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TALMAGE’S SERMON. FLOWERS ON NORTHERN AND SOUTHERN GRAVES. VMIt ‘‘Th* Tim of David, Balldad ♦or an Araeiy Wborooa Thoro Hang • Tboaaaad Baeblvra, All gbloldr af Mighty M#«"—*•*- 4i4. HR Church la here compared to aa ar mory, the walls hung with tropbleg of dead heroes. Walk all about this tower of David, and aee the denied shields and the twisted swords, and the rusted helmets of terrible battle. Bo at this season, a month earlier at the Booth, a month later at the North, the American churches aro turned Into ■* armorleg adorned with memories of de parted brave*. Blossom and bloom. O walls, with stories of self-sacrifice, and patriotism and prowess! By unanimous decree of tbe people of the United State* of America, the grave* of all tbe Northern and South ern dead are every year decorated. All acerbity and bitterness have gono out of the national solemnity, and as the men and women o tau Hoiith one month ago florallzed i!;<> cemeteries and grave yards, so } • .it i lay, we, the men and women of the North, put upon the tomb* of our dend the Vlas of pa triotic affection. Bravery always ap preciate!) bravery, though It Dvtit on the other side; and If a soldier of tit# J'V<|. eral army had been a monin ago at Savannah, he would not have been , ashamed to march In the floral proces sions to the cemetery. And If yester day a Confederate soldier was nt Ar lington, he wus glad to put a sprig of hcart's-case on the silent heart of our dead. Ml* l* HUUI'. UUI Htri, n HI I III' Confederates were driving back the Federals, who were In swift retreat, when a Federal officer dropped wounded. One of bis men stopped at (he risk of bl* life, and put bis arms •round the officer to carry him from (he field. Fifty Confederate muskets were aimed at the young man who was picking up the officer. Dut the Con federate captain shouted, "Hold! don’t Are! That fellow Is too brave to shoot." !And as the Federal officer, held up by bis private aotdler, went limping slowly off the field, the Confederates gave three cheers for the brave private; and just before the two disappeared behind a barn, both the wounded officer and tbe brave private lifted their caps In grati tude to the Confederate captain. Shall the gospel be less generous than tbe world T We stack arms, the bay ' onet of our Northern gun facing tbls way, tbe bayonet of tbe Southern gun facing the other way, and as the gray of tbe morning melts Into the blue of noon, so the typical gray and blue of old war times have blended at last, and (hey quote In the language of King fames’ translation without any re vision: "Glory to God In the highest, •nd on earth, peace, good-will to men.” Now what 1o we mean by this great Observance? Flrat, we mean Instruction to one Whole generation. Subtract 1SC5, when (be war ended, from our 1890, and you will realize what a vast number of peo ple were born since the war, or were so young aa to have no vivid appreciation. No one under forty-one years of age has •ny adequate memory of that pro longed horror. Do you remember It? "Well.” you say, “I only remember that mother swooned away while she was reading the newspaper, and that they brought my father home wrapped In the flag, and that a good many people came 1n the house to pray, and mother faded •way after that until again there were many people In the house and they told me she was dead." • MWtW UVHVI B n uu UHUUUl I C Ulr 111 • her the roll of a drum or the tramp >>t a regiment, or a sigh or a tear of that tor nado of woe that swept the nation ■gain and again until there was one dead In each bouse. Now it Is the reli gious duty of those who do remember It to tell those who do not. My youug friends, there were such parings at rail car windows and steamboat wharves, and at front doors of comfortable homes as I pray Uod you may never witness. Oh. what a time it was, when fathers and mother* gave up thetr •one, never expecting to see them ■gain. Bad never did see them again until they came bach mutilated, aud crushed, and dead! Four y«are of blood. Four years uf hostile experience*. Four years of ghaaiHue** Fuui year* of grave-tig glng Four years ol funerals comas. Shuuds, hearses, dirges Mourning! mourning! mourning! it w*a hell let luma, What a lime ef waning ter news! Morning i ms e <eutng piper acrutinUed fur Intelligence from the hays at the (rout Firm. announcement lhai lb* buttle must t ur th* a«xt day. The* the a*w« ef the battle s gu lag am, On the following day still go tog *■ Then news ef thirty thousand ■data and of the aims* of the great gen*tula who had fallen, hut no feMM ghoul ton private midterm Vt siting far •ass' After many days a tend at Wounded going through the testa uf •ity. hut ns sees (rum our hoy. Than n tong 11*1 ml nnun t and a tong Hat uf lha dead, and a tong Itgt uf th* mUsing And among the tom .ft uui boy. Whan to *e>ag ! Hu I missing? Who new him I*at? Mleatag Misutngt Wse he in th* scodn to by the stream ? Hon was he hut. M-suing Ml • •'•* ' u*l burning prayer* that hs me, ».t feu hoard from In that awful ••tong f»r gees many a Ufa perished. Thu strain ml iigHtiy was two great. That ntfss _ brain gave way that flrat week aftar the battle, and ever and anon abe walks the flooro of the asylum or looks out of ths window as though she expected some one to come along the path and up the steps, as aba soliloquize*, "Missing! missing!” What made matters worae, all thla might have been avoided. There waa no mors need of that war than at this moment I should plunge a dagger through your heart. There were a few Christian philanthropists In those days scoffed at by both North and South, who bad the right of It If they had been beard on both sides we should have had no war and no slavery. It was advised by those Christian philan thropists, "Let the North pay In money for the slaves as property, nnd set them free." The North said, “We cannot afford to pay." The South said, "We will not sell the drives anyhow." But the North did pay In war expenses enough to purchase the slaves, and the South was compelled to give up slavery anyhow. Might not the North better have paid the money nnd saved the live* of five hundred thousand bravo men, and might not the South better have sold out sluvery and saved her live hundred tluu ind brave men? I swror you by the grave? of your fath ers and brothers, and sons to a new ha tred for the champion curse of the unlvM 'c war! O Lord, God, with the hottest holt of thine omnipotent Indig nation, strike that mons'er down for I ever and ever. Imprison It In the deep est dungeon of the eternal penitentiary; Bolt It in with nl! the Iron ever forged In cannon or moulded Into howitzers, Cleave it, with nil tho sabre? that ever glittered In battle, and wring Its soul with all the pangs which It ever caused. Let It feel all the conflagrations of the homesteads It ever destroyed. Deeper down let It fall, and In fieri? r (lame let It burn, till It ha* gathered Into Its heart all tho suffering of eternity as ; well as time. In the name of the mil lions of graves of Its victims, I de nounce It, The nations need more the spirit of treaty and lesa of the spirit of war. War I* more ghastly now than once, not only because of the greater destruc tiveness of Its weaponry, hut because now It takes down the best men, whereas once It chiefly took down the worst. Bruce In 1717, In his Institu tions of Military Law. said of the Euro pean armies of his day: “If all Infa mous persons and such as have commit ted capital crimes, heretics, atheists, and all dastardly feminine men, were weeded out of the army, It would soon be reduced to a pretty moderate num ber.’’ Flogging and mean pay made them still more Ignoble, Officers were appointed to t'oe that each soldier drank his ration of a pint of spirit* u day. There were noble men In battle, but the moral character of the army then was nlnety-flve per cent, lower than the moral character of an array today. By so much Is war now the more de testable because It destroy* the picked men of the nation*. Again, by the national ceremony we mean to honor courage. Many of these departed soldier* were voltin teer*. not conscript*, and many of those who were drafted might have provided a substitute or got off on furlough or have deserted. The fact that they lie In their grave* 1* proof of their bravery. Brave at the front, brave at the can non’s mouth, brave on lonely picket duty, brave In cavalry charge, brave before the surgeon, brave in the dying message to the home circle. We yes terday put a garland on the brow of courage. The world want* more of It. • • • Again, by this national ceremony we mean the future defense of this nation. By every wreath of flowars on the sol diers’ graves we say, “Those who die for the country shall not be forgotten,” and that will give enthusiasm to our young men in case our nation should In the future need to defend Itself In bat tle. We shall never have another war between North and South. The old de cayed bone of contention, American Blavery, has been cast out. although here and there a depraved politician takes It up to see If he can’t gnaw some thing off It. We are floating off farther unit f>irt hi r fsuni I tv d ii/iselMlitl' nf as.»_ tlonal strife. No possibility of civil war. Hut about foreign Invasion I am not so certain. When I spoke against war I said noth Ing against self-defence. An Inventor told uie that he had Invented a etyle of weapon w hich could be use a in self-de fence, but not In uggreasive warfare. I said, "When you get the nations to adopt that weapon you have Introduced the millennium * I have no right to go on my neighbor'! preiuiaea and assault him. hut If tome ruffian breaks into tuy house for the assassination of my fam ily, and I can borrow a gun and had U In lime and aim It straight enough, 1 will shoot him There is no ran en this roatlntnt far say other t allot. ete#(4 Canada, and n heller neighbor no an* ever bad. If yeu don t Iblab so go to Vlutrcal tad Toronto, and see hen well they will Ueni you. Other then that there la ah saiutniy an room lor nay other nation l hare been across the continent again and sgaia. and hence that *« have a«t a half-inch nf ground ter the gouty toot of foreign despotism ta eland aw- Hut I am not #« sure that some ef the *rr« •u«t nan one of Knrepe nay a<<* •••a* day challenge us. | do u t knew that lbo»o fur** sroubd V « V *es Hsv at* la sleep all through the neat century I da not bn«- w that lUmgst light ho oss mil not ret Urns ...f upon a hastll* navy. I da not bnan hut that a half desea a«ilues envious at ear prosper It), ms) want to glee us a wretlla. If foreign l»e should coma a# waat *k#a lib* three at t*U and llba th«sr of IM) to meat than We want them hit up and down the eosst |*v»laahl had fort dummy Is the name chorus gf thunder as Fort Lafayette end brt Hamilton. Men who will not aly know how to fight, but how to Ho. When eucb a time eomee. If It ever oee come, the generation on the stag) of action will eay, "My country will are for my family ae they did in tbe ol dlera' asylum for the orphans in tbe civil war, and my country will boor my duet as It honored thoee who re ceded me In patriotic sacrifice, and uce a year at any rate, on Decoration Dr, I shall be resurrected In the ream brance of thoee for whom I died, tire I go for Ood and my country! Huzza!" If foreign foe should come, the Id sectional animosities would have no power. Here go our regiments Intdtha battle-field: Fifteenth New York :jd unteers, Tenth Alabama cavalry, thir teenth Pennsylvania riflemen, Tfcth Massachusetts artillery, Seventh Hath Carolina sharpshooters. I do not kjbw but it may require the attack of mnn foreign foe to make us forget ourabfcrd sectional wrangling. I have no fgth In the cry, "No North, no South,yio K.ist, no West.” Let all four scctisis keep their pecullarltle!i and their pbf ereneea, each doing Its own work id not Interfering with each other, earl if tbe four carrying Its port In the gait I rrnony—the baas, the alto, the tcg,r, the soprano - in the grand march j if Union, Onco more, the great nallonal cig— mony, means the beautification of t e tombs, whether of those who fell in hi tie or accident, or who havo expire I Ji their beds or In our arms or on n|? Ir.pt:. I support) you have noticed ih>: many of the families take this season an the time for the adornment of their family plots. This national observaiicr h. a r1 "arcd the arboriculture and flori culture of the cemeteries, the straight ening up of many a slab planted thirty of forty years ago, and has swung tt'i scythe through the long grass and hit brought the stone-cutter to call ott the half-obliterated epitaph. This day Is the benediction of the reatlng-placi of father, mother, (ton, daughter, brother, sister. i l »m an mai i:«iu uu 11/r iu<wu uuw« Make th"lr resting-place attractive, not absurd with costly outlay, but In quiet remembrance. You know how. If you can afford only one flower, that will do. It shows what you would do If you could. One blossom from you may mean more than the duke of Welling ton's catafalque. Oh, we cannot afford to forget them. They were so lovely to us. We miss them so much. We will never get over It. Blessed Lord Jesus, comfort our broken hearts. From every bank of flowers breathes promise of resurrection. In olden times the Hebrews, return ing from their burial place, used to pluck the grass from the field three or four times, then throw It over their heads, suggestive of the resurrection. We pick not the grass, but the flowers, and Instead of throwing them over our beads we place them before our eyes, right down over the silent heart that once beat with warmest love toward us, or over the still feet that ran to service, or over the lips from which we took the kiss at the anguish of the last parting. But stop! We are not Infidels. Out bodies will soon join the bodies of out departed In the tomb, and our spirits shall join their spirits In the land of the rising sun. We cannot long be separ ated. Instead of crying with Jacob for Joseph, ‘‘I will go down Into the grave unto my son, mourning.” let us cry with David. “I shall go to him.” On one of the gates of Oreenwood is the quaint Inscription: “A night’s lodg ing on the way to the city of the New Jerusalem.” Comfort one another with these words. May the hand of him who shall wipe away all tears from all eyes wipe your cheeks with Its softest ten derness. The Christ of Mary, and Martha, and Lazarus will enfold you In his arms. The white-robed angels who sat at the tomb of Jesus will yet roll the stone from the door of your dead In radiant resurrection. The Lord himself shall descend from Hea ven with a shout and the voice of the archangel. So the Dead March In Saul shall become the Hallelujah Chorus. GREATEST THINGS. Moscow, Russia, has the largest bell In the world, 432.000 pounds. The Alexandrian I.lbrary contains 400.000 valuable books 47 li. C. The first theater In the United States was at Williamsburg, Vs., 1762. ('ongrvM declared war with Mexico, May 13. 184«; closed fob. 2, IMS. t'olumhus discovered America, Oct. 13. 1403; the Northmen A. !• **V The electric eel Is only found In tba northern rivers of South America The highest denomination of United •tales legal lender Mules Is |lo out) The Arst rvi'wplete sewing ma>hlne was patented hy Kilns Howe. Jr., In lit* l.« ndon Is the largest city In the world, coatalalrg a population of 4." Is4112 persona. first cotton raised lit the United State* was In Vtrglata, tu 1421. Aral os ported. 174?. I he large >t university I* Ogfuri, th Ragland It niMlita of twenty-one wttegen and Av* hall*. first sugar -ns militated la • *• United •tales. m *r New Orleans. IHI •r*4 sugar mill. I t v* Th* ir*t tllnmlaaitiin with ga* »** In t'ornwall. fog. 11*4; In th* fn.ied Atsien, nt kudus, li:i first t*t*gt*pnp IS v, rath'g Is Am*ru<n was h*t*»*a Waahtagton and Ualtlmer*. May 27, tw*« frlillti was ha >wn th China 'a th* •ih cent*ry, lair reduced Into Ragland shout 1474. A met i. a 1134 Th* great wall el t pis* hotlt 14* II C . ta 1,2*0 an i to tens'h *t» f**4 high, and I* Not thtch at th* too* UUo mirror* Aral mad* hy V*n* Ilona In Ih* IJth -entnir, Kv.itM m«t*l Vi i ns*4 before i? at tit**. FARM AND GARDEN. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS. ■am* I'p-to-Dai* Hint* About Cultiva tion of thu Moll untl Vlulil* Thereof—• Horticulture. Viticulture eud Flori culture. _ HB Blghth Report of the Ml**ln»lppl Bxperlinent Station aaya; In 1S88 the Hta tlon commenced a eerie* of experi ment* with gruHee* ami forage plant* with a view of de termining: 1. What plant* will restore fertility to the roll moat rapidly, and at the same time give f *'r return* lu hny or pasture. 2. What plant* will make tlm most permanent meadow*, 3. What plant* will make the best permanent paaturaa, eapedally t,,r winter grazing. , .. ... 4. What buy producing plants » he,f for temporary «*e ,. , Since the commencement of 1 work, B86 apeclc* have been grown, many of them on soil* widely dlff* r n In character, Rowing* have ;i to at different seaaon* and under ' cut condition*; i, < d* of the m'|,! *_ ' (sing eort* have lawn distribute 1 o planter* In different port* <f the *t u*« i■•:d special attention hna beer : rt Hie fertilizing and winter crag ny tie* of each specie*. When tl.t woiii wa* commerced, aimed no hay ••• • •' grown In the slate, ex< • pt what v •<* lined hy planter* for home contwmrt'oP. and thousand* of ton* were • hli.' Into the state annually. The c ’’ 11 report for u -,0 give* tic yl'ld of hay In MIkmIssIppI mi bring only .'*•'* ’ per acre. against an average yield of 1.14 per acre for the whole I'nlt'd State*. In 18!t3 the yield of Uay for this wtfite had doubled, being then IT'1’ form p<*racrt* uKAlru't an avww,**i tons for the whole country. In 1895 t he average yield In Mississippi had In creased to 1,95 tons, ugalnst an aver age of 1.06 tons for the whole of the United States, or 81 per cent above the average, und 114 per cent above the average yield In the northern and cen tral states of the Mississippi valley. Hunting for Hour? In Till** Iloston Evening Transcript: We have nad wonderful weather here for some weeks past, cold at times, but no frost for several weeks, and In consequence everything Is In full leaf and bloom. We seldom have such a spring. The flowers are In the greatest profusion and Infinite variety the hills and val leys are dressed In a coat of many colors. The great white heads of the Spanish daggers look like ghosts as they stand around on the hillsides. At a distance the leaves of the plant are visible among the general green, and the flower stalk stands tall and stately with Its load of creamy bells, the whole cluster being often four feet from the top bud# to the lower flowers, and a foot and a hulf In diameter. There Is another shrub with purple flowerB that Is very much In evidence Just now; some of the bushes are cov ered so closely with blossoms as to leave only little places through which, the crisp green leaves show. The flow ers are in clusters five or six Inches long, drooping from the end of each twig, and one must see them to have an Idea of their gorgeous beauty. There are whole hillsides of them, too, piled one tier above another. Still another shrub with a flower the color of peach blossom is the most beautiful of all. There are several large places on the range where cedar brakes have been burned, and they are almost entirely covered with these bushes, and in look ing over the tops of them on a level It seems like a pink wall, with the old blaek cedar trunks and burnt pines looming over them In gaunt derision. The warm weather brings the bees A..* I » full fneua nm/l T n m m/iSA I li u n ever fascinated with the little insects. I never see one sipping at u flower or flying along In the air but he says: "O, no, you can't find iny house; others you may And. but mine, never.” And forthwith I take up the challenge and never reuse hunting until I find It. Though two or three years may puss 1 seldom fail to do so eventually, and you have no Idea what faselnatlou there Is In It after one has experience. I can usually, after seeing several bees go home and after getting the course laid off. run them home tu a couple of hours, unless they go more than two miles. It seems ridiculous to any one who does not know their ways to make •u< h a claim, but It can be done. To any eye except a bee hunter's a bee In Ihe air U Invisible. I question If many people ever saw one flying, unless It waa In the act of alighting on a flower, but they travel through Ihe air as peo pie travel on earth, and woudertul poser* of sight they must have, lit sides that, there Is ao doubt la my mind that there is an Intelligent wider* ; tug of the whole business of the hive, ! and a means of vommusieeOng of one with Ihe others. •kuttstlmss I take a lot ef *umh with a lml« honey on It. and **t It on Ih* top ef a hill, or In aa open pl*<# where I can see In all dlrwotlonx. aad leave It ; for s day ar two. uwlll Ihe bee* are , working si It strong. aad res >h«a run ikem home la a little while Wh.nl, hate leisure I stay aad watt lor ih.m i.t come, and snaottsge them hi burn lag a piece ef comb every half bout er s* lilt le a warm, blight dsv Is winter aad Ike «**wb Is within two mites ef n swarm, they will come be* fere Ihe *»st hear Is out The hist one, always doubling b»re sad there flies In ever narrowing unules, until kv And* the start location of the ewvwl j swell| he examines It from all sldaa, , Slowly bussing around It, and flaally •tight*. Inseiis his Iona, •«» lehflwe | In a drop of honey, sets bit pump tc work, and In a few minutes Is as full as he can fly. Slowly he rises, carefully scanning the country as he gets higher, so that he can tell the others the exacl locality of tils And, probably. As h« gets still higher, bo feels confidence, and away he goes, slowly and carefully but directly toward home. 1 generally time the first bee, end can Judge accurately as to distance by that, allowing about fifteen or twenty minutes to a mile, going and coming. The bee never delays an Instant, ex cept to unload and make bis report, and then Is off again. If It Is a reliable bee his first report Is heeded and three bees, or In rare cases four, are sent at once after him, arriving at the halt a minute after the first one comes for the second load. Once or twice I huve seen the first bee make two or three trips alone as If his report had not been considered truthful enough for others to be sent to his aid. If the swarm Is at work elsewhere there are seldom more than twenty sent to the new place, but II there Is no more honey to be had they keep coining In regular detarhraenti until, to the experienced eye, It Is Ilk* a road to a populous town, and some ate going loaded, others me hurrylnr along to have a hand In the spoil and scldoiii getting far from the beaten track. As otm new tl ■ • hive (trie oi cave, as It may l;e) the coming and go Inr; becomes iocehsant, some high In tlic air and others clone to the ground, hut all bury and • ; -r to be dciti;: tin h share. And <o think that to must eyes all (his Is invisible! In all the men I have had I.*-i<• -probably l ei Mexl* r„n:« In the last three winter-, horn woodsmen no they are, and true sons o| nature, only olio can **■ a Leo In the air; another In learning the craft a little with lay help, Ti uly, obc way have eye# and tee not! i'o*f of ffnir'ni*- Corn In Kansas |» certainly a great corn state. Statistics show that the average an nual yield for all the thirty-four years, had seasons and good, since J801, has been twenty-seven, bushels per acre for the entire state, ranging In different years from nine to forty-eight and four fifths bushels. The product for twenty five years ending with 1893 has had an annual home value uveruglng more than $31,000,000, and a total value in that time exoedlng $770,000,000. Secretary Coburn In the March fpiar* terly report of the State Board of Ag riculture, presents u detailed showing from sixty-eight long-time extensive growers, in forty-five counties which lust year produced 140,000,000 bushels, giving from their experience "on such a basis as others can safely accept" each principal Item of cost In growing and cribbing an acre of corn, esti mating the yield at forty bushels. About two-thirds of those reporting prefer planting with listers, and the others use the better known check-row method, after the land has been plowed and harrowed. The statements of all the growers summed up, averaged and Itemized, show as follows: COST OK RAISING AN ACRE OF CORN. Seed .$ 0.07 Planting (with lister, or with check-row planter, including cost of previous plowing and harrowing).77 Cultivating . 1-1)3 Husking and putting in crib... 1.18 Wear and tear and interest on cost of tools. .25 Rent of land (or Interest on Its value). 2.41 Total cost.$ 5.71 Cost per bushel.14(4 Average value of corn lund per acre . 29.25 C. D. Coburn. Bacteria in Milk.—When the milk comes from the udder of the cow it It generally supposed to be free from bac teria. Yet five minutes afterward it contains whole colonies of bacteria washed out of the milk ducts, dusted off the Hanks of the cows, blown by the wind from the filthy barn or stirred up from the bottom and sides of the ntllk pull itself. Thorough attention tc all details of milk and milking will do much to overcome the troubles too often found In the dulry and in dairy butter. Humus In Soli.—No noil can be made to produce good crops without the pres ence of a fair supply of humus or de cayed vegetable matter. Kroshly cleared lands, and lands which have not been plowed for many years, usual ly contain un abundance of humus, but when lands have long been cultivated In hood crops like corn ana cotton, the humus becomes exhausted and must be replaced before they ran be made profitable. Just how this humus shall be supplied must depentP on the cir cumstances of each plantation. When It rau be bad In sufficient quantity, there Is no belter material for this pur pose thun Is stable manure, but as this ran seldom be secured In sufficient amounts, recourse must be had t« other material*. Well Prepared tlround The true rule Is to so* no more ground than rau be thoroughly prepared! but where the anti t« not too rompm t, and Is tree from weed growth, plowing may sometimes he dispensed with and 'he upper crust be put In good shape lo receive uat* by careful harrowing Thus It may be under way before the preastng spring worh begtna - K* t’urleelllM of Uratling The ottvs has been grafted uy a juniper, applet an plum*. * toe* oo an orange, p* a* be* oa mirth#, and mulbervbm and red and white grape* with psaihce and apt Wot i «s the aarne stem tor, as the buds at* dlatlnot, the stem furnish** autitattni fur alb \n agtlaltun la proareeatng In lfng land on the question of the gev*rnm«nt paying for tuheveutuata car-ass** e| antrnaU that may b« read* •• a»d by the inspeeletn THE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON XL. SUNDAY JUNE !♦— JESUS IS CRUCIFIED. Uolden Toil—“Christ Iliad for Oar Bin* According to tha Borlpturas" — I. Corinthians IB: 13—Btory of tha Trial he tore Pilate. UK whole story ef U>o trial and cruet# slot! belongs to this lesson. There Is this sdvsn tsge in this fart, that we <*n embrace with in one view »* a whole lhat which In all our former studies we have beheld in s sun esslotl of separate pictures, with week* Interven ing between them. Time of the Trlal*. ISetween 1 and 2 o’rlork till about It o'clock. Friday morning. April 7, A. I>. W. Place. The high prlest'a palaee, llie hall of the Panhedrlm, Pilate's pro tor I urn or Judg n eril hall, and Ilrrod's palace. Holers. Tlhcrlus Ca<*rr, emperor of Haiti' ; Pontius Pilate, governor »f Judes; Her d An* llpae. of Oallh I t'alnpl. . ' tin \.W,. ; re • To-day's Jeason Includes f.uke 2J; JI-l'l. rhe explanation* are as f«tl«w«: S3, ' the plaeo * * * e#,!l-d Calvary," Tin skull, probably from It* she, •. a knoll In Urn form of a skull. < ilvur v i * m..o n.id < gulhtt Hebrew for skull. H.b iln.s m» fend toward the bolls! tbs'. Cal>«ry vr*» the knoll In which is the grotto of J< > -mlal). *1. /’it. :: “> fe.-I beyond tin le.rtll Will id th III ■ crucified him." .bulls was nulled to tin- or- •*,< While II. was lying u; rl the ground, 'Inn It was slowly raised with it, ►.-i- r u: m It. The feet #,f the u'llb rei were ■, r* ly a foot or two iiI/Ovc the ground, and not a* represented In most pictures. at. "Father, forgive llu-m," Th/ so IIret words front Iho cross wen. pr, hably spoken In the height of the agony, wlo u the crocs with the vlcliiu upon If. vile, ilr ; i J Willi a sudden lee, h into O , J,I ,. ,, ,,, ip ,.. . " I 111"/ 1 know not whi.i they do." The .el noi reatu-e that they were murdering their Me,- iah, the f'flu tt'lllt IfUc/ft Ill/VIM Mflth Ml III.' l!lf Knfi of God, Therefore, forgiven*. < was pws slid** for them, and a change of life. Tin y hud not passed the degree from which return v/«» impossible*, "And they,” fb* guard of soldiers, "parted his raiment," th >se pirta which could bo fairly divided among the m, "casting lots" f <r his inner coat or tunic, which was woven In a single piece, 3'*, "And the people * * * and the rulers also with them, derided him," scoffed at him. There was an unruly, turbulent crowd, shout Ing, scoffing, mocking. "Ha saved others let him save himself," which of course ho could do If ho were the "Christ," tin- Messiah, They Implied that lie was a cheat, a mere trickster, who had deceived the people, unless he proved his power by using It to save himself from crucifixion. Hut he did not come down, In order that he might save others, and because he was the Messiah. 26. "The soldiers also" took part In the mockery, it seemed absurd that this dying man was a king, yet by this act be was be coming a king over a wider reaim than Heme ever knew, 26. "And a superscription also was written over him." The white tabb i nailed upon tho cross above the head of the victim, to declare the crime tor which he was crucified. "In letters of Greek," the language of literature and culture, read In all cultured circle* of the world. Latin, for the Homan soldiers, the. language of law and power. "And Hebrew," the language of the Jews, the language of re ligion. "One of tho malefactors," tailed else where "robbers." Probably Jewish fanatics, who made Insurrection against the Homan power, and used this as a pretext tor rapine and murder. "Hailed on him" In his agony, wondering why Jesus did not exert his power If he had any. Pain does not necessarily make one better. "If thou be Christ," the Messiah, as Jesus confessed before the high priests, 40. "The other • • • rebuked him.1' It is quite possible that he had heard Jesus, and seen his miracle*, arid had witnessed the trial, 4t. "We indeed Justly," showing his peni tence. 42. "Lord, remember me when thou coxnest Into thy kingdom." This implies that the robber hud heard of some of the teachings of Jesus. The robber showed that he believed HI In Christ as the Sou of God; 12) in his love; (3) In his power to save; (if in the Immor tality of the soul; (6) in the kingdom of heaven. 43. "To-day," not In the far future, "shait thou be with me In paradise." a word signify ing a pleasure ground or park, and designating the place of the happy dead. 14. "It waa about the sixth hour." 12 o'clock. "Harkness over all tho earth," rather, with revised version, the land. "The ninth hour." .{ o clock p. in,, the hour of the daily evening V. "The veil of the temple whs rent," Thin wan the veil thnt hung between the holy place anil the holy of holie* Into which the high priest entered once a year. It wus th fee! long, and :io feet wide, and us thick us the palm if the hand. At this time were uttered tho fourth, fifth, sixth und seventh words from the cross, of which the last w„h, "Father. Into thy hurnlu I commend my spirit, (late up the ghoat," or spirit. Literally, breelln d out his lift. None of the evangelists use the comiumt word for dying, hut all, some form of ,x prisslon denoting a voluntary yielding up of his life. As Jesus died there was an eatih t|uake. which rent roi i s and opened graven iMatthcw 7 63), and the whole scene deeply Impress. 4 the people and even the limn ... of'uod "" Trul>’’ ",l* “*« Sou 1‘lalluuHi at the Center, ^ tVft l.ipttiliuiH geologlm hnr pro pound* d ihe aatunUhlnq theory that the renter of the earth in a tu.tsg of mu I ten gold amt Platinum. He say* ' It you put Into u bottle tutus ruffe*, kiime sand. and some qutrkallver, fill It up with water und then shake It hilskly, as soon a* it has reeled t t a minute you will have a Ivy.r uf quick •liver at the bottom, a la>*i u( in the middle and a layer «f tup. with the water over all. That |« the he.vi.et ,h# bsHlom and th* Itlhte.i on top At uh* Urn. lhe **• last Ilk* th* content. U| th. * tay«u, And a. It ha« rvtoie.l it u lhai ib* hravie.t of all in< *l.nt*iita putlnum baa •on* to u. bottom I*, the renter, and that l!,» pla.,«uW u surrounded by a layer «f par* ,llM Tb* fold that *c bud un ib* aurta.* i, merely a small quantity :|wi, b.»* Iber* |UI entangled tt„,rr |fc and wa« prevented fr..m .!»,*(«, • oocnnnn t» natoh*. i .b.T^‘*iM' -» nw i^?2 ETC *• a .IeV.7/"! *"** * '*‘‘«* l« tb. tbl* uf • »» thaw l* a buman band JJJ* “*»**">« af . .u#w , r* «• ! bumber |,nq nun » w, m ? I " ** i bttiu.sr.i4 pi nal 1 fw d tu lb* bon* Uf tk« bead ipt «bo .bln Ub.ow.ti ,,)«,!