Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893, February 22, 1889, Image 8
The Democrat. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY CLEM. C, MOORE. OR A WF0RD VIL L E, G E0RGIA. Kri-.red at th<* po«tofBc* at C raw ford v !!» Georp x. k% ■ecottd'Clacif ma.J matter. It is Rial, i by the Medical Hu.,id, that tl»c United thivernnierit 1 t paid more money ail tliQ flit: rli- ■ a - 'if hogs than il ha-, for disc;. ■ afferlino the human raeo. An agjt.i! ion ornoii; the imtives of fn ilia in the pfovi e of iicrigal is disturb ing Kngli*Ji , (heads. It i- said to be nn otllg'rowih of 1 he Iri-i struggle for home nth:, and may take the form of a general refli: il to j it tab' to England. The iMri.il .brnni.'il reeenlly hfadul its column of Michigan news with the following clwlleiig' ; “Leap year h gone, yc( can fifty oru. tell of a bona fide cast! wlert in n Miehimm girl really proposed 1o a mart during the* year? (ilY(! JiOfll' , please; no g<*ncializaiionM.” Th* : tarllimr a*-sort ion i- mum If* in one f>f die opening p ; »T of a recent work on prj-on reform that 1 ■ judionfi l»y the nutti lx r nf commitmcntw, year by yoar, tf> tlm penitent iaricH and Htati* prinons, crime hn- incrf'iiM-d m the t nited States, re! a lively to the population, since tho war by not h' than one third. It i iv w ■rteil by the H\tml New Yorker That 1 M-irc Ina'p and lambs are killed ill Kcw York than in any other city in the world, over two million lead being Klftughli red annually, and with ihe in cri a ing demand for n'.iitton and iambs the chiilic . are that : lie will continue 1" liuld tit 1 place for smile lime 1 i conic. It is tile intention to id iv portable. Btcainer from Liverpuol toi entrttl Africa, to be trun-porled by nalitcs to Simile)’ 1'iml, (ill) miles loan the month of the Congo River, to mu i "all' the Congo, which, il is e lim ited, is navigable lor a distance of -RKK) mile Tho : trailin', it is hoped, will he running in about a y ear. The New Ymk. lb laid < alculitt t hat “a single year of failure in agricultural production would bring a famine, the like of which has never been in the history of all the centuries since civilization begun and y< 1 we have philosophers posing Ug stahsmen who think all t» farmer is goot I for is to east liis vote for the fu vored political parly.’ Daly is rearranging her v.iilvond system on the plan of her great neighbors, so ns to make il more efficient in carrying troops to any threatened point, It seems. comments the (’ini iniiali Enquirer, us if the war burdens Mould never dose over them. But they have increased at such a frightful rate since 1 S 7D that every one who cult is running away. There are few countries where tires are more lisastrons than in Russia; the yearly average of the European part is more tlui^ -10,000, destroying nearly IRe.'KMl buihliii:'\ahud at uhout ^ : 000,0(10. Tin- gnat number is due to the fact that the houses are of Wood .and not sei-arated except hy hedges d twi: ', which In lp to spn ad the lire. In spite of the largely increased con sumption of coal oil, owing to the de cided favor in which lamps are held for illvuninating purposes by fashionable ] )t*o pic, the price, slates the San Eranci- > Chronicle, keeps low and manifests a tendency to go lower, The ow tiers "f oil wells owe a debt of gratiluth* to the artists of the United {states who have improved the form of coal-oil lamps to such an extent that they have Ix-comc ar¬ ticles of ornament as wa ll as utility. If it were not for this fact the immense pro ductiou of coal oil, so largely in < xeese of the demand, would have brought down prices to a stage which would have destroyed all the profit in the busi¬ ness. It is hard for the clergy to please everybody nowadays A R> -ton woman complains that Iter pastor never looks at her when he preaches, but devotes all bis attention to the sinners on the other side of the church. For this reason she says that his sermons do not have the moral effect on her which they ought to have, On the other hand. * l‘hi. ■>; > woman n cently ivntp!ai:n'il tint! her pastor mv ..' ably looked at her whir, ht pit ing. t - v "k lit 1 JCIUT ed hum. bugs an it IV | ■ritrs. and sh<* wanttsl i 4 know if it w a u t an out to treat apeo'able pew hob rs tn this w 5 the clergyman fin : ' h ■ ,ltl of '• lev ancte l;e laughingly i\j *U d tl S. he Wasn't !o. king at the w man a! a” when she thought he xva> hut at a certain pil¬ lar behind her, tl« sight of which, foi come mysterious reason, always tit to clarify la* th- ;-ght. THE DEMOCRAT, CRAWFOKDVIi.EE. GEORGIA, . I J \ l)J| I \ 1 M \ ( ... ,, I- 1 tils' * I'll. 1 illvJl.lUlji . • THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN¬ DAY SERK0N. Subject: “Onr Own Generation.” Text; "Dno-irf, after hr had served An mtm yentra'ion by thr unit of Gad, Sell on slrrp —Acts xin , That is a text which ha* for a longtime been running through my mind, but not nn- , tl now a Seen fully reveal-1 to me. Sermons have a time to be born as wad as a time to die, a radio as well as a grave. Inv.d. cowboy and totie-almger and lighter rsa ...... .......»*•"•*•* I;':.;:""""'" generation 1 that he had I it wa- his own sc, ed that i, th ( ,*-o|.|e living at the tim our r< •.pun--.tali!,-, ,‘,W are rdiiefiy with th# | people walk,. Jg abreast of us' The = nr" al» ,,t four i ••i.cr.d.oM-u. ac-ntury ancltbere now, but in o den time life was longer w.v< perhaps, only one generation into the calculation, to a >»«• tiny. Taking t; fi*ct.H thattbcrc have I make a rough yue.s find | ftI one l.uwlreil and eikhtv generations of the human family. \V th j refe, en.e to them we have no responsibility | Ue cannot bach thin, we can not correct ■: tlieir imsta c w- cannot - -"the their >or rows, we cannot, heal Uicir wound., ihelr > aepuh hf an d'-..; and dumb to anything Ur N, vli> H«y to them. I lie lust i-giment of . that, pi it army ti> pa -d ■ ut of .Rbt. »• Blight halloo as loud a* we could, not one of them would avert his head to see what we ' w " nl1 i 1 admit , , that I am in sympatty with the cht’d whose lath- bad suddenly died and who in her little evening prayer wanted to coat.nuo to piny tor her father, although lie |'Hd one mbo le aven and no i.iore n eilui her i-nyers, an-i lonking up n o ‘‘-i n vi tner h face said: o, mother, J ■an mil, .cave him nil out. I«t me say, ■ I liaiiH G' U that I had a go/sl tatlier > . , nut so I 'Tin U( ’f‘l> '"Ml m my pray C, a Rut t he one hundred and «K»t*Rcn '■/•"’""V....... do.vn Gone b-rever. ' u bhen , theroai ,T ? J‘ ►, n h/w""-iiwl ,0 i’"rhniri’ ,7w r a 0 huiuin-<l thouind and eighty «i.S aenarauoas i wrhaw a nf 'oth. , in?,i !m \\n the.'■ si i J vonVs u<?f w" th^ru will wo shu I «r V nf take no i,art " m in ir ronvo nt",ns their elections rovolutl \V««illi„ in- their now,*atrl-t catastrophes their ■min » the one temnred and Cghty generattens gone *is or the o-e t,nmlied mdei'h'.v tn'. •enerati to come, , .. fj .,,111 h,’d .'afienes of heaven the Co,■ e ,.m-rat Kins o..wn and rejoice at om VI lone or w» mii v by our le-havior *ta,u mfliiein th.-iidvan ", -nod or Im I th it shall roll on through Itnvi in - ages. Rqt our busi nes, h like I to-crvHoiirowtiLcneration, the people now iivim* iicni- those whose lungs now lir.Lthe rk'vnn' Hid v ...... now beat And 111 - it,- not « s,l.mt .irocesfioii, but moving It is a ‘'forced inarch ' at twenty four niilf*s a <lnr, each hour being a mile, (ioinc with th it celerity, it has got to be a Quick service <»n our i#irt, or no service at nil. We not only cannot teach the one hundred find eighty genera tions past and will not see the one h'indr d generations to « • me. but this geuerat on n«?w <»n the stage will soon be off io.; ■ . r n be o 1 wit! them The frtef. is Unit you and I will have to Sturt very noon for our work or it will be ironical and miroitic for any one after our exit to say of us as it was Maid of l)avid, “after he had *<u*ved his own generation b.v Um will of Hod, he fell on sleep.” Well, now, let us took around earnestly, prayerfully and in a common *m» c way and •a© whaL wc mu do for our own generation, » ir 1 of aillot ic see to it that, as far as w.» ran, they have ©nnusrh to cat. The hiirimn bo<ly is -g? < csi ituted that three time* a day tho i v )!'■; .is food as much a, a lamp n»*edg oil, ic much n ;i locomotive ikh*<1h f'•»■*!. To meet this want God has girdled tha earth with appln orchards, orting * i -ov. . wheat fields mid o cans full of Ibh and priori** full of cattle. And not withstanding thin, f will undertake to say that the vuNf. mujority of the human family ore suffering: either for I n k of food or tlia right kind of food. Our civilization is all n#k«.w «>n this subject and God only can set it right. M»mv of the greatest estates - of to day have been built out of the blooii and bones of un requited toil In olden times, b»r tho build ing, of fovts and towers, the ndmbitnnv^ of Ispahan hud to contribute .0,o >0 human skulls, and Bug lad 00,oofl human skulls, and that number of peoid© were Jain so us to furnluh the skulls. But these two contribii tion* added together ma in only Hi0,(KK! skull*, whilo into the fewer <>f the world’s wealth «itd pomp and magnificence hiv* b«©n wrought th© skc-cit.MS of mu'ounted numl'crs of the half fed populations of the earth, mill ouh of skulls. Don t sit down at your table nth five or six courSt s of nbumi int suppl v and think nothing *>f that family In the next street who won d lB.m tiny an • of tiuw * five courses lie tw»xn soup Httu almond m»t« aitd tcci they W«-| •• I" ln'H'.pn. ri«p ‘.ni’k of th" right land of food is tl!" rail., of tl! h of th" drunk eniiess \fter drinking wlmt m.uiv of our groerseill >-«H ro(T,v, and s.< eating <<ot<>nod hat "Hi "ha ot many *'*sar, « many our fcutvbei's rail meal, and "hewing what mam-id oir baki'is rail hr.Kid, until v of th" laboring Casses r.-el so miserable they are tempted to put into their misty What th' tohm onixt .-.ids leio'-'O, or I go into the drinking saloons for what the nini sellers tail beer G...kJ i«ffee would do much in driving out l«i I rum. Adulteration of food lias got to 1* nn evil against which nil tie- health o'h.aa-s and dl the do -t >rs and all the ministers and all the reformers ant! all the Christians neel to set thera selv.ss m battle array llow .m wo servo our genorati ii with enough to eat Rv sit ting dow n m embroidered sUpoers and ioung ing l i k in an arm chair, our mouth puck erei] lip around a Havana of the la st brand, end through clouds of luxuriant smoke rend iug ab. ut political economy mid the phi.os test No v By whom Rrool, vn has been hung on grist!. and sending them n tenderloin beefsteak, Meek <»ut some r.amtlv who through sickness or .cu. unction of mi-fortune have not eiuuig i to vat and do for them wliat t’heist did for the hungry mu . ud»* of Asia Minor, multiply ! ing the loaves and tne fishes, l.-t ua quit the surfeit ; of oiirsni.e* until we cannot choke.L wn mother crutub of cakeaAdb* fin the ss.: n v o other- luvi'-i' s \\> ten see.* asm:; - ale a i <■ ’k lessnes als ut th. w 'me f ed . i s whi h a gr. at w arnor ..... a - ' w.a-nhis ! ■ o.ssu in; i u fr mi n tan «amp .;n.' v.n-, :» i •! ■ tw,» bun di e! tii. uisan i tve- ■> v . m s dial cl I ism tha’. can never tv> !.»r ““ten V\ iiat ati j two s.i bin ire.l fro at tccwsan l p i : : ve- -. :o »se me I worsv* ! huttge; them are !!,. —■ " u suj * j ; *.-r.ties is c in iingth" **.«>: tn •!»»•*:• N o» ; have ■" t a lari put * I tevthe > : «’1 en a cr n l i i: « ' s om» j cue was t r.-un 1 a . t round and the man be.ing t! e ,.x bore on it harder and harder wh.le •> water p. 1 rom ti, and 1 eedswoft e « rom i lieing round and dull, got keener aod keener. ami tb© m© h th© ax. an 1 with edeeso keen be must oau run lu* tinker lost while ex | amming the b© cut hi* band to tb© bon© So 1 have men who wera yui aian\st the gnudstoue of hardship, and wh Jeon© turned the crank anoth©r would pre-s th© unforiunat# ha ier down and karvier down u stu be eras gr und «way thm n r an l thinner, hi* comforts thinner. Ins pr ts i t ..ui*r and h s face thmuer. ' . * ah s r *ks oul •AVbat me*n ye that y© grtn-i the f*«'©.■> of the r sv% r It e *n m«rfu th nf to b© hungry it is an easy thins for us to tv m gtkvi humor with afo the noG-i ©■ rii «t* have u ' A -x. But let f-un per take fu.t i*>**es*jon of us aad w© would a I turn into bartoriaus and vaiiniba>s and ben da 'larriElad to know that the time family h coming, the God hvtrii it. when every in round world will sit down at a full table, add it will bo only a ou-ation between lamb and ven«.on, or between partridge made and quail on toast, and out of spoons oit of N'ovada silver or (,'alifornia gold the pa-tries will drop on tongues thrilling withU l hankfu ness tiecau-e they have full enough. 1 nave no idea Go 1 is going to let the human rac .. >,t.iv n its present predicament. if the worl i winds up as it now h • it w “ ' be an awful failure of Th> . pomologis’fi barren places will 1* wifi' ^ -j ) IK fruits.' helped botanists, of God, in urge on tb • The « p i r ,,.i of the Lord, will help on the garden*. The l a sers of stock will send enough ani mata «, fcr human food to the markets, and th ,, Ja t narthquake that rends the world wilI upsat /. a banqueting table at wnich are . n ,U; raca . Meanwhile, • ■ Affe Wf* u "'' p te?- * - vg- : u ! ‘ ;‘.f. ’„„■!•• 0 ’is fhe , t«Tifl-'ba‘tle now be TougUfc all the worhio r. -■ ■ ' ® **r« 1 * 1 or ^e ground tone of the r p« r t „« in on* of t k U 1 1,1 “ ■ t l ‘ S' f th ,LZ,W dwSKS .ft, v . •ni , .i'<s«lc‘ l Kin* role r ,. t •• •«.,.,• i they f[ * ■" "" , nda ; ,J.hr-d ol m ii ' S ,X“ou and m l I hear the ^ 0 |£ ml torm .the tragedy of un ) , 1 , lt ,., i A nu lt ,udes, who with streimmg behalf eye; aad broken hearts in t!ie , n ol » and their families, are pleading { i, r ,. a d • around to ( nnott , er j 0 ok ( , v . we mav s .. rvB our generation. they ;, c us far pos,-,:l.!e tim* jj enough to we ir God looks on ' knows just how 1fa hu . tia rafi9 , ;n d rnaiiv n. Habitants the world his. The . g , th( v .,, r , r , population and are ta!< o„ in civilized lands, every fl ,., v vears 0 tjj ers of government go through tha !a ,„, a ml count how many Englandandgreat people there Hrf , ti m i; n ,ted Ktatesor ,, ri ,cy is reach- l. Rut when people tell us j,ow many inbabitants there are in Asia or Africa, at best it most b« • wild goMS. Yet j nows the exact number enough of people apparel on J p i anot «nd he lias made for a nnfl if there G, fifteen hundred mil i.on fifteen thousand fifteen hundred and ' apparel ^ ,, e orflc then there is att,e*;n“uousatid, enough for fifteen hundred million, slouch fifteen hundred nmi fifteen. Not ap jure!, not rugged apparel, not insufficient apparel, but appropriate apparel. At least two su ti for every being on the earth, a summer suit ami a winter smt. A good pair of shoes for every living mortal. A good coat, a good bat or a good bonnet and a good shawl, and a complete rmisculine or a feminine outfit of apparel. A wArdroiie for all nations adapted to all climes, and not a string or a button, or a pin or a hook or an eye wanting. But, alas! where are the good clothes for three-fourths of tho human race? The other one fourth have appropriated them. The fact is, there needs to be and will be a redistri bution Not by anarchistic violence. If outlawry had its way, it would rend ami tour and diminish until instead of three fourths of the would world not properly I attired, let four fourths be in rags. you know how the redistribution will take place. By generosity on the part ot those who have a surplus and sinfering increased in dustxy on the part of those from delicti Not all, but the large majority of cam * of poverty in this country are iKHlIt of idleness or drunkenness, either on the part of tho present sufi'erers or ihoir ancestors, Jn most eases the rum iu;» down is tho mael strom that has swallowed tho liveli hood of those who are in rags. But things will change, and by generosity on tho part of the crowded wardrobes, and industry j and sobriety on the part of the empty ward robes there will la» enough for all to wear. God has done Mis part toward the cfiruT “huThaH Thm. He gnnv.-j a plus of wool on the sheep’s back, ,.,nd flocks roam the mountains and valleys with a burden of warmth intended for transference to burn in comfort, when the Klmttlos of tho factories reaching all the way from the Chattahoochee to the Merrimac shall have spun and woven it. Andherocome forth the Rocky Mountain goat and the cash mere anti the beaver Here are the merino she »j», their origin trace?i back to the flocks of Abrahainic ami I hividic times. In white let tors of snowy fleece,God has be n writing for a thousand years His wish that there might be warmth for all nations. While others are discussing the effect of high or low I Far iff or „ ( > tariff at all on wool, you and had better see if in our wardrobes we have nothing that W(gl can spare for th© shivering, or pick Rome poor lad of the street and jpjii down to a clothing store and fit him out for tho winter. Don’t think that God has forgotten to send ice and 8novv , because of this wonderfully mild Janu arv tt nd 1-eoru irv We shall yet have deep gn ows and so much frost on th© window that in the morning vou cannot blizzards, see through it and whole flocks of for long ago declared that winter as well as sum m er shall not c^ase, ami between this and the S p r i nt r <tocus we may all have reason to cry ol|t wif u th© psalmist: “Who can stand be j fore this uxjld ^ | et „ s | 0O k armm.l an ) w how wa ma v serve our generation. Wliat short , K1Kht ,^| mortal* we won d be if we were ! anxious to elothe and feel onlv the most in I gigmfieant part of a man, namely, bis body, j , v | u |„ } , ut f t)r th no eilort to ciotuo „ t „! save Ins soul lime is a ! lt ,i„ , n ,. ow b,oken o;r a groat eternity, \\ | lat are we doing for the souls of , )res ,,„i generation saving. Let me .Most sav „ is a generation worth Wo maguifleent men and women are in it. make a great ado about the improvements in navigation, and in h.com. tam and in art s ,,,i machinery. W* remnrs wiiat wonders of telegraph, and telephone, and stethoscope. What unprovem -ut is eiei-trie light over a tallow .-an lie! Rut all these improvements are msigmll -ant compared with the improve m ent in the human race. In olden times. mice in a while, a great ami goal man or woman would >me tip and the world t„ ts made a great fas. about it ever since, now tie v are so uunerous we scarcely speak - We put a halo about tha peo () |e of tie past, bnt 1 thins if the times de mamled them it would be found we have now |,vmg ;n this vear Ib-H riftr Martin Luthers, fifty George tVa.hingtons. fifty Lady During Hunt inrtons, fifty noresplendid Elizabeth warrior*in Frys. Ncrth and our ,. lv c wsrJ South were developed ;n four years than the wlto.e world developed in the neeviou**w n , tfacn*«ai , challenge the four < adore the flood and the eighteen oac- of t lines f.,... ».fter the flixal to show me the 1’eabodv. equal a large s wle of ideorge ration of men and women is more „ orU , than anv of the »nv hundred put'‘wit-re , ^ . illv generation- that have passed off. shall we tiegm) vfith our , v 'y;.',t is the pil'ar from which we lm ,st starL Preacott. the blind historian, tie s us bow R.-arro saved his ar»y for the .. , A ,, v were about deserting him. u'u, ni he made a lour mark on , , jle savi “Mv tutu, on . „„tL ...L j... Jiitulimi mill dnalti.n **r ... j. Lana rv „„ the north side " an t er tv. on the -.-uth side Parti with rci. ■* t'Knwe for veurveive*. for mv ’ ,’ , to s -th .stepping across fob . ue one by one. hi* troop* ‘ an .j fi t iaHv h s whole army. ** >w. ni of \tratb the ^ \ k! : I ne t > dav. on© fid© of it are . *. n tod »■ n ard e,*th on tha other s$d© ar© ' 4 ^ an: u^fuines* and ha spinels and h . ,^ {rom the wkm^sid© mil to , r ^ s and vour family ’ and Croat n , an ,j rour friends your H ^ v n -ph© wav vou go t lt*r will j. vv? aiv no j saved, we will never s ive anv on * e How to get saved? Be n u-ln acv^r-t Christ and then accept insmtaneouslv and forever Get on th R,.vfirst and then vou will be able to ^ nothM ^ ttpCia xh9 same Rcvck. lien and wom€n j are itvn sared quicker than I have lwn talkin - %Jon % What, without a prjiver What, without time j % . ej lo th.nk it o^er? Vos. Wpat. without a tear! Yes. believe! That is all- oil from Believe sin what? and death That and ’J e ? he. us ,wm Will you. vnn •. . Dr- you! You have. Soraeth.ng makes think you have. >tw light Ms efime! c4 m * 1 ’£°, Welcome! you f Hail. countenances. Hail. hav-i "el ylmrselves, By testimony. how are you lell going .t to your to save tarn ot hers! I :fy. Tell it to your business assoc, ates. led do every whei e. We will successfully prea'-.i talk more religion and will successfully i aro more redgion than we ourselves hare. I The mostof that w.ie-h you do to benefit tlh^ragh *jbs souls ot this generation, behavior. you Go wrong, will effect and your own ®at will induce others to go wrong. >o right, and that will ranine others to go light. I When the great, oentenniatexh.bit on as being held in Philadelphia, the ques tjiou whether came up they among could the keep directors the ex- as fesiTjlJ'oi’Z to ! irjTirsttsffl.jss .v.jj rhUW: mother *ember what my glorihed and I tight me about keeping ..unday. and ■ • hear her voice again w-l as l did when ever/evening d kneit by p p ,-ide in prayer. < I_vote for . observance of the i.hnstian Sa.»i>ath. M he carried everything by storm, and 'hen the question was pat ‘.'shall we on n the exhibition on SabbathT it was aim st iwanimous, “No.” “No ’ " hatone man can do if he does right, bold.y right, empba c ally right. What if we eonjd get this whole gen«ra t-ion saved! These people who are living with us the same year and amid the same itupendous events and flying toward tbs fu tftre sw ifter than eagles to their prey. We c ann ot stop. They cannot stop. We thins v., can stop. We say. “Come now, my friend, let us stop and discuss this does subject,’ but we do not stop. The year not Stop’ atop, the day does not stop, the hour does not The vear is a gieat wheel and there ts L band on that wheel that keeps it. revolv- three mg, and as that wheel turns, it turns hundred and sixty -five smaller wheels, which H re the days, ami then each of these three hundred and sixty five wheels turn twenty four smaller wheels, which are the hours, and these twenty-four smaller wheels turn sixty smaller wheels, which are tha min utes, and thee sixty smaller wheels turn pixt y more smaller wheels, which are the seconds, and they keep rolling, rolling, roll mg. mounting, mounting, mounting, and swiftening, swiftening, swiftening. Oh, God! if our generation is going like that and ue are ^ oin '* 1 ^ waken us to the , short , but *. tremendous opportunity. I confess to vou that my one wish is to serve this generation, not to antagonize it, not to damage ,t, not to rule it, out to serve it. I would like to do something toward helping unstrap its load, to stop its tear-, to balsam its wounds and to induce it to put foot on the upward road that has at its terminus, acclamation rapturous and gates pearline, and garlands and amaranth- dominions ine and fountains rainbowed enthroned and coroneted, for I cannot forget that, lullaby in the closing words of my text: “David, after he had served his own genera tion by the will of God. fell on sleep.” And what a lovely sleep it was! Unfilial Absalom did not trouble it. Ambitious Ado niiah did not worry it. Persecuting Saul did not barrow it. Exile did not fill it with nightmare. .Since a red headed boy amid his father's flocks at night, he had not had such a good sleep. At seventy years of age he lay down to it. He has had many a troubled sleep, as in the caverns o Adulhun "** to the palace his at the time his enemies were attempting capture. Ilut this was a peaceful glorious sleep, sleep. a calm sleep, a restful sleep, a “After he served his generation by the good will of God, ho fell on sleep.” Oh, wi at a thing is sleep after a hard day’s work! It ’ takes all the aching out of the head and all i the weariness out of th© limbs and all the [ smarting morning out and of the ir is eyes. From world. it we And rise in if the a new —seryo our gener a I tion, we will at life's rioie mive most desirable and refreshing sleep. In it will vanish our last fatigue last of body, our last worri men t of mind, our sorrow of soul. To the Christian's body that was hot with raging fevers so that the attendants must by sheer force keep on the blankets, it will be the cool sleep. To those who are thin ooded and shivering with agues, it ill be the warm sleep. To those who, terrified because with of night physical visions, disorders, were it will be the dreamless sleep. *To nurses and doctors and mothers who were wakened al most every hour of the night by those to whom they ministered, or over whom t hey watched, it will be the undisturbed sleep. To those who could not get to bed till late at night before and must getting rise rested, early it in will the be morning the long and Bleep. with all gloomy talk about da Away your parture from this world. If webaveserved | our generation ft vriii not De putting out into breakers, it will not be the fight with the ) I £ A in friend £ ot Terrors; writing it me will from be going Umo to s sleep. says th at Rev. Dr. Wingate, President of Wake Forest College, North Carolina, " ft * r A niost useful life, found his last day on earth his happiest day, and that in his last moments he seemed to be p r sonally talking with Christ, .s friend with friend, saving: “Oh, how delightful it is. 1 knew N ou would be with me when the time game, and I kn-w it would be sweet, but I did not know it would be as sweet as it is." The fart was lie bad served his generation in the gospel ministry.and by the will of God he fell ou sleep. When in Africa. Majvvara, the servant, looked into the tent of David Li v i mgstone and found him on his knees, he j 'topped back, not wishing to disturb him and in I prayer, and sometime after went in found him in the same posture, and stepped I back again, but after a while went in and , touched him. **& io! the great traveler had ; finished bis Lm-t journey and he had died ia the grandest and mightiest piwture • man ester take*—on hi* knees. He i bud serve,! his generation by unrolling the | scroll of a continent, and by the will of God fell on sleep. Grimshaw. the evangelist. when asked how he felt in his last moments, responded: “As haopy as 1 can be on earth and as sure of glory as if I were in it 1 have uotbing to do b ut t- step out of tics bed into heaven.' Having served liis generat on ia successful evangelisas by the will of irod. he fell on sleep. In the museum of < .reenwich Hospital. England, there is a fragment of a took tost wa- found in the Arctic regions am d t.ie relics of S r John Irankltn, who h ut per ished amid the snow ana ice, an 1 the leaf of that piece of a bewk was turned dowm at t the words: M hen thou {taysest thioug.it e waters I will be with thee Having sened • his generation in Hte cause of science and discovery by the wfil a God. he fe.l on ,!ep P | Why will you keep us all wo nervotw talk ; ing about Uiat which is only a dormitory and u pillowed slutulier. canopied by aiigeis w.ngs ! bleep ! Transporting sleep ' An.i ■ wliat a glorious awakening * \ ou and leave eotnvtimes been thoroughly bewnderei alter a long and fat-gu;ng jouraev . we hire etsppeii at a frieail’s house lor toe night an . I after hours of complete iraconaeiousness high f»d we have opened our eyes, the r;--n t in m o«r faces, and. before we coaM lu, y cej lect our faculties, have said; -WnepeamL wbon house :s this and whose are tr.ee* gar j | dens?* gl*d reality. And then And it I has ehotdi flashed not upon wonder us L. i* aft«r w© hav© served our generation una. i-> th© will of God, have la^.en on > «*ep. the deep sieep. the rretful s e-p. W should awake in bfo-^ful \>©wi uerivient i and for a litt © wb:.e **?- '" **** j on\ II What palace is. this-. »* ; ,un ^ this upholstery? ''hat *o in.a n | or© thass tossing: m th# ngfct.w hy_t us locks like heaven' It is. It is. >Sn'. ’-u re is * j | building; ftronder mountain than a I the of east»es spi r. t *r, ©-irtn t: at heavevi into a ; must b© the pa‘.a nned © or * non i there, those walks s.-n a * beautiful than anyth.ng l ever saw j and >ee those who are walking down those aiGee of verdure. From wna^ I o&re ( heard be of Mow th-m. and those Joshua, two him arm o in sxonmi arm must . Sinai and him o' the halting sun over A alon. | And those two walking arm in arm must be j John and Paul, the one st> gentle and the | other so mighty. And th *e two w.ih tue , robfs as brilliant as though made cut of the cooled off flames or marly; irru, must be , John Kuss and Hugh Lot in if. those . I - Eut I must not look any lOhJef at | gardens of beauty, but exam r.s this bu: ding in which I have just awakened. I loo.; out j of the window this way and that and up and j down, and 5 find it is a mansion of immense size in which I am stqpmnz. All its ! windows of agate an 1 its co onnades <> porphyry and a.abascer. " hy 1 " oa d*r if this is not the h» . f . many m ancons oi * ‘ “ -_ read Jt i». u i». 1 1 .. i -” 1 m^radred sum Hark ? n A who 0 f "are eaie those those v vo^ °£.,. who“« 'j are ‘■hose .iow n.i"J’ ; i; the «*-and Jo.trey are emmn'g ti^noa^h -h an a tne a5«-{^ SSRS.'SU “Never to part. Never more to part. more Then our glorjfisd friends say: Come ou wlt h us and see heaven. And. some of them bounding ahead of us and some of thera skipping beside us, we start ,| own the ivory stairway. And wo nieet coming up, one ot the Kings of , anClenl Israel, somewnat small of stature, but having a countenance radiant with* thousand victories. And as ail are making obeisaime to this great one of heaven I y out;.“YVhoi^ ^e! artI ;he ianswiercome^ 1 his 1S t \ ,e of ail th... v o Israel. . u i? T ^ a ^Vv wdi hi- generation rt by the a will of of (dml God, It fell 1 on * fl , HiiTir NfjW lijlDlilLi ft jl DIHDT HCPT/H7D UrrillijU. - TUI AGIUCIKAE i n liTrTJ' t T Tfr.PART3IEM It FPf pnriV7 ! S I’UIXGS IX VO i.XISTEXCE. _ f Lomnilhbioner . , . «i f Ag.ltultiilt 4 ,„•! culture minim COlll ai Nominated for Secretary. * - The 1 Pres'dent has approved ° the bill raising " the Bureau of Agriculture to the the di dignity „ nitv ol 0 £ an executive department, and named the present Commissioner of Agriculture, Mr. j, orrnan j. Colmon. to be Secretary of the ^ - narunent al cf Agriculture. “ tffJW -j; MM ¥-^ 'f'iwfcv- W gSp SB? ftE 2fr ^-n-X'i .-fpS** '^fkXcV \ M ‘-N V, ‘ X'Tit- - %•••■%>#*>*•) ' li B o- / Ycj^Y-ja.',. ,!b' 1 / , \ j 'MM/f .ySfefr / ; _ /H. Av /■ : tW v //, '<^'1 y 5 *Ji \ V 0, '•* r^:Vw’ v ... ^ ’? i$UHf}li . , * enh I 1 \ \\ /b V\\\V\ \ V j / \< ” / "•' '■—’// NO UMAX J. colmav. SThe law creating the new department doss not deline its functions or limits. A dis pa oh from Washington says: “The Senate will doubtless confirm the nomi n TT r o n'. da it THF lV i lW T^n^ Jn the president’s choice of advisers, vmt- nnita aside from this, it is conceded that Mr. Col man has discharged the duties of his office with intelligence, li faitlifullv. and to the satis faction of large number of Democrats as we 1 as Republicans. It is therefore quite pertain that ho will have the satisfaction of bem rr the first Secretary of Agric ulture, though be will have held the office but three weeks. At any rate be will return to .Mis gouri as Secretary.” executiveMe It is forty years since a new part me nt oc the Government was created. The State Department and other depart ments of the Government in IMS had be come overburdened with public Mexico business, The result of the war with was a large acquisition of territory. The discovery of gold in California opened up a new era in emigration tion° to the West, and the land cues was becoming a very important one. The business of the Patent Office was i lKToa siug. Th«> details of tho census, t | 1(1 C are of the Indians tension and bounty matters were mnltmlviug details. All these were grouped under the tho Interior new department,and the a-t making March it Department t was approved J, 1MD Naturaliv, agricultural matters a^gre t un( icr the Secretary of the Interior until IStV’ ” when Congress created a Depart of Awrirulture "interior ’ iiiriepe-mient entirely af the lleuartmeiit but , m Tl',.> ade its head onlv a Commissioner. new department which is now to take a ( part } uf tho burden of the Interior under ts c3re „ iil be known es the ! Centennial Department of the Gov eminent One hundred years | the State, Treasury, War. Rostoflice and At { torwy-Genere.'s fbngress, offi.-e were create 1 byaet 0 f and these five Cabinet posi . 1 , olls , vpr e fiu e ,i that veaf by President 'Washington. The Navy Department did ; m t begin until lTfifl. y or fifty-two years th“reaftc" these s x de partments ha 1 charge of the exeem ;ve busi j ness of the government, and the n> w depart ment just now created oomnletes the octette. -------- j Modes of Execution Contrasted. _ ; T„ pu meuera ana more , DarDaroilS , times .. ^ uie aim Of tho executioner was to tor ture tho criminal by killing him as slow ly as possible; now. on the contrary no’diKte the mm is to kill him as nnmxlilv 1 is o&sr le , , * na sni n ten ms sunenugs, ...y ■ from tins point of view the English method of blow j n g from guns practiced in India, is the humane—this mode of pm mti. .n • ,mi k therefore near) wur , ijuicx, 0 and and tUereforenearly v p®u»- i-min loss. t. the same time the moral tmpres sion produced by it is very great, and well suited to the spirit of contemporarv j gw ^ next mos: humane method of execution j is bv lianfonir }&\ in “ a old “ exnedi -Xpeat eut. ver; ntDili ; resorted to - Russia _ in in modern times, ibis method is inferior to the former, because death is more lingering and cruel. But still it is an WV • ajK>n .i the ..n old system of , 1 M 6 • Bn very r cructSxion much practiced by the Ko mans, lly this latter the man who vio J ft ted the law was nailed to the wood of th cross and hung there often many d-irin^, «hich ».t,; q, i„’e his ‘ '•*. -» tin* sufferings must have teca ternbie.— . . Ad.t'rtti r. NoTW’TTHSTASPDtii the euormotia popa»fttiOn oi ludta, r . there . are vet v as t, tracts of uiimhabited territory. Accord ing to official returns of the total area, o *4,t". d.i ti ) acres under the direct ad ministration of England, only 15*2,000, it> acres are under cultivate n. A very large port- U cf . t;.s t-mJ , r is re rurne.i ns unfit I, r cultivation, an t the forests are credited with 40,000,000 a -r-s. but there still remains no hss than - . i*.'*,' t* • cnliivabie acres as yet un touched by the plow. SUNDAY SCHOOL. tXTERXA TIO^iAL LESSOX FOR rr rprj »r J Le*son Text : “Tac tfi'T Tc.-ic’mt rir.d i lie Ttvfdve.*’ Mark v i.. 1 i 3 -i«o *U‘M Texts Mark vi., 1-13 ..unuentary. j “And He went out fr ni thence.” that is froni Capernaum, wh re He had just healed the woman who had been twelve years sick, the little girlVz years old who had just dled the two blind men and the dumb de , momac: where also he bad on previous oc casioI)S healed the nian in the synagogue SRSSSftSfeViSSS s^25SS«8m.Traf pj-Nbeg^s ss J |§ and ask vourseif if it will be more ol ra e j or s0me on© who never heard of christ '•! t!ian for vou j n the dav of judgment, ' ^N eameirto His own countrv.” After tl p I a zareth re Noted Him and ^ l 'Hi; ^ life ‘““Im He ma le Capernaum hive His if !ie said to a home), aI>(1 it was called “His own (WlMatt. ix., 1; Lui untVv . e iv 10 :J1 , ; but Nazar th was His own 0O where Hehad been brought up. How patien £ f or g iv ,«g and long suifering He is, alld how earnestly He continues to seek those wfc reject Him, if perchance they may rc pent. “His disciples follow Him.” Feme follow fully and some foiiow afar off; some seek and serve H;m with the whole heart and some do anything but that, linless we are as earnest as He was in seeking the lost, as patient and forgiving towards our enemies, and as faith ful in witnessing for God, can we be said to follow Him fuliy and serve Him with all the heart| He g. ■■ When the Sabbath day was come, began to teach in the synagogue.” Hehad been at it early and late all the week, tench j n g, healing and journeying on foot or by boat from place to plnce; bu every Sabbath day is filled aso, and it would seem that they were among his busiest days. Jf we serve Him only on the Sabbath day. or if our work through the week is such that we can not heartily serve Him even on that day, or jf we ^ til0 one day giv6 n wholly to Him a weariness, is it worth while to call our seives His followers or protess devotion to Him! had is not this the oaipenter. . They . , known ^ the Him carpenter many years (Matt as the. carpenter, oo). His ai,< s sou xin., mother also they knew ami His brethren and sisters, and while they could not but wonder at His wisdom and Hif mighty w Him orks, it was too much for them to receive ot tho humble home .as their Messiah, and they were oSendefl at Him. Their blindness is but a type ot the blindness of multitudesi or pro fl 'ss,ng Christians to day, who, not hee ling the plain statements of Scripture, are look ing for results which they wid not see and are blind to the things they are told to look for. As to these brothers and sisters being Mary’s children, the language of the text in di, ates it, and 1 s- b.ix., s, loretells and con forms it. » A prophet without ... . . honor, out . - ‘ is no« in liis own country, among his own km, and m his own house. < >n two Ovher occasions di He speak the same truta d.u.ke iv., .A, oobn iy., i-!), and John vn., a, te..s us teat at one tmie eveu Ills own brethivii aid not belie\e in Him. Jhercfore it any one reads this wh' ,s ( ‘a.."lof i »•., i » b»*a t“achei in.uiday f c ^ 100 ^ or a preacher of the aospel, and viroo. lias sealed the call by showing you results ot your work, let not the opinions ot jour neighbors, or lnenas. or Kiiiured, as to wiiac they may deem your lack ot fitness lor the | work, in trie least (leter you; put seeing oesus 1 only and aiming to gioriiy linn, go tor ward renieinhcnng 1 Lor. i., Ji-.J. could there oo no mignty work. „ "VV jp ith the exception or heahng a, lew sick His power wasinot *JJ, S j o tOVV Hnwrln Ui W fIrFr? ' c . — < . rf all their sick, and magnified tne name Ul UlU Lord among them if they had only received Him; how His heart must have yearned to j tell them more fully the good news or the I kingdom, but their ears were stopped, and they compelled Him their to turn unoelief. away, and * He j marveled because or ! “He went round about the villages, teach i ing.' Matt, ix.,o, says that He taught an i j their synagogues, preaching the sickness gospel and of the kingdom arid healing every | every disease among the people, and that tho ; sight-of the shepherd, multitudes, totv.-heci who were Him as that sheep He ! without a so asked the discudes to pray the Loid ol the harvest to send forth laborers, “ ‘‘He caheu unto linn the twelve ana began to send them forth lorth. to 1 he their praying ! ones are now going answer own prayers, and then He sent forth over seventy also, still encouraging them to continuepray mg tor more laborers (Luke x., HO gave them authority over all devils and to cure diseases; He sent them to preach the kingdom of God and to heal the sick, ihev went forth m His name to show forth His power : to proclaim that the King had come, i the kingdom was at hand and to prove it had by such deeds in His name as the prophets said He would periorm. They were sent only to the lost sheep of the hotisa of Israel, not to Gentiies nor Samaritans uVIatt.x., 5-0), had lor Jesus hod coni" as Israel s Messiah, and they received Him they would have become as a nation a center of light and salvation to all the world. These missionaries went forth seeking only to make Him known, b, '•». “Notliing lor tr.eir journey, * * * no scrip, no bread, no money, no extra coat,” They were evidently not oh a pleasure tour, nor going to make much out of this tinan cially. They were on the King’s business' and He would not fail to provide for them by the way nor to recompense them for their work, \>nt they must simply Lave all that tC Him and fulfill His commands, 10. “In what place soever ye enter into an house, there abide till ye depart from that place.” house, They but were to not inquire to enter for any worthy or every a house, and if after entering they should find the house not what it was said to be, they wtsre to leave it lilatt. x., 11-13.) The fel lower of t.'brist is not to expect that either Ho or His message will be well received by al L nor is he to trust himself where he is not wanted, nor seek help from those who know not the Lord; but lovingly and patiently is he to go in liis Master's name.' bearing his Master’s nn-ssage of peace and gool will, content to be faithful to Him, bearing all things for His sake, and coveting above all things His approval, )L -Jloretolerable for Sodom andGomor rha in the day of judgment, than for that citv." Although this sent: nee is not in the Revised Version, yet it is found in Matt, x., «hihty l: " si.. of 24; and -hows privilege- us tfcegreater and how respon greater fearful will be the doom of those who refuse to hear or receive the I.ori Jesus Christ, or those whom He sends forth as His witnesses. Matt. x.. 4' M'e are a so taught here that the people of fsodorn and G nmrrha hare yet to come into judgment for the Judge Himself has sabi it with His“ Verdy, I say unto you.” ]“ "An i they went out and preached that men shou’d repeat.” Bet .teen this verse and the last the whole of Matt. x.. ltr-42, sterns *<> come tn with its warnings, instru t ons and exhortations to proclaim the truth boldly and God. to fear no man. nor death itself, but only 13. “They ea-t out many that*were devils, and anointe 1 w:tb c;l many sick, and healed tfi-m. ' Tee Lori wrenght through them and His name was glorified. His power through item wa- as if He had be- n i re-ent Himself, and it -h--uld b" so still: but we must rememlier that these miracles were tokens of the k-nedom then at hand.bnt now P *t;-'ned t ;] Hts rc-tum; and yet the apos contmu-si to worg mirae^iim His name Jong a ter il- 1 hid a-:--n tel back to the Fatber.Jand if there was more faith and whole hearted «e:varat a onto Him now on tha part of His followers there would be more manifestations of H’s p:-wer. Let every C r:stian obey m simple reliance on H m, and bow soon would the whole world ba yvangelirei— Lesson Helper.