I +A PRICE UPON HIS HEAD, areer of Catrino EK. Garza, Leader of the Mexican Revolutionists, CATRINO E. GARZA, Benor Garza, who ia attracting consider. able attention from the Government of Mexico and the United States troops sta- tioned in Texas, through his efforts to create a revolution against the Government of President Diaz, and to recruit his small band from among the Mexicans on both sides of the Rio Grande, is a man of more than ordinarily interesting personality, Born in Matamoras Mexico, he began life there ina rinting office. From here he removed to rownsville, Texas, re he attended the public schools, Later ne went to the Uni versity of Mexico, and after his graduation from that institution, entered the Mexican army, from which he was dismissed for gross misconduct, and was compelled to flee the country to escape further punishment He is reputed to be a desperate man, and has been involved in several quarrels which ended in assassinations, the most notable of which was the killing of General Martinez, at Laredo, Garza is about forty years old, and speaks English well. He was at one time connectd with the Mexican Consulate at St, Loais Mo., and as much at home on the Texans side of the Rio Grande as he is on toe Mexican soil, About six months ago he gathered a little band of political refugees and ants about him and began his revolutionary operations, which the Mexican officials assert had only robbery and pillage for their object. The Mexican Goverament offered a heavy reward for Garza's capture, and also had in its possession a list of names of prominent persons who are said to be ac- tive sympathizers of his movement, WORLD'S FAIR NOTES. is fully GSC CryLoX will conduct a tea-house on Mid way Flalsance, A PARADE, participated in by 24 000 bicy- clists, may be a sight at the Exposition. QUEEN MARGARET, of Italy, has promised to loan her famous collection of rare laces for exhibition at the Fair Tae Governor of Dutch Guiana has ap- pointed a commission of thirteen to superin- tend the exhibit which that colony will make at the Fair fowa, in its exhibits at the will show the various forms in products are useful as food, and processes of their preps Tae Sultan « the erection Exposition, which corn also the r ration { consented to wy? . ¢ perators want to Turkey has nosque at the grounds for the religious service madans who attend the Fair Tae Pennsylvania coal construct a building entirely ol anthracite coal at the Exposition, and to have 50,000 tons of best anthracite on exhibition ReGuraTioxs for exhibitors in the several Departments of the Exposition have been issued and can be obtained Ly all intending exhibitors by applying for them, sither In person or by mail Tax resources and industries of the of Minas Geraes, Brazil, will be shown at an exhibition which opens at Ouro Prato, on June 15, 1862. The best of the exhibits will be brought to Chicago later Ix the Washington included a presentati used by Makah Indians and other fist he boats, lines, hooks Tux Rbode Island World's Fair contemplates having its Exposition building at Chicago combine the best architectural features of its Stat apitol at Providence together with those the old capitol build ing formerly occupied at Newport Tue Horticultural Depar position is planning t 1 rose garden in which w e fully 50,000 ants, besides large 108 in special areas he garden will be « design with temples, arbors, archways and trellises, THE enormous trusses to sustain roof of the Manul res Building are about to be erected These trusses are the largest ever made for architectural purposes. They span 369 and rise to a height of 211 feet The contract for them calls for about $460, 000 Htate methods ing salmon exhint will include barpoons, el Board seine Same tha Tur Bureau of Masic has issued letters of invitation to all of the important choral societies in the larger cities asking them to co-operate in forming the grand chorus of 2000 voices, which will render standard ora- torfos at the ceremonies dedioatory of the Exposition buildings. Tue Minois State Exposition Board has set apart $40,000 as a special fund for the encouragement of live stock exhibits at the Fair. The fund is apportioned as follows Horses, thirty-seven per cent.; cattle, thirty per cent. ; hogs, fifteen per cent; sheep, twelve per cont. poultry, six pear cont Sou Swim painters, at Geneva, are paint ing & large panorama of the Bernese Alps, with the intention of bringiog it to Chicago for the World's Fals The panorama will measure 51 by M5 feet and cost $300,000. The sketches for the panorama were taken from the summit of the Mannlichen, 0600 feet high. IT is now the intention to have in the Fish eries Building a restaurant devoted as far as possible to the exclusive serving of fish Fish dinners, and flab, fresh and salt, served in every edible style, will be a popular feat. ure, it is believed, and will give visitors an sxosllont opportunity t) know the merits of fish as food A Beruix dispatols states that Emperor William is greatly interested in Germany making a fine exhibit at the Exposition, and that he has personally urged Krupp, the noted gunmaker, an | schlutow, manager of the ship buliding works at Stettin, to ex- hibit the latest and best products of their vast industries, H. Grosrer Ansarnoxa, of London, is in Chicago, making application for space upon which to show a reproduction of the Tower of London, or rather the most interesting portions of it, such as the “White Tower” ‘ “Tower Cree" ts a com p Tower," *Traitory Gate” ete, Hor pany willing to sxpend $250, 0 in the enter A DISPATON states that a silversmith in Monterey, Mexico, is engaged on a work in sliver w completed will be an exact re duction of the Agricultiral Building now Fine built on the Kx grounds, Chi cago. It will be sight fest wide, will contain a quantity of silver vamed as bullion at $10,000, and when finished will be valued at $20,000, A Bririse woman's commities has been wolected to superintend the repressatation of the work of lish wonen at the ) Rxpoel, | held, | would place the dollar | silver dollar | should think it to be wor | says that to depre FREE COINAGE, The Minority Report Against tha Passage of the Bland Bill, The report just filed in Washington of the minority members of the House Committes on Coinage, Weights and Measures against the passage of the Bland Free Coinage bill is sighed by Messrs, Tracy, of New York: Taylor, of Illinois; Stone, of Pennsyl vanin; Williams, of Massachusetts, and Johnson, of North Dakota, The minority review the silver question, protest vigorously against the Bland bill, ond re commend the passage of a measure author- izing the President to invite an interaal monetary conference, The report says that the first eight lines of the Bland bill develop its true purpose, They provide for two different dollars and a compulsion upon the citizen to receive either in payment of debts due him, “It does mot require any knowledge of monetary or financial views,” the report says, “to demonstrate that the come uls.on of the legaltender power must orce upon the creditor a cheaper and debased dollar, Fow debtors will pay 100 cents to discharge their obligations when seventy cents will suffice in law. This bill converts all existing Government paper into paper which may be paid in silver, and leaves no paper which must be paid in gold.” The minority say that the only escape from a single silver dollar standard under the Blanc bill is an immediate and permanent elevation of the price of silver bullion to the price representsd by the ratio of sixteen to one between silver and gold, This price, it is sald, is $1 20% wer ounce, The minority argues that the land bill will bring silver from foreign countries. The United States, it says, is the only source of supply to Europe, and our gold, by virtus of the Lill, becomes avail able to take the place of unstable silver Silver coming from abroad would, it is destroy the gold standard, After arguing that legislation has failed to raise the price of silver, the minority comment on the effect of a silver standard as follows “The adoption of a single standard, then, unit at once at the mercy of the silver bullion market, and obli- gations now outstandir poeurrsd upon the gold basis, would be pa ile in a depreciated worth only what the world th ata given point of time. Thus to depreciate our standard of payments is clearly partial repudiation and unqualifiediy dishonest and fraudulent.’ As to the effect of bill, the minority thirty or forty the valu avings banks which it is i uid rob millio of #1) . hh cent ties, rery pensioner of the policy of ins orphan enjoying funds, will by 8 this fraudulent standard of the « the G like manner, and eo luties and other taxes two f the am Appended to t every widow and sods { trust suffer fron ira vernment thirds | ing the Preside: monetary confers THE LABOR WORLD. Jarax women load vessels Ma IsniasA nn HINISTS have unions ners earn $18 a month orks are organised, therhood engineers, nu oar conduo NEW Sorts Les bakers work eight urs New Yon A Week loakmakers average #5 and SEVENTY THOUSAND workmet Vi nna, Austria Loxpos, Eagland Labor Exposit A WORKMAN was Germany for calling another an West Vinci reduction to thro THERE is a Kei twenty ¥ AT Pittsburg, Penn ers won a strike against THERE were nearly Ch on arat on ness Are SEVEX young Swedish girls have appointed as extraordinary Lele erks in State positions North Dakota, says are neaded for spring yd summer farm work in his Stats, Wale fined to give forty-eight VERNOR HURKS iN wo 15.000 Mivens w Routh failing wars ¢ going on strike the unemployed in Berlin, men attended The city verfilled and can hardly acoom- inmates AT a meeting of (rermany, 064 Are late thels priscns ne THERE are a dozen wi Philadelphia, Pen: I'he new Conservatory of Music of that city will give instruction in plano tuning and regulation men piano tuners in SIxCRr 1584 the incorporated trades unions of Fraoce have increased from 175 to among them are 64% unions composed of ag ricultural laborers. The entire member ship is only about 150 000 : 35 . Owing toa heavy snowstorm in North Dakota a fireman on one of the rallroads was foreed to work for forty-eight hours at a streteh, and then, after three houry sleep resume work for thirty.one hours more Tux number of idle workmen In Chicago, II. is estimated at 40,000. Taking is for granted that Chicago has 1,000,000 inhabi- tants, there would, at that rate, be 2 4X, 000 unemployed people In the United States; but even reduce this number fifty per cent, and we would have 1,200,000 out of work in this country. FLOODED AMBER MINES, Six Miners Drowned by the Unusual Fides in the Baltic A dispatch received from Konigsburg, East Prussia, reports a peculiar and fats! accident near that place. The Government of Konigsburg is boundel on the north by the Baltic, and along the shores of this ses Is obtains a large proportion of the world's apply of amber is substance is there partly cast up by the sea, partly obtained by means of nets und partly dug out of a bed of bituminous eel A few nights ago an exceedingly heavy sen was running in the Baltic . the high waves swept far inland past their usual bounds. Close to the shore near Palmnicken, a small fishing town, (san amber mine in which a number of men were work. ing. They of course had no knowl. e¢ of the fact that the rising tide was nging the heavy seas in dangerous sroxim. ity to the entrance of the nine, Suddenly the water began to pour into the mine in & fect torrent, filling the small workings, men made 4 wild rush to steaps, but x of them found it impossible to the torrent and were drowned —————— BoouERs continue te in Kan — a th border Cherokee and it is estimated that 90,000 willbe Feady for invasion by March FOUR MINERS KILLED. Crushed to Death by the Roof Tim bers Giving Away. Timbers in the roof of the Arnold ore mine at Forona, N. Y., gave away a few morn ings ago while the full force of men was at work. The following men were killed outright: Conrad Dewey, single man; William Nolan, aged ortp-ive, married and father of a large family; Henry Patnow, aged forty- nine, married. The following were severely wounded: Patrick Dowd, who subsequently died of his injuries, leaving a wife and family; Thomas Russell, who was badly cut on the head; Alexander Dupleas and Antonie Lamarke., Frep Deuvre, a farmer at Germanto Cal., was fatally injured by an explosion o a ‘sheep dip can,” which he was using as a boiler to furnish steam to run a miniature engine of a new design preparatory to ap plylog for a patent on the engine, m HE MARKETS, Late Wholesale Prices Produce Quoted in New York, BEANE AND PEAS Marrow, 180], choice. $205 @$2 2 Medium, 1891, choice.... 1 TTH@ 180 Pea, 1801, choles, ,...... 1 TT4@ 180 White kidney, 1501, choice @ 2580 Hed kidney, 18) choice, 200 @ 310 Hine turtle soup, 1801 100 @ 310 } 1801, choice, 170 @ 175 bush « 1H & 150 16 @ 150 1 2714 1 30 i nl Baldwin, § Greeaings, pot Grapes « Wostos i tawim, Western N Y State 181 choice INg], prime ING], comm estarn Western por Dey paar Western, per pair Goosa, Weste Pigeons, per DRESSED POULTRY DRY Turkeys-<Jersey and Md State and Penn Phila Jersey, per Ib .e State and Peun., per ib Fowls--State and Penn Western per Ib Ducks Jersay, per it State and Pen: Geese, Jersey and Md Squab-- White, per doa Dark, per doa per Ib Chiokens per ib POTATORS AND VEGETABLES PotatoesJersey, bulk, hil ™ State Rose and Hebron, per 150 Ib se Htate other kinds, 180 1b Io 1., in bulk, per tbl Bweet potatoes, Jersey, bbl Cabbage, 1. | por . Onions Connecticut, red, bul Orange County, red, bbl Orange County, yellow Eastern, yellow, per bbl Eastern, white, per bbl Squash L. |. marrow, bbl L. I, Hubbard, per bbl Turnips, Canada, per bbl, |, Celery «Mich. per doz. roots Long Island and Jersey dowen Lunches String beans, Fla, per crate Lettuce, Southern, per bbl lTomatees, Fla. per bush crate LT] LIVE STOOK BOVE. . co cottsssiisronsyss Miloh Cows, com. to good Calves, common to prime Hh O60 00 Pessnnnnnnnns snnnnns GRAIN, ETC Flour-City Mill Extra. .... Ryo—State .... coo coovvinns Barley ~Tworowed Hate... Corn-Un Mixed. .... Unats—No, | White, Ty Mixed Western . | 4 8 Hay ~tiood to Choles, ....... 0) Btraw—Long Rye......coevs ah Lard-City Hteam, FURS AND SKINA, hastera # Nouihern # Novihwestorn Rowlhreastera, LHS 008 00 BS ges 0) BOOS 0 4a 100) 7 Wg lo Tm 00g 7 0 UR Me 4 50 88 Bat 2 00 18 Mg 250... aE 1 x Ey 00.458 FARRER Black bear. ... Cubs and y'rlings Otter, each, ..... Lo] 40 70 LU w | ty-Dine | 1 started | “The {its life out | 06.5 | REY. DR. TALMAGE. BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN DAY SEIKMON, THE subject: "Heavenly Congratulations’ Texr “Likewise joy shall be in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine jus! persons who need no repentance.” lake xv, 7 A lost sheep! Nothing ean be more thor oughly lost, [look through the window of a shepherd's house at night, The candles are lighted. The shepherd has just plac? his staff against the mantle, He has taken off his coat, shaken out of it the dust and hung itup. [see by the candle light that there are neighbors who have come in. The shepherd, fagged out with the long tramp, sits down on a bench, and the wife and the children and the neighbors say to him, “Come, now, tell us how you found the poor thing.” “Well.” he says, “this morning I went out to the yard to look at the flock No sooner had 1 looked over the fence than | saw something wrong. The fact was they did not count right Ninety-five, ninety-six, ninety seven, | ninety «ight, ninety-nine--only ninety-nine ot Country | | And ljwonder which one was gone, and | | began McDonald, you know we had a hundred again, and 1 counted ninety-five ninety-six, ninety-seven, ninety eight, nine- Well, | whistled up the dogs, and on the flelds and across the bridges, and | tracked the moors, and | leaped the gullies, but no bleating of the poor thing did I hear I sald to myself, lamb must have fallen into a ditch, or a pack of wolves from the mountain must have torn it to pieces and sucked But I could not give it see it was a pet lamb, It with the black i on the right shoulder that used come and lick my hand as | crossed the field and somehow | could not give it up. Bol went on and on and on until after awhile | hoard the dogs bark, and [I said, ‘What's that? Then 1 hastened to the top of the Bill, sod | looked down and there | saw the poor lamb, It had fallen into the ditch and as I came where it was and bent over the ditch and stooped down to lift the poor thing out, 1 wish you could have seen the vis imploring and tender t looked at me. | litte] it out, and it was all oversd with the slush and the mud, It was an awful thing todo, but I lifted it out, and it wa lame and so weak it could not walk alone y 1 threw it over jor and | started dition of t up was that O16 Kw ag and way | my shoul neward, and the at lamb you may h | have just he and on inte that 1» talked, and they laughed and and they ate, and they drank, and and told over and over agsin { the lost sheep that was fi tenderness and me LOrist rey the souls « here § of God they the wd OW ise the angels , 1D persons tha wall 0 south wail to west wall and in Upon of heaven has there is Joy in heaven of God over one sinter and from eest Bin tes every of it, for amot.g the angels tha! repenteth i can very easily should be Joy In ratand how there IAYED Over a usand souls saved it no mystery about thet: 1 oan under Joy in heaven ¢ una Vetiteoost we day wtand thr with three th ty mi val UJ Lord God | have been my good works 11 {a want Thy salvation i. have mer ¥ oun ow him, and immediately heaven strikes a silvery are four towers to the Here ls a man who is bad bad, and everybody else kn he is not an outoast far from A AN east. He moves in respectable circles one day, by the power of the Holy G6 he rouss up to see his sinfulness and} 0 Lord, have mercy I am a and without Thee | Hav God hears him, and imme liately towers © heaven strike a stivery chim But here is an outosst He was inst night out of the gutter and oars the police station He has been in the pend tentiary three times He is covered and sonkel with loathsomeness ani abomination Arousing from his debauch, he ories out: } God, have mercy on me Thou who didst pardon the penitent thief, hear me ory for mercy.” And the Lord listens and pars dons, and no sooner is the poor wreteh par doned than three of the great towers of heaven strike up a silvery caime, But bere isa waif of the street Hho passes un jor the gaslizght, and your soul shu lders wilh a great horror, No pity for her, No com miseration for har As she pases down the straet shy hearse a song in a midaight mission, and she listens to that song she haars All may come, whoever wil, The Mas rece vou poor sianers stil, She puts into that harbor, she knesis by the rough baneh near the door; she my “U Lord! Taou who didst have mercy on Mary Magdalen, take my blistere] feat off the re hot pavement of hell” Gol mys, “My daughter, thy sins are forgiven thee; go in peaesr” Now, all the four towers of heaven strike a silvery chime, anl they who pass through the celestial streots say: “What's that* Why, the worst sluner must have been saved. Hear all the four towers ving and ring and ring™ “Anil there Is Joy in heaven among the angels of God over one sintge that repentath.” . th My subject impresses you, | think, wi the thought that it is possibile for as bo aug ment the happiness of heavens, People think that souls belore the throns are as hapoy as they ean be, | deny it. Look at that mother before the throne of thod, When sha died she loft hor son In the world a vagabond, Ave WAN ler perish merey tw » the ol un 1 wn» { here this house to-day who could go out with a torch and kindle a new bonfire of victory on the hills of heaven. If you would thi day repent and come to God, thd news of your salvation would reaca heaven, and then, hark! to the shout of the ransomed Your littls child went away from you into the good land, While she was here you brought her all kinds of beautiful presents Hometimes you came home at nightfall with your chet full of gifts for her, and no sooner did you put your night key into the latch than she began at you, saying “Father, what have you brought me?’ Hhe is now befors the thrones of God. Can vou bring her a gift to-day? You may. Coming to Christ and repenting of sin, “the tidings will go up to the throne of God and yout child will hear of it. On, what a gift for her soul to-day! Bhe will skip with new glad. ness on the everlusting bills when she hears of it, My subject also impresses me with the idea that heaven and earth are in close sym pathy. People talk of heaven as though it wero a great way off. They say it is hun dreds of thousands of miles or you reach the first star, and then you go hun dreds of thousands of miles before you get to toe second star, and then it is millions of miles béfore you reach heaven They say heaven is the center of the universe and we are on the rim of the universe. That is not the idea of my text. I think the heart of heaven beats very close to our world. We measure distances by the time taken to traverse those distances, It used to be a long distance to Ban Fran cisco, Many weeks and months were passed befors you could reach that city. Now it is wix or seven days. It used to be six week y you could voy age from here to Liver pool. Now you can go that distance is «is or seven days. And so | measure the dis tance between earth and heaven, and I find it is only a flash, It is one instant here and another instant there, It is very near day. Do you not fesl the breath of heaven on your face? Christ says in ons place it is not twenty-four hours’ distance, when He ays to the penitent thief, “This day, ti shalt thou be with Me in paradise nota day, itis not an it minute, It is not a second Oh, how near heaven is to ocennic cables you send a message expensive Lo send a ge, you a great deal of mesning in few Sormstiunes in two words y eaning. And it angels of God who carry 10 heaven need gard to your soul, only two words in ordes to kindle with gladoess all the redesmead before the throne, only two words, “Father saved” “mother saved son saved “daughter saved” And “there is joy heaven amotig the angels of God over ons sinner that repoenteth My subject also impresses me with the fact that the mivation of the soul is of wast " wiance. If hould make $200 000 this year, do y« that news a be carried &« t enough imporise befor hour is 1 TIE. aaa IE take u » OAT that the ne r Spain w ning. are no vati n that lan re gladne that y the mon ston e field De avery day : are and news before the and smeraid hrysoprasus oe and sarconyx At saivation mn Ko% VEY of God i vet th throne Having found in my this religion is a comfort i commend it to you In the days of infancy | was carried by Christian ps the house of God and consecrated baptism to the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost; but that i not » ne In wn experience that and a joy, | stand my rents to and and father's me But one i nto my boari sas . { and | et heart saven t gadder for ¥y in heaven among 1 v at» nie that repenies the Lord who bought sanne noe SUrTrenosT if for Lt prayed. bx VOU say al Christ ten GAYE D od be mer say, “Il oa t jook to the thr “ny 1 can’t look up me signal like that which given by the iad in the hospital’ and suffering and dying speedily to go away from all suffering and pain, and be said to his comra fos in the hos pital, “It is strange to me that Jesus doesn’t soe me when He goss through hers nights and takes others to Himeel! He goes through here and He dossa’t see me. | must be asleep and He doesn’t know I want to go “Now, 1 tell you how I'll arrange it go to with my bands up, and when Jesus comes through the bospital by night He will see my hand lifted, and He will know that | want to go with Him.” Be it was done. For that night Jesus went through the hospital and took the suffering lad, and the next morning the nurse passing through the wards of the hospital saw a dead hand lifted braced on one side against the pillow, and the left band holding the elbow of the right arm, Jesus hal seen the signal and answered It Oh, sick sou wounded soul, dying soul, canst thou not give sone signal? Wilt thou not lift one hand or one prayer! God grant that this day there may whe i i“ whoop then be joy in heaven among the angels of Goi | over your soul forgiven SELLCT sIFTINuS. Palmistry is once more having a vogue. Glass is now used as a filling for teeth. A Rio Grande engineer recently shot a wildeat near New Castle, Col. from the cab of his engine, A Pennsylvania insaneasylum super- intendent reports that eight out of every ten of his inmates write verses, Dom Pedro de Valdivia, the first Governor of Chile, founded Santiago, its capital, February 12, 1541. Sheet iron kites, to enable a vessel when in distress during a storm to com- munioate with the shore, have been sug: gested, A Lynn (Mass) man is the owner of the dram which beat time for the Mas. sachusetts Sixth on its famous march through Baltimore, Md, The first Russian newspaper was pub. lished in 1708, Peter the Gréat took a personal part in its editorial composition and in correcting proofs, It is the custom in Brooklya, N. Y.§ for physicians to render serves to priests and to attend them essionally without making any | beloved of His soul’ ! little respite, for | orth out of Egypt. and the | the people.” in the | ness for God in the holy city { mony had been {| Asaph and even Jeremiah himself | mish and brought 3 to {| band of God he w Zadekind thee! | evil work and ! ville, Ind. ing at work on t at the time.” —] SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAY, LESSON FOI FEBRUARY 28, Lesson Text: "Jeremiah Persecuted,” xxxviy, 11.21 Golden Text, Jeremiah i, 19 Commentary, 11. “And it came to pass, that when the army of the Chaldeans was broken up from Jerusalem for fear of Pharaoh's army We are now in the reign of Zedekiah, son of Josiah, the last of the kings of Judah He, like the three who preceded him, would not listen to the words of Jehovah, although at titpes he seemed inclined to do differentiy, as we shall ses, and even asked the prophet to way for him and for the people; verses 1-3 But the end was now near; the city is be sieged, and God is about to give “The dearly into the hands of her enemies (chapter xii, 7). Therein, bowever, Pharaob's army comes Chaldeans de part from Jerusalem (verses §, 10 12. “Then Jeremiah went forth t of ous of | Jerusalem to go into the land of Benjamin to separate himself! thence in the midst of The Revised Version says, “To receive his portion there A nathoth, land of Benjamin, was his home (chapter i. 1 He had been a faithful wit. and his testi. rejected It was most nat ural that be should dewirs to take advantage of this Jull in the siege to retire if possible to the quiet of his own town 14. "And when he was in the gate of Ben« | Jamin a captain of the ward took Jeremiah, | the prophet Thou fallest away to That the righteous should pers and ighteous seems 8 strange troubled David and Mon Lhe rxxvil find the saying, the Chaldeans.’ be falsely aocused, slain by the wm thing tw many It uted even Ps we first two In xi ] experiences of the and xxiii, In Jer | prophet talking with God after this fashion, “1 know, O Lord, that Thou art righteous, nt why do the wicked prosper and why are they happy that deal trescherously” The sdmonition to all in sino circumstances fs found in Heb xii 14. “Then said Jer al be harkensd not to } w Liar {alee Irijah Look « the princes it the prophet saw only Irish be would natur ally be greatly provoked, but if he saw the uid be ot When Job lost his family and his property through the malice of Satan he said, “The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the buy J ore. bh and an the Lor ford interviews wi the prophet but really afraid 185, “Moreover What in» wisaner, appesied 1 Tentas Both Jeremiah and hind the words and done Jeh and that was just what Jesus did, and that they crucified Him way of God be contrary 10 man's Way prov the that and stirs up his wicked art . # CRIA r Datars ind ity against (rod 4) Where are now vy rr phesied unto Baby against els Ww! Babs apparent his Jeremiah 1d have | Tende ruinst Paul the xxv. 11). spoken mewhat simian the vah, for yo isin man ana t him daily aj remained In the court i 1 vr t Al though after tune in a most filthy dungeon : was delivered by Ebead- -Melech the Ethiopian, with ropes and rotten rags, yet the court of the prison was his lodging, ani there he was when the city was taken (chapter XXIV, 18, 14 38 There the captain of the guard of the Babylonian army found him, and by of the king 4id well by him. Se Xxxix it, 13; x 4 5. BoGod promise to Jeremiah (chapte and delivered him, thoug! many A time they oi hi He Keep iis wor life Ne will suways and we may unwavering!y trust Hin and rely upon Him. Sea also, His promise 0 Ebed-Meloch in chapter xxxix,, 16-15 and remember that the same God makes equally great promsies to all who pul their trast in Him. In reference to Daniel 18 fs written, Bo Daniel was taken up out of the den, and no manner of hurt was found u him, be cause he believed in his God.” or the same reason his three friends walked in the midst of the fire unhurt (Dan. wi, 25; ii. 35. Re lying upon the same God, Paul could say: “1 know whom! have believed, and am por suaded that He is able to keep that which | fr x command chapters kept His | 1» | have committed nato Him against that day. “1 was deliverad out of the mouth of the lion; and the Lord shall deliver me from every will preserve me unio the heavenly kingdom” (If Then. 4, 12 0v_ 15, 18, All who go forth in the name of the Lord, at His command, to do His bidding, may sure ly rely upon these words, “They that war against thee shall be as nothing and as » thing of naught, for I, the Lord thy God, wil hold thy right hand, saying, Pear not, | will Stlp thee" (lea. xii, 12, 18 <Lesson Helper, THAT ancient suggestion that rails | way accidents be avoided by straj- ' ping a member of the board of direc | tors to the engine might not, it ap | pears, prove effective after all | ex-president of the road and his wife | were on the Monon train which mes The with a serious accident at Crawfonds In the reports of the dis aster, which was a horrible one, the statement Is made that “it was doe to a loose rail, two section-hands be Thas the condition of the rail should have | been known and still no effort made to warn an appreaching passonger train is a startling evidence of the happy-go-lucky system which prevails on too many railroads
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers