The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 26, 1896, Image 7

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    REY. DR. TALMAGE.
The Eminent Washington Divine's
Sunday Sermon.
Subject: “Warming the World.”
Tex:
w-Pgalm exlvil,, 17
The almanac says that winter is ended
down to zero, deny it,
a more genial climate than this, and yet he
winter,
snow like wool, the frost Ii
stones like marbles, and describes the cone
geslmeot of lowest temperature, We
all studied the power of the heat,
of us have studied the power of the froat!
"Who ean stand before His cold?”
challenge of the text has many times been
accepted,
Oetober 10, 1812,
began its retreat from
dred and flity thousand
600 cannon, 40.000 stragelers, it
was b wright weather when they started from
Moscow, but soon something wrathier than
than the ~k8 swoope
An army of arotic
bayonets and hatlsto
manded by voice
them, the flv
Napoleon's great
Moscow. One
men, 50,000 h
army
hun-
Res,
pieces ol
Cossa
with feiel
shot, and e«
marched after
ng artillery of the heavens in
pursuit, tro at nightfa
gather into « s and huddle the
gether for wa h, bat when the
they rose not, for they were dead
ravens came for their m
corpses. The way strewn with
stuffs of the edst, brought ity fr
Russian capital. An invis
100.000 men ¢ hurled
snowdrift
chill rivers, and int
that had foilowe ¥
freezing horror which
was proof to all «
for any earthly
lenge of
His o«
In th
Forge,
and frost
shoes, 101
pillow of the
civil War the ery
when tha tr
in the
blusts, 0%
ws for
f tempest,
yn.
ps
WAS
ns bo
ihn
we
and ch
imperial a }
tal and iz sealed
with
0
. 3
+
Teas
Tn
wo
weather,
econditio
Know ve n ot, en
of thousands peanie wi
fore this cold? fe in
bare feet, and to empty
gaunt visages, Christ gave the world a les |
son in common sense when, before preach.
ing the gospel to the muititade in the
wilderness, He gave them a good dinner,
When I was a iad I remember sesing two
rough woodents, but they made more im-
pression upon me than any pictures I have
ever seen, They were on opposite pages.
The one voc det represented the coming of
the snow in wioter and a iad looking
the door of & great mansion, asd he was all
wrapped in furs, and his cheeks were ruddy,
and with glowing counteanncs he shouted:
“It snows, it snows!” On the next page
there was a miserable tensment, and the door
was of and a child,
ragged and wretched, was looking out, and
he said, “Ob, my God, it snows!”
tor of gladness or of grie!, according to our
gireumstances, Bat, my friends,
nen are
Win
noft
y cannot stand
to preach to
mach, and to
Hielegg
sf
world, for it is a eold world in more re.
spects than one. and I am here to consult
with you as to the best way of warming uj
the world, I wantto have a great heater in-
bomes throughout the world,
of divine patent,
which to conduct heat, and
door in which to throw the fuel
Ones got this heater introduced and it
will turn the arctic zone into the temperate,
and the temperate into the tropics, It je
the powerful heater, it is the giorious fur.
nace of Christian RR Symp, The question
ought to be, inst how much heat can
we absorb, how much heat ean we throw
out? There are men who go through the |
world floating foe They frees sve
It is a heater
It has many pipes with
with which they shake yours is as cold as the
paw of a polar bear, If they float into a
religious meeting, the temperature drops
from eighty above to ten degrees below zero,
here are loicles banging from their eye-
brows, They float into a religious meeting
| and they chill everything with thelr jere-
minds. Cold prayers, cold songs, cold greet-
ings, cold sermons, Christianity on ice!
The Church n great refrigerator, Christians
| gone into winter quarters, Hibernation! On
the other hand, there are people who go
through the world like the breath of a spring
{ morning. Warm greetings, warm prayers,
| warm smiles, warm Christian influence,
There are such persons, We bless God for
| them, We rojoles in their companionship.
A General in the English army, the army
| having halted tor the night, having lost his
baggage, lay down tired and slek withont
any blanket, An officer came up and sald:
“Why, you have no blanket. I'l go and
get you a blanket,” He departed for a fow
| moments and then cameo back and coverad
the General up with a very warm blanket.
The General sald: “Whose blanket is this?'’
The o Monr replied: “I got that from a pri-
i vate solder in the Scotch regiment, Ralph
| MacDonald," “Now.” sald the General,
| “you take this blanket right back fo that
soldier. He ean no more do without it than
[ ean do without it. Never bring to me the
blanket of a private soldier.’ How many
men that Genera! would it take to
warm the world up? The vast majority of
us are anxious to get ms
anybody is biavket
at the fellow feeling
| rooky betw
| Jericho in Seripture times,
| who has been set 1 by the bandits,
the struggle to Kee his property he has
got wounded and mauled and stabbed, and
«% there half dead. A priest ridesalong,
Ho soos him and says: “Why,
with that Why, must
¢ on the flat of his back. Isn't it
1d lie there!
like
Look
ths
a4 or not,
displayed in
Joerusa'em
Here 18 a
elas
deflie on
man
up
in
he 1
matier man’
way to
FOIOS
“Why, that
hurt. Gashed on
stabbed under
his
haven’
in the
time
Carry ¢ if
{0 warm
lespod into
was si
Hug to
pking
inake
Re Wo wore in |
i and drowned tos
nen like that would
i world E
th horrors of Newgale
turansld impracation
aad th a flith into prayer aud repentance and
a reformed life, The sisters of charity, in |
1863. on Northern and Southern battlefields,
same £0 bovs in blue andl gray while they
were bleeding to death, The black bonnet |
with the sides pinnetl bask and the white |
ve brow may not have answered |
all the demands of elegant taste, but
Pu not parsuade that soldier dying 1000 |
tile from home that it was anything but an
Oh, with
cheery look, with bel pfal word, with kind
action, try to make the world warm!
sve thelr king
it fake to warm
izabeth Fry went into
prison,
and the obecenity
is aol
Count that day lost whose low dessanding
sun
Views from thy hand no generous action
done,
It was His strong sympathy that brought
Christ from a warm heaven to a cold world.
The lan where He dwelt had a serene sky,
balsamic atmosphere, tropical luxuriabee.
No storm blasts in heaven, No ehill foun-
taine, On a eold December night Christ
stepped out of & warm heaven into the
world's frigidity. Tbe thermometer in
Pristine never drops below pero, but De
age is very poor on the hilltops, Christ
stepped out of a warm heaven into the cold
world that eold December night. The
world’s reception was eold. The surf of be
Joseph's sepul-
teher was cold. Christ eames, the
warmer, to warm the earth, and all Shijsten.
| dom to-lay fecis the glow, He will ke
warming the earth until the tropic will ive
away the arctie and the antarctie. He gave
an intimation of what He was going to do
when He broke e the funeral at the gate of
Nain and turned it into a reunion festival,
| und when with His warm lips He melted the
and stamped His foot, erying "Silgnes!" and
the waves crouched and the tempests folded
their wings.
Oh, it was this Christ who warmed the
chilled disciples when they had no food by
giving them plenty to eat, and who in the
tomb of Lazarus shattered the shackles uns
til the broken link of the chain of death
rattled Into the darkest crypt of the
mausoleum. In His genial presence the girl
who had fallen into the fire and the water is
healed of the eatalopsy, and the withered
arm takes museular, healthy action, and the
ear that could not hear an avalapohe catches
a leat’s rustle, and the tongue that could no’
articulate trills a quatrain, aad the blind
eye was reiumed, aod Christ, instead of
staying three days and three nights in the
sepuloher, as was supposed, as soon as the
worldly curtain of observation was dropped
began the exploration of all the under.
ground passages of earth and sea, wherever
a Christian's grace may after awhile be, and
started a light of Christian hope, resurrection
hope, whieh shall not go out until the last
cerement is taken off and the last mausoleum
breaks open,
Ah! 1 am so glad that the Bun of Right.
eousness dawaed oa the polar night of the
Nations, And if Christ is the great warmer,
then the church is the great hothouse, with
its plants and trees pnd fruits of righteous
ness, Do you know, my friends, that the
church is the {astitution that prop
parmth? I have been for twenty-seven years
studying how to make the church warmer,
{ Warmar architecture, warmer hymn
| warmer Christinn salutation, All os
| Siberian winter, we mast have it a
| hothouse. he only institution o
| day that proposes to make the w
{ Universities and observatories,
{ their work. They P
but they do not prop
| world light,
the world war n. Geology informs us, bt
Id as the rock it hamyners, The t
is Aso
soope shows where the rids are,
ner is
The]
ology,
utaide
n earth to.
rid warmer,
they all have
roposa to make
yess $0 1
ther we
led
foils
while joo
ff strange
ty may
it It ean-
us
nfarior aMal
ir affloity;
work t
i has »
of m
Re gether for
: great
splendor, but it is th
n an iceberg. The
wWAr nth Aan 1 Best sin » 11 ’ 1 for
. Warm ! ni athie 8,
y ind th
nd la
Kinagiegq,
14 ani nlight
ey
the sexi
Oh!
ti
STUNE ACE RELICS
Ifmporiant Archasologzioal Disc
Near Worms
avery Made
An imoortar shasalneies
tO sat Wor
yarias g
as
fragments
and eoloriag the
taddle and
and tatooing,
in were also frequent,
In barlly a single case was there missing
from the women’s graves the primitive corn.
mill, consisting of two stones, a grinding-
The men's graves
contain weapons, The implements are all
stone, with whetstones and bones for sharp
ening purposes, They consist of perforated
ire
were geed
That there was no want of food is shown
| them, the latter being bones of various ani.
male. Several photographs have been taken
of the skeletons as they de in the graves,
their appearance being perfect, after a repose
faspended by Her Long Halr,
Mise Theresa Lachet, a girl employed by
he Racine (Wis) Wagon and Carriage Com-
pany, was standing near a machine in opera-
tion when the belt caught her balr and in an
instant she was Ju five feet into the air
and held suspended against a pulley, Twenty
girls witnessed the accident and many
fainted, while others ran screaming from the
building. The machine was stop and
the girl removed, A portion of her air WAS
torn out and her head and soalp lacerated,
but pliysicians believe that she will recover.
sbi
The G. A. BR. Encampment,
The grand annual encampment of the
Grand Army of the Republic will be held in
St. Paul, Mian, the first week in September,
The pro i “Biue and Gray” grand pas
rade in New hor ow York on Joe Fonte of July will
not old, owing to © on on the part
of Grand Army of the Republio posts,
—-—
Japanese Stadent Cats His Throat,
Jokithi Uchida, a Japanese student at Oor-
nell (Iowa) College, a ward of the Methodist
Church and a well-known , commit
ted suicide while in a despondent mood by
*
WOMAN'S WIT.
TOLD BY A ROCIETY GIRL,
Something About arphine, Sulphur,
Molasses and Other Things,
From the Evening News, Newark, N. J.
Among the populnr soclety leaders in East
Orange, N. J., Emma L. Stoll, a charming
young maiden, stands in the foremost rank.
Bhe is of a lovable disposition and the light
of the social sot in which she moves, For
two years she has been a sick girl from inter.
nal troubles peculiar to women, and having
recently recovered, given our reporter
the following interesting account:
“Instead of improving under the care of
my physician I worse, For five
weeks I was unable to get out of ped and
about six o'clock sach morning I suffered
horribly.
from the marks of my teeth, for in my efforts
from screaming I sunk my teeth
deep (nto my At sueh times I rolled
lke an aspen
has
became
My lips were sore and Incerated
to keep
ps,
and tossed until the bed shook
jon! and it foally got serious
doctor—1 won't tell you his name gave me
some morphine pilis to take. The very
thought of them now makes me shiver, These
morphine pilis simply put me to sleep for a
whiie, and when | LIne again
My AZODY Was renewnd,
“The pain in my stoma and back
than I could stand. ‘Your bio
the doctor, ‘take sulphur
and I did uotil {1 was a great won
der that | was not nn mke, It was
time wasted in taking it because I was not
benefited inthe least; my suffering
but by a mighty «effort after being
long, I gotup., Oh, but I was a
then, From 112 pounds, 1 hm
ninety: my cheeks were pale ands
al: ¥ actually bho
pain in my side, Then I read «
' Pink Pills for Pale People and
mind in the News lpspired me
1 got the pits and took them
many dave | began to ih wa and be.
had finished one box I felt as if I
out wail for !
{ through the Pink
yendaches
id bok Bid
BO
Luscrg Conscious
was
wd ie
and
more
poor,’
IGOIRRSOR,
sald
orlassuans
sontinued,
Lend
sad sight
i fallen to
ken and
bbied ym the
fDr
in -
"
and miles, 1»
imping an
bye {0
Ofiact
A Good Dox is Werth
fuder:
f to know §
fet MH
yoy wat
Lak om
Wein
Mare, W
teething, ec
tion, alinys pai
4 v4
: 2 one
whom and what
my recovery
3
are i
10
I owe
, and there
5 of my
taking the Compound
7, after seeing what
it has done for me.
Oh, if 1 had known
of it sooner, and
of misery. 1
friends
gth St, Cincin-
nati, O.
Should advice be required, write to
Mass, who
has the utter confidence of all in-
telligent American women. She will
promptly tell what to do, free of
charge. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound, which is easily ob-
tained at any druggist’s, will restore
any ailing woman to her normal con-
dition quickly and permanently.
Paderewski's Joke.
The other day when Paderewski was
dining at a hotel in Richmond, Va. a
fine nickel-plated banjo was setit in by
a local banjo player, with the request
that the great pianist should write a
ghort musical sentiment on the sheep
gkin head. Paderewskl complied with
the request, and this is the sentiment
to which he attached his signature: “1
have not the pleasure of being a per
former on this beautiful instrument; am
only a plano player.” Now the banjo
player Is asking his friends if the vir
tuoso was “Joliying” him.
His Mathematics Lame,
A Beoteh tradesman, who had amass.
od. as he belleved, £4,000, was surprised
at his clerk showing by a balance sheet
that his fortune was £6,000, “It canna
count again,” sald the old man,
The clerk did count again, and again
declared the balance to be £6,000
The master himself counted, and he
also brought out a clear balance of
£6,000, Time after time he cast up the
columns: it was still a six, and
four, that rewarded his labors Bo
the old merchant, on the strength of hi
good fortune, modernized his house,
nd put money in the purse of the car
penter, the painter, and the uphois
terer. Still, however, he had a lorking
doubt of the existence of extra
£2,000; so one winter night
to give the columns more count.”
At the close of his task he
as though he had been galy
rushed out in a shower of rain
house of the capped
| drowsy, put out his in an gti
window at the
mumbling “Who's
d'ye want? “Me, ye ws
claimed
Me Year «
bes
not a
the
he
“one
jumped ug
anized, and
to the
clerk, who and
head fi
sound of the knocker
there, and what
oundrel!” ex
his employer “Ye've added
of our :
Big and lLirave,
io Mac 1
tallest men «
standing 6 feet!
fa riy
{eine
raked to write,
advertisements
hie cannot! inde
ot
Ripans Tabu
and went
snd WHISKY baits
EER By, B 8 WOOLLEY, ATLAYT:
nb ————— AOS HO SIT SA OANA
Gladness Comes
ith a better understanding of the
feal ills which vanish be fore projes ef-
forts— gentle efforts — pleasant eflortge
rightly directed. There is comfort in
he knowledge that so many forms of
sickness ire not due to any actual dis.
ease, but simply to a const ipated condi
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt-
ly removes. That is why it is the only
remedy with millions of families, and is
everywhere esteemed so highly by all
who value good heslth Its Beneficial
effects are due to the fact, that it is the
remedy which promote ternal
leanliness, without debil
rans on whichitacts. Itis
Tr important, in order io gel
effects, to note Ww
at yon have the ger Bui art icle,
1 nufactured by the California
Sy or, 0. only, and sold by all rep-
162 drugg ri SiR
one
ial
ulab
if in the enjo
nd the system
tives or other rem
1f afflicted with any actual disease, one
may vo commended toth e most skillful
physicians, but if in need of a laxative,
then one should have the best, and with
the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of
¥ oe stands hi ghest and is most largely
used and gives most gene ralsat tisfac tion.
Money in Chickens
11 b
. ‘
of good health,
then axa
not needed.
yment
regular,
dies are
1%
w
25 ce
ype
ake it profit
ent § . 15 BOOK PLM
«174 Leonard mt:eet, NN. Y. Clty
2 AS STHMA
or FRAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
ef in FITE minutes” Bend
» FREE ai packsge
gviie z sent Po
receipt of 81 Bix bores Bi. 00
ross THOS, POPFHAN, FRILL, FA.
0G,
we Tur
where .
xp ads
we FUR
* y eYOrY 838
“lw write $l one
Bes LE, Detroit, Birk.
we wil
retne er
ANTAL Bari FalTULRING URTaR
ra PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleaseos end besetifies fhe
} em 8
y its Tom
res wonip dente §
Boe, und §1 7% wt
Rats 3
i Sud
”
NO A GENTS.
1 Lo Lhe Omens
wiaclessle prices. Ship
ywhere for es isatior
Frerything war
a LOO & of Care
rieEgeE, 00 vies of Mar
CN ess, 410 Riding Sed.
Jdles. Vi rite lor catnlogae
ng PLEHART
on iin Cattiage & Haracw Mig Ce
Eisbait, lod,
WE HAVE.
po anda
best with Pearline. Its
Unlucky
lere are
QO)
}
I' NOUS
with
uired to
de by
your
you can
clse
©
lt
fedin
there's
r in sight that isn’t cleaned
gh and
Purchase
Jeseon eufferin
Pemale Infirmities Im
Nearalgla: More than 4,000,
18Seat.}
as directs? fil to benefit any
and Liver Troubles, Bilious-
Chronic Headache oF
OFTEN ois
and references in Sapeeiom news-
fully understand, and which vou would
snoyolopmdia costing #25 or #30.
LISHING HOUSE, 134 Leon-
furnish you, postpaid, With just such
in stamps sent to BOOK PUB-
ard Streot, N. Y, City, wi
a book, containing 530 pages, well
sound travels 1135 feet per ssoond?
0¢:
0c: