\ THE TARIFF BILL PASSED. THE SENATE APPROVES THE GORMAN COMPROMISE, ¥he Measure Wins by a Majority of Five ~Senator HiIl Votes Against the Bill Because of the Income Tax Feature ~The Conference Committee, The Gorman compromise Tariff bill passed the Senata at 10.45 o'clock p. m., on the day set for the final vote after a continuous and eventful session of more than twel ve hours, and after a struggle which had months and for the bill Ing 89 yeas lasted three The majority the vote Senator one day. five, 34 nays, wns to | be- | Hill | voted against the bill, ‘With the exception | of Hi'l the Demoeratio side acted with per- fect discipline and sustained the In all ealoulations as tity, supported the bill, alist Senators, Kyle an uncertain and Allen, deoren of | the caucus, Senator Irby, who has figured | quan- | and the two Pop- | who | had of late displayed disturbing symptoms | of dissatisfaction, recorded the Demoeratic majority, Peffor and Stewart—voted with Hill and the Republicans, paired, themselves with The vote in detail was Yoas—Maasrs, Allen, Bate, burn, Blanchard, Caffery, Call, Cockrell, Coke, Daniel, Faulkner, George, Gibson, Gorman, Gray, Harrls, Hunton, Irby, Jarvis, Jones (Ark.), Kyle, Lindsay, MeLaurin, Martin, Mills, Mitchell (Wie.), Morgan, Mur- phy, Palmer, Pasco, Ransom, Roach, Smith, role, Vest, Vilas, Voorhees, Walsh, White Aldrich, Allison, Carey, nder, Cullom. Davis, Dixon, Dolph, ols, Frye, Gallinger, Hale, Hanshrou Hawley, Hill, Jones (Neva Manderson, Mit Peffer., Perkins, Proctor, Quay, Sherman, Stawart, Teller, Washburn ' PAINS Ware as for and the Shoup, 34. follows, the first named z | others against the bill va with Woleott ; Batler with Can fen with Pettigrew ; Gordon with Wil Pugh with Hoar ; MePherson with Mor 1@ end of the in long and exciting struggle in dramatic features, al- it was devoid any enthusiastic emonstrations, The scene which marked ng of the bill In the House found no climax of the Senate debate ond the de womie sv wing of tha desks of 1 pposite stems the 4 ained by the bindl The sharp met nunaiation ntrast btw | raised in 4 lustrated “a House k to the minute the Senate and the respected on the o stillad, Instantly the ery seat in the galleries were the floor back of was filled with Represen ent Stevenson ann Id be read a third time, an explaination from 3 alr vote becnn chamber was oo crowded and the space on the Senate 2 rele tives, Viee-Pre that the bill w then Senators of t . Senator Smith, of New Jersey, aross in his piace, and began in a loud voles to explain the vote he was about to record, Senator Yest, ot the Finance Committee, w about wearily in Lis chair, and Senat ris, who was impatient rolled u tho sleeves of coat and leaned his way on his hand, Wad his statement in a monotonous tome, sninsiand upiadq, came the ental r Har for a we his head Two Populists — | Every Senator voted or was | Berry, Black- | alpaca | in "| Senator Smith | and Senator Harris looked gloomier as the | New Jersey Senator continded to turn over | the leaves of manuseript in his band, Then came Senator Allen. Senator Hill wound the speech making, or, rather, speech reading, by defending his course, Then came the vote, Mr. Blanchard failed to vote and Mr. Caffery caused much excite ment by voting no. Senators Jones Vest, the ymmittee, glanced at Louisiana Senators in amazement, Benator G who engineersd the promise, « not disguise his surprise When name was reached he voted aye, and the Democratic leaders regained their courage, After the vote had been cone cluded Senator Caffrey made the statement that he had voted not to emphasize his indignation over ths fact that Democrats had broken the A. cus pledge to protect the planters so that they woul get this year's bounty Mr. Caffrey changed his ave, Mr. Blanchard also vot The vote was then anno Vice-President, and there applause in the galleries, re motion Vice-President then appointed the following the hill: V Harris, Yest, Jon Sherman, Aldrich ana Allison. The Senate then adjourned. up of rman, . A oulq Irbhy's ince was On 8 irhees, sant I —sss mt RED TAPE CUT OFF. The Reorganization of the United States War Department, The re recently ordered ization of the War Department y Secretary Lamont, and which is the result of months of study of the various systems of the Department, has gone into The sweeping orders of the Ssceretary, which reduce the fores of the Da. partment from 2200 to less than 1200, have naturally caused widespread excitement and consternation throughout all the bureaus, Almost all the eumbrous system that has been bulit up In the past thirty years has efleot been radically modified, and in addition to | the great saving in clerk hire that is ex. Tarkeya, PH pectde to result, s large number of army of | cers are detached and ordered to rejoin | their commands, There are now eleven of. flcers on duty as assistant adjatant-gen. | erals, five assistants each to the surgeon. general and the quartermaster-gensral, and the same number to the chief of ordnance, | Gosss, BB and all the other buresus have various as- | sistants, The new order permits only one assistant to each chief, although special circumstances a second officer may be detailed for similar duty, but all ths others must go, and so must the clerks that, hava herstofore been needed to carry out the duplication upon duplication of the rod tape system that is sald to exist, The system of correspendencs is changed, by which about half of the communications which new reach the Department will re- caive neither reply nor acknowledgment, The voluminous annual reports will here- after he confined to suceinet narratives, and no ons in the Department will hereafter write books or engage In aay literary work without special permission, pe seimeetlili————— — CONSTERNATION IN ITALY, An Editor Who Had Desounced An. anarchists Stabbed to Death, Glusepps Bandi, editor and proprietor or the Cazetio Livornese, was stabbed with # polgnard ia Leghorn, Italy, while riding tc his office lun carriage. He died In n fou hours. The assassin escaped, Tho marder has thrown political men and §ousnal into a state of consternation. It believed that It was the work of Anaralsist conspirators, Bandi had opposed the Anarchis's with great courage in his newspaper and had strongly denounesd the sasassination of President Carnot, He was one of Garibaldi's thousand heross of Marsala, under | Potatoes, P hl KILLED FOUR BABES, ———— Awful Crime of an Insane Woman in Vermont, At Richford, Vt., Mrs, Morrill Baker, the mother of four children, whose ages ranged from ons to eight years, as the result of a quarrel with her husband, hanged the little ones to the bodposts In her chamber, one to each, and then fled to the woods, Baker and his wife have lived unhappily during the past two years and have separ- ated several times, They quarreled and de- olded to separate again, Mr, Baker agreeing to take his wife and the children to the residences of his brother in Enosburg, about sight miles away. Soon after Baker lofi the house, Mrs. Baker took the children to her cham. ber, and thers hanged them to the bad. posts. They were dead when found, The woman had tied the neck of each of her little ones tightly to its respective post, Two canary birds were also found banging by their necks dead in the room. The search of the neighbors was sucooss- ful after a long time, and the woman was found hiding in the bushes not a great dis- tance from the house, Her appearance clearly showed that she is insane, Be a ————— NEARLY 200 LOST, A Ferryboat Capsized in a Hungare lan River. A shocking disaster occurred on the River Theiss, near Nyireghyhazl, Hungary, result. ing in the loss of nearly 200 lives, A ferryboat persons on board was being drawn anross the river by means ©f a « . Ti } 1 parted and its saapping n board the boat, in the mid of which the vessel capsized from being overweigh on side, All the cecupants of the into the river and most drowned. Only about & have been saved, with abou mt number oy one GuirrLeMiy, a schoolmaster Les-Clermont, France, acclde one of his small pupils while g graphic history of the assassinatic ident Carnot, The poor at his dee to kill hin teacher, distr 1aelf THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted in New York. 26 MILE AND CREAM. ¢ generally active during the past During the surplus sold at the exchange to per Marke " 3 ) man pl ior 40 being juarts, raisod 20. 1,618,133 16,390 Creamery —~Penn,, € BE +4 o SR firsts . 3, thirds to s fummer make .... Rolls, fresh ...o..c00 cHnEan State--Full speam white ‘ancy Fall eroam, good to prime, State Factory—Part skims, rhaiss . -~ ransa Part skims, Full skims som. 1o prime BOOS, Riate & Penn-—Tres) Jorany Fanner. .. Wont orn F roah, hoot “a Ny yath & West Gooss egas BEANS AND PEAS Beans Yarrow, 1999, ob 1808, hoi wloe, Madinm Pan, 1893, cholo Rad kidney, 1853, choles White Kidney Riark tartle sonar Lima, Cal, 1893, yroon peas hbls, AYD BREARIES—TT 1am FRUITS Rlaskthorriea N. C., ? qt tran w \] rries, Herr ne nrring LE] DRESSED POULTRY. Chick=ns, Phila, brollers, .... "a Fowle, Durks, — a | bd = Squabs, ® doz YREOETADLES, Seconds, Pind... Cabbage, ¥ 10 Onlons-—Barmn Ia, # Sa ~ a TO. erate Egyptian, ¥ maz, sei Squash, marrow, ¥ crate, Lettuss, looal, ¥ B41, .., Boasts, ¥ 100 hanshes Asparagus, ¥ doz Soke String beans, W asin, .... Grenn pons, ¥ basket, Ezg plant, # bbl Tonatowss, Fla, ¥ oarrier, Cucumbers, ¥ erate... .... GRAY, ETC, Floar-~Winter Patents, ,... Kpring Patents, .... Wheat, No, 2 el ..... May . ' Corny B....00...5.:.4s Oats~No, 2 White ........ Track mixed Rye-Stat®.......0o 00000040 Barlay-«Ungraded Wostorn Beads Clover, ¥ 100....... Timothy, ¥ 100.,....... Lard=City Steam ............ LITE STOCK. Beovos, olty dressed. Mileh Cows, con. ta good... Calves, olty drosaal,......., Country dressed ........ . Bhesp, B 1078. ouiiiniiies Iambs, ® 1008. . ovens ye. ~~ ETE 2-5 Pehl a e-L Be FRdbaan | the bill was withdrawn | Ings and 55% Saal 32 wie e223 Hogs-~Live, #100 Bs. ...... Dresso EE FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS, The Senate, 1430 Day. Consideration of the Tariff bill in Committee of the Whole was finished and the measure reported tp the Senate, «The joint resolution, passed in the House, con tinuing for thirty days after the close of the fiscal yenr the current appropriations passed the Banate, dre Day.—-The Tariff bill was under consideration all day, several important votes on the sugar schedule belong taken, The proposition to cut out the eighth of a cont differential was lost, Mr. Quay casting the deciding vote, The Finance Committees was beaten on Mr. Hill's motion ro terminate the bounty with the passage of the act, The tax will therefors go into effect forth with, Mr. Kyle's amendment making the sugar schedule operative at once was agroed to and then the whole schedule was passed, 145 Dax. —Aftor a discussion lasting all day the Tariff bill was passed by a majority of five, A conference committee was ap pointed, The House. 168p Day.—The election contest in the Tenth Georgia District was decided in favor of Mr. Black, the sitting member, 164 Dax. Tha blll to readjust the sal- aries and allowances of the postmasters at Guthrie and Fingfisher, Oklabhamsa, was taken up, but the morning hour expired and Twenty-nine pen- sion and desertion bills which had been favorably reported were passed, 185te Day. ~The resolution Mr. Me- Gann, directing the Commissionsr of Labor to investigate and report upon the conditions attending the employment of women and children, their wages, sanitary surround ost of living, was passed, —The bill providing for the erection of a Hall ol Hecords in Washington was called up, and two unsuccessfal attempts were made pose of an amendment reducing the priation for the site from £300,000 to 104) 166 Dax he Pari? bill was submitted ongratulations from Brazil wers lal the House — The H passed tion looking to the resumption warships [ho billto tax greenbacks was then : Tlie Nicaraguan Canal Lill was reg ol taken ug THE LEAGT Clubs 0 Baltimore. § Boston... New York. Pittaburg..56 21 Philadel Brooklyn. .38 ¢ THE Gurrrrre § 82 —— NATIONAL GAME. Brovruen mores, Tuetw lead the Nov Tux I’ Buckley, ls Lowe, « home runs Basgnars FRmes are Tax Baltimores hay class, Such batt them in front, Tazavway, of Brookiyn, has secured first base on bails more tines than any other | League player. Bostox's erack pitcher, Nichols, has lost but two games this season, and Baltimore onor of lowering his colors MorLiaxg, of Baltimore, has been for thirteen years, and bas yet to He Is sald ere pitehing “x pe Taz Baltimores have finally ensounterad bard luck in the shape of an injury to Catcher Robinson, which will keep him out of the Fig T “ye Sisog Tom Brown captain of the L have been wo for some tin rdod Pleffor as he tallenders Pleffer's ilar with his yaiaviil flaying wit exciosiveness made him ung ug 1 but good, ‘layers nything and ner HE inabiilty to mnd in a oan red, and that neriy, aiways Linniag wien the arkable games the were played at Marietta tenm Each Marietta nd games by 7 to 4 and mmrocks won the third bet ween rmrocks, of Wheeling Was A Tweaive inning contest first and as and th Rts 7 aN Tux Boston baseball managers have been refused permission to erect a woolen pavi- Hon on the site of the one recently destroyed Liy fire, The reason for the refusal fs that the site of the proposed structure 14 within that area in which the erection and construe tion of wooden buildings is prohibited, Yarz now claims the college baseball cham. lonship, thouxh she refus=s to play a decid Bg game with Peonsylvania, The series bee tween Cisse two teams is a tie, and as Penn sylvania also claims the champlonship, sinee Yale has refused her offer 15 play a deciding game, the claims of the former will be con. siders | by avery sportsman as belong much better than those of the latter, ONE MILLION LOST. Two Men Killed by Falling Walls In Brooklyn, One million dollars’ worth of property kept in Woodruft's stores, on Farnam street, between Joralemon and State, Brooklyn, was destroyed by fire a few days ago. Two men, employes of the Unlon Ferry Company, wore killed outright by a falling wall, Thres men wars injured. Another man was missing on the morning after the fire, The dead were DeadeJohn CO. Barrow, unmarried, crushed by walls; James Prentice, single, mangled beyond recognition, Missing Robert Sheppard, bollevad to be in the ruins, Woodruff's stores occupy the antirs blook, bounded by Farman, Joralemon and State streats and the East River, A workman discovered the firs un the second floor of the five story brick building facing Furman street, known as Division K, at 4.10 o'clock, No ons had entered ths floor for seven weaks, and spoatancons combustion was the only assignable cause for the conflage mt ion, A ——————— Tux antelopes, like the bhulaioes, ars *. coziing very scarce in Texas, A few yuirs ago toey grazed the prairies in vast herds, | there, lished gardens of bewitehing beauty and luxe. | urlance, gathering into them Alpine, Pyren- | ean and French plants. One of the sweetest | spots on | stone, | but little Impression on the world, but his | genius were brought than any I have mentioned, | Inst £100,000 saerifl REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BDROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, Subject: “The Royal Garden.’ Text : “I have come into My garden," Bolomon's Bong v., 1. The world has bad a great many beautiful gardens. Chaarlemagne added tothe glory of his reign by decreeing that they be estab lished all through the realm lecreeing even the names of the flowers tobe plantad Henry IV., at Montpellier, estab- asarth the poet, wis the His garden of Bhene writings have made garden, ‘The Leasowes,' will be immortal. { To the natural advantage of that piace was | brought the perfection of art, | terrace and slopes and rustic temple and | reservoir and | their crowning, | forth their richest foliage. There was no life | more diligent, no soul Arbor and urn and fountain here had Oak and yew and hazel put more ingenious than that of Shenstone, and all that diligence and to the adornment of that one treasured spot. He gave £300 for it. He soldit for £17,000 And yet I am to tell you of a richer garden It is the gar den spoken of in my text, the garden of the church, which belongs says 50. He hought owns it, and He shall to Christ, for mv text it, He planted it, He mye it, Walter Scott, in his outiny st Abbotsford, rnined his for- tune, and now, in the erimson flowers of those gardens, you easn almost think or im- agine that you ses the blood of that old man's bre The payment of the ed him, But I have to irist’s life the out! Kan heart, tell you that CO death were titul garden of my text sp tears and pangs and agoniss | ell me, yo women who saw Him hang! Tell me, ye ex- rontioners who lifted Him and let Him down! Tell me, thou that f»il! gave Himsa] the o bal bas a ri blessed Jasus, ] saks, fie . then, the garden ol Christ, certainly He then, oh walk up and what Thou wilt hurch Comm, this rong. wi these aisles and pluck of swaetness for Thyse The } compared t of cho thoro That w were no they will bs alo WAY. my fext appropriately & Pins w there rat the gate. will dist wshionad hol AL) r ooreopsi oisanaer, His garden, the bright gpon the w nns pea bave 10 search for such sg You do not ses them v you find whers they has ening face geranium on tains Keeping ¢ They are perhaps eresping swoatly al briers of life, giving ki a man who has bad black rock of trou! have covered ft wer with flowering jasmine running in and out amid the erev. wes, Thess Christians in Christ's gardens are not like ywar, gaudy in the Haht, but whenever darkness hovers over a f sha ir the in the stan if the 3 thes sunt | soul tha: nends to be comforted there they Sand, Bet Blooming cereusor, Bat in Christ's garden there are plants that may be better compared to the Maxioan cactus , loveliness within nea with of character, They wound al mie that touches them, They are hard to handle. Men prosounce them noth ing bat th but « Oven withstanding all their = man has had very and it has only heen bas raised even the smallest In this garien of the has planted, I also find tify but cold phase the winter who are precise sioned, pure se snow ir never shad any they never say anyt! anvthing pro ver flutter; th their Punts MOST every Won them not- Arpt Many Ari grou through in (ears the imdiguation Jat I have to tell § gathering up | i i YORrs ago put forth ite tis the pass.on lowe ots foretold it, Lon i eked upon it ia thy bul, the ross shook af 8 bursting, and the dead got up in thelr winding sheets to ses its fall bloom, Itis a erimson fower-<blood at the roots, blood on the branches, bool on all the jeaves, [Its perfume is to fill all the nations, Jis touch is life, Its breath fs heaven, Come, O winds, from the north, and winds from the south, and winds from the east, ar | winds from the west, and bear to all the sqrth the sweet smelling savor of Christ, my Lord, His worth, if all the nations knew Sure the whole earth would love Him ton, Again, the church may be appropriately comparad to a garden, because it is a place of select fruits, That no peaches or apricots, The soarser fruits are planted in the orchard, or they are set | out on the sunny hillside, but the choloest 80 In the | delight, | prin. | charity, generosity, integrity «but He intends | | the choicest fruits to be inthe gardien, and fruits are kept In the garlen, world outside the chureh Christ has planted A great many beautifu! things-<nationos, if they are not there then shame on the church. Religion Is not a mera flower ing sentimentality, It is a practical le wiving, healthful fruit--not posies, but apples, “Oh'™ says somebody, “I don't sen what your garden of the chareh has yielded." Where did your asylums come from, and your hospitals, and your Institutions of meray? Christ planted every one of them , He planted them in His gar- den, When Christ gave sight to Bartimaeus, He Iald the ocornsrstons of every blind asylum that has ever besa built, When Christ soothed the demonian of Galiles, He Inid the cornerstone of every lunatic asylum that has ever been established. When unrest sakd ro the sisk ma, Tike up thy bed ancl walk I" He Inid the corasrstonn of every hospital the world has over soon, When Christ said, “I was in prison, and ya visited M+" He laid the sorasestoas of every prison relorm sssosiation that hw ever boon formal. The chareh of Christ is a glorious garden, and it ta fall of frakt, | know thers fs soma poor frat in #t, 1 know thers ara wo ne woes ls that onght to have been theowa over ths fenes [ know thers wre somn crabappls trae that ought to be cut dows, 1 Know there are some wild @rapas that sught 10 be aproote ], but are you going to destroy t'y wholes @nrden because of a Nits ganried feait? You will fla worm estes leaves in Fontalableau anl lnssots that sting in the { mo | Ing ja this great | got in, | only glimpses you over get of such a garden would be a strange | garden which had in # no berries, no plums, | ' Airy groves of the Champs Elysees. You do { not tear down or destroy the whole gar. len because there are u few spocimsns of gnarled fruit, I admit there are men aod women in the church who ought not to bas there, but let us bo just as frank and wimit the fact that thers ure hundreds and thoy sands and tons of thousan is glorious Christian men and woman, holy, Glesssd, useful, consecrated and triumphant, There is no grander collection in all the earth than the collection of Christians, There are Christin meu In tks shyreh whose reli zion is not a matter of psalm sing- ing and chureh going. To-marrow moralng that religion will keep them just.as contls- tent and consecrated on “exchange” ms it ever kept them at the communion table There ure women in the church of n higher type of character than Mary of Bethany. hey not only sit at the feet of Christ, hut éhey go out into the kitolan to help Martha fn her work, that she may sit thers teo, of | There is a woman who has a drunken hus. more faith aad Hugh wand, who has exhibited patience and courage than mer inthe fire, minutes, martyrdom. Yonder is a mangwho has lain fifteen years on his back, unable sven to food himself, yet calm and peacelal though he lay ou one of the green banks of heaven watching the oarsmen dip thelr pad. Ales in the crystal river! Why, it seems to this moment as if Paul threw to a pomologist’'s catalogue of fruits grow garden st love, joy, peace, patien charity, brotherly kin loess, gentleness, merey—glorious fruit, enough fill sll the baskets of earth and heaven, I have not told you of the better tree Mis garden an! of tha better frat, It was tside Jerasalem a g iw us the of Chri in RRL) long without plenty of water, nave sosu 3 garden in the midst of a desert, yet bloom. ing and luxuriant, All around were dearth and barrenness, but thers were pipes, aque- ducts reaching from this garden up to the mountains, and through those aqueducts the water came streaming down and tossing up into beautiful fountains until every root and leaf and flower was saturated. That is like he church. The church ls a garden in the midst of a great desert of sin and suffering. It is well irrigated, for “our eyes are unto whenee cometh our help , untains of God's strength Lhere rivers f gladness, There is rer whereo! shall make of on God, Preaching the gospel is one of these aqueducts, The Bit is ancther, Baptism and the Lord's sup are aqueducts, Wate ) slake the thirst water to restore the faint, wash the un in the light of the showing us the rainbow around the throna, Oh, was there ever a garden so roughly irrigated? You know the beauty Vorsallies and Chats worth depends very much upon the great iy of water, 1 came to the Isiter place one day when strangers are not to be adm 1, but by sn inducement, which always seemed as applicable to an English. man as an Amerioan, I go the gardener went far the stalrs of stone and turaed on the water. I saw it gleaming on the dry pavement, coming down from step to step, until it came #0 near I could hear the musical rush, aad all over the high, broad stairs it came fonming, fash. down river the gind the city weer r water 10 nan, water tossed ’ sun righteo of " and then up ing, roaring down untH sunlight and wave in | glossome wrestlo tumbled st my feet, So lt ia with the church of God, Everything comes from above—pardon from above, joy from above, adoption from above, sanctification from above. Oh, that now God would turn on the waters of salvation, that they might flow down through His heritage, and that this day we might each find our places to be “Blima,” with twelve wells of water and threescore and ten palm troes, Hark! I bear the iatch at the garden gate, and I look to see who is coming. I hear the voles of Christ, “I am come into My mare den.” Isav: “Come in. 0 Jesus: we hare boon walting for Thea, Walk all through these paths. Look at the flowers. Look at the fruit. Pluck that whish Thou wilt for Thysell," Jesus comes into the garden and up to that old man and touches him and says, “Almost home, father ; not many more aches for thee, I will never leave thea I will never forsake thee, Take courage a little per, and 1 will steady thy tottering and 1 will soothe thy troubles give thee rest, Courage, old man,” Then Christ goss up another garden a soul in trouble and all is well, I bave soon thy heard thy prayer, The sun ® thee by day, nor the moon we Lord shall preserve He will preserve thy troubled spirit.’ Then I see en pat? r the lon yes TO thee soul aio her rar benutifal nes and sass y gather lilies, and mean to fake these # high terrace, and for the garlen around My palace, and there I will plant them, and in better soll, and in better air, They shall put forth bLrighter leaves and sweeter redoience, and no frost shall toneh thom forever.” And I looked up into His face and said “Wall, it i« His garden. and He has a right to do what He will with it, Tr will be done” ~3he hardest prayer a man evar made, I notice that the fine gardens sometimes ave high fences around them, and I cannot It is so with the king's garden. The is when the king rides out la bis splendid earriage, It is not so with this garden the King's garden, I throw wide open the gate and tell you all to come in. No monopoly in religion, Whosoever will, may. Chooss now between a desert and a garden, Many of you have tried the garden of this world's Yeu have found it has been a che Bo it was with Thes.ore Hook, Ha made allthe world lsagh. He makes us Inuch now when we read his poems, but he could not make his own heart laugh. While in the midst of his festivities he confronted a lookinggiass, and he saw himself and sald “There, that Is trae. | look ap just as Iam «dons up in body, mind and purse.” So It was with Shemstone, of whose garden T told at the beginning of my sermon. He sat down amid those bowers and sald : “I bave lost my road to happiness. [ am angry and snvious an’ frantic and despise everything around me, just as It becomes a mad man to do.” Ob, ye weary sonls, come mto Christ's garden today and pluck a little hoartsoase | Christ is the only rest and the only pardon for a arbed spirit, Do you wot think your chance has almost come? You men and women who have boon waiting year after yoar for some 1 opportunity ‘a whieh to Chiat, at have postponsd it 5, 10, 20, 30 years, do you not feel as if now your hour of deliver ance and pardon and salvation bad some? Oh, man, what gradge hast thou against thy soul that thou wilt not let it be saved? f fool as if salvation mast come ROW 10 some of r honrts, rooks, They bad that lifetost the a vossol mruok on the only ono Mepom a gore and crow The vossol had Lasti- | He was consumed in twenty | Hers has been a twenty years’ | ns | i that shall saying | dered by the 0 got into the boat, Taw! went «cams wal wen! ou iar ture did not sesm to After awalle she could walt no lounger, and sue leaped on the taffrall aad then sprang into the sen, crying 10 the bhostman Yiave me next! Have me next!” Oh, how mauy have gone ashore into God's mercy, and yet you are olinging to tne wreck of sin' Oloers have aocepted the pardon of Christ, but you are in peri. Way aot tals moraing make a rush Tor your lmmortal rescue, crying until Josus shall beur you and heaves and varia ring with the cry ‘Save wie uextl Bave we next 1” EE — SABBATH SCHOOL. INTERNATIONAL JULY rit came ang coms LESSON 15. FOR Lesson Text: “Visit of the Wise Men,”” Math, 11, 1.12 Golden Text: Math. i1., 11- Commentary. 5 was | the days Dethie. of Herod from 1% what of the orn in the came wise mer the Matt) the hav i DAY nd vet they were n nally interested ; their kuowiedg iraw them to Hin 6. “And thou, Bethichem, in land of Juda, are not the Jeast among the princes of Juda, for oat ofthese shall o A govergor rule my people lsrael This is juoted from Mie v.. inst clause of which says that His ih have been the Gaye 3 argin be “‘ason bors, Mighty God" ” 8 Ter. t per id not 5 tha Noe from ruler of Israel was t« but He was also ‘the 6 7 As tru pr phecy He wi ‘avikl's throne acl y us He has ful ntly 11 at ews ! vl during the probable long pntheriog the priests to get ther Ow they Are once ore y, and they dow a] , my exeesding joy Ps. xiii, hristian workers are much hin wisdom ely good but to step out follow “Jesus only” Is joy indeed, 11. “And when they wore come the house they saw the young child with Mary, His mother, and fell down and worshiped Him, and when they had opened their treas. ures they presented unto Him gifts, gold and frankincense and myrrh The star had guided them to the very where the child was (verse 8), for God leaves nothing hall done, ani now they are face to face with Him whom they have journeyed so far to see, According to the custom of our day, they should have made each other a present about this time, but all is given to the child Jesus, It will be a good day for churches and Bundayschools when the Christmas time sees pastors and people, teashers and scholars, vying with each other in loving gifis to Jesus 10 hasten the time of His king dom, 12, “And being warned of God in a dream that they should not return 10 Herod they departed foto their own country another way.” God knew what Herod's worship meant, and He knoweth bow 10 deliver, He can guide us by His word and spirit, or by a drvam, Of & star, or an angel, and in some way He will surely gutde us of wae will only fot Him. His word is generally sulicient, but if nught olse is needed it shall be g ven, yet never in confliot with His word, waich is supreme, for Hie word is Himself, It is ai. ways sate to disobey Herod la order 10 obey God, ~ Lesson Halper, a —— Mirage of St. Louis, lealing God ) ht “ro 4 Many ( with Hike Ray met und nto housn about forty-five de . Toe wtrests
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