Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 February 1889 — Page 7
TSIFlNDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1889-TWELVE PAGES.
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READING FOR THE SABBATH. Written for the Sunday Journal.
Unto the Fold. - The Lord is my Zhephrrd. r$alm rxiii, I. Unto the fold Tbelinffprinfftibt fades from the western Rkles; Alonp toe hills the wailinjr nifrht-wimi sighs; Belated, dim, and cold, the moon doth ric. Unto the fold. Unto the fold The noisy rooks are winding homeward flicrht: And dimmer, fainter Krowa you wmded height; Ueep etillness in the vallev: falls the night, Unto the fold. Unto the fold Twas thns as fell the Mmber eventide, Trom his repose, hich on a tnrmntain-tide, Tnto his sirayin? tlock a shepherd cried, Unto the fold. Unto the fold And then from lowly plade. and mountain-nook, Jle softly gathered them with tender erook. And led them o'er the belpht and by the brook. Unto the fold. Unto the fold Thoa eve r-10Tln? shepherd, great, divine. When dim and low life' lingering beam doth shine. Guide Thou, these weary, straying feet of mine, Unto the fold. Alonyo L. Rice. Rat's Cnossixo, Ind. Sunday-School Iesson for FeJj. 10. The Fierce Demoniac Mark v, 1-0. Golden Text CJo now to thy friends and tell them how jrreat things the Ird hath done for thee, and hath had compassion ou thee. Mark 19. nOME READINGS. Mon. The fierce demoniac Mark v, 1-10 Tues.-The tierce demoniac Mark v, 11 -'JO w"ed. Purpose of Christ's coming..! John 111, 1-8 Thurs. Christ's power greater than man's Matt, xvii, 14-21 TrL Chris-fsttower acknowledgetl.Iuke iv, 33-47 gJt. By the Spirit of God Matt. aJi, 2 J-30 fcua.-nnaldeRtmctiou ol Satan... He v. xx, MO Whether there are auv cases of physical possession by demons novor not, ue know that the cases of moral possession, of evil spirits are too many. A prominent clergyman when asked what ho was doing to fcubdne Satan.-answered that all he could attend to was the little devil within him; that ocenni iali of his time. The question of subjection to moral demonisui rests with Jhe man himself. The Uenresene was helirt8 on8 f can advance that plea. The power to exorci&o lemons is ours. Wo can drive them from us by the help of God. The tremendous force of evil compelling one from law to license is well illustrated hy the utigoverned nature of the demoniac TThom fetters could not bind- Sin brings "Tith. it a wildness, a lawlessness, a cynical neer at order and restraint. Where that feeling lurks. Satau is at work. ? matter how depraved or abandoned people are, in their hearts they revere and worship the name of Christ. Their souls iJY- hefore the purity they fain would have, ."n this thought in mind none should be mscourapdin his work among the ahan-1-i.C(J f here is always a spark which, if Jiehtly fanned, will kindle tho penitential flame. .Plp, when they need help, will invariJhly seek it in Jesus. Brine tho demoniac to him. This is all one can do. If there is special demon for each sin, or wicked ten Gency, their nam mav well bo legiou. It Jaakes a man shudder to be the Corliss enPne do its mighty work. The evidences of arino power make even tho righteous Juake with awe. If a greater terror does r?:lfe.,ze the restless wicked it is because oi their unpardonable ignorauce. .if" rt iect Christ on the eve of infraction are like the inhabitants of C.erf:. ' best way to be taught is by one's in Abe cured maniac could teach his jm tryiueu much better than Peter or t? ,Ie understood their needs and how iri?Ipr,,,ach th,n- 'AlliH imiMirtant JlrLV1 n Iuissiou work. Convert the i-yopie as fast as possible ami let them carry Ci.1j ? wo,,b- It hanler to seem to leave kit?. i?,ul'lrarh Jlll a'me than alwavs to M at His leet and listen. Personal and News Note.
urir V,im S la., has secured SV).0 i f Wudin-UIIK Ml,,l'a christi;m Avoeiation foTw H(.,ok. of Act"was recently asked mcriiu ltat ,helibrar,,r harvard -Tf!;1 J!ar?r- of VaU-. in the Old , htmfent pleads for i'.iblc
society and tho otherhalf as an endowrnent fund. A like sum is given to the American
Baptist Missionary Society, to be used un
der similar conditions. A stock company with 100,000 capital has been organized at Pittsburg, Pa., to establish Koman Catholic colonies in tho
South.
Rev. J. P. Daly, a converted Roman Catholic priest, was baptised by immersion at the Baptist Church at Marlboro, Mass.,
on Jan. 21.
The death of Father fiavazzi is a blow to the Free Church of Italy. He was well known in this country by his lectures on Romanism in Italy. Rev. Dr. A. A. Bonar. of Glasgow, Scotland, biographer of MeCheyne, and brother of Horatius Bonar. the hvmn writer, has
just celebrated his ministerial jubilee.
Mr. James B. Reynolds, of Yale Theolog-
unris-
em-
ical seminary, is about to engage in
tian work among young men in Paris, ploying the methods of the Y. M. C. A.
The Union Park Congregational Church,
Chicago, has organized a Young Men's Society for the study of American history and American institutions, the pastor, the Rev. F. A. Noble, Jeader. 'Tis well. "Well, my dear, what did you think of Dr. Verbose's sermon this morning!" "Why, 1 was very much surprised. I never knew before that the apparently simple text he choso was so hard to explain." There are forty prosperous Congregational churches in southern California and half as many more preaching stations soon to become churches. There are on the held already as many ministers as the charges demand. ' In an interview, Bishop A. Cleveland Coxo declares that inndelitv in France is o prevalent that very little else is to bo found. Of the 30,000.000 people, the number of those who make their Kaster communion does not reach 1,000,000. Three thousand out of the four thousand people on the Island of Mase, of the Loyalty group, iU the South PaciliC, are DOW Christians, and they are welt clothed and comfortably housed, and are remarkable for their industry and thrift. By this industry thev are not only able to support all their churches, schooh and other institutions, but also to send a goodly sum to tho society in London. Spirit of Missions. The plan provided by the General Conference of the Methodist Kpiscopal Church last May for deaconesses is not to become a dead letter. In Chicago there is a training, institution for deaconesses; in Cincinnati the work has been taken up in connection with the Elizabeth Gamble Home,, and in Detroit and New York the organization is
being perfected, in lioston, rnnaueipuia
and Minneapolis steps are being taken establish the work.
to
All attempts to account forthe conversion of Saul of Tarsus on any natural principles, in consistency with the history of his conversion as given in the ninth chapter of
Act and subsequently given oy nimseii, and also referred to in his epistbs , arc simply exegetical impossibilities. I he his..mf 1 denied: but if admitted, it can
not be so twisted as to eliminate therefrom the supernatural clement. This element, if conceded, at ouce settles the truth of Christianity. New York Independent. Tho tenth edition of Delitzsch's Hebrew translation of the New Testameut will soon be issued. Since 1S7S eighty thousand copies have been published. Hebrew scholars all over the world have taken a deep interest iu the literary character, correctness and rinish of the work. Suggestion have been made by some of the best specialists and these have been duly weighed and measured by the translator, who himself. U doubtless the greatest Hebraist of this generation, if not of this century. Accordingly.' it is a work of rare literary and critical correctness. vhnll I be left forgotten in the dur. when Fate, relenting, lets the flower revive! h ill Nature's voice, to man alone unjust, " Bid him, though doomed to perish, luie to live! rmtie. Then pealed the Ix-IN more loud and deep; iod H not dead, nor doth he sleep! The Wromc shall fail. The Right prevail. Vith peace on earth, ood will to man Ijgfel!ow.
1 tluing u Mrlke.
r'.tlmnre American.
OUT OF THE ORDINARY. At Canajoharie, N. Y. the other. day a horse was frightened to death by the noise made by steam escaping from a locomotive. Fresh water always freezes at tho surface first. Sea water, during calm weather, begins to freeze at some point beneath the surface. At Willows, Cal., a flock of wild geese settled down on a forty-acre field of grain and picked it clean in two hours. The number of birds was estimated at 73,000. W. R. Thurston, of Gloucester county. Virginia, has a curiosity in the shape of a cast-off oysterman's shoe, to which fiftysix living 03sters have attached themselves. A jug of cider thirty-two yeaTS old was unearthed in Camden the other day, and of the twenty men who got a swallow or two of the smooth and deceitful liquid, sixteen were made drunk within ten minutes. Some succulent statistics are that there are in tho Chesapeake oTS.SM.OOO square yards of ovster beds, yielding about 10,000,000 bushels of ovsters annually, and distributing about $3,000,000 among 50,000 people. The length of the Mississippi river has always been placed at 4.100 miles, but civil engineers familiar with the stream say that it has shortened itself over 400 miles in twenty years, and will do as well in the twenty to come. A horse ran away at Cartersville, Ga., the other day, and after running against amoving train and knocking himself down he ran into the waiting-room of the Western & Atlantic railroad, Jwhcro ho was captured amid great confusion. At Charlotte Harbor, Fla.t a blackbird was seen to dive into water his own depth and bring out a live crab as large as a silver dollar. Ho Hung the crustacean on tho beach, and picked and shook him until be killed him, and then made a breakfast on him. In Florida, where they manufacture ice with a machine, freezing takes place so gently that a spray of roses may be put into a tank of water and frozen into the mass of ice without stirring a petal from its place. There it lies imbedded in all its beauty of form and color. One of the evil effects of fog in London is its baneful influence upon flowers. The head gardener of the Royal Botanic Society has reported that the recent darkness and fog has greatly injured the bedding and other soft-wooded plants so that a dearth of flowers might be anticipated in the spring. A fanner of Somerset county, Maryland, recently drove into Princess Anne with a brood of chickens perched on1 the perch pole of his carriage. They had roosted there during tho night, and as the farmer left homo beforo day remained there till discovered by him when it was light enough for him to see them. A section crew on tho Wisconsin Central Railway, when about threo miles east of Junction City, ran down a largo lynx, which threw the hand-car from the track. The animal then charged the crew, who
were armed only with shovels. Afterquito a desperate light foreman Beats succeeded in dispatching the beast. John Wilson, living near Astor, Fla.. cut
a big cypress tree iu the swamp north of
town and found therein a live alligator seven feet long. As the opening in tho tree was not half large enough for the
Vaitor to get through, the presumption is
tuat it craw iea in wnen quite young and lived on other animals and reptiles that sought refuge iu the same tree. A floating island is said to exist on
Henry's lake, Idaho. It is about three hun
dred feet in diameter and is erratic in its travels, frequently, though, going with tho
wind, wnicu catcues in me trees and there
by carries it along. It is said that the
curiosity might remain near shore fordavs.
and then during the night sneak awav and
in the morning be many miles distant.
There is a company in Birmingham, Eng.,
tnat makes aooui umi.hu oi pins every day, the weight averaging live tons per , m .... ;
weeK. l ne company hio in possession, as proprietors, of the privileges tnd riuhts of the original patentee of the 'did-heitded pin. There are at le:t two oth tensivo pin-manufacturers in Birmip where
it is said that half the pin- . tho
w orld are made.
feet of its body. Then it subsided, but the hole in the ice and the dirt cast abont were left to mark its appearance. A similar in
cident happened there about twenty years ago, cansmg great excitement A scientist advances the theory of a hot spring or sort of volcano which is affected "period
ically and throws mud, etc., from the bottom of the lake.
It is said that electricity is now empoyed
in India to keep snakes out of dwellings. Before all the doors and around the house two wires are laid, isolated from one another and connected with an induction ap
paratus. W hen the snake attempts to enter the house or go under it he completes the circuit as he crawls over tho two wires, and if the shock he gets doesn't kill him it is sure to frighten him off. A rude stone cist has been exhumed in Orphir, Kirkwall, inside of which was found a textile garment supposed to be woolen, also an amber head and tho nucleus of a glass one. This is believed to be the tirst cist found in Scotland with a textile garment, supposed to be for covering the body, and the heads for ornamenting the covering. This burial place is thought to be anterior to the Norse invasion, about the eighth or ninth century. Electricity; cut up some queer capers with a, tree down in New Orleans. A guy cable was attached to the tree from an electric light. In some unaccountable way the cable became crossed with a live wire, and on wet days electricity ran down tho former. Several times it set the tree afire and eventually started a blaze which destroyed that part of the tree above tho wire. The trunk was examined and its heart was found to have been entirely eaten out by the electricity, leaving a mere shell. At Americus, Ga., several negro boys got a goat on the bridge over a creek the other morning, and were try ing to force him to jump off into the water. The billy reared upon Lis hind legs and butted the largest boy so heavily in his stomach that he was knocked clear off' the bridge into the water. He would have drowned it the other boys had not pulled him out while billy walked to the side of the bridge and looked complacently down at his discomfited tormentors, and then walked proudly away. A Matanzas paper tells of a sea monster which lately appeared there: "Intelligent persons who saw it calculate that the monster measures abont ISO feet long by forty feet wide. It is of dark gray color, with with spots, the size of dinner plates, all over the back. Its head, tins and tail are identical with those or a shark. It was roaming aronnd the entrance of Matanzas bay for three days, and was the terror of fishermen, who declared that thev bad never seen anything to compare with it." The Oviedo (Fla.) Chronicle says that a linn there are about to engage in a novel enterprise in connection with their vegetable garden. They are taking glass bottles and training cucumber vines, when they are ready to bloom, to grow cucumbers msid of th bottles, so that when the vege
table is full grown it will be much larger
than the neck of tho bottle. They will then lake and nickle them, and will have
tlin Kiirnriainif ftiinir of having pickled CU-
cumbers in bottles with necks much smaller
than the pickles.
A Lonisana paper tells a story of a bear, a
negro and a locomotive wnicn reaus hko a
fable, and mav be one. The negro under
took to drive the bear out of his turnip patch. The bear, however, drove the negro out and pursued him up the railroad track. Tho nnrro fitemxMl aside to let an express
train pass; the bear grappled with the locomotive with the usual results, and the ne
gro skinned tho fragments of the bear and took the meat homo to supper. All this happened near Bavou Goula. The fable teaches that a cool head is rather to bo pre
ferred than great riches when your are he
tween an express tram and a pursuing
bear.
m Jnt AVliat lie Was Looking For. Bob bnrdettc The pastor at Cactus Four Corners, A. T., announced that on the following evening Professor Arioch, of Shinar City, would lecture in tho church building, ou "The Hanging Gardens of Babylon." The announcement was received with general enthusiasm. "Fin goin' to hear that," said Baldv Bludsoe, "that's just tho very thing we ueed iu Arizona. This thing of bavin' to wlk five mild to find a trestle-work er a rr id bridge every time we have some
HUMOR OP Tilt Tit for TaL TheEpixL. Mistress (to Bridget) "Is it possible, Bridget, you are- looking through my
tnkT7 I!.-!.! rr&4 fonlinlrl 'Via mum on' flirln't
I catch you lookin through mine the other dayT"
During a Cincinnati Morning Call
Time.
Miss Oury Pm never going to speak to Paisv Blethen again as long as I live. She didnt invite me to tho reception. Miss Heights Ncr me either, and she didn't even send me a box of the weddingham. Anent a Recent Shakspearean Revival.
Time,
Jack Well, Clara made her debut on tho professional stage as Cleopatra last night. Jack's Sister Did she come out with honor? Jack (Donbtfully) N-no; she didn't come out with much on her.
ruck.
Heredity.
Old James Brown Stone Moro money? WTh3 Jack. Pm astounded! When I was twenty, I lived on $15 a week. Jack Stouo (modestly) That may be, father; but you know you didn't marry until you were forty; and I suppose I've inherited your forty-year-old habits. The Old Question. Atlanta Journal.
Reginald Young (who has been very attentive during the evening) I wonder, Miss Mabel, if vou would consider me impertinent should I ask you the old qnestiont Miss Mabel (greatly agitated) Oh, Reginald! This is so sudden I 1 yes, 1 will listen to you. Reginald. Reginald Young Well, then, have you read "Robert Elsmere!" A New Yorker's Had Ilreak. Philadelphia Record. Philadelphian "You are very fond of society, I see. Do vou belong to tho exclusive iour hundredY New Yorker "No; unfortunately there is a dark stain on my social record." Indeed!" 1 "Yes, it'9 too true. I once walked two squares on Fifth avenue with a very dear friend of mine, an eminent scientist, who bad on a suit of ready-made clothing." Came Tretty Near It. Merchant Traveler. "Ah," said one old business man to another, "it is a pleasure to look back to the days of our youth, and to think of how much the simplest pleasures delighted us." "Yes, that's so." "Why I can remember to this day the keen interest I took iu my first volume of fairy stories. I used to be very fond of them. Perhaps you never read fairy stories yourself!"' "No. but I have read mining prospectuses a good deal in later years."
Tim.
A 11 Iff Crop.
Farmer Say, you're eternal liar! Real Estate Agent Why. what's the mat
ter! "You said when I bought that farm from you that the wheat crop on it last year yielded thirty bushels to the acre." "Welhaud'didn'tit!" ........ . "Didn't it t of course not. It didn't yield a grain. Tho chinch bugs eat it up smack an' smooth." "Well, it was chinch bugs I referred to, and I'd swear there was thirty bushel of 'em to the acre. You don't expect land to raise wheat and chinch bugs both at once, do you!" Not as Black a She Wa Painted. Minneapolis Tribune. "So Clara has been talking about me, has she?'' queried Maud. , "Yes, but she spoke very kindly of you, dear," answered Kthel. "Well, what did she say!" "O, Miesaid that people could talk as they wanted to r.bout you, but she was confident you were not as black as you were painted," And to this day Kthel cannot understand why Maud rubbed her handkerchief to her cheeks, and -said "good-night," oh, so sweetly.
s, I bongfft you this nice new whit on to surprise you Svith on ur cdtnng uy. And it was such a bargain, too. Tim
zsrn tTs w.;rran:cj cr.ver.xa nv. - Mr. Washington Pye (setting brmdle on tabled Thai's very kind of vou. of courv. my dear, and thank you; onlv 1 ready prefer the old one. But, see, I thought 1 d give you a little surprise. That s just as good a piece of silk as a woman needs to wear. I paid 2 a yard for it. . . Mrs. Washington Bye (examining it) o kind of you, darling. .1 ust exactly the Mine quality that 1 saw in Tape & Button s yeterday for $1.50. FASHION JOTTINGS. Parisians now wear the hair in bunches of curls low on the back of tho head, but only for the theater or opera. London not only allows, but approves of gowns of the brightest green, combined with pink or fine faint yellow. Queen Maria Pla, of Portugal, has a set of old buttons upon one of her new gowns that cost just twice as much as the garment they adom. Loose curls, pulls, twists or loops all over the head, or else piled high on top of it, are all allowed ly the present stylo of hairdressing. Peal plush, wrought in very open embroidery and underlaid with pale blue satin, is much liked for pahels to cloth dresses m various shades of brown. Alpaca grows in favor and in fashion. Th lironcrlit over for soring wear are in
all sorts of colors, and striped and brocaded till they quite discouut the rainbow. Amber and silver pins fasten the hair by daylight. For evening or full dress, rhino stones, feathers, flowers or aigwttcs of loop! ribbons are worn at discretion. Cashmere house dresses have princcM backs and jacket fronts, coming only, to tho waist, over a loone full vest that is drawn in by a ribbon and falls quite to the hem of the skirt. The deep Spanish flounce, with standing nitlle at the head and curving deeper at th tides, is much used inthe half-season gowns of black silk, cashmeie or alpaca, now in the hands of the dressmakers. Tea gowns grow at once U'oro and more a favor and elaborateness. They aro isually ,iade up in two very rich stulK or else in cashmere of art colors. In cut they combine tlm directoiro and the princes with a little of almost all else nnder tho buu. but, for all that, are wonderfully f-'hing. lite dresses for homo wear aro even . fashionable than last hca son. only .ey are no longer made of vigogne, n rough, heavv material which docs not drape at all nicely. Tho fabric in vogue if fine white cloth, soft, light and warm, which fits beautifully and is wonderfully becoming.
sateens are of . the and yellow shaded cinhnm ma well a
f checks of red and ivid red. that wern miner. They will bo -'aisls full sleeves V'iy f.no wliito ; it- 7Ts V ill bo
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t
i
New ginghams and liveliest hues. (Jreexi fctrines nn seen in the
the stripes, blocks an
white, dull rei witn v
so much wore made up with and. straight embroidery i the proper Home at. , . narrow skirls.
and defining the i.e - " r. ; while the long trains oi - yf' rru dresses, gathered at tli. 1 )
out tournute or steels, except : v- ... ones at the top, llow in long gracefut at the back. Tournures are only worn will, walking dresnes to keep out the short sk:rt. and then only small steels are used, and so as not to be detected. The newest Loudon overskirt is tucked up in front in one broad, short plait, an if drawn under the girdle, and it I:ilU at tho sides iu the cascades naturally produced by lengthening it and plaitingitat tlieb.lt. The waist is really plain and tiuht-btting. Imt it ia iiw'ilfd lit- ;i rl f iit..levifc'd ilniv-
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itv. mi Miaoeu ilia i uicaiiuii outwi muit
high in the shoulder) and the waist senr made from one piece. Tho waist is rounded and half-high in the neck. A AVu.an Suflrng Canard. Boston Ilirul.L ; Lillio Devere.uiK Blake ha dissipated another popula
