IHC 1A1LY I1.:aLD: I'LATTJliOliTrti UudmAt HON DAY, JUNE IS, 1SS3. 'ItKSS AXD "rOLFIT. 'JNOAY MORNINO SERVICES IN THE BROOKLYN TABERNACLE. fte. Dr. Talmng Would Sccur tb Secu lar rrcM IlA-cuforoFment of Ilo Agton aol th lalplt Tli Mdtlern Sun- lajp Nwinpcr. nr.ooKt.TX, June 17. At the service In the Tabernaclo this morning, the Rev. T. Do Witt Talinagc, p. D., took for tho nubject of his discourse. "lulrit and 1'ress Made AIUuh." Ilia text was Luke xvi. 8: "The children of thi world are In their generation winer than the children of light." lie aid: Sacred stupidity ami solemn incom petency and sanctified laziness are. here - rebuTked by Christ, lie says worldlings are wider awake for opportunities than are Christians. Men of tho world grab occasions while Christian people let tho most valuable occasions drift by unim proved. That ia the meaning of our Lord when ho says: "The children of this world are In their generation wiser than tho children of light." A marked illustration of the truth of that maxim is in the. slowness of the Christian religion to take possession of ' tho secular printing presa. The opf or tunity is open and has for somo time been open, but tho ecclesiastical courts and tho churches and tho ministers of religion are for the most part allowing the golden opportunity to pass unimproved. That the opportunity is open I declare from .the fact that all tho secular newspapers are glad of any religious facts or statistics that you present them. Any animated and stirring article relating to religious themes they would gladly print. They thank you for any information in regard to churches. If a wrong has been done to any Christian church or Christian in- . Etitulion, you could go into any nows paer of tho land and have the real truth stated. Dedication services, ministerial ordinations and pastoral installations, corner stone laying of a church, anniversary of a charitable so ciety will have reasonable sjioce in any secular journal, if it have previous notice given. If I had some great injustice done me, there is not an editorial or a reportorial room in the United States into which I could not go and get myself set right, and that is true of any well known Christian man. Already the daily secu lar press during tho course of each week publishes as much religious information and high moral sentiment as does the weekly religious press. Why then dots not our glorious Christianity embrace these magnificent opportunities? I have before me a subject of first and last im- V portancf: How shall we secure the secu ' lar press as a mightier re-enforccment to religion and the pulpit? The first thing toward this result is cessation of indiscriminate hostility against newspapcrdom. You might as well denounce the legal profession be cause of tne shysters, or the medical pro fession because of the quacks, or mer chandise because f tho swindling bar gain makers, as to slam-bang newspapers because thero are recreant editors, and unfair reporters, and unclean columns. Uuttenbcrg, tho inventor of the ait of r bi 4111111, w iu uwu w vitoMj ;i-v ami extinguish tho art because it wjis pugosted to him that printing might be ffiiorned into the service of the devil, but afterward he betuougnt nimseii mat the right use of the art might more thau overcome the evil use of it, and so he -pparcd the typo and tho irtelligence of all modern ages. But there are many today in the depressed mood of Gutten berg with uplifted .hammer want ing to pound to pieces the type, who have not reached his better mood in which he saw the art of printing to be the rising sun of the world's illumination, if instead of fighting newspapers we tpend tho same length of time and the same vehemence in marshaling their help in religious directions, we would be as much wiser as the man who gets con sent of the railroad superintendent to fasten a car to the end of a rail train, shows better sense than he who runs his wheelbarrow up the track to meet and drive back the Chicago limited express. Tli Rilli(st thins that a man ever does is to fight a newspaper, for you may have the tloor for utterance perhaps one day in the week, while the newspaper has the floor every day of the week. Napoleon, though a mighty man, had many weak nesses, and one of the weakest things he ever did wa3 to threaten that if the Eng lish newspapers did not stop their adverse criticism of lumself he would with 400, 000 bayonets cross the channel for their chastisement. Don't fight newspapers. Attack pro vokes attack. Better wait till the ex citement blows over and then go in and get justice, for get it you will if you liave patience and common 6enso and equipoise of disposition. It ought to be a mighty sedative that there is an enor mous amount of common sense in the world, and you will eventually be taken for wliat you are really worth, and you cannot bo puffed up and you cannot be written dovn, and if you are the enemy of good society that fact will come out, nnd if you are the friend of good society that fact will be established. J know what 1 am talking about, for I can draw on my own experience. All tho respect able newspapers as far as I know are my friends now. But many of you remem ber the time when I was the most continuously and meanly attacked roan in this country. God gave me grace not to answer back, and 1 kept silence for ten years, and much grace is required. What 1 said. wa3 per verted aivl twisted into just the opposit? of what I did say. My person was ma ligned, asd I was presented as a gorgon, end I was maliciously described by per sons who had never seen mo as a mon strosity in body, mind and souL There wcro millions of people who believed that tliere was a large sofa in this pulpit, although we never had anything but a chair, and that during the singing by the congregation I was accustomed to lie tlovrn on that sofa and dangle my feet over the hd. Lying New York coito spondcntJ for ten years misrepresented our church services, but we waited, . ana people irora siltj ui'i0iiuwiiwu of Christendom came here to find the magnitude of the falsehood j ct.;ecra;ng tho church and concerain.: mvat-lf. A reaction set In, and iiow we have justice, full justice, more than justice; and at much overpraise as or.ee we had under appreciation, and no man that ever lived was so much Indebted to tho newspaper press for opportunity to preach the Gos pel an I am. Young men in tho ministry, young icn in all professions and occu pations, wait, i ou can auord to wait. Take rough misrepresentations as a Turk ish towel to start up your languid circu lation, or a system of massage or Swedish movement whose ickes and pulls and twists and thrust are salutary treatment. There is only one person you need to manage, and that is yourself. Keep your diHjxisition sweet by communion with Christ, who answesrd not again, the society of genial people, and 'walk out in the sunshine with your bat ofT and you will come out all right. And don't join the crowd of people in our day who spend much of their time damning newspariers. Again : in this effort to secure tho sec ular press as a mightier re-enforcement of religion and the pulpit, let us make it the avenue of religious information. If you put tho facts of churches and de nominations of Christians only into the column of religious pajx?rs, which do not in this country have an average of more than 10,000 subscribers, what have you dono as compared with what you do if you put these facts through the daily papers, which havo hundreds of thou sands of readers? Every little denomina tion must have it3 h'Ulo organ, supported at great expense, when with one-half the outlay a column or half a column of room might be rented in somo semi-omnipo tent secular publication, and so the religious information would bo sent round and roamd the wot Id. The world moves 60 swiftly today that news a week old is stale. Give us all the great church facts and all the revival tidings the next morniug or the sameeven ing. My advice, often given to friends who propose to start a new paper, is: "Don't! Don't I Employ the papers already started." Tho biggest financial hole ever dug in this American continent is tho hole in which good people throw their money when they start a news paper. It is almost as good and as quick a way of getting rid of money as buying stock in a gold mine in Colorado. Not more printing presses but the right use of those already established. All their cylinders, all their steam power. all their pens, all their types, all their editorial chairs and reportorial rooms are available if you would engage them in behalf of civilization and Christianity. Again: if you would secure the secular press as a mightier re-enforcement of re ligion and the pulpit, extend widest and highest Christian courtesies to the repre sentatives of journalisn. Give them easy chairs and plenty of room when they come to report occasions. For the most part they are gentlemen of educa tion and refinement, graduates of col leges, with families to support by their literary craft, many of them weary with the push of a business that is precarious and fluctuating, each one of them the avenue of information to thousands of readers, their impression of the services to bo the impression adopted by multitudes. They are connecting links between a sermon or a 6ong or a prayer and this great popula tion that tramp up and down the streets day by day and year by year with their sorrows uncomforted and their sins un pardoned. , More than eight hundred thousand people in Brooklyn, and less than seventy-five thousand in churches, so that our cities are not so much preached to by ministers of religion as by reporters. lut all journalists into our prayers and sermons. Of all the hun dred thousand sermons preached today there will not bo three preached to jour nalists, and probably not one. Of all the prayers offered for classes of men innu merable, the prayers offered for this most potential class will bo so few and rare that they will be thought a preacher's idiosyncrasy. This world will never be brought to God until some revival of re ligion sweeps over the land and takes into the kingdom of God editors and re porters, compositors, pressmen and newsboys. And if you have not faith enough to pray for that and toil for that you had better get out of our ranks and join the other side, for you are the unbelievers who make the wheels of the Lord's chariot drag heavily. The great final battle between truth and error, the Armageddon, I think, will not bo fought with 6Words and shells and guns, but with pens, quill peus, steel pens, gold lens, fountain pens, and, before that, the pens must be converted. The most divinely honored weapon of the past has been tho pen, and the most divinely hon ored weapon of the future will be the pen, prophet's pen and evangelist's pen and apostle's pen followed by editor's pen and reporter's pen and author's pen. God save the pen I The vring of the Apocalyptic angel will be tlie printed page. The printing press will roll ahead of Christ's chariot to clear the way. "But," some one might ask, ''would you make the Sunday newspapers also a re-enforcement?" Yes, I would. I have learned to take things as they are. I would like to see the much scoffed at old Puritan Sabbaths come back again. I do not think the modern Sunday will turn out any better men and women than were your grandfathers' and grandmoth ers uuder the old fashioned Sunday. To say nothing of other results, Sunday newspapers are killing editors, reporters, compositors and pressmen. Every man, woman and child is entitled to twenty four hours of nothing to do. ff tlie newspapers put on another set of hands that does not relieve the editorial and re portorial room of its cares and responsi bilities. Our literary men die fast enough without killing them vrith Sunday work. But the Sunday newspaper has come to stay. It will 6tay a good deal longer tlian any of us 6tay. What then shall we do? Implore all those who have anything to do with issuing it to fill it with moral and religious information; live sermons and facts elevating. Urge them that all divorce cases be dropped and instead thereof have good advice as to how husbands and wives ought to live lovingly together. Put in small type the behavior of the swindling church - member and in larg? type the contribution pf some Christian man toward an asylum for feeble minded children or a seaside sanitarium. Urge all managing editors to put meanness and impurity in type pearl or agate and charity and fidelity and Christian con sistency ui brevier or bourgeois, ll we cannot dijve out the Sunday newspaper let us have the Sunday newspaper con verted. The fact Is that th modern Sunday newspaper is a great improve ment on the old . Sunday newspaper. What a beastly thing was the Sunday newspaper thirty years ago 1 It was enough to destroy a man's respectability to leave the tip end of it sticking out of his coat pocket. What editorials! What adver tisements 1 What picturesl The modern Sunday newspaper is as much an improve ment on the old time Sunday newspaper as one hundred is more than twenty-five; in other words, about seventy-five per cent, improvement. Who knows tliat by prayer and kindly consultation with our literary friends we may have it lifted into a positively religious sheet printed on Saturday night and only distributed, like The American Messenger, or The Mis sionary Journal, or The Sunday School Advocate, on Sabbath mornings. All things are possible with God, uud my faith is up until nothing in the way of religious victory would surpriso me. All the newspaper printing presses of the earth are going to be the Lord's, and tel egraph and telephone and type will yet announce nations born in a day. The first book ever printed was the Bible by Faust and his son-in-law, Schoeffer, in 1400. and that consecration of type to the Holy Scrip tures was a prophecy of the great mission of printing for the evangelization of all the nations. Tlie father of the American printing press was a clergyman, liev. Jesse Glover, and that was a prophecy of the religious use that tho Gospel ministry in this country were to make of the types. Again: we shall secure tho secular press as a mightier re-enforcement of re ligion and the pulpit by making our re ligious utterances more interesting and spirited, and then the press will reproduce them. On the way to church some fif teen years ago, a journalist said a thing that has kept me ever since thinking: "Are you going to give us any joints today?" "What do you mean?" I asked. lie said: "I mean by that anything that will be striking enough to be remembered." Then I said to myself: What right have we in our pul pits and Sunday schools to take tho time of people if we have nothing to say that is memorable? David did not have any difficulty in remembering Nathan's thrust: "Thou art the man;" nor Felix in remembering Paul's point blank utter ance on righteousness, temperance and judgment to come; nor the English king any difficulty in remembering what the court preacher said, when during the sermon against sin the preacher threw his handkerchief into the king's pew to indicate whom he meant. The tendency of criticism in the theological seminaries is to file off from our young men all the sharp points and make them too smooth for any kind of execution. What we want, all of us, i3 more point, less hum drum. If we say the right thing in the right way the press will be glad to echo and re-echo it. Sabbath school teachers, reformers, young men and old men in the ministry, what we all want if we are to make the printing press an ally in Christian work is that which the reporter spoken of suggested points, sharp points, memorable points. But if the thing be dead when uttered by living voice, it will be a hundredfold more dead when it is laid out in cold typo. Now, as you all have something to do with the newspaper press, either in issu ing a paper or reading it, either a3 pro ducers or patrons, either as sellers or purchasers of the printed sheet, 1 pro pose on this Sabbath morning, June 17. 18S8, a treaty to be signed between the church and the printing press, a treaty to be ratified by millions of good people if we rightly fashion it, a treaty promis ing that we will help each other in our work of trying to illumine and felicitate the world, we, by voice, you by pen, we, by speaking only that which is worth printing, you by printing only that which is fit to speak. You help U3 and we help you. Side by side be these two potent agencies until the Judgment Day, when we must both lie scrutinized for our work, healthful or blasting. The two worst off men in that day will be the minister of religion and the editor, if they wasted their opportu nity. Both of us are tho engineers of long express trains of influence, and we will run them into a depot of light or tumble them off the embankments. What a useful life and what a glorious departure was that of the most famous of ail American printers, Benjamin Franklin, whom infidels in the penury of their resources have often fraudulently claimed for their own, but the printer who moved that the Philadelphia con vention bo opened with prayer, the reso lution lost because a majority thought prayer unnecessary, and who wrote at the time he was viciously attacked: "My rule is to go straight forward n doing what appears to me to he right, leaving the consequences to Providence," and who wrote this quaint epitaph showing his hope of resurrection, an epitaph that I hundreds of times read while living in Philadelphia: The Cody of Bexjamix Fraxkux, Printer, (Like the cover of an old book, Its contents torn out. And strlptof its lettering and gilding-) Lies here food for worms. ' Tet the work itself shall not be lost. For it will (as he believed) appear once more In a new And more beautiful edition. Corrected and amended By The Author. That Prpymence intencjs tlie profession of reporters to have a mighty share in the world's redemption fi suggested by the fact that Paul and Christ took a re porter along with them and he reported their addresses and reported their acts. Lukp was a reporter and. he wrote not only the book of Luke but the Acts of the Apostles, and without that reporter's work we would have known nothing of j the Pentecost, and nothing of Stephen's j martyrdom, and nothing of Tabitha's resurrection, and nothing of the jailing and un jailing of Paul and Silas, and nothmg of the shipwreck at Mema. Strike out the reporter's work from, the UiLle and yoq kui a large part of the New Testament. It makes me think that in the future of the Kingdom of God the reporters are to bear a piighty part. About thirteen years ago a representa tive of an important newspaper took his seat in this church, one Sabbath night, about fire pews from the front of this pulpit, lie took out pencil and reporter'!; pad, resolved to caricature the whol scene. When tho. music began he began, and with his pencil he derided that, and then derided the prayer, and then de rided tho reading of the Scriptures, and then began to deride tho sermon. But, he says, for some reason. Ids hand be gan to tremble, and he, rallying liimself, shaqicned his pencil and started again, but broke down again, and then put pencil and paper in his pocket and his head down on the front of the pew and began to pray. At the close of the service he came up and asked for the prayers of others and gave Lis heart to God; and, though still engaged in newspaer work, he is an evangelist, and hires u hall at his own expense, and every Sabbath afternoon preaches Josus Christ to the people. And the men of that profession are going to come in a body throughout tho country. 1 Lnow hundreds of them, and a more genial or highly educated class of men it would te hard to find, and, though the tendency of their profession may lo toward skepti cism, an organized, common sense. Gos pel invitation would fetch them to the front of all Christian endeavor. Men of the pencil and (ten, in all departments, you need the help of the Christian re ligion. In the day when people want to get their newspapers at three cents nnd are hoping for the time when they can get any of them at one cent, and, as a consequence, tho attaches of tlie printing press are by the thousand ground under the cylinders, 3'ou want God to take care of you and your families. Some of your best work id as much unappreciated as was Milton's "Paradise I-ost. " fr which the anlli .i i i t i ; vt-.i , and uie immortal oein, "Ilolieulinden," of Thomas Campbell, when he first offered it for publication, and in the column called "Notices to Correspondents'" ap peared the words: "To T. C. The linos commencing 'On Linden when the sun was low' are not up to our standard. Poetry is not T. C.'s forte." Oh, men of the encil and the pen, amid j-ou unappreciated work you need encouragement and you can have it. Printers of all Christendom, editors, re orters, com posi tors, pressmen, publish ers and readers of that which is printed, resolve that you will not write, set up, edit, issue or read anything that debases body, mind or soul. In the name of God, by the laying on of the hands of faith and prayer, ordain the printing press for righteousness and liberty and salvation. All of us with some influence that will help in the right direction, let us put our hands to the work, imploring Cnxl to hasten the consummation. A ship with hundreds of passengers approach ing the . South American coast, the man on tho lookout neglected his work, and in a few minutes the ship would have been dashed to ruin on the rocks. But a cricket on board the ves sel, that had made no sound all the voy age, set up a shrill call at the smell of land, and the captain, knowing that habit of the insect, tho vessel was stopped in time to prevent an awful wreck. And so, insignificant means now may do wonders and the scratch of a pen may save tlie shipwreck of a soul. Are j-ou all ready for the signing of the contract, the league, the solemn treaty proposed lietween journalism and evangelism? Aye, let it be a Christian marriage of the pulpit and the printing press. Tho ordination of the former on my head, the pen of the latter in my hand, it is appropriate that I publish the banns of such a marriage. Let them from this day be one in the magnificent work of the world's redemption. Let thrones and powers and kingdoms be Obedient, mighty God, to thee; And over land and stream aud mair Now wave the scepter of Thy reigo O, let that glorious anthem swell, Jjpt host to host tho triumph tell. Till not one rebel heart remain. But over &1I the Saviour reigns. Adaptability of Trained Mechanics. It is a notablo fact, and one, too, not generally known, that somo of the "best all-around" mechanics i. e., those who can turn their hands to all kinds of gen eral machine work are men who learned iheii business in small shops, where all sorts and all classes of work are done. An ingenious, thinking man placed in such a shop ha3 the best possible chance to develop all the talent thero is in him. Tlie hundred and one odd jobs required to be done will cause him to devise ways and means, and "to think," and in these ways he will grow to be a man fertilo in resources, dexterous in touch, and ready for nearly any kind of work which may come along. Now mark the difference: A man trained in a large shop, with its score or more of departments, learns or works tlirough, as a rule, one, two or three dif ferent departments, of course becoming an expert in the several branches; but should occasion ariso for him to do some particular work of which ho has but a slight knowledge, ho is out of his lati tude, and makes poor progress, 6imply because ho ha3 not done all kinds of work; while the man trained in the small shop can adapt his liand to almost any thing wliich turns up. Industrial World. A PvPh-:y of the freseut. In tearing down an old building at McKeesport, Pa., some workmen discov ered in the cliimney a pint flask of whisky and a tin box, containing a prophecy written in 1SGS. This singular writing was a prediction that in thU'ty five years (in 1873) slavery would have ceased to exist. The writer added: "Men will communicate from beach to beach of ocean easier than indite a letter. Th tallow candle of today will not even Le used to grease the boots. Men will to-yipi the wall as Moses touched the rock tor water, and light will dispel the darkness. Prohibition will bo a battlo cry, with temperance a formidable enemy. The flask of spirts which I place herewith will rise in the midst of a conflict wliich will claim it as one of the principals." " Demorest's Monthly. Remedy for Nose Bleed, j Introduce into the nostril, for a con- j siderablo distance upward, a piece of fine i cnripfr rut to the Kize nnil kIlihr iims- ! sary to enable it to euter without diffi culty, previously soaked in lemon juice or vinegar and water. Tha patient is to be kept lying on the face for a length of time, with the sponge in place. This is the procedure employed by M. Sirederg for controlling nose bleed in typhoid fever patients. Medical Digest. DON'T READ THIS I Unless you want to know where to get the JJest 4,Cath" Jlarguin in OOTS AETD SHOES I -We arc now offering Sjeeial I'rieeH in il l 1 Ir-t Ami the most we pride ourselves on is our excellent line of Ladies' Hand-Turned Shoes At their Present Low Price. Ladies looking for ?uch a Shoe should not fail to call on BOECGC The Plattsmouth Herald Xs on joying a Boom, in "both, its DikSXT AND WIS EDITIONS. The Year Will be one during wliich the subjects of national interest and importance will le strongly agitated and the election of a President will take place. The 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 . rou Daily or Weekly Herald Now while we have the subject before the people we will venture to speak ot our Which is tirst-class in all respects and from which our job printers are turning . out much satisfactory work. PLATTSMOUTH, 1888 kith Kit Tin; NEBRASKA.