Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 2 August 1889 — Page 6

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THE REPUBLICAN.1 THE EARTHQUAKE.

Published by

W. S. MONTGOMERY.

GREENFIELD. INDIANA

rights of man are growing daily narrower and narrower. An Ohio en thusiast is accused by bis wife of running all summer to base ball, and all winter of making Bcrap-books of news columns of matches that have been. She wants a divorce. We zrant he might have been sawing wood, or running for the Legislature, or inventing perpetual motion, or hauling saw-logs, or getting up a trust in apple butter or canned asparagus but if he had been a woman he could have ppent the whole winter crocheting and tattling and reading •'Ben Hur"—and not then got a divorce. There are some things in this world that call for reform but some things never do get quite right. Divorce, by aU m^anp.

ENGLISH VESSEL SEIZED

An Iilojfal Sna'er Captured in Behring Sea by a Ui.ited States lleveuue Cutter.

The steamer Dora arrived at San Francisco from Behring Sea, Tuesday night, and brings the first detailed news of the capture of the British sealer Black Diamoad, by the United States revenue cutter Richard Rush. July 11 the Rush overtook the Biack Diamond and ordered her to heave to. The captain of the Biack Diamond refasel to do this. Thereupon the coinmanaer of the Rash ordered a lovfering of ports and running out of guns, which caused the schooner to heave to. Captain Shepard and Lieutenant Tuttle boarded the English craft and asked for her papers. The ofiicars of the Biack Diamond offered them no armed resistance, but refusel to delivai the ship's papers. Captain Shepard at once broKe opan the cabin and forced the hinges off the stiong box and the captain's chest, thereby secur.ng tne papers. A search of the vessel disclosed 103 sealskins, which had been taking in Uehring sea. Captain Shepard placed a non-coaamiasioned officer from the Ru3h in charge of the Black Diaoaoad, and ordered tne vessel to be taken to Sitka to await further instructions. Tae captain of the Black Diamond made the statement that,when in Victoria, he hai been ordered to pay no attention in case he was overtaken by the Rash and requested to heave to. He said he would not have surrendered if the Rush had had an inferior force to that of his own.

Xatest Indiana Xews.

Fort Wayne's bucket shop has closed. Goshen is seized with a military spirit.

Wm. Curtin, of Michigan City, is dead from lock-jaw. President Harrison will attend the corner stone laying of the State Soldiers' Monument.

The Jones twin freak at Tipton has been classified by Processor George Jackson Fisher, of Sing Sing, N. Y., as belonging to what is known as the "Jechiopagus," which means, joined by the teat bonea. There are but eight similar case3 on recori.

A Fort Wayne officer had occasion to arrest Miss Roaie Down, of Coessee, but the girl saw him and fled to the neighboring swamp, and she was only captured after a chase lasting for four hours. She is accused of sending improper letters through the mails.

A terrible state of affairs is said to exist in the big huckleberry marsh near Walkerton, where fully 500 people are engaged in gathering the crop. Saloons and vile resorts abound and vice in its most disgusting form exists unchecked. A prize fight and races were among the attractions, Sunday.

The yield of wheat in Clay county is surprising the farmers. The Stwalley brothers realized 1,910 bushels from ninety acres W. D. Black threshed nineteen acres, getting 636 bushels Reuben Sehicle got 564 bushels from fifteen acres, and Thomas Rusk reports an average of thirty-three bushels, and one acre showing fifty bushels.

Patents were issued to Indiana inventors, Tuesday, as follows: Eugene Bretney, Indianapoli?, dust collector James Chambers, Rochester, washing machine James W. leney, Indianapolis, blacksmith's mandrel Henry H. Dille, Richmond, pawl and ratchet mechanism T. H. Haberkorn,Ft. Wayne, valve for steam engines Sylvester Hoadlv, Gosport, price calculating device )hn E. Little, Princeton, gate James B. Mersman, Lagrange, folding wash bench.

Late General Ni ws Notes.

The Wisconsin beef-inspection law is pronounced unconstitutional. James R. Garfield, son of the late President, is talked of for Congress.

The oats crop of the country is very large—estimated at 763,160,432 bushels. Two of Wisconsin's counties report their tobacco crop irreparably ruined by a storm.

C. A Herbert, wife beater, was duly whipoed bv Hagerstown, Md., by regulators Tuesday.

John Emmons, of Gaylord, Kan., was tarred and feathered Tuesday for whipping hia wife.

E A. H. Bitchellor, shoe dealers, of Boston, failed, Tuesday, with liabilities of $1,250,000.

The United States' new cluiser, Yorktown, has been thoroughly tested and found to ba first-cia3s in all respects.

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Mary S. Baker, of Sidney, O.,

has been arrested and held to the grand jury for using profane language. Postmaster Paul, of Milwaukee, who, by tbe report of the Commissioner 3,had violated the civil service law, hai resigned.

Texas fever is playing havoc among the cattle in the Indian Territory. Over forty bead were seen dead in one pasture alone, and in others numbers varying from seven to twenty-five. Cattle are dying in large numbers, alpo, in Oklahoma, and it is predicted that there will not be a living head of the cattle imported into that country in two months.

Lord T^nnvson is writing a thousand dollar poem for an Eaglish magazine, thus beating hie famous charge by fcur hundred.

TROUBLES LiIKENED UNTO EARTHQUAKE

jl

AN

They Come to All Men and Shake Them Up—Business and Uomestio Afflictions.

Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at St. Paul, Minn., Sunday. Subject "The Earthquake," Text: Act xvi., 31. He 'said:

Jails are dark, dull, damp, loathsome I places even now but they were worse in the apostolic times. I imagine to-day we are standing in the Philippian dungeon. Do you not feel the chill? Do you not hear the groan of those incarcerated ones who for ten years have not seen the sunlight, and the deep sigh of women who remember their father's house and mourn over their wasted estate? Listen again. It is the cough of a consumptive, or the struggle of one in the nightmare of a great horror. You listen again and hear a culprit,his chains rattling as li rolls over in his dreams, and you say: "God pity the prisoner." But there is another sound in that prison. It is a song of joy and gladness.

What a place to sing in! The music comes winding through the corridors of the prison, ana in all tae dark wards the whisper is heard: "What's thai? What's that?

It is the song of Paul and Silas. They cannot sleep. They have been whipped, very badly whipped. The long gashes on their backs a bleeding yet. They lie flat on the cold ground, their feet last in wooden sockets, and, of course, they can not eip. Bat they can ting. Jailer, what are you doing with these people? Why have they been putin here? Oh, they have been trying to make the world better. Is that all? That is all. A pit for Joseph. A lion's cave for Daniel. A blazing furnace for S:iadrac'a. Clubs for John Wesley. An anathema for Pnilip Melancthon. A dungeon for Ta,ul aud Silas. But while we are standing in the gloom of the Philippian dungeon, and we hear the mingling voices of sob and groan and blasphemy and hallelujah, suddenly an Birlliqu ikt! The iron bars of the prison twist, ill3 pillars crack off, the solid masonry begins to heave and all the doors swing open. The jaiier, feeling himself respousible for these prisoners, aad believing, in his pagan ignorance, Buicide to be honorable— since Bratus killed himself, and (Jaco killed himself, aad Cassius killed himself—put his sword to his own heart, proposing with one strong, keen thrust to put an iend to his excitement and agitation. But Paul cries out: "Stop! Stop! Do thyself DO harm. We are all here." Then I Bee the jailer running through the dust and amid the ruins of the prison, and I see him throwing himself down at the feet of the prisoners, crying ou "What shall I do? What shall I do? Did Paul answer: "Get out of lis place before there is another earthquake put handcuffs'and hopples on tnese other prisoners lest they get away?" No word of that kind. His compact, thrilling, tremendous answer, answer memorable all through earth and heaven, wa "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Weil, we have all read of the earthquake in Lisbon, in Lima, in Aleppo and in Caraccas, but we live in an at titude where severe volcanic disturb' ancee are rare. And yet we have seen fifty earthquakes. Here is a man who has been building up a large fortune. His bid on the money market was felt in all the cities. He thinks he has got beyond all the annoying rivalries in trade, and he says to himself: "Now I am free and safe from all possible perturbation.'" But in 1837, or in 1857, or in 1873 a national panic strikes the foundations of the commercial world, and crash! goes all tkat magnificent business establishment. Here is a man wno has built up a beautiful home. His daughters have just come from the seminary with diploma) of graduation. His sons have started in life, honest, temperate and pure. When the evening lights are strucK, there is a happy and unbroken family cirole. But there has been an accident down at Long Branch. The young man ventured too far out in the surf. The tt-legraph hurled the terror up to the city. An earthquake Btruck under the foundations of that beautiful home. The piano closed the curtains dropped the laughter hushed. Crash! go all those domestic hopes and prospects and expectations. So, my friends, we have all felt the shaking down of some great trouble, and there was a time when wo were as much excited as this man of the text, and we cried out he did, What shall I do? Wnat sha

do? The same reply that

the ap.»te mile to him is appropriate' to ue: "Brieve on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved."

There are some documents of so little importance that you do not care to put any more than your last name under them, or even your initials but there are some document} of so great importance that you write out yoar full name. So the Savior in some parts of the Bible is called "Lord," and in other parts of the Bible is called "Jesus," and in other pirti of th* Bible he is called "Christ but that there might be 110 mistake tbjut this passage all three names come together—"The Lord Jesus irist"

Now, who is this being that you want ma tc trust in aud believe in? Men 4 tmetimes come to m3 with credentials and certificates of good character, but I can not trust them. There is some dishonesty in their looks that makes me know 1 shall be cheated ii I confide in them. You can not put your heart's CHilidencj in a man until you know what s'uti he is made of, and aui I unreasonable t)- lay when I stop to ask yoa who this is that you want me to trust in? No man would th'nk ®f venturing his life on a vessel going out to sea that had never bee

1

jn,

injected. No,

you must have the lertificate hung amtilships, telling toy many tons it cair.es, an ho long ago it was built, aud who built it, aud all about it. And you can nst expect mi to risk the car^o of mv immortal interetts oa bjard any craltti 1 you tell me whatio :'s made of, and wnere it was mads an 1 what it is. "Wh

then, I ask you who this is you

want'me to trust in, you tt 11 me he was a very attractive person. Con nporary writers describe his whole appea ance as being resplendent. Th6re /was no need for Christ to tell the children to come to Him. Suffer little children to come unto Me" was not spoken to tbe children it was akoken to the disciples. Tne children came readUy enoukh with-

In addition to this softness of character there was a tiery momentum. How the kings of the earth turned pale. Here ii a plain man with a few sailors at his back, coiuiag off of the Sea of Galilee, »oing up to the Palace of the Cigars, making that palace take to the foundations, and uttering a word of mer2y and kindness which throbs through ill the earth and through all the heavjns, and through all agej. Ob, He was ilovine Cnrist, Bat it was not effeminicy or insipidi'v of character it was acjompanied with majesty infinite and )mni potent. Lsst the world should not real His earnestness, this Christ Mounts the cross.

You say: "If Cnrist has to die, why aot let Him take some deadly potion ind lie on a couch in some bright and beautiful home? If He must die, let dim expire amid all kindly attentions." No, the worid must hear the hammers )n the heads of the spikes. The world must listen to the death rattle of the jufferer. The world must feel Hi? warm ijlood dropping on each cheek, while it looks up into the face of His anguish. And so the cross must be lifted and a hole is dug on the top of Calvary. It must be dug three feet deep, and then he cross is laid on the ground and the sufferer is stretched upon it, and the aails are pounded through nerve and muscle and bone, hand through the they shake His right fast, and they heave up the wood, half a dozen shoulders under the weight, and they put the

cros3

01

On this hinge turns my sermon, aye, the salvation of your immortal soul. You often go across a bridge you know nothing about. You do not know who built the bridge, you do not know what material it is made of but you come to it and walk over it and ask no questions. And here is an arched bridge blasted from the "Rock of Ages." And built by the architect of the whole universe, spanning the dark gulf between sin and righteousness, and all God asks you is to walk across it and you start, and you come to ittand you stop, and you go a little way on and you stop, and you experiment. You say, "How do I know that bridge will hold me?" instead of marching on with a firm step, asking no questions, but feeling that the strength of the eternal God is under you. Oh, was there ever a prize offered so cheap as pardon and heaven are offered you. For how much? A million dollars? It is certainly worth more than that. But cheaper than that you can have it. Ten thousand dollars? Less than that. Five thousand dollars? Less than that. One dollar? Less than that. One farthing? Less than that. Without money and without pries." No money to pay. No journey to take. No penance to suffer. Only just one decisive action of the soul: "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Shall I tell you what it is to be caved? I can not tell you. No man, no angel can tell you. But I can hint at it. For my text orings me to that point. "Thou shalt be saved." It means a happy life here, and a peaceful jdeath and a blissful eternity. It is a grand thing to go to sleep at night and to get np in the morning, and to do (business all day feeling that all is right between my heart and God. No accident, no sickness. no persecution, no peril, no sword can do me any permanent damage. I am a forgiven chila of God, and he is bound to see me through. The mountains may depart, the e»|th may burn, the light of the stare may be blown out by the blast of the judgment hurricane but life and death, thinga present and things to come, are mine. Ye» farther

oat any invitation. No sooner did Jesus than that—it means a peaceful death. Mrs. Hemans, Mrs. tfigourney, Dr. Young and almost all the poets have said handsome things about death.

appear tnan the little ones jumped from

1

their mother's arms, an avalanche of beauty and love, into His lap. Christ did not ask John to put his head down on His bosom John could not help but put his head there. I suppose to look at Christ was to love attractive His manner. they saw Christ coming along the street they ran into their houses, and they wrapped up their invalids as quick a3 thay could, nnd brought them out that He might look at them. There was something so pleasant, so inviting, so cheering ia everything He did, in His very look. When these sick ones were brought out did He say: "D not bring me these Bores do not trouble me with these leprosiet?" No, no, there was a kind looli, there was a gentle word, there was a healing touch. Thay could not keep away from Him.

in the mouth of the

hole, and they plunge it in, all the weight

His body coming down for the

first time on the spikes and while some held the cross upright others throw in the dirt and trample it down and trample it hard. Oh, plant that tree well and thoroughly, for it is to bear fruit such as no other tree ever bore. Why did Christ endure it? He could have taken those rocks and with them crushed His crucifiers. He could have reached up and grasped the sword of the omnipotent God, and with one clean cut have tumbled them into perdition. Bat ao, He wa9 to die. His life for your life. Oh. such a Christ as that—so lov ing, so patient, so

you not trust Him? I think there are many under the influence of the Spirit of God who are saying: "I will trust Him if you will only tell me how and the great question asked by thousands is: "flow? how?" And while I answer your question I look up and utter the prayer which Rowland Hill so often uttered in the midst of his sei*nons: "Master, help!" How are you to trust in Christ? Just as you trust any one. You trust your partner in business with important things. If a commercial house gives you a note payable three months hence you expect the payment of that note at the end of three months. You have perfect confidence in their word and in their ability. Or, again, you go home expecting there will be food on the table. You have confidence in this. Now, I ask you to have the same confidence in the Lord Jesus Christ. He says: "You believe I take away your sin3, and they are taken away," "What!" you say, "before'I pray any more? Before I read my Bible anymore? Before I cry over my sins any more?" Yes, this moment. Believe with all your heart, and you are saved. Why, Christ is only waiting to get from you what you give scores of people every day. What is that? Confidence. If these people whom you trust day by day are more worthy than Christ, if they are more faithful than Christ, if they have done more than Christ ever did, then give them the preference but if you really think that Christ is as trustworthy as they are, then deal with him as fairly. Oh, says some one, in a light way, "I believe that Christ was born in Bethlehem, and I believe that Me died on the cross." Do yoa believe it with your head or your heart?

There is ithing more beautiful about it. Whe awe stand by the white and rigid features of those whom we love,

Him. Oh, how and they give no answering pressure of Why, when the hand and no returning kiss of the lip, we do not want any body poetizing ground about UP. Death is loathsomeness and midnight, and the ringing of the heart until the teadrilp snap and curl iu the torture, unless Christ shall be with us. I confess to you an infinite fear, a consuming horror of death, unless

Christ shall bs with me. I would rather go down into a cave of wild beasts or a junele of reptiles than into the grave unless Christ goes with me.

I point yon to-day to the eternal balm of heaven. Are there any here that I am missing this morning? Oh, you poor waiting maid! your heart's sorrow poured in no human ear, lonely and sad! bow glad you will be when Christ shall disband all your sorrows and crown you queen unto God and the ljamb forever! Aged men and women, fed by His love and warmed by His grace"for threescore years and tan! will not your decrepitude change for the leap'of a hart when you come to look face to face unon Him whom having net seen you love? That will be the Gooi Shepherd, not out in the eht and watching to keep off the wolves, but with the lamp reclining on the sunlit hill. Thai will be tha Captain of our salvation, not amid the roar and crash and boom of battle, but amid his disbanded troops keeping victorious fes-1 tivity. That will be the Bridegroom of I the Church coming from afar, the bride 1 leaning upon His arm, while He looks down into her face, and says: "Behold, thou art fair, my lovel Behold, thou art fairl"

A little girl in Albany whose family was about to move to New Jersey, and ha he a ok of a a particularly forlorn and God forsak« place, was saying hei prayers at her mo tier's knee the night before their' intended departure. She said all that

cro to JNew Jersey.

THE MARKET-S

l\niANj».roi.is, July 31, 1889.

GRAIN.

Wheat— Corn— No. 2 Red £0 No. 1 Wh.ite 3FJ No.3 Red 77 No. 2 Yellow...:-oi

I OATS,

Choice heifers

Belf-sacrificing—can

White....28I

LIV3 STOCK.

CATTLE—Good

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Common to medium cows 2.00(a),2 35 Good to choice cows 2.f ([email protected] HOGS—Heavy [email protected] Light 4.5C@4 60 Mixed 4.45(aj4. fiO Pigs 4.6'[email protected] SHEBP—Good to choice 3.8"(FT4.35 Fair to medium [email protected]

MISCFT.LANEODS.

WOOL—Fine

muino, washed....

Butter,ereamery 16c Fancy country....8c Choke country...7c

..33@36

nnwasheu med 20@22 very coarse 17@18 ,' KOGS, BUTTKB, POULTRY Eggs!.. 10c I Hens per ft 8|c

Chicago.

Wheat (July).... 8 Pork Corn 36 Lard Oats 22 Ribs

New York—Wheat—2 red 88] corn 43V. oats.

Til.

Philadelphia—Wheat, 87 corn, 44J oats, 34. St. Louis —Wheat, corn, 33 oats 22 rye, 41J.

Baltimore—Wheat, £6-] corn, 43 ,' oats, 2 rye, 41. Cincinnati—Wheat, 80 corn, 37.], oats 26: rye, 47 pork, $4.75 lard J6.02.

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vv., pBSfSAKY,

Bingham ton, N. Y. I

(X j/O letters or Inquiry answered. Guide to Health (Sent Freo). I

To. Care 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. Binghamton, N. Y. Sold, recommended and guaranteed by M. C. Quigley.

Ayrp.s & Sons.]

TEE POPULAR LINE

Cincinnati, Indianapolis. LAFAYETTEAND CKSCACO.

Etafftou

The Entire Trains run Through Without Change. Pullman Sleepers and Ignnt Reclining Uiair Cars on ^igliTTranis.

Magnificent Parlor Cars on Day 'Ji tins SPECIAL PULLMAN

SLEEPERS

On Niglit Trains bet. Indianapolis anil Chicago.

flL9lf)Af*n close connection made with all,

AI UilluAuU

lint for thc wst and

$85Sold4for

io"

ficrthwen..

close connection mndc for 1 points East and Soatheast.

all points Eastjinfl Southeast.

The fact thatit connects in the Central Union Depot, in Cincinnati,with the trainsof the C. W. tf. K.K. (B. & O.), N. Y. P. & O. R. R. (Erie),

and

the C. C.

AI.Rv {Bee Line),for the Emit,as well as with The trains of the C. N. O. & T. P. Ry

(Cinc*naU

Southern), for the South and Southeast, gsi. es it an advantage over all its competitors, for no route from Chlcejro, Lafayette or Indianapolis these connections without compelling passengers to submit tn a long- and disagreeable omaibus transfer for both passenger and baggage. Five Trains each way. daily cxccpt

Sunday, Three Trains cacti war on Sunday, between Indianapolis and Cincinnati. Through Tickets and Baesrase Checks to all Principal Points can be obtained ..t any

Tick$Office, C. I. St. L. & C. R'y. also v.a this line at all Coupon Ticket Offices throughout the country.

II MABTIN, C. S. IjS FOLIJETTE, Dist. Pasn'r Aeent, Western

I

IXDIAM.POL1S, 1XD. LAFATLTTE, lflM.

JOHN EGAS, Gen'l Pass'r and Ticket Agent, C1KUSKATI, O.

un-FREEWarranted.

KOlT WATCH

SiOO

... lately. Heat w»tch lathe worlil. Per-I fcttlmvl 1,.-:-jor.

Soli.l Golit Huutins C»se«.|js Elegant and iri(i(riilflccnt.S,.: Both l»JIC8'»r.(l Kents'stie*:': with works and ca»c« ofv equal ralne-ONE PBWMM| In each locality can secure on»i» FnEE. How Is tills posstblojky We answer—we want one pormm in each locality, to keep

their homes, ami aiiow to those valuable and very useful IMHJSEBOLO !»AWPI.E!*. These samples,as well as the watch,we send free.and after yoo have kept them In your home for SS months and shown them to those who may have called,they become yonr'own ProPj^jJj. It la possible to make thin great offer, pending the COLO watch and COST"* sampleB free, as the showing of the samples in any locality, always results In Urffe trade tor as after our samples have beeu in a V—™ tho we usually get from (tOOO to $CO»# In tra.la trom tho surrounding country. This, tho most known,Is mado in order that our samples may be placed at where they cat. be sen, all over America. Write at nco r«d make'euro of the chance. Reader It wiU bo lmrdly any troubl* fcr yon to show thesamples to those who may call at uurhom« I and your reward will be mo»t sutlBfactory. Ap°a«ial r»rdlo« which to write ug costs but 1 cent aul afteT you knowif you

J, not care to *o further, why no harm is done But I: you to send vour «dlreM at once, you can secure FREE one or IM I best solid Koid watches in the world and our larijo llue of

COSTI.Y SAMI'LEN. We pay all express, freight, el«. iddroi UEO. STUiSOS CO.,

Box

ttlll, FOBTl^ND, UAIN&

DR. ELLIOTT'S

MEDICATED FOOD,

A Sure Cure for all Diseases in

HORSES,

Cattle!, Sheep and Hogs

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

A DEAD SHOT OR VORMS, ADD A CERTAIN PREVENTION OP HOG CHOLERA