Pike County Democrat, Volume 25, Number 26, Petersburg, Pike County, 9 November 1894 — Page 6
— EMPEROB NICHOLAS IL He Proclaims His Father's Death and His Own Aooession. A Sketch of the New Car-A Good Sol* dler, > Good LlnfcaUt »ud In M»ny Hays Resembles His rather —The rntnre Czarina. St. Petebsburg, Nor. 3.—Emperor Nicholas II. has issued a proclamation announcing the death of his father. Emperor Alexander III., and concluding as follow's: “May we be consoled by the consciousness that our sorrow is the sorrow of the whole of our beloved people, and may these people not forIfet that the strength and stability of holy Russia lies in her unity to us and her unbounded devotion to us. We, however, in this sad and solemn hour, when ascending the ancestral throne of the Russian
Emperor Nicholas JL empire and the czardom of Poland and the grand duchy of Finland, in- • dissolubly connected therewith, in the presence of the Most High, record our solemn tow that we will always make our sole aim the peaceful development of the power and glory of beloved Russia, and the happiness of our faithful subjects.” The proclamation concludes by directing that the oath of allegiance to be taken to him, Emperor Nicholas JI., and also to the Grand Duke George, his lineal successor, until God shall vouchsafe to bless with a son the union into which the emperor is about to make with the Princess Alix of Uesse-Darmstadt. Sketch of Nicholas II. The accompanying sketch of the new ,czar is from a recent edition of the Colonge Gazette, a journal of high standing in Germany: “The scientific training of the young prince was su per in tended by his governor and tutor. Gen. Danilovitch.'a man keenly alive to sense of duty, fiiglilj’ educated and with a habit of iookiug at all things in a strictly gentlemanly manner, although of a somewhat dry temperament. He brought up his pupil five from prejudices of all kinds, and this was greatly to his credit, sinee this early education had to be carried out at a time when the •■hatred of German}' and Germans was at its height in Russia. The scientific education was excellent, but not ^ter the fashion of a German gymnasium. AS A YOVXG OFFICKR. “At the wish of the czar, more attention was given to modern sciences than to the classical work. Dead languages were not taught at all, and ancient history only up to a certain point, while, on the other hand, the records of recent centuries, especially so far as they bore upon Russia, were
Grand Duke George. Heir Apparent. carefully read. At the same time a 4*ooddeal of Muscovite history and much that pertaiued to the rise of his own family was kept back from the prince. *The necessary amount of mathematics and a very thorough knowledge of .geography were stilled into him, and particular-attention was given to the language and literature of his own -country and of Germany, France and England. “All these langues Nicholas speaks end writes fluently/ He was also thoroughly instructed in constitutional history, law, the administration of the country, finance and political and social economy. The best masters were selected and care was taken that their instructions had not been warped by political views. “He entered the army at the age of 18 years, and was little more than a child as regards his way of looking upon life at that time. He abhorred the liomage of court and official life, and •was really happy only when he could frolic in an innocent fashion with his younger fellow-officers, when the elder ones, especially his tutor— few whom he has always entertained the greatest esteem—were out of the way. In this way his character became more independent. He became a good officer, and. although anything bat a passionate soldier, he is in a poaitiou to recognize mistakes and to appreciate efficiency. He is demoted to { duty, and does everything that he ua- j dertakes thoroughly. RRSF.MBI.KS HIS FATHER. “In many ways he resembles his father, but is, in scientific knowledge, in advance of him, and has A GOOD I,INOVIST.
this advantage over Alexa-^u* I)!., that, from his earliest yean he has been brought up as the heir-appar-ent, whereas the latter was 30 years of age before he came into that position. He has also, like his father, a certain shyness, which, in his case also, has been mistaken for haughtiness. At home he was brought up in the most loving manner, like all the other children of the imperial family, but the consciousness of the dignity of the position of the czar was more deeply impressed upon him than upon his brothers. To him the tzar was higher than the father. “He has never yet displayed an opinion contrary to that of his father, and it may be pretty positively affirmed that he will tread in his footsteps. But one must reckon with one factor— namely. Nicholas is very easily influenced, and there is fear lest his younger counselors, whom he will have to select later on, should not be inspired with such pacific intentions as the majority of the well-proved counselors of Alexander IIL, in whom, though unconsciously, the traditional friendly feeling for Germany still slumbers. THE FUTURE CZARINA. The little princess who is to be czarina may have considerable influence upon the future of Russia. Half German, half English, bright, intelligent and possessing a mind of her own, she may furnish the qualities which her royal husband lacks. Princess Alix is 33 years old, and is said to be the most beautiful and most witty of all of Queen Victoria's grandaughters. She is the daughter of Prin
v y rn M'incess AH* liwse-Darimtadt. cess Alice of England, and was left an orphan when she was 6 years old. While the loss of her mother was a misfortune in toanv ways, she was less hampered by court etiquette than her royal eousins, and was allowed to develop an individuality which is as marked as it is, r.nusual among royal girls. She is said to be really in love with Nicholas and he with her. Report That MchlHni Would Renounce the Throne. London, Nov. It is reported that the prince and prtaees of Wales were summoned to Liva(ia to strengthen the hands of the czarina in her effort to control the czar and prevent him from acting rashly. One story has it that the young man would like to take #150.000or #300,000 a year and abandon the throne to his younger brother. Grand Duke Vladimir, the dead cm-jx-ror's brother, is credited with being privy to this idea and standing ready to step into the breach as regent for 14)e boy Michael.
AT THE RUSSIAN CAPITAL. Tlte Young Crar't Manifesto Receltttf with IM'ikt. London, Nov. J.~fKe Standard's St. Petersburg correspondent says: “The young czar's manifesto is received with oj>en delight, probably unparalleled in the history of Russian official declarations. The dignified and almost affectionate tone is freely compared with that of the proclamation published upon the accession of Emperor William II. Dispatches from Moscow say that oppressive stillness and mournful expectation overhang that city. Theaters and other places of amusement, banks and exchanges have been closed and business is at a standstill. “It is expected that the body of Alexander III. will lie in state at Kieff and Moscow before it will be brought to St. Petersburg.” The Standard's Vienna correspondent says: “Some time ago a deputation petitioned the czarowit* to intervene for the Russian Jews. A member of that deputation tells me that the ezarowitz repliied: I despise and condemn the expulsion of your countrymen, but my hands are tied.”
FRANCE IN MOURNING. miTwrnl Uriel at the Death of the C*ar. Pajus, Not. 3.—President CasimirPerier presided over the cabinet meeting- held yesterday morning prior to the requiem services held at the Russian chapel. At 11 o’clock the president, wearing the grand cordon of the Legion of Honor, together with the ministers, all in evening dress, went to the chapel, where they were escorted to seats. After the services in the chapel the president and M. Bnrdean went to the pantheon to salute the tomb of the late IVesident Carnot, in conformity to the French custom of visiting the dead on AH Souls’ day. Col. Chamoin accompanied the president and M. Burdeau on behalf of the family of M. Carnot. Both ceremonies were deeply impressive. „ A! me. Casimir-Perier has wired a message of condolence to the czarina on behalf of the union of the women ol France. The congress of Ladies’ Associations for Succoring the Wounded, sitting at Lyons, adjourned until to> day as an evidence of mourning. Dennis Homan, a 16-year-old despera do, was arrested at Elkhart, lad.,
VICTORY OVER PAIN. Rev. Dr. T&lmage Describes the Life in Heaven. Physical Pala and Suffering Will Find Kn Place There, and the Weary and Heavy-Laden Will Find Abundant Beet. The following' discourse on the subject, “Victory Over Pain,” was selected by Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage for publication this week. It is based on the text: Neither shall there be say more pain.—Revelation, xxL. i The first question that you ask w hen about to change your residence to any city is: “What is the health of the place? is it shaken of terrible disorders? what are the bills of mortality? what is the death rate? how high rises the thermometer?” And am I not reasonable in asking, What are the sanitary conditions of the heavenly city into which we all hope to move? My text answers it by saying: “Neither shall there by any more pain.” First, I remark, there will no pain of disappointment in heaven. If I could put the picture of what you anticipated of life when you began it, beside the picture of what you have realized, I would find a great difference. You have stumbled upon great disappointments. Perhaps you have expected riches, and you have worked hard enough to gain them; you have planned and worried and persisted until your hands were worn and your brain was racked and your heart fainted, and at the end of this long strife with misfortune you find that you have not been positively defeated, it has been a drawn battle. It is still tug and tussle—this year losing what you gained last, financial uncertainties pulling down faster than you build. For perhaps twenty or thirty years you have been running your craft straight into the teeth of the wind. Perhaps you have had domestic disappointment. Your children, upon whose education you have lavished your hard-earned dollars, have not turned out as you expected. Notwithstanding all your counsels and prayers j and painstaking, they will not do right. Many a good father has had a bad boy. Absalom trod on David’s heart. That mother never imagined all this as twenty or thirty yrars ago she sat by that child's cradle.
iuur me mis wen u cnapier oi uisappointments. But, come with me, ami I will show you a different scene. By God's grace, entering the other city you will never again have a blasted hope. The most jubilant of expectations will not reach the realization. Coming to the top of one hill of joy, there will be other heights rising upon the vision. This song of transport will but lift you to higher anthems; the sweetest choral but a prelude to more tremendous harmony; all things better than you had anticipated—the robe richer, the crown brighter, the temple grander, the throng mightier. Further, 1 remark, there will be no pain of weariness. It may be many hours since you auit work, but many of you are unresteo, some from overwork and some from dullness of trade, the latter more exhausting than the former. Your ankles ache, your spirits flag, you want rest. Are these wheels always to turn? these shuttles fly? these axes to hew? these shovels to delve? these pens to fly? these books to be posted? these goods to be sold? Ah! the great holiday approaches. No more curse of taskmasters. No more calculation until the brain is bewildered. No more pain. No more carpentry, for the mansions are all built. No more masonry, for the walls are all reared. No more diamond cutting, for the gems are all set. No more gold beating, for the crowns are all completed. No more agriculture, for the harves|s are spontaneous. Further, there will be no more pain of poverty. It is a hard thing to be really poor; to have your coat wear out and no money to get another; to have your flour barrel empty, and nothing to buy bread with for your children; to live in an unhealthy row, and have no means to change your habitation; to have your child siek with some mysterious disease, and not be able to secure eminent medical ability; to have son or daughter begin the world, and you not have anything to help them in starting; with a mind capable of research and high contemplation, to be perpetually fixed on questions of mere livelihood.
i urw jirjj i/m iun#« a ruiuautr auuui the poor man’s cot; but there is no romance about it. Poverty is hard, cruel, unrelenting'. But Lazarus waked up without his rags and his diseases, and so all of Christ's poor wake up at last without any of their disadvantages—no almshouses, for they are all princes; no rents to pay, for the residence is gratuitous; no garments to buy, for the robes are divinely fashioned; no seats in church for poor folks, but equality among temple worshipers. No hovels, no hard crusts, no insufficient apparel. “They shall hunger no more, neither thirst any more, neither shall the sun light on them nor any heat." No more pain! Further, there will be no pain of parting. All these associations must some time break up We clasp hands and walk together; and talk and laugh and weep together; but we must after awhile separate. Your grave will be in one place, mine in another. We look each other full in the face for the last time. We will be sitting togethersome evening, or walking together some day, and nothing will be unusual in our appearance bur conversation; but God knows that it is the last time, and messengers from eternity, on their errand to take us away, know it is the last time; and in Heaven, where they make ready for our departing spirits, they know it is the last time. Oh, the long agony of earthly separation! It is awful to stand in your nursery fighting death back from the couch of your child, and try to hold fast the little one, and sec all the time
that be is getting* weaker, and the breath is shorter, and make outcry to God to help us, and to the doctors to save him, and see it is of no avail, and then to know that his spirit is gone, and t^at you have nothing left but the casket that held the jewel, and that in two or three days you must even put that away, and walk around about the house and find it desolate, sometimes feeling rebellious, and then to resolve to feel differently, and to resolve on self-control, and just as you have come to what you think is perfect self-control, to suddenly come upon some little coat or picture, or shoe half worn out, and how all the floods of the soul burst in one wild wail of agony! Oh, my God, how hard it is to part, to close the eyes that never can look merry at our coming, to kiss the hand that will never again do us a kindness. 1 know religion gives great consolation in such an hour, and we ought to be comforted; but anyhow and any way you make it, it is awful. On steamboat wharf and at rail-car window we may smile when we say farewell; but these good-byes at the death-bed. they take hold of the heart with iron pincers, and tear out by the roots until all the fibers quiver and curl in the torture and drop thick blood. These separations are winepresses in which our hearts, like red clusters, are thrown, and then trouble turns the windlass round and round until we are utterly crushed and no more capacity to suffer, and we stop crying because we have wept all our tears. On every street, at every d«or-step, by every couch, there have been partings. But once past the heavenly portals, and you are through with such scenes forever. In that land there are many hand-claspings and embracings, but only in recognition. That great home-circle never breaks. Once find your comrades there, and you have them forever. No crape floats from the door of that blissful residence. No cleft hillside where the dead sleep. All awake, wide awake, and forever. No pushing out of emigrant ship for foreign shore. No tolling of bell as the funeral passes. Whole generations of glory. Hand to hand, heart to heart, joy to joy. No creeping up the limbs of the death chill, the feet cold until hot flannels can not warm them. No rattle of sepulchral gates. No parting, no pain. Further, the heavenly city will have no pain of body. The race is pierced with sharp distresses. The surgeon's knife must cut. The dentist’s pincers must pull. Pain is fought with pain. The world is a hospital. Scores of diseases like vultures contending for a carcass, struggle as to which shall have it. Our natures are infinitely susceptible to suffering. The eye, the foot, the hand, with immense capacity
of anguish. The little child meets at the entrance of life manifold diseases. You hear the shrill cry of infancy as the lancet strikes into the swollen gum. You see its head loss in consuming fevers that take more than half of them into the dust. Old age passes, dizzy and weak andj short-breathed and dimsighted. On every northeast wind come down pleurisies and pneumonias. War lifts its sword and hacks away the life of whole generations. The hospitals of the earth groan into the ear of God their complaint. Asiatic choleras and ship fevers and typhoids and London plagues make the world's knees knock together. Pain has gone through every street and up every ladder and down every shaft. It is on the wave, on the mast, on the beach. Wounds from clip of eleghant's tusk and adder's sting, and crocodile’s tooth, and horse’s hoof, and wheel’s revolution. We gather up the infirmities of our parents and transmit to our children the inheritance augmented by our own sickness, and they add them to their own disorders, to pass the inheritance to other generations. In A. IX the plague in Borne smote Into the dust five thousand citizens daily. In 544, in Constantinople, a thousand grave-diggers were not enough to bury the dead. In 181S ophthalmia seized the whole Prussian army. At times the earth has sweltered with suffering. -Count up the pains of Austerlitz, where thirty thousand fell; of Fontenoy, where one hundred thousand fell; of Chalons, where three hundred thousand fell; of Marius’ fight, in which two hundred and ninety thousand fell; of the tragedy at Herat, where Genghis Khan massacred one .million six hundred thousand men, and Nishar, where he slew one million seven hundred and forty-seven thousand people; of . the eighteen million people this monster sacrificed in fourteen years, as he went forth to do as he declared, to exterminate the entire Chinese nation and to make the empire a pasture for cattle. Think of the death throes of the five million men sacrificed in one campaign of Xerxes. Think of the one hundred and twenty thousand that perished in the seige of Ostend, of three hundred thousand dead at Acre, of one million one hundred thousand dead in the siege of Jerusalem, of the one million eight hundred and sixteen thousand of the dead at TYoy, and then complete the review by'considering the stupendous estimate of Edmund Burke—that the loss by war had been thirty-five times the entire then present popula
uon oi me giooe. Go through and examine the lacerations, the gunshot fractures, the saber wounds, the gashes of the battle-ax, the slain of bombshell and exploded mine and falling wall, and those destroyed under the gun carriage and the hoof of the cavalry horse, the burning thirsts, the camp fevers, the frosts that shivered, the tropical sons that smote. Add it up, gather it into one line, compress it into one word, spell it in one syllable, dank it in one chain, pour it out into one groan, distil it into one tear. Ay, the world has writhed in six thousand years of suffering. Why doubt the possibility of a future world of suffering when we see the tortures that have been inflicted in this? A deserter from Sebastopol coming ever
to the army of the allies pointed hack to the fortress and said: “That place is a perfect bell P Our lexicographers, aware of the immense necessity of having plenty of words to express the different shades of trouble, have strewn over their pages such words as “annoyance,” “distress,” “grief,” “bitterness,” “heartache,” “misery,” “twinge,” “pang,” “torture,” “affliction,” “anguish,” “tribulation,” “wretchedness,” “woe.” But I have a glad sound for every hospital, for every sick room, for every lifelong invalid, for every broken heart. “There shall be no more pain.” Thank God! Thank God! No malarias float in the air. No bruised foot treads t at street. No painful respiration. No hectic flush. No one can drink of that healthful fountain and keep faint-hearted or faint-headed. He whose foot touches that becometh an athlete. The first kiss of that summer air will take the wrinkles from an old man's cheek. Amid the multitude of songsters, not one diseased throat. The first flash of the throne will scatter the darkness of those who were born blind. See. the lame man leaps as a hart, and the dumb sing. From that bath of infinite delight we shall step forth, our weariness forgotten. Who are those radiant ones? Why, that one had his jaw shot off at Fredericksburg; that one lo6t his eyes in a powder blast;
max. one naa ms oacic orosen uv a fall fram the ship's halyards; that one died of gangrene in the hospital. No more pain. Sure enough, here is Robert Hall, who never before saw a well day, and Edward Payson, whose body was ever torn of distres, and Richard Raster, who passed through untold physical torture. All well. No more pain. Here, too are the Theban legion, a great host of six thousand six hundred and sixty-six put to the sword for Christ's sake. No distortion on their countenance. No fires to hurt them, or floods to drown them, or racks to tear them. All well. Here are the Scotch Covenanters, none to hnnt them now. The dark cave and imprecations of Lord Claverhonse exchanged fortemole service, and the presence of llim who helped Hugh Latimer out of fire. All well No more pain. I set open the door of Heaven until there blows on you this refreshing breeze. The fountains of God have made it cool, and the gardens have made it sweet. 1 do not know that Solomon ever heard on a hot day the ice click in thy ice pitcher, but he wrote us if he did when he said: “As cold waters to a thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country.” Clambering among the Green mountains 1 was tired and hot and thirsty .and 1 shall not forget how refreshing it was when, after awhile, I heard the mountain brook tumbling oyer the rocks. I had no cup, no chalice, so I got down on my knees and face to drink. Oh, ye elimbers on the journey, with cut fee? and parched tongues and fevered temples, listen to the rumbling of sapphire brooks amid flowered banks, over golden shelvings. Listen! “The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead them into living fountains of water.” I do not offer it to yon in a chalice. To take this yon must bend. Get down on your knees and on your face, and drink out of this great fountain of God's consolation. “And lo! 1 heard a voice from Heaven, as the voice of many waters.” MANNA EATERS.
The People of A re bio end Feral* Make It Prom Tamarisk Bram-hee. In some of the eastern countries, notably Arabia and Persia, a manna answering1 closely to that mentioned in the Scriptures is still naturallyproduced in considerable quantity. It comes from the tender branches of the tamarisk, and is known to the Persians by the name of "tamarisk honey.” It consists of tear-like drops, which exude in consequence of the puncture of an insect, during the months of June and July. In the cool of the morning it is found solidified, and the congealed tears may be shaken from the limbs. That, in fact, is one of the methods of gathering manna. Herodotus alludes to the same nutritious product, so that there is no doubt it has . been known in those regions from the earliest ages. It is easy to see how it might be produced in wonderful quantities without any special manifestation of the supernatural. It is a sweetish substance, pleasant to the taste, and highly nutritive. Some students of the Bible hare supposed the manna there mentioned to have been a fungous growth; but while the explanation would be a natural one, the modification which it would require is an unnecessary one. There are numerous interesting things, nevertheless, about the Tarious kinds of fungi, which modern experimentation has decided to be edible; and not only that, but highly palatable and nutritive. What country boy of an imaginative nature but has frolicked in mimic warfare with imaginary foes, getting the smoke for his artillery and infantry from the numerous "puffballs” which a convenient pasture afforded, while his own lung power furnished the ‘‘crash and roar and cheer” for the inspiring contest! Yet science has demonstrated that those very puffballs were once good to eat—in fact, capable of furnishing the most dainty refreshment.—Good Housekeeping. —Lieut. Guyot. of the Freneh army, who recently rode on A bicycle to Constantinople and back, bad a hard experience in Turkey, where he was only able to make thirty miles in three days. In that time he had nothing to eat but four hard-boiled eggs with vinegar, and muddy water with a little raki to drink. The natives insisted on getting upon his machine, and he had great trouble with the dogs. In Bulgaria there were no roads at all,though some were pegged out, and the mud was very sticky. He rode one thousand eight hundred and sixty miles without stopping, except to eat, sleep and have his machine mended, yet he was sev* enty-three days on the way.
A 1* OMn Mwt Fsople overlooked the importance of pet^ » manently beneficial effects and were satisfied with transient action, hat now that it is generally known that Syrup of Figs will permanently cure habitual constipation, well-informed people will not buy other laxatives, which act for a time, but finally in jure the systemLeix, aged two and one-half years, hac been out playing and came in witu a dirty faoe. Her mamma said: “What a dirty face! We will have to call Lulu mamma’s little pig. Come, dear, and have your face washed.” But Lulu objected stoutly, saying : “Pigs don’t have their faces washed.* Hall’s Catarrh Cars Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 73c. A Goon Tims Comc?®.—Farmer Brows <sfter fourteen hours at haying)—“Sere? mind. Tommy; hayiu’ don’t last forever. Just remember that winter’s cornin’ soon an’ nothin’ to do but saw wvod, an’ tend the cattle an’ go to school an’ stxtuy u^hts.” “Er you wanter fiattah er man’s vanity good,” said Unde Eben, “tell’im he ain’t got none.”—Washington Star. loss Oil Upon Troubled Waters is Hale’s Honey of Horehound and Tar upon a cold. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. “That’s a good idea. Carry it out,” Said the editor to the man who came in with a better plan for running the paper.—Philadelphia Record.
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