The Sioux County Journal VOLUME VI. HAKKISOX, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JAXUAltV U, 181)4. NUMBER 18. 6v THE- COMMERCIAL BANK. ESTABLISHED 1888. Harrison, & ft mwstm, President. D. a. ORIS WOLD, Caahi.r. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. $50 000. Transacts a General Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS: OAM EiOHvai National Bawe, Uvted States National Ban, Omaha, Futaf National Bank, Chndroa. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. WDRAFTS SOLD ON ALL PAKT3 OF EUROPE. THE PIONEER Pharmacy, , -,,.. i E PHIH!KY. Pure Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils and Varnishes. OrAVtlSTS' MATERIAL. School Supplies. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded Day or Night. SiniS & SMILEY, Harrison, Nebraska, Real Estate Agents, Have a number of bargains in choice land in Sioux county. Parties desiring to estate should call on School Lands leased, taxes paid for non-residents; farms rented,' etc. CORRESPONDENTS SOLICITED. Nebraska. C. F. Cora, Vio-PrMi4ai. New York, Proprietor. taf-BRUflHRft buy or sell real not fail to them. A CHKiSTMAS SERMON PULPIT FESTOONED WITH HOLI DAY GREEN. ; Rcr. Dr. Tulmaice'. Mrmw on thrlat the Star-A Living, ftpxaklng, HMorir, ud Kvaat-riUtlc Star A Diamine Tkat Glum with KUMiueare. Hark In Hrookljn. In the Brooklyn Taliernacle on ( :hrifW mas day a great audience assembled to participate in the services. Standing before the organ, festooned with Christmas greens, this sermon van de livered by Kev. Dr. Talmage, after the throng had sung ''The Star of Beth lehem." Text, lievelation xxii, 1, ''I am the bright and the morning star." This is Christinas eve. Our atten tion and the attention of the world is drawn to the star that pointed down to the caravansary whore Christ was born. Hut do not let us foreet. that Christ himself was a star. To that luminous fact my text calls us. It seems as if the natural world were anxious to make up for the damage it did our race in furnishing the forbid den fruit. If that fruit wrought death among the nations, now all the natm;! product shall become a symbol of blow ing. The showering down of t he wealth of the orchard will make us think cf Him whom Solomon describes as the apple tree among the trees of the wood, and the flowers of tangled glen and cultured parterre shall be the dear glinted garland forthe brow of the' Lord Jesus. Yes, even the nightshall bo taxed, and its brightest star shall be set as a gem in the coronet of oui" holy religion. Have you over seen the morning star advantageously? If it was on your way homo from a night's carousal, you saw none of its beauty. If you merely turn ed over on your pillow in the darknes, glancing out of the window, you kno nothing about the cheerful influence of that star. But there are many in this house to-night who in great passes! ui mtur u'li, WJiiiw ui mum lar uttii sea, have ga.ed at that star and been thrilled through with lndescrib'e glad ness. That star comes trembling at though with the perils of tho dark ness, and yet bright with the anticipa tions of the day. It seems emotional) with all tenderness, its eyes filled with. tears of munv sorrows. It is the ae:t on the hand of the morning thrust id. to signal its coming. Other stars s dim. tike hoi v candles in a cathedr or silver beads courted injfVm'sy-MMiMA ruuy; twt tni rt a living swr.aapv.k- ing siar, a nisiono star, an evangelis tic star -bright and brilliant and triumphant symbol of the great Re deemer. The telegraphic operator puts his finger on the silver key of the electric instrument, and tho tidings fly across the continent. And so it seems to me that the finger of inspiration is E laced upon this silver point in the cavens, and its thrill through all the earth. "Behold, I bring you good tid ings of great joy which shall be to all people. Behold, I am the bright and morning star. " Tho meaning of my text is this: As the morning star pre cedes and promises the coming of the day, so Christ heralds the natural and spiritual dawn. In the first place, Christ heralded the corning of the creation. There was a time when there was no order, no sound or beauty. No wing stirred. No word was uUerod. No light sped. As far as Cod could look up. as far down, as far out, there was nothing. Immeasureahlo solitude. Height and depth and length and breadth of noth ingness. Did Christ then exist? Oh, yes. "By Him were all things made that are made; things in Heaven and things in earth and things under the earth." Yes. He antedated the crea tion. Ho led forth A returns and bin sons. He shone before the tirst morn ing. His voice was heard in the con cert when the morning stars serenaded tho advent of our infant earth, when, wra,)s-d in swaddling clothes of light, it lny in the arms of the great Jehovah. He saw the lirst, fountain laid. He saw the first light kindled. That hand which was afterward crushed upon the cross was thrust into chaos, and it brought out one world and swung it in that orbit, and brought o it another world and swung it in anot her orbit, and brought out all tho worlds and swung them in their particular orbits. They came like sheep at the call of a shepherd. They knew His voice, and He called them all by their names. Oh, it is an interesting thought to me to know that Christ had something to do w ith the creation. I nee now why It was ho easy for Him to change water into wine. Ho first created tho water. 1 see now why it was so easy for Him to cure tho maniac. He first created the intellect. I see now why it was so easy for Him to hush the tempest. He sank Ceiiiiesaret. t see now why it was so easy for Him to swing fish into Simon's net. He made tho tinh. I see now why it was so easy for Him to give sight to the blind man, He created tho optle nerve, I see now why it was so easy for H fin to raise I,aariis from tho dead. He created tho lody of Lazarus and the rock that shut him In. Home supose that Christ came a stranger to Bethlehem. Oh. no. lie created the shepherds, and the Hocks they watched, and the hills on which they past.irod, and the heavens that overarched their heads, nnd the angels that chanted tho chorus on that Christmas night. That hand which was afterward nailed to the cross, was an omnipotent and creative hand and the whole universe wim poised on the tip of one of his lingers. Be fore tho world was Christ was. All the world camfl trooping vp out of the darkness, and He greeted them, as a father greets his children, with a "good morning," or a "good night.' Hail, I)rd Jesus, morning star of tho first creation. Again, Christ hoaralds the dnwn of comlort in a Christian soul. Some times we como to passes in life where all kinds of tribulations meet us. You ar o.uitlti g up some great enterprise. You have oulit the foundation the wall - you are just about to put tin the capstone, when everything is demol ished. You have a harp all strung for pweeiest accord, and tome great agony crushes it. There is a little voice hushed in the household. Blue eye dosed. Calor dashed out of tho cheek. The foot still. Instead of the quick feet in the hall, the heavy tread of those who march to the grave. Oh, what are people to do ainia all these sorrows? Some sit down and mourn. Some bite their lip until the blood comes. Koine wring their pale hands. Some fall on their laces. Some lie on tbeir backs helpless and look up into what seems to tnem an unpitying Heaven. Some pull their hair down over their eyes and look through with a fiend's glare. Some, with both hands, press their hot brain and want to die and cry. "O God, O Cod!" Long night, bitter night, stupendous night of the world's sutlering! Some know not which way to turn. But not so the Christian man. He looks up toward the heavens. He sees a bright ap pearance in the heavens. Can it b; only a flashing meteor? -Can it be only a falling star? Can it be only a delu sion? Nay. nay. The longe r he looks the more distinct it becomes,' until af ter awhile he erics out. "A star a (norning star, a Btar of comlort, a star if grace, a star of peace, the star of the Kedeemer!" Peace for all trouble. Balm for all wounds. Life for all dead. Now Jesus, the great heart healer, comes into our home. I'eacel Peace that passeth. all understanding. We look up through our tears. We are comforted. It is the morning star of the Kedeemer. "Who broke olT that t'ower?" said one servant in the gar den to (mother. "Who broke off that flower?" And the other said, "The master." Nothing more was said, for if the master had not a right to break off a (lower to wear over his heart or to set in the vase in tho mansion, who has a right to touch the flower? And when Christ comes down into our garden to gather lilies, shall we fight Him bark.'' Shall we talk as though He had no right to come? If any one in all the universe has a right to that which is beautiful in our homes, then our master has, and He will take it. and Ho will wear it over his heart, or He will set it in the vase of the palace eternal. "The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord." Peace, troubled soul.' 1 put the balm on your wounded heart to-night. The morning star, be morning star of the Redeemer. Again Christ holds the dawn of mil- r.Ul i '...1 i, ; n;,.k. ; ft.:-., I'' V. It. IO IlltUi 111 V. MI1JU, ror the vaat iaioritv o th, ajonty 01 tne world s population. But it seems to me there are some intimations of the morning. All Spain is to tie brought under the influence of the gospel. What is that light I see breaking over the top of the Pyrenees? The morning! Yea, all Italy shall receive the gospel. She shall have her schools and colleges and her churches. Her vast population shall surrender themselves to Christ. What is that light I see breaking over the top of tho Alps? The morning. All India shall come toGod. Her idols shall 1)6 cast down. Her juggernauts shall be broken. Her temples of in iquity shall be demolished. What is that light I see breaking over the top of the Himalayas? Tho morning. The empurpled clouds shall gild the path of the conquering day. The Hottentot will come out of liis mud hovel to look at the dawn: tho Chinaman will come up on the granite cliffs, the Norwegian will get up on the rocks, and all the beach of Heaven will be crowded with celestial inhabitants come out to see the sun rise over the ocean of the world's agony. They shall come from the Kast, and from the West, from the North, and from the South, and sit down in tho kingdom of God. These sweltered under tropical suns. These shivered under Icelandic temperature. Those plucked tho vineyards in Italy. These packed the teaboxes in China. These were ulxirigincs lifting up their dusky faces in the dawn. And the wind shall waft it, and every mountain shall become a transfiguration, and the sea will become the walking place of Him who trod the wave cliffs of stormy Tiberias, and the song of joy shall rise toward Heaven, imd the great sky will become a hounding board which shall strike back the shout of salvation to the cart h until it relsiunds again to the throne of tin; Almighty, and the morning star of Christian hope will lie come tho full sunburst of millcnial glory. Again. Christ heralds the dawn of Heaven upon every Christian's dying pillow. I suppose you have noticed that the characteristics of people in their healthful days are very apt to be their characteristics in .their dying days. Tho dying words of ambitions Napoleon were, "Bead of the Army.' Tho dying words of poetic Ird Byron were, "1 must sleep now." The dying words of affectionate l.ord Nelson were, "Kiss me, Hardy." The dying words of oltaire were, as ho saw one be sup posed to be Jesus In tho room. "(!riir.h that wretch." But 1 have noticed that, the dying words of Christ inns always mean peace. Generally the pain is ail gone, and there is a great quietude through the room. As one of these brothers told me of his mot (icr in the last moment. "She looked up ami sitid. point ing to some supernatural Us ing that seemed to lie in the room. 'Look at that, bright form. Why. they have come for :i.e now."' The lattice is turned so that t he light is very pleasunt. It is peace nil around. You ask yourself: "VVhv. can this be a dying loom? It is so different from anything I ever expected." And you vvaik the lloor, und you look out of the winnow, and you come bark and look ut, your watch, and you look at the face of the patient again, and there is no change, excent that the face is be coming more radiant, more illuminated. The wave of deal h seems coming up higher and higher, until it has touched the ankle, ami then it comes on up un til it touches tl e knee, and then it comes on up until it reaches the glrdlo. and thes H comes on up until it reaches the lip, and the soul is about to be floated away into glory, and you roll back the patient's sleeve, and you put your finger on the pulse, and it is getting weaker and weaker, and the pulse stops, and you hardly know whether life has gone out or not. In deed, you cannot tell when she goes away, she goes away so calmly. Per haps it is 4 o clock in the morning, and you have the bed wheeled around to the window, and the dying one looks out into the night sky, and she sees something that attracts her attention, and you wonder what it is. Why, it is a star. It is a star that out of its silver rim is pouring a super-natural light into' that dying ex perience. And you say, "What is it that you are looking sty" She Bays, "It is a star." You say, "What star is that seems so well to please you? "Oh," she says, "that is the morning star Jesus!" I would like to have my death bed under that evangelical star I vould like to have my eye on that star, so that I could be ass n red of the morning. Then the dash of the surf of the sea of death would only be the billowing up of the promise, "When thou passest through t he waters, I will be with thee, and the rivers, they shall not overflow thee." All other lights will fail-- the HgK will fail from the scroll of fame, the light that flashes from the gem in the beautiful apparel, the light that flames from the burning lamps of a banquet but this light burns on and burns on. Paul kept his eye on that morning star, until he wou'd say: "I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand; I have fought the cood light. 1 have finished my course. I have kept the faith." Edward Payson kept his eye on that star until he could sav, "The breezes of Heaven fan me." Dr. Goodwin kept his eye on that evan gelistic star until he could say, "I am swallowed up in Cod." John Tennant kept his eye on that evangelistic star until he could say, "Welcome, sweet Lord Jesus welcome, eternity." No other star ever pointed a mariner into so safer a harlior. No other star ever sunk its silvered anchor into the waters. No other star ev;r pierced such accumulated cloud, or beckoned with such a holy luster. With lanterns and torches and a guide, we went down in the Mammoth cave of Kentucky. You may walk fourteen miles and see no sunlight. It is a stupendous place. Some places the roof of the cave a hundred feet high. The grottoes filled with weird echoes, cascades falling from invisible height to invisible depth. Stalagmites rising rp .from the floor of the cave-, talactites des sending from the roof pt itits t?, jiiiiih eieh oLuer, alid iiiaK ing pillars of the Almighty 's sculptur ing. There are rosettes of amethyst in halls of gypsum. As. the guide car ries his lantern ahead of you, the shadows have an appearance super natural and spectral. The darkness is fearful. Two people, getting lost from their guide only for a few hours, year ago, wero demented, and for years sat in their insanity. You feel like hold ing your breath as you walk across the bridges that seem to span the bottom less abyss. The guide throws his cal cium light down Into the caverns, and the light rolls and tosses from rock to rock and from depth to depth, making at every plunge a new revelation of the awful power that could have made such a place as that. A sense of suffocation comes uoon you as you think that you are 1150 feet in a straight lino from the sunlit sur face of the earth. The guide after awhile takes you into what is called the "Star Chamber," and then ho says to you, "Sit here," and then he takes the lantern and goes down under the rocks, and it gets darker and darker, until the night is so thick that the hand an inch from the eye is unobserv able. And then, by kindling one of tho lanterns and placing it in a cleft of the rock, there is a reflection cast on the dome of the cave, and there are stars coming out in constellations - a brilliant night heavens-and you in voluntarily exclaim: "Beautiful! beautiful!" Then he takes the lantern down in ether depths f tho cavern, and wanders on, and wanders off, until he comes up from be hind the rocks gradually, and it seems like the dawn of the morning, and it gets brighter and brighter. The guide is a skilled ventriloquist, and he imitates the voices of the morning, and soon the gloom is all gone, and you stand congratulating yourself over the woiidertul spectacle.. Well, there are a great many people who look down into the grave as agnat cavern. They think it is a thousand miles subterran eous, and all the echoes seem to be tho voices of despair, and the cascades seem to he the falling tears that al ways fall, and the gloom of earth seems coming up in stalagmite, and the gloom of the eternal world seems descending in the stalacite. making pillars of in describable horror! The grave is no such place as that to me, thank God. Our divine Guide takes us down into the great caverns, and wo have the lump to our feet and the light to our path, and all the echoes in the rifts of t he ro k are ant hems, and all the fall ing waters are fountains of salvation, and after awhile we look up and, be hold! the cavern of the tomb has bo come a king's star chamber. And while we are looking at the pomp of it an everlasting morning begins to rise, and all the tears of earth crystali.o into stalagmite, rising up in a pi liar on the one side, and all the glor ious of II, aven seem to be de scending in stalactite, making a pillar on the other side, and you push against the gate that swings between the two pillars, and as the gate flushes open you hnd it is one of the twelve gates which are twelve pearls. Blessed lie God that through this gospel the mammoth cave of the sepulclior has become the illumined Star Chamber of the King! 1 would God that if my sermon to day does not lead you to Christ, that before morning, lx;king out of the window, tho astronomy of tho night heavens might lead you to the feet of Jesus. FLEET-FOOTED ZEBRAS. Their lBh of Speed When Alarmad bf tbe Vhir of a Uifle Ball. The rapidity with which the differ ent zebras have been exterminated, owing to tbe advance of civilization in South Africa, is shown by refer euce to such works as that of Sir Coi dw liis Harris, written in 1840, in which tbe author tells us that the quagga was at the time found in "In terminable herds," bands of man hundreds being frequently seen, while he describes Burchell's zebra as con gregating in herd? of eighty or 100, and abounding to a great extent; but now, after tbe expiration of but fifty years, tbe one species is extinct or practically so, while the other has been dcJven much farther afield and its nuniSir-i are yearly being reduced. This author's description of the com mon zebra is well worth repeating. He says: Seeking tbe wildest and most sequestered spots, haughty troops are exceedingly difficult to ap proach, as well on account of their extreme agility and fleetness of foot as irom the abrupt a id inaccessible nature of tbeir highland abode. Un der the spec al charge of a sentiutl, so posted on some ad acent crag as to command a view of every avenue of apnruach, the checkered herd whom 'painted skins adorn' is to be viewed perambulating some rocky '..jge, on which tbe rifle bail alone can reach them. No sooner has tbe note of alarm been sounded by the vidette, than, pricking their long ears, the whole flock hurry forward to ascer tain the nature of the approaching danger, and, having gazed a moment at tbe advancing hunter, whisking their brindli 1 tails aloft, helter skelter away they thunder, down craggy precipices and ever yawning ravines, where no less agile foot could dare to follow them." Of Burchell's zebra he says: "Fierce, strong, fleet and surpassingly beautiful, there is, perhaps, no quadruped, in the crea tion, not even excepting the moun tain zebra, more splendidly attired or presenting a flcture of more singu larly attractive Tseautv." Zebras are by no meansamiable animals, and. though many of the stories told of their ferocity are doubtless much ex aggerated, they have bo far not proved themselves amenable to do- ?Vticatien. & , Prof. Nippold, who was for many years at tbe head of the law school at the Tokio University, says that much of the healthfulncss of the Japanese is due to their habitual use of very hot water in bathing, and that, by comparison, nations outside Japan hardly know what a hot bath meaDS. The Japanese take their morning tub at a temperature of over 104 degrees Fahrenheit, and immediately after wards douch themselves with per fectly cold water. Herr Nippold de cla es that after a bath of this heat and the subsequent cold douche, he used to feel warm all day in the cold est winter weather, while in summer the bath had the exactly contrary effect, and was most cooling and re freshing. One of the most remarka ble water-cure resorts in Japan is Kusatsu, where the boiling sulphur springs bubble up out of the earth at a temperature of 158 degrees Fahren heit, a beat which appalls even the Japanese. At 5 o'clock in the morn ing, all through the bathing season, a great bell announ es to all patients who are ordered to take boiling baths that their time of ordeal has come. In the middle of the bath house is a huge basin, filled with the sulphur water. The bathars cluster around, throw water over their head-i, and screw up theircourage. Thedecisive moment conies when the head bath ing oiliclal gives the word of com mand. Then all who have the nerve, and many have not, to subject them selves to the scalding liquid answer in chorus, and begin to get into the bath. This is done as gradually and slowly as possible, because the more the water is moved about the more it scalds. Inch by inch the bodies disappear, till at last the bathers are up to their necks in water. Then they stand motionless. To keep up their mettle, the head bathraan, who stands in the middle of the bath, gives notice every time a minute has passed and the victims respond in chorus, "Two minutes more" or whatever the remaining term of trib ulation may be, and when the time is ui), they all rush and so; amble out of the water at a rate tnat Is a cur ious contrast to the pace at which they go in. A I. our Wait. Saint-I'uix, the French poet, had a large income, but was always in debt. Much of his time was spent (lodging creditors. He sat one day in a barber chair with his face lath ered and ready to be shaved when one of his largest creditors entered the shop. The man faw Saint-Folx and angrily demanded the money due him. "Won't you wait until 1 pet a shave?" quietly inquired the poet "Certainly," answered the other, pleased at the prospect of getting tho money. Tbe poet made tho barber a wit ness to the agrceinont and calmly wined the lather from his face. He wore a beard to his dvt.ig day. UknkiiaIjLy, the dearest things are those which are advertised as free. 6; ; i l t '-'V. milium ijVn 4 V(l ',('-.;. .- , rXl , .'ttfc,l ' V.t.I.V. ' 1st., - ui i ,' . I 1 1 f