VOL VIII. OXFORD, N. C., JANUARY 24, 1883. NO 35. THE JOY OF PARDON. The following exquisite hymn was written by Augustus L. Hillhouse, of New England, who died near Paris, 1859, It has been seldom if ever sur passed in the English or any other language. Trembling before thine awful throne, O Lordl in dust my sins I o^yn, Justice and mercy for my life Contend ! 0 smile and heal tbe strife. The Saviour smiles ! upon my soul New tides of hope tumultirous roll; His voice proclaims my pardon found ; Seraphic transport wings the sonnd. Earth has a joy unknown in heaven, The new-born peace of sin forgiven ! Tears of such pure and deep dedght, Ye angels I never dimmed your sight. Ye saw of old on chaos rise The beauteous pillars of the skies; Ye know where morn exulting springs, And evening folds her drooping wings. Bright heralds of the Eternal Will, Abroad his errand ye fulfill; Or, throned in floods of beamy day, Symphonious in his presence play. Loud is the song; the heavenly plain Is shaken with the choral strain;; And dying echoes, floating far, Draw music from each chiming star. But I amid your choir shall shine, And all your knowledge shall be mine. Te on your Uarps must Icaiji to hear A secret chord that mine bear. WHISPERER!:^ - AN EXTRACT FROM T. DE WITT TAL- MAGE, D. D. If people would mind thmr own business we would have the millennium next week. These gad-abouts, these tale-bearers, these back-biters, these snoops— I hate them with a holy and ve hement and ever-increasing ha tred, and I love to hate them. One of the worst of these creait- ures is the one who brings to your ears all the harsh things they have heard said against your personal appearance, or against your family, or against your style of business. They gather it up and cackle while they see you writhe under it. They tell it in its worst shape, and leave out the exteuuating cir cumstances, and first having made your feelings raw, they take this brine, this turpentine, this aqua-fortis, and rub it in with a coarse towel, and rub it in till it soaks clear to the bone. They make you a pin cushion, into which they stick all the sharp-pointed things .they have heard. They beg yon not to say anything about it. “t^pw, don’t bring me into the scrawl” They aggravate you to the point of profanity, and then wonder that you don’t go off singing psalm tunes. They turn you on a spit before a hot fire, and wonder that you are not all absorbed in grat itude to them for turning-you. Peddlers ot night-shade! Ped dlers of Canada tbistlel Peddlers of nux-vomica! They sometimes get you in a correr, and you oan^t without rudeness, escape; and they will tell you all abbut that one, and all about the other one, and they talk, and talk, and talk, and talk, and talk, and tliey at last go away, leaving the place like a barn-yard the night after foxes have been down; here a wing, and there a claw, and yonder an eye, and here a’ crop. How they do make the feathers fly! Compared with the defama tion of good name, it would be quite an innocent and commen dable business to go round with a box of matches in your pocket and a razor in your hand to see how ’many houses you could burn down and how many throats you could cut A woman at con fession told the priest that she had been guilty of slandering 'her neighbor. The priest gave her a thistle and then told her to go and scatter it on the fields, and then come back. On her re- tjurn the priest said: “Go now and gather up all those thistle- seeds.” When she declared she could not, he said to her; “Neith er can you gather up the evil words you have spoken.” There is scarcely a man or woman on earth but has had the detractors after him or her. John Wesley’s wife began to whisper about him, and whispered all over England,and whispereduntil they dissolved partnership. Jesus Christ was charged with drink ing too much and keeping bad company, “a wine bibber, and a friend ot publicans and sinners.” Take the best man in the world and put a detective on his track and watch him for ten years, see iug where he goes and how long he stays, and when he comes, and all he does, with a desire to destroy him, and you can make him appear despicable. But if it is wrong to despoil a man’s good name, how much worse to dam age a woman’s reputation? That style of infamous work is going on from century to century—aK ways by whisperers. One whis- ,perer starts asuspision. The next whisperer tells the suspicion as 'au established fact, and many a woman as honorable as your mother or wife has been whisper- pered out of all kindly associa tion, and whispered into the grave. Now, there are people who say there is no hell. But if there be no hell for such an ac- oikrsed despoiler of woman’s good name, then it is high time that we take up a subscription and have one built. There is such a place already established, and what a time they will have when all the whisperers get together to rehearse things down there! What an everlasting ' carnival of mud! If it were not for their ins sufferable surroundings, they would enjoy the new opportuni ty in that realm of the outcast. All the bad being there, what a rich and rare field for exploration by whisperers! On earth they had often to belie people in or der to destroy them, but now they can say all the bad things possible about their neighbors and still speak the truth. Jubi lee of whisperers! Grand gala- day of backbiters! Semi-heaven for scandal-mongers! Only stop ping their gabble about their di abolical neighbors long enough to ask at the Iron gate some"new- comer from the earth what is the last bit of gossip from their own place. Now, how are we to help quell this great iniquity? First, by re fusing to listen or believe any thing against anybody till it is positively proven. By all laws of courts and all common decency let every one be supposed inno cent till he or she is proved guil ty. I do not commend my way to you, but I will tell you what I almost always say when I hear or read anything defamatory of anybody—“I guess that is a lie.” The only person that is worse than the whisperer is the person who, without protest, accepts and believes the whisperer. The trouble is that we hold the sack while others fill it. The receiver of stolen goods is just as bad as the thief. An • ancient author said that those who uttered slan der and those who believed it ought both to be hanged, one by the tongue, the other by the ear. When you hear anything about your neighbors, do not go about asking questions concerning the charge made, and so spread it. Don’t bemean yonraelf by be coming inspector of warts and supervisor of carbuncles and commissioner of gutters and the holder of stakes at dog-fights. Allow no defamation at yonr breakfast, or dinner,or teaTables. Teach your children not to speak ill of others. Show them the dif ference between the bee and the wasp, the one gathering honey, and the other thrusting a sting. I have neard of a household where they carefully keep what is called a slander-book, and ev erything that is said in the house in the way of detraction is as carefully recorded as any ledger is kept. For the first few weeks there were many entries; now very seldom is anything written in that boo^. If you are, any of you, in the habit of whispering, let me advise you to desist. Mount Taurus is a great place for eagles, and cranes flying about there cackle so loudly that the eagles know they are coming, and pounce upon them to their destruction. But it is said that the old cranes have found this out, and that they take a.sto;;e in their mouth before they start, so that it is impossible for them to cackle,and so.tbey^y in safety. 'Be wise as those old cranesand a., void the folly of the young cranes. Ifen’t cackle! Take courage if you are maltreated of whisperers, be cause such creatures soon run themselves out. They come to be understood as well in the com munity as though some one had chalked on their overcoat or shawl the words, “Here comes a whisperer; make room tor the le per.” You como on and do your duty, my persecuted friends, and some day ^ou will be vindicated. Get down on your knees and put your reputation and everything else in God’s keeping. I solemnly charge all of you to make right and holy use of your tongue. Though it is loose at one end and can swing either way, it is fastened at the ,other end to tne Hoor of y'our mouth, and you are responsible for which way it swings. The pbilosophe.r Xanthus ordered his servant to provide a great dinner of the best things from the market, as some friends were coming to dine. Seated at the table he found that there was nothing on it but ton gue, and the guests had tongue served up to them in a great many different shapes. The phi losopher said to his servant: “What do you mean by giving us nothing but tongue, when I told yon to get the best things you could find in the market?” He answered: “The tongue is the best thing. It is the organ of truth, and the organ of sociality, and the organ of worsliip.’’ Then the philosopher said: “To-mor row I want you to get the worst things you can find in the mar ket for our table ” Seated the next day at the table be found again nothing upon it but tongue, served up in various shapes. Then the philosopher said to his servant: “What do you mean by giving us nothing but tongue?” He said: “You told me to get the worst thing I could find in the market. The tongue is the worst, because it is the organ of lies, the organ of blasphemy, and the organ of defamation.” My readers, let your tongue, which God hath so wonderfully con structed as the instrument of taste,as the instrument of degluti tion, as the instrument of articu lation, be employed for making others happy, and iu the service of God. If you whisper, whisper good encouiagemeut to the dis heartened and hope to the lost. The tiine will soon come when we will all,have to whisper. The voice will become feeble in the last sickness, and though we could once shout and sing and lialloa till the forest answered in echo, wo can only whisper com fort to those whom we leave be hind, and whisper about our hope of heaven. While I am writing this there are hundreds whispering their last utterance. In that solemn hour which will soon come to us all, may it be found that we did our best to serve Christ and cheer our com rades in earthly struggles, not on ly our hand, but our tongue con secrated to God, and so the shad ows about our dying pillow shall not be the evening twilight ot a gathering night, but the twilight of an everlasting day. IS YOUR HUSBAND LIKE THAT? There was a poor woman who had fallen into a melancholy and murmuring frame of mind. Her minister tried in vain to reason her out of it. She persisted that; she had nothing to be thankful for. At last he spoke to her of her neighbor’s husband, an in temperate man, who wasted liis money when he was out, and ill- treatod his wife when he came home. “Now,” be said, “is your hus band like that?” “No,” was the reluctant an swer. Well, then, should you not thank God that you have a kind husband?’’ She was forced to admit this, and promised that she would thank God every night and mor ning for His mercy. Some days elapsed before her minister revis ited her dwelling; but when he did so, he was struck with her bright look as she greeted him. “Oh, sir!” she exclaimed, “I have longed to see you; I have so wished to thank you! For a morning or two X did as I proms ised, but I did - not rightly feel what I said. But the next day when I was thanking God that I had a kind husband, I thought I should also thank Him that ! had healthy children; and when I was thanking Him for that, I thought that I should thank Him that I had clothes for them to wear, and a Jiouse to cover their heads; and so, sir, w*ien I was thanking God for one thing, an other came into my head, and another still; an I now I know riot where to stop, or hovv to thank Him enough; and I leel so happy!” So it vvill be with vou, my reader, if you will only try the experiment; for t-ratitude increas es with its use. Tlie mo”e thank- ful we are, tlie more thankful we shall become,. and the more we shall have to be thankful for. THE CROCODILE SYLLOGISM. Amongst otiier famous ancient dialectic problems is the following dilemma, which is framed witu wonderful ingenuity, .the ncute ness displayed in its construction being probably unsurpassed. It is called Syllogismiis Crocodiius and may be thus stated: An infant bile playing on the bank of a river, was seized by a crocodile The mother,hearing its cries rush ed to its assistance, and by her tearful entreaties obtained a pro mise from the crocodile (who was obviously of the highest intelli gence) tliat he would give it back to her if she would tell him truly what wou'd happen to it. On this the mother (perhaps rashly) asserted: ■ ^vill notgive it hack.'' The crocodile answer.s to this: If yo'u have spoken truly, t can not give ba k the child without destroying the truth of your as sertion; if you have spoken false ly, I cannot give back tho child, because you have not fuIfiUea the agreement; therefore, 1 can not give it back whether you have spoken trul}" or falsely.” The mother retorted: ‘Hi ha.ve. spoken truly, you must give back the child by virtue of your agree ment; if I have spoken falsely, that can only be when you liave given back the child; so that, whether I have spoken truly or falsely, the child must be given back.” History is silent as to the issue of this remarkable dispute. HORNER SCHOOL, OXFORD, N. C. The Spring Session of 1883 will l).i- giii the 2ii(l -Vionilay in January. Terms as huretolore. 4t THE Orhpans’ Friend, Organ o! the Orphan Asylum at Oxford, aud of the Grand Lodge of Masons •in North Carolina.) IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY AT] ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. It is designed to promote the entertain ment, instruction and interests of THE YOUNG; especially those deprived of the benefits of parental and scholastic training, ft also seeks to increase the soul-growth of tt>e prosperous by suggesting proper objects of charity and true (fliannels of benevolence, in order that they may, by doing good to otii- ers, enlarge their OAvn liearts and extend the horizon of their human sympathies, as they ascend to a higher plane of christiaij observation. Address ORPHANS’ FRIEND. OXF'IRTV N FINE HARNESS. When you need a neat and substantia] HAND-MADE HARNESS —FOR— BirOGY,CAKieiAGEor TCAHI USB send your order to P. M. STEWARD, I’etersburg, V»