THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1806, THE GOSPEL FIREPLACE. Dr. Talmage so Church Designatoa of Christ. the Ihe Flames of God's Holy Love Are Burne Ing in His Sanctuaries Let Thelr Glow Enter Your Hearts and the Cold World Wii bo Warmed, In his latest Washington sermon Rev. Pr. Talmage invites his hearers to bask f= the sunshine of God's holy love and get warm. His text being Psalm 47: 17 Who can stand before this ecld?” The almanac that winter is snded and spring has come, but the wrinds, and the frosts, and the ther smometer, in some places down at zero, Leny it. The Psalmist lived in a more genlal climate than this, and yet he pust sometimes have been cut by the sharp In this chapter he mpeaks of the snow like wool, the frost Eke ashes, the} nd describes the ¢ ast temperat 5AaVS weather, stones like marbles, ngealment of We have all How of the this low before This cha fimes been ace e] ¥apoleon's great great from Mo One hundred £fty thousand men, 15,000 horses, Paces wi cauaun, Bud <4 text has October 19, army began its re- and 600 stragglers, was bright when they witarted but soon something wrathier than the Cossacks mwooped upon tl An army wf Arctic blasts, with icicles for bayo- #sts and hailstones for shot, and eom- smanded by voice of tempest, marched sfter them. The flying artillery of %he heavens in pursn The troops at sightfall would her into circles sud huddle themselves together for swarmth; but when the day broke they #ose not, for they were dead, and the yavens came for their morning meal of @orpses. The av was strewn with the wich stuffs of the East, brought as booty capit An one hundred hurled them dead yd on the hard rivers, and into the that had followed The freezing hor- slled h COW. A), O00 weather Moscow, from eir flanks al, istory t itis a vain thing ‘ " In ut were, Ig OUr civ 5 lichmond! ow H wl NOT greatest s Flees glaciers, » i On Bn lof ice and scepter 1fferings of when all the vi? or the wi vhen the stages rolled te mporary the ice 4 America was frozen ov built on 1 in when er and the ice come down to cr weed Then en there have been on themselves in furs, ives around fires, ms about them lions of the who none of fs perate mre compelied oan stand One-half mre employed in battling ine the weather, The furs of the cotton of the south, the awn flelds, the wool zones us of our day lemency of the north, flax of our of our own flocks, the coal from our own mines, the wood from our own forests, all employed in Dattling these inclemencies, and still every winter, with bine lips and chat. gearing tecth, answers: “None of us ean stand before His cold,” Now this being such & cold world, God sends out influences to warm it. 1 am glad that that the God of the frost is the God of fhe heat, that the God of the snow is She God of the white blossoms; that the God of January is the God of June. The question as to how shall we warm shis world up is a question of immedi. ste and all-encompassing practicality, In this zone and weather there are so many fireless hearths, so many bro ken window panes, so many defect five roofs, that sift the snow, Coal and wood and flannels and khick conts are beter for warming wp buch a place than tracts and Bibles nd creeds. Kindle that fire where it Ee gone out. Wrap something around $home shivering limbs. Shoe those bare t. lat that bare head. Coat thal ro back, Sleeve that bare arm. Nea: ky sll the pletares of Marthe Washing: throne | Lh birds | houses | must be | under his | duties.’ rey went her i to by foreion ambassadors; but Kirkland, in her interesting bool, inspiring portrait of Martha Washington. She comes forth from her husband's hut in the encamp- ment, the hut 16 feet long by 14 feed wide comes forth from that hut to nurse the sick, to sew the patched garments, to console the soldiers dying of the cold. That is a better picture of Martha Washington. Hundreds of garments, hundreds of tons of coal, hundreds of glaziers at broken wins dow sashes, hundreds of whole-souled men and women, are necessary ta warm the wintry weather, What we doing to alleviate the condi. tion of those not so fortunate as we? ye not, my friends, there are hundreds of thousands of people who cannot stand before this cold? It is useless to preach to bare feet, and to empty stomachs, and to gaunt visages, gives a more she are Know Christ gave this world a lesson in com- mon sense when before preaching the Gospel to the multitude in the wilder He them a I was a lad 1 ness. dinner When two gave good remember but they than They woodoul ented the coming of the snow in seeing rough woodcuts mado more impression upon me any were pictures I have ever seen. on opposite pages, The one renee winter, and a lad the door of looking out at a great mansion, and he was vrapped in furs and his cheeks were , and with gl “It snows! there +} y 11s 4 £ wing countenance it snows!” On page was a miserable ild, wan and sick and ragged and wretched, was looking out, and he said: “O! my The winter of gladness or of grief, according to our circumstances But, my friends, there is more than one way of warming up this cold world, for it is God, it snows!’ a cold world in more respects than one, and I am here to consult with you as to the best way of warming up the world. I want to a great duced into all your churches and all vour homes throughout the world, It patent. It ha ch toconduet heat, sh to throw have heater intro- heater of divine many pipes with whi 15 B and it has the fuel whic this try a door in Once get heater intro- duced and it will the arctic zone into » temperate, temperate tropics } he powerf 3 nore wut it t f a privat like that gener: to warm the world up? ma jority of us are anxic whether or not, many men take us to g anvbody el ¢ : § blankets blanketed feeling di , Jerusalem and %« Here ia a Look at the played in the rocky Jerich man who bandits, and truggle to keep his proper wounded, and stabbed, and he lies there half dead priest rides along He sees him and RAYS Why, what's the matter with that man? Why, he must be hurt, lviog on the flat of his back. Isn't it strange that he should lie there? But I am on my way to tem- Go along, you me up to my temple duties’ After awhile a Levite comes up. He looks over and says: “Why, that man very much hurt. Gashed on the forehead. What a pity. Stabbed arm. Whata pity. Tat, tut! What a pity. Why, they have taken his elothes nearly away from him. But set upon by the manis I can’t stop. ple services beast Carry I haven't time to stop; I lead the choir up in the temple service you beast. Carry me After Go along, up to my temple awhile a Samaritan comes along—one who you might sup- | pose through a national gradge might | wounded | sees this | have rejected Israelite this poor Coming along he wan and says: be terribly hurt he is “Why, that man must he is a man Whoa!” says an Israelite, but pnd he is a brother the Samaritan, and he gets down off the besst and comes up to wounsed man, gets down on one knee, listerds to see whether the heart of the nnfortunate man is still beating, makes up his mind there is a chance for re- suscitation, goes to work at him, tales wut of his sack a bottle of oil and a bot. tle of wine, cleanses the wound with some wine, then pours some of the re- storative into the wounded man's lips, then takes some oil and with it soothes the wound, After awhile he takes off a part of his garments for a bandage. Now the sick and wounded man sits up, pale and exhausted, but very thank. ful. “You must get on my saddle, and I will wali." The Samaritan helps sad ten. in courtly dress as . | 0 the fireplace. I see by his features | this | | gospel news, | On it, grapes of Eschol | wine from the kinglom, derly steadies the wounded man until he gets him on toward the tavern, the wounded man holding on with the lit- tle strength he has left, ever and anon looking down at Samaritan and saying: “Youare very kind; I had no right to expeet this thing of a Sa- maritan when I am an Israelite; you are very kind to walk and let me ride.” Now ‘they have come up to the tav- ern. The Samaritan, with the help of the landlord, assists the sick and wounded man to dismount and puts him to bed. The Bible says the Ba- maritan staid all night. In the morn- ing, 1 suppose the Samaritan went in to look how his patient was, and ask him how he passed the night. Then he comes the Samaritan out and says to the landlord: ‘‘Here is the good out . | money to pay that man's board, and if | his convalescence is not as rapid as I hope for, charge the whole thing to | me. Good morning, all.” He gets on his beast, but go slowly, for those bandits the land wounded beast and says Gro sweeping through may some he dy Symi y! Chri How it take to many suc! warm the in Zarey p. There mint ful of meal She is gathering fire to the wen she is going to w cook handfu kindle meal. Tl arms around her boy and die Mis two black servants rot tired w woman comes Elijah, the ravens, aiting on him. He Now, that divided NRAYEe | for food. of meal is to be Before it asks the handful into three parts, was to be divided into two parts. Now, says to Elijah, “Come in down at this solemn table and take a third of the last , How women like that would it take to warm she morse) many the cold world up? Elizabeth Fry the horror tur went into gate Prison, and ation and the obscenity YW ned the the and a he imprec and flith into pr reforme yer and repentance The Sister + n 1863, on nort | aern ana 5, came to boy wer } onnet w after armfu wml was taken fros put under Lhe dr indling began, until It bes filled all v geniality and was reflected the fami the ns it rose ame ¢ hich the with ly pictures on the wal ighbors eame in two by hey sat down, their faces to the which ever and anon was stirred wit) tongs and readjusted on the andirons and there repartee, and story telling, and mirth as the and the blind reg of. Meanwhile was being spread y fair cloth and the they glisten and glisten in our And and farmyard were such times of rustic black stove ver the table was the cutlery, ister ne dreamed and x sO Clean was mind to-day. hen the best luxu ff orchard snd prepared for the table, to meet t Was roast appetites sharpened the cold rid Oh! my friends, the Church of Jesu Christ is the world's fireplace, and the woods are from the cedars of Lebanon and the fires are fires of love, and with the silver tongs of the altar we stir the flame and’ the light is reflected from all the family pictures on the wall pletures of those who were here and are gone now, Oh! come up Have your faces transfigured in the light. Put your cold, feet weary of the jour ney, cose up to the blessed con flagration Chilled through with trouble and disappointment, come close up until you can get warm clear through. Exchange experience, talk over the harvests gathered, tell all the Meanwhile the table is On it, bread of life. On it, new On it, a thon Hark! as » by close worn being spread, sand luxuries celestial, | wounded hand raps on the table, and a tender voles comes through saying | “Come, for all things are now ready Eat, oh friends, drink, abundantly, oh, beloved!” My friends, that is the way the cold yea, drink | world is going to be warmed up, by | the great Now the good Samaritan saya: | mpel fireplace. All nations will ene in and sit down at that ban- quet. While | was musing, the fire “Come in ont of the cold, come in out of the cold!” Comes | along, you | and sit | | ward or forward | SP, ON, None {| Words | which | lowers of endiess varieties, also pardenlarn 21x MANY THINGS. We Are Prone to Concentrate Cne Iden. Products of Nature Thut Blessings to Are Mian. Whenever you see a glass of bri clear, sparkling water, you at « hink what delightful drinking wat that is. ing especially useful for boiling p toes for the only think of its power to quent thirst many desirable properties When bright, hot winter think at You never think of it a= | or bathing face And yet this is only one of VOU S0e i vou once 1 could varm The thougl you keep near it to Uses you that When mans 4 and noing to t has been caused by that cod- yot kill this germ. And fact that this same onsumption in its early not kill the germ of it affect a cure? known & germ 1 RINO KNDOwWDn live there oll w stages explained. Cod-liver | power to btauild up body When i condi. germs of the and inv rata t WwW hole the body cod-iiver nd re- also known lune of in Gold 1 Given } wok of or selling a great interest and popularity Armenia’ with H. Woodward Company, Bal are offering $200.00 to anyone ing 200 copies of their new book, of Turkey and This is work of great interest and popularity Armenia Many agents sell 15 copies a day. A graphic and thrilling account is given of the have aroused the civilized world massacres of the Armenians which Agents are offering the most liberal terms and Fre Write them immediately $1,000 IN PRIZES DISTRIBUTED premiums ight paid and credit given }-20% TO BE ABSOLUTELY FREE Use the letters « MONON NERDS words as you ean miained in the Grow and formas many using letters sither back but don’t ue any letier In same word more times than it appears in Monon Seeds Grow Forexample the words weeds, ete, The person forming the greatest number of words, using the letters in the text, will receive One Hundred Dollars inea h. For the next large-t list we will give £75 In eash, for the next jargest list £50 In cash for the next $2 cash, and for each of the next ten largest lists we will give 80 In gold. Uf you are good at word making you chu secure a valuable prize, as The Monon Seed Co. Intend giving many hundred special prizes to persons sepding hem lists containing over twenty five Write your name on list of words (numbered) and enclose the same postpaid text | with six two.cent stamps for a large combina tion of Monon Seeds That Grow, includes the latest and most popular package and rules of distribution of prizes. The word | conten: will be carefully and conscientiously conduetsd, and is solely for the purpose of | further introducing our seeds in new Joealities {| You will receive the bigg-st value in flower | seeds ever offered, and besides if you are able to make a good list of words and answer prompthy you will stand an equal opportunity o secure a valuable prize. We intend spend ing a large amount of mane in the distribution of prizes in this contest 6 Assure you that our trim! order with us will be most gratifyin ‘rite your name plainly and send list as ear as possible. Address, MONON SEED CO., Moxon Bupo., Unioaco, Tu, PROFESSIONAL CARDS ORVIS, BOWER law. Offices German and legal busines RORYIS, Atlorneys-at. in Pruner’s New Block English, All forms of given prompt attention IRA C. MITCHELL, Attorney-at-law Office in Crider's Exchange Prompt service and careful attention to legal business wii J. H. WETZEL, Attoruey-at-law, in Crider’s Exchange. tention given Lo surveying RRAY fice in Temp p——_— ——— — lh te ted STATE :-: NORMAL :-: SCHOOL are represented conducted Mode students sitions and meet with exe The handsome new bul it a cost of one hundred and twenty-five thousand d 1 and oc cupied Accommodations first class Electric light in every room, carpets, spring beds, wardrobes, new furniture, fourteen bath rooms, Hot and cold water on every floor. Fan system steam heat Smead system of ventilation Everything is new and convenient, Stu. dents may any time Lock Haven is accessible by rail from all di- rections ug ollars, is now finish enter at We shall be glad to correspond with any who are interested. Send for free catalogue and secure rooms for next term JARES ELDON, A. M., Ph.D, Principal, Central State Normal School, Lock Haven, Pa Why be disfigured with face blemishes or a red nose ? or why suffer with eczema or itching piles when a 50c¢. box of : '& Hotland's Pharmacy Holland f #3 Gray's Ferry Rd, Phila Quaker Salve will eure you! For sale b TEADY EMPLOYMENT. We are offering steady employment to competent © “n and women as general ag's for our publications. salary wns) F756 A MONTH AND EXPRNSRS, (oe Our Young Folks’ Natural History Series Is Just the line for the Holiday saason. Write us | : onsr & Co, or particulars : o 5! Fifth Ave, Chicago. * Office Special at. Druggists generally. FN % NN NNN NNN wn BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES, QO000000 00CO0000 COO00000 McCalmont & Co BELLEFONTE, PA. i i SS i id ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ M ¢ / ¢ / Y ¢ ¢ / / ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ / ¢ ¢ / / ¢ ¢ ¢ / t v ¢ i ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ / / 4 i ¢ / i / ¢ " "i ¢ / / ¢ % SST" TTT THE PENNA. STATE COLLEGE. tT A AIA TID. LEADING DEPA AGRICULTI CHEMISTR) BIOLOGY BOTANY a i. CHEMISTRY RTMENTS of STUDY AGRI MECHANIUAI } MINING BNGINEERING HISTORY and POLITICAL SCIENCE INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN LANGUAGE and LITERATURE Spanish and Italiar ptiona 5 an and Englls required MATHEMATICS and ASTRONOMY MECHANICAL ARTS: comt work with udy MENTAL and MORAL SCIENCE MILITARY SCIENCE theoretica Latin rench ern a tical PREPARATORY Years DEPARTMENT Fa courses four years formation, address GEO | term opens September For eata W, ATHERTON State College A Bridal Chamber can be handsome] iittle cost these { &nce between or m1 you'd usuall have to where, will go far ing another room Lome and see the goods, and then you will see how much you save by buying your furniture from us ¢> rnished at The differ 1 what pay else toward furnish Cos And Lo SL Baby Carriages. that we also carry a fine line of baby carriages, at the most reasonable prices It is in order to mention FUNERAL FURNISHINGS and EMBALMING a specialty. F. E. NAGINEY, Allegheny st. BELLEFONTE Telephone No. 1242.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers