NEW STATE Yoting in the Two Dakotas, Washington and Montana, ELECTIONS, The Scramble For the Capital “in South Dakota, | | tary Blaine, who delivered an address of wel- On the second day after the elections in the | four new States the following results were given in dispatches, subject to revision by later returns after this side of our paper went to press: ‘eautiful weather was enjoyed through- out the Northwest on election day and a full vote was polled in each of the four new States. The returns eame in slowly, the polls having closed late and the tickets being long. In North Dakota the returns indicate n victory for the Republicans, although the Democrats claim that the Congressman is in doubt, The Constitution was adopted by a majority, but the Prohibition article ted m of officers and Cong in South Dakota cut rather a small f the result was sure to be Republic the contest for the location of the capital overshadowed all else It asserted that even votes on Prohibition were traded for votes on the capital location, and that the most thorough campaigning was as chaff be fore the wind when the capital question was mentioned The majority as shown by the vote for Meilotte, for Governor, and Pickler and Gif ford for Congress, will be from 18 000 to 12.- 0X0. The Republicans will have a large ma Jority in the Legislature, thus insuring the election of two Republican United State Senators. The Constitution carried al most unanim asly id minority representa tion is so far in the minority as to be almost lost sight of. There is hardly a t Prohibition has carried Un the Capital question Plerre lurality of 2000, and Huron fs sec M. Thomas, Suprem is elected over W 1d tjority, this i v in the Sta ssmen ure, as wn, and 1% is will h wing th te ition will carry “a Constit: rity onstitution jorities Dertyen the mtin. mys that th m of Carter nr hy + paper also he ie 2 " tan sidered } yes nearly vesterday fs 180) the same but the ma. Co — - EIGHT LIVES LOST. A Schooner Capsized and Only Two of Her Crew Escape LL The schooner Erie Wave, commanded by Stafford, Port Rowan and Clear Creek, Ontario, and eight persons were drowned aground for some days had an extra <rew aboard to assist in gett ng her A squall struck her, and she capsized Tour of the crew were drowned, and also four landsmen who were on board. Two of the from reached shore. The names of four of the drowned are Captain Thomas Stafford lobert Marlatt, Edwand Soper and Ge Bell. al Tae English and Italian have signed a more stringent convention than has hitherto existed new convention deel slave traffic to be an act of piracy, and enables eruisers to deni more promptiy with slavers The Molditerr {from the operatic fi - Captain capsized between The vessel had been and WwEe Government anti-slavery The res the Cay wd Aan excluded trond ! 1% THE MARKETS. YO Booves : Milch Cows, com. to good Calves, comumon to prime Sheep AE Lambs ....... Hogs Live Dressed .e Flour—City Mill Extra Patsuts, . Wheat-—No. 2 Red RBye—-State................. Barley —Two-rowed State. , Corn— Ungraded Mixed. .... Oats No, | White, NEW YORK Eggs—Statoand Penn, . 3 SShaap—Madium to Good. .., 4 25 Lam alr tolond. i: bh Hogs to Cholos Yorks 4 J r-Family,............. § BB. Wheat--No. € Northern. ... Corn-—No, 8, Yellow........ Oats—No, 3, White... ...... Barley No, 1 Canada. ...... BOSTON, Flour—Spring Wheat Pat's. tener Y Nera us Corn—8 Outs—No. 2 White. ......... o-Htate Ry. WATERTOWN (MASS. CATTLE MARKEY, Bee! —Drescwd ! Live wei Hogs Ni Rie anrivens PHILADELIYLA, Flo Penn, 1: wit No, 8383 833assasss LE rE Biaiivis MY. cvinnna a Red, Oot... | Cincinnati..." 71 AMERTOA'S CONVENTION. .| REV. DR. TALMAGE. I'he International Congress to Meet at Washington, The delegates to the International Ameri- can Congress at Washington assembled at the State Department, and at 12 o'clock, by | appointinent, proceeded in a body from a waiting room to the diplomatic reception room. Here they were presented to Secre- come delegates wore os corted to the White House, where they were presented to President Harrison. Short complimentary addresses were made by sev. eral of the delegates, which were replied to by the President in the same courteous tone. The scope and purposes of the Congress, ns stated in the law passed May 24, 1855, are to consider: First— Measures that shall tend to preserve the peace and promote the prosperity of the several American States Secondly — Measures toward the formation of an American Customs Union, under which the tradeof the American nations with each other shall, so far as possible and profitable, be promoted Thirdly —The establishment of regular and frequent communication between the ports of the eral American States and the ports of each other Fourthly —The establishment of a uniform system of customs regulations in each of the independent American States, to govern the node of importation and exportation of mer andise and port dues id charges, a uni- rim method of determining the classifica- and valuation of such merchandise in the v of ea untry, and a uniform system { invoices; and the subject of the sanitation { ships and quarantine The adoption of a uniform system ts and measures and laws to protect t copyrights and trade f either country in the Ww the extradition of criminals { acommon silver each government, the in all commercial citizens of all of the Dobe amet the hy ho 5 rights, Citizens « he ad fon © | tender of t between the upon and ior adoption to their respec nents ( plan of arbi. t mates and differ after oxist rec bse tins be THE NATIONAL GAME, Over or ired Lea won by a sl LovisviL: lost in the An Batowrs games than any Dexxy and Glass & their paTmAans LARKSOSN Joston won Kerry in bases = his size Presto YS the to the bit Was pr the League cf New Y Boston, ar exept that a tis Jors I. Roo and attorney that the League players for 1 ourt THIS year's contest B wship pennant wast ring the last bet we the and the Bostons 0 coustantly Yorks THE annus) meeting will be held Now © There be 1 The Il be § all be done und. weedidas of a Be in will wm Iv Clarkson goss As it highly proba by his wif He wn and will return in 8 y dates for the Harvar Tniversity sity nine wa the Philadel eased to Indian oth in his posi Glase ANDREWS, the ph IA management rece apolis, made a great » tion and at the gards him as a fl, or niiy re OE Cay jist hat tain WOR ree great a is ten CAarray Hasrox, of is one of the most pr Brotherhood Lo that the players will the gs, who minent members of 4 Ball Plavers, saves demand of the League eriain concessions, and that thew on Sons must be met. If they are not met. the plavers will certainly adopt decisive meas ures, $ orf Na IN the last ame at Cleveland between the home nine and the Bostons, ( aptain Kelly of the latter club, who was sitting on the player's bench, but was not playing, took umbrage at a decision of 1 mpire MeQuaid and threatened to strike him Kelly, smid ronsiderable excitement, was ejectet from the ground LEAGUE RECORD w New York..... re Boston, , .., Chioago. ... Philadelphia Pittsburg ‘ Cleveland, ,......... Indisnapolis. .......... 80 Washington........... 41 AMERICAN ASSOULATION Wom, Brooklyn. ............. #8 Bt louis. ............. 85 Athletle............... 1 BECORD, Toms 43 —— Columbus. ............ 8 Oity....onnis iB A CrresTix Pave, who died not his farm near Reggio Station, Bernard, La., was said to have been 118 After the preliminary ceremonies at the | State | saying that there oan be no | from the uncanny thin other by New York and Oh THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON. Subject: “The Coming World's Fair; Shall it be Made a Blessing or a Curse?” Text: “They traded in thy fairs." kiel xxvii, 12 Fairs may be for the sale of goods or for the exhibition of goods on a small scale or a large scale, for county or city, for ous nation or for all nations. My text brings us to the fairy of ancient Tyre, a city that is now extinet Part of the city was on an island, and part on the mainland. Alexander, the onguerer, was much embarrassed when he found so much of the city was on an island. for he bad no ships. But his military genius was not to be balked. Having marched his army to the beach, he ordered them to tear up the city on the mainland and throw it into the water and build a causeway two hundred feet wide to the island NO they took that part of the ich was on the mainland and 8 causeway of timber and brick and =t on which his army marched to the capture of that part of the city which was the island, as thourh a hostile army iid put Brooklyn into the Kast River, and over it march to the capture of New Yor That Tyrian AUNMWRY Alexander's Bry there, and by al manently united that it renont Eze city wl with it built ne sh ® which has the island wits to Kor t Iuvial the Islan is no ! The sand greatest of DUrving oitis nav mrt Baalbe and Memphis and Cart Laxor and Jeriche you so mighty, is now tH per inland but aj ®il un for lake ’ red up 1 wi) on nn Palm most Hd bowen t es ot y Mediterranea; wine f H day afte fair ai world's {air ir, and t has ration of 1402. ther ry in INEl a w all proced ng nations with God speed the commemorated ja w ture and music and | quent and stupendoas tary expenditure and priations which t patriot has eve age that the w with such and his for the last few dave by flight of land birds floating branches of and Columbus was down in cabin stadving Martin standing on and wit ) mithwest, eried land! las And (Horia Exoelsis i In raining tears on all three expedition Most wiate ti and Ch "a radi world's 182. Leaving to others the site of the been shall iid Srey the rthy of all the a: pyrotechnics and « planning and nn congressional Kppros vent nit heard of that of Cola en ov had boon stp red berries w hi the the sta ot t : deck n Wan = he ships o and pats COIN Ie appro stian will fair disruesion eX po and 1 der not that some ve or six of our struggling to bave it, for it will gi city to which it i= as signed an impulse © prosperity for red. years—Isay, lens ing to others the selection of the particular locality to be thus honored, I want to say some things from the point of Christian patriotism which ought to be sald, and the earlier the better, that we get thousands of people talking in the right direction. and that will make healthful public opinion t you to consider praverfolly what 1 feel called upon of God as an American citizen and as a preacher of righteousness to utter My first suggestion is that it is not wise as certainly it is not Christian, to continue this wide and persistent attempt of Ameri can cities to belittle and deprecate other cities. It has been going on for years, but now the spirit seems to culminate in this dis cussion as to where the World's Fair shal! be held, astyle of discussion which has a tenden. ey to injure the succes of the fair as a great moral and patriotic sn 0, after t oality has bests d u : Is such a thing as bealthful rivalry between cities, but you will bear me out in pd to come about each , by Chicago Ht. Paul and Minveapolis, by tie, and all through the " the to TIN | ition i of ! mighty law and medicine and art and What schools and ool men universitios: for the country districts to cease talking against the cities, and it will be well for the city of one locality to stop talking against the cities of other localities, New York will not get the World's Fair by depreciating Chicago, and Chicago will ~ not get the World's Fair by be mbarding New York Another suggestion con cerning the coming exposition: Jet not the materialistic monetary idea overpower the moral and reli- Kious in all their lives, there will be thousands of people from other lands who will see a coun- try without a state religion. Let us, by an increased harmony among all denominations of religion, impress other nationalities, as all denominations government. All the | rodin men of Europe belong ! the stato religion, whatever it may Although our last two Presidents have been Presbyterians, the previous one was an Episcopalian: and the two previous Metho dists; and going further back in that lines of Presidents, we find Martin Van Buren, a Dutoh Beforn and John Quincy Adams a Unitaria nd a man's religion in this counts ther hindrance nor advantage n the politic elevation All All the world needs that Wi i something between him and it must not directly or riered with that expositi will confront ns "n nation make an lizin 1} on upon foreign mid otherwise be of century oity where | advantage of having { equal in the sight of | and chief | | Europe 1 A man's welt indire inte during | Christian Liza lion unity to evangs nation afforded Let the day MATION alte is n the exp and pra wy oY the open every ered and the and Elami went of tn lhe trangers that the re 8 and thom wonder off that d what trap that Republi monarchy Bat what if the most wi earth 1 mean tha 1 should practically say the American continent hold & world's | word It specimens of manufactures and ther all the Governments of ira to Tent ¥ fF e and 1d not gathered POY er of a French FeO and might a | 3 the French wm them erument (ravernmment ns mirons we Riv send representa t shall be held piace, and that sha ad arbitration commis all controve thai thr wi sha Pwr referred et wesn nation and niath #0 all nations wonld Heved from ¢ expense of standing armies and naval equipment, war having been made an everiast £ ng wad Iobdit y All the nalions of the sideration would come England and Germany and Fra sin and all the other great Bismarck who worships the Lord of Hosta and Gladstone who worships the God of Peace. and Boulanger who worships himself The fact is that the nations ars wic i of drink ing out of cha » made out of haman skulls and filled with blood The United Slates Government is the only government in the w hole world that could sucosefully call such a Congress Suppose France should oall it Germany would pot come or Germany shoud call it, France would not come: of Rusia should call it or England should oall it, nations long jeal ous of her overshadowing power in Rutope would not come. America, in favor with all nationalities, standing out independent and alone, is the spot and 190 will be the time May it please the President of the United Ntatos, may it please the Secretary of State, may it please the Cabinet, may it please the Senate and House of Representatives, may it please the printing press and the churches and the people who 1ift up and put down our American rolers’ To them | male this timely and sol emn and Christian appeal Do you {not think people die fast enough with {out this wholesale butchery of wart Do you not think that we oan trust to pneu monies and conmumptions amd ww fevers a : - jocis to be fina be re earth tn Nn hty men eand Rue pn Lhonali thes "mr in scholarship! | and | During that exposition, the first time | { town they come here that year, with the superior | Purkey wonald not cone: i | seripted, are owing thelr lives, thelr | General may sit smoking one of the | best Havana cigars after a dinner of quail on toast, It may be well enough for gradu ating students of colleges oni commencement day to orate about the poetry of war, but do not talk about the poetry of war to the men of the Federal or Confederate armies who were at the front, or to some of who, as members of the Christian commission, saw the ghastly hospitals at Antietam and Hagers- Ah! you may worship the Lord of | Hosts, 1 worship the “God of Peace, who brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus Christ, that great Shepherd of the sheep.” War is an accursed monster and it was born in the lowest cavern of perdition, and I pray that it may speedily descend 10 the place from which it arose, {ts last sword and shield and musket rattling on the bottom of | the red hot marl of hell. [st there be called A peace convention for 182 with delegates sent by all the decent Governments of Christendom, and while they are in session. if you should some night go out and look into the sky above the exposition build ings, you may find that the old gallery of crystal, that was taken down after the Beth lshem’ anthem of eighteen centuries BELO WAS sung out, Is rebuilt agein in the clouds, and the same angelic singers are returned with the same lbrettos of light to chant “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will to men Again, 1 suggest Fair that x in regard to the World's while appropriate Are pre pared for all f exhibi make no room for the importation « vices America has enough of its ov nies no installments of that kind y alr will bring all kinds of people, good and bad The good we must prepars bad we must prepare to sh will again be made to break up our That at Wa delphia Centennia The American Sab Sabbath on eartd broken down thereof! the ' BOww i 1 reign ign and wy Pi defested Kept want in Lema ’ mith bast sabbath Ww 1 8 under A deepotisin as bad wierd they tur: wil and make a Jo fie hamae mind rejoicing at What God ha th fou i hess : " grandest Have Bibie spough enough enough enoagh Hosanna to the Som « mt cometh in (he name Through the hare A bere, pwest pe fi : Fron chuds A Nght is break ing That song of hove Ere long shall swe That Night, the bee The goddess epired ping A gros Wood Carving as a Fine Art, carried It is ap such as The art of carving in wood is to great perfection in Florence furniture rds, bookcases, bed chandeliers, ete... to wall to frames, ornamental original work, BOTS plied to decorative mantlepie es, sidebon steads, chairs panels and balustrades, caskets, brackets and sm artic es tu executed by artists in the the word, merits special attention, Tus can carving is softer in tone than the work of Northern Italy. It is distin guished by delicacy of fecling and ac curacy of design found even among the humblor artisans, whose natural artistic Some of rue of taste is now promoted by an excellent | school of design, With the modern taste | for medimval art, imitations of antique furnituie have come to the front to the | detriment of original work. Although Ought | 44 iy possible to buy modern antiques for in Florence, as slsewhere, it is | mare satislactory to purchase | them ax declared mmitations. — New Yord Star. Gireotod by a Greater Power. | entered into a covenant with Jehovah 1 SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR OCTOBER 13. — Lesson Text: “The Ark Brough» to Zion," 2 Samuel vi, 1-12 Golden Text: Pa, lxxxvil Commentary, David being now King over sll lsrasl. and having taken the stronghold of the Jebusites, which up to this titne had been a continued disgrace in their midst, he at once thinks of the Ark of God, pitches a tent for it in | Jerusalem (v. 17) and procesds to bring it thither Egypt A and soon as Terese] brought down redeemed from to Mt Binal oO be peculiar people, 8 kingdom of priests xix. 5 6, He commanded a Tabernacle to be in which He might dwell in thair midst as their King and Lawgiver The Ark of the covenant was the first vessel of the Tabernable which He gave comunandment to Moses, and a knowl. edge of it and it snd ory is ossential 10 a understanding of this lennon His (Ex oeted, OGuoering iificance hast "A | Again chosen men « David gathered together all the £1 sand The 5g Th previous chapter tells its clowing verses of thirty thoy JE 52 the gathering of Israel mies the Philist y defent their ene nes, and ra Mi, on two different occasions ar successfully oy the Lor 29): but ener erent methods Wied by ¥ 1&0 this 1006 and it with the and oo was held i captains « TET in 1 mndreds every leades { t with all (1 Leno { thi wer fr verse, they went the ark thant Jamin A bina ws It had leaving wWhenos mam, ol ’ : | Me OXen Margin and R The worst fn the part David when : it that was ; endanger as this stumble of A Wrong step does first, and the sin is uly through failur rectly respon bl Lord 4 the the « made parfect in upon strengt and His work ht or power n bat by Lord of Hosts (11 Cor. xii, #: In reference to the of itten in Num. fv. 15 20 that t ond his ns were 0 prepare to be carried and that the who carried them, were not go in tO soe when upon pain of death: taking hold of the Ark disobeyed and, as did also the men Beth- sheqel I Sam. wi 19); although there seems to have been some reason for Uzzah's act, and there was none whatever for them Learn that there can be no excuse for disobe dienice x ¢ ng! | plished no of the sn ., Dem, Dor even were ooverwl ol And David was displeased.” It is a sad affeir when the servant of the Lord be he King or peasant, becomes displeased with his Master It shows bow disobedience al ways loads to other sins and strikes at the very root of fellowship with God A God of Love oan wrong, can by ene make a mistake, and the only right thing for His children to do is to walk with Him in cheerful submission 2 “And David was afraid of the Lord that day.” Another result of his sin, which pray or and obedience would have saved him from, 10, 11, “The Lord blessed Obed-odom, and all his household.” David refused at thet tinee to have anything more to do with the Ark, and so it was carried into the house of "Ho no a three months’ Jose to David, for the infer ence ia that David did not return to the Lord
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