The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, July 13, 1894, Image 7

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    TABERNACLE PULPIT.
'the rustic in the palaca”
OF THE KING
'Joseph Is Yet AIIts; I Will Go and See
Him Before I Die," Gen. 40:38—The
Strength and Iteward of Parental
Attachment*.
Brooklyn, July 8. -Rev. Dr. Tal
lage, who is now nearing the Anti
podes,on his round-ihe-world journey,
has selected as the subject for his
sermon othrough the press to-day.
“The Rustic in the Palace,” the text
being taken from Gen. 45:38, "I will
go and see him before I die."
Jacobihad long since passed the
'hundred year mile-stone. In those
times people were distinguished for
longevity. In the centuries afterward
'persons lived to great age. Galen,-the
most celebrated physician of his time,
took so little of his own medicine that
he lived to 140 years. A man of un
doubted veracity on the witness stand
in England swore that he remembered
an event 150 years before Lord Bacon
speaks of a countess who had cut three
set of teeth, and died at 140 years.
Joseph Crele of Pennsylvania, lived
140 years. In 1857 a book was printed
containing the names of thirty-seven
persons who lived 140 years, and the
names of eleven persons who lived 150 j
years.
Among the grand old people of
whom we have record was Jacob, the
shepherd of the text Hut he had a
bad lot of boys. They were jealous
and ambitious and every %vay unprin- !
cipled. Joseph, however, seemed to 1
be an exception; but he had been gone
many years, and the probability was
that he was dead. As sometimes now
in a house you will find kept at the
table a vacant chair, a plate, a knife, j
a fork, for some deceased member of
the family, so Jacob kept in his heart
a plate for his beloved Joseph. There '
sits the old man, the flock of 140 years
in their flight having alighted long
enough to leave the marks of their
claw on forehead and cheek and
temple. His long beard snows down
over his chest His eyes are some
what dim, and he can see further
when they are closed than when they
ire open, for he can see clear back in
to the time when beautiful Rachel,
ais wife, was living, and his children
shook the Oriental abode with their
merriment
Th'e centenarian is sitting dreaming
over the past when he hears a wagon
rumbling to the front door. He
jets up and goes to the door to see
who has arrived, and his long absent
sons from Egypt come in and an
nounce to him that Joseph instead of
being dead is living in an Egyptian
palace, with all the investiture of
prime minister, next to the king in
the mightiest empire of all the world!
l'lie news was too sudden and too
jlad for the old man, and his cheeks
whiten, and he has a dazed look, and
tiis staff falls out of his hand, and he
would have dropped had not his sons
caught him and led him to a lounge
md put cold water on his face, and
fanned him a little.
In that half delirium the old man
mumbles something about his son
Joseph. He says: “You don’t mean
Joseph, do you? my dear son who has
been dead so long. You don’t mean
Joseph, do you?” But after they had
fully resuscitated him, and the news
was confirmed, the tears begin their
winding way down the crossroads of
the wrinkles, and the sunken lips of
the old man quiver, and he brings his
bent fingers together as he says:
“Joseph is yet alive. I will go and
»ee him before I die.”
D It did not take the old man a great
while to get ready, I warrant you. He
jut on the best clothes that the shep
jerd’s wardrobe could afford. He got
nto the wagon, and though the aged
ire cautious and like to ride slow, the
wagon did not get along fast enough
for this old man; and when the old
men met Joseph's chariot coming down
10 meet him, and Joseph got out of the
chariot and got into the wagon and
shrew his arms around his father's
leek, it was an antithesis of royalty
ind rusticity, of simplicity and pomp,
jf filial affection and paternal love,
which leaves us so much in doubt
ibout whether we had better laugh or
cry, that we do both. So Jacob kept
•he resolution of the text—“I will go
ind see him before I die.”
\V hat a strong ana unfailing thing
is parental attachment! Was it not
ilmost time for Jacob to forget Jo
seph? The hot suns of many summers
had blazed on the heath; the river
Nile had overflowed and receded, over
flowed and receded again and again;
the seed had been sown and the har
vest reaped; stars rose and set; years
of plenty and years of famine had
passed on; but the love of Jacob for
Joseph in my text is overwhelmingly
dramatic. Oh, that is a cord that is
not snapped, though pulled on by
many decades! Though when the lit
tle child expired the parents may not
have been more than 25 years of age,
and now they are 75, yet the
vision of the cradle, and the
childish face, and the first utter
ance of the infantile lips are fresh
to-day, in spite of the passage of a
half century. Joseph was as fresh in
Jacob's memory as ever, though at 17
years of age the boy had disappeared
from the old homestead. I found in
- our family record the story of an in
fant that had died fifty years before,
and I said to my parents: “What is
this record, and what does it mean?’’
Their chief answer was a long, deep
sigh. It was yet to them a very ten
der sorrow. What does that all mean?
Why, it means onr children departed
are ours yet, and that cord of attach
ment reaching across the years will
hold us until it brings us together in
the palace, as Jacob and Joseph were
brought together. That is one thing
that makes old people die happy.
'They realize it is reunion with those
1 iroin wnom tney nave long been
separated.
I am often asked as pastor—and
every pastor is asked the question—
•Will my children be children in
heaven and forever children?” Well,
there was no doubt a great change in
Joseph from the time Jacob lost him
and the time when Jacob found him—
between the boy 17 years of age and
the man in mid-life, his forehead de
veloped with the great business of
stats; but Jacob was glad to get back
Joseph anyhow, and it did not make
much difference to the old man
whether the boy looked older or looked
younger. And it will be enough joy
for that parent if he can gee back that
son. that daughter, at the gate of
heaven, whether the departed loved
one shall come a cherub or in full
grown angel-hood. There must be a
change wrought by that celestial cli
mate and by those supernal years,
but it will only be from loveliness to
more loveliness, and from health to
more radiant health. O parent, as
you think of the darling panting and
white from membraneous cro>p, I
want you to know it will be gloriously
bettered in that land where there has
never been a death and where all the
inhabitants will live on in the great
future as long as Uod! Joseph was
Joseph notwithstanding the palace,
and your child will be your child not
withstanding all the raining splendors
of everlasting noon. What a thrilling
visit was that of the old shepherd to
the prime minister Joseph! I see the
old countryman seated in the palace
looking around at the mirrors and
the fountains and the carved pillars,
and oh! how he wishes that Rachel,
his wife, was alive and she could have
come there with him to see their son
in his great house. ••Oh,” says
the old ' man within him
self, “I do wish Rachel could be
here to see all this!” I visited at
the farm house of the father of Mil
lard Fillmore when the son was Presi
dent of the United States, and the
octogenarian farmer entertained me !
until 11 o’clock at night telling me
what great things he saw in his son’s
house at Washington, and what
Daniel Webster said to him, and how
grandly Millard treated his father in
the white house. The old man’s face
was illumined with the story until al
most midnight. He had just been
visiting his son at the capitol. And \
suppose it was something of the same I
joy that thrilled the heart of the old
shepherd as he stood in the palace of
the prime-minister. It is a great day
with you when your old parents come
to visit you. Your little children
stand around with great wide-open
eyes, wondering how anybody could
be so old. The parents can not stay
many days, for they are a little rest
less, and especially at nightfall, be
cause they sleep better in their own
bed; but while they tarry you some
how feel there is a benediction in
every room in the house. They are a
little feeble, and you make it as easy
as you can for them, and you realize
they will probably not visit you very
often—perhaps never again. You go
to their room after they have retired
at night to see if the lights are prop
erly put out, for the old people under
stai i candle and lamp better than the
modern apparatus for illumination.
In the morning, with real interest in
their health, you ask them how they
rested last night. Joseph, in the his
torical scene of the text, did not think
any more of his father than you do of
your parents. The probability- is, be
fore they leave your house they half
spoil your children with kind
ness. Grandfather and grand
mother are more lenient and in
dulgent to your children than they
ever were with you. And what won
ders of revelation in the bombazine
pocket of the one and the sleeve of
the other! Blessed is that home where
Christian parents come to visit! What
ever may have been the style
of the architecture when they
came, it is a palace before they leave.
If they visit you fifty times, the two
most memorable visits will be the first
and the last Those two pictures will
hang in the hall of your memory
while memory lasts, and you will re
member just how they looked and
where they sat, and what they said,
and at what figure ot" the carpet, and
at what door sill they parted with
you, giving you the final good-by. Do
not be embarrassed if your father
come to town and he have the man
ners of the shepherd, and if your
mother come to town and there be in
her hat no sign of costly millinery.
The wife of the Emperor Theodosius
said a wise thing when she said:
“Husband, remember what you lately
were, and remamber what vou are
and be thankful.”
By this time you all notice what
kindly provision Joseph made for his
father Jacob. Joseph did not say: “I
can't have the old man around this
place. How clumsy he would look
climbing up these marble stairs, and
walking over these mosaics! Then
he would be putting his hands upon
some of these frescoes. People would
wonder where that old greenhorn
came from. He would shock all the
Egyptian court with his manners at
table Besides that he might get sick
on my hands, and he might be queru
lous, and he might talk to me as
though I were only a boy, when I am
second man in all the realm Of
course, he must not suffer, and if
there is famine in his country—and I
hear there is—I will send him some
provisions: but I can't take a man
from Pandanaram and introduce him
into this polite Egyptian court What
a nuisance it is to have poor rela
tions!”
Joseph did not say that but he
rushed out to meet his father with
perfect abandon of affection, and
brought him up to the palace and in
troduced him to the emperor, and pro
vided for all the rest of the father's
days, and nothing was too good for
the old man while living; and when he
was dead, Joseph, with military es
cort, took his father's remains to the
family cemetery. Would God aH chil
dren were as kind to their parents.
If the father have large property,
and he be wise enough to keep it in
his own name, he will be respected by
the heirs; but how often it is when the
son finds his father in famine, as
Joseph found Jacob in famine, the
young people make it very hard for
the old man. They are so surprised
he eats with a knife instead of a fork.
They are chagrined at his antedelu
vian habits. They are provoked be
cause he can not hear as well as he
used to, and when he asks it over
again, and the son has to repeat it,
he bawls in the old man's ear: “I
hope you hear that!'* How long he
must wear the old coat or the old hat
before they get him a new one! How
chagrined they are at his independ
ence of the English grammar! How
long he hangs on! Seventy years and
not gone yet! Seventy-five years and
not gone yet! Eighty years and not
gone yet! Will he ever go? They
think it of no use to have a
doctor in his last sickness, and
go up to the drug store and get a
dose of something that makes him
worse, and economize on a coffin, and
beat the undertaker down to the last
point, giving a notJ for the reduced
amount, which they never nav t have
officiated at obsequies of aged people
where the family have been so inor
dinately resigned to Providence that 1
felt like taking my text from Pro
verbs: “The eye that mocketh at its
father, and refuseth to obey its
mother, the ravens of the valley shall
pick it out, and the young eagles
shall eat it” In other words, such ac
ingrate ought to have a flock of crows
for pall-bearers! I congratulate you
if you have the honor of providing for
aged parents. The blessing of the
Lord God of Joseph and Jacob will be
on you.
I may say in regard to the most oi
you that your parents have probably
visited you for the last time, or will
soon pay you such a visit, and I have
wondered if they will ever visit you in
the king’s palace. “Oh,” you say, “I
am in the pit of sin!” Joseph was in
the pit. “Oh,” you say, “I am in the
prison of mine iniquity!” Joseph was
once in prison. “Oh,” you say, “1
didn’t have a fair chance; I was de
nied maternal kindness!” Joseph was
denied m#1+'"-nsl “O1- ”
you say, “I am far away from the
land of my nativity!” Joseph was far
from home. “Oh,” you say, “I have
been betrayed and exasperated!” Did
not Joseph’s brethren sell him to
a passing Ishmaelitish caravan?
Yet God brought him to that em
blazoned residence; and if you will
trust his grace in Jesus Christ, you,
too, will be empalaced. Oh, what a
day that will be when the old folks
come from an adjoining mansion in
heaven, and find you amid the alabas
ter pillars of the throne-room and
living with the King! They are com
ing up the steps now, and the epau
letted guard of the palace rushes in
and says: “Your father's coming, your
mother’s coming!” And when under
the arches of precious stones and on
the pavement of porphyry you greet
each other, the scene will eclipse the
meeting on the Goshen highway,
when Joseph and Jacob fell on each
other's neck and wept a good while.
But oh, how changed the old folks
will be! Their cheek smoothed into
the flesh of a little child. Their
stooped posture lifted into immortal
symmetry. Their foot now so feeble,
then with the sprightness of a bound
ing roe, as thev shall say to you: “A
spirit passed this way from earth and
told us that you were wayward and
dissipated after we left the world; but
you have repented, our prayer has
been answered, and you are here; and
as we used to visit you on earth before
we died, now we visit you in your
new home after our ascension. ” And
father will say, “Mother, don’t you
see Joseph is still alive?” and mother
will say, “Yes, father, Joseph is yet
alive. ” And then they will talk over
their earthly anxieties in regard to
you, and the midnight suppli
cations in your behalf, and they
w ill recite to each other the scrip
ture passage with which they used to
cheer their staggering faith: “I will
be a God to thee and thy seed after
thee.” Oh, the palace, the palace,
the palace! That is what Richard
Baxter called “The Saints’ Everlasting
Rest.” That is what John Bunyan
called the “Celestial City.” That is
Young's “Night Thoughts” turned
into morning exultations. That is
Gray’s “Elegy in a Churchyard”
turned to resurrection spectacle. That
is the “Cotter’s Saturday Night” ex
changed for the “Cotter's Sabbath
morning. That is the shepherd of
Salisbury Plains amid the flocks
on the hills of heaven. That is
the famine-struck Padanaram turned
into the rich pasture fields of Goshen.
That is Jacob visiting Joseph at the
emerald castle.
The Review of Reviews for July finds
cause for rejoicing from the reports
■which it is receiving from all parts of
the country concerning the steady di
mininution in the number of unem
ployed. It will be remembered that
the Review canvassed the situation
thoroughly in the early winter, and
placed before its readers returns from
nearly all the large cities showing the
number of men out of wojk and the
measures inaugurated for their relief.
Supplementary information has been
received which enables the Review to
state that almost everywhere such re
lief work has ceased becahse the neces
sity for it has disappeared. The editor
comments on this improved condition
of affairs and adds some interesting re
flections on the passing of Coxeyism.
In this bonnection the status of the pop
uliets in congress is discussed.
The railway debt of Italy is nearly
five milliards (SI.000,000,000) and the
annual railway deficit is not less than
200.000,000 of lire, (840,000.000.) or
more than the actual cost of the armv.
The man who is willing to learn ona
hing at a time will Eoon know mu
MOBS AGAINST REGULARS.
The Chicago Striker! Overturn Freight
Cara
Chicago, July 6.—Fifteen freight
ears were overturned on the Lake
Shore road near Thirty-ninth and Hal
stead streets just at the entrance to
the Union stock yards at 1:30 p. m.,
just after a number of cars belonging
to the Stock Yards Switching associa
tion had been overturned. The mob
numbered far up in the thousands.
No troops were at the scene of the
trouble at the time, the soldiers from
Blue Island being nearly half a mile
distant.
Ten thousand strikers congregated
at Fortieth street and Wentworth
avenue and tried to wreck the tower
house on the Lake Shore and Roek
Island roads. Police Lieutenant Fitz
patrick was dispatched to the scene
with a large force of police.
Still another overturned about fifty
freight cars on the Fort Wayne road
between • Thirty-ninth and Root
streets, a. point not covered by the
troops.
At the same time as the other mobs
were at work, hundreds of a mob
which, had surrounded Swift & Co.’s
meat train, but had been held partly
in check by regulars, started down
the Fort Wayne railroad tracks bent
on lawlessness. First they fired a
switch over near Fortieth street and
Stewart avenue. Then they attacked
a Fort Wayne dummy train
from East Chicago. The en
gineers and firemen were .driven
away and the windows of the ca-s
smashed. The conductors and pas
sengers abandoned the train and it
was left to the mercy of the strikers,
when it seemed permanently aban
doned the strikers stopped their at
tack and continued their march along
the tracks and many freight cars
were dumped across the tracks. The
regulars remained with the meat
train.
A train- belonging to Morris & Co.,
was stopped by force by strikers at
Thirty-seventh street this afternoon.
It was loaded with live cattle, which
were said to be choking from thirst.
President Debs this afternoon de
clared that if it became necessary the
chiefs of the various labor organiza
tions in the city would call out every
trade in Chicago so that the strikers
would win.
The Illinois Central railroad re
newed its suburban service to-day and
a limited number of trains were run
ning with the usual regularity. The
suburban service of the Illinois Cen
tral road has been practically sus
pended since last Saturday and was
seriously crippled for some days pre
vious.
TARIFF BILL PASSED.
Hill Votes With the Republicans Against
It—The Populists Divide.
Washington, July 6.—In the midst
of intense excitement at 10:43 Tues
day night, after having been debated
for three months and one day, the tar
iff bill, amended to take effect August
1, 1894, passed the senate by a vote of
34 to 39, a strict party vote except Mr.
Hill, who voted with the Republicans
against the measure. The Populists
divided their strength, two, Messrs.
Kyle and Allen voting in favor of the
bill, and two, Messrs. Peffer and Stew
art, against it.
A hard but hopeless fight was made
by the Republicans under the leader
ship of Mr. Sherman to place wool on
the dutiable list. Through the in
strumentality of Mr. McLaurin, Dem
ocrat of Mississippi, the action of the
committee of the whole in exempting
the salaries of the United States
judges and the president of the United
States from the operation of the in
come tax was reserved in the senate.
A very important piece of legislation
in the shape of an anti-trust law was
placed on the bill as a rider, without
even so much as a division. It was
designed, as Mr. Voorhees, chairman
of the finance committee, said, to in
sure “integrity in the execution of
the law,” it being admitted that any
tariff system afforded abundant op
portunity for the formation of trusts
and combines.
The amendment to section 71, re
pealing the reciprocity clause of the
McKinley law, declaring the repeal
should not be construed to abrogate
reciprocal arrangements now in ex
istence, was agreed to.
Upon the announcement of the vote
the galleries cheered. Democrats
threw bills high in the air, and amid
a scene of jubilation the senate ad
journed until/Fridav.
RIOT IN BUTTE.
Two Men Killed Over A. P. A. Trouble
■—State Militia Called Out.
Helena, Mont., July 6.—111 feeling
between A. P. A. and other elements
in Butte yesteaday resulted in a riot
in which two men, one a policeman
named Daly was killed. The militia
was called out to preserve the peace.
As becomes a July number of any
magazine, the Atlantic for this month
has its share of out-of-door papers.
They show more than one way of get
ting a change of scene and air, for be
sides Mr. Frank Bolles's Nova Scotia
paper, “The Home of Glooscap,” and
Mr. Bradford Torrey’s Florida sketch,
“On the Beach at Daytona,” an un
signed article, “The City on the House
tops,” gives a vivid and sympathetic
picture of the summer life on the roofs
of houses in the most crowed quarters
of New York. It is evidently the work
of a man who has lived the life him
self. Mr. W. R. Thayer has edited for
‘.he Atlantic the letters of Sidney Lan
er to a Philadelphia friend. They are
«o appear in two installments, the first
of which, in the current number, shows
them to be of uncommon literary in
terest and biographical value. Hough
ton, Mifflin & Co., Boston.
Station Agent Richard* of Nowata* Ind.
Ter.* Killed on the Depot Platform.
Nowata. Ind. Ter., July 6.—A. L.
Richards, station agent of the Mis
souri Pacific railway, was standing
on the depot platform at 10 o'clock
last night, waiting for the train from
the south, when one of a number of
men who had been around the depot
suddenly confronted him, revolver in
hand, and ordered him to throw up
his hands. Richards, who had a re
volver in his left hand, raised it. As
he did so the robber shot. The ball
cut off one of Richard's fingers and,
interim his neck, killed him.
The Citizens Bank of McGook
INCORPORATED UNDER STATE LAWS.
Paid Up Capital, - $50,000.
Surplus,. 10,000.
DOES A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS.
Collections Made on all Accessible Points. Drafts Drawn on all
Principal Cities of Europe. Taxes Paid
for Non-Kesidents.
Tickets for Sale to and froiji Europe.
OFFICERS.
V. FRANKLIN, President. A. C. EBERT, Cashier.
Correspondents:—The First National Bank, Lincoln, Nebraska. The
Chemical National Bank, New York City.
= THE -
FIi^st Wat1oi\!al
q PaHk .
Authorized Capital $100,000
Capital and Surplus 60,000
OFFICERS JL3ST3D DIRECTORS.
GEOROE H9CKNELL, B. M. FREES, W. F. LAWSON,
President. Vice President. Cashier.
A. CAMPBELL, FRANK HARRIS.
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Address or call on
DR. HATHAWAY & GO.,
S. E. Comer Sixth and Felix Kt«., Rooms 1 and.
(lo Stairs.j ST. JOSEPH. MO.
J. S. McBrayer. Milton Osborn.
McBRAYER 6 OSBORN,
PROPRIETORS OF
MG600K T ransier
LINE.
Bus Baggage and Express.
ONLY FCKMItRE TAX IX THE CItV,
Leave outliers for Bus Calls at the Com-,
merclal Hotel w our office opposite depot*
J. S. ATcBrayer also has a first-class,
house-moving outfit.
CHARLES H. HOYLE,
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW
McCOOK, NEBRASKA.
J. E. KELLEY,
ATTORNEY - AT-LAW,
I AGENT LINCOLN LAND CO.
McCOOK, - - NEBRASKA.
Office In Rear of First National Bank.