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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (April 1, 1898)
TALMAGE’S SERMON.' “MEASURED CY YOUR OWN YARD STICK,'*THL SUBJECT. An Intcrrotlug ami ItiMroctlu nisroonio y ' Talii'n from Milttlirw All. 2. iih Fol low h: “With What M*»:ftHurt Von Mrt«, Kl Klmll lie McaMirnl to You Again." In the greatest Kcrmr n ever prea< hed M* — a sermon about fifteen minutes long according to the ordinary rate of tipeerh a sermon on the Mount of Olive*, the preacher, silting while he ■poke, according to the ancient mode of oratory, the people were given to K understand that the same yard-stick jf that they employed upon others would he employed upon themselves. Meas ure others by a harsh rule, and you will lie measured by a harsh rule. h Measure others by a charitable rule and you will be measured by a char itable rule. Give no mercy to others, anil no mer<y will he given to you. "With what measure ye mete, it shall lie measured to you again." There is a great deal of unfairness in criticism in human conduct. It was to mnlte that unfairness that t'hrist uttered the words of the text and my sermon will be a re-echo of the divine sentiment. In estimating the misbe havior of others, we must take into consideration the pressure of (treum stanees. it is never right to do wrong, hut there are degrees of culpability. When men misbehave or 1' mrrflt some atrocious wickedness we ere disposed indiscriminately to tumble them all over the bank of condemnation. Suf fer 1hey ought and suffer they must, but In a difference of degree. In the first, place, in climating the . misdoing of others, we must take Into P calculation the hereditary tendency. There Is such a; thing as good blood, t^id there is such a thing bad blood. There are families tha 1... vc- hud a moral twist in them for a hundred ye, is hack. They have not been care ful to keep the family record In that regard. There have been escapades, anu maraudings a mi s< ounof iisms nun moral deficits all the way hack, whetb < r you call It kleptomania, or pyroma i.:a or dipsomania, or whether it lie in a milder form, and amount to no mania at all. The strong probability is that the present criminal started life with nerve, muscle and hone contaminated. As sonic start life with a natural ten dency to nobility and generosity and kindness and truthfulness there are others who start life with Just the op posite tendency and they are horn liars, or lx>rn malcontents, or bem outlaws, or born swindlers. There is in England a school that is called the Princess Mary school. All the children in that school are the ehil <Jt< n of convicts. The school is under high patronage. I had the pleasure of being present at one of their anniver saries, presided over by the Earl of Kintore. By a wise law in England, after parents have committed a cer tain number of crimes, and thereby shown themselves incompetent rightly to bring up their children, the little ones are taken from under pernicious influences and put in reformatory schools, where all gracious and kindly influences shall be brought upon them. 01 course the experiment is young, and it has got to be demonstrated how large a percentage of the children of convicts may be brought up to re spectability and usefulness. But we all know that it is more difficult for children of had parentage to do right than for children of good parentage. In this country we arc taught by the Declaration of American Independence that all people arc born equal. There never was a greater misrepresentation put in one sentence than in that sen tence which implies tha- we are all born equal. You may as well say that flowers are born equal, or trees are born equal, or animals are born equal. Why does one horse cost $100 and -an other horse cost $5,000? Why does one sheep cost $10 and another sheep cost $500? Difference in blood. We ,ure wise enough to recognize it in horses, in cattle, in sheep, but we are not wise enough to make allowance for the difference in the human blood. Now 1 demand by the* law of eternal fair criticism of those who were boru wrong, in whose ancestral line there was a hangman's knot, or who came from a tree the fruit of which for cen turies lms been gnarled ami worm eaten. It is a very different thing to swim with the current, front what it is to swim against the current, us some of you have no doubt found in your ,-utn mef recreation If a man find himself in an ancestral current where there is gemd blood bowing smoothly from gen eration to generation, it is not a very grout credit to him If to turn out good, and honest, and pure, and noble He could hardly help it. lint suppose he is born in an ancestral lit:1 in an hered itary line, when the Influent,* have lawn bad, and there hu been a coming down over a lout a I dniltr |ty if th>< man surrender to the indu- n, «•* he will »f» down under the overntas.eriag gravitation unless some superv.*tural aid Is afforded tutu Non, »ucb a per son deserves nut your *i> orttuion. but your pity tv, n,,i stt with *h* lip curl ed lu **t»rn, and with an s*um<,| air of an ,> in Innocr * * looking down up. on >ml< Moral |U* i|<ilsc u Y • ! bad letisr get d >wn wit your knee* and first pray llmtgh'y (Sod fer thr res , w and n«at thank the l, id that yuu khvv tMH bets thrown under the nheels of that juageettnu* hffwin. i hav* tw remark that in eur i letitWUieta the Misdoing «M p*«pl* who have fallow fruM high r*ep». 'ability nnd uaefwhn* .. wt mtn tab* tntucug nideratbtn the ronjun item ,,f ,-tr, cm nta*»r- In nut# cases out uf ten « Man a (Hr par sdiai does not intend nnv poaittve wrung |fe h«a trust tuttdr M» nah* a part nf these luwd* in tnvvwiMsnu Us say a 4 I should lose that Investment I have of my own property five timrs as much, 1 and If this investment should go wrong, j I could easily make it up; I could five j times make it up.” With that wrong reasoning he goes on and makes the investment, and it docs not turn out quite as well as he expected, and he makes another investment, and strange to say at the same time all his other affairs get entangled, and ail his other resources fail, and his hands are lied. Now he wants to extricate himself. He goes a little further on In the wrong Investment. He takes a plunge further ahead, for he wants to save his wife and children, he wants to save his home, he wants to save his member ship in the church. He takes one more plunge and all is lost. Some morning at 10 o'clock the bank door is not opened, and there is a caul on the door signed by an officer of the bank, indirating that there is trouble, and the name of the defaulter or the defrauder heads the newspaper col umn. and hundreds of m n say; ' Hood for him.” hundreds of other men say, "I’m glad he's found out at last; hun dreds of others sav. "Just as I told you;" hundreds of other men say. "We couldn't possibly have been tempted to do that- no eonjuuctlon of circum stances could ever have overthrown me;” and there is a superabundance of indignation, but no pity. The heavens full of lightning, but not one drop of dew. If God treated us as society treats that man we would all h:ne been in hell long ago. Wait for the alleviating cinumdan ces. Perhaps he may have been the dupe of others. Before you let all the hounds out from their kennel to maul and tear that mac, find out if he has not Lien brought up In a ccmmerc'al establishment where there was a wiong system of ethics taught; find cut wltcher that man has not an extrava gant wife who is r.ot satisfied with bis honest earnings, and in the temptation to please her he is gone into that ruin into which enough men have fallen, and by the game temptation, to make a procession of many miles. Perhaps some sudden sickness nitty have tou'li ed his brain, and his judgment may lie unbalanced. He is wrong, he is aw fully wrong, and he must be toiv.omn i*d, hut there may be mitigating cir cumstances. Perhaps, under the same temptation voti might have fallen. Tha reason some men do not steal two hun dred thousand dollars Is liccms? they do not get a chance! Have righteous Indignation you must about that man’s conduct, but temper it with mercy. But, you say: ”1 am sorry that the innocent should suffer.” Yes, 1 am, too sorry for the widows and orphans who lost their all lay that defalcation. I am sorry for the business m>n, the honest business nun. who have had their affairs all crippled by that, defal cation. I am soiry for the venerable bank president to whom credit of that hank war a matter of pride. Yes. I am sorry also for that man who brought all the distress; sorry that he sacrificed body, mind, soul, reputation, heaven, and went into the blackness of dark ness forever. You defiantly nay; “I could not be tempted in that way.” Perhaps you may be tested after awhile. God has a very good memory, and be some times seems to say: “This man feels so strong in his Innate power and good ness he shall lie tested; he is so full of bitter invective against that unf >r tunate it shall he shown now whether he has the power to eland.” Fifteen years go by. The wheel of fortune turns several times, and you are in a crisis that you never could have an ticipated. Now, all the powers of darkness come around, and they chuckle and they chatter and they say: “Aha! here is the old fellow who was so proud of his integrity, and who bragged he couldn't be overthrown by temptation, and was so uproarious in his demonstrations of indignation at the defalcation fifteen years ago. Let us see!” God lets the man go. God. who had kept that man under his protecting care, lets the man go. and try for him self tho majesty of his integrity. God letting the man go. the powers of dark ness pounce upon him. I see you some day in your omce in gnat excitement. One of two things you t an do. Be honest, and be pauperized, and have your children brought home from school, your family dethroned in so cial influence. The other thing is. you can step a little aside from that which is right, you can only just go half an inch out of the proper path, you can only take a little risk, and then you have all your finances fair and right. You will have h large property. You oae leave a fortune 'or your chil dren. and endow a college and build a publti library lu your native tow n You halt and wait, and halt and wal itnttl vt ,ir lips get white You decide to risk it Only u few strokes of the pen now Itut. oh. h w \our hand trembles, how dr adfu ly it bcgil let! The die is cast. Hy the strangest and nt" l awful conjunction of lire ;in stance* at" one o mid h ive Imagired. you are pi evirated. Bankruptcy coin nun oil nnuihdaUou. e»g. sure, crime. Hood nun mourn and dr ilia hold car- I nival and you see your own is..me at 1 the head of the newspaper rtjumti in a j whide (ongr- >• of exeta;. atio.i putnts. j and *ltll» vou are reading the unit e nia in the i poriort it and edtiorhtl par • graph It Is cur* to fell huw much this 1 st.ay is like thil of the dafalcattuii hftcefe veals •-.«* . anil the clap of th iu tier shakes the window silt, •avilig J H’tlh weal t* atnfe >» me * it shsll he Honoured to yuu again' ' Van look tn liutkst d te*t cn There it noihtng like eiMiltttl m uf tempsi i > put a man to disadvantage Yw. a man with calm pitaea and a , hue digestion and perfs r he a th can , Rot a Kelt raised how at » lad» skootd be . spsiod in temper hr an inknltss a>it * U • an.» You say I .O #Mw t be unlwlant. d in that »u " lerkago yea •«.« at a |fy>*wi «« thd nstir j another man swear. Yen prlrle your self on your imperturbability. You say with your manner, though you have too much snort taste to say it w ith your words: "1 have a great deal more sense than that man has; I have a great deal more equipoise of temper than that man has; 1 never eoulrt make such a puerile exhibition of rayse f as that man has made." Let me see. Did you not say that you could not tie tempted to an ebul lition of temper? Some September you come home from your summer watering place and von have inside, away back in your liver or spleen, w'hat we call in our day malaria, but what the old folks railed chills and fever. You take quinine until your ears are first buzzing beehives and then roaring Niagaras. You take roots and herbs, you take everything. You get well. Rut the next day you feel uncomfortable, and you yawn, and you stretch, and you shiver, and you consume, and you suffer. Vexed more than you can tell, you <an not sleep, you can not cat. you can not hear to see anything that looks huppy, you go out to kick the cat that Is asleep in the sun. Your children's mirth was one. music to you; now, It Is deafening. You say: “Boys, stop that racket!" You turn back from June to March. In the family and In the neighborhood your popularity is &5 p< r cent off. The world says: “What is the matter with that disagreeable man? What a woe begone countenance? I can't, bear til sight of him." You have got your pay at last—got your pay. You feel Just as the man felt, that man for whom you had no mercy, and my text c-oniea in with marvelous appositeness: "With w-hat measure ye mete. It shall he measured to you again.” In the study of society I have come to this conclusion, that the most of the people want to he good, but they do not exactly know how to make it out. They make eno ;gh good p solutions to lifi them into angelhood. The va majority of people who fall are victims of circumstances. They are raptured by ambuscade. If their temptations should come out in a regimen: and tight them in a fair field they would go out in tlie strength and triumph of David against Goilah. Hut they do not see the giants, and they do not see the regiment. Temptation comes and says: ‘‘Take these bitters, take this nervdne, take this aid to digestion, take this nightcap.” The vast majority of men and women who are destroyed by opium and by rum first take then) as medicines. in making up your dish of criticism in regard to them, take from the caster and the cruet of sweet oil and not the ciuet of oajcnne pep per. My friends, this text will come to fulfilment in some eases in this world. The huntsman in i'armsteen was shot by some unknown person. Twenty years after the son of the huntsman was in the same forest, and lie acci dentally shot a man, and the man lti dying, said, "God is just: 1 shot your father just here twenty years ago.” A bishop said to Louis XI of France: “Make an iron cage for all those who do not think as we do—an iron cage in which the captive can neither lie down nor stand straight lip.” It was fashioned—the awful instrument of punishment. After a while the bishop offendpd Louis XI. and for fourteen years he was in that same cage, and could neither lie down nor stand up. It is a poor rule that will not work both ways. “With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again.” Oh, my friends, let us be resolved tt scold less and pray more! What headway will we make in the judgment if in this world we have b°en hard on those who have gone astray? What headway will you and I make in the last great judgment, when we nni3t have mercy or perish? The Bible says. “They shall have judgment without mercy that showed no mercy.” I see the scribes of heaven looking up into the face of such a man. saying ' What! you plead for mercy, you. whom in all your life never had any mpppv rm vimi* fpllnu's* Hnii't i i t member how hard you were in your opinions of those who were astray? Don't you remember when you ought to have given a helping hand you em ployed a hard heel? Mercy! You must mis-speak yourself when you plead for mercy here. Mercy for o:h ers but no men > for you. txiok." say the scribes of heaven, "look at tjiat inscription over the throne of Judg ment, the throne of (foil’s judgment." See it coming out letter by letter, word by word, sentence by seiitence. until your startled vision rend* It and your reniore* fill spirit appropriates it “With what measure ye mete it shall be meo- tired to you again, i> part, ye cursed!" < t,?*l -’rwctlry ttr%t\«*gl. Queen Margin rita of Italy intends u lie wt'ti a good deal thfv season wearing coral jewelry In order to encourage au Industry wbl>ii of late years lias soru> what fallen upon evil days It would not he surprising if the f.ithlo i were to spread to l.ondon, as coral is t.< - • omtng to altpo^i any c .urdexton and iatt. of course, be had in any shade, front a ruw pink m> delicate as to i>, almost tnmpcrieptiblc up to a vivid rant. If a revival of the dainty old filiate,- setting should also set in the ott’eoate shot:id ttienn in inf preliy things of a kind that would be gnus n novelty to the girl* of to day. % Vhsis tvvsvf. Mwne HI i 4 < d ce oil eauddah l*u» I toe de bait uev Wceb would >«' («• -| n>>» h «ut up! t'latitts Nop-y, >o" would Ufs. The tootktut patron* of velioa back J ed novels who want to go west an, g«bt lnd‘*ns ahwobd May at Iwns and boycott ih« in front of > -d«<«t,< | •hstpn. "It Is saiil fba* there are t y lan- 1 guages spoken in Russia.” I m pre pared to believe It. I hear tv.<> Ru« sums talking the other day and it. sounded as if they were using the whole sixty at once."—Chicago Daily News. TIi** Mutlnn liriipriillon of Men. Physically men are better today, than ever. Our college youth are, as a general thing, mag i.It cat spe lT.ens.! Tho constitutionally weak and mu ons ( an greatly I ti reuse tl e r strength and restore the nervous system by the efficlint aid of Ho-tetter's Stomach Hitters, which also removes dyspeptic i and billions trouble. Tlte last, wheel on the mark- can j not begin to go as fast as a |5 bill. AN OPEN LETTER TO MOTHERS. We are asserting In the court* our rlglit to the exclusive use c.f itse word "(.'ASTORIA and "PJT(‘HER S CASTOKIA.''a»oui Trade Mark 1. Irr. Samuel Pitcher, of llyannls Mussn rhtiM-tts. was the originator of • PITCHER s (ASTORIA." the --aiii. that has borne and din s now bear the fac-slmllc signature of ('HAS It. ELI- TCHKE on every wrapper. This is the original "PITCHER'S (.ASTORIA" which has beer used in the hemes of ibe mothers of Ann rlca tor over thirty years. Look carefully at li e w rapper and sec that H la ilir kind you hav< always bought. and baa the signature of ( DAS. II l LKTCDKR on the Wiupper No one t ar. authority from n,c to use mv name ex < < pt Tho Centaur company, of which ( lias h, I' P t her is President. March k 1W. .SAMUEL PIT! HER, M. D. The New York elevated railway runs trains only fifty seconds apart. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Lite *uap Toijuii tobacco easily and forever be mag* O' :e. fuil ef life, nerve, oml vigor, lake No-To Hit tin u ' Mier.U'i r!fer flint mu Iron v ■ I at str ’Dj;. Ali dnig!/'st8« ftoo or 4). Cure putt run* te»-d lOioklet UM<1 suniplr free. AiKlros | Stirling Hi iu* cly < o , Chicago or X* w York. ‘Ho on re told mo h« could marry any Kir) he pleased." "And lias he?" “Well .he hasn't manag'd to plea;.** any yt i."~Pkk-Me-Vp. On. tV II AT SI'I.KNUIO COITliK. Mr. Goodman. Williams Co., Ill,, writes: "From one package Salzer’a German Coffee Berry costing 15c I grew 300 lhs. of better coffee than I can buy in stores at .'.’0 cents a lb.” A package of this and big seed cata logue is sent you by John A. Salzer Seed Co.. I.a Crosse. Wig., upon receipt of 15c stamps and this notice, w.n.c. There are almost 4n0 mineral springs In the I'nlted States. Mother <;ray‘* Sweet 1'owtler. for Children Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children's Home in New York, Cure Feverishness, Mail Stom ach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 10,000 testimonials. They never fall. At all druggists, 25c. Sample free. Address, Allen S. Olm sted, LeKoy, N’. Y. Some battles are won by fighting and others by running away. My doctor snid I won d die I tit. 1’Iho'x Cura for Consumption cured me -Amos Ke'.ucr, t berry Valley, Ills , Nor. 23, 1805 The heiress who brags of her wealth may aim to be fortune teller. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. 20 for 5 cts. Edith: “I sttpposp you were at the wedding?" Helen: “Oh, yes." Edith: "How did the bride appear?” Helen: "Triumphant, of course.”—Harlem Life An extraordinary coincidence con nected with the Zob. trial via- tbo fail that while the novelist was loin'; so pluckily defended in one court by Mnitre I .a In ri. In another an1 a<i Joniing court a man named Zola was condemned to tare, years' hard bilxir for forging ' ih" signature of a certain Mine. l.a borl. iieitiipr the convict nor Ills vic tim being in any way connected with M. Kmile Zola or his advocati. No grave is deep enough to bury the good man's hope. State of Ohio. <’lty of Toledo* L»u< u» County, ss. Frank J Cheney makoi oath that fa u the *4-nior partner of the firm of K. J. i'Hvnvy A. Co . doing bi.sine** in the *'uy of Toledo. County and Htale aft»re**inl, ui d that said firm wiil pay the sum of itS i: UOl.I.AHH lor and every ruse of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the u«e of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FHANK J. nil-NKV. Sworn to before rne und subscribed In n y t»r#>#•(,<•*., this 6th duy of December, A. If. ikjjO. A. W OI.KA80N. Notary Public Hall s Catarrh Cure Ik taken Internally and acts dlfe» tly on the blood and mu cous surface* of the system. Send tor icatimoulal* free I r. i’IIKNKY A CO., Toledo. O. Hold hv Druggist*, T.Vv Hall's Farnllv P II- are the best. Havana is almost due joutli of Co lumbus O. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take c*a'•caret* Candy Cathartic Itw or 2V. lit t. C. full to Hir", urn 'irlst • ref r»tl money There are about 2.r,0 religion* fleets ih England. Wales Is the richest part, of Oreat Britain in mineral wealth. wmnannwrnmipaMnnMm.1 Captain Silas Casey, commander of 'ho League island navy yard, who lain become ranking captain of the navy, was graduated from the United States naval i> ademy in IStlO and was a master in the navy when the vnr broke out, From 1870 to 1873 he was on the Colorado, then attached to the Asiatic squadron. He wart in command of the battalllon of sailors from the fleet In the Corean expedi tion and the assault on Fort McKee, Seoul river, in June. 1872. Since that tlmo he has held many important places. Before raking < omtnand f the League island navy yard he was captain on board Admiral Shard's flagship, the Nctv York. All told. Captain Casey’s actual sea service covers a period of nineteen months, three year* and one month of which were under his present commission. "Could 1 sell you a Bible ' asked the agent. "I guess not” replied the real edaie dealer. "You might try tieb bardshee. In the next office, lie has a sort of mania for rare books.” In dianapolis Journal. Ko-To-ltae far fifty (mil. Guaranteed t( l an a I at t cure makes weak men strong, Mood pure IlOr.tl All (IriiytUsls. The artist with a magnetic temper ament ought to druw well. Mrs. Winslow's Kanflilng Syrup V-ir «fit »lt. fi f<-« tldi if wiiflf-ii*- turn btuhi* rulm Inf/tm »JU> • chi#" wli*rt'' • »» VI< (full'll lioilli■. A novel may have anything but a novel plot. When a slnnner turn* saint he Ih apt to overdo It. Hopeful Words to Childless Women. The darkest davs of husband and w ife ure when they conn* to look forward to a t*kiidles . and desolate old age. Many a wife has found herself Incapable of motherhood owing to some great luck of strength in the urgansof generation. Such a condition Is nearly always due to long con tinued neglect of the plainest warniags. lVccptent backache and dlstr*-. ing pains aecompunied by offensive discharges and generally by irregular and seanty menstruation, indicate a nerve de generation of the womb and sur rounding organs, that unlcssspeeillly checked will result in barrenness. Head Mrs. Wilson's letter: IikaiiMhs. I’inkiiam: Nooneeouhl hav<! suffered from female troubles more than 1. I had tumors on the womb, my ovaries were diseased, and for fifteen years I was a burden Id) 111 i 'll* * vr.n <»)/> mii <i |. three different times, with on teni|xirarv relief; also tried many doctors. Lydia H. I’iwk ham's Vegetable Compound was reeoinmended to me by a lady friend, and after taking four bottles 1 was like a new wo man. 1 had been married nine years, and hud noeliildri . I now have a Isumtiful little girl, and we feel assured she Is the result of my taking the Compound.—Mav It. Wu.sos, 323 Ha-.sufran St.. Millville. N. J. Modern seienee and past experience have produced nothing ho < ffcctive in treating dis< a -es of the female organa as Lydia K. 1’inkhum's Vagi able Com pound and Sanative Wash used according to s|weial directions. If you know any woman who is suffering and who is unable to w < lire relief, or who is sorrowful because she believes herself barren, tell her to write to Mrs. 1‘inkham, at Lynn, Muss., and usk her ail vice. The thousands of Mrs. I’inkhn ms cures are all recorded for quick reference, and a reply will oe promptly sent wholly without charge, that will direct her what to do. Mrs. It. Hi.i iim. Ldo Han Francisco A ve., Kt. Louis, Mo,, writes:—“Ithas been my great desire to have a babe, 81uee taking your medicine my wish .s fulfilled." 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Illustrated pamphlets, giving experi ence of farmers who have Ix'eomo wealthy in growing wheat, reports ol delegates, etc., and full information us to reduced railway tales, can be had on application to Department Interior, Ottawa. Canada, or to W. V. Dennett, S. Y. Life Building, Omaha, Neb., | Agent for Canadian < iovcrnmev.t. Dr. Kay’s Renovator, . , ,i *iu. eon*Urwtlo;i <lv» r umi Ultlm \ ilisraMN.hll« UouHfio**-, Ixtii'iui-hi, « u At dru(itfi*tfi A fl. ^T*Laclics Wanted riu\i i r-» P »’d*i'im,.oi > i-.1 ii ibi □ CII © BIIII © Get You PrtMto rEaiaiUild ocuaiE cutCK WiHt C*RT til'AUhi Ll, l\»*-.i Aim no *!.» )mk Aha.., viamimniiun i>, v DROPSY*1"* -v * % . ktttHd t t* . ROOFING I m 1# (it BiTitli tHdtih I* , ‘iWV * ♦. PENSION*. HATE NTS. CLAIMS. ' I