The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 03, 1888, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    DR. TALMAG
"S SERMON.
Jealousy,
“Jealousy is the rage of a man,"—Prov. 6: 34
SOME subjects a religious teacher
touches a thousand times, now coming
on them from one direction, mow from
another, But here is a Bible theme
that for some reason is left totally
wione, » This mor asking you
prayers, and in the th of
want to grapple it.
[here is an old sin, haggard
monstrous, diabolical, that h
walked and crawled the earth,
bines all that is obnoxious in the
human, quadrupedal, ornithol
reptil and insectile, horned,
hoofed, fanged, e
basilisk, the tooth of an adder, t
of a crocodile, the crushing folds of an
anacenda, the slyness of a scorpio!
tongue of a cobra, and
worm that never dies. Ibis
ning
MAUR,
ren
yey
Of i,
ian, usked,
stinged; the
i
+
5
y¢ Of &
Lie Jaws
1
i
the col
IN EVERY COMMUNITY,
every church, in every legislative
in every monetary institution, in
drawing-room levee, in every ht-
erary and professional circle. It whisp-
aye
lies, it
mes, it damns,
it says, ‘*‘Jealousy is the
: at the
superiority in
- or el
ia + +
hisses, it
oe
rage
superio
talent
legance or
ional or
shadow
OS is the shive
ket-book because it is
ne e
CCOSS., It
PMH
pocket-
1 1 4 pr
y II1 OUr wongut
08
inant as
quent as so
494 .
fiutter
\
ot as i
t just to walk
le Abel was watching
e Lree-top, or gazing at son
, down came the
Ail LLL
log } Y
s HOT
of all ages and all
is passion of jealousy so dist
la at the prominence of
of his time, that
wlmired curl from the
, and took
¥ g 1-
he neck of
Orow
+4 .
the embroider
i Of
1
omaeus killed Ix
which attracted too
After Columbus had
4as a gem in the Span
y set on the Spanish cou
rquatus, i
CAUsSe
purple 1
ittent!
Ameri
te his achievement,
ties till the grea
heart broken.
passion, Dienysi )
he was wiser than him
enius because his musi
Jealousy made Koral
and Succ
¥ i
i
Moses, ith
Mey Trial $1 si td 3
5Y mImade the trouble belw
pit, that
fatal wounds
wnished Aristides, that fired An-
igainst Cicero, Tiberius exiled
itect because of the fame he got
beautiful ‘
2 tragedy. That
} nat David. How gr wWphi-
. 2 it when 3 "
ie puts it when it say
k the twenty-
a
su
i
+ §
at set Sa
id il
ALA Kes t
tw ri-h
Dav That
mu as {0 say:
is he
**You
dare you atiempt anything g
grind you under my heel, I will |
ninate you; I will, you miserable |
neulus, Crouch, crawl, slink into
3 I will teach those women
Sing other song, instead of
| has slain his thousands but David
his tens of thousands,’” When Vol- |
taire heard fhat Frederick the Great |
was forgetting him, and ing his
literary admiration on Bacaulard d’Ar- |
naud, the old infidel leaped out of his
bed and danced the floor in a manical |
rage, and ordered his swiftest horses
booked up to carry hun to the Prussian
palacs
That despicable passion of jealousy
ied Napoleon the First to leave in his
will a bequest of five thousand francs
to the ruffian who shot at Wellington
when the victor of Waterloo was pass-
ing through Yaris, That stationed the
grouty elder brother at the back door of
the homestead when the Prodigal Son
returned, and threw & chill on the |
family reunion while that elder brother
complained, sayimg: “Who ever heard
of giving roast veal to such a profligate?’
Ave, that passion rose up, and under
the darkest cloud that ever shadowed the |
how
I wil
hole,
{ Some
‘38
putt
ever shook the mountains, and amid the
wildest flash of lightuing that ever blind.
ed or stunned the nations, hung up on
two pieces of rough lumber back of
Jerusalem the kindest, purest, lovingest
nature that heaven could delegate, and
stopped not until there was no power
left hammer or bramble dr javelin
to hurt the dead Son of God.
That passion of jealousy,
bung vy, unbalked, rages on, and
IT PIERCES THE EARTH
like a flery diameter and encircles it
like a flery circumference, It wants
both hemispheres, It wants the heavens,
It would, If it could, capture the palace
of God, and ‘déthrone Jehovah, and
chain the Almighty in eternal exile,
and after the demolition of the universe
would cry: **Satisfied at last, here 1
am! Alone! the undisputed and ever-
lasting b, Me, Mine, Myselt.”” That
passion keeps all Europe perturbed. Na-
tions jealous of Germany, of England,
livid,
ELS SE LT
ca.
keeps all
THE POLITICAL WORLD A-BOILL.
would like to be his successor,
of the cares of office; and
a whole pandemonium of de-
scurrility,
made,
famation,
Or
tariff, about the raising or lowering
reformation of which many of
of Russia, and those jealous of each
platforms
that the tariff must be
sugar; the people of
told that the tariff must be arn
I
the advantage of American tobacco,
Lh
y tariff must be arranged for
the advantage of American iron, and
, and
tariff m
whisky
the
advantage
il, while Ma
will be promised protection fo
ures, and ail the
. South, East and
Ohio that
for the
y Of
i
i
monetary in-
West,
Lown Vrince
f satisfaction and eon
Christendom, what
i do with the doctor who
“Oh,” cried out the
msies of Europe, “destroy
lestroy
medical jeal
him; of t
What a brutal scene of jealousy we
had in this country
1s
i
J
( aim i’
FOUrse,
RESIDENT GARVIELD 1
DYING
faithful
yes
bere were physicians
ficed their health for all time, in fidelity
to that deathbed, Doctors Dliss and
Hamilton and Agnew went through
anxieties and toils and fatigues such as
none but God conld appreciate, Noth-
ing pleased many of the medical profes-
The doctors in charge did noth-
We who did not gee the case
knew better than those who agonized
a run-round on my thumb, which seem-
attention of the entire medical frater-
President ought to be treated, And in
proportion as physicians and laymen
were ignorant of the case, they were
sure the treatment practical was a mis-
take. And when in post-mortem the
bullet dropped out of a different part of
the body from that which it was sup-
posed to have been lodged, about two
hundred thousand people shouted :
told you so!”
the time!”
all cities who would rather have the
patient dis under the treatment of their
under some other pathy,
THE CLERICAL PROFESSION,
I am sorry to say that in matters of
jealousy it is no better than other pro-
fegsions, There are now In all denomina-
tions a great many young clergymen
who have a faculty for superior useful-
ness, But they are kept down and kept
back and crippled by older ministers,
who look askance at these rising evan-
gelists, They are snubbed, They are
jostled. They are patronizingly advised,
1t is suggested to them that they had
better know their place, If here and
and consecration and divine force
the words of Scripture:
They are charged with sensationalism,
prophesied. If it
with bishops, a bishop is implored to sit
older
thelr
the
than
out
with
some of
more
bishops,
nothing
novater,
IN CONFERENCES AND
TIES
PRESBYTER
ecclesiastical tyrants would not
admit that jealousy had
air, and talk sweet oil and sugar plumb
up the
i of
sanctity,
eves with an air
when they simply mean
truction of those over whom they
There are cases where mii
tand eri
were created,
or woman abused
feudant’s }
pet
WOM
thank
stewards]
is highér up
f+exl that th
fear a Tall If
office In (
thank i
Rey
who are
sine
1 yr
One
hnareh or State
(rind thers
hastening o
The D Dan
§
:
apartinents was visited by a plain
1 ¥ 5
RE Jake il
(11s
friend,
from jealousy,
the Duke said: “You can have all |
have if yon will stand twenty paces off
me shoot at your a hundred
“No, no,” said his
said the Duke, “to gain all my
Lines,’
gunshots fired
more than ten paces off.”
A minister of small
tendants,
Day of Judgment that you had quite
enough people for whom to be held ac-
countable,’
Substituting for jealousy an everlast-
ing emulation. Beeing others good, let
us try to be better, Seeing others in-
dustrions, let us work more hours, See-
ing others benevolent, let us resolve on
giving a large percentage of our means
for charity, May God put congratula-
tions for others into our right hand, and
cheers on our lips for those who do
brave and useful things, Life is short
at the longest; let it all be filled up
with
HELPFULNESS FOR OTHERS,
work and sympathy for each other's
on it
the
and COmes
build so
most favorable construction,
enters Lake
crystalline,
trim
for
to u
had ten million dolla
the ashes
Demosthenes di
hes which
stammerer went,
©]
edd by
it
Leeman
Do
thone
out
much on the
of this
make no differ
enees Woon it
whether
or ten cent i,
the
world,
Nea
into which tongue
into
veriest
Ol are
BR LORD BEHAVED
exasperations,
to catch Him in Hi
not call Him
id they not
inter
§
11d
the v
MAY
AAI A
A CHINESE PUZZLE.
With
ir phone,
Mer. Foo Lee's Experience an
Unenlightened T
» Lire
#4 slreel
ng machine ofl
» proven was lo
houl wasting tine
is enligh
the
¢ thought of the teleph
venient. down-tos
the scwin
tind
MEG
Loe
wyond IVOTALE
2
Aansy
Y on gottee shone ‘achine,
a TT Ge
, IDaKee suriee ont
We'll sell you
m h, and you
you like
Y ou blige
Fi’ dolla
sabes,’
1
Foo Lee, ‘Allee yvitee,
sheen, me takee allee samee
wont makee shittee on, ou
the wire gol crossed and
an Italian {fruit mers
Lhird avenue came to the ear
lw
Just then
the message of
chant on
of the astonished Foo Lee,
“(oat 1 banana, Nisa
bring you twoa bunch,
wuna bag peahnutia?’’
Foo lee, *““Chessenut!
fool. Hellephone no good. Me walkee
down shone ’‘achine office. Me lub
shone ‘achine office down hottee flat
lon.”
Then he walked out of the telephone
with a frown on his usually
bland countenance, He never appear-
ed at the sewing machine oflice, and
the gilded youth of Mott street are still
wearing hand-made tunics,
a —— -
It is said that 40 per cent. of all the
Ww ho
You heap
due to opium; and this rate of mortality
according to Dr. Wynter Biythe,
‘:ariges in a great measure from the
pernicious practice, both of hard-work-
ing English mothers and the baby-
farmer, of giving Infants ‘soothing
sirups’ ‘infant’s’ friends,’ and the like
to allay restlessness and keep them
asleep during the greater part of thelr
existence.” It has been calculated
that one preparation alone 18 the cause
| of death of 150,000 children every year,
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON.
Buxpay, MAY 6, 1883,
The Judgment,
LESSON TEXT.
(Matt, 25: 31-44,
Memory verses, 37-40.)
[LESSON
Toric or THE (
Is ing in Zion,
PLAN.
JUARTER
GOLDEN TEX
But we behold Lim
ries
}
FOR
vo halle
}
¢
than the ange
loneer
I.essox Toric:
fUANCOR
1. The 8
kK.
{
4 \ 1
Wo
Ye
I
-: lu
11. Acceptance Jastified
% $
ana ii Sal
Matt. 19:2
tealized :
LICASTTY wven
11. Aceeptance
The right
old. 1 see
blessed,
1) The
(2) The praiseful address ; (3
award,
Their character ; (2
s+ (3) Their destiny.
when saw we thee an hun-
gered?” (1) Unlooked-for
(2) Unsuspected deserts
surprised saints! (2
Lord,
3. “The righteous into life eternal
{1} As the bestowal of grace
As the fruit of redemption ; (3)
the nafolding of faith.
1. THE ACT OF REJE
1. Rejection Announced :
Depart from me; ye cursed, into the
eternal fire (41).
Depart from me, ye that work iniquity
(Matt. 7:23).
Cast him out into the outer
(Matt, 22: 13).
Verily I say unto you, I know you
not { Matt, 25: 12).
I tell you, I know not whenoe ye are:
depart from-me (Luke 13 : 27).
Il. Rejection Justified :
As yo did it not unto one of these,
.... ye did it not unto me (45),
They have not rejected thee, but. ... me
{1 Sam. 8:7),
See that ye despise not one of these little
ones (Matt, 18: 19),
ve in
fom." gracious invi-
hgh God's blessed
(1)
honors ;
1)
of
As
THON.
darkness
Pure religion is this,
fatherless and widow
! Hie that loveth not
John 4 : 14),
to
(Jas,
abideth i
i hese shall go a
(443)
}
ishient
Sere 14
Dan, 12
ults of the Judgment
-
Spectacles.
inti the
em ————
What Dynamite Is LdKe.
Those who bh mu
f dynamite explosive will be in-
yw that it looks yery much
rown sugar. Nitro giyoer
hs formed by the action «
upon glveerine, at a low
is the active agent In dyna-
é
ive never seen the
talked «
terested to Kix
like moist 1
n whic
acid
wrature,
mixed with some abscrien
gafer to handle
than the liquid glycerine,
The absorbent material
a silicious earth-—a fine Ww
composed of the remains of infusoris
and resembling powdered chalk; this
two or three its weig
nitroglycerine without becoming
and the ingredients are easily
leaden vessels and wooden
bx used to avoid dangerous
§
i
'h
tit Es
, BUG 3
hus used i
bite powde
ines
mixed,
Spoons ing
When fire is applied to this mass it
burns with a stroug flame, without any
but when ignited by a de-
tonating fuse or even by a sudden blow,
its explosive foree is tremendous.
—————
The Island of Ceylon.
Greater progress has been made in
few years than in any period since it
lish. It is said to be the cheapest place
in the world to live in. Unhulled rice
sells in some districts far ten cents a
bushel. and fruit commands only a
nominal price.
w—— a s—
An astonishing experiment may be
performed with no apparatus but a
piece of string five or six feet long. A
person’s hands being held over his ears,
this string is passed around his head by
another person, who holds both ends in
one hand, and by drawing the fngers
or pails of the other hand over the cord
produces upon the tympanum of the
subject impressions of almost startling
fntensity. Sharp peals of thunder,
changing into a distant and proonged
rumbling, are effects that may be read.
ily given,