A TALK ON EMPTY CHAIRS A POWERFUL ARGUMENT FROM TALMAGE IN OHIO. DR. tm Greater Influences Are In the Family Clrala Than the Mute Appeals of Ue parted Ones Vacant Plaeea at the Fire side. IjAKEsioe, O., July 1S. For mnuy years .people have gathered in multitudes at this n of the year for a great outdoor as- ibly. The grounds are a short sail from Sandusky; the place beautiful be yond description. Dr. Talinage preached this morning in this delightful place to a " vast multitude. . His subject was the "Va cant Chair." and bis text, I Samuel xx, 18, "Thou sbalt be missed, because thy seat will be empty." . Set on the table the cutlery aud the chased silverware of the palace, for King Saul will give a state dinner today. A dis tinguished place is kept at the table for his son-in-law, a celebrated warrior, David by name. The guest, jewelud and plumed, come in aud take their places. When peo ple are invited to a king's banquet they are very apt to go. But before the covers are lifted from the feast Saul looks around and finds a vacant seat at the table. He aays within himself, perhaps audibly: "What does this mean? Where is my son-in-law P Where is David, the great war riorr I invited him. I expected him. What! a vacant chair at the king's bauquet!" The fact was that David, - tbe warrior, had been seated for the last time at his father-in-law's table. The day before Jon athan had coaxed David to go and occupy that place at the table, saying to .David in the words of my text, "Thou' 8 halt be missed, because thy seat will be empty." The prediction was fulfilled. David was jnlssed. His seat was empty. That one vacant chair spoke louder than all the oc- . cupied chairs at the banquet. In almost every house the articles of fur niture take a living personality. That ' picture a stranger would not see anything remarkable either in its design or execu tion, but it is more to yon than all tbe pictures of tbe Louvre and the Luxem bourg. You remember who bought it, and who admired it. And that hymn book yon remember who sang out of it. And Chat cradle you remember who rocked it. -And that Bible you remember who read oat of it. And that bed you remember who slept in it. And that room you re member who died in it. But there is nothing in all your house so eloquent and ao mighty voiced as the vacant chair. I oppose that before Saul and his guests got up from this banquet there was a great clatter of wine pitchers, but all that racket was drowned out by the voice that came up from the vacant chair at the table. Millions have gazed and wept at John Quincy Adams' vacant chair in the house of representatives, and at Henry Wilson's "vacant chair in the vice presidency, and at Henry Clay's vacant chair in tbe American 4snate, and at Prince Albert's vacant chair in Windsor castle, and at Thiers' vacant chair in the councils of the French nation. Bab all these chairs are unimportant to jrou as compared with the vacant chairs in your own household. Have these chairs any lesson for us to learn? Are we any better men and - women than when they first addressed usf FATHER'S CHAIR. First 1 point out to you the father's va cant chair. Old men always like to sit in the same place and in the same chair. They somehow feel more at home, and sometimes when you are in their place and Ifoey come into the room you jump up sud- tenly and say, "Here, father, here's your chair." The probability is it is an arm chair, for he is not so strong as he once was, and he needs a little upholding. His hair is a little frosty, his gums a little de pressed, for in his early days there was not much dentistry. Perhaps a cane chair and old fashioned apparel, for though you may have suggested some improvement, Xather does nut want any of your nonsense. Grandfather never had much admiration tar new fangled notions. I sat at the table of one of my pariah ioners in a former congregation; an aged nan was at the table, and the son was pre siding, and tbe father somewhat abruptly addressed the son and said, "My son, don't now try to show off because the minister is here!" Your father never liked any new customs or m.-inners; he preferred the old way of doi ng thi ogs, and be never looked ao happy as when, with his eyes closed, he aat in the armchair in the corner. From the wrinkled brow to the tip of the slippers, what placidity! The wave of the past years of his life broke at tbe foot of that cUair. Perhaps sometimes he was a little impa tient, and sometimes told the same story twice; but over that old' chair how many blessed memories hover! I hope yon did not crowd that old chair, and that it did - not get very much in the way. Sometimes the old man's chair gets very much in the way, especially if he has been ao unwise as to make over all his property to his children, with tbe understanding that they are to take care of hiin. I have seen in such cases children crowd the old man's chair to tbe door, and then crowd it clear into the street, and then crowd it into the poorhouse, and keep on crowding 1t until the old man fell out of it into his grave. ' But your father's chair was a sacred place. The children nsed to, climb up on the rungs of it for a good night kiss, and . the longer he stayed the better you liked it. But that chair has been vacant now for eome time. The furniture dealer would not give you fifty cents for it, but it is a throne of influence in your domestic circle. I saw in the French palace, and in the throne room, the chair that Napoleon used to occupy. It was a beautiful chair, but the most significant part of it was the letter 'N" embroidered into the backof the chair in purple and gold. And your fath er's old chair sits in the throne room of "your heart, and your affections have em broidered into the back of that old chair in purple and gold the letter "F." Have all the prayers of that old chair been answer ed? Have all the counsels of that old chaif been practiced t Speak out! old armchair. History 'tells us of an. old man whose three sons were victors in the Olympic .-Sames, and when they came back these three sons, with their garlands, put them on the father's brow, and the old man was ao rejoiced at the victories of bis three children that he fell dead in their arms. And are yon, oh, man, going to bring a wreath of joy and Christian usefulness and put id on your father's brow, or on the "vacant chair, or on the memory of the one -departed f Speak out, old armchair! With reference to your father, the words of my text have been fulfilled, "Thou shalt be - missed, because thy seat will be empty." mother's chair. I go a little further on in your house and I find the mother's chair. It is very apt to be a rocking chair.. She had so many cares and troubles to soothe that it must have rockers. I remember it well; it was an old chair, and the rockers were almost airorn out, for I was the youngest, and the cnair bad rocked the whole family. It niade a creaking noise as it moved; tiut there wag mimic in the sound. It was i iat I high enough to' allow us children to put our beads into her lap. That was the bank where we deposited all our hurts and wor ries. Ah! what a chair that was. : It was different from the father's chair; it was en tirely different. Vou ask me bowf I can not tell; but . we all felt it was differ ent. Perhaps there was about this ck.-iir more gentleness, more teuderness, more ! grief when we had done wrong. When we were wayward father scolded, hut mother cried. It was : a very wakeful chair.. In the sick days of children other chairs could not keep awake; that chair always kept awake kept easily awake. The cLiur knew all the old lullabies and all those wordless sougs which mothers sing to their sick children songs in which all pity and compassion and sympathetic influences are combined. - ... That old chair has stopped rocking for a good many years. It may be set np in the loft or the garret, but it holds a queenly power yet. When at midnight yon weut into that grog shop to get the intoxicating draught, did you not hear a voice that said. My son, why tto in there?" And louder than the boisterous encore of the place of sinful' amusement, a voice saying, "My son, what do you do here?" : And when you went into the house of abandonment. a voice saying, "What would your mother do if she knew you were here?" And you were provoked with yourself, and you chnrged yourself with superstition and fa- I naticism and yonr head got hot with yonr own thoughts, and you went home and you weut to. bed, aud no sooner had you touched the bed than a voice said: "What! a prayerless pillow? Man! what is the matter?". This, You are too near your mother's rocking chair. Oh, pshaw!" you say. "There's noth ing in that. I'm nve hundred miles on from where I was born. I'm three thou sand miles off from the church whose bell was the first music I ever heard." I can not help that. You are too near your mother's rocking chair. "Oh." you say. there can't be anything in that. That chair has been vacant a great while." I cannot help that. It is all the mightier for that. It is omnipotent, that vacant moth er's chair.- It whispers, it speaks, it weeps, it carols, it mourns, it prays, it warns, it thunders. A young man went off and broke his mother's heart, and while he was away from home his mother died, and t he telegraph brought the son, and he came into the room where she lay and looked npon her ' face, and he cried out: "Oh, mother, mother, what your life could not do your death shall effect! This moment I give my heart to God." And he kept his promise. Another victory for the vacant chair. With reference to your mother the words of -my text were fulfilled, "Thou shalt be missed, because thy seat will be empty." THE INVALID'S CHAIR. I go on a little further, and I come to the invalid's chair. What! How long have you been sick? "Oh! I have been sick ten, twenty, thirty years." Is it possible? What a story of endurance. There are in many of the families of my congregation these invalids' chairs. The occupants oi them thiuk they are doing no good in the world, but that invalid's chair is the mighty pulpit from which they have been preach ing, all these years, trust in God. The first time I preached here at Lakeside, Ohio, amid tbe throngs present, there was noth ing that so much impressed me as the spec tacle of just one face the face of an in valid who was wheeled in on her chair. I said to her afterward. "Madam, how long have you been prostrated?" for she was lying flat in tbe chair. "Oh!" she replied, "I have been this way fifteen years." I said, "Do you suffer very much?" "Oh, yes," she said, "I suffer very much; I suffer all the time; part of the time I was blind. always suffer." "Well," I said, "can you keep yonr courage up?" "Oh, yes," she said, "lam happy, very happy indeed." Her face showed it. She looked the happiest of any oue on the ground. Oh, what a means of grace to tbe world, these invalid chairs. On that field of hu man suffering the grace of God gets its victory. Ldward Payson, the .invalid and Richard Baxter, tbe invalid, and Robert Hall, the invalid, and the ten thou saDd of whom tbe world has never heard but of whom all heaven is cognizant.- The most conspicuous thing on earth for God's eye and the eye of angels to rest on, is not a throne of earthly power, but it is the in valid's chair. Oh, these men and women who are always suffering but never com plaining these victims of spinal disease, and neuralgic torture, and rheumatic ex- cruciation will answer to the roll call of the martyrs, and rise to the martyr si tnroue, ana wui wave tne martyr s palm. But when one of these invalids' chairs becomes vacant how suggestive it is! No more bolstering np of the weary head. No more changing from Bide to side to get an easy position.- No more use of tbe band age and tbe cataplasm and the prescrip tion. That invalid's chair may be folded np or taken apart or set away, but it will never lose its queenly power; it will al ways preach of trust in God and cheerful submission. Suffering all ended now. With respect to that invalid tbe words of my text have been fulfilled. "Thou shalt be missed.-because thy seat will be empty. THAT EMPTY HIGH CHAIR. I pass on and 1 find one more vacant chair. It is a high chair. It is the child's chair. If that chair be occupied I think it is tbe most potent cbair in all the house- bold. All the chairs wait on it; all the chairs are turned toward it. It means more than David's chair at Saul's banquet.--At any rate it makes more racket. That is a strange bouse that can be dull with a child in it. How that child breaks up the hard worldliness of the place and keeps you young to sixty, seventy and eighty years of age. If you have no child of your own adopt one; It will open heaven to your soul. It will pay its way. Its crowing in the morning will give the day a cheerful j starting, and its glee at night will give the day a cheerful close. You do not like chil dren 1 - Then you had better stay out of heaven, for there are so many there they would fairly make yon crazy. Only about five hundred .millions of theiu. The old crusty Pharisees told the mothers to keep the children away from Christ. "You bother him," they said; "yon trouble the Master." - Trouble himl He has filled heaven with that kind of trouble. A pioneer in California says that for the first year or two after hUt residence in Sierra Nevada county there was not a ingle child in all the reach of a hundred miles. But the Fourth of July came, and the miners were gathered together and they were celebrating the Fourth with ora tion and poem and a boisterous brass band, and while the band was playing an infant's voice was heard crying, and all the miners were startled, and the swarthy men began to think of their homes on the eastern coast, and of their wives and chi Idren far away, and their hearts were thrilled with homesickness as they heard the babe cry. But themusic went on, and the child cried louder and louder, and the brass band played loader and louder, trying to drown ont the infantile interruption, when a i swarthy nrrner, the tears rolling down hi ! face, got up and shook his fist and said. 'I "Stop that noisy band, and give the baby a I chance." Oh, there was pathos in it, as -I well as good cheer in it. There is nothing i i to arou.-te and melt and subdue the soul. like a child's voice. Bnr when it goes away 1 from you the high chair becomes a higher j chair and there is desolation all about you. ; In three-fourths of the homes of this con-, i gregation there is a vacant high chair. Somehow you never get over it There is no one to put to bed at night; no one to ask strange questions about God and heaven. Oh, what is tbe use of that high chair? It is to call you higher. . What a drawing up ward it is to have children in heaven! And then it ia such a preventive against sin. If a father is going away into sin he leaves his living children with their mother; but if a father is going away into sin what is he going to do with his dead children float ing about him and hovering over his every wayward- step. Oh, speak out, vacant high chair, and say: "Father, come back from sin; mother, come back from world liness. I am watching you. . I am waiting for you." With respect to your child the words of my text have been fulfilled, "Thou shalt be missed, because thy seat will be empty." AN INVITATION UPWARD. .. - . My hearers, I have gathered up the voices of your departed friends and tried to intone them into one invitation upward. I set in array all the vacant chairs of your homes and of your social circle, and I bid them cry out this morning: "Time in short. Kitermcy is near- . iaae my oaviour. jae at peace witn my uou. uome np wnere i-am. We lived together on earth; come let us live together in heaven." We answer that invitation. We come. Keep a seat for us, as Saul kept a seat for David, bnt that seat shall not be empty. And oh! when we are all through with this world, anil we have shaken hands all around for the last time, and all our chairs in the home circle and in the outside world shall lie vacant, may we be worshiping God in that placa from which we shall go out no more forever. I thank God there will be no vacant chairs in heaven. There we shall meet again and talk over our earthly, heart breaks. How much you have been through since you saw them last? On the shining shore you will talk it all over." The heart aches. : The loneliness. Tbe sleepless nights. The weeping until . "u had no more power to weep, because the heart was withered and dried up. story of empty cradle and little shoe only half worn out never to be worn again, just the shape ot the foot that once pressed it. And dreams when yon thought the departed had come back again, and the room seemed bright with their faces, and you started up to greet them and in the effort the dream broke and yon found yourself standing amid room in the midnight alone. Talking it all over, and then, hand in hand, walking up and down in the light. No sorrow, no tears, no death. Oh, heaven! beautiful heaven! Heaveu where our friends are. Heaven where we expect to be. In the east they take a cage of birds and bring it to the tomb of the dead, and then they open the door of the cage, and the birds, flying out, sing. And I would today bring a cage of Christian consola tions to the grave of your loved ones, and I would open the door and let them fill all the air with the mnsic of their voices. Oh, how they bound in these spirits be fore the throne! Some shout with glad ness. Some break forth into uncontrolla ble weeping for joy. Some stand speech less in their shock of delight. They sing. They quiver with excessive gladness. They gaze on the temples, on the palaces, on the waters, on each other. They weave their joy into garlands, they spring it into tri umphal arches, they strike in on timbrels, and then all the loved ones gather in a great circle around the throne of God fa thers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, lovers and friends, band to hand around about the throne of God the circle ever widening hand to hand, joy to joy, jubilee to jubilee, victory to victory, "until the day break and tbe shadows flee away. Turn thou, my beloved, and be like a roe or a young hart upon the moun tains of Betber." To Keep the House CooL . Much of the heat of our houses is sup plied by the kitchen range, which Bridget keens red hot even in the doe davs. P re- I vent this by using a gas stove or oil stove as far as possible. Then shut np tight all rooms not in use. xvot only snouia tne shutters and windows be closed, but the blinds must be lowered to exclude every ray of light, and the doors locked to pre vent the running in and ont of the chiV i dren, who thus admit waves of heated air. Perhaps it would be neither wise nor prac ticable to hermetically seal all the rooms of a house, but one room, at least, can be so treated the parlor, and also the dining room between meals; the room selected should be closed early in the morning while the air has some freshness, and be fore the sun strikes the wi ndows; then it should not be opened until late in the after noon. . - Every house should have an accessible trap door in its roof, and when this is left open a current of heated air must rise through it and make a general draught over all the house. Awnings should be light in color, and should be at all windows and doors except those to the north. They are great helps in keeping out glare, but they should be chosen of a kind which is readily raised and lowered. After sun plentiful watering of your street down. and pavement, and of all the garden yon possess, will cool the air wonaertaiiy. Ladies' Home Journal. - - .- - Women and Men. Society; is composed,. . principally, " of women and ladies. They call upon eacn j other and bore each other fearfully, yet j each would feel mortally injured if the other did not call. Tbe natural prey of man is woman, and of woman, man; but man bas less leisure to pursue his natural instincts. -The appreciation by which a woman Is held by the male sex gives a good index, on the inverse ratio method, of the estimation in which she is held by her own. Nor; though husband and wife are one and indivisible, does it follow that the admirers of the one will beequally attached to the other? Politically speaking, Eng land and Ireland stand to each other in a very similar relationship. - Intellect in woman is appreciated by man only in so far as it qualifies her to appreci ate it in him. Murray's Magazine. Suits Against New York. Chief Bonner said the other day that claims aggregating at least $3,000,000 were pending against this city for alleged viola tions by the fire' department of patent rights. "Syndicates have been formed to push these claims," said the chief, "and there are two big suits in the courts now. One is for 'an alleged infringement of a patent on the heater stove used on our fire engines and the other suit relates to the Nibbs relief valve. The city authorities have been legally advised that none of these claims can hold against the city." New York Times. SJIIPES & RUflSLT, WMtaa'ls : ail Rstail Drtffiists. -DEALERS IK- Fine Imported, Key West and Domestic : CIGARS. PAINT Now is the time to paint your house and if you wish to get the beet quality and a tine color use the Shenvin, Williams Co.'s Paint "For those wishing to see the quality and color of the above paint we call their attention to the residence of S. L, Brooks, Judge Bennett, Smith French and others painted by Paul Kreft. J Snipes' & Kinersly are agents for the above paint for The Dalles. Or. Health is Wealth ! Dr. E. C. West's Nebvi ahb Bbain Tkbat mknt, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dizzi ness, Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headuche. NervouB Prostration caused bv the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental De pression, Softening of tbe Brain, resulting in In sanity aud leading to misery, decay and death i-remature jia Age, .Barrenness, ioss ot rower in either sex. Involuntary Losses and Spermat orrhoea caused by over exertion of the brain, self abuse or over indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. $1.00 a box, or six boxes for $5.00, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. WK OUARANTKE SIX BOXES To cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied by 5.00, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to re fund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by -' BLAKELET HOUGHTON, 1'rescrlption Druggists, 175 Second St. The Dalles, Or. I. U f JklLEH, -DEALER IN " SCHOOL BOOKS, STA TIONER Y, ' ORG A ATS, PIANOS, WATCHES, JEWELRY. Cor. Third and Washington Sta. t E. BJD flO., Real Estate, ' -Insurance, and Loan AGENCY. Opera House Bloek,3d St. Cleveland, Wash., June 19th, J.891.J S. IS Medicine Co.,' Gentlemen Your kind favor received, and iu reply would say thatI am more than pleased with the terms offered me on the last shipment of yonr medicines. There is nothing like them ever intro duced in this conntry, especially for La- grippe and kindred complaints. -1 have had no complaints so far; and everyone is ready with a word of praise for their virtues. Yours, etc., ' ' r M. Y. IIacklky. Chas. Stubling, : '. . paoraiKTos or ths ' ' New Vogt Block, Second St -WHOLE8ALE AND RETAIL - . Liquor v Dealer, MILWAUKEE iBEER ON TILVUGHT. B If Dalies CIlORlCle is here and has come to stay. It hopes to win its way to public favor by ener gy i industry and merit; and to this end we ask that you gftve it a fair trial, and if satisfied with its course a generous support. The Daily four pages of six columns each, will be issued every evening, except Sunday, and will be delivered in the city, or sent by mail for the moderate sum of fifty cents a month. Its Objects will be to advertise the resources of the city, and adjacent country, to assist in developing our industries, in extending and opening up new channels for our trade, in securing an open river, and in helping THE DALLES to take her prop er position as the Leading City of The paper, both daily and weekly, will be independent in politics, and in its criticism of political handling of local affairs, it will be JUST, FAIR AND IMPARTIAL We will endeavor to give all the lo cal news, and we ask of our object and course, be formed from the contents of the paper, and not from rash assertions of outside parties. THE WEEKLY, sent to any address for $1.50 per year. It will contain from four to six eight column pages, and we shall endeavor to make it the equal of the best. Ask your Postmaster for a copy, or address. THE CHRONICLE PUB. CO Office, N. W. Cor. Washington and Second Sts. T HE DALLES. The Gate City of the Inland Empire is situated at the head of navigation on the Middle Columbia, and is a thriving, prosperous city. V ITS TERRITORY. It is the supply city for an extensive and rich agri cultural an :i grazing country, its trade reaching as far south as Summer Lake, a distance of over t"wc hundred' miles. THE LARGEST WOOL MARKET. The rich grazing country along the eastern slope of the the Cascades furnishes pasture for thousands of sheep, the wool from which finds market here. xne jjaxj.es is -ne largest original wooi smppuig. - A- i A i a c rrr rr ii-n r. shipped last year. , , ITS PRODUCTS. The salmon fisheries are the finest on the Columbia, yielding this year a revenue of $1,500,000 -which can and will "be more than doubled in the near future. The products of the beautiful Klickital valley find market here, and the country south and east has thisK year filled the warehouses, and all available storage places to overflowing with their products. ITS WEALTH It is the richest city of its size on the coast, and its money is scattered over and is being used to develop, more farming country than is tributary to any other city in Eastern Oregon. ' Its situation is unsurpassed! Its climate delight ful! - Its possibilities incalculable! Its resources un limited! And on these corner stones she stands. Eastern Oregon. matters, as in its that your criticism