preachy . t'onLTccration ." 'The I-H'conuion of t. wii T.uhn xv. 22; ...l ?' 1 1 rill, lit" ftiLlli; tho familiar story in t the parable. Inidid home ho left. liUW, ill VK'l UUIL t'l?Jll ei 1 1... i (1 irolir:i.litv. to- li'ji mt ins tun i a on ii:u ioririvi'iu'ss. won. .1L( iin.uk imii; liny in of th! oM farm liouso. alter.' V hat is the mat- on; uicv tjinie iinnc iiiu out: nt a ring on Jus liat a seeming absurdity! ich a wretched mendicant as .i.... 4 :..- .... ...... .1.1 iii.il in 1 1 a i ii im hf.ihi want with a rinir: Oh, he is ;al hoii. ' No more tending of in; notion. iiii.uu iijiim i n 1 II Hin I IL till- I Illl illl lll"iv red feet. Oil with tho rags! On tliorolie! )ut with the ring! liven lit Je mil UUH : i j inn l'l ii. - II 111 II wo come hack, mere are go m rings. and jwarl rings, and cornelian rings, ami diamond rings; hut tlie richest ring that over llaslied on the vision is that which our Father uts upon a forgiven soul. I know that the impression is abroad anions some jM-ople that religion bemeans and iK'littles a man; that it takes all the sparkle out of his soul; that he has to ex change a roystering independence for an ecclesiastical straight jacket. Not so. "Wlieu .a man becomes a Christian ho does not go down, he stalls upward. Religion multiplies one by 10,000. Nay, the multiplier is in infinity. It is not a blotting out it is a polishing, it is an ar!orescenee, it is an efflorescence, it is an irradiation. "When a man comes into the kingdom of God he is not sent into a menial service, but tho Ixrd (Jod Al mighty from tho palaces of heaven calla upon the nu'ssenger angels that wait upon the throne to lly and 'put a ring on his hand.'? In Christ are the largest lib erty, and brightest j'03", and highest honor, and richest adornment, "l'ut a ring on his hand. " I remark, in tho first place, that when Christ receives a soul into his love he puts upon him the ring of adoption. In my church in Philadelphia there came the representative of a benevolent society 1 New York. lie brought with him eight or ten children of the street that he hud picked up, and he was trying to find for them Christian homes; and as the little ones stood on the pulpit and sung our hearts melted within its. At the close of the services a great hearted, wealthy man tame up and said: "I'll take this little bright eyed girl and 111 adopt her as one of my own children ;" and he took her bv the hand, lifted her into his carriage anil went awav. The next day, while we wore in the church gathering up garments for the poor of New York, tins little child came back with a bundle under her arm, and ehe said: "There's my old dress; per haps Kome of the poor children would like to have it.'' while she herself was in bright and beautiful array, and those who more immediately examined her said that she had a ring on her hand. It was a ring of adoption. There are a great many persons who pride themselves on their ancestry, and ' they glory over the royal blood that pours through their arteries. In their line there was a lord or a duke or a prime minister or a king. But when the Lord, our Father, puts uion us the ring of his adoption we become the. children of the ruler of all nations. "Behold what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be '. called the sons of God.' It matters not how poor our garments may be in tins world, or how scant our bread, or how mean the hut we live in, if we hare that ring of Christ's adoption upon our hand we are assure"! of eternal defenses. Adopt! Why, then, we are brother? and sisters to all the good of earth an.' heaven. We have the family name, th; family dress, the family keys, the family wardrobe. The father looks after us, robes us, defends us, blesses us. "We have royal blood in o'.vr veins, and there are crowns in our line. If we are his children, then princes and princesses. It is only a question of time when we get our coronet. Adopted ! Then we have th-i family secrets. "The secret of the Lord is with them that fear him." Adopted ' Then we have the family inheritance, and in the day when our father shall divide the riches of heaven we shall take our share of the mansions and palaces and temples. Henceforth let us boast no more of an earthly ancestry. The in signia of eternal glory is our coat of arms. This ring of adoption puts upon us all honor and all privilege. Now we can take the words of Charles Wesley, that prince of hymn makers, and sing: Come, lot lis join our frienils above, Who have obtained the prize. And on the eajrlo wiDgs of love To joy celestial rise. Let all the saints terrestrial sins With those to glory gone: For all the servants of our king. In heaven and earth, are one. I have been told that when any of the """' members of any of the great secret so cieties of this country are in a distant city and are in any kind of trouble, and are set upon by eneniieo, they have only to give a certain signal and the members of that organization will flock around for defense. And when any man bclong3 to this great. Christian brotherhood, if he gets in trouble, in trial, in persecution, in temptation, he has only to show this ring cf Christ's adoption, and all the armed Cohorts of heaven will come to his rescue. Still further, wheu Christ takes a soul into liis love he puts upon it a marriage ring. Now, that is not a whim of ruins-: "And I will betroth thee unto me for ever; yea, I will betroth thee unto me i-i righteousness, and in judgment, and ia loviDg kindness, and in mercies." At the when, at tiu March," under tin- amid the aroma of otflag' t.( - set that ring on tho round finger oi w. plump hand, and that other hour when at the close of the exhaustive watching, when you knew that the soul had fled, you took from the hand, which gave back no responsive clasp, from that emaciated finger, the ring that she had worn so long and worn so well. On some anniversary day you take up that ring, and you rcpolish it until all the old luster comes back, and you can see in it the flash of eyes that long ago ceased to weep. Oh, it is not an un meaning thing when I tell you that when Christ receives a soul into his keeping lie puis on it a marriage ring. lie endows yo;i from that moment with all his wealth. You are one Christ and tho fcoul one in pjmpathy, one in atTection, one in hope. There is no xnver in earth or hell to effect a divorcement after Christ and the soul are united. Other kings have turned out their companions when they got weary of them, and sent them adrift from the palace gate. Ahasuerus ban ished Vashti, Napoleon forsook Josephine, but Christ is the husband that is true for ever. Having loved you once, he loves you to the end. Did they not try to di vorce Margaret, the Scotch girl, from Jesus? They said: "You must give up your religion." She said: "I can't give up my religion." Aud so they took her down to the lieach of the sea, and they drove in a slake at low water mark, and the- fastened her to it, expecting that as tho tide came up her faith would fail. The tide legan to rise, and came up higher and higher, and to the girdle, and to the lip, and in the last moment, just as the wave was washing her soul into glory, she shouted the praises of Jesus. Oh, no, you cannot separate a soul from Christ. It is an everlasting mar-, riage. Battle and storm and darkness cannot do it. It is too much exultation for a man, who is but dust and ashes, like myself, to cry out today: "I am persuaded that neither height, nor depth, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor any other creature, shall separate me from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus, my Lord!" Glory be to God that when Christ and the soul are married they are bound by a chain, a golden chain if I might say so a chain with one link, and that one link the golden ring of God's everlasting love. I go a step further, and tell you that wheu Christ receives a soul into his love he puts on him the ring of festivity. You know that it has been the custom in all ages to bestow rings on very happy occasions. There is nothing more ap propriate for a birthday gift than a ring. You delight; to bestow such a gift upon your children at 6uch a time. It means joy, hilarity, festivity. Well, when this old man of the text wanted to tell how glad he was that his boy had got back, he expressed it in thi3 way. Actually, Ix fore he ordered 6andals to be put on hi.i bare feet; before ho ordered the fatted calf to be killed to appease the boy's hunger, he commanded: ''Put a ring on his hand," Oh, it is a merry time when Christ and the 60ul are united 1 Joy of forgive ness! What a splendid thing it is to feel that all is right between me and God. What a glorious thing it is to have God just take up all the sins of my life and put them in one bundle, and then fling them into the depths of the sea, never to rise again, never to be talked of again. Pollution all gone. Darkness all illuminated. God reconciled, The predi al gal home. 'Put a ring on his hand." Every day I find happy Christian people. I find some of them with 110 second coat, some of them in huts and tenement houses, not one earthly com fort afforded them; and yet they are as happy as happy can be. They sing "Iiock of Ages" aa no other people in the world sing it. They never wore any jewelry in their life but one gold ring, and that was the ring of God's undying affection. Oh, how happy religion makes us! Did It make you gloomy and sad? Did you go with your head cast down? I do not think you got religion, my brother. That is not the effect of religion. True religion is joy. "Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and ell her paths are peace." Why religion lightens all our burdens. It smooths all our way. It interprets all our sorrows. It. changes the jar of earthly discord for the peal of festal bells. In front of the flaming furnace of trial it sets the forge on which scepters are hammered out. Would you not like today to come up from the swine feeding and try this religion? All the joys of heaven would come out and meet you, and God would cry from the throne: "Put a ring cn his hand." You are not happy. I see it. There is no peace, and sometimes you laugh when you feel a great deal more like cry ing. The world is a cheat. It first wears you down with its follies, then it kicks you out into darkness. It comes back from the massacre of a million souls to attempt the destruction of your soul today. No iace out of God, but here Lj the fountain that can slake the .thirst. Here is the harbor where yoii can drop safe anchorage. Would you not like, I ask you not perfunctorily, but as one brother might talk to another wYmld you not like to have a pillow of rest to put yjour head on ? And would you not like, when you retire at night, to feel that all is well, whether you wake up to-morrow morn ing at C o'clock, or sleep tlie sleep that knows no waking? Would you net like to exchange this awful uncertainty about .the future for a glorious assurance of heaven? Accept of the Lord Jesus to day, and all is well. If on your way home some peril should cross the Btreti Y.I. ... and we g . dust, we can re;.... work is all done, and to-i day an everlasting Sunday," Oh, v.hon, thou city of fiixl, KIiull I thy courts ascend? Wli?ro coiiKivtaitioiis ne'er break up, Is nd SablKiths have no en J. There are people in this house today who aro very near the eternal world. If you are Christians, I bid you bo of good cheer. Bear with you our con gratulations to the bright city. Aged men, who will soon be gone, take with you our love for our kindred in the bet ter land, and when you see them tell them that we are soon coming. Only a few more sermons to preach and hear. Only a few more heart aches. Only a few more toils. Only a few more tears. And then what an entrancing spectacle will open before us! IVautiful heaven v. here all Is lisht, Ueuutiful angels cult lied in white, beautiful strains that never tire, lleautiful harps through ail the choir; There nhall I join the chorus sweet. Worshipping at tho Saviour's feet. I approach you now with a general in vitation, not licking out here and thero a man, or here and thero a woman, or here and there a child, but giving you an unlimited invitation, saying. ''Come, for all things are now ready." We invite you to the warm heart of Christ and the inclosure of the Christian church. I know a great many think that the church does not amount to much; that it is ob solete; that it did its work and is gone now, so far as all usefulness is concerned. It is the happiest place I have ever been in. except my own home. I know there are some people who say they are Christians who seem to get along without any help from others, and who culture solitary piety. They do not want any ordinances. I do not belong to that class. I cannot get along without them. There are so many things in this world that take my attention from God. and Christ, and heaven, that I want all the helps of all the symbols and of all the Christian associations; and I want around about me a solid phalanx of men who love God and keep liis commandments. Are there any here who would like to enter into that association? Then by a simple, child like faith, apply for admis sion into the visible church, and you will be received. No qtiestions asked about your past history or present surround ings. Only one test do you love Jesus? Baptism does not amount to anything, say a great many people, but the Lord Jesus declared: "Ho that believeth and is baptized shall be saved," putting bap tism and faith side b hide. And Jin apostle declares: "Repent and ha bap tized, every one of you." I do not stickle for any particular mode of bap tism, but J put great emphasis on the fact that yoii ought to be baptized. Yet no more emphasis than the Lord Jesus Christ, the great head of the church puts upon it. The world is going to, after a while, lose a great many of its votaries. There are to be revivals, of religion that will shake the earth. We give you warning. There is a great host coming in to stand under the banner of the Lord Jesus Christ. Will you be among them ! Will you be among the gathered sheaves? Some of you have been thinking on this subject year after year. You have found out that this world is a poor por tion. You want to be Christians. You have come almost into the kingdom cjf God; but there you stop, forgetful of the fact that to be almost saved is not to be saved at all. Oh, my brother, after hav ing come so near to the door of mercy, if you turn back, you will never come ct all. After you have heard of the good ness of God, if you turn away and die, it will not be because you did not have c. good offer. God's spirit will not always strive With hardened, self-destroying man; Ye who persist his love to grieve May never hear his voice again. May God Almighty this hour move upon your soul and bring you back from the husks, of the wilderness to the father's house, and set you at the banquet and "put a ring on your hand." Tlie Prince Consort's nesting- Place. Tlie old Whippingham church, which, in the early days, was an abbey, was re modeled in the. most elegant and expen sive manner by the queen, out of her own funds, in 1SG1, and is now one of the most beautiful houses of worship in the world. All the people of the pari.-h attend here, as well as the queen's house hold, but the latter have their own ii vate entrance, and are separated fiMii: the common herd by an artistic screen. The royal pew, on the south side of tlic chancel, is a square affair, very hand somely upholstered, and contains a monu mental tablet to the menory of the late prince consort, with this inscription: "To the beloved memory of Francis Albert Charles Augustus Emanuel, prir.ee consort, who departed this life Dec. 11. 1SG1, in his 43d year. Be thou faithful unto death, and I will give thee a crown of life. Revelations ii, 10. This monu ment is placed in this church, which wa; erected under his direction, by lii. broken hearted and devoted widow. Queen Victoria, 1SG4." Philadelphia Times. Width of tlie Amazon. Tlie River Amazon at its narrowest part is nearly a mile wide during tin period of high water, with an average depth of 225 feet, running with a vc hc ity of nearly five miles an hour, and dis charging 43.875 cubic yards cf water per second, cr eight times the quantity discharged by the Mississippi in a eecorn.' during high water. Globe-Deraocrat. by lieu..-. strong human 1.... offers, refusals, exposiu.. discouragement. A little booth at tho end of the wlTTrr. was filled with a crowd watching some boislerou.s men playing cards for candies; with hats tipped back and chins out stretched in eager disputations, t hey had shuliled on? their mortal responsibilities unto tho jack of trumps. Iu the opposite booth lour strong, shaggy, black eyed men and a wrinkled dame sat about a dirty table and ate dry bread by the lilit of a" candle. Tin; talk in this dingy cabin was low and gloomy; a lad lying on his back 011 a bench announced in precise and bitter speech the condition of things: "The boxes must be large, well tilled with clean fresh berries; the price, then, ladies and gentlemen, is fifteen cents!" "Just so," replied one of the men, a3 he crunched liis crust with vim; "we are fourteen; wo picked hard during two days, and got sixteen boxes; they gave rr.c .f 'S.AO for tho lot; eighty cents off for the boxes, leaves me ? 1.(30 for the prolit. If they think that pays, let them pick and we'll buy." "No danger," Fald another, "of the'r tramping over the rocks! ' And we're fools to spend our time for them. Now I come from near Lake St. John, about fifty miles from here, with twenty boxes, and I've got $2 net for picking three days with twelve hands, and for driving a hundred miles." Then they were silent for a whiletill the old woman, said, in a calm, tesignud way: "Well, yes, that's all true enough, but what can we do? Blueberries are t ho only blessed thing that can be sold for cash. Where else could we get the- $15,000 a year that conies into the country? It's all very well to tell us to improve our farms instead of picking berries, but we'd starve to death on the farm alone." C. H. Farn ham in Harper's Magazine. The Conscientious Ncw-spaper Man. It is my experience that a conscientious newspaperman will da his work inter viewing included rabout right if the man who has the news to give will only let him. Ilcportcnv don't wilfully and ma liciously misquote talkers and nus.ue facts, as they are so generally credited with doing, and I find that x'he' best plan to pursue in giving material for publica tion is to state the facts clearly aad let 1 he reporter do tho dressing up. TLe.-e ftllov.-s who always msist on being re ported verbatim, and who must dictate 'he text of every item they furnish, in variably make a sorry mess o it. An other thing I've r.ocic.-di If a mjtn has a speech prepared for a banquet, present a ! ion ot any occasion of that character, he had better give the reporter the mam.t--cript and go it blind than trust himself to stick to his prepared speech, for, nine tiroes in ten, he'll ge; uway from his paper before. h ii, iiaif through, in which case hCi'll thank his stars forever that the reporter has a grammatical aad reason ably coherent composition to print instead of his disjointed impromptu" speech. Dan Linahan in Globe-Democrat. Tlie Darwin Theory In Commerce. Thi3 application of Darwin's great theory to commercial competition is more than a parable. It is the scientitic expla nation of causes which have wrecked civilization in the past and may wreck them in the future. The struggle mast go on while men are impelled by the de sire for a greater profusion of what sus tains life or makes it happier. It often has been, and often is, carried on by the sword, but important victories may be won, and disastrous defeats sustained, by more peaceful means. The discovery of the passne round the Cape transferred the trade of the east from the Mediterranean to Liondon and Amsterdam, and most merchants in the city allirm that the cutting of the. Suez canal has once more deprived England of the advantage of situation. The com mercial success of Swi' ;;;rl:nd, however, proves that national characteristics are at least as import ; tit us geeirraphleal posi tion, and it is well from Time to time to ask if we arc (loir.:; ail that in us lies to train those who shall follow, us to main tain what our predecessors have .. on. Nature. Ieal lcfter OCice Tiiuseuru. Connected with the dead letter office is a sort of museum, where curious articles that come in the mails and cannot be re turned to owners are placed on exhibition. In the cabinets which extend round the room are shown articles innumerable and varied, many of which have histories. There are pictures and toys and jewelry without number. Sovc-.l Indian hatch ets which were uncla.mcd give to one of the cabinets an archioological appearance, and a pair of 'Indian pines of red sand stone cross each other ia truly peaceful style. One of the rare curiosities i.s a sheet cf parchment, on which is j.ii.neu the Lord's prayer in fifty-four langu.v.;vs. It is said to be a duplicate of a parcU:neut which hangs in irt. Peters's at Rome. Chicago Herald. A Harbor's Otserratioiis. The loquacious barbers now nr.d thru have intervals when they remark inci dents that escape the attention of n.ai:y ii the tear and ru.-h of life. "You sleep o; the right side of ycur body."' one oi th-; said the other day, as he chjr-ptd the set:, blonde hair of a customer. "Why? Li cause don't you see that yeur hair is thicker on the rigkt than on the left side? We can readily tell on which side a cus tomer eieep-. The heat is confined to the side of the head resting on the pillow, and that heat raal-ei the hair grow thicker about the temple." The barber didn't; explain the accepted statement tiict th constant wearing of the hat produces ao much Leat that men addicted to the prac tice are bald. New York Sun. jiua .L'e.Li. In,..,, Ladies' Tei. (J out. . Men's JJurt Shoes. . Men's Slides . . Men's Shoes . . Men's Shoes . . 'vhiklrens '-Little Giant School Shoes," the. Lest in the market, ?an)'e reduction. JS'ow is venr chance to lav in .1 cheat) su.wlv. irruxm, jourir nrra r, ,jlt-. B E J . JUST RECEIVED. Finnan Haddioa. California Evaporated Nectarines , - - they are ocston brown Bread and nice. . Prunella and Apricots. Asparagus in Cans. Clam Chowder. "D TT3 7 4 Have anything you want ircm a two v heeled t,o etui to a twent)fciu passenger wagon. CARRAG-a FOR PLEASURE AHD SHORT DRIVE. always kept ready. Q-Am or tight carriages, pall-Larer wagon and every thing for I'uneruMnrnished in short notico. Term ca tl rTS B4 E,! B 7 RfW TM rHiA WiUtwsent t tCt.K U fci fcal W V:A i.VVA ftr Wr" fci " . A Handsome Boak nt 1 12.11.. Ion a post-il for . SANGER, BAtf IMPORTERS Ph HARDWARE TIN FLATS, SlSrf-srr- ?VI CSTLE2T. KAILS, lrv' :-- fiwC i-r- 22, 24, 20, 23, SO & 32 Laka Street, or Sale. A fitrm oi VTf-i-:T Vjtcr l.!tu::i, tlv. S. "W. i of Sf.' 21 T;?. 10. Rnnjjr 14. F!i ti i --" cf J.jjifri Vt .iit n i Rock B.uilV for f.irlh-.T ; -.rlii-ul-ns b'ii.t. 1-Ca;u. 4 -50 r'7r-r,ir "7 o to " " a uu tl L0 " 2 00 wt. u Mum l ttmim. mmj famm . N N E T T. delicious Mixture, --Something ne 3 T T. ANNUAL FG111888 j ail vbo writ tor it 1 ia ! PfaAcw. ad u,liu iti abot ihm i I IN. K1U r. anil riilWCd t 1 t BD.. With htindrttfW rJ .. .1 i .. ; i. , j i ' . . ' . , V B ecrib3 Hare Novelticnin VKOKTAHLf tnd FiToWKHK,! I of rrnl value, which cannot bo obtunnd clmnrhnre. &mal mAArm tho most complete C'atnlnxuR Kbllke4. to I JOBBERS e Harness, saddles, vrhips. lridW jcwlry ,,f -vriy kind and J t :n ke-it i:i stok and 8atiract' t- d at Sire. "hi IT