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2 THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, JULY 1, 1876, IR COTTO 1 Thiy - nity lsan 3 ) T8 then, *1 sball | 'unl}—fl}l." The ol n~l-n( hu- 7(&1’!1’1:! not, we sllnlfimlcrnlnml Iiis provi- | loylng and praclons Father, morn ready to i\ Dl THE COTTON DI b b i e St A RELIGIOUS. L R e e MR G ] B RS R e S b D R R B GRS AR Sl T TILE TUR and all sorts of mnanufuetured artleles, The Texas trade s better than the ald Southern 4 rade, which made fortunca for thousandaof | ¢ (- Now-York and. New-Eogiand denlurs, beeause God For Us"-=-Sermon by the dny, be at once fully completeds The trial | Judgs of all the enrth will o rights then we | or wocr. Iet na spread the gond news! Lot the then ahall emd, the disipline shnll have | shall sco that what He promised He performed, [ aun ahine breiehter and the birds simg better for How St. Louis Has Obtained the beey fally garncred, and alt whom Christ had | that in workig nll things aewording to the | oie Father loves us ud wishos' what Ia hest for | Recent Events at Saratoga--z, . eleansed “will then' he ready for the glorfous | counsel of fifs own will, e acted bt perfect [ ual Trade of Texas. tite plan of rettiement aml farming fn Tesns Rev. Samuel W. Duffield. {rauafer from thme to hmmartality. Daring Al | wisdom, merey, and fove, Whn il is §s | - And when onico our eyes ars opened this s fn- Ochlltree Seandal. admits of a denser population. The old planta- TN DTS e this thne and amid sl there warvelouschanges | loyingly understond, shall we not. he satisiiedl | deed preelsely what we'see, The Chilstlan who tion-agatem s played out, Cotton fs grown by Chirist's own will be * sutlsticd.” Lt di ot by forgotten, ns we closo these | hoa been in doubt and tronble and distress, and Immense Value of the South- western Cotton-Trafilc, wmall furmers: 63 n part of theirerop, just sa | The Rev. Dr. Williamson’s Views wheat s grown in the Northwest, Under The resurection of thie human body will take | Joyous reticetions, that here will be o awaklng | (0 whom it lus beea revealed that this 9 for | The Amarican Horses in Englang.., hits system, an intelligent and ndustrions com- on “Satistuction.” lace In this world, right where itsuffered, died, | with Ils likencss by spontanlety, The ardent { his — good, wil not be n heathien > T founil e, wolcnite. sepilenre, it hit | Jubior o yutle. Hfetliys will. alk b mecdud to | @iide = oF s faies proshet. it Tho Dofeat of Proaknoss, munliy has grown up, o which nearly every —_— method of fte transference to Heaven, und, In- uch the ratiafaction 1 have tricd to define, | will know that God lielps these” who, in Toving family 1s protiucing this staple article of trade 2 TION. deed, the locality of Heaven, we caunot even | and for which your alarmed spirit so deeply | trast on Him, endeavor to liolp themselves Epectal Correspandence af Tha Tribune, A Busi: of Millions that Has Grown- | and consumptlon, for which there Is an unlim- BATISFAC LY plauslbly surinise. Bome think wa ehall not | yearns, The réaurrectlon morning s certndn | It seems that [iis laws and 18 providences BAnaroas, N, V., July 28,—Though () aingss fted demund n the North, and in exchange for BENMON RY TIR REV. DR, WILLIAMSON, Icn\'c thls dear, unfortunate old earth at all, but | to break, for Gol's Word so nasures s, but to | are opposed Lo our wish, the opposition passes turns for tha first of the racin h Bh tha ry Up in a Fow Years, which they want o long it of goods’ munufac- | The Rev. Dr. Wililamson, pastor of the Wa- | that here our lcaven will be. God I abley you | rome its radiance will bo unutterablo confuston | away when the decpor linrmony (s revealed tn [ 8 87 Y o I“['-' Byear show g ] A tured {n tflc North, Thus, the bush Avenue M. E. Church, preachied yesterday | know, to spread as heautiful ns Eden olt over | andwoe. ‘To gaina part In tho first resurrection | Jesis Christ, er of horscs In tralnlng than ever bety DIRECT PROFITS OF TUE COTTON-TRAPFIC o fo not represent the valte of tho trade, The | Morning the followlng discourse, tuklug as bis {ndireet benefit Is greater than the direet. The | texts scller of cotton I8 a buyer, and his vrders range | 1shall o matlefiecd when Tawake with thy like- all through the llst, from the platio to the scrul ners,—Lealme, zvik, 10, bing-brush, and from the steam-cnglne to the Thers are very fuw, i there arc any, satisficd rat-trap. 1 have talked #ith 8t Louis Jobbers | people, though all are secking to become such., b il lncs, nud finil that tiey plage s very Wih | 1 s gonerally felt that rlcties have n good deal ::lmr?tnlle\filbh‘lz;gnemwm e ;]"’“‘sl“’h diemn, | of power to make those who possess them quite Dbut generally they consider that tImy Tave It al] | well satisfled. True to this widely prevalent to thigmsclves. ‘They say that the tiade of Tex- | Idea, our inost valuable people are trying to get a8 is rrowing in voltine und lucrensing In safcty | rich a bundred fold harder than they are scek- Y every year, It 18 counted upon as oue of the | 15510 oat wise or good, Only a few, compara- this world, (€ He thiuks it besty and, for aught | will tax you to your wtmost, 1L s hard work 1t will not he to us a8 to .the heathen, Thoy | 8t n greater amount of money given fn n_m"; T know, He may think best, Adam lived 1n o | o earry” on o lirge bieluess, to | renr binck columna and eut them luto strange, | and prizes, the Inst threo meetings in the g, runyfulr Ileaven before hio felly and the orig- | accomplished seholar, to raise a1 grinning foces, But to us an ol 48 nothing i | have not heen up to tho mark, m,n“].fm rnnl lory of his home rvestored, amd wmade | v to getand hald a strong influ the world, Men's fictions as to tho divine had Indifferent flelds and n elphty cofnelient with the boundariea of our Globe, | elorts re the inerest haliday recreations 2om- | character are nothing to those who realize ;.L 5 id a small attendaneg, might auswer well enough for the cternal | pared to the peralatency ot fabor and self- | that e lson our side, nnd thutall things con. | 0t Long Branch there wero very fow horses ang dwelling vlace of the redeemed, Let the :‘l’n-mul required to nwake with His likeness, An | spire—nas In the majestle argument of the apostle | 10 good contests, and at Saratoua the meetin, fssto here suegested turn out as ft | ensy and irresponsible time fn religion means, | —to prove the fnct, Death, disasier, dreatt,—f cantiot be ealled o auccess, judged by the iy, g may, all who aro admitted ton ‘mn.lu the first | when its opportunities are over, the worm that | blnck columns on which o god's faco has been | standard of previous years, like 1575 f gy resurrection will be “eatlsfied,” ‘Thebeavenly | dies not, and the fire that cannot bo quenched. | cut,~are not to us anything doubtful or terrl- stance. Tho heat b ) 10 for g, land, whether it be tha terresirla) purltied, or | Dear friends, who are ldlers tn the vineyard, let, | ble. Inatend, they nre very marka of the pres- « Tho heat hae sent inany lorses anyy the ldeal celestial, shall be o total_stranzer to | me, inmy Master's nane, alarm you ont of | encoand strehgtl of Ono who dwelleth not fn | ond the stringeucy of tho times has s elleq dissntistactions and complaints, Not asonl tn | your deadly innctivity, that when inthe resur- | tomples made with hande. on the stand and the pool-box, all tho excellent glory shall ever frct, find fault, | fection you awake, it nay be with 11is likeness, The Egyptian pricsts were wout to plico o On Tuesday the five-furlong dash was Won by Chicage, If 16 Chooses, Can1 Serure Conlrol of This Profitatle Dranch of Commerce, Speclal Correspondencs of The Tridune. 8r. Louis, July 29.—* It has alwayas scemed singular tomothat Chicagohnsallowed 8t. Louls to get the trade of Texas without n strugglc,” rewarked & promiucnt merchant of this city to nie, the other day. WAre you quito sure that you have that i1 dependencics of the jobbing trade of St. or repine, These ieerable peaple must all by long avenua of sphynxes, facing each other, | Ryadamanthus J hio b trade,” said I, fuain dop tively, are making any marked effort to gatn | 20EE Gt to mates of the Colestiul City. « 9 9 way of enitrance to a pyramid. Eaclt sphynx rep- hus I tho best thie on record, & fag “There Is no doubt of It. Wo sccured it by x‘i‘:‘:‘énym rise the realor who lins been edus | personal satfsfaction by gathering entarger | Unclouded good hunor, and. Tuniticss. patfence "“‘mfig’")" '}E?EEWUS;",”D s rescnted tho perpetiinl _ ritlle of ' c3intence, | 1 mention becausa it contirs tio theory of Ty establishing s cotton-market at Bt Louls, and | eated {1y the faith of the superior enterprise of | storcs of knowledge of purity. Money aud | add n consplenous inerement to the fef ull‘v Ol | ey Samuel W Duled sestordug morn. | (Lhey stared at cach other withstony eyes, ~ Ad | TainuNE that It tho welghts were rafacd ty we will have no trouble in retalning {t so longas | Chicago to learn that St Louls has cstablished | position are il that most men want, aud are the | the heavenly home. Man und his surroundings he Rev, Samue] W, Dudlield yesterdny morn- | he who wont to the great pyramlil or temple | time record would not suffer materially, timeps this fmportant and beneflelal commercinl rela- . Hlonahin with Texs in the teeth of ratiway.dle. | OM3 powers they fecl like trustiog, Riches, criminatious In favor of Chifengo. Up to about | lowever, do not make men satiaflcd, nor docs Chlcago does not sea the benefits arising from will be inutitally mated. Each being who is | Ing preached an extempore sermon In the | went on between them=llke one In pursuit of the handling of cotton., Are you sure that 1ng, 08 you know, the most failaclous and 1 found there I8 bent on mukiug” all the rest | g Presbyterian Chureli, corner of Robey | truth passing between the Inquiries which b W Lot comfortable. Evur{\\‘hcru Wil he displayed ‘ll|:fill"‘l\l¢ni]:;:,;{u:lr u:‘recl;. r;,:' “"‘Gnd For m_.’.’ thrang on citlier hand. But he lgrnml nelthor | 8nisfactory of teste. Tliadamantins, n 4-yey, ! | 3 3 g > Id, earried 118 pounds, or 14 moro th Clleago Is not falling behind the times! She ear ago, Chicago had the advantage of St. | Influential position. At least, thisls the test- | filaminated explanatlons of the dark provideiives | % to right nor left, for from far beyond the great | 9! pounds, han hy almu‘;s have hod s cotton-market ive years nffo, AT L:Kun m:fiec:.lullu, ey trelght. ony of those who have poapulucd Doth. Thak now ahads s Tiven. il ambre portent | The following is an abstract s and permanent truth looked upon them. ia :',:’{‘lll;l :':‘:':d‘:::l':" s ‘El‘."“" tho old syaten, and with it she could have kept St. Louls out'of | rates, Something of n change has taken place | 11}y my mind, dear fricnds, that no one will | A% We *sco through a glass darkly, but then | 1t God bo with us who shall ba against us?~ | shadow strotchied to their fect. It efood fixed of Tz TRIBUNE'S position |y sluce In these respects; yet to«lay St, Louls can ever be satiafied fn thi W, W 1 clafin no ndvantage except established trade. aticil, m. bHIs -WOrL:. Ve are: o) ‘Tha eotton ":fn be l,m“ ed from Texns to | pllgrims and strangers, away from home, and Chlcngrluclmnply a8 to St. Louls. ‘This is the | hcalth, and happlucss, The Chrfsttan will bu only polnt to be consldered; for no Chicagonn | sntistied, but not yet. God hos not placed us In Becs b told that hiwcity 18 » better markesfor | fieed, L) At Texns. But it Is too Iate now, I think." This conversation led ine to mako some io- quiry into the cotton-trade of St. Louls, with a view to discovering its value, and to flud out If 1t were really *too late,” co to face,! Thers will uot be one thing in | Komans vlit., 3. and_cternal, overtopping all questions and be- | fPproved. Tho Travers stakes show how stron :‘I‘Iu:hg e':t:crmty ul‘ the redeemed able to "mu- These words are the climax of nlong argument. | littling all ,,'m,,.,.m{,‘},, or dcl}ly.‘ g In( L‘YCT;'OIL{'H‘ Ylfl‘li Helmont's stable Iu‘ns lnuc.fl turh our peace, bub what will e elther subdued | And with Laul every step of such sn argu- [ _‘Thus, thougn fnall other forms at religlon bl B "'“"‘t’; or n"lmnj.l 10 et Rl or cxplafned. When temptations onee end they | 1nant rlses nbove the step which precedes it, | Godl is neuinat us, in Christinnity lle fs © for nrul‘.‘fu gk Firale, s Erflfll"rmcilmrm Mon. eud forever, and when _enmitles conse ta frot p 5" fe” on o climbing n tower, at the summit | 1% And I denounco na heathentsh any repre- y 1 ang won casily, lore let my this world sfmply that we may be eatisfied, but | thoy havo no awakening. In view of what, sentation of Him which docs not convey this | SoTrect two crrors. The populir fl!':m’t 15 thay s 5 % Thw P , cally, '8 o en | of which fs u great befl. On renching 1t ho | jooineand helpfal and f 4 Tlddlestick 18 on the verge of breaking dow Tus invesifgation hus shown that e e o s e | st o tnay et rondy to bo. Here wetava | {57 etk apceticalys st Chees Ul | G0k atrong stroke. whtchr nounds. far | oF it “Snat Il mebaro sy ictcr Mol | au Uhat Atgerine, who ofentert ik o ‘. THE COTTON-TRADE understood In Texus, Indeed, representative | something clse to do. We aro living fn the | ness’: neross Ltho country, awukening aud arousiug the | tracts from the ,irmld symmetry of his charae- Hfif&g‘“yn.'fi]df:n"‘l’,".fl‘" "h“ B“""I“’"‘vdhu broke 1s one of the most important Industrics fn thls | men from Texas havo more than once appeared | midst of u slngularly incompleto stato of things. HFirst—They will be of the samo quallty as | people, ter. For love will not cull good evil, nor make : ck 1s quite well, and will, with, clty; that s number of the leading mercantile’ Louscs here are dealers fu this stapte cxclusive- ly; thot it gives employment Lo a large number in imgz&!fi: ":x{wcc l:m'rltlmlrcllmuel: ol‘t‘h"n t'l:y ;u All s confusion and insccurity, In a moment make an 0 gstablish closer and more ex- - tenslve husiness-relations hetween the twp | WE Puss from the most britifant day futo the lnces, Bomething over two years ago, o num. | darkest mldnight. The sorrows of age are upon . outalle to bo the same as the trnth, Love is | Oubs doubt, start for the Kenner; sols ads Em:t ullr‘\mfnlvrv'm ?l-:llv:n‘: "‘e'f-c“rf lflfix'\?”'\';f&“u'.‘,: Or ft ia liko the brave vofce of some caurage- truly fyexorablo, and to fght n[;uleml witl AI' crine, the rumors of wlose aceldent ary ldeuilt’y of quality is ot complete Tntll the | ouemanwhich turllls through usintime ot doubit | jyyg® s to ' put God - afar off | traccable tothe fact he torea blister from by b Vi von, | And dunger and bids us stand up nnd bo atrong. | and to desplsg Christ, in whom | 18 With listceth and ao produced an wgly-Jook. of men, and intercsts profitubly many miillons | her of 13 almost before the glow of 1ife's murning hos | Aa. 'H:: Igo‘x)l{loll;u‘mfl l"shulnrrn P i {Ifg"isl?n::i, Tiuls thought wua contral {n religlon then as | Ile spenks to us, For let us rémember that it ";“-";l':'c':h Tkt fl!l!l'fill‘\"':lll aquarter syecpataky . of dollars directly, while it influences Indirectly TEXAS EDITONS VISITED CIICAGO, faded, 8weet children steal nolsclessly intoour | tliough they are oncin substance, so Christisin- | now, That God was for us was evident to any is with human volee Ilo speaks. And the music y corgo _ Lorillardy o vast amount of trade, to the incalculnble i and T bad ocension to tatk with thei on this | homes to gladden them for a day by the ir subject, 1 found them, without exception, In [ s witchery v 9 favor of Chivago ns the ;!ro per market for ll'n-lr :;“‘cllfil“g]n“ :rl:‘_hf:;‘“zs.‘ "h(g{:'r “vl::‘rl_‘)“ml‘mv::i: " :,’:3 people; i‘“&"“‘,“y "'l‘;m';"‘.l "L':“‘, thelr '"')“'cl"“".'" truest affections fustening themsélves upon any Drescarel CORO Yo luonusnd b oplace T0F 1 ghjeit wortly of thelr strength and tenderness, purchasing rupplics. This Anutlm'cm'nru\ulluxl sabn MONER &0 empty embrace, for the object strangly and generally, and they Wad pent | of” their luvo has dissolved, and is lost forever. ;fn'\‘l'["!“l daye of the previous week Inspecting St | [1ome is to wur liearts a sacred word, beenuss 1t Tho system of trading now applied by the stunds for o mory sacred fact; but cun anythin o # 3 be more unsutisfactoryl Man in middie lfe Chicago uard of Trado' to wheat, corny Bikd | Whera'ls bl liomo of ey childhood aud youth fi';:":’(l,':x;’"“’ m:l‘_yk“mcn‘tgs ou'flar‘fllt{:l" all i | Thy father, tuy iather, thy brothors, slstors, couaV | snd fricudst Where tho fanilier play-grouna year around for un q““""“’"‘ ““"_‘M’ and trees, and temptiy bru(‘akly “Wllerc.'l when applicd to cotton, ab once place Cleago | g1y old school-house; s pratetut re- atiend of St. Louls 03 o cotton-market. No | the 01, SGOOMIONRS | e grteful | e, dealer can doubt the benefit to the general mar- | {550 (o) 98000 Worgga ™ " mpstors ket of the aystem of buying and sellthg * fu. aml “uistrosses,” and the roynl boys tures,” when regulnted ns it now 8 In Chileago. | 1R pte1g with whom you played gml m“’l_ Pt Louts Is too uld-fogy to adapt this system. | juyi i charintug life of your carly home long It has been attempted tine and aguln, but does | gooq ceased to flow, and fis bcnutelul assocla- Dot meet with fuvor. This system nas enabled | il p e up whilo you wero yetalad, Wo New York, notwithatanding the remote loeation, have atl loved, and then burled bur denrost af- to govern the cattonetado of the country. L | foctiuns, ' Wiio could be satisiled with such a oL erer e SG MO | staty of thingsi—aud yel this 15 ourunuvoldable halz':, would offcr a higher murkubfxrlco the year fate. Our frall tencment stauds fnaland of & 'otn Ochiltree, hitherto undefeated, who w, finttely larger than 11is ransomed brother, with- y 1t sty tn, | of that volce Is the @ Stilly sad music of human- | 100 Y y 1 out dUerhyz from bim In. tho. siightost Uegree "“"' :““f “kflmlfll m;} b‘"c& "l“:’l; ":“:"C e "l'_‘o’ " |ty Wa canuot improve on these ol prophets Hf;t_'fl“l 24 J“"G'F‘hg‘}:l“r,l‘“’e“l "'f" ""-'11,"- beirg In the quality of His spirituallty. This cyeniess ““; ‘L““‘ hecdalent o Ghirlasianisy (to:propo: "‘}’"E!“P“i’ltl‘“} “‘L‘.Vs f(il'h'-m,il,l co-uplcrn‘uun 1111 Who ninde mchkwrc{chc(l.flfxl:fifm:; ‘%III’E“;OI)-P. 1 Ch o . 01 od and they cxpressed {t, hey ralsed us to | N s L 8 :.)l‘;t;“rlfill‘:’;lgfnuc :ll:'xl:;‘;u“wl\l:fiml::l[::: ‘3’«’5&‘.“3&.’1 g“Aml'ynl. to<lay wa carc moro for the nofses | hope for participation in the divine nature, and “Ic'ifi ‘Véfl-}\o fi“‘ ngainst thy 1}\ estern crack, which all shall wear ngain “whom the Lord | of the street than for the stars. That which fa | for triumph over all that stayed our cause, You | gemnts A tho TSt WIS 0% Sarty Bt Odlile our God shall call? When Chirlstians come to | 1ot i nearest lmpresscs and oppresses us | felieiber, do you not, how thero was once a | (it AEHEE Mage i o n:’"'(“,cl;tff"\l:gfl ;;‘}}"‘{),3‘" be of the sama quallty as thelr Chyist, their con- th te and fnvlsible. The ma great desire for the mnhu;inmy to_use In furnt- | 40 eIt n)'lmm L Oy il duct, too, will be llke His. Conduct Is an out- | more thon the remote and In " 0 | ture, in doors, In decorntions? We ransacked i Lty o b e Walter ward expression of the inner quality of the soul | by our side I8 of greator consequonce than God | Campeachy and Ballzs for the valuable timber, | fhion Aad for Pt o "," s oro very shap reppunsi‘blu Tor it, Asmen and woinen are they | who fs afar off and unseen, But by and by the tasto changed. Wohad found Tulfumfi T ,‘,"’ a ,':5,“' u::.' "nlmt"':‘."!p"?:““y Plerre, beliave: and, too, as they behinva thiey ure. Beenuse of thls we flnd human methods | Stherurnumental wuoda. ' Wo employed the | ¢ SCR, SEREUR D Jan veats whed g stuar The elgn which our nature hange out prom!- | futruding ail through - our Chelstianty, | PUEX Mottty Ho roanvaod, tho ‘ebonyy the | o Juttlug the public ek the stage 1 nently to tell the public of our real quality, | To conduet n church ®s somo other # ' . belief that one horse would run, and startl worth or worthlessucss, 13 our departinent. ¢ . " bell turned and we have come back to the grand old o 4 )y tartlig Now. wilt you not, my’ brothor, be sutisfied | Church s conducted, o bellevo as =909 | mahogany and to fta solid nud-splendid amotlcts 20 theh tho yuhllc Jumt it maney L when you come to net fike Christ, becnuse you | woime one else Lolds them—this is the usual | StECRgth. Ot Lo At Tion he Ui l‘( ik ll)‘l ofa y? Christ and the Christiau, remember, are to | greatest of our tratibles, Like a garmont of wo liad ons Lorse entored for two races be glorlfled together when they enter into the | jhixed stult, gno purt of it suflera from tho commentaries and theologles, But we are com- dlie same v, and st 9. scssion of the **Jolnt-helrali Wo dail ! ched, . God’s | 08 back ngaln gladly to them—to thelr stnple | o7 H me day, aud no provision mnde asty Felolce in- the plwu]n:s of conslousncss. We o lle, :i'é:(m‘.,’;'fil;“,:f“ uitoudied Hod's urfvarying strenigth and solldnoss. Thicielis wonld, i Joruml It Was_scun how ara_conscions of our own wonderful belng—of | words of tho old prophet—aro *moth-oaten” | Wl tnight Puul ssky Who can bo agatnst | Bis heb A e ot h‘{“hfl\l! reasoulng, remeinbering, sorrowlug, loving, and | Thero (s a struggle belween tho tiwo plans, sim- ;‘f\.’n gf,fi °§‘f.:fl"i'hf",',’uf“gf§§ :;Z;‘S“&'J’?& I‘X-{T iy i'“‘LVL‘S‘J'; A‘fi?“‘ll’?;ruflm‘ Eoritari R‘Aggfi:ghoguglls:&:: yonag‘tog;n?n':fnx‘m:,\sllll'i {’fi.’,}:f;{:‘;fit‘w oot havo the divtiie mothod | yuuest It ip s thus that tho leart of God Is |, et be sald to bia vory popular on the turf. benofit of the city; and that all this la n matter of ahout three years' growth. Surcly this fs o spbject worthy of soma consideration on the phrt of enterprising Chicago. Before the War there waa very llitle cotton haudled fn 8t. Louls. There were no rallroads penetrating the cotton-sectlons, and no induce ment to senddt North by river. Thd exigencles of the War-period threw large amounts of the staple this way, and for a time 8t. Louls became quite an (mportant market. This wos the near- et polut where the customs-ofllcors weru in the exerclse of their authority, and speenlators huy- fugr permits to buy cotton in the Seuth found it gafer to ship to Bt. Loufs than to any polnt nearer the place of production, TILE NECEIPTS DURING ONE YEAR of the War mnounted to 60,000 bales, and _tho trade was highly luerative to those engaged in I This cottun ol cauno from_States borderlug aih thie Missiselppl. . ‘The return ol peace brought a re-cstablish- went of the old river cotton-markets at Mein- puls, New Orleans, und other places, and the secetpls at Bt. Louls dwindled to au Inconsider- D " shown us, and It we kuow that Ho incans to he |, Yesterday was a duy backera will loni romem. able aiount. For scveral years littlo ttention furlous storms. Providence, or good fortune, | bo tested when it first uitenpts ta realiz your | “ffeqie comen the sway of the srtificfal in re- ! g Uery 88 on il four races the favorites were de Vas i Y o | ronund than 8t. Louls. } i ¥a | personal -oncuess with Chirist? Too just like [ yigian. Wo slip away from tho trathfal condact | OUF father and our friond, who aro we that we | Yer ot Heritisdidy cotton-market ut this point. X ‘Fhe extenslon of the Iron-Mountaln Road, whicly, with fts branches, traversea the l’|l'1lcl‘. cottou-distrivts of Arkansns, nud the buildhg ¢ 2 en fur the Alnbumun stakes by Morclless, the will bea renllzatlon eo plorious us almost to 9 co contiunlly strain and And now what can stand | successfully [ ¢ J oot e y Brealc down tho. conselosmness forcud (o onter: | r'Jine yiadite sspodiens, rosasea tiself ju | 11 our Way o hold us Luck from vid. | publicoveriooldug the fuct that at tho siort die tain the concoption. Do you uot nll share with *qu of tho permancnt m'lnclp&1 .. Weadopt t, | toryt ITos not One Jlussoll_tlrmugh those i % y8 Leen at loast us good me the certalnty that when this promised nt- | yy1 wo—forgetting that we might reasonably conflicts in ndvance? Wh focalities ure cqually fnsecure, 8o that changes Make n bid for the cotton-vrop that Texas I8 Just et v : 2 getting ready to ahip and WIhiH {0 yenrs g | O Placa need ot bo suggosted.” Our bodles re ahummet will be Hned with factorles turning out | 9Ve W Invaslon by o bundred sources of dis- nt can we cncounter | A% Patience, and that the Intter had only afew oM ¥ e casc, und we ure powerless to close a single av- ; over which ilo hus not already triumphed | days before run o long uud suvere rneé under of the Atlantlc & Pacific, and the Missougs, | Wooden-ware, and all manner of articles of do- | G B S and women of strongest nealth | tainment of glory is by us personally possessed | vount om God belng for us—wo ondeavor to do 4 y triumph Neave welslita, “Thets 81 0 b Kiing & Eexis ll:u]rumla, ‘which penotrato hind !I"Ir:"u’:!:nfltfhé% r;l:m)l cu:.llll;gu':l’gm%«l?xnfi.\fix: ure most llable to sudden isaster, Eud ‘the ux- | Wo shall be satisifed? by ourselves In our own manner what Shall it be the warld who would confront _us | heavy welzh attle A., after hclnfi cotton-belt, of tho, Lone-Star State, led to in- creased shipments of cotton to 8t, Louis, so that, two years ago, the receipts reached 40,000 baley, Thils Increnss had come without effort, and had the effect of inducing the businesa-men of the ety to take actlon In dcvclnp(nglthu trade, This action hus met with an astonishing response, the receipts having Incressed from 0,000 balcs in 1874 0 250,000 bales in 1876, Two years ngo, o number of cotton-brokers, totton-factors, and cotton-buyers organized the ST. LOUIS COTTON-EXCHANGE) the stated purposes of which are “to pro- vido sultablo uwccommodation for the meet- ing of its mewmberai to establish unl- form usagos, rules, ond regulations for the cotton-trade in the City of 8t. Luuis; to adopt standards of classification; to acquire, preserve, and dissvminnte uscful informatfon ronnected with the cotton-interests throughout sl tarkets; and generully to_promoto thic cot- ton-trude in the city of 8t. Louis.” This or- ganizatlon lae been hufhly successful in for- woarding the Jast-namned objuc log sthn- alated “the trade, and {nereesed its ' vol- ome, by the use of many menns that were not practicable without™ orgunized effort, Aldod by thie merchunts In various ilncs of trade, it has offered high premiumns to cutton- producers at the Annual Fairs held heye, These premiums have been ag hlgi‘h a8 $10,000 in ono year; and tho system has been very successful n attracting cotton tor this poini, The Kx- change now fncludes about seventy firms in its membership. It oceuples a conmodious bufld- 1ng on the corner of Main and Chestnut streots, Second—They will bo fmmortal. Tmmortality | wo ought to have commitied to Tim. | 80 resteainus from our true destingl Dut | #¥87 h{"!'lvi:ll(a'lnfrfi"ul“::lsmj::;‘l"c"c:ll?mll:umxfi"| we now know only as a promisc, then we shafl | I o not understand why wedara not take God'a | from l%lmw “l‘: d ‘fi""l_‘“‘lr ?"dcf;lv‘."yl”m'_“ Then 8t. Murtln und Big s‘““lyu Plre] know [t ns our own possession. Now we can no | methods boldly and fully, 1t 4s Mke nu old King | ¢ame the “:'“ g ld‘l]"’“ of good eheery J huve | ¢ (I8 N off, ind. Tnvoles cito up i heas more than hope for this dear boon; then we | sctting out to” bulld a” pyramid, Ons says to | OTgHROS LI WOTSH © them both, Al luat, In tho steeple-chase sholl kuow tho blesseduess of beig imuortal. | him—and probably some one did sny t—“There hall 4t bo the flest ’l WIth ta desfres, its am- | O and Kutlo P, went on th fhH Durlugs the presont Tife we all live uiideru very | i3 no uildinz ke this In the world:? _@'That,1t | itlons, lts uppetiies, lua wllurementst But one [ JFotin st Badie B Weph o, the wrong eds durk cloud,” The full sunshine of unaullied joy | he replies, **fs just why I want to bufld it I f‘““,‘il“ up, t pule mun hc{""’ m,‘ Judge,—judg: | b ! u?):koumuku of the })ralmlunnl‘ Dettmg: uever breals upon us, though we wonld have it | ave chosén the form which {s in_harmony with | {8 the very on who Jud e in,—and | B R0 R deploted. i g #0 sith a consuming longing. ‘This dark und | nature, and It makes no difference (£ thiere Is | 0 80Y8 T W BIER of you “‘""“‘5‘“;’“’ of slni dreary cloud is the certuluty of our mear mor- | pothing similar on the wide earth.)’ And the wh"“k R ey "1’““ war frotn temp- THE AMERICAN HOKSES IN ENGLAND. tality. Wo canuot forceost a singlo year, or | pyramld stands there to-duy—but many a tem- Ouu, )“u‘ {“fi "cua Pnlela n;s 0 l.)u;u..x Agectal o eiaiiee o The Totlirs moutl, or duy, Wa canuot look uto the future | ple aud obelisk, bullt less wisely and loss en- | 68 EG L "’“;V" s '{mv-lvmmp o do not New Youx, July 8, —The defent of Matcl to mature out plana and enjoy our posscasions. | durfugly, hus perlabed frow the fuco of the globe. | (8ISKE IR 8 Corll, Welb, thetl, tike away tho § o for the Goodwood e 4 In the presont moment we nre living; of the Flhicro tan bu no doubt that this artiticlality I" I |I1’r."rum Xnfln{un;., uml cal l";J evil; for | the race for the Goudwoud Stakes, for whilch he moment to follow this we have no shadow of | halds back the Church of Christ. Emorson sava | 1inust belleve elther fi n personal devil or In | pusixth ina fleld of soven, bad been antlel romfse. We buve grown indifforcnt to our | truly Inone of hia cssays that the nearer wo 'E'“"f’ "“l‘."“l‘ll“'lf‘“v““‘h hower of wickedness | p0q by Tuz Curcaco TRIBUNE, o8 nrd fartuno by getting sccustomed to ity or we | comne to the inethods of natura the moro. power | Which takies hle pluce, | But thls sano ealimvolce | 4yona “hy welghty, 113 pounds, | Jus, should Jook unon It ss futolerablo. Our poor | wo possess. Aud a man sball labor all his Jifo {l"l’”fi‘_l“"(‘l"“’-\:’“Fflc'”[‘,',"‘31‘.1‘"‘“‘“[“’"“"" Ll [t o o M v 1l hoads unresfsticgly lle upon the penal block to | to turn the current of the stream of truth back | {168 el i ’;“'lf‘“‘"“ Joik Lo V“’"‘(‘W he- | ab ed him, ‘the. distanee, Big mtles awalt, with such’coposure a4 wo are nble to | upon (tsclf by evory dovico of sclonco nud he | (e Gnee bbialied for us wo uiay naw resist the | wua rather more thun he fancied. e comunnd, the descent of the executloner's eruel | will at lengt{l miserably fail, Nature ealmly | 9tV &“fl 6 will fice from us, will, I think, stand a much better chanee In the ax. Thess coudltions of uncertainty und desola~ | watches his strugeles, She neverstrives nor | God meuus thut we shall trivmph grandly the | oo ioxt week for the “Brighton Btakes, 15 tlon are mot well sulted to muke men and | cles. But when the man has done | Aval day, And that expression, *Abuiidau proakuess di St women who bear tho lnage and Incarnate the | his — utmoss — sho has - nover relaxed | ENtrance,” fs burrowed from thu guro of o ship | Wiles. Preakuess did not wiu the Guodwood divinity of Gud Himaclf mtsfled, Wo ara all | tho preswuse of Tior Inevitable, fnexomblo laws, | With all sails sot. After voyaging ou lfc's | Cup, but made such o gullant Azl for it tht congelous, with preator or luss distingtuess, of | and tinally ho diea fn the“midst of the debate, | §ivit drven on ho Dbreath which has | tho = Amerleans should feel ‘well satls- our bluod relationship to Deity, “As 1lo {n 'tm- | Io siuks tu the carth from which be came, and | javored iis ht cko years, and which | glud, . The sturters wore New Iolland, Temple mortal we know wo should be, if some dire dis- | Nature strikes licr hand vver the green mound | 188 "“‘-‘i"'l :“ l{ rough the beart 1ol ihe | Bar, Preukness, Apnlul.?' Forerunuer, und oster hind not at some time bufallen us, Death | which covers him_and levels hinand it to tho "E"““ au A"“’ ‘l“ 6 waters, “’"l come fn slght | gyelieield, New Eolland had done Tulrly well welustinetively rescentnsan unaceouutablsintru- | comwmon clay; for Naturo's heart ls in the hand | ofport. . Aud then we spread gludly every | uyu 9 und Syear old, and this year had won the slon. It Is & sorry outcome we hud not fooked | of God and beats as 1fe bids it. ‘To fight sgalnst | Btitch of canvas to the Lreeze. Actoss thit | groat Metropolitan, B4 miles; and run Becond for, Tt ts all unnatural, painful, und dreadful. | Ler s to fight against God Limself, baebor-bar aud trough the lust few apucks of | for tho Alexander, 3 thiles, {1 such stylea ns to :VJ cautiot cun%cm xtlm.;:’uu; ;wri'ullntfl of belu;i Alul( ,'.lln lc;uln e tub sy th‘illtm e gy ;{;fifid’&’::m“" lhg““;‘u:&:’lhg}“'fi‘mfi ;nm"n. ovmcnt't}mt'l;o ‘\l"nndumi) utktb'o best orn to atoms by it8 Irreclalmuble decny, and may gafely conslder all opportunities, cul- ong-distance nags In Englund, reakness rap reat satialled. When we awnke In Tlis Itkencss l.h,'uy, end hindersicis: 1o b matla by us | 1ove. And we entor it, sure that Ilo who las vurgntrunkull W Juat e wnlle, when New 1y 1o maldug bz for cottony, aud they ey | HEREEL SR B8 PEESClE, Mol et sjinost 10 k"”,""'“ tates, Texns 1a st CROURN 80 | 4 biun §s ut the merey of any determined eneiiy, T Scnt prise mow olforet £oihe pommpeting | Sovlety rogurds mu, aeclsed of any onl, 18 enterprisc of the manufacturing and commer- | Gulity until be 18 shown to be Innoceut, and cvi- o ence can hardly be strong enough to prove a clul centres of the country. BoswstL. | yuihocent who 13 mow c:hm!-;;:w with uny ——— 2 fault, Qur most beuutiful, peacelnl, and per- AGBICULTURAL CONGRESS, | mucut homos are situated cuch in the ecntre of adumestie ccmetery, Iere lle our [fathers, Fifth Aunual Session, mothers, brothers, slsters, children, and fricuds, BEcnETARY's OFFICE, NATIONAL AGRICULTUR- El“fl“ i the weary slumber that cannot bo At Coxanss, Aues, In., July 20, 1870.—Tho roken but by the trumpet of the archangul, Flfth Aunual Bession of the Natlonal Agtleul- | foug hores toos by the sids of theas loved }fl:.’l turat Congress will be held [u the Judges’ Pa- | getting and forgotten. Ob, how incomplete tho viliop, Ditervational Exhibltion Grounds, Phil- musuu:fins:{'ummz:} v‘fllr:h!.hlml llll“nl: Hu\g l(‘uég adetphl (evening sesslon b Belmont Hotel), on | Bre we ablg Lo d at 1s inld ot our fec Taesday, Wednesduy, and Thursday, va.’ 19, mrlunnl’und what an insignifleant contribiition J ) = * | we aro able to nake townrd miuking the woild 13, and 14, 1870, commenddug at 10 o'clock & | jetter, though we give to humlity our entire . on ‘Tucsday, lives! ™ We live in o world of sln, but we cannot. All Agricultural Socletles, Agricultural Perl- | change it Jesus Himsclf could not, nor could odlcals, Agricultural Colleges, Hoarls of Agrl- | the Aposties, Luther, Wesloy, and Moody culture, Granges, Farners’ Clubs, or othier or- | (i1y of worldlivess und trunggression that ever- ganizatlons whoss object 18 the promotiun of | more breaks over our world. Can a Christiun Agriculture, nre Invited to send delegates; and [ man bo satistied when he kuows that all persons deslring to promots the objects for | hia own -blood, and his dearest friends " Lesldes, are hastening to death eternal? which the Congreas is inatituted aro earncstly . b . requested to uttend and purticipte in the de- };;‘,‘;;‘;,’gv,,{,.‘};‘,‘, (: r;;c;“‘:luy:s m:fl)‘ly ‘;f Q‘va!.x“c'l‘lx’xl Hueratlons. body of Chrlst’s Churchi'is not half In earncst, Belleving that the time I8 come when the Ag- J-nul n‘l:u-l:)r;ltl 8! all wll;i(;dprufolui tlmc]m\mr (:l » ’ ¢ ? eaus s he mothods of his Church to riculture of the United States must be studied ey nluHP 1 think of all whe are not regulurly ! wa ghall be immortal, and we shall ktiow it, tou, | and'not by God. In anothier sense from™ that “'I‘I“"‘i“' ':‘gh"’"fi way thither will be glud | flolland went to tho foro and won by twa wlicre its dufly sesalons arc held, A this pluce, | oud consldered as a whole, and by ncomparison | 4o"Goqiy hous to warship. 1limn; so muny cii- | 88 clearly a8 we now Lnow our mortality, ' May | intended by the poet, we may declare When wo get there Tengths, Tewple Bar, o very light-welghted + the arrivals, “shipments, nud transnctlons are | of the enpabllities and conditions of widcly-sep- | tirely ignore the prayer-mcetings, and the class- | we not so far anticipute our future us to wonder All diecord hormony misunderatood, | year-old, beatlng Preakness by o head,’ Preak. Lulletived ; and hiero the bulk of the trading §s | arated reglons, n order to fully understand in | meetings die for want of the fervid tongue of — ——— hu'\.v{ e shall lr:ull'\v 1gnhthl:?“dr&.u‘11 ,""j'”""h llln All partial evil unlvorsal good. A H;-];"-'fl;fl;l;‘l’v;;-nnnh gy l;u\vuvc? lu: Bpringfield, i c?u-le s-,;flr- entirely removed ‘o be lke God in the quall- ‘'or beneath the discord, harmony can cer- 0l 8 Preas, old, winner of n ot of money, and helleved to ty of our charaeter, and like i, too, o the g,f,‘,ly b““(.,.fm';.t ‘the heart of u,.,,g{, And 1o | Yesterday afternoon & mon dressed 1n good | ba nearly, it non'(ulle, i Kisber, win- fmmortality of our buInF. will surcly by personal | whosends thesun forth,and thowlnd; whokoeps | clothes, an eye-glass, aud o gold-mounted cane, aer of "thy Derby and Grand Prix de Parls; ossedsiona of sntisfylng grandour. Blesscd | fho squadron of tho stars salling upon the un- | nnd possessing altogether o rathor clorical ap- | Forerunner, anotiier crack S-year-old, who rai oon of immortality! “Realizatlon of 1ifu's onv | digeovered space, iives all” theso gifts | pearance, hailed a passing strect-ear. There second for thd Derby, and Apology, the famons sublime hopel The majesty of thinu lueflable, | ¢o ws, It d8 nni wlong tho eye of | was nnlh'lng unusual or particularly notleeuble | 1076 of the “sporting parson," the Rev. Mr. silent repone upon the boswn of eternity, sub- [ 4o day which shines on us, but tho | fn this, éxcept tho ale of loftydignity with which King (Wis rachig ~ pseudonyin . was Mr ducs my soul tho very burden of its subllin- eyes ogyu‘q night. The sun Is on evident | yo cummumimluhnlt, and the desperate etfort Luunde), winner of the Oaks m\'d St. Leger, ity. God grant that wo may all refolee together | giyl open glory llko the face of the Bon of Man, | which he mude to mafutain his centre of gravit ud who carrled olf the Ascot Cup o month by and by In iinmortality. but the stars arc Ilko angols® oyes, and louk | ny he passed to the car, and reveated tho fack | 50 Consldering the ngo of Preakness, the Third—They will bo scenre, In this world wa upon us with love und helpfuiness, that he was allghtly iscbrluted. Arriving ut the perforimanee I8 suiliclently good to please bis aro at least, ug oftun Insecur aasceure, Dungors | Now, If thure I o meantig above athers, and | daor, he solemily ralseil his right foot to enter, | fFleuds, It stacts for the Brighton Cup next are o8 imminent os galetles. ‘To bo crushed 18 | that “seeing thirough s giass dm-kl,\r "and to | but, not rnlalngft. quite high " enough, he week, though the welght he s to mr? Is 08 bundily done os to be strengthened. ‘The | ghat veil which is upoi the face of il waters,” | Lealllong on thio floor of th car, R-.\lu'lug hitm- | leavier, the distancs (27 willes) s less, und bo vine und flg-trec no lnmgzrcrunluul)wdacxcmpt and to the darkucss upon the heart which 16 yot | solf up with somo difficulty, he cast o soverely should do better, {rom spotlation; und all Providence Is asevident- | Gynbroken away,” it certalnly 18 to the truth reproving look at the oldgentleman sitting neor I cunnot fufl to ke somo cominent on the Iy agalnst us 08 In our fuvor, Providence us & | of tho text. i:]mrn Is an obscurity which | the door, and said: time question. The distancy in the cup race i ety fu thialife, the Bible and our own minds | prevents our seelng and knowhig that “Bir, what a4 you lift up this car for just as T 23¢ inlles, and the tme glven I8 0:03, or, eny, at unlte to Inslat upon, but Providence as an_ex- od {8 on our 5(10 to il aud do- | was goin’ to gat g th rate of 324 to the nnle | A year ago Preake planation fs .ow wholl{ unintelligible, Thut | liver ns, Aud His messengers whom 1l sends s Sy dearsir, 1 didn't 11£t tho car, replled the | HE8% carrying 115 pouds, ran a dead hicat with od, In all Fis intinito slze and power, i3 con- | fly very swiftly. ‘They do_not idly elrele about | ola uullelmm' meekly. ¥ Springbox for the Saratugn cup, 2 miles fn stoutly walking to and fro In this ear |1 tread- | tfio throne,Lut they somo ik the strong breath “%Vell pcrb:lps ou didn't, T won't 'tompt to 3 ?{;nllowmg for the four pounds more e I upon some, and raising others up, witherlng | of the “.,,.l, and lile the flame of the fire, and | grrue with & man n your condition, My mmia- | car (ly this thino and *the longer distance, hio 1ils power, and sthnulating Ly His cheor, Is theycommunicate His will und return and report. | b frlend, 1t's my calm and_deliberate” "pihion would have covered tho Guodwood coursy in what all of us belleve but cannot understand. | And to you and e that will comes and we are | you've bech look g upon the wine when i s ahout 4:25, or conslderably over 13¢ minutcs One of the pleusures uf heaven may be to veud | to he messongers of equal swiftucss to tell o | Fed, Very sorry to see it 0 s man of your uge, | fister than the tine reported, Besides, thero in the book of Uud's Providence, aml undurstand | others that God loves them and carcs for them. Wiint 'd #'pose your mother would suy It he | Eccius Httle doubt that the English turf tracks what is so darkamd trylg, When we awake | Plis world s really o collegiate course, After would sce you intossicatedd My friend, I've | B¢ fuster then ours. Under these circnmastances with Iis likeness wo shall bo secure, anil not tl | waonce (5o beyond winers chilitiice, unqueation- | ahed muny f,mm. tears over such cases us yours, it would look very much ns If the English timing then, Timo I8 full of accldents, but never an 3 e ¢ Fre ¢ Fear, o8 M e 9 cring vole Is about Just as unrullable s it can be. Seldent th a1l famortaliiy | T el s%mun,“uume intoa Frestunan yeurof Fear. | Yos,” contlnued he, in o falterliz volee, and ] v done, A ruminiscence of former dn{u 13 notice- able In the motty, In large capitals, Inclosed (n n frame und suspemded ucross the end of the main room: ** Cotton s King” ANOTHEL IMIORTANT YEATURE in developing the cotton-market ut §t. Louls fs the compress-muchinery that has been erected here, There are thred Compreas Compunies, vach ownlng lund, warchouses, and compresse suuchinery.” The latter, as the uume hindicates, s fur the purposs of comspressing the bales of cotton Ko ns to decrease thelr bulk, and lessen the cost of transportation. The Turirest of these Companles hus storege. et #111ts warehouses cqual to an oren of 14 neres, It usea press which was invented by John F, aylor, of Charleston, 8, C., In 1870, The am-cylinders are 50 by 100 fnchess the water- cylimder, 6 feet by 14 tnclies; the Lwo_ rams are 2214 by G Inchost with 80 pounds of “steam, a ressire of 1,200,000 pounds is produced, ] ulk of i bule of cotton is reduced about on It by this operation, ‘'I'he gereat suving is o) nt from the fact that, in shipplng fro evus and Arkatsus Lo this polnt, nbout 84 bules constitute s car-lond; whereas, in shipping Tromn 8t. Louls Eust, after compressing, 50 bales are londed tnto u ear, Thus, in 1870, before the compress-muchinery had been ereeted, with Ireight ot W0 cents, n ear-lond patd the radlroad ouly §103; b 1876, with frelzhit ut 75 cents, o what manner the interests of each und ull may | fire. flulld:fi'flflm’“lfl are sustajued byu few, Vi 1y 0 by them on the other side. e heat promoted, wo appeal to tho Agricuity- | ut near ] rlsts of every section of the Unfon, and to all | 1, U5 fartumofs it 1o bo cast o, a spioro of living where one can 'es8 yet bo satlstled. Tho who are working for thelr welfare, to gather to- Ill;ucsz type ot enjoyment and peace is still fu- il hi et In this Centennful yeur of our Natlon's | admissible, ‘The buitle {8 now hotter than cver Eluury. and, in the birthplice of Amorleat Na- | bufore. The Uhrlu}hu army 18 now cogaging tonal Freedom, to eounsel together und to give | the enemy’s entifo line. There aro o greal anew lmpulss to the agricultural progress of | many luefiicient leaders, and numberless poor our country, soldlers, und yot the army of the Lord 18 galne Bocietlus, ete., sending delegates aro request- | ing. Not by being satisiled, howevet, is this ed to communlente thely uppointment to the X-uumpllulwd, but by eonlllet, long, weary, and Becrotary, at Iuwa Agriculturnl College, Ames, | discouraging. We liave nothing but battles and Ia., previous to Sept, 1, und after that thne to | blnod to oficr those who would” join God's host. him at the Belmont Hotely Forty-first aud Ore- | With a degres of surprise, I hear somoare cosy ) gon streety, Philadelphila, whero delegates, on | * but nre not all thoruughly consecrated Chrlst~ thelr arrival, ure invited to enll and report. Inus, whose lives are bid™ with Christ fn God, O, Fraoy, Presldent. sutisfled £ ¢ By the grace of God b It not pos- @, E, Monnow, Scorctary. siblo to be entirely satlstled in the present lie " The Beluiont liotul, cortier of TFurty-first and | * Are not all whoare saved satisflel” 1 do Oregon atreety, and convenfent to the Exbibi- | not doubt that comparative satisfaction {s pos~ tlon Grounds, will be the headquarters of the | siblo even now, but the fullness of the blessing Sofety, sud the ptace where its evening meet- | 18 held fu resorve untll the confliet 18 over, an [y Wil he held. ” Delegates desiring roums ure | the victory won, ‘There Is a sort of satisfaction requested to notlfy the proprictors 1o advance, | In filuence, Some people huve fallen luto a ORDER OF BUSINESS, condition of apathy in which they do_not care a Tuesday, Sept, 13, —30a, m,: Call_ta Order; Eruut deal how things turn out. They bave Prayers Adidress of Welcome, ete,, by Dr. Chiarles | been so frequently disappointed, It may bo that Lreelilunt Plilladelphta Boclety for I'ro- | they have grown desperate. Tl'wy have with- ttury, snd Burnot ‘Lundreth, Esdoy | drawn all active ogency in affulrs, and are pleas- ot Ly Freationt 0 Kational Ager- | v 1o lot results [swuo us they muy. —‘This, after notime Al Chier of i bt lons Tt n B are not sure of this Heavinly Father chlef, “and 'y d—— e ———— var-lowd pys §105. T cost of compressinge’ s culium) Congrenns Appointmont of Commities ull, is a toreo of sutlsfaction inwhich no thuught- | curity is uutocratic and universall Is not this | whom we have unthinkingly loved. But then, }“,'.',','.5’.,%5’3,,‘,,‘{!,',".’:2&“’.’.: "-gfi'lI‘;gm1|];;'¢;|,gcrwl,,lrg The lloosno Tunnel, about 33 per cnr-lu.u:l; deducting thls from | G e v American Aurleulturo, ful soul can rejolee, and into which but few such | ctertial security @ prime coudition of satisfue- | {f there s any true honesty to the mind, and 1t Whoroupon ho wiped hils eyes with a grand KNorth Adams (Musr,) ’l{wurflp’l.' E165, there remntus $133, which represents the | 5 the Prestdent, Wo C. Flagg, of (inols, are begulled. tion It ‘bo rightly pulded, it°pusses into (ta next | flourlsh, Lluw lis nost, and uavigated 1o the The tewperature of the Huosue Tunnel f ncl! ‘1";:',(;'30 ffig‘fif‘ffiifi'ffihmfi ll‘x?u .f‘.‘.'i'{'fi"“'i“"’? i Reportof Committou oy Credentlalad’ leo: o Tlni'ru is “lm}'t 1t ny be, & vfi' H:Llo satlsface | Fonrth—They will be happy, What Is known yenee thnd o ]Dnubt,—wlllfi glcuulm \?lln th't. othor ond of the car, :‘Ill'u"l""‘[tt‘;"";“‘,“'l'&;l:c‘l!‘t‘:nff“;t{f,‘:":“"r o y the ¥ 7 e ruteof | tlon of Members; Puyinent of Dues; Appolutmen u o concelt, s possible Lo go - ; come, Beye ¢ e te zonc| 81 I5ients pfir undredowelsht, b (:nmmllnltc:; I rl-:n—"()hjntll‘nn‘«l Niknont | Uon w:ll e vatted pwlth onl:FA‘ 1;!:;" In this world as bappiness {s” usually fortitude. | aud hints of truth to come. Beyond this again Wien he reached his destination he pulled y 124 tho Natloual Avricultural Congrems, by the Bece | 1) el " y 4 Tetary, G £, Morrow. of jowns Discnentun, B 10, The highest comparative sutisfuction Is un A Bes ORI . 2 doubtedly that of s consclencs yolil of offense B A e Ok 3 Al A | han? Gl a6 Tl Ut ull wasurancs of acceptance with Giod, which w’l‘:":‘:’l'r's'mlny, Sepl, 11.—10 n. m.: Koy includes fu the lxlum&nusu of its promives the committeess ** Al nl Statlatic y Iifu thut now 18, snd all the lUfo which I8 to Dodge, Htutistictun Department of Agriculin come, must be to experience u preelous enrnest }‘i‘m::::fil‘?‘” hfl'hm_ Aé.::::m:f:‘ .A'i'{.llcll,‘l:‘l"‘f:l of thit sutfafuction which all realize in ita kical e ) evant, Mnxachu- The Bt. Louls Compress Company fs o stock company, With a caplital of 15,000, The shures ore held by cotton-factors ut this pobt. Ouly 50 cents on“the dollar was pald on tho stock; yet the khares are abuve par, and cannot Le bought for less than $125 per $100, During the scuson Just elosed, thy Company has pald o divinend of 10 percent on the fuce-value of the stock, utd put astde a reserve-fund of 325,000, “There Is great pence, aid a treasura of joy, also, | graws up Revercnce, We have learned our own | yho bell-strap and_ started for the door, When | 91, 18 bure except when there aru o gr In enduruice, 'm ew people of our nm)]'ullhlti iz urunéc. and we uro thus prepared for o flual | he got About hall-way, aud just ns he was ,:‘, tralus golng thwufiln, filling the tunnel witl ance whose tirelees equaniimity we lmost envy | tiine of Love, We aro nearly ready to gradunte | frong of a lndy, he trippid and fell at full lengtn | BM0ke; yet, notwithstanding that, there 1a now ure generally artlsts i tho grace of concealing, | when wu have teached this poiit.” In Its com- | on the floor. * Ralsings himeelf toa perpendien. | 1o doubt about the tunncl's beig able o Tho”number of huppy hearts, and lappy und | prehensive grasp ore incluaed all tnquiry sndall | jar, ho turned to tho lady, aod, i o toue of | toreushly ventilate ftself. When' tho 5,0X sutisfied homes, that rojuice dully In our midat, | suceess, Now we have attalned at luufitu o | mingled severity and whisky, suld’ men were at work, there was 5o much smoke {t would not weary a child to count. Diseiplind | fuith which is Arm.: From o simple, chlldtike | "'WNfatame, yan've vertalily go tho biggeat | fTOm Lhe luinps of ‘the inlicrs, the fres of is quits common, but huppluess 18 rare. Weo | falth we have come o a childlike, shnple falth | feet I evi have the word, but shall not have the experlenco | aguin, Muany miuds can take only this road, WRIrY v 80w {1y 1ifo.” Dlacksmiths, und the trajus that were constantly suld the lady ndignantly, at work, that the tunnclers’ oyes and lungé by . N : fullness whers heaven’s most exeellent glory | until, having worrled through thy night, we are It fs thus 4 natter of encourugement to us «“Qh, don't Ypologize, ¢ 9 swere very often seriously uffected, 'the Conpany has o contruct ‘with the Rullroad | weite: discusaion e tpmaricats | bocotues Lo the redeeied o personal und death- | satiefled In the morntng, Wien we Ewaco with | that thia world Is so manifestly g‘%veu to us to | 1o potogize. it nbz“é:;lu::inunxnl;vcfi 5 l’llst “Lho urehing hoa not been i any ons place, but :;;":‘m“l" &‘filul?c)‘v:;;" ll‘:;’;giy“l;fi]tx::::l. "b'm'; O e lesn pogscsalun, 111s likeness there will not be one untappy soul, | teach and prepire ua for mysterica to come. | if'yiu would Just pars 'em down o tittls Mvoudd | 1 sections, wherever there was a possibility of W Of New Yorts Disciselom, The satisfuction, however, felt by the saved R hc’ \\&urh‘l‘urt u],,f:';:‘,‘,‘,"[l,, soul I8 only comparative. Contrasted avith thy 70 "—Dby the Hon. Alexander Delar, of Peon- | bitter experlence of the sinful life, theso joys of wylvanla, Lruce seein to b perfectly cuvishiog and Dliss- Thursday, Sept. 14.—10n. m.: Address—** Onr | ful, Satisfuction, let it be borns (0 i, s n Qraln-Fields "—by Alfred Y, Secretury aneas | wtate of the soul induced by having ull things Honrd of Agrieniture; Discussion: Addresy—* Our aevording to the mind, hen the Christian Bouthe, by! Coled "‘,’x‘l"‘f'lf:‘l'é‘g:"‘l‘.'l:“:" mab cun act and live to sult bls tuste und con- bl e et UF | eience, ho will be satisticd. But this heautiful Addre sricultural Education”— | conjunction of opportunitics will never oveur In A, 5, Welsh, President lows Agricultural Col- | this world in our duy, Things ure not suffered 1cge s Discussion, 8 p. ., Agrlculturnl Organs | to go according to God's mind, and how then fzatjonn and Co-operation address ond discun- | can God's children, His sons and danghiters, b sion; Thomas P Janes, Commigsioner of Agricul. | satisfled? God 18 in our world In pecudiar prea- lur«i\ of Georgla, will lM!dml the Congrens upon s | ence and reality, but who supposcs thut Ho iy topic not yet indicated, suited with our wdinlnlstration “of affuirel It o fur us thue will permit, other appre God hos not rlncunl us n this workl to be de- toples will be discussed, Brief addros: lizhted with {t, what hins ITo placed us here for expected from s number of gentlemen widely | Tiigg is far from un ousy question to unswer,® known in ugricultural vircles from ther oflivial | Why God continues an ever-enlarging nwee of positions sud weltings. stuful and ushappy men, He bua not seen it to ——— sny, and we ¢an uo more thun conjecture, e Re-Tulllng » Llo in Gud, us I do, I um surethere bsa Cincinnati Enguirer, Teason, thuu;;l;l!rcnhv confees I canmot see it, ‘The lon, the iaty of the lun which was | As Christians, our duty {s to deal with u pluli whipped by the donkey somo weeks ago, bad | fuct, Why God madu the world and its fnhabi- Difs tafd nipped off by 4 viclous hyens, confined | tauts we ure not prepared to sy, but that Ho i au adjolning cogé, The noble king of the | did make them, und that man haysinued agitnst woods wus much mortified In- consequence, and | Jim, llPluin to 6ee na mid-day, Our duty, 1t wus feared would worry himsell to death, He | after getting oursclyes saved from sin, is Lo ¢ kept continually biting bl tall, wnd playing ull | gugze, with all our powers, In the work of g kinds of mysterlous prauksin bis coge, Twomen | tiug others sayed.” Wo are not called upon to were kept constantly eiployed, at an expenseof | futerpret” God's mind, but to do 11 231 a weel euch; w 'wuteh the lon and_prevent | 1t le uot to us materisl why God bl from further fnjury upon himself Mr.John | at all, snd why, mau having fullen, | Curney, the new Buperiitendent of the Zuologl- | to create the” hew generations that prolong o cal Gurden, hus succeeded fu corrying out a vlan | sinful and sylluring raco; but it is material that each suceeeding year. " The enorinous value of the compress tustitution may be understoud by wldiug to the handsome profits secralng to the Compuny, as shown fu this parugraph, the large- Iy-lncreased capaeity of each cary wnd corre- epouding inerease of fncoie to the raflronds, ue ehown i the preceding puragraph, St. Luuls hus demsonistrated that [ ** TILENE'S MULLIONS IN IT." Whilo looking un, \vull.-hluh' the operation of the great press, and jotting down sume of the bygures § have given you, I remarked to u lead- ng dealer that m.z wus 4o very easy way of wmuking money.” ¥ ¢ Rather, he replied, it is o hisrd way of making money pretty fast,' The new cotton begins coming i I Septeme ber, und the movenient ol a crop estends through the entire year,—the beaviest receipts lrclnr; u Decenber, January, and February, Bt. Louls' shure in tho crop of “lust yeur will reach 250,000 bules, nearly wll of which has atready arnved. The bales aversge about $60 ench fn value,~making the ng&;;:%&liu value of the re- veipts upwands of $12,000,000. Cotton is a must. iberal cantributor to those who hundle it it pays auore freely, aud (o more ways, thun any othier article of trude. Here, Iy 8L Louls, & vast nume ber of people et s share, in tho shaps of cone isslous, storage, Insurunce, CArtagy, compress- gy Inspeeting, weighing, bortug, lnux?)lw. clissiigg, trimining, marklog, and s0_on alost ntingtedy, Yetall this direct benefit ls insige rincant o comparison to the benefit that the ¢ ttonetrade hde Lrougbt to the general ther- chandisimg und MANUFACTURING INTEHESTS OF TUN CITY, If In Eden Adam kuew the meantug of happl- | Weure lkie broken pebbles tossed out upon | ho'n great *commod , dunger from looss and crumbling rock. In” sll, neas, thie txperichee has bicome absclote among | the Ahore by the watkr, then sekod back by tho | b8 atlon to tha traveling pub- | 505" 500" feet have been arcligd, the lobgeest his children, T think heaven will tot be suji | reyrsication of the wave, churned wruin and [ T lady was specchiless with fnidignation, tho | Stetion belng 800 fuet und the shortest 10 feot, lxllud with the repafred enjoyments of carth, | around in the veascless swirl of the decp, | passemgers were convitlsed, and the’ gentiéinan Thus tho nu\l‘llllll:ll were not all togethor, bub but with an untlr\:l{ new set, inude on purposo [ until we are perfect,” fufshed.” Often | staliced maeatically out to ‘the door, stepped to | ¥ore satteredalong the e, After s scction for its felicity, und with whichwo on enteringe | we would llks to Ao on sliore, Lut we are drag: the ground, and inimediately sat down. As tho | Of the tuunel tud been solected us nccdll}k thero will "t “unfamilfar, lappiness wifl | god buck to tho deepest depths, Thu word | car moved away bo arose, eXamined hia clothes, | arching, the miuees bugan to remove the fack doubtleas b firat awong theso new and henven- | Which expresses our condition after the provess | Jooked up oud down the street, waved hig | from the sldes and rouf for & depth of nlmut Iy pleasures, - “ eloved, 1t doth not yot appear | ds ut an cud i one which menns rounded and | hand fu un uncertaln manuer, and walked | & ety that bolug the average thickness of Whut ye shall he amd enjoy," smoothed. Puin, care, and griel, ne well 88 | gygy, * tho arching. In performing this work constan LYth="They shall huve wtl opportunity. We | juy, utid hope, and love ave glven us to wenr —— carg was uscd, atid when tho cftreno lability have fiext to' o oppartundty now bocauso wu | and work us to the true shape, A Proposed Swiss Law. to danger from falllng rock 1a cunstdered it ud. have 8o littly -tine, are so pitiched by miscruble And 1t you will stop and conslder it you will © it Mall Budget, wonder thut g0 fow accldents have uerumd poverty, and are uble tu hear ko little, Want of | see that the Bluly contulns ull the greatnotes of | The prn}mw\ Inw to regulate’the cost of ex- | The ruck tuken down waa removed dally an days, und means, and strengil, wro our great | humanlty, What i thero which “is 1oft out! | emption from wilitary service In Switzerlund, | dumped at different points uwlong the road "9':]‘ mndy of foes to oppurtuniiy, Wo plan \\’tn:l fy | Wehave hate il love, lops aud fear, joy | which wua rejocted on_Bundsy by u populur | the ummll thut from the roof being re/ml\eIl und experhent, for ten years, sl then begii o et serfel. “There need bo no superstitious claji | vote of 165,000 sgulust 145,000, wus ons of the | wnd carriud vut by platform cars that '"“"f) weamphshy, but our timé s up £ ety just na | made for b in order to set it at the head of all almnk;esl pleces of Ieglslution ever concelved. | Within a few feet ofit. When the sectlon to bo our energies get well unider wog, The work wo | Mterature, 1ts storfes of 11fe contain the germ | The llubility to miflitary seryico under the Swiss | arched hud been umparly propared, tho masons would du, nfi-muml,wumqu ro funidd, bist tho | of ull tho novels that have been plutted and sil Constitutlon fs uniyersal. No ground. of | hegan their work, luylug the brick on wooden domands of food and rafment take away our | the tales which huve inade us ligh or weep. | exemption 8 recognized oxcept” the ox. | srches called ucngmb which were pus,up lust dollar, The dutiea of human 1ifo take | Human nuture is the snme, and it strikes those | {stence of bodily — infirmitics which une { every 8or 6 feet. Tho bric K was pot A“ physieal strength, as woll as mental and spirit- | vust and univereal chords which vibrate fn every | it o man from belng an_ effectivo soldier, | ¢lusd to the wall in all purts, & space being Je! uuf, and often, Hght at tho moment of victory, | bosom und fo every lond, Those who nru exenscd on this ploa psy a cor- | for the water to run down, Bheet fron was I body wid spirits we break hopelessly dowin And I the cuse of this book wo flnd the truth | tafu line which is roughly supposed to represent | placed betwoen the brick and the wall for prm In the’tmmortal lund all thegs enidbarrassments | that God Iy for v For liere slone do | the moncy value of avingle soldier, It the law | tection agalust water, and the brick was l?x will be unknown, “Tho wark of cterulty will be | wo dlscover. veliglon, aud fn rellglon we | which hus just been rojectod had passed, this | with water-proof cement, No part of tho sly pursied throughout cternity; woatth | sce rovelation, and In vevelation we sce the love | fine would liuve been replaced by a tax prupog- arcmnfi Lag been slighted, the whole work belog NG to Us 48 0 parxl'.' of the patiimony of | of the Most Iigh for His cliildren, ‘Thus, it Is | toned to the moans of thuvxempted man, Uhe | carefully and thoroughly done. . the redeemed, sad the gloritied Lody will surely | the great central thowght of Chrlstiunlty that | Juurnal de Geneve entenlated that a man, with an | A telégraphwirehus bien putthrough the "lm know no such afllivtion” as weariuess and pafin, | Gob (s disposed to succor us and to be on our | Income of £1,000, exeused on tho seore of short ncllmdomwanlallunudnbulhemll.lmd“lm ng Oh, shall we not all bo satisfied, when we awuke | side, alghit or Inmeness, would by the time that ho | whilby given oyery time a trulnenters Md'““fi In tho beauty of our strengthund the perlectlon The opposite of this is heathentsin, Inita | fs'43 years old huvo pald something liks £000 us | the tusinel, Aaiager Prescott Las ap flllm.l of_our upportanity ! man eiee, ik God 15 merciful, Or Lie | o pealty for not befng ablo tosorve. If aaon | R B. Campbell superintendent of the “"m-ll They will kuow tod in character and fn provi- | disgs himsetf slung weury leagues, und God e | failed ta pay, the Jaw proposed to malke his | for the, present, at least, and 3r Cul:lu)b&‘ dence, ‘This retleetion 1 buye burcly unticlputed, ;;Il:x of his torture, Awuy with sweli i thing us | futher lable tor the tax,” The lm[[)ml. was o bo | keeps fen men exumining tho sides and roof 1 g v T but now asl you to refolce In more Immedintes | this] 10 the Hible gives us no beitor con- | Jevied on Swiss clpizens domleiled sbroad | and toking down luuse rock witrever found. Bt Luuts now conslders Texus the most fme | for the padiidation of the king of the foreet, | we, knowing our duty, ln\mrluuulyenmngu inthe | ly, In l.hiukwyorld merje Is no chance ta et ception of - the l!‘fvlnu chueacter than | aml on foreigners dumideiled In Bwitzerlund, | Buforo h traln gocs through, the entiro Purtunt und tost promteing of her commerclal | which bas succeeded beyond bis' most_sanguing | uuble work “of saving’ men from the wages of sonally aequalnted with God, We mect 1 this, then * aenl up Ity puiges | this L povisdon erenting the shagular | e of tho tunncl is watkulover by four men, coustituencies. This vast teglou is developing | expectations, He had s smali box-cage”con- | sin, Not until we are through this evangellstic ¢ Is Arud, In His Word, denice, but at b purs prChLi It daull 1 males and the bats, 10 Hhe st el at diffueon Wosy e the t A TR ON PR U Campt el ulow “ 5 Uajhe Lk 0L 10U watlas Lopangit CVCEY Gay on e toir of examiues fun and Kuowledge, When wo aweke with 1 | Thure b be walled ln aud fued on Al ug Whout this p ‘}“’"‘l 1 thial 143,000 ton, and no rudumlnn, uum\ulug the lA‘c.','uul,lllll' Ukeness, we shatl know Hhn, and rejolee, Our | afliction and supplicd with water ot affliction. | should have beon found 1o vatu for it watehers, will Lo wllowed 1o pass ‘t:;l‘nLh; knuwlu[uu of the Divine character will bo our | Let mo no longer ses the sun or heav a bird | most lutelliclido explubation f8 that o largu | Twonty mlmlwn\q!l(mu:cnl by every arioly superlative realization of beauty, I am sure | slugl If Gaid b so forgotten Mis world, and | number of rich men bave felgued or vxeggerated | going throwgh, sud st this low r:;'iu fl flap“ o that this wonderful contemplation will by u | {8 30 unlovely and hideous, let me_escape from | bodily defucts, und that o lurge part of the pub- | and with the precuutlorns incntions ..:hu u“%l’ large weusure of our sternal felleity. Then, i | sight or sound of Him and of myself] ¢ urs anxious to flevee thea fur their want of | of the uuderground journey s - i thy ligbt of eur pleasunt wequadntance with God, ut, 1t instead of this, 1o sbould be a | publle splrit. nominal With great raptdity, Immigration to it s great- er than to any othier Btate; its population {5 fn. creusing eunormoualyy and its capucity 1o sup- port mililons of people §s Just begiuning to be ppreciat: 1 takics pdvantage of, 1t 1s guin. Jug recru o 1 all sectlons of the country; outl, generully speaking, the muterlal uf these uew acceedlonis Us the very test fur the o developiug such reaources a8 ‘bexss pro This works, and {1 provis | und gave it f t 1 dnterview omutucl iR atructed wijofning the lion's cetl, und coaxed | effort need we ugucl the highest satlsfu-tlon. b the wounded beast thereln. The eage was so We shall be satisfled when we awake with, s constructed that the Hon could not turn ahout | Hkeness, when i the morning of the resiiree It Onee In{ dila tall wus treated medically, | tun ull the hosts of the redectned, ubediont to nud covered with a bluck snake's skin, The | the call of the Archangel's seurching trumpet, lon now secing perfectly satised with thie | shall burst forth from the lung finprlionment ol uiendutent Lo by tail, aud holds his head us | the grave fnto tho besuty and bloom of a fade- erect uud §sus prowd us wvir. Mr. Curney 13 o | less Bmmortality, each wearing ugaln the long- Keulus . luat imsge of Creatar. Fhien,, and not il iy thite Mt ik e L{TTITE us yot, bt not pereep- L