' ...... , 0 YOU KNOW interest to keep posted 9 YQV KNQW That THE tion of any County? 9 yppr KflQW That in this progressive age intelligent peoplfi want the news ppjLitycalJy and ; ptherwise? THI? MIST will endeavor to kfep you posted. . ; " v " gO YOU KNOW That it is pp YQV know $g you know i That the js $1.50 cents a week. , '' ' : ''j ' -.- . ' . .' .. -i , i. , That THE MIST publishes al the local news of Columbia County? ft k fa your read ft. That THE MIST js thp County Official paper of Ccumtoa County? read it and on current events. MIST has the largest circula paper distributed in Columbia asft your poj8tnjiastfir. impossible for a newspaper tp please everybody? this we do hot propose fp undertakje. That THE MIST is the only paper in he county that prints the court proceed ings and ral estate transfers? tfjis is a fact. subscription price of THE MIST per year, or a Htthj Ujss han 3 TOE HOMESICK SOUL. Oft. TALMAGE PREACHES TO VOUNQ . HEN ON THE PRODIGAL tON. Cari.t Cam ta Rutor tha Slaral "Tha Stck Kh rbjr.lolan. Not tit Walk ASaatlag laalahava mt Paaala Wba " Vrwra A I Moat fud, ' Buqosj.TS. J una 11. Dr. Talmiurs's sermon this morning m an appeal to young men. Nuiubsn of thess ooiu to tli Tabernacle torvicss, many ol tbeiu from country homes, when the received Christian training, which, in the temptations .of fitty itfe, has been east off. Dr. T4wK called hit er mioq "TU jlouesick SqwI" and hi texjt ww roiu Uu Prodigal Sou, l.nke r, iS. "I will ariae and go to my Xather.'' There to nothing like huttgar to take the energy out of a man. A hungry ,iiwn (mu toil neither with pen nor hand nor root There Jiaa beea inany an army defeated not o much for lack ol ammunition as for lack of bread. It jraa tltt fact that took the ore oi oi fhia young luan of the text Stonu And eipoaure Will ear oat any man 'a life in time, but hunger makes quick work. The moot awful cry ever heard PO earth to the cry Jor bread. A tra eler leila a that in Asia Minor Ummw are "trees which bear fruit looking very much like the long bean of our time It to called the carab. Ouoe hi a while the people, reduced to destitution, would eat these carabe. but generally the carat, the bean spoken of here in the text were thrown only to the swine, and tbey crunched hein with great avidity. But this young man of my test could not even get theni without stealing' them. 80 one day amid the swine troughs he be gins to soliloquize. He says, "These are no clothes for a rich man's son to wear; this is no kind of business for a ftw to be engaged in feeding swine; fU go home, I'U go home; I will arise and go to my father." I know there are a great many people who try to throw a fascination, a ro mance, a halo about sin ; lut notwith standing ail that Lord Byron and George Sand have said In regard to it it is a mean, low, contemptible busi ness, and potting food and fodder Into the troughs of a herd of iniquities that root and wallow in the soul of man is a very poor business for men and women intended to be sons and- daughters of the Lord Almighty. And when this young man resolved to go home it was a very wise thing for him to do, and the only question to whether we will folloir him. Satan promises large wages if we will serve him, but be clothes his victims with rags, and he pinches them with hanger, and when they start out to do better he sets after them ail the blood hounds of perdition. Satan comes to as today and he promises all luxuries, all emoluments if we will only serve him. Liar, down with thee to the pit! "The wages of sin is death." Oh I the young man of the text was wise when be ottered the resolution, "I will arise and go to my father." SO RKKORM WITHOUT SORROW. In the time of Mary the Persecutor, a persecutor canie to Christian wom an wno nad bidden in ner noose lor the Lord's sake one of Christ's servants, and the persecutor said, "Where is that heretic f The Christian woman said, "Y.ou open that trunk and yoa will see the heretic." The persecutor opened the trunk, and on the top of the linen of the trunk he saw a glass. He said, "There is no heretic here." ' "Ah," she said. "you. look In the glass and yon will see the heretic I As I take up the mirror of Ood's word today would that instead of seeing the prodigal son of the text we might see camel ves our want, our wandering, our sin, our lost condition, so that we might be as wise as this young man was and say, "1 will arise and go to my father." The resolution of this text was formed n disgust at his present circumstances. If this young man had been by his em ployer set to culturing flowers, or train ing vines over an arbor, or keeping ao coant of the oork market or oversee log other laborers, be would not have thought of going home. If he had had jjis pockets full of money, if be had been abiQ 10 say: "i nave a tnoosana dollars now of my own; what's the use of my going back to my father's bonsef l)q fan turns 1 am going oacc 10 apol ogize to the old manf Why he would pat me on the limits; he would not have going on around the old place such eonduct as I have been engaged in; I won't go home; there is no rea son why I should go home; I have plenty of money, plenty of pleasant surroundings, why should I go homer Ah I it was his pauperism, it was his beggar. He had to go home. Some man comes and says tome: "Why do you talk about the ruined state of the human soulf Why don't y ou speak about I he progress of the Nineteenth century, and talk of some thing more exhilarating I" It is for this reason: A man never wants the Oospel until be realizes he is in a famine struck state. Suppose 1 should come to you n your home and yoa are in good, sound, robust health, and I should be gin to talk about medicines, and about bow much better this medicine is than liat, and some other medicine than some other medicine, and talk, about this physician and that physician. After a while yon would get tired and yon W00J4 fa? ' " do0' want h boo medicines. - Why do yon talk to ma of pjy's(eiinsf I never have doctor." But suppose I come into your hoass and I find yoa severely' sick, and 1 know the medicine that will cure yoa, an4 1 know tin physician who to skill ful enough to meet your case. Ton say 1 "Bring on that medicine, bring on that physician. I am terribly sick and I want help." If I came to yon and yoa feel yoa are all right In body and all right in mind, and all' right in sooL yoa have need of nothing'; bat suppose I have persuaded yoa that the; leprosy of sin to ppon you, the worst of all sickness. On, then yoa say, Bfjng me that balin of the gospel, bring' roe that divine medicament, bring mqesus MAN'S LOST AMD UNUONR CONDITION. But says some one In the audience, "How do yoa prove that we arw In a ruined condition by siuT Well, I ran prove It In two ways, and yon may have your choioa, I can prove It either by the statements of men, or by the statement of Ood. Which shall It bet Yoa all say, "Let ns have the statement of Ood." Well, he says In one place, "The heart is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked." He says in another place, "What to tnau that hs should be clean f and he which to born of Woman, that lie should lie right eontr He says in another place. "There to none that doeth good; ho, not oue." lie says In another place, "As by one man sin entered Into the world, and death by sin; and so death' passed upon all Men,' tor that all have sinned." "Well," you say. "I am willing to acknowledge that, but why should 1 take the particular roa die that' you propose!" Tills to the reason, "Bxoept man be bom again he cannot see the kingdom of Ood. This to the reason, "Titer to one name given under heaven among men where by they may be saved." Then there are a thousand voices here ready to say: "Well. I am ready to accept tills help of the Oospel; I would like to have this diviueeure; how shall I go to work!" Let me say that a mere whim, an undefined longing amounts to noth ing. Voa must have a stout; tretnen dons resolution like this young man of the text when he said, "I will arise and go to my father." "Ohl" says some man, "how do 1 know my father wants met How do 1 know, if 1 go back, 1 would be re ceived T "Ohl" says some man, "you dont know where I have been; you dont know how far I have wandered; you- wouldn't talk that way to me if you knew all the iniquities I have com mitted." What to that flutter among the angels of Godt It is news, it to newal Christ lias found the lost Moraasalscaa tbair Joy eoaula. Rat Uadla wlla nw Ore; The fttauer loat, to found, thsjr slog. And strika Uia aoondioc lyra, When Napoleon talked of going Into Italy, they said: "You can't get there; if yoa knew what the Alps wjre yoa wouldn't talk about It or think of it You can't get your ammunition wagons over the Alps." Then Nspoleon rose In bis stirrups and waving his hand to ward the mountains, he sold. "There shall be no Alps." That wonderful pass was laid out which has been the won derment of all' the years since the wonderment of ail engineers. And you tell me there are such mountains of sin between your soul and Ood, there is no mercy. Then' 1 see Christ waving bis hand toward the mountains; 1 bear him say, "I will come over the moun tains of thy sin and the hills of thy in iquity." There shall be no Pyrenees; there shall be no Alps. A OODLI SOKKOW VOH SIS. Again, 1 notice that this resolution of the young man of the text was found ed in sorrow at his misbehavior. It was not mere physical plight It was grief that he bad so maltreated his father. It to a sad tiling after a father had done everything for a child, to have that child be ungrateful How sharper Ihaa a serpent tooth It la. To hare a Uiaokteea cUUd. That to Shakespeare. "A foolish son to the heaviness of his" mother." That to the Bible. Well, my friends, have not some of us been cruel prodigals! Have we not maltreated our father! And such a father I So loving, so kind. If be had been a stranger, If he bad for saken us, if he had flagellated us, if he bad pounded us and turned us out of doors on the commons. It would not have been so wonderful our treatment of him; but he to a father so loving, so kind, and yet how many of us for our wanderings have never apologized. We apologize for wrongs done to our fei lows, but some of us perhaps have com mitted ten thousand times ten thou sand wrongs against God and never apologized. I remark still farther that this reso lution of the text was founded in a feel ing of homesickness, I don't know how long this young man, bow many months, how many years, be had been away from his father's bouse, but then is something In the reading of my text tliat makes me think lie was homesick. Some of yoa know what tliat feeling to. Far away from borne, sometimes sur rounded . by everything bright and pleasant plenty of friends yon have said, "I would give the world to be home tonight" Well, this young man was boaiesick for his father's bouse. I have no doubt: when' be thoaght of his father's bouse be said, "Now, per haps, father may not be living." We read nothing in this story this parable founded on everyday life we read nothing about the mother. It says nothing about going home to her. I think she was dead. ! think aba had died of a broken heart at his wander logs. A man never gets over having lust his mother. Nothing said about her here. But be Is homesick for his father's house. He thought he would Just like to go and walk around the old place. He thought he would Just likt to go and see If things were as they used to be. Many a man, after 'having been off a long while, has gone home and knocked at the door, and a stran ger has come. It is tlie old homestead, bat A stranger comes to the door. . He finds out father Is gone and mother to gone and brothers and sisters all gone. I think this young mart of the text said to himself, "Perhaps father may be dead." Still be starts to find out He Is homesick. Are there any here to day homesick for Clod, homesick for heaven t ' A atOTtnCR'S PRATKH FOLLOWED Hist A sailor, after having been long on the sea, returned to his father's house, and his mother tried to persuade bun not to go away again. She said, "Now yoa had better stay at home; don't go away; we don't want yon to go; yoa will have It a great deal better here." But it made him angry. The night be-' fore be went away again to sea, b beard his mother praying in the next room, and that made him more angry. He went far ont on the sea, and. sorra came up, and he was ordered to very perilons duty, and he ran op the rat lines, and amid the shrouds of the ship be beard the voice that be had beard 1 in the next room. ' He tried to; phtoU 1 It off, lie tried to rally lib ooaraga, but lie omild not silenee tliat vote he had heard In the next room, and titers In the storm and the darkness he said: "O. Lord! what a wretch 1 have been; what a wretch I am. Help me Jut now, Lord God." And I thought In this amemblage today there may be some who may have the mrinor? of a father's petition' or a mother's prayer pressing mightily upon the soul, and tliat this hour they may nmka the same resolution I find In my text snving, "1 wilt arise and go to my father,', A lad at Liverpool wont oat to bathe, went out Into the sua, went ont too tar, got beyond bis-depth and he floated far away. A ship bound for Dublin camo along and took hhu on board. Bailors Are generally very generous fel lows, and one gave blm a cap and an other gave him a Jacket; and another ffv him shoes. A gentleman passing along on the boach at Liverpool found the lad's clothes and took theui home, and the fat Iter was heartbroken, the mother was heartbroken at the loss of their child. They had heard nothing from hltft day after day, and they or dered the uual mourning for the sad vent But the lad' took ship from Dublin and arrived hi Liverpool the very day the' garments arrived. lis knocked at the door, and the father was overjoyed, and the mother was overjoyed' at the return of their lost sou. Oh, my friends, have you waded out too deep! Have yoa waded down Into siu! llnvo you waded from the shoref Will you come back! When you come back will yon- come In the 1 rags of your sin, or will you come robed In the Saviour's righteousness! I be lieve ths latter; Go bonis to your God today. Ho to waiting for you. Go home I TROS RRtR!fTAXCR A.tD OODLT KtWO Lt'TION, Bat I remark oooeemlng this restu tiou, it was immediately put into execu tion. The context says, "Hearone and cams to- his father." The trouble In nine hundred and ninety-nine times out of a thousand to that our resolutions' amount to nothing because we roaks them for some distant time. It I re solve to become ! a Christian next year, that amounts to nothing at all If 1 resolve to become a Christian tomorrow, that amounts to' nothing at all. If I resolve at tho service tonight to become a Christian, tliat amounts to nothing at alL If I resolve after t go houie today to yield my heart to God, that amounts to nothing at oil. The only kind of resolution tliat amounts to anything Is the resolution tliat to immediately put into execution. ' There to a man who liad the typhoid fever. He wild, "Oh, If I could get over tlus terrible d 1st rem, If this fever should depart, if I could be restored to' health, I would all the rest of tuyjife serve God I" Ths fever departed. He got well enough to walk around the block. He got well enough to go over to New York and attend to business. He' Is well today, as well as lis ever was. Where is the broken vow I There to a man who said long ago, "If I could live to the year 1891, by that time 1 will have my business matters arranged, and I will liave time to attend to reli gion, and I will be a good, thorough. eonxecrated Christian." The year 1891 tins coma. January, February, Marcli, April, May, June almost half of the year gone. Where to your broken vow! "Oil," says sums man. "I'll attend to tliat when I can get my character fixed up; when I can get over my evil habits; I am now given to strong drink," or says tho man, "I am given to uncleanuess," or says the man, "1 am given to dishonesty. When I get over luy present bubits. then I II be a thorough Christian." My brother, you will get worse and worse, until Christ takes you in hand. "Not ths righteous; sinners, Jesus earns tweaU." Ohl but you say, "I agree with you on all tliat, but 1 must put It off a little longer. Do you know there wers many who came Just as near as yon are to the kingdom of God and never en tered it! I was at East Hampton and I went Into the cemetery to look around. and in that cemetery tliere are twelve graves side by side -the graves of sail ors. This crew, some years ago, in a hip went Into the breakers at Auiag nnsett about three miles away, My brother, then preaching at East Hamp ton, had been at ths burial. Tbess men of the erew came very near being saved. The people from Aniagnnsett saw ths vessel, and they shot rockets and they sent ropes from the shore, and these poor fellows got into ths boat and they pulled mightily for the shore, but Just before they got to the shore the rope snapped and the boat capsized and tbey wers lost; their bodies afterward washed an on ths beach. Ohl what a solemn day it Was I have been told of it by my brother when- tbess twelve men lay at the foot of the pulpit and hs read over them the funeral service. They cams very near .. shore within shouting distance of the shore, yet did not arrive on solid land: ..There are soms inert who corns almost to ths shore of God's mercy, but not quite, not quits. To be only almost saved is not to bs saved at alii - ; A Ooablfal CompllaiMt. - Sometimes an expression of thank fulness can be turned Into one of things which are better left unsaid. Oue sunny day a sod eyed man, clad In shiny raiment, found a prosperous youth enjoying the warmth of Brood street, and besought him for alms. He himself, quoth . ths applioant, had known prosperity In earlier day, and lie knew what was due from one gen tleman to another. Therefore be had not hesitated to address ths youth, who, being happy himself, should try to make others happy. All this had its effect upon the young man. He pro duced a dime and banded it to ths stranger, who accepted it with a bow and a flourish. "All,' mister,'' hs said, "I hops ws shall meet again, and that then I shall be in a position to recipro cate." Then he went his way, leaving the youth sadly puzzled as to Just what he meant New York Times. gpcaklng bf ths Cards. ''Whist is a poor substitute for ths moonlight." "la what wayr folding baods.'V PIAWOS and ORCAWS IliiUett & Davis and New Ibitll Organs. I invifo inspection, ami defy comjitttition, ; L. V. MOORE, 105 Washington st., WHEELER & WILSON NEW No. o. HIGH ARM. ' ; The only perfect fiimilv machine; wiw ftwimlcHl tlio only grand prize at the Paris Kxpoeition in 1889; LARGEST STOCK AT LOWEST PRICES. For pnrtlrulur cull on or sddisss ths AST01UA AGENCY, A G. SPEXARTH, r Tho Largest General Jewelry House IN TtlirCITY. MAIN OFFICE: 1368MaretStT8efa S. F., California. EVERDING & FARRELL, Front Street, Portland, Or. DEALERS IN Guana, $20.00 A CHEAP FERTILIZER. Land Plaster $2.25 Per Barrel. -Also a Fine Line it- G ROC EUIES AN D PROVISIONS Joseph Kellogg & Co.'s River Steamers Joseph Kellogg and Northwest. FOR COWLITZ RIVER. NORTHWEST KELSO Monday, .Wednosda-y, nd Fiidny at 5 am. Leaves PORTLAND Tuesday, Tburs. lay, and iaturdny at C a. m. - . JOSEPH KELLOGG iw RAixiWat 5 a. . duily, Sunday excepted, arriving at Port hi nd at; 10:80 a. m; Returning leaves Portland at 1 p in., arriving at 9 p. in; T?I-iE3 Farmers' and Merchants' INSURANCE COMPANY, Albany, Or. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL, - . - . $500,000 SECURED CAPITAL, .. . - 247,50(V PAID CAPITAL, . - -: - - - - .74,250 FARM PROPERTY A SPECIALTY. All Losses Promptly and Satisfactorily Adjusted. For particulars apply st ths offlco at Moore A Cole, or Tus Mit ofllcs: ' CLATSKANIE LINE.- STEADIER O. W. SHAVER. . J, W. SHAV12R, Master. ' t .. Leaves Portland Irom Aldftr-ntrcet dock Monday, via West port, Skamokawa, and Cathhunet, Wednesday nnd " Friday for Clatukanie, touching at Sauvies Island, St. IlelenB, Columbia City, Kalama, Neer City, Rainier, Cedar - Landing, Mt Coflin, Bradbury, Stella, Oak Point, and all ..intermediate points, re turning Tuenday, Thursday, and Saturday, ; Don't Buy Your Drugs ANYWHERE BUT AT A REGULAR . DRUG: : STQFEl, -.7 .. :', -7-YOWWILL FIND THE . ., , '.; Freshest, Purest, and Best of Everything .. . AT THE .V1'''- ; Clatskanie - Drug Stores DV J. E. II ALL, Proprietor. ' Scale Kimtmll Pianos and Kim. twr. Per Ton, 4 fall