Pike County Democrat, Volume 27, Number 2, Petersburg, Pike County, 22 May 1896 — Page 7

TALMAGE’S SERMON. Dtecooroe Upon thS Folly of Keeping Bad Company. la Rcllgioa, Idlers, Perm Is ten* the Spirit of Gambling la the Category. Bier. T. DeWitt Talmage chose “Bad Company" for tfiSssnbject of a recent sermon to his1.Washington congregation taking for wWtbxt: Walk not thou In the way^rith them.—Proverbs L. IS. Hardly any yonng man goes to a place of dissipation alone. Each one is accompanied. No man goes to ruin alone. He ad ways takes some one else with him. !^|ay it please the court,” said a ccHSvu^d criminal, when asked if he had anyting to «|y before sentence of death was passed upon him— “may it please the court, bad 'company has been my ruin. I Teeeived the blessing of good parents, and, in return, promised to avoid all evil associations. Had I kept my promise, I should have been saved this shame, and been free from the load of guilt that hangs around me like a vulture, threatening to drag me to justice for crimes yet unrevealed. I, who once moved in the first circles of society, have been the guest of distinguished public men, am lost, and all through bad company. This is but one of the thousand proofs that evil associations blast and destroy. It 'is the invariable rule. There is a well man in the wards of a hospital, where there are iOO people sick with ship fever, and he will not be so apt to take the disease as a good man would be apt to be smitteu with moral distemper if shut up with iniquitous companions. In olden times prisoners were hqyded together in the same cell, but each learned the vices of all the culprits; so that, instead of being reformed by incarceration, the day of liberation turned them out upon society, beasts, not men. r We may, in onr places of business, be compelled to talk to and mingle with bad men; but he who dpliberately chooses to associate himself with vicious people is engaged in carrying on a courtship with a Delilah whose shears will clip off all the locks of his strength, and he will betrippel into perdition. Sin is catching, is infectious, is epidemic. 1 will let you look over the millions of people now inhabiting the earth, and I challenge you to show me a good man- who. after one year, hae made choice^ and consorted with the wicked. A thousand dollars reward for one such instance. 1 care .not bow strong yonr character may be. Go with the corrupt and you will become corrupt, flan with burglars, and you will become.a burglar. Go among the unclean, and you will become unclean. Many a young man has been destroyed by not aopreeiating this. He wakes up some morning iu the great city, and knows no one except the persons into whose employ he has entered. As he gt>cs into the store all the clerks mark him, measure

Him ami aisruss nun. iaayoung men of the store wish him well, bpt perhaps wait for a formal introduction, and even then hare some delicacy about inviting him into their associations. But the bad young men of the store at the first opportunity approach and offer their services. They patronise him. They profess to know all about the* town. They will take him anywhere he wishes to go—if he will pay the expenses. For if a good young man and a bad young man go to some place wjier© they ought not, the good young man has invariably to pay the charge. At the inodhent the ticket ” is paid for, or the champagne settled for. the bad young man feels around in his pockets and says: “I have forgotten my pocket-book.” In 4t> hours after the young man has entered the store the bad. fellows of the establishment slap him on the shoulder familiarly and, at his stupidity in taking certain allusions, say. "My young friend, yoe will have to be broken in;” and they immediately proceed to » break him in. Young man. in .the name of God, I warn you to beware how yon let a bad man talk familiarly with you. If such an one slap you on the shoulder familiarly, turn around and give him a withering look, uotil the wretch crouch in your presence. There is no monstrocity of wickedness that can stand abashed under the glance of purity and honor. God keeps the lightnings of Heaven in llis own scatbard, and no human arm can wield them; bat God gives t<o every young man a lightning that he may use, and that is the lightning of an honest eye., Those who have been close observers of city life will not wonder why 1 give warning to young men, and aay: "Beware of evil companions.” I warn you to shun the skeptic—the young map who puts his fingers in his vest and langhs at your old-fashioned religion, cud turns over to some my stery of the Bible and says: "Explain that, my pious friend; explain that.” And who says: "Nobody shall scare me; I am not afraid of the future; 1 used to believe in such things, and so did my father and mother, but 1 have got over it.” Yes, he has got over it; and if yon ait in his company a little longer yon will get over it, too. Wlthour presenting one argument against the Christian religion, such men will, by their jeers and scoffs and caricatures, destroy your respect for that religion which was the strength of your father in his declining years and the pillow of yoor old mother when sue lay a-dying. Alma! a time will come when this blustering young infidel will have to die, and then his diamond ring will flash Oo splendor in the eyes of Death, as he stands over the couch, waiting for bis soul. Those beautiful locks will be uncombed upon the pillow; and the dying mao will say: "1 can not die —I can not die.” Death standing ready beside the couch, says: "You must die; you have only a half minute to live;

lei; me bare it right away—yotu**oul. ” “No,” saya the young infidel. “he#© are my gold rings and my pictnresrtake hem alL ” “No,” says Death; “what do I care for pictures!—your soul.” “Stand back,” says the dying infidel. “I will not stand back,” says Death, “for you hare only tea seconds now to lire; I want your aouh”\ The dying man says; “Don't breayhe that cold air into my face. You^erowd me too hard. It is getting dark in the room. 0 God!” “Hush,” says death; “you said there was no God.” “Pray for me,”exclaims the expiring infidel. ' “Too late to pray,” said Death; “but three more i seconds to lire, and I will count them | ofF^rone—two—three.” He has gone! | Where? Where? Carry, him ont and | bury him beside his father and mother, i who died while bolding fast the Chris- j tian religion. They died singing; butj the yonng infidel only said: “Don i breathe that cold air into my face, j Yon crowd me too bard. It is getting j dark in the room.” Again,.I urge you to shun the com-I panionship of idlers. There are men hanging around erery store, and office, j and shop, who hare nothing to do, or j act as if they had not. They are apt to come in when the firm are away, | aud wish to engage you in copyersa- j tiion while you are engaged in your j regular employment. Politely suggest | to sucli persons that you hare no time to gire them during business hours, j Nothing would please them so well as j to have you renounce your occupation 1 and associate with them. Much of the j time they lounge around the doors of j engine houses, or after the dining j hour stand upon the steps of a fashionable hotel or an elegant restaurant, wishing to gire you the idea ■ that that is the place where tlfey dine, j But they do not dine there, ,|*hey are j sinking down lower and lowe#, day by j day. Neither by day or night hare j anything to do with idlers. Before you admit a man into your acquaintance j ask him politely: “What do you do j for a living?" If he saj-s, “Nothing, 1 ; am a gentleman,” look out for him. He may hare a very soft hand, and very faultless apparel, and hare a j high-sounding family name, but his touch is death. Before you know it, j you will in his presence be ashamed of j your work dress. Business will become to you drugery, and after awhile you will lose your place, and after- i ward your respectability, and last of all your soul. Idleness is next to villainy. Thieves, gamblers, burglars, shoplifters and assassins are made j from the class, who have nothing todo. ] When the police go to hunt up and ar- j rest a culprit, they seldom go to look j in at the busy- carriage factory, or be- ; hind the counter where diligent clerks j ace employed, hut they go among the j groups of idlers. The play is going on at the theater, when suddenly there is a scuffle in the top gallery. What is it? A policeman has come j

ill, uuu, iciiinuj; u*ci, vv»j*pvv* on the shoulder of a young roan, saying: “I want you. sir.*’* He has not worked during the day. but somehow has raked together a shilling or two to get into the top gallery. He is au idler. The man on his right hand is an idler, and the man on his left hand is an idler. I urge you to avoid the perpetual pleasure-seeker. I believe in recreation and, amusement* God would not have made us with the capacity to laugh if He had not intended us sometimes to indulge it. God hath hung in sk}\ and set in wave, and printed on grass many a roundelay; and he who choose pleasure-seeking for his life work does not understand for what God made him. Our amusements are intended to help us in some earnest mission. -The thunder cloud hath an eage exquisitely purpled, but with voice that jars the earth it declares: ‘‘I go to water the green fields.” The wild flowers under the fence are gay. but they say: “We stand here to make room for the wheat field, and to refresh the husbandmen in their nooning.” The stream sparkles and foams and frolics and says: “I go to baptize the moss. I leave the spots on the trout. “I slake the thirst of the bird. I turn the wheel of the mill. I rock in my crystal cradle muckshaw and water lily.” A id so, while the world plays, it works. Look out for the man who always plays and never works. You will do well to avoid those whose regular business it is to play balL, skate or go ;t-boating. AU these sports are grand in their places. I never derived so much advantage from any ministerial association as from a ministerial club that went out to play ball every Saturday afternoon in the outskirts of Philadelphia. These recreations are ; grand to give us muscle and spirits for our regular toil. I believe iu muscular Christianity. A mao is often not so near God with a weak stomach as when he has a strong digestion. I But shun those who make it their j life occupation to sport. There are young men whose industry and usefulness hare fallen overboard from the yacht. There are men whose business fell through the ice of the tkating pond, and has never since been heard of. There is a beauty in the gliding | of a boat, in the song of the skates, in the soaring of a well-struck bail, and 1 neyer see one fly but I involuntarily throw up my hands to catch it; and, so far from laying au injunction upon ball playing, or any other innocent sport, I claim them all as belonging of right to those who Vnl in the grand industries of church and state. Again, avoid as you would ; . aid the death of your body, itund and soul anyone who has in him the gambling spirit. Mi n w|to want to gamble will find places just suited to their capaci1 ty, not auiy in the underground oyster cellar, or at the table back of the curtain, covered with greasy cards, or in the steamboat smoking cabin, where Aim- bloated wretch with rings in his ears deals out his pack and winks at . the unsuspecting traveler—providing free drinks all around—but in gilded parlors and amid gorgeous surroundings. A young man having suddenly inherited a large property, alts at the hasard tablet and takes up iu a dice box

the estate won bj a fathers lifetime sweat, and shakes it and tosses it away. Intemperance soon stigmatizes its victim —kicking him out, a slaving tool, into the ditch, or sending him, with the drunkard’s hiccough, staggering up the street where his family lives. But gambling does not in that way expose its victims. The gambler may be eaten up by the gambler’s passion, yet you only discover it by the greed in his eyes, the hardness of his features, the nervous restlessness, the threadbare coat arid his embarrassed business. Yet he is on the road to hell, and no preacher’s voice or startling warning, or wife’s entreaty, can make him stay for a moment his headlong career. The infernal spell is oh him; a giant is aroused within, and though you may bind him with cables, they would part like thread, and though you fasten him seven times round with chains, they would snap like rusted wire; and though you piled up in his path Heavenhigh Bibles, tracts and sermons, and on the top should see the cross of the Son of God, over them all the gambler would leap like a roe over the rocks, on his way to perdition. The whole world is robbed! What is most sad, there are no consolations for the loss and suffering entailed by gaming. If men fail in lawful business God pities and societj* commiserates; but where, in the Bible or society, is there any consolation for the gambler? From what tree of the forest oozes there a balm that can soothe the gamester’s heart? In that bottle where God keeps the tears of His children, are there any tears of the gambler? Do the winds that come to kiss the faded cheek of sickness and to cool the heated brow of the laborer whisper hope and cheer to the emaciated victim of the game of hazard? When an .honest man is in trouble, he has sympathy. ^ “Poor fellow!’’ they say. llut. do gamblers come to weep at the agonies of the gambler? In Northumberland was one of the finest estates in England. Mr. Porter owned it, and in a year gambled it all away. Having lost the last acre of the estate, he came down from the saloon and got into his carriage; went back; put up his horses, and carriage, and town house, and played. He threw and lost. He started for homeland on a side alley met a friend from whom he borrowed ten guineas; went back to the saloon and before a great while, had won £?0,000. He died at last a beggar in St. Giles. How, many gamblers felt sorry for Mr. Porter? Who consoled him on the lo>s of his estate? What gambler subscribed to put a stone, over the poor man's grave? Not one! Furthermore, this sin is the source of uncounted dishonesty. The game of hazzard itself is of;en a cheat. How many tricks and deceptions in the dealing of the cards! The opponents" hand is oftimes foumj out by fraud. Cards are marked so'that they may be designated from the back. Expert gamesters have their accomplices, and one wink mav decide the game. N The dice have been found [loaded with platina, sc that do&blets come, up every time. These dice are introduced by the gamblers unobserved by the honest men who have come into the play, aud this

accounts lor the fact tnat yy out oi a 100 who* gamble, however wealthy when they began, at the end are found to be poor, miserable, haggard wretches, that would not now be allowed to sit on the doorstep of the house that they once owned. lu a gaming house in San Francisco a young man, having just come from the mines, deposited a large sum upon the ace and won $‘-*2,000. But the tide turns. Intense anxiety comes upon the countenance of all. Slowly the cards went forth. Every eye is fixed. Not a sound is heard, until the ace is revealed favorable to the bank. There are shouts of “Foul! foul!" but the keepers of the table produce their pistols, and the oproar is silenced, and the bank has won $05,000. I)o you call this a game of chance? There is no chance i about it. But these dishonesties in the carrying on of the game are nothing when compared with the frauds that are committed in order to get money to go on with the nefarious work. Gambling, with its needy hand, has snatched awar the widow's mite and the portion of the orphans; has sold | the daughter's virtue to get the means to continue the game; has written the ^counterfeit's signature, emptied the banker's money vault, and wielded the assassin's dagger. There is no depth of meanness to which it will not stoop. There is no cruelty at which it is appalled. There is no warning of God that it will not dare. Merciless, unappeasing, fiercer and wilder it blinds, it hardens, it rends, it blasts, it crushes, it damns. Have nothing to do with the gamblers, whether they gamble on large or small scale. Cast out these men from your eon • pany. Do not be intimate w ith them. Always be polite. There is no demaud that you ever sacrifice politu ess. A young man accosted a Christian Quaker with; **Oid chap, how did you make ail your money?" The Quaker replied; “By dealing in an article that you mayest deal in if thoa wilt—civility.’ Always be courteous, but at the same time firm. Say “no" as if you meant it. Have it -understood in store, sad shop, and street that you will not stand in the companionship of the skeptic, the idler, the pleasure-seeker, the gambler. Bather than enter the cmipanionship of such, accept the invitation to a better feast. The promises of God are the fruits. The harps of Heaven are the music. Clusters from the vineyards of Gou have been pressed into tankards. The sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty are the gnests. While standing at the banquet, tc fill the cups and divide the clusters, and command the harps, and Welcime the guests, is a daughter of God ou whose brow are the blossoms of Paradise, and in whose cheek is the fiush of celestial summer. Her name is Religion. Her ways are ways ot pie&mataeas. Aa4 all her paths are peace.

ALFALFA AND CLOVER. OoBctMloni Drawn from an Indiana experiment Station Report. Alfalfa has been grown several yean At the Indian experiment station, and W.C.Latta, agriculturist of the station, speaking from experience, says that although alfalfa can, when well started, endure drought better than clover, it cannot produce three or more crops the same season with out irrigation. This information is necessary to counteract statements made by some enthusiasts, who may, unintentionally, mislead some into displacing clover with alfalfa, on account of the alleged immense yields of the latter. At the station it was found that alfalfa is more feel.de than clover at the start, and is very liable to be choked by weeds the first season; that it increases In vigor until the third year at least, and thus maintains itself better and longer in the soil than a common red, mammoth or alsilce clover; that in very dry seasons—like 1895—it may yield more hay than clover; that in normal seasons it sometimes yields less than clover; that but two cuttings of alfalfa may be expected the same season without irrigation. In any fertile toil, having sufficiently porous sub-soil to permit it to strike deep root into the lower, permanently moist earth, the alfalfa will probably do [ well. It is said to do best in light, calcareous loams, underlaid with a porous subsoil. - The land should be thoroughly and deeply drained, and may be plowed .to advantage. Subsoil in the fall, but sow the seed in the spring. Close pasturing by any class of stock is injurious to alfalfa, and sheep should not be allowed upon it, but if not grazed too close it will endure pasturing fairly well. It is, however, best for hay, In any soil where red clover thrives it is not wise to discard it for alfalfa * without first experimenting with the j latter. If experience proves it superior | to clover as a seed, a soil renovator and a yielder, then a change can be safelj made.—Journal of Agriculture. FARM HORSE POWER. Krected oa a .Barn Floor and l*ted with j Kirdlent Swim. I send herewith a roUgh sketch of a j power erected ou barn iloor, which j gives good satisfaction for cutting j straw or cornfoddeP. The large wheel j in diagram is 12 oV 14 f«fet in diameter, i made of wood, The hub of the big j wheel is 4 feet in diameter, made of j inch boards nailed together, with j square hole in center t© tit post. The spokes, 8 in number, are 2x4 inch hemlock scantling, bolticd to hub with two %-inch bolts in each. The rim is made of three tiers of inch boards, cut the proper circle and about 7 inches - -.ft - !

HOMEMADE 1IORSE POWER. wide. The two outside tiers p^ject over the midtile tier 1 inch, in order to make groove for chain to run in, ,The post A in diagram is 6 inches square, hard wood, rounded off at each end to I j un in bearings on floor and in overlay. The big wheel is fastened on post high j enough for horses to walk underneath, j The chain B is a size heavier than eonjmon plow chain. The jack in illustfalion is made from the gearing of an old | Buckeye mower. It is shown fastened j to post in bdrn. C is; a wooden pullev | 15 inches in diameter,- with groove for j chain and bolted to raehet wheel, origI inally on the main shaft ^f the old mow- ! er. D is the bevel gearing and F is a j wooden pulley bolted to cog wheel for j i belt or rope to connect with cutting | j box. X is the tightening pulley, | | hinged at (a) with weight i> attached ] j to keep chain taut.—Cor. Ohio Fanner. : MULES FOR FARMING. : Coatlaootu Work Seems to Be a Daily Advantage to Them. t There is much unnecessary prejudice ! against the rnuleo It exists among : those people who have had little or no j experience with this; creature. He is not an extnfragant eater, in the first place. His preference is rather .for the cheaper provender and a very moderate quantity of corn and oats. He is built ' for work, in that his looks do not suggest any aristocratic tendencies. Under -j sensible handling he is trained to work : in much less time than the average horse. He has a “mind of his own,” and will not always hurry on short notice; but he is willing to plod along steadily early and late, and thus accomplishes more in a day of heavy w ork than the average horse team. No animal endures drudgery so weiL Continuous work seems to be a daily Advantage. When worked steadily a mule team is very reliable* in every essential requirement A “level head” and more than “horse sense” is characteristic of this faithful brute: With many years’ experience w ith them on a farm the writer would prefer that on a farm of a quarter section or more that three-fourths of the j teams should be mules. With the great glu* in the horse market HAjhecvnt years ift would certainly be advantageous ttj the general breeding interests if more of the horse stock be bred to produce mules for the next two years or more. We may be sure that the mules will ; not multiply themselves aa another . generation of horses may dc. It’s v'Tth thinking about seriously, j —Western Rural, j -— -fThe beet systems of cropping are invariably hose which call for the moat thorough preparation of the suiL 8/ JM M

“Ha Is good-natured, is her* “Goodaaturedt Why, I have known that man to wear a smiling iaoe when he was speaking of taking off a porous plaster I”—Boston Courier. free by Dr. Kline's Great Nefre Restorer. No fits after first day's use. arvelous cores. Treatise and <3 trial bottle free. 1^. Kline, 981 Arch St., Phila., Pa Ah En’dcrixo Ttstimoxial.—First Aspirant for Fame—“We're got a hen that’s laid an Easter egg!” Second Ditto—“Pooh, that's Cothiog; my father’s laid a foundation stone!”—Fun. if How Mt Throat Hurts!—Why don’t yon use Hate's Honey of Horehound and Tarf Pike s Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. “Can you cash a check for fire dollars?” “Oh, yea*” “All right, lend me five.”— lift!* ; ___? THE MARKETS. New York. May 18. CATTLE—Native Steers.« 4 00 @| COTTON—Si iddling. .... & FLOUR—Winter Wheat....mu, 2 40 & WHEAT— No. 1 Hard.....' 72*® CORN—No. 4. S Oats—No. 2. <& PORK—Old and New Mess,... tOO o ST. LOUIS. COTTON—Middling.. 7KA BEEVES—steers... 2 56 ~ „ Cows and Heifers. * 65 , HOGS Fair to Select.. S 10 ( SHEEP—Fair to Choioe.. 8 75 * LOUK—Patents... 3 60 __ Fancy to Extra da.. 8 75 WHEAT-No. s Red Winter.. 67 COHN—No.^ Mixed...... OATS-Na 8 . RYE—No.2...’ 38 w TOBACCO—Lugs... 300 Q „ Leaf Burley...... 4 5) w 1 HA Y—Clear Timothy. 8 00 a] BUTTER—Choice Hairy. 9 (g. LOGS—Fresh... .... a PORK—Standard Mess (New). 7 65 © BACON—Clear Rib. 4\(£ LAKH—Prune Steam. .... a) CHICAGO CATTLE*-Shipping.. 3 45 A HOGS—Fair to Choice.. 3 25 @ SHEEP—Fair to Choice.. 8 75 & FEOUR—Winter Patents. 3 50 & „ Spring Patents.. 3 10 id WHEAT—No. 8 spring.. .... <(£ No. 8 Red. CORN—No. 2. 88v*iA OATSt^u. 2...*. PORK—Mess (new).... 7 60 a KANSAS CITY. CATl'LE—Shipping Steers.^. 3 00 g HOGS—All Grades.7.. 3 10 JA WHEAT—No 3 Red.... 63 ^ OATS—No. 2...i 16 46 CORN—No. 2. NEW ORLEANS. FLOUK-High Grade. 3 55 A COKN-No. 8. 34 % OATs—western. a5S4vt Ha Y—Choice.’19 00 ; POKiv—Old Mess............... .... (/A BACON—Sides................. .... u COTTON—Middling. u LOUISVILLE WHEAT-No 2 Red. «g A COKN—No.2 Mixed..... 31 A OATS—No.3 -Mixed.,..... 28V,A PORK- New Moss.. .... 8 00 46 BACON—Clear Rib. 5'Ci6 Co V10N —M iudii ng. if

Tho Commissary D«p«rtaMt Of the human system is the stomach* An consequence of its activity, the body!* supplied with the elements of hone, brain, sen>ous and muscular tissue. When icdigeatiow Impedes its functions, the best agent for ia** parting a healthful impetus to its operations is Hosietter’s Stomach Bitters, also a curative for malaria, bilious and Kidney cocaplaints, nervousness and constipation. Since the bicycle era envelops us quite All the universe seems to seek “safety” ha flight. —Boston Courier. Sleep lingers ail our lifetime about cmr eyes, as night hovers all day in the hough «dt the fir tree.—Emerson. The Greatest Medical Discovery * of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERT. DONALD KENNEDY, of ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our comraoa pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula, down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred* cases, and never failed except in two cases(both thunder humor.) He nas now m hfc* possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfkt cure is warranted? when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Bead the label. If tiie stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Hat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedh time. Sold by all Druggists.

When buying sarsaparilla,... sr I I \ D ASK FOR THE BEST AND YOU’LL GET AYER’S: ASK FOR AYER’S AND YOU’LL GET THE BEST. ::i The remedy with a record: >•.•50 years of cures.

“Contains More Flesh Forming Matter Than Beef.” That is what an eminent physician says of good cocoa. The Cocoa made by Walter Baker & Co., Ltd., Dorchester, Mass., is the best. Sec that Imitations are not palmed off on you.

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WE PA Y mn Trwh tatlLPIZE. No Money to Invest, no Risk. RiUBirt,! ‘- -

PENSIONS DATCMTe tekhj. gouty. • ■ ®Pw»»Slon«y.*tc. M. D.o’liri,** IK JUtta. VoU.. Major tad Adjt-Ou. of 3tanro**« w Amy of to* Cteul Um, * U**. Mm -— -—-* —■ A. N. K.. it 1806, ■i