Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 30, 1874, Page 7

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— e THE PULPIT. Dr, Thomas on tho Power of the Press. fiitel tho Orvigiuator of tiio Golden Sermon by the Rev. Br. Kohler of Sinai Congregrtions Dr. Kittredge Criticises tho Recent Lecturo of Carl Br. Ryder on the Tumortality of tho e gormon by Dr. Necal, of Doston, POWER OF THE PRESS, nou by the Rav. Dr. Thomno. regation of the Fuat Methodist Chuich, in tuo Methodlst Church Bloct, tho Bev, Dr. Thomas spolio Lt eveulng, Lin subjeot bring, ** 1bo Pross aud {ts Tuflueses Upon Pub- Befora the cUBF! Dr. Thoman sald his purposo wag to spoak to thom of the third of tho eutsldo agencios which aficct mocioty. [is toxt was taken from tho ™ influenced by climate, sconary, aud prodaction, in a wodliying cuarnoler, a8 it I8 also influsnced by tbo Church and Stato, boar In mind that the Stato and tho Church aro only forms of socint life, and aro ovolved from {hio m.or principles of it. First come tho Inaor, and then the outer, prinziples. The infiuence of tho press diffors from that of tho Chuich and Gtato in that it is ot affactod Dy tho tngor piinciplos; it utl (onsug with the inuer pringi Tho prosy. wor ples (hut form tho oufer structure, VW from outside, grost cisadvautara {2exporioticod ; worlapg on the wuer piugipies, on tho garms, iy at.oade’ witis much advan.age. ower (st gots back of the Iiw and direeta tha it wack of tho Cougiosy and directs the Cou- giowy, Au n power working upon powers, 1t 1y teeli aud cannob but control It is importaut to 1:8, the outer lica 3 upou tho prinels "I'ho preea is o »u jmmersa power i the world, for {1 the of the peoplo which is expiessed in 18, le cared not how shrong Government may be by wintary forcos, let it be not fonnded vpon Justice, tho y.00ple, recognizing tue fact, will sgon i Or t:ko rolinton, uo mater how s'roug, 1£ it rest ugon error zud suporstition, aud net vpon trath, iuiolligoneo of ty the power thinking and the focling sputned, 138 dugmus sod ) 1 uid ic st bo amssolved. Whero i nothing o fear fio ouhgltenmont. 1 1eligion (ho just and true uced vou fear. Lub d pupure who bave ronsou to dread, Iuiotlyg noo will pever work the down- full of aby goverument. “t Lo peenliar powor of the press will be found ho would mention. cumes diractiy to tho mind of man, to tho fuought prndiplo of man. Take manr of tho iulluences 1u lue, aud, sliough thoy u timatoly . seill they do not appeal to Wealth may tal ooices iiave no forca, In povermuontand icis the ignoraus uns inoaew thineg reuch Lhe mind tho deeire for in o eeoso lodged in Tt ronches tho wtmod iudirectly Amusementa may be a lind of diveition or groat poner iu tho lodged m the world, In- n way epriog up irom tue ilag, pairotio arades; bat 1L 1 a difforont kind of pa- 0 & maao studies the privciples of the povernient undor which ho i i tzived tho press Lias 2 peeuliar poser, in that it zewches tho nund directly ; it works sram within, and afects ono's judrment, tnlica Loid of tho mind, and shoots its priuciples out thioueh "I ho charaviur und iufluencet by what ho potito may be id; but Lhoy are mun's nature. 1t comes to us witit & strouger convictiou s boaring. It fy sup; osel, therefoie, that mon wilte wora carotully than thoy lalk, ‘Lue pices 1eaches us on tho sido of our confl- dence nnd boeumies a oumpanion to the mind. 1t gues futo all the modos of hle; goes with peo- 1o to their bomey aud Hresides ; with tho young 3 and thas 1t becomes u com- ives mmplo teles ; to ue age facts, and to 1wan to bis room youth romaces ; to the mai ala ags euitablo matler, 1t vr. 1ungs the thought of 1ho pust; prolumgy the vuite of 1ho past, By tho power uf the piess wo lave the Pealms of David, tho Lawohtaiiona of ihe piophct, tia wolds of Jesus; tho pootry oi limer; tio slo- quenco of Buike and of w Cluysostom. Tho power of tho press rescncs bLuck, ana rerents 16 Jestons of past aIcs. ens 1ho rasont, - 1o bringa faz-off places nour; gives tho thivker an opportunity to unpress Liimuelf bo.x Lis ago ; tho fho tew bus to the wany; tho press taies o word from & buurgeon, or o Boockor, aud tenda it all over tuo wolld. Aunotber immenss porwor i8 in it—tho pos- sib.lity of a nuiversal sympathetic ewmotlon, I {s aoue In Ruseia, a responge is faven in this country and elyownero, aud whon & is done, & feohog of boner iy Douvs & rovival break out a tewparnuco movemcut develup uself promiucntly, tho prosa takos it up, and s reads 3t Lrondeast us 1t by currents v "Palio the plightest referenca to bis- 1t impossible tuat o urizersad intelligencs could cxine if it was vot {or tho power of tho prefis, puwer tie grost muven 1ies would never Liave 1 broadenyand dosp- tor t0 speak uos to uesd of lonor ia tory un this Aubjcck. Wore it uot for thus ments of tho past ocniu- beau offeciod. Eugland woald not bave nmonded and avolistied Ler la- moud penal lavy but for the power of tho préus, and Lather might have hummerod away as Ro- mmasm untl aovmuday, and tho Iefornintion wouwid have boou uuuccompiished wera it not pross, and Jobu Wwers 1t not fur 1he sa:ue power. of tite precs which bas gven to the world the wouks ur $halinpearo, Bucov, and Dickeus. = Aud w0 con Lell iho poner of Dicitout,-who did so wuza goud 1or the poor with his wighty pen ? w00 of detfeigon when his for liberty ? Tho tulo of by Harmet Deceuer Gtowe, touched this whols pution, ond budo A wies ccmo together untit Liberty rovaptizeu was given tous, story weut over the ulls and mountaius aud th.ougli 1hio valioys of the Jand, anu into o drami, uud swayod tiuy people as tho wind docs It is tho power eo was lted np wolo Tom's Calin, alism divides itaelf into the socular and now Lut littlo seoulat pross lhere ia reall duferenes between thom, for is acaling Jatgely with yeligiouy maticrs, and vico voisa. 1tisnot doplorabla as far us tho Ecenlar prees 18 concerred, but it 1s & matler of sumu regrot 0o to tho other, 7The businesy of 1k:0 Broular NLees 16 o piva facts as thoy are, and be oid net think it was & ronnd otjeciion to the geeulur press thnt §6 publichey ovil a3 well ay e it docs so truthfully thero setion to it, Tho rending of crime reading, nor lu it euleulatod to do Dbut chio unpicasing tung 1 thub tha fucts nro i tho world; aud - journal ro, 1hole mives botl sides of 1ifo; tollsof tho adul- tory of Duvid us vl a3 the PEaims, the misdueds ot Bolumun & woll B4 s §0od notd tha wwarve sweli as bis 3aithfuincss, w10 puuko cruue aitractive 1vima traitot to tino beet interests of society, Buk it in not u {ruter, for it simply pottruys sooioty us it io. If u wunister or & pubhic nun bo falce, the press dues n dury in expesing his fulsencss, * So- ciety ho bellsved sttfforn to-Uny vory muoli from shuns and hypacrasics, snd whatover nower can @xpuse thowo i zather 1o bu supported than cons An o rulo, the great maasos of mankind ar ditposcd 4o by ou tho rlght ido; they do not want (o bo wrong, - ‘ho prevs has more tw do i 1on to (ho minds of the pooplo than and it is therafora tu-ilay tha To wosi glad to flud tho prosy 1o considored tho pvess of the laud to be Tho oditortai 1 oniy grua eduenator, ou the #.do of worallly, thie oyinion of ono well-infarmod mau, bt ths poopia iu twe kuow buw muclt waight ta attach to that opinton. e did not deem it wrang for tho rcoulue prora to doa! and (roat of rellzious witiors, but roliglon should b sacredly weated by it. P relipious prosa fa & hind of bond smong ocoiohigionista. Tho groatost comploint ho had against Lhie ralipionn pross is that it fs not in tarmony with, awl not np 1o, the sentimant of thewa gays., In times past potty diffuronsoa ho- twoon chiurches sufliced to matisfy peoplo in the religious pieps. But to-dny higher aima con- sonant with tho apitly of the age zro necossary, 'T'he religions presw must Jesd the poopls and Itoup np with the Living thought ; must bo beslde tho Inboror as well as the wealthy man, It ourhi to bo a powor beyond what {t s, In tho dnys of tho War it was 803 and if, forgetting ihoir diTerencas to-day thoy wouid unitedly spenk i for a pure soligion, 1t would bo far neator tho accomphshment of 3ta :missfon, 'Lhe roitglous Journal will novor compete anccaenfully with tho seculnr as n nowapaper, aud if 2 now wpli€ Lo ;i: Lu{u«cd {nto it the mocular pross will wuke its | placo, A bad boo iaths worsl compamon a.young peison can hava: it is polsonous, Lwonty tons of obscoue litorature way scizod in Now Youk not long ago. A bad uowepanor s equally per- nicious fu'its influonco. Ho was bappy to sny tiat thoro were very fow nowspaper publications which como undor the bon, Hpeaking of pubs lioc opivion, Mr Lhomas sald it was moro subtlo than tho press itnelf. Lot uai- versal. opinton he ot in favor of a oertain thing, aud there 18 no power to provent that thing s let s bo against it and nothing oan savo it. To contrel publ pinion, tho hegine nin must bo mads ot Lhe schoola, through tho aliniroh, md (siough the press. Ilo wished o bomes to sholter the poaple of oll lands, rcliools to educato them, and thuy publio opinion of n healtly order would diroot the world, Il callad upon eacl ono to heoip to mako the echuoly, thie church, ond_Stato, soh that out of them inay sprug o publio opinion which stail bitygr shoite n umverss! desire for tho secomplishment of goad, 2 ———— HILLEL, ‘Mo Originntor of the Galden Yiale, Strango as it may soom to us, neithor the Mo~ Drows nor any othor natlon of antiquity bad a word for religlon. As host s diffused through every poro of tho atono, ns well as through tho vplns of the tren sud tue nerves of the living aulmal, only Loro and thors flashivg fortls spurks of oloctricity, or concontrating itwelf fnto cheer- iug flames of light, religion porvaded all forms #! 1o of o nation, bub scldom appoared iu its purity as a spark of Loaven ava woraphle flame of the spul lifting man unto the throno of the Most High, Tho wholo lifa of a poople, s it grew out of primitiva forme, was au insoparable organlonotwork aroitad which the differont pur- susts and customs clusterad, without boing recog- nizablo a4 Lo their distinct characterand bearug, Of thoso, relizion formed tho hoorl, iulusing life and strength into all tho velns and artorlos of the nation, but boiug as inzoporablo from avy political aud vozial order of lifa ad tho hearth w from tho houschiold. 3Ience, roading the laws of Bloses or Zaroustor, of Manu or Lycurgus, you can searcoly tell whero religlon ends and whare pohitical jurisliotion beging; whero mor- als, or ritos, srls, .or cunvostionul forms are taugb, Natioual lifo is & tree rooted in {ho soif of the land, and cinbracing, with its multiform ramifi- catlons, tha bighosy and tho lowest puisuits of tho peoplo, but allowiug no einglo brauch to bo overed frow tho stock, lest it mjure tho eutiry growth of tho uution. Henco all the lawgivers Gf sutiquity wero poitical asd svcwl, well as religionn, 1eformere. They were vulircd citber to " petter -the framo of the Btxe from -the vory rooh, of nob ab il For ibis reagon 1ho Mosaie Juw, aa adopiad and vabeiouod by the Jewish poople aftcr tuo Daby- Jonnan exile, did vos presout & merely rcligious codo, but at tho tamo tiuio nlso s poiitical one, lavinz down rules of juxidical, governmental, 2ud oven oanitary practices, but tosicely dotinivg the ossence aud the #pbere of roligion, Bat the tiunocama wheutlirough tho amalzama- tion of ‘matiy poeplo, caused by the couquents of Ateseuder oud tho Romaus, rcligion 1n geners aul commenced to_outerow its yntivual forwn, sud Juoawin cspecielly tpread ielf over tany luuds, over taling o stronger hold upon iho mimgs, while its politienl prospects gradusliy crow more bopelers. ‘Lien tho question sug- wested 1teelfs What isthe Jowish religion? s it mercly o uatiomal form, indissoin. bly connceted with tho soil of the Hely Lend aud ity demplo, unchmugoubls wnd ime wovabie 20 tho conres of the .sturs, & skoln of sniutes Lovor Lo Lo disentaugled, or are thero sowo pri ol ductrines, formug the cantie of Jucaism, siound which -2l tio ‘i;rccnp!u giavi- Lauging a-j cet aud foru, ns tho olancts arourd 1.6 eub, rece.ving light and ilfa from the Juminous body in thoir widst 2 It was Ihilel, the greatb muaster of the Jewlzh Acadomy at derurelom, living about forty years Defore Chrivt, who firet tricd tu solve this ques- tion by provouncing the commaud, * Loye thy naighivor us thyeell,” na tha groat principla of thy Jaw, thue cwane pativg religioa from tho thralidom ol political sud pricetly authorivv. But, Lis Iife and {eachings aot being sutticicntly agprecieied, neither by hia own paople nor by thozo who owo_luid most of what thoy call tho new Gospel, I feol myroif par- ticularly fuduerd to muke you sequainted with the noblo featuics of tuat great Ratbi, at whoso fesb Judaim and Obristianity eit to-day, mumnir, o8 ttyo lato Dr. Geiger said, the adveut of avether 1lillel, 1o make mother aud danzhter join hands agatn over tho bloady clasu of maby centuriey of strifoand war, Oniginally the priosts and tho sons of Levl wore nirusted with: the musion, to teach Jacob tho judgmeots and Tsracl tha law. Contrary to auy vtuor priesthood, they weio ardained to en- ligliten the mindy with divins knowladge, and to Lindls tbo five vi religion in the boarty of men. But_**Yo bave broxod tha covenant ot Lovi saith the Lord of Hosty,” was (bo word of the last prophet, adiresred to the p.icsthood. Inves.ed with the highest anthenty. tho sons of Hadduo, the pricst, turned thoir whels wtorest £ world- ly sfiaits, aud neclectad_their sac.od, mission da spiritanl leades. Winlo they indulged in luxurioua ' plcasures and effcoted houthou- ish_euln whoy clung Wb the utmost zenl to fho old_ittuels, beiug uaniling to senounce their pravileges ia tho Tomple, iu which oo po- liticat and roiigions weifaro of the nation scomed to owlmwinaie, Nor 6ld this cortuption ccase with the Maceebean rriests, who, though the descondants of n_noblo siock of yious men, nhen opceclevated to tho hugh position of Kinz dul not prove faithrul to their sacred dulica. They formed an anstoctatio party, csled tho Sndducocs, o prosorve the old traditions war- Tanting theic own sanetit, rad to keop them- felven ujoof from the common, uukoly peopie, inforior to them nlso by tue Jeck of Hellenio education nod munners. On the otber thie, however, an opposition had arlsen from tho yanka ot the people, men who, liko tho uritans in England, fought with glowing sud iuspmng fervor nguins: (b0 abuses of tho priesthood, snd in order tu coex the source of inlquity 1epelled, s much ns poseiblo, any socinl 1ntercourts with beathors. Boreowiug many sacred uenges rom tho pricsthiond, thay extorted tho claims of lolincts to sbiributo theta to themeelyer, ang declured any Imuelito lending a puie Iifo dovoted to loarning, to de- gerve greater merit than: the higl prist, wear- iug the guiden ddem on Lis forehead. Theso v e1a the Pharirce, the defenders of the riglits of tha_people aguinst pricstly sivoguce. To thom the Rabbis und scribes, ail thepojularora- tors and mas.ora of lesrning, belonged, They wero the prapngators of knowledye, the foundors of sclionle, Lo 1rue pricsts of (he Inw, whoeo yanotuaiy thoy opened for all, making it tho cenio of religion, instend of the gorgcous tem- pio witl s blogdy mucriticos. Quce, the Talmud Felates, whon “on tha day ' of atones mont 'the lugh_ priost loft tha rauctuacy, baving performed thomontimpasing eetomony of tho year, SBemeas and Plalion, the two Princijals ot the Jenith Acsdeiy, cam along and wers - stautly surrounden by tho Lorong of peoule who biad, until thon, cscurted the Ligh-pricses, Lab Bamoau aud Dtalion wers uf foroign descont. and when thoy ewlilcd the higheptiest ho austrered wlth Witternosw: ** May tie forelgners walls lu preace! ™ *'L'bo foreiguors,” paid they, sowill walk in Bflflno, for they fwfill thewr peaveful miwsion, but not ko tho £on of Aaron.” ose tWO great masters, whom even King Terod epured wuiidst s oinel parseoutions of oll_mou of learning, wero tho leaclera of our flitel, A native of Dabyloia, of noble descent, —tho Talmudical logeud makes hlm & descend- 0t of Dovid, also,—ho hwil & profuble trado {n partnorahip with his brothes, but soon Jofs Liim to dovate himself 1o study ut Jorusnlom, wheta ho drow wisdom from the lips of tho Lue forc-mentioned I'residonty ot the Bynbodrion, Pa make his fiving s worked for about o diuno aay, saving tho hialf of this to pay the doors Leoher of tho Aoadelny for admitinnco ; for Kiuy Herod, fearug tho influence of lenzning upon the minds of the proplo, had ordoered tho bulls of tho Acadomy to bs clused Lo tho public. Uug wintry dny, when the soveso cold had prov, i fvom ‘working, the schour, buriing thitab for lnowledpe, yeb unable to gam adsiion without tho onstomsry leo, olimbed up tho wiedow to enteh from without some of tho loaus of Liw yoverod wngtory, Lut alas! THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE lio camo noar belug frozen to doath, as his body was all covered up with anosw, bad not his form boen acon reclining againat the window. It was ou & Bmbbath day, aud tho scholais thereforo hiesitated to spply remedlon to rostnro m to lfo, but, rocognizing the raro studont, Sameas and Ptalion snid: ¥ Vorily, to wavo thls man'slifo lano_profanntion of tho Sabbath.," Taving storod wisdom from which- ever sourco hie could, uot shiiuking from study- ing dreok plilosopliy, which was stterwarda foatored {n hls houso aud school, Lo ro- turned to Dabylonia to seattor the soocds of loptnlng thoto, but only o few years had alapsod whou hig wss recalled to the motropolis on ac- count of hils great acholarship to fiil the vacant chalr of the residont of the Synhedrion. 'here Lio inauguratod a now ora, by introdue- ing now mothods of expouvding tho law, forciug the lotter to sorys tha splrit, and the ol tinditions to apswor the mants of his timo. While formor toachers, muostly BSzdducoes, mado all efforta to presorve the old customs in thoir Integrity, fnlvnmzlng tho dend forms, Lo imbued religion with a uow Jifo, using logical arguments as weapons _agnfust his onponosts. Unable to abolish the law, whoao priucipal teschor hin was, Lo roformed it, making reason its sxpoundor ant tho wolfare of his pna{nlo Its ouly scope and aim. Obsorving sevoral ordluances of tho Monaio Inw, a8 that roquiring " an oye for an eya and a tooth for a Luolfi. to havo beon disrogarded by the Pharisecs and roplaced by bsttor practices, e biought his logical arguments to bear upon tho law to maxo the letter Liarmonize with the spitle of Iife, Such lawa, which wore well adagted’ tor n amnll agrionllural pooplo, but in- Jurious to tho commercs of a people trading with nany nattons, he tuterproted to snit tho roquito- mouta of bis uqun. Thighita by which the priest- hood cxerted a firm hold upon tho populace ho nm-n;ifccd, every whoro alleviating tho burden a1d broaking tho tettors of authority-worsbip. “Thus ho Inid the foundation of tho souderful cd- ifico af tho Talmud, this great Iibvrith of Jow- ish learning mn which so many ageo lost them- avlves, missmg the Jaading-siclng 1o gurde them back to tho broad daylight of season. Dut though growing by the'adversity of Lmces mto & Chineso wall, toc.itding the Jowish poopio from tho world, rabbinical Judatem ariginelly presents a new aud lmproved edition of the M- ssio Iaw, mouting up & lipher sland- md of morals and philotopby, not eclipred by, but in many rcepects ‘achipsing, tho no-called New Testament, which i3 motely o #pri takon fiom tho plantation of Iililel, Ac- cording to tho older booka of tho Now Testa- mont, 1t was not Jesug but oneof the reribes who declarad tha commandmenc of Tove for God and for follow-man comprisoed the whole luw, the Nazarono teacher mevely snsenting toit, Ilow- cver that muy bo, Uillel nas the originator of thav Eayiug, which caplivated tho eivilized world, A ltomnn, thus gocs the wtory, onco went to Yhamai exprossing tho deslio {o bo converted, provided bo could’be taught the Jowioh raligion while standing on ous foot. Shamal, tho master of tho orthodox ecliool, much srmtated by tho lioataen's mockery, turned lum from lis door. o camo to Iiflel utteriug tho samo ro- quest, but Lo reccived him Jndly saying: Da not unto asothor, whab thow wouldss not have nuother do unto thee. Tins Is tho e seucs of tho luw. The rest it a more common- targ.” Etruck by this avewor, the leathon studied and afiorwards embraced Judalsm, " b rtory tolls of auother beathen who urged Shamai to admié Lun jvto tho told of Judsian uuder tho condition that he would lustall bim az Iigh priest. Shamal folt provoked, INilel, howover, vld not loso Ins sail-control, and re- phed: *Surdy this high oflico ueeds prepara- tun; eit down and study.” ‘'hio heathen hs- tened to tho words of the torchor for aays aud moiths, daily becoming mo: o inorested in thoso studics woica oponed n new wwild fo fum. Lsuully, rending tue Biblizal vorse, ** Nu etranper Unte Wpproach the penctuary lest ho die,” bo - ssied, quits perplezed, * uefor, doos 1wt term upply 10 me¥¥ iy good friend,” 1ii'lot auswored, * itincludes sll thoso y¢hio ave nu, uifpring o Amon, oitn David tho Ewmg of Turacl!” » But thien, how can 1 aspizo Lo tue otico of tho ¢ L.ub-Pricst *Yon cers taly cannot become High-Prical in the * lueral eensd,' buy you Dy aspile Lo tho priestiy dindem of bolingss, and of divina Xuowledge, ollered by God to 1L whols peoplo, which is murs picoious than oll the jowels of ibo iNigh-Priest.” Yhe upil was not whiaken in bis juitlin the master, 1iillol’s méesnosy was o proverbial that oue pers son mauo_a Dot of 400 demuti that he could provoko Hulel's wrath, bus lost it, though in- wading upon Lim ab the most inoppoituue time vath the ailiiest questions iu tue world, belug ovenmet with kind answors tcemjog with gobor Wisdum and insruciion. Or crurge, all theeo lngnnd:, with which s grutelui postality aoorny the Bgure ol o pogular poigpnage, must Lot 6o Lalen &y literal truth, Lut opon an ineight into the trua chuincier of {ha juan, showng the imprint of bis words upon Lis time. 'Pwo of Ly styingas charactorizo juw Vest: *Doadiscipls of Aatom, & putsuor and romoter of peace, o fiend of sil men, aud araw toem neur to the lawe” Far from laymg much stres on ritual ovservancas, ho cunsidered the true mission of all who aspira to the patno of pricetto be tho reconciliation of man wich s God and with his feliow-man, Butin no way did bo believa in tho povier of any man to atone for another’ 610, or_of wcting us medator potween bim sug lue God. ‘Tho woxim of his hifo sud tho pewrl of his m.ral hunblu‘( waa: “If I care mob for myzelf, wbo wil caro for mo ? Curing ouly for myseif, what am 1?7 Aud if nosat prosent, wuel shullic be ¢” With tha firsc of theso thice seutcuces, Lo de- cluted the conscicuue, both heart aud mwd, to bo the only judio fudicnsun in valuirg religions practices, Wik tho tecond he showed the tiuo toundation of socioiy tobe luve and ympathy for uthers, without which man could not exist. With tlie third, e rointed to tho lifo bero on earth 28 tho only ecopo for the diviue wission of man, to work out lus salvation, aud to build the beavenly Lrugdom of truth aud love, Liviog i 2 aiwe of great political excitemont, when uiny visiouatics brouded over tho unkuown world ue- jund oping to liud Tosguo fiom the distresiag stalo of thulife sround ciom, he remsiued’serony and cho.veul, voverlosiug his truse in Gud aud Lope for ko fature., VWhou Sbamal joined the agcetics fn deerying this world o valv of tears, aod o life Inden witth enrao thiongh muu's cor- Tuption, saying, ** It were botter for wmen not to huve been boin atall,” Uillel pointed to au Alle wive Creator, who, baving mado tue world, pro- nouneed iv to bo gocd, and appointed mun us co: Ialoicr in tho fuftillmeus of Las plons, **Life,' hosaid, * wagilt of God, and wo ought to bo thankiul for all its blessings nnd tho eujoyments ic ofcis, 1must wol guard my bedy, it boivg the Leator of 1ho jmage of God. Does not the Emperor deslre the jnages of him to appear to tho gronteot advontagoe 7 Wby slould not [ at- tend wedl to my persou, it reflecting the glory of the Most High#” Waking a brght viow of lfo and man, ho taught: Do mat judgo thy peghbor untll thou hast stood in " his puce.” iNoither did ho 1yox gloon'ly upon tbo divino ways of retribu- tion. Witncusing the wauy alrocitics perne- tratod by llerod, he ouco exclaimed, whilo obrerving a seull tloating upon the water, * L'er- haps thon Last beeu drowuod, Uccauso thou didet diown another, iut surcly he who caused thy deata will tind lus too.” By mere justico, howevar, bis voul found no Tent, but brred its hopa ou mievey. Weighed I the bealcs of justico, the world ever hange in tuspenso, the goud and tho ovil of wmausind oqualing each other, but God's merev geasps the ona seale, outbslanemg justico tw eave mankind, Of his beuevolence, ono icwarkable umt s recordod, Noue- ing & mun of moblo parentago reduced in” clictmutances, and unabio to Live in former wtylo, be caused him to Le provjded with a ser- vaut'aud a hoteo for bis use. Notwithstandivg Lus great wikdom and tho aeop affoction poople eutertumed tor bim, bo nevor proteuded to bo superivr 1o other mon, but, when b died, hlg people mourued their evero joss, exclaming, *\yo have Leen hereft of a wman of 1are quall- tina, of & socoud Ezra, of anothor restorer of tho law " Nor did his depatted gprit sppear to visionary filonds, clad in somo hoeaveoly gurd, but it hved in the words and tonchings lie ln buqneatlod to a latge number of his pupils, When Jolinnan Len Endal, oue of these, ot the and of bis davs, sww tho boly aity boloazneted and tho temple throatenod with dostruction, bo calmly roquested tho Lwmperor Titus to grant bit & place for a seat of learuimng, For with & nursery of kuonledse, Judaism cunnot dio, Trotbren, tho day haviug coma when the old Inudmarks of woushiip ure agsin 1cmoved, wheu Christjumity aud Talmudical Judamm, buth off- string of Hillel, crumbio and shis liko the tem- plo of old, let ns tuke firm stand on the funda- mont or religion, laid by llillol. On tins broad (atform, whioh bidy v to love God and our fol- ow-mun, all scots and nationa can and shall unite iv orecting (ho new tomple of God in tha Licarty of uuiyerenl mankiud, Awen, o PREACH THE GOSPEL. Dr, Kittredge’s Reply to the Lecture of Curl Bz The Rev, Dr, Kitbre roponted. by request, the sormon preacked by him on the proceding Buuday eveniug, in roterence to Carl Schurz's leeturo on Edueation, Hid foxt wan ¢ G o (nto ul tho world, und proach tho doupel fo overy ereatura,—Mark, zvl, 15, I'he text was tho commaud of tho Bon of God a 1o was about to ascond to Ilis Fathor, It wau proper tlut wo whould exorglée our roason, and ahould como Into an intolligoné snd hearty sym« pathy with the command, that it could be under- stood why it was nocesaary that the world eshould hear tho Gospel. There was no otlior agoncy to ovorcomo sin and purify tho hioarts of men, Olvllization had failod to take ita place. Waada grow best side by sldo with the cholcest flowers, and sin thrivos bost in tho soil of the moat refined civilization. Givill- zation hoa made tho bar-room more gorgsous and attraoiive, and the gambliog don mora fo- | viting, ¢ han planted its muuld;udud halls on our moat publio atrocts, and made Aldermen of known and proleasion Tnmbhm. Civillzation Ticonsos houses of prostitution, which are fro- quonted by thoss who mova in the highest cir- cles, It mnkes the theatros school of lcon- tiounnoss, snd the mora corrupt the play the ‘mare crowded the louse by the 8o-callod moral alasson of tho community. Civtlizntion invented divorcos, and, ss a re- genorating powor, was a total fallure, aud lio wise willfully blind who did not sco and acknowl- edroit. Can civil low make commuuities pure nnfi upright? The most stringont legislation could novor oradioate sin from a community. It could narrow tho limits of evil, or, as at prosent, Ticonso tha dovtruction of the ‘bodics sud sould of men in a decont aud respectable mannor. Could odueation purify scoloty? Noona lad & higher appreciation of our common schools than tho epeaker. 1f tho hour should come when tholr only and slcopless enomy—tho Roman Catholie Clwrch—should bave to anenly seek thoir overthrow, ho would be “found to maiutain thom with all his might, Dut oducation was mot tho savior of tho world, You may etore the hond with tho cholcost intollaotual faod, but tho hesrt will remam as boforo. A man daes not love tauth aud virtua auy mora becauss ho can solve an lgebraic problom, or nomo the stars in the firmament and calculato their courses, Daes cdueation rafarm drunkards, purily the hoart of tensuality, or stav the liand of the thief or mur- derer ? The suenker would biavo the stroams of knowledge tlow evorywhero, bub when it was claimed that thus our home would becomo beau- tital with tho ctoroul ploros of vir- tue, holiness, und pence, be thought o sadder mistako was nover made, Education, divoreed from Christiapity, ita handmnid, wns not, aud nover could be, a regonerator of public moralg, Just as traly 85 God had writton in tho vauy phyaical constitntion of man, ** The wicked shall not live ont balf thowr days,” ro it waa the acknowledged truth that virtuo is a neceosily to a permanently sound miud snd & heaalthy Lody, Tlho tnme Intr was writton in the constitution of nntlous, * Rightoousncus cxaltotl n nstion, but i 18 fho destriction of anv peoplo.’ God's lawe axe wisor than humaa enactwents ! Lidu- catlon will nut hill the vacouum | *I'hose who lintoited to the 1un. Carl Schurz o fow eveninga teforo leatued that tho culiivation of tho domestis virines was the romoedy for goclal ovila, Theso virtwas woro derned to bo a knowledge and love af houschiold duties, of litorature, of art, sud of tho means of healthy reercation. Tho lecturer was objectionnbla to tho srenier not 0 much becawse of what was raid na of what waos loft unsaid. Dr. Bchurz gavo ox too ouro for the evil of utomperauce tha apening of moro parks Avd freo concort-balls. "o spoaker bad Loen waitod upon a fow days befora by au insana man, who also had o theory for tho care of intomperance equal to {bat of BMr. Behurz, 1o wanted to borrow £2,000 to orcot public fonutaws through- out the city, whbich ko claimed wonld curo the ovil, far man drank whieky because they could not get water!” Tho spoaker thought Mr. fichurz anu tho iusanc visitor avout ou a par in their romedien. usand vears a7o a wiser man than tud, *11e fear of the Lord is tho It of wisdem.” Mr. Schurz was lko {Lio would-Yo roformers, who throw the Diblo aside aud dethrouey God and took down tho cross, and {liow wout to work to purify eociety. Lducation eannot regenerate society, for the woral disoaso is 1 the Leart, and can only bo_eradicased by tho implanting of now and holy desires, aud by tha nspieation of a hife motive which by its divine graudeur shall Lecomo the mold to whick & divincly ginnd eberacter shall be tormed. "'hia Gosy.al ot Jesue Chuist aloue wet the deop wantof tho poul, and was tho only Lope of eocioty ; ience the langpuago of the iext. he speakier ¢1d nov. undosstoud the Gonpel as do- Wanivatioushem, or any theological dogina. liet, theu, was tho Gospol? The answoc way found a the crossof Chiist, 'Tho love of God o suers wag & fove which went forth to sava them, This fove of God was tho Gospel, or the glad tidings whieh thodiscipies of the xizen Lord wero commauded to preach. Tho intidel denied that thors way suy such Gospel, snd that it could mccomplich any such resuits. The autbenticity and inspiration of tho Gospol reats upon tho same kind of tostimony that his- tory and gcionco do, with tha diterence thut tho proof of the Gospel is strongor ud mors overwhchning than all olticr, Somo of these preofs v Tsr, that only & supernawminl ower could tmpair (Lo 1uin sin had mado ; sec- ond, God 18 Juvn, thien it is like God to pity His sinning children, and to put forth Iis amuvipo~ tout erm to mava them; third, infidelity had labored for 1800 years to overtbrow the Bible, arraying raiost it toaeon, histors, and scienco, but, in tho face of uil opposition, it was 1apidly warclung forward to the conquest of the world, Chollenging the rewovul of ouc stouo in {ho mosivo - wall on which the inspirm- tion of the Iible rusted, the speskor aflivmod that God had promiscd to save all men Trem tho power of _sin by tho renowing of His luly Brint. The Ditlo secognized tho evil and rower of wu; 1t declorod tho holplaseness of tho eimer to change his own heart ; it ;ave to 1hio worla tho model of a boly character, in sym- mctry, epotlcesuess, and Leaty ; it commanded all men to bo like Clrikt, to love God with ali the hears and soul, and mwiud, aod strength, eud our neighbors ns ourelves ; it prowmised tho breathiog of His Almivhty Spirit upon ein-loving Leavts, radieally changing the foundation prin- ciples, o that a porson fhus changed ehould Lo in desiro aud purpeeo o Dw erouule, av il bom again. e sponlor then eloguently considered the promises of God to the world, and feclivgly il lustrated tho simplicity, mepuing, and appli- cution of his toxt, dweliivg particularly upon the idea that Jesus nlone cun save. ————— THINGS UNSEEN, Sermon by tho Roy. Dr Ryder at Murray Chapel The Ttov. Dr. Ryder proached st Murray Chape), on Indisna wvenue near Twenty-ninth strect, to a small congregution, yesterday morn- iug, takiug as bis text ¢ While we look not at the things which are soen, but st tho thiugs which are uot even ; for tho things which are seon are temporal; but tuo ' thlugs whicd aro not ston urs eternal.—/ 1, Corintiions, . 18, Ho uaid bo need not do anythung more than slmuly call attention to the first clauso, tor noth- ing was moro evidont in our ordinacy observa- tion thian theb tho things winch wore visible woro tempoial. Tho other clause, however, was not #o ubvious, Indeod, it was vory hard for many peaple to believe that tho things which wero un- ween wore otornal, and that the yeal forces in tlus universo were not visible at all to our phya- feal mgut, Dbut were altogothor Loyond the rencu of what mwan culled tho *‘five souses” 16 wus very easy fo sCo that fho body decayed, but men wero not apparently suro that the sou! survived, and thae tho reullife was not in the hody bat in that principlo which rosurued to the God who gave it. o tnoughs it vory important to ponsess all the puesibio Jigbt on” tho subject, ginco wa noodid moase or lcss for our comlort und encouragoment dusivg thoe juurnoy of this life. Ho yudotstood tho kind of proof expected ot tho existenco of & spiritaal body. 1f ke declared thiere was ono, and that it and nob tus phyvical body we eaw was tho teal oue, how wasthe proposition to Le demonstraled ? Ile certainly wos hot to estaplish it by the proof of thinks which ners fndicated by the seowes, He bo- Neved the doctrine of o horeafter rostod upon ar- gument and ovidoucs s satifactory 1o tho tenson ag auy othor olaes of proof. The mate- rladst would sy wa had a body, but wo dld not kpow that wo bad a woul, One could nut taucl s thougt, or tasto & focling, orsinoll & rosolution, or measuro tho sizo of & Dopo aud fear, Thess, thon, wors not watter, buk tomething olse ; und we wern just as cortain of the existenca of that something ns we woro of the cxistonce of physical things; it was the soul ; and we woro tuora cortaim of its existonco thun of the axistenca of the budy. How did he know thas thore was a book boforo hiu? 1o was simply consciung, by virtie of an mpresslon made upon the miud through the oyo, ot & nensutlo | Ankwering to tho form of a book, 'Lhst which acted upon bim through hta FunRcH Wua mattor; that which wed conscions of the prexence of matlor and could gaugzo itd prop- ortics was soul, If asked how lio knew thero waw #onl, bo would unawor, By 1ts qualition, All intoraistion relating to the physical wonld come to ud through tho séuses, but wo must not concluda that, through thoao madia, we saw ull thave was (o be seon, Wo did not got Idons, or love, or hate, or aifection, throuzh tho sonnon, or our boliof in God, or onr wontidonce 1 tho heroalier, through oithier of thow, ‘The fivo simply umted (Lo mud with (he would Flioy wera'tha five windows thramht which the boul luoised out upon atorial phunomons; the soul was dopendent of theso uvonucs, After advaucing s argumont to show that IONDAY, NOVEMBER $0, 1874 tho soul was alive, he called attontdian to an im« portant fact, thar the common opinion of tho dopendenge of Jife upon the orpnnism was in- Was tho moul an offect or & causo? Did growth crasta the body, or tho bodv giow ‘Thore was o vaguolmpression abroad that mattor wan first and spirit aftor- correct. bocauso it livod 2 ward,—that tho ph{slcnl form wns tho origin atructure, and tho i #o0 that God onas firat,—that mind or epis was bofors mon. Alatter was mado to give ox- pression to mind, not mind 1o give exprossion to matter, Tho phyeical world hind its usca aud sorvod tho onds of lumamity just as thie physical body sorved tho ends of ‘the souls snd G fe in it wan » subsoquent creation ; but if wo thought » littlo we wonld timo at the sun's surface, Then the aquaroof v will bo found by subtracting » from d, dwviding the romaluder by dr, sud multiplying tho result into 41, Now, Lha qnantity & minus r, by dr, ropresents tho puaro of the rate of travoling along the ele nal | cumforatics of au oolipso, whero d s tho major axln; r, tho ditlanco of any polut from tho prin- it cipal fosus; aud the dopartuic or hondmg of tha oiirva from tho tangont lino, measurod fu the direction of e focuy, varien [nvorsely as the sauare of ». enca tha atiraction of "tho sun palls the earth xlong tho cireumforonco of tho a1 | ellineo, instend of pormitsing it to deacribo tho awopt. tiiam out. of oxistonce_that tho splritual | t8ngeNY live, realm might bo entiroly complote and full, 1le thon_proceoded to show that mind come- timens nctod indoponidontly of tho body, instsus. ing, by way of illusiration, somnambulisn, ab. normal eight, miud-reading, and prematuro de- volopmont of ohildron, Wheso mightnot demons atrato tho doctrine ot an indopendent action of tho mind, or provo tbat the noul pxisted inde- pendontly of the budy, but he did think, by & coudid oxamination of these phonomens, that hia hearars would agreo with kim that thoy wero apoworful indication of the truth of what bo o Tio noxt considered the tornity of thinga soon, Would tho Indden cloments always iive? n Wauld tho noul prove to bo Indestruotible? It was impos- sible for any intalligont man to concoive a dif- Tho bolief in imwortality woe not aceidental; it did not depoud upou eduons Would the mind always suvvive? feront result. tion. Every man bolloved substuntinlly what Lolioved ; thora was o raco of Leings’ that did ot believe iu a God of some kind nud & future life. Was it concatvable that God had o organ- izod our being and so controlled us that wo wora compailed to believe that which was 1ot true? To bolioved, with the Apastie Paul, thot faith wwas the substance of thingu, and hopd the o donco of things not scen. to-day and eomsthieg elso to-motrow, Lha stinots of humnanity uover changod, What man loved in the bLeginuing Lo loved to- day. When every lumat eoul, from the cam- ‘mancomant to thivdsy, bad been worabipiug God, and renchiug out after Hitn, there must ba a God ; oluo avory man woa Hterally a cheat. Tho boot of man's inatincts was Lis roligious lnstinet, ond he balieved 1t could bo trustod—that it was moro reliable than ronson, mote cortaln thau ‘Pl neater vo cawe lo death the moro wo naturally trusted i God, and the stronger becamo our faith in the lifo to come. His subjoct, it would Lo zoon, assumed s two fold form: Wo Joft matexial things this side of tho grave; aud wo took spiritual things with us. If tina wero 80, ohpht we not 1o at loast some- tintes thinkabout it? Wlat onght tobe the sim Ought we 1ot to try in tho foar ergumont, of our lives ? of God to got xeligion 2 e CARRYING THE BANNER, Sermon by tho Rov. Dr, Neal, of Doston, Tho Iov. Dr. Noal, of tho First Baptist Church, Danton, preached yesterdasy moruivg st the TFourth Baptist Church, at the carner of Paulina and Washington streots, fram the toxt: Thou st gven & bannor to them tlat foar T that it may be dispisyed bevauss of tho truth,—Peaiims, 2ty 4e In opening kis sermon, theproaclier slluded to tho fuct that the pssim bogan with a word gorrow, but ended with a nota of joy, emblem- Though ovary one hiad sorrows, thora was a changa for the bot- What changed the plaintiv strain toana of cheerful melody wag stated fn the text. The bunnor was the sicn of tho national awmhoiity, It representod the arm of powor, and was| ;-nxlpuu\cd accordingly smong different 1c banneys of the Lord hung out all over tho world in the vizible and ivvisiolo prod- atic of Christian esperiouce, ter for all. nutious, 1] wots of Ih miglit. o reforenca w tho text wan to the outward igious moiskip, Tho act of coming o shuieh wig i il s good thiug, Th 0 the forms of ¢! Clivistian savetunry was dosigned to b bouso of tho Lord, of God'a bunor, and, plo might eay tlay tho dwelling pl thouria many P golug thero was wevely o form. they should remember that it Iiow many a man ways_God's appomted form. would have hiad his mother mado hi qu tu chnrehl Ll d from & tecrible cars Lio Babbath wns anotier form of God's ap- Ynlul}nu. ‘This precious season was rogarded by he pions Tiebrew oy o day of vost, Thoe Clrise tinn Sabbath was difforent from that of tho Jows in that it was not ep rigid; thero was mors of }Ifico and sweetness in it. Stil, it 1e:nined ts siguificanco as of yoro. Tho preacior do- eeribod thoe Leautiful cala of a Now England Sabbath mornig, and tho shock it gave him when, 28 a boy, ou & Sanbath day, he heard tha This regard for - tho Sabbsth waa auother bannor of Gad report of a gun in the wonds, Whils tho intollects of men chuged, and thoy bolleved ono thing folicw thoe form of go- ‘s lineal volocity with which the oarih, or any othor body, movos at any point is, therefore, oxactly u?unl 10 that which wonld bo gongrated by & fall from an erimnal _dlstanco equal to tho major axis of the orbit, 1tls also equal to tho volocity duo to an expulsive forco which would bo oxhanated when the body had reached o dis- {ance from the sun cqual to tho major axia of its orbit. Tho fall from tbe tangont kino to thugurv« inn unit of timo is that duo to the sun's altraciion operating In that unit of timo only, In tho clreilar orbit theso tvo movomonts aro to oach othor as the aro Lo its yorsed slno. s0- | o muy nolo, aluo, thit, whothor o path do- seribed bo a straight line and baole (the sun bo- ing at ons ond of tua line), or o circlo having o diamotor equal to that stralght line, or an ellipse of sny po:aible eccentricity, buving its major axis oqual to that stenight lino, the poriodof royolution will bo tho samc, Tho carth, whon thrown oft from the sun, did not deecribo a spiral path, nor bas sho dono 8o at any mubsoguont date. The mame fs trup of ail tho other plancta, Tho equations aboya indi- catod show, also, that oven it n convulsion in the sun should bo poworful enough to expel o Dbody to au infinito distance, the path doscribed wouh]l bo tho lalf of & purabola, and not a spirel. ho vi- —_— e —— Steligions Excitement in England. The profound religions oxcitoment in Tngland, just pow, wo may well beliovp, excecds thatof any poriod for o long timo pravious, Tho hot discussions over Tyndall, Huxtoy, and Mill wore scarcely *on " boforo the Gndstone eatthquake come, - Even withous the Jatter, the burden of roligionn dincussion was boconing intolorable. Bir. M. D. Conway, who, as correspondons of the Cinclnnati Commercial at London, is par excel- lence the religiois reporter for thls lalitude, auotes Disracii as saying that © ladios lisp Athe- ism ovor their ices,” and snya that ic is in order in tho intorvals of the waltz to ask your partwer whetker she belioves in animism or automatism, Society 18 further kept nlivo by the aponrance In tho froo_roligious pulpit of a lovely woman, Mrs, Anno Desaut, who hee mastored tho best cutture and soclety of Burops, only to bo divorc- od by her husband for rofusing to “join the Eng- lish Chureh nud partako of tho sacramont. Aa- other lady of hovetical opinions, the wifo of n clorgyman of tho church, though never out of Ler right mind, hay beon found in s private in- sane gsylum, whoro sho Lng beon incarcorated sinoo Soutember, 1870, and whonca all hor lottors and appeals have beon suppressed. She s now out, and has so interosted Sir Charles Dilke, Lord Roagborry, sad others, that An agsociation s beon formad to push tho refarm of the luna« cylaws, Undor tho prosont disabilition of mar- ried womon, it takes tho husband to got tue wife out of o lunatio ssylum, and that's whors clorieal goutlomon have tho advantage over lorotical spouscs. {n- hee of CITY REAL ESTATE. TOR BALR_2% VEINON-AV._NEW OCTAGON- front; will take & Jot tn part payment: wiil ront. (iOR BALEG—800 FEET _NEAR OENTRAL PARK, ‘batweon Lake aud Aladisun-sts.; one-foarth caab, alaace, 4 yoars. ouse sud 1wt near Unlan Pack, Lats noar Nurthwostorn lggomofire worke. . H, CASTLE & SON, Toom 3 Mothodlst Gnarch Block, TOR SALU-A NIOE GOTTAGE, SIX TROOMS, closots and water; Jut 29x15; a bargain |f you hava money, _Inquiro at 117} Jaokson-at. For BALE_REAL TR BY AUCTION-WE Liave had plicod In our hands some of tho most val uablo proporty in Chicago and its subucbs, embracin o i 5 aituat parts of aco o iydo Park a ixton Halghts acce 0o ithour rosorre o Monday, 5, TEYY "Auiionoors, JOIL BALE-OR "EXCRAROE-SEVERAT, MOST doslrabio plocas of roal estato in Chicsge sad im~ cor | modiats viclaity, ymprovad and unimproved, froo from livas, for aa ¢ vory low and on oasy tarms, of, woild 8z eliango for buslages praporty i tho city nol too hearily iucuinborod, ‘and mizby ks sane cash, ware & gonulao bargtta to U oiforod. ” GEU, 1. IOZLT, 103 Washiag- - SUB B BAN REAL ESTATE, QR BA 100 WiLI, BUY A LOT AT PARK F Ridge, 3 lodsmnl aud #5 a month untii paid; ono all | biock from dopor; vroparly shown fieo, Cnespost props oty mlngl(vg. IRA BROWN, 142 Lasalie-st., It lflflll BALE~CHUEAP [0 AN COTTAG! at Euglowoad, ucar dspot, on mun‘lI i?nymenl!, T4un houkes at iivaaston; samo torms. TILLOISON e COURYRY R.EALNJ:?J.'ATE. oot 4, alich clionld be Lont waxing forarar, o | TSI EATE AN 5 FROWRGE- Church organization was n divine hmll‘.utl?u for Thoa was no doubt that thore wera bad mombers of churclies, but, oeiug uader tha shadow und pra- tection of the bavner, troy did not soear so bad the comfort aud sufety af its membera, as thoy really were, Tho minin‘ars wera intonded to bo a protec- tion imd rolinble guide to their people, ~ Th woro mnbussdors for Cbrist, and onght all feel tlcir solemn responsbility, A faichful ur tar was the divinely-sppointed banner-bearer the Lord. reuponsibility. God's woids, to which specinl referenco was made in tho text,was o atill moro porfect banuer. ‘Flio preachor bad heard muny o crimiual o that if whon young he had mado a study of the Bible bo would bavo mado = bebter and moro successful man, Thare was n perfoct boun aud that was tho iutinita love of our Savier fur 1u one seuse such a ono waa suthor ized to wicld the Koy of the Kingdom, aud, ( 15t with o knowledge of tufs fuct in mind, overy minister ourht to live up to tho Ligh lovel of his d tnems in fgwa and Iligols, ‘Feuit farm I Mionlgan. 2 huuscannd lota ay Downor's Grova, 10 acros land In Tuwa and ntonoy fur atock of goods, 810,060 atack ot dry gouds und oots sud shous for olty roul oniato. % 500 ucics land fn Xows for sals at £3.80 e acro Apely to . 1L, G, 1t & SU S Toom 3, Maiiodist Ghuch Bleck, ey | [FOR HATE- T AORIS EX NT GEA to Land fu Northorn Indiana, 60 niles from. Chi - tiroo rallroads witnla Smullos. Addrees O, B, TH RS2 [ Selua, Clark of s O, o S ARG SO, (TR e Tat, in good apaory $100 enrh 8y 1, R R SRR H A unovitice, 10 RENT---HOUSES. 70, RENT_VERY ONEAT_BONIE NEW GO tagos i suppliod with water, o Ambrony - Caabol sampboll, o [c~ i | Conmiokiat oD, B LaSationt. iQ WENT-—LOUI N EWSSTORY AND MASEMENT wbllckfl\vfl"(m:s nwmcrb.\'l ‘:hdslfl“fi lud.als"ll‘lirbh !h‘. $60' et mundi i Urick. dweltng, 253 Huotaosts 0, | Fo8 heS ut oot i Jseanis Buildioi. % s Cormik o ANTED-A LTI ‘v thorighly heguaintod with_thy hii-taoess Bt. Pauly o, NTED-IWO YOURG oty aud fes store, Mt s Apply nb OEO, K = AN T ell e ended, (v tako chi o cheguin Jouriug ki 13 1ows, ~Addicia ¥ D-X FTRET.OLAAS 1) e QT TARDSON ‘& "0Tid, i1 \CLASH OLOTHING SALEUS; Jrues BUSTO CLUTIT b T CED, PRACTIOLL a0 of aud an T J0B GO lugaity, Ktosdy eniplo e minn, no Job Printors ““}f;‘.'.fi,’,.;‘,|"“”“""“"‘"y ..;r'mm;v Goon ynrrol coanwra ot fo T R Mins DA GOOD TRIWER, A3 FORRMAM. 8o Kot Hataied sy, atwaan 13 and § (5, DAY &CO., Min ANTED —A PRESSMAN = CON tako chargo of tho “Transcript pire nat anly hie thoroughly experfonced, hut & man of sto Tahlte. A pormanont situation for'tho right man, Ads urons Poorin Transeript Compauy, atatlng torms, oto, Miscolinnoons, — A FIMYT-OLASS QANVARSER TG v tho oity for aty mproved biudor, Weful 14 ion, and capelally aantod to thia'usy of i Aurance compaulos, Addross, giving relervncos, K i, Tribune othgs, H-—MEN OF GENTREL APPRARAN or, men of tact. Sampics to 'country” Ir Ki Stoi st Toom O burtaces in olty or gonntey. Weaflor 8 want gocd mci; 840 1o $0a work sl 1§ £ 0 to soll maw Articios suitod for huuse, officey 4310 G20 buya outlit, Amorioan X » 113 linst Madison-st., lluoiu 2. ANTED-A SOLICITOR oIt {nots, Blank huk work, arid fob printing. 4 sert desteablo and purmanentaituation 1 one of the beat ofide hio a'good man, Ad salary axpoctod; PICAN. 1z, Chicago. TABLE TAL oveit] ADVERTISE, il ol LN, Room 16 Laveatde WANTED-FEMALE HELP. AN NED=EBNALE LR, D; : Axren-omn TR Bk, TASTER, A roner; must comsa woll rocommondod. Call st 13¢ A NEAT, TIDY GIRL TO WAIT ON d aasiat at housawork, Abply Imnodiately t Nursos. TANTED—AN EXPERIENORD NURSP, ONR 0 can como recommended, 115 Migdluan.av Apvly virly to No, nnar Thirty. i’ Book! ITUATION WANTED. yoats of &0, O mnrnn‘mlhlydm:v‘u’;m‘ntswu'n office work'n all ftg an intradug 13} 83 Tous ars’ ro, 10 provsnt omployors. Addross k10, Tribans ey ! - e § SITUATIONS WANTED--MALE. lroonors, Clorks, &a, Y A N AN % nnl, I a morahiant or conmising SITUATIONS WANTED--FEMALE » Nursns. TUATION WANIED-BY A GOMPEILYE o o mifo, Chlambornialdy G6s AroROREY R Hoory” o e o Employmont Agonts. ITUATIONS WANTRD-FAMILIES IN WANT, (r 0 < Soandinavisn ant Gorman help cas bs tuppils 4. DUSK 'S ohice, 0 Milwaiken-av, FINANGIAL. SMALL AMOUNT OF MONEY TO LOAN ON od_securlty, WIII purchate & good ~murlgage. sALLMAR, 8 o ark-at., Hoom 25, AID TOR commercisl paper, i t ONEY TO LOAN ON DIAMONDS, W. oy maopiaon ad athor oltstorali. Pl LAIMS AGAINST THE KNIOKRRBOOKIR, LA- imar, itepublio, Hom vusol and othor baukrupt lusirancy Do Itoom s, T GITY GERTIFIOATER ARD S UGaREC LRGP nidY T ‘toss Room 2, up-at s, 10 LOAN ON CULLATERAL SEQURL all amatints, aboet iiins, and reason 1blo rate JONN M. WAITE, i3 Doarbornat, ONEY TO LOAN ON_ DIAMONDS, WATGHES, ‘at LAUNDICH'S privato office, 130 Ran- “Lintk,Katabiishod 1854, (ONEY TO LOAN ON IMPROVED FARMS 1N MORGners st D: ;. Tribuuo Bufldios, K. PEARSUNS, Room 1§ 0 LOAN—$17,000 IN TWO BUMS OFf 26,000 T N A oW b K GRTGOT & East Wasbiugtodat, EACH & 00.‘-! LA i DICTRE S0JTe CO0D ATFIoA i fanida proporty, Tunds in bankand oao! ainouie to suit. 11 OSLORN & SON, 123 LoAN—l'l?lNlP‘TY. FORU AL T'fl:s{ g&YBAfl%: 0 51 praporly, at curront rates; Hira imoney MOrigsges wanteds e De HAIL: lugton-st. NTED-TWRER WMRN IN A one moed & sl at Rovm X, 131 LaSa TO $],00 INVESTED IN 5T00KS AND GoLd 'C05 tidukers, 3 Wah R 10 thay aro abls Eiron of sto0k at 8100, por siata. la-8t., lll!lwnunfilnflg!. per cont a monih, r particuisrs + Now York, oMt ot vovoniy of 36,001 por. annm, % iimoxcoptionsbla city seforoRces: drone 18, Tribiuno otfcor T WILL B PAID YOIt NHGOTIATING a losn of 816,000, pagablo in 0 o Intorast 10 p3z cont on productivo busiuos o msuulactuclog towa near Oleveland, O, an. Ad‘! n (ivo annual . mi-annual; securit, ; property in_goa or annum, T0 LOAn FOR LONG TIME ON Stz orept ostate, 't sims of 63,00 to s 24,000, " LOCKWQOD & BAUOY, Reom 13, 88 AGENTS WANTED, TNTS WANTED_S10 PER DAY—TO SELL THR Tomo ahut.lo sowing machino, priso 5. | 3o ean’ tako inonoy - sollini iha Yehetlior you aro oxporiaacod Lo the busine Sau wish 10 bug & sowing maching for family wae, oUF cie 7ol (Gtusa maney, Addreis JOLLN: toadort ! uio Shuttle ¥ not. foago, 11 '§ WAN Wowantatintcla or, t soll the wogld-renawnod Wilton bibo, and tho Wikon mauufactunn m ‘or fall EVING-aACIINE" 60! —SPECTAL INDUGENENTS= agont Inovary county b {he Unitod uttls Sowing niach{nos, ta we ary prepared to oller oxtraordinary indiose eifoulare, anoly to, o addeeen, W 1in SR AN "\ GENTS WANTED-SER HERE-85 T oy geliablo and fist reling aricicn; ead gors Agoots' Exobaoge, 13 East Madle PIISCELLANEOUS, - Tl owi, Theso Launers waio intended to bo | 0, RENI=A TIOUSE CONIAINING T TOOMS displayed, not for vaw show, but as tho toxt said | d for’ the sake of the truth, Thoro nover was a tie whou (his way mora neceasary than now, Infidolity was gaiuing & stronger foothold than ever, The mout intellectual of mon hed ine trenched thomaolves behind scientifie facts, and bad uttncked ovon tho old family Biblo. It wug necoreury thut the sacred baoncrsshould bo displayed just as thoy cawe from tho Lord. If apy ofio atieapted to chiaueo the bannor he would bo nccwissd in the nawo of tho Lo \Whoa a boy, tho praacher had heard Wobsfer do- Tiver iu tha Senata bis wagnilicent apostrapho to the Amorican flug, and L urged that the sonti- monts of that fatuliar oratorical passago wero appiicablo to tho divine baunors on which ho was preaching. In tho conclualon of his sermon the proacher addressed bimself to tho young men of tha con- nregation, aud colled upon each of them tn take Liolt of one of tho banuers of the Loid, und to carry ic thiough lifa faithfully aud with waswerv Ing purpose. THE EARTH'S MOTICN IN HZR ORBIT. To_the Editor of The Chlcago Tribus sin: Loving lud & dis menner 0 wuich the earth ediy.tic apply o you for iuformation, ory 1 bilieve to be, aud, wh aud yreater, fwally ow!cumhl% the_sitraction gravhatlon, aud causing the eart Unucd to sct, aud converted the atraight liue orl iE- | TO RENT=-ST! iuuly puraucd into a cureed lue, Now, Lad tha furcea Loon preciacly tho same, niud aotin at Tight on a ing angles to eacls otor, tho result wouid Lave of motion oquldistant lebwoen the two dlirectious foree, which wouid enitihg fiom tho opposition of the two furc Soeumed s direolions "but. siightly dofiected_front oller~ the direction of < tho force, greuter wise tho centrifugol forco, 8o be, while thie centritugal forco crcatis dn tho opposition of the forces, and tho size g i hs SHORY & Gate WHOLES of the epirul fncieate ina co Gnally tho esrth shiall yasa boyond the fuRunce of “organy: will selai] Instruments #un, and contjuue forover ouward in & siraight lino 7 pianos and organs; wi Wi you kiualy snswer thieso quosidons c;mm T bondeyd Tumuse, Yours, oic. Cmoago, No, 31, 16i. ANSWER, 1t ia not possiblo to givo a complote anawer theso quostions without employing & number mathawatical figuros ond formulas ; and thoy would be out of placa in the coling of & nows- paper. Wo mili, howover, i1y to indlcate the modo ab ronscuing ont tho mathematics in the ity, or the spuco passod over in s unit of timo, tho distance, r; nud f tho distance throu whiok tho body would fall dutho firut umit jon regarding * the sumed s presont motion arcound the sun, permit me to The accented tho- hat ‘the earth originally ) formed part of tho Sucindescent matles of 1l aul Io fn thla vondition, tlio Leat getierated a rapid rotary motlon the centrifugal force Lecame greater lo fiy off ut & fone | L alsklo oron tulse B Tho'atursetion of gravitation stil, however, con- | 20t JULnuth Clar Tiave been a clrcle, 1t hiero the diilicully arleen; the forces wero nob eqial fu the atart, sud coustquently (ho new linoof motion, To- wo Lavs, A8 4 ro- suilt, & apirel Inetcid of & elrcie, Now, o8 (e spiral Juv Creases i fize, and the distancd from e sus becomes greater, the Kitraction of grsviiation besomet leks, ocs.not decreate, Why, then, dees not (e deflection decreaso with the de- g0, ‘'aking tho distanco from the cantre of thesun Lo hie Aurface us the Wit of weasuromont, lotd represont tho distanco to which an oxpuluive fores at tho eun woulkl cause a bady o rocedo from hilm; that g, tho diatance nt which tho out~ N ward movoment wouwll coaso, owing (o the ro- UYERS {srding influenco of tha sun's uitraction, Letr ropresont Lho distanco from tha s at any point. infos pathy, olthor golng or Fotucniug ¢ v, tho volos- ithif half-bluck of strest.cars, with of without laupe ry attaobicd, Inquies az 10 forth Gres CPAINTERS, ATTENTION-YOU CAN DAy pact i wark, Half or'all af S-mom hiousa 837 Judisunst, Rout 10 sult, TRUESDELL & BROWNK, 108 Fiu ENT--I00M5. M'0 RENT-NIOELY-FURNISHED ROOMS_FOR Jomon; central lucadun asd rout juw. Inquirs rkeat., Koo 6. 0MS AND COTTAGES FOR TIOUSE.- L'm‘i‘ n good ordor; ono block nv:t n(ounkm Park; cheap to goud tonuut. Oaflat 181 West Dadion- atey touun TD RENT-THI MOST DI rd, Aot rons LYt otk ot magatn antly farnlsbod_raums by day, weok, or menth; to gontfoian ouly. & Dearborists, Toom’ &, Caros Foasonabio. 10 RENT-TRIVATE PASILEAVE X THONT Yoo, furaldied, for ono of two gontlemeu, 41 South Carpontorst., uoar “'l)hlul_lm‘l. 10 RENT-UN’ it LR 5T et atad quiroat oitica of Mutual ‘s Block, Ine "Co., 48 Sould 7ji0, RESTIND NT _IOOMS, with or without [ k., moar Nor(li Doarbora. e Truge ofhice. o h STONE-FIRONT Latlis in lats, each con. faintog 7 teran front and Tinck on 7 sont $25and §20 yer mouth, o T A’Nn’mn'r!l-:s o, ]'IO'O.\IBJ ci n Say AL 50 1 counaly locato Afig.\h":. at fave Gonnate, Ly W.a. Wes RENTSNICKLY FURNISHED ROOMS, IN. 0 BN I SNICAY o CAAL Unlon Block, arboveet kot and Madison 716 TRENT—IIARDSOM o | TGty vran sulio: bost ¥ TURNISHED ROOATS, cation {0 tuo eity, and lowont oo 11, ORES. OFFIC S, &o Stores. '0 RENT-SEVERAL 8TURES AND BASRMENTS dwolifog apartments in the Suttou Bluck, gore and \ad o) s .ate.: evarythilog now aod A e D AVISON & WRLOIT, T8 La 2alio Aty Miccollnnnoms, TD RENT-THRER DESIRABLE LOTTS AT 50 AND 51 Aadisan. {apturiog bu Sultatila for salgiroomus or for waun-,| wineid,” Hong o, ARy ta D U, WAL 1A0AL Bullock Hrotiors, B8 aud 53 Medlaist; MOSIGAL, ______ HTOLASS OABINET ORGAN OAN BI i of atth an factory thaa at any oth- i, | Wikdeato aud towlls Kictotun thl fl":_!&l iana-st, T DEALENE TN R R O A Mholdeato prioos, Mo ts oue o i scoure B nte Dockor, Bragbary, oF Story’ & Oswp PIA8s, or Faiey Urgan, A lvn,futte atnok of aocond-hand fnatraments ra o 455 s W sl o0 Laualimn or o Iawing Tent 1o go toward purchiayy, 3§ doss ot to upar Adaus, DVERTISERS WIIO DESINE TO REACH GOU. 1ry readors can do go fa the iz uno or woro sect o) aper Lists, Apply to A 1L GOOD UAST-OFF GLOTINING WiLL ot tho blghost prica by JONAY A Bi uth Clarkiat, Notico tho best. and aheapest, ma ymald promptly atten ST FATD TOW OLD REWRTADHNS, ROOK J' pamphiacs, rage, mainle, bo:tlo 5 2, oblt 2 iitvar, Blook Salled forla Novewbior, 194, tlos, &c., 8t PETT WANT OF 10% GREAM BALOON Jargo lino of marblo top o Staves, Loy o 14 & GO S and o8 Bas TERFY INFORMED THAT THH n & Flint bave, ou tho dth day of olvod burtoerabin, Contracts takor L1y, (30 Siato-at. FOR SALE. OR SALE—RID YOUR HOUSES OF TITE LOATH- ‘namo cuckroach whilu they 1o slug Oakis 3 Bl thoy Infor: Soue watin toone dukiraach. FAturIGator, WARCAREA: Catl'oa G ‘addross ARTIUIE OAKGS O] BALE—~A GOMPLETE TILE OF OHUAGO e outis, oidiog Juus . 157, Addrese 90, TP BETY OF VERY NIORMIKK 't Tots thas batC fico, 125 Clark-st. BUTOL £, 3 North Sangawmon.at. cash peloa, Private Loan Of Hooin 2. Tt BLOGKS, DY A, J. WY D= L BOARDING AND LODGING, Wost “ides T MADISON-ST., SITARD'S RLOCK-. ingle aud suites of ooms to 1001, with board, at rvasouablo irioes, EVADA HOTRIL, ards por weok i day.board, $5 por. Hotels, WABAS ur00—First-ols SEWING MACHINES, s;; GROVEI & A €3 and Uato Domt 125 Soutls Uiark-at e INOUR, SEWING MAGHINE-—PRINOIDAL OF. 1los 111 Btuto-st, Machivossold on menthly payments; 10 por cont discout for as! INGLE OLFIOIOT A, J. MELOHENRT, 515 SOUTI Ity agont. Machines sold’ on mouthly i ropal KER'S, 3 INPROVED SINGL] c, at fous than hull cust, Ltoom 2 ozt atlico, U TOWLING AL F Houtu Water. K OIIANOF~FOR BALG—THE ST, ONARLES otel; big bargal: Bold 1his mont ng { Apply 10 PHITLEE U gy “ WILL BUY A HALF INTEREST IN AN old ostulilsned eashh buslio of i L TOR SALE-NEW AND SEOOND. hand planos and organe. 1lntiug 8 aprelilly, Wat, PROSEEN Y U ag Vau furen. LOST AND FOUND. ____ ST—A SMALY, BLACK VALI# CONTAINING L o Seiday s irrard pasd i1 5 Sibtor i,_GEORGE PG OST-RUNDAY MORNING TETWIERN 19 AND 3, Kot-bouk coraiing papers and ahuut 1) Wat [uat on Bataest., botwoo Thistsonth s, Keop minoy and rolugn pooket-baok, ifles, obllglig uwuae, BV ERITAM, GOODS, HOUSEHOLD I AND BELLIRE O URE, OR BUG andise, will Md 120 thude Yt W AL ON 8 A o ndl a fi?fi?nmwu OIS AN 1N A NEWS. gh uapur s, Nuns ool unrly wilces they ace abla ant W Wirhas e biwted W skt Bt e R ot | S CR &G B ) W LR Call or ddross 137 houtn Ulsi] 10 EXCHANG! PO EXUHARGE=MO and 32507 woll susure clty real ostata dnprovod opswdise us, tuentiue; ud OING=A BKLEOD Ul SR & anh; el intiocn;tulon'yad goatliiud BUSINESS CHANOCES. S CONPLETE FOIt SALHA ho leaso and 1urniture must oing out of tho boto! busincss, V. ropriotor. ayiug 404 e & s 0 horyed, osrriaiee, and slcigar vlday AL n, Partios wishing W O o et das u dishoto ot BUoh ook ¥ROULA AEOD Thove paon 33 ATGaL birgains are coctal i BALE=A FIRSTOLASS B, ‘Afbany sioigh, sud e e wo ot tia boat iteht AL 10 Lssl Washingis i OF #7,00 St el IS\ Frk KT yrecd oy ronl WUCK Wi Rin ¥ urontiig, o.uusno e (o Jiasiors an Idowalts a spockaliz

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