WR aa re L remeY 1 FP¥y $ Rey wT TN te hia AND TEMPORAL CON- % BSIDERATIONS. The Sunday Sarmon as Delivered by the = Brooklyn Divine. : ¥. “TEXT: “In all thy ways acknowledge “Him and He shall direct th no Proverbs iii, 6, Y path . ‘A promise good enough for many ki of lite, but not for oy king of Titan Inde some business man; *‘the law of sapply and : 2. Bat I have reason to say that it is a promise to all persons in any kind of honest business. - ere is no war between religion and busi- mess, between ledgers and Bil between «churches and counting houses. On the con. trary religion accelerates business, sharpens men’s wits, sweetens acerbity of disposition, lips the blood of" cs” ws ore velocity into the wheels of hard wor gives better balancing to the judgment, strength to the will, more muscle to Ql iad Wg «on . You cannot in all the round + of the world show me a man whosa honest ausiness has been despoiled by religion. ~The industrial classes are divided into Dr a ee eyWiacturers, c S, su as farmers and miners. Manufacturers, such as those who ‘turn corn into food, and wool and flax into abparsl, Traders, such as make profit out of the tra; business man may belong to any one oral X of any other. old J . . en the prince imperial of France fell o ik 2 : the Zulu battlefield becausethe strap roto a g ing the stirrup to the dle broke as he 1d ee 2 «lung to it, his comrades all escaping, but he. Sn } jftallibg under the lances of the savages a - # Zreat many people blamed the em for & Gi ‘allowing her son to go forth into that battle- eo : < field, and others blamed the English Govern- by > Sh {ment for gosepting the sacrifice, and others 5 «8 3 blamed the Zulusfor their barbarism. The tt ar one most to blame was the ‘harness maker or a . awho fashioned that strap of the stirrup out i oe «of shoddy and per t material, as it was _ found to have been afterward. If he strap had held, the princes imperial would probably have been alive to-day. But thestrap broke. : No prines independent of a harness maker. J gh, low, wise, ignorgnt, yon in one - # occupation, I in another,all bound together. . Bo that there must be one continuous line of ‘sympathy with each other's work. Buf whatever your vocation, if you have a amultiplicily of engagements, if into your life there come losses and annoyances and perturbations as well as percentages and dividends, if you are pursued from Monday morning until Saturday night, and from January to January by inexorable obliga= bon andduty, then you area business man J oryonarea business woman, and my sub- © Ject isappropriate to your case. +i... We are under the impression that the moil * and tug of business life are a prison into _¢ which a man is thrust, or that it is an un- qual strife where unarmed a man goes forth ‘to contend. Ishall show you that business dife was intended of God for grand and glori- ‘ous ‘education and discipline, and if I shall be ielped to say what I want to say, I shall rub me of the wrinkles of care out of your row and unstrap some of the burdens from our back. [am not talking to an abstrac- %ion. Though never have been in business life, I know all about business men. In my first parish at Belleville, New Jer- woy, ten miles from New York, a large por- tion of my audience was made up : Now York merchants. Then I'wenb to Syracuse, a plage of intense sommercial activity, and ‘went to. Philadelphia and lived long the merchants of that city, than wh here are no better men on earth, and oF e than twenty-twd years I have toed in this presence, Sabbath by Sabbath, preaching to audiences, the majority of whom are business men and business women. 1 is not an abstraction to which I speak, but reality with which I am well acquainted. In the first place, I remark that business Jife was intended as a school of energy. God gives us a certain amount of raw ma- “terial out of which weare to hew our char- acter. Our faculties are to be reset, rounded f-' and sharpened up. Our young folks having graduated from school or college, need a higher education, that which the rasping % EL ¥ EAL fect. Energy is wrought outonly ina fire. _After a man has been in business activity “ten, twenty, thirty years, his energy is nob - 40 be measured by weichts.or. plummets or 7. ladders, ‘Theres no height it cannot scale, _and there is no depth it cannot fathom, and “there is no obstacle it cannot thrash. Now, my brother, hid God put youin “that school of energy? Was it merely that you might be a yardstick to measurs cloth or 4 steelyard to weigh flour? Was it merely _ that youmight be better qualified to chaffer and higgle? No. God placed you in that school of energy that you might be devel. oped for Christian work. If the undeveloped talents in the Christian churches of to-da; -were brought out and ShorouBhily harnesses + 1 believe the whole world would be converted to God in a short time. There are so many deep streams that are turning no mill wheels and that are harnessed tono factory bands. Now God demands the bestlamb out of every flock, He demands therichestsheat of every harvest. He demands the best man of every generation, A cause in which Newton and afford to toil in. Oh, for fewer idlers in the canse of Christ and for more Christian workers—men who shall take the same energy that from 'Mon- dey morning to Saturday night tnsy put forth for the achievement of a livelihood or the gathering of a tortune, and on Sabbath days put it forth to the advantage of Christ's kingdom and the bringing of men to the Lord. Dr. Duff, in Sonth Wales,saw a man who had inherited a great fortune. The man said to him* “I bad to be very busy for ‘many years of my life getting my liv ood. ‘After awhile my fortune came to me, and ‘there has been no necessity that I toil since. “Phere came a time when I said to myself, +Shall I now retire from business, or shall 1 goon and serve the Lord in my worldly occu- pation? ? He said: “I resolved on thelatter, and I have been more industrious in com- mercial circles than I ever yas before, and since that hour I have ne t farthing “for myself. Ihave A grea : i » { shameif I couldn toils ha’ Lord 7 wi Yr toiled f 5 de : ad y factories and of y Y establishments to thelast farthing have gone for the building of Christian institutions and supporting the chureh of God.” Oh, if the same energy put forth for the world could be put forth for Godl Oh, if a thousand nen in these great cities who have achieved a fortune cdu dee it their duty to 1 0 a ‘business for Ch and the alleviation ‘of the : ] . . world’s suffe : aed % & Again, I rémark, that business lifeis a i ‘ . school of patience. In your everyday: life Ln : 5 how many things to susoy and bo disquiet} Bargains’ will rub, Commercial men sometimes fail to meat their engagements, ill sometimes Cash book and money drawer Wi Falak - qiarrel. Goods ordered fora special emer. 4 | gency will come too late or be dama; in : : The transportation. ' People intending ng harm will go shopping withoutany Inteiition: i t stocks of of pure erturning hase, ov : ; goods and insisting that you break the dozen, 5 2 Caan = ore bad debts on the ledger. More counter- fk He feit bills in the drawer. - More debts to pay “for other psople. More meannesses on the part of partners in business. ' Annoyance after annoyance, vexation aftter vexation and loss atter loss. api queer, and they lost their customers, Sales ¥ meq have been. brightened 8 ; Sader. hb ii i PI 5 were tougbened by 2 : ie + poate, Foy were like rocks, all the wa uid e for being blasted. At fi : hoke down the rath. PENNSYLVANIA NOTES. REED ON PROTECTION ADVICE— EXISTING INDUSTRIES—IN- CISIVE THRUSTS AGAINST THE ENEMY. A Few Condensations of Evants Occur- ring Throughout the State. have gentle Jeliavior no customers. oy are patient now with un- fortunate debtors. They have Christian re- | now for sudden reversss. over many things. Enter thou info tue joy e talk about the martyrs of the Pied mont valley, and the martyrs among the Scotch highlands, and the martyrs at Ox- ‘ord. There was just as certainly martyr: and State street, martyrs o: roadway, martyrs of Chestnut street, going through hotter fires, or having their neck: der sharper axes. Then it behooves us ta ish all fretfulness from our lives if this subject be true. We look back to the time when we were abt school, and we remember and we remember the hard fasks, and we complained grievously, buf now we see it was for the best. Jetiacl, and the asks are hard. and the chas ments sometimes are very grievi but The hotter the yo the There are men pefore the throns of God this day in triumph who on earth ware cheated out of everything but their coffin. They were sued, they were imprisoned for debt, they were throttled by a whole pack of constables with writs, they wero sold out by the sheriffs, they had no compromise with _ their creditors; thay had to make assign ments. Their dying hours ware annoyed by the sharp ringiry of the door-ball by some impetuous creditor who thought it was, out rageous and impulent that a man should dare to die before he paid the last threes shillings and sixpence. 1 had a friend who had many misfortunes. Everything wentagainst him. business quality and was of the best morals, but he was one of thos have sometimes seen, for whom everything His life became to him eard he was dead I said, (ood; got rid of the sheriffs!” “those lustrous souls before the throne? When the question is asked, “Who are they?’ the standing on the sea of glass respond, se are they who came out of great busi- ness trouble and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb.” ! A man arose in Fulton street prayer meet- _ **I wish publicly to acknowl. edge the goodness of God. | 1 had money to pay, and I had no pay it, was in. utter despair of all human help, and I laid this matter be- rd, and this morning 1 wen! among some old business seen in many years—just to make a call— and one said to me: ‘We have some money on our books due you a good while, but we didn't know where you wera, and therefore Mirod Guta], an illicit distiller, has ee they get that patience? By h missioner Colburn in Scranton. Gutzl was arrested by Marshall Barring in the moun tains of Potter county, and his still was speech at the recent banquet at the Home Market Club in Boston, Tremont Temple meeting, was made by Ex-Speaker Reed. was given a reception of which any man might well feel proud, and it was not until he had waved his hand several times in dcpreciation of the tumult that his enthusiastic admirers would allow When they had become quieted he said: Fellow-Citizens, Ladies and Gentle. Major McKinley was kind enough to give me credit for going to Ohio. [Laughter,cries of ‘Good’ and applause. ] 1 do not quite deserve it. there by my district and the State of Massachusetts [laughter] for I never met a man in either place who did not want to know when I was going to Ohio. [Laughter.] I do not say that because it is all necessary to make Major McKinley feel at home in New England; if he does n8t appreciate the reception which has been tendered him here to-night, which reception he deserves, he must during his life have been fayored by many [Laughter aud applause.] I am going to confine myself to a dis- cussion or to a few suggestions in regard to home matters, for I confess that I feel quite at home in Boston. I noticed in coming here to-day a lamen- table decay in the moral tone of the in- dep -ndent Democratic newspaper of Bos- [Laughter.] When I was herea few weeks ago the uprightness and straightforwardness, the devotion fo a gold standard which was manifest was something which did more than do [Laughter.] It carried a very large balance to the credit of the 1 incidentally recommended Mr. Mills to the Democracy for the Speakership, and it was very handsomely [Laughter and applause.] I said, however, simply that he was the best Democrat, which you perceiveis not [Laughter and applause.] It is only a tribute to the blindness of any kingdom when a ohe-eyed person becomes king. [Laughter ard applause. ] While I gave Mr. Mills the full need of praise which he deserves, I took occasion to point out in his own unmistakable language that he was earnestly, yigor- ously, and. violently in favor of free earing reach concerning it on Sabbath? hey got it just where you will get it—if you ever get it at all—selling hats, dis- Fulton street and Atlantic street and counting nofes, turnin corn, tain roofs, = e turmoil and anxiety and ex- asperation of everyday life you ‘might hear possess your soul. Let patience have her A fire in McKeesport destroyed three etty little cottages and made three families Diphtheria in a most malignant form has broken out at the county home, Greens A number of the inmates are down h A J. Simmord, a nurse in the insane department, will not recover. 1 remark again that busiuess life is a school Merchants do not read many books and do not stud, do pot dive into profounds of learning, and 2 + : y Frank Oberkirch, of Erie. was given $85( to understand ques damages in a suit against Levi Kessler for malicious prosecution and false arrest. The influenz again is epidemic at Lan- caster and hundreds of people are down with it. Abont the only sympton: not so netice- y year and the year before is sneezing, which this year’s visitation seems to lack, The aitacks of the disease seem fic be fully as severe, but of shorter duration better the refining. It pupils will not learn, she strikes them over the head and the heart with ssvers losses. You put $5000 into an enterprise., It is all You say, “That is a dead loss.” no. . You ars paying the schooling. That was only tuition, very large tuiti you it was Vs Frei Suhoolizlistress--but it was worth it. You learned things under that Mrs. Amelia Spiess, a 1d not [have learned in any Lancaster, ato) with her husband, and on her mother threatening to eject the husband from the house the young wife ran stairs, and, before she could be prevented w out her brains with a pistol. Charles Dietrich, 60 years of age, a well known resident of near Huntington, started for Washington yesterday with a load come to know something harvests; traders in fruit coms something ‘about th Topical prodgetion; come to understand the 2 nsfer and exchange of all that which is produced and Taatactuted: SAY ] L of these classes, and not one is independent | books must come to understand the new law of copyright; owaers of ships must come to know windsand shoals and navigation; and ‘very bale of cotton, and every raisin cask, box, an much literature for a business rother, what are you go- e men, such as you fright, and running away u but a short time after the accsdent Receiver Sproull says the debtors of the Corry National Bank promptly. A dividend will be declared that you might be sharper ina - trade, that you might be more successful as ing? Oh, noj it was that you might useful information and use it for u have been dealing with nd never had the is onsry 7ASRIn; 2 va 20 6 bo that you i, bec pe ao th all the outrages inflic u have mever tried 8 ospel which is to ex- tripate all eviland correct all wrongs and illumine all darkness and lift up all wretch~ edness and save men for this world and the world to come? Can it be that understands ing all the intricacies of business you know those things which will last long after all bills of exchange and; consign: ments and invoices and rent rolls sh Robert Rod is sister, both old and > Je Res An Hl Se you, is to me the evidence that when Early the other morning the howling of a dog inthe kitchen awakened them just in time to save them from cremation, got out nothing but the dog, went after at great peril, being badly burned. He said the dog had saved his life and must gotten her vagaries, will stand once mi in the forefront of the defenders of th [Great applause. | The National Bargain company’s store at The Scranton coroner has Dominic Etro, who was killed at the Pyne shaft a few days ago, met death ‘through a Some boys.locked Etro in a small room at the head of the shaft. ing enraged. Etro hurled himself through the door so forcibly that he was unable to check himseif and went down the shaft to a 3 © are very glad you have come.’ And the man standi prayer meeting said, ** me was six times what I owed.” You sa You are an infidel. that man’s prayer. Oh, you want of the olden days. There was a pous M. P. present, a meek iti French priest and some ladies. were all strangers to each other, b exchanged remarks as fellow-trave: ers. As we neared a horrizon woods we saw suddenly a burst flame. Se e amount they paid will be wise for time and a fool for eternity? gr: 1 that busines Commercial ethics, business honors, laws of trade, are all very good in but there are times when thing more than this worl ‘You want God. For the lack of that you have known have consented to at their friends, and to d their names have school for integrity. he will do when he is tempted. thousands of men who have kept their in- tegrity merely becauss they never have been A man was elected treasurer of the aine some years ago. i tinguished for his honesty, usefulness and uprightness, but before one year had passed he had taken of the public funds for his own private uss, and was hurled out of office in disgrace. Distinguished for virtue before. Distinguished for crime after. . You cancall oyer the names of men just like that, you had complete confidence, but placed in certain crises of temptation No man knows what Owing to au inability to pay salaries, the City Museum and Theatre at Altoona, closed its doors last night. he managers were A number of freaks are forge, and to maitr curse their enemies, an been bulletined among scoundrels, and they bave been ground to powder, have known have gone of circumstances triumph: here to-day who fought d the victory. People come ont of that man’s store, and they say, “Well, if thers ever was that is one,” Integri H Sames Carson, a mail carrier of Tionesta. was held up and robbed of a sum of money Saturday morning. : At Riddlesburg, Bedford county, most of the inhabitants flicted with typhoid Saptants are Joe Ls backed up by applause on the Dem- [Laughter and applause. ] At that time the esteemed Herald [deri- sive laughter]. the independent newspa- per of Boston [a voice, ‘The Daily Liar,” laughter] was showing how deficient we Republicans had been in standing by sound money, and how good and virtu- ous the Massachusetts delegation were going to be in repudiating everybody,’ not who was in favor of silver coinage, but who refused to hunt silver coinage the battle and gaine cracked Joseph Overholzer's flour-mill safe in Sprin undred dollars, fired the mill and escaped with a stolen team. Sixteen-vear-old Grace Sheeler fell down fhe cellar stairs with a lighted lamp at Boy- ertown, and was fatally burned. | A. 5-year- old dau zhter of .James Price. of ~outh Shen- ango, met a similar fate from contact with a kept, the books an Light from the eterna: world flashed through the show windows, Love to God and love to ever so many temptations to scoundrel- Not alaw on the statute book but has some back door through which a Ah! how many de- ceptions in the fabric of goods; so much: | plundering in commercial lite, that if a man talk about liviag a life of complete coma | mercial accuracy there | More need of honesty now than ever complete honesty, than in those times when business was plain affair, and woolens wera woolens and silks wera silks and men were men. How many menido you suppose there ave in commercial life who could say truthfully, sin all the sales I have ever made I have never overstated the value of goods; in all the sales I have ever made covered up an imperfection in the fabric; of all the thousands ‘of dollars made I have not taken one dishonest fars thing.” | There are men, however, who can say 1t—hundreds who can say it, thousands who can say it. They are more honest than when they sold their first tiercs of rice, or their first firkin their honesty and integrit o ‘etvilly; ‘‘as the wind is blowing at aol down, Taba, St hab 2 redtly from us, that would be alm Ob n re 5 7 matter?” Yoh go up a little elosar, and you see written on the card of that window, “(losad on account of thedeathol ons of tho all through the circies of talk aliout how a good man Count Di Montercole, the former husband of Virginia Knox, the Pittsburg heiress, is insane in an asylnm in Philadel- friends will tike him to Italy. A boy named Samuel Uhlman, near War ren station, Washington county, accidently shot himself while hunting and will proba: ta before—iried honesty, | ] member the great moral attitude which they all of them reached at that time. You remember that we pictured to our- selves the Massachusetts delegation com- mencing life by bolting the Democratic You can imagine my hor- ror. and surprise on readin Herald [laughter] to-day to find that Mr. Mills’s views on the silver question, which ‘were a declaration te the whole world that they were determined to force free coinage of silver, were perfectly ac- ceptable to that valuable journal. [Loud laughter and applause. ] 1 want to take that for a text for a little, short discourse. [Laughter.] Did you éver see a Democrat who wasn't a good man a week before election? And did you ever see a Democrat a week after election that hadn’t fallen from grace? [Laughter and applause.] When ques- tions are pending there is nobody on earth who can come forward and make declarations of piety and virtue like a Democratic orator, unless it be a Dem- ocratic editor. [Laughter and applause. ] And after the election is over they re- turn to the Sondition which is normal to [Laughter and applause.] I am glad that my two friends who have preceded me have discussed with you a bit the question of raw materials. There was a time when the great principle of raw material was harnessed up in a double team with the other great princi- the markets “of the world. [Laughter and applause.] The markets of the world have utterly disappeared from all manner of human discussion for more than three years, and now is left us [Laughter.] What is raw material? Why, somebody defines it as ‘*something upon which no human labor has been bestowed.” If you are go- ing to protect labor in one con must protect labor in another. cannot lower the wages of one class of men without lowering the of other classes Help, Lord, for the go He has made his’last bargain, fered his last loss, he Pat Cavanaugh, the Mt. Pleasant speak: r was sentenced by Judge has ached with the last £ $500 and spend 10 months in ill.get. the result of if through misfortune thera y will have an estate of xample which will be rewards: for earthly ‘the wicked cease from troubling and the weary ure arr and collision of everyday life alone can ef- | During an altercation at Johnstown over a charge for hauling goods to Moxham, Sat- urday afternoon, George Fieck shot Richard t'obaugh with a revolver. : The ball lodged in ‘Cobaugh’s kidneys and will prove fatal. #Fleck was to have been be no dollars left, the prayer and Christian e THE CHURCH OF THE FUTURE. The Christian world contains no saddes picture than small towns where money and strength are wasted, not that souls may be saved and the human condition bettered, but that sects may win proselytes.: All’ denomi- nations are sinners in this matter, church is needed in a town, and thoseal-’ ready there hold no cohference, make no mutual plans, never ask who cau do the work best, but the one that happens to have ready money rushes in and pre-empts the Missions are needed to the heathen, and, in too many instances, there are offered to those who know not how to distinguish, Marion Curry. a farmer of near Washing: ton, has been suffering serious losses from is residence, new barn, and 30 stacks of his hay were burned recently. Ten stacks of hay were burned fires are all said to have been the work of tes ant, But they remember & time when { Not yet married a month, Lincoln Hauer, withontany effort at of Lebanon, has been arrested for desertion into a sharp corner an y they never took one step on that pathway They can say their prayers without hearing the clink of dishonest dol- y can read their Bible without hy of thé time when with a lie on their Inside Foreman Hugh Jones and Miner James Eitterick were fatally burned by an ‘explosion of gas in the Hillman vein mine, While trying to collar a ‘‘tame’ raccoon at Lancaster, Stephen Dittus was badly bitten thirteen times. At Lock Haven, a barn on the dairy farm of Jacob Ricker, with its contents, including tom house they kissed the Book. They can think of death and the ‘and Episcopalian forms of Christianity, and the poor heathen make the best bargain by going to the highest bidder. Think of rival societies in the face of the poverty and crime which are rising like a flood! Think of a Zulu trying to understand the immense significance of the difference between immer- sion and sorinkling! Indian trying to fathom the mystery of the Think of street children growing to be criminals while the General Assembly is settling the infinitely important question” a8’ to whether Moses wrote the books that contain no mention of his author. ship! Sects are the products of intellectual differences, They will exist as long as men which will probably be forever, Heaven would be a monotonous piace: if all the angels looked alike and sang the same strain without ceasing. "basis for the co-operation ‘among Christians which is imperative? There is, "and it may be found in the principle of federation. Tet the sects keep apart as much as they choose in the making of their theologies but come together in the service of humanity. In the not distant future all denominations in the community will have some sort of a legislature—a committee, perhaps, on. which" all will be represented and to whose treasury all will contribute—and this body of elders, wardens, deacons. or what not. will have direction of all that concerns the whole com- y.. Is a new church needed in a locality? This committee wil report what denomination will suit that particular field best, and then ail others. will help as much “|'as if it were their own. ‘Is quired, or a place where those who have no home can be provided with a homa? All will consider the question and help accord- ing to ability. Nothing less than this can meet the problem of the modern city. Not only is the need too great for money to be wasted, but the ignorance of. the people is such that they must not be confused with A denominational mission in Africa or in Whitechap=l is poor general ship. I hall the better day!—{Rev. Dr. A. H. Bradford at the London © cke and Mansfleld toiled you andI can : ment that comes after it without any when all charlatans and end frauds shall be t does not make their k together and it does not make their teeth chatter to read ‘‘as the partridge sitteth on eggs and hatcheth them not, so he that getfeth riches, an shall leave them in the mi and-at his end shall be a fool.” : Oh, what a school of integrity businesslife is! 1f you have ever been integrity cringe before present advap- tage; if you have ever wal embarrassment and said: little aside from the right path and no one will know it, and Ill come all right again, once.” Oh, that only once has f thousands of men for thislife and blasted their souls for eternity. Itisa tremendous school, business life—a school oi A merchant in Liverpool Bank of England note, and hold flinching—that day Is of cereals, were burned. Henry Hilbert entered suit against W. E. Sherman, manager of the Berwick opera house. for maintaining a nuisance in his ouse. The bill says ay directly behind Visses Laura ai Think of a Sioux historic Episcopate ! measured 48 inches : and completely hid the stage. Sherman gave bail for court, a ing will probably settle a nusiance prevailing everywhere. David C. Friend, a wealthy farmer of n county, was thrown from t Bethlehem and instantly 2 the raw material. At Altoona Joseph Burgert's livery stable and Frank Peddicord’s burned. Loss, $1,300. John W. Mack, who was recently dis- charged from Bethany home, cured of his insanity, another attack Wednesday night. ht at the ‘house of George Fisher, near Bolivar, and about mi: with horrible cries began to demolish the furniture in his room. ed the room the madman felled him sense- ess and was about to finish the work when ther arms stayed his. laning mill, were ered the letters,and found ting had been slave fn Alglers, saying in substancs, * Whos ever gets this bank note will pleasa tainform my brother, Johu Daan, living near Carlisl that’ 1 am a ‘slave of the bay of Algiers.” The merchant sent word, employed Govern mentiofficers and founl who this man was ken ‘of in this bank bill. ‘the man was rescued, who for elevan years had been a slave of the bey of Algiers. f was immediately emancipated, but was sd worn out by hardship and exposurs he soon h, if soms of the bank bills that.,come through your hands could tell all the scenes through waich they hava passed, ragedy eclipsing any drama of Shakespeare, mightier than King Lear or Macbeth ais \ 2 When Fisher enter- of stopping, there is no point for stay. It must be protection for the labor wherever found ; and, if raw material is something on which no labor has been bestowed, where under the moon and stars and shining sun is there such a thing as raw material? Is there anything on earth of value, upon which no human labor has been bestowed? Absolutely noth: ing. 1t has always seemed to me to be the most singular attitude which some Mass- achusetts manufacturers have assumed-— that whatever went into their mills was to be free, as they call it, of tariff taxa. tion, and whatever went out of their mills was to be protected by tariff taxa. - When I was last here I put to a gentleman at the head of the Lowell Carpet Mill the plain question, ‘‘Are you, who are in favor of free wool, in favor also of free carpets?” he has not been deficient in times past nting the public prints, he has not done so upon that subject. plause.] It is so plain oring to kill by detail, .that men cannot see it.’ At the nieeting of the executive commit tee of the World's Fair board was taken up by various tate, who were here to tests against the opening of the the opening of the gates on he Saboath The ky gs its’ final vote, records itself as favoring the closing of the. gates on the Sabbath. egio laborer on the Beech Creek ex- tension was killed by a companion named Allen, near Clearfield. As 1 go on in this subject, X am impressed with the importance oi our ‘haying mora sympathy with business men. me that we in our pulpits do not oftener preach about their struggles, their trials and en wno toil with the hand are not apt to be very sympathetic with those who toil with the brain. The'farmers who raise the corn, and the oats, and the wheat sometimes are tempted to think that grain. merchants have an easy time, and et their profits without giving any squive, The trouble arose The murderer was this morning while try- The revolver was found on There is a positive value in having some special parties for whose saving we hold ourselves, under God, responsible, ever try this? What was yourex Are you thus doing this year? If you are uot, will you?[—New York Advocate. / : A The Bal:imore and Ohio station at West ~~ All that process will either break yon Newton was burned Saturday night. down, or brighten yow up. It is a school of . patience, You have known men under the process bo become petulant and choleric: and angry and pugnacious and cross and sour Ollie Miller, aged 18, of Fairchance, went There is but one way to become a thor- ardey. The hammer tive Christian. Wheth- with a Inrge flock and salary, or small; whether you are a Sabbath- school teacher, or a philanthropist pushing an uphill reform, or a paren zuiding the home flock, you w \ unless you serve Christ hunting rabbits on Sat of his gnn caught in some went off, the contents entering fatally injuring him. ough, happy and effec! er you are a pastor, epurseof the nations, and ti q | vised that cities bs built at least ten miles and tueir name became a detestation. Othe: ast. : lustrious or high minded mon than se who move in the world oi traffic. hem carrying burdens heav , a case of endeavs dead in his parlor. His with whom he had been conversis s death natil a grand asleep, tried to waken him - irst they: first thav that the ssme principle which protecis them on the high prices of their labor must also protect other men on the high prices of their labor. {A voice, ¢ ‘That's it,” and great applause.] Ca These men are fond of harping upom the idea that protection was originall intended for the development of infant industries. It isn’t the first time in the nistory of the world that after a systems was in successful operation it was found to have virtues of which its founders never dreamed. To-day we are not onl in favor of fostering infant industries, but we are in fauor of fostering and con- tinuing existing industries, because we have discovered that, to remove the bare rier between us and the cheap labor of Europe, is to cause a reduction of the wages of our own laboring men and re- duce them to their level over there [ap~ plause]; and, having discovered if, ni sneersabout infant industriés will prevent us from maintaining the barrier between the condition, happy and prosperous, of our people and the condition of people beyond seas which makes them so glad to seek our country. [Applause.]} But, my friends, it is not necessary to discuss these principles, it is not neces- sary to reaffirm our belief in them. What is necessary is for us to be up and doing in the work. It is not sound principle, but it is steady and active men behind the sound principle, that lead on to the victory we need to preserve ‘our country for ourselves and our descendants. [Ap= planse.] And your presence here night, the earnestness with which yo have listened, the plain evidences of your belief in the truth of the great fae which Major McKinley has presented time comes, Massachusetts, having liberty and prosperity of the countr : The Burning Bush, «Talking about the power of agination,” said the Raconteur, was riding across a piece of lew eountry in one of the British Nor American provinces in a stage «A camp-fire,” suggested the “It, is zee bush zat burns,” hi zarded the little Priest meekly. | «It is a camp-fire,” re-affirmed Member of Parliament. A «] zink zat is zee bush,” uttered the priest in a faint voice. Mi “J can feel the flames even at distance,” noticing my existence wit affable condescension, ‘do you I sire? : sf cannot say I do sir,” 1 answ impossible.” : ; “Impossible or not, the blaze very perceptible. 1am not given vain imaginings. As we app nearer you will see for yourself, that I am right.” And he drew him self into a corner with much dignit: 1 never care to argue a point of the pine woods. J priest spoke up in tones that had a sort of trinmphal I-told-you-so air about them. Lal “Vat Izay? It ees ze tree zat burne, n'est celpas?” Co For the fire was most decided] queleched. That which we had take for a flame is known in the provin¢es as ‘‘the burning bush,” a peculiar foliage which burns a vivid red, b fore any other tree has changed its color. As the light plays on leaves and the wind agitates thi has all the appearance of a fire. And it is so rare that there seldom more than one in a distrie By the old habitue they are regarde with superstitious fear. The M. P. looked and drew d the corners of his mouth. In th blessed country it would have mes “‘What will you have, gentlemen? the next stopping place. But I joyed feeling the ‘‘fire” in pantom and in knowing that it and the M were effectually quenched, even if thirst was not.” 1 ? The club took the hint and ac upon it.—-¥ree Press. 3 i opened for many years. On turn its leaves he found that in the h of the volume was a cavity eaten ou that would hold a walnut. Th was no opening apparent by the insect that did the mischief have entered or gone away, ana insect itself was not to be foun must have been a: book-worm course, “but the question is hos it get into the heart of the book out making a hole, and how di get out? - " Reward of Bravery, Patrick MoX is a ‘great admi of personal bravery, and never to insist that men of intrepidity entitled to great favors an } ileges. * ; He was told the storyof a my who had died bravely on the taking the whole matter with and gay words. ie ; “An’ sure,” said Patrick, man has died on the gallows as’ that, the giverment sh dhon him on the sphot fa very! ne Fanaa that business men