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V0L. X NI L~~~~ICKEiNs, S. C., Ti'I') , N',VI~L~1,I~.N B RIC K >\ WI110 ) T S I l W, SERMON PA,LACHED 13Y THE REV. T. DE '-11Y T TALMAGE. AIlemil.It (I- P1-1. . I)I Illi . 1 :iss Pealeol Tw -ni %-.u 16ea:-A let J:roibk I.y , II im All ne n i . rtt Ncv r Larger S Ito I itrd14)o:I or I-, y). 1) c T , tx was thr on-f (I : 11umal C IO. mlornin11-. Thec Vast Hlu( iel to it, wilmoit capacity With It r 1.!Ite t.3 tshowVS h10\Y thle p) -q.uhir pln-wcr rctain" Is power. oVer Ihe plp|i'. \14lioiL.h he has hm(.il prendlil" g il JIro' ld\ for iire thi Lwenty-ltir .4-n, hirs, hi tuielees we.re never S( !ie so Wop a w att n l iuth the har!et lllti t, ehtIreb Ah llm rieln h!as blwl oui t r liii), there vievi r WIlls a Utime wherl 'o Ilmit y 111,-Ools wNle tui,livd a wa y 1l-r |tvck 411 r, II't1. T1.w Slith ject ot'f 11!. i. - IUo iiI !Z 8:1., 11 ; I , s '.iek, V licSt t na w, 11 a Cint iniatiol 01 the nuries (;, thc cor' Illation of Hloly ScriptuiC NOIh JD. ' rawe 1011( ill his journey Irtlim Ilhe Pyralilli to the A o 1olis, . as 1sai4ah xix, I, "ThLe b111r.6i l.l" t! Imt i . ;I r :(!1udd" 1(111 4 0.1 8 p i -u (14 .51 'b e . llem 'Iloeet. 'ut oa di T. .' 0.. li 11 i i i '-i ; N X I:- vI if< - 5(111: (li -N . a r ot1 m114 II I e. tit s (i O 1, Xk I I ' t 1, I - F(t im 1 1t h: e m oni.eel.aukd the;Ir (114(1 ~ ~ V 1V14 0Q,l 11 1- 11k.l iI i ,tit] .Ia:it ad toi N" ur. T' i.N -.arb is Or iittuis.- A war'l i. II! ciitLii''i t ( th< :ite: T. The? lrto tu ne th 1 Irun thirty or tor t y t mi I :Ia .! It h 4 1 t ro (0t 1 oflan kq (111 . .hm. :a ! Th(s ". reI- thle oh isto t toi mu n I4 'u .h. ii bu t o l ; 'Ie li vIt. < 4. 11' l i -i e o hi a :.h0 c lde t I- t' 1 n lne Iet mttx t ,lip t to c iplk Ill..icilt.) kI let 1 4)il I't 1n. 15 tIl i-w N it. I tIOle rkiSt ti l. a J!:wi, ha frlhe oil cuis lit 1n 4 v l ii s If 1,d (!,Own te bile, 111)'1t !It' I reh Lt:'te an the ilr% de-o t:xd tr. nob tii. e s iln t;l si heiore .10SUph'N C! -wit Ow p.-t-I)wA r, c(Am St~ -t at how I .i. : I, f dim!I, I sce the su11 -1 t ( ' :. v ut W E ed h\ them e 5 li s o ! 4 . t L V, h.) % tho'w l i u s l - . Iha ,- Ih ,'tl %s ith tulh ootot n :or !,I avu otilr.x'lthec, iow I ' t,- w't illd t X 1 'I*rs?1) -N ovi . I . L 1I. i - ir". (If ier int ' in - .:.i\ N O S 1:otilan, tIn .1 liih il# 1( 1, I' w on i) il tIll i . 1 aIi tl l- I tlid 1it1Ol U t . Il- Iuiu tieet, th l ' 1 1 * .f ca u I. <h ill 1e. breviti; (A <. I W 0 lw alwo. T . Ahi adredi ni" ib 0qdA Oinus dowm the .IlleV refcr to- E,-y -w a: I the( Ev yt ian1.. Ni wol-til , h) ,- pt, s the IIIll o f i atioi's. I-.p. hlI' e 1a mo te ol Girecce; GAi " 1 ce he 111"thul: of Rllitme: Home, the tuz erit Enuhind; Englani thle mnother (iff-tur own hand]. Accold( ing to that, E.y III e is our i:rvati'S reat grandthder. On oterab 1' jtb4att I l!ft you stdy Ug What tMuy 11nusS have b' enl inl 1,heir glory; the 11yInwiVO 1al of lAnne. the architectual unraelt,s at L.uxor. Lhe Colonnade oIf 1tremiheh, fixe cemnetcrles of Memphiy, the vale 'a kingdom inl one nimunt. Whe Sphinx, wich itih ip isuf stn spaksd t lud enoug toia be 1 Oerd across the eu'iy enlre8 bleliopli an 'n,tecoudumo reioo l" U ct1. il whit tie Eyptian farier mAfs is paid I*or Ifaxes to the govern :ti I~Now, that. is not so much taxa mi as assassinlaaliol. %A hat thiuk you -I that. you w..ho groan unier heavy Iaxe in AXericay I have heard that In I lo t fihe working people h.ve a soU I-ke this, "They starve us, they starve us, tcy heat us, they beatus; butthere's seine one a)ove, there's some one above, w ho will punish thenu well, who will punl i.,h them well." But seventy per cent. of governint tax in Egypt is a mercy its couipared to what the Hebrew slaves suffered there in Bible times. They got iot,hing but, Food hardly fit 1or a dog, and their clo(tg was of one ra,-,, and theic ro'>1 a burning sky by day aad the stars (f heaven by night. You say, "Why did they stand it?" Becausc they had to stand it. You see along l'ack in the world's twiligii there Was i fiutinie in Caumana, and old 'Jacob atli his sons came to Egypt for bread. The old inan'sI boy, Joseph. was prime ininister, and .Joseph-I kuppose the father and the brotherA called li.n Joe. for it does not make any difference how much a boy is advanced in worldly stle- 1 cPss, his father and brothers and sisters always cali him by the same name that hie was called by when two years old .1Iieph, by 111hara1olh's permission Cave to hi-, I'a nily, vlho had juit arrived. the rihest part of l'ypt, the Westeiester him is or ie L-ncaster farmis of the an CIvints. .hCob'S dcendaits rapidly Alter awhile El_ypt took a turn at it!nine, andil thos;e descendants of Jacob, I the ]-:raelites. catne to a great store- ; house wihieb .osepli had provided, and ( 1a1l in toWHV forcorn. But afLr awllile 1 the .oie)y -ave out and then they paid mn cattle. Atter awhile the cattle were ill in possessioi of the government, an( thenl the AIrIembrews bulIght corn from the trovernmnent by3-surrendering themselves ais slaves. 1i:(jIXN1N; OFSnAVI.:RY IX E-:V-.r. Then legan slavery in Egypt. The I !,tverm)Illenlt owned all the Hebrews. I Amd let, modtina lunatics who, in Amer- I ica, propose handing over telegraph coinmpanies and railroads and other things to le u1111 by government see the Folly o lettivv government get its hand on every th;1. I would rather trust the people thanI any governileit the United States (-ver had or will have. Woe worth the d,ay when legislatorR and con,,resses and mlnii-tratiols get possession ol any 1hlnu more than it is necessary for them to have. That 11-oUld be the revival In this land ol that hl Eg.ptian t-ranny for which Gml has ne%er had anything but red hot I thunderho! ts. But through such unwise prt)cesses Israel was enslaved inl Egypt. and the lon-z line of agonies hegan all up and down the Nile. Heavier and harper feIl the lash, hungrier and ghast lier Orew .he work - en, louder and lon ..(r went up the prayer, until three mil lions of tle enslaved were crying: "Ya, Alah! Ya, Allah!" 0 God! . God! Where was help to come from? Not the throne, Pharaoh sat upon that. Not the army, Pharaoh's ollicers commanded that. Not, surrounding nations, Phar aoh's threat made thei all tremble. Not tihe izods Ammon and Osiris or the g-oddeas 1sis, for Pharaoh built. their temples out of the groans of this diaboli cal servitude. But one hot (ay the priicess Thonori-is. the daughter of' Phar aoh. whide in her bathing house on the banks of the Nile, has word brought her thit, there is a baby alloat on the river in a cradfle made out GIf big leaves. O* course there is excitement all up I and down the banks, for an ordmnary< taiby in an ordliiary cradlle attracts sill in tnin, hut an infant in a cradle1 of papyirus rocking on a river arousesi not only admiration, but curiosity.< W ho maude thalt boait? Who made it w ater ii!ht wvith bitumen? Who launched i 1i1 Reekless of the~ cr'ocodiles, who lay basking themiselves in the suni, the malid-. ('1s wade in anid snatch iup the child, andl Iirst one car'ries him andh then another carr'ies him, and all the way up) the bank lie runs a gantlet, of' caress~es, till Th7lon uiris runshes out of' the bathing house and s:ity: "'lhcatitiful founidlhing, I will adopt youi as iiuy own. You shall vet wear t he ECgy plian ero wn and1( sit oni the Eg.yp- I tian thron,e.'' No! No! N''! IIe is to be thei eiinni pator' of the llebr'ews. T1ell it In 11ll the brie-k il ns. Tell it, amoing all I the ye who are wri iithi ng un der t.he lash, I :I i.t4- a 32 ah the eaatles of Meimphis 1 aind ti 'hoods anid Zoani and( T1hienes. a a top. 'oe. this one wvillI receive frim ti.e Ahlnihity a lawv that is to be hew fonhto of all good law while the u rld la. W lien lhe is (eadl, God will unte diwn oni ' Nebo andl alonie hury hial, ni' ann:i1 ei womnan or angel wor'thyv 0o ait,t'd 'thbseriies. Th'le ' Iil :i ross uip anri goes5 out and te rzth1t t i''e ha:s no t come, ail tlfhugh 1 Ilnie 10or a mninte het let thy, and when hei sa a ins$kiinaster' pu1t the wvhip on th e It.ik of a worikinmn who was dloinig his1 b)1 i. a al h eard thea poor tel low cry and , saIw the b lood s -urt, Moses doubled upI) i lie. t atnd st ruck himi on the templet till the irut 1 illain r'olle'd over' in thei s tel I minutte a)11d neveri swutng thei i00 w.\s ON Hl i slDE. uI,~ .i'o tes, are' ymou goiig to) undler- t ia.-t inposibdlities?' Yos tech t ht y o regoin: to free'i the liebrewvs trta i I te':lage. it where is y our 1 army? '~ Wi-re is you)r navy ? Not, a1 I tIw'lld hiv' yo, not a spea1r, niot at 4 ehari 01imot otl)h)is. Ah': God was on I h:'m side, int he htas ani arit~mt o his own. T ho sn4wstomsi! are on God's side; 1 wiit ins tIhi' snonihalnk s in) whih the I inch Iriniiy of1 inivasioni werei buied oI hmeir way ba:ck ftromi >\oscow. Thi rain1 is ('1 his sidie; witrness thle 18th of < dbune ait Waterlo 0', wh len the tettipests1I 31o sa11 it --d the r'oad that the att,eki (collid not4 t0 inalde on Welington's 14)reeI til tilI eleven 4>'elock, a-nd hi' wais str'ong entough to hold out until re-en forcemeniits arrived. , lad that batti h been opened at live okelock( in the morning inistead of at eleveni thle (lestiny of Etirope wouild hiave beeni t urned thle wrong way. Tihe heavy rai" dt'idl e1 very thuing. So also a.r4' the wtids anti tth waves on God's side.. W\jitess the Armada with one hundred and( tifty ships and twenty-slx hundre,l andi fifty guns and eight thou sand1( sailors and twenty thonnandi s. dies svint out, by Philip It of Spaini it) conquer England. What became of those men and that shipping? Ask the wind and the waves all along the English and Irish coasts. The men and the ships all wrecked or drowned or scattered. So I expect that Moses will be helped ii rescuing the Israelites by a special weaponry. To the Egyptians the .Nile was a deity. Its waters were then as now very deli.-ous. It was the finest natural beverage of all the earth. We have no su ch love for the Hudson, and Uermans vav.3 no such love for the lIthine, and jiussians have no stich love for the Volga as the Egyptians lujve love for the Nile. But ona day, when Pharaoh conies lown to this river, Moses takes a stick ind whips the waters, and tiy turn nto the gore of a slaughter house, and hrough the sluices and f1shponds the ncarnadined liquid backs up into the and and the malodor whelms every. ,hing from mud hovel to throne room. 'lien came the frogs, with horrilpe Treak, all over everthing. 'Then this leople, cleanly Almost to last,tidiousness, vere infested with insects that belong o the filthy and unkempt, and the air )uzzed and buzzed with flies, and then ,he distemper started cows to bellowiig mid horses to neiglinr, and camels to ,roaning, as they rolled over And ex >nred. And then boils, one of which will put, L man in wretchedness, came in clusters 'rom the top of the head to the sole of ,he foot. Ant then the clouds dropp.-d tail and lightning. And then locusts 'amke inl, swarms of them, worse thI:im he grasshoppers ever were inl Kan-as, md then darkness dropped for three lays so that the people could inot see ,heir hand before their face, great aurges of miduight covering thmiii. knd last of a.l, on the night of the 18th f April, about eighteen hundrel years efome Christ, the Destroying Angol weeps past; and hear it all night long, he flap! flap! 1lap! of his wings until Igypt rolled on a great hearse, the !Idest child dead In everv Egyptian tome, The eldest son of Pharaoh ex >ired that night in the palace and all ilong the streets of Memphis an( lie iopolis, and all up and down the Nile here was a funeral wail that would lave rent the fold of the unnatural larknes if it had not been iiipenetra de. NOW IS ISRAEL, s CHANCE. The Isrealitish homes, however, were iitouched. litt thesel homes were fuil >f preparation, for now is your chance, J ye wronged Hebrews! Snatch ip vhat pieces of food you can ard to t he lesert Its simooms are better than -he bondage you have suffered. Its corpions will not sting so sharply as .he wrongs that have stung you ill Four lives. Away! The man who was ,radled in the basket of papyrus on the Nile will lead you. Up! Up! This is the night of your rescue. They gather Logether at a signal. Alexander's trmies and all the armies of oldei noit wei c led by torches on high poles, great. ?rests of tire; and the Lord Almighty kindles a torch not held by humail iands but by omnipotent hand. Not made out of straw or oil, but. kindled out of the atmosphere, such a orch as the world never saw before ind never will see again. It reached rroin the earth unto the heaven, a pillar >f fire, that pillar practically wAying 'This way! March this way!" On that upernatural flambeau more than a nillloa refugees set their eyes. Moses ind Aaron lead on. Then come the ierds and flocks moving on across the iands to what is the beach of waters low called Bahr-el-Kilzum, but called n the Bible the led sea. And when I lipped my hands in its blue waters, the ieroics of the Mosaic passage rolled ver me. ON TIllE REDi SEA' alSlORF. After three days march the Israel tish refugees encamped for the night in the banks of the lied sea. As the hadows begin to fail, in the distance s seen the host of Pharaoh in pursutit. [hore ,were six hundred finest war hlariots, followed by common chariots. olling at full speed And the glitter ng of the wvheels and the curse of in 'uriated Egyptians caime dlown with he darkness. But thre Lord openedl he crJ stal gates of liahr-el-Kulzum mdl the enslaved Israelites p)ass~ed into iberty, arnd then the crystal gates o,f he sea rolk-d shut against the Ejgyp ian pursuers. it was about two o'clock ini tIhe morn rig when the interlocked axle trees of he Egyptian chariots could not move in inch either way. lit the Ilied se-a mhiitchted the horses a11nd uhel metedi hie wvariorst)i, and left. thle prou1 d hio,t a ,vreck onl the A rabiani sands. Thlien ,w-o chuts es aro.w, arid .\l is. a h-dl the imen in one, anid .\lir iam ltd the wiean o t he o ter, and I he womenI ba' tim--' sith hei r feet. The record says: ". il he women went, out after lier wit h librels and with dances. Arul Aliruuni rswered( thiemi, Sing ye to thle Lor-! or lie hathI trimplied gloriously ; thli iorse andi i i ridler hath tie thirtoni nii i lhe sea " Wi.at a thrilling story of eut liurarice andI victory. 'Tie geatest tiumpih of I landel's teius11 was shown ini his inu norti a d natie oratorio, "Israel in lEgy pt." Ili imd gi vein to the world the oratorio of 'Esther an:1l I )eborrah,'' andl Athaliah,l lit reserved for his might iest exertion it the furll height of his powers the narshahing of all nitsical instrunmerit oI the dhescriphtioni in harmony ouf the cenes on which we thris morning d well. In gave twenty-seven days to this pro Ituetion, with its twenty-eight chiorutses, ithlrallIinrg hnis own t.ime and all a ft er ime wvith his "'Israel ini Egypt.'' So the burden of oppressioun was lil t d, lbut another burden of figypt is unade up of dleserts. Iudeed, Africa is great coinmnt for d.-s(rt s, ibiyan ltsert, Sahara dlesert, deserts here aind here and yondler, coindeimninig vast ri ~ions of A frica to barrenness, onie of lie dear1 ts three thousanid miles long mud a thousand mites wvi-le. Baut all hose de'ots will yet be flooded, amnd so) undte fertile. D)e Lesseps says it carn be loire, and he wvho p)lannied the Suez ca 'ral, which marries the lied sea, and hre Mediterranean, knows what he is Ltaling about. Th'fe huiiman race is so multiplied that it must hav'e miore cultivated land, aind the worldi must abolish its deserts. IEight h nndred millions of the human race are now living on lands not blessetd with rains, butt dlepentdent on irriwa tion, and( we want by irrigation to make ro o m for eight hundred millions more. Biy ir-rigation the prophecy will be fulfIllied, and "the desert will blossom as the rose." So from lEgypt the bur den of sand will be lift ed. THE nUiIEn (Iw MOJIfA3MEDIANiSM1. Ao Inot,i phi of I ypt to Ii li Let s tite birdenl of Mlhn11111tdi.in, al though tllcre. are seie gomil thing". aboULt aiLt r,-ligioln. A c.-iniendahlt grace is cleanliness. Strong drink i positively forbidden by M:h:1mnedanl ISM, and thoutgh Sont nitv have seer a drmiken MthOmninvilin, I never s:In cue. it is a itreigitn of sobitntty. Ilel they arc not ash:onad heir devo tionls. When the cal for] praye'rs is sounded fromt the ininare.s the Moimai nedan immediately urilrbs the rog oil tho gl.Iruntt .11141 itls on1 his k(nees, and cro1,W410 ()f spetator's ar. to hirt) il) Pi Im :zassilent reproof to manyw a ChiriIti an w ho cliiits is 1lray - ers if people .re looking. But MolianIIe -n iisiil, w.v ith its poly gainy, blights everythii) t t. otche's. MohatniueI. its fotuni,i halt four wives, and his hy'lo.wers are, tie vle lilies of good woithilold. Nioham mledanlisinl pilis ilts cuirm. 4.1 all Eg.- 14, and by setting uip a sinful Arab liger than t lie inimaculat , Christ, is an over wheling biv"phtiiy. NL-y (God help the brave and cons-crated isisionaries who are spending I heir i ves in combat ing it But before I forget it: I miist put uore euph;3sis upon the fact, tlat t he last, outraie th:dt. resultet! in I he libera tion (f the Il. .ws woI ti-i" i-ing comlpell"d to 1)nako brivk,. without st raw. TI:!t, was the iest straw that broke the c;u('i h:tNk. (W I " ould al low the de p.tisni .Z!inst h-S 11-'4)1le to go Ip; tarthe r. .\kin;g brieks without straw' Till-: (W PT V,:--;(.) r !J. %)r N o . T atres i ' 'till ;ill. I )e, liiIn! ) tu w. iV I I I .i ;It ward r b .1rit a t l 'hi liC.i 10 1d- w :r , h l pro ti ding thI e 11r10 n1 ce ':ty -b-ricks withou st 1ti . -iti' : dh-ll.m ting in Al lil U .; i M "t e li.i m iIches tea c.I" oi y Ir livelib\ l t brit'11s Jithout stea. J,Iti a.'ls trvwr. \Vlii" jtlltSi'A l . i (.!I aIt groveliei 1*1 lint, t -f s nntli"111: tai(d con grusswen i:t \ -hiimt iN! At'e. ancev to the inom ern w W;e phsple, but on coipewmaionl wh*li.-hI I.ay have done well ell u h tg li iwentvlie ci! ent went s Far as I I! hiir 11ow, bl!t in thlSe I iinle IInt i t preseive their itliuwit:e i a pcs1 tability bricks witlhout sltr.tw. I in lany 'ats of Ihe hl: Churches den :ndn yof p1: : V ig0lr)ZS sclrniOnS a t tyo'a i-.l P ti ie on htrvalionr saiary swillml Mi.oos om fiur d - lars a ) Par. li vte s (lith(m,i straw. That i mint r(1!:An w.hy 'wtre :n. so i Or bil l :1 hpk brick:; are ,1 0 b t -: ; _11 W or;k :id, Vi uit i ti N ri ) I I't i - : ' I n ) o at I th ie work i!,A 'A f1r.:[!. s".raw ill then hV1l, h:i', jut in i tiel t I I't th re are Ilharathlls; h :i:I : I pital a P',larUih sometim In ( 1 i 1 P. -,r0' . Wholn ofIil thael i pr rudrn k< J I( ier eent;iaae onl it :hv -to :.anod dtecl llw to cons'ider ! ! 11. "'- , I. hon tiper- It. , anid I re it 1w :i S111.110 h I n u a ma ihillt i- hi e ! a wre li i) Il r '111l l tht I.ands on lh-- o Wi.I ) k h- I .lit ! C;pi Il is a M'h ra i. I I t h wr hndi wtvendrm ,ntn ma h n cleites am~ihulgI ieo -,lir'tgJ ei' f 4helirn (t.plll)ioyin)g tioli, al)d '.I a tinge a un Ihe fi.-Il art doing 1tivir lbe tlo iinwrt in ilnportilt. Conltr-tot :illd .11d al b ud.s busy to hei"nplisAh It,al. such a Vwtm t.o have his el-t>tis eake I srite and put thwir vinpio3etrs int)1 exielrr e per plexity ai't, selvvre loss -Ahell [,O lor bte C103oe I lli1r01h of the w.1o rsIt Oppllus sion, and iust look out frm, the judg nments of (G0d. 11 1 lEsl: I . 1: 1 1T . Ill I\Aoll t. Wheni in Devu'i'w. of i't, ;at thie .Ml situ at Bil;w, E'l pt, I looked at te inuini'ies el the ;ld Plariihs, the very lidstreals u% Iho ia-holizedI elvltu ries, and f saw i. 1 . . Ith i I - lki and cne'r is and t i~ tl tJhdw lightil! of1( tr ero1s0 Jinionarchs .id byc le,Ji' and J ts lii laitnated ri cldrI olytt w'it illithy get~ awayiIIi fro te Ipt', ri(was nttot' l ok'upi the Ilas('t oftr the to'haraohs. All covts ithe word od er chai uls playt: g te l'haraIoh il vet yoiung moerc hs oy hl''ers hl'ying I)'ha pllyn th Cl'hth overill'IItt you o. ie ng tPharao over' youngtoininistor. itIith cr, ' do you ? You arv al ways go il. to se your inot her! What are you i whinipi-rin,g abotit! Iturry up now and get lily slippers! Where's the liewspa per?' The tone, the look, the im1pa tiece-the cruelty of a Pharaoh. That is what gives so inairy WOlinen a cowed down look. Pharaoh! you had better take your iron heel of that woian's neck or God will help you reinove your heel. he say nothing. For the sake of avoi ling a scandal she keeps silent, biut ter tvars and wrong. have gone into a record that youi will have to tit as certainly as Pharaoh had( to nee; hail and lightning and darkness alnI the death angel. God never yet gav to any iwan the right to tyrannize a wonian. and what a sneak you are to take ad vantage of the marriage vow, and i caulse :fhe Cannot hvlp herself, and ll der the shelter of your own hionio out 'liaroah the Egytian opprossor. Tlre is som(,thing avfully wrong inl a house. hold where the womian is not conlsider dil of as m11uch imliportanice as the lian. No rooni iii tiis world for aiy nore I'liaraohis! SIN iiAS niMEN OlAt TASIOIASTI-At. But it rolls over oi inu wit Ih great power the thought that we have all heenl slaves down in Egypt, and sin has b.en our taskinaster, anti again and again %%e have felt its lash. 1u,t Christ has i,eu our Moses to lead us ont of houdage. and wve are fiorlever If t ''. The Red sea of a aviur' sacrie rolls deep and widi hct weeni us ail t.ir aluretinie bcoidage, ail tlougikh tin re inay he dest ts et. For its to ros4. we ar- on Ito 'eny to, I hiv lronised I ,.. Tainks ho tinto tlibrl For thi- icinatiwi pat ing :o.pel! ('oiiv ip oliLt of Egypt ul! e who aro yet nsad.What Chlri:ril, (11r- lis hie nill do lor y<m. "Waslus'"i a wor(l. Fxod!s laiteald ofi tim hirick kilis c i l ieuw it,o the eiliipr-pcd vineyards o (i, A .where tone clua r At impos is bigger O hn the ont i t t h spivs brought, to I he I graehitos b; Ito liokof E.shcom, t holl.'h tha" citsf r was so hirge that it was Itorne ' ii two liponl a stall." Welcoine all by Sinl oppressed, Welcoinl to his Sacrid rest; Nothing brought hint froin aboNe, Nothing but letdceiiing love. Crutlie .y t , i or al. Colori.\,NO\v. -L.--W\. .1. Thark ston, itely ('hief Clerk in the oii -u of Iie ul erinl enuvienlt of l'ucation, . has bieen a,vay troi Lis w\ork ntow ovcr t,wo 111onths. Ili: -0"onct. Iu-s e-:m eid co siertbe coininet-I l vi w 'A' hli,, vo,114,ltio w\i:li the 'aliit . th 1 ,Journal, which was verIlv a"ttkrid by thie state press whei the cirtcin SuIlCe-S0of it.s iSsul\VT w IrAlkOWn1. Alr. laylield said today t1hat he ltIs eiltitil ilt that 'Ihackstoil dots lilw i! teii to rt!turn. IFl has not sent in his ri-Sigittioii, btut ho siolip svt *t I li!0 Ii e tvilor of llis letIer tihat h lnii, ,1 L'.111 t a 1iliterstiiti I hat I he vo!it lon v vit cant.i Ill let.eillI, I hia:ks -, w1a gralited t wI) wee,ks. vaca,tionl, iill hll IS nowI iti Chat ttlt 14-ga. Illi; act I:.) i-. vory stIitage 1'k tho'-c who kiow I II. i I. - \wia: as::ailed right an-d ht-H, il the Scholk?l .Jourial qu;e:titon, but0 till of his Irieuld.i believed hir0 linmeiit. (it intell Iional wrong doing. His friciis, k\ cn the bust of thni, adini: that ie in.adile a grevious mistake in Iie it ter. but none of his political 4111 lits ev cr I harg ed him with intentiona I riiud, The crit icisins of' titw siati' prcss and the public sevilled to havben Ioo iutch for him, anI he has given up his posit.i-In. Mlr. Mlayfield had pel fcct c(.1doie inl his assistant, alt loulgi lie mltniits that0 a great mlislake was- mlatie in I hll Seboil .Joillnal illatter. Mlr. Ala) lit-h4 h:t. I " oth ing to do witi the .outiral b,' oI giv ing cert aill fact.; inl conneeot ionl with the( hu(stness of his otlici'. IUnl'ss some in ay ihink I hat ilre was a1 sho(rtage' inl acconts, it ina;y bei as w~ell to) state thuit T1intekst lutidl no4 ('olilt iolI over aniy 111lolliy I' ;sI i g tirugli leain~lg the state peilIilii t illy list he. ascribtedl to ius dlesIro( t a vouti riti ieism on t he inisttike lie ilade' in I h i Slhoo)l .Jiuitilal tIlldt.ter :iiiit zvoitd givilig thte pretsient :aliinistra:tint any fuithier h.otbs a sitn inciuthrl 1. fhn itl s )itrtan lsetor, AiiI. W. Jones, htoI (lay it fr'otn ttii state goes toi luriigni (co4n (tiring Ithe pasit, yeari aind the dIe nuint .1:r' iiniking at dteiutrate ifft to I-tI h h ttIhe-.1 til on he nutiaml, bit .-hl It hat al iich- is ani uk nlow q i init I '. li1iid bi year t-nd4iItiis it lit, 1jug wis 10f.2il . li' te i4unel V lIont; izst yei nr lie7, i 119, l king a~In hera .-i' h Ii ii: Nliui, ci The reit o l spcto .11a.s fuilr ihowt.h s:i' ISne of) the 11oin-l Iau ilithlut bee Mening! S antrg I li'racl nore o mk i .nsls andthu iy the roat!y lie ahu t th oi p:I4IIN a. e , o hav 1- h as 50n illpubited theIli!ii' to.- i :n -the Co t w, t i'lin ig (c4amp .inyI, an s ti he I arIl in Ir't. 1.\flitn l pany.WO C li tL&ay tini ts.. iiinghi votopnies :sil bowaeu ah tart onirck einieiisme 157' two teresent scinte the ( I oft my l2 id89) au U i. hr mi ler'd. lh lnhd.(mat x 1etlesre i4Thirimt. AL-i O loillA , ht, Nov. '2- .- let- ' W trer trsin aut ristorhinitly das iland re onlie headt y. 0'i iNealin.o!t chlread. wook were tfod irhd a thaItui place. dor thoded i en,rbuti. is b ie at,tesureawscnyitd.eas LAST WEEK'S ELECTIONS. A DRAWN BATTLE BETWEEN THE TWO GREAT PARTIES. Now York Gives a Handsome Democratic MoJority, but Ohio Goes itepubilean. Tho Result in Massachusette, Pennsyl vaniia anI other statem. Ni-'Nw Y0.ik ALL 1i0HT. Nj-:w Yon, Nov. -I.-In last 'tues day's election the Democrats s%n ept the State, their majority being between forty and lifty thousand. Ex-President Grover Cleveland gave his opinion of the results of Tuesday's election as follows: "Of course every oto has the right to put his own con struction upon the results, and I aui not anxious to obtrude my indeas, but it seemis to mne some things ought to be no longer doubtful. Anyone who still thinks that tariff reform is a settled and obsolete issue, or that the impor tance of sound and safe money is a qiuestion upon whielh the people Can be blinded, is either wilfully wrong or dangerously dull. It seems to me, too, that Deinocrats ought to be satisfied that a staunch adharence to the princi ph s of their party does not require the abuse of those who show an inclination to help)t us. I very much regret the de feat of Governor Campbell. Ile has he-in a brave and honest ollicial. This and the splendid canvass lie made en tiiked h im to success. Whil the elec t ion of Flower, Nussell and Boies ought to cause the utmost rejoicing among Democrats, they should not forget that with thteso things comes the obligation to ie true to the party, honest in the advoeaev of our principles, and decent in all things. W ATI:TOwN, N. Y., Nov. 4.-Gov erimr clect Flowt r returned this eve 1uing froml New York,and was received by thousands of citizens who tendered himi a grand ovation. A carriage drawn by six white h. rses was in wait, ing, which the Governor-elect entered. A parade was then formed, and Mr. Flower was then escorted to his home, where Mayor Porter made a few re miarks of welcome, Mr. Flower respond ing inl a feeling manner. T E lIoT ONisTs 'A UTURIE 01110. C'uL.:ii;L-s, ()hio, Nov. 4.-The Ite Ilblicans carried this State in Ties <tay's election by a majority of twenty thoul-aild, electing all of their State olferni and caltuing both branches of t. Legislature. The I eature of the result is the coml l1(te drop of the 'eople's party. Their vote in the State will not exceed 11,500, aiid I hey claiined before the election t least, 75,o0u. They probably will lose 7,uo votes troi last year, falling prob. ably 16,0,io. This loss is traced to the ieubbAln Counties and partially ac co-nts for thekir gains in strength. >vcrnor Campbell takes the situa I ii Ph i)oophiclly and says that tht 1 (mocitie part, was laboring under loo gieat a 1;lidicap in Ohio becatise of tit h,Wk of 1undsi1 to Iy tle legitilnate expilses of tile caupaign. lie says I Iey have made the best light they could in the face of the RepIblican majority of I1,000 to start onl and the conbined oplo.sit ivit of the manufacturers and capitalists. liesides all this it was a lift and death struggle with the Ite I)ubilican party. 'o defeat McKinley, one of its national leaders and the rep resentative of its chosen idLea of pro tection, meant the downfall and disin tegration of the party itself. Party lues were closely drawn. U)W A nREMAINS luEMOCRATI<C. I)j4:s MoinNi::s, Nov. 1.-The latest re tunis indicates hat Boles, the DeMno erat ic candidate, has be'en elected Gov cetnotr by about eight thousand 1)1urali ty. l'ight y-eight counties give him i1 80t, anud thle othter eleveni two years ago went, 3,08t lRepublican, reducing the fi rst tigures t o 9,722. lBut propor tiott e gains in these eleven should1( in crease the plutralit y to 10,000O. TIhe l)eintocrats claitun the election of their wvhole State ticket, as it runs well up with lioies. Thie Senate stands: 25 I)-moucrats, 24 1liepublicans and 1 Inde pendet. T'he lIepuiblicants have a ma jority of 2 in thte Itouse. 'The I )emocrats are htavinig a regular old-bi sinitoned ju bi lte to-niIghit over tIhe sutccess of I loies. F'i res are burning all ov~er the St ate, antd I )enmocrats are tiiarchtinig the streets with brass bands uelebratintg thteir victory. Governior I oits arrived to-ntight fromt Waterloo, and htis carriage was dlrawvn through the streets Iby a great crowdl of D emno (emts . .\ gret, jolli lication meeting wvil Ie beit- here Saturdauy. 10 wrio), NOV. 4t.-Tlhe plurality re <i-mvel b y G overnoer Rutsseli, l)emnocrat, is not yet accurat ely known, but all bu t t re smaitll towns htave been heard I rain. Withtnt t hese towns, Rtussell's pluaitI y is (d,913 . IlTe mitssing towns wil * -> loer these figures more thtan a score, i fl atall. T'he Republicans htave elec ed1 te r-est of I hlir State ticket, biy abiot I he samte ptluralit.y, shiowi-ng thtat Governtor I .ussell rant fulhly 14,000) votes a: cnd of li-i ticket. FTe lI epublicants at! tired both~ biranches of the Legisla Go~vernior I ussell this morning elimits his t lect.ioni by about i',000). lIe s:vs : "'It to-ams that .\assachusetts is earntest ly for tariff reform ont the line of free raw intatorial, whlich hias been the chief issue mi this State. It also meitans that site is fIrmly and aggres sive/ly for- siomund cuirrtency." '.antv i,ANIJ loni: D)iGC0CATIC TIAN i;r ii ait , Nov. 4 .-F'rank Brown, I >cmocurat. for stoverntor, carriedl the stte Iby somtething over 30,000 plur'ality lit yesterda:y's election. VTe legi-slature will stanld ont joint ballot, 103 D)emo Nts, 11i opplositiont. TFhe senate will hatve' ontly four liepubitlicants, who ate !rohiover senators. In the house of lelegates theret are seven Rtepublicans tad tbroe Fuisionists, it t he last senate thter e were eighteen I)etmtcrats awol eight Rtepublicans, and n ithe houso fifty-nineo Demtocrats arid itttwo) Republicants, In the next ~ente t htere wvill be four and perhaps ive Rlepublicans, and in the house th)out twelve, givinig the Democrats a ntajority on joint ballot of eighty-five. IIF: REPi'UnILICANs RtECAPTURE KAN MS. TlOP'EKA, Kan. Nov. 4.-TLhe result of the local election in Kansas yesterday was a great surprise to all parties. The Riepublicans carried eighty-five out of the 106 counties in the State. The re sult is a great vIctory for the Rlepubli Can. Taen out of tihe eleven Peoples party candidates for district j idge were defeated. Last y(ar the People's party elected nearly four-fifths of the county officers of the state. Yesterday the figures were reversed. The People a party elected only one district judge out of nine. The Re ublicans claim a 1 great victory over the People's party. and that calamity and repudation as preached by Peffer and Simpson are dead. TILE DEMOCRACY SOLID IN VIRGINIA. RicnHMOND, Va., Nov. 4.-Later re turns from the election in Virginia con firm the claims that the Democrats have swept all sections of the State. In the senate, the Democrats, with the hold over senators, have thirty-nine or forty members of that body. In the house, the Democrats are almost certain to have over eighty-five of the 100 mem bers. These figures are conservative. For the first time since their enfran chisemeut the negroes will not have rep resentatives in either branch of the Vir ginia Legislature. The Rpublicans made no showing in yesterday's elec tion. The Alliance and Independents were the chief opponents of ttie Demo crats, and neither of these cut much of a figure. ALL ONE WAY IN 3iIssissPPI. JACKSON, Miss., Nov. 4.-The election in this state was held for three railroad commissioners, the entire legislature and district attorneys. W. S. Laurins, J. 13. Askew and .. F. Sessions were the Democratic nominees for railroad con missioriers, and had no opposition. The general legislature will be overwhelm ingly Democratic, with most of the members pledged for the return of Messrs. Gteorge and Walthal to the United States senate. PENNSYLVANIA .101 N -:n1O:: il) iii OLS. PUILADEL'litA, PL., Nov. 4.-Con plete figures from fifty-three ofthe six ty-seven Counties in the State, includ ing Philadelphia and Allegheny Coun ties, and a carettil estimate Ior the other fourteen Counties, show a plurality of 51608 for Gregg (Hepublican) for Au ditar General. The )rolPc,;itioi for a constitutional coivention wa.s over whelmingly defeated. t o)LoulA iO) ('O(NT -::;iT. l)ENv i;, Col.Nov. 4.-Chairinan Coe, of t,he liepublican County Central Coin - mittee, claims the election of the entire ticket by 2,500. No complete returns from outside towns have been received, but Helm's election as chief justice of tie Supreme Court is claimed by the State Republican committee by over ,0 00. )111NW. *ui TRENO'()N, N. J., Nov. I.--Iteturns uip to I o'clock indicate the election of the Democratic Senatorial ticket in Now d)ersey and forty-one out of sixty As semblymen. ihis will give the D!emo crats a majority of thirty-three on joint ballot, probably the largest majority ever held by either party in the Legis lature. LAST WEEK'S ELECTION. Whlat, is Tho.ught oif t lie nestilt in Was~ih uigtlon. WASnIN(TON, NoveMber -.--DllmO crats in this vicinity are very well pleased with the outcome of yesterday's elections, while the Republic:ws Uo glad that it was no worse. A member of the Cabinet, who objecti to being (I uoted, said to-day that the Republican managers in New York completely ig nored the Administration during the recent fight In spite of the fact that they were warned against the Anti Tammany issuo in the riral districts. Republicans in Northern New York appealed to Patt and his lieutenants to send some speakers into t hit section who could tell the farmers something about the effect of the McKinly bill oil eggs, barley and simila- produicts which comle into comnpetit ion with Canadian productions. The Presidlent is alleged to have suggested that it would be beCt ter to inlject, national issues into the camipalin withm a view to arousing tile initerest of the voters in the ejitnties outside oi Newv York and Brooklynl. hlis ideas were repleated to M1r. l'latt, but he paid no attention to the friendly PAuggestionus. llencei there appears to be but little sympat,hy for the dowvnfall of Fassett in Administration circles. On the other hatnd, the iJetiocrats are not cast dlowni because Camipbell was defeated fin Ohio. WVhile they wanited the courageous Governmor to win theyl3 realized that lhe hiad remai-kable o(ds against himi. Congressman Mc Kin ney, ol' New llampshire, who took an active part ini the recent cam paign, says that the whole weight of the Administration was thrown into Ohio to hellp AlcKinley. The returns show a falling off in the R epubllicanl vote in thme manufamctuiring centi-es, wvhile they galineud ini the agricultural districts, thus shmowing the people were affected lby thle couriset of evenits since the passage of the MlcKinley bill. The operatives in the mills voted against McKinley becauise his bill did niot in crease their wages, andi the farmers wvere disposed to favor ft because they are getting b)etteir prices for them(ir crops, and imagine the bill has something to (1o with that, leasanmt fact. Congressmtan Mill1s expressed his re grets that Governor Ca~ upbell was not re-elected, bitt, saidi he, ~\sterdiay'sI fight settled beyond (dispute th at the D)emo crats must throw asidie all o'ber issm~ and imake a squtare contest Wa.li to Repuiblicans on the tariff utuestioni. T1o (10 that they should select Clevehintd as5 their standar-d-bearer, and it Is p)roblable that the llepubhlcans wvill nominate McKinley. In that evenlt there would be no0 room to drag in the silver or any other outside Issues, but sonlinme theI fight to the tariff alonie.--News aiid Courier. lIere's a lIowdy-Dou! STi. Louis, Nov. 4.- The board of di rectors of the Cotton Exchange todaly adoptod the followvling resoluitioun: "Rtesolvedl by the board of directors of tihe St. Louis Cotton Exchange, '[hat the Associated P'ress be requiiredl to either discontinue its so-calle I cotton news, as now published daily, enmanat ing from speculative (leaks, or to also give the tradle the viewvs of mer-chants and factors who ownl the cottoni, believ ing, as we do, that those who represent the p)roduicers should have an1 eqlual show with paDtiesi whose stock in trade is phantom cotton." Frightful WVreck. A RKADELPITA, Ark., Oct. 31.-T-'here was a frightful railroad wreck on the Ulti ma TIhulIo railroad near here yester day. Capt. ,Jack Week, sup)erintend(enlt of the road, was killed, and several ther passengers in jured seriously. The 3aboose jumped the t rack, rolling down an emhankment.