TVBLISHID BT ROANOXB PUBLISHWO Ca "rem Gde, poit cotfmf ry and ton t eutu" Thomas' Husoir, Business Uuzagxr VOL. u PLYMOUTH, N. 0., FHIDAY, MARCH 14, 1800. NO. 44i S v; .. Trepidant Joseph Stanley, of the Broad , . fway and Newberg Railway ia Cleveland, ,as kilted by J J in ping from one of hit own - electromotors--AnEngUahayndicatsbaa '-botghttbe business of tha four firms con- ! trolling tha manufacture o! soda watar and beer apparatus in the United State. -t50,- 000 damage wea don i by a tire at Thomas lladdcck'a sanitary wara factory in Trenton, . JN,' Jf. Eagloeer Tom Walters and Brake- man William Carletoa were killed on tba - "railroad, near Washburn, Wla, Henry D. Lecato ia held in Puila lelphla, on tha charge . of stealing dUmond-i and jewelry.- A .Biaiuber of shawl concealed among macaroni s . Were aeieed b7 customs officers in New Yotk. w There are fourteen cases of amall-pqx ia ., Meriden, Cf State Treasurer Noland.'of Missouri, is short in his accounta over $30,. 000. Senators Barlow an 1 Dodds, of the -North Dako tietslat jrj, were oentarel by their colleague for substituting a report in which they called other Senators dead beats. Andrew Alexander was burned to death tfn bis saloon (n Brail, I id. Patrolman Shoemaker, of Detroit, Mich., was shot and ' tnortally , wounded' by burglars.-James Leonard was fatally Injured, and Thomas ' Owens crippltd for life by tha premature ex , plosion of rock In Wilkeabarre, Pa, ' j The Exchange Hotel, at Mlldletown, N. . was burned, and a young woman fatally injured by , leaping 'from .a '. window. Chalkley L-eooey waa acquitted at Camden, N. J., of the murder of his i niece. The : , fruit prospects in Lancaster, Pa., are said to t bare been ruined by the lecent frosts. 1 Ex Postmaster William U, Bennett, of Long Branch, waa held for the action of the United States grand Jury, oharged with beinj $1,000 short ia his acooujita. Jbarlesi A. WLe, of South Greenfield, N. Y., committed suU ctde on a railroad train, at Roanoke, Va. -. Mayor Elyson; .of Rioamond, Va.; reports ,.. that the acccunta of 'A. Rv Woodsou, late city collector, ahow a deficit of- $38,080.. Alt. Joy, Lutheran Church, near Gettysburg, Pa., waa burned. Three youog Catholio , women of D-tybrook, . JlL, hare become in sane upon the question of Christian science., ,rThe First Methodist Episcopal Cburch of Keithaburg, 111.', was burned.. Ltss $15,000. In -the wreck of a freight train hear Massillon,' Ohio, several train uien were killed, an oil tank explodiug. Colonel E. E. Brianl'aatookbarn near Huntingdon.Ind., was burned, and thirty five thorougbbroi pdlled Annus cattle perished. .AiiOiber uttompt to pass a lottery bill through the North. Diketa legislature will bj m-.de.- The renegade Ap'acht s ure tealiag horces and comtniltin o'.her depredations in Sonora, Mexico. -The Boedle Hjue, at Keer.e Valley; in the : Adirondack Moun:aim, was burned. . Loss ' $03.00a i - ' ;: - . . . -- . . 'The dead bodies of a man named , Holmes, his wife and two chil ireu, were found bear . i Shawnee, 1. '17, and it is supposed the whole family were raiir lered by the outlaws that lufext that locality, Frank McGowan, Who risked his life in the interest of science, to 11 ud a rare fiber of bamboo iu South America for E iiaon, baa disappeared from his' borne in Orauge,-,.N. J. Whitecaps whipped three women and two mon near Kocklngbam, N.C. -President' Chauncey Ihpaw. of the New York Central Railroad, "uWje the report that be will resign his po V- litionftMrtewof hia possible nomination by. the Republicans for the presidency. The WhittU-f memorial building, on the Harnp- o Normal School grouuds, Port Monroe, Vo., was burne.l.- The rubber shoe manu , ' fiiulurers' combine propose to advance the - price Uftesn per cent- Tha lo.'ts of life by ;ha treeking of the big dam near Prescott, 'v - Arizona, is not so great as first reported. In - all thirty-nlim bodies have beeQ recorered. .- 'Krank Pormenich manager, and V, JJ.' Vinlth, superintendent of the Fortneniob. . ; : (iluuosa Works, near Marshalltown, Iowa, 'aavo been indicted for polutin the Iowa t river ami lniiintuiolug a nu.sanco. Fire at JCMiHiiigtit, HI., destroyed the hotel and o Sii'"bor of buildin a. Loss, $16,000.'' ', ' , : .Oscar Evans, (n his aecaod trial at Rom '! f r. ney, W.,Va., for the murder of Jacob Kirby, i ,J waa acquitted. -Mrs. Gerard Perktns.wife . ' of a farmer of Amsterdam,"!?. Y., bad a terrible struggle with a tramp who attempt p rd to assault her,- Leroy Joaes, of Han over county, Va., waa thrown from jumper wagon, and hij head crushed , between the ; spokes of the . re vol Tin .wheal. Throe t ' large tnoinshinera' distllleriea have been eia d on JsTo Man's Land, forty miles from v Clayton, N. M. -Colonel J, Mervyn Dona-' :' vhue, president of the Sin Francisco and -'" . Northern Pacllio Railroad, died In San Fran I Cisco; The accounts of Town Collector John Cbaihourne, of Oxford, Me., have been found $4,003 short. W, H. Pope, teller of - ' the Louisville National Bank, has disappeared ; ' ' and so has $53,000 from the Bank vaults. Edwin CowK 9, editor of the Ltaderpt Clave l5' taud, Ohio, died, aged sixty-five year. ; ' The Columbia and Fort Deposit Railroad ; ,' waa aold to the Pennsylvania Company for v $1,800,000., The awitchmen of the Pitts ' burg and Like Erie Road : have 'determined . io continue the strike, and the yardsat Pitta-' ; ; burg ere blockadod with freight cars.- -' Thomas Bishop waa arretted in Petersburg,. - Va., charged with beating his wife nd caus ' - log her dtalh. The Illlnoi state oonven y tlou of raioerB, opened at Springfield, and P. II. McBryde, of Pennsylvania, president of the national executive board, advised the minors' to stand by th scale adopted by the . Ohio con vent)ou.--VioeI,rtaident Morton und party ".rrived at St. .Augustine, Fla. " th West Jersey Presoytery dee ded for re. vision o(: faith. -United States S nitor : Alilson wai re eeoUd by th Iawa Iagisla ; lure. Jude Dniel It Tildtn, who wis a . number or Congress during the Mexican war; died at Cleveland, Ohio, aged eighty- f.ur yeara A bi building on iiroaiway, New York 'C.ty, occupied by M. & C Mayer, Jmjoi'tra ot tosierr ud g; ovei, and ISscon a; L'-i'ori, u-..brf-1'.-i ni.ii.ufacti.rera, was lMirne-1. -Los-.'s :m?.O0O,' REVISION OF GRBEDS- BET. : DIU ' TAiVMTAOE'S SVJCDAY Preached ht nroklyn Academy , ' ' s VI MUSIC ' -' ' Text: "Loosehim.and let Mm oo." John tl.,44. , , , v ' My Bible ia, at the place of this text, writ ten all over with lead pencil marks made last December at Bethany on the ruins of the house of Mary and Martha and Lasarus. We dismounted from our horses on the way up from Jordan to the . Dead Sea. Bethany waa tha summer evening retreat of Jesus. After spending the day in the hot city of J erusalem He would come out there almost every evening to the house of His three friends. I think the occupants of that house were orphans, for the father and mother are hot mentioned. But the son and two daugh ters must have wherited property, for it mast have been, judging from 7 what I saw. of the foundations and the size of the rooms, , an opulent ' home, Lazarus, the brother, was now the bead of the household and his sisters depended on him, and were proud of him, for he was very popular and, everybody liked him, and these girls were splendid girls. ' Martha a first rate house-: keeper and ; Mary a spirituelle, somewhat dreamy, but affectionate, and as good a girl as could be found in all Palestine? But one day Lazarus got sick. The sisters were in con stern&tion. Fathar gone and mother gone, they feel very nervous lest they lose their nrotner also, , disease aid its , quick woric. How the girls hung . over his pillow? . : Not much sleep about that house, no sleep at all. From the : characteristics otherwhere de veloped, I judge that Martha prepared the medicines and made tempting dishes of food for the poor appetite of the sufferer, but Mary prayed and sobbed. Worse and worse gets Lazarus, until the doctor announces that he can do no more. ' The shriek that went up from that household when the last breath had been drawn and the two sisters were being led by sympathizers into the ad joining room, all those of as can imagine who nave had our own hearts broken. ' , But why was not Jesus there as Be so often had been! 'Faraway in the .country districts preaching,healing other sick, how unfortun ate that this ; omnipotent Doctor bad not been' at that domestic crisis in Bethany. When at last Jesus h rrived to Bethany Laza rus had been "buried . four days and dissolu tion had taken place. In that climate the breathless body disintegrates more rapidly than in ours. If, immediately after decease, that body had been awakened into life, unbelievers might have said that ho was only in a comatose state, or in a sort of ,v trance, and by some vigorous manipulation or powerful stimulant vital ity had: been renewed. No! Four days dead. At the . door of the sepulcner is a crowd of people, but the three mortt memor able .are Jesus, whowas the family friend, and the two bereft sisters.; We went into' the traditional tomb in December, and it is deep down and dark, and "with torches we e.rplored it. Wo found it all quiet that after noon of our visit, but the day spoken of in the. Bible there was present an excited multi tude.;! wonder what Jesus wiil do. He orders the dkr of the grave removed, and then He begins . to - descend the. steps. Mary and Martha close . after Him, and the crowd after them." Deeper down into the shadows and deeper I The hot tears of Jesus roll over His chesfca and plash upon the back of His hands. Were there ever so many sor rows compressed into so small a space as in that group pressing on down after Christ, all the time bemoaning that He had not come beforel1, Now alt the whispering and all the crying and all the sound, of shuffling feet are stopped. - It is the silence of ex pectancy. Death has conquered, but now the vanquisher of death confronted the scene. . Amid the awful hush of the tomb the Familiar neme which Christ bad often hod upon His lips in the hospitalities of the village home came back to His tongue and with a pathos and an almigh tineas of which the resurrection of the last day shall be only an echo. He cries "Lazarus! come forth I'V The eyes of the slumberer open and he rises and comes to the foot of the steps and with great difficulty begins to ascend, for the cerements of the tomb art -yet on him and his f3t are fast and bis hands are fast and the impediments to all his movements ore so great that Jesus commands: "Take off these cerements; remove these hindrances; unfas ten these grave clothes, v loose bim and let him go !" Oh. 1 am so glad tha t after the Lord raised Lazarus He went on and commanded the loosening of the eoi ds - thatt bound his feut so that he could walk, and the breaking off of the eremnt that bound his hands so . that he could stretch out his arms in saltita- I tioo, ana me rarwg on or tne oannage from around bis jaws so that he could speak.' What would, resurrected life have been to Lazarus if be bad not been freed from all those cripplements of his body? I am glad that Christ commanded his complete eman cipation, saying: "Loose him, ana let him go. - ' The unfortunate thing now ia that so many Christian-; are only half liberated. They have been raised from the death and burial of sin Into spiritual life, but they yet have the grave clothe." on them. ; They are like Lazarus, hob bling up the stain of the tomb, bound hand and foot, and the object of this sermon is to help free thair body and free their soul, and I sbtJI try to oliey the i Master's command that omes to me and comes to every minister of religion: "Loose him, and let go." First, many are bound hand and foot by religious creeHts. Let no man misinterpret me as an tagonizing creeds. I have eight or ten of them; a creed about religion, a creed about art, ft creed about social life, a creed about govern ment, and eo on. A creed is something that a man bolipve whether it bwrittcn or un written' The Presbyterian Jhurch Is now agitated about its creed. Home good men In it are for keeping it because it was framed from the bJif- of John Calvin. ; : Other good men io It want revision. I am with neither party.' Instead of revision I want substitu tion. J waii sorry to have the question dis turbed at alL , The cril did not hinder; us ' from offering the pardon and the fomfort of the Gospel to aJI niwu and the Westminster Confession has iut interfered with me one minute. But now the electric lights have been turned on the imperfections of that creed and everything that man fash' (ona U imperfect let us put the old creed re spectfully aside and get a brand new one. It is impossible that people who lived hun dreds of years ago should fashion an appro priate creed for our times. John Calvin was a great and J good : man. but : he . .died threa hundred and twenty-six years ago The bet centuries of. Bible etudy have como since'. tton. and explorers have done their work, and you might as well have the world go back And stick to wihati. Robert Ful ton knew about teAuhoats and reject the suosequeot impi-ovctneiits injiavigation; and go bacK t John Outtenberg, the- inventor of the art of printing, and reject, all modern newspaper presses, mid go back to the time when telegraphy was tha elevating of signals or the burning of bonilresou the hilltops and reject the magnetic wire, whioh is the tongue of nMlicrw. as to ignore all th eregeffs and the philoloiristsiivl the theo K'giTms of the lust three hundred and twenty sis: ywirsand put your head undn' toe 'eve of thr ryvt'i'" a f-s f -entli century d;';.!r. I could' till i'"-1 ' r -,::ies t tv-"ry Ijvi-.r Presbyterian ministers of religion who could make a better creed than J ohu Calvin. .The Nineteenth century ought not to be called to ait at the feet of the Sixteenth. ' "But," you say, "it ia the same' old Bible, and John Calvin bad that as well as the pre ent student of the Scriptures," Yes; so it ia the same old sun in the heavens, but in our time it has gone to making daguerreotype and photographs. It ia the same old water, but in our century it has gone to running steam engines. ' It is the same old electricity, but in our time it has become ft lightning -footed errand boy." So it is the old Bible, but new, applications. , new , uses, ;- new interpretations. Yon must - remember that during . the last three hundred years words have changed their meaning and some of them now mean more and some leas, 1 do not think that John Calvin believed, as soma say ha did, in the damnation of infants, al though some of the recent hot disputes would seem to imply that there is such ft thing an the damnation of infanta. ' - ' A man who believes in the damnation ot Infants himself deserves to lose heaven, r I do not think any good man could admit such a possibility. What Christ will do with all the babies in the nertVworld I conclude from what He did with the babies in - Pales; tine when He hugged them and kissed them. When some of you grown people go out of tbia world your doubtful destiny will be an embarrassment to ministers officiating at your obsequies, who will have to be cautious so as not to hurt surviving friends," But when the darling children go there are no 'if s" or "buts" or guesses. We must re member that good John Calvin was a logi cian and a metaphysician and by the procliv ities of his nature put some things in an un fortunate way., Logic has Its use and meta physics has its use, but they are not good at making creeds. . A gardener hands you ft blooming , rose, dewy : fresh, but ft severe botanist cornea to v you with a rose and says. "I wiU show you the structure of this : rose." .- . And he proceeds to take it apart. andJ pulls off the leaves and he says: ' There re the petals," and he takes out' the anthers and he says: "Just look at the wonderful structure of these floral pillars," and then he cuts the stem to show: you the juices of the plant. So logic or metaphysics takes the aromatic rose of tne unristian religion and says: , I will just show . you how . this rose of religion waa fashioned;" and it pulls off of it a piece and says: ''That is the human will," and another piece and says: "This is God's will" and an other piece and says: This is sovereignty," and another piece aid ' sava: : "This it free agency," this is this and tnat is that. And while I stand i looking at the. fragments of the rose pulled apart, one whom the Marya took for a gardener comes in and presents me with a crimson rose, red as blood, and says: "Inhale the sweetness of this, wear it on your heart and wear it forever." I must confess that I prefer the rose in full bloom to the rose pulled apart..' A l: v - f s ; , vv nat ft time we nave bad with tne dogma tics, the anoloeetics and tha hermeneutica. The defect in some of the creeds is that they try to tell us all about the decrees : of God. Now the only human being that - waa ever competent to handle that subject: waa Paul, and he would not have been competent had he not been inspired. 1 believe in the .so vereignty of God and I believe in man's free agency, but no one can harmonize the two. It is not necessary that he harmonize them, livery sermon ' that . I : have ever; beard that at tempted such harmonization was to me as clear as ft London fog, as clear as mud. My brother of the nineteenth - century, my brother of the sixteenth century, give us Paul's statement and leave out our own. Better one chapter of -Paul on that subject than all of Calvin's institutes, able and honest and; mighty as they are. ,. Do not try to measure - either the throne of God or the thunderbolts of God with your little steel pen, ' What do you know about the decrees? You cannot pry open the door . of God's eternal " counsels. You cannot ' explain the , -mysteries of God's government now, much less the mysteries of His government five hundred quintiUion of years ago. 1 move for a creed for all our denomi-' nations made out of Scripture quotations pure and simple. - That would take the earth for God. That would be impregnable against infidelity and ApoUyonic assault. That would be beyond human criticism. The de nomination, whatever its name be, that can rise up to that will be the church of the mil lennium, will swallow up all other denomi nations and be the one that will be the bride when the Bridegroom cometh. Let us make it simpler and plainer for people to get into the kingdom of God. Do not binder people by the idea that they may not have been elected. Do not tag on to the one essential of faith in Christ any of the innumerable nonessentials. A ; man who - heartily accepts Christ is a Christian and the man who does not accept Him is not a Christian, and that is all there is ot it. He need not believe in election or rep robation. He need not believe in the eternal generation of the Son.' He need not believe ia everlasting punishment.- He need not be lieve in infant baptism. He need not believe in plenary tnspirataon. Faith in Christ U the criterion, ia the test is the pivot, is the indispensable. But there are those who would add unto the tests rather than subtract from them. There are thousands who would not accept persons into church membership if they drink wine or if they emoke cigars or if they attend the theater or if they play cards or if they drive a fast horse. Now I do not drink wine or smoke or attend the theater, never played ft game of cards and do not drive fast horse, although. I would if I owned .one." But do nos substitute tests ' which the Bible does not establish. There is ona passage of Scripture f wide enough to . let all in who ought to enter and to keep out all who ought to be kept out: "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." Get a man's heart right and his life will be right ; But now that the. old creeds have been put under public scrutiny, something radical must be done. 1 Some would split them, some would carve them, some would elongate them, some would abbreviate them. At the present moment and . in the present, ghape they are a hmdrance. Lazarus ia alive,' but hampered .with the old grave clothes. . If you want one glorious church free and unencumbered take off the cerements of old ecclesiastical vocabulary. Loose her, and let her go! - Again, there are Christiana who are under sepulchral shadows and hindered and hoppled by doubts and fears and fdns long ago re punted of. ' What they need ia to understand the liberty of the sons of God. They spend more time under the shadow of Sinai than at the base of Cal vary. They have been sing ing the only poor bymn that Newton ever wrote: .'.'..,.;. ' TV a point 1 loajr to know. , Oft it rtuswumxlou thought - ' Do I lore the Lord orno, . .. v . . Am I His ot tn I Dot? : Long to know,-do"; youJ Why do you not find out? . Go to work for God and you will very toon find out..,; The man who is -all the time feeling of his-pulee. wid- looking atr his tongue to see wbetBr4t la coated1 Is morbid and cannot be physically well. The doctor willsav: "Go out Into the fresh air and into active life, and stop thinking of yourself and you will get well ami strong. " 60 there are people who are watchini their spiritual symptoms, and they call it seU-esamiuation and they get w(5ail,4r an i sick'cer in tbeir faith all the time. o out and do some thiusr nobly Christ ia. Tfike holy exercise una then e.fauiiti" yo'ir-.f, aril, josUm 1 cf 'w t.'n's ";'.sirur.' 1 nn.l ! :;ku t-ynin t'-at I ti-sfc '20te:', you " -.1 th. Nev 1 ,('s c ' rhi a Amssing grace, bow sweet the so and - , Thai saved a wretch like me! . 1 once was lost bnt now am found; ' Vas blind, bat oow I see. . . v What many of you Christiana most need la to get your grave clothes off, I rejoice that you have been brought from the death of sin to the life of the Gospel, but you need to get your hand loose and your feet loose and your tongue loose and your soul loose. There is do sin that the Bible so arraigns and fmnctures and flagbHates aa the sin of unbe ief, and that ia what is the matter with you. "On," you say.'.'Hf you knew what I once was and how many times I have - grievously strayed, you would r understand why 1 do not come out brighter." Then I think you would call yourself the chief of sinners. I am glad you hit upon that term, for I have a promise that tits into your case as the cogs of one wheel between the cogs of another wheel or as the key fits into the labyrinths of a lock. A man who was once called Saul but afterward Paul declared: "This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief." ' Mark that -"of whom I am chief," "Put down your overcoats mnd hats and-1 will take care of '' them J; while , you kill Stephen" so Saul said to the stoners of the first martyr -"I do not care to exert myself much, but I will guard your surplus apparel while you do the murder." The New Testa ment account says: "The witnesses laid down their clothes at a young man's feet whose name was Saul." No wonder he said: "Sin ners, of whom t . am the chief." Christ is used to climbing. x He climbed to the top of the temple. He climbed to the top of Mount Olivet. He " climbed to the top of tha cliffs about . Nazareth.' He climbed to the top- of Golgotha. ! . And to the top of the hills and the mountains of your transgression He is ready to climb with par don for every one of you. The groan of Cal vary is mightier than the thunder of Sinai. Full receipt is offered for all your indebted ness.. If one throw a stone at midnight into a bnfih where the hedgebird roosts, it im mediately begins to sing: and into the mid night hedges of your despondency the) words. I hurl, hoping to awaken you to anthem. Drop the tunes in the minor key and take the major. Do you think it pleases the Lord for you to be carrying around with you the debris and carcasses of . old transgressions? You make me think of some ship that has had a tempestuous time at sea, and now that it : proposes another voyage, : keeps on its davits the damaged life-boats, and the splin ters of a shivered mast, . and the broken glass of a smashed skylight My advice is: , clear the decks, overboard with all the dam-, aged rigging, brighten up the salted smoke-; scacits, ; open a B new book, O haul in: the planks, lay out a new course and set sail for heaven. You have had the spiritual' dumps long- enough. You will please the Lord more by being happy than by being miserable. V Have you not sometimes started out in the rain with your umbrella and you were busy thinking and you did not no tice that the rain had stopped, and though it had cleared oft you still had your umbrella up, and when you discovered what you . were uuuig you ieu siuy enougnr inat is what some of you are doing in religious things. You have got so used, to sadness that though the rain has stopped you still have yowx umbrella up. Come out of tho shadow. Ascend the i stairs ' of - your sepulchcr. Step put into the broad light of noonaay. w e come around you to neip re move your grave clothes, and s voice from the heavens, tremulous . but ' omnipotent, commands: "Loose him, and let bim go." Again, my text has good advice concern ing any Christian ham-wed and bothered and bound by fear of hia own dissolution. To such the book refers when it speaks of those who through fear of death were alt their lifetime subject to bondage. The most of us, Bven. if we have the Chrlstain hope, are cowards about death. If a plank falls from scaffolding and just grazes our hat,- how pale we look. If the Atlantic Ocean plays with the. ' steamship, pitching it toward the heavens and letting it suddenly drop, how even the Christian passengers pester the stew ard or stewardess as to wnether there is any danger, and the captain, , who has . been all night on the bridge and chilled through. Doming in for a cup of coffee, ia assailed with a whole battery of questions aa to what be thinks of the weather. And many of the best people are, as Paul says, throughout their lifetime in bondage by fear of death. My brothers and sisters, if we made full use of our aligion we would soon get over this. Backed up by the teachings of your Bible, lust look through the telescope some bright night and see how many worlds there are nd re Sect that all you have ; seen compared with the number of worlds in existence are less than the. fingers of your right hand tts compared with all the lingers of the hu man race. How foolish then for us to think that ours ia the only world fit for us to stay in. I think that all the stars are inhabited . and by beings like the human race in feelings and sentiments and the difference is in lung respiration and heart beat and physical con formation, their physical conformation lit for the climate of their world and our physical conformation fit for the climate of our. 7 world. So we shall feel at home in any of the stellar neighbor hoods, our physical limitations having ceased. One of our first realizations in getting out of this world, I think, will be that in this world we were very much pent up and had cramped ' apartments and were kept on the limits. The most even of our small world ia water, and the water says to the human race: "Don't come here or you will drown." A few thou sand v feet up the . atmosphere is unin habitable, : and the . atmosphere J says to the . human race: "Don't . come up here or ".: you cannot ' breatbe.' A few miles down the earth is a furnace of fire, and the fire says : ' "Don't come here or - you will burn." The caverns of the mountains are full of poisonous gases, and the gases say: "Don't come here or you will be asphyxiated." And, crossing a rail track, you must look out or you wil) be crushed. And, standing, by ft steam boiler, you must look out or , you will be blown up. i And pneumonias and pleurisies and eon.nimptiona and apoplexies go across this earth in flocks, in droves, in herds, and it is a wonld of equinoxes and cyclones and graves. Yet we are. under the delusion that it is the only place fit to stay in We want to stick to the wet plank 'mid ocean while the great ship, 'the City of God," of the Celestial line, goes sailing past, and would eladly take us up In a -life boat' v My Chris tian friends, let me tear off your desponden cies and frights about dissolution. My Lord Dommands- me regarding you, saying: "Loose him, and let bim go.". -' Heaven is ninety-five per cent better than tnis world, a thousand per cent better, a million per cent better. Take the gladdest brightest most jubilant days you ever had on earth and compress- them all Into on, hour, and that hour, would be a requiem, a fast day, a gloom, a horror, as compared with the., poorest hour -they -.have bad in heaven siacA its ffrRt'tower- was built -or its fbst gates- swung' Ft -first song caroled. "Oh," you say, "that' may be true, but I am to afraid of crossing over from this world to the next and I fear the snapping of the cord between soul and body." Well, all the Burgeons and physicians and scientists declare that there is no pang at the parting of the body and soul, and all the seeming resttessnew at the closing hour of life is involuntary and no disease at all. And I agree with tho doctors, for what they say in confirmed by the fact that persons who were (v-'iwn l or wc-e sill:,. i?rgn-i unt'l all const r .;.w-. 'i'-rwr',--! aci were efterwurd pasting into unconsciousness was pleUSiif able rather than distressful. - . The cage of the body has a door on easy binges, and when that door of the physical cage opens the soul simply puts out its wings and soars. "But" yon say, "I fear to go becnse the future is so full of mystery.'"' Well, I will tell, you how to treat the mysteries. The mysteries have ceased bothering me, for I do as the judges of your courts often do. They bear all the arguments in the case and then say : "I will take these papers and give you my decision next week." So I have heard all the arguments in regard to the next world, and some things are uncertain and full of mystery, and so I fold up the papers and reserve until the next world my decision about them. I can there study all the mysteries to better ad vantage, for the light will bo better and my faculties stronger, and I will ask the Chrlstaiu philosophers, who have bad all the advan tages of , heaven for centuries, to help me, nd : 1 may permit myself humbly to ass the Lord, and 1 think there will be only one mys tery left, and that will ; be how one so un worthy aa myself got into such an enrap tured place. Come Hp out of the sepulchral shadows. If you are not' Christians by faith in CnriBt come op into the light; and if you are already like Lazarus, reanimated, but still have your grave clothes on, get rid of them. The command is; "Loose him; and let him go." ., The only part of my recent journey that I really dreaded, although I did not say much about it before hand, was the landing at Joppa. ' That is the port of entrance for the Holy Land, and there are many rocks, and in rough weather people cannot land at alL The boats taking the people from the steamer to the docks must run between reef a that looked to me to be about fifty feet apart, and one mis-stroke of an oarsman or an unexpected wave has some times been fatal, and hundreds have perished along those reefs. Besides that, as we left Port Said the evening before an old traveler said: 'The wind is just right to give you a rough landing at Joppa; indeed, I ' think you will not be able to land at alLw The fact was that ' when : our Mediterranean steamer dropped f anchor near ; Joppa and we put out for shore in the small boat, the water waa aa still aa though it had been: sound asleep a hundred years, and we landed as easily as I came on this platform. Well, your fears have pictured for you an ap palling arrival at the end of your voy age of life, and they gay that tha seas will run high and that the breakers will swallow you up, or that if you reach Canaan at all it will be a - very rough landing.. The. very opposite will be true if you have the eternal God for your portion. Your disembarkation for the promised land will be as smooth as was ours at Palestine last December; Christ will meet you far out at sea and pilot you into complete safety, and you will land with a hosanna on one side cf you and a hallelujah on the other.; -; "Iiind ahead !" its fruits are waving . - O'er the hll.s of fsdc'es ?rocn. Ann the lhmpr waters lavirnf ' frhores where heavenly forms are seca. - Rocks and storms I'll fear no mora . When on that (crnal hores . Drop the auehnr ! furl the sail! : 1. 1 am safe withiu the veil I . . . DISASTERS AND CASUALTIES: The dwelling of Hunt Bead, in Augusta, Georgia, waa burned a lew days ago, aud bis three children, aged, at x, lour aud twoyejrs, perishod in the flames. - . .: It is reported from' Wood River. O eon, that Catue aud horts are dying la. large numbers in that section, ana tun. "uiauy bauds will be wiped out entirely uuleaa a thaw ccmes,w: ."7 ::v- :.: ..--;,'-. : Martin Starrow jammed a bar iato a hole containing a dyuamlte cartridge at the Lackawanna Irou tCoinpanys stone quarry at Scran ton, Pa. He waa oluwn high Into the air and decap.tated. ' During a runaway accident, near Newark. New Jercey, Mine Mary K. Tyler was killt d and Lottie Tyler, her sister, waa injured iu" teroa ly. - Two other women wno were in tha carriage wre slightly injured. Stockdale Jackson, a wealthy resident of East Liverpool, Ouo, while suffering from an attack of la grippe, took a large dose of corrosive sublimate in mistake for bis medi cine. He died in a short time. A despatch from Preacott Arizona, says that the death list has grown until now it ia known that no less than 150 persons lost their lives in the dam disasters, Wlckenburg waa destroyed, evory building falling biore the awful assault Seymour, 12 miles further on, was also wrecked. f. Charles Hunley and William Dodson were asphyxiated in a atreet crossing watch box of the Vaodalia Railroad, in 'JLVrre Hanti, Indiana. Hanley was dead when found, and Dodson ia thought to be twyond recovery. They entered the watch box during a heavy rain. -, - ' . A train on the Evansvllle and Terre Hauti Railroad went through a bridge at Kelso creek, near Vincnnes, Indianra, . Engineer A. Lyons and fireman Louia i owdun are missing, and are . supposed to be under- the engine, which was totally wrecked. Several passengers were injured, but not fatally. - Michael McDonoagh, aged SO years, dis covered that a railroad rail bad been placed across a track just outside Akron, Ohio. A vain being iu sight, be had only time to take one end ot the obatruction and drag it from tha track when the engine atruck the ether end and the rail waa dashed aaii - his head, crushing hia skull like an egg shel.. The en gine and care did net leave the track. , : . George Do well set a shot gun trap for a thief iu his barn in Spring Hill, Missouri. The trap was ao set that the gna would b discharged when the barn door was opened. Mrs. Dowel! did not know tbs trap had been set and when she went to the barn and open ed tha door the trap waa sprung and aha re ceived the who's charge tull in the- breast She died instantly. : Mr. and Mra. D J well had been married only two months.', Mail advices from Hong Konfj and Yoko hama, received in San Francisco, repor t that the storm along the Bashu coast m January 24 th was very disastrous." About 1XW fishing boats, with between 2VX) and 3UUU flihermen, drifted out to sea. r Nine hundred of thru boats, with all the men aboard, were : lost Most of the bodies drilled upon the beach, The same day 11 boats wore wrecked la tha sea off Tobisham. and AO fishermen were drowned. On January 85th 33 fish rne 1 wer drowned oa tba ooaat of MaschiM a. ' IN A BLAZING MINE. Eight Men Imprisoned Behind a Wall f riama In Pennsylvania. A disaster lOcourrei at ttie Sittth Wilke. barra Colliery ot the Lihigh and Wllkesbarr-) Cotnpnny which will probably involve tha lives ot eight men. During the proo.-sa ot timbering one of the gangways, the wood work took tire from an explosion of gas. Bcycni tho workiog, eight men, are ento:ube by tha fUmes, auu, as all efforts to rwicue them have proved unavailing, it is feared that "ffooauoo m en, ua, if the men are not alreadj dead. Tlte names of the men ara Tfeom ia Williamson, HusS Dnzzn, Thomai Jr,-;)a, ltl-hal V'rry, h'rani Ou 1, Thos. ncD--lJ, J : .aes U i)vti: ,i ac-i a iaaa v -jm Ik No Improvement in the State of Trade. Grain Ntocks Coutiuue to Snow a X" creaseEx pott or Wheat and Float have lucrcascd Cotteu 0uUU ; Special telegrams to BradstrmA$ do not. re port any material or widespread improve-1 aient in the state of trade, s The alight gain in wheat prices is more than cfl-aet by that dullness in Iron, while unfavorable weather heavy wagon roads and floods in the Ohio; Valley, all tend to further restrict the dis tribution of general merchandise, already less than that reported one year ago. The decline in petro'eum results from the dis covery of three flawing wells.' Cattle ara 15, to 29c. higher, and live hogs off 5c. per sua-' ired. Dru.js and chemicals are steady and in' fair demand, aa are wholesale groceriea, Reports to Bradstreets of grain stocks, Eat of tbs Kooky Mountains, continue to. abow a decrease, the total decrease during January and February promising to quai. y.SOO.OUU bushels, ugtunrit b,(XA),(AJ0 busuela decrease list year, wuica will rednce wheat (Wcka, March 1, to about what they wera, cue yearngo. Tha average decrease during- tare weeks of February has been nearly; 1,250,000 bushela per weak, against 7U0,0U bushels during like wteks ot Ibo'X 1 Exports of wheat (and Sour as wheat) from' bota. coasts Lava increased again, and ara now noticeably lull, particularly from Sanj Francisco. Tbo week's reported shipment trqual a.300,7-53 tushels, against 2,!7ifilV bushela last week, and i,3M,5U4: busuelS iu: the last wetvk ot Fobi uary. les'J. ; The total1 foreign shipments July lt to date ia 146 bushels, againsi ti,7o5,tiK bushals ia a, like port ou of ltSSa-tSU. ":i : , 'v v; A. San Fraocisca tbe appointment of a re-j ceiver for tbe trust refinery anus tbe Pacific coast sufar market in tbvhtnUsot Mr. Caua Sprackels, but urnou! -.ted u only J4'c bigher.r There ia a light busiuess in raw sugars Kast,, owing to lack of demand, foreign advices u ing rather stimulating. Rebued su,ir is4 stmnger. Coffee is about steady on restricted offerings. -" - f Dry goods jobber report trade fair'y ho- tlve. Cotton and w uoitu doiuestio and for, eiga dress oods are roost active. Agsuta pwiwirt laailln Mtvlra of coKtaa Well sold uo. and a fair re-order business in Spring spao.alt ties. Prices are geu-ry.'y firm, with bleach- ed cottons showing greatest strength. lUwf wool is dull. Carpat wools are active, and! prices are weak . but not quotably lower. Raw cotton is dull iu all ruari ti. '1 h cr ji wovemeut continues light but linn; price disoeurag the consumptive demand. NOT SO SLICK AFTER ALL.5 . i .-. . . ( 'The Boldness of n Bank Bobber COM Him ll'sliifo.. ' ' - I'm a alick'un " Telegraph Operator Tay lor beard these words adireased to him by a stranger while he was receiving meesaiea at the railway station in Meriden, Ks. lie paid no attention to tha remark until he had com pleted a message from Valley Falls, which read aa follows: . . ; "To tho Sheriff, Meriden, Ks.: "Hicks & Orphan's Bank robbed this even ing of $3,(WU , Robber unknown. Dscrip- tiou as follow; Biondi; liht bair and inoua tache; blue eyes; five feet eleven inches tall; medium weight i .. "Sheriff." The operator looked up, and nearly lost bis breath when be saw standing befor bim the man described in tha dispatch. H did not reveal the fact of tbe recognition, bat merely agreed with the stranger that on was a slick 'unJ The atraazer inquired tbs time of the next train tor Atcmson, and aked where be could put up for the night The operator directed him to a hotel, where) Jha man took a room without registering, re questing that he be c tiled at Ave o clock: ia the morninic in time for tbe Atchison train. Local Police O dicers Smith and Summerfild, it nil nun sansn ran si sratii l nai.run lhhih aariiris w ia a ley FalU to arrest any su-p-sct, were toform ad by the operator of the presenoa of tbe ttranger a tne hotel. ' Arming themselves with Winchester nil , )hey went to tbe hotel,- waited und r tbe "--lick 'uuV window uatil twelve o'clock, aud then going to tbe office, acquainted the pro prietor with their inteotiou of arresting his guest A ball-boy was aent to tbe tranjor' room with a m.-ssage that it was time to get up to catch the Atchison train. When the stranger descended to the ofiicj he was con- fronted with police-offloers, with Winchester rifles pointed squarely as hU breast, lie never quivered, but looked inquiringly around. 'Tnrow np your bands,'' Othoer Smith aaid. Tbs stranger seemed to realisa hia situation then; but instead of obeying, ha thrust n hand in either side-pocket ot his overcoat, to' draw, revolvers which only a few hours before bad intimidated Cannier Coba, of the Valley Falls . Bank. As tba stranger made tbe motion toward bis weapons totb Winoheaters were discharged instantly at bis breast The stranger foil dead with one bu let te rough bis heart and another through the right luug. Tbe coroner was notified, aud before noon tns verdict waa returned txo i erating tbe otHoers of any criminally io Hav ing caused the death of tbe bank robber, self defense being their excuse Up to this time no search ot tha dead outlaw's person hd been made, but at Udshier Cohu's req.icss a eareb-was made and the sto. en moey re covered.. Ia his boots were found two packa ges of greenbacks of $oJU each. Tne b tiaace of the money bad been distributed amoti bis various pockets. TlA outlaw wm positively identified froit? a registered receipt dat -d as Burlington, Kansas, as one Robertson. Tbe money receipted for hd been payable to one li. C Smith, at Ottawa. Ilansas. Iu Kobert son'a pocket was a watch with tba initial 'ft" ' engraved upon it and a foot-tula bjariii the lameinitiat . -.' .v : : ENDED HIS LIFE'S JOURNEY. A 3few York .Han Shoots Himself on N a Ittttlronri 1 raiii. . - Just as' tha oraicemin ot who east-bound Norfolk and Western train called out "Eiio oka, change cars for tbe Shenandoah Valley," a well-dressed man was observed by p:iajn gers in one of tbi first-class coachea to delib erately rise froaa his seaftake hiagripiack from the rack overhead, open it ami take therefrom a large CoU'a r.volver. U-for anyone reilizd whit be intended doui ha placed the revolver to bis forehead, Ore i, ul f ell dead between the seats. Tn body wu removed to an un i'rtafiiri e-ttablishni 'tit, and au examination of papers found ou ic re-, vealed that the suicide wiu Ooarl . s A. V.'i.e, of boutU (JrefuUeid, N. Y., en route from Jacksonville, Tin., to his home. A ibrou ;h tiouet check (or bi.-i-ai-t and Hi iu i-..u-y wera fouud o i hfs j'.Tsoii, llswaifau!1 -a.y ilrci- ' !, and his fi'n'iw paingi:i's nay i.u .lid or sc- ; ;oi$! . 4 dun l. ih-j i iy t.i; m !... t 4 ;,-. fiii; Ued s U-d-. '. h- - as s-.i.n - i .t'.v y ' o. 1', .