Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 22, Number 41, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 April 1892 — Page 3

I

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J)B. G. W. LOOMIS,

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2040 north 0th st. Terre Haute, Ind. 1 square from Electric Car Line.

ATTOBUEY -A.T Xi-A.W 228% WABASH AVENUE.

J)E. O. M. BROWN,

ZDJEHsTTIST

Office 511% Ohio Street, Tcrre Haute.

JACOB D. EARLT,

X.iL-W"5TEK

Room 1, Beach Block, Sixth and Main streets

VTXM.IAM MACK.

DAVID W. HENRY.

Notary In Office.

]^[A0K & HENRY.

ATTOB3STBY8.' Linton Building, 521 ObloHlroct.

0. JENKINS, M. D.

Office, 11 South Seventh Streot, telephone, 40, residence, 4te north Fifth street, telophone 17a. Office hours:9a. m. 2 to4 p. m.: 7 to 8 p. m. At residence until uutll 8 a. m., 12 to 1 p. m., to 0 p.m.

A RTIFICIAL TEETH.

JLX DR. F. 0. BLEDSOE—DENTIST. With 80 years practice in dentistry, I can guarantee first-class work. Special pains taken In mending old plates. Tooth extracted without pain.

Main street, near Ninth.

JpELSENTHAL, A. B.

Justice of tJicPcnco «nd Attorney fttLaw, 20 south 8rd stroet, Terre Haute, Ind.

T)R. L. H. BARTHOLOMEW,

"DENTIST. 3#

Removed to 071 Main St. Terre Haute, Ind,

H. GARRETT,

t) Custom Harness Maker. Track Work and Repairing a Specialty, ay south 7th. rear P. J. Kaufman's Grocery

JSAAO BALL,

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Oor. Third and Cherry St«., Terro Haute, Ind la prepared to exeoute all orders in his lint wl th neatness and dlspatel

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J. NUGENT. M. J. BROPHY.

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SOME FAMOUS HYMNS.

When and WJbiere the Inspiration Game to Their Authors.

"Tell Me the Old. Old Story" VTas Wrl«?v tea on Top of a Stage Coach andV-T Sale iu the Arm* of Jesus ?gs on a Train. lH

[COPTKIGHT, 1SK.1

^Everybody has lisard that famous hymn, "Shall We Gather at the River?" "I would rather be the author of that hymn than the preacher of all the sermons that were ever delivered," said

Dr. Dickinson, of Richmond, some years ago, addressing a great Sunday-school mass meeting.

Its author is Dr. Robert Lowrv, and if all the hymns he has mitten, save that one, were blotted out forever, the name of Robert Lowry would live, author of that melody. "I cannot recall just the circumstances under which 'The Beautiful iRiver' was written," said Dr. Lowry. "I have no method of composition. Sometimes the music comes first and words follow, fitted insensibly to the melody. I watch my moods and make note of anything that strikes me as being good. My brain is a sort of spinning machine, as music is running through it all the time."

In appearance Dr. Robert Lowry is of medium height, with full beard, dark, expressive eyes and long dark hair, combed carelessly back from a low, broad forehead. He is at present, and has been for a number of years, pastor of the Park Avenue Baptist church, at Plainfield, N. J. He is a fine conversar tionalist, ever willing to give anecdotes from his past in connection with bis work as a Sunday-school writer. His hearing is defective, and in talking with me he leaned slightly forward, withxino.

Sp

hand beliind his ear 'to concentrate the sound of his visitor's v.oice. Though his impaired hearing affects him unpleasantly in, other affairs of. life he finds it no impediment to his work as a composer. "I could write hymns if I were totally deaf," he said, '.'for with music running through tiiy brain I have only to get it on paper." "Weeping Will Not Save Me" is his favorite of all. He regards it as the most evangelical hymn he over has written. A few of the many of his most celebrated productions are: "The Mistakes of My Life," "Saviour, Thy Dying Love," "We Are Marching to Zion," "One More Day's Work for Jesus," "I Need Thee Every Hour," "Where Is My Wandering Boy To-Night?" apd hundreds more as familiar and popular as these.

Dr. Lowry lives in^ a' beautiful home on Madison avenue, Plainfield, N. J., and possesses one of the finest musical libraries in the country

The most striking event In t)r. Lowry's life in connection with his song writing occurred while he was in London some years ago. Of this pleasing incident he says: "It vfras during the Robert R&ikes centennial. I was in London, and had gone to a meeting in the Old Bailey to see some of the most famous Sunday-school workers in the world. They were present from Europe, Asia and America. I sat in a rear seat alone. Alter there had been a number of addresses delivered in various languages I was preparing to leave, when the chairman of the meeting announced that the author of 'Shall We Gather at the River' was present, and I was requested by name to come forward. Men applauded and women waved their handkerchiefs, and the great audience rose as I went to the platform. It was a tribute to the hymn, but I felt after it was over that perhaps I had done some little good in the world, and I felt more than content to die wlbcn God called."

When Dr. Lowry was asked to add more to the story of his life he answered: "^vC "I would rather not write about myself."

HOW DR. DOAJne COMPOSES. The five authors whose hymns have attracted worldwide popularity are Robert Lowry, P. P. Bliss, W. Et.

ilil

•ii

Do&ne, James McQraaahan and Ira D. Sankey. How generally tiny are used in eiviliwd and tmcivilbsed countries can be more easQy understood when it to staled that letters from tbe four corners of the globe ham been received by some of them saying how their hymns have gone on and on in maajr languages, preaching to and comforting thousand* upon thonsanda.

Dr. W. H. Doane as a wrtter cdf aaflsfsff

music has contributed some of the beat Df tbe Sunday-school hymns now in ose. His home is at Mount Alburn, Cincinnati, and his life has been d®" voted to music in its many phases. He is a scholarly {gentleman and a most entertaining talker. An enthusiast in music, he is briraful of many bright recollections of his early work as a writer. I asked Dr. Doane which of his songs were best kuowri\£

VThat," he answered, "would be. very difficult to say- 'The Old, Old Story,' 'Safe in the-Arms of Jesus,' 'Rescne the Perishing,' 'More Love to Thee,' 'Tell It with Joy,' 'Nearer the Cross,' 'Come, Great Deliverer' and 'Though Your Sins Be as Scarlet' have all been popular, and are very generally used throughout the world A large number have been translated. Each kong has ah interesting history, and oftentimes has been inspired by or written under most peculiar circumstances. "It was while on my way to New York to attend a Sunday-school convention many years ago that the music of 'Safe in the Arms of Jesus' came ringing through my brain, and, through the noise and rush of the railroad train, I jotted down the hymn which has proved one of my best efforts. "Often, tinder apparently the" most inauspicious circumstances, melodies come to me which I had never dreamed of before," continued Dr. Doane. "One of these was 'The Old, Old Story.' I was having a summer outing in New England, and it was while there, one hot June afternoon in the year 1866 or 1867 —I have forgotten the ..exact date— whileT was riding on the top of a stage coach going from the Glen to the Craw»ford house in the White mountains, that the hymn was written. Perhaps it was the grandeur of the rugged landscape .that gave me the inspiration in this case case.

"written, soon after, in 1877, and it came through reading the hymn, almost without my seeking. It has been translated and sung in all lands and tongues where the Adorable Redeemer is known. "Some of my later hymns are: 'Behold What Love,' *Tbrs Crowning Day,' 'If God Be for Us' aild 'Be Ye Also Ready.' "I think there has been some progress made-more of Scripture truth and less of human sentiment, more wheat and less chaff—but there is still use for the sieve and the fan."

Rev. C. R. Blackall is well known, being connected with the American Baptist Publication society. The hymn, "Triumph By and By," was written by him, the music by Prof. H. R. Palmer. iDr. Blackall writes of this hymn: "It was written for ah anniversary of the Second Baptist Sunday-school, Chicago, of which I was then superintendent, possibly twenty or more years ago. It has been translated into many languages, including the Chinese, and holds its place well to-day. My impression is that the anniversary named was just after the great Chicago fire, and it was designed to assure the final triumph no matter how great the difficulties under

rERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL

a

wk

'Pass Me Not, O Gentle Saviour!' was was written for a special service held in the Mount Auburn church,, near, my home in Cincinnati." Vs

V\ A LETTER FROM DR. DOANE. In regard to the' liymnology o£ tile Sabbath-school Dr. Doane writes to me as follows: "One only has to glaMce over the hymns formerly put into Sun-day-school singing books and compare them with those in the books made today to see the marked improvement. I have labored long and diligently to improve the liymnology of,the Sundayschool and I feel sure the tendency is for a higher,purer.style. Of course the're are and always will bp authors and bookmakers who have little idea of what a hymn should be and whose efforts are more easily satisfied wjth a jingling rhyme than a solid, good Gospel or spiritual hymn that will itself! teach a good sermon and leave an impression on the mind and conscience.!'

M'GKANAHAN'S GOSPEL SONGS. McGranahan's Gospel songs are not many in number but they are full of spiritual truth. He has a fine character and his life work has consisted in doing good. His home is at Kinsman, O., and( it is from there he writes concerning* his hymns. 'I Will Sing of My Redeemer' is, perhaps, the most widely known of my Sunday school pieces, it being one of jny earliest in that line. The late P. P. Bliss, whoke name lives on as the composer of so many of the sweetest of Gospel hymns, wrote the words a short time before his death. The music was

4

which

one might be laboring. There is ho question that hymnology is far in advance of what it was ten years ago, and there seems a tendency to the higher musical forms, yet the schools are struggling against a flood of poor and thin music."

FAJiOUS THE WOKLD OTKK. Perhaps the oldest hymn writer liring «is Fanny Crosby- She has her home in New York and is now sixtyfive years old. She is sazd to have oo®posed more Sunday-«chool hymns than any other" ten living writers. /They number three thousand or morel Bar songs are full of pathos sand appeal to the human heart touching^, especially when it is known they are the inspiration of one who has been blind from infancy that her' soul has overflowed with Bn ami pmremt sentiment of Sabbathsongs while this bright worid of oonwaslosttoher foreveK. $

Her favorite hymn, "Pass Me Net, O Gentle Saviour," was written in 1889. "Rescue the Perishing," a year later, and thetse were followed by "Saviour, More Than Life to Me," and "Jesus, Keep Me N«i#the Cross."

Stephen Collins Poster was not & hymn writer, but he is the typical American ballad writer. Although a northerner, his songs of the south -are among the most "beautiful and original that have ever been written. Although the brain that conceived and the hand that wrote the melodies: "The Old Folks at Home." "Massa's in de Cold, Cold Ground." "My Old Kentucky Home." have long since crumbled to dust their work is found in thousands of American and European homes. 4

Mr. Foster was born in Pittsburgh, July 4, 1826, and died in New York, January 13, 1862, at the early age of thirtyseven. He was the composer of "Old Dog Tray," "Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming," "Gentle Annie," "Willie, We Have Missed You," all of which and

SSmS -iJ. MBS. CBOSBY, THIS BLIND HYMN WRITER.

many others were born under Pittsburgh's canopy of smoke and amid her roar and bustle.

Morrison Foster, of Pittsburgh, sends mean interesting incident of how his ^brother Stephen came to give the name "Suwanee River" to that sweetest of all "his melodies: "It was in the spring or summer of 1851 that my brother came into my office on Water street, Pittsburgh, and said to me: 'What is a good name, of a river in the south to put in a song, a 'word of two syllables and of euphonious sounds?' I suggested 'Yazoo.' "'Oh,'he said, 'that is old and h|s ibeen used before.' lp| 'How would Peedee do?' said I. He ^replied quickly: 'That would never answer at all.' "I then took down the atlas from the top of my desk and said: 'Let us look a little through the map of the United States.' My eyes fell upon the little •river 'Suwanee' in Florida and I point.ed it out to him. s,

That's it, that's it,' he exclaimed, fond he immediately filled up the blank an his manuscript with the word •Suwanee.' "The song 'Old Folks at Home,' was 'completed, and E. P. Christy (from whom my brother had a standing order) paid him $500 for the privilege of tinging it before publication. "8WKET BY AND BY."

The great and steady popjilarity of "Sweet By and By" is most noteworthy. .Hopeful and sweet in its sentiment and Associated with a tune easily learned and which, once known,, is ever remembered, this hymn is known-the wide world over. It is heard on land and Bea and sung by all classes and conditions of people. The name of its jauthor, S. Fillmore Bennett, and that of the composer of the "taking" music which accompanies it, J. P. Webster, probably will never be forgotten. "Sweet By and By" was composed in 1868 at Elkhorn, Wis., then Mr. Webster's home. He pd Mr. Bennett were jintimate friends and partners in publishing enterprises. Both words and 'music were produced, it is said, in less than half an hour. The occasion of its production was a fit of mental depression experienced by Mr# Webster which his friend sought to relieve by a composition that has solaced myriads in the like condition. Mr. Webster's sympathies and invention were excited by the effort, and his response was the music which so delightfully harmonizes with the sense of the hyinn.

Mr. Bennett lives at Richmond, Ind., where he practices medicine. He is a man much respected and Beloved, a student and facile writer.*^ His career has been a triumph over difficulties which began in his childhood. It was in June, 1836, that he first saw the light,

at TMw, Erie county, S. Y. His parents made their home at Laics Zurich, ELL, when he was five years old. By the cultivation of the little leisure saved from toll on the farm young BeniMstt laid a foundation of liberal learning which enabled him to spend a year at the university of Michigan. He taught school and wrote for the newspapers before the war. in which saw considerable service. Subsequently lis kept adrag store and prepared for the professional labors in which he has been engaged sinoe 187* Mr. Bennett Is a food specimen of the man whose a* tainmentaand dignified usefulness are the result of hard toil and straggle in the ealttvatkm of superior natural abfi-

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For tickets, time tables, maps and full information apply to D. W. Janowitz, D. P. A., Wis. Cen. lines, Indianapolis, Ind., or to Jas. Ct Pond, Gen. Pass, and Ticket agent, Chicago, 111.

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