'tillS DAILY Uu:aLP; PLATOliWrn, HCUttMSli A, MON PAY, J LINE 25. 1888. TALMAGR IN KANSAS. HE PREACHES TO A LARGE AUDI ENCE AT WINFIELD. "Th ConatlUtlon of thm Iletlemd.M II U Kut.Joct ClirLtUo Workfn Shall Helen forever and Eer We blifall Ckooae Our Asaoelatea In Heaven. Wixfikld, Kan., Juno 24. Un counted multitudes were present today nt a great outdoor inciting held in this place, whero the Itev. T. Do Witt Tal luage, I). I)., was the preacher. Not only thut Lut adjoining tatep were repre sented in the congregation, and the oc- ctsion will be long remembered. Tho text was: "They that turn many to rightcousncw shall thine an the btars for 4 ver and ever" Daniel xii, 3; and tho subject: "The Constellations of the llo- doenifd. " Dr. Talmace said: Every man ha? a thousand roota and a thousand branches. His roots reach Jown through all the earth; his branches Fpread through all tho heavens, lie ppoalis with voice, with eye, with hand. with foot. 1 1 is silence often Is thunder. and hi life is an anthem or a doxology There h no such thing as negative inllu cneo. We are all jKwitive in tho place we occupy, making tho world better or making it worwe, on tho Lord's 6idc or on the devil's, making up reasons for our blessedness or banishment; and wo have already dune a mighty work in peopling heaven or hell. I hear people tell of v hat they are going to do. A man who has burned down a city might as well talk of some evU that he expects tc do, or a man who has 6aved an empire might os well talk of some good that ho expects to do. Dy the force of your evil influ ence you have already consumed infinite values, or you have, by the power of a right influence, won whole kingdoms for Cod. It would Ijo absurd for me to stand heio and. by elaborate argument, prove . that the world Is oil the track. You might as well stand at the foot of an eru hai i k men t, amid the wreck of a cap sized rail train, proving by elaborate ar- iniment that something is out of order. Adam tumbled over the' emlankiuent sisty centuries ago, and the wholo race. in one long train, has gone on tumbling in the same direction. Crash I crash! The only question now 19, by what lever ago can the crushed thing be lifted? By what hammer may the fragments be re constructed? 1 want to show you how we may turn many to righteousness, and what will be our future uy for eo doing. first We may turn them by the charm of a ripht example. A child, coming from a filthy home, was taught at school to wa-sh its face. It went home so much improved in appearance that its mothei washed her face. And when the fathei of iui household came home, and saw the improvement in domestic appearance, he washed his face. The neighbors happen ing in. 6aw tha change, and tried the same exp-eriment until all that street was purified, and the next 6lreet copied its example, and the whole city felt the re sult of one schoolboy washing his face. That U a fable, by which we set forth that tho best way to get the world washed cf it? sina and pollution ia to have our own heart and Life cleansed and purified. A man with grace in his heart, and f Christian cheerfulness in his face, and holy consistency in his behavior, is a ierc'lual 6ermon; and the sermon differs from others in that it lias but one head, and the longer it runs'the better. There aro honest men who" walk down Wall street, making tho teeth of iniquity chatter. There aro happy men who go into a sick room, and, by a look, help the broken bone to knit, and the excited nerves drop to calm beating. There are pure men whose presence silences the tongue of uncleanness. The mightiest pgent of good on parth is a consistent Christian. I like the Bible folded between lids of cloth, of calfskin, or morocco, but I like it better when, in the shape of a man, it goes out into the world a Pible illustrated. Courage is lieautifui to read about: but rather would I 6ee a man with all the world against lam confident as though all the world were for him. Patience is beautiful to read about; but rather would I see a buffeted 6oul calmly waiting for the time of deliverance. Faith 13 beautiful, to read about; but rather would I find a man in the midnight walking straight on as though be saw everything, ph, how many souls have been turned to God by the charm of a bright example I When, in the Mexican war, the troops were wavering, a general rose in his stir rups and dashed into the enemy's lines, 6houting. "Men. follow!" They, seeing his courage" and disposition, dashed on after him and gained the victory. What men want to rally them for God is an ex ample to lead them. Ail your com inauds to others to advance amount to nothing 6C long as you stay behind. Tp nilect them aright, you need to start for Leaven yourself, looking back only to giro th6tirring cry of "Men, follow I' Again: We may turn many to right eousness by prayer. There is no such detective as prayer, for no one can hide away from it. It puts its hand on the shoulder of a man ten thousand miles off. It alights on a ship mid Atlantic The - little child cannot understand the law of electricity, or how tha telegraphic opera tor, by touching tjia nstrnmer5t liere. may dart a message under the -Tea to another continent; nor can we, with our snrall intellect, understand how the touch of a Christian's prayer shall instantly strike a soul on the other side of tle earth. You take ship and go to gome other country, and get there at 11 o'clock in tho morning. You telegraph tc New York, and the message get3 here at C o'clock in tho same morning. Jn other words, it seems to arrive here five ""Loure tcforo it started. Like that is prayer. God says: Before they call I will hear." To overtako a loved ono ca the road, you may spur up a lathered steed until he shall outrace the one that brought the news to Ghent; but a prayer f-hall catch it at one gallop. A boy run ning away from borne mar take the mid right tmin from tho country village Rnd . reach tho seaport in timo to gain the ship that sai!3 on tho morrow; but a mother's prayer will be on the deck to meet him. and in the hammock before lie swings into it. and at the capstan bo fore ho winds the rope around iC and on the sea, against tho sky, as tho vessel pi res on toward It. There is a mighU ncsif In prayer. George Muller proved a company or poor hoys together, und then ho prayed up an asylum in which they might bo sheltered. He turned his face upon Edinburgh and prayed, and there camo a thousand pound-. He turned his face toward London and prayed, and there came a thousand jounds. He turned his face toward Dublin and prayed. and there camo a thousand rounds. Tho breath of Elijah's prayer blew oil the clouds olf the sky, and it was dry weather. 1 he breath of Lhjah s prayer blew all the clouds together, and it waa wet weather, l'rayer, in Daniel's time. walked the cave as a liun tamer. It reached tip, and took tho sun by its golden bit, and stopted it. ehave all yet to try the full power of prayer, The time will come when the American church will pray with its face toward tho west, arid all the prairies and inland chief will surrender to God; and will pray with face toward the sea, and all the islands and ships will become Christian. Parents who liave wayward sons will get down on their knees and say: "Lord, send my boy homo," and the boy in Canton shall get right up from the gambling table, aud go down to the wharf to find out which ship starts first for America. Not one of us yet knows how to pray. All wo have done as 3-et has only been pottering, and guessing, and experiment ing. A boy gets hold of his father's saw and hammer, and tries to make some thing, but it is a poor affair that he makes. The father comes and takes the same saw and hammer, and builds the house or tho ship. In tho childhood of our Christian faith, wo make but poor work with tho weapons of prayer, but when wo come to the stature of men in Christ Jesus, then, under these implements, the temple of God will rise, and the world's redemption will bo launched. God cares not for the length of our prayers, or the number of our prayers, or the beauty of our prayers, or the place of our prayers; but it is the faith in them that tells. Believing prayer soars higher than the lark ever sang; plunges deeper tlian diving bell ever sank; darts quicker than lightning ever flashed. Though we have used only the back of this weapon instead of tho edge, what m.'irvejs have been wrought I If saved, we are all tho captives of some earnest prayer. Would God that, in de sire lor the rescue of souls, wo might in prayer lay hold of the resources of the Lord Omnipotent. We may turn many to righteousness by Christian admonition. Do not wait until you can make a formal speech. Address the one next to you. You will not go home alone today. Between this and your place of stopping you may de cide tho eternal destiny of an immortal spirit. Just one sentence may do the work. Just one question. Just one look. The formal talk that begins with a sigh and ends with a canting snuftle is not what is wanted, but the heartthrob of a of a man in dead earnest. There is not a soul on earth that you may not bring to God if you rightly go at it. They said Gibraltar could not be taken. It is a rock, sixteen hundred feet high and three miles long. But the English and Dutch did take it. Artillery and sappers and miners and fleets pouring out volleys of death, and thousands of men, reck less of danger, can do anything. The stoutest heart of sin, though it be rock, and surrounded by an ocean of trans gression, under Christian bombardment may be made to hoist the flag of redemp tion. But is all this admonition, and prayer, and Christian work for nothing? My text promises to all the faithful eternal luster. "They that turn many to righteousness shall shine as tho stars for ever. ' As stars, the redeemed have a borrowed light. What makes Mars and Venus and Jupiter so luminous? When the 6un throws down his torch in the heavens the stars pick up the scattered brands and hold them in procession as the queen of the night advances; so all Christian workers, standing around the throne. will shine In the light borrowed from the Sun of Righteousness Jesus in their faces, Jesus in their songs, Jesus in their triumph. Christ left heaven once for a tour of redemption on earth, yet the glorified ones knew he would come back again, iiut let him abdicate his throne, and go away to stay forever, the music would 6top, the congregation disperse, the temples of God be darkened, the rivers of Jiglif stagnate, and every phaiipt would become a hearse, and every bell would toll, and there would pot be room on the hill sides to bury tho dead of tins great metropolis, for there would bo pestilence 111 heaven. But Jesus lives, and 60 all (lie redeemed live with him. He shall recognize them as his comrades in earthly toil, and remember what they did. for tho honor of his name and for the spread of his kingdom. All their prayers and tears and work win rise before him as he looks into their faces, ancl he wU di vide his kingdom with thero; his peace their peace; his holiness their holiness; his joy their joy. The glory of the cen tral throne reflected from the surround ing thrones, the - last spct of sin struck from the Christian orb and the entire nature a-tre;nblo and a-flash with hgbti they shall shine as the stars' forever and ever. Again : Christian workers shall be like the stars in the fact that they have a light lndepengect cf each other. Look up at the night, and see each world show its distinct glory. It is not like the conflagration, in which you cannot tell where one name stops and another be gins. Neptune, Ilerschel an4 Mercury are as distinct as if each pne of them were tho only star; so pur individualism will not be lost in heaven. A great mul titude yet each one as pbservabls, as distinctly recognized, as greatly cele brated, as 11 in all the space, from gate to gate, and from lull to hill, he were tho only inhabitant; no mixing up no mob no indiscriminate rush; each Christian worker standing out illustrious all the story of earthly achievement adhering to each one; his Eelf denials, and pains, and services, and victories pub lished. Before men went out to the last war, the orators told them that they would all be remembered by their country, and their names be commemo rated in poetry and in song; but go to the graveyard in Richmond and you will Gnd there 6.000 graves, over each pne of. which is tho inscription, 'Unknown." The world does not remember its heroes; but there wC! be no unrecognized Chris tian worker in heaven. Each one known by all ; grandly known; known by accla mat ion; all tho past story of work for God gleaming in cheek, and brow, and foot and palm. They shall shine with distinct Lght as the 6 tars, forever and ever. Again: Christian workers thall Bhlnc like the 6tars in clusters. In looking up you find the worlds In family circles. Brothers and sisters they take hold of each other hands and dance in groups. urion in a; group. 1110 I'leiaues in a group. The solar system is only a com any of children, with bright faces. gathered around ono great fireplace. The worlds do not straggle off. They go in squadrons and fleets, sailing through im mensity. So Cliristian workers in heaven will dwell in neighborhoods and clusters. I am sure that some people I will like in heaven a great deal better than others. Yonder is a constellation of stately Christians. They lived on earth by rigid rule. The never laughed. They walked every hour anxioiu lest they should lose their dignity. But they loved God; and yonder they shine in brilliant constellation. Yet I shall not long to get into that fiarticular group. Yonder is a constellation of small hearted Christians asteroids in the eternal as trouomy. While somo souls go up from Christian battle, and blaze liko Mars, these asteroids dart a feeble ray like Vesta. Yonder is a constellation of martyrs, of apostles, of patriarchs. Oui souls, as they go up to heaven, will seek out tho most congenial society. Yonder is a constellation almost merry with the play of light. On earth they were full of sympathies and songs, and tears and rapturee, and congratulations. When they prayed theii words took fire; when they sang, the tune could not hold them; when they wept over a world's woes, they sobbed as if heart broken: when they worked for Christ, they flamed with enthusiasm. Yonder they aro circle of lightl constellation of Joyl galaxy of fire I Oh. that you and I, by that grace which can transform the worst into the best, might at last sail in the wake of that fleet, and wheel in that glorious group, as the stars forever and ever I Again: Christian workers will shine like the stars in swiftness of motion. The worlds do not stop to shine. There are 110 fixed stars save as to relative position. The star most thoroughly fixed flies thou sands of miles a minute. The astrono mer, using his telescope for an Alpine stock, leaps from world crag to world crag, and finds no star standing still The chamois hunter has to fly to catch his prey, but not sc swift is his game a-s that which the scientist tries to shoot through the tower of observatory. Like petrels mid Atlantic, that seem to come from no shore, and be behind, to no land ing place flying, flying sc these great flocks of worlds rest not as they go wing and wing age after age forevei and ever. The eagle hastes to its piey, but we shall in speed beat the eagles. You have noticed the velocity of the swift horse under whose feet the miles slip like a smooth ribbon, and as he passes the four hoofs strike Jht earth in such quick beat your PVIes taki tne same vibration, uut un these things are not swift in comparison with the mo tion of which I speak. The moon move hfty-four thousand niuea in a day. ion der, Neptune flashes on eleven thousand miles m an hour, x onder, Mercury goes one hundred and pine thousand miles in an hour. So like the stars the Christian worker shalj shine in swiftness of motion. Ycu hear now of father, or mother or child sick one thousand miles away, and it takes you two days to get to them. You hear of some case of suffering that demands your immediate attention, but it takes you an hour to get there. Oh, the qy heh you 6hall, in the fulfillment of the text, take starrj speed, and be equal to one hundred thou sand miles an hour. Having on earth got used to Christian work, you wj pot quit when death strjkfa you. You will only take on niore velocity. There is a dying child in London, and its spirit must bo taken up to God; you arp there in an instant to do it. There is a young man in New York to be arrested from going into tliat gate of sin ; you are there in an instant to arrest him. Whether with spring of foot, or stroke of wing, or by the force of some new law that shall hurl you to the spot whcr.9 you 'would go; 1 know not; but piy text suggests velocity. All 6pace open before you, with nothing to hinder you in mis sion of light, and love and joy, you 6hall shine in swiftness of motion a3 the stars forever and ever. Again: Cliristian workers, like the stars, shall shine hi magnituMd. The most illiterate man knows that these things in tho siy, looking like gilt but tons, are great masses of matter. To weigh them, one would thialf that it would requiro scales, with pillar hundreds of thousands cf miles high, and chains hun dreds of thousands of miles long, and at the bottoms of the chains basins on either side hundreds of thousands of miles wide, and that then oninipotenpe alone could put the mountains into the scales aud, iu "hills" into the balance. But puny man has been equal to the undertaking, and has set a little balance on his geometry, and weighed orld against world. Yea, ha. ha pulled out his nieasu.ri.ng line," and announced that Kersohei is thirty-sis thousand miles in diameter, Saturn seventy-nine thousand miles in diameter and Jupiter eighty nine thousand miles in danicter, " and that the em llast pearl on ' the beach of heaven is immense beyond all imagina tion. Bo all they who have toiled for Christ on earth shall rise up fc a magni tude of privilege, and a magnitude of "of srrengtli, and a magnitude of holiress, and a magnitude pf joy; and the weakest saint in glory becomes greater than all that we can, now baiaginepf an archangel. prethren, it doth not yet appear what we sliall be. Wisdom that shall know everything; wealth that shall possess everything; strength that shall- do every thing; glory that shall eireuniscribe everything I We shall not belike a taper Eet in a 6ick man's window, or a bundle cf sticks kindled on the beach to warm a shivering crew ; but you must take the diameter and the circumference of the world if you would get any idea of the greatness of our estate when wv shall shine as the stars forever and ever. Lastly and coming to this point my mind almost breaks down under the coii- templation liko the stars, all Christian workers shall thine in duration. The sumo start that look down upon us looked down upon tho Chaldean shepherds. The meteor that I saw flashing across the sky the other night, I wonder if it was not tho sumo ono that pointed down to where Jesus lay in the manger, and if, having ointed out his birthplace, it has ever since been wandering through tho heavens, watching to see how tho world would treat hiru. When Adam awoke in tho garden in the cool of the day ho saw coining out through the dusk of the evening the same worlds that greeted us 011 our way to chinch to night. In Independence hall is an old cracked lell that sounded the signature of the Declaration of Indejiendence. You can not ring it now; but this great chime of silver bells tliat strike in the dome of night ring out with as sweet a tone as when Cod swung them at the creation. IX)k up at night, and know that the white lilies that bloom in all the hanging gardens of our King aro century plants not blooming once in a hundred years, but through all the centuries. The stars at which the mariner looks to-night was the light by. which tho ships of Turshish were guided across tho Medi terranean, and the Venetian flotilla found its way into IiPpanto. Their armor is as bright to-night ns when, in ancient battle, tho stars in their courses fought against Sisera. To the ancients the stars were tho symbols of eternity. But here the figure of my text breaks down not in defeat, but in the tnajes- m: 01 ins? jimiwrr. I :m' not shine forever. Tho Bihle sava they shall fall like autumnal leaves. It is almost impossible for a man to take in a coursei going a milo in three minutes. hut God shall take in the worlds, flvinc a hundred thousand miles an hour, bv one pull of his little finger. As, when the factory band blit3 at nijrhtfall from the main wheel, all the smaller wheels Mucken their speed, and with slower and slower motion they turn until thev come to a full ston. so this rre.it machinery o the universe, wheel within wheel, making revolution of annulli'mr sjeed, shall by the touch of God's hand slip the band of present law and slacken and stop. That is what will lie the mat ter with the mountains. The chariots in which they ride shall hah so suddenly that the kings shall he thrown out. Star after star shall be carried out to burial amid funeral torches and burning worlds. Constellations shall throw ashes on their heads, and nil up and down the hurhwavs of space there shall In? mourning, mourn mg. mourning, because the worlds are lead. But the Christian workers shall never quit their thrones llv-y shall reign forevei and evti. f by some in vasion from hell, the attempt were trxidc tc carry them off into captivity from heaven, the souls they have saved would rally for their defense, and all the ant-els )f God wen Id strike with their scooters and the redeemed, on white horses of victory, would ride down the foe, and fill the steep of the sky would resound with the crash of the overvyhhiicd cohorts tumbled headlong ui of heaven. An Armless Artist In. Europe. When 1 was in Antwern 1 met with n poi son who intt-rested me very much. I was in ttie picture gallery there, and had walked through a long line of rooms to to the end apartment. There I saw ujon an case a picture nearly finished, which was a copy of a very fine painting ujion the wall. I was attracted by the beauty of this copy, which seemed to me as well painted as the original closo by it; and 1 was going away when 1 saw a tali, cl iei ly man come into the vaotn, and tako his seat upon a StP.pl in front of the easel. He wore largo, looso slippers, and, toniy astonWnnent, tho first thing he did was to kick them oil. Then I noticed that ins stockings were cut of? a little Lelow the instep, leaving his toes exiKiscd. Leaning back; on his stool, he lifted up hia two long and active legs and took up his palette aud maul stick with hU left foot, putting his great toe through the hole in the palette, just as an ordinary artist would use his thumb. . Then ho took a brush lietween the first and sec ond toes of his right foot, and touching it to tho paint on the palette, ho began to work upon tho painting upon the easel. This artist had. o ayuis, having been born without them, and he had painted the beautiful picture on tho easel with his toes. U wu9 astonishing to see him leaning back" with upraised legs and put ting the delicate light3 and shades into the eyes of the portrait on hi3 canvas with a brush held between lus toea He has long been known aa a, most skillful and successful painter in certain branches, and, his beautiful work is not only inter esting in itself, but it points a moral which we can each think out for our--selves, St. Nicholas. In the Distant Northwest. A syndicate of American capitalists has employed an engineer toexploro thor oughly the provinces of Athabasca, Al berta and, British Columbia, and then to tak a look at Alaska, all with the pur pose of ascertaining tho feasibility of building a railway line from sorao point on the Northern Pacific railway, in Da kota, toCalgaryt on the Canadian Pacific, thence through Alberta to Edmonton, the heart of a wheat district richer tlan Dakota in its fertility. Thence the pro posed road is to run . acrosa the rich plains and through the enormous forests, of Athabasca, rounding tho northern limit of the Rocky mountains, and hav ing its northwestern tevffdnus at or near Fort Wrangle, Alaska, and having close connection by steamer with Sitka and Yukon. The countcy through which it is proposed to run the road is all open, except here and there a patch of woods, and the finest farming and grazing lands in tho world. The foothills cf the Rocky mountains in the region are rich in coal and iron, and along the Athabasca, Liard. and Peace rivers there is gold in large quantities, Frank Leslie's. Strength of the Y. BI. C. A. The new Year Book of the Young Men's Christian association gives the number of associations throughout the world as 3,804, of which 1,240 are in the United States and Canada. Tho Ameri can associations own real estate to the value of $0,708,230, an increase of nearly $1,100,000 during the previous year. The association was never so strong and prosperous as it ia now. New York Tribune. ' - . The Plattsmouth He ra I Is on joying aSominboth its DAXLiHT AND WEEKLY EDITION S. Tke Year 1888 Will lie one during which the subjects of national interest anl importance will he strongly agitated and the election of a President will take place. 'J he people of Cass County who would like to learn of Political, Commercial and Social Transactions of this year and would keep apace with the times should -ion Daily cm- Weekly Herald. Now while we have the subject before the people we will venture to speak of our Which is first-class in all respects and from which our job printers are turning out mnch satisfactory work. PLATTSMOUTH, ICITIIEJt tiik TPnn Eilliiy NEBRASKA. EwL . . .