The Lexington dispatch. [volume] (Lexington, South Carolina) 1870-1917, August 31, 1887, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

Notices in local column 10c. per line IBypir--: . ' \ . each insertion. ^ Marriage notices inserted free. 7EIHTS OF SUBSCRIPTION. 1 . ? * ? .\__~~TI".~ rTTHHHIT s? .. .... Obituaries over ten lints charged for at ^ .^v > ".v A: . f __ ? :? ?~"T?7*~~ ~? \ . - regular advertising rates. . W==tr.:^ y0L_ XVIL . LEXINGTON. S. C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1887. NO. 41. ? KL~', " ?? three months oO nmmmmmm^mhmbbbm "WE ARE WITNESSES * I ' . ?? ^ | DISCOURSE BY REV. DR. TALMAGE | AT THE HAMPTONS. The World Will Be Brought to God Not j Through Argument, but Through Tea^kaonj-The Christina's Weapon in the Conflict Is Faith, Not Logic. The Hamptons, Aug. 21.?"The Facts 1 Proved"' is the subject of discourse by ; . the Rev. T. De "Witt Talmage, 'today. ! His text is from Acts xv, 8: "We are witnesses." Following is his sermon in full: In the days of George Stephenson, the perfector of the locomotive engine, the scientists proved conclusively that a railway train could never be driven steam power successfully and without peril, but the rushing express trains ; from Liverpool to Edinburgh, and from i Edinburgh to London, have made all the ^ nation wilnesses of the splendid achieve^^^^inent. Machinists and navigators proved ^that a steamer could never ^ *^bf sucha^ij^ocean, but no sooner had v mh ii il?n ??5fc^roved the impossibility liuru, and the Innj^r than the work and the White Sta^uers on the Cu There went up a guffa^N^l8,110 ' " at Professor Morse's propositrtlifcj^^'3" the lightning of heaven his erranSi^ and it was proved conclusively tliat^^, thing could never be done; but now aL the news erf the wide world, by Associated Press put into your hands .every morning and night, has made all nations witnesses. Soin the time of Christ it was proved Conclusively that it was impossible for him to rise from the dead. It was shown logically that when a man was dead, he was dead, and the heart and the liver and the lungs having ceased to perform their offices, yie limbs would be rigid beyond all power of friction or arousal. They showed it co be an absolute absurdity that the dead Christ should ever get up alive; but no sooner had they proved this than the dead Christ arose, and the disciples beheld him, heard his voice, and talked with him, and. they took the witness stand to prove that to be true which the wiseacres of the day had proved to be im^ - - - * - j uip recora oi the experiment and o the tettimop^ is in the text: "Him hath God raised from the dead, whereof we are witnesses." Now let me play the skeptic for a fcaoment. "There is no God," says.the skeptic, ' 'for^I have never seen him with my physical eyesight. Your Bible is a pack of contradictions. There never was . a miracle. Lazarus was not raised from the dead, and the water was never turned j wine. Your v religion is an impoeion on the credulity of theages." There " ?7"\ aged man moving in that pew as " '> would like to respond. Here m * Z^iof n^Mfcyith faces a little ftements, and all a suppressed r1 speak out in Chris ^BHBHHmer I HHr nHI^^^H^nRHB^HPrriot beautiP^^^nB^HHflpB^nllsavc a soul. and a man of the ^^wIRBRSeach other and the man of the werld *ilT in all probability get the triumph. There are a thousand things m our religion that seem illogical to-the vrtrld, and always .will aeem illogical. Our weapon in this- fconflict not logic; faith, not metaphysics; faith, not nrofundity; faith, not scholastic ex ploration. But then, in order to have faith, we must have testimony, and if five hundred men, or one thousand men, or five hundred thousand men, or five million men get up and tell me that they have felt the religion of Jesus Christ a joy, & comfort, a help, an inspiration, 1 am bound as a fair minded man to accept their testimony. I want just now to put * ^ ^before you three propositions, the truth vhioh I think this audience will attest with overwhelming unanimity. The first proposition is: We are witnesses that tl\e religion of Christ is able to convert a soul. The Gospel may have had a hard time to conquer U3, we may have fought it back, but we were vanquished. You say conversion is only an imaginary thing. We know better. "We are witnesses." There never was so great a. change in our heart and life on any other subject as on this. People laughed at the missionaries in Madagascar because they preached ten years without one convert^ but there are 83,000 converts in Madagascar today. People laughed at Dr. Judson, the Baptist missionary, because he kept on preaching in Burmah * five years without a single convert; but there are 20,000 Baptists in Burmah today. "Tieople laughed at Dr. Morrison, in China, for preaching there seven years vithout a single conversion; but there are 15,000 Christians in China today. People laughed at tlie missionaries for preaching at Tahiti for fifteen years without a single conversion, and at the missionaries i preaching -in Bengal for seventeen ^^^^years without a single* conversion; yet in j all those lands there are multitudes of j . Christians today. i I But why go so rar to nna evidences oi the Gospel's power to saye a soul? "We are witnesses." We were so proud that no man could have humbled us; we were so hard tliat no earthly power could have melted us; angels of God were all around . about us; they could not overcome us; but one day, perhaps at a Methodist anxious seat, or at a Presbyterian dathechetical lecture, or at a burial or on horseback, a power seized us, and made us get down, and made us tremble, and made us kneel, and made us cry for mercy, and we tried to wrench ourselves away from the grasp, but we could not. It fltrag us flat, and when we arose we were as much changed as Gourgis, the heathen, who went into a prayer meeting with a daggpr and a gun to disturb the meeting and'destroy it, but the next day was found crying: "Oh! my great -- - -^?* ?" sins! Oh! my great oavwuii eleven years preached the Gospel of Christ- to his fellow mountaineers, the last words on his dying lips being "Free grace!" Oh, it was free grace! There is a man who was for ten years a hard drinker. The dreadful appetite ' liad sent down its roots around the palate and the tongue, and on down until they were interlined with the vitals of body, mind and soul; but he lias not taken any stimulants for two years, * What did that? Not temperance soci.Qr ties. Not prohibition laws. Not moral suasion. Conversion did it. "Why/ said one upon whom the great change had come, "sir, I feel just as though I were somebody" else.'' There is a sea* captain who swore all > the way from New York to Havana, and from Havana to San Francisco, and when he was in pert lie way worse than when he was on the sea. What power was it that washed liis tongue ciearj of profanities, and made him a psalm singer? Conversion by the Holy Spirit, I ' There are thousands of people in this (lionse to-night who are no more what ! they'once were than a water lily is night- j s shade, or a morning lark is a vulture, or 0 day is night. . ! ^ I Now, if I should demand that all those ' ? people in tliis house who have felt the ! E converting power of religion should rise, r so far from being ashamed, they would J spring to their feet with more alacrity * than the}T ever sprang to the dance, the r tears mingling with their exliilaration as j 1 they cried: "We are witnesses!" And ? if they tried to sing the old Gospel hymn, ^ they would break down with emotion by 8 the time they got to the second line: 3 Ashamed of Jesus, that dear friend ? On whom my hopes of heaven depend? * v No! When I blush, be this my shame: \ That I no more revere his name. ] Again, I remark that '.'we are wit- * ne&ses" of the Gospel's power to comfort. When a man has trouble the world corner in and says: "Now, get your ( mind off this; go out and breathe the fresh air: plunge deeper into business." What poor advice. Get your mind off of it! when everything is upturned with the bereavement and everything reminds ' you of what you have lost. Get your mind off of it! They might as well ad- j . vise you to stop thinking. You cannot f stop thinkings and, ydu cannot stqp>}mik > " - ii "walk hi 1 mg ra ^ ^ that very j , the fresh aff! *she once ac- | J street, or tha "T that grass plot : ; comivmrf you. O that show ! ? h?8 /U^Ke ST, fascinated, saying: Ncilldow Slie )00#vy> ,, ^ ,1,wM>rrr 1 EW? see the pictures. Go decpu ? ' f^fiisivvess! Why, she was associateu . sincesawmr business . ambition, and 1 left. you have no ambition Oh, this isa\ ,, , . ;f 1 fries to comfort aS^v world when . , build a Corliss enguRl> heart. 1 ca ( Raphael's "Madonna, ??} ] thoven's symphony a3 Yp'^' a < world can comf ort a broken*/ ^ . . < yet you have been comforted.' I it done? Did Christ come to 5^ 1 say,. "Get your mind off this; "go oK. ^ t breathe the fresh air; plunge deeper*? 1 business?" No. There was a minuv^' 1 when he camo to you?perhaps in theV, 'watches of the night, perhaps in your place of business, perhaps along the street ?and he breathed something into your soul that gave peace, rest, infinite quiet, so that you could take out the photograph of the departed one and look into the eyes and the face of the dear one and say: "It is all right; she is better off; I would not call her back. Lord, I thank thee that thou hast comforted my poor heart." There are Christian parents here who are willing to testify to the power of this Gospel to comfort.. Your son had just xiwlu. svaooi or-college and was going into business and the Lord took him. Or your daughter had just gradu- , ated from the young ladies' seminary and \ you thought she. was going to be a useful ] woman and of long life, but the Lord j took her and you were tempted to sav: ? 4'All this culture of twenty "years for ? nothing!'; Or the little ohild came home 4 from school with the hot fever that ^ stopped not for the agonized prayer or for c the skilful physician, and the little child t was taken. Or the babe was lifted out of t your arms by wme quick epidemic and s take it away. And yet you are not repin- * ing, you are not fretful, you are not fight- L hag against God. * s What has enabled you to stand all the a trial? "Oh," you say, "I took the medi- ' cine that God gave my sick soul. In my S distress I threw myself at the feet of a \ sympathizing God; and when I was tfco weak to pray, or to look up, he breathed l into me a peace that I think must be t^9 I foretaste of that heaven where there is g neither a tear, nor a farewell, nor a s grave." Come, all ye who have been 1 out to the grave to weep there? come, all t ye comforted souls, get up off your j knees. Is there no power in this Gospel t to soothe the heart? Is there no power l in this religion to quiet the worst par- c oxysm of grief? There comes up an answer from comforted widowhood, and s ^V>Anooa Onrl ^il^laconocc caxrrnor* f "Aye; aye, we are witnesses!" ^ Again, I remark that we are witnesses ] of the fact that religion has power to give t composure in the last moment. I shall t never forget the first time I confronted { death. We went across the cornfields in i the country. I was led by my father's 1 hand, and we came to the farmhouse where the bereavement had come, and we saw the crowd of wagons and car-? J riages; but there was one carriage that '1 especially attracted my boyish attention, and it had black plumes. I said: "What's that? what's that? Why those 1 black tassels at the top?" and after it was I explained to me I was lifted up to look upon the bright face of an aged Christian woman, who three days before had de- i parted in triumph. The whole scene i j made an impression I never forgot. '< In our sermons and in our lay exhorta- I tions we are very apt, when we want to bring illustrations of dying triumph, to 3 go back to some distinguished personage 1 ?to a John Knox or a Harriet Newell. I But I want you for witnesses. I want to know if you have ever seen 1 anything to make you believe that the religion of Christ can give composure in the final hour. Now, in the courts, attorneys, jury and judge will never admit mere hearsay. They demand that" the witness must have seen with his own 1 eyes, or heard with his own ears, and so ' I am critical in my examination of you ; now; and I want to know whether you i have seen <jr heard anything that makps 1 you believe that the religion of Christ : gives composure in the final hour. "Oh, yes," you say, "I saw my father 1 and mother depart. There was a great difference in their death beds. Standing 3 by the one we felt more veneration. By ' the other, there was more tenderness." Before the one, you bowed perhaps in awe. In the other case, you felt as If j you would like to go along with her. How did they feel in that last hour? 1 How did they seem to act? Were they 1 very* much frightened? Did they take hold of this world with both hands as though they did not want to give it up? ; 4'Oh, no," you say; "no, I remember as ' though it were yesterday; she had a kind word for us all, and there were a few mementoes distributed among the chih dren, and then she told us how kind wo ' must be to our father in his loneliness, and then she kissed us goodby and went asleep as a child in a cradle." What made her so composed? Natural courage? "No," you say, "mother wasvery nervous. When the carriage inclined . to the side of the road, she would cry out; she was always rather weakly." What, then, gave her composure? Was it because she did not care much for you, and the pang of parting was not great? "fch," you say, "she showered upon us a wealth of affection; no mother ever loved her children more than mother loved us; she showed it by the way she nursed us when we were sick, and sho toiled for us until her strength gave out.; : What, then, was it that gave Jier comj posure in the last hour? Do not hide if. I [ .Be frank and let me know. "Ob." you J I say, "it was because she was fo good; j she made the Lord her portion, and she ! had faith that she would go straight to ; "glory, and that we should all m?et her at last at the foot of the throne." Here are people who say: "I saw a * Christian brother die, ana lie triumphed." j Lnd some one else: *1 saw a Christian J istor die, and she triumphed." ' Some": no else will say: saw a Christian j laughter die, and she''triumphed." j hme, all ye who have seen the last iioments of a Christian, and give testinony in this cause on trial. Uncover :our heads, put your hand on the old arnily Bible, from which they used to ead the promises, and . promise in the >resence of high heayen that you will tell he truth, the whole truth and nothing >ut the truth. With what you have een with your own eyes, and from-what rou have heard with your own ears, is here power in this Gospel to give calmless and triumph in the last exigency? rhe response comes from all sides, from roung and old and middle aged: 4'We tl U ?* IVUUMVU* You see, my friends, I fiaye not put before you an abstraction, or a chimera, >r anything like guess work. I present rou affidavits of the best men and women, iving and dead. Two witnesses in court will establish a fact. Here are not two witnesses, but thousands of witnessed? ">n earth millions of witnesses, and in leaven a great, multitude of witnesses mat no man can number, testifying that :here is power in tfiis religion to convert he soul, to give comfort in trouble, and :o afford composure in the last hour. If ten men should come to you when rou are sick with appalling sickness, and ay they had the same sickness, and took t certain medicine, and it cured them, rou would probably take it. Now, sup>09e. ten other men should come up and >ay: "We don't believo there is anything n that medicine." "Well," I say, "have you ever tried it?" "No. I never tried it, but I don't beiieve there is anything in it." Of course pou discredit their testimony. The skeptic may come and say: "There is no power in your religion." "Have you 3ver tried it?"- "No, no." "Then 1 vaunt P Let me take the testimony of 'he millions of souls that haye been concerted to God and comforted in trial and solaced in the last hour. We will take .heir testimony as they cry: "Wo are witnesses!" Some* time ago Professor Henry, of ^srtington, discovered a new star and "*e ?Win<?a srwvi bv'submarine teleoranh. and ali the observatories of Europe were watchir^for tiiat new star. Oh, hearer, ooking othr trough the darkness of thy eoul, canst thou see a bright light beaming on thee? 4'Where?" you say, ' 'where? How can I find h?" Look along by the liDe of the cross of the Son of God. Do you not se^it trembling with all tenderness and beaming with all hope? It is the Star of Bethlehem. Deep horror then my vitals froze; Death struck L ceased the ti de to stem. When suddenly a star arose? 1 It was the Star of Bethlehem. Oh, hearer, get your eye on it. It is sasier for. you now to become Christians than it is to stay away from Christ and leaven. When Mme. Sontag began ler musical career she was hissed .off the ttage at Vienna by the friends of her ival, Amelia SteiniDger, who had already )egun to decline through her dissipation, fears passed on, and one day Mme.' lontag, in her glory, was riding through he streets.' of Berlin, when she saw a litle child leading a 'That's my mother; that^^^l^^^nnger. She used'to be a great gS&^tfut he lost her v6ice, and she cried so much .bout it that she lost her eyesight." 'Give myJove to her," said Mme. iontag, "a3ra tell her an old acquaintance rill call on' her this afternoon." The next week in Berlin a vast assemilage gathered at a benefit for that poor >lind woman, and it was said that Mme. kratag sang that night as she had never ,n ng before. And she, took a skilled ocuJfrfr TrrVi/k in noin 4~rickf^ (rivfi OVPWtrVlt. tA I'UV/ ~ -O? -~ he poor bund woman. Until the day of Amelia Steininger's deatli Mme. Sontag ook care of her, and her daughter after ler. That was what the queen of song lid for her enemy. . rf. But, oh, hear a moro thrilling story till. Blind, immortal poor and lost, \ hou who, when the world and Clirist vere rivals for thy hfeart, didst hiss thy Lord away?Christ comes now to give hee sight, to give thee a home, to give hee heaven. With more .than a Sontag's generosity*he comes now to meet your iced. * With more than a Sontag's'music le comes to plead for thy deliverance. ' It is said that all the elements of the attlesnake's poison are to be found in :he common Irish potato. 3? ' It is hard to estimate the exact value of what one does one's self.?Ciu-isiian Keid. Curious Hysterical Epidemic. A curious outbreak of convulsionist nania, analogous to those which occurred ?rom time to time during the middle iges, has shown itself at Agosta, in the province of Eome. For some weeks jxist tho country people have been laboring under the delusion that the district is under -the immediate government of the evil one, and before retiring to rest they carefully place on the tlireshold the broom and the salt, which are credited with the power of keeping off evil spirits. Many of the younger women have epileptiform attacks, during which they. utter piercing shrieks and are violently convulsed. So serious had the condition of things become that the syndic of Agosta found it necessary to inform the prefect, who sent detachments of soldiers into the district in order to calm the apprehensions of the inhabitants. As a natural consequence of this condition of mental perturbation the country is overrun with quacks, who claim to possess the only infallible remedy for the seizures. One of these nostrums, the vender of which was making a rich harvest from its sale, was found on analysis to consist of earth, snuff and borax. Ihree medical men who were commissioned to investigate the cause and nature of tills extraordinary affection came to the conclusion that it was ah epidemic of hysteria. They examined a number of the sufferers, mostly young women, some of whom were alleged to have vomited nails, horseshoes and other equally indigestible substances, while others barked like dogs. Several of them were removed to Home for treatment in the hospitals there, and measures have been taken to check the spread of the mischief. In a milder degree this contagious form of hysteria is not infrequent, especially in places where ignorance and superstition. favor manifestations of nervous disorder. The worst excesses of popdlar outbreaks, like the French revolution, have been attributed to similar iniluences and with every appearance of justice.? British Medical Journal. Jubilee Fever in New Zealand. They have had the jubilee fever very Strong in New Zealand. The Herald of that colony contains abundant evidence of the fact. Hero is one advertisement: "Wanted?Two jubilee ladies want two jubilee husbands. Apply 2-5 Queen street." Here is another: "Wanted? Jubilee wives, husbands, housemaids, waitresses, housekeepers, barmaids and genccaJ servants, can ix* had for the listing. A. McLeod, 25 Queen street."? New York Tribune. WHOM THE NEWSPAPERS NOTICE. People Who A.ro Well Known, and What Is Said About Them. A son of Charles Dickens is to bo one j of the social lions in New York next fall. Lawyer Belva Lockwood is going to lecture in New York state on the woman question. \ Dom Pedro paid much attention to the Pasteur institute in Paris, with a view to | founding a branch of it in Brazil, where ; mad dogs abound. Mrs. Augq^h Evans Wilson is to rise from her loijfc literary slumber, and will publish a ne^rfcrovel in the early fall. It will be entitled "At the Mercy of Tibe! rius." ' , ; Florence Dunn, the little London school prl who received a ring from the queen's j hand for not missing a day at school for j seven years, is an Irish lassie from Tipi perary. Mrs. Crawford, Paris correspondent of The London Daily News and Truth, is said to earn $10,000 a year by her pen? the largest sum made by any woman out ! oF journalism. { The dissipated monarch of Hawaii has I gone into literature. He is writing a 1 lx>ok: \o be sailed the "Myths and Mois of the Hawaiian Islands.". The ex-United j States minister reads his copy and makes | suggestions, and a .New York firm will publish it. ^ . The Boston Transcript mentions that the mother of the late Sylvaniis Cobb., Jr., had in her veins the blood of the Hales, the Waites and the Stanwoods. j She was a first cousin of Mrs. James G. ' Mioo Akirrail TVvfryn ; JLUtfuJLUs iUIU The empress of Japan, accompanied by a retinue of twenty persons, will visit the i United States in October. She will land : at San Francisco, stop at Salt Late, : Omaha and Chicago, and return, after a I two months' sojourn, by the Southern | Pacific route. i Jefferson Davis and Thomas L. CHngman, of North Carolina, are the only exsenators now living of all the southern ! members of that body who, in July, 1861, were expelled from the' United States senate for having left their seats and | gone over to the Confederacy. Mme. Christine Nilsson hag among her | treasures photographs with autographs i attached which have been presented her ; by the queen of Spain, empresses of ; Russia and Austria, the queens of Greece, i Sweden, and ^Norway, the. Princess of i Wales, the Duchess of Edinburgh and j many other royal ladies." Mme. Nilsson | is probably the richest prima donna in j the world, and .was the poorest when she | l>egan her career. Mrs. Leonard Swett, nee Marie Decker, j who has just married the well known . Chicago lawyer; was her husband's con l fidential clerk and partner in business for I a number of years. Her interest in the i firm at the time of her marriage amounted ! to $5,000 a year. Storting out as book; keeper, she was soon placed in charge of > ! the vaults, and was the only one who | knew where to place hands upon imi portant papers oohnected wifh. ail the ! varied interests intrusted with the firm. In two years she became cashier in addiI tion to the other trusts,jgid Itf* fOfcJfflCT ti~ ! she toas admitted as a partP^^p^^^p VJ iuo ivcvj ijunui x Wi]Q has just celebrated his seventy-eighth i birthday in Boston, the poet %}rffctier ' writes: "More than fifty years agot mc^ j j liim at the convention which formed j first temperance society in Essex cou*y j and about the same time at the format^' j of the Essex Anti-Slavery society. Sim : then liis genial face and cheeriri& vou j ; liave been rkrely missed wherever tk ' causes of temperance and freedom mei i together. He was always .a welcome * ! speaker. Like President Lincoln, he had] j. the gift of story telling, and .fiis stories were always to the point, putting to i shame his opponents with ready wit and { humor." ^ . .. The funeral of Miss Jennie Collins, the ! philanthropic lady who established a ! home for poor girls in Boston, was a ! most impressive one. Girls she'had bo , friended in their need, and sorrowing \ fronds were there. Some wept silently, : se^ue lingered and passed their bands lov! fi^ly and tenderly over the brow of the 1 Head woman, others wept outright and were led away by friends, while in the corners of the vestibule and on the pavement near the church men and women gathered in groups and told of little deeds of kindness and thoughtfulness which had endeared little Jennie Collins to each personally, and grieved over the loss of one so true and faithful to her self imposed trusts, i ? - - Theodore Kooseveit speaxs enmusiasu; cally of ranch women. He lells of Mrs. ; Bishop Hiff "Warren, who is worth $10, 000,000, and made it on cattle with no ; assistance other than her mother wit. i Another cattle queen, Mrs. Rogers, of j Corpus Christi, Tex., a fearless rider, I goes over the range as frequently as the ranchmen she employs. Sho started with | a few cattle on a small scale, and lias now ; amassed $1,000,000, and is every day enj larging her enterprises. A rich widow, I a Mrs. Massey, of Colorado, went there | as an agent of a life insurance company i and married a man owning 150,000 head J of cattle. Tar Heel Squirrels. A farmer named Corner, of Roane -county, W. Va., has invented a new plan to catch squirrels, which has proven a; great success. He has a larg<? corn field, j which borders on the woods, and which I the squirrels have almost devastated during the past season. Having liit upon a ; plan, he first, watched the animals, and | found that when they had made a raid i and retired they retreated to the woods almost invariably along one particular line of fence. Having learned this fact, | Corner covered the top rails of that line i of fence with tar, putting on a heavy ; coat. This he did in the evening, and in the morning when he went to the field I lie saw a long line of squirrels running ! along the fence toward the woods. They ! succeeded in clearing the fence, but when j they struck the woods the leavqs and i sticks stuck to their leet so Dacuy mat j they could not climb the trees nor run very far even on the leaves. The first J capture amounted to twenty-seven squirrels, and within a week Corner had killed and captured over 100 squirrels by his unique device.?Christian Advocate. There's Something In that Hoy, A funny sight the other afternoon was j a little urchin about 10 years old, who, having sold all his papers for the day, took out of a sachel swung across his i shoulders a clean blue and white shirt, j which, after washing his face and hands: j and drying them on the soiled shirt, he j proceeded to put on. Tjben he brushed ; his trousers and boots, brushed bis hair I .with a brush carried in the sachel, and,' 1 having dusted his hat and replaced it upon his head, ?be really did look muck I improved. Then he danced a hornpipe, I He next proceeded to dine on tho curb | stone, spreading out thereon a piece 0 paper, two liam sandwiches, a piece d gingerbread and*a slice of watermelon After this fine repast he washed it dowj with water from the Jerry McAule fountain. And then came, to me, tl; most remarkable part of the whole pi?/ ) I f I I t I . * i J rarmer who was a friend of mine near Hollonville, who owned a very fine cow whioh had a most promising heifer calf. The cow died while the calf was very young, and the calf, as the saying goes, had to be raised by hand, and of course as the farmer's wife "took'a hand" in its. nurture and admonition, when the heifer grew to maturity "she was a daisy." But let me back to the subject of physical training. While the poor little orphan heifer was passing through the first stages of grief for the irreparable loes of her kind and tender mother, 6he would soek sympathy from every source, and early every morning when my farmer friend would rise te feed his stock the little orphan would meet him at the door as he came out and rub up against him and hold up her little black nose to be caressed, and the farmer, touched by these demonstrations of affection and being a kind hearted man, overflowed with sympathy for the m^Vinvloae nfiH urifK f/wra In hfa j ceeding. \Ho actually stooped down co the lower oaSrin, intended for dogs and cats, and proceeded to wash tho soiled checked shirt fte had previously worn. It ! was duly rir.sedl wrung out and hung up on. the iron railing amrrounding the'flower garden to dry. All^ this time I sat in a building directly op>posite, awaiting my turn to come at my dentist's, who told i me afterward that the small boy was a daily frequenter of the fountain, and bo , didn't believe the _l^d had any other home.? Springfield Union. A New English Game. A new game called ^ringoal has come into favor i;i England vthis summer, and i forms an addition to\ tennis at garden j parties and fashionable outdoor gather| ings. The'game require ' two goals in the shape ci" nets, gra^s It ps and sticks. I* The hop is thrown to a\l fro between tho pflyers, the thrower\ scoring one point each time that He succeeds in sending the hoop past his opponnent into the goal. This the other player tries to prei vpnt b* catching the hoop on one or both I of Ills *sta*s|Ptiid it lie is success! ui ne : throvr^Xln'.cK at Lis opponent, in order, : if jxmbfe, io get it into his goal.?Chicago-feues. ! - PARAGRAPHS OF INXEREST> *. .Twefify-seven thousand emigrants landed at Castle Garden during *th6 month of July. X ^ The millers are hext talking of organizing a trust. A failure to vaccinate is punished at Phcenk, A. T., by $300 nne or six I month* in jail. People say that next winter different ; colored lace parlor window curtains will be the fashion. j n The digging for the foundations of the i new Roman Catholic cathedral at Peking j has been begun. A San Jose,. Cal., bicyclist is having a I machine made in the east with a nine ; foot wheel, and which will run a mile a j minute. | A law designed to prevent girls under i the age .of 15 years from begging or peddling has been admitted to the statute books of Massachusetts.* The police matron system is about to | be adopted by the Cincinnati department, j It is found to havoworked in Philadelphia with excellent results. f The Buffalo Ccnrier declares that'tit is ! safe, to isay there are 75,000 people in' i Buffalo today" that have never seen Niagara Falls not heard their Cbaring. Some^^ha.-cottages at Bar Harbor hai^Jfl^^Hight a tiny and brass * ^U^^^J^Khich is inscribed the name given it. This is the ilaT^^^^Hvrrinkie. ' San^^^Bteco's historic "Sand Lot" is to be no^Kre. By order of the super1 visors of city it has been sown with I clover. jHirney is the proprietor of a I peaceful in&lligence office. Somebc^w has discovered that Danief ! Webster StJ no right to practice in the i United St.As supreme court. It is a i little late r?w to do anything about it., j and we dot^t know as thire is anything y^e^^K of the Philadelphia zoo are j S^E^dant!?ye? I trou the put at^^0Raf VashingtoiTintne east parlor, f j / Sixty i thousand orange trees are on theit way tos California from Japan, where ? they were shipped (in board of an English bark in the harbor of Yokohama about two weeks ago. Vith them also comes a miscellaneous ass?rtmeqt of over 90,000 trees and shrubs, indigenous to Japan, which it is proposed to acclimatize in California: - - - ! - . . . f During her majesty s journey from Windsor to Gkwportthe royal saloon was made cool by meazB of wooden frameworks on each side, covered with felt and canvas, which were kept saturated with iced water, so that the temperature was exceedingly peasant, although if was one of the hottest days of this tropical summer. . . Mrs. Island Stanford's Charity. The other day & lady visited the Women's ud Children's hospital in San Francisco, and was, says The Alta, particularly aifected at the sight of the many liitlc childrtn, whose wan faces and distorte*l*fonn told of intense bodily anguish. jSJm sight of one little fellow, whose suff^ngs are of a peculiarly harrowing natire and whose patience is the wonder of ill who see him, so affected this kind T&arted lady that the tears flowed fast is she bent'over his tiny crib. The attendants of the hospital wero unaware of ;ke identity of the lady until she registered just before her departure as Mrs. LsUnd Stanford. Next day the children's <wara was thrown into wild excitemert and joy by the receipt of an immense package of toys.. The mana-' gers of tba hospital were not forgotten, for to thea Mrs. Stanford sent a check. i for $1,001, which was doubly acceptable, for it caoie at a time when the funds were muh depleted.?New York Tri- 1 bune. * Sort 6f Careless Style. Now <ones a tutor in penmanship in one of tie down town commercial schools, who informs the club man that the day of angular penmanship has passed. It is English still in England, for they don't change over there as often as we de, but it is not the proper caper any more in this cotintry. Asked what the thmgin penmanship now is the professor retlied: "Oh, ei sort of careless style?asif the writer didn't care. The , idea is tlat it denptee independence, and the Anwrican girl of the present day wants tqmake it appear that she doesn't - care d caitinental about anybody." So to be in style, be .careless.?Chicago Mail. 1 Keeping Up Appearances. An Allany newspaper says that there j are families in that town who have got , 'the art of keeping up appearances reduced to a science. When they want to make tluir neighbors think that they have gone into the country they are not content with the old plan of shutting the front blinds and living in the back of the house. They leave their^ newspapers on the front piazza, apparently neglected; but they take them in at night and read them, at the same time supplying the piazza with old l&pers for the next day's masquerade.?New York Sun. Could Carry a Oow. One of the most remarkable instance* of physical training that I ever knew ocj curred in Pike county. There 'was a * f\ , 4 eyee he took it up under his arm and carried it with him to the lot and fed the stock, jpd then wouM carry the calf back to the house. In the meantime the farmer's wife had prepared food for the calf, and then would feed it Every morning this was repeated pntil it became a confirmed habit of tne farmer to carry the calf to ' t?te lot and then back to the house to be fed, and it became a part of the calf's existence, and it would not eat at all without this treatment And thus it went on; years passed, and the heifer grew to be a.large oow, weighing 800 pounds, and her growth was so gradual that it was imperceptible to the fanner, as he had accustomed himself to carry the daily increasing weight, and it had never occurred to him that there was any more effort necessary to carty the full grown cow than there was to carry her a little, motherless, orphan heifer. Yet, strange to say, that if the farmer was called on to raise a weight of 200 pounds he could not do it, but an 800 pound.cow was an easy load, simply because his physical training was in that line.?Uor. Griffin (Ga.) News. Our Sunday-schools Must Teach the Doctrines of Our Church. address delivered by Rev. E. L. Lybrand, at the Sandayschool Convention in St. Stephens Church, Lexington, S. C., August 14,1887. / Many Christians fail, in practice if not iD theory, to give doe credibility to that verse of wisdom, which declares: 'Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old be will not depart from it." The great body of Christians profess to believe that all scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for Reproof, for correction, for instrucffaSn in ridrhteou^fl ? ~"Y)f course no 0f flod's word with'reference yard in a 1 doctrines a&'repentfcb, holiness of heart and life, ruction of the wicked, and the ng blessedness of believers. ; nparatively few realize as troth, "Train np a child in it shoold go.n The church under the old dispensation had children iqcorporated within it, and the heads of families were required ' by A1 i to i- i i. _ii I me Jkcernai raiaer 10 ceaco an iuv precepts of the law to their children.. Not only the precepts of law/bcrt the ceremonies, rights and meaniog of the principal feasts were to be tanght and explained to the yonng. And the last command of onr blessed Savionr, to His disciples was: Go make disciples of all nations, baptising them in the nan^p of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost; teaching them to .observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you. Reiterating the Old Testament injunction of bringing children in the church as well as adults, and of teaching them to observe all things whatsoever He had command. Christ commanded Peter to feed the lambs as well as the sheep. And wheD, on a certain occasion, the disciples rebuked certain ones for trespassing upon the Saviour's time in offering to Him little children. He said: "Suffer little children to come unto me* and forbid tbem not, for of such is ihe kingdom of heaven. And whosoever shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better that a millstone were hanged about his neck and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea." Beyond .? doubt, Christian training is as clearly revealed as any other doctrine, and children are proper subjects for it; " For of each is the kingdom of heaven." .The chnrch is largely composed of children; the charch militant and. the chnrch triumphant. In thq Mosaic dispensation, parents were positively required by God to teach their children. Hence, the children were early tanght to reverence God's law, to obey its precepts, and with the meaning of the worship of the sanctuary they wore thoroughly acquainted. Thus as one veneration passed away another was ready to take its .place, having the same law,'the same feasts, the same worship. We observe, then, very little change in Jewish customs and worship from Moses to Christ, a period of many hundred .years; and with reference to worship, comparatively none. The same may, in the mean, be said of Judaism from Christ down to the present. This oneness of life and worship may largely be attributed to the careful manner in which the children were taught the truths of their religion. Nor will the time ever come when parents should fail to teach their children in those principles which are to control their after life. The admonition will ever be binding. "Fathers provoke not yonr children to wrath, but bring them np in the nnrtnre and admonition of the Lord." The charch in our families should teach every member of the church and famdy, the faith of the church, and to know the foundation upon which she is builded. The church, however, in its united efforts offers to assist the family church in teaching the children the fear of the. Lord. This assist&Qce offered and given by the united church constitutes as what is known as helps to family training. Prominent ampng these helps in these latter days,/is the Sunday-school. The object of the Snoday-school is to instruct and train the children to properly take their places in the church. It is not an independent organization as the practice of some would go to show. ' Id many Sundayschools, especially in our large cities, it is thought enough for the children to attend the Sunday-school, but no effort is made to keep them in the sanctuary during the regular services of the church. As if the children had no use for the preached word. And any SQoday-sckool that presumes to train children and yet ignores tbo regular worship of God's house, is exerting do good for Christ or the church. 'It is that kind of training which trainB children to do without knowing how or what to do.* The Sunday-school is very properly styled the nursery of the church. And just as the little twigs in the nursery have to be trimmed and cultivated so that the sprigs may become trees and bear the fruit of the parent tree, so in the nursery of the church, the Sundays, school, the children, with their plastic minds are to be trained Tor usefalneei| io the cbarch. The moral nature o: the child is to be developed byxterefal training, so that Christian fruit may produce and develop tBreon. i But as the Sunday-school is te nurj sery of the church and aimsto help I ! the charch, it must of necessty teach the doctrines and prioriyie> of the church. . / L ^ or grapcon thistles, so a Lutheran*""* Sunday $ool is not the place to tcaio a eld for aoy other faith. I repeat thfcame idea, if our faith is the faith c God's word, then God commandfius to teach our children that faith. "If Hebrew parents permitted their children to grow np in ignorant of tie tenants of their religion arid to stray about from Sunday school to Sunday-school, according to their own whin*? or ndtions, or because some one mxj perchance say it is nncharitable to dt otherwise, "how long would Jadaism continue to exist? God's way is best; let. us then follow it, training up our children in the nature and admotion of the Lord, and in the knowledge of the doctrine, discipline and worship of the church. Bat now let as consider our duty in Lutheran Sunday-schools by a brief study of others. And I have already referred to Judaism, which ought to be an ample illustration of this matter. How she has, from the the days of Abraham to the present, maintained a onenes^in her religions worship, and that all along down through this long, long period of time, she has never lost sight of the dnty, as well as the necessity of teaching tHe children the tenants of her faith. Tliis, I say, ought to be sufficient to forever set our minds at rest, that we, as Latherans, are to teach anything to our children except the principles of our church. But io order to give us more information let us notice a few other examples, equally illustrative. Suppose the Romish 'church were to teach her children Protestant principles, how loDg would Romanism exist? The Romish church, however, has beeD zealous in inculcating her doctrines in all her members. And to make a success, she removed the Bible from the laity, in order that tbey might study only the Oanobs of the church. Apply this argument to the Mahometan religion. | If Mohometan conn-tries would allow | their children to associate with Chris tiane and receive unnsuan iruiuiug, from what source woald Mohometanism draw its increase. "If satan's kingdom be divided against itself, satan's kingdom will come to nanght. One more illustration. And this one we take from what is commonly called part of Protestantism. There is an organized society "Of Christians known as the Baptist. The great distinguishing feature of the Baptist is the doctrine of immersion. That immersion .or dipping the subject in water is the only correct mode of baptism. Now, if the Baptist cease to believe in immersion, 1! tbey relinquish their cardinal principle, there remains no longer the Baptist church. They are bound to maintain immersion as long as they desire to maintain the identity of the Baptist chnrcb. Now if the Baptist would everywhere send their children to Pedobaptist to receive Christian training, and depend upon adults who are outside of the church, for their increase, tbey would lose more oy death in one year than they would gain in several. And what shall I say in regard to our beloved Lutheran church? With her great principle of justification by faith as the doctrine of all doctrines, she is bound-to teach her children the phin of salvation. Do we find fault with the Cbnrch of Rome for teaching hers, or the Baptist or Methodist, or any one else, for teachiBg their's? No; ifris,tlje errors that underlie the different 9ystem that we contend with, bat not with their connections of daty to teach their children. ' Shall oar beloved charcb, the charch of the Reformation, the church built upon the foundation of the > apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ. being the cornerstone be too timid to teach her children the plan of salva- . tion in the fear of the Lord? We believe oar church is right. Sorely there is no one present, claiming to be a Lutheran,' who does not ^ believe the Lutheran chufch is right? Religion should be a matter of firm. settled faith. If we, claiming as we do, the name * of Lutheran, deny Luther in theory aod practice, then we are untrue to ourselves, and to the cause we claim to present. Assuming, then, that we # are a unit npon this point, that we bright to be what fte profess to be, I repeat, we believe our church is right. While we grant there are many good people in other chnrches, yet of systems professing Christ, we oars the purest That in fessions, in the her teaching there more than any where else quote a few words a ]<S I author: "No partiopWlharcl^^^^^^^^l^fl on i>? own showir^J rfclht j^^^uoiverga ngbt to a part which does not dfl B that to it shoald belong the wd|^H^H^H tfaen word iu regenerating aud saving th? I "Being born again, not of seed4 bat incorraptabie, V I word of God which livethand forever." Granting, then, that we a cburcb are right?bave the true doctrines of God's word, let as apply ' ' a principle of Christian ethics to onr present sobject. It is an assomed fact, in Christian ethics that it is never right to do wrong, bat always right to do right, and always wrong to do wrong. And now, if we are right, can it be wrong for as to teach oar children what is right ? Is it right for as to teach oar children in Snnday-scbools systems and principles which we believe to be 'wroDg* Is it right for as to engage in any form of worship or to countenance any doctrine which we believe, from God's word to be wrong? If ? not, how can it be right for as to kavA nnr ehildren taaghf, bCOCU Ui uuif v W v?. ? ? thiDg8 which we do not believe our? selves? Bat the cry will no doubt be raised: "Yon are uncharitable;" "charity is the best of all." Bat Sanday-school teachers, if charity is the greatest, faith is the* first. "Faith, hope and charity." "Add to your faith, virtue to virtue, knowledge to knowledge, temperance to temper' ancce, brotbetly kindness to brotherly kindness, charity." Towards a departure from any trath of God's word, there can be no charity. Suppose Lather had thought it charitable to have acquiesced in the wishes of t? T.ntheranism and IVOmtJj wuoic nuum ? Protestantism be to-day? Did the Protestant Prince think it charitable and acqaie8ce, when in the city of I Augsburg to attend the Diet, he received the order -not to allow his ministers to preach while there! In sub| stance he answered: You may sever j my head from my body, but for me to forbid my ministers to preach what ^ I believe to be the troth, I'll never do i it. Upon snchj an immovable basis the church of. the Reformation was ' planted; resting upon the same, we ; are to (depend aod promulgate the truth. Let us go oo, then, teaching ? the truth, and nothing but the truth, and God will lead us on to victory. Two weaks ago the farmers of Aiken connty had -the brightest prospect j for a big yield of cotton they ever had. | The crop had been well worked, was i in good condition, and was growing well. To-day they report a different condition of affairs.?Aiken Journal j and Review. ^