6 THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA., THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1806. —— —- THE EAST WIND. It Will Drive Sinners Into the Har- bor of God's Sympathy. t Tries Men's Souls and Learns Them to Endure the Vexations of Life Through Much Tribulation We Shall Enter Kingdom. the In his latest sermon, Rev. mage calls attention to the rava caused by tl AS Ww 1, and shows how it is guise. Sq ros A but joy cometh in chose for his text £xo the Lord br the land all night.” uaght The reference here i but the wind from to the long-cor irritating and full of threat. Eighteen times does the Bible speak against the east wind. Moses describes the thin ears blasted the east wind. The yu uy Psalmist deseribes the breaking of the | ships of The borne Tarshish by the east wind. Egy I'he that sheltered Jonah was shattered by he east wind; and + + 1 11 locusts t t aat t were in on the gourd mers, en the pastor told ritual depression was only an consequence of physical depression, Andrew Fuller, Thomas Seott, Willian Cowper, Thomas Boston, David erd, Philip Melancthon were mighty men of God, but all of them il ustrae. tions of the fact that a man's soul isnot independent of his physical health. An eminent physician gave as his opinion that no man ever died a greatly tri. umphant death whose disease was bes low the diaphram. Stackhouse, the learned Christian commentator, says he does not think Saul was insane when David played the harp before him, but it was n hypochondria coming from inflammation of the liver. Oh, how many good people have been mistaken in regard to their religious hope, not taking these things into consideration! The Dean of Carlisle, one of the best men that ever lived, and one of the most useful, sat down and wrote: “Though 1 have endeavored to dis charge my duty as well as I could, yet sadness and melancholy of heart stick close by and increase upon me. I tell Brain Dr. Tal- | also | | ! | ¢ | ! | | nobody, but I am very much sunk in | deed, and I wish I oould have the re- lief of weeping as I used to. My days are oxcoodingly dark and distressing. la a word, Almighty God seems to hide His face, and I intrust the secret hardly to any earthly being. I know not what will become of me, There is doubtless a good deal of bodily afilic- tion mingled with this, but it is not all 1 bless God, however, that I never rht of the cross, and though I should die without seeing any personal interest in the Redecmer's merits, I that I shall be found at His feet. will } 1 . . N ¢ I will thank +» or a word at 80. LOSE 81g hope Your Iv door is bolted at tl for | matter witl , and affec your 1 for help, race 3 y withering blasts d's prot ge our affairs chart and ently of sens y ' m and sall on; but Caribbean eoast, and WINes uh wind up the we are ipless in the gale, and we ery out for harbor All our ealculations upset, we | say with the poet Changs and decay on all around | see 0 Thou who changest not, abide with me! she south wind of mild providence | makes us throw off the cloak of Chris | tian character and we eateh cold, but the sharp east wind of trouble makes | us wrap around us the warn promises. | The best thing that ever happens to us is trouble. That is a hard thing, per haps, to say; but I repeat ft, for God announces it again and again, the best thing that happens to us is trouble, When the French army went down into Egypt under Napoleon, an engi neer, in digging for a fortress, came across a tablet which has been ealle the Rosetta stone. There were ine scriptions in three or four languages from: that stono were enabled to read ancient inscriptions on and on tombstones | i monuments | Well, many of the | handwritings of God in our life are in- | decipherable hieroglphics; we cannot i i understand them until we take up the | Losetta stone of divine inspiration, and the explanation all comes out, and the mysteries all vanish, and what was before beyond our understanding now is plain in its meaning, as we “All things work together for good tw y who read, phor ' " » love God, SO Wo 4 hieroglyphies Oh, my the have you ever calculated w David? It i minstrel for id trouble do for Joseph’ wor of the cornet for » koop What did it do for Pau of the samuel Ruther npoatic lid it do for his invall y illustriou iid it d by onst the wilt that 4 nu os o 4 bevy into the Kinga Cron You bh north south blessed God for th wind, and for wind, and for the wind: enn you not in the light of this subiect bless him for the east w ind? Nearer, my God, to shoe, Nearer to thee E'en though 18 be a cross That raiseth me Beil all my song shall be Nearer, my God, to thee, Nearor to thee Killing Wesds by Eleotriotty, Prof. Woodworth, of the Michigan agricultural college, belloves that elec tricity is quite as cheap as salt for the ikflling of weeds in the long run, as itis much more effective, and destroys the plant to the root. He proposes to ex- periment on the most noxious weeds by making » wheel™ arrow or wagon supplied with a storage battery to the land to be cleared, and lot the hanging wires drag along the ground. He in- sista on the practicability of removing ave blessed him the blessod him west on that Rosetta stone. Scholars study. ing out the alphabet of hivroglyphios Canndian and Russinn thistles from furms in this way. TO MAKE A HAYRICK, A Rigging Usod In Kansas With Great Buncess. The accompanying cut from the old New Engl tO BAv farn and Homestoad represents how labor at haymaking. A Kansas r who has used the rigging success explains it as follows: AAAA are four poles 82 foot y may be mado of 4 BB aro 4 by two with with long. by 4 material and § and 4 feet long. tim! by long, fastened togother with five one 18% 12 inches long. A pull is under B, and F a t p 4 and 30 feot A New Lawn Mower, Rural New Yo r onlls the bicyelk Ww vhi io have tod from f a young man who attach attention to is said suggest 1 an ordinary mn ' srdinary hand mower, GERMS, They Exist Bverywhere NoOw-o= Days. In the Alr and fn Our Food and Drink, No One is ¥ree Yrom Them for n Moment. One these v afraid to drink a his face in a ba those who tall FUG wll us reads so much abont germs, 1 he becomes alin "a lass of mi water, BY 4 Cus now lie ger: you sow a, We BOL 400090000 H ~ * PTT, ER EE Ww 9 & Ld ® ¢ Ww bd : ¢ @ GL. d 000000000000 00090000000 P0000 9000909 Specifics nro Ve : 4 ® nw LF nw the system and are In fact and Bemedies of the World, wre } ~ Fevers, ( P-Wearms, Wor Fev 3-Teething: ( Cr 4-Diarrhea, of YY -Lounghs, Colin S<Nearalgin, Tom P-Headnohes, Pick |} 10-Dyspepnin, 11 <Sappressed or Painful Periods 12-Whites, Too Prof 13-Croup, Laryngitis, 14-Salt Rheum, Krys 15-Rheumatism, Hheu 16-Malaria, Culils, Fe 19-Catarrh, Infloenes, ( 20--Whooping Cough 27=Kidney Disenses IN-Nervous Debllity 30-Urinary Weakness 34--Sere Throat, Quincy HUMPHREYS WITCH “The Pile Gintment,” Trial Slee Seid by Draceiets, oF sent procs ' LN BRE) BERR ERBYERNR RENCE . HAZEL © 26 ¢ Few rurakeyve Marta “ "NE ® FERN FEW Yon HURPREEYY ZED CO 101 A 01S SPECIFICS. Uli $1 Solentific American Agency for PE NTA and UNN & CO, COPYRIOMTS, free Handbook write to for eum ADWAY, Naw Yon tn America, before charge In Le Ba Th Th Th hh he | BUILDERS" SUPPLIES STONE fort 3 AL our efont OO0CO000 00000000 SATA TTT VP TV TAT TAT TTT TITAITITTTTTITATDTTDLT ARTI DIRNIE ¢ ¢ f ¢ ¢ ¢ ¢ [4 [J ¢ ¢ ¢ M ; ¢ ¢ ¢ u ¢ ¢ ¢ / ¢ ? ¢ ? 4 5 # 4 4 a HN DDD VHD DDDDDDD BEEZER'S MEAT MARKET ALLEGHENY ST , BELLEFONTE. We keep none but the best yuality of Beef, Pork, Mutton, etc. All kinds of smoked meat, sliced ham, pork sausage, ete, If you want a nice juicy steak goto PHI . ws 2 Sr. ey {hil oan & it. Xo Sel , 0 4 aba
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers