i Tilt l)AiLY IiEltALi), iXATrSMOuiiri, iic.-unAoiwA, M()klAV. MAItCII 19, 188S. iAGEIX THE WEST .UUENT SERMON ON "THE .ORATION OF THE SOUL." Iralile of the I'roJIal Kon It' Matters Not How Poor AV Aro If XV m but Wear on Our I!ail tlie Ring of Chrlat'a Adoption. Foet Scott, Kan., March 18. The Rev. T. Do Witt Talinage, D. D., of the Brooklyn Tabernacle, prcacbel licro this evening to a crowded conKrcjcation. lie took for hvi Kuliject "TJie Di'coratioii of tho Soul," ami hi tea.t wa Luke xv, 22: 'Put a rin; on liis hand." lie saiu: I will not rchearao tlio familiar btory of tho fast young man of tho par;ibl You know wbat u sj!cnil home he left. Yoi know what a hard timo he had. Anj you renieiiilx-r how, after that season of Vagabondage and prodigality, he ro Bolved to gi and weep out hi sorrows on tho bosom of parental forgiveneas. Well, thero i great excitement one day in front of the door of tho old form Iidum. Tho ftervantj couio rushing up and mv: "What' tho matter? What i i tho mat ter?" lnt lief on they quite arrive the o!d man rri"sout: "I'm a ring on his liand." What a seeming nlurdity! What can such a wrcU.'Iunl mc inlirant as this fellow that is tramping on toward the houso want with a ring? Oh, he ij the prodigal son. No more tending of tho swine trough. No more longing for tho puds of tho caroh tree. No moro blistered feet. OH with the rags! On with the robe! Out with the ring! Even bo does God receive every one of us when we come bk. There aro gold rings, and pearl rii and cornelian rings, and diamond ringVbut the richest ring that ever flashed on the vision is that which our Father puts ujion a forgiven soul. I know that the impression is abroad among some eople that religion liemeana and belittles a man; tliat it takes all tho sparkle out of his soul; that he has to ex change a roystering independence for an ecclesiastical straight jacket. Not bo. When a man becomes a Christian ho does fcot go down, he starts upward. Religion multiplies one by 10,000. Nay, the multiplier is in infinity. It is not a blotting out it is a polisbing, it is an orboresceiice, it is an efflorescence, it is an irradiation. When a man comes into the kingdom of God ho is not sent into a menial service, but tho Lord God .Al mighty from the palaces of heaven calls upon the messenger angels that wait upon the throne to Uy and "put a ring on his hand." In Christ are tho largest lib erty, and brightest joy, and highest honor, anil richest adornment. "Put a ring on his hand." I remark, in tho first place, that when Christ receives a soul into his lovo he puts upon him the ring of adoption. In my church in Philadelphia there came tho representative of a benevolent society in New York. lie brought with him eight or ten children of tho street that ho ""dad picked up, aud ho was trying to find for them Christian homes ; and as the little ones stood on the pulpit and sung our hearts melted within us. At tho close of ine services c;it jiciii i-.it vi canny man came up and said: "I'll take this little bright eyed girl and I'll adopt her as one of my own children;" and he took her by tho hand, lifted her into his carriage and went away. The next day, while wo were in tho church gathering up garments for tho poor of New York, this little child came back with a bundle under her arm, and she said: "There's my old dress; per haps some of the poor children would like to have it." while tho herself wa3 in bright and beautiful array, and those who more immediately examined her said that 6he had a ring on her hand. It was a ring of adoption. There are a great many jiersons who pride themselves on their ancestry, and they glory over tho royal blood thnt pours through their arteries. In their lino thero was a lord or a duko or a prime minister or a king. 15ut when the Lord, our Father, puts upon us tho ring of his adoption we bocomethe children f the ruler of all nations. "IVholl what manner of love the Father hath bestowed u;ioa tw. t'sat we should be -.lt l ,1... t.t llr. tt tiv.tl, Tint- lillCU 141V Vk V . V " . . ...... .v - . -. how poor our garments may be in this wwld, or how scant our bread, cr how mean tlio hut-we live in, if we have that ring of Christ's adoption upon otfr hand we arc assured of eternal defenses. Adopt I Why. then, wo aro brother? and sisters to all the good of earth ar. . heaven. Wo have the family name, tb: family dress, the family keys, the family wardrobe. The father looks after us, robes tu, defends us, bkvsses us. V.V have royal blood in cat veins, and thero are crowns in our line. If we are hs Children, then princes and princesses. It is only a question of time when we get our coronet, Adrteu! Then we have th family secrets. "The s?cTet of the Lord is with them that fear him." Adopted '. Then wo have the family inheritance, nnd in the day when our father shali divide tho riches of heaven we sliall take our eharo of tho mansions and palaces and temple. Henceforth let us boast no .more of an earthly ancestry. Tho in fugnia of eternal glory is our coat of arms. This ring of adoption puts upon us all honor and all privilege. Now wo can tako the won!s cf Charles V.'ey, -.that prince of hymn makers, and sing: - v Come, let U3 join our f rieiuls above, -yjio have obtained tho i;-ir. And on tha eagle wioipj o lovo fo joy cee-jia! rise. j-t nil tlio saioU tcrrestrirJ siH With those to K'.ory gour: For all tho serv ants of our Linjt, Ja Jeven and earth, are ono. I have Lean told that when any of the members of any of tlio great secret so cieties of this country are in a distant ,i r i-;n1 tf frraibfo. and City aiiu urj m . , are set upon by enemies, they have only to give a certain signal and the members of that organization will flock around for defense. And when any man belongs 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 Us rescue. Still further, when Christ takes a soul Into bis love be puts upon it a marriage tins. Now. tliat la not a whim of mine; And I will betroth tb-s unto mo for rrj I rH 1-"-" f-"i r-o in tho wedding altar tho bridegroom puts a ring upon tho hand of tho bride, signify ing lovo aud faithfulness. Trouble may come upon tho household, and tho carpets may go, and tho pictures may go, tho piano may go, everything c-Uo may go tho Last thing that goea i:j tho marriage ring, for it is considered sacred. In the burial hour it is withdrawn from the hand and kept in a casket, and sometimes tho xx. is ojened on an anniversary day, and ns you look at this ring yc-u eeo under its arch a long procession of precious mem ories. Within the golden circle of tha- ring thero is room for a thousand sweet i recollections to revolve, and you think of the great contrast In.! ween the hour when, at tho closo of the "Wedding March," under the flashing lights and amid tho aroma of orange blossoms, you set that ring on tho round finger of tho plump hand, and that other hour when at tho close, of tho exhaustive watching, when you knew that the soul had lied, you took from tho hand, which gave hack no rcrinsive cbisp, from that emaciated finger, the ring that she had worn so long and worn so well. On some anniversary day you tako up that ring, and you repolish it until all the old luster comes b:ick, and you can we in it the Hash of eyes that long ago ceased to weep. Oh, it is not an un meaning thing when I tell you that when Christ rec ive3 a soul into his keeping ho puts on it a marriage ring. He endows you from that moment with all his wealth. You are one Christ and tho soid one in sympathy, one in affection, ono in hope. There is no jxnvcr in earth or hell to effect a divorcement after Christ anil the soul aro united. Other kingj have turnod out their companions when they got weary of them, and 6cnt them adrift frm the palace gate. Ahasuerus ban ished Yashti, Napoleon forsook Josephine, but Chri.-t is the husband that is true for ever. Having loved you once, ho loves you to the ciul. Iid they not try to di vorce Jlnrgaret, the Scotch girl, from Jesus? They eaid: "You must give up your religion." She said: "I can't give tip my religion." And so they took her down to tho beach of tho sea, and they drove in a stake at low water mark, and they fastened her to it, expecting that as the tide came up her faith would fail. The tido legan to rise, and camo up higher and higher, and to tho 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. Uatllo and storm and darkness cannot do it. It is too much exultation for a man, who is but dust and ashes, like niyself. to cry out today: "I am xrsuadcd that neither height, nor depth, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor any other creature, shall separate me front the love of God which is in Christ Jesus, 1113' IiOrd!" Glory bo to God that when Christ and the soul are married they aro Ijound by a chain, a golden chain if I might say so a chain with one link, and that one link tlio golden ring of God's everlasting love. I go a step further, and tell you that when Christ receives a soul into ITis love ho puts on him the ring of festivity. You know that it has been the custom in all ages to lestov rings on very happy occasions. Thero is nothing! more ap propriate for a birthday gift than a ring. You delight to bestow such a gift upon your children at such 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 this way. Actually, liefore he ordered sandals to bo put on his bare feet; before he ordered the fatteil calf to bo killed to appease the boy's hunger, he commanded: "Put a rhig on his hand." Oh, it is a merry time when Christ and tlio soul aro united ! Joy of forgive ness! What a splendid thing it is to feel that all is right between mo and God. What a glorious thing it is Co have God just tako up all tho sins of my hfo 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 nain. . Pollution all gone. Darkness all illuminated. God reconciled. The prodi gal home. "Put a ring on hi3 hand." Every day I find happy Christian" Ieople. I iind Eome of them with no second coat, some of them in huts and tenement houses, not ono earthly com fort afforded them; and yet they are as happy as happy can lx?. They ting "Rock of Ages" an no other people jn the world sing it. They never wore any jewelry in their lifo but one gold ring, and that was tho ring of God's undying aficction. Oh, how happy religion makes us! Did it mako 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 rel gion. True? religion is joy. "Iler ways aro ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." Why religion lihtons all our burdens. It smooths all our way. It interprets all our sorrows. It changes tho jar of earthly discord for tho peal of festrd bell?. In front of the flaming furnace of trial it sets tho forge on which scepters aro luxmmcred out. Would you not like today to como 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 tho throne: "Put a ring on his hand." You are not happy. I see it. Thero is no peace, and sometimes jou laugh when you feel a great deal more like cry ing, The world is a cheat. It first wears you down TCjth its follies, then it kicks you out info darkness. It coine3 back from the massacre of a million souls to attemnt the destruction of your soul today. No peace out of God, but here is the fountain thai; ean slake tho thirst. Here is the harbor where you can drop safe anchorage. Would you not like, I ask you not : perfunctorily, but as ono brother might talk to another would you not like to have a pillow of rest to put your head on? And would you not like, when you retire at night, to feel that all is well, ' whether you wako up tomorrow morn ing at C o'clock, or sleep the sleep that knows no waking? Would you net like to exchange this awful uncertainty about t!e future, for a glorious assurance of heave-.? Accent cf t! -t J "3 t-y- and dash your lifo out, it would not hurt you. You would rise up immediately. You would staud in the celestial ttreets. You would Ixs amid tho great throng that forever worship and aro forever happy. If this day some sudden disease should como upon you, it would not frighten you. If you knew you were going ycu could give a calm farewell to j our beautiful home on earth, and know that you arc going right into the com panionship of those who have already got loyond tho toiling and tho weeping. You feel on Saturday night different from tho way you feel any other night of tho week. You come homo from tho bank, or the store, or tho shop, and j-ou say: "Well, now my week's work is done, and to-morrow is Sunday." It is a pleasant thought. There is refresh ment and reconstruction in tho very idea. Oh, how pleasant it will be, if, when wo get through tho day of our life, and wo go and lie down in our bed of dust, wo can realize: "Well, now the work i3 all done, and to-morrow is Sun day an everlasting Sunday," Oh, when, thou city of Ciol, KliaU 1 t!iy court: aso-nd? Yheij coc.ire;ratioii neVr break up. And Sallxitha lia.e no end. There aro people in this house today who aro very near the e ternal world. If you are Christians, I bid you Ixs of good cheer. Dear with you our con gratulations to the bright city. Aged men. who will soon he gone, tako with you our lovo for our kindred in the bet ter land, and when you see them tell tiicm that we aro soon coming. Only a few moro ccrmons to preach and hear. Only a few moro heart aches. Only a few moro toils. Only a few moro tears. And then what an entrancing spectacle will open before us! TVautiful hcavea where all b light, lJoautiful anReLi colthed in white. Beautiful strains that never tire, lautiful harps through all the choir; There shall I join tho chorus S'.veet. Worshipping at tho Saviour's feet. I approach you now with a general in vitation, not picking out here and thero a man, or hero and there a woman, or hero and thero a child, but giving j-ou an unlimited invitation, sxij ing, "Come, for all things are now ready." We invito you to tho warm heart of Christ and tho inclosuro 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 tho 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. Thero are so many things in this world that take my attention from God. and Christ, and heaven, that I want all tho helps of all the symbols and of all tho Christian associations; and I want around about mo a solid phalanx of men who lovo God and keep his commandments. Aro thero 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 questions asked about your past history or present surround ings. Only one test do you lovo Jesus? 13aptism does not amount to anything, say a great many people, but the Lord Jesus declared: "Ho that believeth and is baptized shall bo saved," putting bap tism and faith side by side. And an apostle declares: "Repent and Ixj bap tized, every ono of you." I do not stickle for any particular mode of bap tism, but I put great emphasis on tho fact that you ought to bo baptized. Yet no moro emphasis than the Lord Jesus Christ, the great -head of tho church puts upon it. The world i3 going to, after a while, lose a great many of its votaries. Thero aro to be revivals of religion that will shake the earth. We give you warning. There is a great host coming in to stand under tho banner of the Lord Jesus Christ. Will you bo among them 1 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 tho kingdom of God; but there you stop, forgetful of tho fact that to be almost saved is not to be saved at all. Oh, my brother, after hav ing come so r.mr to the door of mercy, if you turn lack, you wiil never come at all. After you have heard of the good ness of God, if you turn away and die, it will not bo because you did not have a good offer. God's spirit ivill not alwaya strive With hardened, self-destroying man; Ye who persist his lova to grievo May otver h6ar 1:1s voico again. May God Almighty this hour move upon your soul and bring you back from tho husks of tho wilderness to tho father's house, aud set you at the banquet and "put a ring on your hand." The Prince Consort's Kcsling Flap. The old Whippingham church, wluch, in the early days, wa3 an abbey, was re modeled in the most elegant and exjen tive manner by the queen, out of her own funds, in 1801, and is now one of tho most beautiful houses, of worship in tho world. All the jxoplo of the parish attend here, as well as the queen's house hold, but the latter have their own pri vate entrance, and are separated from the common herd by an artistic screen. Tho royal pew, on the south side of the chancel, is a square affair, very hand somely upholstered, and contains a monu mental tablet to tho menory of tho late prince consort, with thia inscription: iTp the beloved memory pf Francis Albert Charles Augustus Emanuel, prince consort, who departed this life Dec. 14, 1SC1, in his 43d year. Be thou faithful unto death, and will give thee a prown of life. Revelations ii, 10. This monu ment is placed in this church, which was erected under his direction, by lus broken hearted and demoted widow, Queen Victoria, .1864." Philadelphia Times, -, . j . j : .. Width ot the AniaxotJ The River Amazon at its narrowest part J3 nearly a mile wide during tho period of high water, with an average : depth of 225 feet, running with a veloc- I ity of nearly live miles an hour, and clis- j charging 245,875 cubic yards of water I pr r-c"?id, or eigbt tim it's t Airy i EDITED DY THE SCISSORS. The only true refuge from doubt is the light of ampler truth. lvery man on tho Kansas City police force is a church member. Phosphates in almost unlimited quan tities have been found in Florida. Frenchmen aro beginning to talk a!out the forbidding of children in circu;-aud theatres. Copies of tho "National Anthems of Ah" Nations" aro to lx provided for all Eng land's regimental bands. Baltimore boasts of having a wealthy society young man who can bako bread and cook a delicious meal. Tho number of patents issued in thij country during 1887 for electrical devices of various kinds was 1,21H. All Europe seems impressed with tho Ixlief that peace can best be maintained by having everything put on a war foot ing. The revenues of the Church of England have declined enormously. The living of Rochdale, that used to bo worth $.30,000 or 00.000, is now worth only $20,000. Three physicians havo left Paris for Australia, taking with them germs cf clncken cholera. Tho Australians aro about to adopt Pasteur's plan of destroy ing their rabbits, in the face of very strong ojposition. Millions of jack rabbits migrated from Oregon to Idaho during the cold spell in the far northwest. They crossed tho frozen waters of the Svnl-Hr'-r :i ' ana presenteu u. wuiiuci-.li .,;i;c.a n; iu the people who saw them. Tho Bank of New York has a check yellowed by fire which was drawn by Aaron Burr Aug. 14, 1781, and also another check drawn by Talleyrand and Gulian Verplanck. It is now nearly 101 years since tho bank was'established. There are 18 different missions in tho Mexican republic, 11 different denomina tions, 123 foreign workers, 12,133 com municants, adherents about 30,000; thero have been 59 martyrs; thero are 88 or dained native preachers and G3 unor dained. The autographs belonging to the collec tion of the late Ben : Perley Poore havo been sold at auction, and netted about $0,500. Tho highest price paid for any one autograph was $90, for a letter writ ten bv Edgar Allan Poe upon the subject of "The Raven." The barb wire industry is in a fair way of being overcome. According to Tho Iron Age there aro forty -four manu facturers in this country who own 2,lfil machines. It is estimated that in 2C0 working days, running single turns, they will make 300,000 tons of barb v. ire while tho consumption ranges from 130, 000 to 150,000 tons a year. Some of the society men of Paris are advocating the adoption of a moro suit able stylo of evening dress. The costumo proposed consists of buckle shoes, silk stockings, knee breeches, velvet coat (curtailed), laco ruffles, etc. The pro moters aro anxious to avoid the dress which causes, sometimes, mistaking re semblance between guest and waiter. When the mercury was 22 degs. be low zero at Virginia City, Nov,, a big black dog walked to tho mouth of the Utah shaft of the Comstock mines anci jumped down. Some asserted that ho had committed suicide. It is more likely that he felt the hot air rushing up from below and wanted moro of it. lie fell 250 feet, and hadn't a whole bone left. Curious Iir:;o in KI:iiiie. A curious mirage has been seen at Gray, Me.: "Tho thermometer stood at about 20 degs. below, the sun was ob scured by a light cloud, a slight, misty haze pervaded the lowlands, but the sky was otherwise almost cloudless. Sud denly along the horizon, from north (to east, tho whole outline underwent a change as if by magic. Huge pbi-?s, never seen before, stood out against tho sky for a radius of ten miles. Further to tho left npjeartd trees with tho tops slightly flattened and joined together, looking like massive columns supporting a colossal bridge, tho top appearing per fectly straight and even ; in the center n ridge of land, covered with .beautiful elms and maples, was visible, and a hiil several miles beyond the natural horizon, wit! i a strip of timber on. it, and a per spective beyond as far as tho eye could reach, V-Brooklyn Eagle, Two Portrait of Toe. Only two original portraits of Edgar Allan Poo aro to bo found in this city. That one of them which hangs in the gi:l lery of the Historical society is an oil pointing, and represents him as he looked in his better days, before the knell of "Nevermore" liad entered his brain. Tho other portrait, which is in water, colors and of 6mall size, belongs to a gentleman who last week set it on an easel amid a group of Poo'a admirers. It represents him in his later years, near the end of his life, when both body and mind wcro nearly wrecked. He is. seated on a chair, over the back of which his right arm is thrown, and his listless attitude and vacuous expression are melancholy reminders of the fall of the magical poet. One of the party who eaw the old por trait, aud who had known Poe at that period of his life, was 6tartled by its real ism. It was the work of a Philadelphia artist named Smith. New York Sun. A Insurance Idea. A new commercial idea consists cf a combination of insurance with the ordi nary commercial agency. A canvass, of the wholesale dry goods trad in Nev York city V"3 made nearly a year ago, and tbe" encouragement obtained was sufficient not only to warrant the pro jectors of the enterprise to go ahead, but also to start upon a second concern of the same kind. Their plan is to insure the payment of debts by retail merchants throughout tha country to New York wholesalers, jobbers and manufacturers from whom they buy goods. Thisseem at first like a wildly reckless undertak ing. Nevertheless, the two companies have been sufUciently capitalized to begin operations on a considerable scale. Pub lic Opinion. If, in f?-9 i "rt, rrorderera cannct , FURNITURE Parlor Sets, wi Air FINE :-: FURNITURE - Parlors, IScclrooms, Oining-rooms. Kitchens, Hallways, Ofliccs, (U) TO Where a magnificent J'riccs HNOFn ft'NG AND CORNER MAIN AND SIXTH aitsmou e Is enjoying a & Aft EDITION S. Will be one during -which the subjects of national interest and importance will be strongly agitated and the election of a President will take place, 'ihe people of Cass County who would like tu learn of Political, Commercial and Social Transactions of this year and wor.ld keep apace with the times should SITBSO HIBB FOP. riTIIER THE Daily or Weekly Herald. Now while we have the subject before the people we will venture to tpcak of our Which is first-class in all respects and from which our job printers are turning out much satisfactory work. PL ATTS3I0UTH. EMPORIUM. Bedroom Sets. r ,i L'Ci'o t'v VQll - CD ZEE-! d2 ZEh k2 stock of Goody ami Fair abotuul. ALliilNG A SPECIALTY PLATTSMOUTH, NKIIRAHCA. era d Boom in both, it s VV J3&&, NEBRASKA. rhaps thev-