The Christian index. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1892-current, October 13, 1892, Page 5, Image 5

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. ... ~ , And all other CHRONIC DISEASES cured with cer- Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Asthma, Catarrh, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Asthma, Catarrh, Neuralgia, after all medicines hye failed. Best references in S IHm m 1 r ’ a n n , 1 AT . . ’ city and throughout the State. Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Asthma, Catarrh, Neuralgia, -“-■~ i! j i - SECTROpoisE company, - . . Room 45, Gould Building, Atlanta, Ga. MISS Mary E. WRIGHT, : ; Editress A JAPANESE SALOON CLOSED. Writing from Osaka, Japan, the Rev. William Wynd, the famous Baptist Missionary there, says: Some time ago I opened a country station at a very needy place in the Island of Shikoku. A few having pro fessed their faith in Christ, and asked for bsptism, we went to hold a series of meetings and baptize those who gave evidence that their hearts had been changed by the Holy Spirit. We had a time of great blessing. Our meeting-house, a pretty little place, holding about two hundred people, was full every night. The first night there were some inclined to be noisy. They shouted, whistled, and called out, “It is false.” But after reasoning with them, and saying how uncourteous it was to condemn a man before they heard him, their native polite ness restrained them, and there was no more interruption. Wo held meetings every night, and often far into the night, for a week, and dur ing the day we had many inquirers. I baptized four men and four women, who had. been receiving instruction for some time, and who gave evi dence of conversion. The mother of one of the young men baptized, kept a liquor shop, which, like the same trade in America, is a profita ble one. I showed him the evils of the drink, and readily obtained from him a promise to have nothing to de with the accursed thing. He seemed greatly concerned about his mother, and when he went home he reasoned with her so that she, too, resolved to have nothing to do with it. Although it was nearly midnight when they came to that decision, the young man came right back to my house, and aroused me out of bed, to tell me the good news, when we rejoiced together, and praised the Lord who was indeed showing that the hearts of all men are in his hand. His mother is now a candi. date for baptism, and although we are keeping her waiting a little, I think the fact that she was willing to give up her business for Christ’s sake, is an evidence of her conver sion.—Christian Herald. THE TRUE PHILOSOPHY OF GIV ING. Not many years since, writes a clergyman, I had occaision to solicit funds to aid in the prosecution of a work of benevolence. I stepped into the office of a Christian brother, with whom I had a partial acquaint ance, and incidentally mentioned the unpleasant business before me, and inquired of him for the residence of a certain benevolent individual and added that I hoped to get one dollar of him. After receiving direc tions, I turned to go out: “But stop,” said this brother, “suppose you let me have the privilege of contribu ting a little of the money which the Lord has lent me, to this cause. Put down £IOO for me.” I expressed my surprise that he should contrib ute so liberally, and remarked that I should feel myself in duty bound not to call on him very soon on a similar errand. “Well then,” said he, “my brother, I think you will very much mistake your duty. If you knew how much pleasure it gave me to contribute of my sub stance to the Lord, you w’ould feel no reluctance in calling again. And now let me charge you, when en gaged in similar business, never to pass me by. Call and I think I shall be able to do something; and if not, my prayers shall go with you.” A DARKENED 80UL LIGHTED. Once in the heart of Africa, a na tive was dragged before Stanley by his men, for stealing a gun. Stan ley looked at the gun—it surely be longed to the expedition. The poor man, frightened at the mention of Stanley’s name and his presence al most beyond speech, could only find voice to say this wonderful thing: “I am a son of God; I would not steal.” He repeated it again and again, but could say nothing else. Stanley comprehended that he must lie a convert of some missionaries at work in that region, and gave him the gun, allowing him to go. At the next stopping station they found the gun waiting for them, with the explanation that the native had found it and was taking it to the missionary for instructions when he was captured. What a light must have touched this darkened soul, who, reared in all vileness and sin, had come to realize the divine fatherhood, and could say, “I am a son of God.”—Christian Herald. WORK WITH THE UNSAVED. BY REV. C. H. MOSCRIP. THE WOMAN OF SAMARIA—THE OUTCAST. Note the fact that this passage contains more material than can be used. It is a treasure-house of prin ciples concerning foreign mission work. Christ used the meeting with the woman of Samaria as an object lesson in teaching his disciples the laws of spiritual harvest. (See the sermon from this passage by Dr. J. A. Broadus.) One of these laws may be stated briefly. Christ reaches the mass through the individual. Not the city for an audience, but a single woman. Our lesson has to do only with the way he dealt with this un saved woman. I. He deliberately planned to meet her. It is God’s purpose to save. The seemingly fortunate chance is divinely intended for this very end. There are no happen ings in God’s providence. Nothing comes by accident. God brings you into contact with others that at this point of contact you may be a Lei p to bring them to accept Christ. Learn to look upon every contact with the unsaved as a divinely planned occasion to lead them to Christ. 11. He gains her good will by receiving a favor. It has been said : “He stoops to receive little at tentions. He borrows Peter’s boat for a pulpit.” One reason why the poor despise the rich is because they can do nothing for them. Nothing so breaks down barriers as a neigh borly service. In personal work there must be a basis of real fellow ship established. This may often be done by the acceptance of some simple service. But be sure also to give something better in exchange. Use every courtesy of life as a means of establishing fellowship with the unsaved. 111. When Jesus received the drink he pressed upon the woman’s attention her need of the Water of Life. “If thou knewest. . . ” Christ never permitted such oppor tunities to pass unimproved. He had the art of lifting a conversation to a spiritual level. To do this well is an art. It is the art of sanctified tact. Be possessed with the pur pose to turn every act, record, and event occurring in your intercourse with the unsaved to account in bringing home to their hearts the truth as it is in Jesus. Use, not sanctimonious cant, but sanctified tact. IV. Christ, not mercilessly but mercifully, pressed home the truth about this woman’s sinful life. We need to be more careful than we of ten are in our denunciation of sin, for we are ignorant of the facts and of the way to use the facts of sin, in other lives. After every allowance is made, however, we must be faith ful in witnessing against sin. Lov ingly witness as to the evil of sin. Be lovingly truthful. “Truthing it in Love.” V. Jesus would enter into argu ment even in defense of the faith of the Fathers and in explanation of the divine revelation. “Ye say,’’ and “we say” gives place to the sim ple declaration of the gospel. “I that speak unto thee am the Mes siah.” Avoid controversy but use the Word to lead the seeker to Jesus.—The Examiner. A CHINAMAN’S VIEW. A Chinaman, in a letter to one of his former teachers, gives the fol lowing bit of New Testament exe gesis : “I led the Young Men’s Christian Association meeting on the Sunday before January 11th. The subject which I gave out, ‘The Christian must be born twice ;” and also read the Scripture in Chapter 3 of the Gospel of St. John, and ex plain to them. I said if a man in this world born twice, ho only die once, and if a man born once he die twice. I mean if a man born twice he must born again of the Spirit• nis soul shall save ; that is, he only die once. If a man born once his THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1892. body shall die, and his soul also perish ; that is, he die twice. Af ter the meeting was pass one of the old gentleman came to me and said, ‘Are you a missionary ?’ I answered him,'‘No,’ I said ‘I am laundryman.’ And good people thought I was mis sionary.”—Foreign Missionary. household. Love Work* Wonder*. Wc read a legend of a monk who painted In an old convent coll in days bygone Pictures of martyrs and of virgins sainted, And the sweet faced Christ with crown of thorn. Poor daubs—not fit to be a chapel’s treasure! Full many a taunting word upon them fell; But the good abbot let him for his pleasure Adorn with them his solitary cell. One night the poor monk mused, “Could I but render Honor to Christ as other painters do, Were but my skill as great as is the tender Love that inspires mo when his cross I view! “But, no—'tie vain I toil and strive in sorrow; What man so scorns still less can he admire; My life’s work is all valueless; tomorrow I’ll cast my ill wrought pictures in the fire." He raised his eyes within his cell—oh, wonder! There stood a visitor—thorn crowned was he. And a sweet voice the silence rent asunder— “l'll scorn no work that's done for lov, at me." And around the walls the paintings shone re splendent With lights and colors to this world in known; A perfect beauty and a hue transcendent That never yet on mortal canvas shone. There is a meaning in this strange old story— Let none dare judge his brother’s worth or need; The pure intent gives to the act its glory— The noblest purpose makes the noblest deed. —Christian Million. APPLE-BUTTER AND APPLE-JELLY, Apple-butter is made from sweet apples that are pared and sliced or stewed until they will rub through a seive. They are then added to fresh cider that has been boiled to one-fourth its bulk, and the whole is sweetened to taste. Some makers use less cider and a few lemons. It is generally marketed in small, wood en tubs holding from five to ten pounds each. It will keep perfectly if put at once into tubs or jars, cover ed with a cloth dipped in salicylic acid and then over all with cotton batting. It is often made in large quantities. The price varies accord ing to the care used in making and with the season. A real first-class article is generally in good demand and will pay a good profit. Apple-Jelly.—The ripe apples should be ground and boiled hard a few minutes, then strained through a cloth, and the juice, after being sweet ened with nearly its bulk of sugar, run through a common sorghum evaporating or other pan. About eight gallons of juice will make a gallon of jelly. The price will vary according to the article made and the demand. A good article will generally pay a fair profit if econom ically managed. A little experience will help you much, and it would he well to commence in a small way first —Farm and Fireside. FEEDING HAY TO PUOLTRY. Only a few years ago, had the feed ing of hay to poultry been suggest ed it would have created a surprise, hut in experiments made it has been discovered that clover hay can be used to form a large portion of the ration in winter. The hay is cut very fine, not exceeding half an inch in length, scalded or steamed, and fed once a day. If a small portion of cornmeal and bran is sprinkled over the cut hay it will be an improve ment. Clßver is not only highly nitrogen ous, but is rich in lime, a substance required by the hens for providing the shells of eggs, and which is in a more soluble form in the food than in the shape of oyster-shells or other insoluble substances. It contains nearly thirty times as much lime as docs corn, and is about equal to corn in its proportion of flesh-forming ele ments. One of its advantages as food for hens is that it is not only nutritious but bulky, and aids in the digestion of the grain. It is valua ble in supplying those substances which are lacking in grain, and as it is plentiful on all forms, and requires but a few moments for its prepara tion, there is nothing to prevent its use. By allowing a ration of scald ed clover to the hens after green food is gone, they will keep in better lay ing condition and the production of eggs will be increased.—Farm and Fireside. HOW TO FEED LAYING HENS. In the first place, do not overfeed. Bear in mind that if a hen is to keep in laying condition she must have exercise. When you feed grain, do not put it in a trough where the hens can stand and eat their fill, but scatter it far and wide, as the hens will find every grain. If the snow is on the ground after the cold sea son sets in, throw the grain in leaves or cut straw, so as to keep them busy. Do not feed grain exclusive ly, but give a variety. Allow ground meat, or meat and bone fresh from the butcher, three times a week Vary the grain, feeding corn, wheat, and oats, and give cabbage, cooked turnips, clover leaves, or any other food that the hens will eat. ASPARAGUS GROWING, “How must I treat the seed that grows on this season’s stalks, in order to raise an new supply of plants ? How should I transplant the young plants ?” Cut tho stalks when the berries have turned a scarlet color, and take them to tho barn when dry. You can strip the berries off by hand, or thrash them out with a flail. Next, put the berries into a tub and mash them with a wooden pounder the best way you can ; after which sep arate the black seed from the pulp by washing. Pour water upon the mass, and pour it off again with all the pulp matter on top. The seeds remain at the bottom. Repeat this several times until you have the seeds all clean and free from pulp. Then spread them upon a board or cloth in the sun to dry. Be sure to have them thoroughly dry before putting away. You can sow this seed in fall or spring in rick soil, having rows a foot apart. Thin the plants to stand two or three inches apart in the row. They can be transplanted in fall or spring, and at from one to two years old. Have the ground reasonably rich (the rich er the better the results.) Open furrows five feet apart, and eight or ten inches deep, and place the plants in them not less than two feet apart. Cover gradually. The best late strawberry I know of is the Gandy, but it is not very prolific, although where late berries are in demand it is often very prof itable. Parker berry and a magnificent fruit, but while it sets a great many berries it re. quires a very rich Soil and plenty of moisture to do its best. This season I shaded a part of the bed with a brush screen, such as I use for evergreen seedlings, with the result that the late setting of fruit on the part shaded matured well, and we had much more and perfect fruit from this part than from that not shaded. —The Alexander is a reliable early peach ; the Old Mixon Free a good medium, and the Heath Cling a good late kind. The Elberta is a new va riety that I think a valuable market variety on account qf its beauty, but it is not of good quality. Probably if your peach orchard was on high, not very rich land, you would be far surer of a crop. The trouble with your trees, I think, is that the trees grow so late in autumn the fruit buds do not mature sufficiently to stand the winter. I once had a small peach orchard in New York on rich, alluvial soil which was care fully cultivated, and another on the hillside near by, growing in poor land in grass, without any cultivation except a little mulching around the trees. The latter would drop their leaves early in autumn, while the former were still green, yet, I never got a crop from the trees in the val ley, but grubbed them out, while the apparantly neglected trees on the hillside bore very regularly.—Farm and Fireside. GRAPE-VINE CUTTINGS. It is generally safer to winter grape cuttings in a pit instead of planting them out in autumn or leaving the wood on the vines over winter, to be made into cuttings in the spring. It is not necessary to have sand to keep them in during the winter, for any sandy loam weil dried will do nearly as well. I prefer to put them in tho tops down and tho butts covered about three inches, thus cov ering tho entire cutting. Do not make them until just before winter, and use only well-ripened wood. Plant out quite deep in spring, leav ing the upper eye at the surface of tho ground. The soil should be plowed several times before the cut tings arc planted.—Farm and Fire side. destboyingOmkroaohes, Dr. Riley recommends good, fresh insect powder, such as buhach. He says : “Just before nightfall go into the infested rooms and puff it into all crevices, under baseboards, into drawers and cracks of old furniture, in fact, wherever there is i crack, and in the morning the floor will be covered with dead and dying, or de moralized and paralyzed roaches, which may easily be swept up or otherwise collected and burned. With cleanliness and persistency in these methods, tho pest may be driven out of the house, and should never be allowed to get full posses sion by immigrants from without.” POULTRY AND PORK. The cost of the production of pork is less that of the cost of poultry, but the prices of poultry are higher. The keeping of a flock of hens, how ever, is not for the production of meat only, as a hen may lay ten dozen of eggs before she is sent to market. There is no conflict between the hog and the fowl. Both have their uses on the farm, and as far as tho matter of profit is concerned, the hen can compare favorably with any of the animals.—lbid. ©ltUdrnV* (JJimu’L’ llis Love and Care. I know not where his islands lift Their fronded palms in air; I only know I cannot drift Beyond his love and care. O brothers’ if my faith is vain. If hopes like these betray* Pray for me that my feet may gain The sure and safer way. And thou, O Lord! by whom are seen Thy creatures as they be, Forgive me if too close I lean My human heart on thee? —John G. Whittier. ONE WEEKS WORK. A Sunday-school missionary in West Virginia gives the following items from his experience : “Leaving home on Tuesday morn ing 7 :40, I started to Nickolas conn ty, in tho interior of the State. It was in December, but the weather was very fine for this climate. On the railroad train I made a pleasant acquaintance with the family of a Methodist minister. Eight oclock at night I quit the train at a little sta tion in the dark, deep New River canyon. “I had two heavy valises of books. A brother met me at the station with a good horse. We mounted and rode up the steep mountain side, winding round and round, the cliffs towering at times one hundred feet above us, and if we had gone over the side we would have landed per haps two hundred feet below. At nine o’clock we stopped to stay over night, tired and hungry. A good supper and comfortable bed was waiting for us. The next day we rode about fifteen miles to a Baptist church where a “protracted meeting” was going on. I staid there that night and preached, and went over three miles next morning and began an institute. Remained over Sunday giving three lectures each day in the Bible and Sunday-school work, preaching on Sunday and dedicating a meeting-house. “The people were very glad to see me and treated me very kindly. They were very deeply interested in my normal lessons, and took hold of them with an astonishing earnestness. While the people live in a primitive way. they are remarkably kind. I stopped with a family who lived in two rooms, some fifteen or eighteen feet square, In these two rooms were seven persons, and they cooked, ate, slept, sat and manufactured all their bedclothing and wearing appa rel, and kept tho post-office. They were contented to work and live thus until they could pay for their farm and build a larger house, which they expect to do soon. When I talked about people in the West and South without Bibles, the man and his wife each gave me one dollar for our Bible work. “I left at daylight on Monday morning, having sold out most of my books, which had been hauled from the railroad on a wagon ; we strapped my two valises on one horse and put a boy on him, and I mounted another and started for the railroad. I felt that la grippe was laying hold on inc. I reached the Ohio River at eight o’clock, spent an almost sleepless night, took an early train home, to find so much mail matter to look after that I did not have time to yield to the demands of la grippe, but kept up and at my work as usual.” CALLED TO A KINGDOM. There was once a young and tal ented prince, heir to the throne of Russia, who was giving himself to every form of dissipation. He took up his residence in Paris, and entered heartily into all its gaieties. One evening, as ho was sitting with a num ber of others making merry, a mes sage was privately conveyed to him that his father was dead. Pushing away from him tins dice and the wine cup, he rose up and said: “I am em peror!” and forthwith announced that his must henceforth be a different kind of life. Young people, I have to tell you of a kingdom to which you are called. To* you the Lord Jesus says: “I appoint unto you a kingdom, as my Father hath appointed unto me.” When the day came that Saul was actually to be made king, the youth was “not to be found.” He had hid himself among the stuff. Saul concealed amid the baggage—is he not the picture of many whom God is calling to a kingdom, but is chin deep in busi ness, so absorbed in worldly matters that he cannot attend to the affairs of his soul?—Thain Davidson. WHAT, AS WELL AS HOW. A sermon is too often like Hodge’s horse. It is overdone with brasses and bells, harness and harmony, but there is no real strength in it, no life and vigour. It is fine, but not forci ble. Now, it strikes everybody that the trappings of a poor old half-star ved horse look like mockery. You cannot plough fields with ribbons and bells; you want muscle and sin ew; and so there is no moving men’s hearts with pretty phrases and musi cal nothings. What is needed are thought, truth, and sound doctrine, and the Spirit of God. Young men are apt to think less of what you say than how to say it; but our advice is, think of both in due proportion Set the matter before the manner; get the horse first, and get a good one, and then harness him. Give the people the grand old Gospel, and plenty of it, and they will not much mind the way in which you bring it forth. A good horse should be decently harnessed, and Divne truth should be fitly spoken: the mis chief is,that some appear to think that the harness makes the horse, and that a fine style is the main thing in a sermon. Churches would not so often be empty if ministers would take heed what they preach as well as how they preach.—C. H. Spurgeon. MAKING AND BREAKING WILLS. In 1891, more than four thousand wills were contested in the courts of the United States, and about sixty per cent of these were broken. This should teach several lessons: First, give all you possibly can in life, and so be your own executor, beside en joying the pleasure there already of seeing your gifts at work; second, make your will, not on your sick bed and in the face of death, but in health and in calmness, so that no thirty-day limitation, nor the plea of undue influence may thwart your sacred purpose; third, see to it that he who writes your will understands well the titles of the various boards and corporations of the church named in your bequests.—The Jlis sionary Guardian. nwy unw.il. We think we value health; but are all the time making sacrifices, not for it, but of it. We do to-day what we must or like; we do what is good for us—when we have to. We could live in full health, do more work, have more pleasure, amount to more, by being a little careful. Careful living is the thing to pu' first; let us send you a book on it; free. Scott* Rows*,Chemi,:.,:,*South <th Avenue. New York. Your drugglM keep, Scott’, Emiiliion ol cod-liver oil—all drnfgilt* (verifier, do. |i. 43 READY SEPTEMBER 15. Gospel From Two Testaments! Sermons by Baptists on tho letornntioml f). S. Lrmodb for iso:). Editor: President E. ton.i. Andrews, of Brown University, Sent postpaid on receipt, of price, fl.ilA. Large dis cotiut to the trade and to clubs of 10 or more. Order early of E. A. JOHNSON & CO.. iaug’.’lt Providence, K. I. DO YOU WANT DO YOU WANT Teachers? Schools? Southern School end Teachers’ Agency Assists Colleges,Schools, and Families in se lecting Competent Teachers without cost. 2. Aid Teachers seeking possitions to secure suitable places at small cost, 3. Teachers wish ing positions,and school olticers desiring teach ers, should address, with two cent stamp, S. S. OOLWINE, Proprietor, Nashville, Tenn. 24deciv A BEAUTIFUL EYE Is often ruined by Inflammation, Weakness or Granulated Lids Our Old Reliable Eye Water, -Aires the trouble at once without pain. BY MAIL, 25 CENTS. 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We also agree to forfeit S 8 Five Hundred Dollars to sny person whose skin 8 Scan be injured in the slightest possible manner, S E or to anyone whose complexion (no matter how g E bad it may be), will put bo cleared, whitened, im- g g proved and beautified bf the use of Derma-Royale. s E Tut up in elcgaaL t.ylr in large Bight-ounce bottle*. E E Price, si. Evaav bottle guaranteed, s g Derma-Royale sent to any address, safely packed 2 • and securely sehled from observation, safe delivery g = guaranteed, on receipt of price, SI.OO per bot- x 8 tic. Send money by registered letter or money a Border with your full post-office address written s E plainly; be sure to give your County, and mention 8 8 this paper. Correspondence sacredly private. 3 “ Postage stamps received the same as cash. 5 Ai'lrcu The DERMA-ROVALE COMPANY, 3 Corner Raker nnd Vise Sb. 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