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. P . ; i ; THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: MONDAY NOVEMBER 16, 1874 e e s A B P e A SRS S S NI SRS S | nothing of tho unseon word, and they ean only imit 1 o 1 1 o win tho Divino npproval for whnt they aro doin; mon, they built up n now life with itin (hoso 3§ EAL ESTATE. ; NTED==] THE PULPIT, o e L S ot St and it Tangungo and. follg oly o tho most oo Uhoy” et ok i il ot 1" to i aboty e by wiro ool anrot nld, ahd Wfifimmmfiwm W%EW%‘E% s onwiapplog the young and , whothor | - | thelr lifo nlong thene nartow lnes, Just ns i | frioudsnip as porpetual ag tho stroke of tha w arblo:fron Parkony, B rs, Clorks, &a, 1t coma frotn nn oxeromo acloncd whioh trion 0 | ernd ' pose ey o REont Cathiallo axen Rl | Hiattors of Tuith o b oloarle 1inat, ‘son mains | Tooet o, (o rbory o St Bvor apali g | Taraiyos sl pey wwbimironk bunes YL ek, ANTED-ONIE OIt TWO KNURORTIO sATns. Modern Christianity Whanting in Pathos, Profi Swing’s Sermon on This Intor- csting Topic, Tobort Collyer ou the Right Use of Monoy. How Mammon i\my Bo Mado to Praiso - God. Sumncr Ellls on tho Power of o Good Life. HRISTIANITY WANTING MODERN 0 AT HOS, i Hervion Yesterdny at . the e Fourth Chareh. Trof, Swing preached yosterday morning, tak- ing na big test: Josus wapt.—John, i, 35, ‘Lhis least of alt veraca in the Dible w{ll bring ‘beforo us a themo which I have Jong desired to shpgeat to your thought,—that our cwmirent Curistinouy {8 wantiug in patbos, Led by now timos, now places, pow customs, religion scoms to be moving awany from the loving, rojoleing, ‘ond weeping spirit, and taking up its abodo in the balls of disoussion, or in the porchof philoa- opbiv, Busy In gathering up the morals and ductrines of Jesus, we all scom willing to forgot that o wept, that eroat waves of sorrow rolled in His heart. In its disoriminating work, in its great task of ifling truth from orror, our ago Las, perbaps, been compelled to moglect tho omotlonal eido of its own religlon; and, against tho charge of nogleoting this bean- tirul nud vseful sido, it may woll plosd tho pres- enco and pressure of othior ruhfzinnu duties, 1f it hos ovorlooked tho tears of Clirint, it feols that it uid B0 becaues it was 8o deoply engaged over Ilis phi.osophy. Iuall our remarks to-day, and thoughite tuo, let us: not fird fault with ‘our times, and, instead of being mtudonts, Leoome only complaining sauls ; but let us simply look at tho attitudoof ourago as to the pathetio In religion,—look not that wo may scold, but that we may learn and may amond. No age can cairy along all the forms of truth, and beuuty, and gooduces at onco, Its arms cannot grasp so large a lond, The great world of pivilization is nover moved forward in ono magd, bub it i takten to pioces by the wandoring human beings, sad, whilo ono goneration is Bwing's carrying along the lnw or tho agriculture, an- othor orowd I8 following afar off with the ans, or tho sciences, or tue luxuries. The spring of all motion iy found i & kind of enthusinsm that Lolongs to tho soul, and, ns enthusiasm slways fastons itaclf upon only one objeot at a timo, and honco pursios o_bariow path, sny given ago will this bo found pursuing I8 own uarrow way, Whilo the lomans loved law and con- uost, tho Gieeks loved art; and, whilo somo amu land was mad ovor games, o fourth land was porhaps waling up to o zeal in raligion, Not only are tho worke of man too great to be carried forward atl at onco, bnt there has slways been o dilliculty in the way of uations as to tho works of tho iutelloce nnd tho soutiment: ono petiod botug ablo to obuy only the intellect, snother only the heart. Thus, while Gormany sud Englang bavesought out and loved doctrines of religicn, France aud Italy bave caved less for the dootrines, but much for tho emotivnal pare of Chustiauity, Thus, society is a partiat actor, loving this to-day and vegleciing or hatiug that, and, to-morrow, being ready to chisugo, aud love what it once dmsgiuod. or dospise what it had loved tenderly. No individual, 1ising up in the firat contury or the ninntcm‘l. flnds tho com= pleto Clristianity auywhero around him, but finds only what the times in their partiahity snd weake wvess were able to approciate and appropriate. Thus it comes to pass that the religion of Ialos- tino was all aglow with forvor aud scutimont, while the toligion of Scotland has always been full of philosophy and reserve, hego gouoral omarks will fraparo us to bo- liove that i our own land aud age wo aro not eecking or onjoylug the wholo of religlon, butb are chorishing &b Amerioan part of it, and aro fullof egotism over tho supposed possession of & universe when we are ically poor, and, in- stead of Lolding a world complote, are tho tn- habitants of only s small farm. It appoars that tho Christianity of our day and couatry s full in the vtudy and love of prin- oiple, but is quite deficient in” pathos aud spir- itunl tendetnces, We all gathor up tho maxims of Jesus, but do not pause long nor ofton over tho scous outlined in tho toxt. I'he Clrist of our ago ig a tlanking, nota woeping, Christ. But tho Chust of the early Church was tho Jesus that wept. Henco all tho old galleries aro full of tho piotures of Clrist ns crowned with thorns, or as weeping in the gardow, or ay heiufi placed in the tomb, 1t is to bo hope that oo present or future ago will roturn to the whola gloum and melancholy of somg of tha past centuries, but it is ulso to bo hoved thatno time, pregont or futuro, will got away from that quantity and quality of melancholy aud sorrow that actually belonga to human life and rohgion, Uabiappy day when the weoping aud dying Chriat shall céuse Lo be impressive, end nothing shall romain but Christ as a divine philosopher ! "'here aro sovoral ronsons why it might have ‘been anticipatod of our nge thai it wouid becomo cold aud meutal in religion rather than touder and tearful and spuitual, ‘irgt—The raco that firet came to this Jand was a roco of bran rathor thau of heart, The Northern races Lave never beon children of soctry and soutiment, but of intollect, ‘I'ho noment you pass the northern confines of Ttaly snd Frauco you begin to move sway from omo- tion, nnd toward the thinking facultics; and our ancestors, comibg from tho nowthorn paralicls, brought with them plenty of intellect, life and pow= eor, but not wuch emotion. They brought u deluge of lnws and doctrines—laws that regulated every mation of tho body, nud each evont of lifo—lawi about sunday and Monday—Ilaws about food and driuk, courtship and marriage, and about tuo lan- guage to be usad, and even about the hour of retiring at might. And next to tbis detuge of lnws came tho greas flood of Church doctriues— & flood not clear, but wido and deup, Bicond—Noxt Lo thig bed boginning camo tho influenco of nbsorbing practical atfais, Wo becsmo a nation of most elavish workmen. ‘There waa no reet for anybody, for a nation way to po carvad out of » unvage wildowmess, and homes and comforts had to be formed out of a bleak wilderuoss, Such & nation of actual toil- ers had nover bofors appeared upon oarth, sud it sy ono will comparo the Americs of the 1l grima with {bo America of to-day, ho will cou- fews that work the most stupondous bas boon done. - But tho eflcot of thoso two centuries of Linrd toil hag been cortainly to make us a pructi- cal peaple ; and louce to make Chiistianity Le- ‘come sirong in its practionl sido, strong in Its law ond philosophy and most rosl iduss, Duy what is the meanlug of strongth in this dopart- nont ? It [mpifes weulnoss apon tho sido of the nore epiritual, aud the fess visblo, Tuis iui- ncneo dovelopment of the practicul implies a aogloot or decline of tho imagination, ah oxaltas sion of the Clirist who tauglit above the Clrist #ho wopt. = Wo liave all become sshamod of so much of zoligion oa reiatos Lo heaven, aud to orowns, and barps, and tho bleased compunionehip of tha enints hore and horenfior, sud axo proud of it only us & h:mytllo Of wiso procents and vagua 0x= ectatlon, The porpetust hard work of our land s evidently olipped the wings of ita funcy, and it scems all untitted for socing Abrabum’s mys- tico! city when it journoys, qr Jacob's vision when it sleops. To Lo a thue symmetiical Origtian, imagination that can logk Lavoud, and see the domces of Taradia, that can rise above tho dust of this flat earth and look aver poarly fiawn and poo immortol fluwers, that can livo oyond theso months and seo unnumbored years away from this comotory of the doad,—ihfs im- agination is needod moro than one uceds tho forms and bistory of a thourand dogmas, Lt tho long, toiling, practical years of our land hava warred aganet all things which tho aye eannot #0o or tho hand touch, and have left us the possessors of o roligion which resemblos n satuto book more that Abrahum's faith or Bt, John's raplure, Zhird—"To theso two influcnces, race and Iakor, wo must udd o lhinl, mora poworful than thio othor Lwo combined, ‘I'hie uge has bocome «skoptionl and matbomatical, For ronsuns which wo could not enunorate liore, ovon if we know thomn sll, our ago realizes littie boyond our avory day horizon, aud sits down {n doibt where our fathers advanced in full assurance, 1loavon {8 not o uch & reality as s possibilty, o ravo iy not & gatewsy ut all hours, but'an end, [housauda and tous of thousnuds havo ottlad down 1uto the determination that thoy will only wait aud 800, As for tho presont, thoy know constriok n universo without a tiod, or comes fiom an oxtremo thoology whioh constrnoiy n untvoreo by means of o dishonorablo Ctod, hore is tho cloud of distimet. nn nadenmablo seality, Novw tho fleat thing in religion which falls a viotim 1o shoptiomn I8, of oonrae, 1ta loss real, lcea visible olomanty. Its casumstry, its procopts, its ocnsciouco, ite faith and love, ulnml Torth in ‘Doanty, for thoy aro toundod upon the elniplost dotatos of renson; amd lienco tho Christ standr, po fur o8 t1o i3 attached by history and assoclas tlon, to theso ; but tho crose, and tho grave, and 4ho roswirootion anffer becanss tho ovidouco bo- peath those idens is Jess questionable. Henco, Ohuist a9 w tenchor is loved, but rho Jesus who wept fulls mote and moro juto shadow, Whab suffors most in a skoptical nge is all thnt 1a poot= ic, ponuive, or mystorjous; that wich is enrthly oo flourishos best, From a flower-garden ro- ligion falla bacl into n desert, just oy Jong-drift- ing kands have mado tho ouco rieh Puleatino dreary waste, Undor thoyo throo inflnonces an orlgianl race that Lrought only intellect, labor that’ inangur- nted tho naterial and prao-lenl, and au ern of slktop.Jelsm which doubts all boyond ita fuot, ro- ligion hny lout & grent woalth of koutiment aud pathos whioh sot forth with 1t {n Hs morning, and whicl Is inseparable from its groatnoss, Tias luts {u viciblo, not only in the hves wo sce and wordy wo liear to-day, but more vixiblo whon wo look into the words and livea of tho past. Lo sormons of pust nges wero largoly wndo up of tho puthos ‘of rohglon. Thoy came sbort in logicul forco ay our age comos short fu ailection 3 but, a8 for pnthos, it was the quecn of all tho old eloquenes, ‘Tho pulpit orator would desctiba tho cruclilxion ln all jts details; bo would jnvite his audionco to seo the rude pieces of woud, to watch tbig soldier ruu for uale, that one for Topes, that ono tor the bammoe Joft o litto bo- yond rench, and thon would bid thom soo tho vichim grasped by rude bands, and lnid down, and bound, and naited 1o tho 1astrament of tor- ‘ture aud denth, Traces of this proaching must have beon still In_tho woild whun some of the oldest of Lhig audienco were young, but thoy havo all passed away fiom tho horizou of tho Churel, Wo do not rogrot that tho samokind of pathos, 8o full.aftan of tha horrible, bus censied to oxist, but'what wo noto s thnt thoe wholo world of tho emotional has sunk and faded too complotoly, and hoa made room for & domnm of thought nesther 8o beantiful vor any moro true. Ir you will take down the scrmons of Isanc Watts you will bo surprised at his thomes, ** 'Cho Judgment Day," “'Tho Wicked Soul SBurprised in Death,” “Tae Christian Dywug in Peuco " ; theso aro tho atylo of subjocts that dolightod and intorested tho multitudo in his day. ‘Tho great change thut has come, line como not to tho pulpit aloue, but totho biraud all publio eloquonco. Tho words of the bar are almost wholly confinail tological statcwonts of the most forma! kind, tho patbos uud poetry of pust times having boen almost wholly elimiuated, not the leatning of the now gonoration any more than by its coldness. Noither of theso groat professions can bo held respousiblo=for tle change, for they s1d themeolves only tho oron- tures of the age, doing what the public demands aud what some invistule spirit ordots them to do, Limotion can bo withdrawn from tue bar with leas injury or violenco than must attond its wito- druwal {rom roligiou, for the luw dopends little upon imagination or sentimont in reality ; hence tho era of practical sonso and of logio may actuslly add to this profossion on ono side what it steals from anothor, but not o with roligion, Imagination aud all the cmotionsl part or tho soul I its iudispensable ally, sud nothing logie can bring to tho putpi or pow will atouo for the abyence ot this clicf. ‘I'o sowic windy 1nagination s kuown only ng & power that fubricates, that furnizbes us with taisehoods fustead of truth ; but, inktend of such o nugsion, the primo oflice of that fuculey is lo help us i tho tolds that lie beyond our fect. 1t iy by Imaginution tho fether fooks back o lis boylioud, aud that the youth luoka onmward to mauhood, It was by [mngmation that Wobsier was onabled to lovk to tho luiure of our countiy and Boo the last setting san shining upon a dag unrout, sud upon Staies ono and iukoparable, The astronomer must iuvoke this power to cnablo himto seco tho sters all moving iu their orbits, aud to renlize tho greatnoss of the umiverse ho loves, The logical fuculty alone is the coldest and deadest of all things, and would not make u slatesman, nor evou o weologist or an astrono- moer. 1ow then ean Christiunity escapo declive or oven oeath v au age wodde:d to tho slato sud nn;zcn?ux buginess, and to skepticism in Chuiuti- nity IBut wo nocd no longor dolay over the stato- meat of thecase. Whu caso secms clear, and wo cau only ray that it s the misfortune of our day that it does pot love the spirtual sido of religion. ho Unilarinn or Broad Cliurch Jovoa tho philogophy of Chriat, tho oxamplo of Christ; the hboral orthodox churches lave tho carainal doctrines of the Gospol ; while the extra otthodox love ueithor of theso d:mgn, but deep- ly love themeolves and tbeir dogmas, withiout 10gacd to quality or quantity ; but ull of us aliko Leop anny from the pooiry, aud melancholy, and Joy, and patuos of that roligiun whose teurs foll all tho way from Jacob to Mary Magdalon, Christisnity is based upon the sulemuitios of lifo, and upon its coming agonicy, too, Without tho pageautry of doat, aud Lo Judgmont bo. yond, withous the vision of the myriad souls of earth tising to ium_mrtulmfi, leaving bobind them their sns and - griofs, Christianity 18 nothing ; tho Bible {s only s compilution of ‘sucial ethica, Bat the momeut tho mind yiclds to the mysteries of tho gruvo and futurity, tho rehigion of Christ rises up in all 18 magniticent propostions, and iy not au othics but o resurcection and & poindise, ‘Lho words **Josus wopt” are tull of instruc- tion to our age. No ago over needed 80 much tboro tears. Thoy ought to fall all ovor our land to eofton the hearts of all us busy ones, and hulq us gco tho sccnes which dimmed those oyos 0 long sgo. For that great Son of Man did not weep without a cauwe, and pot for a writling cause. Thoro 8 mothing the words of Curlst, nothing 1n His lifo, tuat showed any woak routimentality. 1nall his days, from tho fivst ono to that last ono on the eross, nothing is visiolo but o heroism nbove all kuowu to men, Houoo this weeping was ouly a purt of that great grasping of numan soiro'w heco aud horos artor tha showed itsolf all slong in_the sympa. thy sud preciousnoss of Hiy lite. Io cams not a8 tho prince of philosophy, or artLor oloquonce, orany worldly pursuit, but as tho studout or teacher of Lifo and Douth, AxSt, John stood ou Patmos and saw 0o lougor the earth of the Crosn1s, but sasw the groat spectaclo of lifo aud doatl, heard the groat thunders of wrath, and maw also tho poariy gates, 8o Christ, in o sub- limo way, saw not tho wotld's riches, or honors, or pleasures, but bolield instead tho groal phe- nomons of vin and virtuo, grief nudlfn" out. epread over the career of men, enco the toars by the dead Lazarus and in tho Gardew, and tho sorrowfut Leart at sll times, ‘t'he forgivencss whioh o flung out right and loft, the gatboring up of littlo childron in Hiy arms, the benedletions upon the Mount, all ssem to lnvo come from Ilis wido grasp of life's mys- tery, whon children should go from parcuts, and friond from friend, when two should bo rinding in the mill, and tho one bo taken and he other left; from s realization of Lo duy wheh rich and poor, high aud low, should lie down In tho great sloop, Whou the mvord and scepter rust § Whon the matron aud the puid, Tu ouo aliout bed are Jald ; Whou the vassal uud thio King Bldo by side Ho withering, To tuls Clist, enrth wag not as to us,—n mar- kot-place, . or o palace of ploasure, or a swoet Lowe; but it was o dissolving scous,—= greay army marching sloug through su iron gato whenco none could gvor return, Tue tonrs, and words, and oross of Olrist ate founded upon the tomb und future of man, Now, theso thiilling facts which filled with tears the oyes of this Nazarona remain to-day in il their lnipressivoness, 'Cho human family hug not coesed goiny to tho tomb, As sutumn leaves fall, so the human heads that wore warm sud full of frioudalup yostorday go to-day by myr- indu to tho low carth, empty of love and hfo, All that over drow toura from any ono re- wmains to invite us o woop. Tho myatory of denth, snd of joy or sorrow nfterward, lins undaergone 10 chango siuco that group bowed over tho tomb of Lozarus. In a few years wo aball ali bayo gonw from this oarth, 'Tie places thoveof shall kuow us uo more, ''ko hums where you wore loved, tho streots whoro you walked, your placa in tho suuctuary, will know you no moro. Ll econo aver which Josus wopl is a orpotual secue, aud Lo wept not simply bucanso i’.uzurun sy thus asloop, but becauso in that gravo was mirrored the culamily of tho huwmun 1 ca. mbur era of hard logio {s goad for much, Itis sopurating tha triie from tho falso, tho whout from the chafl, aud is bursing tho ehutl with unquonchable fire. It is compeling Romauism and Protestuntism toresinte their doetrines, und rojoct tho fulse, Bub so far as it goon boyond thiy, nud wakes tho beast doubt the jntungible, and ronders tus noul too eold to fill tho melan- choly of this rhoro, and its joyful hopo Lao, it makes povr amend for the old erodulity wileh olnuu'gnlhumd tho truo and falko juto ouo groat slical, . Roliglon is comploto only to Lim who to its cethica wud dootrines cav add its solomn mystos- des, and not fosr to make thoma thume of thoughe whon aloue, snd couverss with his fol- low-mon, It in wbnolutely an evil of our timon that thoy rojoct from Lgought the wounderiul, opulations, young aud old, vieh and poor. into t| mlr chiurghies, and closo to tho altars, not by tho power of lnw alone, but by the powor of soutimant, which nxpwnscl\ itaolf not only 1 raintings nnd architecuro aud musie, but 1 all tho splendors of the Chriet as IIo lved and drod and aroso for them, Learning reaches ont afow, Logio alono charms only the world's olect 5 but tho beant{tul and pathetie ara for all aud for the gond of all, And our Amerlenn re~ ligion will nocomplish its great miesion when it sbnll, by honsos of worshin built for all, ana by o religlon of Jovo and rvmpnthy understood by all, atd by eong and friendship folt I.{ all, bo- came, ko 'ita Chilst, n most woudetful Liondiug of truthiand affection, of wisdom and teara, My frionds, trust not your own ago implicitly ; 1t is'not earrying along ‘tho wholo of Ohristinn- ity it mx\¥ botray yo. Hee toit, ench for him- solf, that its logio shall not pluck the flower wronths from tho cross ; that the coldnoss of selence ahall not blind you to tho march of death bealdo us and lLefore us, and denden the enr to tho music soundiug boyoud tho tomb, gt THE DIGAT USE OF MONEY, Scrmon by the Rev. 1tobert Collyery of Unity Chwreh, Tho Rov. Tobert Collyer preached yestorday moining, taking a8 hiy toxt ¢ Yo canuot sorve God aud mammon,~—Matthew,vl,, 2, I wau called not long ago to perform rervice in tho lino of my minfsiry at & placoin tho country 1 hind hoard of as wo hear of a thousaud pinces to which wo nover give asecond thought. Somo years before this, I bad been over tho gronnd whon {t was what you havo all scen many a timo within a fow milos of our city, a tract of Innd Lalf marsh, holf prafrle, with hero and thoros shanty on it, o lot of Lalf-wild cbildten sbout it, and cattlo and a man snd woman of tho samo typo, tho father and mother of tho children, boaten out in their battle with the harsh and evil wildernoss, and gradually lelling whatever touch of liuman dignity théy might have brought from Ireland or Gormany slip out of tho habit and purposa of thelr life.” But on this Baturday afternoon, to my wonder, I found overything changed; old things hiad paesed away, all things Lad beoome now, Whore tho wildorness was a fow years sgo I fonud n town ombowered in summer firuoncr_v. tho etaguant wators druinod away, wido streets planted with maples, cot- tages and manrious standing onch in their own gu rdon, echools, and the embryo of s collego; churches fr more then enough rs yot for tho population ; & post-ofiice, stores, aud a railroad, which nade tho folks as near nolghbors to the whole world an it ja possiblo for any of us to bo ot our particular point of this groas oarth, And, asking after still moro intimato I{nulculnm, 1 founa that thego pooplo, with hardly an excep- tion, held the titlo-deeds to their bomes, aund ware paying for thom a fow dollars at s time; Just avout 23 much perhara as their ront wauld amount L [n tha city, togethor with the ovorplus of spending to no purpose most of us aro tomited iuto in this vast maclstrom of extrava~ ganco and folly, jn order to appoar as well os our noighbors, Yery much delighted with this change, as you may well believe, 1 inquired of the friend who wont with mo how it wl came about, and be told me, You know such aud such _men, ho said, how shrewd they are and wiko, and sure to muka mouey whon thero is any to bemado; thoy saw how this waa o good place, for masuy reusons, for a suburoan town. Thoy cwmmno out here and bought up tho tract at o prico which neemod a fublo of good fortuno to tho orginal holdors, who went nway to ottle whero land is cheap, Then they laid out thoir town in a really gonor- oux way, for real cstaio - men atiracted this men there, and that man got n echool started, helped to' build o charcl, made in- torest for o post-offico and a station on tho railvond, worked alt day, and aat up nights to mako their vonturo u great succesy, and go at last it fs what you seo; rod they will finally mako a forlune, for (hat all the timo of courso Is what they are attor, aud thoy will deserve what tbey make, for in this thing certdiniy thoy Lavo sbown {homsclves menorous and highs winded mon, who, by their Linins and eapital, have made it casler for avery ono of us to peb u howmo of our own,with nll these advantages, than we could have hoped to have, I supposoe, in uny othar way. They huve engincored the whola thing, bo eaid, wisely and woll, aud this is their reward. I know of a placo again, far nway in tho heart of Yorlehire, butlt wp within my momory by o man who, when [ was a lad, was doing o very small bucinesy in wool. He was employing wool-combaors, who would do the worle 1 their own homes, snd spinmng and weaving it in n limited way in a factory not far distanti but after a time it was found ho had gone abend avu ‘mndfi moucy eaough to strike out w o new fash- ou, So ho bought land on which he could carry out his iden, built a great fuctory of a wonder- ful perfection and beauty, and then gradunily built a town about 1it, togethor with cotfages, stores, o lyceum, a library, and a church, so lovely to look at that when o were about build- ing outs on this coraer, I gob photographs of ir, boping it might impress you as it had improssed me, 50 (hat wo might copy it, and set it up ia our city for a sermon in stone. ‘That littlo fuctory-town is o moael to all En- land of il the oright cheary comfort und clean- 1o that can bo pneked into such a placo, aud of nielligenco, sobrioty, aud thnft. Tho workmen —aro the frionds of (he greut sterling man who Lias drawn them about him; Liis braiv is at thewr servico for guidance, and Liy Lunds for belp; and whon thoy are o0 old to werd, if meanwhile thoy have not been ablo to savo a competence, he caios for them until they dig, or, if thoy fall by a premature douth, ho talos caro of tho widows aud children, and whon 1o dies himwelf, ns I have been told, ho will have hig bones laid near thewm ju o soparate part of the church he has built, _whoro, if " wae still keen track of our work, as I hopo we do, when God calls us Lo our rest, tno busy noisos of the mills, tho porpetual passing of Luman feot, the church- guing bell and the sonnds of praso and prayer will pervade tho silenco in which his dust i sleoping, and, lot us bope, will siill be an elemont of gladnoss to hin spirit in tho bot- ter life. Mecauwhile, this man 8 growiag rich in this grand, wood servico; hig monoy comes buck to him in n perpetual wcreaso, 1fe could not ba poor in that “seuss it ho tried, becauss it would Le o sbamo und & @n to hun, and a sign that ho was coming down from his high place; that bo was pove erty-stricken in his own nature,~-not tho old, Btrong, wike mag any more, but the mera sbadow of the man who las dono this poeileas work for himgolf and for thuse about Liw, & man above most others in the goulus for makivg mouey, and then for turnlug it to n great ac- count, A friond of mino again wont, eomo years aro, to a groat morchant to got somo monoy for n good purposo, After somo talk about this pur- buko, tho morchant said, * I want to toll you a story. A gaod nnuy years ago,” owsid, ' I fouud I was growing very rich, but, at the same time, vory uncasy in my mind. I would go about the™ city overladen” with care, and lay awake uights thwlang about my ships out at rea woudoring whether they were wafo, and what the result of {ho pusssgo wonld be, aud so it went until one night as I'was tossing on my bed the iden dawned upon we that my brain way getting heavy, and tho channels of my hifo over~ cloggod with gold (for tho older mombors of my cungregation will romember that gold uked actu- ally to be the circuluting modium uud the honest tolion of so wmuch real worth hero in Amerien). I rose naxt morning, looked ovor my afluiis, found out how I stood, and how some groat charitios and other things stood in my city, and boforo noon thatday I hud done two thinge, I had iven away $20,000, and registored a vow thol ay ong as I lived I wonld keen my wealth down to o curtuin modorate measure, which I folt I could easlly carry, aud from that day my load way liftod, care took to heruol! wings and flow away with the riches, Now lot us koo what yourshuro will be of thio wonoy I uiust give wway this yonrs and, turning to u privato book in which he Iu'spl this curfous account, coneluded about so much wag coming to my friond ; ho made out a eheclk for the amount, and told lnm to cume again whenover o had so good an errand, And those things camo tome as I fried to as- cortain whoro tho luos really run Letweon theso Kingdoms of Gtod and Muminon, of which Jesus opeaks [n tho toxt, And in what way lue{ muy differ from thoso wo draw from {he merdian of tho moetiug-house, low wido they mav bo snd fair for the true servico of God m comparison with our narrow cancoptions of thom, founded us wo think on the ‘I)riucllzlcu laid do by our Diving Teachor, aud so how mauy men who are uorely sorving Mawmou neeording to theso con- coptions, mmy indeod all the while bo consciousty or unconsciougly serving God, and may win Hig Wyvoll dono " porhaps for thewr doed whon (hoy would uot Liope to win it for their Intention, a8 Jous in anothior placo telts us how o will sy to multitndes who, on their own conteusion, buve never thought of 1ljm in conncotion with what they they wore dolag, * Qomo ye blossed of my Yawher, inhorit tne liquoul pm])-rnd Tor you from thio foundation of tho world," Tov thero id something pitiful and sad to me hoyond oxprossion {n tho way men narrow,down this nervice of God i this dircctlon o8 e ovory otdier, sud try to sLow bow vory few cau Lopo to &y thin ehibboloth, and sh worship and obsory- auco must conform to thole rubrica and rites, so fu tho conduct of lifo_ you must do this, and you must not do that, and 1 Duriness this and not that must bo your mo- tive power, or whon you como to the great nc- connt you will find yout hove to hoar the eentenco, without hope of “appeal, **Dopnrt yo curseu Into ovoria-ting fire,” It i8 pititul aid sud, I say, when It oumos to this, in auy way, by whicls thio usunl Christinn teachivg will Jot us come lo Qod, beennao 1t leavoy 1im o cirenmeoribed aud hclp‘cau m I own unlvorso, oives Him euch o poor ehance at ITis own children, aud, on a theory which canuot bo tru#, that ail this 18 of His own ordination, makos Iun ny nerrow aud fulonso a bigot In 1lis grout wido honvens as any one of those who think they do 1lim rorvice in showivg erthar that those heavens aro nol great and wide at all, or elao that when Ho makes up His jowgls Ha cannot Liave n vory onviablo colloction, Weo do not cousider it auy proof of the greatnoes rud worth of & stennbon lino whon half their ships go down w mid-Atloutio or are broken up on rocky whores, Wo sctour ool on it 1f we can, aud crush it out. Wo did not weep when the Jast Napoloon lolt Lis _tbrone, after drauging iy groat Bupiro down into sbamo - in tho " lows of oo bls armics and his capital. Wodo not glvo that farmer the gold medal who shiowa us a farm ono-balf weeds, aud stock ono-lisif ruuts, or the minister honor and osteow who, aftor twonty yoars of preaching, openy bis church doors, and rovonls o congrega= tion stilokon with sbirilual piague and doath, or tho futher nud mothor who lot alf their clildren go at lost into gambling bolls and brothicls, About all these things we como to clear couclu- sions. Wo trace tho rhamo and sin home to those on whoso shouldors the govorument sostu, aud yob whou mon prove worse uuuin than auy of thoso 1f taclr promises nre true about tho ways which load to Lol and loaven, thoy call Iim in whoso hunde are tho issues of lifo and death the Moat oly a woll as the Most High, and imagiue thoy honor IIim as we canvot who try to sco and to say that Ho has given the linos of Hlu servico » vaster and widor swoep, and that wheto our rea- son taily, and our fuith and even our rovelation, s meroy ondursth furever. No, when you return to tho toxt, and try to futarpret it in this Inrgo aud Llossed light of the inclusiveness of thawervico of God, you can sco witls what n wealth of sorvica wo can sorve Ihn i the right use of our wealth, so that, whila if must reain forover truo that wo cannot sorve God and Mammon, it may bo just as true that wo can mako Mammon help us to serve God in some bettor way than we sould kopo for wera its power never put into onr Lauds; or, as I have sold ohieady, wo may sorvo 1lmn thjongh our vory love of Mamumuon, If wo try to srike certain sreat and wholesome laws and tondencios whicly are on the mde of hfe agaiust death, Tuke thoso men, for ustance, who bavo twid out that suburban * town wo saw just mow, by wlich hoalthy and plessant Lomes aro starteil in thousunds, 1f ‘you tako all these towns together, rolieving the appailing pressuro toward tlio coutro by wlich the life tn gront citios1s kept down to zero, giving tho small childron o chauco that dio in July and August i this city, o8 if tho pestilonce that wulkoth su dsrkuess bud como: homes where fair morals ecan “maintain their ground and grow to grace and purity, becauso they are not overshzdowed by drinkiug-saluons and other ovil places, aud whers men ara lou on to spare and suve when Loy mghtspend to their burt, because the prospecs 18 forever betoro thom of thot Lossession the American Leart prizes abovo oll otliers,~n Lome of yonr own, and o dooryard, Cowpare & movement liko this with that of the man whou packs bis dwell- ing# as closo nu they can stand, Lides thom in yards nnd aolloys, aod crams them trowm collar to gamrot Wwilh human bewgs, so 88 to got large wvouts; lots tho draing tako cnro of thewrolves, cuts down all deceucies, and will not give o lusliel of quicklime for the spring cleaning, 'Theso two clusses of men muy euch bo bent on makiog a fortune, and thero mey be litle difference v tho genersl tonor of their motives outwuard or inward, Yer thoso sorve God and tacso Mamunon mn theso two ways beeauso this man s ou the side of life, and that of deuth ; oue iy for good, and the other for ovil, for avuy down in tho heart of each an - stinct hins beew allowed to lead this man out to a large, gonorous, wholesowe way of moncy-mak- ing by which ulf Lus feliows aro ultimately guin- ey, whilo tho other has foltuwed a uarrow aund grovoling iustinct which has resulted juct the other way. It is uot, therefore, & quostion so far bebweon those two wen in tho Jive between God nud Mamion, which has attouded church regularly, or reluted the most poworlul experi- cuce, of Pmd most money for tho support of the Gospel, or given most in privato cauritics, or founded s s¥nagogue, or deoked au alear, It is a_prial question af good: aud_evil reching far boyoud ull theso things, good as thoy may be. A few years ugo the Dean and Cuapter of ‘Westminster Abbey beld a vastsmount of house- progerly in Tondon, which was fuund on fu- quuy to bo much of it unlly for human babita- tion, sud sowe of it reuted for the most hideous purposes to whieh o houso can be put, becauss more meney could bs wado that way thau iu latling tho to wholsowo and decent peoplo. Ang, when I was i Loudon, Bir 8ydney Water- law Look mo to goo » great model “dwelliug ko Bud buile iu the very Loart of thoso feaifully crowded noighburioods you find overy- whero at the Lust End, o grand fre-prouf Llock, in which for a very muderato vent iu- dedo s fuunly could havo & nico homo with every convenionce, ay clean and wholosumno a8 anything can bo iu that at- mospliere. Now, tho Dean and Chaptor sre at tho lioad of the most honored churen in Greab Butain, ‘Lheir sorvices and soimous are won- derful to hear aud sce, and Sir Sydnoy Waterfasw at that time was going to u litile meeling of ** Covenuutors,” heretics of tho most ungues- tioued Lrund. Ho was and is, also, o keen, wibe busiuess man, who makes mouoy and Leeps sud spends it like a lord 1 should sy, if I know of n Jord to equal bit, aud ho built that block,as lio to!d me, for n good averago investmont, and was gotting what lo atarted for, Yot who shull doubt whora the line Is to bo drawn of tho ser- vice of God and Mammon between the Leretio and the grent Instorio church in thia matter, or who will say that tho service of CGod is with those who say most abuus if, and Lnve tus religlous, world on thewr side. 1t lies witll the man wio,soelug ths last of his childron siokand in prison in theso hullsand hovels, took bus wealth, out of which ke etill moaut o got his own again, and went and ministored to them in this Inige, wise way, compelling Mawnion to wsorve God too. 8o once nioro » man lite Titns Salt grows rich In business as o manufacturer aud merchant, gives his lifo to buildiug up a place like Saltairo, tisinks of his business by day and dreaws of it by night, aud is mora fortunate than some I kiiow of if tho thought of it does nou eteal in sometimes among the sermons and prayers on Buudoy. And he kuows the value of a pound storling exactly, aud will hold on to it for geod reason agninet all England, but does that innn sorve Mammon? 1 say no, ho serves God, And he serves God in this “"lil! sonso I am trying to touck, not througl articled of belief and modes of worship, About these T know nothing, they aro Lis own private matters; bub tho publio mattor 1 that fin servos God fu bullding up such 8 business as that, and in conducting ivin sucha fashion, Ho lifts u life, which n losts of factorlos and factory towns hus sunk into folly, iguorance, and sin, into intelligonco and scll- respect, aud makes tho sun of bis brond and fair huwunily shine on every man, womau, aud obild through ull the roowms of hls factorics, and all the Lumos about thom, Until God's Kingdom comes, in pure mannory, fu sweet lving-rooms, in books, in the tulk of wise meu at the inutituto, 8a woll a3 jn prayers and psalms, ho mulics Manunon sorve God nstoad of befui himsel! its poor thrall and_weariug its goldon collar. So you may serve God also, you merehants und mon of busiuess, 1t is _the monoy-muking period in America, so onamy Dlrico eays, aud ot not _that it s truo, buy otting neod not bo the more service aud slavory of Mainmon whon tho tide turns, and your investments como In Inton with largo divi- dends, or oven now whon only those that bave uo Jading camo to trouble you. You slso can make Mummon serve God ‘by doing whatovor out* difforont lifo and mannors will pormut you to do tor tho lilting up and helping forward of thoso who sorve you for duys’ wages, You havo nat olosed the account when you Linve paid them tleir wages, and tho jden thit you bavo s one of the sources of this avor-widonng gulf bo- tveou capital und labor. I romembor Willinm Cuambers sald at one of tho annual dinuors thoy give thefr workmon in that house, “ Our men nover leave us, wo novor have u sliike ; our worle will compare with the best in tho Riug- dom, and 1 traco the rouson for thiy not moroly to the fact thut wo pay as good wagos ns any firm in Edinburg,—wo do tbnt, of course,— but we have tiied besido to make common causo with our mon, Wo stand by them, and so thoy stand by u wo trust (hent and thoy trist ub and 1 hopo," ho concluded, * thut sli theso yours havo only biought addod proof to thoso who work for Us that they havo n 1ight to & greatdoal moro than is down in the bond, Wo linve tied to ha!p them rive with our aising forbunve, and 10 Joud o hund all round." Now 1t wuuld bo a sermon In jtsolf to toll how thoeo brothers hinve thought aud wrought for thoir won whila tho mou wero thinking nud working for them, and how, in building up thoir fortuno with the btircloss porsistouce of £ voton- leason from tho OId World we must loaru iu tho Now sooucr or Intor, or the fortunos onr merchants and manifooturers mako in *'tho monoy-making ora” will bo ewept away In anothor o1a as with the flond, These groat braing and Atrong hands of yoars are for grandor uses than o lock up safos und bido tho sombination tomuke all they can, and lot thoso who help us tomnko it go Lo the dovll for all wa caro, E‘huv aro for ¢o-oreration wuorever it In possiblo In lifo nn woll as In induntry ; for nike counnal aud a stiong grp concernlug tho intereat of tho nioorer hrains and weaker hands God ban brought to our sorvice, It is not by giving tho aunual hundred dollaia eithor whou thoy want it to tho Ald and Reliof, but in ko teacling poor-meu so to help thomuclves that they wili not want it at all; not in giving money o much whero the noad 18 &5 I suticipating and provonting the need, for o man may offor mo & oup of cold water aftot ho hos soulod up tho well, sud anothor may not ccard Lo offer tho cup be- causo Lo hns opened a fountsin and mado It run my way, but I know whiols of theno man does mo the truest sorvico, and I know also that hie who sorves mo mout traly just as truly sorves God. Horo, thon, 1a tho trusline botween tho service of Godand of Mammon, Wa sorve (iod whou womako n fortuno in some such fashion as I bavo tried to touch, and wealth of monsy may monn woalth of wortl, or it may mean sroalth of monunoss, It may gradua'ly hft a man ont of a oramped and narrow splicro uto wide reachos of ]mwur for good, oril may press bim down and hido him until he bocomes like a poor reptile, i {hiy wondorful world aud hfo of ours imprison- ed undor & stono. Ifo mny make to himsclf frionds of this mammon,” as Josus said, so that whou ho fails it mway bo o koy as it woto to tho vory gales of light, or tho gates of light ~ may bo to his vision ready to open as they must have soemed to ouo wo hear of in tho Goapels long ago, Yel, bo- causo thoro is no higher purposa in him than to mako his worlth & moaua of ostentation and luxury, ho may find it ls all ono great, sad mis- tako from firet to Jast. When a mwan fluds out great and gonerous, or wide and wholesomo ways - to Invest tho money from which ali tho time he expects o suro and amplo roturn, ho ranks with tho wise husbandman who enriohes his land, and sowa good seed for a harvest. Ioth ave in the service of God, aud the pulpit of a Churol like owrs has no hatlow Lruco with them ; it rocog- uizea thoir morvico as part and parcel of tho whole sorvico of God in tho world, Mammon soizes Ileaven aud fights hell when, in the hands of men of power, aud richos, and wisdom, and strougth, 1t briugs bonor, and glory, and blows- ings “to those who aro drawu “within tho circle of s powor; and it i for- getting this, in secking our own woalth wholly, and not the comnion wealth at all, that tho great woes como to nations which end either in purifying thom na by fire, or in burn- ing them up, “Wnalth may be ono of tho noblost alifea for Cod, or it :nay ba ouo of Il¥ dirost ovomies. 1t may make mon cither way what thoy vever conld hopo to by or diead to bo with- outit, * Thero isa burden of caro in getting riches,” quaint old Matthew I{enry says, * fonr in keoping them, tempiation in’ using them, gulle in abusing them, sortow in losing them, and a burden of nccount to be givon at last con- cerning them,” aud overy word lio says is truo, Yot it 1a just as truo that wealth, well won and woell used, may mako the soul strong to boar such burdens, hrave to oucounter them, high thiongh their beaviness, clean through their use, Joyful in their gond friats, and sure that, when all {8 ovor Lieve, the Master will sny, ** Well dona, thou good and faithful sorvant ; thou hast Leen faithful ovor ton pounds ; 1 will make thoe ruler over teu cilics.” —— POWEIR OF A GOOD LIFE, Sermon by the Reve Sumner Ellis, of the Chureh af the Redovmer. The Rov. Sumner Ellis, pastor of the Church of the Itedeemer, corner of Sangamon and Wash- ington otreots, proachied to bis congregation you- terday morning on tho toxt: 'E\;;y good Ufe bringeth fcrth good fruit, JMatl, uit,, 17, . In opening, tho prenchor spoke of tho great power which o single truo and good Iife worked among mwen, Tho ownors of this great power wero much more frequently unconscivuy than covscious of ‘its posscssion. It could not bo doubted that, jhst as surely as tho henlthy treo brought forth good and healthy fruit, ko surcly were the moral ox- cellencies of o truo lifo followed by bonelicial results more widesproad than might at first glance bo suppoeed. The proscuer stated that o woral life carcled weight with it whorever it was found, and instanced Lord Brougham as n man whoso uiterances in tho British Larlinment always carried conviction with them on sccount of tho reputation of their Bpeatkcr 1or high moral charnctor. In this verv clty, a fow days ngo, tho preschior had witnessed an o ‘mplo of 1ho Buno hing wheu bo hoatd Judgo Wallace, of the Pro- Late Court, dolivor & lecture before the law- atudouts upon the method of proceduro in that court. 'Tho leciure iteelf waa simple, plain, aud unadorued, yot it was casy to see, At its conclusion, that it bhad mado s deep improssion upon its bearors, This was due mamly to tho charac- tor of (he fecturer, and )t was more than proba- DLl that muny of the Judge's liearers had, whila listening to hia advico ns to how to act moro Jjustly and honorably in mavaging tho ostates of tho widows and fatherioss, determined to follow uusworvingly his excellent precepts, 1t wau A common adoage, used in school and out of xchool a4 a Bpur to 1he young to push on {o groater atininments, that knowledge is power, 1t was, however, much moro o fact aud n fact worthy of beini mads kuown thut zoodness was power, 'Flio power ot goodness wes much wider ihan that of knowledge. The inttor was fre- quantly cold and unsympathiotic, but tuo formor radiated 1n all diroctions and did good wherever it was folt, " = Knowledge, too, might be a power for ovil which guodnees never could be. In viow of this fact it would'bo woll to vemind the young ihat tho powor of goodnoss was the greatest force in the world, It was 1ho combination of common montal with nncommon moral powers, whiol onds tha people sho have led the world in the work after that which is good. The mighty minds of tho ol philosophieys are as nothing compared with the simple qualities of o soul im- bued with spiritus! lite, The preachor took up the caso of Xloronco Nightingale, who by lior simple nursing of tho sick soldiors of the Crimea Lad gsined famo all tho world over, ‘The sex, proud of her example, followod it, and no one &new bow much comfort Lind beon cacried to our soldiers duriug the lato war, which might not hiave Leen but for that ox- amplo, T'ho power of spotless purity and up- doubted excolience wag hero fully oxempli- fied. Tho preacher compared tho iulol- leotunily porfect sormon, exciting cool ad- wiration and nothiug moro, with tho plain, unpotiehod discouras, which, Incking all the rhotorical flourishies of tho former, yeb moved thio heart o8 with sweotest music and swoka thoe brondest sympathies of humanity, In Lhe latter ca6 it wad tho spititual lifo which called forth thu warm responso in tho hearts of the histeners, » thing in_which tho first sermon was entirely wantiug. Tho humblo religions life iuspired ull around 1t aa was evidonced whou somo great re- liglous soul, not great in its own coneciousness but in its own moral worth, became nerhaps un- wittingly an cxamplo to bo followed by hundreds of otheis, Many now Jiving thought they wore living in vain, that thoy wore more bubbles ou the sea of lifo soon to break aud o forover furgotton, This wes uot tho fact. Onoof thio bumblost Lienrts tho proachier ovor know died many years a0, sud you he remowberod hiw, the words he had spokieu, and the purity of his hife, and thoy hsd often rewppesred to him, and hod often promptod him with 1dons which he bad jucorpor- ated in bis nermous, and preschied to thousanda of poople, ‘Thus we could eco the fores of tho wotidn: **‘Phe loast shall be gront, and the woal strong.” Who most humble man or woman, ave tunted by Ohfis:fun goodnovs, was in & largo measuro the sorvant of Qud and tho minsionary of Christ. All should enst thelr ot into thin company, and bo safo while thoy lve horo and in the lifo herenftor, e A HEAVY MORTGAGE FORECLOSED Speciat Dispateh to T'he Chieayo Lribune, Onaita, Neb, Nov, 14,~A mortgagoe of £5,000,- 000 wne foreclused wpon lands of tho B, Juo & Denvor Daitroad, in thoe Umted States Cirenit Cowt in this city fo-day. Judgo Dillon directed tht the decreo should ¢ontam a olauso that suy hundbolder might ask tha Marsbal tosoll suy sectiun kopatatoly, and it should be done, AGENYS WANTED. GINTS WANTED_RPROTAL INDUGKMENTS Woiwanta it coumyinibo Voitod oo, 10 b0l ¢ fauctio Sowluk t ‘machinee, (b rreparod xln wllor ’ujl(urllull;la?lfrl.rll{lvhllil- b Ay 0, o, WL fi?}-‘a"al,‘\-Iii‘;Jsl?\‘U:?‘.’;E CORRNY, "l S0 ey ARTIE-DID NOT G JUR NUTH Ualt luv.wlluluty aL 48 Fuu'afi.pcn TASY MONTHLY TAVMENTS oy oo cortanos aud lote on West lrla, fucan, ‘qmi porfur-ats., Lotweon Lincoln and Itobe 2 GHANE, Wotw': 38 Seatin Dinricate . SUBURBAN REAL ESTATE, OR BALI—8i0 WiLT, BUY A LOT AT PARK D b, Bt & bt Sl i o ropory el . Glionpoat prop- arty bu matkots 11t HOW Ny 142 Lasalles st Tt MOR BALE=TIOUSES AND ati wood, At dopot, Torms to sult purchasors. menta, Fidg liniaos at. Auuh | Jivaneto IN_RiRUS, M arlilngton S i ... COUNTRY REAL OR ™ BATI-OR RXOHANGE-TIILGE FARMS IOt i ot B Nouso and lot at )l insdaln, brincumbered, Hotol an 1 aore of ground noar o 3. L uintigc-yard with good gustant qeat clty, Goolfneiy ur supck of drv-inda, A 10 5, I, B & RON, 102 Washington.at. —__FNAL ESYATE WANTED. VW ANTED—A DETAGHD RESIDIENGE 1N GOOD soription aud prico G O 63, Tribuno oihico. - VY ANTED-TO PURGITASE 2,06 '0Q 5,00 ACRES rdin Gottuy, Teama, Wil pay canh T of Jand In la choap, Uvwaars uuly dealt withs Addross A 100, Ghiea ‘tlbuno ltuntione for city and oountry, fu; 125 DEREHOET-teg 1o e Aty ab Tr VWANTED-A OCARD: PAINTER, AND atoror liouo f it e R O GO, S m’y"!‘:'n"’x':';'\l’:l‘n'&fi‘.'# during tho wint o W ANRED-A GEAGRENITI] ON HUGGY AND light piniform worke wito wifl Bot ablogt 1 on uitt o) l.,":lugn'll;lwavz.lIldawl"l AN & Uu, ML DERS, —ADDRESS T VY ARIED: RS, At . n Co., 2106 Markotat,, Sty D-RESON MOLT Tt Tomts, 4o -ouls Sialloabl Troi VW Aj1ED=A —Gaon V¥ thin marning U2 #n BOOTMAKEIL AUPLY t Madison-nl D BARROW HANDS, 10 hursa-sboor, at No. 64" Blue WANTED-TWO puno work ou stock, aud | Taland-av, Miscotinnaons. —A FEW AGTIVE MIIN OF, CHARAC- sl Ean wiaka from 10 to 415 por. dar: s JAMES T TLILL, 85 Wanningion.ates Honion, Mase o ANTED - COAL-MIN i MINONK, 11 oad fara troin Chica 3 3 i bt Ohteao, gl Tuquirdof AT, “AMisd JANTEDZA HIDE-BUYER TO BOY SLAUGIG Wi A LREUY LY, TO DOV FLAVGIE worthy, and 136 tho host of reiersuces. Must b - yprou tornvel it tho coutter, Aduron LIDE-LUYER: 70 RENT--~HOUSES, 70 RENT-COTTAGE 07 TGOS O: av. it noar Thiely-farili URN| rlck hot board, and all tho modors dovr, 10 WENT-_HOUSK NO. 81 WEST VAN WURE: at+ 8 roonis, gas and gas-nzturen: Housa o guod o monin o Aluy, 1wt HESRY . YOUNG; ok, WO.BTOIRY A M1 South Wood Inprovemeaty, I [T Mooia 8, : PO RENT-OWNIWANTS A TIDY TAMILY 70 take, tilL MAy, balf or all_of ‘E-roin Lo ol Wost fidana-at. Clronmatances aro sucht tlioy oan gnt it 'A% thelr own prica, TIRUESDELLE BROWN, 108 811t T-WE HAVR RENTED MK aoudous reductions have only onn left, at -stary and basemont brick, now’ and allmodura Improtomonis, twa blucks feam Listcaln Uar Dalt block fraw streat-cars. TIRULSDELL & BROW. 108 ¥ifthenv, Snrurnnn. RVANSTON, A GOOD NEW Jouso, with @ rooms, at 815 puf manth hna daceen of wollcultivated. gronady aud sl take any kind of Inbor forrent. O, " BROWNE, Teoom 11, 168 ¥ifthon. 70 RENT--ROOMs. ] G JENT-FURNISHED ~ AND UNFURNISHED ronms in tho Davy Biuck, noritiwst cornor ‘Groon, and Madison: fanitor, 0 RENT-IN 0 oflicw, s ) ARTED-A'YOUNG MAN 70 BKLY, in tio ity g wagan furnjsnad, aud Fourtoa TiQuons wod rofurences rogulrod ; horae, and Avply at lyuor stwro curner Caual VW ANTED-MEN TGO BRLT, NEWEST FAST-SRLL- v RN ool e (1,15 pay, 113 Liast Mndlsoiate, 3oom Sy o oM VWANBED-MEN SEEKING BUSTNKSS OAN PUT A littlo money into a pormaucat, % Lhat paya 00 T cont b) i to us furBio artplos; sent froe tomen. sl moan business, Aar Gan CovoE & EGMACY P FoaReTL AY & Qul 4 ¢ Jtoom 1, udolgy \WANT D G WY A 8 FOR W o bst voillug Vuuk of (o agus Vrhe Bovory Cone UENTS TO BELL THIE VLIFE AN fll“t?n'l{"l?l‘l;l‘(‘l )Dg:' !.Q‘ltufill‘nnz'“ cnmuh!lo{u.vwg s ich el o' tho taise. 1.'5 A STEADY, T) 1 200 casts to i upwards. 77 Wost Madis as, INDUSTRIOUR WAN 7 mako $10Va wontls aud o VAN SN 1N (G00D-PAYING GU: P fucewoata offorod at No. 177 I AN WA A GOOD BOY FRROM 1370 20 YRARS 0 u1proa, at 510 Nauth Jellorsun-at. e 0 OO0 PR, AL S Suuth dullormiant WANTED—FEMALE HELP, 3 Domeatios. VVANN’“?—A FIRST-OLASS GIRT, TO DO SPO- o, LY FURNISHED TO0MS, WiTit ond work; nust bo tiorougbly compotent, ~ Rofor b L L O iy | oncorruqaitod. Mo Trihwanted. ” Aamfoieites siaer near Clark, Apply at ltoom &, L Ba.m., ar8p, m. r’vo‘ltxx?‘?xlmmu.vrl.v URNISITED ” ROOME, \ Drfi}x?.u!‘i‘,'.’,m'fi[\;fl I.fivd\dx‘m:v?'vu‘,'v‘ . wouk, ot wontl, o otols, Tauitdrics, at 85 Donrhorneates o B Ullariog resomblor " | gountey, st MKS. DU otico, 0 Milwaukoa s, RENT-IOOMS FURNISTED FOR TOUSE- | J{A> UOMPETENT GIRL FOR ORNEIAL 1} $3, 0 e N - nnt by d covk, R B e PO RENTSFLO0ORS AND SUITH OF Roows, | \YANTED-A STRONG MINDLE-AGED_DOMES. fiei s i T R I e T O T AT, DO Tae don_ Sangamon-s By WAL 18, THOSVSON, 25 Wont Madison, P10 MEN ESHANDSONMULY FURNISHED 00N, Ttoom 31, 123 Bast Washington-at, TO RENT--ST ORES. OFFICES. &o Staros AP-TWO NEW BRICK STORRS ‘b, romonica oums, aultabilo fur Tuguiroat Hatoh House, 29 Norly c fonant; and b family, un W Wolls-st, Miscellananus, o, S PURPO ot Hotel & feot on Raudy ory b sy Dy 90w Yamiied; largo offies, diving nmi carving. an lirst flour, kitehon [n tho basement, larko cellars, ana clovator {rum collar to fuurth story, 43 eoutns up-fairs, g3 o every ruon, and watee on gneh Hoor Toe in. formation (nuire o promts0s to JAMES GUFFINEL, Dotrvit, Mioi, PO RENT-BARBER SIOP, 8 BATH ROGMS, nnd faundry, in tho bost location in e city, & rn- Apiousdble party cin ront itat o bargain, TRUESDELL & BROWN, 168 Fifth WANTED--T0O RENT. VWARTED-TO RENT-ON THR NORTI SIDE, mouth of Dhicago-av., of withina milo af fho cuntrd of tho city, & Iarge, commiodious dwolifni-houso: rent st bo readooabls,” Address BIBLE" WOIK, Tribuna o TRD—TO RENT--UNTIL 157 OF AV, A nlovly-farnlalioil iouss whoro' to eara af tho irop. xporionoeil partios will Lo - considuration, © Ads '3 BY Patioor House. TO EXCHANGE. PO LXCHANGE- 810,00 OF SUBURBAN 1O for wiid hands, stooks'vf merehandies, orothor proporty. ALl i at. porty. ALEX. 1L, GUNN, 3 Lass 1[0 kXGUANG, a1rby, oo sauty, 167 Wasfilugton. 0 X CH S & Ou,, BLOOKS, O T.OTS AT b od_or_Washington Helghts, cloro to “nl&cl}lun:‘].r it dl’:. l!.lndfih(cnnu“&rfuul‘hAéll(\x- afleuad, for oud firnis or othiar guod DFOPUry, By A GILBR s O e T atallocst. oo broporty 0 BXCHANOE-HORSE, BUGGY, AND NAR. nicas, & very ino borse, and atline proporty for desira. bl eeal Salata. 1. G DEWEY & U, oom 1,108 iz XGTANGT~A OIOIOK WOME AT SOUTIL i fur Towa lands or praved faem fo 1linols Y & CU.. Room I1, 18 P'iftu-av. 815,000 EQUITY IN WELL 1O do dook property, for lands, faym, city St suburban Hropstty, of & businss {ntorest, Wil an- pumo or pay caslr dilioronca, — Addeoss DOUK, Koom i, 135 LaSalto-st, WYL, loom § Otis Hloek, m Incumborod. 3 all clear, Apuly at 135 Souf 0 FXCUARGE T STORES ON BOUTI CANAL. st B. V. Jtis Block ~AN JLLINOIS FARM IN EXCITANG st Ttoom 11, A ety with somo cash can got a bargaln, ‘4 “’ A(«)rfi cottzges aud luts stnorth city liml h \E S l\l BUSINESS CHANCES. ELEGANT, WELLSTOCKED DRUG STORR oo Joction on tho North Sido, for kaly nta + loww 10 Jtoapor Block, cunor Olark 1“‘l sacrifice. Aoply aud Washtugtun (‘:\CTUR\’ FOR HALI for Lhoir factory, X, 'HE SUBSCHIRERS OF- 3 Jarrabooat., and adjointng fota for sala: brick Bunding 50 foot Crout, tva wtorlcs hixh s can bo readily sdaptad to almost any businoss; will bosold cligap, - For tull mlormation &pply on tho prenisos. O #1000 WILL BUY A HA R old oatablishod oash bisfuoss paying £40 ‘all or addros 123 South Clark-st., Boom b, SIEAND FIXTURES OIF 11 EXG it 01, No. 124 Nurth Ganal-at., for saio, adjoiniug hiroatirn dopot, aba gruat saceliico, {nquiro o4 ¥ MALF INTERGST IN THE STANDARD BILT. tard Halland sawmplg room, 71 itast Mo A truar Stato, adjoluing Myers' Opor for snta: firar-class in over oy Fomson 1o sollla s o Soathued THELALeh iy xavson for sulilug s tay doatluuod Hieattis L solicted. 'g‘;r)r) WILL BUY TITR STOOK AND FIXTURES .24.40 of a woton and fancy goods ‘slore, osubilshod two yoars, Locatton and traite firstclaws 3 desirable Iiviog-tonie adjolnlng atore. ftant tow, 911 Vewr Liako-at, frousp-ox TnE T OF NOV. 15 A BAY Boree, with silvar-mounted Barnoss od. Ownor can liasa Ui wig by paving olisrgos. " Suquird st Wast Luke I & HROWN, ATURDAY IN IN ORI NRAR King bury Haull, n({nnb'ullnm 5d plus A liboral ro- arn e glven for ft at 43 Wabash-av. OST—ON TIE THINST,, THREEEXI PHOTO- 4 rapla, with iho nana uf olley o the baeie of onu Loave with or giva Jnformation o 5 UNNING, 160 lo-st.,_Ltoom 89, xiid o rowarde &5 WEWARD=LOST, AN DO iweon Unfon Park, May- ho_finder will receive abovy rewazd BIRS. GRUAT, 503 West Madisouaat., VST RING, DE. i, and Adaia, ¥ ruturning 10 diana-st. g Sonmstrossas. TYARTED-GIRLS T0 UPERATE HOWE SEWING macihing on ctilldroy's alioes, at 27 South Canal W AR PED—FIFTY Filk i TAKE| No ollices need apply. wabulactudlog department., . MTootinnoonus. (VW ANTED-LADY AGENTS TO SELL AN ARTL. clo usod In gvery famiiy; can mako trom $2 to 83 por day, Apply a5 irst floor, \VARTED=A BOOKBINDER GIRT, TO .“’..“"" 10 30w and fold, to-day at &I ;mw-TukwK-rvmw TANTEDZA Taby 0 SOMIE Wi ovenings, Componsation small. Addross Tibudo oilicy. SITUATIONS WANTED-=MALE, AR RS IR AN SRR R A Miscolnnoous. ITUATION WANTED—BY A YOUNG MAN AS Durter or some light work ; wagces L. A chanco Gy atilialat during Lo wintor all (st 8 dostred - Aud 5 rin L winte Addre 197, Frlhng ontion. Vs S Lt b dostre 2 L SITUATIONS WANTED--FEMALE 3 Domesties, SITUATION WANTED-BY A YOUNG GIRL TG do'accond work {1 a privato family, I oy fisopd work tu o pelvate Tamily. Taquiro for twa ITING J 8, Emnloviuent Agents. ITUATIONS WANTED—FAMILIES IN WANT 0¥ sood Scandinnvian and Goeman liolf) enn ba supplicd o MRS, DUSKL'S othioo, 80 Miiwaukoo-us. . Miscolinuoons. ITUATION WANTED-BY AN AGREEABLE ouk Iy, alons Aud Hiomeloss, ' a sithation or hoins whioro ang ca make her living; undurstands bousohold and aowing; teachos' mu ~ caonomy afg. is accomnlished, und fa & yoars of ago. ' Addross ULARA WRIGL] slowood, T, L) QUUATION WANTED —T¥ & TADY TAVING D _soia yorsonal kiiowledto of baokkuoping snd ofiico- ot bo o with wnallsalacy, Lo SIANN S WHO DESIRE TO REACH COUN- try readors cau do 50 in (o best, ail cheapost niais mor by using ono or moru sectivus ot Kelloge's Great Neww. vaper Lists, A 0 A K LU, 79 Jackdo: LI, OAST PALD FOR OAST-OFF CLOTHING AND ¥ neaus goots of all kinds by sending te JUNAS GELDER' Loan Otice, 628 Stato- AT IASINNGTON NEIGHIS-THE MEGULAT Bfonthly Fale T) Jurgo lot of milch cnwa, horacs aud cattlo; id_tn your stock, Bs many kit nd, ot rags, 256, 2%, and any o city, freo, T(XZERT ACCOUNTANT-BOOKS OPENKD AND Y clored, eomplicated and mnshlp acoaunta ade Justed, by ¥ Toum 1, 1 t Madison-at. " IVE AGEN A 1o mako b’ money, Quartars, 103 last Madison PAPERS, BOOKS, ottlos, &c., at PETTL. v. Slock called forin -STOUKS OF GENERAL MEROHAN- diao or furnitiaro, In Amouats from §2,000 to $15,000, Will give for samoh bost ol secured notusun roal o nte, duo fu 8 months (o4 years, and cash as roquirod. Wi also oxchangn city prupcrty, mprov h bosis, SOORW KL, “WILLIRSY 'R0 sk Bladisou-at '\" CIS BY MAIL TO DR, . R. SYKES, 163 ™ £\ Madison-st., will return (ull informatlon’'of a **Sure Uuro ' tor catarzh, within ovory ouu's soach. FINANCIAL, TAIMS AGAINST M1l REPUBLIO, LaMAR, orbnekor, aud othor lnsolvaht lbsnzancs L 150 1) t., Room ¢, OAN ON GIITGAGD REAT, siumis at tho lowest raluss L5, U, CO! alle-a.s V10 LOAN ON DIAMONDS, WATGIIES, b “un_”ux'n 1S 0 office, 120 Raut —ON DIAMONDS, WATGHIES, achines, and othior collatorali, Privald 5L, HoUn 3, up-stalrs, MO LOAN_$1.00 ARD 36,00 UN GITY TWEAL FS. RaeS IKWOUD & [ACON, 81 Washiugton- TV ANTEDSHET FOKONE ORTWO YEARS, socurlty wortlh £10,000: Will pay intorest montifly quartaily, Apply 1 CILARLES L, BOYD & C Washunglon-st, B s MBRIDGE & Gt ank $100,000 Loy laer. Toans toguated, TS mitia Wahimeon st gr()_iu;w;um 1L PARTY WITO © LIFTE DO 1hio olack, ovorcaat, and uthor actlolos [ donco coraer Ulilo and Cas te. on Thursday nigiitlast, will rd‘tlum or glvo h:’(umrlnllilln l-;:‘(llnud w rnu«m.vlr’yvll a0y thi aliovd Fhvear ¢ paid aud 1o’ quostiuns ankol. Addrony 5 ! ki HORSES AND CARRIAG: (OR BALE_AT A ACRITIOR—NY ILANDSOMI ‘team of sonut, fast, woll-heod, S.yenr-old roadaties; hundwomor In Chicagn: will Wurk singlo or dowblo, v cathor of tham i worth (ho nioney, Ala Oy ood iy and harnesw for §110, “Iio aliova must ba w0l at 871 Wost. Fificontli-st,, ucar Coutro:av,, to-Uay or to-murrow, JTOR BALERPAK, A oY D AV s oni o dnpnldd weny aince, huth suni, singlo srorkors: just off the farms will tell for firat runsonabile siant ke 8 usiows on my. faru (i wook, J; T MOON I, Can bo seou dlunday woruing in front of Tribuno oftico, VW ARFED-(IONSE AND TUGGY O Sean OF ) graca oud sarringa; fur sno of g Lot lutsav ont nglowond, on Vinconues-av., & in the grove, quly oo ke fruim opat. 8. 4, GILBLRT & GO, o SEWING MACHINES, T-OABR AND ONIL ary wnnd threg Grover & ol ntc-st. Machinossul y 0 ot cont disvount for cashe spxadt ik AINGIER OFFIOK OF A 7 Halsted-st., “glty agon| Mugl reutod, and repatred, HOUSEHOLD GOODS, JROR BALIE-MATILILIOR GHAMIER Kty AND othar chambor (uenituro, noarly siow, &t JRl-prive, Apnly toaday to janlor King's Butlding, sossor Wasatng. ton and Doarborn-ats, 7} QUSELLOLD GOODS OF BLYERY KIND WANTED Fir hy:llt;nil,l buyer, Addross Ji ADAMS, tilox 293 Aicaa D O MUSIGAL, FOR BALE AND TO RENT, REPAIRING JPranos and - I:zli\l{v'_l’\:‘lf‘lio hlorgu l’l:nu Lagtory, 2ig nl—n—w: \V ANTED-A GRAND NO-TETAND, FOI WHIO! S by s olee Sula frunting v I3 Boutl e Evans L An i U uul lowood WA Lo kivone Lis As & GO, 3 Tasatto-ate A l)AIl‘rSl:u WANTEL which | want to by hoss. " Addross, slutig busiuoss sud p Fritans oitios, W DARINER A WITIL #1, 0 b, 5 el we aapor und jub pelutlog busiass, }mfimm‘éfi." AN, Bl 1! BOARDING AND LODGING. Waoss Stga, 3 2] 6 FULTON-ST, (IJOHNI'." PEORIA-NICTE nud}ml{u, or slugle gentl Turuiaiod raoiin, with gnod bonrd, for gontlenvin 10 OF [nd1un; tormia remvonablo, 7 TWEST MADIS it 500 Bt TP nt o sonablo pricoy, with o) ST (8 B o or on suite, at vory teas withaug board, Asnty mna. J7 EIDRIDGECOUIT, NEAR WABASI-AV. Goud boaxd {or ladivs or geatlemon, frum $1 ta'$§ ur wook, witls usa of piano, _Day buard, §1. Hotats. ATLANTIOIOTID, QURNER VAN BUREN AND oriuan-sle-Supuorioe scoommudationy at modvrate Ta Nuv.\m TOTEL, Madigon aud Blbn Tow prioes '}1\;‘\ !‘AN“‘I"\IV" s hito oy buard, b o waoks > a STON & U0, 193 EAST WASHING. os of horses und carriages uvory Pactfos wivhlog olther to ck should ativad thuso TETWEEN board st vory TOR SAun. T A e ehag north S Dot " Mlchienn-ara., 10 b takot aways Arde AVERELL, 17 Daarborii.ate Hoom b, i i ¥ " CIOA [P BALECA CONTLETEE T OF i for 6 ouding Juuo 80, 1474, Addre: NORNALIEZUAKLEYE COOKNOAGH AND RiE) Jrops Vxiarluaior warr antraota takon, Uall on e address ARTIULE O s Nate. DO SALESDI EXOHANGE ?Ax‘l‘n:.\\d mm:un llrlu;.'vllv':u]\"nl:illt’}Il\'lni' e et Alldreas o 1 GONDE A0 BALT=8 THOROUGHBRED ELGLISI LKMZ O o AL 1ps, 6 ks ulds & Hontn A @ atut.Fathor aud wothor hnpoeted in Apeid of this yoars Pelv, g0 each, Also ouo Eaglial livar abid whiz 2 sot top altd Bt wld, Hnparted 1 duly of this yonr. toricoy Uriligrons aitd e ariigulars ou anpifiation i OLL 1 ROBINSON, Tho Willuws, Wadena, Minn, Hikn HIAGO AUAD) ¢ 9 Michlgan-av, A Vi Huren-sts,—Are Solivol sivaotiyn T puiving, drawiug, seuliuro, ool areliiice ture, Bpeclul seboui'toodin tor adivg, [soning sohoo] apoa feat 8 w 10, 1 uE taEie gy tue Slroulars, RY--ON NOV. 18,1111 OTEN. an unrter of Konwood Boiminar, bu wtarted e tho (nu pUs vl ta aud trom the schuol, MI{S, J, A, K W Pelnopal, VS ADADIMY, 758 MIONIGAN-AV., TOR lri ol il g HOAN AV, TOR HKU! Nuit tors eyl [on. g, Sovs s ekl BT 00 LIYas 10 paci E bra. BV BIOWS, Peluoipal, ¥ seisletil