| HE CENTRE Di MOCRANT, BELLEFONTE, PA. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, THE STARS. How Amos Interpreted the Cone gtellations of the Heavens. God's Displeasare Jas Manifested by Them Been Heen Frequently Astrology May Have More Than a Brilllant Heathenism., ermon Dr, Amos of In his latest Washington Talmage the Tekoa, an ancient from it some useful was Amos 5: 8: “Seek Him that maketh the Seven Stars and Orion.” A country farmer wrote this text Amos of Tekoa and threshed the grain by a new thresh- ing machine just invented, as formerly the cattle trod out the grain. He gathered the fruit of the sycamore tree, and scarified it with an iron comb just before it was getting ripe, as it was necessary and customary in that way to take from it the bitterness. He was the son of a poor shepherd, and stuttered; but before the rustic the nd Phoeni- Ammonites, of farmer, and draws lessons. His text tells story He plowed the earth stammering Syrians, and cians, and Moabites, and and Edomites, and lsraclites trembled. Moses was a law-giver, Daniel was a prince, Isaiah a courti David a king; but Amos, the author of my text Was a ped t might be parallelisms Nis pro} 'y full of W Im n li , and the r locusts, and t rumble of arts devouris e floc) hile the shep cam tin t | . He wat the herds by day, and by night habited a 1 I that thro see more familiar with them than our houses tars except among mneys of the great towns jut at seasons of the yea: when the herds were and d, as sup- ar the odor posed, near pastoral, ttle of shea » out of bushes, so branches long, 1 he dounl to N in the open field all his only shel heaven, wit been ant Amos two vn the nen and hand and cut and pen of proj reant people of ying Seek and Amos fst as Amos wm y God On must as we made the be the God of much a star vho Pleiade order. It was here and =» that ime pressed the herdsman, but meven in one group, and seven in the other group. He saw that night after night and season after season and de- eade after decade they had kept step of ght, each one in its own piace, a sis- 8) not so star there inapired terhood never clashing and never con- | testing precedence. From the time Hesiod called the Pielades the “Seven Dau ghters of Atlas” and Virgil wrote in his Aeneid of “Stormy Orion” until now, they have observed the order es. tablished for their coming and going; order not written In manuseript that may be pigeonholed, but with the hand of the Almighty on the dome of the sky, so that all nations may read it Persistent order. Sublime or- Omuaipotent order, Order. der What a sedative wo you and me, to whom communities and nations somes times seem going pellamell, nnd the world ruled hap-haz ard, and in all directions maladminis tration! The God who worlds in right circuit for year certainly keep nll the affairs of individuals and nations and continents in adjustment. We had not better fret much, for the peasant's argdment of the text was right, If God « care of the worlds of Pleiades and the four chief Orion, He can the one world we inhabit In your sphere, do the best vou can, and by some flend at keeps seven GG 000 can take the ids of take care mn seven wo f Of probably your occupation, your mission, then trust to God: and if things are all mixed and disquieting, and your brain is hot and your heart sick, get some you into the light and point out to you the Pleiades, or, better than that, get into some ob- servatory, and through the telescope see further than Amos with the naked could—namely, 200 stars in the Pleiades, and that in what is called the sword of Orion there is a nebula com- puted to be two trillion, two hundred thousand billions of the sun. who made one to go out with star- eve times larger than Oh, be at peace with the God that and controls all that the wheel of the constellations tu ing in the wheel of galaxies for thousands of years without the breaking of a cog slipping of a band or the snap of r your placidity 2 the Lord Jesus Him that Com “Seek maketh rs and Orion. SAW, as wo who made text r that Go God was not sat groups of the was the light, Amos ss seven: and naving finished that group of world group—group after leiades He adds Orion It seems that God light so hat He keeps making it. On one knows the sta makes another group. To the likes wel sing in the universe and and ; Orion was inl, and sald Reef sall, make things snug, or put harbor, NUrricanes unr getting their it were the veel ev the w ange Orion was arning propnet of th winery Oh, now | get the of God | had! 1 ! two sermons | want to the indulgent ere are preach one that presents God so kind, so 80 that men may do Him every law, and put the pry of lenient, so imbecile what they will and frac. ture His their impertinence and rebellion under against His throne, and while they are spitting in His face and stabbing at His heart, He takes them up in His arms and kisses their infuriated brow and cheek, saying, "Of such is the kingdom of Heaven." The other kind of sermon I never want to preach is the one that represents God as all fire and torture and thundercloud, and with red-hot pitchfork tossing the human race Into ptroxysms of infinite agony. | You must remember that the winter {is just as important as the spring, Let {one winter pass without frost to kill | vegetation and jee to bind the rivers and smow to enrich our fields, and then you will have to enlarge your hospitals and your cemeteries. “A groen Christ mas makes & fat graveyard,” was the | old proverb. Storms to purify the air | Thermomaoter at three degrees below goro to tone up the system, December 1897. | and January just as important as May and June. 1 tell you need the { storms of life as muck as we do the | sunshine, There are more men ruined | by prosperity than by adversity, If | wo had cur own way in life, before | this we would have been impersona- tions of selfishness and worldliness and disgusting sin, and puffed up until we would like Julius who was made by sycophants to be- lieve that was divine, and the freckles on his face were sald to be as we have been Caesar, he the firmament. Lhe made the stars of One of swiftest trans-Atlantic voyages one summer by the Etruria was because she had a stor my wind abaft, chasing her New York to Liverpool. But to those going in the opposite direction the storm was | a buffeting and a hindrance. Itisa bad thing to have a storm ahead, push- ing us back; but if we be God's chil- | dren and aiming toward Heaven, the storms of life will only chase us the | sooner into the harbor. I am so glad { to believe that the monsoons, typhoons and mistrals and siroccos of the land and sea are not unchained maniacs let loose upon the earth, but are under d§- vine supervision! I am so glad that the God It was out ot Dante's suffer. the Divina Comme- dia, and out of John Milton's blindness . and out of from { God of the Seven Stars is also the of Orion! ing came sublime came Paradise Lost infidel water Treatise and out of David's exile ‘ i ana able attack came age in favor of Ch wmnity, the the Cun n 4’ ongs ofl out Msoin bereavy pover Ye come your your Oh, what text Cod and rene Psalt ust obey n te will scek Him call to mind that it is n universe shat is most valuable . And that each of us worth more than all the worlds. whie the booth on the hil spiritual has a sou inspired herdsman saw from his * of Tekoa I had studied § and falls K against carved % and down fH pavement Ove hich the kings nd to « transept queens of the earth have w Nave portals alked and the In- intercoluined onfessional and aisles and combining splendors of sunrise and sunset teriaced, interfoliated As 1 stood ng st the double range of flying buttresses grandeur outside. look andl the forest of pinnacies, higher and higher and higher, until I almost reel ! from exdinimed HOXO ogy dizziness, 1 Groat in stone Frown praver of many nations But while standing there | saw =» poor man enter and put down his pack and kneel beside on the hard floor of And tears of deep emotion came into my eyes, as I said to myself: “There is a { soul worth more than all the material | sarroundings. That man will live after the last pinnacle has fallen, and not {tne stone of all that cathedral glory shall remain uncrumbled. {He is now a Lazarus in rags {and poverty and weariness, but | immortal, aad a son of the Lord God | Almighty; and the prayer he now of- | fers, though amid many superstitions, | T believe God will hear; and among the | apustios whose seulptured forms stand i In the surrounding nitches he will at last bo lifted, and into the presence of that Christ whose sufferings are rep resented by the crucifix before which | ho bows; and bo raised in due time | out of all his poverties into the glori- ous home built for us by ‘Him who maketh the Seven Stars and Orion.’ ® his burden that cathedral, | exhibited | occupants of passing vessels | Ils | the | vero [ and | whale | later the TAME OCEAN FISHES, WHALES AND PORPOISES ARE BOME- TIMES PAINFULLY SOCIABLE, Good Natured Bob, an Acquaintance on the Florida Coast — Nome Interesting Experi. ences With Whales In the Pacific Ocean, Travelers the certain coast of por- and up to 1851] and down up Fiorida will remember a poise the remembrance of the writer, paraded that for years, in and down a quarter section of the He rarely answered to up Florida peninsula, known Bob, his name he was well known to all sail Wis ns and though he ors in those parts by a peculiar cut in his dorsal fin, giv ing it che appearance of having a win dow in it. Some thoughtless passenger, wishing to practice on all animate na ture with his revolver, had inflicted this | injury, and the porpoise apparently was | it was | the | it. In any every opp very proudiof at event, ritunity to It would How it at times but 100 yards come near the vessel, fo r gambol about the bow or stern, chief wition was about r consider r whale mwas well iliustrated by a whale h evidently took the ship Plymouth eo of ita kind, This whale was a ur bottom, about 90 feet in length, the Golden and re igh the itire voyage ith Ameri he big fWam 1" ship off left San Fran i thine ity that m alo the crew In ft might os dismast the St every device it came ' It went on “key intil the ship finally entered such shoal water that it was obliged to sheer off The sociability of dolphins and por poises is well known, their graceful gambols about the prow of vessels being Nn YOryY No matter how rapid the pace, these attractive creatures s0 time their motions that they pass and the with the : § Cus ff ns ail tO no par ng company'’ shit Hnmon mEn ress filving ocutwater ’ groatos The close proximity of such large ani mals to vessels might suggest a possible danger, yet fatalities are rare and few are known where the whale has not been attacked. The terrible incident of the Essex is perhaps the only one, Here the whale was run down by the ship, shock from the contact being so se. as 10 throw the crew to the deok almost dismast the vessel. The swam oil and a lookout cried out that coming for them on the surface. The animal was inspired by revenge, and at full ¥peed struck the ship in the bow so | powerful a blow that the bow was crush- od in, and the vessel went to the bot- tom ten minutes later, leaving the men in boats 700 miles from Bouth America. A survivor of the adel. dent still lives in the little town of Sane ta Monica, Cal. «Cor. New York Post. Paris and London Letter Doses, The apertures in the Parisian letter boxes are horizontal, in the London let. ter boxes vertioal, Bob was recognized | re Bruce BnuenuenueBnuacng © cc Biro Bric Bina Brae Base Biss Sinse Brie Biase 81s @ Bri Bis Bs x Bins fins Biss Biase Bins A HELPING HAND. 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