I WHEN MOTHER In memory till I plainly hear My mother railing: "Willie. dear Come, Willie! Hurry hi!" In fancy I can see the door And her there as ihe stood of yore, And hear her nay: "Come in!" In every gladdest hour of play My jov were always swept away, For mother ne'er forgot to aay "Oh, Willie! Now come in!" WHITE WATER-LILIES, By Helen Forrest draves. THE sunset was Jvist penciling linos of rlgzng gold athwart the purple-Mark clouds that f were piled along the west; the soft, white mlHt lay, like a shadow of fleecy pearl, over the Hue of the little alder-fringed river; and the train from New York, after a minute's stop, flung out Its Mark banner of smoke, and glided swiftly on, gradu ally accelerating Its speed, as It moved out of sight. Only two passengers) for Cruxbor ough. It was no fashionable summer ing place like Saratoga, Cape May, or even Clifton Springs, but there were few evenings when there were not at least half a dozen to spring from the platform of the New York cars. To-night, however, two only were visible two who stood staring at each other with a sort of unwilling recog nition. "It's never you, Fitzroy?" said one, In a pearl-colored summer suit, with an expensive Panama hat and gloves of the palest primrose tint. "Bless me, Symington, who expect ed to see you here, of all places In the world!" ejaculated Mr. Fitzroy, who was attired In Immaculate white, with a dainty sole-leather valise lu one Baud, aud a cigar In the other. Both young men looked decidedly sheepish, as they might have done were both very small boys, detected by their muteiunl ancestors lu the very act of stealing sugar from the top shelf In the cupboard. "There's a hotel here, I suppose?" said Symington, gazing dubiously around at the two or three houses, the church and the miscellaneous store which constituted the village of Cruxborough. "Why, of course," responded Filz roy, who was of a sanguine disposi tion. Aud both the gentlemen adjourned to the hotel a one-story building, with a barroom of disproportionate size to remove ihe dust of travel and smoke the cigar of pence, or rath er of truce. Both John Symington and Ferdin and Flieroy had come on the same errand to see Olive Harcourt, the belle and beauty, who had come to Cruxborough to recruit her roses for the next Philadelphia season. Miss Harcourt had supposed that Cruxborough would afford her a snfe retreat from admirers and bores alike, but she was mistaken. True love will find Its way through bolts aud bars, and It Is not likely that a few miles of wood and swamp will prove any obstacle. At all events. It did not In the Individual Instances of Mr. Sym ington and his frleud, Ferdinand Flu roy. Olive Harcourt was not surprised to see them the next day, as she sat sketching on the slope of a hill.. "How is old Philadelphia" she In quired, "hot and dusty as ever?" "Well, yes," said Symington; "but It lias Its advantages. Don't you find It very dull here?" "Not so very," Miss Harcourt an swered, "I'm In a farm house the sweetest old elin-shaded spot you ever saw!" (But sho did uot Invite Mr. Syming ton to come there, Fitzroy observed, with delight.) "Any pretty places around here?" Symington asked, with simulated ease of manner. "Oh, plenty of 'em! By-the-way, can either of you swim?" cried Olive, her deep blue eyes sparkling Into sud den brightness. Mr. Symington unwillingly owned that he could not neither, It appeared, could Mr. Fitzroy. "Of course not! Nobody even can do what I want 'em to do!" pouted Olive. "There arc some of tho sweet est water-lilies you ever saw Just out lu the stream, aud I do so want a few to model in wax." "Are they far? Terhaps I could reach 'em with the hook of my cane?" suggested Symington. "No, you couldn't," said Olive, Im patiently. "But I'll go aud show them to you, ull the same. I'd give anything in the world for some of them!" "Anything?" repeated Symington, laughing. ' Yes, anything!" said Olive, with a saucy nod. Sho knew she. was safe enough. Juht where the IliA-r Croix makes a Utile bend around the abrupt slopes of a tiuy lslnud, sweeping into the broad er and bluer expanse beyond, lay the tangle of broad green leaves, float ing sereuely, starred hero and there with the cream-white cups of the superb water-lilies. "Oh, see them!" cried Olive, longing ly clasping her bauds together. "If I could ouly get cue Just one!" Mr. Fitzroy looked at Mr. Syming ton; Mr. Symington eyed the far-off lilies. Both of them wished them selves crocodiles, water-rats, speckled trout anything, in fuct, which could swim. "Very pretty," said Symington, "t'pon my word, superb!" said Fitz roy. They continued their walk over the crest of the hill to see a cascade, which was the ouly curiosity about Cruxborough, and then down by a rumed paper-mill, which was consid ered picturesque; and then home. "About thoso water-lilies?" said By Milngton, meditatively. "Yes," said Fllzroy, "she must have pome water-lilies." "Aud tho man that gels them slauds ths best ia her good graces, eh?" "So it would appear." Moth young men went back to their hostelry, and imulo diligent Inquiry sepaiately, however, and without coll'.thioii about a boat. No such K'liiatic convenience v.rs to bo luid, It ft'iH'p.rrd, vu Imc.ligaiiou, SAYS ."COME IN." O it via long ago that I Obeyed that sweet, that fond old cry Of "Willie, dear, come in!" And oh, I would that I could be A child again, bark there, and aha Remained to call me in! Ah, when my carea are put away, When I am through with toil and play, Shall I, up there, hear mother aay, In loving tone. "Come in?" -S. E. Kiaer, in Chicago Times-Hcruld. "I never was In such an outlandish place In all my life!" said Symington. "But I'll get her some lilies If I pay their price In gold!" "You mean you'll send to Philadel phia, where they're blossoming away as thick as peas, close to you?" "Never you mind what I mean!" Symington retorted. "Humph!" said Fitzroy. "If some folks choose to be reticent, others can be equally so!" "Just as you please:" said Syming ton, laughing. Fitzroy hugged himself. He had the best excuse In Ihe world now for not telling his rival about the leaky punt he had discovered under Fanner Hatheway's old barn. "He'll send to Philadelphia to night," thought he. "His lilies will come from the florist's, all packed In wet cotton, to-morrow evening. I'll be up at sunrise, and bring the flow ers, all wet with dew, as a morning offering to Olive's breakfast table; and he may laugh who wins. Mr. Symington went to the railroad station and sent a note to Philadel phia by the conductor of the evening train just precisely as Ferdluaud Fitzroy had conjectured he would. Fitzroy slept, with his watch In his hand, lest sunrise should steal on him unawares. And, early next morning. Symington was snoring comfortably us Fitzroy passed the young mau's door. Ferdin and's heart thrilled with triumph as he heard the somnolent sounds. Cool and fresh, and wax-like, glim mered the lilies in the purple flush of the glorious midsummer dawn; sweet and clear echoed tho songs of the rob ins and thrushes In the aider houghs that dipped their green fingers In the water. "Bring on your boat, my lad," said Fitzroy to the boy who sat walling ou the shore. "Her leaks a bit," hesitated the boy. "Dad, he nailed a piece of oilcloth In her bottom, but it nln't no good." "Nonsense," said Fitzroy. "Here! give me the oars! Now steer, and don't let's hear any more of your non sense. Whoop! Hurrah! hero we are!" The stern of the boat rnn Into the mat of wcier-l!lles with a soft rustle of crushing greenery. Fitzroy caught greedily at the many-blossom cups and half-open buds, pure as if they were carved In pearl. "This Is something like," panted he. "If only Symington could see me now! Hold on. though! I must have yonder great, shining flower!" Rising up In the boat, he leaned over nearly his whole length to reach the royal blossom still It evaded him. "I will have it," he muttered, with a reckless piunge. "Oh, take care, sir!" squeaked tho boy. But his counsel came too late. The boat guve a lurch. Fitzroy lost hi balance, and over ho went splash Into the still and shlniug water. . "Dear heart alive, sir, don't fret! You nlu't drowned nor you ain't hurt. It's uothln' on nlrth but a good scare; and them Hntheways ought to be Indicted for coaxin' anybody to go out In their old leaky, rattle-trap of a boat that Ihey ought." Mr. Fitzroy sat lu a big rocking chair In Farmer Westwood'g kitchen, dressed in an old blue-flannel dress ing gown which belonged to that gen tlemun's father, a frilled ulght-cap tied about his eurs, his feet thrust in to coarse carpet slippers, and a woolen stocking tied about bis neck Mrs. West wood's panacea for nil possible and impossible ailments. "Here's the mustard plaster," said Mrs. Westwood, triumphantly. "Aud here's the sage tea. Drluk it now, like a darling good gentleman, and theu I'll get a sponge uud Wftsh the mud oil your face." "But I say, look here!" sputtered Fitzroy, getting a chance glimpse of himself In tho little nsparugus-shad-owed mirror that bung below the clock, "I'm such a 'Judy of a sight!' " "Oh, never mind." purred benign Mrs. Westwood, "There's nobody to see you except " At that iustant Olive Harcourt came In, robed In a cool white muslin, her goldeu hair floating around her like a cloud. "Mrs. Westwood " she began. Aud theu, struck with nu irresist ible sense of the ludicrous, she burst out laughing. "Pray forgive me, Mr. Fitzroy," she at lust enunciated; "but you do look so exuetly like the picture of Little lied Hiding Hoou's grandmother! I ouly came In to offer my box of homeopathic remedies, lu case you should have tuken cold." And she rau out agaiu, nearly chok ing with renewed laughter. Fitzroy, scarlet with mortification, at once perceived how the matter stood. They had taken him. In the full tide of his Ill-luck, to the very farm bouse that sheltered the fair head of Olive Harcourt 1 And about in the same moment the glib voice of John Symlugton sounded on the rose wreathed porch, "Ah, Miss Harcourt, the gods them selves have rained down gifts upon us! See what I have got!" "Water-lilies! Oh, what beauties!" cried out Olive,' rapturously. "I found them lying on the shore of the river, near t.n old overturned boat. Some water nymph has heard your longings and gratifies them thus!" "Oh, I urn so glad!" "And I am I not to have my re ward?" Tho voices grew lander, and more earnest, as they receded, and Ferdin and Fitzrop gave ( groan from the depths of Ills heart. . "Take some more nj;q tea?" said Mrs. Westwood. "Nothing like sage tea for the gripes." But alas, not even sage tea Is a medicine for tho mind diseased and that Avas what tilled Mr. Fitzroy. lie hail sown, and another had reaped; he had risked his life, not to mention having made himself supremely ridic ulous, for the very wator-lllles where with John Symington was now plead ing suit. "'Inconstancy, thy nnnie Is wom an!'" groaned Fitzroy, gulping down th? scaldlng hot tea. "Here, get me my own clothes! I'm going to Phila delphia by the next train!" "Bui. Fir, they ain't dry." "I don't cure If they are as wet as Noah's great-coat. I won't wrav these things another minute!" he roared. He persisted In his determination. The consequence was a six-weeks' In fluenza, nt tho end of which he re ceived cards for Mr. and Mrs. Syming ton's first wedding reception. "What fools people are!" said tho sneezing philosopher. Saturday Night. Death Takes Them Off Quickly. It Is a peculiarity of the members of the royal family that, however healthy and hearty they may have been, yet let them be once attacked by serious Illness In advanced middle life or old age, and the malady quickly proves fatal. - The Queen's father, the Duke of Kent, was the strongest among strong men, and never had an hour's illness In his life, but at the age of fifty-two he died at Sldmouth of a severe cold after a few days' Illness, which was caused by his sitting with wet feet after taking a walk In the rain. (Jeorge III. was declared by his doc tor to be likely to live for several months, or perhaps years, but within a week ho was attacked with some illness of old age and died lu a few hours. The Duke of York, as strong and healthy a mau as his brother, the Duke of Kent, caught a chill while on a visit to the Duke of Rutland, nt Belvolr, was seized afterward by Illness, broke down all at once, and died lu three months. George IV. was expected to live for years in the early part of 1830, but he broke up exactly In the same manner as his brother. William IV. died in ten days from hay fever, after having been for seventy-two years n most healthy and vig orous man. The same thing happened with other members of the family of Cieorge III. London Truth. John's Cue la Donined. According to a resident of China town, the statesmen of the flowery kingdom are now considering the ad visability of altering the Chinese law which requires Mongolians to wear cues. The local Informant Is authority for the statement that tho Chinese wore their hair American fashion some !iOO years ago, at which time they like wise wore garments similar to those in use in this country to-day. With a new emperor came an alteration lu the two fashions, rtnd ever since cues and blouses have been quite tho proper thing. Now (here Is a great agitation for a change back to the old style. The Chi nese ore of a practical turn of mind, and insist that too much time Is rc Qulred to dress their long braids. There Is considerable objection to the stylo now In vogue, and so persistent for a change has become the demand that It Is likely the law establishing the style of head dress will be altered. It Is stated that the Chinese will not wear their hair long, but that their heads will be kept shaven. Only indefinite rumors of the proposed change have been received from tho old country, but local Chinese express the belief that the present unpopular style will be abolished. Portland (Ore.) Tele gram. Hcheine of Slow-Comlnc- Fireman. Those who see the fire horses leav ing their stalls when the fire bell strikes have probably noticed that the animals stand under the harness until the firemen come to fasten It. In onu of the houses there is a horse that stands well If there Is a mau on the floor, but if there Is no one there the horse will run back to the stall and will have to bo led out again. A driver who was once connected with No. 1 Company says that he has tried nil kinds of schemes to break the horse of this habit, but has been unsuccessful. Several times men were coucenled on the floor, and the horse was sent out. It seems that he located the men by sense of smell, and when those tests were made the animal always stood in his proper position. Michael Ward, of tho truck company, has hit upon a plan that will fool such a horse. It Is to rig up a dummy the size of n man. with false whiskers and a cap, aud have an electric wire connected with the figure, so that when the alarm Is given aud the doors open, the dummy will be made to sway gently as If Im bued with life. It Is expected that the horse, seeing this, will suppose. It Is a fireman. Hartford (Conn.) Cournnl. Iletleved at I.aat He Wan Swindled. "Ethel," suld Lionel Bertram .Tones, as he dropped his slice o'f bread In the plate with a nolso that set the canary in the gilt cage overhead chirpiug mer rily. "Ethel, I have something to say to you." They had been married only four weeks, and the time, had not arrived when she did all the saying. "Do you remember the day on which I proposed to you?" "Yes," she replied, "I will never for get it." "Do you remember," he went on, as he abstractedly drilled a hole In the loaf with the point of a carving knife, "bow, when I rang the bell, you csme to the door with your fingers sticky with dough, and said you thought It was your little brother who wanted to get In?" "Yes." "Oh, Ethel! How could you? How could you?" "How could I what?" she responded, as a guilty look crept Into h?r !tce. "How could you make me tha r'ctlm of such a swindle?" The Hultuil's Uasplpea. Morocco litis taken a first step re ward civilization. Tho Sultan has or dered a set of Highland bagpipes frn:. a Glasgow tlnn. They are tirob.il);, the most costly ever maiio lu Scotland, as the mouldings ant lu lS-oar:it yoid aud the yrlce Is $15uo. . CHRIST 1$ RISEN! Dr. Talmnje's Sermon on the Lesson Embodied in Our Saviour's Resurrection. Awaiting the Day When "All Who Are la Their Gravel Shall Come Forth." tCorTTlrht urn. i .Wariitkc.tox. D. C The great Chris tian festival celebrated ia all the churches la the theme of Dr. Tahnaie's discourse: I Corinthians xv, 20, "Novi is Christ risen from the dead and become the first fruits of them that slept." On this glorious Kilter morning, amid the music and the flowers, I give you Christian salutation. This morning Rus sian meeting Russian on the atreeta of St Petersburg hails him with the salutation, Christ is risen indeed!" In some parts of England and Ireland to thig verv day there is the superstition that on Easter morning the sun daneea in the heavens, nd well may we forgive such a supersti tion, which illustrates the fact that the natural world seems to sympathize with the Boiriteal. Hail, Easter morning! Flowers! Flow ers! All of them s-vniee, all of them a tongue, all of them full of apecrh todav. I bend over one of the lilies, and I hear It say: "Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow. They toil not, neither do they spin. yet. Solomon in nil his glory was not arrayed like one of these." I bend over a rose, and it aeems to whisner, "I m the rose of Sharon." And then I stand and listen. From all aides there comes the chorus of flowers, saying, "Jf (Jod so clothed the grass of the field, which to-day is, and to-morrow ia cast into the oven, shall He not much more clothe you. Ove of little faith?" Flowers! Flnwcra? Braid them into the bride's hair. Flowers! Flowera! Strew there over the gravca of the dead, sweet nrophecy of the resurrection. Flow ers! Flowers! Twist them into a gar land for mv Lord Jesus on Easter morn ing, and "Glory be to the Father and to tho Ron and to the Holy Ghost; as it was " the beginning, is now and ever shall be! The women came to the Saviour's tomb, and tbey dropped apices all around the tomb, and those spices were the aecd that began to grow, and from them came all the flowera of thia Easter morn. The two angels robed in white took hold of the atone at the Saviour's tomb, and they hurled it with auch force down the hill that it crushed in the door of the world's ssepulchcr. and the stark and the dead must come forth. I care not how labrinthinc the mau soleum or how costly the sarcophagus or however beautifully parterred the family sronndr. we want them all broken up by the Lord of the resurrection. They must come out. Father and mother they must eome out; husband and wife they must come out; brother and sister they must come out; our darling children thev must come out. The eyes that we closed with such trembling fingers must open again in the radiance of that morn; the arms we folded in dust must join ours in an embrace of reunion: the voice that was hushed in our dwelling must be rctuned. Oh. how long some of you seem to be waiting for the resurrection! And for these broken hearts to-day I make a soft, eool bandage out of Enster flowera. This morning I find in the risen Christ a prophecy of our own resurrection, mv text setting forth the idea that as Christ has risen so His people will rise. He, the first sheaf of the resurrection harvest. He, "the first fruita of them that slept." Be fore I get through thia morning I will walk through all the cemeteries of the dead, through all the country graveyards, where your loved ones are buried, and I will pluck off these flowers, and I will drop a sweet promise of the gospel a rose of hope, a lily of joy on every tomb, the child's tomb, the hushand'. tomb, the wife's tomb, the father's grave, the mother's grave, and. while we eslebrate the resurrection of Christ we will at the same time celebrate the resurrection of all the good. "Christ, the first fruits of them that slept." If I should come to you and ask you for the names of the great conquerors of the world, you would sav Alexander, iuesar. niinp, napoleon 1. Ah! You have forgotten to mention the name of a greater conqueror than all these a cruel, a ghastly conoueror. He rode on a black horse across Waterloo and Chalons and Atlanta, the bloody hoofs crushing the hearts of nations. It is the conqueror Death. He carries a black flag, and he takes no prisoners. He digs a trench across the hemispheres and tills it with the carcasses of nations. Fifty times would the world have been depopulated had not God kent making new generations. Fifty times the world would have swung life less through the air no man on the moun tain, no man on the sea, an abandoned ship plowing through immensity. Again and again has he done this work with all generations. He is a monarch as well as a conqueror; his palace a aepulcher; his fountains the falling tears of world. Blessed be God in the light of this Easter morning! I see the prophecy that his scepter shall be broken and his palace shall be demolished. The hour is coming when all who arc in their graves shall rise. Jesus, "the first fruits of them that slept." Now, around thia doctrine of the res urrection there are a great many mvs teries. You come to me and say, "If the bodies of the dead are to be raised, how is this and how is that?" And you ask me a thousand questions I am incompe tent to answer. But there are a great many things you believe that you are not able to explain. You would be a very foolish man to aay, "I won't believe any thing I can't understand." Why, putting down one kind of flower seed, comes there up this flower of this color? Why, putting down another flower sued, comes there up a flower of this color? One flower white, another flower yellow, another flow er crimson. Why the difference when the seeds look to be very much alike are very much alike? Explain these things; explain that wort on the finger; explain the difference why the oak leaf ia differ ent from the leaf of the hickory. Tell me how the Lord Almighty can turn the chariot of His omnipotence on a roi? leaf. You ask me questions about the resurrec tion I cannot answer. I will ask you a thousand questions about everyday life you cannot answer. I find my strength in thi passage, "All who are iu their graves shall comu forth.." I do not pretend to make the explanation. You go on and say: "Suppose a returned missionary dies in this city. When lie was in China, his foot was amputated. He lived years after in England, and there he had an arm amputated, lie ia buried to-day in yonder cemetery. In the lea uirection will the foot come from China, will the arm come from England and will the different parts of the body bo re constructed in the resurrection.' How is that possible!" You aay that "the human body changes every seven years and by seventy yean of age a man has had ten bodies. ' In the resurrection, which will come up?" You aay: "A man will die und his body cram ble into the dust and that dust be taken up into the life of the vegetable. An animal may eat the vegetable. Men eat the animal. In the resurrection that body, distributed in so many dir.-ctiona, how shall it be gathered up?" Have you any more Questions of this style to ask? Com on and ask them. I do not pretend to nil' swer them. I fall back upon the an' liouncemeiit of God's word, "All who art in their graves shall come forth." You have noticed. I suppose, in read ing the story of the resurrection, that almost every account of the Bible give the idea that the characteristic of thU day will be a great sound. I do not know that it will be very loud, but 1 know that it will be very penetrating. In the mausoleum, where sileuc has fehjrodd a thousand years, that vo'ee must pene trate. In the coral cave of the dep that voice must nenetrate. Millions nf spirits will come through the gate of eternity, and they will come to the tombs of the sank, and thev will cry: "Give us buck our bodies. We gave them to von in corruption. Surrender th-tni now' in in corruption." Hundreds of spirits hover ing about the fields of Gettysburg, for there the bodies are buried. "A hundred thousand soirits eoming to Greenwood, for there the bodies ere buried, waiting for the reunion of bmlv and so-il. All along the sen route from New York to Liverpool, at everv few miles vlirrs a slenmer we.it down, deimrlcl spirits -.im-tag hack, loverir.:; ov?r ty.o wavo. Theis is where" the Ully or Boston perfaneiT, Found at last. There is where tha President perished. Steamnr found at jast. There is where the Central Amer ican went down. Spirits hovering-hundreds of spirits hovering, wailing for the reunion of bodv and soul. Out on prairie a spirit aliahts. There Is where a traveler died in the snow. Crash goes Westminster Abbey, and the poets and the orators come forth! Wonderful min gling of good and bad. Crash go the pyramids of Egypt, and tha monarch come forth. Who cn sketch the scene? I suppose that one moment before that general ris ing there will be an entire silence, save tin you hear the grinding of a wheel or the clatter of the hoofs of s procession passing into th cemetery. Rilenee in all the caves of the earth. Silence on the side of the.nMuntaitu Silence down.iai,h vallevs anrt far out Into the sei. KiicnC" But in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye. as tlis archancel's trumii-r comes Pealing, Tolling, erashini across th moun tain and sen, the enrth will give one terrific shudder, and the graves of the dead will heavn like the waves nf the sea, and Ostend and Sevastopol und Cha lons will stalk forth in the lu-id air, and the drowned will come up and wrin out their wet locks above the billow, and all tho land and all the sea become one mov ing mass of life all faces, all eges, all conditions gazing in one direction and upon one throne, the throne of resurrac tion. "All who are in their graves shall come forth. "But," yon sav, "if this doctrine o the resurrection is true, as prefigure'! by this Enster morning, can von tell us somethintr about the resurrected bodv?" f c"?' ,T,,;pre are tnvsteries about that, but I shall tell you three or four things in rcrard to the resurreelel bodv that are beyond guessing and beyond mis take. In the first place. T remnk in regard to your resurrected bodv, it v.-ill be a clorious body. The bodv we have now is a mere skeleton of what it would have been if sin had not marred and de need it. Take the most exquisite s(.au that was ever made bv an artist nnd chin it here and chip it there with a chisel and batter and bruise it here and there and then stand it nut in the storms of a hundred vears. and the beautv would be gone. Well, the human body has been chipped and battered and bruised and damaged with the storms of thousands of years, the physical defe-ts of other generations coming down from genera tion to generation, we inheriting the infe licities of nast generations. Hut in the morning of the resurrection the body will be adorned and beautified according to the original model. And there is no such difference between a gym nast and an emaciated wretch in a lazaret to as there will he a differenee between our bodies as they are now nnd our resur rected forms. There vou will see the per fect eve after the waters of death have Washed OUt the Stains nf tonrs nn.l rl. there you will see the perfect hand after tse snots ot toil have been untied from the knuckles; there you will see the form erect and elastic after the burden hnve gone off the shoulder the vers- life of Ood in the body. In this world the most exnressive thintr is tt, hnmnn but that face is veiled with the griefs of a thousand vears. But in the resurrec tion morn thnt veil will be tnken awov irom the tace, and the noonday sun i dull and dim and stupid compared with the outflnming glories of the counten- once of the saved. When those faces of the righteous, those resurrected fnces. turn toward the gate or look up toward the throne, it will be like the dawning of a new morning on the bosom of everlasting dav! O glorious, resurrected body! tint I remark also m recard to that bodv which vou are to get in the resur rection, it will be an immortal body. These bodies are wasting away. Somebody has said that as soon as we begin to live we begin to die. Unless we keep putting the fuel into the furnace the furnace dies out. The blood vessel are einnl tnkintr th breadstuff to all part of the system. We must be reeonstructcd hour by hour, day bv dav.. Sickness and death 'are all the time trying to get their nry under the tenement or to push us nff the embank ment of the grave, but, blessed be God, iu me resurrection we will get a Dody im mortal. (Sometimes in this world we feel wc would like to have such a bodv as that. There is so much work to be done for Christ, there are so mnnv tears to lie wined away, there are so many burdens to lift, there is so much to be achieved for I hrist. we sometime wish that from the first of January to the lost of December we could toil on without stopping to sleep or to take sny recreation or to rest or even to take tood that we could toil right on without stopping a moment in our work nf commending Christ and heaven to all the peonle, but we nil get tired. It is charaeteriatic of the human bodv in this condition : we must get tired. Is it not a glorious thought that we are going to have a body that will never grow wearv? O slorious resurrection dav! Gladly will T fling aside this poor body or am ami ning it into the tomn It at Thy bidding I shall have a body that never wearies. That is a splendid resur rection hymn that we have all sung: So Jesus alept. God's dying Son Passed through the grave and blessed the bed. Rest here, blest saint, till from His throne The morning breaks to pierce the shade. I heard of a father and son who, among others, were shipwrecked at sea. The father and the son climbed into the rig ging. The father held on, but the son after awhile lost his hold on the rigging and was dashed down. The father sup posed he hud gone hopelessly under the wave. The next day the father was brought ashore from the rigging in an ex hausted state and laid on a bed in a t shermaa's hut, and after many hours had passed he came to consciousness and saw lying beside him on tha name bed his boy. Oh. mv friend, what a glorious thing it will be if we wake up at last to find our loved ones beside us, coming up from the same plot in the graveyard, coming up in tho same morning light the father and son alive forever, all tho loved one alive forever, never more to weep, never more to part, never more to die. May the God of l'e.ice thnt brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, thnt great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant make vou perfect in every good work to do Hi will, and let the associations of thia morning transport our thoughts to the grander assemblage before the throne. The one hundred and forty anil four thousand and the "great multitude thnt no man can number," soma of our best friends among them, we after awhile to join the multitude. Glorious anticipation! lllest are the saints beloved of God: Washed in their robe iu Jesus' blood. Itrighter than angels, lo, they shine. Their wonders splendid and sublime. fv .Mll nttr.i'nnt. .1.. Would stretch her wings and soar away To aid the song, the palm to bear. And bow, the chief of sinners, there NEWSY CLEANINGS. NniiirnI cas has been struck uenr Lowellville. Ohio. Ilareelonn. Spain, will hold an Irish poiato exhibit during .I:y and Juue. Another counterfeit of the 5 silver certificate. Issue or ISX), has beeu (omul. Tho hecirn of V.Vs'.ern capitalists md corporations to Nt-w Ydrli Cltv ij still kept up. After huving i ?ou threatened mnnr years, the foriKlciuions of I'nils are at lust to be destroyed. Landslides iu the Apennines have destroyed enliro villages, and caused considerable loss of life. Chicago boasts of u society lust or ganized for "making things unpleas ant for uupleasuut people." Tobneco-lnlsltiK seems likely to be come a new and leading farm Indus try In Northwestern Wisconsin, Tho Venezuelan Goveiuinent has waived the duty on self-propelled ve hicles ittkeu Into tha I country. THE SABBATH SCHOOL, International Lesson Comments For April M. Subject: Jesus Appears to Mary, John xx., IMS-Colden Text, Rev. I., 18-Mcmory Verses, l6-IS--Commentary ea the Day's Lesson. 11. "Mary." This was Mary Magdalen, out of whom the Lord had cast reven dev ils. The epithet "Magdalene," whatever may be its meaning, seem chosen for the express purpose of distinguishing her from all other Mary. "Stood without." Peter and John going (v. 10) compicnd Mnry' staying. To the grave she came before them; from the grave she went to tell them; to the grave she return with them; at the grave he remains behind them. To stay while others stay is the world' ove; to stay when all are gone is constant love. "Weeping." She had great love for her Lord; He hnd done much for her. "Stooped down." Because she was anx ious to see whether she might not, after all. be mistaken about tho alwence of the body. She stooped because the top of the entrance was so low that she could not otherwise obtain a near view of the inside of the tomb. "The sepulchre." The sep ulchre seem to have been a square room hewn out of a rock, partly above ground, its roof being as high a the top of the door, which formed its entrance. 12. "Two angels." Peter and John did not see the angels. The angels' presence showed the Divine hand and care. They were ministering spirits to comfort those who were in such great sorrow and need, nnd they gave explanation of what hnd been done, no one else being able. The supposed discrepancies in the number of angel seen is explnined by Leasing. The whole grave, the whole region about the frave was invisibly swarming with angels, here were not only two angels, but many of them. Sometimes one appears and sometimes another; at different places and sneaking different things. "In white." This was an emblem of purity. Sec Iter. 10: 8. 13. "Whv weepest thou?" Are you quite sure that this empty tomb doei not show that you ought to be rejoicing? "Taken away my Lord." While the other women were terrified Mary seems to have had no fear, so wholly was she tuken uo with her great desire of finding her Lord. She was rendv to brave more heroically than ever all danger if only she might find the One she loved. 14. "Turned herself back." Still weep ing she turned away from the angels. She turned to go again with the other women to Jerusalem, who had already departed, but ahe had not as yet gone so far as to be out of the garden. Mary was so absorbed in grief, and her eves so dimmed with tears that she failed to recognizs Christ; besides, she was not expecting to see Jeaua alive, as she had no conception of His resurrection. 15. "Jesus saith unto her." This was Ilia first appearance. Ho afterward ap peared on this same day to the other wom en returning from sepulchre (Matt. 28: 9, 10), to Peter (Luke 24: 34). to two disci ples going to Emmanus (Luke 24: 1331), and to ten apostles. John 20: 1 'i". "Why weepest thou?" She had cause suf ficient to rejoice instead of to weep. "Whom seekest thou?" He seeks to comfort her in her great grief. "The gardener." And therefore a servant of Joseph of Ari mathea, who owned the tomb, and who. of course, would be friendly. No olher person would be likely to be there at so early an hour. "Have borne Him hence." Thinking that perhaps Joseph had or dered His body taken to some other place. "I will take Him away." She would sec that it was done. She would be responsi ble for Hi removal to a proper place. To think that stranger hand had cared for Him when she had brought spices for that purpose was a bitter disappointment to her. 16. "Mary." Jesus stirred the affection of the weeping woman at His side by ut tering her own name in tone that thrilled her to the heart and created the new, sub lime conviction that He had risen as He had suid. What transports of joy must have tilled this woman's heart! Let it be remarked that Mary sought Jesus more fervently, and continued more affection ately attached to Him than any of the rest: therefore to her first Jesus is pleased to show Himself, and she is made the first herald of the gospel of a risen Saviour. "Eahbboni." My Master. "A whole world of emotion and devotion in a word." As Mary uttered the word she must have endeavored to fall down at the feet of her Lord, embracing them. 17. "Touch Me not." "Cling not to Me." The translation "touch Me not" gives a false impression; the verb doe not mean to "touch," but to "hold on to" and "cling to." "I am not yet ascended." Mary appears to have held Him by the feet, and worshiped Him. Jesus says in effect: Spend no longer time with Me now; I am not going immediately to her sn; you will have several opportuni ties of seeing Me again; but go and tell My disciDles that 1 am, by and by, to as cend to My Father and God. who is your Father and God also; therefore, let them take courage. Do not rest your new faith upon My corporeal life, but upon that spiritual life soon to be consummated with the Father. Then I shall receive your love, and we will resume our friend ship. One touch through the Holy Ghost is worth far more than any bodily pres ence. To be satisfied with His being re stored to life that she might be in His presence as before was to lose sight of the merits of His death. Henceforth He must be believed in and worshiped as God, for He was not to remain ia a natural body. "Go to My brethren." Firat servants, then disciples, then friends; now, after tho resurrection, brethren. This involves in itself eternal inheritance. "I ascend to My Father." I am clothing Myself with My eternal form; I have laid down My life that I might take it again, and use it for the highest blessedness of Mv brethren. "My Father your Father My God and your God." Father of Christ by nature and of njen by grace. His God only in connection with us; our God only in con nection with Him. His eternal conscious ness of the Father's love dignified all His human relations with the lather, and be came the true inspiration of all conscious ness of God possessed by His disciples. 18. "Mary told the disciples." An apos tle to the apostles. Mary was the first to see Jesus and the first to proclaim His resurrection. Tiiis special message wn clearly given to the woman who held His feet. St. Murk tells us (chap. It): 11) that the apostles could not believe what she suid. They seem to have consideret' it us an effect of her troubled imagination. Hut they believed when they suw the Lord. One Way to Tell Tslan. One good way. I think, to 1udi whether we have a talent for anvthiiihr or not Is to watch the motive that draws us toward doing a thing. If we no it necause It Is the fashion, or be cause other girls are doing it, or be cause we have to do It for some use ful purpose. It is not probabla that we nave a real talent for it; but if we find ourselves doing it lust rtally love It and would rather do it man not; ir it la doinf the thing itself that attracts us, and not the eclat It Is going to give ua In the eyes or oth erswhy, then I think we may reason ably conclude that God has given ua a real talent for that particular sort of thing. Kins; Edward VII' Ureal Kinplris Exclusive of Egypt, the area of King Edward's empire li 11,773,00) square miles, Including Egypt, abaut 13,000, COO square miles, or much over one fourth of the land of the g'.oh. Tho wealth of the United Kingdom alone, apart from that of India, Australia, Canada and other powicsBlons, Ij abnut yjO.000,000.000, or second only to that of the United States. Ths papulation of the empire sgg'.eaatea sjrne l')),00(),. 000, being comparable w(Ci t.t::t of tha c:e.plro of Ch'.ns. EPW0RTH LEAGUE MEETING TOPICS April 14 "Foundations." Matt, v t, 24-27. Our Lord comes to us nnd to nil men as the absolute toucher. "Who soever," he says, "heareth these say ings of mine, and ths'th them, I will liken him unto n wise man." lie clnlms to understand life nnd fis outcome. He allows no place fur possible doubt, lu the previous study the apostle I'aul has revealed the wonderful change that comes to those who accept Christ an their Lord. In this Scripture the Lord himself reveals the test by which nil men are to be tried. Some may claim to lie alive to Christ who are not. In every Rise there will be those who will say, "Lord, Lord," but bear no fruit. "The hiiiKUiijre clearly Ira plies that there are Homo who profes to be Christians, who acknowledge Jesus to be the Lord aud pray to blm as Lord and praise hliu as the Lord, who nevertheless hnve no part In him." "All Men Are Itnlhlel s."'-Thls is one of tin- great truths which our Lord indirectly declares. Not all are build ing wisely. Hut everyone Is building' something. This Is n truth we are all npt lo forget. We are apt to think that we can pass nlong through life and sometimes lu the lust hours make everything right with God and Christ. Hut thi truth Is we are building all the while some kind of a house. "All I'ullders Have a Choice of Foundation." Every house, whatever Its character, must have a foundation of some sort. It cannot he built Id the air. The wise builder Is reveal ed more by his choice of a site even than by his choice of plan nnu mater ial, lu the mind of Christ there are Just two kluds of builders tbom who choose the rock and those who choose the sand. He that heareth Christ's sayings and doeth them Is building bis house upon the rock. Those who have not heard Christ's words but live ac cording to their best light will find a rock foundation somewhere, sometime. They are building on the sand who are building carelessly, thoughtlessly. All who, having heard Christ's words, do not do them are building upon thft sand. Ami the sand represents every thing that Is Insecure. "Only tine Foundation Will Stand." This Is the point of the whole par able. Our Lord warns tup people of his day and of all times that, there Is only one thing that will stand In that dtiy that will try all meu. namely, a character built upon him as the foun dation rock, a character modeled after the pattern he has set. We are all building; we all have a choice of foun dation, and the ability to choose whnt sort of structure we will build. The Lord warns us In advance that our house will surely be tested, The test ing time may come suddenly, or with certain signs of its coming. Eternity will try everything. Those only will stand who, hnving accepted the Lord's words., live every day in accordance with them. CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR TOPICS. April 14 ""Foundations." Matt, vll., 24-27. Scripture Verses Isa. ixvlli. 10; 1 Cor. III. 11; Eph. II. 'JO; Heb. xi. 10; 1 I'et. il. lti; I's. cli. 11, I J; c. 5; Matt, x. 'J; Mark xlli. 13; lv. 14--J0. I.essou Thoughts. Strength of foun dation is tlii! ouly thing that can in sure endurance. The superstructure Is Important, of course, but Is ia value less without a good solid base. The will of God Is the only founda tion for dully Christian living. Are we uolng his will, or saying "Lord. Lord." In an empty, Idle confession? Selections A religious life Is uot a thing thnt spends Itself like a bright bubble on the river's surface. It Is rather like the river Itself which wicl ens continually, until It rolls ou, luto the ocean of eternity. A courier riding with his sovereign amidst the acclamations and splendors) of a triumphal procession, asked him, "What Is wanting here?" and very empharlc was the reply, "Permit-' nence." The music, tho huzzas the parade, would soon be over. And ho with all those things, on which, aside from Gd we depend for happiness. As we tie n tender tree to home other tree that it may uot be broken by the winds, aud cast anchor in a storm to fix the ship that it may not lie driven by the tempest; so ought we to Joiu aud apply our weak and faint hearts to the lire pillar of God's word, and tlx the ship of our souls by the anchor of hope, that It sink uot. Hullders wiy that half the work of putting up a building is completed when they have got a good, Urrn lev el foundation. Time the erection of a great building, and you will see that this is true. Yet how many of us thluk to haste the laying of founda tions! We are In a hurry to make money, and so cut short our education that we must nceept low salaries) all our lives. We have uo time for Kible study and prayer, so thnt our un founded faith Is nt the mercy of tho first billow of doubt. A good start is worth many a league. RAMS' HORN BLASTS HE brara man u ever a leLJevlo one. Love la a convic tion that super, sedeej the aeneej. If you woa' avoid sin do .not seek out tempta tion. Tit nnlv At ,rjS vine service is the jVk fe:vlce of humani. A man U worth what he gives. Jterormers must be transformed. Manliness Is built on godliness. Fast llvling is really but alow dyine. The Chrlcitian serves all men but Christ is his ouly Master. The heaviest croea of many Chris, tians Is the church collection. Tha man who will not servo others cannot succeed himself. The llg'ht of a Christian life either hlnes out or It goes out. Spasms of spiritual indigestion ar produced by swallowing isms, A diamond must remain dirt If it he not willing o lose half itsolf. A bailora rises when you throw out b.illat but a man will sink that way. Ho who v.oulj measure the sun w'ta a frot-ruls .u!4 judge Ood by him self. (Irk Is a ffcod thins to have an Wi as you don't fire It la your neigh bors facts. Tho man who aL t-i niiUu. . .. Ul popahr applause finds It hard to sleon (or ftar tho bubble will burst. Tt trouble wl-l'h aoxe selr.nil.-'n ia that they live in tho civoi.l-mtn of their iuves;lHtl(in3 ar.d coil their candls the sua. 7k m