THE CHATHAM RECORD, P1TTSBORO, CHATHAM CO., N. C. April 15, 1908 THE CHRIST OF THE ANDES t ' ""aPfwrAR 3 and 4. -Q ... 1 I v.ii u r- i h. f ; j I i 1 HANCE it cannot be that the festival of the resur rection falls together with the springing of the - j'ear and the rebirth of the earth. The 6trange fittingness of times and events only strikes us now and then when we stop .to reflect; but this side of life, the ' beautiful, undulating order of the universe, is what gives man his sense of security; it is the root of all the gayety and the buoyancy with which we tread the appointed paths. What! shall the orbit of the star be mapped out, and the hip-joint of the locust's leg be set so that he can make music through the hot and sultry nights, and the blows that fall upon the yearning soul of man be meaningless and haphazard? Only when we are too tired to think do we feel the necessity of the existent order of the universe. . . It is not to detract from the value of a symbol, therefore, to realize that EASTER LILY VASE. It is in its essence of the intrinsic nature of the human heart, the re sult of that inevitable preoccupation of man, and that in all ages, all climes, he has reacted in some way or other against the numbing con clusion of a possible ending. In the lowest tribes and the farthest days some care was taken to provide the dead with solace on the long jour ney, dark and mysterious, upon which they were supposed to go. Who can look unmoved to-day upon this relic of a past age, in a negro cemetery, and see the toys laid about a little child's grave, the photographs .and favorite possessions about those of the older human child, without being touched by this groping of the mind into the darkness beyond which it cannot yet tee clear. In its own 1 way this is a reaffirming of the unity ! of all hie; it, too, js a realization that it is the same universal life showing a new face. Man himself, myriad-minded, confused by feeling one thing at one time and a wholly new one at another, yet holds ever in some dark chamber of his though: the conviction that all things are one, and . that multiformity is but a way of looking, ' by turns, at the par celled, kingdom- of the universe. It Is as in ?the child's sonc of a new poet; ; , "What does it take to make a rose, Mother mine?" "The God that died to make it. knows It takes the world's eternal wars, ' It takes the moon and all the stars. It takes the might of Heaven and Hell, And the everlasting Love as well Little child No atom of dust, no star-burst nor trailing comet, must fail to the mak ing of the whole perfection which is the thinking body of divinity. All the shows and the storms, the short, cold winter days, go to the making of the sweet and wasteful hours of the long 'twilights. It is just this faint "taste and premonition in the air of what is to come which makes epriftg, -the , season of deepest glad ness; .it. is a, foretaste of desultory wanderings' through a warm-breathing ; earth when: the unexpected, .visi tations of the best . thoughts fajl, such thoughts as can only, deign to come in blessed idleness and renewal of all- life, could recklessly hazard a doubt of lasting blight? How often, in looking upon Greek vases , we see the flowerlike . wilted figure of Perse phone falling lax in the arms of the can forget who, at any rate, that has ever looked upon the keeneyed pitiless sorrow of the wandering Demeter of Cnidus, in the British Museum, can forget the grief of the desolate mother and the resultant sterility of the earth, -the skd news handed oh by Hecate, who heard the ravished maiden's cry, and by Helios, who saw the theft. Then Zeus, tak ing pity upon the earth, sent. Iris with a message to Hades ordering the redeliverance of Persephone to her mother, that the grief of death might not be devastating and overpowering. So it has always been in the mind of man, this strange anguish and de spair at the glowing human life which seemed to suffer sudden eclipse In death, and its reaction, till, from the . annual reassuring himself that even as the seed falls Into the earth and darkness, not only to come forth In due season in more glorified as- fpeot,so the soul of man suffers mo mentary and partial eclipse to be bora mqre gloriously .but alas.! not Vithin the scope'of ouf vision. ; The festivals of Demeter were held In the spring and autumn. The 7th of April was the day set.part for the games of Ceres. Demeter corre sponds to Beltus in Bactrian and to Armaiti in Zoroastrian mythology. ArmaitI, too, wanders in sorrow from place to place. She caused all growth and pervaded the whole ma terial world, even being said to dwell in the hearts of men, and fructify there into fair activities and noble pursuits. How Intimate and familiar, how strangely modern and near, seems the last great fact of resurrection, as we turn to it from the more ancient aspects! How sonorous and living are the words of the medieval ritual: Die nobis, Maria, quid vidisti in via? And the detailed verification of the antiphonal chant: -Sepulchrum Christi viventis et gloriam vide resurgentis. To know One risen from the dead, to feel the life once reaching only a handful of folk on a strip of land by the Mediterranean, now filling the world and leading men everywhere, is to know that as surely as the spring follows winter, so surely docs life follow death, and how little it matters what the forms of that life be, since at least we know that noth ing is lost. Harper's Weekly. EASTER PROMISES. "There is no death!" tl;e flowers say, "In faith we hide our souls away, While tempests desolate the earth. And patient wait the promised birth." The south wind chants, "There is no death, I come and winter is a breath; Against his falling walls 1 set 1 ' -s 4 UvJZvy The snowdroD and the vinW V1?'- Ijroljliels the hie to be, A kindred spark abides in me, jLiuii., iiKe me wina, no tliether Unows, And yet is comrade to the rose. Thus mother earth, thy gracious breast Jj'ves all thy tired children rest, Where, sheltered from the storms, they bide The coming of the Eastertide. From "Sword and Cross, ami Other Poems," by Charles Eugene Hanks. THE ANNUNCIATION. Th 3 percentage of foreigners in Holland Is one and one-half. THE RISEN CHRIST. (Hofmauii.) (Colossal Statue on Boundary Uh Betfteen Chlla and Argentina.) See, where it, stands in its beauty, Where the earliest sunbeams shine; Tall and stately and splendid: The Christ of the Boundary Line! Forbidden the evil impulse That le'adeth to pain and crime; United the faith of nations, A compact outlasting Time! Telling the coming of Man, Who is born in the Image DivineJ Like a grand, full, chord of music, . The Christ of the Boundary Line! As we view this beautiful statue From the mountain paths below, As we see its Face supernal In the sunbeams' latest glow; Twixt erstwhile waring nations Of a present peace the sign: A psalm and a jrayer in marble; The Christ of the Boundary Line! AS EASTER GREETING. " Peace, My peace, be unto you ! " Hear, ye valleys! list, ye mountains! God's breath on the streams and fountains, As He maketh all things new. In the tree tops, rustling, pendent. Hear His garments move transcendent. Bush and shrub are trembling, too. "Peace, My peace, be unto you!" Hast thou heard, dull world, the greet ing? Dost thou rise, the Master meeting, Working wonders rare and true? At His footprints falling lowly, Let us kiss His raiment holy, Of fresh green impearled with dew. From the German of Anges Franz. EASTER'S REDEMPTION'. Let me arise freed from the bonds Of foolish, fettering creeds, Tuned to the holy truth that meets The spirit's needs; Housed from the torpor of a ilod, lleniade into Thy image, God. !Siisie M. Best, in The Independent. EASTER. With heart aflame and eyes in which Yet glowed the wonder of a vision bright, In caer hnste she sped to comfort bring To those who sorrowed for their Lord and King. "He is not dead," she cried, tier voice Athrill with rapturous ecstasy, "Our Lord is risen, empty is the tomb; Our Lord is risen, past the night of gloom." I?ut they, loo jealous ol their grief And blinding tears, believed her not. To them , ; -The styry of the Resurrection Morn Seemed but an idle tale in fancy born. They needs must see and touch and hear Ilefore their doubting hearts could certain be -. ' That lie for whom they mourned ih an guish sore Had triumphed over death forevermore. O Faith that seeing not, believes, !Jow dear to Him who died and rose again! His gift' to us was Life, now grant we pray Our gift to Him be Faith, in Faster Day. Josephine Kobmson, in the Home M ag- azine. Easter Novel tirs. All torts and conditions of rabbits of apparently every age', from the tiniest bunny to the full-grown size with large startled eyes and long pointed ears; chickens, roosters, ducks and pigeons come in the form of boxes, to be filled with dainty bonr bons when the head is removed. One very novel candy box which gives no suggestion of thergoodies within is a miniature well of cardboard pap ered to imitate. wood, the top covered in a most realistic manner with rag ged moss, and the tiny oaken bucket hung from a silken cord. The top of the box opens-to reveal dozens of tiny candy eggs of every color and flavor, and when closed, a small pompous rooster fastened to the lid keeps guard over the good things within. . - ?:m$r$i lie r- . THE TRADITIONAL SITE OP AS Christ. risen from the'dead? 'lf not, thea the history of nineteen centuries is a.n - inso luble . problem, the Christian Church is a gigantic imposture, the ireed ot Christianity is a house built on the sand, the hope of the Christian soul is a fond imagination The grip of sin has not been loosened, death Is still the king of terrors, this pres- cnt w;orld is our master,- Innocence has suffered her irrevocable defeat, Injustice is seated on the throne for ever. The meek and . the lowly, the holy and the faithful have been de spised; the priests and the Pharisees, the tyrants and the traitors have con quered. And the most beneficlent and most radiant vision that ever visited the human soul is only a mirage. "Eat, drink and die, for we are souls be reaved. Of all the creatures under heaven's wide cope We are most hopeless, who had once most hope, And almost belieifess, that had most be lieved. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. As of the unjust, .-slso ;f the just Yea, f.i that .Ju.-l One, too! It is ihe one sa I j-'ispel that is Irtie Christ is not risen." Once a year this question demands an answer, once a week it stands at the door, every day as we live and work, and suffer and trust it, it is In the background of our minds. We may go to a distant land for the an swer to the tomb In Joseph's garden, said to have been open and empty on Easter morning. We may consti tute a court of law to decide the question, and take the evidence of the holy wunun, of the eleven apos tles of Chiist, of Jewish enemies and a host of other disciples. We can appeal to the tradition of the church unbroken through the centuries and sealed by the sacrament of the Lord's Supper. We can cite the facts of history, the conversion of Saint Paul, the faith of the martyrs, and the miracle of Pentecost many times re peated. Hut this means a long jour ney and much reading and intricate argument. Can we not change the form of the question, and ask it again not has Christ rlson? but is Christ alive? Let us turn from the centuries and take the date of this morning's letter; let us forget Palestine and be content with our own land; let us close the books and lock at life. Let the schol ar come from his cloistered seclusion and the toiler from his workshop, and the mourner from his shadow, and meet where all are equal on the common platform of contemporary fact and human experience. Were one dropped from Mars upon this earth, could he discover trat a certain person called Christ had once lived, and now was living, and was likely tc live forever? Come first to the Churchit mat ters not whether it -be St. Peter's at Rome, or "Mo.unt.Zijon" Chapel of a f.;-. , aaahtaai Browning's poem. It is a place of worship, where the human soul mak ing its journey ..from one world to the next in the midst of the sad mys tery of life, unburdens itself of care and sorrow. So many hundreds or so many thousands are calling from the depths of their need unto God, whom no man hath seen or ever can see, and they are beseeching His mercy and His 'help through whom? Through Ohrist Jesus our Lord. They lift up their voices in a song ot victory between the battle of last week and the corning cattle of .this week, unto whom? Unto Him who a logins us and hath washed us from our sins. Tb crowd pours through the door. THE GARDEN OF GETHSEMANE. but they are other people than when they entered. That beaten man has straightened himself, that widow has peace upon her face, that outcast has obtained a glimpse of hope Christ is alive. Come again to this other building which rivals a church. Within cool wards, fragrant with flowers and adorned with pictures, the sick are lying. They are poor people, who can pay nothing for this kindness. Some of them have been useless peo ple, who Vave deserved nothing from society; some of them are incurable people, of whom nothing can be made. Yet the finest science and the most skilful physicians and the most faithful women are waiting on them. Why have they not been left to perish, as paganism would have left them? Why should this immense trouble be taken with them who can be no gain to any one? There is another Physician present whom nc one sees; there Is another Hand car ing for the sick which no one feels: ! there was a Name on the subscription CHEIST r '-v & Ld 1 Tru WOMEN AT THE SEPULCHRE list which was never printed Jesus Christ. Once more. let us visit a character istic building of our modern city. It is an orphanage, and at its back door in some quiet street where none can see, children of misery in rags, in squalor, marked with wounds, friend less, ill-used, hopeless, are being rer ceived. Within .this friendly" place are comfort, healing, teaching, train ing, peace and gladness. From the front door in a public place children are coming out to enter- on the du ties of life, healthy, intelligent, self reliant and self-respecting. It is the utilization of the waste products of society; it is the most practical, phil anthropy that ever has been in vented; it is the redemption of the j chief woe of life, the sorrow of the children. And the founder of this home of joy is the friend of little children. Better than all the manuscripts, and all the theologies and all the his tories are those three evidences of the living Christ. Here is the living Christ, whom no grave on earth and no throne in heaven can hold. "Though dead, not dead; Not gone, though fled; Not lost,, though vanished. In the great gospel and true creed. He is yet risen indeed; Christ is yet risen." Ian Maclaren, in Youth's Compan ion. AN EASTER DAY. Stark girden Bhrubs. still half asleep, In rising pools stand ankle-deep. The strolling path beneath the gate lias turned a river, stern and strait. The Easter rain drives cold and swift; The dark sky hints no mellow rift, But stf etches obstinate and-harsh Above a lifeless, leafless marsh. Oh , joyously one living bit Of all the greyness, hid in it, Pours forth his resurrection strain Across the rushing Easter rain. His notes the old-time faith repeat:" lie knows that earth is turning sweet, Is turning warm and fair and kind. Like miracle who cannot find Within his heart? come to the pane.. Listen across the Eastern rain! Fnnnie B. Damon, Dexter.; Me. Easter lm prtaUoe oaaoty eway and atrelL, Ttwlr itw4 joy to ten: - ' WUti little jreM, tremtninf, bins a. With felateat, aoftaat. plnket flruk. And woo tb lark ' anC thnw. - To alar tbetr t7n choral aons. Tbalr n?tea of ecatasr wild, etroog. , rtom . dawa tiu dark prolong. 'rawith fond reapoDsire cblme and awioj. Biewea Delia 01 nr ot. uaxaa nog. Glad, aUrarf .tiding bring. Tba wild March aklee, ot bine and "gold, The llghtaome wlnda ot spring ontold, . Tka atorj woodroua, old " That Jeaua,' Maater, la not dead. . . pot from hla aceoted, rock-bewa bad, Be hath la feeaotr ded Back to hla gaatla mother'a breast. . Ones mora oe " SerapWcly to reat. Back, oaca to trouper, w on us Dispelling gloom and fear...-' Into the eara'of thosa wbo weap" O'er dear onea lu' deep grates asleepy 'Where lengthening abadowa creap, ye, back to loTlngly repeat Hla go pel lessons grand and sweat , Of charity complete. To bid of ala and atrlfe snrceas,-. Of Easter happiness and peaca X Jthpoa UdlOld Increase. AN EASTER PRAYER. So many eyes, tear-blinded, scarcely see The gracious hope and promise of the spring; Though leaf and bud are rich in prophecy, They have no vision of the blossoming. Oh, God of pity! at thi3 Eastertide, May all the sweet, glad promise of the day Steal into troubled hearts, and there abide Grant visions unto such as these, we pray. IS RISEN. 2 -i JiJe-Sir Wv EARLY IN THE MORNING. HE IS RISEN. Sweet the chime the bells are ringing, Sweet the carol angels singing; "Risen is our Lord most glorious, Over sin and death victorious. He is risen tell the story -Wafted from His throne of glory; From the bonds of death 6et free O, grave, where is thy victory? Angels, strike your harps of glory; Waft, ye winds, the joyful story, While with happy voice we sing, Praises to our risen King. -Emily Houseman Watson, in Home Herald. - EASTER EGGS. Humpty Dumpty has country cousins Who come to the city in spring by dozens; They make-such a brilliant show intown You'd think that a rainbow had tumbled down lihie and yellow and pink and green, The gayest gowns that eve? were seen. Purple and gold, and oh! such style. They are all the rage for a little while; But their visit is snort, for no one 6tays After the Easter holidays. All that springeih from the sod Tendeth upwards unto God, All that c-ometh from the skies Urging it anon to rise. - Welcome, then, Time's thrashing pain, ' And the furrows where each grain. Like a Samson, blossom-shorn, Waits the -resurection morn. w X J. 1 1 1 S Magazine Verse. Out of the dark tarn sodden rain Into the night, Faces that tanush and turn again Amethyst white. Bound me the pulsing, misty year.? Limitless gloom, Downpour and eddying swirl of tears Terrible doom! t Header, picture these awful scenes. VThv do you sigh? You don't know what this poem means? Neither do I. yM " Washington Herald. r ' Political Success. Knicker "What makes .1 success ful politician?" Bocker "The ability to tell a bandwagon from a hearse." Judge. What is Oblivion? Tommy- "Pop, what is oblivion?" Tommy's Pop "Getting married vO a famous woman, my son." Philadelphia Record. A Musical Comedy Phrase. "This is gay New York." "And who are these sad-faced people?" "They are the gay New Yorkers." Louisville Courier-Journal. Wrong Material. "William is getting up a literary Club." . "Hickory is the only kind that will ever bring him to his senses," said the old man. Atlanta Constitution. Enthusiastic. "Do you believe the President really enjoys walking in a storm?" "Believe it? Of course he does. Why, half the time he kicks up the storm himself." Philadelphia Led ger. 1 -- Exercising the Dog. "Justin," said Mrs. Wyss. "Yes," replied Mr. Wyss. "Will you speak a kind word to Fido and make him wag his tail? He hasn't had one bit of exerc;'se all day." -Lippincott's. Different Then. "Think of the simple, truth-telling character of George Washington!" "Yes," answered Senator Sorghum, "but there wasn't as much compe tition in American politics then as there is now." Washington Star. After the Engagement. "Did he get on his knees?" "No, he couldn't; I got there first!" New York Telegram. Industry. Bowery Lady "Why don't yer look fer work 'stead of beefin' about hard times?" Bowery Gent "Work? Gee, don't I work! Don't I stan' three hours oa de bread line ev'ry night?" Puck. His Initiation. Mr. Hogan "Where did Oi git th black oye? O'im pust afther bein' initiated." Mr. Kelley "Into what society?" Mr. Hogan "Into th' society av me mother-in-law." Leslie's Weeli iy. He is a Wonder. "Mrs. Rollins has the most accom modating husband I know." "What has he done now?" "Why, you know she was growing very stout, and he took to drink just to worry her thin." St. Louis Post Dispatch. This Earthly Stage. "The sun," remarked the kindly citizen, "shines for all." "And that's what worries some people," averred the caustic citizen. "They seem to think the sun ought to be handled as a spotlight." Louis ville Courier-Journal. One Drawback. Olive "What an improvement it will be if the time ever comes viien everybody can get a seat iu the street cars."' Violet "Oh, I don't know. A Kirl would never be sure then that she was pretty." Pack. Foolishness. ."I don't quite gst the idea in this article," diflidently ventured the ar dent admirer. "You don't?" "N-no." "Well," demanded the popular author, "do you suppose a man has an idea every time he writer' " Kansas City Journal. Why She Kept Her. Suburbanite "It puzzles me bo Newsubb can knep a cook so long-' His Neighbor "Don't you know ho married his stenographer?" Suburbanite "What's that got to do with it?" His Neighbor "Why, his wife ea take 150 words a minute from tba cook without even a frown. "Puck.