THE DAILY HERALD, -PLATTSMOU ret, rtrfiSICASK A. MOXDAY, MAY 21. 1SS8. LOVK AT FIRST SIGHT. REV. DR. TALMAGE'S DISCOURSE AT THE BROOKLYN TACEKNACLE. ' Trouble Develop ami i:nmtla (littrao- ter T"i Hrauty of riifalterlitg I rlcnd lilp A 1'uth Whlili Marin Iarkljr Often i.flm Itrlglitly. liROOKi.YN, May 20. Tho owning hymn iit the. Tabernacle service today liegina witli tho wordsr MorelDvetotlii-o, O Christ, " 3!ro lovn to liw. After making a running commentary on some p:is.sagesof Scripture tlio Ilev. T. lh: Witt Talmagf, I. !., took the text: "And he went, ami came, and uleaiie-d in the field aftT the r'aTs: ami her bapi was to Iiht on u Kirt of the fild lifiging unto ISoaz, who was of the l.indn-d .f Kiim.lcch." Ihith ii, He breach! from these words the following sermon: The time that Kuth :md Naomi arrived at IVthh-hi-iii i: harvest time. It wa.s the custom when :i sheaf fell from a load in harvest field for the rcacrs to refuse to gather it up: that was to l left for the mki wlio niiht hap-ii to eome along that way. If there were handful of raiii scattered across the field after I lie l.iain harvest had lieen r-a"d, instead of raking it, as farmers do now, it was. hy t he en-loin of the land, left in its place, ij that the MHr, coming along that way, might L-loan it and get their bread. Hut, votisity: "What is the uss of all these - harvest fields to Until and Naomi? . Naomi a too old and feeble to go out and toil in tho sun; and can you expect that Kuth. the young and the beautiful, tdioiild tan her checks and blister her hands in the harvest held?'' Jioaz owns a large farm, and lie goes out t see the reajx-rs gather in the grain. Coining there, right behind the swarthy, n:n browned . reajiers, he beholds a lo-aiitiful woman gleaning a woman i ". lit to lx-ud to a harp or bit upon a throne than to htoop among the bheaves. Ah, that was an eventful day ! It w:w love at first sight, Hoaz forms an atlachiiit nt for the womanly gleaner a:i attachment full of undying interest to the Church of tJod in all ages; while "Ruth, with an ephah, or nearly a b.i-hcl f b.ii'Iey, gM-s home to Naomi totell her the miciwh and adventures of the day. Tint Kulli. who left her native land of M .ih in darkness, and traveled through an undying atfeciion for h. r mother-in-law, iti the harvest field of Jloaz, is aJli anmd t' one of the Ut families in Ju d.ih, and Iwcomes in after lime the aii-ccstn-ssof Ji-mis Christ, t he Lord of glory. Out of so dark a night did there ever dawn so bright a morning? I learn in the first place from this sub ject how trouble develops character. It was bereavement, jKiyerty and exile that lnveltNil, illustrated ami announced to all urs the sublimity of Ruth's charac ter. TiiUt is a very unfortunate man vho has no trouble. It was sorrow that made John lUinyan the better dreamer, and Dr. Young the better ioer, and )"l.nnel! the belter orator, and Jiishop Hall the better preacher, and llayelock tl;j-, U-tter soldier, and Kitto the Ix-tter 'iieroiOKeiliot. and Ruth the better daiightV-.:ndaw. I once asLed an aged man in regard to hi pastor, who was a very brilliant man: -Why is it that your pnstor, so very bril liant." seems to have so littla heart and tenderness in bis seraions?" "Weii," he replied, "the reason is our pastor has never had any trouble. When misfortune comes Uxn hini his style will be differ ent. " After a while the Lord took a child out of that pastor's house; and though the preacher was just as brilliant as be was before, oh the warmth, tha tenderness of his discourses. The fact is that J rouble is a great educator. You see soinctlies a musician sit down at an instrument, au J his execution is cold and ioi mal and unfiling. The reason is that nil hi life lie has leen prospered. But let misfortune or lereaveinent come to that man. and lie sits down at an instru ment, and you discover the pathos in the Jlr.-t sweep of the keys. Jlisfortune and trials are great educator-;. A young doctor comes into a sick loom v?lx-re there is a dying child. Per Iiaps he is ety rough in his prescription, end very rough in J;is manner, and rough i:i the feeling of the pulse, and rough in Iiisansver to th? mother's anxious ques tion; but years roll on. and there" liad tavn one dead in bis own house; and now lie comes into the sick room, and with tearful eye he looks at the dying child, .and ho savs: Oh, how this reminds jueof my Charlie!" Trouble, the great educator. Sorrow, I see its touch in tho grandest painting; I luir its tremor in the sweetest ong; I feel it lv?r in the .mightiest argument. cjrecian mythology said that the foun tain ot Ilippocrene was struck out by the foot of the winged horse Pegasus. I have often notic-fed in life that the brightest and must beautiful fountains of Christian oir.f'.Mt and spiritual Jifo have been t-trnck out by the iron shod hoot disas ter an I calamity. I ee Daniel's courage best by the flash of Nebuchadnezzar 3 furn.:ce. I see Paul's prowess best when I find l.L:i on the foundering ship under ihf glare of the lightning in tlie breakers Jh-Iita. C'Wi crowns his children amid the bowling of wild beasts and the chop ping of blood spLi&hed guillotine and tho ruckling fires of martyrdom. It took the persecutions of Marcus Aurelius to develop Poh carp and Justin Martyr. It took the w'orld'6 anathema to develop Martin Luther. It took all the hostilities against the Scotch Covenanters and the furv of Imi1 Claverhouse to develop James Kenwick, and Andrew Melville, and Hugh McKail, the glorious martyrs of Scotch history. It took the stormy pea, and the IXeccmber blast, and tlie desolate New England coast, and tho var whoop of savages to show forth tho prowess of the Pilgrim. Fathers. Whoa euiiil the storms they sang. An J the star heard, and the sea; An-1 the sounding aisles of the dim wood llactf to the autbems of the free. Jt took till our past national distresses to lift u; our nation on that liigh career where it will march along after tho foreign aristocracies that have aiocked and the tyrannies tbat have jeered, shall 1 swept down under the omnipotent wrath of G1. who hates despotism, and v.hn. by tlie ftrength cf bis own red i i-'it arm, will make all men free. And 0o it is individually, and in the family. and in tlie church, and in the world, that through darkness and storm and trouble men, women, churches, nations are de Ttloved. II. Again, I mm? in my text the beauty of unfaltering friendship. I 6Uppos there were plenty of friends for Naomi while sho was in prerity, but of all her atcjuaintances, how many were will ing to trudge off with her toward Judali, when sho had to make that lonely jour ney? One the heroine of my text. One absolutely one. I suppose when Naomi's husband was living, and they had plenty of money, and all things went well, they lad a great many callers; but I Hipposo that after her husband died, and her projerty went, and she got old und jxxr, she was not troubled very much with callers. All the birds that Kung in the bower while the sun shone have gone to their nesta, now tho night has fallen. Oh, these beautiful Bunflowers that spread out their color in the morning hour! but are always asleep when the sun is going down! Job had plenty of friends when hew:isthe richest man in Uz; but when his projerty went and tho trials came, then there were none so much that estered as Eliphaz theTeina nite, and Rildad the Shuhite, and Zophar the Naamathite. Life often seems to be a mere game, where tho successful player pulls down all the olher men into his own lap. Let suspicions arise aljout a man's character and he Itecomes like a bank in a panic, and all the imputations rush on him and break down in a day that character which in due time would have had strength to defend itself. There are rep utations that have been half a century in building, which go down under some moral exposure, as a vast temple is con sumed by the touch of a sulphurous match. A hog can unroot a century plant. ' In this world, bo full of heartlessness and hyjocrisy, Itow thrilling it is to find some friend as faithful in days of adver sity as in the days of prosperity. David had such a friend in Ilushai; the Jews had such a friend in Mordecal, who never forgot their cause; Paul had such a friend in Onesiphorus, who visited him in jail; Christ had such in the Marys, who ad hered to him on the cross; Naomi had such a one in Ruth, who cried out: "En treat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after theejfor whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy people shall le my jeo ple, and thy God, my God; where thou diest will I die, and there will I be buried the Lord do so to me, and more also, if aught but death part thee and me." III. Again: I learn from this subject that paths which ojxmi in hardship and darkness often come out in places of joy. When Kuth started from Moab toward Jeruralem, to go along with her mother-in-law, I suppose the people said: "Oh, what a foolish creature to go away from her father's house, to go of? with a poor old woman toward the land of Judali 1 They won't live to get across the desert. They will be drowned in the sea, or the jackals of the wilderness will destroy them." It was a very dark morning when Ruth started oil with Naomi; but behold her in my text in the harvest field of Boaz, to 1 affianced to one of the lords of tho land, and become one of the grandmothers of Jesus Christ, the Lord of glory. And so it often js that a path which starts very darkly ends very brightly. When you started out for heaven, "oh, how dark was the hour of conviction hov Sinai thundered, and devils tor mented, and the darkness thickened 1 All the sins ot yftiir life pounced upon you, and it was the darkest hur you ever saw when you first found out your sins. After a while you went into the harvest fieul pf God s mercy; you began to glean in the fields of divino promise, ami you had more sheaves than you could carry, as the voice of God addressed you, saying: "Blessed is the man whose transgressions are forgiven, and whose 6insarc covered." A very dark start ing in conviction, a very bright ending in the pardon and the hope and the triumiH, pf tlie Gospel! So, very often jn our jyprldly business or in our spiritual career, we start pit on a very dark path. Wo niust'go. The flesh may etn ink back, but there is a voice within, or a voice from above, pay ing: "You must go;' nnd wo have to drink the gall, and we have to carry the cross, and we have to traverse the desert, and we are pounded and flailed of tuis represeidation and abuse, and we have to urge our way through ten thousand ol stacles that must be slain by pur own right arm. We have to ford the river, we have to climb the mountain, we havo to storm the castle, but, bUst bs God, t,he day of rest and reward will come. Ou the tip top of the captured battlements we shall shout the victory; if not in this woild, hen in that world where there is no gall to drink, no burdens to carry, no battles to fighr. Hoy dp I know it?. Know it ! I know it because God say Q : "They shall hunger no more, neither thirst nny more, neither 6ha!l the sun light on them, nor any heat, for tlie I-aoib which is in the midst of tlie throne shall lead then to living fountains of water, and God shall wip all f5.ars from their eyes." It was very lard for Noah to endure the scoffing of fhe people in his day while he was trying tq build he ark, and was every morning quizzed about iis old boat that would never be of any practi cal use; but when the deluge came, and the tops of the mountains disappeared like the backs of sea monsters, and the elements, lashed up in fury, clapped their hands over a drowned world, then Noah in the ark rejoiced in his own safety and in the safety of his family, and looked out on the wreck of a ruined earth. Christ, hounded of persecutors, denied a pillow, worse maltreated than the thieves on either side of the cross, human hate sniackiug its lips in satisfaction after it had been draining his last drop of blood, the sheeted dead bursting Irom tho sepulchers at his crucifixion. Tell me, O Gethsemane and Golgo- ! tlia! were there ever darker times ; than those? Like the booming of the i midnight sea against the rock, the surges of Christ s ane-uish beat acamst the crates of eternity, to be echoed back by all the thrones of heaven and all toe dungeons tit hell. Dut the day of reward comes for Christ: all the poinp and dominion of Ihli world are to be hung on his throne, uncrowned heads are to bow before him on whoso head are nuuiy crowns, and all the celestial worship is to come up at his feet, like the humming of tho forest, like the rushing of the waters, like the thun dering of tlie Beas, while all heaven, ris ing on their thrones, liet time with their scepters: "Hallelujah, for the Inrd Gm1 oninijKjtent reigneth! Hallelujah, the kingdoms of this world have ljccome the kingdoms of our Lord Jesus Christ!" That song of love, now low and far, F.rf lung shall swell from star to star; That light, the breaking day which tipa Tl gulden spired Alocalypi4e. IV. Again: I learn from my subject that events which seem to le most insig nificant may le momentous. Can you imagine anything more unimfiortarit than the coming of a poor woman from Moab to Judali? Can you imagine anything more trivial than the fact that this Ruth just happened to alight as they say just hapcued to alight on that field of IJoaz? Yet all ages, all generations have an interest in the fact that she was to ie come an ancestor of the Iord Jesus Christ, and all nations and kingdoms must look at that one little incident with a thrill of unsfieakable and eternal satis faction. So it is in your history and in mine: events that you thought of no im jMjrtance at all have Ieen of very great moment. That casual conversation, that accidental Meeting you did not think of it again for a long while; but how it changed all the phase of your life I It seemed to be of no imtortance that Jubal invented rude instruments of music, calling them harp and organ; but they were the introduction of all th world's minstrelsy; and as you hear the vibration of a stringed instrument, given after tho fingers have been taken away from it, so all music now of lute and drum and cornet is only the long con tinued strains of Juhal's harp and Jubal's organ. It seemed to be a matter of very little importance that Tubal Cain learned the uses of copper and iron; but that rude foundry of ancient days has its echo in the rattle of Birmingham ma chinery, and the roar and bang of fac tories on the Merrimac. It seemed to be a matter of no import ance that Luther found a Bible in a monastery; but as he opened that Bible, and the brass bound lids fell back, they jarred everything, from the Vatican to tho furthest convent in Germany, and the rustling of the wormed leaves was the sound of the wings of the angel of tho Information. It seemed to be a mat ter of no importance that a woman, whose name has been forgotten, dropped a tract in the way of a very bad man by the name of Richard Baxter. He picked up the tract and read it, and it was the means of his salvation. In after days that man wrote a book called "The CaE to the Unconverted," that was the means of bringing a multi tude to God, among others Philip Dod dridge. Philip Doddridge wrote a book called "The Rise and Progress of Re ligion," which has -brought thousands and tens of thousands into the kingdom of God, and among others the great YY ilberforce. llberforce wrote a bonk called "A Practical View of Christian ity," which was the mean3 of bringing a great multitude to Christ, among others Legh Richmond. Legh Richmond wrote a tract called "The Dairyman's Daugh ter, ' which has been the means of the salvation of unconverted multitudes. Ami that tide of influence started from the fact that one Christian woman dropped a Christian, fract in the way of Richard Baxter the tide of influence. rolling on through Richard Baxter, through Philip Doddridge, through tho great Wilberforce, through Legh Rich mond, on, on, on, forever. So the in significant events of this world seem, after all, to be most momentous. The fact that j'pu came up that street or tins street seemed to be or no importance to you, and the fart that you went inside of some church may seem to le a matter of very great insignificance to you, but you will 1lnd it the turning point of your history. V. Again : I see in my subject an il lustration of the beauty of female in dustry. Behold Ruth toiling in the harvest field under the hot sun, or at noon tak ing plain bread with the reapers, or eat ing tlfe parched corn which Boaz handed to her. The cusf oins pf society, of course, have' plianged, and without thq hard ships and exposure to which Ruth was subjected every intelligent woman will find something to do. I know there is a 6ickly sentimentality on this subject. In some families there are persons of no practical service to the household or community; and though there are so many woes all around about them in the world, they spend their time languishing over a new pattern, or burst ing into tears at midnight over the story of some lover who shot himself! They would not deign to look at Ruth carrj ing back the barley on her way home to her mother-in-law Naomi. All this fastidi ousness may seem to do very well while they are under the shelter of their father's house; but whei the sharp winter of misfortune comes, what of these butter flies? Persons under indulgent parentage may get upon themselves habits of indo lence; but when they come out into prac tical life their soul will recoil with dis gust and chagrin. They will feel in tiieir hearts what the poet sq geverely satirized when he said: ' Tolks are so awkward, things so impolite, They're elegantly pained from morning until night, Through that gate of indolence how many men and women have marched, useless on earth, to a destroyed eternity! Spinola said to Sir Horace Vere: 'Of what did your brother die?" "Of hav ing nothing to do," was the answer. "Ah," said Spinola, "that's enough to kill any general of us." Oh! can it bo possible in this world, where there is 60 much suffering to be alleviated, so much darkness to be enlightened, and so many burdens to be carried, that there is any person who cannot find anything to do? Mme. de Stael did a world of work in her time; and oue day while she was seated amid instruments of music, all of which she had mastered, and amid man uscript book which she had written, some one said. to her: "Hdw do you find time to attend to all hese tlungs?" "Oh,- she replied, 'these are not the things I am proud of. My chief boast is in the fact that I have seventeen trades, by any one of which I could make a livelihood if necessary." And if in sec ular spheres there is so much to be done, in spiritual work liow vast the fieldt e want more Abigails, more UannahSj more Rebeccas, more Marys, more De borahs consecrated liody, mind, soul to tho wrd who bought them. VI. Once more: 1 learn from my sub ject the value of gleaning. Ruth, going into that harvest field, might havo said: "There is a straw, :ftid there is a straw, but what is a straw? I can't get any barley for myself or my mother-in-law out of these separate straws." Not so,-beautiful Ruth. Sho gathered two straws, and sho put them together, and more straws, until she got enough to make a sheaf. Putting that down, she went and gathered more straws until sho had another sheaf, and another, and another, and another, anil then sho brought them all together, and she threshed them out, and she had an epliali of barley, nigh a bushel. Oh, that we might all Ik? gleaners! Elihu liurrilt learned many things while toiling in a blacksmith's shop. Ahcrcroiubic, tho world renowned phi losopher, wa.s a philosopher in Scotland, and he got his philosophy, or the chief art of it, while, as a physician, he was waiting for the door of the sick room to ojH-n. Yet how many there are in this day who s:iy they are sr busy they have no time for mental or spiritual improve ment; the great duties of life cross the field like strong reajiers, and carry oil all tho hour?, and there is only her1.' and there a fragment left that is not worth gleaning. Ah, my friends, you could go into the busiest day and busiest week of your life and find golden op ort unities, which, gathered, might at least make a whole sheaf for the lrd's gr.rm-r. Ii i- the stray oppcrumuios and the tiray privileges which, taken up and bound to gether and U-aten out, will at last fill you with abounding joy. There are a few moments left worth the gleaning. Now, Ruth, to the field! May each one have a measure full and running over! Oh, you gleaners, to tho field! And if there Ins in your household an aged one or a sick relative that is not strong enough to come forth and toil in this field, then let Ruth take home to feeble Naomi this sheaf of gleaning: lie that gocth forth and weeeth, bearing precious seed, shall doubtless come :gain with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with hiin." May the Lord God of Ruth and Naomi be our portion forever! BITS OF GOOD READING. Damascus is to have street cars just like any modern city. One of the young Indians in the school at Carlisle, Pa., has sent home a descrip tion of tlie "ear gloves" he has seen pale faces wearing. The Tall Mall Gazette says that '"it be comes more and more palpable every day to the careful observer that the posi tion of the czar in European j lit ics is becoming more and more dominant." An Indian elephant lately acquired fit Central Park, New York, is nine feet liigh, though quite young, and bids fair to outgrow Jumbo. It daily consumes aliout two ami one-half trusses of hay and 200 pounds of vegetables, washed down with eighty gallons of water. The proposed schedule for taxing British horses and carriages is this: For every horse, CI; every race horse, '.; every horse dealer, 15; two wheel carts, 5 shillings; four wheel carts, 10 shillings, and for carts weighing more than half, a ton, 1 5s. It was fortunate in the case of triplets, Ixirn lately in Pekin, that they were girls. Had they lteen all boys, under the laws tf the empire they would have been be headed, as there is a tradition that one of three such children will invade ?nd at tempt to overthrow tho government. The United State-j supreme cou; t ha;j sustained the validity of the Kansas law making railroad companies responsible ii? damages for isijuries to their employe growing out of the negligence or care lessness of fellow employes. This is con trary to the common law rule, and tho ruling wiil in good time have most salu tary results. . Just now the ruling "fad" in Parisian society is a mania for medical and sur gical curiosities. The scenes of the dead house, tho dissecting room and tho sur gical theatre, all matters of pureh' pro. fessional jntei.c-rt, havo become, the spet-.: taole of the hour and the twin diversion with social small talk. This is eluc, no doubt, to the diseased realism in tho world of fiction where Zola and his imi tators rule. The Rev. WT. Norton, at a hunting din ner in Hertforshire, said that the clergy lately had rather abandoned the bunt' ing field, because they wero thy f tlie public. He thought that struio;:s would be improved ii preachers could have a gallop with the hound: twice a week, and if the late bishop of Winches ter had not hesitated to attend the hunt ing field he would not have been killed i by galloping on tho highway. It was not only tho school for good ridkiy, but the r-chbol for good manners. Fashion has declared in favor of low ceilings at home. It has been decided that it is very difficult to furnish a high ceiled room so that it shall look cozy and inviting. In fact, fashion doesri't lieve that a room with a high ceiling can be properly banditti at all.' In view of these discoveries, it is growing customary to put in false ceilings of canvas tit u height of about nine feet from the floor. Then the canvas is treated with fresco ing, or minting, or paneling, with light gilt work, as the decorator pleases. Tlie Veterinary Surjeon's Work. Great improvement has been made ii the medical and surgical treatment of the hprse in the past few years. TLo treatment is more scientific in every re spect. The veterinary surgeon nuwa. tlays must possess a thorough education and bo posted in as many branches as a physician. His calling requires him t i be particularly sensitive and alert, for he is treating a dumb animal whose mani festations of pain are difficult to make out. The result of all tliis is that the Eick or injured horse gets nearly as care ful and minute treatment as the sick cr injured man. Fractured bones are often reset, and even amputation has l?en per formed for special purprses. Let the horse injure its leg or foot and the mem ber is done up in a sling as tenderly and carefully as though it belonged to a hu man being. New York Mail and Ex press. " -'.. . The Plattsmo uth Xs enjoying a EDITIONS. 7 & ear Will be one during winch the stihjocts et" national interest ami import-moi; will le strongly nitateil ant tin; election of :i President will take: place, 'ihe people of Cass County who would like to learn of Political, Commercial and Social Transact;ons of this year and would keep apace with the times thould ii: kjtmki: Tin-: Daily or Weekly Herald. Now while we have the sulje:et before the people we will venture to fj.eak ot our ? 0) "Which is iirst-chiss in all resprcts and from which our job printers are turning out much satisfactory work. PLATTSMOUTH, Hera Id So om in "both, its NEBRASKA. 1888