Prosperity I. Returning. Prosperity cannot be restored to this country In a day, in a yearâ€"or perâ€" haps for several years. To undamnnd this fully, we would consider the great obstructions which m In the pathway (1 thou ‘who hue undertaken the her- rotatory smoke breeds mpubiicnnism. The springing up of factories through. out the south has been (allowed by a govt! oi protootive sentiment and re- publican membership in cons-re. from that section. More than thirty votes from the south were cast for o protec- tive toriii' measure in the home and the southern states had thirty-three repubiimn members in inst coup-en. white in no preceding congress had the party been represented by more than half that number from that section. WhenDomom-atg from North and South Camiino, Alabama, Mississippi. Dimini- nno nnd Texas Joined with the remit» "cam in supporting protective views and a protective tariff bill, there can remain no doubt of the growth of re pahiican principies in that section. No in"! bill ever passed in Congress received as many southern votes as did (he one whivh has just passed the house. Twenty-ï¬ve republicans, ave democrats and one populist. from me south. supponeri the Dinghy bill in m house. and the other populist. from that section declined to vote mine! it. Protection in the south nu mule won. dorm! strides in the int few yet" “a will continue in the same line. In two". The lmponem of me country an and u so many in hem. TIN-p- expected to malw mlllloas out of their extol-Ive lnportml ms [Mar to the llnal emu- aunt of llxe Dingley bill. bul the ro- tmtlm rlause lmrodured at the In: momvm and passed by the house “41er! tholr plans mumletely. Thelr hope of hrlnx able lo Import hundreds o! mllllnns nl dollars '0th of good: during (ha dlmlnlnn M the blll la the mate in (one. and may wlll not be likely (0 Add mam-I‘m to the enor- mous slovks of goods which they had Already brought In to mp9 payments of lnrreaavd ma. 0! dntles. It In: \ mm» mm: on w mm 0! the poor!» M "w rmpm- of Imam m In the pmva- at iho l‘nllc-II 8mm- 10 I" mmnxh 21w mmnlu or â€n- ummln. looking tn mom nu n anal nilwr poo- pk. whrn â€wt hm ulroady made up their mm I. :n mlom lhr .nld Mandahl. The hunt mum-s (mm (but mmmy show my :tw pmpu-Hkm car on adop- tion «I! Ihv gold standard haul in. nu- dor mnndrrmlon for III.) your: and (ï¬t â€w nflkinlz; of the union Ind naturally downwind In adapt It dur- III we very time am Huâ€" people or III: country ven- lnolum um than u the mrm ardent ailment" at out". A Mn: as to their plan. round have and mm?! o! the worry and speech-i mm; In the mo demon In the â€IR"! Svatn Exâ€"Cln‘lmue Brynn. who bu been In Wuhmnou the In! law an". Id- llluod to hll Mead- tha! the diver Motown-nu o! the put luv mouth: love been wry damn-mu; lo the nuns. HM they ocrurml In the an months Ducal!" n. the volume at their nu- vtr pmpwulon would have been much non couple“: and ens-hm nun II 'II. Japan. Run-la and China, to which may ronunuuy nh-rrd u Ibo am prom In Inpporl of IMII‘ on"! theories, bun l". 1mm IM clot-(Ion. IIOollm'mI "Mr «lmrllon of (h.- .n- tn mulard. This tour» Muiro and Soul}: Ann-Hum rmmlnn about m- anly mum mm mnlmnmlnx the pund- ud of the nhuo mom! and urn-ml M "In" M0 making prrpunllmu In no lo â€w null standard as qulrkly u pm. “No. The Deoille want it to become on net and that very promptly. capltni Awaiting Invent-lent. Millions of capital is now awaiting the action of Congress on the tariff bill. Its enactment will he a signal for activity among the factorim oi the east, and the beet growing section of the west. in the cotton ï¬elds and fee- tories of the south. in the manufactur- ing establishments of the Mississippi valley und on the fertile fields of the Paciï¬c slope. Earning- Already Incmolu‘. One hundred thousand dollars a day is a neat sum to add to the earnings of the working people of one state in six mouths' time. The Labor Bureau of Pennsylvania reports one hundred thousand more men employed in that state today than were so employed prior to tho- election of McKinley. This means uu.- hundred thousand dollars a day inerw'lsetl earnings by them, to sa)‘ nothing of the increased wages paid to those who were employed, or working on short time. Multiply this by the number of Mates or by their propor- tionate populatiom and you get I prac- tical denmustrutiou of the improve- ment going on in business lint-o the elecutm or hurt November, which n- lurai a protest-me mrifl and int-renu- in employment. ‘II. In. fol-n3. Downl- â€om-od- The only persons who are expressing dissatisfaction with the new tarilr bill are the foreigners and importers. Ger- many, Canada. England and other tor~ eign countries are scolding about the Dingiey bill; so is the Reform Club of New York. which in made up principal- ly of importers. The chief objection offered to the bill is that it is a bl". Working Man and Fun-nu Argul-l Ill Myrdmponen and Foreigner- l‘l‘hflug lhâ€"A Great Boon [or the Worklng People. .memmâ€"FZâ€" k0 PUmHMDw EH_IO NIL. 44.3 >NJUZ-nâ€" â€=5 PUSHING THE TARIFF The Ranch tor Prmntlon. G. H. WILLIAMS. u 9". arc-t roman. In the amn‘mnentl monetary to new" millelent revenue the commit- tee, it in mtiiylng lo know, inn not lost sight of the relations of 1 Wise tariff system to the attainment of the highest possible material me of the nation. The fuming of n min in one sense is the huliding of the notion. A bill of this kind should be so con- structed as to secure the nation in times of war. both in its means 0! defense and of industrial independ- ence. It should consider its position ,among other nation. it should en- ;donvor to encourage all the arts which fortify. enrich and adorn. give em-} ployment in skilled labor and extends in every possible way the comfort and welfare of all the people. To allow how momentous to these interests are the questions involved in such 1 mm revision an that just completed by the wnyn and menus committee I Inn m. pared a moment of the productive industrlnl- of the mum for In @- To bulld up the Amerlmn run-Murâ€" ture of woolen goods has been one of the horde-n tans met in all the thirty- en yen: of motor-Hon. It ls the 1mm. men: 0! the ables! and most experiâ€" enced men. after many years of only punlal â€"0983, that there he never been I: â€riff on woolen. which bud not weak and mlnmble points. A duty 0! 50 per cent on glee! nlls mnnot be evldtd. But a duty at 10 per cent on ‘mny Made of woolen clothe ll; of no nellect whatevrr. It the foreign maker can produce what appears to the oral- nary consumer the very same cloth. by use of shoddy. at he" former eat. It Is the dellberlte purpose of the Ding- Icy hill to make humble thls de- struction d Ameflcen mnutacmre by Importation: of swindllng products 0! ehoddy.â€"New York Tribune. Tho '1th Tani. Tlu- pundit-i manage or its Ding- Iey mm In a talk! rrpnhiimn rot:- is something more than more proof of the urellrnm M the pnriy diaâ€" cipline. It In lions than won! 0! ad- mirable puny bankroll». I: In a when of the. spindid unity 0! pmâ€" none of the npnhiirnn «mgrm- men, who. dilating, perhaps. an in me drill": at Um Dinghy bill. are one in iheir loyal approval at m gm! prinrinies and autumn. This absolute unanimity in support of a measure an rompiir-aled and an inn portant is extraordinary in the annals of iqislniion.â€" Boston Journal. l- "as [menus 0' HM â€unheard All lbh tun Mn than“. lama bu (Inland [at "no min-n 0! both mum- on um um or 33 lo I. Th. mm- M the pm" ‘23?! M n your am has ban donhlul. ulndlaumlh Jour- IIIL I Japan and silver. t in adopting a monetary system i which will keep both gold and silver in circulation, Japan has destroyed the frightful proportions of the more which the advocates or tree silver coinâ€" age had prepared by representing that by being on u silver basis Japan would capture our markets it we did not. adopt silver monomotalliam, which Mr. Bryan mistakes tor bimetallieln. A year up quite a number of peopie wore mystiï¬ed by the utory oi the great prosperity of Janine-o mnulartoren under a ailver basin. and it wan aid that the name pro-verity would more to on it we should lecialate an that aiiver would be the monetary aloud-3 ard. Japan was payina much ioaa wagon to eilrer than waa being paid in gold in tile l'nited stateai liader nut-ii condition. there could be no nyatery in the atatement that the manufacturer: 0! cotton good» in Japan could tulle very touch more money to each thou-and apimiid-a than an. be- ing wde by mount-tuner- paying more wage- on the [old baaia. It one not the mutt-riot“ poteney at diver whit-h t‘lllll‘d annular-tum to thrive in Japan. but the pinin {art that In ,parln. Ina-a in aliwr they paid in ’mottey of III" porrhaee power. The manotartnren who have a market and pay only a quill" r. nun-h "an" an tlu-lr competitor: niii nuke money when the ollwnt eill (all And that ran llm roan-In [or the prosperity in Japan tor tho iimitnl nomher having rapltal Into-tori in mttoo mitia. Hot for tho thousand: who worked in the milla nothing In mid, but pmpia were left to Iornr thnl they ahami thi- proaperlty when. u a mum-r or tart. tin-y work"! (or wry low mum null stilts-lat"! on rice IIIII on ulhnrniw empty dial. We stand at the dead line 0! na- tional bankruptcy and general demor- alimtion. True, we have retraced our steps, under the guidance of a wise and skillful leader. But it is always easier to descend than to ascend a hill. It is a long and tedious road to the summit of Mount Prosperity. It was a good deal easier (or the israelites to get into Egypt than to get out again. So it was a good deal easier to ruin our industries than it will be to rehabilitate them. Yet we have a Moses who will lead us safely through ‘the Red Sea, and although the Journey to the promised land may be attend- ed with many dangers and hardships, and though a silver call may he set up to seduce people away from the true way. or brazen serpents may he set up to avenge disobedience, our intrepid leader will smite the rock for the thirs- ty. and, it we are guided by the light of faith and intelligence, we shall event- ually reach the land of corn and wine.-â€"Cleveland World. cuiean task of restoring the country to its normal conditions. The pathâ€" way to success in this alert in render- ed almost impassable by the wreckage of our industries; the arteries at trade ‘and commerce are choked up with for- eign and deleterious substanceS; the very lite blood of the nation is poi- soned with potions administered by alien enemies. The Germans in Germany are not in favor of the Dingicy tariff bill which 1. the expression of the protective policy jot the McKinley administration Why this onMition? Simply because an German manufacturers prefer to ban us for customers. and are nbuply against our management at. our own aflairs no as to give our mmutwtum protection alum foreign labor and our ï¬rmer-3' markets at home. Com to ell-Ink of It, It is very ain’tâ€"Bull- In! Union. This famom policy of delay cannot be tolerated. There Is too much at maker-Boston Journal. r \ It la on the senate that publlc pt- temlon must now be com-W. no Intent. "apex-ulna procrastination at that unfleldy body must be over- come by the Irresistible pressure of popuhr sentiment. The eflort of the rabltl free trule opposition will be to prolong the debate on every connin- ble pretext and postpone the return of the xenon! prosperity which in sun to deal the ï¬nal death blow to the In! trade propaganda. fur- the Thanh-ne'- a- the Honâ€. Dementi- 1n"! . rill-n. The Demon-rule party whlcll ls cru- irMng the [ï¬nger hill mum do In Whh some snort perhaps n I! had ever ‘fnmed a cum mu which brought enh- in revenue or prmerllon. The trouble with Democratic arm. I: they no good for neither one thing nor the our er. Nobody can tell that they were framed for. It Is 1 difllcun task to de- vlae a bill whkzh will produce both revenue and protection. but intelllxut. nnbimd persons will he apt to amp! the Republicam' opinion that thin measure mu do both then things.â€" 81. [mils mun-Democrat. The Nugwnup pr". prom- (mt magnum out the Repubflmn pro. an. to pass I new “ml 8". Thou grunt-nu 'M are too flood to me. with any mama: yum any that D‘- otnnc lulu-Icy totes ton to. by (Map pretenses. (In! any were I'll. died. on. These amnion: an no» out "to least foundation. The planar- upon w». ammo, stood mum: moat umpiulcally for provemmn. Not mm plank in the pluflml u more distinct Ind emphatic. m â€.1. form tied-rm! vmphaflrnlly um nann- Mkably in favor o! “the policy of pro- tmlonwaoungstnwn Telemu. For It. In “no “no. me "cry amploynul o! "to American peopl- II ' uMIod In A common mwnlllon of (M Import-n" Ind ulna at a "math ‘dtuwlmln-llon by out lawn in (not 0! our own wool. Mu- lormvr. hot-u. Marly Montana; "In! In bu (or ale mm In no“ In". or not Iold at “I; Hm Vanuatu-1m". bot-nun ho bu found It Impoulhln In no" homo-undo nood- lu a market pine mu In Il- mdy bought Ila-ll poor at m “hr- pln muntm“ a! Europ- nd Ann; and «manure. Imus» A Mlle. â€to this mu m nu: ma «lo-«l door: and bmkm windnrlllhln d m ow- tnrumn In Ibo and of tho nah {a what It Man. In In I madman it“ h mmpmoly Inn! to A" mmuem, do manic and fonlqn- (foam. llnlllwr In Home of Rrprrnnullvn 1 In the Influx o! the Republican tar- ll blll. which 111- A good prospect u become 3 I“. John Bun mllua the full manure of his but" din-puma!- Inoul. Th hand at Dinky I. not tho hand of Wilson. nor doo- Pruldcnt Io- Klulay shun Ihn urn! «low- 01 Pro-l- aom Chrolnd‘ «Wanna: mun- ‘ebl‘l‘f, it ll easy to understand what is the mailer with John Bull. He in nursin‘ an acute use at disappointment. The Democrat: have disappointed him some by not. going the lull length 0! the (other. but he consoled himself will: their promise to so luriher the next. time. They promlud him to entry the election a! me. alter which they were going to sin him some more big slim on the line Ameriflu loui. The trouble is that we are about to enact another tarii‘! law on protectivo lines. We have done this before and always have stirred up the British lion by doing it. Not to go very far back in our history. when the McKinley law of 1890 was passed.'the London Times and other free trade interests tore-aw destruction of this great republic. Our history tells that the McKinley isrit! act did not destroy the country; on the contrary it was under that law that we saw the very best times in the history of the country. The soul of the London Times is laur- rowed up because the United States I: about to make "a long backward stride." What. we are about to do in going to result In "serious annoyance and derangement of business {or exâ€" porters. as well as a corresponding loss for Americans themselvea" Thls 1. what makes It so bad, we are all going to ruin together, Number “'ascs Year. Emploged. Paid. 185!) ....... 95.35 8 Vflue of Product. 236.755.!“ “.019. "31,618 18% . 1.8!],2401 378,878,986 1.835. HILGE 1870 £58,998 775,584,343 4,212.35.†mo 3.738.950 947.9195“ 5,369,067,705 1890 . ... . . 4.475.834 2.171.750.1148 9,056.7“.M Nearly ï¬ve times as many employs. In our industries and nine times the annual wages paid and value of'product is the measure of the [only year- 0! progress.+nobert P. Porter. cades, all of which are affected In sum way by the blll under oonulderatlo Until the sudden revulsion 0! our In- dustrial progress, soon utter the advent of the free trade udmlnlstratlan, March 1893, our lnduatrlnl advance had been as follomy: Why the Gum-M Kick. I‘M W.“ .0 ON 3......†All Ind-nub. Ant Put-0N... Englund Don't Lllw u. DOWNERS GROYE REPORTER- Roll lt data In comfort all through these alnlen, A worklngâ€"dny Christ In ' worklugdny apparel. Tell n in the darken corrldor of the monnuln to the poor miner. Tell lt to the factory mold In most unventllated estnbllnhment at Lovell or Lancatter. Tell It to the rlmrer of rang-host new ground In the western wilderness. Tell lt to the new- lng woman. In xtltch In the Ade for Invery Mlloh in the garmlmt, some of 1 their cruel employers having no right to think that they wlll get through tho door of heaven any more than the! could through the eye 0! a broken needle whlch has just armed 0'! a" bare floor from the prlcked and bleed- my; ï¬ngers of the consumptive sieving- girl. Away with your lull than M‘- poetatlc unlon, and noterloloxy of the ‘ Council of Trent. Ind the nearby-la ol rollclon vhlch would but: practi- nl airman“) out at tho world; In pn- llou m We an on all man to: 0' In: "In to h- 1 it Christ had appeared at daybreak with a crown upon his head, that would have «mod to suggest especial nym- pnihy for monarch; ll Christ had apâ€" peared in chin of gold and with robe Miamonded. ihlt would have seemed to be especial sympathy for the ni- ï¬mnt; if Christ had appeared with tol- dier'l ash and sword dangling It his side, that wouia have seemed to imply expect“ sympathy for warriors; but when I ï¬nd Christ in gardener} nan. then 1 me" it out thnt he has hurt, and pathetic understanding with every- day work, and every-day anxiety, Ami wary-day fatigue. In" lumlninn. on im- inn- m ruin a! 3 inch abnwnr of wot-ping. turn: to (his workman. umi rhnrnn him with iho decoration M (In (man. whom lo! the lung" rust-owls, ‘ilinulng him who» nnul into um won! which tram- bin wlih nll ihv nwmni vhyihm 0! «mi and brawn. saying. "XI-r)?" in that mnlhrliy n! nmnimilon I" ihn lnmlio loll all. and she tmuul ihni Indus! of union with an humble pr- m M Ania flimr. she wls ialhln‘ niu "in: who own. all ihe hanging unions of haven. (lamiollniion- the clusters of lmg«.me-nou. the un- lowor the thkf of nil, the morning shy and the midnight aurora, ï¬ning iot- nm 0! beauty. Mulls like - man" u ll wlih coronation rose. anti giant- of tulle. Blamed and glorionn min-h (ale of May Madam. "She mlp’on‘ inn bin in he the â€ran-er." WM don that mu? Ii means that we 3 hm an everyday Chriu ior nary-4., work In even-«lay apparel. Not on £1.th morning in our most manly apparel an, we more attractive to Christ -than we are in our every-vi" work dress. managing our merchan- dise. smiling our anvil. ploughing our ï¬eld. tending the Inn; shuttles. nend- ing the garments for mu household. pmidlng food for our inn-mes, or toll- ing with wary pen, or weary pencil. or weary chins-l. A wnrhingâ€"dny Christ in working-day apparel far up in our every-day toll Put It into the Dubai. «rain of this Easter anthem. “3an in; him to he the gardener." ‘l'hrra an turn or (our thing: uhlch tho world and the church have not no- llmtl Iu word to the resurrection of 0mm. Pint. our hard In the 3mm. cr‘n ultra. Mary Mngdnm. [flot- ltntrk. sund- by the rifled “MW": 0! Hum. um turm- uotmd. hoping m: run and the [rm-I at tM urrllouloo- naurrwtlunlut who r... dmwllod tho an", mm) at" and: mum our In work- “. "pawl roma Iorth n It to walrr on “our". 0r upmol thn «no: [mat "to union. or to not rm-Hmlunu the mm VIM mum mu- Iu working u» pun-l, Mn nrmrut‘ Wham- having the an of the «that um! am n! that net-upl- Then the mighty stranger, ex‘plorlflK I" the ghastly furniture of the place. and walking through the labyrinth. Ind opening the dark reliant of mu. Mfr. Incl tarryiuu under a root the ribs 0! which were made of human heath-tuning for two night» um! a day, the nights voty dark and the day "WY dismal. he seized the twa «hie! pli‘ hr- 01 that Awful p-luo and rocked them until it bean to lull, and than laying hold 01 the ponderouu tron! nto hoiumi It {mm It: hing". and man-had lorth rryinl. "I III! the Resurrection!" That ewnt «- reichrntn this Easter morn. llaudolinn and Beethoven!) min- rlu of mod added to thin floral «loco- ntion which him not the plum Ihioom. ‘ FIRE are Mary M a g d a l e n and Christ. just after h is resurrection. For four thousand years a grim and ghastly tyrant had been killing people and dragging them into his cold palace. He had a passion for human skulls. For forty centuries he had been unhin- dered in his work. He had taken down ‘ “"83 and queens and conquerors. and those without fame. in that cold pal- ace there were shelves 0! skulls. and pillars of skulls, and altars oi skulls, and even the chances at the table Were made of bleached skulls. To the skele- ton of Abel had been added the skeleton at all the ages. and no one had dmputed his right until one good Friday. about lebteen hundred and sixtyâ€"80W" Yea†H30. as near as I can calculate it. a mighty stranger came to the door or that awful place, rolled bat-k the door, and went in, and seizing tho tyrant throw him to the pavement and put “Don the tyrant's neck the heel oi tri- umph. From the Text: “Sin. Huppoilng Illa to Be the Eur-loner. Salu- Unto lllm: Tall Me Where “I‘ll-nu "an Lula lllln Inn! I Will Tuko lllm Away"--Juhn ï¬ozlfl. .FOHHMDM ><OZDO mm.~.m<m 3N1<Pm_s ZOâ€"FDHmvâ€"Dmum (5 TALMAGE’S SERMON. After Christ‘s Interment every cellu- llr tune broke down, Ind nerve and utter! Ind bum m physiologic“ wreck. and ya: he come- np m. m «A van. m In. an m III-u Ilia“ Shadow 0! unnnnwered question! Why were the) men away tron: us? why were they "or given to an it they were to be has: so noon? why were they taken so suddenly? why could they not have uttered some farewell words? VD)? A short question, but 1 whole cruciï¬xion of spray in it. Why? Shndow on the raven of good men and women who seemed to die before their work we: done. shadow on all the graves of children bernune we ask our‘ selves why so benntitnl a craft launch- ‘ed at 1" if It was to be wrecked one male ontntte at the harbor? But what did Mary Magdnien have to do in 0"" to get more light on that gram-q She run will: to wait. Alter 1 while the Enter mm roilt-d um and the whole piace was flooded with light. What have you and I to do in order 1 to get more light on our own graves 1nd light upon the grave: or our denr loved ones? Only to wait. It [In rhmnonmer had been invent- ed nml Mary had as good a mild: u some at the Marya of our time have, she would have found it was about htlt~past 5 o'clorlt a. In. Hatthen say: it. cm In the dawn. Mark earn it was at the ennrtstnx; Luke can It We. very early In the morning; John says lt 'na while it was yet rink. in other words. n was twilight. That was the o'clock at which may Magdalen mistook Chrtnt tor the gardener. What doe. that ymn? It means there er:- shadows lover the mve nnltltod IhMO'a at Tmyntery that re hovering. Mary named down and tried to "cook to the other end of the crypt. she gave hye- tettc outcry. She would not we to the other end at the crypt. Keith-3r can ynu ‘2 to the other end at tht gruve (1; your dead. Neither an 'e see to the ‘ other end of cur grave. Oh. it than! were shadows are: the fnmlly plot he- longlng ta Janey: at Arlmuhea, ll It strange that he should be some endows over our family lot? Enter dawn, not Enter noon. There In moth" thing that the worm and Um rtmrrh have not observed In regard m um mantra-mm nod Mm In. It In me morning "Hum. Thrm in I mun m-vrn-«im'iini anvil oi IVII‘IN'. tic-vii oi mida, oi'wii oi hair, devil oi indulmin, dry" «I ruin-hood. devil of "mm: drink. devil ni imruri~ u. Uoui ran inim "mu an Away. an- m or mvrniy. i rod- m" "in mm mntilcvor Midge Iiml nonm- Ninmr'n I bridm 900 lm ions. iii-o In" M chum 1mm hint! to bilti’. l mum! nn-r ii wiiimm anxirly. Why? Ila-- [elm iwnnly-ivn inn-o Mirr- um! ï¬wunirlwo ram indon v ih gran-i had lulu! lilo bridge. man-ands M 900va ‘nlnmlinx an (in Pun-din» IMO, limits- noda Handing un Iiw Anion-inn Mdo In oppiami in. nubiovamni. Ami imw- cn-r inn; "no imin cl our immorini in- innin nay in vu- an- m "manhu- Ibu (M's lurid†of mmy npnnnlfll the rhnm o! «in inn iron mny imievi by (in nvini him «I all "or pardon"! sin of II" am. chum- miviuni nami- ‘ in; an m hunk, whim-ii inn-whim “India: on the other Milk. Oh. it via to nw nun-deviled Mary that Christ muck Ilia am postmortem up- paranm. While yuu are no! to confound lu-r will: [no ropuxunnl courtmn who had mule her lumc IOU... do the Work of low! at Christâ€: loolwuhlng, you no not to tome! that she nu examined 0! «van devils. What n mum! of do. monoloay uhr mm! have Inca. What u chow: of I“ ullnbollm. mun dull- ~~lwo for Um ryn, um two for m. hunk, IIII two (or flu- feot. Ind on. for (he Imam. flew-n devils. Val I" than an (vlurpnlod. and now we in A: flood u «mm «In‘ wu bad, And mart-l. honor- hc-r wm. Hu- an! malnu- mous nun-numxe? What «lot. "In! 'm'nu'.’ ‘ ' ’ Another t in; which the church and Lthe world have not noticed in regard to the resurrection of Christ is that he made his ï¬rst post-marten: appearance to one who had been the seven-deviled Mary Magdalen. One would hlvc sup- posed he would have made his nut posthumous :ppenranoe to a woman who had always boon illustrious tor goodness. There are saintly womm who hum ulunyn [won saintly. nnlnlly in girlhood. wintly in infancy. always Hllnlli'. in Slowly all our iamlllns there have been saintly mints. In my i‘nmlly â€role it was unm Phebe: in your» saintly aunt Martha or saintly aunt Ruth. One always unintly. But not no with the om.- uuoken of in the text. Oh. that is what helped Joseph Wedgwood, toiling amid the heat and the dust of the potteries. until he could make for Queen Charlotte the iirst royal table service or English manu- lnrtnrr. That was what helped James Watt. tit-(med at and caricatured. until he could put on wheels the thunderbolt of power which roars by day and night in every furnace of the locomotive eu- glnea at America. That is what helped Hugh Miller, toiling amid the quarries of Cromnrty, until every rock became to him a volume of the world‘s biog- l'flvhy. and he found the Iootsteps of the Creator in the old red sandstone. Oh, the world wants it Ohriet for the otiice, n Christ for the kitchen. a Chill“! 1 for the shop. a Christ tor the banking- house. in Christ (or the garden. while invading and planting and irrigating the territory. 0h, 0! course, we want to see Christ at iaet in royal robe and bediamoned. a. celestial equestrian mounting the white horse, but from this Easter of 1897 to our lat-1t Easter on earth we most need to see Christ as 1 Mary Magdalen saw him at the day- break, “supposing him to he a Bar- dener." it It and feel the mm] of the Ohrluly Mbhorhmd. Not nupposlug the man to be Caesar not supposing him (0 b. Socrates but "supposing him to be tn gardener." I The ilret year of Chridinn Endosvor in Tremont Temple Begun elm-ch. Baa-ton. has been s fruitful one. Bev- cral members of the society have elit- eri with the church. One of no In! deed: or the society was the wbiieetlon of a sermon on baptism by Dr. Lori- mer. Two more of the psetor's su- mone were published during the yer. a total of eight thonesnd copies. The instruction committee of the society has maintained a Bible history ele- ‘undcr the direction of the m: ‘pasior. and it has also provided in murmur 0! university extension lee: . turcs. Since Trenmnt Temnle is very " peculiar!) situated in the business dit- trict the society has mule every elurt ‘ to apply business enterprise to in 1‘ methods. and at the beginning of in 1 year it issued (or toners! W ’5 a beautiful calendar. “rm 0'} church and society end tile in “‘2- Tho l-Innravnrora In the Me of ‘\'nnh|nm0n have made meat el‘oru to adv-um temperance and Sabbath ob- sorvanco legislation. A temperance m was ronvnuy hefnre the lesialatnra and the Endeavoren prompted uranium roprmentatlvea to personally via“ the apical, while about ï¬ve hunched calo- grnmn wm sent (ro- all m of tho state to the senator: and rem-unclu- "V". Man meeting- vol-a alao held In many districts. all vim the aim of pmperl y inflmnclng W A mmmny of Endeavors" (mm [M Hrlndway naptm rlmrch, (mama..- no", Mum, 1mm wnkly maul-n In I wnmm "Union In Baum. mfldll‘ I m-o lunch [or ï¬ne men, In W tn .1 hot: lunch uloon In the â€In- Imrhnml. The» meetings have ml!- m In many mvenlm. “A ll nun! m-rmshna to the church. The Dude-'- nrorq mako It a practlce to Dec-n CI- plnymr-nt for the converts «an M No. An I‘IN'I‘INII‘ Illa-r spa-(Mk! “to. u: m-nr-Iml M - Miln- Chrmhl II- .Inamr mum In anal-n7. Wm M. rice. The young men of "In new not um. Um by (In. to preach the my“ Ihmuxhnm III lhflr dlflflfl. I m forty by uvonly mile. In elicit. Th0] hold 22â€] unlov- nd ruched 4.57) hvarv'n.. null all 'Mbonl a you" at u- pmsv. The young In nu may I.- lrrnmm almrknm One of tha- philmumhknlly "muted. m norm! (mm running 3 Hut by tho "man In the stream. "The Lord m In prmch the (go-pol. not to thnse Inflows." §§;? ...- work lull Ibo othcr a" (I. m nmaurrr n-flnd {mm lil- M I!- Lv lwn ulumml «Inflow On. 11 :lusv c-nvrlopm ll l-med to ml: Dd.- um'r vw-ry lwn wnln Ind In as". m in gun: Dllntrml III I nlkn 0! (ohm. Hy "manning (mm the luxury at I'l- uwpnndrn", mm (mm "In no at Mr hm'ru‘ "w man «no enabled In full" tho-Ir pic-«Inn, "Hhv mm. dour what aha mum." Tho uu-mlmn M Um (mm-um Endeavor I)- --h-|y In "In Indiana nun prison I! \llrllllnn City have no money In con- ull-mu Inward nlnln mmuu MV- Tho Juulm' Boole!) of Christ!“ Kn- m-umr wan mum: you-- old on luck :7. 0- Man-h 20 then won «lulled u‘u 34-point] [Inn's book- llï¬l‘l Io- rmsru. with 340.!†numb": The In: mu'h'l)‘ mun ornnlud In Tabor, Ion, In "m. Julm W. ('onl m In! dlgm‘r M "In Junior plan“. I. I" I . lv- -my man Standing this morninx tound the uhultormi masonry or'our bord'l tomb. I point you to I: World without helm. wittmut mutual drum. without tunn- iun. without mtufuiquc. und without I tour. Amid all the nth-drain at tho lill‘lli‘d no logs." the "Dead March In Haul." Imi. whola Iibmtl o! "flallelnhh Charm." 011, put trumpet to lip and thin-r to key, and loving tonic“ nunlnut lhn lit-Ion! of 3 than Clrbt. il-iia-lujnb. All'll. HMMIUIh. All.“ All! all the Blde-flchfl, and the hold- aches, and the back-aches. and the loa- arhea..nnd l‘he henrbaches we wlll leave Wham Chrlm left “la. The ear wlll come up without ltn hen/luau, the eye ‘wlll come up wltlloul. ml dlmnm, the lungs wlll come up wlthoul oppmud rouplrallun. Oh, what race- wo wlll run when we become Immortal nth- loles! Oh. what. clrcultu we wlll take when all earthly lmporlectlolu lub- (I‘m-It‘d and all celestlnl velocltlel ad- olml we almll set up our relldcnce ln that our whlch, though miter than all the mm. or "II: world, shall never lw vo mm nhquuy! Oh. the glorious thought, the glorlou consolation or this subject when I and Christ coming up without any or the lacerations, {or you must remember He was luceruted and wounded lenflully In the crucifixionâ€"«coming up without one. What does that make me think? That the grave will get nothing of u: except our wounds and imperfections. ‘Chriat went Into the grave exhnuuod and bloodless. All the currents of Hi- me had poured out from His woundl. He had lived a lite oi trouble. narrow, and prlvntlon. and then He died n im- gering (it-nth. His entire body hung on [our splkos. No invalid of twenty yenra' suffering ever went into the graft! no white and ghastly and broken down as Christ. and yet here He comes up so rubicund and robust she supposed Him to he the gardener. â€RING. mt unlo- u that ï¬lm would become of the 130de 0! 13¢ Christian dead. they are going to can. up. the norm rearuna, the optic mm tolllumlned, the ear drum aâ€"vlhnto. CM whole body m'tad up, without it: wak- new and worldly use: [or wblch then In no resurrection. Come. In It not nl~ most time for us to go out to meet our roanlmuted dead? Can you not hear the 1mm: 01 the rusted latch? CHRISTIAN ENDIAVOI.