Pike County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 1, Petersburg, Pike County, 24 May 1888 — Page 4
A.GE’d SF.I5MUX nal Influences of Sorrow and Misfortune*. toufUW story of Hath amt Hoax Woven Into a Herman on the elmtsslsg luUurnec* of (.wl- ' ' Scat ASUrtlonx Rev. T. DeWItt Tnhnage took for the subject of a recent sermon ia the Brook - Ira Tabernacle the story of Ruth anil Boa*, drawing therefrom a les.-on of the Influence of incidents on human lives. IM-i text was: And site treat, i*nrt eamr. nnil g!enne-t tn the hcht after the reapers: *nd her h iw was to l|t> 111 I part of the tWd beinnslux unto Beat, who was of Ite kfril.-ed of Rllruelcch - Ruth 1L. a The time that Hath am) Naomi arrived at Bethlehem it was harvest time. It was the custom when n sheaf fell Iron* u load In the harvestfield f ir the reapers to refnse to gather it up; that was to be left for the poor who might happen t» rone along that way. If there were handful* of grain scattered across the field after the main harvest hod been reaped, instead of raking it, as farmer* do now, i1 was, by tli^ custom of the land, left in it* place, so that the poor, coming along tha‘ way, might glean it and get their bread Bui, you say: *‘What is the use of all these harvestfield* to Ruth and Naomi? Naomi is too old and feeble to go out and toll in the sun; and can you cxjwct that Ruth, the young and the benniifut, should tan her cheeks and blister her hands ill the harvest field?” Bo** owns a large farm, and begoes on! sup the reaper* gather tn_^k> grnin. mtng there, right: behind the swarthy, i-browned re*|ierh, he beholds a hemsI; worn an gleaning —a woman more fit ~ j>r sit u|H»!i u throne "" ' eaves. Ah, that
got their cause; Paul had such * frientl in one Hiphorc.s, who vieited him in joiit ' Christ had such a friend in the Marys, who adhered to Him on the rroest Haomi hint such a one in Butb. who mod out1 Entrant me not to lent* thee, or to return troth following after theei for whHhor tholl gocst I *IU go: an# where then lodjrest. I will lodge; thy people ehatl he n;y p ople. and Uty Rod my Clod; when thou dtest wilt I die, and there will I be buried: the lord tk> wi to me, and more aUo, U aught but death part thee and Again I learn from this subject that paths which open in hardship and darkness often corns out iu places of joy. When Ruth started front ?i«nb toward Jerusalem, to go along with her mother-ta-lr.w, ! suppose the people said; “Oh, what a foolish creature to co away from her father’s l»ous«, to go off with a poorold wnr.uatoward lUo lund' f Jndcat They won't live to gat across the desert. They will fco drowned in th* ■. or the jackals of the wilderness w.ll destroy them.” It wns a very dark morning when Ruth started off with Jfconil: but behold her In lav text in the harvest field of Boas, to be aClanerd to oue of the 1* -rds of the laud, an;! become one cf the grandmothers of Jesus Christ, the Ir'ci! of Glory. And so it often is that n path wh'ch starts veiy darkly ends very brightly. When yon started out for Hesvcn, ol». how dr.rlc was the hour of conviction—how sinai thundered, and devils tormented, and the darkness thickened! All the sins of your life jfounced ujam yon, nnd it was the darkest h ur you ever sow when you first found out your slus. After awhile you went lalo the liarve.U field of God's mercy; you begem to glean in the fields of divine prom'ee. and yon had more sheaves than you eosld carry, as the voice of God addressed you, saying: Blessed Is ibe torn whose transgressions are forts wo and whose sin* are covered. A very dark starting in conviction, a verv bright ending in the pardon and the boras and the triumph of the Gospel! Bo, very often in our worldly business or iu onr spiritual ocreer. we start off on
exposure to which Ruth <ru subject#*, every intelligent woman wilt tad something to do. I know there is * sickly sentimentality On this subject. Id some families tbero ere persons of no practical service to the household or community; anti though there are so many woes all around about them in the world, they spend their time languishing over a new pattern, or bursting into tears at midnight over the story of some lover who shut himself. They would not deign to look at Ruth carrying back the barley on her way home to her rnother-ln-lnw, Naotul. All this fastidiousness may seem to do very well while they are under the shelter of their lather’s house; but when the sharp winter of misfortune comes, what of these butterflies? Persons under indutgeut pareutage may get upon the mselves habits of Indolence; but when they come out into practical life their soul wlH recoil with disgust and chagrin. They will feel in their hearts what the poet so severely sa tirited when he said: Foil:* are so awkarri, Urines so Impolite, They're elegantly pained from morning until ttfcht* Through that gate of indolence how many men and women have marched, useless on eerth, to a destroyed eternity! Rpinola said to Sir Horace Vere: ••Of what did your brother die?" “Of having nothing 'to do,” was the an
ewer. "Ah,” Raid Spinola, “that’s enough to kill any General of or. " / Oh! can it be possible in this world, where there is ao much suffering to.be alleviated, so 'much dsxkness to be enlightened, and so many burdens to be carried, that there is tiny person who can not find any thing to dot Mme. de Stael did a world of work in her time; and, one day, while she wm seated amid instruments of. music, nil of which she han mastered, and amid manuscrlpt books which sbt’fiad written, some one said to her: , / “How do yon find time to attend to all these tilings?” “Oh,” she replied, 1 am proud of. any '•these are not the My cliittf boast is fact that I have seventeen trades, one of which I could make a liveliI if necessary." tnd If in secular spheres there is so Lch to be done, in spiritual work how It the field! We want more Abigails, ire Hannahs, mote Rebeccas, more Jrys, more Deborahs consecrated— jy, mind, sonl—to the Lord who bought fm. ace more; 1 learn from my subject the i of gleanings. 'Ruth going into that vest field might h«ive -aid: ore Is a straw, and there is a straw, Iwhat is a straw? I can’t get any barfor myself or my mother-in-law out of i separate straws.” kt so said heautiffil Ruth. Khe gath- ] two straws, and put them together, | more straws, until she got enough to sheaf. Putting that down, she 1 gathered more straws, until she anther sheaf, and another, and ananother, and then she brought fall together, and she threshed them land she had an ephah of barley, i bushel. Oh, that we might all be lore! Rnrrltt learned many things while iu a blacksmith's shop. Aberthe world-renowned philosopher, philosopher in Scotland, and he got ilosophy, or the chief part of it, t a physician, he was waitingfor of the sic); room to open. ""Yet ty there are in this day who say so busy they have no time for or spiritual improvement; the duttes of life cross the field like reapers and carry gff all U»e hours, _ tThly bore and there a frttgnt left that U not worth gleaning. Ah, iy friends, yon cou ld go into the busiest ty and busiest week of your life and find olden opportnnitiea, which, gathered, light at least make a whole sheaf for the ord’s garner. It is the stray opportuuies and the stray privileges which, taken p and bound together and beateu out, rill at last fill you with abounding joy. There are a few moments left worth the [leaning. Now. Ruth, to the field! May ach one have a measure full and runting over! Oh. you gleaners, to the field! Lnd if there be in your household au igcd one or a sicl: relative that is not trong enough to come forth and toil In his field, then let Rnth take home to eeble Naomi this sheaf of gleaning: He that goeth forth mod weepeth. beurlng melons se-.l, shall doubtless come again with totem:, bringing hiii sheaves with him. May the Lord God of Ruth and Naomi onr portion forever! SOLOMON'S TEMPLE.
What It Known About Hit Moat t'lmou Structure Cttr Erected. It t* pro battle that the actual temple stood an an elevated platform, like that which now rise* sixteen feet above the level of the ground qpon the oenter of which lice the {Teat Sakhara Uock, which gives Ita name ■ Dome of the Bock" to the Mosque of Omar. The temple of Herod, according to the Mishna, waa entirely built on raised ■rcht-a. We know that Imdde the temple no atoue waa visible; all waa of glided cedar wood and olive and oypireas wood, variously i carved and tape*tried In parts by-purple and embroidered hanging*. llut what waa the external aspect qif the aacrrd building itself—“the Joy of the whole earth*'• Strangely enough our existing records leave ne entirely in the dark on this point In the works of later rabbis are have glowing and , highly Imagined re descriptions of the. aspect of the third temple, lint even these are too vagee to help our Imagination. The onf.de of Solomon's temple, and Its general j appearance are left almost uiidescnbed We j know that there was a richly-ornamented parch, but we do not even know with any certainty whether the building Itself wan j 'covered with one llesel roof, or whether, qu the outside aa vrell aa within, the Holy of Holies appeared to be of lower j deration. W» do not know whether the 1 root waa flat, or, na the rabbis aay, ridged, j On the top of it there seem to bare been ] some gilded uppe r chambers. There can be ! no reasonable doubt that tbs roof of the old ] tabernacle rose In, a ridge, for otherwise the outer akin* would have sunk down and torn the curtains, which, in ease of a rainfall, might have broken through altogether. It is said the temple waa covered with beams and boards of cedar, but unless they were sloped to both skies or supported by pillars, it would have been difficult to secure beams more than thirty feet long from becoming warped and sagged. We know that on approaching it we should have seen a thrvestorled house, over which roes the latticeperforated wall of the temple Itself; but, besides this uncertainty about the roof, we do not even know whether the outer surface was of stone, or whether it was overlaid with cedar wood, or with precious metals, aa the chronicler seems to Imply, nor whether it eras ornamented or left blank. H*y, It has eves been a matter of dispute whether the general character of the temple was Greek, or Egyptian, or Phoenician, though the nee of cedar beams and large blocks of stone Jiewa in squares, and Joined without mortal, together with the whole history of the structure, seems to prove decisively that the style of architecture was borrowed directly from neighboring Tyre. The emotion occupied seven years and a half. In spite of the small rise of the actual temple. Sue, Indeed, waa no element of it* tfloencc, fur it waa much smaller than an English church. Bat it must, be ihered th.it it was not intended for either priests or worshipers Ancient and Eastern worship waa mainly in the open air, the shrine itself only symbolised the of God. Even when we allow for peeper
AN OLD-WORLD BUDGET. Tm Emperor Francis Joseph has worn the crown during forty years of the fiftyeight he has lived. Kaiser Willhelm during his four military campaigns performed 728 days of actual se rvice in the field. Qciirx Victoria's message to Victoria, of Germany, on the accession or Frederick HL, was: “ By daughter; my sister.” Trains are fifty thousand more women than men in Berlin, and more than half of the dtisens of that city were born outside of th<s city. Parisiarb have been imusing-themselves with a “ham fair,” at which booths were filled with sausages, hams and lard, and are now enjoying a “gingerbread fair,” say the correspondents. Tu : question agitating the British Government is whether to make Parliamentary prov ision for the Prince of Wales’ daughters, who are marriageable, or to Wait until they are engaged to be married, Trce love’s most signal triumph over poverty and age must bo in the recent marriage in Devonshire between a spinster of-seventy-five and a bachelor of sixty-six, both in receipt of parish assistance. Eves in the Holy Land, sanitary improvement is tbe order of the day. Bethlehem has well paved streets and Jerusalem is becoming clean. Tanneries and slaugh-ter-houses have been banished from the city proper, and a system of sewerage is under way. A Geruj x newspaper tells of an old Gypsy fiddler who awoke one night to find his hut flooded with water, and who, having no movable goods except an old bedstead, a stool and a bass viol, seated himself on the latter and paddled to dry land, using one of the slats of his bed as au oar. Tin English Record Office announces the speedy completion of their publication of documents relating to the history of England previous to the reign of Henry VIII. The work has been going on for thirty years, and the series already extends beyond mo hundred volumes, of which over forty-five thousand copies have been sold.
DOINGS OF NOTE. Tat two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the founding' of the city of New Haven wax celebrated recently. Aooxnmon was lately held at Asheville, N. C-, the object of which was to secure for the Bouthers States a larger share of the foreign immigration to this country. A compaxt to maintain a permanent expedition in Chicago has been incorporated. It has a capital stock of't500,0(M, und interested in it are many capitalists of that city. A coxtbact has been entered into at Fresno, Cal., to introduce three hundred negro families into Unit county to take the place of the Chinese in orchards und vineyards. A Chinaman was immersed and received Into the Immanuel Baptist Church in Chicago not long sim-c, being the first Mon golian to join that denomination by baptism in this country. * We are informed that a new and powerful-ly-written story, delineating college life in America, and the remarkable religious experience of a former infidel and ewer students, m which the great truths of Christianity are dealt with in a manner calculated to interest all readers, has just been written expressly for the Vkrtitimn lhrald, by Rev. L. 8. Keyser, author of the famous and popular story, “ The Way Out.” The first chapter appears Hay 34, under the the title of “ The Epochs of a Life,” and will be continued from week to week. This journal is now the most popular and extensively-read illustrated religious paper published. For sale or can be ordered at all news-dealers. Price, 8c. Subscription price, 11.50 per year. 1 Address 68 Bible House, New York Awsjteb says that an ordinary beetle can draw twenty times its own weight. It o&gfcl le go on the road a* a theatrical star. A Jetting on the Halt Grievously disturbs the stomach of invalid travelers. The motion of the ship and vibration of the screw in crossing the ocean does the like for many in good health. All travelers should have, as a companion, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which fortifies and regulates t ho stomach and bowels, counteracts hurtful influences of climate und changes of temperature, and is a sovereign remedy for malarial, rheumatic and kidney ailments. Netei ask a crust of a crusty man. Ask him for meat, for he’ll give you a cold shoulder with pleasure. 1M another column of this issue will be found an entirely new aud novel specimeu of attractive advertising. It is one of the neatest over placed in our paper and we think our readers will be well repaid for examining the supposed display letters in the advertisement of Prickly Ash Bitters. The professor of penmanship can not doa flourishing business when he drops his pen and uses a type-writer. FREE! A 3-foot French Glass,'Oval Front, Nickle or Cherry Cigar Case, Merchants only. K.W.Tansill & Co.,Chicago The man who wears no collar is never troubled with a tie-up.—X T. Journal. Ladies who possess the finest complexions are natrons of Glenn’s Sulphur Soap. Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 50c. A winding stare—watching your best girl ss you hold her skein of floss. It wilieted with Sore Eyes use Dr. Isaac Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it26c. Made out of whole cloth—porous plasters. —Pi**,
THE MARKETS Nttr You*. Mar a, 1888. CATTLK-Sttlre Sierra.» 4 51 U* 5 40 COTTON—Middling. *t 10 vixnra—tioodtocboim...... a aa © 5 ai WHEAT—No. * Red. SK-i® 101 CORN-No.* . *4*4 »*> «K OATS—Wetter* Mixed. t S8 ® «» PORK—Meta fnewi.« SS © IS 50 ST. LOUIS. » COTTON—Middling. 8*4® , »N BEEVKS-Geod io Choice. 4 SO © 4 75 Fair to Medium.... 8'.5 HOGS—Oemmon to Select.... 4 75 SHEEP—Fan- to Choice. 151 FLOUR— Patent*. 4 *5 , XXX to Choice. S# WHEAT—No, * Red Winter. « .. CORN—No. * Mixed. . 55**** 56 OATS-No.*... 555*7* * BYE-No. «. ... «* «* «a TOHAi OO—Lags . **> ‘t »l» Leal—Medium.;.. *00 ® 15 «» RAY—Choice Timothy. 15 0t A 17 50 BUTTER—Choice Dairy. If © S> EUGS—Freth. 11 ® 1H* PUKK—Standard Met* met). »« 4B8 BAOliN—Clear Rib.. 8*tt *S 5 00 5 80 6 u> • 480 U 4 *) LaR1>— Prime Steam-WOOL-Fair to Cbo! e. CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shipping.. 4 00 HOGS—Good to Choice. 5 40 SHBKP—Good to Choice ..... * 00 FLOUR—Winter..... 4 75 Patents.. 1 55 WllKAT-No. * Spring.... »V* *H4 CORN-No. . . 3»‘.« 5*H OATS-No * While. M-i® 54* POR»—New Mem. 14 45 © 14 SO KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steen-... 5*5.4* 4 75 BOGS—Satet at .7.. 4 S5 © * *• WBEAT-No. *. *5)4* 85'4 OATS-No. t. *1 • a*‘S CORN-No. *.. *1 tt 51*4 NEW ORLEANS 5 10 87 45 50 l« 84. » -8S4 LOUISVILLE. . ~ iT—No. 2 Red. 8814* » I—No. * Mixed. 51*© hi OATS-No. a limed. *5 *a *S -C—Met*, . . . 14 75 ® 11 00 N*Sbi»'8«>.:..„". 8*§ 8JS " Ulag.. « » F°te^ ^ABLEMEN V stockmen Ifhtta Greatest Remedy knoWkj tjoi?s©3V larr tiRucGisrs and ocaicsn. ■CHMAMOBOIB Ct MinUMf COqjSi-ES HP f luidgft* x 6BSAX raouBE smor
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Ibii beat aad autetKcaedjrfcr Oats rtf 1 dlmoees eaaaed by may deraaceneat air tba Urer, Kidney*, Dyupepaia, Sick Billon* Complaint* ud Malaria of all kiadii yield raadily la tba beaeSeeat taflocaeo of to tba taste, tooea ap tits _. aad preaerrea health. It Is partly Voetable, aad eaaaot tell to proTO bearfldal, both to old aad you*, a a Blood Parlder it la aaperior to 01 nr*. Sold ererywkero at $1.00 a bottle. MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Wbnlly unlike arttflflsl ijnleM. l ure of mind w underlay. Anjr book leaned In ono rending. Classes of 1087 at Baltimore. Id -HatPhlladelp - * at Detroit at Bouton, large classes of Columbia Law stmlenta. ‘ r. Wellteli •ley. Oberlln University of I*enn.. rsity. Chautauqua, Ac., Ac. End greed ai Yale. _, Michiiran Unlversl_____ by Rkhard Proctor. the Scientist. ;ons. If. W. AsTOiiu Jtn»A h P. Benjamin. Jndce Gibs aw. Dr. Brown. K H. Cook, Principal N, r. State Normal College. Ac. Tauaht by correspondence. Pror cectt_ post cuss from Prof, Loisrrri.23T fifth Av., N.T. •■r liXl THIS rATta story lOMyaa awa CURES RHEUSATISII, K Ak Jfc
COLD in HIS AD . -icnutiCATARRH.
asarssrar«5 C*ta‘?*3S5&! ¥S^MlS?^eiri»U«B Is the outgrowth, or result, ot this /rest mw valuable experience. Thousands oftasninoDials, received from patients and from phyatclaus who have tested it in the more aggravated and obstinate eases which had baffled their skill, prove it to be .the most wonderful remedy ever devised for the relief and cure of suffering women. It is not recommended as a "cure-all." but as a. most perfect Specific for woman’s peculiar ailments. Jls a powerful, invigorating tonic, imparts strength to the whole _ system. anl"to~tha*w5mS~anS it£ appendageTh; ^3H^’’F0dreb^O,f^herC»5& dressmakers, seamstresses, "shop-sirIs, housskeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription to the greatest earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonle. As a soothing and strengthening nervine. “Favorite Prescription" kuiif qualed and to Invaluable in allaying and subduing nervous excitability, irritability, exhaustion, prostration, hysteria, other distressing, nervous symptoms commonly attendant upon functional and organk) disease of the womb. It induces refreshing sleep and relieves mental anxiety ahd daSPBn?5»res*e Fa v write Prescription is a legitimate medicine, carefuflr compounded by an experienced and skillful physician, and adapted to woman's delicate organization. It is purely vegetable in its composition and perfectly harmless in Its effects In any condition or the system. For morning sickness, or nausea, from whatever cause arising, weak stomach, indigestion, dyeSipsia and kindred symptoms, it* use. In small eea, will prove very beneficial. “Favorite Prescription” is a positive cure for the most complicated and obstinate cases of leucorrfaea, excessive flowing, painful menstruation, unnatural suppressions, prolapsus, or falling of the womb, weak back *• female weakness, ants version, retroversion, braring-down sensations, chronic congestion. Inflammation and ulceration of the womb, inflammation. pain and tenderness In ovaries, accompanied with “ Internal heat." Aa • regulator and promoter of functional action, at that critical period of change from girlhood to womanhood, “ Favorite Proseription ” to a perfectly safe remedial a^ent. and can produce only good results. equally efficacious and valuable In its effects when take __;en fop those disorders and derangements incident to that later and most critical period, known as “ The Change of Life." Favorite Prescription.** when taken In connection with the use of Dr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and small laxative Coses of .Dr. Piercers Purgative PeBets^Llttle 1 Jver Pllta), cures Liver, Kidney and diseases. Their combined use also removes blood taints, and abolishes cancerous scrofulous humors from the system. “Favorite Prescription** is tbe only medicine for women, sold by druggists, under it positive guarantee, from tbe manuacturers. that it wlU give satisfaction in every tase, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle-wrapper. und faithfully carried out for many years. Large bottles (100 doses) $1.00, or six ' bottles lor $5.00. For large, illustrated Treatise on Diseases of Women (ISO pages, paper-covered), send ten tents in stamps. Address. VMM’s Oispsssiry Midleii Assoelitisi, M, BUFFALO, Jf.T.
W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE. FOR GENTLEMEN. The only Hoc calf_ I world made without tack, or nulla. At atyllafe ■leaa Shoe In the and durable a* those costing IS or hi, and haying no » or naila to wear the stocking or hurt the feet. ;ee them aa comfortable and well flttinK aa a __ .--flttlng i hand sewed shoe. Buy the beat. None genuine anon bottom "W. I* Douglas B Shoe. ra^Hl < W. L DOtOLAS %* SHOE, the original and only hand aewed welt M shoe, which equals custom-made shoes costing from B toB. w. 1. DOTeLll U.se IHOI la. ceiled tor heavy wear. _ _W. 1U DOtOLlI U SHOE la worn Ben. and la the beat school shoe in the wi Ann - - - _ _ goods are made In Congress. Button and Lace, and If not sold by youfjdealer. write W. 1_ DOCOLAfl, B reek tern. Mam Mason SlHamun ORGANS. Hl«fee*« Honor* at all Great World** Kskibtttoa* airiOMtjle*. f«to «•*•. For Ca*h. Zmmf ^aym 9t Rented. Catalogue,** pp.. 4to. free. PIANOS. ORGAN&P1AN0 CO
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THBI OSBORN BROTHERS , removed to their elegant Sen Building on Hal* street, where they have a large i splendid line ot BOOTS AND SHOES, ror Men. Women and Children. We Seep R. L. Steven*’ and Emmerson’a brands ^ of Fine Shoe*. Indiana. C. A. BURGER & BRO., FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS, Petersburg, Indiana, Hare BeceM Their La® M of late Styte a{ Pieee Gooflx, of the very beat Suitings and Broadcloth*. Perfect Fits mi Stiles fimreeteei. Prims es lew as
