Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, June 8, 1874, Page 3

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THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE MONDAY. JUNE 8, 1874 THE PULPIT. Influence of Freedom snd Re- straint on Man. Profy Swing’s Morning Sermon at the Fourth Churchs Tho Rev. Dr. Lord on the Develop- ment Theory, Dr. Kittredge Reviews the Work of the General Assembly. Sermon by Dr. Tiffany. FREEDOM AND RESTRAINT. Sormon by Prof. Swing nt the Fourth Prese o.ve - - byterlun Oburch, . Prof. 8wing presched as usual yosterdey morning, on “Freodom and Reéstralnt Mako the Groat Boul,” Tho toxt was: Thou'shalt giitdo ine With 'thy conngol, and aftor- wards recelvo mo to glory.—LPealm 13, M, - - ‘Whenover the large aid beautiful ateamships loave tho harbor, and turn their bow out toward tho great Atlantic, and the first swell of the deep wator bogins to ‘lft up the great vessel, 'as a gtont would toss an infant up and ecatch it in bis arms, tho frionds who have said-good-bye to loved oros bogin to wondor whothor tho ship so" Tadon with Iife will reach'in "posco the far-away shore. * Prayers nacond’ and tears fall’from thoso ou board nnd those loft bohind. A Yrench writer soys: **Tho ehore.lights faded bebind' s, aud our ship, plerclog tho night, seomed to move out into tho unknown," iy Encl individual lifo in the same mannor moves out from tho shoro; and; ontoring the' {sront crowd that always rests' upon lifo’s eea, unils away toward the unkuown. It is tho prayor of thogo around, and it is, tho -prayer. ot tho one noxt fo” his own henrt, that he mu{ ronoh tho farthor,shore In pence. The posbibilily that the humah'heart may bo wrackod, and the other pos- eibility that it may como " to' glory and: blessed- neas, surround each livivg botuy with an interest most thrilling, . If you secleot any -fair-hatred «child of the strect or of the school-room, and givo yourself u'l’l t0- meditation over the two aestinies which lie -inviting it,—tho dostiny of Vico or virtuo; or of ' korrow ‘or happiness,—yon will almost feel willing for the Intinite Oue’ to. rocall the obild to Hoaven that ko may, cscape tho peril of thoso Jator days, which marshal their momonts along betweon tho two fatos, It | 'was while thunking of this unkunown outcome of maturer years, a pootoss sang for us those 8chool-bovk words: e : . ‘It must be sweot In ohildtiood to give back Thespirit toits Maker, aro the heurt Huth grown famiiur with tho patlis of 'sln, And sown to garnor up ita‘bitter fruits, But noithor does Nature permit nor roason Justify s surrendor ‘of thoso earthly yours, but Torward goos the porilous advance of the multi- n}de :n:v-xd tho fnrther shore of shipwrecit or of safoty. ' ‘Tho froodom of the will which we all so cor- dially accept, and even 0 highiy prize, is indoed the groat necessitude of the human fu:lng. In momeuts of silent meditation over their per- sonal liberty, in momonts when all ogotism and ‘vanity aro pus aside, does. it ‘nat . often oppress your heart that your Creator has granted you the power to livo 4 meaun, dishouest lifo ? and to mako ovory 'stop ‘bear you farther from . yirtue, from ‘man, from God, from home? For 'sin muss "he a wildernoss, ~nover a oo, This privilogo of tho-soul fo solcot either of two paths 1uvolves 8o much of peril, that both God ju Hix own namo as an suthorly, ond reason in its porsuasive powors, and _tio moral sense i 'its innate ‘feelings, take thewr place besude this jmpeniled oroature, aud throw their jufluenco in favor of . path of rightaous- noss. - Absolate indopoudenco of action cannot bo. For this could only be whore all patlis were' equally right and happy.” Evon' God Himself enjoys not an absolute indepoudence, for **shull ot the Judge of all the eaxth do xight?? + God Hiwmaolf is not free to do anything wrong, but matked, * Our conntry has Jost the frooat soul it possossod.” DBut,from .what was that gront | ol froo? Not from Godl Nol for all tho orations of that acholar wore founded tipon the justico ,and beuoyolonco of God. - Into.all Lis. | Ploadinga for slaves fn all laida was insorted overywhero ‘tho namo' of “thie Inffiite One and Tl “onrthly imago; Josus Chuist, Freo, thon, trom . whnt?, Only from tho enrthly, tho contomptible, tho * 'mmall ;- fiob U from thio Intorost {hat sought goln from tlio toll of” others, freo from the power of tribes, free from fear of the opponition of cueniios, and tho frown of friends, froo from all tho common temptatious to dishonor. But hore bis porsounl indopondenco tormiated, for the great counsel of nations, the wikdom of man'from Plato to Franklin, the sif- forings of tho poor. from. tho galloy slaves,of Rtomo to tho Africans In our colton fiolds, was nn outsldo forco that held his mind and spirit as n' mothor’s arms’ Liold hor cluld. Thus the freest maon our country over possessod spoms to hava bean ires only from solflehiness nid hittlenoss, but not freo from tho ‘great truths that scom to procoed, from God and mankind. - Thero was- n great counsol outsido of Lium, reaching Il&lmm autiquity, spreading out as it advanced like an Aurora rising up_from the ‘horizon in: its . 'gor- fuoun shoon, and betoro this broad pillar of light 1o bowed as Paul boforo that Damakcus boam {rom Honvon, and with- Paul sald: *‘Lord, what wouldst, fhou bave mo to do?” i 'lk‘lma 1t would appoar that tho human henrt is Do age is tho moat perfect picture of solf-hood; but {8 prund in tho grontnoss of that outside coun- el which mastors all its thoughts and cmotions.’ Wo fool almost ready to eay.~that ) what wa all neod ju froodoin from all’ that .ia- wioked. and amdll, and thion o lifelong boudage to all “that is truo nnd gront. < We veod tho libortyof & -Paul who was froo, a8 to the things that aro false.or small, bt & slave as to Josus Chriat. i Thore liavo boen mortala hore and : thoro' who havo asserted an unlimited’ indopendenco, bub thoy have ouly narrowed the lifo. thoy expected to enlargo: x * ot ' 'Pho echool of Epiourus, whora thoyeaid, s eat aud drink, for to-morrow we dig,” was an oarly declaration of moral Indopendenico, 'tho courtiora of Canuto ivishod him to assort inde- ruudunco, and speak to the tide of the sea, but Lio waves eamo rolling along. Thomes Paino, in a certain dogree, longed and scruggied for porfect freadom, roleaso from all fetters, henvy or light,.and Byron, teo, denied thoso vast lnwh of socioty whi¢h hayo commouly boen held sncred by thoghtful soctoty, but in all these ox- poriments, -from "Epicurus to Lord Byron, the result has ‘heen such us to make moro evidont tho dopendouce of the aoulu{pan a great bond held out towards it from the [ong caroer of ' man and the grent powors of God. * SO AL AT | Cnnm“‘i‘“fi horoforo, the dubjection of the in- ind, dividual mi and confoesing the littlencss of any ono soul compared with the world of thought and mottve outside of solf, the Jangusge of the Hobrew King, “Thou shalt guido mo with Thy counsel,"” roveals somothing ot itsintrinsio worth. It a statosman can 'move along great: in ihe counsel of all .nations,; tondor: in thoir. tears, \viso fn_their, varied thought sud- exporionce, powerful in all thoir successes and dofents, if under this long admonitiou reaching from Baby- lon to Watorloo, the patriot riaes up ‘in a powar greater than his own bosom, thoen, with God as a counsellor, tho , soul daily received fnto - o glory . which can - mever .be hoped for from .the .absolute Independence of the iuman life. - By ** counsol of God,” "how- bver, must bo impliod only the nqunuhunnbla and sublime attnibutes of Himsolf. . Whon the oxnlted soul of the poet says; *¢ Thou shalt guide me by Thy couusel,” it was notof such * coun- el .08 was to bo embodied in tho philosophics of Bubsequont churchies ; he speaks not of n coun- selgathered up by a Pope, nor' by a Gonvention, norby an Assombly, but tho groat ovident chnr- notor.of the Almighity 88 it reposes o ita pur- Koscs of love, of wisdom, and of rightoousnoss. fany, no doubt, feol thal they are following tho % counsel of God” whenthoy nara‘only following the leadings of a Baptiat, or a Methodist, or 4 Prosbytorian - Churcl, . This .is' : 8. lamont- oblo ~ mistake, for it is _onl the gront” loading 'of God,. God -in His breadtl and Ilfih: that brings tho soul to the *‘afterward glory, hnenpluz,- therefore, the error: which adentifies God with. some scct, and coming out into the great presonco of the. Almighty, tho soul finde around it an influeuco greater than tho ‘atmosphore of civilization which encom- possed ‘tho Earl of Chatham or the Princo of Orange. God is tho ideal of justico, and look- ing up to Him the heart is heid to au orbit of Kn lic and private honor. -God is . the idesl of otinss, and looking. up to Lun tho Leart it hold to an orbit of greater pitrity of life. God is love, and tho'henrt, énchained to’ Him goos forth among its fellow-men with' tears for the unhappy, with & gospel for the ‘hoathen, with froedom for the .slave, God is a father, nnd the ‘with tho Doity the desiro to do_suything wroug is wholly out of the quostion, and-hence there is 0o consoious limitation of froedom with the Inflnito One. ¢ ‘With man, however, the tomptation to pursuo = less honorable caveer, the temptation to vari- - ous forms of sin {880 sotual and powerful that his frecdom ngeds s porpetunl restraint, noeds n fiemumnl ontreaty from some oxternal voice. ext to the value of lite must, -therefore, bo reckoned the. value of some moral restrain upon the freedom of life. To bo boru into enrth {8 mot 80 great & blessing 88 to be boru into somo moral diviston of eurth, whore the -morala of tho home or tho commuuity color the wishes of the young hentt, and cast tho freedom of the will at once under the teunder and powerful porsuasions of ~ religion, or morals, or. ‘Christianity, - To bave beon born. like Hauonibal, whore at tho age of 0 ho was led to the altars to mwoar cternal war sgainst tho Romans, 'was not o blosaed an event as to have beon bory ag Bt. Jobn was, wheto when a youth he was led, to Lha‘friundufilp snd very bosom of Jesus Chrigt. ' It would 'seom that wbat. man needs ‘when coming into this mysterious being is not sheolute independenco, bat & liborty restraived. by some vast external atmosphere that will aiways bo a medium upon whioh the wings can joyfully beat, and far enough and high enough 8oar, . Froedom {8 worthy of all tho toars that have boon wept over ita loss, aud of all tho blood poured out in its purchase, .But this prizois ouly & relative liborty, a liborty only when compared with the ndage, Bat ~ boyoud that comparison, It is a limited indepeudonoe for which men m:ql) and for which they fight upon the battle-flel 4. After the groatost cham- plona of freedom haye won their mosb porfect victories at Salamis, or Thermopylm, or Rtunny- mode, or Dunkor ilill, victorioua chiefs bave hastened to tho nearest templs 't0 blesa tho King.in Heaven, and _to profous anow thoir alle~ gisuco to Him. Liborly is, therefore, only s comparative torm, aud is uaué, not to indicato, the {ndopendonce of any mind, or hoart, or eople, but_only the cscape - from in unjust and jurlous bondsge, May we uot' -therefore reach and announce the conclusion that the suc- cess and blessedness of each being upon earth aro to come, not from any porfect indopendenco of life, but from the epposite, from a vast ro~ straint outside of solf and grander than solf, In support of suoh a thoory comes the pensive verse of the Hebrow poot Thou shalt guide mo with thy counsel and after~ ‘wards roceive mo to glory, ‘This sinking of one’s liberty into the wide and deep son of God's wisdom is tho first actof & grand life, snd tho first. unfolding of an aftor- epint. resting “fm“ Him finds no degolate hour, 1o orphanaga, for oven the Valloy of cho Bladow of Death’grows radiant with the morning of im- mortality. -« - - - G ho - Boyond the emiling and the weepin T il g 80 e Boyand the waking and the sleoping, Boyond tho sowing and {ho reapiny * He shall be svon. Thus the counsel of God hecomes a vast power ‘'outside of the heart, a ‘sublime ‘mastery-of the ‘poor human will, not making it o real slaye, but ‘preesing ugainst its indopendence, and restrain- ‘jug lts licenso, na the attraction of tho eatth ‘holds the forosts, and lakes, and rivois, and oceans, close ngainst its bosom, and thus, by irestraint, holds back from chaos a most marvol- ous world. Eaoh sporkling - river and each iwarbling bird glorics in liborty, and yot, at_tho samo instant, tl m{ are alavos of a gizentio law. Tho success of the soul thus ‘comey from its ‘confessing a vast iufluence outsido of ftself, that !shall shapo all its conduct‘aud happiness: Bin is duflnulroflnn a8 solflsbness, If by sclfishness |i8 monut forgetfulness of all but eelf, the dof- iinition is good. When .a, statosman accepts o i bribo to ao wrong, that act'must come 'from o 1rotroat into solf, from & closing of “the soul 'l against_ that immense **couusel of God” twhich has . mirrored itself in every honorable lifo that has boon lived in all nations, and musb :come from a closing of the ear to that chant of righteousness’ which bas ‘beon sotuded ot alf ‘tho. altars of fho living God: forever 'must como - from a ° complete withdrawal from thopresence of Jesus Christ, who not only suid ¢ ¢ Blessod are the pure in heart,” but who stood himself upon the hoight of ‘sinlossuess, ‘Yos | ein must boa solfishness. a rotreat from tho glory of man and tho glory of God, a rotroat from tho great ontlines of immortality loto the compags of & poor worm that wag born to-day to porish to-morrow. - +*"A roason why I -have-often_urged you all to - unite.with some church.of God, may bo found in this need we all_aro born into, of having some vast influence above us and around us, that may helpour wills in this world of two'great paths, and may keop the spirit full ‘of thiugs groator thau steelf, so that, whon a weak bour come to tho heart, ' tho. great realm of religion, with its God and Chrigt; with its tomb and tho shinlug shore beyond, msy supplant oir littlencss with their grentners, and may utterly overthrow tomptation, by burying it beneath tho grandour of tho roligious destiny. ‘Yo mo it does mot seem thoro can ba a mortal liviog whose 'indo- pendence does not need tho restraint of religion, and whose spirit is so perfoct lu self that it needs not tho uplifting of divine hands oxtending down from above. ‘ward glory. But bofore: you ponder much upon this resolve of the Hebrew who was at ouce King and elave, ot ongo poot of the tomple and itent of the closet, look out upon the pho- nomena of socloty, and loarn from its customs, apart from ita rellgious customs, that the indi- vidual is only groat whon gnided by sume mighty hand resching out to him fromg {e\ug greater iy f 1] 6 humblo oarcer of the Indinn i tho result inpart of che fact that tho atmosphere m{:ul;!d him is only that of huuting, fiehing, or war, and capnot nouyish & soul though divinely made, but leaves it to languish futo o form littie above the quality of & brute ; but when you go away from his wigwam, and come to thiat vast sur- rounding of education and morals, and are, and culture, which gave socioty 8 Prince of Orange or & William Pjtt, or tho whole illustrious cata- logue; whose names uo one auy longer may count, you feo! that no soul ie final shapor of jta own degtiny, but all great minds are those which have been overshadowed by s moral aud moutal roalm without, Cut off any bosom from the in. fluence of tho outor world and leave it wholly to self {from infanoy, sand that bosom may bacome _the " home of avarice, or of low passion, or of indolence, or of imhaoll\ty. ‘but of greatness nover, Greate ness {8 & crown which no owno over wore for bimeolf. Do it of art_or eloquence, of benevo- lence or religion, or of Christianity, all the agos fong beforo- bit and etill_around him Lave brought togothor tho jowels and have beaton out the gold for the rich diadem. Fenelon loft wholly to himsel? would have boen only & @ave sge, Inhis beautiful hfe and holy progress centered that grest voiatilo influenco whioh had Leon gathering arouud all kneellug ones, be- tweon the bonthen Aurelius and the' Obristian 8t. Louis aud his ulm‘unnno bad all been woven for him in the looms of Greece, 2,000 yoars before, All that the I'ronch hear} Liad dono waa daily from Youth 0 go and bow at the shrineoutside of his poor.self, and thus radually. put on the innge, not of ls avs, but- of tho world's thousands of yoars, gradually put on, not the imuga of Fonelon slone, but of a wide humanity, When Mr, Bumuer diod,’a public man ye own few. In the attempts to educate,our millions of chil- dron, it is now thought -the law will have to be invoked to gompel the guardians of youth to send ovon thoso they love to the public school. Why ask the law? Only becauso there 18 In tho' Btate a logal and morel forco, whioh not only compels by ponaltios, but which helps the thoughtless or tho undecided to realize that there is Bomothing in cducation that may Lavo escaped their notico and failed to awaken tholr dond hosrts, In Ianco, Viotor Cousin foit that it was impossible to oarry forward a gobeme of publio instruction unless there were combined with it Christinnity onough to jead to .a new cstimato of the valuo and significanco of life. In Hcotland thore has long existed this oxtornul influonce of » grent atmoephero, aud thore the youth have always beon glud to wall five milen to school enoh mosnlug, and to return with Jight hearts in tho twilight, IS Thoso illustratious indicata tho folly of seak- ings or claiming porsonal indopendouce, and the absoluto need we all' have of s power, national or rollgious, to rosoue us from the handa of solf, and deliver us ina blessed bonduge to that which {# groater than we. As-tho freodom throughout our country surrounds us and forbide that you and L hall over oursolves be willlug to imposo it upou others, as this whols continent oncompasaca you toshnpeyourthoughts and fool- §mnd in tho docted of aoif-hood, for a-sav- |} A thoro yon may read that counsel which has , dovor vt guided falaoly a human soul, i ‘Aftorward,” sayd tho’poot, * rocolve mo to 'flflry."‘ It4s difMoult to:{mogine howa Jite could ; torminato in glnrfl( that had tot heon following a great path, — Tfio ¢arcor of n woak, ‘gimple jolfy ' 7 that * haa' doolarad mbrolutism, ;and ; has . confemsed no | world but it own bosom, ean no mora bronk’ forth into ‘n{‘flo\ldor than a flickoririg tapor can’oxpand into the Bun of Juno. " Recall the wiokod, the oruol, . the Infamous of nll .agos, from now to tha lagt rhutrdordr or{mpostor_of any namo, and there ia 1o rosson or charity tunt onnt soe any flowor or fruilt of benuty appearing in thofr momory, It i only n'gront pati that oan lead to o fair dos- tiny, "“Paul, John, Christ, came to acrown of honor by walling along Lonor's path, 'This bo- ing tho invariablo. privoiple of human life, the Pealmist bns bonitifally stated the liw in tho dontiootlon ho mukes “botweon following tho counsol of God, and then hoing rocoived into %lary, for if thero bo, as wo all think, a glory of od'aud a shore of immortality whoro ‘this #plendor all lies . outspread, & aradiso of'bilss, thon wo need no argument to tonch us that the soul that follows God boro is onch day dlimbing tho goldon stalr-whoso atops Innd in that blessodness, ITo that followa God, or rather bo that followa that Bothlohem imngo of God, iy hourly being recelved Iuto the full hope of glory, +bo fio In any land or iu any Chiureh— Down £’ thio margin of tho river, ' 1is feot are prossing now, ¢ | Aud tho bright glory of tho'upper templs | .18 renting on hin brow. | Boun slulk the hand thitio own 8o oft has folded i "Bwiop o'or a hirp of gold, * : g | And tho warn feot, with all tholr wandorings onded, . Rest in tho Master's fold, ‘ % i Soma voice will nssure ua thot ail tho clond: will rigo to-morrow and show us'tho sweet bluo of n botter sky, .The heart broaks ouly when its future’is gono, whon, through its bittor tenrs, it can fee no aftorward. ‘In thus following tho dolmnnl of God tho present is not bosprinkled. with tears, .but is_sbsolutely dwarfod . by the splondor of the fatwro. Martyrs lave sunj bymus at tho. stake, because,of tho ‘aftorwar tint Iny boyond tho flamas, In this hopa frionds att here, and in the name of this futurity nol ar away, all human hoarts clinging to God, may | sing tholr hymn in darkest days, for the solemn raquiom of this life will be 'n woruing hymi of the dour “afteryard. | " THE DEVELOPMENT THEORY. i Discourso by thio Rev. Dr. Tiord fn tho Flrst .. Presbyterlan Church. % ! The Rov. Dr. Lord delivorod o leoturo Inst ovening at tho First Prosbyterian Olurch upon th_n t_luve_llr'mmunt theory advocated jointly by Profs. ‘Husloy and Darwin, He olioso for tho fhomo - of his : discourso " tho ‘syllogism of Descartos - * Cogito,” ergo sum." If man oxlstod, .ho romsoned:, Mau had on oH- gin. Whenoo, thon, ‘did ho como? To this there woro two answers, one by Mosos and the other by modern' s¢icutiats. Moses ' said God oreatod' man in His own'imago out of tho dust. felonco said he was ovolved from somo primor- dial origin, Botonce indorsed Moacs' statemout 80 far a8 to admlt that man,waa oreated out of thio’enrth, but deniod his spiritual existenco. ! Tho Badducees cried out thatthere was mno epirit, and, it thoy were right, Moges was wrong. T'he Badducees wors not dead yet, The dualism of this class,~of Comto, Feuorbach,and othors,— wag thint of mattor and motion, nob of matter aud mind ; that mind was only a manifostation of matter in action; thot mind was, in facs, a product of tho brain, a8 Dbllo was of tho liver; and ultimately that phoaphorus was tho seat of mind. Consequontly morality, right, and wrong, booame nil. If thiose wero right hoy woro op- posed to the dootrino of Mosos of the spiritual ature of max, . - g ) I Wero thoy right or wrong? If wrong, thoy iworo immonsoly wrong. I’hysieal science could bear” no testimony, for epirit, thought, woro impalpablo, invisible. How 'then could the toachings of the Materialists bo rofuted ? Con- clusively and forever b{ tho testimony of con- folousnosg... Wht was 1t within us that knew thought, ~ romembered, loved, hoped, thal wont off' vast and wondrous excur- plons, sud affections, embraciug; tiuth God, ond_ men in joyous muticipitions What wasthis,—s bone, 8 pleco of flesl:,'a quiv~ orln%nunn 7 No, it could not be idontitied with the body. It was belioved to be tho iuvisible art_which the Scripture called tho spirit, nud ases - ounoblod .88 . the imago of God | The thoughe .was _startling, Dofilod, do- gradod, " fn the "ono viow; in ' iho othor; ' how how august! [t was ront, the iutollcctunhmago fivet, that it might bo the moral. A an arithmoliciap, astronomer, as one ‘oxorciding himeelf in say roalm of thought, mun diffored from his ‘Maker only. in dogreo, as o ‘'space of time diffored from.iutinite time. Lhis mustror of Mouis wos oloar, lmplo, yational, rand.:” 5 "There wero moro susivers than one, and ho .would ¢ito those of tho'old Groek thinkors, which though absurd, were not moro g0 thun some of moderp times, Ono eage suswared ‘! Mau did not come from anywhero.. ' He never ‘camo, ~ ho - had no origin. Man like the world is eternnl.” Oould we_foranke Moses sud follow the. Greek? DBut he could not understand what ‘tho old Greok mennt. ‘Philosobpy opposed him. Etornal man must bo gelf-uxistont. If the first man wore eternal be ‘never died, and therofore whore was ho. —His- tory confuted him, for it formed its firet- man ‘about 6,000 yosrs ngo. Geology - confutod ted him, for it showed that through the early goological porlod man could not have existed .in - -the world. In ‘addition to this, mnot o bone of man ‘appearad until the' geological pertods renched their close with the present.time, ' Asccond snewer to thoe quostion, .** Whenco ‘camo man ?" was that by procosses of Immenaura- Ibto length, bo was® developed, Why . those tro- ‘mendots_processos had consed did not appoar, {But passing this ‘a8 immaterinl, tho faoctors of ‘this development wore two; flrst, the germinal .point, and, gecond, tho ovolution. Honce varia- ‘tions might bo omitted, with only o glance at ‘the diversityof forms, Calling the roil of scionca ‘e would oolloct their mnswers. Oue said a!pri- mordial fungus, auother proxoplasm, another an oyster, ‘anothor ‘a worm.’ Thus they all differed, !TFortunatoly they all agraed on something. Excopt .Bwodonborg,. all tho soientiats agroed that the orminal somothing possossed a certain intornal :finpnlne. and, by external-contaot, the process of dovelopment'went on toward the dostined goal. Was the wisdom of the ecientints to do accepted? The sponker did uot like to.ac- copt it, He concoded that seionce was ghty. But was it _ scionco that thus spotke? Interrogate the folentists, and tho answors conflicted. "Could scienco conilict with itsolf? . Would it:uot be wiser to romain with Aoses until the discord of scicuce wero dono? ‘But then, again, supposo that the discord end- o, and protoplasm were decided upon as the . origin of man, Who mado protoplasm? Who 'made the marvelous qualitios 1. possosacd ? | Who imparted them to protoplnsm ? Was it God? Was ecionco duven to the diviuosct?. And, if so, why not regard that act other than a8 Moses did, mnk&n% a burlesque “of sclonce, | and a convenience of God ? . The theorica of- Huxloy aud Darwin wers tho Iatost nnd most olaborate, and were confounding ! the world. Thoy, thorefore deserved ' s’ glance.- | Rojeoting the Maesio theory, they reforred to an aboriginal something, callod by one o fungus and by tho -other protoplasm; possessing cer- tnin “soif-soting powers by which it was oarried through & vast range of speoies to man. One called this process transmutation; the others development. Bo far as the spenker could see, tho theorics wero the samein _ es- gontiale. A deer, for instanco, passing undor s tree, ronched up and plucked some leaves ; it got into tho hubit ~ of ronch- fug upj its descendant foll into the samo habits, and at longth, myrlads of agos since, the;lincal descendant of this deer hind beoomo & magnificont giralfe, atretching up high into the clouds. ‘Thig gavano Idea of tho tremendous power inherent in tho protoplasm, ‘Thiy -chnnfio, wonderful as it would be, was & change within tho limits of spocics, ~ But spo- oloa ftself was resident In the protoplasm—tho whole world of animal and’ vegetable existence, was inhorent in protoplasm, Ho had endoavored to put those naked idens before Lis Lonrers destitute of teohuical torms, Should thoy now distrust Moges in what he paid of tho orlgin of men, 80'Lonorable to us? _ Fol- lowing the word of the Groat Mastor, we would snswor *{ trow not."” ings by ita polltics and by ltsclimato, and vasjuoss oxtent, and industry, so ovory soul, havig a moral nature, sooms to meeb Wwith the mont lmnluvo and tho most truthful associntinns of re- iglon it can find 1n this immense outer power, thiat 1t may possoss & friond that may bolp it m tomptation, aud cheer it in sorrow, and traus< form dooth iuto bleksed transformation. Lub that tho Oburch may bo to_you what your sonl needs; it must bo a Chnreh not that will cast down the mind and the spirit, bub will ift them both wup to ‘the counsel of God that will atterward receive - to ;}lory," must possass littlo of tho wonk counsel of mah, 1t should be udeod the counsol of God, Iu the person of Ohrist, that Los beon ko pln\nl ra- Tho theorlsts uamed troatod only upon an in facts, bue a8 dexterous politivians used fig:. uros whioh would not llo unless mado to, The l!mvnblu fota were with Mosos, not with pro- oplasm ; for, nccording. to tho solentists, an ouormous chaugo of structuro was golug are still among the animals, Now, we had a do- mounstration that for 8,000 cluding mov, had beeu exacily what they wero vat collection of mummios aud romains of ani- mals which wero examinod by Cuvier, who pro- nounced them sfructurally oxaotly ‘what tho same anlmald woro to-day, The thoorlsts com- lainod tliat this was too short a period, Wos not this a fatal answer 7 No chunge of vealed that you noed make no groat mistake fioro, Bpring ovor the intervoning &muu in which tho doscents of mankind have broken in upon the Gospelbarmony,aud plont yoursolt beside Ohsiat, structuro in 8,000 . Ten thousand times 0 Would il bo'0, S o Qeology, whose poriods those were, donied anormous agsumption, Thoy dealt somotimes’ Bim\vn nnimaly, in-' to-day. Nupoleon's oxplorers in Egypt found a, 3 that thora was one fnot in nll its ronlm such.na tho theorlsta olalmed. 'The strata did cootsin fossila of nll kinds, of plants, fish, animals, and at longth of mon. ‘Lhey wore porfect. Tha strata contained nothing that wng intermedinte, . For instance, Iirutovlnum dovolopod Into fish, bLut .thero must ba a poried whon thero’ was pars fish and port protoplasm. 8o a structuro part. flsl, lmfl. quadruped, was thorefore Indispenanble o tho proof of Darwin's theory that tho Intér- ,medinto formu should bo, digcoverable. Woro thore any such remams? Qoology replied “ Not ouo.” Gaology proved, if 'snything, that tho most porfoct form of & spocies were found atits iotroduction, and that spocics dogoner- ated, This was just tho roverso of the dovolop- mont thoory. To obviato this, ita ckamplons ,of no actlon of the Church, eithor by Presbytory, Bynod, or Assembly, that Woulld debar hor fiom ‘sposking at an ‘ordinary ‘prayor-moolivg, if sno folt inclined to uttor ler roligious ngnll monts alond. Dut, while ho'statod thid, ho hiad not tho “lightest fear, in his* chiroh, of throbwing: the gatos wido opon to the Indies, e know that all, of thom proferrod to work in silance, as'beat bo- causo their rovoted sox, and ho hind nodoubt that thelr efforts would alwaya be » nlm;;F support of roligion, and a gulding atar to the falthful of tho C’mru g & o . DR. TIFFANY, Grace (M. E)) Ohinroh Yester« duy Morning, ia Sormon nt clfmed ihat one luk 'was - wanting | ‘The Rev. O.IL Tiffany, D. D., formerly & which would stuciurally conncob man with | pastor in thisclty, butnow of Washington, D.O,, the 'mmlku{.» Tho “lnk was material | doliverod & discourso yestordny moruing at Graco .o bone, If thoy could. find n akull.of a cortnin Church, cornor of LaSallo and: Whito atroots, +from tho foflowlug foxt: . In tlie yoar'that King Uzzinh diod I snw also tho ! Lord sitttn Slipo, tho link would bo supplicd, Bub. tho Bponker maintainod thnt there was anothor link wnkuhn’g.—n spiritual Huk, Bo fm . v ns matlor was concorned, man L slitiog pon a thaons, gk and Hited, Uppand hod the highost phyelcal manifostations mnfl ‘;:nc)loz;im‘l‘:‘mllo;rl\{‘lvuv'ln;ll':flwvfllt"I\::fl?flm:‘ég::;:ll ? God in -'his own hody. DBut " he {nu face, and with twalu he covorod his foot, aud with ad something gronter, than moro vital | twain ho did fi ] i e "Aud oné cricd unto nnothor, and said, Holy, holy, holy, in the Tord of Hoats; tho wholo earth is full of i glory. And {he posta of the door moved ' nt tho volce of Tifm thnt cried, and tho houso was fillcd with smoke, Thien snid I, Woo is mol for I am undone; ‘bocauso I am & man of wnclean lips, and I dwell in the i midst of & peoplo of unclean lips “soen the King; tho Lord of 1osts, ¥ i 'Then flewono of the soraphim unto mo, having o liva con! in his hand, which ho had takon froin off tho ‘altar with the tongs, ° e : 2 iAnd he loid it upon my moutb, end snid, Lo, this iath touchod thy lips;-and thinfniquity fa akon away; and thy ein purged, Also I heard -thio volca of rd, anying, Whom sball I sond, and who will go n}r “1"-;'1 Then said I, Jore ‘s I; send’ me.~Isafah ‘o, 18 owers. Tho ‘soat of " rondon, conscionce, and mporial ‘will wa had,—tho #lgn of apirituality, Bhonld his hearors then loave Modes and follow tho “npista?” Bhould they furn rovereatly to God nnd sny, * Thou art my Fathor,” or goona wild, nnending search among thoe baboons? ‘I'ie sponker briofly restatod tho torms of the - oo, glving tho answors of tha sclontists aud of Mosus, and loft his hearcrs to'draw their own conclusions. - i It was amusing to hoor fho remarks mado upon the lootnre. Some said it was'an oxcol- Jout sermon ; otliors thought Darwin had not & Iog to atand upon. One old gentloman ivas owor- licard remarking, *‘It is dangoroua to abandon fulth, and enter the listy armod with reason dlone,” But tho most Prosbytorian, if not the most Jogloal, commont the reporter heard wag D, Tiffany thon wont _on to say theso words wore & epiritual nutvbln;impuy. which ‘always ways tho almost universal plritual experiouco 3 for mine oyos Luve |, AMUSEMENTS, " THE GREAT ADELPHI, IEONARD GROVER, . MANAGER Mandny Lveninm, . i BURNAND'S EXTRAVAGANZA, Now Hoonos by Noson, Now Costumios by Ulomonts. FISKE ns MINERVA, ) i FRANIKIE as IXTON, § VERY FULL CAST, Tho world-famod ABDALLAT TROUPE, of ° AR A B -2 Irom Jernsalem, 1loly Land. . Fourtosn Honxaf tho Desert, tho samo ‘who were cnin- oy e e o Ryt o Fones ot i S Ci llnlh (\Hl, u‘l uh’nl thelr m;u!,lv‘,nn‘flmhl!ll dll' i lile ordors, decoratod with the MOS'] i B Ol A AT adition o the o aualod listof Spocial Stagy aud Aot g TOEDAND THE Di GLORTANS, MINRR AND LU N WHEELLR, GRAY tha Tady Sengdnd Ugncs, Accint, ISR | CoiONY, LNTLE BENNTE i i TERS, TiE HUNGARTAN BALLET, N'TIN '8 GOMIO: PANTOMIAK, i AND G FISEERMAN’S L'UCK. (TADLE NIGUTS, Tundyy anid Thupdey. MAT. S inosilny ' and urda, 2 | PREG, s Tt e tho Civiirod World Tor a Bor turmancd of such oxcallenco, - - MoVIOKER'S THEATRE. ONLY TWO WIEKS MORE OF TII OWN] N O W NS TAN, M, | [ENOWNED Sothern! Who will appoar on Mnmlxi{ and Tnosdny only in NisIne imitabls Lolinoation of LORD DUNDREARY. MBS MINNIIE WALTON ae Gonrcinn. 1t VIRING BOWIES in Asn Tronoinrd, Wodnosdey isenfuz, funo 1y, fiest production fn Chit onkn, inn PROPER STANNETL, and with a_sultablo dis- friinition of clinractoia of tha lixquuito Domestio Gomedy thiss I was vory unmecasaary. Wo aro all |.of overy truo Obmstian. Every ono found in good Christinus. We do not beliave in Darwin bimself s dotormiued spirit to ‘assort his inde- ! g i Y *". | mondimos, and thus placad biisolt n appostion 2 ‘1o .. Ho rofus asle anything. from Him ; LI ASSDMBLE. il cinpellod 1o Tho hlghfiubht}mgl In iifo for evory stinn was to reconclle himse! 0 (o Roviow of Xin Doluke by, thie, Reve Dr. Xt~ | uq {¢ in tho aboyn passago.bo could find tho n: | rulo of lifo: by whlug it could bo done, much would bavo boen accomplishiod by him. -Tho | prophiot cloarly. showa that: this was to bo. ac-. complished by gaining aoloar Enrcuptlon of God, | df our own uniworthinoss and sinning, and to 'cj|i}:.£vnzo & rendiness .and oagornoss to do Mis will, . . . | How, then, should a claar concoption of God bo ninod? It was not of any importance whother | tho , prophot saw God with bis carnal eyo, rovelation . that bonofited one and had a insting ihfluenco”over his mind, was that which camo through the inward mind; the window of the goul. Was_God not. seon evory day in the sun, stars, and all that was bonutifal; and whilo look- ing at Hits works 1e waa forgotten.. Xrom this vory fact, it was nocossary that oll thus forgot- | ful should bo awakoned and made to oo the truo Tho Rev. A. E. Kittredgoe, who has just ro- turned from'tho Prosbyterian Assombly, which was rocently in seeslon in Bt. Louls, oficiatod in the Thivd Presbytorian Church, of which ho is | pastor, yesterdsy morning. In leu of the cus- tomary sormon, the roverond gentlemen dis- coursed at length tpon the procoedings of the Assombly. Ho choso for his' text the fourth vorso of Acts, Chinp. 162 ** Aud whon thoy wdre como to Jerusalem,” ete. s " The proacher sald tho true Ohurch was not a: partioular denomination, but embraged all who loveéd God and kopt His commandments.. The differont sccts woro 86 many roliglous brigades; enoh carrying the insignis of its. organization, but, all marching boneath the great banuer of the ' Cross, crimsoned by the blood shed upon Calvary, . = g ‘I'he " Prosbytorian Church -was only.one of those brifinduu 5 for, with all her epirit of discl- pline and evangolism, sho was in close’ com- munion with her slater Oburchos, snd bolioved in spreading kno\vlm}fio of Ohrist outside of bor own domains. With all this liboralism, howevor, sho intermixed good government, and took caro to keop her communicants faithful .to their own denomination, becauso ‘it was to the interest of roligious progress that all churoh-members should _bo onthusisstically logal to tho scct o which they belonged. This was not, however, s spivit of bigotry, but a spirit of order. Thoy loved their glorious old Ohuroli-for® her firm faith, her wondrous victorles, and her plendid history, 'Thoy would be faithfni to her with the faith ‘of children, but should always.oherish fraternal regard for poople who, did. not bolong to hor particular fold. 1I'he governmont of the Presbyterian” Church was o patriarchy, closely modelod on the system first ostablished by Moses. It was almostn counterpart of tho'sovere simplicity of tho an- clent synagogue, sud the simplicily which ap- poaled to tho roligious ronson of mankind it shontd alweys progorve intaot, Theinnovations of Rome had, in the third century, done much' to direct tho human mind in o channel the re- vorso of simple, but Presbytorianism had pro- sorved tho faith pure, a8 1t came from the foun- tain of grace, No Church could: claim n direct divine, inspiration unless through the good old medium of the Word of God, notwithsending the claims made bE some that they wore. the ropositories of the Divine law, The Presbytorian Church, founded on the Bible, maintained tho Biblical eimplicity, and did, not.. rocognizo.| the infallibility of bhuman dogmas. . Heuco ite power and its purity, - Thoro woro now in the world 53,000,000 of peoplé who pro- fossod tho Presbytorian . faith., ~Tho Church was Euvomnufl by Presbyterios, Synnds, and Assom- lics, the latter being tho Lighost form of her government, To tha tho Church, “hgi{lcm man, no matter how broad his humnnitarianism or o fine his mathotio tastos might b, ho conid ok onter into o spiritual life. Thoroforo the firat thing to.bodone was to gain this knowledge of God, not such a concoption as an_arfist fiot of his subject, but s knowledge of Him ns 0 18, that wiil cause him to: ory out; Lol God is hero. Wit was_the. result of.this ? A real- | izirig sonse of tho diffetenco betwoen God, who was puro, and the wickednoss of mun waa gained, and thon the sscent from siu began. A man who ocould seo God and not feolto a terriblo dogreo, Liis own sinfuloess was not propared to enjoy- - tho blessings of the rodoomed. their wickedness, *.but rather in the good man who was ongaged in prayer in his closot, ronliz- fug fuily the presence of God and the dopths of his own dogredation and’ wickedaess. Haviug committed 8in, no_ono could bo. bronght into comumunion with God, it ho did nob exporience this fosling. Then camo tho rovelation of rellemption from sin,—tbat our iniquity was purged. *Thon flow oue of the seraphim'unto mo, having & livo coal in his hand, which he had takon with the tongs from off tho altar, nnd ho laid it upon my mouth and 8ald, thy Iniquity is takon away and thy em purged." This purgitg from sin was not done by od, but by a modiator, who Was betwoon im aud mon, our Lord Jesus Christ. Tue coal was typical of tho sa~rifico of purification. When wo roalized the loathsomo horror to which wo aro linked, could we quictly fool wo could Lo froed from it; and yot not do it? It.-was im- ssiblo,; to .80 foel, and oyery one:having his knowledge would be driven .to do ms Judss did,—go bang_ himscif. . Like Enoch of old, wo walked with God, and wo must live with Him, Thon wo must.go wherover God's voico waa hoard'cailing. ™ b % Tho danger to tho Ohuroh to-dny soemed to bo our own sinfulness, we were inclined” to sit and ning ourselves away in bliss, instend ‘of desiriug I to.do His-wlll aud -hoar His call. -Obristian lifo was ono of action nnd of conilict. To any one who asked * How am I to become a Christain?" he eaid: -Look away from yoursolf and toward God. Go out into the glorious fields of true lifo, and seck to'do His will. Everyone to his work. Novor hear the Mastor's voice without respond- ing, * Hero Lord am sond mo.” Assombly any member of aggriovod, - could appoal, but tho bod: ot undortake to establish rules for individual Churches, That was leit to the Presbytery, unlers tho latter appealed to the Digher powar. ' In this way all arbitrary epirit wag chooked, and the Ohurch preserved tho orig- inal patraichal foatures to the eatisfaction of Ler children. “Ho had, as they wore aware, recontly attonded tho meeting of the Presbyterian Assombly ot Bt. Lows,—the pastors and eldors of the Church,— which' comprised noarly GI0 dologatos from the different sections of this vast country. Ho hnd never \itnossod 8o great sn oxhibition of Christiaz charity, forbearance, and : unanfmity. Thore were difforonods in ro- gard to policy,—for example, on the question of consolidativg tho Councils,—~but tho greatest amount of toloration” and dignificd courtesy marked the debatgs. On the question of con- solidation thore wera two reports,—one gentlo- man baving the independant courago to stand alone in the minority. Neithor was adopted, but | the Assembly had accopted suggestious from e A Blind Loador of the Blind. ' The remarkablo faculty of James, Moore, & man 85 years old, and blind from his birth, is thua desdribed by the Cleveland (Ohio)’ Herald : 1 .** Ono yesr ago, Dr. D, B. Smith, of tnis _oity, removed the balls of his eyos from his hoad, and Mr. Moore has been employed in lils office sinco thnt timo for the purpose of recolving visitors when the doctor is absent. He appears in every respect difforent in' his movements from’ ordina- 1y blind porsons, aund, as ho woars groen glusecs, fow persons who moot him are awaro of his fp~ firmity. .Whon desired to goon au errand, o finds his way without dificulty, and he' hus ren- dered himself so familior With the streets of bach. 5o thit all difforances wore happily har-'| Cleveland that ho rarcly as to inquire. Shonlzod, The polloy adoptod, which had siready Altuoogh: T T e b RN ko boon laid boforo thom _through tho columns of [ Berdly - ovor — pormits . o . . toud tho sidewallk, seeming to bo guided by infuition nivay ‘from contact with obstaclos. His sonse of henring . is: go acuto that ho is able: to state hether a streot is narrow or brosd by means of tho sound of tho' footstops of persons passing along on tho opposite side. When orossing a street ho manngos to avold the vohicles, stopping and waiting 1n the middlo if nocessary until tho coast is vlear, it being indicated to him by sound. Te is frequently sent to conduct bliud patients who do_ not possess his wondorful faculties to Charity - Hospital from ‘his employor’s oflice. Bometimoes he will walk, guiding their tottering stops, aud at others, will tako & stveot car, sta- tioning Limeolf on Euclid_avenue, and lnquiring befora stopping on board if it is the nignt ono, 1le can remove overy spook of dust from tho fur- niture of an ofiico or parlor, handling tho most trogilo artioles without breaking' or damaging tuem in the lonst. » NEW PUBLICATIONS. : _ NOW READY. ‘THEODORE . TILTONY NEW . NOVEL, TEMPEST-TOSSED. tho socular and the religlons press, ho had no doubt was for the best interests of the Oburch. All appeared to bo sntisfled . with the sottlomont of the questicn. Another ' grand fonturs of the Assombly was that mon who hnd ' long beon sundered by the oporation of the late civil war camo to- gothor 1lke brothors who, long wovered, had ogein grasped hands, and romowed the old uos, und resuscitated old offections. Thore were alsosome colored delogates present, ono of whom reproscnted one of tho groatest Prosbytorios i Amorica—that ‘of the City of Now .York, Anothor was. from Bouth Osrolina, and nmong the muny ominent men who dis- played rare sbilitlos in tho proccedings of the Assembly, theso two woro prominout. The .| Brother from Caroliug snid: * Wo ask of Fou, in the name of Jesus Christ, boforo Whom all of us stand oqual, to call us no longor freedmen, but men—mion liko yourselves, Wa aro ready to forgive eyen thoso who have opprossed us—to extond Christ's charity from man to his brothor men, but let us not be madealien by distinctions which aro invidlous and which,. within the Church, showld' have no recognition.” Theso sentiments were loudly irdorsed, and no man loft that Assombly with aught cléo than brotherly faoling for tho cotored misslonaries. Tbo white Bouthern dologates showod sn equally glorious apirit, and, inceed, nngels might Love chanted their songs of joy, 'to see suck enlightenod aud noble toleration. The Sreuclwr then entorod into some of. tho minor detaila of the session, and. said that n cry for support was atmni;ly borne to thom from tholr brothren in forelgn missions, scattered in Loathon lands, whom it was their duty to au(p- port. Little did many of his_hearers—living in filed‘)m!norlty of the United Btatos—know of the trials and nuflnrlnfu of thosa who nobly qu- ported the burdon of tho Cross in the distant lands into which thoy had carried the glorious tidings of . heavenly salvation.. T'he Assombly had unanlmously resammonded to all tho Prosbytorics that tho appeal slivuld not be unheeded, and that thoso who sowed tho speds of roligion in far countrics should bs liverally sustained in their plous labors, e biad noticod an editorlal domment on the raccedings of - the Assembly In oneof the morn- ng papors, The writer had said that no procesd- ings of any lmportance hud comno beloro that body. There lisd not—only the snlvation of souls, Was that of no importance? It was s matter so important that Jesus Christ spilt hla preolous blood, and braved tho pain and shamo of orucifixion that slunora - might = be :rodeomed, It wos o maottor B0 important that hundreds of noble lives had been dovoted to that ‘work alone, and thousands thore wero following on tho samo rond.. ‘he salvation of human souls wes tho noblest enterpriso to which religlous humanity could bo dodlented. Noua othor #o powerfully apposlod to the hfighur "Tho story {s ono of marked power and pootio boauty. “Mr, ‘Tlton wiolds & very gracoful pou, and Dossessens vivid tmagination. - 2ad. - ACROSS AMERICA; . OR, THE GREAT WEST AND PACIFIG COAST, DY GEN. JAMES T, RUSLING, © Vol., lnrge 12nt0, with 8 full page Muse SRS b AN R ‘l';rl:ensf. Paclflo Coaat tod, and are | dn‘-la:r‘l’gul()ll.':rnh'lgfi Do o Stow 1o Do mort Intolly on| LI “This tels of U, Musling's ocoupled two. e rabad Soroug s, i RECENTLY PUBLISHED, BEORETARY WELLEY' BOOK, LINCOLN AND SEWARD. The Wetherel Affair. BY COL, Jé W. DEFOREST, By MRS, ANNIE EDWARDS, o4 Brs, Tidwarde §s ona af tho brightost and froeh it e R i eotheat of sontiments of our naturo, aud ne hoped that the | Misa TForrester - - - = $L00 Third chamu would manifest a practioal spirlt ‘guzh‘g }Nolk‘a V{i}: Horf = - 1.m) waorthy of so groat o oanso, Tho Ordonl Toe Wiven, v ox P bl Mr, Kittrodgo thon alluded to the sotion of | ATSRI0DEVERy 7, = = ¢ = = 300 the Asgombly rolativa to woman as a proncher | A Vagabond Horolng, =« = = - 75 luhtms pulpit; ‘Lhe 5‘?;““03 }md;lzmx:‘u uke% sl S whethor woman wag dobairos rom taking ar in prayor-mootings—whothior 8ho was wormitted By JUSTIN McCARTHY, to uponk on such ocoaslons? 1o'would suswor.| A Fair Saxon, = - e $100 that, while tradition, oustom, and that | Tindy. Judith, L. - = 1,28 modeaty which should over _encompass | Anyotthe it by matl, post-paid, on rocelnt of woman as with a lelo, -were agawst | orio. } Addy Lo appoarauce .as & prosoliop, le kuow. | LDON & CO.. Now York. God. - Unloss this porception of God came'to a | Thoinflucucoof sin was not roalized in hospitals | whero mon could been dying from tho results of | ontitlod Weitt 1y for, Mr. ) 4 n by a BRILLL HT. ' suppos T H o Hoats, Nt 3 , [ ey ::3: foats, "Noxt wook last of Mr. Bolhom, HOOLEY'S THEATRE, GRAND OPENING: OV THE BUMMER SEASON! A Grreat BEvoxtl Flest appoacance {n this clty of tho world-lamous ‘FIFTH-AV, THEATRE COMPANY, in ita ontlroly and undor tho porsonal supervision of its eminant propriotor, managor, and autliar, P IMR. AUTUGUSTIN DATY. 'AlL the groat spoolaltios of the FIFTIL AVENUE AR AR bepeotiaed ‘in Fapld susedstions Monday, - Tuoaday, -and Saturdsy mstineo, Juuo 8, 9, an g d 13, DIVORCE:! ‘Wadnosday Thursday, and Saturday ovonings, IMLAN ANID YR LI 31 Fridny ovoning, LONDON ASSURANCEH. - ox sliget now open. ACADEMY OF MUSIO. " ENORMOUS 8UCCESS OF THE WONDERFUL VO K ®mSI Positivoly Last Weok and Nightly Ohango of Bill, ellos of the Kitohon,” rong Matt fn thy TUght Placo,” Tud in's Bow" EXPOSITION GARDENS, Lako Bhoro and Adams-st. THE LADIES! RESORT! 'ALWAYS COOL! Exposition Gardons, Lako Bhore and Adatni-at, THE WONDERFUL PARIS BY MOONLIGHT! Dubafe's DON JUAN and HAIDEE, @Grand Promonnda Concort by Honry 8. Pago's Band, | Tha groat buildiug beautitully docoratad. pon from 2 to b and trom 7 ta [0._Admisslon, 00 ots; Children, Bets. LEGAL, that.when wa realized, tho prosonce of God and | ‘Ono Vol. largo 12ma, tintedpapor. Price 8176 BANKRUPT NOTICE. Inthe District Court of tho United .States for the Bastern Dis- trict of Wisconsin, In the mattor of tho Osbkosh Msnufacturing Gompany, Dagkrupt, In Bankrupto i, Notlod i noreby glven that in parsusnce of an orilor of {uo Distrior Gonel B tho Taitod Braton, in audfor tho Iastern District of Wiscunsin, made and onterod on tho sith day of Maroh, A, B 17k} iho undecelgned assignoce pakeypioy of tho satd Hafkruph will soll st publla 0} 0 highest snd bost bidg h dlay of Juno, A, D. 187 that day, at th D! AL on Righ Stroot, in the City canain, all tho righ supt, and all t] siunod, as aea 5 Towing' desorlbod Iteal Estato, togol ap- [urtatsnes therounto bolongliy, {ying and bolog situate o “the klth Ward of tha City of Osikosb, County of Winnobago, aud State of Wisconsln, and scribod an follows, to-wit : fittopn (I9), .".'.;’(5‘;" amo vo (6), ol . ni 175 (1) {n Dorranco’ Tots fourtoon two ’!). throo ten (10), olovon aivislon ot ot ono In blook 1§ Fifeh Ward, fron from all will aiso =t fobilo suction same time and placo with 1) ight titlo and interest of tho sa sokrupt and the sald assignoes in and to cortain lettors patent for the Manulac- ture of Throshing-Machinos kuown as tho Gelsor Soparator and Heliauco 1lorso-'uwur, to rghur ‘with all patterme B50d [0 the Manufaoturo of ‘such Heparators aud 1orso- i [d assignoos will alsoat the sam sol at. publio auotion to tho biglost aad st bidder for caah, 'n. largo amount of . lumtior, irun, ipoios, and othor matorial atd por- sonal proporty ust o the Manufsctura of Throshin, achihos, also ® largo numbor o dog-Machiass engorn 21 h” dotaor Naohizo, some 1a a isishod aud othora {n an unfintaiiod atato. 3 "Tho Roal Katato abore dorcribiod eonsiata of about four acresl land ijing on K Fho Ohlcago & North- ‘westorn and tracks mnnln% now, and buil 1, inoumbran nt tho I3 ‘Thero t0 the works, in tho most substautisl and convenient T atod May 27, 1874 ator , 1674, % . M, HUTGHINSON, Folli BroatLur, g" amoss. YKLKER & WRISBROD. "Atv'ya for Assly NOTICOE:. Wheroas, Danlel Pratt and Gharlos 8. Symonds, s As; slgnoos in hnukmuu[ of tho **Peoples Safn Deyorlt and HBavings Inaiitution of tho State.of New York," are tho ownors und Lol tho title of ono tndivided :t of tho lauds and promises herefusttor doscribodt ‘Whoroas, at & Court of Bankruptcy hold tn and for tho Northor District of Now York, at tho United Sintos Court-room, In tlia City of Utics, ln 3aid State of Now York, on_th 19th day of March, A. Diy 1874, it was, on potitfon filed, ordered by eatd Oourt ' ihat safd ‘As- Slgnoos moy sbl aud contoy thio onn undivided BAll pary af the two thousand actes of land situata In the Town of Moluonco, 1o the County of Kaukakos, and Btato of if+ ‘ols, particularly montionad, and doscritiod {n eaid potl- tin, AL publio or privato eals on such torms and con tiona ‘ag shall I tholr ‘Julgmont soqm for the bott ia- torast of sald state, Lo sauio boing the landa horolnaf. tor doscriliod ; . Comstock, of eald Northorn Disltiot of Now Yotl, s therownor, arid holds thig (itlo of tho othor undividod half or moloty of the said lands and prenilsos, and haa, 1-\! groomant with nnid Asslgnoos, in ordor to facllia nid {ands, consontéd to ol and aonvey idod ot ax horatnbiar atatad. uns an horeinaftor statad. 1w 1a horoby givon thatwo, tha unda; oes, sagd undivi Now, thorofore, publio no- ned, {n purst R, and-wilh o8 s of sall, order and agroomont, A erodng, o Tih day of Jung, As D 1674, 8413 0'ofock at noon of thatday, at tho grain-waroliouse of Guorga 8, Tiiakosioo & Go, 16 thia Vllfu?-ol Bamenco, in tho Caun- tyof Tankakes Tilinols, oxpose for saio, and scll st publla anotion for tho higheat and bost prise tho sama wiil bring & the followlng de- the Townshilp of aud Btate of (fl& Bootion (i}, ul tod, In Homenc, ¢ Kaukakeo, Tisols, vis. ¢« Sootfon.qus (1, Seotion fry eluven {11), tho north half of Beotlon twelre forty scres describas I oaopt Bootln twelve; thu past half fhiroo (8), sll in Townshipa thirty (80) North, Rango olor- en (11) west of ‘Ilm socond priucipal meridian. and con- sald n talul 1,025 87.100 acres, more or lons, togethor with the {nlbrobamonts and appicienancos thiroutla Salongine: e (ormos of sald ax1é to b ono-hall onst on tho (nlly: ory St A do0d for tho samo; and tho blance fa eight rTatha. feom, the data of salo: to be sooured by wmart- Gago ur traav dead nn tho promiuos sold. 10, Blay i, 1674, DANIEL PRATT, difanlis 8. Sy Monps, Astignessof tho Poolos K Dopall sad Saviogs To- 5 of tho Stato ol Now York et W3t IT, COMSTOOK. INOTICE Ts_horeby glvan that an_ application will be mado hy e onaton Emplre Wowlag Maoline Gompany,” an locorsbration orgaizod uudar tao Iaws of te Statu Ul Haw Yotk laving fte chiof business ofiice at Tilon, Gounty of Horkimury N, Y., at & spocial to promo Court of the Hiais of Now Yor o A, Hardin, ‘Shambora of Hon. Goor ¥alle, said Oounty of Herkimor, o the S04 I faroc 161, o bl o'olock ‘sonn thoro. 3 a.1m,, or 83 after na counsol ‘ean bio heard, for, au ordor authorizing thomid {ncorgoration to susuino tbo corporate naie o “Romiugtan Sowing: Maching antpany. " Datod ac o, No Yo Mg My S i eaninamony » Presidont of sald Incorpuration, 108, RIOKARDBON, Attornoy, Tlon, N. V. FRACTIONAL CURRENG $5 Packages FRACTIONAL CURRENCY FOR BALE A% . TRIBUNE OFFICE." DRGAN BI§: | ND GON. . RAILROAD TIME TABLE, AREIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF TRATYY. FEXPLANATION OF JIRPERENCE MAnxs, -+ Saturds eontnd: v gand P R S0 S SR e il 128 MICHIGAN CENTRAL & GREAT WE.‘“’ o e, L S e and b Canatats, corner i Simfhons T ¥ Handolphy 2] Bafl {yia nain aud ole tino) Day Joxprons, -Al Night ICxpro GRAND IAIDR Mornin Night ENRY O, WINTWORTH, Gonoral Passonger Agent. CHICARD & ALTON HAILROAD. Ohicogo, Kansns City and Denver Short Line, eia Lauftt ‘ana, Ho., and Chicaga, Sprin ind 8, Louts Through fine, Unton Depot, Weat £ Al Diepaty bridge. _Ticket yices T Kannas Oty and Danvor Faat Iox. |* 1:04p. Ienuns Uity aprosy, i x 8t. Lonia BU uis An Lz, vin Jaol X 8:10p. my A T S5 e (! ' e I 3 o M. Jaliol & Dirigh Acvomnmodation, + 30 e s CHIPARO, MILWAUKEE & ST, PAUL RAILWAY, Iion Lepot, corner Maditon and Canal- 63 South Clark-at., opposite Sherman ilou D (5% Teave, Miwaukep, Madison & ifvaukos Madtson & Pralsls du Milkankee, GraqrTigy: iavane| 000 b 1100 m !;:"MI‘ Paul & A?{nnuwul o s LXDTORR. 400 ue. 130 &, m, [*4:15 p. m, Milwacksg, OrioR Tiay, Grevor] 00 ™ P - Lot vraire du ‘Uhlon, & i orthorn fowa, Mall, * ) e Miliwaukeo, 8t, Paul & 3l i olis, Niglit £ixpross, ... [t 0:80p m. |t §1d6 8 m, JLLINOIS CENTRAL HAILRDADY Depot footof Laliest. and Joat o7 Tieenty.sscondet. necy Tak Seamiotphatey near larky - recon bt Ticksd Teav, Arrivs, 8t. Laufs Tt &t Lo K 1 al "(a) Russ to Ubampalgn on Saturdays. | i CHICAGD, BURLINGTON & UINCY RAILROAN. Depots—Ltool af, Lake Indiana-av., anid Strteanthert,, and Canal and Siztsenihoste, - I¥chet ifices, No.09 Clark: at,, Grand P'aclfic Hotel, and at depols, Arriva, Tears, Batl and Expros,.i.. Quiawa aud Sieeator Dutiue & Stoux Uity Eap. Pucltic Fast Lino, for Omuli; Knuans Gty dnison & Bt foseph Kxp.. 1 CHICAGO & NORTHWESTERN RAILRDAD. CQlty afices, 61 Clarkeat, (Sherman-House), and 78 Conals sty corner Madidon-st Leav Arriea, @« Pacifio Fast Lin @ Lubiigquo Luy K aDubiiqug Night Fix. via Qlintoi aUmaba Night Ezpro a fvocnort & Dubuatia e ~ Pl Passongor.. 410300 . a—Dopot cornor of Walls and Kinzlo. —~Daopot corner of Canal and Kinzie W H. STENNETT - Gon, Pass. Agont. CHICAGO, ROCK.ISLAKD & PACIFIC RAILRDAD. Devol, corner of FanBuren and Sherman-ats, Tickst ofice, Grand Taclfio Hotel. Omaha, Loavonw'th&Atohieon Ex| P m. ‘thoreof upon tho same torms and gondi- 'as the southonst quartor of te | Poru Accommodation, Night Expross.. OCEAN NAVIGATION. NEW YORK TO CARDIFE," TuoSouth Walos Atlantle Stoamship tompany's Now 0a. m. W A, m. First-class, ¥ull-poworod, Olsde-bullt Bteamshins will il jrom Reanarivani Talsead Wasst, Jomar OL1: ot 4] U o) 6 » GLAMORGAN., Ju:?: l:l RO gih oods and passengors at through ratos fronx o Unitod Statos and Canada to ports in the Channal, and all othur polnts in Fngland. toamaliips, built oxprossly for tho trade, are pro-* 'vided with all tho latest improvemonts for the comfortand ‘convenience of B OABIN. AND STRERRAGE PASSENGERS. First Cabin, 675 and #80 currencs. Socond Cabin, 855 guerancy, Stéoraga, &30 ourroncy. Prepaid Steerago cortificates from Cardifl,... <83, Drasts for £1 and upwards, Yor fastiior partieulars, atiply In Cardit, ot the Com- ‘pany'a Oflices. No. I Daok Chainbars, and in Now -York to ANOUIBALD BAXTER & (0. Agonte, No. 17 Broadivar, STATE LINI. To Glasgow, Belfast, Liverpool, Londonderry, &e. BTATE OF DENNSXLVANIA: sl BTATE OF GEORGIALL “Jund i3 ' FROM PLER 38, NI Wookiy Bailin Cabin, i pats o TH RIVER, N. Y. noxt Suminer. & and $80 gold; Staerago, fny, Dynfts at Joirest eates. ply to AUSTIN BALDWIN £ ot , New Vork. JOHN'F. EARLE, Tacal Ageat, 0 Qlarkeat.. Clileago. Netional Line of Steamships. \ . WOTICE. qIhentostaontherly route has aliiaze hoon adoptod by s o0 and hondlands, Sk oo Now. ork for LIVIRPODL and QUENS- TOWN overy SATURDAY. & for London (direct) every fortaight. Ratos of prssngo; ll’}nw‘nl‘?y any llfiht o Lurthior pastio Clor Agouts, BB B0, 880, cuzronor; stooragu, at groaly roduced ratos. " Hatbrn tioketa at lowest ratos. “Draftsetor 1 aud vpvard, ¥, B. LARBON, Gen'l Wostara Arent, Northeast cornor Glatk and Randolph-ats, (0pposia now Bherman Houso), Ollcaito. "ANCHOR LINE. Yrom Now York to all patts of Great Isitatu, Troland, and Continental Ruropo avery Tuosday, ‘Thureday, un Saturday, CAMIN from trom %2 United Siatos Qurroncy, Sight Dlllll:.nl Jowost rates, Al gk Pl Rl EDUCATIONAL. PO g tst oLy LA D (PR o KEBILE SCEOOTIL, i BYRAGUSE, N. ¥, . ! [ hildy ll?r!‘:.uhu:v.lflg‘l:o& the KAV, . B HUNTINGTON, SRBS Bliop of Contral Naw Yark: Instruction co Deisca a Zhoreih logHiah cotirans tho Anolont and Ao e Lanaingia, Munlo.stig Deving. o Uost sehool et il ponmsuco an Wedgonday, Ropt. 18, Lor Cireu- fa ACKBON, Syracuso, N, Y. s apply to_- MARY J. . TDWANDS FLAGE RONOOL TOR BOYR AND 1 poine, mon, Buokbrideo, Maas., Lostus I il T B B e Bltiattio Roitiol by Baviese: Motets: HOREMAN & FLAGK. Assuciato Principal BITTERS. PERFLECIION! BOKERS BITTERS. Reware of Counterfeits. PIT . EHS The Colebrated Gyrman Pilo Olutmont fa now offorod for snlo for the firet timodin Obiengo, A cure warrautad {wail oascs. Pricy Ono Dullara fox, " Lelncipal Duoor 61 Canal-st, (basumont), J, 1t WHITE & 5O, Property Owners, Aftention! Until 18th fnat, ‘Vax Sale Cartificatos held by the City ot Chifangn oau bo fodusiuel sE 10 ot cuat, promiui, alar whiol dao tha ratu will o ngtanesd to 2/ par cunt, IERTIES, Gl Bomprrottor. Outoano, ApritL, I — PROFESSIONAL OARDS, “ SUGULD FAIL & [ SUBULD AL o rand | Yonrs Amung (s Aflicto od fran sands X Thlety Looturon, espacimilyto ¥ diliveryd Dotorethe OHIOAGO RDIAL IS H LU Blco'20 cyaw bost il Ouloe, THT Warhiuiton cago; Canauitatlon, frou 3 Bravided with honrd and rooris, - 00 T o NO.CURI! D NO PAY!! Kean, 300 s0UTIL (:L.\lll(-l;'l y Il;‘llll(Ml-‘-(l. by d, unall; . f el B e o DI d K A only physician in tho olty who warrants 8 OF 0. D3y, "Ohfow Boure, U s 10, 108 et Siiidaye (rom 9 io i, DI RN, 180 Van R A ronloy Norvus,. & Dis et e s o] am 8y enl Wor 1 b pasd 6 §d¥en, un'?:.unf:ninluh Ith great syocees, Ty vt B YT the oty pidalclan n he ohy syttt e, i ol it ) , Do baman it Shatdanttu, aveuts tronted ata diss

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