame into the symbol of triumph, cowardly disciples into brave apostles and martyrs, Saturday into Sunday? To the question, then, as to the possibility of a resurrection from the dead, we return for answer the fact of an actual resurrection. Beason and history alike bear witness to it, Christ rose from the dead. MANNER OF THE RESUKEECTION. I address myself now, briefly, to the other question "How are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come?" Here we touch a genuine difficulty. It has been said that belief in the resur rection is more full of comiort than belief only in the immortality of the soul, because it satis6es not only the reason, but the im agination of man. It takes the mind away from a morbid dwelling upon the corrup tion of the grave and gives it something bet ter to think about. A disembodied soul is to ns inconceivable. The future life is well nigh unthinkable, without some kind of a body that is true. And yet it is just as true on the other hand that imagination is a very formidable obstacle to the doctrine of the resurrection of the body. In spite ot us our imagination lingers about ihe srrave. We see the slow hnt rnm- plete dissolution of the body into the dust. we Know that we all walk daily over dust, which, coming from this old burying ground, the earth, may once have formed part of a human body. Wethinkof theburnedand the drowned and the mangled, of a en blown into unrecoverable fragments, of Wickliffe's body reduced to ashes, and the ashes scat tered along the surface ot a running river. And we say irresistibly how can these dead bodies rise? And if the resurrection of the dead be what some people imagine, if'it be as it is pictured' in a corner of Michael Angelo's "Last Judgment" how indeed can they rise? It is impossible. ST. PAUL'S EXPLANATION. Let us see how St. Paul answers the ques tion. St. Paul does not answer the question di rectly. He gives no description of the man ner in which the body may be gathered to gether after all its elements are dispersed In a thousand directions. Neither does he give any description of how the resurrection body will look. He would confess his entire ig norance on these two points as frankly as St. John, who said: "It doth not yet appear what we shall he." But he (foes answer the question indirectly jufc ne uoea wncr uia quouuu muncutij i hy analogy. First, by the comparison of the I SUNDAY, APRIL 6, seed. Does the body corrnpt in the earth, so does the seed. That corruption is es sential to the followirg mcorruption: ""The seed is not quickened (does not live again) except it die." The body which dies and is laid in the grave is not that body which shall be raised, just as the seed is not the flower or the wheat which springs up out of it. In one sense it is the aame; there is an identity. But it is an identity "of per sonality not- of particles." God gives the seed anew body. That is what rises. And God gives to every seed to each individual seed its own body. So also is the resurrection of the dead. The resurrection body, St. Paul teaches, "will be connected with the body of the present life, will spring out of it, will be in fact the development of which it is the germ." It will be as unlike the body of this life, and as much better and fairer, as the flower is unlike and lovelier than the seed. ALL FLESH NOT THE SAME FLESH. St. Paul has also another answer. He ad duces the comparison of the many-sided world. Is it difficult to conceive how there can be another bodv really a body, but an other, and quite different ? "All flesh," he reminds us, "is not the same flesh." There are marvelous varieties of 'God's workings even in this life men, beasts, fishes, birds, celestial and terrestrial, sun, moon and stars, all differing one from another, all glorious, all illustrating the manifold power of the Maker of them all. Can He not make still another body, celestial, spiritual? And not only is it true that God can raise the body He will. St. Paul shows how that is in line with all the other workings of God. First corruption, then incorruption; first dishonor, then glory) first weakness, then power that is how the science of our own day reads the history of the whole world. "First a natural body," continues the apostle, "then a spiritual body. As we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly." This is but the natural law in the spiritual world. It is the eternal principle of pro gress. It is true this blessed Easter truth I We "look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the world to come." We believe in "the resurrection of the body and the life everlasting." George Hodges. Threw Away Ills Cnnea. For several years during the winter, I have been tronbled with a painful swelling of the feet, which physicians claimed was rheumatic gout. I was treated by some of our best physicians, and obtained but little if any relief and used many so-called "cures" without benefit. During the winter of 1887, when my feet were so swollen and inflamed that I could not wear my boots, I commenced using Chamberlain's Pain Balm. The first application reduced the swelling and inflammation and the use of one 50-cent bottle so completely relieved me that I dis continued my canes and was able to get around ait right, ana wear my boots, l am a practical druggist, and have sold and used many different kinds of liniments, but Chamberlain's Pain Balm is undoubtedly the best preparation ever offered the public, for relieving chronic or inflammatory rheu matism. I always keep a bottle in the house, and have never known it to fail to re lieve pain and suffering when used as di rected. John Pabe, Beaver Creek, Mian. 50 cents per bottle. For sale by E. G. Stucky, 1701 and 2401 Penn ave.; E. G. Stucky & Co., cor. Wylie ave. and Fulton St.; Markell Bros., cor. Penn and, Faulkston aves.; Theo. E. Ihrig, 3610 Fifth ave.; Carl Hartwig, 4016 Butler St.; John C. Smith, cor. Penn ave. and Main st; Jas. L. McConnel & Co., 455 Fifth ave, Pittsburg, and in Allegheny by J. J. JiecK, vs and la federal st.; Trios. R. Morris, cor. Hanovef and Preble aves; F. H. Eggers. 172 Ohio St., and F. H. Eg gers & Son, 299 Ohio st. and 11 Smithfleld street. wsu This Time It Warn a Shrewd Bnalneis Man Who Held Certificate No. 268 In Ihe Everett Piano Club, And receives one of the finest pianos in the world on payments of $1 per week. Mr. O. D. Glenn, who holds a responsible position in the large drygoods house of Boggs & Buhl, Allegheny, gave the Everett Club system a tnorougb investigation before joining the club. He saw that the club provided a better piano for $350 than, he could buy elsewhere for S450, aud at the same time allowed members to pay in the way most convenient to themselves, ranging from $1 per week to all cash. The suc cess ot the Everett Club is a strong argu ment in its favor. The pianos are going to the homes of the members with a rush, and while the retail dealers are complaining of dull trade, there is a1 constant stream of pur chasers at the warerooms of the club man ager. We advice any one wanting a fine piano to investigate the Everett system at once. "Call or send for circular to the man ager, Alex Boss, 137 Federal street, Alle gheny, Pa. wsu Tbe Greatest Boom on Record. On Friday last Guskys announced that they would put on sale yesterday what were probably the greatest bargainsever known in new spring hats and caps, which, it is safe to say, drew together such im mense numbers of delighted purchasers as to even test the capacity of that extensive de partment in their mammoth establishment Did you obtain one of the wonderful bar gains? If so, you are happy. If not, take our advice and secure a hat there the first thing you do to-morrow. Why, everyone, from infant to sage, were in ecstaciesover their marvelous and fascinating stock. The run on gentlemen's fine stiff hats at $1 24, 1 49 and $1 90 all heiehts of- crowns and widths of brim was stupendous, while charming fancy headgear for tbe young folks kept the wrappers on the constant rush. But great as the business was, they have enough left to supply all, and got hundreds to spare for their unfortunate com petitors who might like some. WUY YOU SHOULD BUY A Hardman or a Kraknner Piano. They are recognized as absolutely the best upright pianos made. They are unapproachable in power, sweet ness and durability. Their present enviable position has been attained entirely by their intrinsic worth, artistic excellence and superiority to any other piano manufactured in the world, coupled with the fact of their being sold at an honest prjee. Many other makes of pianos and organs of the best reputation and make for cash or installments. Call or send card for cata logues and full information. Mellob & Hoene (Established 1831), 77 Fifth avenue. It Wan tbe Talk of Everyone. While everyone appreciated the glorious weather of yesterday, it was not one bit more talked about upon our streets than was the extraordinarv rush to Guskv's extensive clothing honse, where the announcement of a special sale of spring hats and caps that day seemed to have drawn anxious pur chasers from a score of miles around. They had heard yes, and they had found there was all tbe newest, the latest and the nob biest novelties in' men and children's head gear for almost carrying away. While one sejected a neat polo cap for 9c, 14c, 19c or 24c. another searched for daisy "Steamer" at 19c, 24c, ,29c or 34c. Others selected cloth hats at 21c, 29c or 34c, but a large percent age prelerred the "Mikado" at 49c, 69c, 84e and 'Joe. Jiut the rush, tbe crush and the jam, yet everyone got served and served well. FOB a finely cut, neat-fitting suit leave your order with Walter Anderson, 700 Smithfield street, whose stock of English suitings and Scotch tweeds is the finest in the market; imported exclusively for his trade. ' . bu Highest price paid for ladies' or gent'i cast-off clothing at De Haan's Big 6, Wylie ave. Call or send by mail. tvsu Take Wandram's herb powders and pills for the blood. Druggists; 25c UAjtDSOHB Deaaect capt up, at Eoionbaum & Co. 'i. Handsome beaded eapei, f 1 CO, 3 and J89Q. MYSTERTOFTHE DAL Easter Brings Up a Great Question None Living Can Answer. THE DOCTRINE OF RESURRECTION. How the Movable Feast is Determined and How It is Observed. TROUBLES OF THE CHDECH CH01BS tWBIXTEK TOR THB DISPATCH. 1 On this "Suuday of Joy" as it was called in the old days when Easter, or the festival of the resurrection,' was wholly given up to feasting and enjoyment the church goers will be treated to a musical programme of unusual splendor, and an Easter sermon which will make them not a whit the wiser as to the great mystery of tbe resurrection. Nor would it be very surprising since an cient customs are often revived and old fashions come up again to have them hail each other with an "Easter kiss," and the exclamatipn,"Surrexit," and receive the re ply "Vere surrexit." In these good days, however, Easter will be much more decorously celebrated than by the church people of primitive times, who, as history relates, made the Sunday of Joy a holiday for the enjoyment of popular sports, nances, sermons that made the people laugh and exhibitions of the burlesque or der. Bonfires were kindled and the bands played. Feasting and fun, music and mirth, joy and gladness were the exponents of the spring festival Sunday. But the Beformation took out tbe picnic and jollifi cation leatures of the day, that were a sur vival of the pagan rites and observances in their worship ot the goddess Ostara, and made it a day for solemnity and holy joy over the resurrection of Christ. The bon fires became "hallowed fires," and finally candles: WHAT IT MEANS NOW. In these latter days, however, Easter, for the multitude, means mainly dyed eggs, picture cards, Easter bonnets, new clothes, with but little regard to, or understanding of, its sacred features. One of the great issues of the day in the second century, it appears, was the settlement of the question as to what day should be the proper time for the celebration of Easter. The Eastern Christians, as the story goes, considered it the same as the Passover ot the Jews, and therefore kept the feast of commemoration on the fourteenth day of the first Jewish month but the Western Christians held that the proper observance of Easter was on the-Sunday alter tbe fourteenth, and that it should celebrate tbe resurrection. At that time this was, doubtless, as momentous a question as is the revision ofthe creed to-day, and the Council of Nice no donbt discussed it with as much lervor and temper as is shown by tbe presbyteries on the creed. The decision was in favor of the Western churches, and the Eastern idea was branded with the long name of "quartadeciman heresy." But though the Council settled the point that Easter should always be cele brated on Sunday, and should commemorate tbe Resurrectionandnot the Passover,it did not establish its place in the calendar. But tbe method alterward adopted to get Easter always in the right place is a mystery to most of mankind, aud life is too short to study it out. However, as we all know,Easter is a mov able feast that is now determined by the moon, not the actual moon in the skies, as appears, nor the mean moon ot the as tronomers, but an imaginary moon so arranged as to fit in with the calendar that always brings Easter as the first Sunday after the paschal full moon, or that which falls on, or after the 21st of March. AVOIDING THE PASSOVER. They tried to arrange it so that Easter might never occur on the same day as the Jewish Passover, but it was a failure, as this has happened several times and is likely to do so again. However, Easter Sunday, as ordained by. tbe standard authority, can never be celebrated before Marcb 22, or after April'25. Consequently Lent and housecleaning, as the meanest seasons of sackcloth and ashes of penitential tears and sorrows multiplied can always be classed as coming about the same time. A favorite style of celebrating Easter is by very fine and elaborate music in the churches which indulge in costly choirs. Everyone who has ever been in a choir knows that nowhere else is a belief in the total depravity of things more strongly and unshakenly sustained and confirmed by the course of events. The most delightful programme that could possibly be arranged for Christmas or Easter is as surely subject to crosses and misfortune as are men to death and taxes. If a soprano soars and sings like a lark or a Patti at every other time, she will more than likely have a frog in her throat, or an "awfully bad cold" on Easter, or some other festive occasion. If a tenor makes a magnificent high A or ring ing B fiat at rehearsals, he is likely to break on them at the choice and golden mo ment. Standard time may be most strictly maintained at choir meeting, but on the great day there will be a drag or something. The organ all right the day before will take a crank on Easter, and drive the organist to despair. SOME LITTLE MISHAP. Then, perhaps, after weeks of practice everything may be in perfect condition when all at once a cloud will cover the sun, there will come a "hitch," a break, a beat off or some small thing totally unexpected, utterly inexplicable, to mar the movement, ana men toe ueaveus win ue aarKeneu. That is when the iron enters the soul of every singer and of everybody else connected with the choir. When a tenor breaks on his pet high A on Easter Sunday it is not in accordance with the etiquette of the oc casion to try it over. He simply suffers and goes under the willows to weep. He has done it grandly before and will do it again; why he failed at this special and supreme occasion is a mystery as inscrutable as whv bread falls upon the buttered side. The fine programmes arranged for Christmas or Easter often give illustration of the Shakes pearian quotation, that There's a divinity that shapes our ends Roncli Hew them as we will. In every choir, that on this Easter day essays to give utterance to the master pieces of Handel, Haydn, or Mendelssohn or Moz art, it is more than likely that some one will ardently desire to go through the floor, or ease his mind bv swearing, or kicking some thing. It is always the way. Thousands of sermonswill be preached to day on thegreat subject of the Besurrection. To what end? Will anybody know more of the mysteries of the "great beyond" after the subject of Easter has been elaborately discoursed upon than before? How shall the dead arise, and with what bodies shall they come is a question upon which the most learned theologians differ, tbe deepest think ers disagree and upon which tbe Scriptures are contradictory, and tbe absolute truth concerning which nobody knows or can know.this side oftheaven. THE QUESTIONS THAT ARISE. "Shall we know each other there'' is the burden of heart and song. Shall the dead arise in their identical bodies, orhall they all be changed, when tbe trumpet shall sound? Shall the loved one gone before be recognized as disembodied spirits, or shall they be known in new and more glorious bodies? Earthly love and longing makes vain endeavor to pierce beyond the veil. The late Bishop Kerfoot said it was just as easy to believe that the dead would arise in their identical bodies cs'that they should all be changed in the twinkling of an eye. A miracle would be wrought in raising the dead in other forms, and why should not a miracle be worked as well to raise them in the same bodies." Paul said flesh and blood could not inherit the kingdom of heaven, and yet Christ rose in his earthly body and aaceeded into heaven. The highest bliss promised hereafter could not be reached if unknowing and unknown those who loved each other here were to roam eternally the golden streets witn strangers, even though saintly snow-clad angels. As a learned "divine puts it, "one of the greatest delights of the heavenly city will be when with conflicts o'er and battles wonthe soldiers or the cross will talk over their struggles with sin and their vic tories over the world, the flesh and the devil." It would be a divine pleasure for tbe saints in glory to have the puzzles solved and the mysteries of the earthly life cleared up, and with whom of the hosts of the holy angels could they most enjoy the revela tions and the talking over as with their own familiar friends. . TnE DARKER SIDE. It stands to earthly reasoning and human nature's longings that this should be, but who knows? All the Eister sermons that have ever been preached give no absolute truth on this matter. The eyes of faith see it, and the longing soul hopes for it, but nobody knows. It is a dark subject for a brilliant feast day for those of little faith. Not the least sad feature of the last great day when the dead shall arise "They that have done good to the resnrrection of life; and they that have done evil to the resur rection of damnation" will be the separa tion of friends and neighbors, jafter judg ment. From this view it would seem to be better not to know each other there. It would be too grievous and distressing to those elected to salvation and eternal bliss to recognize earthly friends and loved ones consigned to eternal fire. The old theolo gians held that it would be extra bliss to the saved to behold the. torments of the lost but who believes it now? Take tbe one picture of the Allegheny Cemetery on the last day, when the trnmpe't shall sound and tbe dead shall arise. Dearly loved friends, relatives, neighbors, fellow citizens of Pittsburg all there together. Im agine the large majority under Calvin's creed marched off to everlasting flames. Would the few reserved lor heaven feel like singing songs of thanksgiving or breaking forth into snouts of gladness? Take a family lot four put of five interred therein judged by Christian standards and orthodox limita tions are destined to eternal fire. SOME SAD PICTUBES. Will the good mother be happy as her children are led away to endless misery? Will the loving wife be blest if her husband is sent below to writhing fire and chains? Will the loving father or devoted husband feel ready to revet in eternal bliss while their dear ones here below are consigned to the devil and his angels? Should such be trutb, it can hardly be doubted it were hap pier not to know each other there, but with new and glorified bodies to begin a new life in the world beyond without a tie or thought of earth. All Easter sermons are unsatisfactory. Faith may swallow them whole, but reason balks. Bishop Butler says, "Probability is the guide ot life," and the great Locke, on the same subject, says: "The mind ought to examine all the grounds of probability, and upon a due balancing of the whole.reject or receive it proportionaoiy to tne prepon derancy of the greater grounds of probabili ty on the one side or the other." So each person must take his Easter sermon on the resurrection and' consider its incongruities and difficulties and probabilities. With all tbe testimony of analogy and revelation and Sunday sermons the unknowable still re mains. With all the thousands of dis courses preached upon the subject of the day we celebrate, the "unseen world" will be as much of a mystery as ever. Thosewho have acquired the faith to which is attached the promise of eternal happiness, as a practical habit will give little thought to the subject, but those whose faith by nature is weak can only wait for the flower of belief to blossom and keep their minds open for the reception of truth. OLD CREEDS ARE DISAPPEARING. The sermon of the hour, tbe lesson of the day, the keeping of the feast, should be to the effect of working out the old leaven of malice and wickedness for the new leaven of sincerity and truth. "Men are sprout ing and they do not know what ails them." Men are breaking awayfrotn the old beliefs, the old creeds, the old doctrines. This alarms many good people. They do not know what the world is going to come to. They do not know how people are to be kept good, if they don't live up to the old doc trines and hold on to the old articles of be lief. But the old order changeth. The world is movitjg on. The springtime of the soul has set in. Tbe new leaven of sincerity aqd truth is at 'work. Men are learning to think for themselves. They will no longer consent to be bound by the creeds made in the dark ages. Improvements are being constantly made in laws, new light is breaking always on science, better ways are continually being found out for doing things. Sweeter manners, purer laws are in order. Bessie Bramble. Disastrous Fnllare ! We can mention no failure more disastrous than that of physical energy. It involves Xbe partial suspension of the digestive and assimi lative processes, and entails the retirement from business of the liver and kidneys. Only through the good offices of Hostettcr's Stom ach Bitters can the restoration of its former vigorous status be hoped for. When this aid has been seenred, a resumption of activity in the stomach, liver and bowels may be relied npon. Tbe Bitters conquers malaria and kid ney troubles. "More money is to be made safely in Southern investments than anywhere else." Hox, William D. Kellet, Pennsylvania. GREAT LAND SALE AT CARDIFF, EOANE COUNTY, TEITN"., On the Queen and Crescent Eoad and Tennessee Biver. The Cardiff Coal and Iron Company, (Chartered by the State of Tennessee), Capital, $5,000,000. HON. B. B. SMALLBY, Burlington, W. P. BICE, Fort Payne, Ala., H. O. YOUNG, Cardiff, Term., - NAMES OF THE DIRECTORS. W. P. Eice, Fort Payne, Ala.; B. B. Smalley, Burlington, Vt; General Joshua b. Chamberlain, New York City; Eon. Bobert Pritchard, Chattanooga, Ten n.; Charles L. James, of James & Abbott, Boston; Hon. Carlos Heard, Biddeford, Me.; Hon. John MV Whipple, Claremont,Jf. H.; T. 6. Montague, "President First National Bant, of Chatta nooga, Tenn.; Hon. J. F. Tarwater, Bockwood, Tenn.; Hon. 8. E. Pingree, Hartford, Vt: Hon. William Warner, Kansas City, Mo.; H. C. Young, of Cordley & Co., Boston, Mas., c Dr. J. M. Ford, Kansas City, Mo. "" WILL HOLD A MAMMOTH LAND SALE : op rrs cmr lots at CARDIFF, APRIL 22, 1890, AND FOLLOWING DAYS,; Excunion Trains will be run from SATTJEDAY, The Cardiff properties are not experimental. The coal and Iron have been profitablf mined more than 20 years. The location is in the midst of already developed properties. The company owns over 50,000 acres of coal and iron mines and timber lands, situated in the Tennpssee counties ot Roane, Cumberland and Morgan. Its city of Cardiff contains' over 3,000 acres. There is scarcely any industry which cannot find a favorable chance at Cardiff for successful establishment and profit The development is in charge of men of approved judgment ahd experience. Excursion to Cardiff for the sale will be ananged from principal cities of the North and West ' ' Proceeds of sales to be applied to the development of the property by the erection of iron furnaces, coke ovens, hotel, waterworks, motor line, electrle lighta, manufacturing plants, pubho buildings., A plan will be offered which will enable purchasers to seeur lots at reasonable and not speculative prices, the intention being to give patrons of the sala a chance to make a profit as well aa the company.. Accommodations will be-provided fo all attending the sale. For further information, prospectus, etc.,"apply to W. P. BICE, Quincy Housr Boston, Man. . COBDLEY & CO., Bankers, Boston, Man. Or to the Company, CARDIFF, Roane eounty, Tenn. a-- 15 THE GLAD EASTER MORN. Boon the coldness and gloom of the winter, Wfll give place to the sucsnlne of spring; And tbe flowers will brighten our pathway, And the woods with the birds carol ring Then arfie! on this glad Easter morning Cast on alt thy sorrowand gloom; For the gforions light still adorning. Shall brighten thy path to the tomb. Though the world with cares'may oppress thee, Tbe friends you trusted not true: ( But. Christian! then still let your faith be His promUe 'twas siren 'or you. 1T l"l SDrTTK. AJt H .l.ldUUKU, Zipill Urn EL CM. THE fact should be borne in mind that Chamberlain's Couch Bemedy is intended' especially for acute throat and lung dis eases, such as couzhs, colds, croup and whooping cough, and is pre-eminently su perior to any other known remedy for those diseases. wsu Handsome beaded capes, $1 50, $2 and np, at Bosenb.nm & Co.'s. LADIES Who Value a Refined Complexlta MEDICATED It Imparts abrilHant transparency to the Ellin. Kemoves all pimples, freckles, and discoloration, and makes the skin delicate ly soft and beautiful. It contains no lime, white lead or arsenic. In three sbaUest pink or flesh, white and brunette. FOR SAXE BY - ' til Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers ETeryH-here. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. Absolute Proof of Success Is the tact that the hundreds of testimonials of cures made by tbe specialists of the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute at No. 323 Fenn ave nue, and which have been published in this paper, have not only contained the residence but the full name AS SIGNED BY THE PA TIENT. thus proving their gennlneness. To say that a physician can cure a disease is one thine; and to prove that he has cured it is an other. It they have the means to cure the dis eases of their specialty and thus prove this fact by referring yon to hundreds whom they have cared In yonr own city and at your own door, what better evidence can they give? The physicians of this institntion are specialists in the true sense of the term, as no patients are received for treatment except those suffering from catarrh, dyspepsia or diseases of women MORE SHARPSBURG TESTIMONY? The above Is a portrait of Miss Mary F. Hart man, of bbarpsDortr. and a sister of Mr. John Hartman, whose portrait and testimonial re- cently appeared in these columns. Miss Hart man has also suffered from catarrh, and the symptoms were a dropping of mucus from her head into her throat, where it became very tenacious and hard to raise. She coughed, and often felt dizzy. Her stomach became very weak, so that she felt sick after eating, and would often vomit np her fond. She was con tinually tired and folly realized that she was gradually getting weaker. After taking a coarse of treatment from these specialists she savs: "It gives me pleasure to state that I have been cured of catarrh. "MAKY F. HARTMAJT." Please bear in mind that THEY HAVB BUT ONE OFFICE, and which Is PERMA NENTLY LOCATED at 323 Penn avenn. Office hours, 10 a. at. to 4 P. 3L, and 6 to 8 r. X, Sundays. 12 to 4 P. jr. Consultation free toalL Patientstreated sue cessfnlly at home by corresnondence. SenU two ¢ stamps for question blank and ad dress tbe Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute. 323 Penn avenue, Pittsburg. apo-Mrso, Vt, President - Vice President Vice President New England, leaving Boston, APBII, 19.