The Oregon Scout. 22 VOL. III. UNION, OREGON, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBB 4, 1880. NO, 30. THE OREGON SCOUT. An Independent weekly journal, Issued every Saturday by JONES & CHANCEY, Publishers nnd Proprietors. A. K. J oxer, I Kdltor. I I n. ClIANCCV, I Foreman. KATES OF SUlISCltHTION: Onocopy, one year fl M " Six inonthB 1 9 " Threo months Invariably cash In advance. If by any chanco subscriptions are nut paid till end or year, two dollars will bo obarged . Hates of advertising tundo known cu appli cation. Correspondence from all parts of tho county solicited. Address allcoininunlcations to A. K. Jones, Editor Oregon Scout, Union, Or. Lodge Directory. Gll.VNIl IlONIlH VAUW I.OIK1E, No. Ml. A. F. and A. M. Meets on tho second nnd fourth Saturdays of each month. O. F. Hum,, V. M. C. K. Davis, Secretary. Union Lotion, No. :w. I. 0. O. F. llofrulnr meetings on Friday evenings of each week at their hall in Union. All brethren In pood standing arc invited to attend, lly order or the lodge. S. W. Lo.NO, N. G. O. A. Thompson, Secy. Cliurcli Directory. M. E. Cnuitcii Dlvlno servico every Sunday ntiln.iniuid7p.nl. Sunday school at ;i p. in. Prayer meeting every Thursday evening utG:30. Kkv. Watson, Pastor. PiiEsuvTcniAN' Cnuitcii ltegtilar church services every Sabbath morning and evening. Prayer meeting each week on Wednesday evening. Sabbath school every Sabbath at 10 a. m. Kev. H. Vkii.non Hick, Pastor. St. John's Episcopal Chuhcii Servico every Sunday at 11 o'clock a. in, Hkv. W. H. Powei.u Hector. County Olllccrn. .1 ml go A. C. Craig Shcritr A. L. Saunders Clerk II. F. Wilson Treasurer A. F. llonson School Superintendent J. L. Hlndinan Surveyor E. SIihohIh Coroner E. H. Lewis COMMISSIONEHS. Geo. Ackles Jno. Stanley State Senator L. It. Hinchiirt ItKPHKSK.NTATIVES. F. T. Dick E. E. Taylor City Olllccr. Mayor D. II. Hecs councu,mi:n S. A.Pursel W. f). Jlcidleman J.S. Elliott J. II. Thonmson Jno. Kennedy A. Levy Heeordor M. P. Davis Marshal E. E. fates Treasurer J. D. Carroll Street Commissioner I.. Eaton Departure of Trnlita. Hegular east bound trains leavo atfl::!0a. m. West bound trains leavo at 4:30 p. m. I'ltOITSSIONAL,. J. K. ClUTJiS, ATl'OI'Kr A'i' LAW. Collecting and probato practlco specialties Ollice, two doorB south of Postolliee, Union, Oregon. R. EAKIN, Attorney at Law and Notary Public. Ofllce, ono door south of J. H. Eaton's store Union, Oregon. I. N. CROMWELL, M. I)., Physician and Surgeon Ofllce, ono door south ot J. 1!. Eaton's store, Union, Oregon. A. E. SCOTT, M. D., Has permanently located at North Powder, where lit! will answer till calls, CVA. 1JONIIAM RESIDENT DENTIST, UNION, OREGON. Dentistry in nil its lirnnclies. All opera tions warranted. Gold Filling ft specialty. Olllee Corner A and Main Streots. M. Uakkk. J. F. IiAKKlt. BAKER & BAKER, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, AM) REAL ESTATE AGENTS. La Grande, Oregon. D. B. REES, Notary Public AND Conveyancer. OFFICE-Stato Land Oflico building, Union, Union County, Oregon. II. F. BURLEIGH, Attorney tit H.snv, nl Khlnfo uml Collect Iiik: A' Land Oflico Business a Specialty. Otllco at Alder, Union Co., Orogon. JESSE IIAltUr.STV, J. W, SIIEI.TON SHELTON & HARDEST!, ATTOIOHYH A'I' I,,1M'. Will practice in Union, linker, Orunt, Unuitillu nnd Morrow Counties, also in the Supreme Court of Oregon, the Plntrict, Circuit nnd Supremo Courts of tlio United Stntes. Mining and Corporation bubinetis a sne cialty. Ollices iu Union and Cornucopia, Oregon. SHINGLES. Having leaned tho tdiine,lc mill belons'ms to h. 15. Ilinehnrt, we are prepared to tar nish a Hiiperior quality anil mnke ot idiiii gles at t lie following rates; Delivorod at Union, At tho Mills, $3.25 Per M $3.00 Tor M Wo respectfully solicit a Khnro ot the patronnsc. U0111NS & lUHlKHTS. A. L. COBB, M. D., PHYSICIAN ADD SURGEOk Having permanently located in Alder. Union county, Oregon, will bo found ready to attend to calls in all the various towns and settlements of the Wallowa valley. Cln-ouic aHhosiM-f a Specialty. jaDTMy motto is: "Live and let live." DEPOT HOTEL A. C. CRAIG, - - Proprietor. (Union Depot, Oregon.) f-'plcndid accommodations for commer cial men. Tables always supplied with the best tho market affords. JSS-IIoT AND CoiI MlNHlt.U. UTIlS-t5-3 KENTUCKY LIQUOR STORE AIVh SOBA I-'AtrrOBtY. Cor, Main and I Sts., - Union, Oregon. SIIICIOIAN A:KIiKV, Prop. Manufacturers and dealers in Soda Water, Sarsaparilln, Oinger Ale, Cream Soda and Champagne Cider, Syrups, otc. Orders promptly Idled. G. W. I D PHYSICIAN & SURGE ON, Union, Union County, Orogon. Onicoon A street. Itcsidenco threedoors south of the Court House. Special attention given to Surgical prac tice. W. R.JOHNSON, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Main Street, Union, Oregon. Plans nnd Specifications for DwelHngs, Ilarns and llndges furnished FUEIC OK CHARGE. Bridge Building' a Specialty- All kinds of Cabinet Work neatly execu ted. Repairing dono on short notice. None but tho best workmen employed, and satisfaction guaranteed. Call and interview mo. FRUIT AND SHADE TREES APPLE, PEAR, PLUM, PRUNE, PEACH APRICOT, CRAI1APPLE, CHERRY. SHRUBBERY AND SHADE TREES Of woll known varieties, suitable for this climate. Can alio furnish foreign sorts at one-third tho prico asked by cistern can vassers. 1 desire to sell trees at prices that people can afford to buy. L. J. ROUSE, Cove, Oregon. Or. Van Wonciscar 132-134 Tttirfl Street, Portland, Oregon IS a regular graduate in medicino; has been longer engaged in tho special treat ment of all Venereal, Sexual and Chronic DisenseB than any other physician in the West, us city papers show, and old resi dents know; 1,000 toward for any casu which ho fails to cure, coming under his treatment, by following his directions. DR. VAN is tho most successful Catarrh, Lung and Throat Doctor in America. Ho will tell you your trouble without asking you a singlo question, and WARRANTS PERMANKNTCURK in tho followiagcases: NERVOUS DKDIL1TY, Spermatorrhea, Seminal Losses, Sexual Decay, Failing Memory, Weak Eyes, Stunted Develop ment, Lack of Energy, Impoverished Wood, Pimples, Impediment to Marriage; also Wood and Skin Diseases, Syphilid, Eruptions, Hair Falling, Uono Pains, Swell ings, Sore Throat, Ulcers, Effects of Mer cury, Kidney nnd Uladder Tumbles, Weak Rack, llurning Urine, Incontinence, Gonor lirea, Gleet, Stricture, receives M'arching treatment, prompt relief nnd cure for life. NERVOUS Diseases (with or without dreams), Diseased discharges cured prompt ly without hindrance to business. ROTH SEXES consult confidentially. If iu trouble cali or write. Delays are dang erous. Disenecs of the Eyo or Ear, Ulceration or Catarrh, internal or external, Duafness or Pnralynis. Singing or Roaring NoUen, Thickened Drum, etc., permanently cured. LOST MANHOOD porfectly restored. CANCERS AND TUMORS permanently removed without tho knifo or caustic. Medicine compounded nnd furnished to nil patients at ollice strictly pureand vege table. Guarantee of I'titiiANK.ST cures in all rases undertaken. Consultation free and strictly unfldenlinl. All correspon dence promptly attended to; medicine Kent by express to any address free from oxpot ure. Call or address Private Dihpensary Nos. ia2-13i Third St., Portland, Oregon, Terms strictly cash. Ollice hour 6 a. in. to 8 p. ta. W. CAPPS, M. D., Surgeon and Houiconatliic Pliysiciap. Union-, OltlMlON. Will go to any part of Eastern Oregon when solicited, to perform operations, or for consultation. Medicine FurnWliod 'Without UMin Charge. Olllco adjoining .lones llroa.' Store. Uuo. WltlOIlT, President. W. T. Wkioiit, Casliier. UNION, OREGON. Does a General Ranking llusincss. Buys and sells oxchange, and discounts com mercial paper. Collections carefully attended to, and promptly reported. "J. 3 2 S si 5 51 S3 5 O 0 5 o bD 23 a o rt 0) CD a 'A 2 rs to ii o B m llr a '5-: 8 2 u u 3 gS rt S o J , y rt K 7 jio u U C3 w Q 'Ji U C-i 2 a CO a c MASON & HAMLIN OrgatiB Pianos Viiexccllcd r.-- can Favo From $J0 to ZVO on tho J.UU purcimeo or an lnstrumont uy uuylnp tnroiiL'ii W.T. IVJIICIIT, Agent, Union, Ogn Oove Oheese Factory. JAMES PAYNE, Proprietor. Having procured tho services of Mr. M. A. Sickles, a chceso maker who lias had many years' experienco in the largest fac tories ol Wisconsin, l icel comment, mat J can supply my patrons with a quality sec ond to uono on tho market. If Orders promptly filled. Address, Jami:r Pav.nb, Cove, Union Count j. Ore. Tonsorial Rooms Two doom south of Jones Itros.' store Union, Oregon, J. M. Johnson, PllOPIUETOIt, Hair cutting, shaving and shampooing done neatly nnd in tho best style. CITY v MEAT : MAEKET Main Street, Union, Oregon, BkNSON IlRO.'B - - PltOI'ItlKTOHS. Kcop constantly on hand BEEF. FORK., VEAL. MUTTONS AU SAGE, HAMS, LARD, ETC. IAL v HOTEL Union, Oregon. Dan. Ciianulkk, Pnomimou Havinir recently purchased tills hotel and refitted it throughout, I am prepared to accommodate the hungry public in first class style. Call and see me. Lawik Sam i'lk Roons for tho accominodatlon of oiuinorciul travelers. RUTH'S WONDROUS DEVOTION, LESSONS DRAWN FROM THE STORY OF THE YOUNG WOMAN. Tho Right Path the Best Even Though Most Difficult to Pursue. Death Robbed of All Anguish and tho Soul Mado Roady for the Judg ment Day. Sj.rcial to the Jdinsns City Times. OuiMMiv, Oxt., Auk. 2:. The Rev. 1. De Witt TalmsKV, D.D., Is attending this old historical cmnu-nicctltig for the third time. People from all parts of Canada attended the forvlce to-day at which he was the preacher. Ills text was" Ruth I., 10 and 17: "Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from fol lowing after thee; for whither thou guest I will go: and where thou lodgest, 1 will lodge; thy people shall ho my people, and thy God my(!od; where thou dlest, will 1 die, and there will I he hurled; the Lord do po to nie, nnd more also, If aught hut death part thee nml inc." The following Is .Mr. Tahuage's sermon : Famine In .ludca. Upon fields distinguish ed for fertility the hllght came, and at the door of princely ahodes Want knocked. Turn ing his hack uKn his house and his lands. Ellmch'ch took his wife Naomi and his two fons and started for the laud of Moab In search of bread, (letting Into Moab, his two tons married Idolaters Ruth, the name of one, Orpin; the name of tho other. Great calami ties came upon that household. Elhnclech dlrd and his two sons, leaving Naomi, the wife, and the two daughters-In law. Poor Naomi! Iu 11 strange land and her husband and two sons dead. She must go hack to Judca. She can not stand It In a place where everything reminded her of her sorrow. Just ns now, sometimes you sec persons moving from one houc to another or from one city to another, and you can not understand It tin til you find out that it is because there were as sociations with a certain place that they could no longer hear. Naomi's nr.TritN to jl'dka. Naomi must start for the laud of Judca, hut how shall she get there i Hetneen Moab and the place where she would like to go there are deserts; there are wild beasts ranging the wilderness; there arp savages going up ami down, and there Is the awful Dead bca. Well, you say, she came over the road once, she can do so again. Ah I when she came over the road before, she had the strong arms of her husband and her two sous to defend her; now they are all gone. The hour of parting has come and Naomi must be separated from her two daughters-in-law, Ruth and Orpah. They were tenderly attached, these three mourners'. They had bent over the same sick hod; they had moved In the same funeral procession; they had wept over the same grave. There the three mourners stand talking. Naomi thinks of the time when she left Judea with a prince for her companion. Then thev all think of the marriage festivals, when Naomi's two sous were uuiteu to lliese women who have now exchanged the wreath of the bride for the veil of the mourner. Naomi starts for the laud of Judca, and Ruth and Orpah re solve to go a little way along with her. KI'TII'S NOUl.H SELF SACUIPIL'U. They have gone hut n short distance when Naomi turns aruiiud and savs to her dauirh- ters-ln-law. 4,Go hack. There may be days of brightness yet for you in your native land. I can't bear to take y6u away from your home and the homes o"f our kindred. I am old and troubled. Go not along with me. Tho J-onl deal gently with you 11s vo havo dealt with the dead unci with me." lint they persisted In irohur. and bo the three traveled on until alter awhile Naomi turns around again and begs them to go back. Orpah takes the suggestion, and after a sad uartlntr troes awavt hut Ruth, grand and glorious Ruth, turn her hack upon her home. Sho sav8: "I can't bear to let that old mother go alone. It Is my duty to go with her." And throwing her arms around weeping Naomi she pours out her houl In the tenderness, and pathos, ami Christian eloquence of my text: "Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after nice; jor wanner mou goesl, I win go; anil whither thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy peo ple Khali bo my people, and thy God my God; where thou dies:. I will die, and there will I be burled; tho Lord do so to me, ami more aiso, ii angnt uut (team part tnee ana me." Five choices Ruth made In that text, and five choices must we all, make if we ever want to get to heaven. " C1IOOS1NO Tlin fllltlSTIAN's OOD. Flrpt In the first place, If we want to be come uiirisuans, we must. lll;e ittilli in the text, choose the Christian's God. llcautlful Ruth looked up Into the wrinkled face of iMaomi and sold: "iliy God snail be my God." You see it was" 11 change of gods. Naomi's God was Jehovah; Ruth's god was Chemosh, the divinity of the Moahltes, whom she had worshiped under the symbol of a black star, .'mow sue comes out irom under mat black-starred dlvlnitv, and takes tho Lord in whom there is no darkness at all; the sliver starred dlvlnitv to whom tho meteor pointed down in Bethlehem; tho sunshiny God of whom the 1'halmlst wrote: "The Lord God Is a fun." And so, my friends, If we want to be come Christians we must change godn. This world is the Chemosh to most people. It It a black-starred god. It can heal no wounds. It can wipe away no sorrows. It can pay no debts. It ran save no undying khiI. It Is a great cheat, so many thousand miles in diame ter and to many thousand miles In circumfer ence. If I should put this audience under oath, one-half of them would swear that this world is a liar. It is a blank which makes large advertisement of what It has In the vaults and of the dividends that it declares, and tells us If we want happiness, all w'c have got to do is to coma to that bank and apply for It In tiie hour of need, we go to that bank to get happiness, and wo find that tho vaults are empty, and ull reliabilities have ab sconded and we are swindled out of every thing. 0 thou black-starred Chemosh, Jiow many are burning Incense at thy shrine 1 ' JEHOVAH'S WOVIJltOUS 1IKAUTIKS. Now, Ruth turned away from this flod Chemosh and she took Naomi's God. Who was thatf That God that made the world and nut you In it. The God that fashioned the heaven and filled It with blissful Inhabitants. The God w hoe lifetime study it has been to make you mid all His creatures happr. The God who watched us in childhood and led us through tho gauntlet of infantile distresses, feeding us when we were hungry, pillowing us when wo were somnolent, and sending Ills only son to wash away our pollution with the tears and blood of His own eye and heart, and offering to ho our everlasting rest, comfort nnd ccttacy. A loving God. A sympathetic God. A ureal hearted God. All allcmorn piinlng God. A God who flings Himself on this world In a very abandonment of everlast ing ulfirtlou. The clouds, tho veil of Ills face. The tea, the aquarium of Ills palace. The tart, the dew drop 011 Ills lawn. The dod of Hannah's prayer and Kstber's consecration ami Mary's broken heart and Ruth's loving and bereft spirit. O, choose yo between Chemosh and Jehovah! The one servico In pain and disappointment; the other service 1 brightness and life. I have tried both. I chooe the service of God because I was ashamed to do otherwise. 1 felt It would he Imbecile for me to choose Chemosh above Je hovah. O happy ilv t ti At nteil my choice 1)11 I lice, my S lor tint my (livll Well may this glow hit: Imtn rrjnlce. Ami tell Its raptures nil nliroutl. O linpry boml that "! my rows To llhu who lm-rlts ull my loir! l.cl cheerful anthem till llUhou.r, While 10 Iila nicri'il throuc 1 move. Illch Heaven, that heprd the aulcmn vow, 'I lint o rcnewcil uliall ilally hear; Till In llfe'n latent hour 1 how, Ami bleu In death a hoiul o dear. roLLOwtxo Tin: hioiit path. Second Again; If we want to he Chtls tlans, like Ruth In the text we must take the Christians path: "Where thou goest, 1 will Co," cried out the beautiful Moabltcss of Naomi, the mother-in-law. Dangerous prom ise that. There were deserts to bs crossed. There were jackals that came down through the wilderness. There were bandits. 'I here was the De.ul Sea. Naomi savs: "Until von must go back. You are too delicate to take this Journey. Yon will give out Iu the llrt live miles. " You cannot go. You hnve not the physical stamina or tho moral courage to go with me." Ruth resjiouds: "Mother, I am going anyhow. If I stay Iu this land I will be ove rliorue of the Idolaters. If 1 go alone with von 1 shall serve (Soil. Give me that bundle. Let nie carry it, I am going with you, mother, anyhow," And if we want to serve God we must do as Ruth did, rryingout: "Where thou goest, I will go." Nevermind the Dead sea. Afoot or horseback. If theie be rivers to fonl, we must ford them. It there be mountains to scale, we must scale them. If there be ene mies to light, wo must tight them. It re quire grit and pluck to get from Moab to Ju dab. O. how many Christians there arc who can he diverted from tho path by a quiver of the Hp, Indicative of scorn I They do not sur render to temptation, hut thev bend to It. And if In a company there be those who tell unclean stories they will go no far as to tell something 011 tho 'margin between tho tho pure and impure. And if there be those who swear In the room and use the ruogh word "damn" thev will go so far as to tiso the word "darn'' anil looking over the fence wish ing they could go farther; but as to any de termination, like KntliV, to go tho whole road of all that is right, they have not the grace to do it. They hnve not In all their body as much courage as Huth had in her little linger. O, my friends, let us start for heaven and go clear through! In the river that runs bv the gate of the city we shall wash oil ail our bruises, TUB IIOMK 01' A CltlUSTIA.V. When Dr. Chalmers printed his astro nomical discourses they were read In tho haylofts, In the Holds, In the garrets and In tho paliccs, because they advocated tho idea that the stars were inhabited. O, hearer, does not your soul thrill with the thought that there Is another world beauti fully Inhabited 1 Nay, more, that you, by the grace ot God, may become ono ot its glorious citizens) Third Again I remark: If we want to become Christians, like Ruth In the toxt, we must .choose the Christian's habitation. "Wlicro thou lodgest, will 1 lodge," cried Ruth to Naomi. She knew that wherever Naomi stopped, whether It were hovel or mansion, there would be a Christian home, and sho wanted to bo In It. What do I mean by 11 Christian home I I mean a homo In which the Bible Is the chief book; a. home In which tho family kneel In prayers', a home in which father and mother am practical Christians; a homo in which on Sabbath, from sunrise to sunset, there is profitable converse, and cheerful song, and hiiggeHtlous of a hotter world, Whether the wall be frescoed or not, or only a cell ing of uuplancd rafters; whether marhlo lions arc couchant at tho front entrance, or a plain latch is lifted by a tow-string, that homo is tho aute-e.liainber of heaven. A man never gets over having lived In such an early home. It holds you in un oternal grip. Though your parents may have been gone forty years, the tears of pnl tencu and gladness that were wept at the family altar still glitter In your memory. Nay, do you not now feel warm and hot on your hand tho tears that mother shed thirty years ago, when, oue cold winter night, sho camo and wrapped von up in tho lieu and prayed for your welfare here and for your everlasting welfare before tho throne! sr.TTISO A (1001) KXAMPI.E. O, ye who are to set up your own home, sco that ft be a Christian home I Let Jesus make the wine at the wedding. A homo without God Is an awful place, there are so manv perils to threaten It, and God Himself is so bitterly against It; but "tho Lord encampeth around about tho habitation of the lust." What a grand thing it is to have God stand cuaru at me aoor. ami tlio l.oni Jesus tlin family physlcluu; and the wings of angels tho canopy over the pillow, and the Lord of Glory a perpetual guesi. 1011 say 11 is imiiortaut that the wife and mother be a Christian. I say It Is just as lmortant that tho husband and father ho a Christian. Yet how many clever men there are who say: ".My wlfo does all the religion of my house. I am a worldly man; hut I have confidence iu her and I think she will bring the whole family up all rlcht." It will uot do. my brother. The tact that you arc not u Christian has more inllueuco 011 vour family than the fact that your wlfo 'is 11 Christian. Your children will sav: "rather' a very good man; he Is not a Christian and If ho can risk tho future I can risk tho future." O, fattier and husband I join your wlfo on tho road to heaven uml at night gather your family at the altar. Do you say: "I can't pray. I am a man of few words and I don't think I could put half a dozen sentences to gether in such a prayer." You can pray; you cau. If your child wero down with scarlet fever, and the next hour wero to decide its recovery or its death, jou would pray In sobs, and groans, and paroxysms of earnestness. Yes. vou can nrav. When tho eternal llfo of your household may depend ujxhi your stippll- canon, lei your Knees nmner aim go uown, but if you still Insist that you cannot compose a prayer, then buy or borrow a prayer lisisa- nt Iij. Vnl. I ol,irl. ..n.l . 1 1. .......... - family, and put your prayer book on a chair, aud kneel down beloro it, and In a solemn and hushed presence of God, gather up all your sorrows, and temptations, and sins, and cry out: "Good Lord, deliver us." THE IIBST Of COMPANION!). Fourth Again I remark: If we want to he- come Christians, like Ruth In the text, wo must choose Chrlstlau associations. "Thvneo- Rio shall be my people," cried out Ruth to laoml. 'Tho folks vou associate with, I want to associate with. 'Ihey will como and see me, and I will iro and see tliem. I want to mnvn in the highest of all circles, tlio circle ot God's elect j and tlicrefore, mother, I am going back with you to tho land of Judah." Do you who are seeking after God and I sutipoan there aro many such In tills presencedo you who paraphernalia." Well, this Is a free country, and you shall have the right of choice, but let mo tell you that tho purest mirth, and the moat untrammeled glee and tho greatest resilience of soul aro iuslde Christian compan ionship and uot outside of It. 1 have tried both styles of companionship tho companion ship of the world and the companionship of Christ; and I know by experience. 1 have been now so long in tho tuuthlny experienco aud society of Christian people that when I un coinpciieu to to lor a lime wu e amid in. ' are sccKing aiier uou preier utirisuan society to worldly society I "No," you say; "I prefer the world's mirth, and tho world's laughter, nnd the world' Innuendo, unit tho world's tense worldlv society I feel depressed. It la like going oiit of a June garden Into an Ico house. Men never know fully how to laugh until thev become Christians. The world's laughter has a jerk of dissatisfaction at tlie cad; hut when a man Is consecrated to God, and he is all right for the world to conic, then when he Iauirhs body, mind and soul crackle. Let n giotip of ministers of tho gospel, gather ed from all denominations of Christians, be together In a dining hall, or in a social circle, nnd you know they are proverbially jocund. O, j'p unconverted people I 1 know not how you Van stand It down iu that moping, bilious, saturnine, worldlv association. Come up Into the sunlight of Christian ocletv tho'-e jieoplo for whom nit things are working right now, and will work riulit forever. I tell you that the sweetest j.ipoidcas grow In the Lord's gar den; that the largest crapes are from the vine yards of Canaan; that the most sparkl'ng "Hoods break forth from the Rock of Ages. Do not tin) much pity this Utith of my text; for she is going to become Joint owncrbf thegreat harvest fields of lioaz. PKlTlt UOIlllIU) OF ALL PAIN. Fifth Once more: If we want to become Christians, we must, like Ruth In the text, choose the Christian dentil and burial. She exclaimed: "Where thou dlest will I die, and there will 1 be burled." I think wo all, when leaving tins world, would Hue to bo surround ed bv Chrlslian Influences. You would not like to have your dying pillow surrounded by caricaturist, and punsters, and wine bibbers. How would j ou like to have John Leech come with his London plctorals, and Christopher North with his loose fun, and Tom Hood with his rhvnilng jokes, when you are dying! Vol No I No I Let me have u Christian nurse In my last sickness. Let me have a Christian physician to administer the medicines. Let It ho a Christian wife, or parent, or child, that watches the going out of the tides of my moral existence. Let Christian men come "in and read of the Illuminated valley, and the ex tinguishment of grief, and drawn tho hoarse blasts ot deatli with the strains of "Mount l'isgah" and "Saint -Martin." In our last moment wo will all be children. Said Dr. Guthrie, the famous Scotch clergy man, when dying: "Sing mo a bairn's hymn." Yes, we w ill all bo children then. In that hour the world will stand confounded around us. Our fi lends may c-y oyer us; tears will not help us. They may look sad; irlint wo want Is radiation in ihe last moment, thinking It will help them to die. In our last moment we want that bread which came down from heaven. -Who will glvo it to usl O, wo want Christian people In the room, so that If our hope begins to struggle thev may say: "Courage brother! all Is welll Courage! THIS LAST MOMKXTS OP LIFE. In that expiring moment I want to hear the old songs that wo used to sing In church and prayer-niocting. In that last moment I want to hear the voice ot some Christian friend pleading that tho sins and short-comings ot my life may Iks forgiven, and the doors of heaven may be opened before my entranced spirit. Come sins to me of hearrn, Vlienlrm about to die; Sing oiik uf holy testacy, To watt my soul un high. Yes; Christian people on cither side the bed, and Christian people at tho foot of the bed. and Christian peoplo to closo my eyes, and Christian people to carry me out, and Chris tian people to look after those whom I leave behind, and Christian peoplo to remember me a little while after I am gone. "Where thou dlest, will I die, and there will I be burled." Sometimes an epitaph covers up more than it expresses. Walking through Greenwood cemetery I have sometimes seen au Inscription which impressed mo how hard the sculptor and friends were trying to make out a good story In stone. I saw from the inscription that tho man or woman burled there had died without hope. Tho inscription told me the man was a member of congress, or a bank president, or Bomo prominent citizen, but said nothlug about his soul's destiny. The body Is nothing. Tho soul I The soul! And here by this In scription I seo that tills man was born In 1S0O und died In 1875. Scvcnty-llvo years on earth and no Christian hope I O, If la all the ceme teries of your city tho graves of those who havo gone out of tills world unprepared should sigh on tho wind, who would havo tho ncrvu to drive through such aplacel If all those who havo gone out of this world unprepared could como back to-day and lloat through this air, telling the story of their discomfiture, this audience would fall Hat on Its face, asking to bo rescued from the avalanche of horror. 1H5APY POll TUP. JUIIflMKNT PAY". My hearers, do vou wonder that this Ruth of niy toxt made fho Christian's choice and closed It with the ancient form of impreca tion upon her own soul, it sho ever forsook NaomH "The Lord do so to me, and mom also, If aught hut death part theo and me." They were to live together. Come tho Jackals, como tho bandits, roll on Dead heal My hearers, would you not llko to ho with your Christian friends forever! JIavg there not gone out persons from your household whom you would like to spend eternity with! They were mild aud loving and gentle and beautiful whllo here. You havo no idea that tho Joys of heaven have made them worse. Chooso their Christ and you may have their heaven. They went in washed through tho blood of the Lamb, and vou must have tho same glori ous ablution. With holy violence I put my bauds on you to-day, to push you on toward the Immediate choice of tills only Saviour. Havo lllm you must, or perish world without end. Klect this moment as tho ono of contrition aud transport. O, glvo ono intense, earnest, behoving, loving gaze Into the wounds opened for your eternal salvation, Some of you I confront for the first and the last time until tho Judgment, and then we shall meet. Will you be ready I Montul Dlscitso Frequent Among' Sov croitfiiH. Tho death of tho King of Bavaria lias called forth a (rrcnt number of ps nays and treatises on mental insanity aud its causes. In ono of these tho woll-known Gorman scientist, Professor llackol, points out that mental diseaso is much mora frequont among tho high er and highest clasos of society than among tho common people. Ho says: "Mental disuasos tiro romarktibly fre quent among sovereigns. Tho cele brated specialist for diseases of tho brain has shown that tho proportion of lunatics in roiguiug families, as com pared to that of tho population of tlio r country, is as b'O to 1 that is to say, that lunacy occurs sixty times as often in reigning families as among ordinary mortals. If similar accurate statistics woro taken as to tlio frequency of luna cy among tho nobility it would at onco uppuar Hint this class also furnishes n much largor contingent of 1 unities than iion-arJstooratIo humanity. Tlio catiso of this is the unnatural or one sided education and ,tho artiiielal scp- tho rust of their fellow creatures, which separatum causes many dark sides of numau nature to ueeoiaq particularly developed artificially trained, tu) ft woro, and by the lavy of - her&ditles they aro more strongly tUtVolopwl iu every c.imin.llni. o.i..oi.olUuS Hal) It,, ft 0UUVCCUIIII: BHW.nm,y , m SI j i . ' IBB . QaztUt 3sr