AT HOME AND The Latest Intelligence by ‘Telegraph and Cable. ABROAD. Five Men and Four Race Horses Killed in a Collision. The Boston express freight ran into ths Brattleboro freight, bound south, about a thousand feet south of the flag station at Harrison's Landing, Conn, on the New London Northern Railroad. The engines came together head on, and a frightful wreck was tho result, The first car of the southbound train contained four racehorses bound for the races at Croton. Four of the five men in charge of the horses were killed outright, and one was so fearfully injured that he died a few minutes after reaching New London. The men killed were as follows: Charles Hiney and William Gillen, of Ballston Spa, N. Y.: Edward Moore, of Norwich, Con- necticut ;——McKenna, residence unknown. «Of the fifth man nothing was known and there was nothing upon his person which would tend to identify him. The racehorses killed were Teddy R., Brockway, Wonderful Cure and Jennie Maynard. The car which carried the horses and men was carried, after the collision, over the engine of the northbound train and then fell over on its side. Other cars of this train were also thrown over and to the side of the Boston freight. The cause of the accident has not yet been determined and no one can be found who will venture a theory. The railroad officials have nothing to say. The coroner and medi- cal examiner were at work in the case, and the engineers, firemen and other train hands and railroad officials were put upon stand. The train dispatcher of the road was declared to be the person at fault, and he was placed under arrest by the coroner. Cheyenne Snow Bound, A disoatch from Cheyenne, Wyomina, says: The Wyoming capital has just been snow bound for three days. It was the worst storm ever known here. Bat little can be learned from the outside. A mail carrier who came back after making only four miles in five hours, said that the drifts would make travel impossible for some day and that he counted eighty dead horses on his trip. Any flock of sheep caught out in the storm w { ba a total | sly a telegraph, In Chayvenne there is scar electric light, or telephone pole up and th sands of trees broken A few small building it no personal injurie The town is in darkness with all wires down and t railways blockaded, T mply | For twenty miles any way not more than one telegr ole in # dred is standing Snow § shovelers, and linemen are b ing worked as hard as possible Reports are being received losses of cattle and borses in Northern Colorado and in Wyoming. Thousands of dollars’ worth of these animals are known to have perished, and it is estimated that were +4 st and north 1a AIDS ATE 8 of immenss almost a third of the cattie and horses on the ranges have been destroyed by the storm. An unknown man was found dead by the side of the railrvad track near Greeley Col. He hat perishel from the effects of the storm. fe Hung Chang's Queer Doings The statement is made y PRINSTZErE Ar viving at San Francisco, from China by the steamer Oceanic that Le Hung Chang, Prime Minister of Chica, bas manifested symptoms of insanity As is the custom in Choa all audisnoss Me grants are publi For the head of Gove. srument to slap the fa ¥ an officer in the present of an inferior is considers ia deadly insalt, and thr man who is strick loses caste forever Yet t g what Chang is said to he dois iaily Limos every 3 Whom his gra sid bn } # and ifed in front of servants and retir lisgras A ling to # senge affairs cams t ) iimipat ont i fore the stam tA wd ¥ the i» n Ch Army appears bed Lung Chat make his a he Vi su kK the OG y nly pre from falling on tt ¢ Miners Killed and Injinred The number of men killad and injured by the exp gas at the Philadelphia and Reading Company's Sterling Rua colliery at Shamokin, Penn., is now known to be eleven, Of these five are dead and the remainiog six were so ba lly burne! and mutilated that » wn of small hopes for their very ware oaater tained When the explosion occurred it was ae companied by & very heavy fal of coal ynbed five of th was at once afe condition which the ex rock and debris, which en miners A rescuing band ganized, but owing to the un of that part of the mine : plosion occurred and the presence of black damp, their progress was necessarily slow Ratiof bodnes were formed, and early in the morning the last body was reached and brought to the surface Many narrow es. CApes Were a is by miners working in parts of the mine near waers the exniosiOn but all the men are now out, We occurred Storms in England Very heavy gales prevailel over the northern part of England, North umberiand, Durbam, Yorkshire, Lin- coin, and Norfolk being the worst sufferers by the storm. The reports from along the coast bring tidings of wrecks It was sup- posed that a number of lives wers lost by the foundering of vessel's off shore, The mail boats plying Letween England and Ireland have been greatly delayed. Large tracts of land in the north of Wales bave been flooded and the crops still in the fislds have beon ruined. Several rivers in Westmoreland and Dertiyshire hava over. flowed their banks and adjacent low lands were submerge’ During the gale at Wicklow, Ireland, threes men who were trying to pass a line to a schooner in distress were washed from a pier and drowned. Ths Drogheda packet boat has grounded on the coast of Ireland. Mexican ¥ xports The publication of the statistics on expor. tation for the fiscal year ended in June last goes to support the statements of the con. est of Mexico, The exports tinued amogated 10 $75,467,000, a wain over the previous year of wore than $13,500,000, ne a eet gain was in precious were also made in tobacoo, esd, ; n woods, marble, skins, wheat and vanilla, Theres was a decreas in exports, fle Paid Nigh Vor Timber The Ontario (Canada) Government soll — the | a HE alien THE NATIONAL GAME, PresioeyT HarRisox is fond of bassba'l, CINCINNATL bas released Pitcher Meakin, Tu1s has been a year of bitter disappoint. ment, Jovy er, of the Brooklyn, is a failure as an outfielder, Broursens, of Brooklyn, is the only one left of the famous Detroit “Big Four." PriTsnunc now has a very fast outfield — almost equal to Boston's or Cleveland's, Axsoxn, of Chicago, has been in active ser- vice on the diamond for eighteen years, Harnixarox, Cincinnati's cast-off catoher, has the best average of all the Leagu» back- stops, CHILDS, of Clevelan !, has made mors runs than any other Leagus player, and Brouth- ers, of Brookiyn, more hits, BrouTienrs has lost a great sha-e of his popularity in Brooklyn, and may not cover first base thers next season. HcHARDRON leads all the short stops of the League in tel ling, and is the only Wash- ington player who leads in any position, It is a tong time since the big League has seen a left-handed throwing Third Bwseman such ns New York's new man, Keele, is, Axsox, of Chicago, is in favor of doing away with bunt hits and gloves for avery- one except the first baseman an i catcher, New Yong has five remarkable base run ners in Fuller, Doyle, Keeler, Burke and Lyons. McMahon is the only real slow run- ner on the team CaPraix Comiskey has had the lauzh on his old team this season. In each half Cin- cionati has won six out of seven games from St. Louis, or a total of twelve out of four teen games played, One feature of the make-up of the Cleve. land team to walch credit enough is not iven is the number of albarouad players Javis, O'Connor and Tebeau are threes par- ticularly valuable men in this respect, IAL averages s10w that Keefe, of and Youn: and Cuppy, of wt effective pitchers in $ crack pitchers and twelfth, Uxorri Philagelpnia, Cleveland, aretha m the League, Boston and Ntivetts, rank as eleventa Mt ey DanrLex, of Chicago, in fielding averages is head and shoulders above all the third baseruen in the wit Shindle, of Baltimore, leads the in the chances, with Nash tho ani Farrell Chicago, Dex! BASEBALL interest everyw deman is that the game in Now Yor be revivel at onee, Anson's transplantation [Ir > cago to the metropoll vould | th surest mode of securing - mensely popular wi a pat is of the National gam REC ) OF THE LEAGUE C1 § Ver Per Clubs. Won t Clubs 1 ot ot Cleveland. 52 608 Chicago 50s Boston 48 40 Cincinnati Wi Pittsburg ..4 wh Louisvi $1 4 Brookiyn...42 Wi Baltimore. 96 44 71 Philad’ip'a 4 ) } St. Louis x New York 890 37 14 Washin L 15 PROMINENT PEOPLE. Tae oldest British solfier is Sir Patrick Grant, aged eighty cht MicHARL ths well-known French financier, i Winriax 11, of Germany, is at this mo. ment the richest sovereign of Europe King Otro, of Bavaria, has in a straigutjacket despite his royal protest Lovis Koss LH « meatal taculties through been placed rit, the Hungarian patriot, is extrema losing hb losing b BE YER, the eminent sculptor, is dead in London at the age of sixiy-six the Revolutionary claimel President of tion to sonra throne unt ha has bes s a4 how 4 t jacketed in a padded ness Burdett Coutts has resolved y ioagy Fair; her husband will with her Age sets lightly upon her | has pot yet touched her vivaoity brow and She is nearly sighty he £ COTe A. B, veteran is aunty, ABLY the tallest y Boyne, of Green ( vania. who stands feet in his ring the war he Was a pr ala wenty-woond Penosylvania Pao ven iri sidier in the T gp greatest pleasure ths King of Greece sit to Paris was tos behind, and to joking into jrohaeas Just us ber of the hu ip out 1 hia suite ¥ louisvaris wa and making § if he » an ordinary men man family Tue paper James Eddy tha secret vernment only by which all the UG money is printed is male dd Troy. N. XY of its « ymponith wi, the formula ink with who alone has | having been given to him by his father, the | inventor of the ink, on his deathbed, The making of it results in a profit of £50.000 » year Tue German Emperor is fond of bunting, particalariy of following the boar, the snort in which his forefathers excelled. The Kaiser rides a white horse whan he goes hunting, and silver spurs jingle on the howls of his top-boots. He is a good marksman, and has a record of putting three balls from a revolver in the bull's eye of a small target fil teen paces distant MUCH MONEY AND STAMPS, Heport of the United States Barcan of Engraving and Printing. The annual report of Captain William M. Meredith, Chisf of the Burean of En graving and Printing, for the flseal year ending June 30, 1800, says that the Bureau sccomplished another successful year's work, Theres were completod and de Ivared durint the year 1478 4M Btates notes, Treas. 37 oh certificates, silver ow tifloates, and National bank notes, Dh rut face walus of $700 . 760, 800, and 154, 000,000; a ¢ mtalning 2,051 « sheets of drarte, with mis. “A BAD RECORD. ———— BENJAMIN HARRISON'S ADMINISTRATION UNDER INDICTMENT ~- EXTRAVA- GANCE, AND UTTER DISREGARD OF BOLEMN PLEDGES. CORRUPTION The issue in this campaign is the Ros publican record of the last four years. It is a very bad record. It iss recocd of wrong-doing, of unfair favoritism in legislation and of scandalous misconduct in administration; a record of reckless squanderiog; of the debauchment of the public service; of corruption in office and 1 getting office, and of shameful malpractices in the attempt to retain power regardless of the popular will, The Administration and the Fifty-first Congress came Into power by plain pur- chase. The Republican Party in 1888 secured its triumph by selling le rislation short, Abandoning all that it had professed and all that its leaders, living and dead, had taught concerning the limitations of right in tariff legislation, it framed a platform in Chicago in which it offered to monopolists such tariff rates as they should desire for their enrichment at the expense of the people, in return for con- tributions to the campsign fund. The offer was accepted. Toe money was paid, and with it the notorious em. bezzler and corruptionist, Matthew Quay, with his lieutenant, Dudley, was set to buy the election. When the funds ran low John Wanamaker purchased an option on a Cabinet office by securing ao additional contribution of $400,000 from the buyers of legislation upon a margin, When the Congress thus elected came together the Republican majority was too narrow and uncertain to do the work it had promised. It could not deliver the legislative goods it had solid to mou- opolists without resort to [further un fairness and wrong. It pro led t ) seat members of the minority whom th people had elected and to it R ) ca whom the people had i i elect, and L ana 1 ail L 8 WHS UTrav rh sl « 3H to # voi in protest. When the time came for deDate th majority decided not to permit deal lest the truth be made plain to ths peo pie The rules of the House were revola. tionized. A dictator of p 3 trary will was placed in the chair wh suppressed discussion, overr wie all « siderations of fairness, changed House from a deliberative body into a mere machine for recording his deter. mination, and thus enacted the measures of monopoly which the party had bees Lo pasa paid io sdvan In two short years this Congress squan dered an enormous surplus, reduced the treasury to the sorest straits, laid heavy burdens upon the people and upon io. dustry and made a determined, though fortunately a fruitless, effort to rob the several States of the right of free elec ticas in order to secure for the Republi can Party a longer lease of power. It sought to buy votes for the future by pension legislation of the msl reckiom and usjust chara ter, whose shadow hangs like a pall over the finances of the country and must embarrass its prosper ity for a generation to come The Administration thus elected de livered to Wanamaker the Cabinet offi he had bought, put Tanner into tie Pen sion Office, with his exultant exclama tion, “God help the surpius!’ nol uj his lips, and when his scagsdalous mis. hi made his removal a necessity, put Raum there instead, larger mischief in vociferous jon, and to fill the office tions, peculations and scan ials #0 shame ful Reed yald not be dragooned into pallisting them. Aud. in spite of further and grant exposure, Raum is in office still! Ihe Administration came into pow protesting most solemnly its conduct to work still fash § tye P ME leas with Congress that even the more fla. enforce the Civil Service law in letler and spirit, and to extend its scope and influence It straightway set Clarkson at work to behead postmarters ad arate wholly unprecedented. The President openly farmed out the Federal office: a spoils to such bosses as Quay and Platt, and quartered his own relatives add partaers and chums upon the public ser vice. When the Civil Service Commis. sion discovered the most flagrant and shameless abuses in Baltimore and urged the removal of numbers of persons by name for proved misconduct amounting to criminality—misconduct perpetrated in the name and on beball of the Ad- ministration—the whole matter jauntily put aside by Wanamaker, aod the President in no way interfered to re. deem his pledge or to {ree himsell from the shame of it all. purp we to | Was Dudley was one of the agents in the e was found out. since refused to hold intimate personal relations with the ‘Blocks of statestuan, but through his Attorney. porehue of Mr. Harrison's election, and Mr. Harrison has Five’ General and former law partner he has interfered with the administration justice in Dudley's case, has saused a judge upon the bench to shield snd pro- of tect crime, and has since rewarded that judge for his corrupt subserviency by elevating him to a higher judicial posi tion, And within these later months the country bas seen the President organize the Civil Service lato a political ma. chine, and with it compel his own tion, according to the known need and desire of each of his beneliciaries. In certain directions he filled the foreign service with incapable men to oblige unworthy interests. He sent Mizuer to Centrsl America, and kept him there long after the country had given expression to its disgust and humiliation with the conduct of an American Minister who, in the interest of a speculative syndicate, sacrificed the honor of the Nation and the flag. He sent Ean and MeO reery to Chile, with results grievously hurtful both to the good name and to the commercial interests of the country. To Wanamaker he has added Elkins as a Cabinet officer—Elkins, a political adventurer and speculator, who had grown rich out of politics without hav- ing won respect enough anywhere to make his name suggestive even of possi. bilities in connection with honorable of. fice. He made Porter the Bu perinten- deat of the Census, knowing him to be sn already discredited manipulator of statistics, a foreign adventurer destitute of convictions sod in search of a market for his peculiar abilities, a man at that very time conducting business as a vul- gar wine tout in combination with polis tics and ready to placard his advertise. ments in the Executive Mansion itself. He permitted this man to falsify the cen. sus of great States by way of robbing them of their just representation and thus increasing the chances of that party's success to whose service he had hired himself. It is a sad and shameful story of pledges broken: of fiscal legislation bar- tered for campaign funds; of elections secured by the purchase of voters; of high office mad» the subject of wtigar traffic: of the public pervice, including the most honorable pisces, prostituted to the promotion of the President's ambitions; of a court « sanct dre persons nvertea jato a of Rion 2 sCOuUn- i - “5 on, ~ - - ~ of debate sup of a BUrpiGs squan sdicial place; ongress ; Cand of the enormous increase of share oil with the political organization int made its collection possible. It is a grievous indictment that is here made covers , but it is perfectly tr but s part of the truth specifications will « later course The given upon which every accusation rests, The record will laid bare —that record which the people by their votes in November are to or condemn, And this is not a mere recalling of oid errors, a recurrence pented of. The courses that this Administration have been cc ntinuous, Raum is still at the head Bureau, and that bureau is not reformed Marshall Airey still holds Jaltimore, notwithstanding loosevelt’s report as tw 3) i ie aad it The the yme in of § facts will these letters. be whole be f offenses re. carndemn he Peasion or purified. in Commissioner his organization of the postoffice Custom House employes there iatlo a band of political rutfians, his use of them to carry primaries in the Adminis. wholesale cheating office trations interest by tual physical violence, 1a waich : ly participated. Neither he and Dy ac r Postmaster Johnsoa nor any of their subordinates have been removed, thougza their cooduct was fully sel forth and their removal strongly urged by Mr. Roosevelt, a Republican member of the Cay Rery Commission ; though some of them, sccording t 3r. Roosevelt's report leliberately wostified to lies; them openly confessed all of them set at political assess. though many of cheating; thouga the law against ments, and though they all professed with more or less of candor the creed of cheating and ballot-box oh the testimony showed that they rt stufiag wh had practiced. These men who, as one of them put it in his testimony, believe ‘in doiug any~ thing to win,” are still in office by grace Mr. Wanamaker's favor asad Mr, Harrison's of duty tilt Administration ma- neglect constitute the And they | cuine in Baltimore and Maryland polities. | In brief, the Administration is what it has been. It profits still by the practices for which honest men in both parties have condemned it in the past. It pro. tects its scoundrels and its law breakers. It keeps them in office. It uses them in politics, their performances, It sent them and such as them to Minneapolis to nominate Mr. Harrison for a second term in spite | of any desire the Republican Party might | have for some other candidate. It still looks to the monopolies it has fostered for the money with which to carry the election. In their behalf it has not only made laws, but hes neglected and refused to enforce such laws as there are on the statute books adverse to them, The coal conspiracy has been formed during this Administration. Without le or hindrance it has levied a tribute upon the people in face of the aoti-Trust law, That law makes it the imperative duty of the Attorney-General, through the District Attorneys, to bring criminal prosecutions against all the conapirators: but no District Attorney has moved, and the Attorney-General weakly protests that he has no information touching the conspiracy. In the interest of good government it is necessary to chastise official miscon. duct by defeat. The men and the party now in power must be seat into retire ment for the public good, Our public life is in need of disinfection, It is tims to restore legislation to its proper service of all the people. ; The simple facts of these four years history constitute the most comclusive reasons for refusing to intrust this Ad. ministration or the it represents with a further lease power, New York World, ——— The Tariff and thy Farmer. A Pensylvania Demoorat writes the Oouriet=J uct} for information upon follow ¢ rid reg tarift affect the It sanctions their creeds aad | grain farmers as compared with the cot. ton growers! “2. How are lated? “3. What articles of trade, either produced on the farm or manufactured, can be sold in the Eaglish market cheaper than in the American market? [ mean American goods.” 1. The tariff and cotton growers elike in this, that it robs both, It is true that there is a tariff on corn, wheat and oats, on the pretense of protecting them, Lut they need no protection, because they exported iu large quantities and sold in competition with the grain of other countries, be exported in large quantities, it is be- cause it is produced more cheaply here than it is abroad. In the last fiscal year we exported 157,000,000 bushels of wheat, worth #1 61 , 000,000, besides 15,000,000 barrels of flour, worth 855, . 000,000; also 75,000,000 bushels of corn, worth £41,500,000, and pearly 3,000,000,000 pounds of cotton, worth tariff rebates regu. $258,000,000, We were enabled to do this because these commodities were cheaper in the United States than in countries to which they were sent; the price abroad, less freight, commission and other charges, being the price re. alized for them hore. It is nonsense to talk of protecting cheap goods against those that are dearer; by the natural laws of trade commodities seek the mar. kets where prices are best, on the free (ist, while wheat is nomi. nally protected by a duty of twenty-five cents a bushel; bat cotton is as effecty. ally protected by its cheapness as wheat, sud neither is protected by the tariff, Where the robbery comes in is tax on she ROO 1s which farmers for their grain and We sent abroad last year, in round numbers £800,000,000 worth of products of agri the . : Cotton is in the receivs culture of all kinds. What did we pet in retura? Did we gel our pay in gold? No; we exp pried more g i and ver than we imported We had to take fore i Inerchiar i H ex Ang wd on a autiab is t t i x ed M Ivy H nes ¥ per i . f ‘ E161 § } ow oF h e8 x ported, the farmer { paid 3! ) is, would ge at $110, f ] J w rt ' Ie A it 10 2 ALY tn Pay * 3 | jtie t & r je sll imports ar juliab ut it 0 true that th farmers pa t 3 estic manufacturers mu 4 rices tor goods obtained from th thar RIDIN goods would cont sDroad 80 that a reduction of third from the purchasing power ur agricultural ex. ports does not by any mesns represent the exaction which the tarifl makes of the farmers 2. When imported? material is used in the manulscture of an article, niaety- nine per cent, of the duties paid on such material 1s refunded when Lhe arti is exported, 3. Many agricoltural implements, sew ing machives, and macy other articles are sold abroad at lower t home, Oa ot i This has been denied, but i been proved beyond question; sad some protectionists admit and defend it as proper. The rebate of duties on imp rt el material contributes to render this possible; but it also happens in the case { articies on which po rebate is paid, because high tanifls en » the manafac turer to exs x sive | 5 at me, while abr where Lhe tariff v Hm no advantage, he is ¢ ipelied to take a reasonable profit. — Courier.J 1% ——— tor— It Is a Stimulant. Mr. Mason, one of the Republican stumpers decla es that ‘the tand not a lax Dot a stimulant A true word. The tarifl stimulates campaign con tributions (rom its beneiciaries, the pro tected millionaires. The fat-friers know It stimuated Carnegie to buy castles in Scotland and to set up as a money lord in England while reducing wages at home, It stimulates manufacturers to shoddy. ize their goods and raise toerr prices It stimulates the tariff and the usurer to collect the debts of its victims. It puts the stimulant of necessity upon workingmen to secure the ex'ra cost of their necesseries due to exactions Mr. Mason is only half right. The tariff is both a tax and a stimulant. i A The Result of Tariff Taxation. Experts estimate that during the last | thirty years upwards of five billion dol- | lars have been paid ioto the United | States Treasury as the result of tariff | taxation. The same authorities tell us thet for every dollar thus paid gto the Treasury, from §3 to 85 profit has one into the pockets of the protected home manufacturers, or, altogether, the enor. mous sum of thirty-one billion dollars. Is it any wonder that twenty-five thous. and individuals now own one-half of all the property m this country! Who will question the necessity of relief to the tolling millions from suen burdens as these! THe vew system of electric street lighting which is to be introduced on Fifth Avenue, New York City, will em. ploy two instead of one arc lamp on each post. In this way more effective light and better diffusion are expected, #0 that shadows will not be as notice. able. The wires are to bas concealed from view anl consectel ualergroned to the low voltage maios of the Edison Company. Eh lamp will take about filty volts nnd the pairs will be con. nected up io series and the system is multiple, so that no wire will carry over 110 voits electric pressure, — Tar Government has ordered an steamers 10 have lifeboats ready for an emergency. Their lifo-presorvers ought also be suficient In quantity and quality for the maximum nume ber of passengers carried, and, what : { affects grain farmers are | Whenever a commodity can | SABBATH SCHOUL. | INTERNATIONAL i LESSON YOR OCTOBER 28, Lesson Text: “Peter at Cesarean,” Acts x., 3048 Golden Text: Acts x., AB—Commentary, 80, It seems to be a Scriptural princi that if we would obtain definite Tad | from God in any form we must seek it wi the whole heart, “Ye shall seek Mo and find Me when ye shall search for Me with ull your heart” (Jer. xxix, 1%. Jesus also taught that certain diseases could be over. come by prayer and fasting (Math, xvii, 21), Cornelius being thus in earnest re cvivesa visit Irom an angel 31, The angel brings tidings from heaven that both Cornelius prayers and alms have been heard and regarded by God. Compares Daniel's fasting and praying and the mes- sage sent to him by an angel (Dan. x, 12 19). Bee also Zacharine and the angel Ga- briel (Luke i., 13 The angels are minis. tering spirits on the heirs of salvation (Heb. |., a who wait up 14). Bebold the intimate acquaintance of augels with our name, the house we live in, the town in which we sojourn, our occups- tion, «1 Observe bow plain and {ud the directions given to the servants Bo the nw A God end the visions of God are writ. ten pininly (Deut. xxvii, 5; Hab, 0. 2 that the one who reads may obey, See also Pa, xxvii, 1L $8, Corpelivs baving briefly replied to Peter's question, “For what intent have ye sent for me? (verse 20) and having grate. Tully commended him for bis promptness, then adds, “Now therefore are we al hers present before God to bear all things that are commanded thee of God It ts God and not Peter whom Cornelius expects to hear from, it is the presence of God, not of Peter, that awes them 34 “Of a truth | perceive that God is no respecter of persons.” Thus Peter began his address. He might have learned this from the law (Deut. x, 17; Il Chron, xix, 7: Job XXXIV but he nesled a vision to convinces Some people now would need a vision to convinee them that God actually can and does love and work through those who don’t belong to their church 5 “In every pation he that feareth Him and worketh righteousness is accepted with Him For Peter to put a Gentile on 1 level with a Jew as to acceptance with 1 was rely the Bpirit speaking in Peter, for a little while before hie thought ver Hor- ently, Bee verse A ugh the peace preached by J ' Chr as first for lesrael, yet lsaia ad hinted st its being for Gentiles a when ha wots ace, peste to him that ar a that r # y preached it in Epb s 18 :, isting that “The same Lord rice to all that ¢sll upon Him™ Peter insisted that they knew this word which began to be preached in Gallles and afterward in all Judea, but he could not bave added that it was because of the Baviour's command 10 preach the Gospel to every creature and the aposties’ faithfulness in obeying it 3, Here is a most concise and yet com- prehensive statement of the commission, sower and work of our Lord Jesus Christ, dere is clearly the fact of the Trinity— Father, Son and Holy Spirit unitedly work- ug on behalf of opposed humanity and against the devi 38 The Bible is the great and wholly in- #pired even verbally inspired) record of God and His Son; but so few, even of those who possess the Bible care mu or know much atout its testimony. Therefore God has appointed living men and women who shall be living walking speakin Bibles, known and read of all men, AI with the Spirit, bonoring the Lord Jesus dl Cor. iv. 11 40, Unr veroal testimony fact that Jesus died and rose again--de- Hvered for our offenses, raised again for our The testimony ustification (Rom, iv J be, to the fact that VER eh isto the great y AN of our lives ia, or shouid we died with Him, by faith in Him, and are now alive unt walking in newness of lite, our affections set things above Rom. vi. 6; Gal ii, 20; ¢ i 1 41. Jesus God upon after His resurrection, appeared some ten or eleven times, but only unto the disciples, and perhaps n them Many know that Jesus di for them who know litte of His resurrect one out. side the oi for entrance to His yon b 42. The who died and rose again is 10 be our Judge He offers Himself! to all now as their Saviour, promising to east out none who come to Him John vi, ¥7). but sx surely as He is a Saviour now, He will soon be Judge, first of His redesmed, then of th ving mations and lastly of ali the rest of the dead. It will be a dav of a thousand years begmning and sanding with judgment (Acts xVI Rom. xiv, 10; Math xxv 2: Rev, xx. 11, 12 43, It is the privilege ol ali who receive Jesus Christ as their Saviour to know that they have even now the forgiveness of sins and shall never come into judgment for their sins (I John ., 12; Isa, xxxWwiil, 17; shit. 25 Acta xiii, 3% 39 l Joni, 7. © 44, It isevident that as Peter spoke the words they were received by those who beard them, and right on the spot in the midst of the service, while Peter was speak. ing, the Holy Spirit came upon them, God thus sealing the preaching of Peter and manifesting His approval (Mark xvi, 20), 45. 1t seems that the brethren from Joppa who sccompanied Peter (verse 25) were Jews or circamoision, as we might have ex. , no Gentiles or uncircumcision baw. ng Jub hiten received. And now they are indeed astonished to see uncirew Gene tiles receive the same gift from God as the circumcised Jews had recsived at Pentecost and afterward whapters ii, 4; iv, 80), 44, The power to speak various langs and God was Tully granted to them. We know that now oeived Holy Spirit, the naxt step is the public $ of the same in thus that henoeforth world and alive unto God, oon. are be wou while they rejoiosd in being a al bood unto Him, how he would them of a possible abundant entrance into the king. dom, and of the glorious appearing, — Lamon Helper, : Ca 5 Woor-The alien contract-labor iaw Is getting to be a dead letter. Van Pelt—How s0® Wool--Why, look at the wealthy widows who have imported husbands this season. Van Pelt—That's all right; they den't Sotie over here to work. —Brookiyn ife. Is equally important, be within easy reach.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers