Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 4 June 1891 — Page 7

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4)ecokition day sermom

Twb G-arlands for Northern and Southern Graves,

Vj^o the North, Give Up to the South Keep Not Back."—Rev. Dr. Talmage's Sermon.

1

Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn Sunday. Text, Isaiah xiii, 6.

t{I

will say to the North, give up,

:, and to the South, keep not back." He said: Just what my text meant by the

JNorth and South I can not say, but In the United States the two words afe go point-blank in their meaning "that no one can doubt. They mean jhore than East and West, for, although between these two last there Siave been rivalries and disturbing Ambitions and infelicities and silver [bills and World's Fair controversies, 3hQre have been between them no batteries unlimbered, no intrenchinenti? dug, no long line of .sepulchral

Sounds

yirown up. It has never

ji&mssachiteetts Fourteenth Regifoetid against Wisconsin Zopaves it has netfer been Virginia Artillery against Mississippi Rifles, East and West are distinct words and may sometimes mean diversity of interests, but there is no blood on them. They can be pronounced without any intonation of wailing and deathgroan. But "the North and the South" are words that have been surTdbarged with tragedies. They are words which suggest that for forty yeaars the clouds had been gathering for a four-year's tempest, which thirty years ago burst in a fury that shook this planet as it lias never been shaken since it swung out at the first world-building. I thank G-od that the words have lost some of the intensity which they posessed three decades ago that a vast multitude of Northern people have moved South, .and a vast multitude of Southern people have moved North, and there have been intermarriages by the thousand. Northern Colonels have married the daughters of Southern Captains. Texas Rangers have united for life with the daughters of New York Abolitionists, and their children are half Northern and half Southern, and altogether patriotic.

But North and South are words that need to be brought into still closer harmonization. I thought that now when we are half way between Presidential elections, and sectional animosities are at their lowest ebb, and now just after a Presidential journey wheri our Chief Magistrate, who was chiefly elected by the North, has been cordially received at the South, and now just after two memorial days, one of them a month ago stoewiug flowers on Southern graves and the other yesterday strewing flowers on Northern graves, it might be appro-

(riate

and useful for me to preach a

Sermon which would twist two garlands, one for the Northern dead and the other fpr the Southern dead, and have the two interlocked in a chain of flowers that shall bind forever the two sections into one and who knows but that this may be the day when the prophecy of the text, made in i*etjard to the ancients, may be fulfilled in regard to this country, and the North give up its prejudice and the South keep not back its confidence. '"I will say to the North, give up, and to the South, keep not back."

But, before I put these garlands on the graves, I mean to put them this vnoruing for a little while on the brows of the living men and women of the North and South who lost husbands and sons and brothers during the civil strife. There is nothing more soothing to a wound thai, a cool bandage, and these two garlands are cool from the night dew. What a morning that was on the banks of the Hudson and the Savannah when the son was to start for the war! What fatherly and motherly counsel! What tears! What heart-breaks! What charges to write home often! What little keepsakes put away in the knapsack or the bi.ndle that was to be exchanged for the knapsack! The crowd around the depot or the steamboat landing shouted, but the father and mother and sister cried. And how lonely .the house seemed after they went home, and what an awfully vacant chair there was at the Christmas and Thanksgiving table! And after tli^ battle whatwaiting for news! What suspense till the long lists of the killed and wounded were made out'! All along the Penobscot* and the Connecticut and t:ie St. Lawrence and the Ohio and the Oregon and the James and the Albermarle and the Alabama and the Mississippi and the Sacramento there was lamentation and mourning and great woe. Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted, because they were not. The world has forgotten it, but father and mother have*not forgotten it. They may be now in the eighties nineties, but it is afresh wound and will always remain a fresh -wound. Coming down the steep of years .the hands that would have steadiedtho.se tottering steps have been twentyeight years folded'into the last sleep. The childlessness, the widowhood,ifche orphanage, who has a measuring-line long enough to tell the height of it, the depth of it, the infinity ©f it? What a mountain, what an Alp, what a Himalayan of piled-up agony of bereavement in the simple statement that 300,000 men of the North were slain and 500,000 men of the South were slain, and hundreds of thousands long afterward through the exhaustions there suffered death.

I detain from the top of the tomb these two garlands that Ham twist-

ing for a little while that 3 may with firing. Over the fallen the people -Mia: 'J?oor fellow I What a pity that he should have been struck dowa!" We

them soothe the brow of the liyinj

did not, however, often enouffh say: "Poor father! Poor mother! Poor wife! Poor child!"and so I sayit now. Have you realized that by that wholesale massacre hundreds of thousands of young people at the North and the South have never had any chance? We who are fathers stand between our children and the world. We fight their battles, we plan for their welfare, we achieve tneir livelihood, we give them the advice of our superior years. Among the richest blessings of my life I thank God that my father lived to fight my battles until I was old enough to fight myself. Have you realized the fact that our civil war pitched out upon the farmfields of the North and the plantations of the South a multitude that no man can number, children without fatherly help and protection?

Under all thes§ advantages ^yhich we had of fatherly guidance, what a struggle life has been to most of us! But what of the children two and five and ten years of age, who stood at their mothers lap, with great, Y5Und wondering eyes, Hearing her read of those who perished in the battle of the Wilderness, their father gone down amid the dead host? Come young men and women, who by such disaster has to make their own way in life, and I will put the garland on your brow.

Before I put the two garlands I am twisting upon the Northern and Southern tombs I detain the garlands a little while that I may put them upon the brow of the living soldiers of the North and South, who, though at variance for,a long while, are now at peace and in hearty loyalty to the United States government and ready, if need be, to march shoulder to shoulder against any foreign foe. The twenty-six winters that have passed since the war I think have sufficiently cooled the hatreds that once burned Northward and Southward to allow the remark that they who fought in that conflict were honest on both sides. The chaplains of both armies were honest in their prayers. The faces that went into battle, whether they marched toward the Gulf of Mexico or marched toward the North star, were honest faces. It is too much to ask either side to believe that those who came out from their homes, forsaking father and mother and wife and child, many of them never to return, were not in earnest when they put their lives into the awful exigency. Witness the last scene at family prayer up among the Green Mountains or down by the fields of cotton and sugar cane. Men do not sacrifice their all for fun. Men do not eatomoldy bread and go without bread at all for fun. Men do not sleep unsheltered in equinoctial storms for fun. There were some no doubt on both sides who enlisted for soldiers' pay or expecting opportunity for violence and pillage or burning1 with revenge or thirst for human blood, but such cases were so rare many of you "vho were in the army four years never confronted such an instance of depravity.

Yea, there was courage on both sides, 'rhey who were at the front know that. When the war opened, the South called the Northern men

:'mudsills"

and the North called the

Southern men "braggarts" and "pompous nothings," but after a few battles nothing more was said about Northern "mudsills" and Southern "braggarts." It was an army of lions against an army of lions. It was a flock of eagles mid-sky with iron beak against another flock of eagles iron-beaked. It was thunderbolt against thunderbolt. It was1 archangel of wrath against archangel of wrath. It was Hancock against Longstreet. It vfias Kilpatrick against Wade Hampton: It was Slocum against Hill. It was Ol O. Howard against Hood. It Was Sherman against Stonewall Jackson!. It was Grant against Lee. And the men who were under them were jnst as gallant, and some of them are here and I detain the two garlands, that I have twisted for the departed and in recognition of honesty arid' prowess put the coronals upon these living Federals and Confederates. North and South, we will make a great fuss about them when they are dead.

There will not be room on their tombstones to tell how much we appreciate them. We shall call out the military and explode three volleys over their graves, making all the cemetery ring under our command of "Fire!" We will have long obituary in newspapers telling in what battles they fought, what sacrifices they endured, what flags they captured, in what prisons they suffei'ed, but all that will come too late. One word in the living ear of praise for their honesty and courage will be worth to them more than a military funeral two miles long or a pile of flowers half a mile high and ten bands of music playing over the grave "StarSpangled Banner" or

nWay

Down

South in Dixie." Now, while they are in their declining years and their right knee refuses to work because of the rheumatism they got sleeping on the wet ground on tne banks of the Chicamauga, or their digestive organs are off on furlough because of the six months of prison life in which their rations were big slices of nothing, and their ears have never been alert since the cannonade in which they heard so much they have never been able to hear but little since, in these cases I call upon the people of North and South to substitute a little ante-mortem praise for the good deal of post-mortem euIojnanv.

These two garlanda that twisted for Northern and Southern graves shall not be put upan the grass of the tomb until they bare first encircled the fortheftds of the living. I

1

"lITTfiH*

will let the front of the wreath come down over the scar of a scalp wound made by the sword of a cavalryman at Atlanta and drop a little over the eye that lost its luster in the mine explosion at Petrsburg. Huzza for the living! Calla lilies and camelias and amaranths and palm branches for the living!

But we must not detain the two garlands any longer from the pillows of those who for a quarter of a century have been prostrate in the dreamless slumber, never oppressed by summer heats or winters cold. Both garlands are fragrant. Both have in them the sunshine and the shower of this spring time. The colors of both were mixed by Him who mixed the blue of the sky and the gold of the sunset and the green of the grass and the whiteness of the snow caystal. And I do not care which you put over the Northern grave and which over the Southern, gr?:ve, iDoes any one say, "YVhat is the use? None of them will know it. Your Decoration Days both sides of Mason and Dixon's line are a great waste of flowers." Ah, I see you have carried too far my idea that praise for the living is better than praisd for the departed. Who says that the dead do not know of the flowers? 1 think they do. The dead are not dead. The body sleeps, but the soul lives, and is uuhindered. No two cities on earth are in such rapid and constant communication as earth and heaven, and the two great Decoration Days of North and South are better known in realms celestial than terrestrial.

With what interest we visit the place of our birth and of our boyhood or girlhood days! And have the departed no interest in this world where they were born and ransomed, where they suffered and triumphed? My Bible does not positively say so, nor does my catechism teach it. but my common sense declares it. The departed do know, and the bannered procession that marched the earth yesterday to Northern graves and the bannered procession that marched a month ago to Southern graves were accompanied by two grander though invisible procession that walked the air, processions of the ascended, processions of the martyred, processions of the sainted and they heard the anthems of the churches and the salvo of the batteries, and they stooped down to breathe the incense of the flowers. These august throngs gathered this morning in these pews and aisles and corridors and galleries are insignificant compared with the mightier throngs of heaven who mingle in this service which we render to God and our country while we twist the two gerlands. Hail spirits multitudinous! Hail spirits blest! E&U martyred ones come down from the Kings palace! How glad we are that you have come back again. Take the kiss of welcome and these garlands of reminiscence, ye who languished in hos •nitals or went down under the thunders and lightnings of Fredericksburg and Cold Harbor and Murfresboro and Corinth and Yorktown and above the clouds on Lookout Mountain.

And now I handover the two garlands, both of which are wet with many tears, tears of widowhood and[ orphanage and childless, tears of suffering and tears of gratitude, and as the ceremony must be performed in symbol, there are not being enough flowers to cover all the graves^ take the one garland to the tomb of some Northern soldier who may yesterday have been omitted in the distribution of sacrament of flowers, and the otner garland to the tomb of some Southern soldier, who may, a month ago, have been omitted in the distribution of the sacrament of the flowers, and put both the wreath gently down over the hearts that have ceased to beat. God bless the two garlands! God save the United States of America!

An Indian Goldfish Pond.

Port Townsend Call. Several Indians have been observed around? town for the past day or two peddlita'g goldfish, which they sold at 25 cents each. The Indians are reaping a: harvest at the business, and strangers remark that it is a mighty prosperous town where the go around selling goldfish. It has been something of mystenr to most people asClto wherd'the source of supply existednthat has proved such a veritable bonanza to the meek and lowly siwash. Judge Jaml's (1. Swtnn yesterday discovered the secret. He says that several years ago a vessel from Honolulu brought to P'^rt mble a small lot of these beautiful fish, and not being able todisposeS 'df the»n all dumped them into a pond' liear Port Gamble. The fish eontinlie'cl'tb thrive and multiply, and now the Tiv dians there have a monopoly Of the" goldfish trade and no doubt wiM1 be' able to supply the whole Stete with those aristocratic fish.

Finest Card Made.

New York Times. "Here is a card that typifies my line of business," said an" energetic tradesman to a friend, handing out a business card so iight and thin that but for its elasticity and crackle a blind man would have said that it was gold leaf. It was thinner than ordinary writing paper, and yet it had the elastic qualities of linebristol board. "The card is made of aluminum," said the tradesman, "and itis a novelty. It is the finest card made, and, as I sell the finest goods made, it typifies my business. It is more durable than anything that 1 have been able to find, and I have, tried everything no1" of paper, metal, wood and celluloid."

The Georgia editor who has twentythree children doesn't seem to have much trouble in getting out copy.

Woe! Woe! Unutterable Woe. Why endure it daily, nightly, we had veil nigh said, hourly. They do who are tortured by chronic rheumatism, The remedy, botanic, pure, safe and prompt, is at hand. Were the evidence in behalf of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters collated, it would be found to teem with well authenticated proofs that the medicine is both a preventive and a remedy in this malady of varying agonies and ever present danger. To forestall its chronic stage is the dictate of prudence. Renounce dangerous medication. Far more effective, more certain, more permanent in the beneficent consequences is the use of the Bitters. Experience endorses, the recommendation of physicians sanction its use. Begin early, use with persistence, and expect rensf. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters relieves constipation, biliousness, kidney ailments, dyspepsia and malarial trouble.

Texas Sittings: It would seem that the proper place to cook mountain game would be on a mountain range.

Catarrh Cftn't Be Cured!

With: LOCAL APPLICATIONS, F.h they cannot reach the seat of the disease, Catarrh is a blood or constitutional dilOftftfi. ami in order to cure it you. havg tako int=iii-if tetaedies. flail's c&tatrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and. mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is no quack medicine, It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country lot years, ana Is ft regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect com bination of the two ingredients is what produce such wonderful results in curing catarrh. Sen for'testimonials free.

F. J.CHENEY &

Sold

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CO.,Props.,Toledo, O.

by druggists, price 75c.

A writer in the Homestead says there little profit in ducks. The proprietor of a seaside resort with a good bathing beach thinks differently.

Thb children consent to be undressed und go to bed only on oondition that mamma gives them each one more Dr. Bull's Worm Destroyers. They taste so good. Worms don't like them, though. Bv mail, 25 cents.

D. Parle. Cincinnati. Ohio.

Many a girl who now goes off summering expects to come home with a summer-ring on her finger.

How to Make Mouey.

DEAR SIR—Having read Mr. Sargent's experience in plating with gold, silver and nickel, I am tempted to write of my success. I sent to H. K. Delno & Co.. of Columbus, O., for a §5 plater. I have had more tableware and jewelry than I could plate ever since. I cleared $27 the first week and in three weeks $97. Any one can do plating and make money in any locality the year round. You can get circulars by addressing the above firm.

WIIXTAM GRAY.

Love is a sacred matter, but it is difficut for a woman to make her fourth or fifth lover believe it.

MOUNTAINS AND OCEAN.

Rapid Transit and Improved Train Service via the Pennsylvania Lines. With the coming of the heated term Long Branch,Atlantic City andCapeMay, Newport, Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket and the other places of summer sojourn ilong the coast of New Jersey, of Maine and Massachusetts, as well as the resorts 5f the eastern mountains, come into the thoughts of thousands of persons in all parts of the United States. For to these retreats where there are hotels and boarding houses suited to every requirement and to every purse, come all sorts and coniitions of men in pursuit of the health and (rigor brought by the refreshing waves and strengthening air. Under the schedaleof the Pennsylvania Lines, which will shortly be placed in effect, there will beestiecial adaptation of through train and through car service for reaching these reports'. Fast express trains with Pullirsan Sleeping and Dining Oars will tvrnvo at Philadelphia in trae for connection with train51ha? OTTng the Jersey coast within two~hoiiri of that city. Connection will be made wiih the trains that run from New York throughout New England ami with boats of the Fall River Line that afford facility for a most delightful Journey to the resorts of the New England coast. Tickets via the Pennsylvania Lines can be procured at any principal railway ticket Office throughout the West and Northwest. A perspective map showing the situation 5f the various resorts and a concise aejcl'lptionof their attractions can he obtained upon application to any agt.nt the Pennsylvania Lines. is a wonder that tho Czar does iiD*' writfe' .book when he has so many plots to choose frtmij

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THE best cough midicine is Piso's Cure [or Consumption. Sold everywhere. 25c.

Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.

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O A

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Syrup"

Martinsville, N.J., Methodist Parsonage. My acquaintance with. your remedy, Boschee's Qerman Syrup, was made about fourteen years ago, when I contracted a Cold VI which resulted iu a Hoarseness and

Cough which disabled me from? filling my pulpit for a number of Sabbaths. After trying a Physician, without obtaining relief—I cannot say now what remedy he prescribed —I saw the advertisement of your remedy and obtained a bottle, received such quick and permanent "i help from it that whenever we have had Throat or Bronchial troubles since in our family, Boschee's German Syrup has been our favorite remedy and always with favorable results. I have never hesitated to report my experience of its use to others when I have found them troubled in like manner." REV. W. H. HAGGARTY, of the Newark, New

G. G. GREEN, Sole

the good

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ISLSNSJISTSDLOCAL' WILL CURE

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-YASELINE-

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(f

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Sos«.exquiBitely«eonted,2J

of White Vaselln

One tvo-ounce bottlo 25

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SPRING GURRY COMB

Fatented in United States, July 16, 188% and in Ten Foreign Countries.

A COMB THAT COMBINES THE STRENGTH OS METAL WITH THE ELASTICITY or A BRUSH.

Efficient, Humane, Convenient and Durable.

AES-CIRCULARS ON APPLICATION.-® ABIC your dealer for it, or Bund 50c. for sample by nail, ADDBWS:

SPRING CURRY COMB CO.. South Bend. M.

AUDI CTTC I-adies: IJefore put-

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ting jour hair up on

••crimps" or VisiTi^ CUVUng

lr$n?

dampen it with Curlettfl, ana 11

will retain that FIu|fy apl^TA ance 3 t£) 0 days, r?

',.,-.1 uncss V.i.hi'fr a.a5 aCaip. -Mi excellent hair tonic* Leauing society and T-' 4' i^Hn regard Curlette as Vu toilet. Price 50c. per bottle, a, iWe .v? Jed bj mail. Agents wanted, address

3

Mrs. Jennie Markley, Loganspoyfr, Ind.

COMBINATION BEAM (ti. f. SiAlfDAKO) No Weights to be LOST or STOLEN. o-TON *50.00. I

For full information, address, WEEKS SCALt VVOltKS, Buffalo, N.Y.

or taie

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(BE0WETTINQ.1

testimonials address, with stamp* IB, Hcvlcker's Theatre, Chicago,

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PATENTS

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C. A

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REMEDY FOB CATAltBH.—Best. Easiest to use. Cheapest. Belief is immediate. cure is certain. For Cold in the Head it bas no equal.

QATAR

It is aa Ointment, of which a small partlclo Is applied to the .. jrnggisti or sent by mr... E. T. HAZRI/TTNR, Warren, Pa.

nostrils. Price, eoe. Sold by Address.

AUpHtotoiMNlisfl te—tftoi WSBBWS.MM

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