Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 1 March 1894 — Page 7

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"THE HUALlf FACE."

The Tell-Tale Index Soul.

of the

A DUconrse Upon the Varied l'hyslogo- •. mien Produced by Varied Thoughts and Actions—Dr. Talmago'a

Sermon.

The Brooklyn Tabernacle was crowded, Sunday, to hear Dr. Talmage discourse upon "The Human Face." Text: Ecclesiastes viii, 1— "A man's wisdom maketh his face to shine, and the boldness of his face shall be changed." He said:

In all the works of God there is nothing more wonderful than the human countenance. Though the longest face is less than twelve inches from c.he hair line of the forehead to the bottom of the chin, the broadest face is less than eight inches from cheek bone to cheek bone, yet in that small compass God hath wrought such differences that the 1,600,000,000 of the human race may be distinguished from each other by their facial appearances. The face is ordinarily the index of character. It is the throne of the emotions. It is the battlefield of the passions. It is the catalogue of character. It is the map of the mind. It is the geography of soul.

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You at the first glance make your mind that some man is worthy of your friendship, but afterward by circumstances being put into intimate association with him you come to like him and trust him. Yet. stay with him long enough and you will be compelled to return to your original estimate of his character, but it will be after he has cheated you out of everything he could lay his hands on. It is of God's mercy that we have these outside indexes of character. Phrenology is one index, and while it may be carried to an absurd extent there is no doubt that you can judge somewhat of a man's chai'aoter by the shape of his head. Palmistry is another index, and while it may be carried into the fanciful and necromantic, there is doubt that certain lines in the palm of the hand are indicative of mental and moral traits,

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Physiognomjr is another index, and while the contour of the human face may sometimes mislead us we can generally, after looking into the eye and noticing the curve of the lip, and the spread of the nostril, and the correlation of all the features, come to aright estimate of a man's character. If it were not so. how would we know whom to trust and whom to avoid? Whether we will or not, physignomv decides a thousand things in commercial and financial and social and religious domains, From one lid of the 13ible to the other there is no science so recognized as that of physiognomy, and nothing more thoroughly taken for granted than the power of the soul to transfigure the face.

I do not wonder that when an opposing attorney in a Philadelphia court room cruelly referred to this personal disfigurement. Bcjamin F. Brewster replied in these words: "When I wa a bubo was a bea: tiful blue eyed child. 1 know this because my dead mother told me so. But I was one day playing with my sister when her clothes took fire and Iran to her relief and saved her, but in so doing my clothes took fire and the fire was not put, out until my face was as black as the heart of the scoundrel who has just now referred to my disfigurement."

Heroism conquering physical disabilities! That scholarly, regular feat•ures are not necessary for making powerful impression witness Paul, who photographs himself as in ''bodily presence weak and George Whitefield, whose eyes were struck with strabismus: and Alexander H. Stephens, who sat pale and sick in an invalid's chair while he thrilled the American Congress with his eloquence, and the thousands of invalid preachers and Sabbath school teachers and Christian workers. Aye, the most glorious being the world ever saw was foreseen by Isaiah, who •described his face as gashed and scarified, and said of him, "His visage was so marred more than any man." So you see that the loveliest face in the universe was a scarred face.

And now I am going to tell you or some of the chisels that work for the disfiguration or irradiation of the human countenance. One of the sharpest and most destructive of those chisels of the eountenaee is cynicism. That sours the disposition and then sours the face. It gives a contemptuous curl to the lip. It draws down the corners of the mouth and inflates the nostrils as with a malodor. What, David said in haste they say in delibration, "All men are liars." Everything is troing to rum. All men and women are bad or are going to be. Society and the church are on the down grade. Tell "them of an aet of benevolence and they say he gave that to advertise himself. They do not like the present fashion of hats for women or of coats for men. They are opposed to the administration, municipal, State and national. Somehow, food does not taste as it used to, and they wonder why there are no poets or orators or preachers as when they were boys.

But let Christian cheerfulness try its chisel upon a man's countenance. Feeling that all things are for his ,gdod, and that God rules, and that the bible being true the world's florjalization is rapidly approaching, and the day when beer mug and demijohn and distillery and bombshell *nd rifle pit and seventy-four pounders and roulette tables and corrupt

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book and satanic printing press will have quit work, the brightness that comes from such anticipation not only gives zest to the work, but shines in his eyes and glows in his cheek and kindles a morning in his entiro countenance. Those are the faces I look for in the audience. Those countenances are sections of millennial glory. They are heaven impersonated. They are the sculpturing of God's right hand. They are hosannas in human flesh. They are hallelujahs alighted. They are Christ incarnated.

Here is another mighty chisel for the countenance, and you may call it revenge or hate or malevolence. This spirit having taken possession of the heart, it encamps seven devils under the eyebrows. It puts cruelty into the compression of the lips. You can tell from the man's looks that he is pursuing some one and trying to get even with him. There are suggestions of Nero and Robespierre and Diocletian and thumbscrews and racks all up and down the features. Infernal artists, with murderers' daggers, have been cutting awn}' at that visage. The revengeful heart has built its perdition in the revengeful countenance. Disfiguration of diabolic passion!

But here comes another chisel to shape the eountenaee, and it is kindness. There came a moving day and into her soul moved the whole family of Christian graces, with all the command has come forth from the heavens that that woman's face shall be made to correspond with her superb soul. Her entire face from ear to ear becomes the canvas upon which all the best artists of heaven beuin to put their finest strokes, and on the small compass of that face are put pictures of sunrise over the sea, and angels of mercy going up and down ladders all aliash, and mountains of transfiguration and noonday in heaven. Kindness! It is the most magnificent sculptor that ever touched human countenance.

All kindness comes back to us in one way or another if not in any other way. then in your own face. Kindness! Show it to others, for the time may come when you will need it yourself. People laughed at the lion that spared the mouse that ran over him, when in one motion of his paw the monster could have crushed the insignificant disturber. But it was well that the lion had mercy on the mouse, for one day the lion was caught in a trap and roared fearfully because lie was held fast by ropes. Then the mouse gnawed the ropes in two and let the lion go free. You may consider yourself a lion, but you cannot afford to despise a mouse.

When Abraham Lincoln pardoned a young soldier at the request of his mother, the mother went down the stairs of the White House, saying: "They have lied about the President being homely. He is the handsomest man I ever saw." All over that President's rugged face was written the kindness which he so well illustrated.

No man ever indulged a gracious feeling, or was moved by a righteous indignation, or was stirred

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nevolent impulse, but its effect was Dion: or less indicated in the countenance, while David noticed the phvsiognomie effect of a bad disposition when lie said: A wicked man hardeneth his face," and Jeremiah must have noticed it when lie said of the cruel, "They have made their fae.es harder than a rock."

Oh, the power of the human face! I warrant that you have known faces so magnetic and impressive that, though they vanished long ago, they stiil hold you with a holy spell. "Well," you say "if she had lived she would have been ten years old now*, or twenty, or thirty years." But does not that infant face still have tender supremacy over your entire nature? During many an eventide does it not look at you? In your dreams do you not see it? What a sanctifying, hallowing influence it has been in your life! You can say in the words of the poet, "Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all."

Or was it your mother's face? A good mother's face is never homely to her boys and girls. It is a Madonna in the picture gallery of the memory. What a sympathetic face it was. D:d you ever have a joy, and that face did not respond to it? Did you ever have a grief, and no tears trickled down that maternal cheek? Did you ever do a bad thing, and a shadow did not cross it? Oh, it was a sweet face! The spectacles, with large, round glasses, through which she looked at you, how sacredly they have been kept in bureau or closet! Your mother's face, your mother's smile, your mother's tears! What an overpowering memory! Though you have come on tb "midlife or old age, how you would like just once more to bury your face in her lap and have a good cry!

But I can tell you of a more sympathetic, and more tender, and more loving face than any of the faces I have mentioned. "No, you can not says some one. I can, and I will. It is the face of Jesus Christ as he was on earth and is now in heaven.

What a gentle face it must have been to induce the babes to struggle out of their mothers' arms into His arms! What an expressive face it must have been when one reproving look of it threw stalwart Peter into a fit of tears! What pleading'face it must have been to lead the Psalmists in prayer to say of it, "Look upon the face of thine annointed!" What a sympathetic face it must have been to encourage the sick woman who was beyond any help from the doctors to touch tfae hem of his gannent!

THROUGH.

Detroit Free Press

"Did you see that?" A stage coach which has been pushing along the overland trail in western Kansas is suddenly pulled up by the driver, who rises in his seat, points to the broken ground on the right and ahead and turns to the two outside passengers to repeat: "Did ye see that? Thar's injuns ambushecUin that dry ravine ahead."

Two passengers on top, five inside, seven in all, but two of them are women—wives of army officers. Five men with gun and pistols. The driver won't count unless a bullet brings down one of the horses. "Ready inside, thar?" he asks. "Tell them wimmen folks to crouch down on the floor and keep quiet. Throw open them doors and fasten 'em back. One of you better come here. Now, then, thai* may be ten or fifteen or thar may be fifty or sixty of the varmints. They've got their ponies, in course. They'll make the rush jest whar the road bends to'rds the river, They'll cum whoopin' and yellin' like lunatics broke loose, but don't let the noise rattle ye. I'm goin' to put my horses on the dead run and keep 'em goin' at that, and I expect the rest of ye to do the shootin'. Everybody all ready? Then here we goes!" v' wo women crouching on the floor

Hie coach praying to God—five pale faced men with teeth hard set, gr/pping their rifles and determined to make a good fight of it. With a shake of the lines the driver breaks the four horses into a run and then braces his feet and looks straight ahead. The spirited animals will be terror stricken at the first yell and run away. He must keep the coach in the road or a wipe-out is certain.

The Indians fire at the men on the roof—they urge their ponies to overtake the swaying, bounding, flying coach—they yell like devils let looseCrack! crack! crack! go the rifles. A poinr falls—a warrior throws up his hands and tumbles to the. earth—the driver gets a firmer grip on the lines aud mutters: "Splendid! splendid! Couldn't ask 'em to do better. If them fellers inside has got sand we'll pull through all i*ight."

Yes, the Indians are there—half a hundred of them. They have been in ambush for an hour. This is the first stage to the west for three days it will be the last, for a fortnight. It is another Indian outbreak and Custer's men will ride over the Smoky Hill section to find mutilated corpses at every relayhouse for a hundred miles. The bend in the road is reached, and of a When soap is dissolved in water the

sudden fifty ponies rush out of the dry ravines, which spread out there like the fingers of a human hand.and fifty Indian warriors whoop, shriek and yeil at the top of their voices. They fire their rifles and discharge their arrows as they charge, but is a wild fusilade. "Steady, now!" calls the driver, but keeping his eyes on his flying horses. "My little trick has knocked 'ein out. They'll have to swing in behind us, and you fellers want to take it cool and not waste ycr lead. Geewhiz, but ain't them horses cuttin' out the pace."

The warriors were gaining. With

Whoa! my beauties!" called the driver, as he laid aside his pistol and

NEW PBISBYTERIAN CHURCH AT KOBLESVILLE. DEDICATED FSB. 11, UM.

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separated the lines. "This ere foul is over, and ye needn't throw any more shoes off. Easy, now—whoa! How is it with you feliers back thar?"

As the frightened horses began to slacken their pace he cast a swift glance over his shoulder. The three men were lying down on the roof. Half a mile further on he brought the horses to a halt and called to those inside. A man with blood on his face and hands stepped out and asked: "Are they gone?" "Yes—licked 'em in a fa'r fout. Anybody hurt down thar?" "Women all right—men all wounded. How is it up there?" "Whoa, horses! Lemme see. This feller's dead—that one's dead—t'other one only hard hit, I guess. That'll do. That's a heap better'n the seven who was clean wiped out Monday afternoon. Git in and chirk up the wimen. We've passed the danger p'int, and it's only two miles to No 4. Somebody must hev bin prayin' to God tcrpuil us through, and He's dun it in purty good shape."

Why Soap is Cleansing.

Brooklyn Eagle. The cleansing properties of soap are owing to the soda and potash which enter into its composition. Dirt requiring to be washed away, whether of the skin or clothing, is owing principally to dust particles and matters of a more or less greasy or fatty nature. If fats or oils are added to pure water it is well known the}' do not mix or dissolve in that liquid, but if soap is present the fats aud oils become readily dissolvable. The effect of soap, which is a combination of the"alkalies of soda and potash and fatty acid, is therefore, to unite with the greasy and fatty matters, rendering them soluble in water. The alkalies of soda and potash which are contained in soap are more power ful. cleansers when used alone, but in that case their action is too energetic, as they tend to destroy animal and vegetable .fiber and hence are injurious to the skin and to fabrics. They therefore require to have their energies toned down, as it were, aud this is accomplished bv uniting them with fatty acid

soMa or potash is set free to some extent, and seizes the grease and dirt present, which thus become soluble and are washed away by the water.

Tyndall's Mountain Diet.

Correspondence New York Tribune, He used to experiment not only on nature but on himself. I once asked him what food he took on the mountains. He said the guides commonly consumed a mixture of butter and honey, which they had found supplied for long excursions, in the most portable form, the greatest amount of heat and nourishment. But for himself he liked cakes oi chocolate best, and these he used to eat every two hours while climbing. His love for the Alps was more than scientific and more than mountaineering or the both together. It was a passion, and they were his home every summer during the last twenty years or so of his life. He had a cottage on the Bel Alp to which he went regularly, and when he chose a country home in England he chose Hindhead, nearly

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a sudden rush the mob parted to. take the stage right and left and to! enshrouded isle seem to understand, get at the horses. Then from the the value of pure, dry, fresh air. It doors rifles and revolvers was to him a condition of intellectual op cracked—from the women crouched t?" the floor with faces buried in their hands came shrieks and wails of despair. "It's a straight run now, and the Lord help us!" whispered the driver, as he shifted all the lines to his left hand and drew his revolver and opened fire. "Take that, ye painted devil! Down 3re go, ye spotted cavuse That's "the last arrer you'll ever shoot, my yellin' buckl Revolvers is the thing, boys—down with yer rifles and use them barkers 'Oh, God! have pity on us!" prayed the women between their sobs, but the white faced men firing through the open doors over their heads heard them not. Thud! splash whiz came bullet aud arrow. There was the jingle of breaking glass— splinters flew about—drops of blood fell upon the upturned faces and burned like fire. All at once the pandemonium ceased and silence reigned. The Indians had abandoned the attack. On that three-mile stretch lay a dozen dead and wounded bucks—more than that number of dead and wounded ponies.

feet above the

level of the sea. He understood, as few men in the fog-laden and mist-

vitality. I Tongue Twisters. Six thick thistle sticks.

B^lesh of freshly fried flying fish. The sea ceaseth, but it sufficeth us.

High roller, low roller, lower roll? er. Give rimes Jim's great gilt gigwhip.

A box of mixed biscuits, a mixed biscuit box. Two toads, totally tired, tried to row to Ted bury.

Strict, strong Stephen Stringer snared sickly silky snakes. She stood at the door of Mrs. Smith's fish sauce^ shop, welcoming him in.

Swan swam over the sea swim, swan, swim swan swim back again well stum, swan.

It is a shame, Sam these are the same, Sam. 'Tis all a sham, Sam, and a shame it is to sham so, Sam.

A haddock, a haddock, a blackspotted haddock, a black spot on the black back of a black-spotted haddock.

Susan shineth shoes and sacks socks and shoes shine Susan. She ceaseth shining shoes and soc.'^ for shoes and socks shock Susan.

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impure blood or a failure in the proper perforat-

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paid. 'INT,

Dseltimeut Oat West,.

Editor Dugout (Kan.) Boomer: ••liello! What's the matter!" Assist int (wildly): "Our tilroad reporter at Chicago telegraphs that an Eastern man boarded the west-bound train there with a ticket for Dugout City, and ho hoard the m:m say something about buying a lot." Editor (excitedly): "Stop the press and get out an extra! We'll have the town wiid. Another big beat on the sickly shoot over tho way!1'—New York Weekly.

Poverty niny not be a crime, but it pets more punishment than crime does. —Philadelphia Inquirer.

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CHICAGO.

Indianapolis Division.

ennsuivania Lines.

Schedule of Passenger Trains-Centra! Time

Cnlninbns Urljiina Piqua Co vu:ifUn

New Paris

'7 30

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I AM AM I'M PM PM

Eastward.

Irvi»}jton Cumberland Philadelphia, Greeniield Cleveland CharloUsville.... lCnifflitstown Dunreith Lcwisville Strawns. Dublin Cambridge City Gerinantown CentrevlUe ICicUmoiu!... New Paris Wileys New Madison.. Weavers Greenville Gettysburg Bradford .Jo C«vington Piqua Urbana Coluanbus

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Kan.

Pittsburgh and the Ka.st, and at Richmond lor Dayton, Xeniu and Springfield, and A'o. 1 for Cincinnati.

Trains leave Cambridge City at, 17.00 a. m. and t3 30 P. m. for Rushville, Mhelbyville, Columbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City tl-45 and +6.45 p. m. JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,

Gansral Manager, Genoral Passenger Agent.

11-29-93.-R, PITTSBURGH, PENN'A. For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.

CHEATING

HORSE

LANKETS

Nearly every pattern of

Cta.

s/a

Morse Blankets

are copied is strong evidence that they are THE STANDARD, and every buyer should see that (he 5k trade mark is sewed OB the inside of the Blanket.

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Meals. Flag Stop.

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Boss Electrlo Extra Test Baker

5/A

HGUSE BLANKETS

ARE THE STRONGEST. 10Q 6/A STYLES

at prices to suit everybody. If you can't get them from your dealer, write us. Ask Urn the 5/A Book. You can get it without charge. WM.

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Blanket is imitated in color and style. In most cases the imitation looks just as good as the genuine, but it hasn't the warp threads, and so lacks strength, and while it sells for only a little less than the genuine it isn't worth one-half as much The fact that

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