Volume XXXIV. SUFFOLK, VA., FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1881 Number *23'. LITTLE THINGS We call him strong who stands unmoved— Calm as some tempest-beaten rock— When some great trouble hurls its shock; We siy of him, his strength is proved : But when the spent storms folds Its wings, How beats he then life's little things? We call him great who does some deed That echo bears from Bhore to shore— Does that, and then does nothing more Yet would his work earn richer meed, When brought before the King of kings, Were he but great in little things. We closely guard our castle gates When great temptations loudly knock, Draw every bolt, clinch every lock, And sternly fold our bars and gates; Yet some small door wide open swings At the sly touch of little things. I can forgive—’t is worth my while— The treacherous blow, the cruel thrust; Can bless my foe as Christian must, While patience smiles her royal smile; Yet quick resentment fiercely slings. Its shots of ire at little things. And I can tread beneath my feet The hills of passion’s heaving sea, When wind tossed waves roll stormily ; Yet scarce resist the siren sweet That all my heart's door softly sings, “Forget, forget life’s little things.” But what is life? Drops make the sea ; And petty cares and small events, Small causes and small consequents, Make up the sum for you and me, Then, Oh for strength to meet the stings That arm the points of little things ! Family Treasurer. SELFISHNESS NOT ALWAYS STINGY. There is a great deal of open-heart ed and open-hauded selfishness in the world. Some of the most liberal girers in the community are thorough ly selfish. Selfish prodigality is by no means uncommon. There are those who look upon themselves as exceptionally generous, and who are even so counted by their fellows, who are unmistakably selfish. This is a truth that ought to be borne in mind when we are passing upon the char acteristics of ourselves, or of those whom we have a right to judge— because of our responsibility for their training. Selfishness is not always conjoined with stinginess. Esau was a good illustration of the thoroughly selfish man, who was open-hearted, open-handed, aud pro dignity liberal. He was ready to spend a fortune for one square meal. There was uothiug stingy about that. Men would be a great deal more like ly to call his brother Jacob close fisted aud niggardly. But Esau was really more selfish than Jacob. Esau lived for self. His parting with his fortune so reckless was merely because just then he wanted some thing more than he wanted a fortune So with his marrying, and so with his his failing to cherish aud retain anger against Jacob. If he wanted a wife or two from the heathen nations about him, be took them. What did he care for the Lord’s, or his parents, opinions on that point Y If his wives didn’t entirely suit the old folks, he would take another of a different sort rather than have trouble in the fami ly. You don’t hear of Esau’s toiling .away seven years to win a woman )who had his heart, while all these ’years “seemed unto him but a few Nvys, for the love he had to her.’ uui was too much taken up with \f, too much absorbed in his own ‘sonal enjoyment for the hour, to /love or spite have control of him r any great length of time. But 'hat did Esau ever do in the line oi ^elf-denying or self-forgetful good tc fliers! When did he ever seem tc $ve others the first place iu hisaffec lions or in his plan Y In what did he ever show real unselfishness of char iicter or conduct Y From Esau down to “Jim” Fisk this kind of an open-handed, gener fvous seeming, thoroughly selfish man (has been a prominent and a populai (character in the community ; and its ^tside attractiveness has blinded tie eyes of many to the sharp distinc Son between selfishness and stlngi ness, so that those who are known to give freely, aud to have no taint o1 penuriousness are generally looked as free from the objectionable trait OI selfishness. Tet man/ a free giver is »lotchedly selfish ; aud many an unselfish man is sadly prone to pen uriousness. Ono man gives freely because ol bis reckless enjoyment of prodigality: another because of the reputation his giving brings to him 5 another be cause of the sense of power thal comes with the bestowal of gifts ot others—the creating thereby of a cir ole of grateful recipients, if not oi conscious pensioners; another becanst it is easier for him to give than t< refrain from giving—with bis tendei heart and sensitive conscience. In neither of these instances is it nnBelf ishness which prompts the giving : self is in each case at the bottom ol the apparent generosity. Anothei test than that of giving, wonld prove either of these open-handed ones tc be a selfish persou. Wonld he deny himself enough to step and look intc this case to see if it is a worthy char ity f At a recent public meeting it Philadelphia in behalf of the Society for Organizing Charity, the Bev. Dr Goodwin made an address on “The nncharitableness o f almsgiving.’ There is a great deal of almsgiving instead of aid-giving, because of the selfishness of the givers. Wonld the giver make just as liberal donations ia this and that direction, if his name were never to be known as a giver f Wonld he want his left hand to be entirely ignorant of what hie right hand was doing in the giving line t Would he be ready to take a gift from another without rendering an equivalent, and thereby lose the prond sense of independence and superiority his giving now secures to him, if be were sure that the one to whom he has been giving, and whose interests he professes to have at heart would more enjoy that way ol doing t Is his giving in any event at a cost of self-denial to himself, either iu funds or in feeling t It was said of a good man in a certain church thatit was harder for that man to give a dollar than for apy other church member, but that he gave more dol lars in proportion to his means than any other man in the church. He might have been called a stingy man who gave unselfishly. 4^nd there are other men of his sort. They deserve more credit than these who,when they are asked to give, cannot refuse with out an exercise of positive self-denial. Free giving is a very poor test and measure of unselfishness. Christmas time is a season of giv ing; but it is by ho means the season that shews whether or not one is tru ly selfish. Almost everybody gives gifts at Christmas time. One is as haued net to give then. Most per sons, indeed—especially in';ugood so ciety”—have to give more holiday presents than they want to give. They give to keep up their good name—their name for generosity— among their friends and neighbors; or they give to get a new hold on some whom they have selfishly neg lected all the rest of the year. There is, therefore, a danger to be guarded against, of putting the enforced oi customary giving of Christmas time into the place of unselfish feeling and doing; just as we too often put Sun day religious observances into the place of personal religion for nil the week through. The giving is all right, jost as far as it^goes; bat it doesn’t go far enough; and it is ueith er a proof of nor a substitute for real unselfishness and true generosity. If you were always receiving and never giving gifts, you would admit that you were stingy; you would call yourself mean. So it would be in your estimate of yous children. You would be shocked if they found no enjoyment in giving to others. But both for yourself and for your chil dren yon should bear in mind that one may give freely and heartily and yet be grossly selfish. Generosity is literally “nobleness of birth or ol soul.” He who is realty generous will show his generosity twelve months in a year; will show it in uniform cour tesy of manner; in tender consider ateness for the feelings of others; ir self-forgetful or self-denying defer ence to the wants or the interests oi tastes of bis companions, in the ordi nary intercourses of life—whether ii the parlor; on the play-ground, or it the place of public gathering or oon veyance. His unselfishness will noi hinge upon bis holiday giving; noi upon his giving at any time of th< your. Giving may or may not be com mendable and beantifnl. Uuselflsh ness and generosity are always admi rable. There are selfish givers— givers who are not stingy bat selfish There are those who, by their giving deceive others as to their character and there are many more who de ceive themselves into the thoagbl that1 they are generous because they give freely and gladly. There are others, again, who have little to gut* and who indeed have little thought ol giving, who are so generous and sc unselfish that they hardly have t separate existence either in gettiug or in giving. They absolutely live for others—and that is better rai than giving to others. "The nature of inch souli li to be blind To self, and to self-seeking; let them blend Their life as harmony and atmosphere With other lives ; let t hem but have a friend Whose merit they may set off or endear, ▲nd they are gladder than in any guess Or dream of their own separate happiness.” Though we bestow all our goods to feed the poor—or to please the rich— and have not unselfish,generous love, it profiteth us nothing.— Sunday School Times. NATURE ANO PROVIDENCE. BY BEV. BICHABD OOBDLEY, D. D. It is very popular to plead the ne cessities of nature against the special activities of providence. It is claim ed that ‘-science is continually uar rowing the range of our prayers, and will In time shut tlftftn out altogether, by showing that all things are gov erened by fixed laws. The savage would pray to have the eclipse avert* od, but we all know now that its coming was fixed when the morning stars sang together. We still pray that the storm may be stayed, but the Signal Service has seeu it com ing three days before our prayef went up.” But the discoveries of science are not all one way. While the domain of law is found to bo universal, the margin of possible variation is found to be wider and wider. Climate is being reduced to a science. Its chang es are not freaks of nature, but the result of definite causes. More and more its changes are being acoounted for, and more and more can be pre dicted. But while this is so, we arc also learning more and more how to influ ence climate. The rainfall of the praries is being increased by the planting of trees, while that of oth er regions is being lessened by the removal of forests. Great fires briDg wind ; the firing oi guns is said to bring rain ; a great battle is often followed by a storm. Climate is aff ected by the erection of buildings,the cultivation of fields, the changing of water courses. It is claimed that the building bf the Pacific Bailway has materially affected the climate of the plains. It seems hardly credible that two bands of iron cau modify the cli mate of a nation. But we do know that a little rod of iron will turn aside a thunderbolt, and a number of them will dissipate a thunderstorm. Storms and wind and rains are de pendent on delicate electric currents which are easily disturbed. As we are learning Jhe laws of na ture we are learning to use them. We are finding points where we can touch their secret springs. We turn p way the pestilence by sanitary reg ulations ; we bauish the malaria by draining our lands; we divert the lightning by a rod, We make the lightning carry our messages, light onr gas, ring our bells, aud do all manner of work. Franklin pricked the clouds with a piece of twine, and brought the lightning down to his feet, aud made a servant of it. It seems pertinent to ask, if man can thus influence nature and violate no law and produce no shock, why may not God do at least as much ? Why may not he as well as we touch the secret springs, and produce results without breaking up the order of nature or disturbing th%pillars of the world ? There is no measuring the possibil ities in this direction. Nature is full of the most delicate agencies, which can be swayed by a touch,or stirred by a breath. God need but touch as weof teu do, these delicate forces which in terweave themselves with the whole fabric of nature, to accomplish almost any conceivable result. The finest forces of nature are her mightiest forces. Her invisible, imponderable forces will at any time rend and lift her solid substances, as a giant might scatter the playthings of a child. It was ouce a cumbrous thing to light the lumps of a great city. But now a little child may touch the keys, and a thousand burners flash at ouce for miles away. Air and earth and seas 1 are full of forces which respond to the gentlest tonch. To control these is to control the universe to which they furnish the energy and the im pulse. All these are the servants of God. He dwells among them aS a living presence, penetrating a 11 nature through and through. Among these mighty forces, on whose borders we dwell, and whose faint impulse we feel, God reigns a Sovereigu and a King. We tonch them here and there, and easily- attain our ends, lie holds them in his hands in complete supremacy. With what infinite ease he may touch these springs of living force and attaiu his ends, and there be no suspension law, no breaking up of systems, no shock to order. | God is not a prisoner iu his own creation. He is not barred out from the works of his own hands. He says he hears the cry of the needy, and nothing science has discovered for bids his helping them. He says he hears the prayer of his people, and the exactness of nature is no hind rance to his answering those prayers. We may give science all she claims, and yet there is room for the divine sympathy and space for the divine help—Selected. WHAT SAVED HIM. A young wife iu Michigan had just settled in her new home. All seemed fair and promising, for she did not know her husband was a drunkard. But one night he came home at a very late hour, and much the worse for li quor. When he staggered into the house, his wife, who was very much shocked, told him be was siuk, and must lie down at once; and in a mo ment or two he was comfortable on the sofa, in a drunken sleep. His face was reddish-purple, and, alto gether, he was a pitiable looking ob ject. The doctor was sent for in haste, and mustard applied to the patient’s feet and hands. When the doctor came and felt his pulse, and examin ed him, and found that he was only drnnk, he said: “He will be all right in the morn ing.” But the wife insisted that he was very sick, and that severe remedies must be used. “You must-shave his head and ap ply blisters,” she urged, “or I will send for some one who will.” The husband’s head was according ly shaved close, and blisters were ap plied. The patient lay all night in a drunk en sleep, and, notwithstanding the blisters were eating into his flesh, it was not till near morning that he began to beat about disturbed by pain. About daylight he woke up to the most uncomfortable consciousness of blistered agonies. “Whatdoes this mean t” he said, putting his hands to his bandaged head. “Lie still; you must’nt stir,” said his wife ; “you have been sick.” “I am not sick.” “Oh, yes, you are; you have the brain fever. We have worked with you all night.” “I should think you had, ” groaned the poor victim. “What’s the mat ter with my feet f” “They are blistered.” “Well, I am better now : take oft the blisters—do,” ho pleaded piteous ly. He was in a most uncomfortable state—his head covered with sores, and his feet and hands still worse. “Dear,” he said, groaning, “If I should ever get sick in this way again, don’t be alarmed and send for a doctor; and, above all, don’t blister me again.” “Oh, indeed, I will! All that sav ed you were the blisters. And if you have another such spell, I shall be more frightened than ever; for the tendency,I am sure,is to apoplexy,and from the next attack you are likely to die uuless there are the severest measures used.” He made no further defense. Suf flee to say that he never had another attack.—The Golden Senscr. GO TO THE FOUNTAIN. Water is water, wherever it is found ; but there is a great difference betweeu water which is drawn from the fountain, aud water dipped from a stagnant pool. The one refreshes, the other nauseates; the one is life giving, the other brings poison and death. The word of God is a fountain ol living water, but how often this wa ter becomes stale, adulterated, aud defiled, iu passing through the vari ous cbaunels of falleu humanity. There are sermons which have mauy of th« thoughts of man, aud few of the thoughts of God. Multitudes ol men content themselves with a sec ond hand gospel, which is stale, flat, and unprofitable. They do not search the Scriptures, the/' do not study the living Word, but they de pend on commentaries, sermons, in terpretations, and misquotations, aud thus are led into gross errors, aud are deprived of the freshness and vitality which resides in that Word which liveth aud abideth forever, The word of God is living and pow erful, We are to be cleaused ‘ by the washing of Water by the word bnt that water mast be living water. No stagnant pool of human tradition no turbid current of doctrinal contro veray, can refteah and eleause the aauls that thirat and pant for the living streams which flow from be neath the throne. Those who would have living wa ter must learn the way to the living fountain, the word of (iod itself. A writer tells o two wells of the Doge of Venice: the water of one of them is brought iu barges from a distance and few care to taste the insipid draught; the other is a delicious nat ural well, cool and refreshing, and the people strive to obtain water from this fountain. Ministers of the gospel, who long to be of use in this world, must not content themselves with being mere sponges to absorb aud then give out the thoughts and ideas of others; they must ou the contrary draw wa ter for themselves out of the wells of salvation, and know the virtue of those streams that make glad the city of our God. Let us turn away from the torbid waters which men have fouled and defiled, and let us learn to drink from the living foun tain, that which shall be in ns a well of water springing np into everlast ing life.—Selected. MAKE HOME HAPPY. The happiness of home depends very much ou the dispositions of its inmates, no matter what the sur roundings may be, for this reason if for no other, we should cultivate ami ability—that we may make our homes happy, we wives and mothers only kuow the many little home-cares, seemingly trifles in themselves, bnt in the aggregate which weigh very heavy upon our hearts, that make np many a day, but when with aching limbs and throbbing temples the bur den of cares seem almost too heavy for us, if we but lift our hearts in prayer to “Our Father,” thus “cast iug our cares upon Him,” remember ing that “He careth for us,” he will surely be strengthened. Solomon says: “Every wise woman buildeth her house, but the foolish plucketh it down with her hands.” I have some times wondered if the wise old king did not mean, that she laid the foun dations thereof in wisdom, that its chief jewel 'the one “pearl of great price,” and its most precious orna ment that of a “meek and qniet spir it,” and if so these materials with which to build are in reach of all of us, and we will be happy if we use them, whether in a palace or a cot tage. Especially^hould we endeavor to make home happy for our little ones, by words of love, by soothing their little troubles with gentleness and by contributing all means iu our power to iucrease their happiness, they re member au unkind word long after we have forgotten it, we should exact from them obedience and respect and iu return give them love and kind ness, thus wiuuiug for ourselves the commendation of Lemuel. “Her chil dren arise up, and call her blessed, her husband also and he praiseth her. Dish Washing.—If a womau wish es to keep her hands soft and chap less, even while washing dishes, she need not go to the expense of rubber gloves but merely use a dish-mop, aud keep her bauds and temper from getting into “hot water.” To make a disk-mop, get a smooth round 3tick, S or 10 inches long—half of an old chair rouug will do; wrap a suitable quantity of soft cotton or linen cloth (old toweling is best) around one eud of it, tyiug it ou neatly as brooms are tied; with this she may have her dishes in scorching hot water, and take comfort iu the operation. If the water is hpt enough, . no soap need ever be used, except on the very greasiest pots, kettle aud pans. It is more difficult to riuse off the nasty soap than to make all clean without it. One by one as the dishes are ta ken from the hot water, they should be stacked as wood is stacked in a charcoal burner’s pit, in a pau foi rinsing with boiling hot water; then wipe, while hot have two clean wi ping cloths—one in each hand. No Angers need ever touch a dish, and her flue china or self will look as good as new, and her wiping cloths keep unsoiled for weeks together.— Country Gentleman. Those keepiug sheep should place salt iu some place accessible daily to the sheep. It is said that in Spain, whenever sheep are kept iu the neigh borhood of rock salt hills or sea salt, and have access to it, they thrive better thau in other situations, and in France the same thiug is found to exist in the neighborhood of the coast and the salt works of the Noith; sheep give more aud better wool, and the mutton is more highly esteemed than that from other localities. Never milk while the cow is eating. When a con has once acquired the habit of feeding at milk time, she will often refuse to let down her milk unless food is before her. A RICH EXPERIENCE. WHAT A PROMINENT AND WELL KNOWN NEW YORK PHYSICIAN TOLD A REPORTER. HiB Revelations Upon a Subject of Vital Interests to All. The experience of any one of edu cation and learning extending ever a long period of time mast necessarily be valuable, and while no two expe riences in this world are alike, there is snch a similarity between them as to render one which is rich in valua ble facta of benefit to all. America’s greatest orator declared that he knew of no way of judging the future but by tha past; and past personal experience is of the same natures as that history which repeats itself. A representative of this paper while lounging in the lobby of a prominent Hew Tork hotel, met a gentleman whom he had known years before in the city of Detroit, but ; whom he had not seen before for a number ef years. When the knight of the quill had last seen this gentle man, he was giving his entire time and attention to an extensive medic al practice, and was on the crest oi the wave of popularity. From De troit he removed to New Tork where he eonld find a more extensive field for his talents and experience. Al though several years had passed, the doctor’s physical condition had evi dently very much improved, for he was looking much better than when the man ef news had last seen him After some general talk, the dcctoi ; fell into an easy train of conversa | tion and uttered some truths so sci entific and valuable, as to justify theii production in print. "xea,” said the doctor, “X have lm proved in health since you last saw me and I hope also in many othei ways. One thing however, I havt succeeded in doing, and it is one 01 the hardest things for any one, ami especially a doctor, to do and that if I have overcome my prejudices. Yot know there are some people who pre fer to remaiu in the wrong rathei than acknowledge the manifest right Such prejudice leads to bigotry of the worst order, and of precisely tht same natnre as characterised the sixteenth century when people wert burned at the stake. Now I am i physician of the ‘old school’ order too, bnt I have, after years ef experi ence and observatiou, come to the conclusion that troth is the highes of all things, and that if prejudice 01 bigotry stand in the way of troth, s< much the worse for them—they art certain to be crushed sooner or later Why, when I knew you iu Detroit I would have no sooner thought o violating the core of ethics laid dowi by the profession, or of prescribing anything out of the regular order than I would of amputating my hand Now, however, I prescribe and advisi those things which I believe to lx adapted to cure, and which my ex perieuce has proven to be such. “This is rather an unusual way fo a physician to talk, it is not, doctor?1 “Certainly it is. It is way outsid< of onr code of ethecs, but I havi grown far beyond the code. I havi all I oan atteud to, and am determin ed to be honest.with my patients am mankind, whether my brother phy sicians are with me or not. Why, J prescribe medicines every day, somi of them secatled pateut medicines which would render me liable to ex pulsion from the medical fraternity but I am supremely indifferent t< their laws. “Are th« medical fraternity of tht country combined against proprietary mediciues, doctor f” “Invariably, aud it is sufficient ground for expulsion from any med ical society iu the laud to prescribe any patent medicine whatever, nc matter if it is made from an exact formula, such as physicians are using every day. You see the code is es tablished aud sustained by an old physician like myself, who make the rules and insist upon their enforce ment in order to keep the youngei doctors from obtaining a foot-hold and eneroachiug upon the already established practice of the older ones 'Ibis is largely the reason why young physicians have such a hard time ol it; they are fettered by the code, and have only their personal influ ence to depend upon in seenring practice.” “How did you come to get sucl heretical ideas as these, doctor ?” “Qh, they are the result of my ex perienoe and observation. I obtaiuei my first ideas upon the subject, how ever, from having been cured after al ray oare and the skill of 'my profes sional brethren had failed to relieve me. Why, I was so badly off with % complication of troubles, including dj spepsia, and consequently imper feet kidneys and liver, that I feared I shonld have to give np my practice. For more than a month I conld not sit down or get up withoot the most intense agony, and I was suffering all the while. Some one adviied me to go ont of the regular channels and try a remedy that was becoming quite famous for the remarkable cares it was effecting; bnt mv prejudice was altogether too strong for that. How ever, I did quietly begin trying the remedy, but I promise you I said nothing to my brother physicians, or even to my family about it. Well, sir, it was a revelation to me; for in all my medical experience I never saw anything operate so rapidly or so effectually as that did. I owe my health to-day ; and for all I know, my life also—to the remedy known as Warner’s Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. That was the starting point with me, and my prejudices faded very rapidly after that I can assure you. I went to reading extensively, and analyzing more extensively, and I supposed I analyzed all the leading proprietary mediciues that are made. Many of them I found perfectly use less, being compounded simply of water with a little flavoring. A vast majority of them all, however, I found made up of prescriptions used by physicians in their every day practice; but out of the entire num ber I found only two that contained absolutely harmful ingredients and then in very slight quantities. Indeed we are prescribing things constantly that have more deleterions matter in than they hadj After discovering this, I said to myself: why should the medical fraternity be prejudiced against those preemptions which they are writiug every day, simply because they are put up by wholesale and are sold with a government stamp on the wrapper. I saw its manifest absurdity aud resolved that I would be bound by it no longer. Since that time, I have prescribed proprietary remedies every day, in my practice, and I have no reason to regret having done so. Why, enly a few days ago I advised a lady who was suffering from a serious female difficulty and displacement to use this same Safe Kidney and Liver Cure which cured me. I saw her this morning and she is nearly well; , the pain and inflamation are all gone , and she is around as nsnaL We have no right in the medical frater uity to sit back and declare there is ; no such thing as improvement or ad ■ vancement, or that we havp; a mo i nopoly of the remedies which nature i has given to mankind. There are great changes going on in every de , partment of life and there are great >' development iu medicine as well. Thousands of people die every year ; from supposed typhoid fever, rheu matism or other complaints, when in . reality it is from trichina, and the i result of eating poorly cooked and > diseased pork. A vast majority of ■ all diseases arise from imperfect kin neys or liver. The liver becomes • clogged, and its work is thrown npon ’ the kidneys; they become overwork > ed aud break down, and so the pois > on gets into the blood instead of be > ing thrown from the system. No . one with perfect kidneys or liver is [ ever troubled with malaria; and it . is the poisonous particles which these diseased organs allow to get into the i blood that clog the capillaries of the , lungs and cause tnbnrcles -and-eon sumption. Thousands of children are dying every year from dropsy as the , sequel to scarlatina, when in reality it is diseased kidneys which have be come weakened by the fever they have just had. Here is another strange thing : not one in ten people who have diseased kidneys notice any pain in the vicinity of the kidneys, for these organs lose their nervous sensibilities when they become dis eased, and the symptoms are shown in hundreds of other ways.” " en, doctor, you have got some uew truths here, certainly, but they sound very reasonable to me.” “Well, whether they are reasona ble or uot, 1 have demonstrated to my own satisfaction that they are true, and I propose to stand by them no matter how much opposition I may raise by doing so. Any man, be he politician, preacher or physi cian, who is so considerate of his pocket book or of his own personal ends as to stultify himself by sup pressing the manifest truth, is un worthy the name of man, and un worthy the confidence of the publio whom he serves.” The white of an egg, into which • piece of alum ab.out the size of a wal nut has been stowed until it forms m jelly, is a capital remedy for sprains. It should be laid over thedprain upoa a piece of lint, and be'clum§sd as of*' ten as it becomes dry.