Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 26 July 1889 — Page 6

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THE REPUBLICAN. •5®v,v.:..

Published by

!.. W. S. MONTGOMERY. GREENFIELD. INDIANA

Latest Indiana News.

Evansville needs a (public) bath. There are twenty beneficiary lodges end mutual aid associations in Jefleroonyille, and the aggregate membership is nearly 3,000.

The Sunday law was closely observed at Oarydon, last Sunday, even the barbers, the confectioners and small dealers generally closing up.

Mr. Jackson, of Odesse, was struck by lightning while asleep in his house alter nightfall, and two of his toes were so badly burned that amputation was necessary. "Grandma" Bowers, of South Muncie, aged seventy, died very suddenly, Monday. Many years ago her husband,long since dead, was swindled out o! a saw mill, and the old lady was continually calling upon the authorities to recover the property.

A corps of engineers, employed in the United States Geodetic Survey.has been sent to secure the topography of Brown county and are now encamped on the summit of Weed Patch Hill, where a tall signal tower was erected by the government a few months ago.

A lad aged fifteen, son of Henry Pet* tinger, of Cason, was seized by two unknown men, last Saturday night, who chloroformed him, threw him into a carriage and drove rapidly away. Pursuit was had, and the lad was found in an unconscious condition lying in a, fence corner some miles distant. The supposition is that it was a case of mis-1 taken identity, and that the wrong boy was kidnapped.

There is a local celebrity at Muncie, known as "Ginseng Sol," who makes his living by gathering ginseng. The loot commands $2 75 per pound, and is mainly shipped to China, where it is highly prized. "Ginseng Sol" knows every piece of woods in Delaware county, and he has become so skilled in the search that the plant, which is quite small, can be detected by him fifty feet away. He tramps from twenty to forty miles a day searching for it, and last summer his services netted him |8(J0.

Rev. C. C. Palmer, a graduate of Franklin College, who was pastor of the Baptist churches at Brookston and Chalmers, according to report has abandoned his pulpits, as well as his family.under disgraceful circumstances, and he is also accused of taking with him $1,000 by means of notes upon which he had secured the indorsement of his paris ionera. The ministers of the Baptist denomonination at Delphi are taking action on this matter, and the indorsers upon the notes will endeavor to secure his return.

The Huntington Herald says that Major Sbearer, pastmaster at that place, is physically unable to dress himself, or' even feed himself, and mentally he is unaIe to comprehend the slightest details of his office, and for several months he had nothing to ]do with his official work, save to ride there occasionally. Recently he was granted a' liberal pension, his ailment arising from injuries received while a soldier, and this gives him a comfortable provision for the remainder of his life. Because of his mental and physical condition, the Herald demands a change.

Late Gtneral

Nstes.

The Liberals in Parliament will resist all demands for further grants to the royal family.

The Executiue Committee of the Knights of Labor has chartered an assembly in Australia.

The brewers who have not sold out to the E jglish syndicate are forming a trust lor self protection.

Twelve German men-of-war will accompany Emperor William when he attends the naval review at Portsmouth.

The output of the Bluffton gas well is estimated at 3,000,000 cubic feet per day. The gas escapes with a roar that can be heard three miles away.

Mr. ckson, member of the British Parliament for the St. Stephen's Green Division of Dublin, has purchased 20,000 acres of land in Paraguay.

A special from Cincinnati to the Chicago Mail announcas a report in the former city that Murct Halstead suffers from an incurable disease.

At Kansas Cit3r between 700 and 800 carpenters struck for nine hours in place of ten and eleven. Part of the contractors yielded to the demand.

John Rose, one of the mo3t prominent citizens of Powell county, Ky., was assassinated, Monday. He was a leader of a feudal faction, and was to be tried Bhortly for killing his father-in-law.

The Dominion Government has had one of the persons afflicted with leprosy in Inverness county, Cape Breton, removed to the leprosy lazretto at Tracadie, N. B. It is understood that there is some doubt about the other two cases reported, but they are being investigated, and action on them will be taken at once.

District Attorney Fellows, of New York City, said, Monday, tnat he will bring no more boodiers to trial unless some new evidence not available in the trials already had, can be procured. The result of the trials thus far, he says, is to show that conviction is impossible, and to prosecute under such circumstances is to waste the public money.

Doomed to Die a Martyr.

Mrs. Hattie Gibson Herron, late of Jonesboro, Tenn., is under sentence oi Corea for teaching the doctrines of death in Christianity. Rev. David Herron is well known as a Presbyterian minister. He went to Corea about three years ago, the wife joining her husband a few weeks later. Mr*. Herron preached the gospel as well as her husband, and was the means of converting a nobleman in Corea, who began preaching Christianity.

The Emperor had Mrs. Herron arrested and tnrown into prison. Her case was investigated and finally the sentence of death was passed. Mrs. Herron was known as the most beautiful lady in upper East Tennessee.

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It must very hard for a funny actor to keep up the spirit of his part when during the whole performance he sees his audience sitting in tiers.

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HOW TO ^CONQUER-

COURAGE 18 KEQU»BFD IN RE8IST1NG EVIL.

Dangers that Beset Pathway ot Youtti More Easily Repulsed than in Mature Years—But One Way.

Rov. Dr. Talmage preached at Late Mninkuckee, lad., last Sunday. Subject: "How to Conquer." Text Prov. zxiii, 35. He said:

Our libraries are adorned with an elegant literature addressed to young men, pointing out to them all the dangers and perils of life—complete maps of the *oyage, ahowing all the rocks, the quicksands, the shoals. But suppose a man has already made shipwreck suppose he has already gone astray. How ia he to get back? That is a field comparatively untouched. I propose to address myself to such. There are those in this audience who, with every passion of their agonized soul, are ready to hear such discussion. They compare themselves with what they were ten years ago, and cry out from the bondage in which they are incarcerated. Now, if there be any here, come with an earnest purpose, yet feeling they are beyond the pale of Christian sympathy, and that the sermon can nardly be expected to address them, then, at this moment. I give them my right hand, and call tbem brother. Look up. There is glorious and triumphant hope for you yet. I sou ad the trumpet

oi

Gospel deliver­

ance, the church is ready to spread a banquet at your return, and the hierarcbs of heaven to fall into line of bannered procession at the news of your emancipation. So far as God may help me, I propose to s!*ow what are the obstasles of your return, and then how you are to surmount those obstacle. The first diffi mlty in the way of your return is the force of moral gravitation. ast as there is a natural law which brings down to the earth any thing you throw into the air, so there is a corresponding moral gravitation. In other words, it is easier to go down than is to go up it is easier to do wrong than it is do right. Call to mind the comrades of your boyhood (lavs—some of them good, some of them bad—which most atfecced you? Call to mind the anecdotes that you have heard in the last five or ten years—some of them pure and some of them impure. Which the more easily Bticks to your memory? During tbe years of your life you have formed certain courses of conduct.—some, of tbem good, some of them bad. To which style of habit did you the more easily yield? Ah, my friends we have to take* but a moment of self inspection to find out that there is in all our souls a force of moral gravitation? But that gravitation may be resisted. Just as you may pick up from the earth something and hold it in your hand toward heaven, just so, by the power of God's grace, a soul fallen may be lifted toward peace, toward pardon, toward heaven. Force of moral gravitation in every one of us, but power in God's grace to overcome that force of moral gravitation.

The next thing in the way of your return is the power of evil habit. I know there are those who say it is very easy for them to give up evil habits. I do not believe them. Here is a man given to intoxication. He Knows it is disgracing his family, destroying his p-operty, ruining him, body, mind and soul. If that man, being an intelligent min, and loving his family, could easily give

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that habit, would he not do so?

The fact that he does not give it up proves that it is hard to give up. It is a very easy thing to sail down stream, the tide carrying you with great force but suppose you turn the boat up stream, is it so easy then to row it? As long as we yield to the evil inclination in our hearts, and our bad habits, we are sailing down stream but the moment we try to turn, we put our boats in the rapids just above Niagara, and try to row up stream. Take a man given to the habit of using tobacco, ani most of you do, and let him resolva to stop, and he finds it very difficult. Twenty-seven years ago I quit that habit, and I would as soon dare to put my rignt hand in the fire as once to indulge in it. Why? Bee. *tse it was such a terrible struggle to get over it Now let a man be advised by his physician to give up the use of tobacco. He goes around not knowing what to do with himself. He. can not add up a line of figures. He can not sleep nights. It seems as if the* world has turned up3ide down. He* fe*ls his business is going to ruin. Where he was kind and obliging he is, spoiling and fretful. The composure) thai, characterized him has given way! to a fretful restlessness, and he has be come a complete fidget. What power isf it that has rolled a wave of woe over the earth and shaken a portent in the heavens? He has tried to stop smoking or chewing! After awhile he says, "I am ring to do as I plejuse. Tne doctor doesn't understand my case. I'm going back to my old habit." And he returns. Everything assumes its natural composure. His business seems to brighten. The world becomes an attractive place to live in. His children seeing the difference hail the return of their father's genial disposition. What wave of color hes dashed blue into the sky and greenness into the mountain foliage and the giow of sapphire into the sunset? Wnat enchantment has lifted a world of beauty and joy oa his soul? He has gone back to tobacco!

Oh, the fact is, as we all know in out own experience, that habit is a taskmaster. As long as we obey it. it does chastise us but let us resist and we find we are to be lashed with scorpion whips and bound with ship cable and thrown into the track of bone-breaking uggernauts!

Suppose a man after five or ten oi twenty years of evil doing, resolves to do right? Why, all the forces of darkness are allied against him. He can not bleep nights. He gets down on hia knees at midnight and cries, "God help me!" He bites his lip. He grinds hia teeth. He clenches his fut in his determination to Keep his purposes. He dare not look at the bottles in the window of a wine store. It was one long, bitter, exhnnative, hand-to-hand fight with infl d, tantalizing and merciless habit. lie a he thinks he is entirely free the old inclinations pounce upon him like a pack of hounds witb their muzzles tearing away at the flankc of one poor reindeer.

I have also to say that if a man wanta return from «vil practices society re pilses him: Dasiring to reform,' hi «»ye: "Now 1 will shake off my ol»

associates, and I will find Christain companionship." And he appears at the church door some Sabbath day, and tie usher greets him with a look as 'much as to say: "Why, you heie? You are the last man I ever expected to see at church! Come, take this seat right jdown by the door!" Instead of saying: (''Good morninp I am glad you are here. (Come, I will give you a first-rate seat, jrignt up by the pulpit." Well, the prod!igd', not yet discouraged, enters the .prayer meeting, and some Christian limin, with more zeal than common isenie, says: "Glad to see you. The dy.ng thief was saved, and suppose there is mercy for you!" The young disgusted, chilled, throws himself back on his dignity, resolved that he will never enter the house of God again. Perhaps not quite fully discouraged about reformation, he sides up by some highly respectable man he used to know going down the street, and immediately the respectable man has an errand down some other street! Well, the prod igal, wishing to return, takes some member of a Christian association by the hand, or tries to. The Christian young man looks at him, looks at the faded apparel and the marks of dissipation, and instead of giving him a warm grip of the hand offers him the tip end of the long fingers of the left hand, hich is equal to striking a man in the

Oh, how few Christian people understand how much force and Gospel there is in a good, honest handshaking! Sometimes, when you have felo the need of encouragement, and some Christian man has taken you heartily by the hand, have you not feit that thrilling through every fibre of your body, mind and soul, an encouragement that was just what you needed? You do not know anything at all about this unless you know when a man tries to return from evil courses of conduct, he runs against repulsions innumerable. We say of some man, he lives a block or two from the church, or half a mile from the church. There are people in our crowded cities who live a thousand miles from the church. Vast deserts of indifference between them and the house of God. The fact is, we must keep our respectability, though thousands and tens of thousands perish. Christ sat with publicans and sinners. But if there comes to the house of God a man with marks of dissipation upon him, people throw up their hands in horror, as much as to say, "Isn't it shocking?" How these dainty, fastidious Christians in all our churches are going to get into heaven I don't know, unless they have an especial train of cars, cushioned and upholstered, each one a car to himsell! They can not go with the great herd of publicans and sinners. Oh, ye who curl up your lip ot scorn at the fallen, I tell you plainly if you had been surrounded amid the cultured and the refined and the Christian, to-day you would have been a crouching wretch in stable or ditch covered with filth and abomination! It is not because you are naturally any better, but because the mercy ot has protected you. Why are you brought up in Christian circles, watched by Christian parentage, should be so hard on the fallen?

Then, also, I counsel you, if you want to get back, to auit all your bad associations. One unholy intimacy will fill vour soul with moral distemper. In all the ages of the Church there has not been an instance where a man kept one evil associate and was reformed. Among the fourteen hundred millions of the race not one instance. Go home to-day, open your desk, take out letter paper, stamp and envelope, and then write a letter something like this: "My Old Companions: I start this day tor heaven. Until I am persuaded you will join me in this, farewell." Then sign your name and send the letter by the first post. Give up your bad companions, or give up heaven. It is not ten bad companions that destroy a man, nor five bad companions, nor three ba companions, but one. What chance is there for that young man I saw along the street, four or five young men with him, halting in front of a grog shop, urging him to go in, he resisting, violently resisting, until after awhile they forced him to go in? It was a summer night, and the door was left open, and I saw the process. They held him fast, and they put the cup to his lips, and they forced down the strong drink. What chance is there for such a young man? V„

I counsel you also to seek Christian advice. Every Christian man is bound to help you. First of all, seek God then seek Christian counsel. Gather up all the energies of body, mind and soul, and, appealing to God for success, declare this day everlasting war against all drinking habits, all gambling practices, all houses of sin. Half and-half work will amount to nothing it must be a Waterloo. Shrink back now and you are lost. Push on and you are saved. A Spartan General fell at the very moment of victory,but he dipped his finger in his own blood and wrote on a rock near where he was dying, "Sparta has conquered." Though your struggle to

Seath

at rid of sin may seem to be almost a straggle, you can dip vour finger in your own blood and write on the Rock of Ages, "Victory through our Lord Jesus Christ."

Oh, what glorious news it would be for some of these young men to send home to their parents. They go to the posioffice every day or two to see whether there are any letters from you. How anxious they are to hear. Who has brought disgrace upon his father's samel God pity the young man who has broken liis mother's heart! Better ii be had never been born—better if ih the first

hour of his life, instead of being laid against the warm bosom of maternal [tenderness, he nad been coffined and sepulchered. There is no balm powerful enough to heal the heart of one who has brought parents to a sorrowful grave, and who wanders about through the dismal cemetery, rending the hair and wringing the hands and crying: "Mother! Mother!" Oh, that today by all the memories of the past and by all the hopes of the future, you would yield your heart to God. May your father's God and your mother's God be your God forever!"

Trouble in Oklahoma.

A special from Guthrie, Okla,, says: The decision of the Land Office, ousting the "sooners," as those who entered Oklahoma before noon of April 22 are called, is causing excitement throughout Oklahoma as fast as the news spreads.

Two hundred men were in line Monday morning waiting for the Land Office to open—a large majority waiting to file on claims already entered by men supposed to have been in the Territory before noon of April 22, and which the decision declares are not entitled to hold claims.

The effect of the decision will be felt everywhere throughout the Territory and endless trouble seems in store.

A Unique Club House.

Lexington, Ga., thinks that it hai one of the most unique club houses in the country. It was built by the members. who reared a log hut, chinking the space between the logs with clay At one end they built an enormous fir© place. The club is composed oi wealthy young men, and has a weekly supper. The day before the supper a big fire is built in the lire-place, and the next evening there is a splendid bed of live coals, and on this, birds, fish, 'possum, oysters and other good things are cooked under the personal supervision of Solicitor-General Howard, whose success in roasting birds and planking .sliad has given him an enviable re.pui•ition.

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God that, and you

I think men also are often hindered from return by the fact that churches are too anxious about their denomination, and they rush out when they Bee a man about to give up his sin and return to God, and asfc him how he is going to be baptized, whether by sprinkling or by immersion, and what kind of a church he is going to join. Oh, my friends! It is a poor time to talk about Presbyterian catechisms, and Episcopal liturgies, and Methodist love feasts, and baptisteries to a man fiat is coming out of the darkness oi gin into the glorious light of the Gos pel.

Who cares what church he joins, if he only joins Christ and starts for heaven? Oh, you ought to have, my brother, an illuminated face and a hearty grip for every one that tries to turn from his evil way! Take hold of the same book with him, though his dissipations shake the book, remembering that he that converteth a sinner [rom the error of his ways shall save a soul from death, and hide a multitude of sins.

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B*ek

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', To Gore Heart Disease Use "Dr. Kilmer's Ocean-Weed Heart Remedy." It regulates, corrects and relieves the most distressing cases. Price 50c, and $1.00. Pamphlet Free. Bingbamton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quijjley.

DR. KILMER'S

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Knockel Do*cvn a Hor A telesrniph lineman fell from the cross-bar of a poie at New Haven, and, oftcr

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to

connections without compelling passengers

submit to a long and disagreeable omnibua transfer for both passenger and baggage.

Five Trains fach way. daily except Sunday, Three Trains each way on Sunday, between Indianapolis and Cincinnati.

Through Tickets and Baffsaee Checks to all Principal Points can be obtained at any Ticket Office, C. I. St. L.&C. K'y, also via thisline at all Coupon Ticket Offices throughout the country. I. H. MABT1N, C. S. LaFQLLETTE,

Dist. Pass'r Agent. Western Pass'r^ent,

IKDI AX ATOMS. ISD. IAFAY ETTJt, IHB» JOHN EQAN. Gen'l Pass'r and Ticket Agent, CIKHSKATl, O.

1

FREE

V.":

call, a compete line ofonr

valuable and very naefol IIOHSEUOLU NAMPLJES* These svmples.as well as the watch,we send free.and after yon have kept them in yoor home for S months and shown then to those who may have called,they Income your own Pr0P*y!» l( possible to make this great offer, sending the SOLID COLD watch and COST* samples fri-e. as the showlngor the samples In any locality, always results In a large trade for as-after our samples have been In a locality for a month or two we usually get from fiOOO to ft&OOO In trado from tb« surrounding country. This, the most wonderful offer ever known,Is made in order that our samples may bu placed at -nicy where they can be seen, all over America. Write at once, ana make'sure of the chance. Beadern will bohardlyany troubla tor you to show the samples to those who may call at your hom* and your reward will be most satisfactory. A postal «ra oa which to write us costs hot 1 cent and after you know all,tr yoo 4o not care to go fnrthcr, why no barm is done. But If you do •end your address at once, yon can secure FltEE one of to* bast aolid gold watches In the world and our large line or COSTLY SAMPLES.

-i

"M

all expreas, freight, eto.

AfttaMam.SXUiBOMMOO,,Box (18, PORTLAND, M4JH&

DR. ELLIOTT'S

MEDICATEDFOOD,

A Sure Cure for all Diseases in

HORSES,

Cattle, Sheep and Hogs

Arising from Impurities of the Blood, and from Functional Derangements.

DEAD SHOT OH WORMS, AHD A CERTA2R