The Sioux County Journal, VOLUME VI. HAHKISOX, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1801. NUMBER 43. TALM AGE'S SERMON. HE GIVES WARNING TO THE PENITENT. IM Thar I. bo Kairrul that l I nju.t W ill Thoughts Conrrrntng of Jadfnent B ll I nju.t mul a rinal Hefurma- Uuii'CiMiequrnra of bin. Only On Vrrdlet. itev. Dr. lalinmje, who is now on his round the world jo.imey, ele U-d an the Hub.ect (or his ouruum through the fires lanl Sunjay, "Another (. hanre," the text being taKen from KrleniiHtf-s xi, :i, "If the tree fall toward the oouth or toward the Dorth, in the place where the tree fuilelh there i ahull be." There in a hovering hope In the minda of a vast multitude that there will he an opportunity in the m-xt world to correct the mmtakes of thin; that if we do make complete rhipwrec-k of our earthly life it will lie on a shore, up which we may walk to a palace; that, a a defendant may lone his cai-e in the circuit court an I curry it up to the supremo co.irt or court 01 chancery and get a reversal of jUdif nent in hi behalf, all tho costs liein thrown over on the other party, so If we fail in the earthly trial wo may in the higher jurisdiction of eternity have the judg ment of tho lower court set aside, all the costs remitted, and we may be vic torious defendants forever. My object in this sermon is to show that common sense as well as mv text declares that such an expectation is chimerical. You say that the impenitent man, hav ing got into the next world and seeing the Uisiister, will, as a renu t of that disaster, turn, the pain tho cause of his reformation. Hut you an find 10,(XH instances in this world of men who have done wrong, and ditreMi overtook them suddenly. IHd tho dis tress heal them? No. They went right on. Thr C'our of IMraa. That man was flung of dissipations. "You must stop drinking," caul tho doctor, "and quit the fust life you are leading, or it wi;l destroy you. patient sulers paroxysm after fhe i pur- , oxysra, but under skillful modica treatment he begins to sit up, begins to walk about tho room, liegins to go to business. And, lo, he goes back to tho same grogshops for his morning dram, and his evening dram, and the drams between. Mat down again. Same doctor. Same physical angu sh. Same medical warning. Now ttiu ill ness is more protracted, tho liver is more stubborn, the stomach more lrri- i opened a primary school at I'onoroiio table, and the digestive organs are lis. 1 do not think that the parents more rebellious, ilut after awhile he from other cities would have stint their is out again, goes back to the same ! children there. Instead of amend- drajnauops uu U'M ti mm rird ' ecriwjfo against his physical health, He sees that his downward course is ruining his household, that his life is a perpetual lx-rjury ugainst his mar riage vow; that that broken hearted woman Is so unlike the roseate young wife whom ho married that her old j Bchoolmates do not recognize her; that his sons aro to tie taunted for a life time by the father's druiikonnet.s. that the daughters are to pass into lit u un der the scarification of a disreputable ancestor. He is drinking up their happiness, their prospects for this life and perhaps for the lile to come. Sometim sun appreciation of what he is doing comes uin him. His nervous system is all a-tang)e. Kioiii crown of head to sole of font he is one aching, rasping, crucifying, damning torture. Vvhero is he? In hell on earth. Docs it reform him? After awhile he has deliiium tre mens, with a whole jungle of hissing reptiles let out on his pillow, und his screams horrify the neighbors as he dashes out of his lied crying, "Take these things ofT me!" As ho bits pale and convalescent the doctor Bays: ''Now, 1 want to have a plain talk with you, my dear fellow. The next attack of this kin l you have you will bo be yond all medical skill and you will die." He gets Itotter and goes forth into the same round again. This time medicine takes no effect. Consultation of physicians agree in saying thero is no nope. Death ends the scene. Chaiicca of ftvforrn. That process of inebriation, warning and dissolution Is going on in all the neighborhoods of Christendom. I'ain does not correct. Sutterlng does not reform. What is true in ono sense is i true in all senses and will forever tie bo, and yet men aro expecting in the next world purgatorial rejuvenation. Tuke up the printed reports of the prisons of the i. nitod States, and you will find that tho vast ma.ority of the incarcerated have been there before, some of them four, five, six times. With a million illustrations all work ing the other way in this world, people are expecting that distress in the next slate will be salvatory. You cannot imagine any worse torture in any other world than that which some men nave sm.ored here, and without any sahiturv conse juo.nco. J- urthermore, the prosiect ot a re formation in the next world is more improbable than a reformation here, in this world the life started with in nocence of infancy. In the case sup posed, the other life will ojien witb all the accumulated bad habit of many years upon him. Surely it is easier to build a strong ship out of new tim ber than out of an old hulk that has been ground up In the breaker. If with innocence to start with in thin tile a man doe not becomo godly, what prospect is there that in tho next world, starting' with sin, there would be a seraph evoluted? Surely the sculptor has more prospect of mak ing a fine statute out of a block of pure white i'arian marble than out of an old black nick seamed and cracked with the storms of a half century. Surely upon a clean wh'te sheet of paper it is easier to write a deed or a will than upon a sheet of paper all crlbbled and blotted and torn Irani top to bottom. Yet men teem to think hat, though the life that began here turned out ; though it starts with a dead failure. , "liut," says some one, "I think we; ought to have a chance in tho next ; I life, because this li e is so short it al- j I lows only small opportunity. We ' I hardly have time to turn around lie- : tween cradie and tomb, the wood of . , the one almost touching the marble of ' the other.'' Hut do you know what i made the ancient deluge a necessity? It was the longevity of the antcdilu- ; vians. They were worse in tftese olid i century of their lifetfme than in the ; first hundred years, and still worse in i the third century, and still worse ; all the wav on to 7Hi, sou, and !0 years, and tho earth had to 1x3 waxhed and scrubbed and an- ; chored, clear out of sight for more I than a month liefore ii could be made : tit for decent people to live in. j Ixuigutity never cures impenitency. j All the pictures of Time represent him i with a scythe lo cut. but I neer saw any picture of Time with a case o, med- I icine te heal. Seneca says that Nero j for the first five years of his public life was set up ior an example of clem- ency and kindness, but his path all the i way descended until at H A. I), he bo- j came a filicide. If H ycurs did not iniike antediluvians any better, but only made them worse, the ages of eternity could have no effect except pro.ongation of depravity. Wrong and KiKhnt, "Dut," says someone, 'In the future state evil surroundings will bo with drawn and elevated influences substi tuted, and hence expurgation ami buIi lirnation and glorilication." Hut tho righteous, all theirsins forgiven, have passod into a beutilie stale, and conse quently the unsaved will lie left alone. It cannot bo expected that Dr. DuiT, who exhaisted himself in teaching Hindoos the way to Heaven, and Dr. Alieel, who gave his lile in the evan gelization of I'hina ani Ailonirum Jud son, who toile 1 lor tho redemption of liorneo, should tie sent down by some celestial missionary society to educate those who wasted all their ourtbly ex istence. Kvangelistic and missionary efforts are ended. The entire king dom of tho morally bankrupt by them selves, where are the saivatory in- fluences to come from' Can one speckled and bud apple in a barrel of uiseaeu uppies turn ine otner apples good? ( an those who are themselves down help others up? Can those who have themselves failed in the business of the soul pay the debts of tho insol vents? Can a million wrongs make one right? I i oneropoug was a city I'oneropolia was a city where King j-i'mnpoi inracia put ail the nan ma peo ple ol his kingdom. If anv man ha 1 mtat lo the ctW world, all the ciutions, now that the good are evolved. will be degenerating and down. You would not want to send a man to u cholera or yellow fever hospital for his health, and tho great lazaretto of the next world, containing tho diseased and p ague-struck, will be apoor place lor moral recovery. If the surround ings in this world were crowded of temptation, the surroundings of tho next world, after the righteous: have passod up und on, will be J.HM) per cent, more crowded of temptation. The Count of Chateaubriand raude his little son sleep at night at tho top of a castle turret, where the winds howled and where specters were said to haunt the place, and while the mother and sisters a!most died with fright tho son tells us thut tho process gave him nerves that could not trem ble and a courage thut never fullered, lint 1 don't think that towers of dark ness and the sj ectrai world swept by sirocco and euroclydon will ever lit ono for the land of eternal sunshine. 1 wonder what is the curriculum of that college of intorno, where, after proper preparation by the sins of this life, the candidate enters, passing on from freshman class of depravity to sophomore of abandonment, and from sophomore to iunior, and fro:ii junior to senior, and duy of graduation comes, and with diploma signed by satao, the president, und other professorial de moniacs, attesting that the candidate has been long enough under the drill, ho passes up to enter Heaven! i'ande monlum a preparative course for heav enly admission: Ah, my friends, satan and his cohorts have fitted uncounted multitudes for ruin, but never littod one soul for happiness. What Another Chance Meant. Furthermore, It would not be safe for this world if men had another chance in the next. If it hart been an nounced that, however wickedly a man might act in this world, he could ; fix it up all right In tho next, society would be terribly demoralized and tho human race demolished in a few years. , The four that If we aro bad and unfor- i giving hero it will not be well for us in the next existence is the chief in- ' fluence that keeim civilization from j rushing back to semi barbarism, and somibarharism from rushing into mid- ' night savagery, and midnightxavagery from extinction, for it is the astringent j impression of ail nations -Christian and heathen that there is no future 1 chunco for those who have wasted this. ; Multitudes of men who aro kept within hounds would say; "Go to, t now! Let me get all out of this lile I thero is in It. Come, gluttony, and in ebriation, and uncleanliness, and re- ' venge, and all sensualities, und wait upon me. My life may lie somewhat shortened in this world by dissolute ness, but that will make heavenly in- i diligence on a larger scale the so mer I possible. I will overtake the saints at j last, and will enter the heavenly tem- Ce only a llttlo later than those who' ehavtd themselves bore. 1 will on j my wav to Heaven take a little wider , excursion than those who were on earth pious, and I shall go to Heaven via gehenna and viaahoel." Another chance in the next world means freo license and wild abandonment in thin. Huppose you were a party In an im- ortant case at law, and yu knew rom consultation with Judges and at- lWe torneys that it would lie tried twice, and tiie first trial would be of little im portance, but that the second would decide everything. lor which trial w juld you make the most preparation, ' for which retain the ablest attorneys. ; for which be most anxious about the attendance of witnesses? You would put all the stress upon the second trial, all the anxiety, all the exnditure, saying: "The first is nothing: the last is everything." Ghethe race as surance of a Becond and more impor tant trial in the subsequent life, and ail the preparation for eternity would be "post mortem " post funeral, poet sepuichral, and the world with on jem be pitched off into impiety and godlessness. . Only On Iovltatlou. Furthermore, let me ask why A chance should be given in tne next world if we huve refused innumerable chances in tills? Suppose you give a banquet, and you invite a vast number of friends, but one man declines to come or treats your invitation with inditierence. You in the course of twenty years give twenty ban juet, and the same man is invited to them all and treats them all in the same ; obnoxious way. After awhile you re- i move to another house, larger and j better, and jou again invite yOr j friends, but send no invitation to tfce j man who declined or neglected the, other invitations. Are you to bliinje? , Has he a right iO expect to be invifcjd after all the indignities he has doie , you? God in this world has invited va all lo the bati juet of His grace. He invited us by His provldenco and His ; spirit litlo days of every year since wo knew our right hand from our left. If j we de dined it evoiytime or treated the invitation with indifference, and ga.e twenty or forty or fifty years 'Of j indignity on our part toward the ban- . quetor, and at last Ho spreads the ban- j quel iii a more luxurious and kiny ! place amid the heavenly gardoi.s.here j we a right to expect Him to invito Us i sg..in, and ha. e a right to blame Htm if he does not invite us? j If twelve gates of salvat'.on stood i upon twenty years or fifty yearslor: our admission, and at the end of that t.me they ure cl sod, cm we complain ; of it and s .y: "These gates ought to ; be open 'again. Give us another chance?" If the ste.imer is to sail lor Hamburg, a a we want to get to Oar- , many by ttiat line, and wo road (In1 every eve ung and every morning newspaper that it will sail on a certain -day, for two weeks we have that ad- , vert sement before our eyes, and than , , we go down to.the (jocks fifteen nfc utesafier it hug shoved off into the S Veuni and say: "'Come back. Give me another cha ice. It is not fair to treut me in th s way. Swing up to the do k again, and throw out planks, abd let me come o i board." Such behav'or j would invite urrest as a madman, j. I i The Necemarv 8nrrnJr. . V" ' " And if,' aftor the gospel ship has lain : at anchor bei'oro our eyes for years and years, and all the benign voices of earth and Heaven have urged us to get on board, as she might sail away at any moment, and after awhile she sails j without us, is it common Bonse to ex pect her to come tMck? You might as well go out on tho highlands at Nave- . sink and call to the Majestic after bho has been three days out and expect ! her to return as to call back an oppor tunity lor Heaven when it once has sped away. All Heaven offered us a , gratuity, and for a lifetime we refused ' to taso it, and then riiBh on the bosses of Jehovuh's buckler demanding another chance. Thero ought to be, there can tie, there will bo no such thing as posthumous opportunity. Thus our common sense agrees with my text, "If the tree lull toward the south or toward tho north, In tho place where the tree fulloth thero shall it tie." I You see that this idea lifts this world up from an unimtortant way station to a platform of Btit; endous issues and makes all eternity whirl around this i hour. Hut one trial for which all the ! preparation must be made in this world or never made at all. That piles i up all tho emphasis, and all the cli- ' maxes, and all the destinies into life here. No other chance! Oh, how j that augments tho value and the im portance of this chancel I Alexander with, his army, used to : surround a city, and then would lift a ' great light in token to the people that if they surrendered before that light ' went out all would bo well. Hut if once the light went out then the bat tering" rams would swing against the wall, and demolition and disaster would follow Well, all wo need do for our present and everlasting safety is to make surrender to Christ, tho King and conjuoror surronder of our hearts, surrender of our lives, sur render of everything. And He keeps a great light burning, light of gospel in itation, light Kindled with the wood , of the cross and (laming up against the dark right of our sin and Borrow. Sur- j render while that great light con tinues to burn, for after it goes out there will be no other opKirtunity of making peace with God through our , Lord Jesus Christ Talk of another chunco! Why, this is a supernal chance! ilartKmflnt Hall. j In the time of Howard VI. at the but tle of Mussel burg, a prlvato soldier, seeing that tho Karl of Huntley had lost his helmet, took off his own hot met and put it upon the head of the Karl, and the head of tho private soldier uncovered he was soon slain, while his commander rode safely out of the battle, liut 1.1 our case, instead of a private rolder offering helmet lo an earl It Is a King putting Ills crown upon an unworthy suhjoct, the King dying that we might live. Tell it to all polntB of tho compass. Tell it to night and day. Tell it to all earth and Heaven. Tell it to all centuries, all age, all mlllenlums, that we have such a magnificent chance In this world that we need no other chance In the next, j I am in the burnished judgment hall of the last day. A great white throne I is lifted, but the Judge has not yet 1 taken It. While we are waiting for Ills arrival I hear Immortal spirits in conversation. "What ate you waiting here for?" bays a soul that went up from Madagascar to a soul that as cended from America. The latter says: "I came from America, where forty yeais 1 hearu the gospel preached and Jul ble read, and from the praver that I learned in infancy at my mother's knee until my la.-.t hour I had gospel ad vantage, but for some reason I did not make the ( hristian choice, and I am here w aiting lor the Judge to give mo a new trial and another chance." "Stranire." says the other. "I had but one gospel call in Madagascar, and I accepted it, and 1 do not need another chance." "Why are you here?" says one who on eartli had feeblest intei ect to one who had great brain, and silvery tongue, and scepters of influence. The latter responds: "Oh, I knew more than my fellows. I mastered libraries and had learned titles from colleges, and my name was a synonym for elo ouence and p iwer. And vet I neg lected my soul, and I am here waiting for a new trial." "Strange," savs the one of the 'eeble earthly capacity. "I knew but little of worldly knowledge, but I knew Christ and made Him my partner, and 1 have no need of an other chance." Clofflne the Hook. Now the ground trembles with tho ari reaching chariot. The great fold ing doois of the hall swing open. "Stand back!" cry the celestial ush ers, "htand back, and let the Judge of quick and dead pass through!" lie takes the throne, and looking over the tnrong of nations He says: "Come to judgment, the lust judgment, the only judgment!" liy one Hash from the throne all the history of each one Hatnes forth to the vision of himself and all others. "Divide!" Judge to the assembly, echo the walls. "Divide!" guards angelic. says the "Divide:" cry the And now the immortals separate, rushing this way and that, and after awhile there is a great aisle between them, and a great vueuum widening and widening, and the Judge, turning to the throng on ono side, says, "He that is righteous, let him lie righteous still; and lie that is holy, let hirn be holy still," and then, turning toward the throng on the opposite side, he says, "He that is unjust, let him be utijust 6till and hejthat is filthy, let him be filthy still," and then, lifting one hand toward each group, ho declares, "If the tree fall toward the south or toward the north, in the place where the troe falleth there it shall be." And then 1 hear something jar with a great sound. It is the closing of the book of judgment. The Judge ascends the stairs behind the throne. The hall of the last assize is cleared and shut. The high court of eternity is adjourned forever. One Touch ofMotherhoort. A lady in waiting to the Princess of Wales told a friend a touching little incident wtiicb took place soon after the death of her son, the Duke of Clarence. The Princess, with her usual gentle reticence, tried to hide the grief for her nrst-born. It was shown only in her failing hea th and in increased tender conHideration for all a ound her. One day while walk ing with one of her ladies in the quiet lanes near .Sandringharu, she met an old woman weeping bltterlv and tottering under a lo;id of pack ages. On inquiry, it appeared that she was a carrier, and made her liv ing by shopping and doing errands in the uinrket town for the country people. "Hut the weight Is too heavy at your age," sa d the Princess. 'Yes. You're right, ma'ain. I'll have to give it up, and if I give it up I'll starve. Jak carried them for me ruv boy ma'am." "And where is he now?" "Jack! He's dead! Oh. he's dead!" the old woman cried wildly. The 1 rincess, without a word, hurried on. drawing her veil over her face to hide her tears. A few davs later a neat little cart with a stout donkey were brought to the old carrier's door. She now travels with them too and fro, mak ing a comfortable living, and has never been told the rank of the friend who has tried to make her life easier for the bake of her dead boy. Chicago Post When You Gape. A well bred tuan puts his hand over his mouth when he yawns, but not one well bred man in 10,000 knows why. The reason is this: Four or five hundred years ago there was a superstition common in Europe that the devil was always lying In wait to enter a man's body and take possession of him. Satan generally went In by the mouth, but when he had waited a reasonable time and the man did not open bis mouth tne devil made Ibim yarn, und while h s mouth was opened jumped down his throat. !-o many cases of this kind occurred that the people learned to m.ie the sign of the cross over their months in order to scare away the devil. The peasantry in Italy and Spain still adhere to this method, but most other people have dispensed with the cross sign and keep out tht devil by simply lacing the hand before the lips. It is a most remarkable sur vival of a practice after the signifi cance has perished. A oiitL of twenty-six Is more dis posed to to pleasant to people whose clothes are or an old fashioned make, than a girl of sixteen. Why are the wearers of moustach es and beards the most modest men 1 In society? Because they are tb least barefaced. THE COMMERCIAL BANK. ESTABLISHED 1888. Harrison, Nebraska. hV & Bkkwbtik, President. D. H. GRISWOLD, Cashier. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL. $50 000. Transacts a General Banking Business. CORRESPONDENTS Exchan'OI National Bank, New York, Uited Statb National Bank. Omaha, First National Bank, Chadroa. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. WDEATTS SOLD ON ALL PARTS OF EUROPE. THE PIONEER Pharmacy, ' J. E. PHINNEY, Proprietor. ' ; Pure Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils and Varnishes. ty artists' Material. School Supplies. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded Day or Night. SUMS & SMILEY, Harrison, Nebraska, Real Instate Agents, Have a number of bargaino in choice land in Sioux county. Parties desiring to buy or sell real estate should not fail to call on them. School Lands leased, taxes paid for non-residents; farms rented, eta CORRESPONDENTS SOLICITED. C F. Com, Viee-l tVBKTJBHES.