The Rockdale banner. (Conyers, Ga.) 1888-1900, June 11, 1896, Image 3
■ pR, TALIAGE. DIVINE’S SUNDAY note 0 DISCOURSE. «.4n Ill East Wind” r brought an past SSS"SS Irina is r th and full of ibr8 eiag. ■ i itatin£ . ■ B/t^.P -s* Pses does the Bible speak wind. ' Mose^ describes th a east T h a ,r: ^tribes the tn breaking o' the ships The locus’s were born in on the east i‘” T Pf jeJF Phat ee"t Weltered and Jonah in all was the d b ? ’!t,,'mn= wind, springs of 15 L” winters, wiDd that BW- ' ‘ the worst ea=t wind. Now. if God P km 1 jre US a Climate kind of and perpetual placid venial and would all be. i EfdmiRbtv in-Christians we be what we (trace to fr«aSwet istnf the world’s L wingof villainies. the Urte PlKs. suieides and murders have Ki out. I histone think if of you the days should oi Ueorolopical fXnt rivht beside it the criminal SWrv best days vou for would public find morals that pre "wider the north west wind. the or for pub It those were the worst days wiud. Us which were under the east U of the compass have more to do World's morals and the church’s Lvnu e suspected. Rev. Dr. have ret \lmnder. whpr eminent asked for by learning one of U*s eouseeration. whether he always at Princeton replied, Te*. |j Assurance of faith, U pn the wind blows from the east. Lia dictator of Paraguay, made oppressive when the Lfrom the east, people, but when the en [s fchanged for the of eruel repented him the healed the enactments and was in cnor with all the world, ti overtake the main thought of my [want to tell Christirn people they ibe observant of climatlcal chancres, tur ruard when the wind blows from i There are certain styles of tempt h [t von cannot endum the under wind certain blows I weather. When s east, if you are of a nervoustem It.gonotaiDon? exasperating people, to settle bad debts, do not try to idisputes, ion, do not talk with a bigot do not ?o amonsr those people ight [to in saving irritating thines, do colleer" funds for a charitable on, do not try to answer an insulting (thesethings must be done, do them je wind is from the north, or the rthe west, but not when the wind is •Ti-t. ly that men and women ought not to (skive and nervous. I admit it, but talking about what the.world ousrht I am talkiner about what the world is. (ere are persons whose disposition [ (sphere, seem to be affected by changes in nine out of ten are mightily kder ponby such influences. O Christian such circumstances do not write ps rit against yourself, do not get wor¬ bomber your fluctuating experience. You that the barometer in your ply I Instead answering of sitting the barometer down and of being the feed and saying, “lam not a Chris iu. : e I don’t ieel eibilarant,” get up k out of the window and see the vane pointing in the wrong quarter, tsav-, “Get thee behind me, satan, bee of the power of the air; get out base; get out of my heart, thou de iUrkness horsed on the east winck However good and great you may iChristian life, your soul will never pendent of physical condition. I t uttering a most practical, useful to, one that may give relief to a great hnstians who are worried and de t at times. •ri) a monarch in medicine, after uidreds of gases of mental depres sc.f felt sick and lost his religious he would not believe his pastor ' pastor told him that his spiritual * was only a conseouence of physi ■ Andrew Fuller. Thomas mmm Cowper, Thomas Boston, < Philipp but Mulanchthon were all of them illus Z his a man’s soul is not physical health. An emi SiVe us his opinion that no . eked a great triumphant death ,1„^ as below the diaphragm. C' , 6 b-‘crned Christian commen hvDfinf^ vid nl-fv 8 har P ® bttfore aal was him insane but - url V omin « frof u iuflana sveb koi er> . Ob, how many good ! n ff? takmg ken ln 'bese regard things to their into ahoni ® of Carlisle, one of the best ‘ -u. and of men tSlf °ne the most useful. : " Thou -b I have en Dd my ^ well as I ^ lA’and aS, f ”i crea IEelan « e upon '- , boly oi heart I tell EhlconSn but i ^ Ucil suak me. ,bave the relief ln d«ed, Itn . of weeping "■Si5 \r., kT are exceedingly dark :■ His if,/, face, 2 a word. and I Almighty intrust the God Lofifbeing. se : MU I know oddea i 1 of K me ' ^bere is doubt it y fflict5 ? a mic - !ed .that 7 neri 20 4 a n so T bless God, - ‘ . tbe ,./v ero? -' interest j Ti i bout seein « any II n Redeemer’s merits, I shall ha? utfiis f Pet I will . '-•“d ^oitSyS a: theti/I 1191 ? our am writing ieis ure. this, My SftoT^^bthedeanofCar- haMh/L or3e man Xo < **42 Ss a ^L V state wdnute. his - P u Oh, ' 3t! - mortal '• 334 afT'4tf/ Zf / be llTer ,fP le€a R » uud will affects affect - kcvoajteA Appealing these to God for H a ces withering ‘ es t that - l^l^eckyou. wr -----— brml L L ° rd C0D - '■ He tcS' ord Dr °ught the s : u 1 . especial V wh^ bl0w from pur °ast t-- that 1 1 ri 3d, the US f 33 iai P ort ant ■ 6 ut or r’«f° - - Uta th® -• not so or ten Trial sa Y You will A *iy who'thL' j“ r floev er did escape at “ecomnlished any Bse r - v a,e ev er escaped it? £ v > esiey. in Lon “ 1T * be4” nhJ tC0 d oa " da ? and I-' , with all the k ___ and’ “jv^ a" iaa 0Ile —'that oi arose lathe " So j.,h. b >'°u were drunk =Jiev passed ucnar I saw in a foreign journal a report of one of George Whitefieid’s sermons—a sermon preached a hundred and twenty or thirty years ago. It seemed that the reporter stood to take tbe sermon, and his chief idea was to caricature it, and these are some of the re portorial iuterliniugs of the sermon of George Whit,-field. After calling him by a nickname indicative of a physical defect in the eye, it goes on to say: “Heratne preacher clasps his chin on the pulpit cushion. Here be elevates his voice. Here he lowers- his voice. Holds Ir.s arms extended. Bawls aloud. Stands trembling. Makes a fright¬ ful face. Turns up the whites of his eyes. Ciasps his hands behind him. himself. Clasps his arms around him and hugs Boars aloud. Halloos, jumps, cries. Changes from crying. Halloos and jumps again.” Weil, rev brother, if that good man went through all that process, in your occupation, in your profession, in your store, in your editorial shop, at the bar, in the sick room, in the chair, somewhere, you will have to go through a similar process. You cannot escape it. Keats wrote his famous poem, and the hard criticism of the poem killed him—lit¬ erally killed him. Tasso wrote his poem, entitled, “Jerusalem Delivered,” aud it had such a cola reception it turned him into a raving maniac. Stillingfleet was slain by his literary enemies. The frown of Henry YIII. slew Cardinal Wolsey. Tho Duke of Wellington refused to have the fence around his house, which had been destroyed by the excited mob, rebuilt, because he wanted the fence to remain as it was, a reminder of the mutability and uncertainty of the populat favor. And you will have trial of some sort. You have had it already. Why need I prophesy; I might better mention an historical fact in your history. You are a merchant. What a time you had with that old business partner; How hard it was to get rid of him! Before you bought him out, or he ruined both o! you, what magnitude of annoyance! Then after you had paid him down a^ certain sum of money to have him go out and to promise he would not open a store of the same kind of business in your street, did he not open the very same kind of busi¬ ness as near to you as possible and take all your customers as far as he could take them? And then, knowing all your frailties and weaknesses, after being in your business firm for so many in'making years, is he not now spend¬ ing his time a commentary on what you furnished as a text? You are a physician, and in your sickness, or doctor in your to absence, you get a neighboring take your place in the sick room, and he in¬ gratiates himself into the favor of that fam¬ ily, so that you forever lose their patronage. ■ Or. you take a patient through the serious stages of a fever, and someday the impatient father or husband of the sick one rushes out and gets another medical practi¬ the tioner, who comes in just in time to get credit of the care. Or, you are a lawyer, and you come in contact with a trickster in your profession, and in your absence, and contrary to agreement, he moves a nonsuit or the dismissal of the case. Or the judge on the bench, remembering an old political gets grudge, rules against you every time he a chance, and savs with a snarl. “If you don’t like mv decision, take an exception. stings Or, you are a farmer and the curculio the fruit, or the weevil gets Into the wb“at or the drought stunts the corn, or the_ long continued rains give you no opoortuuity gets tor gathering the harvest. Your best cow the hollow horn; your best horse gets foun¬ dered. A French proverb said that trouble comes on horseback and goes away on foot. So trouble dashed iu on vou suddenly: but, ob. how lopg it was in getting away! Came on horseback, goes away on foot. Rapid in coming, slow in going. That is the history of nearly all vour troubles. Again and again and again you have experienced the powej the east wind. It may be blowing from that direction now. troubles Mv friends, God intended these and trials for some particular purpose. promise: They do not come at random. Here is the “He stave,th His rough wind in the day of the east’wlnd.” In the tower ot Londonthe swords and the guns of other ages are burn¬ ished and arranged into huge passion flow¬ ers and sunflowers and bridal cakes, aud you wonder how anything so hard as sleel could be put into such floral shapes. I have to tell you that the hardest, sharpest, mpst cutting most piercing sorrows of this life may be made to blcom and b'os3om and put on bridal festivity. The Bible says they shall be mitigated, they shall be assuaged, they snail be graduated. God is not going to al¬ low you to be overthrown. A Christian wo¬ man. verv much despondent, was holding her child in her arms, an I the pastor, trying to console the woman in her spiritual depres¬ sion. said. “There, vou will let your child drop.” “Oh, no,” she said. “I couldn’t let the child drop.” He said, “You will let the child drop.” “Why.” she said, “if I should drop tbe child here, it would dash his life out!” “Well, now.” said the Christian min¬ ister, “don’t you think God is a» good as you are? Won’t God. your Father, take as good care of vou. His child, as you take care of your child? God won’t let you drop.” blow just I suppose God lets the east wind hard enough to drive us into the harbor of God’s protection. We nil feel we can man¬ age our own affairs. We have helm and compass and chart and quadrant. Give us plenty of sea room and we sail on and sail on: but after a while there comes a Caribbean whirlwind up the coast, and we are helpless All in the gale, and w» cry out for harbor. our calculations upset, we say with the poet: Change and decay on all around I see. Oh, Thou who changest not, abide with me! The south wind of mild Providence makes us throw off the cloak of Christian charac¬ ter aud we catch cold, but the sharp east wind of trouble makes us wrap around us tbe warm promises. The best thing that ever happens to us is trouble. That is a hard thing perhaps to say; but I repeat it, for God announces it again and again, the best thing that, happens to U3 is trouble. When the French army went down into Egypt under Napoleon, an engineer, in dig¬ ging for a fortress, came across a tablet which has been called the Rosetta stone. There were inscriptions in three or four languages on that Rosetta stone. Scholars studying out the aiphao<-t of hieroglyphics fr^m that stone were enabled to read ancient inscriptions on monuments and on tomb¬ stones. Well, many of the handwitinsrs of God in our life are indecipherable hierogly¬ phics. We cannot understand them until we take up the Rosetta stone of divine inspira¬ tion. and the explanation all comes out. and the mysteries all vanish, and wbar was be¬ fore beyond our understanding now is plain in its meaning, as we read, “All things work together for good to those who love God.” So we decipher the hieroglyphics. calculat¬ Oh, my friends, have you ever It made ed what trouble did for David? him the sacred minstrel for all ages. What did trouble do for Joseph? Made him the keeper of the corncribs of Evypt. What did it do for Paul? Made him the great apostle to the gentiles. What did it do for Samuei Rutherford? Made his in¬ validism more illustrious than robust health. What did it do for Richard Baxter? Gave him capacity to write of the “Saint’s Ever¬ lasting Rest*” What did it do for John Run¬ yan? Showed him the shining gates of the city. What has it done for you? Since the loss of that child vour spirit has been purer. Since the Joss of that property you have found out that that earthly investments are Insecure. Since you lost your health you feel as ever before a rapt anticipation of eternal release. Trouble has humbled you, has eularged you. has multiplied your re¬ sources, has equipped you, has loosened your grasp from this world and tightened your grip on the next. Oh, bless God for the east wind! Ic has driven you into the harbor of God’s sympathy. Nothing like trouble to show us that this world is an insufficient portion. Hogarth was about done with life, and he wanted to paint the end ot' all things. He put on canvas a shattered bottle, a cracked bell, an un¬ strung harp, a sign board of a tavern called "The World’s End” falling down, a ship¬ wreck, the horses of Phoebus lying dead in the clouds, the moon in her last quarter, and the world on Are. “One thing more,” said Hogarth, “and my picture is done.” Then he added the Droken palette of a painter. Then he died. But trouble, with hand mightier and more skillful than Hogarth’s, pictures the falling, failing, moldering, dying world. And we want something per¬ manent to lay hold of, and we grasp with both hands after God. and say, “The Lofd is my fortress, light, the Lord is my love, the Lord is my the Lord is my sacrifice, the Lord, the Lord is my God.” Bless God for your trials. Oh, my Chris¬ tian friend, keep your spirits up by the power of Christ’s gospel. Do not surrend¬ er. Do you not know that when you give up, others wiil give up ? You have courage, aud others will have courage. The Romans went into the battle, and by some accident there was an inclination of the standard. The standard upright meant forward march; tne inclination of the standard meant sur¬ render. Through the negligence of the man wfyo carried the standard, and the inclina¬ tion of it. the aimy surrendered. Ob, let us keep the standard up, whether it be blown down by the east wind or the north wind or the south wind. No inclination to sur¬ render. Forward into the conflict. There is near Bombay a tree that they call the “sorrowing tree,” the peculiarity of which is it never puts forth any bloom in the daytime, but in tne night puts out all it3 bloom aud all its redolence. And I haye to tell you that through Christian character puts forth its sweetest blossoms in the dark¬ ness of sickness, the darkness of financial distress, the darkness of bereavement, the darkness of death, “weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning.” Across the harsn discords of this world rolls the music of the skies—music that breaks from the lips, music that breaks from the harps aud rustles from tne palms, music like falling water over rocks, music like wander¬ ing winds among leaves, music like caroling birds among forests, music like ocean bil¬ lows storming the Atlantic beach. “They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more, neither shall the sun light on them nor any heat, for the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead them to living fountains of watet, and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.” I see a great Cnristian fleet approaching that har¬ bor. Some of the ships come in with sails rent and bulwarks kuooked away, but still afloat. Nearer and nearer the shining shore. Nearer aud nearer the eternal anchorage. Haul away, my lads; haul away! Some of the ships had mighty tonnage, and others were shallops easily listed of the wiud and wave. Some were* men-of-war and armed of the thunders of Christian battle, aud others were unpretending tugs taking others through the Narrows, and some were coasters that never ventured out into the deep seas of Christian experience; but they are all coming nearer the wharf—brigantine, gal¬ leon, line of battle ship, longboat, pinnace, war frigate—and as they come into the har¬ bor I find that they are driven by the long, loud, terrific blast of the east wind. It is through much tribulation that you are to enter into the kingdom of God. You have blessed God for the north wind, and blessed Him for the south wind, and blessed Him for the west wind; can you not in the light of this subject bless Him for the east wind ? Nearer, my God, to Thee, Nearer to Thee, E’en though it be a cress That raiaeth me, Still all my song shall be, Nearer, my God, to Thee, Nearer to Tiiee. NEWSY GLEANINGS. Potatoes cost one cent a bushel at Toledo, Ohio. Myriads of army worms are consuming crops near Areola, ill. Russia has about $30,000,000 of American gold locked up in her vaults. There is a London firm that issues a phatnplet containing a list of over 6000 “un¬ claimed fortunes” m this country. Fatal bicycle accidents are now of almost daily occurence in Great Britain. The Whitsuntide holiday was signalized by three. Application was trade to the Sinking Fund Commissioners by the New York Zoo¬ logical Society for the allotment of 261 acres in South Bronx Park for a zoological gar¬ den. Several excellent deposits of anthracite coal have been discovered recently in the Rainy Lake region of Minnesota, near the Canadian border, by surveyors and prospec¬ tor?. A record of train accidents in the United States during April places the number at 04. which included*21 collisions, 72 derailments and 1 other accident. The number of per¬ sons killed was 23 and 104 injured. In the Supreme Court an opinion was banded down by Justice Brown to the effect that bequests made to the United States for West Point Military Academy in New York, are taxable under the State laws of the State. Because of some poison gathered by the honey bees iD Wayne County. Pennsylvania, during the long drought of last summer, it has been discovered that the greater num¬ ber of hives owned by the farmers have been destroyed. , The Woman’s Relief Corps of Blue Ridge. Eau., decided that if Decoration Day is to be desecrated * by horse races, baseball games, cock fights and fishing picnics they will p.bandon the day to the unfeeling and K oorting element and will decorate graves on May 29 instead of May 30. The Colima volcano in Mexico, after several month? of quiet, is again in a state of active eruption. Lava and ashes are being be ched forth from the crater, and the grow¬ ing crops and considerable other valuable property at the base of the mountain have been completely destroyed. Tbe eruption is attended with severe earthquake shocks. It wa* decided by the United States Su¬ preme Court teat the Bannock Indians are not entitled to hunt on “unoccupied lands” of Wyoming, notwithstanding that in their treaty with the Government they were guaranteed that privilege. The State law for the preservation of game must, it is main¬ tained by the Court, prevail. Justice Brown gave a dissenting opinion. The interesting intel igenee comes from Washington that Professor Langley, of the Smithsonian Institution, has invented a fly¬ ing machine which behaved very wall on its trial trip. The t’escription of its working savs that at the end of a trial, when the steam which worked the of propellers tumbling down gave “settled out, the machine instead as sloxly and grace!ally as a bird.” BUILT A HOUSE. AN OHIO WOMAN PLANS AND BUILDS HER OWN HOME. Her Husband a Cripple—From Foun¬ dation to Roof the Building Shows the Brave Wo¬ man’s Handiwork. «* r » i YTIFE of forty-nine who has proved herself a helpmate indeed is Mrs. Elizabeth A. Foster, of Portsmouth, Ohio. Mr. Foster has but one hand. They are hard working people. Hav¬ ing no children, by saving their earn¬ ings they accumulated enough to buy a lot on Walnut Hills, a suburb of Portsmouth, They soon found their accumulations would buy the lumber, but were not sufficient to build a house. Air, Foster’s father was a car- iiSStst ■* i gf Wb m ■ s 33 hr 'b/>- / ill m s = r t ft u IP if® 3K Ji i i ,: w f MMIu HOUSE BUILT BY MBS. ELIZABETH A. FOSTER WITH HER OWN HANDS. penter, and he had learned the art of drawing plans for buildings, but be¬ ing minus one hand and crippled in the other he could not do any work. Mrs. Foster’s father was also a carpen¬ ter, and in her younger days she had spent many hours watching him in the erection of buildings. $he was above the average in intel¬ ligence, and had gained such a thor¬ ough knowledge of the general mech¬ anism of the trade that she concluded she could build a house that would afford them a comfortable home in which to spend the declining years of life. They together formulated the plans and ordered the material. Mrs. Foster then staked off the ground and went to woik laying the brick founda¬ tion. While thi3 was new work for her, her general knowledge of how things ought to be served her well, and she hewed to the lines closely. When the chips had all fallen she found that she had a foundation that would have been a credit to any mechanic. Then with the little assistance her husband could give her, such as holding tim¬ bers and lines, she erected the frame¬ work, nailed on the weather boarding, and was soon interesting the passers by in her work of nailing on the shingle roof. Mrs. Foster is very modest, and felt somewhat embarrassed to have people who happened to pass that way stop and stand for several minutes watch¬ ing her drive the nails, saw and plane, yt. >K. I w V /£?; m -W. "/'iff ST JS ~mk : £5 .wW ate ~ T=== - Ns ft YM W y/m \\ v/ / MRS. FOSTER, THE WOMAN CARPENTER. yet she says it is consoling to her to Know that when clone she had a house and owed no mechanic for building it, “and then, you know,” she says, “that when persons are working for themselves they will do much better work, and I think I have a better house than any man would have built for me.” Mrs. Foster was born in Perry County in 1847. She moved to Ports¬ mouth in 1886, and was married to Frank Foster shortly afterward. A Curious Lake. A curious lake has been found in the island of Kildine, in the North Sea. It is separated from the ocean by a narrow strip of land, in which sponges, codfish and other marine an irnals flourish, The surface of the water, however, is perfectly fresh, and suports daphnias and other fresh water creatures. The soil of Cuba has no rival, espec¬ ially for tobacco and sugar. COTTON BOLL WEEVIL. A Pest Which Recently Appeared in the United States. The Agricultural Department of tho United States Government considers the cotton boil weevil, a picture of which is here shown, to be one of the most dangerous pests that has ever made its appearance in the United States. It has so far confined its oper¬ ations to Northern Mexico and a lim¬ ited area in Texas. It has in some lo¬ calities shown a tendency to spread rapidly, while in others it is said to have been at work for years in very small areas, and shown little signs of extending operations. Department experts have been at work investigat¬ ing his bugship for some months past in the neighborhood of Brownsville on ths Rio Grande. So far no cure has been discovered, and many acres of cotton have been abandoned in conse¬ quence. . An extraordinary thing about this creature is that it will live in a cotton boil and nowhere else, and once secrot ed inside of these shells it is safe from enemies and snug and comfortable in a bed of softest down. The-appearance ft 1 ' !./ u I f f jOilf; V w. V ! V . .£• ii m m 8 1 ss 1 r • COTTON BOLXi WEEVIL, IIIGIILV MAGNIFIED of this insect is dreaded later in tha year. ______ Finest Church Organ, What is said to bo the finest church organ in the country has just been set up in the South Congregational Church, of New Britain, Conn. It cost $20,000, and includes every possible modern improvement. Its bank of keys is movable, and electrically con¬ nected with the organ, so that the in¬ strument can be played from any park of the church. Two Thousand Earthquake Shocks. The recent eruptions of Hawaiian volcanoes recall the fact that during the last eruption of Mauua Loa, in 1868, there were ever 2000 earthquake shocks in twelve days. The steam from the crater rose to a height of about 20,000 feet.—New York Post. Oil anil Oh. t /.\ *-r . c >* s lllll / O' \ti $jmfjp ' /TV \ >n 3 hf Mi ®§y\ % i vW4v^ m-ffe iT I ii 6Y M\ v : W . i r Proficient Bicyclist—“Well, oia chap, how are you getting on?” Commencing Bicyclist--“Thank yon, not badly ; bnt I find I can get off bet¬ ter.”—Punch. .....