The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 14, 1895, Image 7

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

    REV. DR TALMAGE
——————— S——
The Eminent Washington Divine's
Sunday Sermon.
Subject: “The Disabled.”
TEXT: *'As his part is that gooth down to
the battle, so shall his part bethat tarrieth by
the stuf.” —I Samuel xxx., 24.
quarters you have no idea of the amount of
of baggage, David and his army were about
to start on a double fuick mareh for the re-
covery of their captured families from the
Amalekites,
their blankets, their knapsacks,
gage and their carriages, Who shall
detailed to watch this stuff? There are
sick soldiers, and wounded soldiers. nnd
aged soldiers who are not able to go on swift
military expedition, but who are able to do
some work, and =o they are detailed to wateh
the baggage. There is many a soldier who
18 not strong enough to ch thirty miles
in a day and then plung
fight who is able with
against his shoulder
a sentinel to keep
put the to the bag
200 of tho led and aged on
soldiers deta wateh
Some of them, I supposs,
across the brow, and some o
arms in slings, and some of
crutches, They were not
duty. ey had fought
battle for their countrs
are now of
part time on garrison
Im st ery be ‘Muse they
other troops te ti
neis wateh the
the sentinels,
There is quite a different ing en-
acted in the distance, The Amalekites,
ing ravaged and ransacked and robbed wh
countries, lebrating their suee in a
roaring ear ofthem are dancing
on the lawn v | gyration of heel
and toe, and
the spoil
earrings
hea
with ¢
sapphires
plate, and je
ver at 2
prince!
nd the
hea
drawn sword lifted
ta pace up and down as
off an enemy who might
ded
0 the Ls
had
bag
band
f them had the
them wall
owards shirking
in many a
and their God,
in hospital and
duty. They
cannot go with the
Whi asa senti-
baggage the wate
flares
They
part the
of the
1 front
hes
scene b
are Sag
Ire
cloaks
banquet
queters
the battie of
pefore they
celebration
er,
Ar
and
carounsal i am i his
our Civil War
lost because
Now is the
SWO p
Some of th
on th pot, som
staggering and hice
gome of them raw!
Davie
gether the wardr
them upon
Wag:
1a
i eat
80
15a
his
m
the battle
inthe distance,
ne
n
sinted
F they all
“How i
ult thine,
Drive
r dim
to
“ory
these treasar
who had b
did all the
at &
have all the tr
into the w
had stayed
around and ss
been kept,
all safe, and
erippled men wi gi
atthe fr r had
little general looks up
and says,
and he
and ha says, ‘He vou
gether,” and hands are
gether, and he flils them with silver
rushes up to another man who was
away back and had no idea of
the spoils, an ws a Baby!
over him and fliia his hand with gold And
he rushes up to another man who had lost
all his property in serving God and his coun-
try years before, and irives
the cattle and some of the sheep that they
had brought back Am . and
he gives two or three of the cattle and three
or four of the sheep to this poor man,
shall always be fed and clothed, He seas a
man so emaciated and worn out and sick he
needs stimulants, and he gives him a little of
the wine that he brought from the Amal-
ekites. Yonder is a man who has no ap-
petite for the rough rations of the army, and
he gives him a rare morsel from the Amale-
air
thess
hands
held co
And }
sitting
sefting any nf
= ng any o
the
wish garment
»
yr
he up some of
from the slakites
so he
|
|
i
i
i
i
discouraged.”
on garrison
be just as
significant, I am olear
Woman, God places you
duty, and your reward will
great as that of Florence Nightingale,
who, moving so often night by night
with a light in her hand through the hos-
pitals, was called by the wounded the “lady
of the lamp.” Your reward will be just as |
great as that of Mrs, Hertzog, who built and
endowed theological seminary buildings.
Your reward will be just as great as that of
Hannah More, who by her excellent books {
Burke and Joshua Reynolds, Rewards are
in the world, nor even |
noise vou make
full capacity, according to whether or not
Buppose you give to two of vour children
errands, and they are fo go off to make pur-
chuseg, and to one you give #1 andto the
other you give #20, Do you reward the boy
that you gave #20 to for purchasing more
with that amount of money than the other
boy purchased with #17 Of course not! If
God give wealth or social position or elo-
quence, or twenty times the faculty toa man
than He gives to the ordinary man, is He go-
ing to give to the favored man a reward be.
cause he has more power and more influence?
On, no. In other words, if you and 1 were
times more talent than I have, vou will get
wre divine reward than I will, Is God
reward you because He gave you
That would not be fair; that would
be right. These 200 men of the text who
brook Besor didtheir whole
duty. They watched the baggage, they took
cars of the stuff, and they got as much of ths
victory as the men who went to
““A= his partis that goeth down
1 be that tar.
no m
spoils of
the front,
his part
to the battle, so shall
rieth by the stuff,”
There is high encouragement in
all who have it ibility
erodit f what they do You
names of the great ul
cities. Do you know the names of the
lential clerks—the men who have the |
K the men who know the co
bination I distinguished merchant
goes forth 1 ring place, and he
flashes past, say, “Who is that!
replie », Ydon't you |}
th that
banker: great manufac.
' The eonfldential clerk has his week
» er he Mes or
and after
and he sits
But God will
th a= He recog-
it phils hro-
this for
and little
ow the
1508 of
re FOSHOT
1 resnon
or
commer
these
0
ite
“Oh "
That
great
144 is
is 1 porter:
Knovy clerk
mm River Rall-
Erie Railroad,
tatirond —
to mind the fait)
of then
of
i m
thelr services,
omplaint.
ze that fide
of the
Railro up at death to
God g ter kn
that h han was know # ni
* Railr
ror d
gn
Wn
wh t
ght
nd, was
uplings,
bat
s that tarrieth by
we expected
tom of
sh tha abv
ig : Ky
id of the
It was
f God
an ked
thers was a
that ship witho
sd $
Ade,
it RO
the on He ste
, away down
amid the hi furnaces,
whole duty. Nobody thanked
nesr, cognized his heroism
his continuancs and his fidelity, and there
will be just » gh reward for the engineer
of sight as the Captain who
tarkn ing
IATK NORE, ing
bets
ig
who works
!
maimed and aged soldiers who tarried on
garrison duty get st as much of the spoils
of battle ag any of the 200 men that went to
the front. *“~As his part is that goeth down
to the battle, so shall his part be that tarrieth
by the stun.”
The impression is abroad that the Chris
tian rewards are for those who do conspieu-
ous service in distinguished places-—great
patriots, great preachers, great philanthro-
pists, Bat my text sets forth the ides that
there is just as much reward for a man that
stays at home and minds his own business,
and who, erippled and unable to go forth
and lead in great movementsand in the high
places of the earth, does his whole duty just
where he le. Garrison duty as important
and as remunerative as services at the front.
“As his part is that goeth down to the bat-
tle, 50 shail hig part be that tarrieth by the
stuff.”
The Earl of Kintore sald to me in an Eng-
lish railway, “Mr. Talmage, when you get
back to America I want you to preach a ser-
mon on the discharge of ordinary duty in
ordinary places, and then send mea copy of
it." Afterward an English clergyman, com-
ing to this land, brought from the Earl of
Kintore the same message, Alas, that be-
fore I got ready to do what he asked me to
do the good Earl of Kintore had departed
this life! But that man, surrounded by all
palatial surroundings, and in a
guished sphere, feit sympathetic with
those who had ordinary duties to per
form in ordinary places and in ordinary
ways. A great many people are dissonraged
of the howling tempest, “As his part is that
goeth down to the battle, so shall hie part
be that tarrieth by the stuff.”
A Christian woman was seen going along
the edge of a wood every evening, and the
neighbors in the country did not understand
now a mother with so many cares and anxie-
ties should waste so much time as to be idly
sauntering out evening by evening. It was
found out afterward that went there
to pray for her household, and while there
one evening she wrots that beautiful hymn,
famous in all ages for cheering Christian
hearts
she
I love to steal awhile away
From every cumbering care
And spend the hours of setting day
In humble, grateful prayer.
Shall there be no reward for such unpretend-
i
Clear back in the country there is a boy
They call him a bookworm. Wher.
houge—he is reading a book. “What a pity
it is,” they say, “that Ed cannot get an odu-
His father, work as hard as he
i
i
|
John Knox, and of Deborah, and of Florenes
Nightingale, They say, “Oh, that was ail
00d and right for them, but I shall never
called to receive the law on Mount Sinai,
1 shall never be calied to command the sus
and moon to stand still, I shall never be
called to slay a giant, I shall never preach
on Mars hill, I shall never defy the Diet of
Worms, I shall never be called to make a
queen tremble for her orimes, I shall never
preside over a hospital.”
There are women who say, “If I had as
brilliant a sphere as those people had I
should be as brave and as grand, but my
business is to get ehildren off to school, and
to hunt up things when they are lost, and to
ses that dinner is ready, and to keep account
of the household expenses, and to hinder
the children from being mrangaisted by the
whooping cough, and to go through all the
annoyances and vexations of housekeeping,
Ob, my sphere is so infinitesima , and #0 in-
One night
there is a |
y the product of the farm.
Ed has retired to his room, and i
family conference about him, The sisters |
say: “Father, I wish you would send |
Ed to college. If you will, we will work
harder than we ever did, and we will
make our old dresses do.” The mother
says: “Yes; I will get along without any
hired help. Although I am not as strong as
I used to be, I think I can get along without
any hired help.” The father says: ‘Well,
I think by husking corn nights [ ean got
along without any assistance.” Sugar fis
banished from the table, butter is banished
from the plate, That family is put down on
rigid--yea, suffering—economy that the boy
may go to college. Time passes on. Com-
mencement day has come. Think not that
I mention an imaginary case. God knows
it happened. Commencement day has come,
and the professors walk in on the stage in
their long gowns, The interest of the oc
casion is passing on, and after awhile it
comes to a climax of interest as the
valedictorian is to be introduced.
Ed bas studied so hard and worked
#0 well that hs has had the hon
or conferred upon him, There are rounds
of applause sometimes breaking into vocifer-
ation. It is a great day for Ed, But away
baek in the galleries are his sisters {n their
plain hats and their faded shawls, and the
oid fashioned father and mother—dear me,
she has not had a new hat for six years; he
has not had a new coat for six years—and
they get up and look over on the platform,
and they laugh and they cry, and they sit
and they look pale, and then they are
very much flushed, Ed gets the garlands,
and the old fashioned up in the gallery
hive their full share of the triumph. They
have made that scene possible, and in the
day when God shall more fully reward self.
sacrifices made for others He will give grand
and glorious tion. “As Don in
that goeth down to the battle, so shall his
part be that tarrieth by the stuff,”
is high encouragement in this sub
ject also for those who once wrought ‘mighte
ily for Christ and the church, but through
sickness or collapse of fortune or advanced
years cannot now go to the front. These two
hundred men of the text were veterans, Let
that man bare his arm and show how the
muscles were torn. Let him pull aside the
turban and see the mark of a battleax., Pull
Would it have been fair for those men,
I was in the Soldier's hospital in Paris and
men of the first
fought under their great commander. One
was at Austerlitz,”’ Another
man sald, “Twas in the awful retreat from
Another man said, “I was at the
Some of them were lame,
they were all aged, Did the French Gov.
ernment turn off those old soldiers to die in
want? No. Their last days were spent like
princes. Do you think my Lord is going to
are
the brook Besor? Are they going to get no
part of the spoils of the vietory Just look
at them, Do vou think those crevices in the
faco are wrinkles? No. They are battle
scars, They fought against sickness, they
fought against trouble, they fought
against sin, they fought for God,
they fought for the chureh, th
fought for the truth, they fought
heaven, When they had plenty of money
their names were always on the subscription
list, When there was hard work to be
done for God they were ready to take the
heaviest part When there
great revival they were ready to
night for the anxious and the
They were ready to do any work, endure »
sacrifice, do the most unpopular thing
God d jut now they
gO w they have phvsies
infirmities, Now their head troubles then
They are weak and faint }
lesor, Are they to hs share
triumph? Are they t > oe of
ures, none of the =p
must think that Chris
memory if you think
services,
Fret not, ye aged
staff and wait for
onder they
any
of it. came
pray all
gin struck.
not
bro
in ¢t
tring
w the
the
of the {at
shining
the shining
and they 1
wo up,
the chari
££" **As his part |
shall his
t Bovpan
the be that tarrieth
en and women of unaporeciated
will get vour reward, if t
When Charles Wasley ao
up to judgment, and the th ands o
which were wafted into glory through 1?
songs shall be enumerated, he will take
throne. Then John
here, hereafter
f sou
Wesley will com
udgment, and afte his name has been
tioned in connection with
the millions of souls br
the Methodism which he founded he will
take his throne. But between the two
thrones of Charles Wesley and John Wesley
there will bea throne higher than either, on
which shall sit Susannah Wesley, who,
with maternal consecration in Epworth ree.
tory, Lincolnshire, started those two souls
on their triumphant mission of sermon and
song through all the following ages, Oh,
what a day that will be for many who
rocked Christian eradles with weary foot,
and who patched worn out garments and
darned socks, and out ~f = small ineome
made the children comfortable for the win-
ter. What a day that will be for those to
whom the world gave the cold shoulder and
called them nobodies and begrudged them
least recognition, and who, weary and
worn and sick, fainted by the brook Besor.
Oh, that will be a mighty day when the
Som of David shall distribute among
~
And then it shall
be found that all who on earth served God
ns
much reward as those who fliled the earth
with uproar of achievement. Thea they
shall understand the height, the depth, the
magnifloence of my text, ‘‘As his part is that
goeth down to the battle, so shall his part be
that tarrieth by the stuff.”
DEATH IN COLDEN ROD,
A Wisconsin Veterinarian Decldes the
Flower Produces an Incarable Disease.
State Veterinarian Dr. C. F. Scott, of Wis.
consin, has discovered that under the shaggy
yellow blossoms of the golden rod flower
there lurks the germs of the most dangerous
disease to horses which has ever been dis-
covered, Like consumption it is incurable
and it affects the equine in mueh the same
way as that disease eats away the life of man.
o horses which eat the tempting plant
20 into a gradual decline, the blood is de
stroyed, the tissues waste away and they die
in from three weeks to three months. Thou-
sands of horses have perished in the pineries
of Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin from
this disease.
The State Veterinarians of these States
have for a long time tried in vain to discover
the cause of it. Dr, Scott sald: “I am satis.
fled this is where the trouble lies, There is
no eure for it, Nothing ean be done except
to destroy the leat and roots.”
Hanged Her Child and Then Herself.
On the farm of William MeClarney, near
Cairo, Ill, lived a man named Reush with
his wife and their little daughter, about four
a Ol ow eh Ao be loft home to
work, ex ng to return a fow .
When he returned he could not find his wife
or child, The alarm was sounded, and after
a search the woman and her child were
found in the chicken house, there
with pleoss of rope attached to scantlings
A NEW MUSICAL INSTRUMENT.
An Invention that Is Intended to
Produce Blended Tones.
From South Dakota comes a descrip-
tion of a musical instrument, the like
of which we have never seen. It is of
the guitar or the banjo type, but it is
distinguished by the fact that it has
two connected sound-boards, from
which are obtained tones designed to
blend and afford music of an altogether
superior quality.
The body of this instrument has an
interior chamber, with the usugl tone
opening In the sound-board, and within
the body is a second auxiliary body,
similiar in contour, the two bodies being
connected front and rear by pins of
wood. An Interior bridge 18 used, algo,
which connects the outer sound-board
with the upper face of the inner. The
that in
the outer, but not so large in
NEW MUSICAL INSTRUMENT.
has
diameter The new instrument
an II rcs
ANS ENEMY,
SELDOM
VICTIMS,
WOM
SPARES ITS
When It Does She is But 8 Wreck-—-Phy-
slcinns Have Long Been
Vowerless
The Experience of a Balti.
more Woman,
Herald, Bali
Gr
Mrs, J.
th
Pp
fn
mitimore,
w f hal
man o
scribe was ushered into ths parlor to await
The room gave every evidences |
and attention of
a good housewife, Choiee books lay as
{the
rated with many rare |
the intelligenos
and the walls were deo
and
and
annom
her
of virtu bric-a-brac from Sou
ther countrios. When |
inoed the reporter wa
amtonished to find such a young looking
and healthy woman, She is well educated and |
is a fluent talker and interostingo listen to, |
She, however, declined at first to
America, Japan,
Mrs. Grove wa
speak of |
xpocienced from taking |
said, she did not
Ppear in print in any way,
she Hike |
aE,
that
me |
iid me 80 much good
I might be doing wrong by not letting
other sufferer know what they 414 for
Then she sald, “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
rertalnly all the propriet reprogant the
tobe, I never had suo! fron
other madinine, A short tims
attack of peritonitis whi
prostrated and nery
spairad of recovery i sshd sloop,
ar read with legroe PRRs Fr sat.
and life was absolutely a burden,
Having heard that others had been cured of |
the same troubles by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills,
I secured several boxes and began to take
them. As if by magico I at once began to
improve, They cured me, and now | have
no symploms of nervousness or of the disease
which so prost rated me, Now that's enough ”
said Mm. Grove, in reply to another ques.
tion. Bhe walked to the door as Hghtly as a
young girl and, with a pleasant good ‘mora-
ATA
relief
1 such a
that I de |
ither al
ent
t
portals of her happy home with little
grandehild clinging to her skirts,
Dr. Willlams' Pink Pills contain, in a con-
a
give new life and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves, Pink Pills are sold
by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on
receipt of price (00 cents a box, or six boxes
for #1.50~they are never sold in bulk or by
100), by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y,
8am 'Bias—~Look hyar, Looshus, why
am dis hyar Valkyrie laik a trolley car?
Lucius Dove—"Deed 1 dunno. Sam
‘Bias de fendah am allers in
front ob 'er.—Philadelpbis Record
8100 Hewand., $100,
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
east one dreaded disease
Case
stages, and that j= ecatarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a cone
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in-
teraally, acting directly upon the biood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de.
stroying the foundation of the disoase, and
giving the patient strength by building up the
constitution And assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors bave so much faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun.
dred Dollars for any conse that it fails to cure,
Send for list of testimonians, Address '
F.J. Cazgsxy & Co, Toledo, O.
BW Sold by Draggists, Tho.
A bad man most hates the things that
would do him most good,
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov't Report
Royal Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
OLDEST HOUSE IN NEW YORK.
Absent-Minded.
remember th stories of the abe
minded 1 umbrella
0 bed and stood behind the door all
ouidn’t
We
It Is Bituated in Southampton, Long {i sent
Island, {1
One of the few
colonial days is stil] standing at
ampton, Long Island. This town claim
the pre-eminence
English
York, and the ancient hon
was built by Thomas Sayre,
relics left of the early night, and of an
find his pipe when he had it bet
his teeth. Here }
to add to the
A
Maine was burrs
friend, to
ped suddenly
South ween
“ Lan
8105 Y
1 oldest
W ¢
forvo
being tl
in the Rtate of
of
town promis.
ge re
On
I've come away
my watch undert
“l.0t's go bad
friend
“Hold on”
don’t belleve
he drew the |
looked caref
ed the minutes
ghan't have
on toward
+11, 1 guess |
t a wat
iaou
OLDEST HOUSE IN 5
first
settlers,
and has been his
10 Bon
erations,
direct de
At
The Greatest Medical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY'S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENKEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,,
{ § .
ian u
the
Our COMMmon
ures every
ret Borofuls
Has diam yew A
pasture we
kind of
down to a
He has t
CRSOS, A!
(both tha
his posse
entos
of B a bn i 2 Or DOK.
A benefit is alwa enced from the
first t “an riect cure is warranted
laxen
ted it causes
is passing
the Liver
y iuotls
pears iu 8
th
abel,
Humor, from the w
hundred
“ses
‘ 8 Ww in
ndred ocertifi-
twenty miles
’
ven
on two
n
Private Roof Gardens,
Plans have been ty
houses that
. Foy
ir
the west
regidences
@
: water al Ded
FRU
near bj)
top will be p Ladies or Gents, §75
word It
have it 80
is
arranged
his breakfast or |
116, Columbus,
POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
a Gives relic! in FIVE minutes * Rend
re FREE trial package. Sold by
y One Bos nt postpad
roipt of §1.% Ble hove oh,
ress THOR, POPHAR, PHILA, PA.
rule such a vast :
Mr. Minks "Well ki
not very big yourself, my dear.’
York Weekly.
A DAY SURE..7:=2
1 dan’ FA
afi we w
“
4% ATTLE
on Duller
+s SALE BY
wi. Md
Hoste
N-FRIESIAN C
for k,
tiie al opew
4 w $ # ¥ Sure -
BT. BOZCAR, Basegrr, Bos PETROIT, BIHAN
$3 A YEAR.
Presidential Yess
THE CHICAGO CHRONICLE
newspaper of th
days a week
this rate jess than one
CHRONICLE, 164-168
g Timely Warning.
The great success of the chocolate preparations of
the house of Waiter Buker & Co. (established
in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
many misleading and unscrupulous imitations
of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
Baker & Co. are the oldest and largest manu-
facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
used in their manufactures.
Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
cratic
one year fo
¥
¥
a
For Whooping t ough, Disco's Care {8 a suo
oosatul remedy. M. P. Dizrxn, 67 Throop
Ave, Brookivn, N. ¥.. Nov. 14. 1804
It doesn’t take much money to make a
good man rich.
Mrs, Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething softens the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion allays pain cures wind colic, 2c a bottle,
No matter how safe sin may 100k, tsend is
death.
What a Sense of Kellie! it is te Know
that you have no corns. Hinde reorns removes
them, and is comforting. 15. at druggists.
A wrong desire overcome isa temptation
resisted,
Dr. Kilmer's Sw axpr-RooT cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles,
Pamphlet and Consultation free,
Laboratory, Binghamton, N. Y,
Wisdom can live on what
under foot,
FIT stopped free by Dr. KLive's GruEaT
avh fixsronsa, No gy Ares day's use,
arvelous cures. Trea ! al bot
tiefree, Dr, Kine, #31 Arch 8t., Phlla,, Pa
The Inventor of soap was a friend of the
Gospel,
fools trample
Parker's Buu Tenic in Popular
I Sood, Ot pBaSering, sisspleeg, DoURIng ADRS revving
ALS
To live an aimless life is to lose life,
they get, the genuine Waiter Baker & Co.’s goods.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
the food for all such.
How many pale folk
there are! People who
have the will, but no power
to bring out their vitality;
people who swing like
a pendulum between
strength and weakness—
so that one day's work
causes six days’ sickness!
People who have no life
for resisting disease—thin people, nerveless, delicate !
The food for all such men, women, or children is Scorr’s
Emursion. The hypophosphites combined with the oil
will tone up the system, give the blood new life, improve
the appetite and help digestion. The sign of new life will
be a cting and reddening, which brings with it strength,
comfort and good-nature.
Be swre you gut Scott's Emuleion when pow want it and not a cheap subatitute,
i ——
SNe gran ase home
Japan exports matches.
|
Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. soc. and $i.