Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 50, Petersburg, Pike County, 24 April 1896 — Page 6
It is wonderful to bow many tunes •the Gospel nsy be set. Dr. Talmage's latest sermon »shows another way in which the earthly experience of our lord is set forth. His text was IL Samuel, zr.r 17: And *he king went forth sad tarried la a place which vast far off. , Far up and far back in the history of Heaven there came a period when Its most illustrious citizen was about .-to absent Himself. He was not going' ■to sail from beach to beach; we hare often done that. He was not going to pat out from one hemisphere to another hemisphere; many of us hare done that, liut He was to sail from world to world, the spaces unexplored and tlfe hemispheres uutraveled. No ' world has ever hailed heaven, and • heaven has never hailed any other ■world. 1 think that the windows and the balconies were thronged, I and that the pearly beach was crowded with those who had come to see Him sad out of tfie harbor of light into the ocean beyond. Out and out and out, and on and on and on. and down and; down and down He sped, until one night, with only oue to greet Him. when He arrived. His disembarkation so unpretending, so quiet, that it whs not •known on earth until the excitement da the cloud gave intimation to the v iHethlehem rustics that 'something grand and , ,glori6us had happened. Who pomes there? From w hat port did He sail? Why was this the place of His destination? I questions thy shepherds. I question the camel drivers.- 1 question the angels. 1 have found oi}t. He was an exile. But the world hail plenty of exiles. Abraham, an exile from Haran; John, an exile from Ephesus; Kosciusko. an exile from Poland; Mazzini, -an exile from Rome; Emmet, yn exile
iruiu imauui ncwr aujfu, uu cjluc from Hungary. lint this one of whom I speak to-day had such resounding farewell land came inUvsuch chilling reception -for not even an hostler went out with his lantern to light Him in—that He is more to be celebrated than any. other expatriated exile of earth or Heaven. First. I remark that Christ was an imperial exile. He got down off a throne. He took off a tiara. He closed a palace gat# behind him. Hisj family were princes and princesses. Vashti was turned out of the throne foom by Ahasuerus. David was dethroned by Absalom's infamy. The five kings were hurled into a cavern by Joshua's courage Some, of the Henrys of England and some of the Lou iaes of France were jostled on their thrones by discontented subjects. Itut Christ was never more honored, or more jtopular, or more I loved, than the day He left Heaven.] Exiles have suffered severely, but Christ turned Himself out from throne room into sheep pen, and down from the top to the bottom. JMe was pushed Off. He was not manacled for foreign transportation. He was not put out because they no more wanted'Him in celestial domain, but by choice1 departing and descending into an exil five times as long as that of Napoleon at fit. Helena.and a thousand times worse; the one exile suffering for that he had destroyed nations, the other exile suffering l>eeause He came to save a world. An imperial exile. King eteraai. "Blessing and honor and glory and power be unto Him that sittetu Upon the throne." Hut I go further, and tell you he was an exile ou a barren island. This world is one of the smallest islands of light In' the ocean of immensity. Other ste^ar* kingdoms are many thousattdsr—rrmes\ Sa'rger than this. Christ came to this small 1‘atmos of a world. When 'txi.e-, are sent out they are generally sent to regions that are sandy br cold. or hot—some Dry Tortugas of disagrees bleness. Christ
cam* as an exue to a woriu noorcaeu with heat and! bitten with toold. to deserts simoon-swept. to a jhowiing wilderness. It was the back-door yard, seemingly, of the uujverse. Yea, Christ came to the poorest part of this barren island of a world—Asia Minor. with its intense summers, unfit for the residence of a native. Christ came not to such a land as America, or England. or Franks*, or tier matt v. but to a laud ooe-third of the year drowned, another third of the year burned up, and *mly one-third of the year just tolerable. Oh! it was the Imrren island of a World. Barren enough for Christ, for it gave such small, worship and such inadequate affection, and such liittle gratitude. Imperial exile on the barren island of a world. I go further, and tell you that He was an exile in a hostile country. Turkey was never so much against Kuss.ia, prance was never so much against tier-many, as this earth was against Christ. It took Him in through the door of a stable. It thrust Him out at the point of a spear. The Roman gov•erntueut against r Him with every weapon of its array, and every, decision .of its courts, and every beak of ita war; eagles. For years alter HLs arrival, the only, question was how best to pnt him out. Herod hated Him. the high priest hated Him, the Pharisees hated Him, Judas Iscariot haled Him, Ckataa. the dying thief, haled Him. The whole earth seemingly turned into a detective to watch His steps. And yet He, fpeed this ferocity. “Notice that most of Christ’s wounds wette in -front. Some scourging. on the shoulders, but most of Christ's wounds in front. He was not oa retreat when He expired. Face to face with the world's feixxrity. Face to face with the world's sin. Face to face with this world's arete. Hia i eye on the raging countenances of Hia foaming antagonists when He expired. When the 1 .
cavalry officer who roweled His steed so that He might come nearer up and see the tortured visage of the suffering' exile, Christ saw it. When the spear vras thrust at His side, and when the hammer was lifted for His feet, and when the reed was raised to strike deeper down the spikes of thorn, Christ watched the whole procedure. When His hands were (fastened to the cross they were wide open, still with benediction. Mind you. Bis head was not fastened; He could loole to the right and He could look to the left, and He could look up and he could look down. He saw when the spikes had been driven home, and the hard, round, iron heads were in the palms of His hands; He saw them as plainly as you ever saw anything in the palms of your hands. No ether, no chloroform, no merciful anesthetic to dull or stupify, but, wide awake. He saw the obscuration of the . heavens, the unbalancing of the rocks, the countenances quivering with rage and the cachinnation diabolic. Oh! it was the hostile as well as the barren island of the world. I go further, and tell you that this exile was far from home, it is 95,000,000 miles from here so the sun, and all astronomers agree in saying that our solar system is only one of the smaller wheels of the great machinery of the universe turning around some one great center, the center so far distant it is beyond all imagination and calculation,, and if, as some think, that great center in the distance is heaven, Christ came far from home when He came here. Have yon ever thought of the homesickness of Christ? Some of you know what home | sickness is when you have been only a * few weeks absent from the domestic ! circle. Christ was 33 years away from | home. Some of you feel homesickness ! when you %re 100 or 1.000 miles away | from 1the domestic circle. Christ was ! more million miles away from home j than you could count if all your life I you did nothing but count, You know j what it is to be homesick even amid ; pleasant surroundings, but Christ ! | slept in huts, and He was athirst, and He was ahungered. and He was on the ! way from being born in another man's I barn to being buried in another man's I grave.
they art* far away from their country, at the sound of their national air get so homesick that they" fall into melancholy and sometimes they die under the homesickness, llut, oh! the homesickness of Christ. Poverty homesick for celestial riches. Persecution homesick for hosanna. Weariness homesick for rest. Homesick for angelic andarchangelic companionship. Homesick to get out of the night and the storm and the world’s execration. Homesickness will make a week seem as long as a month, and it seems to me that the three decades of Christ’s residence on earth must have seemed to Him almost''interminable. You often tried to measure the other pangs of | Christ, but y6u have never tried to ^measure the magnitude and ponder- ! osity of a Saviour’s homesickness., 1 take a step further and tell -you that Christ was an exile which He knew would end in assassination. Holman Hunt, the master {painter, has a picture in which he represents Jesus ! Christ in the Nazarene carpenter shop. Around Him are the saws, the hammers, the axes, the drills of carpentry. The picture represents Christ as rising from the carpenter's working bench and wearily stretching out H.> arms as One will after being in contt-acted or uncomfortable posture, ani the light of that picture is so arranged that the arms of Christ wearily stretched forth,together with His body, throw on the wall • the shadow of the cross. Oh! my friends, that shadow was on everything in Christ’s lifetime. I Shadow of a cross on the Bethlehem swaddling clothes. Shadow of a cross '■ ou the road over which the three fugitives tied into Egypt. Shadow of a : cross on I-ake Galilee as Christ walked j i(s mosaic floor of opal and emerald i and crystal. Shadow of a eross on the j brook Kedron. and on the temple, and ; on the side of Olivet. Shadow of a ! cross oh sunrise and sunset Constantine, marching with his army, saw just once a cross in the sky, but Christ saw the cross ail«?he time.
solves with i.-u* fact that it will end in warm hospitality; but Christ knew that ilia rough path would end at a defoliated tree without ooe leaf and With only two branches, bearing fruit, of s^uch bitterness as no human lips | had ever tasted. Oh! whaban exile— j starting in an infancy without any ] cradle, and ending in assassination, i Thirst without any water. Day withS out any sunlight. The doom of a des- [ perado for more than angelic excel - j lence. For w.hat that expatriation and that exile? . Worldly good sometimes comes from worldly evil. The accidental glance of a sharp blade from a raxor-griaders's wheel put out the eye of Llambctta and excited sympathies which gained him an education and started him on a career that made his name more majestic among Frenchmen, than any other name in the last 20 years. Hawthorne, turned out of the office of collector »t Salem, went home in despair. His wife touched him on the shoulder and said: “Now is the time to write your book." and his famous “Scarlet Letter" was the brilliant consequence. Worldly good sometimes comes from L worldly evil. Then be not unbelieving when I tell you that from the greatest crime of all eternity and of the whole universe, the murder of the Son of God. there shall come results which shall eclipse all the grandeurs of eternity past and eternity to come. Christ, an exile from Heaven opening j the way for the 'deportation toward Heaven and to Heaven of all those who wiill accept the proffer. Atonement, a ship large enough to take all the passengers that will come aboard it. For this royal exile 1 bespeak the love and service of all tha exiles here present, and. in one sense or the other,, that includes all of ns. The gates of i this continent have been so widely -
! opened that there are here many voluntary exiles from other lands. Some of you are Scotchmen. I see it in your high cheek-bones, and in the color that illumines your face when I mention the land of your nativity. Bonnie Scotland! Dear old kirk! Some of your ancestors sleeping in Greyfrairs churchyard, or by the deep lochs ifllled out of the pitchers of Heaven, or under the heather sometimes so deep of oolor it makes one think of the blood of the Covenanters who signed their names for Christ, dipping their pens into the veins of their own arms opened for that purpose. How every fiber of your nature thrills as I mention the name of Robert Bruce, and the Campbells, and Cochrane. I bespeak for this royal ex- ! ile of my text the love and the service of all Scotch exiles. Some of you are Englishmen. Your ancestry served the Lord. Have I not read of the sufferings of the Haymarket? and have I not seen in Oxford the very spot where Ridley and Latimer mounted the red chariot? Some of your ancestors heard George Whitefield thunder, or heard Charles Wesley sing, or heard John Bunyan tell his dream of the celestial city; and the cathedrals under the shadows of which some of you were born had in their grandest organroll the name of the Messiah. I bespeak for the royal exile of my sermon the love and service of all English exiles. Yes, some of you came from the island of distress over which Hunger, on a throne of human skeletons, sat queen. Allefforts-at amelioration halted by massacre. Procession of families, procession of martyrdoms marching f rom North channel to Cape Clear, and from the Irish sea across to the Atlantic. Ap island not bounded as geographers tell us, but as every philanthropist knows—bounded on the north and the south and the east and the West by woe which no human politics dan alleviate, and only Almighty God can assuage. Land of Goldsmith’s rhythm, and Sheridan's wit, and O'Connell's eloquence, and Edmund Burke's statesmanship, and O’Brien's sacrifice. Another Patinos with its apocalypse of blood. Yet yon can not think of it today without having your eyes blinded with; emotion, for there your ancestors sleep in graves some of which they entered for lack of bread.
For this royal exile of my sermon I bespeakjthe love and the service of all Irish exiles. Yes, some of you are from Germany, the land of Luther,' and some of you are from Italy, the land of Garibaldi, and some of you are fromj.France, the land of John Calvin, one 6f the three mighties of the glorious Reformation. Some of you are descendants of the Puritans, and they were exiles; apd some of you are descendant* of the Huguenots, and they were exiles; 0 and some of you are descendants of the Holland refugees, and they were exiles. Some of you were born on the banks of the Yazoo or the Savannah, and you are now Irving Id this latitude. Some of yon on the banks of the Kennebec. or at the foot of the Green mountains, and you are here now. oh! how many of us far away from home. All of us exiles. This is not our home. Heaven is our home. Oh! I am so glad when the royal exile went bock He left the gate ajar,, or left it wide open. “Going home:” That is the dying exclamation of the majority of Christians. I have seen many Christians die. 1 think nine out of ten in the last moment say. “Going home.” Going out of banishment and sin and sorrow - and sadness. Going home to join in the hilarities of our parents and cux dear children who have already departed. Going home to Christ. Going home to God. Going home to stay. Where are your loved ones that died in CfhristV You pity them. Ah! they ought to pity you. You are an exile far from home. They are home! Oh! what a time it will be for you when the gatekeeper of Heaven shall say: “Take off that rough sandal; the journey's ended. Put down that saber; the battle’s, won. Put off that iron coat of mail and pat on the robe of-conqueror." At that gate of triitmph I leave you to-day, only reading three tender cantos translated from the Italian. If you ever heard anything sweeter I never did, although I can not adopt all its theology:
“Tins whispered one morning in Heaven. How thb lifOe ehUdraagel Mav. In the shade of the great white portal Sat sorrowing night and day; How >he said to the ststely warden— He of the key and bar— **Oh angel, sweet angel.I pray yon Set the beautiful gates; ajar— Only a little. I pray yon. Set the beauttfal gales ajar. •”I can hear my mother weeping. She is lonely, she can not see A glimmer of Tight in the darkness. When the gates shut after me; Oh' turn me the key. sweet angel. The splendor will shine so far:'* But the warden answered; “I dam art Set the beautiful gates ajar;** Spoke low and answered: “I dam art Set the beauttfal gates ajar. ** . Then up rose Mary, the blessed. Sweet Mary, the mother of Christ; Her hand on the hand of the angel She laid, and her touch sufficed. Turned was the key in the portal. Pell ringing the golden bar. And k>‘ In the little child's Angers Su»*d the beauttfal gates ajar In the little child's angel Angers Stood the beautiful gates ajar. Bob—“Star, ain’t you going to stand treat* I thought you had money to hum ” Dick— *4 should* hare if you would furnish the draft. ■’—Boston Transcript. Ladt Ctmtoue* in china ahopt—uDe you break these &eu?” Dealer—“5a, madam; the purchasers’ servants usually attend to thfirt.”—1Tit-Bits. A DErntmox.—“What is a critic r* ‘*H« is a man who ripe things to pieces without knowing how to put them together again.** —Chicago Record. Bn honest in your heart. Whitewash may look like paint for aurhite, but the world soon learns the difference.—L. A. WBullettu. Faux fighting is not yet so dfagmcaful that the Average citizen ten t in a hurtj U know who whipped.—N. Y. Press.
M'KINLEY DELEGATES. Gnmaot*! Claims far the Okts vorlte—Resalts Compared with Pfcdl«tIons— Tables Showing tha X amber of OsltRatsi Already Chosen and Estimates of Thow Tot ^bs Klee tod Washington, April 20.—The following is the statement siren oat by Gen. Grosvenor last night, pursuant to the custom which hus prevailed to announce the proceedings of the McKinley campaign in the press of each Monday. Gen. Grosvenor said: “Before giving you the situation as it stands to-day, 1 want to call attention to my first bulletin, which was issued before any delegates had been elected. At that time I predicted that the vote for McKinley on the first ballot would be as stated below. I place now within the first column my prediction at that fcarly date, and in the second column I-place the results in all of the same states in which the full complement of delegates have beenfehosen:*’ Alabama... .. 1§4 .. Arkansas.... 16 California. :.... 10 Florida.... 8 Georgia..... . 18 Idaho. 2 Indiana........ 24 Illinois.. 80 Kansas. 16 Kentucky.,... 16 Louisiana. 7 Maryland... 10 Michigan. 20 M.ssissippi. 18 Missouri. 26 Nebraska.. s..7 16 New Jersey. ........ 10 New Mexico.. 4. 6 North Carolina.... .. 14 North Dakota.. ;. 3 16 SO 18 16 Ohio. ........”. 46 Oklahoma-;.. 3 Oregon .... . ..— 8 South Carolina...—.. 8 Soutn Dakota... . . 3 Tennessee.. 13 Texas_....... .. 14 Cuh. 2 Virginia..... 18 • VVaxhiftgtc'n. ......._.”. 4 West Virginia.... 12 Wisconsin-. 20 Wyoming....... ........... ' 2 24 Total..:. 43. J
“It will be seen that^kentucky. New Mexico and Utah have fallen below my ast imate.fi re in Kentucky, five in New Mexico anti one iu Utah; while Georgia, Indiana. Kansas, Illinois. North Dakota. Oklahoma. South Carolina and Wisconsin have all gained. This^ comparison of the original estimates, which aggregate 433, with the actual results from elections in 2S states, shows clearly that the estimate was too low. “There have been elected delegates in states that I did not claim in that estimate—Minnesota IS. New York four and Pennsylvania t\yo. And it will thus he seen that iff the same ratio of gain is maintained to the end of the states forming my original * edict ion there will not pnly he the 3 delegates claimed, hut there will be a dear majority of the convention in these states alone and those in which 1 claimed nothing in my original estimate. j •* “Following is the present condition of the McKinley vote, including, ail usual, the full vote of Qhio and'In1 dianac I Alabama. 13 Arkansas.-.—.—.— ....... U Florida......-i... . s.—f £ Georgia.......—4.5 18 Illinois-.__—..— ...... 1C Indiana...|L. 3C Kansas-.— ..«*.;4.- 2t Kentucky. ...f..,—....1... —. — 11 Louisiana..........j. . i Maryland....— -1. -1 Minnesota.... .. IS Mississippi......i... IS Missouri..........Nebraska.................. New Jersey..—..|.... li New Mexico....1...V- - t New York. /.. ..* Ohio....... k Oklahoma...&. s Oregon.......— .. S Pennsylvania . I South Carolina.. 17 South Dakota.... . t Tennessee ............. .. K Texas.i.i...^.. 13 Virgins .. 6 West Virginia... 3 Wisconsin...... "A Utah. 1 North Carolina........... North Dakota... 3
Total 3K ; “The New York Tribune of this morning gives McKinley :<1$ practically uacontested and instructed votes. In my report I exclude doubtful votes ' iad have failed to claim a nu mber L kupwn to be for McKinley. I poi nt to the vindication ol my original e>tb mate with some degree of satisfaction, ind I state now that my present estimate of safe votes for McKinley on the hrst ballot is below the actual ’ facts. j. “The most significant feature of the | last week’s elections is the numler of second choice instructions for McKiniey. In this category may be classed New Hampshire. Kentucky, Pennsyl- , vania and New York, and it is saJe to l saj that there are now well-defined | second choice delegates that are committed to McKinley as such, not less , than 125. During the remainder ol ; April there will be elections in ConnecI tieut. Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania. Indian Territory, Alabama, Oeor- | gia. Illinois, Vermont and Arizona, !in all S4 votes. Out of this number it is a very low and conservative | estimate’ to claim for McKinley i 50, delegates. Then will follow in. (the month of May conventions in the following states: California. Indiana* ! Michigan, Nevada, West Virginia, Montana, Missouri, Delaware, Colo rado, Washington, Idaho. Wyoming and North Carolina, with 152 delegates,’'. _ A lon( GIHS rata. Womsnii, Mass,. April 20. —Kerne Chabot, aged 17, was killed while rid- | ing a bicycle. Miss Chabot had borrowed a wheel for the afternoon, and in company with three friends, started for a short ride, She was not an ex•>ert rider, and in endeavoring to pass i heavy cart, leaded with gravel, she rate into the gutter and in attempting to get back into the road lost control of her wheel, which struck a stone, and threw her under the wheels of the cart, which,.passed completely over the girl's body nnd head, crushing her terribly. She died on the war V6 the hoar ■I
— On April Ttfc, tlst and Mar 5th, 1806, Homeseeker's Excursions will he run from Missouri River points, and territory West of Chicago, Peoria'aSd St. Louis, to stations in Kansas and Nebraska, Stone fare,plus *2.00, for the round trip. All who can should take advantage of the cheap rates and inspect the most productive corn lands in the United States, which arv for sale, by"the Union Pacific Railway Company, at from *3.30 to *10.00 per acre, on ten years’ time, ouly 1-10 down. Remember that the Kansaa com cron for 1695, with 8,000,000 acres in cultivation, yielded over 301,000,000 bushels, the estimated value of which is over *46,000,000, being *7,000,000 more than annual output of gold in the United States. ^ t Those taking'advantage of the excursions, should take receipts for aU railroad fare, and the portion paid over Union Pacific lines, will be refunded upon purchase of 830 acres. Information regarding rates can be ascertained from the nearest railroad agent. ,'. For maps and pamphlets descriptive of the, lands, write to B. A. McAllastkr, Land Commissioner, Omaha, Neb. v “I snoRH does hope.” said Uncle Mose, “dafc dey will git dis Leah new pbotogranb trick so fine dv summer dat man kin tell wedder melon is ripe/’—Indianapolis Journal. A Sjuptng Trip Soath. On April 7 and 31. and May 5, tickets will be sold from, principal cities, towns and villages of the north, to all points on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad iu Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida and a portion of Kentucky, at one single fare for the round trip. Tickets will be good to return within twenty-one days, ou payment of (3 to agent at destination, and will allow stop-over at any point on the south bound trip. Ask your ticket agent about it, and if be cannot sell you excursion tickets write to CJ- P, Atmore, General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Kv.. or Geo. B. Homer, D. P A., St. Louis,* Mo
“I*ix kiss rou fof*my sister's sake. ” “Pruv. don’t forget yourself,” she said. | straightway took her at her word, Aud'kissed her for myself instead. —Truth. Better Thun Refined Gold Is bodily comfort. This unspeakable boon is denied to many unfortunates for whose ailments Hostetler’s Stomach Bitters is a promptly helpful remedy. The dyspeptic, the rheumatic, the nervous, ' persons troubled with- biliousness or chins and fever, should lo^e no time in availing themselves of this comprehensive and keuia! medicine. It promotes appetite at d nightlyslumber. Be Tanqce—“You don’t take enough exercise for a man of rour habits. ” Old Soak —“Why, I have been shaking dice for drinks ail the Baeord. Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No fits after first day’s use. Marvelous*cures. Treatise and $1 trial bottle free. Dr. Kline, 981 Arch f*t-, Fhiia., Pa Horace appears- in good humor while he censures, and therefore his censure has the more weight as supposed to proceed from judgment, not from.passibu.—Y#ung. afternooiv”—Philadelphia ioom” FoRTirr. Feebie Lunsrs Against Win ter withf-Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. “Thou hast a-prettr wit,'•'quoth the monarch. “Aye, and a dry hutnor,** replied the Jester. Whereupon the king ph4he<i the button.—Philadelphia Record. v'I use Piso’s Cure for Consumption b#$b hi my family and practice.- Da. Li \Y Pvrte*sok, Inkster, Alich., Nov. 5. The best hearts. Trim, are ever She bravest, replied my Uncle Toby.—Sierw.
Spring Medicine Your blood to Spring is almost certain bar be full of imparities—the accumulation of the winter montits. Bad ventilation of sleeping rooms, impure air in dwell* ings, factories and shops, overeating, heavy, improper foods, failure of the kidneys and liver properly to do extra work thus tb rust upon them, an tilt prime causes of this condition. It is of the utmost importance that you Purify Your Blood Row, as when warmer weather comes and the tonic effect of cold bracing air iff gone, your weak, thin, impure blood) will net furnish necessary strength. That tired feeling, loss of appetite, will open the way for serious disease, ruined health, or breaking out of humors and impurities. To make pure, rich, red blood Hbed's Sarsaparilla stands urn equalled. Thousands testify to it* merits. Millions take it as their Spring Medicine. _ Get-Hood’s, because Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the One True BIb«fPv»rf#er. All druKgists.lt. Prepared only t>y Cr T. Hood* Ox. Lowell Mass. Hon^’c Piilc are the onlv pills to taka IlUiKI S> r Il»5> wtth Hood's .Sarsaparilla, ASK YOUR DF'.UER FOR W. L. Douglas *3. SHOE "««y!lsTM* If you pay 64 to 9B for shoes, es- ^ amine the \V. L. Douglas-Shoe, and O ^ see what a good shoe youcan bay for 8 OVER IOO STYLES AND WIDTHS,
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