will use all who will give themselves to be used. But he requires heart service. “My son,” he says, “ give me thine heart.” When the heart is given to God, our talents, our energy, our possessions, all we have and are, will be devoted to his service. Mgrs. E. G. WHITE. MISSIONARY DEPARTMENT OUR DISTANT WORKER. t WE of the Vermont Conference must not forget that we have a field worker now in Edinburg, Scotland, a city of 425,000. Elder Westworth writes of the needs of the field, and feels that a wide field is before him. Let us remember him and his family when we pray, neither let us forget how God witnessed to this step by the power of his Spirit when at our recent camp-meeting it was decided that we send a worker to a distant field. The Lord desires the message to go to all the world speedily, I am thankful that our conference can have a part in sending the light to other parts of the world. Our home field needs more labor- ers, let us be faithful in tithes and offerings, ‘that other workers may soon be added to our numbers, J. W. Warr. SPECIAL NOTICE. IT has been decided by the officers of the General Conference to recom- mend that these tracts be scattered one at a time in their natural order. First, “ We Would See Jesus;” second, “The Signs of the Times;” third, “ The Gospel Remedy for Present-day Isms: Spiritualism, Hypnotism, Chris- tian Scientism, and Higher Criti- cism;” fourth, “What do These Things Mean?” This suggestion need not interfere with any other arrangements or methods which may be already organized, or which may ATLANTIC UNION GLEANER be better suited to local conditions; but we think that the tracts are likely to accomplish more good if our brethren will order a good quantity of the first and carry it to the people, and then order the second, and so on until the four are distributed. In next week’s Review the first tract will appear in full. Do not fail to read it. It will surely revive your own soul, and stir up within you a great desire to carry it to others. All these are sixteen-page tracts. Price one cent each. May God bless you all in this ef- fort; and we pray that the “old-time ” spirit in tract distribution may be re- “vived and multiplied. E. R. PALMER. WHAT A TRACT DID. In 1785 Dr. Coke gave a tract to a family in Virginia. The family num- bered fourteen, and that tract was the instrumentality used in the conversion of the whole family. A tract distributer, passing through a sparsely settled country district in Canada, gave away many tracts. One of them, entitled “ Repent or Perish,” was found floating in the Irazer River. dried it, read it, and by it was con- verted to God. A preacher invited a man to attend meeting. The man refused, but he consented to take a tract. A few weeks afterward that same man stood up in meeting and confessed that that tract had led him to Jesus. During the secession war of America a chaplain was passing through a hospital, and he left in an empty bed a tract which was a copy of the hymn, “ Will You Go?” The soldier came to his bed, picked it up and read the title, and dropped it. A second time he picked it up and read, “We are traveling home to the heaven above; Will you go?” and then threw it down again. A man saw it, took it out, Soon (3 3 afterward he picked it up again and read it through. Then, after deliber- ating over the matter in his quiet hours, he finally wrote on it, “By the grace of God I will go,” and signed his name. Some months later he was killed in battle in Virginia, but he was saved by the tract. It is often the case that a man who will not enter a church or listen tothe preaching of the gospel, will read, when alone, a tract or a paper which may be more effectual for his salvation than a sermon. There are many cases where a tract has been the instrumentality which has restored from despair a precious soul. Passing through Switz- erland, a tract distributer presented a tract to a man in a town notorious for gambling, On his return, some days later, he met the man, who exclaimed, “I thank you for saving my soul and body.” He then explained that on that day when he received the tract, he had lost heavily in gambling, and was contemplating suicide, but the tract arrested his attention, and led him to Christ. Instances of this sort could be mul- tiplied, for these little printed missives have been known to prevent crimes, to save lives, to heal the broken- hearted, and to bring discouraged, disheartened, and despairing ones to Jesus. We never know, nor can we realize, the good we are doing in dis- tributing tracts. A FURTHER ANNOUNCEMENT Concerning the Tract Campaign. UnxpousTepLy, all our brethren have read from week to week the an- nouncements and notices in the Ae- view and Herald concerning a special tract campaign during the coming winter. The tracts are now ready. God has blessed the efforts of his servants to place the vital truths for this time vividly before the people in these simple, inexpensive tracts; and now