Published bt Koakokk Publishing Co. FOU GOD. JJ'OR COUNTRY AND FOR TTiUTLfc - C. V. W AUBBOX, BUSINESS MANAGER. VOL. II. PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, .MAY 8, 1891. NO. 52. THE NEW! A. firrge supply of natural gas has bsen dis-i. covered at BJoomington, 111.- Eniest Mor ris, a naturalist, died at Indianapolis. Jon athan Woolford shot and killed Frank Fran . cis near Pikesvillc, Ky. A beginning was ., mado in a tunnel between Detroit and Wind- sor. Dr. Joseph Leidy, the naturalist, died - in Philadelphia. Baron von Raven, laid to' m a German nobleman, was arrested at .Hot fjprings, Ark.; He is a bunco steerer.- The Dhortagc of Cashier 1 1. W. Covington with the Farmers and Traders' Bank of St. Louis is $30,000. It is not known where Covington is. i Fire at 'Mahonby City,' Pennsylvania, de stroyed half-a-dozen stores and other build Ingv. Loraes by the forest fires, in New Jersey, will exceed $1)0,000. -Six ' miles of forest on the South Mountains, Pennsylvania, ire burning.-" President Harrison was given a grand reception in Monterey, Cal. -James Taylor, colored, shot Policeman Chas. Cook, who was trying to arrest him at Franklin, Ga., and a'niob speedily hanged the negro. Rev. Phillips Brooks was chosen .bishop at Boston, o succeed the late Bishop Paddock.- The quarantine against Hudson county, N. J., on :, account of plenro-pneumonia, has been raised,' Jnmcs K. Cooper, of Forepaugh's Circus Com pany, gave ft $10,000 clcphunt to the National Zoological Park, at Washington.-r Dr. R. C. Mauss died in Washington of wounds made y himself. Archibald Andrews, the oldest - man in North Carolina, is dead at one hun dred and ;even ycarfj.-f Professor John Le Oonte, of the California - (state University, at Berkeley, is dead, aged seventy-three. Dr. Philip Leidy died at his home in Phila delphia, aged fifty-three years. The White tjquadron, arrived off Fort Monroe. Gen. Armistead L. Long, ' a , noted Confederate rifRfpr Atari, Of. PViarlntantlla V. . Tnn , thousand acres in the vicinity of Millville, N. " JV, have been burned over by forest fires. A number of Chicago's boss carpenters have granted the' employes'. demands, and there is not Mkely to be a strike. -A. M.' Warner, of Cincinnati, was elected ,-. department- com mander of the Ohio grand army. -A fountain hbI f-tntue to tbe memory of Henry Bergh, founder of the American; Hociety for the Pre vention of Cruelty to Animals, was unveiled in Milwaukee.- B. P, Hutchinson, . the fatuous grain operator of Chicago, has dis appeared, and his friends think he lias become mentally deranged and wandered away. The Norfolk Southern Railroad was sold .at ' Elizabeth City, .N. C, for $.500,000.- The bridge over the, Hudson river at New York will be 150 feet above high water mark. Henry Bernstein,' ' bhoe dealer nt Mobile, assigned; liabilities, $?5,000, assets, fo),000. 'By the falling in of the roof of the Opera House at Troy, Ala., two young women were killed and several injured.- NathanS. Fisk, a centenarian, died at St. Croix Falls, Wis. Fire destroyed property worth $.5,000 of the Wilmington and Northern Railroad Com pany at Wilniington.--r-James Ctimmings, a railroad engineer, was killed at Oswego, N. Y., by the explosion of a locomotive, -Sain Anderson, a well-known farmer, was shot and -killed, near Sbreveport, La. J. Wallace is Huspeeted of the crioie.- Fire in Chatta- '. liooga, Tenn., caused a loss of a quarter of a I ; 1 1 : . A . n .. t it-Ljx . l a i .1 killed Dr. Rockett, at Bodcan, Ark.-r-The Omaha left Mazatlan, Mexico, for San Fran-', cisco.-- The American Protective Tariff League gave a banquet In Madison Square Garden, New . York, at which a., number of notable speeches were made. Mr. James Gamble, surviving partner of the old firm of Proctor & Gamble, soap manufacturers, died iti Cincinnati, aged eighty-eight years. ' Confederate memorial day observances were held- in Savannah. and ether Georgia towjis. Young David Wise,, of Buena Vista, Va., while out driving with a young lady, play- i fully pointed a pistol at his breast, and was killed.-M Mrs. Julia- Casey Gibbons, a mem ber of the Casey family, of Philadelphia, died at Putnam, Ct., aged seventy-one years. -r The birthday anniversary of General Grant ,was commemorated in Philadelphia'by a banquet at the Union League. Joseph C. Vidgeley, a Philadelphia wood dealer, was arrested on a warrant charging him with pen jury.--JI. O.Meredith, a young man for merly of Baltimore, who was , to have been married shortly, committed suicide in Knox ville, Tenn.-: Harrisville a thriving village on the routj from Watertown; N. V., into the ! Adirondack forest, was destroyed by fire. The New York State Board of Arbitration called the attention of the legislature to the infamous "sweating system" in operation in New York city, by which poor people received a miserable- pittance for hard labor. The body of Bertha Everett, of Phillipsburg, Pa., was found at the Parker House, Boston. She bleWout the 'gas. The Writers oft the City Railway Company, of Detroit,' have Avon.- . The Supreme Court ofyxiuisiiiua hs decided the lottery case In (aver of the company.- ' The Glen Hazy snrt .SjHawmu Railroad Com pany was chartered at II arrisburg, Pa.- The C. II. an t Dayton Railroad Company hps leased tho Cincinnati, Dayton and lronto road for ninety-nine years. - Ground w broken at Riverside Park, New iYorki for monument over the remains of Gen. I'ra Speeches were made by Gen. Horace Yojfter and Commander Freeman. The Methodist Conference of Maine and Vermont voted to admit women. Curwen Stoddnrt, a wealthy merchant Philadelphia, suddenly became insane in Chicago and attempted to kill him-wlf.--n -Auditor Charles L. Stratton, of the Northern lluilroad, New Hampshire, was sentenced nt Concord to. three yean in slate prison for embezzlement.-" -The Baron do Hirseh Land and Improvement Company was incorporated at Albiiny, N. Y., with a capital of fso,000. The Odd Fellowsof Washington celebrated the sevc ity-secwl anniversary of j heir order. , . ' M NATtfK Ii.M i.s ciirrifH in his poekrt aa ji -.nil N-cnir tt lii.pcr.r jiwfv hi U he siiys is the i i i dime i lovri liisi.-iit pHi-1 hi in, verv ' i" nmiM i 't'lwl I (he tin i ! And Three) Mora Injured by an Acci , dent on the B. & 0. i ' An Express Train Runs Into a Freight On the Metropolitan Branch a Few Miles From Rockville, Mdi ' . , The Cincinnati express of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, which left Camden Station Baltimore, at 2.30 o'clock P. M., ran into a freight train at Warring'' Station, about one ruilc'above.Germantown, au the Metropolitan Branch. The killed were: ... . , ' . Engiueman Curtis Ellicott, of the express. Fireman J. IL Murphy, of the freight train. Postal Clerk Burdette, of Washington. The injured were: ' Engineman Henry Croff, of the freight trian. Fireman N. G. Mviller, of the .express. Postal Clerk Milton Peacock, of Baltimore. : No passengers were hurt. ' C The scene of the accident was at a sharp curve near Wfring Station, eight miles west of Rockville," Md. - The express loft Washing, ton at 3.30 P. M., and was made up of engine, baggage car, postal car,"two day passenger coaches and two Pullman cars. The freight train wns at a standstill taking water on the main track. The" express was running at a speed of 40 miles an hour. The sharp curve hid the freight tram from sight until the ex press was within a short distance of it. Elliott saw the freight train, on his track as soon as he rounded the eurvev' and at once reversed his engine and applied " the. air . brake. The momentum of the train " was too great to be checked in snch a short distance, fand a moment later his train crashed into the freight without its speed being perceptibly checked. At the place of collision there was a smaller curve, which prevented the two engines from meeting squarely, and the blow was a side one. As the engines came together ; the crash could have been heard a long distance. The passen ger engine reeled to the right and fell on the ide of the track,: while the freight engine was thrown over on the left side.; - Following the the shock the baggage and postal ears left the track, and a moment latter the two cars were in flames, having caught fire from the engines", and not long afterward were completely de stroyed, as were also -two freight carp, one loaded with hay and the other with lime. .. The passengers went to work , to assist in searching for the killed and iniured. Super- intendent Thomas Fitzgerald, who was on the express ordered a wrecking crew from Rock ville, and began to clear the " track, while an extra engine was attached to the j passenger coaches and all of the passengers were sent back to Washington and thence West via the Main Line. ;. . - , : f k X The work ' of extricating the wounded was made difficult by the heat from the burning ears. Fireman . Miller was found : lying against an embankment alongside the track, badly cut and burnt on the, head and with several bones broken. : He was token to the Providence Hospital in Washington. Postal Clerk Peacock waa discovered beneath the broken timbers of the postal car, and was i tsuueu jui in unie w prevenims ueing I'urm to death. His head was severely cut and he was injured internally. . Engineer Groff was found seriously hurt near his engine. Postal Clerk Burdette was also pulled out of the de bris of the postal car. He bad probably been killed instantly. The bodies of Engineman Elliott and Fireman Murphy were buried beneath the wreck, so that they could not be seen, and for a long time the heat from the fire, made search for them impossible. t Only two mail bags and three or four pieces of baggage were saved, while nearly all the express mat ter, including two sates containing money, are said to have been lost. The heat was so in tense that the iron axles of the cars and the iron of the engines glowed white hot, and with the primitive means at hand fighting the flames had to be abandoned. r , The tire depart ment at Washington was appealed to, the As sistant Chief Bell and several fireman, with a supply of hose, were sent to the assistance of the wreckers . . The bodies of Murphy and Elliott have undoubtedly been consumed. ... ' HEBELLIOlT IN clLL The Monitor Huascar Was Sown Up at CalderaUalmaceda's Fears. ; Advices received in Paris from Chili, via Buenos Ay res, state that' during the battle at Caldcra five torpedoes were discharged at tho Chilian insurgents war vessels, sinking the monitor Huascar, as well as the Blanco Encal-1 ada. The dispatch adds that President Bai rn aceda's fleet, after administering this severe lesson to the insurgents, return to Valparaiso without having sustained any damage. The warship Florence, which, up to the present, has - been loyal to President Bal maceda, has now gone over to the insur gents. : -" , ' -. - President Balmaceda is in dread of being poisoned. To such an extent does . this feel ing prey upon his mind that he will not partake of any food which has not been pre pared by his own mother. The latter conse quently, prepares aU the President's meals. . The Congress yarty in Chili," telegraphs that the loss of their , warships will . not im pede their military operations, and that their army continues its march southward. - . ' ADUEL IN A CAFE. . V One Gambler Shot Dead by Another, Who ! Is Himself Wounded. ' ' . A terrible tragedy occurred at Marshall's Cafe in Roanake, Va. ' Nick Flood, son 'of Major John II. Flood,' a prominent tobacco niel of Lynchburg, and Charles L. Ross, who Vame from Washington on February last cn- J gaged in a auei with pistols. Ross fell, pierced by several ' bullets, and died in a few minutes without speaking. Flood was shot in the mouth and breast, ; but will probably recover. : : Both men were gamblers, and the shooting was the result of a quarrel at a card table about six weeks ago. Some, days asro they were prevented from nhootinc each other and placed miner nonns to ncep me peace, itoss bad $71'J in Iun pockets. Flood is a daiicerous character. A " few months ago he stabbed Martin O'Meara, a Lynchburg tailor, nearly to death, and subse quent I v almost killed a man named Payne, of Roanoke, with a billiard cue. f A FAMILY SWEPT AWAY, l'lve PerxonH Killed by a Hungiirimi AVho linally Drowns IliniHclf. , A terrible tragwly; in which a whole family lost their lives, happened in Pcsth,' Hungary, it fVw diiys since. A irmn employed in the iOKt office wan M'ized with a houiicbtal frenzy and fV tally ut- 1 lacked all (he meniberHof his household never I ccHt.ii)'' in his bloinlv woi'k until he I nut iiitn dcred hi." wife, inoiiier-iii-law, and tlirco chil li i'cii. The itimi then si:irted for the Diii.'iln', tui.i ' Mill ri : iliCT t ' " : v I'J !,i ' '.v hi ni ii r I . r i t:- ' i : ' iic- ABOUT NOTED PEOPLE. GESEKAL Hawley declares that he would much prefer a seat in, the Senate to a Cabinet porwono. . - , Don Fkdbo, the ex-Emperor of Brazil, has planned to spend the Summer at Busbey Park, England, the residence of the Duke de Nemours. - - ' ; bin Charles Dilke is 48 years old. He is a man of average height, with a long brown beard and a deep voice. He is wealthy, capable of hard literary work, a convincing speaker in Parliament, and a man of good manners and excellent taste in dress. Mme. Von TEfFFEL (Blanche Willis Howard) is as busy with her literary work at Stuttgart as before her marriage. Her .hus band, proud of literary gifts, says it would be a disgrace should marriage fetter .her talents. Geace Gbeenwood is nearljr blind, owing to cataracts on her eyes, and will soon become entirely so for a time, and permanently should the operation fail to remove them. She is to leave New York and take up her residence in Washington, soon, with her daughter. .- Rev. David C. Keliey, who .was sus pended from the Methodist ministry for six montlis for running as a candidate for Governor of Tennessee on the Prohibition ticket, has been restored to favor; but the Bishop is not yet able to say whether a fresh ' appointment w ill be given him immediately. Mrs. Charles DcDttY TVarner, wife of the well-known author, is not inclined to literary pursuits herself, but fills a portion of her days in the quiet city of Hartford, where she liM her home, busy at musical studies. Mrs. Warner is an accomplished artist on the' piano and a devoted admirer and interpreter of the classics. . , . , Mr. Thomas Edison's house at Orange, N J ., is a beautiful and luxurious one, and is but a five minutes' walk from his laboratory. His family consists of his wife, a daughter about 18 years old, two boys and two babies. The boys are being educated at home by a tutor; oneinhcrit8hisfather'sinventive genius, while the other is musically inclined. , ' , George Francis Train affirms that he is living solely upon coflee.v "I am astonished at myself," said he to an acquaintance the other day "but I am in perfect health and vigor,? although I take no solid food. Mv whole diet is a few cups of coffee per day."1 His skeptical hearer, knowing that Train'a muscles were like those of a ; blacksmith, questioned him closely, but George Francis stuck to his story. Prince and Princess Henry, of Batten, burg, who were with Queen Victoria at Grasse recently, wished one day to enter the hotel by a private entrance leading ipto the garden, but a sentry of the Alpine Chasseurs, not recognizing, their royal highnesses, refused to let tnem pass. The prince in vain explained his station, and it was not until one. of the officials had intervened that the prince and princess were allowed to enter. . The. Czar of Russia is more than six feet tall, and has the shoulders, arms and thighs of an athlete. So great is the strength of his hands that he can twist a horseshoe with ease. He is a magnificent horseman, a thoroughly trained soldier and an accomplished linguist, speaking seven modern languages besides Russian. He works hard and is out of bed from six in the morning till ten at nigbt. Stimulants and narcotics are however gratlu- auy uuuerminmg nis sirengtn. especial table, and was very kind to us, but I was ternbJy afraid of nun. ' One of his greatest pleasures at the table was to mix the most fiery of salids, which he would send by his own man (who always stood behind his master's chair) with the General's compliments, to the fa vored few. My gastronomic tastes were far from being developed, and thrld gestleman's red pepper and mustard nearly killed me. I simply could not eat the burning stuff. Feel ing the General's eye upon me, I vainly tried to swallow it, but failed ignominiously, with tears coming into my eyes with the effort. To add to my discomfort and mortification, a voice roared out in a deep tone from the General's throne: "The little Cbase does not like my salid.' " .. . THE DEEPEST WELL ON EART& A Hole Being Drilled Near Wheeling, W. Va., for Scientific Observations.' There is an enterprise in progress near Wheeling, under the joint patronage of the United States government and some enter prising citizens of Wheeling, which, if suc cessful, will prove of extraordinary interest to the scientific world. '- Th public-spirited citi zens of Wheeling, have failed of financial suc cess in the boring of a deep well, j have dedi cated the well to the purposes of scienee and determined that it shall become in that way a success. ... ; ,f- - Major J. W. Powell, of the geological sur vey, writes that if the well is carried down un til it reaches the carniferous limestone it will add a very important measurement to geology, and will aid in guiding future operations in boring for economic purposes in 'West Virginia Ohio and Kentucky. "It will also afford an opportunity practically unique for the deter mination of the laws of temperature change beneath the surface of the earth, i The ideal locality is one where a deep well penetrates undisturbed horizontal strata and does not tap veins of water, and the combination has never been realized before. , I am, therefore, very desirous to secure for seienee the best records attainable from observations of this well, and have detailed for the purpose Dr. William Hallock. a trained and experienced physician, who will begin his preparatory work immedi ately." ' ;.:; it ; ' ' . .." . . - The well in question has already been bored by the Wheeling gentlemen to a depth of 4,100 feet and was .started wit h , the a vowed inten tion of boring until either oil or natural gas was found, "if they had to go through to China." ; To reach u mile deep it. will be necessary to sink the hole WW feet deeper. It is proposed tokeen a careful measurement of all the strata" gone through by the drill and save Kamples of ' each dinerent formation.When the drill gete'l pone before the temperature of -'tlurearth at that point will be taken by a self-registering: thermometer, as minute observations.wili also be made of the magnetic conditions and other pern inr ehuraetensties, things of which tho scientific . world hns now no experimental knowledge. i THE ROOF FELL INT A Party, of Toung Penple Crashed in an ... Open House. -t The opera house in Troy, Ala., fell in the other afternoon, while a party of young people were rehearsing an amateur performance. A lout 20 persons w ere buried in t he ruins. The dead are: Miss Annie Foster, of East man, tin., and Mix Fanr.iu Lou Starke, only chihi of Judge 1. W. Starke, of Tr-y, The seriously injured are Mis i Masrcrie Burnett, lately of lfainhriik'e, Ga., and Ms Kola limvnfntV Others were burr, hixk not seNOH-.lv. I 'i i-i - l i.i. iiT i iilti-d iVniii the f-i-n adi f i 1 i IIs- ..-'. w hii Ii - u-" HI-I to "C M IU I : Kate Chase Spraoce tells this story of a . visit to old General Winfield Scott, at Cozzen's West Point. "He gave us seats at his own . DB. T The Eminent Brooklyn Di vine's Sun day Sermon. ; Snbjeeti Thfe New Tabernacle.' Text: " What mean ye by these atones f Joshua iv.. 6. ' The Jordan, like the Mississippi, has Muffs on the one side and flats on the other. Here and there a sycamore shadows it. Here and there a willow dips into it. It waa only a little over waist aeep in December as I waded through it, but in tbe months of April and May tue snows on Mount Lebanon to aw and flow down into the valley, and then the Jor dan overflows its banks. Then it is wide, deep, raging and impetuous. At this season of the year I hear the tramp of forty thouJ sand armed men coming down to cross the riven ?; You ; say, why do . they i not go up nearer the rise of the river at the o Id camel j ford? Ah I my friends, it is because it is not 1 safe to go around when the Lord tells us to I; go ahead; The Israelites had been going around forty years, and they had euough of it. I do not know how it is with you, my brethren, but I have always got into trouble when I went around, but always got into saiety wnen i went a Dead. I There spreads out tbe Jordan, a raging I torrent, much of it snow, water just come down from the mountain top; and I see soma f of the Israelites shivering at the idea of piungmg in, and one soldier says to nis com rade, ."Joseph, can you swimf' And another says: ' "If we get across the itream we will get there with wet clothes and with damaged armor, and tbe Canaanites will slash us to ; pieces with their swords before we eetupth9 . ether bank." But it is no time to halt. The j great host marches on. i' . I The priests carrying the ark go ahead, the people follow. 1 hear the tramp of the great multitude. The priests have now come with in a stone's throw of the water. Yet still there is no abatement of the flood. Now they ; have come within four or five feet of the ftream; but there is no abatement of the ' flood.-" Bad .prospect! - It seems as if those , Israelites that crossed the desert are now eo- ing to be drowned in sight of Canaan. But "Forward !M Is the cry. The command rings all along the line of the host. "Forward!" Now the priests have come within one step of the river. This time they lift their feet rrom tne solid ground and put tnem down into the raging stream. No sooner are their feet there than Jordan flies. On the right hand God piles up a great mountain of . floods; on the left the water flows off toward the sea. The great river for hours baits and . rears. The back waters, not being able to flow over the passing Is raelites, pile wave on wave until perhaps a sea bird would find some difficulty in scaliog the water cliff. Now the priests and all the people have gone over on dry land. The I water on the left hand side by this time has reached tne sea; and now that the miracu lous passage has been made, stand back and see this stupendous pile of waters leap. God takes His hand from that walls of floods, and like a hundred cataracts thty plunge and roar in thunderous triumph to the sea. How are they to celebrate this passage? Shall it be with music? I suppose the trum- j pets and cymbals were all worn out before this. Shall it be with banners waving? Oh, no; they are all faded and torn. JoshnJ cries out, "I will tell you how to celpbrata this build a monument here to commemoj rate '".the event," and every priest puts 4 heavy stone on his shoulder and marches bttt and drops that stone in the divinely ep- E Dinted place. I see the pile growing m eight, in breadth, in significance; and, in I after years, men went by that spot and saw' iniB monument, and cried out one to anotner, in fulfillment of the prophecy of the text, "What meant ye by these stones?' Blessed be God, He did not leave our church In the wilderness ! We have been wandering about for a year and a half worshiping in the Academy of Music, Brooklyn, and the Academy of Music, New York. And some thought we would never reach the promised land. Some said we had better take this route and others that. Some said we had better go back, and some said there were sons of Arak in the way that would eat us up, and before the smoke had cleared away from the sky after our tabernacle had been consumed, people stood on the very site of the place and said: "This church will never again be built We came down to the bank of Jordan; we looked off upon the waters. Some of the svmpnthy that was expressed turned out to be snow water melted from the top of Lebanon. , Some said: "You had bet ter not go in; you will get your feet wet." But we waded in, pastor and people, farther and farther, and in some way, the Lord only knows how, we got through; and to-night I go all around about this great house, erected by your prayera and sympathies and sacri fices, and cry out in the words of my text: ' What mean ye by these stonesf It is an outrage to build a house like this, Co vast and so magnificent, unless there be some tremendous reasons for doing it; and so, my friends, I pursue you to-night with the question of ' my text, and I demand of these trustees and of these elders and of all who have contributed in the building of this structure, "What mean ye by these stones?" But before X get your answer to my question you interrupt me and point to the memorial wall at the aide of this pulpit, and say, "Ex plain that unusual group : cf memorials, What mead you by those stones?" By per mission of the people of my beloved charge t recently visited the Holy Lands, and. having in mind by day and night during my ab-a gence this rising house of prayer, I bethought myself, ' What can I do to make that place significant and gloriousf : On the morning -of December the 3d we were at the foot of the most sacred mount ain of all tbe earth, Mount Calvary. There is no more doubt of the. locality than of Mount Washington or Mount Blanc. On the bluflof this mountain, which is the shape of tbe human skull, and so called jn the Bible, "The place of the skull," there is room for three crosses . There I saw a stone so sug gestive I rolled it down the hill and trans ported it. It is at the top of this wall, a white stone, with crimson veins running through it the white typical of purity the crimson suggestive of the blood that paid the price of our redemption. We place it at' the top of the memorial wall, for abeve all in this church, fot all time, in sermon and soug and prayer, shall be, the sacraflce of Mount Cavalry. Look at it. That stone was one of the rocks rent at the crucifixion. That heard the cry, "It is finished." Was ever any church on earth honored with such a memorial? Beneath it are two tables of stone which I had brought from Mount Siuai where the law was given. Three camels were three weeks - crossing the desert to fetch them. When at Cairo, Egypt, I proposed to the Christian Arab that he bring one storte from Mount Sinai, he said, "We can easier bring two rocks than one, for one must balance thorn on the back of tho camel," and I dM not think until the day of their arrival bow much more uggestiv would be the t wo, be causfi the law was written on two tablets of store. '.Those' stones marked with the words "Moant KimM felt the ftrthquakthat shook tho mountains when th law was given.- The lower etone of the wall la from Mars HUI, the plin-o where .Pftnl stood when hn preached tLi;t famouj t nnoao'i the tro'.herhood of the human race, declaring ' 'God hath mad of one blood all nations." ' Since Lord Elgin took the famous statuary from tbe Acropolis, the hill adjoining Mars Hill, the Greek Government makes it Impos sible to transport to other lands any antiq uities, and armed soldiers guard not only the Acropolis, but Mara Hilt That stone I obtained by special permission from the Queen of Greece, a most gracious and bril liant woman, who recsivea us as though we had boon old acquaintances, and through Mr. TricouDis, the Prime Minister of Greece, and Mr. (Snowden, our American Minister Plenipotentiary, and Dr. Manatt, our Amer ican Consul, that suggestive tablet was awed from the- pulpit, of rock on which Paul preached. Now you understand why we have marked it "Tha Gospel." f Long af ter my lips shall utter in this church their last message, these lips of stone will tell of the Law, and the Sacrifice, and tbo Gospel. This day I present them to tbe church and to all who shall gaze upon them. Thus you have ray answer to the question, "What mean you by these stones?". . But you cannot divert me from the ques tion of the text as I first put it. I have in terpreted these four memorials on rny, right hand, but there are hundreds of stones in these surrounding walls and underneath ns, in the foundations, and rising above us in the towers. 1 The quarries of tiits and trans atlantic countries at the call of crowbar and chisel havecontributed toward this structure. "What mean ye by these stonesf; 1 - " , You mean araonT other things that they shall be an earthly residence for Christ. Christ did not have much of a home when He was hers. Who and where is that child crying? It is Jesus, born In an outhouse. Where is that hard breathing? It is Jesus, asleep on a rock. Who is that in the back part, of a flsWng smack, with a sailor's r ough overcoat thrown over Him ? It is Jesus, the worn out voyager. O, Jesus Hs it not time that Thou hadst a house? We give Thee this. Thou didst give it to us first, but we give it back to Thee. It is too good for us. hut not half good enouh for Thee. Oh! come in and take the best seat here. Walk -up and down all these aisles. Speak' through these organ pipes. , Throw thine arm over us in these arches." In tbe naming ot these brackets ot fire speak to ns, saving, "lam the light of the world." O King! make this thine audienee cnatnner. Here 'proclaim righteousness, and make treaties. We clap bur hands, . we uncover our heads, we lift our ensigns, we cry with multitudinous acclamation until the place rings and the heavens listen, "O King 1 live forever!" ( , - . Is it not time that He who was born in a strangers house and buried in a stranger's grave should have an earthly house? Come in, O Jesus I not the corpse of a buried Christ, but a radiant and trumphant Jesus, con queror of earth and heaven and helL . . He ltves, all gory to Hts name. He lives, my Jems, still the earns. ' Ob, the weet Jo this sentence givof 1 know that my Redeemer lives. Blessed be His glorious name foreverf Again, if any one asks the question of the text, "What mean ye by these stonesf the reply is we mean the communion of saints. Do you know that there is not a single de nomination of Christians in Brooklyn that has not contributed something toward the building of this house? And if ever, stand ing in this place, there shall be a man who shall try by anything he says to stir up bit terness between different denominations of Christians, may his tongue falter, and his cheek blanch, and his heart stop I My friends, if there is any church on earth where there is a minelinx of all denomina tions it is our church. I just wish that John Calvin and Arminius, if they were not too busy, would come out on the battlements and see us. " . Sometimes in our prayer meetings I have heard brethren use the phrases of a beautiful liturgy, and we know where they come from; and in the same prayer meetings I have heard brethren, made audible ejaculation, "Amen I" "Praise ye the Lord P' and. we did not have to guess twice where they came from. .When a man knocks at our church door, if he comes from a sect where they will not give him a certificat?, we say: 'Come in by confession of faith." While Adoniram Judson, the Baptist, and John Wealey. the Methodist, and John Knox, the glorious old Bcotch Presbyterian, are shak ing bands in heaven, ail churches on earth can afford to come into close communica tion: ' "One Lord, one faith, one baptism." Oh, my brethren, we have had enough of Big Bethel fights the Fourteenth New Yoric reeiment flxhting the Fif tesnth Massachu setts regiment. Now, let all those who are for Christ and stand on tbe same side go shoulder to sfcoulder.and this church, Instead of having a sprinkling of the divine blessing, go clear under the wave in one glorious im mertion in the name of the Fathar and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. I saw a little child once, in its dying hour, put one arm around its father's neck and the other arm around its mother's neck and brimz them close down to its dying lips and give a last kiss. Oh, I said, those two per sons will stand very near to each other al ways after such an interlocking. The dying Christ puts one arm around this denomina tion of Christians, and the other arm around that denomination of Christians, and He brings them down to His dying lips while He gives them this parting kiss: "My peae I leave with you. My peace 1 give unto you. How swift tho heavenly courte they ran. Whose hearts and faith and hopes art one. I heard a Baptist minister once say that he thought in tbe millennium it would be ill one greas isapust cnurca; ana x neara & Methodist minister say that he thought in the great millennial day it would be all one great Methodist church: and I have tnown a '- Presbyterian . minister who thought that in the millennial day it would be all one great Presbyterian chuBch. Now think they are all mistaken. I think the millennial . church will be a composite ihurch: and just as yon may take the best parts of flvejor six tunea, and under the skil ful hands of Handel, Mozart or Beethoven ntwine them into one grand and overpower ing symphony, so, I suppose, in the latter iavs of the world. God will take the best parte of all denominations of Christians, and weave them law one great ecciesiasncai harmony, broad as the earth and high as the heavens, and that will be the church of the future. Or, as mosaic is made of jasper and agate and many precious stones cemented together mosaic a thousand feet square in St. Mark's, or mosaic hoisted, in colossal, seraphim in St. Sophia's so I suppose God will make, after a while, one great blending of all creeds, and all faiths, and all Christian sentiments, the amythest and the jasper.and the chalcedony of all different experiences and belief, cenieted side by side in the great mosaic oi tne ages: ana wane me nations look upon the columns and architraves - of tbe stupendous church; of the future, and cry out, "What mean ye by these atones I". mere snail Lie liiiiunierauie vt.uccs vj ip spond, "We mean the Lord God omnipotent reioneth." ' Stilt further, yon mean bv these stones tha salvation of the people. Wo did not build this church f ;r mere worldly reforms, or for an educational institution, or as a platform on 1 which to read essays and philosophical disquisitions, but a place for tbe tremendous work of soul saving. . Oh, I had rather ba the means in this church ot having one. uoul prepared for a joyful eternity than live thousand souls prepared for". mere-- workilv success. ' All churches are m twj e.asjfs, au uc-umusitio in tw places,;!! the raoe ia two classes believers and unbelievers. To augment the number of the one and subtract from the number of the other we buuc tlua church, and toward that supreme and eter nal idea we dedicate all our sermons, a'l our songs, all our prayers, all our Sabbath L.v.id shaKings. We want to throw defection into the enemy's ranks. We want to makg Vvjna either surrender unconditionally to Christ or else fly in front, scattering the way with canteens, blankets and knapsacks. We want to popularize Christ. We would like to tell the story of His love here until men would feel that they had rather die tha' f!. live another hour without His symoatay ar. c. love and mercy. We want to rouse tip t enthusiasm for Him greater than was :; for Nathaniel Lyon when he rode alor": ; ranks; greater than was exhibited for n' ington when be came baci from Watjj-i greater than was expressed for Nspof a i when he stepped ashore from Eibai We r. believe in this place; Christ will enact same scenes that were enacted by Him wi He landed in the orient, and there will such an opening of blind eyes and unstlf,j ping of deaf ears and casting out of undo. ., spirits such silencing bestormed Gentlest,, rets as shall maie this house memorable five' hundred years after you and I are dead and t forgotten. Oh, my friends, we want but one revival in this church, that beginninar now and running on to the day when the chisel of time, that brings down even St. Paul's and the Pyramids, shall bring this house into the dust. . , Ob, that this dav of dedication might be the day of emancipation of all imprisoned soulf. My friends, do not make the blunder of the ship carpenters in Noah's time, who? j helped to build the art; but did not g-et into it. uod lorbid tnaEyon wno cave wen sw -generous in building this church should not ; get under its influences. "Come thou and all thy house into the ark." Do you think a mania safe oat of Christ? Not one day, not one hour, not one minute, not one Fecond. Three or four years ago. you remember, a rail train broke down a bridge on the way to Albanyi and after the catastrophe they were looking around among the timbers of the" crushed bridge and the fallen train and found the conductor. He was dying, and bad only " strength to say one thing, and that way, "Hoist the flag for the next train." So ttiere come tons to-night, from the eternal word, '. voices of God, voices of ansrel?, voices of de parted spirits, cryingr "Lift the warning. Blow the trumpet. Give the alarm. Hoist tbe flag for the next train ." -.'-'Oh, thai), to-night my Lord Jesus would sweep His arm around the great audience andl take you au to His holy heart. You will never see no good a time for personal conse cration as now. ; "What mean ye by these stones?" We mean your redemption tvom : sin and death and hell by the power of an f omnipotent gospel. Well, the Brooklyn Tabernacle is erected again. ' We came here to-nisbt not to dedi cate it. That was done this morning. To- night we dedicate ourselves. In tbe Epis-, copal and Methodist churches they have a railing around the altar, and the people come and kneel down at that railing, and get the sacramental blessing. . Well, my friends, it would take more than a night to gather you in circles around this altar. Then just bow where you are for the blessing. Ared men, his is the last church that you will ever dedicate. May the God who comforted -Jacob the Patriarch, and Paul the aged.i make this house to yon the gate of heaven; and when, in your old days, yon put on your spectacles to read the hymn or the Scripture lesson, may you get preparation for that Jand where you shall no more see through a glass darkly. May the warm sunshine of heaven thaw the snow off yourforebeadst r Men in middle lif e,do you know that this is : the place where you are going to get your ,: fatigues rested and your sorrows apneased and your souls saved? Do yon know that at this altar your sons and daughters will take upon themselves the vows of the Christian, and from this place yon will carry out, some of you, your precious dead? ; Between thut baptismal font and this communion table you will have some of the tenderest of life's ex periences. God bless you, old and young and . middle aged,: The money you have given to this church to-day will be; I hope, the best ' financial investment you have ever made. , Your worldly investments may depend upon ' the whims of the money market, or the hon esty of bun'ness associates, but the money -you have given to the house of the Lord shall " yield you large percentage, and declare eter nal dividends Ion? after the noonday sun shall have gone but like a spark from a smitten anvil and all the stars are dead . CABLE SPARKS. . " Ex-Speaker Thomas Reed is in Home. A map wolf ran a muck .through an Aus trian village in the Duccy of Buckowina and , bit thirty-two persona. . The Portuguese in South Africa seized rf Hritish vessel, hauled -down the English flag and raised their own in its place. A gardesek in the village of Albrechts hein. Germany, murdered his wife and four children with a hatchet and then hanged him- self. ' . . : The natives of Portuguese, Guinea, weEt roast of Africa, after having massacred all the Portuguese officers and soldiers, on the Island of Besso, have hoisted the French flag. A London jury rendered a verdict in favor of Mr. William Henry IIurlbut,the American journalist, who was sued in that city by Mi6 Gladys Evelyn, an actress, for breach of promise. - ' The British government refused to' appoint Michael Davitt, the Irish leader, on the labor commission because he had served a term in prison, having been convicted of treason felony while advocating Ireland's cause Conferences between the delegates from Newfoundland now in London and represents tives of the BritiKh government relative to the. ' fisheries dispute have been of a satisfactory nature to all concerned, and it is believed a practical and definite agreement will be reached, i IT is reported in Paris that Baron ITimch, the Hrbr' philnntropist, has purchased an immclse p-ct of hind in Pennsylvania with -the ntict'if establishing there a colonv of: KnstnJy lebrews. The -truthfulness of the report lVsienied in Philadelphia. It is claimed laud boomers started the report. . ' Spain- bus concluded a reciprocity treaty" with the United States, whereby the Vniteil States wil obtain an exemption from duties on most of its raw and manufactured products and a reduction of the tariff on cerea; and flour shipped to the West Indies. In return the United States will allow Antilles sucrnr, molasses, eotl'ee and hides to enter free of duty and will reduce the. duty on tea. t The British Governor of tlanibia, Wt Africa, sent au English official to the native King of the colony, who had allowed a num ber of depredations to le nutde on Briti) onists,ivnniine him that he must behave him self and nee that dis subjects behave t! m aelvea properly iu the future.ir flue the nmrm forces of t lie ijueen of Euuland would be n dcred t make him a visit of a. discit-bun nature. Tho King ordered the env-v t. sci.i-daml port hum of his irhecks and ihi ' cm out. The tortunil Kinrlilnuan mid pieces of tlcsh were sent buck t- ilie !v with the rep'iy that they were Use Kh.,i swer. Pr- !C"i -i hospital -t i cm ! : j GermausVii ft failure, evun fi"c; I -"unoccupied, and the place 5 - 1 s