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VOL ViE. ~MANNIN I 'm. O LDESDAY, N I IV191Al___ N. 7 E . P.'- 3Y HE REV. T DE A:rT .:AGE. Iyn. Ills A . re Ncvar LarA-r "n -h .dv f E :r.-!.His TI.6 2eOKLyix. Nov. .-TheTaberU.a.e Wats lhronret u ti mri The vatte 't t no calac.ty with :3rer t-ne: shows iow the p apular prechet' r5ins his p-wer ovur the peopiP. A 01un he has been prchng in k for !tore than tlr- en'yu t anL. e e r never eo large -s ne0. id anlhoughI the larget Protent ch;irch in Arnerica has been built :or hi. there r.ecr was a time when so m v persovs were tu.rned 3wy fI- I-ok -'room. Tie .iuh "'Uricks - tot: 4:w." a ct ot the series on the co) -irnatiun of Holy Scripture whic )r. 'I almian e found Iu his journey froa the Pyramids to the Acropolis, 7LIS textz was ainh xix, 1, "The burden of What is n ' c\ eIrwbnt about in the streets rat" k zpt.! ! Decemn btrlcmrnia %la i" "- :i.d-el k X We bear :cud v i. at.: .ee 1e Crowcs if peo)n~i tee to. lhe sides '. the street. The - xitrn-nt it others be ce.ts otr zn A xc tneit. Footmen coie :'ight. T ave a rod In the hand an iele cap on head. and their ar:s tind 'te are bare. Their sarb is bla:k to the waii. except as threar'ed wI ;icAd the rtL is h T'y art .:iar z Ihe way f,,r an oth Ial d%. t earv in a ebariat c-rca-.r ae. The r' i, and r omi in:es run tiirty or em, a stLre h ;n frontof an equip:i:. Mase w.' They are the fle-oV -*;.C.td men e n earth, but so .n die. !"r tihe htr .-:n :rkae was n .t ae for sue: endura.ce. I alked Sl around ime Nt.o the ma in' thecarriage was. but no ne eeied to know. Yt a I el 1 tck with the rest to Te wall I : id. This is the. old cus tom :'Lund all Up and dow'n the bible, f otmcn runin:,g betore the rulers, de miandI (;*eisance, s in Genesis before Joseph', c;ariot the people were con mandedl. "Bow the knee;" and as I see the swift feet o; the men followed by the swift leet of tc horses, how those olds woros f Jerem!ah rushed through my rind, --': thc.u hast run with the footmen and.! they have wearied thee. how caEsL thou _ortend with horses?" HE SERVES AS A FOOTMAN. Now, m r hearer. in this course of ser monsA I am oly serving Tou as footman. and clearm tie way for Your coming into the wonders of Egypto!ogy, a sub iect that I wotidi have you study far be 3&nd anything that can be said in the tredity if pulpit utterance. Two hun dred ~and ewIhty-n:nc times does the 31le refer to Egypt and the EgY ptians. No wonder, for Egytpt was the mother f nations. Eg;y., the mother of Gureece; Greece, the mother of Rome; Rome, the mo her of England; EnglanA1. the mother of f'ur o-- lend. A.:emd in- to that, Egypt is our great-Areat grandmother. On other Sabath- I left you study ug what they must have bxen in their glory; the Hypostyl hall of Karne. the architectumal miracles at Luxor. the Colonnade of Uoremh, the cemeteries of' Memphis, the vake of a kingdom in one monument. the Sp~hinx, which with lips of stone speaks loud enough to be heard across xe cecntries, Hleliopolis and Zean, the conur?drum of archeolo gi.ets. But all that extravagance of palace and temple andA monument was the cause inf ani opprension high as hear en and deep as hell. The weight of those blocks of stone, heavier than any modern machinery could lilt, come down upon the ebrew slaves, and their ulood mixed the mortar for the trowels. We saw again and again on and aloug the Nile a boss workman roughly smite a su'oordmnate who did not please him. It is no rare cceurrsnce to see long line of men under heavy burdens passing by taskmasters at short distances, lashihg them as they to by into greater speed, and then there workmen, exhausted with the blasting heats of the day, lying down upen the bare ground, sunddeniy chilled with the mnght air, crying out in prayer: "Ya, Allh" "Ya, Allh!" which means 0 Goo! O God! But what must have been the olden t mes crueltY shown by~ the FEytiani :owaird thei'r heraelitish slaves is indteute:d by a Ket ure in thne Basrd-Unse-nr tombs, vrhete a man :. held dlown Cfn his fac b twol feetr v-hile .1he e .e a beat the bare back IQow iHEiY CQUr AFyontl> IT. a:.ird to~ bui1 such costly.' weric. 1 but tio i.55s and~ bio<-d of the tol, and bilod ..re a ch'eap dreni fo*rdels "Brieks uh vt ar rs" y not suT gest so much aris :ip until yo~ c.u ku that the brieb nre usuahf madec -.ith "crushed straw." straw crushed by the feet of the cer in tie ;thrashingw. d thins crushed si.raw denied to then wherk-. men, they had to pie. up here anid thce a iece ol ,utl.e or aiher rlusi.es ::. the waterside. This sory of me Lite Kis omfirmei 3 by the fte: that macn o the brick~ wanlls of E:inr. have ou t.e lower layers L:ck rn..ie with straw, bu' th:e higher iayers of brick mnaw o~ cut roughn straw or rushes from the river bank, the truth of the Ueink of Ec.,d.n thus written ini the h:lek w'alls dLscovr ed by the naoderni explorers. That goverrnenti uutrage has l ways beea a characeristi ct If gy tian rulrs. Taxation to the pKnt if.a vaton was toe iEyna rtuleintei ble times as wel sti- . ;r. (i onIE time. A modern tre'eier e~ives h ures concorum:zth cu itiun en teem acres. ta values 'f the l1-2 If *h field stated in li:&slter: Produce..............-.---U Exnpenses................. - SClear proJU........ ...... T.e....................... 43 AmIouat c>'ared by the tarmer 31.5) Or, as myj at: .ertr :n sire. sevenuts pr eens. of w:.a t E.gyptian irruer makes is pai i. r taes to the govern ment, . .ha, i :t so0 much taxa tion as assas.-5:aaie. a? has ihmk you - of that. you .aho an under havy taxes in Amne? .ave hestd that in Egypt tihe wc akineple hiave a so;ng like thi', 'Th y s'a, us, they starve us. they beat", th- :eaLuS; busthere's some one no, theres sous oneeanve. who will putni the~ 'rbIl, w h- wilpu *ist them wel . L;esventy :er coat. of government tai :L gypt is a miercy as cempared to wha.e ebrew slaves suffered. thei' ''. nimre. The: gou nothing bu:. Iood ha. ly lit for a dog, and their clohn wnas onone raez and t heir . on ri 's t'v :,Il e:eenc C C e a .0 n uan,! )!, ;oldA Jco aaa' L'"o" tera aad b~bters -Wa ' 11'r. hr O came E 'r tha TAo4 old mn b y. .toLi W. asi rme minister, r:wdo h. d 1.ti nrrupei. thn r: er th Lucater ls c!!ed the an. ii .: .t es deendafnce howdl muec aohle tavao k a turn at n t eai thoe dmeendats o a JACOb. !.e Israted"3 catme to a yeaL Stolre .;ouei Joeph, b haraoh(' provioe. ane p.aid i moncyor cora. But aiter twhile :'C- r?opest pate oEyp the Wthe sat catte Ater aahile the cattle were Ii n pctz:,sc~on od ihe noTernmetr and Afen the hebrews bouht corn from the i-oer-nent tF osu-renderng thems ves Ir1NI'NG OF SLAi'. IN 1-:oYi'i. ' w'-7 i' u sa..i ~ir ih Se0 nIsrites camt a h fpealse aos whipucJsp hadri ovid edrand: paid'C inoney lr:z"', corn .n iut Af r whil ur.ny garneout dthe the fy pai tvi erncit -e 1 iLdo'aeverv in tl u;otie er ithe tte ere nii in p o 'e11n1o the United n ate t ah te WH.ebe ioge. 'Woe worf the r xy "et c '.i 'r. dt' c on4r e:5~ au ( th ": It' A"e '01 0 --- Trt '(-y3 ur eg ml 4.1 as *' 1 ti'' t ,r slca e GN (Fo . .hvERY h' ' N : h t .vina en -.vutd a-l- th Herise adtet odem_ iir:uta::tiies ho, u inar caLd me a ra'r.aa other thinls etire e iasi. huDmentreer uid erhast in. Ie woul. raerlouder a IOU _e, vent d c r rfe. W. threwot mih W here :.:aIst ao co...;eos? Nod the throe. it isat neasn that. Not the armY. r: c'ffco-:'s conniinded t hav. No' Phar atl s wodab thade trnev ain trmbie. Not te E iAmnon and Usiris or the IG:dotsis s - .e r Phe.rai built. thet ternpies rut of tie gronns (;i' this dhaboii cnl detviwde. But ou. 'ot da the IriUces 1isnorael thwas dauhter of Phar aoh wh e in lir batiing house on ae b anks o the Nile. Iees word brouglt he reat there is a bah. afloat on the rivr in a cradle mxa!e out of bli, hraves. Of course thrk is exltement all up anu down 'We b)atks*, for an o:dmnary bag ir an ordinary cradle attracts smil inn atftion, but an infat in a cradle h papyrus rockipg on a iiver arouses Lot only a iration. tnt curiosity. Who made that boatic Who made id 1wvater tizht withi b;itune'r launchied aecke.s 0o th cacxoiols, Who lay a!h'sng themeles i the aun, the maid. ens wade in and sn atch up the child, and Nst one carries hmn and then another I corres him, and all the wa u the bank pe runs a ganrtiet of caresses,till Thon aos rushes out of the bathing house and sais: -Beautluui foundliniz, I will adopt baunks mfte ie own. ord brougt wer ttheEpisan crobn adlsit on the river in ci ar ot oebir eas. Tl i Ollt'cue there ls exciltmn all taos do are baukn unor the ordah, bahl i anz ordlnary crasdles atrt semi ind atenio, bu an ionant i crhebs orehamyauseockig pnat rive armouses tntonl, admeirauone will euiey Wo h mil ly a that ioat Wh e i te foendklios of all goodiles, whol lay ,aorin lat.Whelen he suea, the maill ensm w n ond sneatch uplthe bdrn tmt on care hom and ore angeother to'aried tuh, andsallthewa3 phbn he~ uns horrorie o caessestill one o in usheso the btingnatose fnd ays r"Beatifula foudling, Iawlthaopt youc , as my own . You shll, and wear he Egypan crwn and it on the Egonyh Gean hroe" h oo el r n INeN! ;1iiNo! Hre!i to be the those whoare writhng under theh an 'Hhpoi an Zoan and Thebes.ot 'eor him a se il at Ona mon tai top,'~ alne t - qn his owllrcev fro he Alm' ''ighty ar law thtis to; "theI' fonaion o'fl [ood lawi wh the om dononNb and aloe bry~ to attend ter obsequies.ros auie ther!- horos f gytiatppre ionad " e rese as indington fo to~c n'r 'iue o .. let l, nd wen bet an eads', the poorlow ry woud saw te blood"" ' s;:urMoe wdoubleu Set d str.~uckd hiong thetemle G i the rela* viinL: rld twntyin h an exmimte nd evr s'iute the otnis~: jAis l m f Si:. t :?ke ti i.. "butws Yonu nel - . ' n a ga i in t nd thebes m p4::i'. utwher is your .re? ter:- or "ny ? Not charit, r a e~e 2:A' Gud .s n h* sd, ' he h s arm of hpia]wn itess :heA snowoksin whi the l Frene :"I' -'f nvaso wee the " u'''-~ton hi a - t'~ tho 'art. The rai fis re' ' (ie Aitc te doh of io aun--'te road the~il'. the tc co d no Vtrs m:.dhe noc Weligon's sron ten \ a~ to o et unJtil~ re oene :nti rie<:.~ ksa tc 'cloc o~r' the wrmnind mte~yo t ruten ti "d-s G y of Y tu rpe would.an hatro been tune the'- u'dn way.oct The heavy ram )jcide d evryhm. So als * siM . irs :dt vle t trm roaeith on hundrei can Vity ltpsan twety-i unre:s ak alloe s~tt~,' : 'd eigh thu *m saf -pC s :u' er'y Z. th stouin sl (no u c ue of Vz~ thee 'ume an that e~bippizze? skth llind and he wave ll .drue::: the'r h'ngls tnd L'Iroish cgrens.g *f. ;e m rad ther ahip al wrecedorro edrsatrd.S u wn h boils. one of WiC wll I pt a i in wretchedness, caae in ac'stcrs I froman Me top of the head to the sult o a the ro.t. Aud then the clouds dropped s hail and lightning. And then locusts came in. swarms of them, worse than 1 the grasshoppers ever were in Kansas, I and then darkness dropped for three t days S) that the people could not see I their hand before their face, great I surges of midnight covering then. And last of ad, on the night of the 18th of April. about eighteen hundred years I before Chr!st, the Destroying Angel s sweeps past; and hear it all night long, ( the ftap. flap: 1lap! of his wingR until C Egypt rolled on a great hearse, the t eld.st child dead in every Egyptian a home, The eldest son of Pharaoh -x- c pired that night in the palace and all L along the streets of Memphis and le- t liopelis, and all tp and down the Nile T there was a funeral wall that would i have rent the fold of the unnatural t darknes' if it had not been impenetra- t ble. A NOW IS ISRAEL S CHANCE. The Isrealitish homes, however, were untouched. But these homes were full of preparation, for now is your chance, ! 0 ye wronged Hebrews: Snatch up what piec--s of food you can and to the: desert! Its simooms are better than the bondage you huve suffered. Its I scorpions will not sting so sharply as the wrongs that have stung you all your lives. Away! The man who was :Tadled in the basket of papyrus on the Nile will lead you. Up! Op! This is the night of your rescue. They gather together at a signal. Alexander' armies and all the armies of olden tiuit wei e led by torches on high poles, great 1 crests of bre; and the Lord Almighty v kindles a torch not held by hunurt 1 hands but by omnipotent hand. Not made out of straw or oil, but kindled out of the atmosphere, such a torch as tne world never saw before r and never will see again. It reach-l 1 from the earth unto the heaven, a pillar of fire, that pillar practically syim -his way! March this way!" On tat isupernatural flambeau more than a mniiioa refugees set. their eyes. Mrs and Aaron lead on. Then comee herds and flocks moving on across utm sands to what is the beach of waters t now called Bahr-el-Kulzum, but called 9 in the Bible the Red sea. And when I t dipped my hands in its blue waters, the heroics of the Mosaic passage roiled c over me. ON THE RED SE A'S S110E. After three days march the Israel- 1 itsh refugees encamped for the night on the banks of the Red sea. As the shadows begin to fail, in the distance is seen the host of Pharaoh in pursuit. There were six hundred linest war chariots, followed by common chariots, . rolling at full speed And the glitter ing of the wheels and the curse of in furiated Egyptians came down with the darkness. But the Lord opened the crystal gates of Bahr-el-Kulzum and the enslaved Israelites passed into liberty, and then the crystal gates of the sea rolled shut against the Egyp tian pursuers. It was about two o'clock in the morn- r ing when the interlocked axle trees of h the! Egyptian chariots could not more r an inch either way. But the Red sea y unhitched the horses and unhelmeted ( the warriors, and left the proud host at wreck on the Arabian sands. Then 3 two choruses arose, and Moses led the d ren in one, and Miriam led the women b in the other, and the women beat time L with their feet. The record says: "All v the women went out after her with a timbrels and with dances. And Miriam answered them, Sing ye to the Lord, e for he hath triumphed gloriously; the b horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea." What a thrilling story of en- e durance and victory. c The geatest triumph of IIandel's c genius was shown in his immortal dra- a matic oratorio, "Israel In Egypt." He b had given to the world tihe oratorio of t "Esther and D~eborrah," and Athaliah, e buit reserved for his mig~htiest exertion at the full height of his powers tbe t marshaling of all musical instruments r to the description In harmony of the p scenes on which we this morning d well. r He gave twenty-seven days to this pro- f duction, with its twenty-eight choruses, entralling his own time and all after- a time with his "Israel in Egypt." t So the burden of oppression was lift- a ed, but another burden of Egypt is g made up of deserts. Indeed, Africa is e a great continent for deserts, Libyan s desert, Sahara desert, deserts here and there and yonder, eondemning vas re- v ions of Africa to barrenness, one of t the deserts three thousand mile's long t and a thousand miles wile. But all b those deserts will yet be flooded, and so r made fertile. De Lesseps says it can be il done, and he who planned the Suez ca nal, which marries the Rted sea, and g the Mediterranean, knows what he Is talking about. It it must have more cultivated tand, and I the world must abolish its deserts.t Eight hundred millions of the human race are now living on !aras not blessed 1. with rains, but depent'ient oni irrisa ton, and we wnt by irrigetioni to make roti m for eight hundred millions more. By irrigation the prophecy willi ue fulfilled, aiid "the desert will blossom e as the rose." So from~ Egypt the uur- a den of sand will be lifted.d THE BURDEN OF 3O0HA3IMEDANMSM. :1 Anotner burden of Egypt to be lif teda is th~e burden of Monammnedism, ai- v though there are semne good thiings e about that religion. A commenidable grace is cleanliness. Strong drink is 1 positively forbidden by Mohamnerian- i lm, and though some may have si-n a drunken Mohammedan, I never saw e one. It is a religio~n of sobriety. Then I they are not ashamed of their dI evo- 1 tions. When the call for prayers is sounded from the minarets the Moham - medan imediately unrolls the rug p on the ground and falls on his knees, and crowds of spectators are tot hin no embarrassment-reproof to a mru:nv a Christian who omits his gr-y- li r if people are looking. But Mohammedanism, with its poly- 1 gamy, blights everything it touchtes. iohammed, Its founder, had four a' wives, and his followers are the eine- I mies of good womanhood. Moham- a medanism puts Its curse on all Egypt, 3 and by setting up a sinful Arab higher tan the immaculate Christ, is an over whelming blasphemy. May God help the hrave and consecrated missIonaries who are spending their lives in combat But before I forget it I must put more emphasis upon the fact that t he last outrage that resulted in the libera tin of the Hebrews was their being. compelled to rmake bricks wIthout straw. That was the last skraw tht~ broke the camel's back. GoxI would al low the despotism against his people to go no farther. Making bricks with out straw! TEE OPPRESsION STILL G;OEs ON. That oppression still goes on. D~e mand of your wife appropriate ward rbe and bountiful table without pro- i Ividing the means necessary-bricxs I Iwithout straw. Cities demanding in the public school faithful and success- e Iful instruction without giving the teachers competent livelihood-brieks C without straw. United State's govern-t metdmadn of senators anid con ance to the Interests of the people, but f Io compnainr whicah may have done -c in ma ':-t of0: tin. churchtes em11"w:.1N i p to r iers 1:monjs ad sir heic evi:- n sta.rvation aary: san: ~ -t: Ciceros o% four doi rs a year. "rieks without straw. 'ist is omnr r-::son wy there are so tany poor brinks. I departments, ricks ars not bricks at all. Work ade usately paid for is wrth inore thaii -ork nct pali tor. r ivre straw and he-n better bilcks. liut in all rtmnts there are ar'aohs: 5om~etu en Capital a Pharaoh ometi Lahor a Paraoh. When sApital prospers. and iiiakes large per entare vii its invenetim, and declines o considr ther needs of the operatives, n. treats them as so rnan human ma hines--tht-ir nerves no more than the ands on the l actory wheel-then Capi al is a Phnaraoh. On the other hand, hen work men, not regarding the anx :ties and 'osiness struggles of the firm mployirg them, anti at, a time when he frn are doing their best to meet an nportant centract and need all hands us y to .cromplish it. t such a ttme to I ave his enployes make a strike and ut. their employers into extreme per lexity an'! severe loss-then Labor be o0:es a iPharaoll of the worst oppes ion, and must look out for the judg .ents of God. TIMnE Am.E STILL PHARAOIIS. Whben :n December of 183'S, at the lustiui at Ioulae, Egypt, I looked at be" mum mis of the oid Pl'araobs, the try micreants wbo dtbolized centu es m v thIir teeth and hair and :r m h -s'i rawn'i. tight vrthir -h-e on. Ihe sarcuphagi f these :1 monatrClis side by side, nd I w -v xl s::!tated I could only ;iii 11 i get awa from the spot, was nou io ; upuon the last of the > r'ws. .1 wvet. th worl old iner hamt z ltp i; tite l'iPaei.h over youngI It ach ver Long rSr., old doctors avAg% IA ttne P r ' er 0 oung doe ors.t ats plti e Pnaraoh V r oun I' rfs ; ; s. i d m iniste-rs play ;? te :,n::_u z-r yu r in aisters Lect all" opre'i'ay Hi om iL ~ ~ w L 0C A tt ories, i, .01"a 1-r7 i~~uoe iu ates oppe- 'r, 'ad A'will come 1o rief here or rea r. Pnaraoh hoeevht he W1.1 : in tam~tg. a cunuing 1ing, a dei2ive thing v1 hn fOr the Oplete ex~tnt :o the tlbbr.Ws inl .gypt he ordered alt the ]ebrew boys iassacred. bu n c: no G.nd i so ine ti t In his own . born that izht of dsh- i~ig at'ei dropped en1d o th-- uo0' I,;or i the foot of hie porphy ry p.1lar of the paace. Let ! the Ptuahs take waring. Somte A the wcrst of t bm are on a smail scale a households, as when a marin, because is arm is ;:-ri n. hi. voiceloud don - mates hits poor wife into a domestic laverv. There are oous.nds of such cases .1ere the wife a hIfetime serf, her jfi!Ofn disregrded. her tastes insulted' ad her existence a wretchedness, ough the wori'i may not know it. It r) t a iPnaraoi taat s.=s at the head of at table, and a Pharaoh that tyran izes that home. There is no more at rrent Pharaoh than a domestic Pha nall. There are thousauds of women to hom death is passage from Egypt to annan, because they get rid of a cruel iskmaster. What an accursed mon C er is that man who keeps his wife in read about family expenses and must e cautious how she intioduces an ar icle of minftnery or womanly wardrobe ithout humilting consultation or poogy. Who is that man acting so? For six . ionths-In order to win that woman's t eart-he sent her every few days a boa uet wound with white ribbon and an ndearIng couplet, and to- her to con erts and theaters. and helped her into arrages as though she were a princess, nd ran across the room to pick up her E andkerchief with the speed of an an loe, and on tihe marriage day promis d al that the iturgy required, saying I will!" with an emphasis that excited e admiration of all spectators. But ~ ow he begrudges her two cents for a ostage stamp. and wondiArs why she des across Brooklyn -r bidge when the >ot passage costs nothing. ie thinks now she is awful plain, nd he acts like the devil, while he i 3uders out: "Where did you get that i ew hat frota? That's where my money oes. Whetre's iny breakfast? Do you all that coiTeey Didn't 1 tell you to ~ y on that button ? Want to see your Tel enourth .vhten twenty-five cents rent as far as a dollar now, but in wese times not unFicient to preserve ricks without staw oter.0 oyo - Y Ou are- al ways go- C g to see your mo'ther! What are you rhimerhig ab'mt! ilutrry ttp now and ~ et mnv slipp--N: Wh'e the newspa Ary h tone,. te icok. the imlpa en*t -- ern o a P:.raoh. That 9 winu.------:: ---,-as m& a cowed ott:n . i i ' P .c :: o hadi better :, vc;: jr A r ; tita~ wVomfan's er (n .. wii 'A lpu' remove youir .sw -.:, :kne !-o tet ket of er ers;;ad :.ro:a t:: i gon nto aI -r uly I ..::, had to mee: hail enth ano.AC:* G Ad ne': r e gar" to ny nmu e.o rio t ty'r.am:ze a wroman ni what ;- a - r to take ad an I--o themri vow, and be- ~ er :-. s:ar f yr wa h':oe out ~ Ara .t'A- E ..i. .ppresor. There ~ omthing aw'7 ityrotg in a house oh hr- eeonni not corsider- 2 ot as much *::mrtance as the man. o room i i n'rid for any more naraohr. ..N HtAS 1.rN t i- TAsKMAsTER.c Bit it rolls over. on me with great ~ ovrthe thtougt that we have all een slaves do wn in Egypt. and sin has ee. nur takmaste'r, and again and i''. net hae lt its lash. But Christ as teen tAir :.s to lead us cut of I e ndagy and! '- ar' forever fr ee. The tlse o a viu- acrilie rolls ~ een anud yide between us3 and our oretimne b~ndaae,..nd though there 1av be dlestrts vet for us to cross, we reon the way ' the P romrised Land. hanks te nto God~ for this emanci atng Gospel: Comte up out o Eypt all ye who are t e'rtiaved. What hist did for us e will ,- f--r yon. "Exodus!" is the o. Exodu! itead of the brick ilusof Egypct "ame into the empurpled, ineyard.s of God, iws:ere one cluster of t 'rapes is bigger than the one that th el pies broug~ht to the Israelites by the rok of Eshcoi, thoughi that cluster ras so largt- that it wa:s borne' between WO unon a staff." Wecome all Oy sm- optpressed, Welcome to his sacred rest; Noting broa:.;ht htim from abovic othing but tedeeming ioye. 'rr:il wf a CoTuton kicker. t ANt.A, Ga, Oct. 20.-Quite a sen ationt was created toany over the work I ego Willis Lipsc'omb's cotton picker. a n a lare cotton ;held niear Atlanta the 1 ckr- waIs pu-t to work under the dir-d tion o~f Lispenard, the inventor, and erforued it-s work to the satisfaction i hundreds of plan trs, who hiad come t o Atlanta tr> witness the test. Every ody pronounuc-d the machine a suc .'' . . C(.u 'of c-.a was picked in a s t~W mUiu es.:tho leaves tand green podsc 1 the stnl heing uninjured.r AST WEEK'S ELECTIONS. DRAWN BATTLE BETWEEN THE TWO GREAT PARTIES. iew York Giyes a Mandsomo Deioeratic Majority, but Ohio Goos Ko.piublican. The oesult in Massachusetts, Pen:syl vania and other States. NEW YORK ALL RIGHT. NEW Yox, Nov. 4.- I-n last Tues av's election the Democrats s- cn- the tale, their majority being between orty and fifty thousand. Ex-President Grover Cleveland gave is opinion of the results of Tuesday's lection as follows: "O course every ie has the right to put' his own coz truction upon the results, and I arn tot anxious to obtrude my indeas, but t seems to me some things ought to be o longer doubtful. Anyone who sill hinks that tariff reform is a settled ,nd obsolete issue, or that the inpor ance of sound and safe money .s a uestion upon which the people can be linded, is either wilfully wrong or angerontsly dull. It seems to me, too, hat Democrats ought to be satiatied hat a staunch adherence to the princi les of their party does not requmre the buse of those who show an inclination o help us. I very much regret the de eat of Governor Campbell. lie has >een a brave and honest otlicial. Tii ond the splendid canvass he madt en itled n im to success. While the dee ion of FLower, Russell and Boi-e ought o cause the utmost rejoicing au.cag )emocrats, they should not forget that vith these things comes the otligation o be true to the party, honest in th< dvocacy of our principles, and decent a all things. WATERTOWN, N. Y., Nov. 4.-Go V rnor elect Flower returned this eve idz from New York, and was receiv::d y thousands of citizens who tenceredi im a grand ovation. A carriago rawn by six white h- rses was in wvit ag, which the Governor-elect entert-0, t parade was thbn formed. and _Mr. ower was then escorted to his hwomie, here Mayor Porter made a few re aarks of welcome, Mr. Flower respond ig in a feeling manner. rHE PROTIECTIONIsTs CAPTURE 01110. COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 4.-The lRe >ublicans carried this State ic. Taes ay's election by a majority of tweity housand, electing all of their State fcers and capturing both branches of be Legislature. The feature of the result is the e-om lete drop Af the People's party. 1 heir ote in the State will not exceed 11,500, ad they claimed before the election t least 75,000. They probably will lose .000 votes from last year, falling prob .bly 16,000. This loss is traced to the tepublicani Counties and partially ac ounts for their gains in strength. Governor Campbell takes the situa ion philosophically and -?ets that the )emocratic party was laboring under oo great a handicap in Ohio because of he lack of funds to pay th3 legitimate xpenses of the campaign. ie says bhy have made the best fight they could n the face of the Republican majority f 11,000 to start on and the combined pposition of the maanfact urers and apitalists. Besides all this it was a 1Ie and death struggle with the Re >ublican party. To defeat McKinley, no of its national leaders and the rep esentative of its chosen idea of pro ection, meant the downfall and disin sgration of the party itself. Party es were closely drawn. IOWA REMAINS DEMOCRATIC. DEs MoiNs, Nov. 4.-The latest re urns indicates that Boies, the D~emo ratio candIdate, has been elected Gov rnor by about eight thousand plurali y. Eighty-eight counties give him 2 806, and the other eleven two years go went 3,084 Republican, reducing tie first figures to 9,722. But propor lonat~e gains in these eleven should in rease the plurality to 10,000. The )emorats claim the election oc their hole State ticket, as it runs well up rith B~oies. The Senate stands: 25 )emocrats, 24 Republicans aud 1 Inde endent. The Repu.blicans have a ma rity of 2 in the house. The Democrats are having a regular d-fashioned jubixee -to-night over the uccess of Boles. Fires are burnin~g all ver the State, and Democrats are aarching the streets with brass bands elebrating their victory. Governor oles arrived to-night from Waterloo, d his carriage was drawn through he streets by a great crowd of Demo rats. A great jollification ineeting rl be held here Saturday. [AsACfUSETTS ELECTs A DEMO CRATIC GOVERtNOR. BoSTON, N'ov. 4.-The pluraLity r ived by Governor Russell, Democrat, snot yet accurately known, but all ut three small towns have been he-a.rd rom. Without these towns, lu--1S' lurality is 6,913. The milssing towos nill r .y lower these figures mnore th" "' sore. if at all. The Republican as~ have lected the rest of their State ti. .t. b bout tae same plurality, showin-' th t kovernor Russell ran fully 14000X vo ~.s :ead cf his ticket. The Republicar-s aptured both branches of th Legisla~ Governor Russell this m~orn ig laims his election by about fi,000. I~ ys: "It meams that MassachusettI is arnstly for tarIff reform on the line f free raw material, which has beenCi h chief issue in this State. Ith aeans that she is firmly and age s 1rely for sound currency." [AnTLAND MORE DEMoCRATIC THtAN ETER. BA LTIMORE, Nov.4.-Frank Urowu, )emocrat, for governor, carried the tate by something over 30,u00 pluirality yesterday's election. T he legi .lature nl stand on joint ballot, 103 Demo rat, 14 oppositIon. The senate will ave only four Republicans, who are .old-over senators. In the house of elegates there are seven Republicars d three Fusionists. In the last senate ther e were eighteenf )emocrats and eight Republicans, and a the house fifty-nine Democrats and irty-two Republicans, in the next enate there will be four and perhaps ye Republicans, and in the house bout twelve, giving the Democrats a ajorty on joint ballot of eiihty-iive. 'IE REPUBLICANs RECAPTURE. KAN sAS. TOPEKA, K(an. Nov. 4.-The result Af he local election in Kansas yesterday h'as a great surprise to all parties. The sepublicans carried eighty-five out of he 106 counties in the State. The re ut is a great victory for the Republi an. Ten out of the eleven Peoples iarty candidates for district judge were defeated. Last ye ar the People's iarty elected nearly four-fifths of the ounty officers of the state. Yesterda~y he fIgures were reversed. The People s arty elected only one district judIg ut of nine. The Republicans claim a reat victory over the People's party. id that calamity and repudation as reached by 1'etter anid Simpisou are 'E DEMOCRACY SOLID) IN TIRGINIA. RICuOND. Va., Noy. 4.-Later re urns from the election In Virginia con ml the claims that the Democrats have wet all sections of the State. In the emite, the Democrats, with the hold ver senators, have thirty-nine or forty amrs of that hodr. In the honsP.. t 1e l r..s.ar On certuIn to have! ove'r iu'-tly-flv o' the 10 mem bers. Tlir-? Iures are conservative. For the tirht tine since their enfran c'isernent the negrot - wijl not have rep resentmt ives in either branch of the Vir giniat Legislature. The Rtepublicans made no showing in yesterday's elec tion. Tii AllmnTe and Independents wer- the chitf opponents of tne Demo crats, and neither of these cut much of a iigure. ALL ONT; WAY IN MISSTsIsIPI. JAcsaN, Miss., Nv. 4.-The election in hi siate wos ipld for three railroad Sconaiesioners, the entire legislature nd di:ic attorneys. W. S. Laurins, A (ske 1 ni.1 F. Sessiona were the 1)cnocratic nominees for railroad com misioners, and had no opposition. The gertral legislature will be overwhelm ingly Democratic, with most of the members pledged for the return of Messrs George and Walthal to the United States seuate. 1'E:NNSYLVANIA JOINEI) TO HlEn IDOLS. 'u fADELIPHIA, Pa., Nov. 4.-Com plAte tigures from lifty-three of the six tv-seven Counties In the State, includ ijug Philadelphia and Allegheny Coua ties, and acareful estimate for the other fonrteea Counties, show a plurality of 56.!08 for Gregg (lRepublican) for Au ditar General. Tne propceition for a conItitutoraI convention was over whelmingly defeated. CoLO.ADO's CONTEST. 1)EN . Col. Nov. .-Chairman Coe, fe !u.-can Countv Central Com. mte;, u_!ai's the election of tie entire Sby 2,0. No complete returns fr-m outside towns f-ae been received, bu rileim's eetion as chief justice of rie Suremn Court is clai med by ther te -ublican committee b. over 15,1NJi. GOOD i-Ot NEW.JEfsEY. I 'm.:x-rx, N, .J., Nov. 4.-R eturns up toC. 1 o'Cc indicate the -lection of the IDemr- ,:ic .-torialt icket in New IkrJe'-.w forty-;ne oit of sixty As smbiaIen . This will mye the Demo , riy of thirty-three oa joint - -:s tLe largest uiajority e h Iy. etite~ parrv in the Legi. LT WEE-S EtrCTiON. W:1 I:: i-,T t Z1.1 M ,n41' In W nAM1h .A.,?Nix ', November 4.-Demo cratI in this vicinity are very well l*asedt sith the cutcomaz of yesterday's eleci.n. hil the Reoubileans are gl4d that it was i worse. A member uf the Cainet, who -bjecti to being quoted,:i ai- ro-dey that the Republican iaararv in New York com:pletely ig ored the Administration during the recent fight in spite ot the fact that they were warned against the Anti Tainma i-su in the rural districts. Repoulimans in Northern New York apnealled to 1latt and ais lieutenants to end sone sneakers into that section who could te~!1 the farmers something about the eftect of the McKinly bill on eggs, barley and similar products which come into competition with Canadian productions. The President is alleged to have suggested that it would be bet ter to inject national Issues into the campaign with a view to arousing the interest of the voters in the counties outside oi New York and Brooklyn. H~is ideas were repeated to Mr. Platt, but he paid no attention to the friendly suggestions. IHence there appears to be but iittle sympathy for the downfall of Fassett Ai Administration circles. On the other handthelDemocrats are not cast down because Campbell was defeated in Ohio. While they wanted the courageous Governor to win they realized that he had remarkable odds against him. Congressman McKin ney, of New Ilampshire, who took an active part In the recent cam paign, says that the whole weight of the Adninistration was thrown Into Ohio to help I1c1inley. The returns show a falling off in the Republican vote in the manufacturing centres, while they gained in the agricultural districts, thus showing the people were affected by the course of events since the passage of the McKinley bill. The operatives in the mills voted against McKinley because his bill did not in crease their wages, and the farmners were disposed to favor it because they are getting better prices for their crops, an~ imagine the bill has something to do with that pleasant fact. Congressman Mlills expressed his re grets th at Governor Campbell was not re elected, but, said he, yesterday's fight settled beyond dispute that the Demo crats must thro w aside all other issues narankoc a square contest with the lkpu)ica ns on the tariff question. To do that they should select Cleveland as their stanidard-bearer, and it is probable that tuhe Renoblicans will nominate McliL. 1D tnat evenut there would ae n. e. to drag in the: silver or any othso -tide ssies, het cz-nfine the l o - 1ariff aione.-News and Cuxwo.03.. -l.I.- special from Lik .a. A'r'.,sayv: -News reached <er a r-ih ,,'' tercriole hand-to 'II'eunte at H'ucY'p~*rt, twenty r~is rom E~orado. L'r.:ion County. al. ::-, Ers -, mis~ oms meeting last IP-i~ St- L-ctur"-r Bryan, of the -'u~ee -, s ti- pri-tceipal speaker of t-- F:ng .,,orrly after he had con elautd ."s s n ' u-rrel took place anc se:.: mtnira 7:hich was "e . upiy n oth'-rs in the an ' i : Wme serisles, shc-tguns :md tnis we-~ mi"- w rth deadly E-i ect. .trt' iy.;>, .. Hi. Tovn and three othe:. whnc a e uld not be eaned -re kiL Several were shnl 'nneued sheriff Dunn, of Ei d-rado, I lef -a oer rhe scene of the trcobe:.. -d-ho r dities was the (ul' :md sol) '*'-" of the trouble." l!!i(N' -.N a, .VtNov. 2.-Five as Ssina ines a '.it2!in nin'ty days is ther ear,! ; Mg a a smaltl town in But 0~ 1oul- S iis orning: the dead and mn.'led ~body of Tomu Shepard and~ his v iiewr mlow in htd at that place. Durin the xig.ht bo0th had been brained win- a' u'e. which v::us found beside thbd, cl:ted wuth blood. No cause for~ the Ae'd is knewn, butt it is be'lieved th.at th mu..rder was esmmriitted necause ..e..ged.o;!le wiere against moon-a shnr uespecrate gainz who operate i thoisx vieinty of Georgiana and are areany r-sponiie for two p:evious rdehr-s. Thre sherif' and a posse are sourerng thei country. and if caught the murrrs vwil b~e lyneched. Great ex mdighit great anxiety is felt in Birnm inghamu over the late of the young cool1 who were married at the State iar grounds early this af ternoon and enonabridal tour in a bailoon. Teptyin the blasket consisted of Aemn~iant ihaldwin, IH. >. C. IlIutchiin son, thie young groom and his bride who ea '.'ss Miianet'or~eson. The balloon ntuplike a rocket to a great height, 1m den slw dr'ifted almost due eart. f It wa~s last *eon highu up in the ar, passuig over Newcastle, thirte-n miles north of .lirminghamn, On the Louv-ille and Nashville Railroad. The 'alloona was going steadily toward the remoite' moutid regions of North Ala bamau. ami mirecayv away from railroad and roe-'raoh lines. A MUSS I-N BA1N\MELL. ALLEGED ATTEMPT TO DEFRAUDji THE STATE. it Iteward Claimed for the ArraAt o* a MXr-C derer, who Voluatarnly Sarrondered to t the S-erift. and Wants the Money.to Fay a Lawyer to Defend him. COLU2BIA, S. C., No'. 4.-It will be remembered that during the early part of last summer E. C. Burpee, town marshal of the town of Midway, Barn well County. was shot and kuled by one Wm. L. MeFail. a full accoun t of which was publishsd in The Register at the2 time it occurred. McFail "skipped." so to speak, and was not heard of from the tme of the killing until last Sunday when his an pearance at Barnweli Court House gave no little surprise. Bosides this there is considerable diflerence of opinion as to the cause of his appearance, it being claimed by some that he was captured, and by others that he voluntarily sur rendered himself. These differences of opinion assumed detinite shape yester day morning when oflier II1. Hill called upon Governor Tillman and claimed the reward ofcred for McFail's capture. Previous to Mr. hilt's arrival. how ever, Governor Tiliman had received communications From Robert Aldricl, Esq., one of McFai's counsel, and Mr. H. C. Folk. acquainting hin with the fct that McFall had -urrendered" voluntarily, and also hinting that there was some collusion between Hill and McFall to the end that the reward moucy J ouild be used for the purpose 01 d fense. The ;irsr of thise commun.ca tiour is from Robert Aldrich. Esq., of date November 2, and is as follows: BARNWELL, C. H., Nov. 2. 1891. T, ID- Exccll:.cy Governor E. R. Till man. C~olum~bia. S. C. )EAR SR:-Wilam 'e. McFa:- eur readereca voluntarly 'o tc ShEriff of th S County w-day. Should any claim be made fur the rev-ard it will be a fraud unon the State and s!?culd be aisregard ed. Yours very truly, ROBERT ALDRICH. The next is from Mr. H. C. Folk of Bamberg of da-te November 3: BAWD-no. Nov. 3. 'Hon. 1. R. Tillman. Governor of South Carolina, Columbia. S. C. M DEA R Sli::-McFal, the slayer of Burpee. has surrendered to the Sher iff th"rough his friend H. IH. Hill. This is done to get the reward offered by you for his arrest, or at least this is the gen eral impression here. Can you not with hold the reward and investigate the mat ter? Our State should not pay for the do fense of her criminals if it can be avoided. I have written the above with the hope that you may be able to do somethingt to stop this business. Yours very truly, H. C. FOLK. When Mr. Hill called on Governor Tlllman yesterday morning he was armed with the certificate of Sherif Lan caster of Barnwell County acknowledg ing the receipt of McFail at the Conuty jail, but of course in the face of the in formation received in the matter Gov erner Tillman refused to pay the reward offered. The following is the certificate of Sheriff Lancaster: STATE OF SOUT1! CAROLINA, t COUNTY OF BARNWELL. 0 This is to certify that H. H. Hill has this day delhvered to me the person of W. L. McFail, charged with the murder ot E. C. Burpee, at Midway, in this County and State, and that the said W. L. McFail is now confined in the Coun ty jail. J. W. LANCASTER, Sheriat Barnwell Count y. November 1st, 1801. Witness: W. GILMOEE NIMMs, C. ] C. P.and G. S.] Upon the payoent of the reward be ing refused Mr. Hill called upon G. W. M. Williams, Esq., of this city.. one .f MFail's counsel, and explained the matter to him, whereupon Mr. Williams wrote the following letter to Governor Tila:Conc31BIA, Nov. 4, 1891. To His Excellency B. R. Tillman, Gov erno~r of South C:?rolina: Having been informed by Mr. H. A. Hill of certain communications to you, I have read the communication of Robt. Aldrichi, dated Nov. 2(d, and addressed to you~, mn which he states that Win. L. McFail surrendered voluntarily to the Shrtif of this Cuuuty to-day, and I wish to say that whbile I mai.ke no charges of wilfulhy mistakin;; things agai'ns Mr. Aldrich, he is v'ery- seriously mistaken* 2 I am the lega! ader ' of Mr. Mcl in the et~se lhe now. Sslads charged with brogh ino hecase to asis rac in the deen-ling of M\I&". I lute wish to state that Colo"el Al:leh i e~end ing a party chsrgyd with arson, againstt whom Mr. McFaii is an important witness, and in wvhosc behalt. A~l drich is of course quite solicitous I further wish it known to you that I was in Da.rnwell on the :2d, (the da oij Coo.nel Aldrich's ietuer.)~ and he did not intjimate t, me auy intentn of. trt you, or asked u'e auythiig con erning this anmaos cortspondence. i. 5sW Colonel Aldrich eariy mn the morning of the 2d, and asked him for a consultation, and after leaving him at the fcont giate of his residence, saw no more of him. In regard to H. C. Folk's communica tion to you, dated :Xd November, I wish to say to you that. although he in a e presentative from Barnwell. he would not dlare tell the Sherufl that McFail sur- i rendered to him. Though Folk has the s honorable attached to his namec as the representative of the people, he has ex- I hibied to my mind a partisan feeling un- C founded in fact except as suits his own a peculiar notions. I would not write this to you, Governor, except for the ~ aguage used in Folk's letter which I ~ o pe the public will see and appreciate. and for the backing tile enormous report t seems to have from one of McFail's law- I e rs, so considered. Very resectfully, t your obedient servant. 1 G. W. M. WILLrAMS. t And thus the matter stands. and so it t will stand until Governor Tillmnan has I had time and opportunity to make a thorough investigation of the whole matter.-Register. Thursday Governor Tillman received the following additicoal letter in regard a to the allende~ fraudulent capture of W. s L. McFail by H. HI. Hill in Barnwell c County: "BA NwzL C. II.. Nov. 3d, 189 l. "To His Fxcellency. Go(v. B. 11. Till man, Couba S. C.: "Dear .$ir:-I wrote you last night that Win. L. Mc~all had voluntarily surrendered to the sheri. and any claim r for the reward oiiered would be an at- i empted fraud upon th~e State an d should t he dlisregairded. 1 was moved to write E CuI as I did without any knowledge ot 6 oe laet, r (vin any rumor having eached me of such an ~attempt being in Ontemplation by any one, but simply lom certain suspicious circumstances .Ltending the surrender. It has come u my hearing today that one Hill ob ained from Sheriff Lancaster a certifi ate that he had arrested McFail and Lar he had delivered him up, and that TPan the next train Hill left, presuma. dly for Columbia. My suspicions are tow conlirmed, and I hope my letter eached you in time to frustrate this windle. I am one of McFail's attor eys, and know that he has fully intend d, all the time, to surrender upon the re.f the court, which begins here next Ionday, and only avoided arrest be ause he feared he would not be able to et bail, and naturally preferred to stay ut of jail than in it. "I know also that Hill could no more iave arrested McFail, without .his con ent, than could an infant have captured n armedI warrior and brought him to >rison, and the farce of Hill capturing IcFail is only surpassed by the audaci ;y of the fraud attempted or may be con ummated, on you and the State. If he ias succeeded, I am clearly of the opin on, and can furnish the proof, that it is case of obtaining money under false retences. As a citizen, this swindling peration upon the State excites my ire, td, being perpetrated in a case with rhich I am connected, arouses my In lignation. I shall be at your service tnd at that of the attorney general when -enuired. -I beg to remain very respectfully Fours, ROET. ALDRTCH." Governor Tillman again states that is will take no action in this matter ithout a iull investigation, which will e undertaken at once. MARRIEO HIS SISTER. 2ueer Legal Tangle That is Vexing the New York Barge Offieials. NEW YoRK, N ov. 5.-General )'Beirne is in a quandary. As acting iuperintendent of Immigration at the Parge office in the absence of Colonel Veber, who has gone home to Buffalo o vote, the General is required to pass ipon a case presenting some very recul ar and unprecedented features. A family by the name of Muller ar ived Saturday from Mecklenburg, on he steamer Fuerst Bismarck. The amily consisted of a mother, a daugh er, a son and a son-in-law. All had ickets for Elgin, 1Il. The daughter, aarguerite Muller, was detaired at the arge office because of her condition. According to the custom which ob ains at the port of entry in such cases ionic one must marry her or bonds must )e given for her support. It appears hat the knowledge of this requirement :ame to the family on shipboard, and he brother, John Muller, agreed to mar y his sister. After the brother-in-law had gone Vest yesterday, and in the temporary Lbsence of Mrs. Muller, John and Mar uerite were married by Pastor Keyl, of .he Lutheran Mission in State street, in he presence of General O'Beirne. pan the mother's return the discovery d the fraud was made, and both brother td sister were detained at the Barge >flice for further action. General O'Beirne said this morning hat he had been grossly imposed upon Lad that he would have the deceiving :ouple on hoard ship in less than twen y-four hours, and would see that they ere sent back to Europe. "It was a deliber ate fru, he said, 'perpetrated for the sake o i getting the rir out of the Barge office. I told-the young man that he was not compeed o marry the girl and had Pastor Keyl el him the same thing. They insisted, oweer, upon the marriage ceremony >eing performed and went through it ith all aparent reverence. Th. dis overy of the actual relations of the pair ras an astounding revalation. I shall onsult with the United States District ttornev's offi~e to-day and learn what aust be'done. if' anything, to have the arriage annulled." At the office of the United States istrict Attorney it was said this morn ag that the case had not been brought ormally to their attention, and that ua i it was no opinion could be passed ipon it. Mr. Frederick 1R. Coudert, the well nown international lawyer, was asked o give an opinion upon the case. -'I think," said Mr. Coudert, "that eat leniency should be exercised. The rother undoubtedly acted from a worthy active and under extreme pressure. He aw no other way of getting his sester o her destination rand saving her from pen disgrace, and to send her back in h streerage at this season of the year aght possibly result in her death. "As to the law in the case: If the ouple, as I understand it, were, at the ime of the alleged marriage, which, of ourse, w as no marriage at all, still un er United States jurisdiction, then no tates la'v has been violated, and I know t no Federal law which covers the case. t seems to me that the beet way is to rop the whole business and let the peo l proceed to their destination. I cer ainy would never take part in the rosecution of such a case." Chnecans Freparing for War. LONDON, Nov. 4.-The latest advices rou Valparaiso state that there isno iminution of the popular animosity gainst Americans, and that no real ef ort is being made to bring Chileans to astice for the killing c f the American alors. While the American negotiations are ending, the Junta has ordered the Chil an war vessels to be ready for service, nd the forts defending Valparaiso har or are being strengthened. These steps re being taken very quietly, as if with view to avoid attracting attention. The Baltimore maintains great vigil ne, and Capt. Schley is evidently on e lookout for a treacherous attack' he opinion is expressed that, should be situation not culminate before the th instant, the new president, proba ly George Montt, may bring matters o a settlement. Montt is believed to e the best disposed to Americans of ny of the revolutionary leaders. Te correspondent of the London ies at Valparaiso is said to be a ,riter who has been noted in the past or his hostility to the United States. le Times articles continue to be the ahject of unfavorable comment in Lon o!, as calculated to stir up bad blood e ween the United States and England. Horrible Death. T. PicL, Minn., Oct. 31.-Mrs. Lucy 'odd Gilbert, mother of Bishop Gilbert, as found early this morning lying in pool of blood in front of the Bishop's sidence. It is supposed that she arose i the night, and not being accustomed the house (she had just arrived from her burg, N. Y..) fell out of the window. he was 78, and feeble. 1