Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 123, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1885 — Page 13

CHE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL SUNDAY MORNING MAY 3 1885

13

TALMAGE. 5What Ig tho Iollucnco of Club Houses la American Cities?

2r. Talmije Proponnds the Oaery and Answers It la His Sandaj Seraoa. j:vs:y Tree 13 Knovra b Ulj Own Fruit.' U:;ookly.v, N, Y April 23. Dr. Talmas prtached this uornlng la tha Brooklyn Tabernacle oa the subject: "What is the inflo enceof clubhoasa in African citie?" Before the aermon Dr. Talmag expLaInd the trenty-second chapter o! Proverbs oa the ra'ae cf a good name trhich comes from equipoise of temper and industry, Tte hymn sang was: Before Jehsvah'g awful throne. Ye nation bow wltä acre-l joy." Tha text was Luke vl., 4 i : 'E7ery tree is known by his cwa fruit." Dr. Talmeo iid: Fall pippins do not grow on a crab apple tree. Choke pears are net foaad in an orchard of Bartletts. Christ laid down this principle, and it is always applicable and everywhere applicable. If yaa waat to find Whether an 'institution is Rood or bad, yon bare only ta examine the kind of character it prDduces. I remembir in my father's orchard there was a lar;a apple tree that yielded luxuriant fruit; but it had a hollow trunk so that we boys could hide in it, Irnich was the bast poaitita from which to xaznine the fruit cf that tree ia the trait Where we sometimes U3d to hide, r stam4lag oataida looking np a, the fruit? "Well," you say, "atandiag outside and "lookiag at at." And so I really believe that those inside any institution are lees competent to judge of its tendencies than those who are stand3ng outside and w&tchia the products perpetually shaken dim' I am asked what is the influence of the club-houBts of this country? To the aasveribg cf that question I gira the discoor-. !Men axe gregarious. Cattle in heardj. Fijh in schools. Birds in floes s. Men' in smsi circiis. You may by the discharge of a suu scatter a (lock of quails or by the plans of aa anchor seed apart the deczens of the stajbat they will gather themselves together ajdin. If jcu by some new power could breafc taa associations in which men now Staad, they vouid again adhere. God meant it so. lie las gathered all the flowers and shrnbi into iseciations. You may plant one "forget xne-cot" or "heart's-oase" alone, away orf upon the hillside, but it will soon hunt np some other'forgetme-noV'or "heart's ease." Plants lore company. Yoa will fini tntm talking to each other in the dew. A uALAXY OF 8TAES is only a mutual life insurance company. You sometimes se a man with no oatbranching of sympathy. His nature 13 celt and hard, like a Bhia's mnsc ica-glazed, -which the most agil sali ctnld never climb. Others hare a thousand roots and a thousand branchss. Innumerable tendrils climb their hearts and bloessva all the way np, and the fowls ef hearea Eia? ia tsa branches. In conqace cf this teWency' we lind mem coming together in tribes, ia communities, ia charohes, ia socittUs. oEe gather together to cmltirate the arts, tome to plna far the welfare of the S:ate, somelo discuss religious themes, some to kindle their mirth, seme to adracre their craft. So every active community is diyldid into assscialions of artists, of merchants, of baok-bina-ers. of rarpentrs, of mussns, of plasterers, or shipwright!, of picmb-rs. Do yoa cry out agaicst It? Then joa cry oat against a tendency divinely implanted. Your tirades will accomplish no more taan if you should pre ich lo a busy ant hill or bee hive a long sermon agairat teeret societies. Ail intelligent acs have had their gathering characterized by the blun: old AngloSaxon designation ot club " If you have rtad history jou know that there was a King's Head Club, a Ben Johnson Club, a 23ro ter'a Club, to which 8wift and Balingbroke belonged: a Literary Clab, T7hicii Bari e er d Goldsmith and Johnson and U33well made immortal; a Jacobin Club, a Banjamin Franklin Junto Club. Some of thea lo indicate justice, tome to favor the arts, come to promote good Uiannsrs, some to deSpoil the habits, some to destroy the soul. So now we hare club houses and they are as different from each other ai day and night. Leos at two specimens: What an Imperial hallway! Be, here are parlors on this side with the upholstery of the Kremlin and the Tnileries, und hare are dining halls that challenge you to mention any luxury that tbry can not afford, and here ar galleries wnh sculpture and paintings end iithoraphsind drawings from the test cf artists, Cr:,-.ey and Bierstadt and Church and Hart and Gitford pictures for re ry mocd. whether you are impassioned or placid; ehipsmck or eanlisht over the sea, fcfberic'an'a ride or the noonday party of the farmfrs under the tree, foaming deer parEued by the housds in tha Adirondack or the theep on tne lawnl On this etde there are reading rooms where you find all newspapers and maszines. Oa that side there Is a 11 Wary where you find all books from herxncneutics to the fairy tale. Coming in and cut, tfceie are gentlemen, some of whom stay ten minutes, ethers stay many hours. Some of there are from luxuriant homes, and they bare excused themselves awhile from the domestic circle3 that they may enjoy the large sociability of the club house, The?9 are ficrn dismembered household, aad thsy hare a !2in lodging loaswhere. but they came lo thU club-room to hare their chief enjoyment. One black ball amid ten rotei will defeat a nan's becoming a member. For rowdjijm, fcrdrnnkenesj, for gambling, for any kind of mis:Urueanor, a membar is dropped out. Brilliant c!nb houses from top to bottom. The chande'iers. the plat?, the iurniture. the companionship, the literature, the eoc:al prsstig?, a complete enchantment. ANOTHiia CLUD H0U3S. Orning ths dcor -we 2nd the faca9 cf si;ccg Jr nk ad tobtcco. somathlDg alm2t ir tolerable. These young men are at this tab.'e It is easy to underttand what they are at f rem the flushed cheek, the intent look, the almost angry way of tassing the dice or f moving the "chips;" they are gambling. At another tab! are men who are telling Tile storif s. They are three-fourths intoxicated, and between 12 and I o'clock they "will postaegering, hootin?, swearing, shautIcg on thf ir n ay tome. This is an only san ; cn him all kindness, all care, all rultare has fcf en bestowed: he is paying his pneuta in this way for their kindners. That ia a voang married man, who only a few months gi as the altar made rromisofklndnewacd fidelity, etryoae of which he has broken. Walk through and ee for youis3if. Here are all tfco implements " of dissipation ana of qnicfc dratb. A the boa-s cf thi pignt go wiy th wayersaVica ba-

csmrs imbecUe and more debasing. Now it ia time to 8hnt np. Those who are able to stacd will net out on the pavement and balarce ttemeires against the lamp-post or against the railines of the fence. The young man who is r ov. able to stand will bare a bed improvised for niin in the clab houe, rp two not quite so overcome with liquor will cendnct him to his father's house and they will rirg the door bell and the door will open and the two imbecile eicorta will Introduce into t be hallway the ghastliest and most beilien spectacle that ever enters a front deer a drunken san. If the dissipating club housea of tbla c untry would make a cootract with tte Inferno to provids it 10,GCO men a year, and for twenty years, on the condition that no more should bs as led of them, tfce tl ib-hos?s could afford to make that contract, for they sire homesteads, save fortnr.e, save bodies, minds 4nd soul3. Ths 10,000 men who wculd be sacrificed b7 that contract would be but a email j.art of the mnltitude sacrificed witneut the contract. Bat I make a vast difference between clubs. I hare belcnged to four clubs a theological club, a ball club and two literary clubs. I got from them pbjeical rejurenation and moral health. Vhat shall be the principle? If God will help m, I will lay down three principles by which you may judge whether the ciub wher you ate a member or the club t J which you have been invited is a legitimate or an illegitimate club-house. f First of all I want you to test the club by its influences on home, if you hare a home. I have been told by a prominent gentleman iii liuo life that three-fourths of the memWb of the great clubs of tliase cities are xa tried men. That wife soon loses her inn ji nee over hsr husband who nervously and fojii&hly locks upon all evening absence as an aieault on domesticity. How are the great enterndes of art and literatuie and beneficence and public weal to te canied on if every man is to have his world b utided cn one tide by his front door step and on the other side by his back window, knowine nothing higher than his own attic, or noting lower than his own cellar? That wife who becomes jealoas of her husband's attention to art or literature or religion or charitv. i breaking her own Bsepter of congenial power. I know in this church an instance where a wife thought that her hu - band wes eivinertoo ni&nv ni?htiti Hhri.st.iim

Service, to cbaritable sarrice, to prayer-mie; irgi and to religious cjnrersation. She systematically decoyed him away until now he attends neither this nor any Oiher church, and is on a rapid way to destruction, b a morals gone, his moaiy gane, and, I fear, his eoul gone. Let any Christian wife rej jica when her husband consecrates erenlngs to the serrice of Gcd, or to charity, or to art, or to anything derated; bat let not man eacriiice borne life to club life. I hare the roils c f the members of a great many of these prcminent clubs of these cities, and I can voiut out to you a great many men who are guilty of this sacrilege. They are as genial as angels at the club house, as ngly as sin at home. They are generous on all eubiects of wine suppers, yachts and fast horass, but they are 6tingy about the wife's dress and the children's ehe es. That oan has made that which ml?ht b a heathful n er ation an usurper of his affections, and he has married it and he is guilty of moral bigamy. Under thii process tha wife, whatever her feature!, becomes uninteresting and homely. He becomes critical cf her, does not like the dress, docs not like the wjy Ehe arrane3 her hair is amazed that he wa3 ever to unromant c as to offer her hand and heart. Sbe is always wanting money, money, money, when she ought to be discussing Dextsrj and Darby day and Eoglieh draes with six horses, all answering the pull of one "ribbon. " I tell you there are thousands of houses in Brooklyn and New Yori beiDg CLTJEUKD TO DEATII. There are clab houses in these cities where n emberihip always involves domestic shipwreck. Tell me that a man has joined a certain club tell me nothing more aboit him for ten years, and I wili write his history, if he be still alive. The man is a wineenzzler, his wife broken-hearted or prematurely old, his fortune gone or reduced, and his home a mere name in a directory. Here are six eecalar nigbts in the week. "VYnat enall I do with them?" eays the father and thehnstand. "I will give four of those n'chts to the improvement and entertainment ot my family either at home or in good neighborhood; I will devote on to ciaritablti institutions; I will devote one to ths club." I congratu'ate. Here is a man whi says: "I will make a different division of th six nights. I will take three for t'ae clab and three for other purposes." I tremble. Here is a man who says: "Out of the six secu'ar nights of the week I will devote live to the club-house and cue to the home, which Light 1 will spend in scowling like a March squad, wishing I was nut epending it as I had the other five." Tnat man's obituary is written. Not one out often thousand that gees so far on the wrons road ever etops. Gradually Lis health will fail through late bonrs and through too xnnch stimulus. He 1 will be flist rate prey for erysipelas and rneumatism 01 the heart, ine doctor, coming in, will at aglanca s? e it is not only present dieease he must fight, but years of fait living. The clergyman, for the ease of the fefclirjjrs of the family on ths f aneral day, will only talk ia religions generalities. Tha man who got his yacht in the eternal rapids will Lot by at ths obsequies. They will tar rnrs'-Tig ergsgeroents tnat day. They will teed floweis to thecjffin andseml tiir wivis to utter words of sympathy, but they will hfcve enaeraen's eUewhere, They nerer come. Biing me mallet and chiaj aal I wiJi cut on tee tombstone that man's epitaph : Bi3:ed are the dead who die in the Lcrd.'' ''No," 5 on say, "that wauld not be appropriate." "L,et me die tbe denth of the iighteo-s, and les my last end ba like his." "Iso," jou say, "that wculd not bo appropriate." Then give ms the mallet and the chisel and I will cut an honest epitaph: 'Here lies the victim of a dissipating club Loue?!" I think that damage is often done by the scions of some aristocratic family who beloHgto one of theseoissipatin club houses. People coming up from humb.tr cla?3es feel it an hozot to belong to thb same club, forgettirg the fact that many of the sons acd gracdsons of the large commercial establiahments of tbe last generation are now as to mind, imbecile; as to body, diseased; as to morale, rotten. They would have got through their property long ago If they had lud full possession of it, but their wily ancestors, who got the money by hardknocss. foresaw how it was to bo and they tied up evry thine in the will. Now there is nothing of that unworthy descendant but his grandfather's name and roast-beef rotundity. Ai d yet hew many steamers there are which f?tl honored to lash fast to that worrn-eitea tug, thoagh it dwgj them straigh: into the breakers. Another test by whUh you can find whether your club is legitimate or illegitimate tha effect it has on your secular occupation. I can understand how through such tn irstltution a man can reach com nerota pnfcersiS. I know some men have formed ileir test buslntss relations through such a channel. Ii the club has advantaged yoa in an honorable caUinc it is a legitimate club. Bat his your credit fslltd? Are bargain makers mote cautions ho w they trust you wi h a bill of oois? Have the men who3 n&ma veje down in the commercial agency A 1 bsfoie they entered the club been ging down s;nce in commercial standing? Taen lock cut! You and I every day kacw of ccLume'ciel establishments going to ran tbronph tte eos al txcesses of one or two mtixttis. Their fcrtanci beaten tj death

with ball plajers' bit, or cut amid ship by tie front prow of the rs;a t or going down under the swift hoofs of the fast horses, or drowned in large po'aibnt of cogaac cr Monongahela. Their club-house was the "Loch Ilarr." Their business houses was 1h Ville du Havre." Thev struck, and the YiBe du Havre" went under. A THIHD TEST, by which you may know whether the club to which you belong or the club to who e membership you are Invited is a legitimate Club or an illegitimate club, is this: What :s its effect on your sense of moral and religious ob igation? Now if I should take the name3 of all the people in this audience this morning and put tnem cn a roll and then I should liy tte roll back of this organ and a hundred years from now some one should take tbat roll and call it from a to z that would not one of you answer. I say that any astcciation taat makes me forget tbat f ict Is a bad association. When I go to Chicagi I am sometimes perplexed at Baffalo, as I sappose many travellers are. as to whether it is better to take the Lake Shore roata or the Michigan Central, equally expeditous ana equally safe, cetting at the destination at the same time. Bat suppose that I bear that on one route the track is torn up and the bridges ar torn dswn and tbe switches are unloosed? It will rot ta&9 me a great while to dec de which road to take. Now hsre ate t-- ds into the fnture, the Christian aid the unch istiau, ihe Baft nd the msaie. Any institution or any association t lat confutes my idea ia regard to that fact is a bad institution and a Ded aeoc ation. I h.d piayers before I joined the club. I):d I hve them after? I attendei tne hoase of Gt d before I C3nneted myself with the c ub. Since that union with the clab do I eisen myself from religious inrlaences? Whi h would yon rataer have in your hand wh n you come to die, a pack of cards or a Bible r Which would you rather have pressed 10 veer lips in the closing moment, the cup of Behhazzarean wassail or the chalice of Ctrittan communion? Who would you rther have for your pall bearers, the elders of a Christian church or the companions wboee conversation was full of slang and iuctcdo? "Who would you rather have for your eternal companion, those men who spend their evenings betting, gambling, swearing, carousing and telling vile storl83, or jour little child, thatbriglt girl whom the Lord tooi? Oa, you would not have betD away so n uch nights, would you, if yen had known she was going away sd 300a? Dear me, your house has never been the same siDce. Y'our wife has never brightened up. Ehe has not got oyer it; she never will let over it. How long the evenings are with to one to put to bed and no one to tell ths beautiful Eible story? What a pity it is tbat you can not spend more evenings at home in trying to help her bear that sorrow? You can never drown that grief ia the wine cup. You can never break away from the little arms that used to be flung around your neck when she used to say : "Papa, do stay home to night, do stay home to nigbt!" You will never bs able to wipe from your lipithsdy ins; kiss of your little girl. The fascination of a dissipating club-housi is ao great that sometimes a mau has turned his back on his home when hh child was dying of ecarlet fever. He went away. Before he got back at midnight the eyes had been closed, the undertaker had done his work, and the wife, worn out with t-ree wteks' watching, lav unconscious in tbe next rcom. Then tte returned father com s upstairs and hesjes the cradle gone and tbe windows up and says: ."What is the matter?" In the judgment day he will flad out what was the matter. Oh, mau a3tray, God help you! I deplore this iuiu tb9 more, bcau!9 this stvle of dissipation is taking down our finest men. The admission fee s its out the penurious, and takes only those who are called he best fellows. Oh, how changed yoa are! Not so kind to your wife as you used to be; not eo patient with your children. Your conscience i? not eo much at re3t. Yoa :ongh more now and sing louder than ones, but are not so happy. It is not ths public drinking saloon that is taking you down, but it is si uif Iy and undeniably your clab room. You c?o nut make yourself" as agreeable in your family as once. You go home at 12 0 ciock with an unnatural llusb upon your cheek an da Strang olorin your eye tnat you got ct tbe club. You merely acknowledge tbat von feel queer. Yoa eay hat onrapagne Revir intoxicates, that it. otly cxhi'arates, m&kfs the convention flneni. sbasesupthe humor, and htm no bad effect except a headache the next day. Bs not deceived. Champagne may not, like whieky, throw a man under tbe table; but if, through anything you drink you gain aa unnatural fluency of speech and glow of feeling, you are simply drunk. If those imperiled were heartless you: g men, stingy young men, I would not bs eo sorry as I am, but there are many of tbem penerous to a fault, frank, honest, cteerful, talented. I begrudge the devil Th a prize. After a while tneEe persons will LCStt ALL THC FHAJ:KNES3 ASD HOXOa for which they are row distinguished. The r couut-Lances will get ha?gered, and instead f looking one in the eye when they tail-, toey will look down. Aftsr a while wheu the mother kindly aks, ' Wbat kapt yo 1 oat so late?'' they will make no answer, or willesy, "Tbat i3 my busines-s!'1 They will come crors and befogod to the store aid tank, and ever and aaon neglect some duty, and alter a while will ha dismissed; a id then, with nothiBg to do, will rise ia the morning at 10 o'clock, cursing ths eervant because the breakfast is cold, and then g ) down town and stand oa the steps of a fasa. ir.natie hotel and criticise the pas3ers-by. Yi'hile the young man who was c erk in a cellar has como up to the fiiei clerk, and t e who a few years ago ran erranc's for the bank bss pot to bs cashier and thousand ot ether young men have gono up t3 higher and more responsible pos tier 3. he has been going down until there he 1 sues through tha street with bloated lip fcnd tlordshot eye and staggering step and i at mud-spattered and eet sideways cn a shock of greasy hair, and askts of hisc:gar dashed upon his cravat. Here he goes! Look at him, all ye pure harted young men, and ee the work of the diesipating club room. I knew ore such who, after the contaminations of his club-house, leaped out of the third-story window to put an end to his wretchedness. O men who are victims of dissipating associations, your eins will follow you. I deecribe the h'story of thousands of households when I say that the tea is ranidly taken and wiile yet the family linger the father shoves back his chair, has "an engagement," lights his cigar and starts out, not returning nntJl after midnight. That is the history of 363 daj8 in the year, except when he is sick ancan not go out. How about home dutie ? Have jou fulfilled all your vows? Woau. onr wife ever have married you with eah pcs;cct? W ait until your sons get to be F xtffn or eevntesn years of age and tiny, co. will ftcve back from the tea table, htve an engagement," lischt their cigars, go 07er io tteir club-hou?e, their night key rUline in jcur door after midnight tha effect cf 'our examp'e. And as your son's constitution may not be as strong as yours and the liquor he drinks more terribly drugged, he will catch up with you on tbe road to death, alihour h you got the start of him. And eo jcu will both go to hell together. A revolving Drummond light on the lisai of a locomotive casts its el earn thronen, the darkness as it is turned around; so I catch ur the lamp of God's truth ani tara it around

until its tremendous flashei ialo all the club-houses of our cities. Flee the pressucs cf di'Sipatlng club housss. ''Paid your money?" Sacrifice that rather than yoar eonl. "Good fellows," are they? They can not stay what they are under euch influences. Mollusca live two hundred fathoms down ia the Norwegian eeas. The Siberian stag grows fat on the stunted growih of Altaiu peak. Tbe Hedysarium thrives amid the desolation of Sahara. Tufts of osier and birch grow on tte hot lips of volcanic Feat eehalten. Bat good character and useful lite thrive amid club-room dissipations never! The best way to make a wild beast cower is to look him n the eye, but the best way to treat the temptations I Lave descrlbed is ti turn your oacc and fly. Oh, mytheart acbes! I see meu struggling to get out of the serfdom of bai babiis, and I want to help them. I hive krelt with them and heard their cry forhe'p. I have had them put one hand on each ot my Shoulders and look ma in tha eye with an aconv of parnps:tra that th inrt Tmant

ehall have no powr to make me forget, and irena meirups, scorched with tne tires of rum. have heard tbem rrv "find hln tta" There is no rescue for such save in the Lord Almighty. A Mother-in-law's Statue. London Times. A fine marble portrait statue of a Roman ledy has teenjdiscovered near tbe Scala Santa in Borne. It is Eculptured In Spotless i'anan marble of the rarest quality. Tne right hand, which was riised, is unfortnnately wanting, atd the nose ard the tips of both great toes hive teen braised; but with thes exceptions it is e fec and the surface of tha marbi?, nnii jcred by corrosion, is almost as pure as tbe aay 11 Jt ft the sculptor's studio. A Greek inscription cn the plinth tells us it was erected to an intelligent mother-in-low by her son-in-law. Eubcnleon. Tbe rtatue is particularly interesting from te ciTcnmstance that tha lac-s only is thatof Ecbocleon's mother-in-law. 0! statues which have teen xxade to serve far those of persons of a la ter period by the entire removal of the head, enotter head being substituted, there are many examples. But in thi3 statue we have tbe htherto unique instance cf the ongical facp, having bten sunk sufficiently t peru-lt of the feature being altered into thope cf tie lady whose relationship to Eabonlecn I recorded on ths plinth. Tne lettering cn the plinth, and th9 manner in which thf) (ace and hair are carved, would indicate tbat the alteration n& made in the firßtnaücf. thn third century, whila the siatue utilized is a fine work of about tho time of Hardrian if not an earlier era. G, F. SCHMIDT, Brawev snd Uottlor of LÄGEE BE SB rmh M sf.tetel Si.. CX-iX-i ON PYLB BRO'S AT THEIR 3Si ow iSto 29-1 Massachusetts avenue and 329 St. Clair street. COAL OIL ENGINES. la operatloa at 81 West Maryland. Driven Well Kujre-I aad 2 hcrn pover. S&kr than Col oil litnix. R. t liOWSE. fa Uta Azent. w,Nickel Platin to order. ORK I. GO. saps, en V? 68S1V aad SöbüiIy Pavments 97 JEust Washington St. tllN LLOCK OiTOaiTE POST OFFICE. Includes tho old and otablihed BUY AXT V- STEATTON school, toother with the I N 1)1 A N A POLLS BrSINlvS COLL KG E. The departments of the university are in lhst class working order. Persons interested in an honest and cilicient school are invited to see the improved condition of the institution under its ucv management. Actual busii;ef department is now in operation. OSkers and proprietors: Eli F. Brown", President. Orrix II. Trook. Yice-Pre?. Emmett J. Heed, Secretary. Vr. M. Kedman, Treasurer. c Full particulars to any address. WHOA! JANUARY! Harness and Buggies. Jk.jy. EEEBTH, He. 6S East Wash. St. and 71 Eait Court St. cTbe Largest Stock cf names!, Horse Blankets, Clothing. Hobes, etc. ever sbown ia the Slate. JiUgaat Rooms aad Eleg&at Goodd.

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