Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 22 December 1892 — Page 3
im »iiWn taJrol safaaml alwayae remedy for BiUouw^,^blotohcs on tee jfacq, Briglit'a Disease, Catarrh, Colic, Omctipattoa, 7 rtiwinli Diarrh&a, Chronic liver Trouble, Diiybetes, DlsoMered Stomach, Diesdnes3, Dysentery, 5 .. Dyspepsia. Eczema, Flatulence, Female Com-
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Seribner's Magazine for 1893. "iRTIal Prospectus,
t.
ranoss Hodgson Barnett itvibute tlie first serial to appear In a masni her pen for irjauy veais, entitled )NE I KNEW THE BlScr OF ALL."
H. C. Banner
,.ii furnish series of alcetehes entitled ".TERE} fcTRKKj" £ND JEHSEY LASE." lllustrateJ.
Eobsrl Grant.
wl?I relate the further oxi erieuce of Fred, and 'Josephine in "A SEQUEL TO KEKL.ECTI0.Ni OF A MAUKIEL) MAN." Illustrated.
Harold Frederic,'
will contribute a political novel of great power, entitled THIS CO PPKIitlEAL)
By the Author of "Jerry'
Miss S. 3. ELLIOTT, the author of "Jerry," will write :i rea'astio storr oi' liie anion TtM.niss« mountaineer#, "THIS DUR&ET .SPEUUET,"
Personal ReminisconcGS. SOME UNPUBLISHED r.E TTEKS OP CAR•LYLE TO EDWARD IKVIK'j and others, dealing with apart of Carlyie's life far different from \tliat brtjuglit oat in the recent literature of Carlyl-: reniipiswiices. itE OI,LECTION Of LINCOLN
AND SUMNER. By the late Marquis do Chaml)ii n. Both articles aie full of new matter. AX AltTIST IN A PAN. By Jtobert. Blum, who bal just returned l'rom a residence of nearly two yen re in tlie oounlrv. Abu daritiy illustratled by the au hor. HISTORIC MOMENTS, wliicli have been a feature of the magazine during 1S02, will Ve continued bysome particularly strikiusc pancr^ uoLg th 111 .several by the trre-it war correspon•nta. Win. II, Kussell, Archibald Foibes, aud lers.
Elen's Occupa.ions.
6A'esof
articles on tl»« life work of men in
.. -—'-he Viiei
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ys (ex luivc of pro-
in whicu men leavn iheir livelihood.
«i3 World's Fair ia Chicago. will be pub'.ished impression mads
'.ater by the
the year exhibition
vno'trent observers of note, boili American I
aat^
'uany of ihe.se observers \v,ill be
^sjOH'ho will illustrate their own articles.
*c3!ianeoiis Articles. Attributions to the POOR IN GREAT Burnett's Illustrated paieron the
for
HOME AID TO INVALID
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ig article by Octave Uzaune on WOMAN'S ART now going on ielea upon artistic subjects, acetc., etc.
Illustrations
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SCRIBNEFTS/SONS,
•HUFFMAN'S
Hapless
headache
pcowders
GOD A )N6 THE STARS.
The Hear*
3
Amos ix
Declare His Glory
and th^ 3arth Shows His Handiwork-
Ir, Talmago Preaches the First of a Series ert Sermons ou Divine Science—God In tlieXeturnl World,
Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at Brooklyn last Sunday: Subject,' The Astronomy of Bible."
6,
his stories
in
My hearers, it is time that ?rt widened out and heightened our religious thoughts. In our pulpits aud Sabbath classes and Christian worlc of ail sorts ws ring the changes ou a few verses of Scripture until they excite no interest. Manjr of the best p:-rts of the Bible have never yet beeu preached from, or indeed even noticed. Hence I to day begin a scries of sermons, not for consecutive Sabbath mornings, but as often aa I thinIc it best for variety's sake, on the astronomy ofjthe Bible,or God among the stars the geology of the Bible or God among the rocks the ornitholog}* of the Bible, or God an:o ptf the birds the ichthyology of the Bible, or God among the fishes: the pomology of the Bible, or God aiTKHig the orchards the precious stones of the Bible, or God among the amethysts the couchology of the T^ible, or t^od among the shells the bolan.y cf the Bible, or God among the flowers chronology of the Bible, tjr God among the centuries. The fact h? we have all spent too much time on 0110 story of the great mansion of God'r. universe. We need occasionally to go up stairs or down stuirs in this mansion down stairs and in the cellar study the rocks, or up stairs aud see God in some of the higher stories and learn the meaning of tiie text when it says,
While running your fingers among the leaves of your Bible with the astronomical thought in your mind you see two worlds stop—the sun and the moon. But what does that Christian know about that miracle who does not understand something of those tw« luminaries? Unless you watch modern astronomy put those two worlds in its steelyards and weigh them you are as ignorant as a Hottentot about the stupendousness of that scene in the life of Joshua. The sun, over three hundred thousand times as heavy as our earth and going thousands of miles the hour! Think of stopping that aud starting its again without the shipwreck of the universe! But I can easily believe it. What confounds me is not that he could stop and start again those two worlds in Josnua's time, but that he could have made the wheel of worlds of which the sun and moon are only cogs and keep that wheel Tolling
ror
1
MIR
are an fihonest medicine f. whio&i only honest* BtraightforWard tatemants are tnx«d«. Baa that you ret the $ enaintf Hoi2man't. Insii thtm. The] Beadae&ea.
not
man's. Insist en having Core ALL
They noli I Catfcaitlr-
thousands of years
—the flywheel of all eternity. If an engine can start along train, it is not
universe,cwhichmuleheexpress
prising that can stop it.
God
ould and move the
^an
iar
surprisetMhat
he
Infidelity is bard
W$H
Text:
"Itthe
God'isbelong
is he that buildeth
the heaven." He
4'It
is he
that buildeth his stories in heaven." It takes whole pages for a man to extol the making of a telescope or microscope, or a magnetic telegraph, or a thrashing machine, or tq describe a tine painting or statue, but it v/as so easy for God to hang the celestial upholtery that the story is compassed in one verso: "God made ro great lights—the greater light to rule the day and the lesser light to rule the night. The stars also!" Astronomers have been trying to call the roll of them ever since, and they have counted multitudes of them passing in review before the observatories built at vast expense, and the size and number of those heavenly bodies have taxed to the utmost the scientists of all ages. But God finishes all he has to sav about them in three words, "The stars also!"
That is Mars, with its more than fifty-live million square miles, and Venus, with its more than one hundred and ninety-one million square miles, and Saturn, with its more than s-inetet,k. Y.Uion square miles, and Jupiter, with its more than seventyeight billion square miles, and all the planets of our system, when compared with the stars of th3 other systems, as a handful of sand compared with all the Rocky mountains Etnd all the Alps. "The stars al-o!" For brevity, for ponderosity, for splendor, for suggestiveness, for sublimity piicd on sublimity, these words excel all that human speech ever uttered or human imagination ev«r soared after, "The staisalso!" It is put in as von write a postscript —something you thought of afterward as hardly worth putting in the body of a letter. "The stars also!" head on in your Bibles, and after awhile th: Bible Hashes with the aurora boreal is, or northern lights, that strange illumination as mysterious and undefined now as when in the bcok of Job it was written: "Men sec not the bright light which is in the clouds. Fair weather cometh out of the north." While all the nations supposed that the earth was built on a foundation of some sort, and many supposed that it stood 011 a huge turtle or some great marine creature, Job knew enough of astronomy to sajr it had no foundation, but was suspended on the invisible arm of the Almighty, declaring that "he haugeth the earth upon nothing." While all uations thought the earth was level, the skv spread over it like a tent over a flat surface, Isaiah declared the world to be globular, circular. saying of God. "He sitteth upon the circle of the earth."
to
train
©m&poti-nt
drawn by an
]j
engine
for a part of
al
«owu
day
brakes
could put
the
oti
'otating machinery^
two pieces of the
1
for' ground of
tip
complaint against the Scriptures when it finds fault with that cessa tion of stellar and lunar travel.
If astronomers can give a name to a whole constellation or galaxy,
they
think they do well but God has a name for each star in all immensity. Inspired David declared of God,"He telleth the number of the stars he calleth them all by their names
Yes, they have sight, else why the light and hearing, else how get on with necessary language and how clear themselves from advancing perils. Yea, as God made our human race in his own image he probably made the inhabitants or other worlds in his own image—in other words, it is as near demonstration as I care to have it that while the inhabitants of other worlds have adaptations of bodily structure to the particular climate in which they dwell, there is yet similarity of mental and spiritual characteristics among all the inhabitants of the universe of God, and made in his image they are made wonderfully alike.
Now, what should be the practical result of this' discussion founded ou Scripture and common sense? It is first of all to enlarge our ideas of God, and so intensify our admiration and worship. Under such consideration, how much more graphic the Bible question which seems to roll back the sleeve of the Almighty and say, "Hast thou an arm like God?" The contemplation also encourages us with the thought that if God made all these worlds and populated them it will be very much of an undertaking )r him to make our little world over again and reconstruct the character of its populations as by grace they are to be reconstructed.
What a rnanstrosity of ignorance that the majority of Christian people listen not to the voices of other wor dss, a though the Book says
"The
heaven* declare the ory of God." aud again
."
They are not orphans that have never been christened. They are not waifs of the night. They are not unknown ships on the high seas
immensity.
of
a
They to
family of which
the Father and as you call
your children Benjamin or Mary or Bertha or Addison or Josephine, so he calls all the adult worlds by first name and they know it,astheir
well
as though there were only one child of light in all the divine family
Oh, the stars, those vestal fires kept burning on infinite altars those light houses on the coast of eternity the hands and weights and pendulum of the great clock of the universe according to Herschel the so-called fixed stars are not fixel at all, but each one as sun with a mighty system of worlds rolling around it, and this whole system with all the other systems rolling on around some other great center! Millions and millions, billions and biliions, trillions and trillions, quadrillions and quadrillions
But what gladdens me and at the same time overwhelms me is that those worlds are inhabited. The Bible says so, and what a small idea you must have of God and His dominion if you think it only extends across this chip of a world which you and I now inhabit. Have you taken this idea of all the worlds being inhabited as human guesswork? Read Isaiah, forty fifth chapter, eighteenth verse: "Thus saith the Lord that created the heavens, God himself that formed the earth aud made it: he hath established it he created it not in vain he formed it the
in^atited." Now, if he inhabited the earth so that it would not be created in vain, would he create worlds hundreds and thousauds of times larger and not have them inhabited? Speaking of the inhabitants of this world, he says: "The Nations) are as the drop of a bucket."
If all the inhabitants of this world are as a drop of a bucket, where are the other drops of the bucket? Atrain and again the Bible speaks of the hosts of heaven, and the word host means living creatures, not inert masses, and the expression "hosts of heaven" must mean inhabitants of other worlds. The psalmist cries out. "Thy mercy is great above the heavens." What could be the use of His goodness above the heavens if there were no inhabitants to enjoy it? Again, the Bible says, "He has set thy glory above the heavens." And here my text comes in with its idea of a mansion of many stories. "It is he that buildeth his stories in the heavens."
All around us in this world we s«»e economy of omnipotence. If Christ was going to feed the hungry seven thousand in the wilderness, he made use of the boy's five loaves and two fishes, expending no more creative power than was needed. "Waste not" God hath written all over this world. And do not suppose that God would waste world material in our solar system to the amount of what has been estimated as seven hundred trillion miles of solid contents, and that only a small part as compared with other systems that go to make up this inauy stored mansion of the text where it says, "It is he that buildeth Ijis stories hi the heaven."
It has been estimated that in the worlds belonging to our solar system there is room for at least twenty-five trillion of population. And I believe it is ail occupied or will be occupied by intelligent beings. God will not fill them with brutes. He would certainly put into those world's beings intelligent enough to appreciate the architecture, the coloring, the grandeur, the beauty, the harmony of their surroundings. Yea, the inhabitants of those worlds have capacity of locomotion like ours, for they would not have had such spacious opportunity for movement if they had not power of motion.
"The
much have you sought tbem oiiSyi, You Have" been satisfying vouFself' with some things abut Christ, but have you noticed that Paul caps you to consider Christ as the creator of other wor ds, "by whom also he made the wor ds." It is time you Christians start on a world hunt. That the chief reasoq why God makes the night—that you may see other wor di.
I thank God that we have found out that our world is not half way between heaven and hell, but is in a sisterhood of light, and that this sisterhood joins all the other sisterhoods of worlds, moving round some great homestead, which is no doubt heaven, where God is and our departed Christian friends are, and we ourselves through pardoning mercy expect to become permanent residents.
Furthermore, I get now from all this an answer to the question which every intelligent man and woman since the earth has stood has asked and received no answer. Why did God let sin and sorrow come into the world when he could have prevented them from coming? I wish reverently to say I think I have found the reason. To keep the universe loyal to a holy God it was important in some world somewhere to demonstrate the gigantic disasters that would come upon any world that allowed sin to enter. Which world should it bo? Well, the smaller the world tho better, for less numbers would suffer. So our world was selected. The stage was plenty large enough for the enactment of the tragedy. Enter on the stage sin, followed by murder, pain, theft, fraud, impurity, falsehood, massacre, war, and all the abominations aud horrors and agonies of centuries.
Although we know comparatively little about the othpr worlds lest we become completely dissatisfied with our own, no doubt the other worlds have heard and are now hearing all about this world in tho awful experiment of sin which the human race has been making. In some way interstellar communication is open, and all worlds either by wing of' flying spirits or by direct communication from God, are learning that disloyalty and disobedience doom and damn everything they touch, the spectacle practically says to all other worlds, "Obey God, keep holy and stay in the orbit where you were intended to swing, or you will suffer that which that recreant world out yonder has been suffering for thousands of years." It is no .longer to me a myste why so small a world as ours was chosen for the tragedy. A chemist can demonstrate all the laws, of earth and heaven in a small laboratory, ten feet by five, and our world was not too small to demonstrate to the universe the. awful chemistry of unrighteousness, its explosive and riving and consuming power.
I do not believe there is a world that has been in existence from the time when Copernicus, tho astronomer, knocked on the door of heaven, to the world that last week came in sf:ght of the observatory at Greenwich, but has heard of our terrific terrestial,experia ent-, and the awful object lesson ha-, thrilled the multimillions of stellar population, especially when they iseard that order to an est the disaster of centuries the World Maker and the World Starter and the World Upholder must give up his on'y son to assassination to expiate and restore and save the victims of the planetary shipwreck.
Tlia Period -f Bodily Growth.
There are soma reasons to suppose that a period of bodily growth in Americans at least continues longer than is commonly supposed. The statistics gathered by the United States Sanitary commission and discussed by Dr. B. A. Gould, concerning the heig-ht and other proportions of nearly a quarter of a million soldiers appears to indicate that young men are not on the average physically, adult until they attain about the age of 28 years. It seems to me clear from my observations of young men in Harvard CoUeye that they do not on the, average attain tho full measure of their mental powers until they are at least 25 years old. My observation have inclined me to believe thai the reasoning: capacities, or at least tho-:e involved in carrying ou difficult trains of thought, are not at their strength until this use. This fact, if such it be, serves to show how futile it is to expect in immature youths a full measure of comprehension in difficult taska which are before them in our schools and colleges. The long continuance of bodily growth affords at least a presumption that the mental development demands a greater number of years than we assign to it, and makes the wide divergencies in the rate of intellectual growth more comprehensible.—N. S. Sholer, iu Phil. Press.
Just by incident.
One of those lucky girla who can turn theirs mistakes into victories is said to have originated the fashion of wearing ribbon oelto twisted so as to make a point in the eenter of the back. Dressing in a hurry, she draw her belt carelessly about her waist «nd hastened down to breakfast be greeted by her dearest enemy before she had traveled half the length of the hotel dining-room, with, ••Oh, Addle, dear, your belt is twisted right iu the middle, don't you know, ltuu back and straighten it before Mr. sees it. He is so critloal about liitle matters." "Don't you think it gives a nice pointed effect?" demanded Adele, catching sight of her re&cction in a friendly mirror. "I do," and sho marched serenely to her se»V and after two days of wearing' kwr belt twisted the other
her.
As
works of the
Lord are great and to be sought out."
if
18
f!V.
50
Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis Sentinel Cincinnati Weekly Gazette, Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer, Chicago Inter Ocean, Chicago Times, St. Lonis Globe Democrat, St. Louis Republic, New York Press, New York Tribune, l*he Indiana Farmer, New York Witness The Ohio Farmer,
arAiuwx
THE
agreed
rlrU
wi»a
:—,
for the oritio-1 Mr.
adays.—Boston
It
for
some reason, of whioh poaslbi/ A4«te has the secret, h« «eems o«rtou«ly indifferent to the dearest
en«wy now
1
Transcript
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