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e Ehichge Dailp TRibane i st i e e VOLUME XXXI. ' CHICAGO, MONDAY., AUGUST 14, 187C. ¥ ' 21CE FIVE CENTS. Srnqry pg 0 (o] . »g ARTISTIC TATLORING. comparison, For while, In every other worship | and to thelr fcachiers. Thero f1s thus at the | and while I do not fear personal hatm from ox- | ful crime. The real f th IS8 5 N THE PULPIT. 4 under leaven, this relf-control runs ont {uto | outset & lack of melfcontrol which | asperated enemies, Idoshrink from the dis- | hasnot yet heen ?ml.m:nmtul:lc:l.‘:nd II':;:‘;»‘)'{:'-E 3 bithem to look u M outsldaof (he 3 marely negativo sellishness, and ro ultimatly | protects that woman fn hier womanhood, and | approval of fricuds who moy differ from my | pose w place the foul flend 35 thasherctica on thelr wny to perdition; geparatea tho particloy of Wikt pur 0w, | Whicl theroiors forom. hor by Lar. st sabinte | Clone or wiis ooar qaealos e Sty ot | et ool fitad o trial betare this s 7 \ehocver shall onpase them as represcta: belief unites them. Making n merlt of sacrifica | the responsiblljty of a msn. 8he must, there- | thelr uttemnce. lvlu n mlnlnlcr.l(@unuenuml, not.” . Lut usJook at her motives and reasons, | riehts eve 'L, ,;‘ b will thoreby forfelt aft Several Sermons Preached | §rof relfdenial only fosters prido. Humillty | fare, take tho consenuonces, Aschoal-teacher— | should atand upon some elcvated outlook | and sce i thore of o personal character warrant | nted bl '”5" augh ”";{"’," Ve toler- I8 not to bo found ut lome, nndd natead arro- | nmanof charncterand poition—hna como o fecl | watcbing the battle; hu should discover the | any sich reault or revenge. Lat us see. True, | been made 1o holicye sl ulslor: Yesterday on the Re-= gancy comne to the door when wo knoek. It i | that these actions perfled the cause of educa- | strongthand the purpose of the enemy, and | Mra. Maggio Buchanan Sullivan is o strong, sclf: | hs ity witl (s eve that the puhlic nchools of q Jreciscly the diflerenco helwrcen the Rersice ren- | tion, ot for s to tnrulre fucther Uian | while the combatania I the fleld may only soc | educated ambitioas woman, buttatirally koode | fos of fue tan g Jf Bl fe the most desly cent North Side cred by love for love’s sake an the oye-service | thia into the motlves which produccd the paper | thelr tuiividual foos and the Lear atruggles, he | hearted, peucrous, and truthfal. Lefc alone, | New Yorke antttho Romo. Father Hecker, of of on Insolent nnd mercenary Nirling, Wo ull | fhat e wrote. ' It anough thut evcry lina of | ehould Took beyond todlscover tho rea ircuith | shio a capatie of tho spiit and wardn of Ehal | A pe s koo Uhey cost, tho Charch 100, Tragedy. know liow great Is the gulf hetween love's ser- | it displays Intenro fealing, and tiiat ite Internnl | of the opposiig forces and the purposa and in- | awful hour, Bl hus been engaged In re- | dount his s L:l.“ ron crury year, and I do not v vice and that which a common fiithy lucre com- | evidence shows It to be o frank and undisquisced | epimtion of thu cnemy; he must uncover their | portorial and perlodical lieratirs for over mani ,‘;,yi. ""'“?.‘,"" 1 ;h""'m the Biblo sod mands, expreasion of his views, That it wus designed | Intrenchments, and {f possible dismount their | slx years in tols city; her criticlsms | {g .,h,,m- Im, 'E""L f\mt n thio Intorests of Roma When Paul rrn’ml that we might givo body, | to be read n open Cotnell, nn one who has ex- { guns. —In this caso thoso peraons whosc nuines | hnve “bcen numerons, sharp, and _personal. | fully endeavored to ey (I8 they have faith- The Necossity for “Solf-Con. | S0u! and spirit tosuch a sorvice, he struck i | smined it ran well belicve, If there If then on sppcarin, print, are not the only parties In- | Burely atie lnd no riglit to condemnn Mr,” Tian: 1 oarored to o, To deny 3 usclens; the the centro of the clierlshed thought of sclf-con- | Is part a Inck of self-control in cortain phrascs | volved s it in & wider and more farreaching con- | ford for elmilar treatment of bersolf. A8 10 | "Fesnces o birg oo ombige0, them s 'sin. trol,” an Eloquent Dig. | trol Itisnotas virtue begottenof expodioncy, | and oxpressions, tiila is doubtless thair oxplana- | flict than iaa yct hoen mato to appear. Bome | the statement. of fact, there f8 no doubt but | apiergiord committed thin sin, violently ' or pride, or rltualistic obedience, 1t is, on tho | tlon; and that It contalns any justification for | of you will yet bomore personally involved in | thatesery cliarge made was trae, nud could | faithul ounes C’T“l the Churchiand these her course by the Rev. 8. contrary, ono _which is gladly ren- | nssnult Is preposteroug. A suit for alander | this strugglo than you yot Imngine; some of | bave beei so made Lo appear by him. Then | (han “‘m}"' d""’ the ntlack was morg dered "' to Mim who has bought | could have been fta Aot Tegitimate result. | your sunamay vet die under the hond of the | wihat demon took posscssion of this womanly |m,"n,i:’m(":|' o it muat b resented In the ‘W. Dufficld, us with 1Ilis own. most precious Llood, | And, If Its focts be truc, thiey arc none too | veul murderer of Francis Hanford, Let uslook | heart! We find that from her youth she was | was sgeinat 1o urch, Thus tho real offnso a3 In the old time ft was rendered less Intel- | strong in tatoment. The mernber of Councll | for a few momenta ot the facts In the case, and | trained a thorough Romsnist. Bince her adult | othervlow thot s ':""“'h Church. There (% no ug]cnn%. the fnvisible, all-powerful King, | to whom that paper came presented nob jta facts | sec if we can find the renl inspiration of this | yearsshe has héena stanch and fearlcss do- is oTens '""" | account for the cnormity of Jehovall hut its actuul lauguage. A storm was rajscd, | terrible murder—a suflicient cause for this aw- | fender of that faith. Bhe has written morc and | ana M:x:]e r:“ figm{rm{lfil}lumflur g Romanism Responsible for When we look In tha Bermon on the Monnt | In splte of the judivions rullng of the tem- | ful tr abler articles for the periodieal literature of thia : o training prepared them 15 Per Cent Discount on 8ll Garments orderod of us dur- ing July and August. BLY &CO., ARTISTIO TAILORS, Wabash.av., cor. lonroc=st. oot bt Bl hahlitintd KFINANCIARL. i LAANOIA L e i 7 PER CENT. ’ holcs business mecurlty at 7: S eoroon. fa,r.oa st R City Cerilficates 5,000, rown of Lake honds wantedl, o eSO & MABON, 107-100 Deatborn-st. W cdy. MUNEY A.T L[] BATES for the credentials of this proverb of Boloinon, | poraty. Chasirman,' the document was roul to | The bullet, or the revolver that ent it on fta | ity than aby obner Paplec. 1l o | folook upon him es o ‘dog:¥ fna Roman- i pamgi the Murdoer of Fran- wo ind them very piaios. 10 ko that Is alow 10 | bEelied nrs. - Tho Chirman alons apnesrs £ | doadyy mission, ccriataly ed ‘no. intentlon of | Lo Up extonded noticas of the mheisuae writ; | Catlolle country ke wold. have bsen %0 toan on Warcliouse Recetpts for Grain 4o P! Y b eretical dog" (hut hereile is ot ‘an American. Fen T Sealittorshd Youther by ik aad cls Manford BoF Tl s tlows Rocamtaiobttonth o Wil | Aotk o ccimenon s oo . e otanly | Thauseniot o motive op o pareom IS | o erlon o tana, uiner of fastiaye, snd | word), nd b miist ot oxpect o cscope: Fran Morigages. US BILVERMAN, | 3 . 3 g ‘| 3 3 ave been dedle: 4 5 o Baak Cnamber of Comercs. v even aacrifice in the highest moralsansc of aclf- | cool il calm, who dematds and obtaina the | the fatal shot, but I losltate to speak of Iim aa | Home. Perlaps ambition. has gaitod with con, | o8 Lanford's crime was that he had struclc . n em Rome in the person of Mre. Bulllva d b control that sin which 1s as hand, or foot, or eye | nome of the writer, Need [ add that from this | the natural monater that some think he s, and | aclence fn $his, but_whatever th tive this v van, and by, B Is the Vi T 2 }3 al‘r;n.b Tthra(\lxglmn‘t this m:nfl?ua(o:i\}icmc%t n-:'amle‘n%l it fa n] mad \vlllxlrl|or l‘l‘“g'-. gud‘ ;»I ulpfim} { hnv"u "{L‘ s{n;’pu:.hy wm;fltbe tnlk&b?‘ut “:,L)‘-nfih- {m; Leen tbilntlh'nct«dn?lng {l]lmu 1l|ne lm[':on‘l’:,’lonuol -‘;'fi; ?:;‘::}l:h, ,’,‘,“,f{,’:’,‘gu,‘{l“;‘,,'{’mfgl, “fl::t‘f'{fl:{_ est and ot correct style of Ing wae | ot which we have all stoo 1281 {0 N, hat he I8 a murderer and ehould sufler nfiuence, w 2 ealre ane b - 1’ Suc e View Taken of | 1l boet o ot oot o i Mken | point yon to the n;‘?‘uhvlumq;lnlnucn f il | the full pensity, for hin crime T G helleve and | 1ate apodintmChte - she becime. tho cenqo by | lome ‘must bo rvenged by her faithful scr- Al FDUCATIONAK~ l’ennsylvaniq@aryflcademy e Dreadfu Iden thread, The poor in spltit, tha meek, | law, lumano and divine, md to tha uiter de- | expect; Lut I think I volce the feeling of the | successtul agent for the Chureh in this depart- | 1oLy, Jorpired by this teaching, they di thelr th adful Affair the merciful, the puruwl’n hcan.pum'peacc-lmd(- striietion of all self-control? Were we 1o b cogunn'nl: when I declare that on ‘ihv gurhrc. ment of hc:zwurk. nndcln dfi:‘,".. t.;: oth::?;rrl'c’: fl?fll ,.,‘7,‘;.'5‘:;,,,,‘,’ '.“J"?F'.m; o’l flomlnl‘; tainiug, Penosytvents Milltary Acedomy, Chestor, Ps., opens by the Rev. M. era, come In for the largest shatc of blessing. | surrounded by men who could not huar such | or as seen In the evidence given in the Coroner's | ahe haa served Rome faitbfully and well. This et of er Infornal spirtt, com= Gept. 13, C1VIL, ENOINEERTNG, THE CLASSICS, AND EN- GLISH THOROUGHLY TAUGHT. 2 % ‘For tirenlars spply to T. A, Cosgrove, U0 Washington. st., Chicago, or lg ’Cul. Theo. llyatt, President P. M. Foruivencas of injurica 18 n_cardinal doctrine, | provocations; wera we o sink to a protection of | Court, there s found n6 autliclént cause for | is now denfed. Of course it 1s. But M, Sulli, | Pecly Oiiing a paturally gencrous heart, Mar- M. Parkhurst, Aud tho golden rute of all Chritianity is ta do | Character by th pistalullct or' the knifo- | this terrible crime. We all exclaim, *1¢ fa | van hsoll ¥old- that they. (bmeelf and wife) Baret, Duchanan eullivan, could. never bhave to another what we would that heshould do to | thrust, we inlght well doubt the value of ro- | awfull" Ho Incxcasablo!" Who is eafe?” | wrote to Michigan aud got o whols Jot | sins an she aeed b uch SXhres- us. _Any violation of fliesa procopta ks not only | ligion, and tho'uscfulncas of Wat death which | 1L s unascountablo and unprovol®d!" But | of lutters favortng the oppointment, of thelr | Fhomeh t poerol sol,, that fearful liour. 8 sin againat the Savior'ateaching, but It Isa aln | taiight us moderation, sclf-sucrllice, and for- | no snfllcient motive or inspiration appears; all | {ricod Doty, and named the two men whom eX- | done her wiek: oiheis ik tho Papacy haa Who Domands that the Reading | sgaiustsoclety. Now this ahows us, os hardly | giveucss of Injuries, are ustounded. Why! Other men liave been | Mayor Colvin says he caused lettors to be ob- i j gthiers with the sasno apirl: may *" Col. Hyate wiil bo &t tha Shermaa House Monday, anyihing clse can show (t so clearly, that | We have too preatly forgotten this important | killed as suddenly, other families have been be- | tafied from. Now,dt is slmpl 5 do this work more Jeanitically, but it il be fn- © finn.&& ':é?:.‘,z‘.'.m. 1o poim., snd will bo happy fo of the Bible Be Re- sncicty ) Grilization. nre the produet of elementb.of colt sontral, - When Georzze Borrow, | reft as sadly and hopelessly; therc have been | vernclty between them. Py %Xl)?n{-x;“‘-‘trtflé spired by tho eame gplrit, and from the saino e pataons of the Academy and othiers ou oficlal busi- thie Léachings of w pure and true religion. To | imprisoned In Spain, took Paul's toctics and wis | hundreds mtundered mors Lrutally sud muth- | tme b told this, had Bo motive for miarepre. | FoNre: This is the legitimate work of the Ro- el stored in the Public love our cucmics, o bless those that curse us, | finally releosed honiorably by the muthorities, | fated inore savagely. Whence, then, this | senting the affatr, The Sullivans bave told of | orm, lC nulmlh: Chuteh. Ny Mr. Ianford they. = topray for thoss that despitefully use us and [ his quict imness enined’a footing for the Gos: | awfulness and lrcmbfing of hearl all over the | the meotiugs at their bouso of Mr. Doty, Mr, | siorc fapired with the ubifity and wmado to fect LAKE,_NAVIGATION, Schools. eggecte us, It to bo tia children of our Father | pel. | When David Livingatons Bappened | cler! — Mr. —, and_Mr. — for the purposs uf | fiorecopiity,of perforiing this terriblo deed. g g i o P . n lleaven, 'And assuredly socicty lscemented [ oncs to strike a most exasperatin Alexander Sullivan waa no monster or davago | 1aying plans 'to successfully manipulats the Juo to"thile convictions ot duty to thels > and settied fust to the sxient tury it adhoros to | and treacherous. Sepoy on hia ¢ march | tass Sans th (though b ee thommas G Ul Aot n” thix by i toe Intereat of | o they could hardly uve done loss, and sio H o S o & this lna of condutct. to Toke Nyoses N0 recorda fn his | day) Sal {thoul bo may be o ! ;:‘,gl;-“r';' Romue. Bt It I8 safd Mr. Doty Ir ot & Roman oy m’f:,"“,'"“‘:“h“ casc la exceptional, orthat A In Memoriam---A Funeral Digcourse | , I might even doclare with an authority equal | journal that holins degraded bimsclf in s own | anit we would have trusted our lives aud ‘prop. | Cutholic. True, but Rome ia uslng the Liboral | saram, (¢ 10 theso litterauces, 1s that all her & by the Rev., John At~ to the old proplcts that I tho Golden Ruleworo | cyos,aud vl nover-do the ko again. | And | crty Tu s hands without. esitancy during i gfltfimsuc&ufiuenm in thla cty and country | R beckloss. of pesanl oo oy b, Churcl, Stoamer Tountaln City, Tuesdoy, Ang, 18, y the " J0. made tho standard of 11foand morals to-morrow, | wherever Livingstons went his moderation was | this time. Gentlemanty, fafthful, mcunn'\m;:;g wirike uf:'[f:pmllhgz gl:;: ul]um?{::gfltg: 3-;“.2 panfed by su uncoutrollable temper au o wicked . the city ordinances could all be set away as un- | known happlily by every one who has followed | the prejudic A Kingon, necessary. Minute statements would bo need- | hiim, The gentleman “holds Lis hand, but tho umx?uu’-:ludcfig"‘%fiffi?flé'{;fl"ficflum.,m doxy. Without thelr aid the Bible would stlll "“}.";L‘f,‘,”fl,, standpoint of histor nd obs less. We should proceed upon equity and not | churl strikes. 'They refused In the early Church | othiers—in sympathy with him—gosded him | ave been read In our echools. Alding in thls | yon T see o faithin] and gulchciontel fneag * upon Jaw. I feel sometimes as though churclies,. | to make ishops of thote yho werc'ready to | with the charges mude In the City Councll; but | nefarous work, they are elther the partners or | f;o0dom and Protestantion ol ichte A and Ghristians, and civilized soclely, und cltios, | given blow. W o, while W niec novr bo | an his wy lioine he taticed over the nflair colly | the tools of Kome. Tlic Pliatisces,—Apostate T, aoveranc. altag The Tragedy of Crime===Sermon | and States were all strr ling.in e ot of o' | Cawards 'agt. or idughtycan ovorcomo ol | iy a poraomal rlod of ming, oty paried | Church—and. iho: Saduceet—aieption-dnite Son ooy T, el e ber - e Steamor China, Wedneadsy, Aug. 10. Steamer Badger State, Thurnlay, Aug. 17, Steamer Onolda, Batnrday, Aug. 10. Yor tickets and siato-rooms opply ot 119 Clagkest. A, A, BAMPLE, Parsenger Agent. s h &nawn s r public wiiter o i ool M =l ervances with which the devil entangles our | withgood. The examplsa of our blesaed Lord is | at, the cornes again to cruclfy Jesus. Pilate and Herod are o e pubi ) = WANTED,. by the Rev, S. A, W, fect. Inplaco of a few simple prlnclplng to live | that of tho trucst courage aud the noblest self~ 2(7:1" .’3.,2“:’3,; ?I:ao :Llé:: %fi'flmfifir“m'fi‘ na’f; made friends f"; ne common cause, llx:dm?x‘l’zlm:‘d:?'retr:gr h:hcx,mg{‘ ?ilon;'; t:x‘“dt: A~ s A Jewett. and dic by, we have thousands and myriads of | cantrol. minutes later,and went bowards bishome withno | Do not bo decelved, Mra. Sullivan was falth- | oo s woe Jolin Huss o Jeromt of Mosie Parizersbip or Agoucy Wautads | el eniensad srgemenstesn | it e here vt ol | R bl S Kot Sl | i o ol ks b | sy " et vl o sincore soul strives almos aln. vhich this self- T o Ve 8 en the pal o . —_— SELF-CONTROT:. Tho hest that can be donc is to teach | controlls to be galned. In Soine way it must be tmu O Lhistoment. My dchC edares P blow at the e | Bullivan und Lis wifo for het’ consclous volun- hat fic could not belleve before” that any man | the case, a blow at Mra. 8. wos a blow at the lto- v i AETMON B RHR BT, & W PTTYIRLD: and help fate true freedom the pro- | by the surrender of self, And wien we have | could ehange so uddenly, as Aid tiis ma dur. | mon Catholic Churvh, “Bho waa Its represcnta. | s AGCOt8: sa truly as the revoiver and bullet The Rov. 8. W. Dufleld, pastor of the Elghth fessed followers o!‘ that fincst patiern | lcarucd that in a question of truthfuinessa | ing these thirty minules} they parted pleasantly tive and servant, Therefore, to hang the Sullf- Tome may how] over this ;,'mg,, hut eannot I oS ¥ h P 't Tobe 5 of nobloe_ citizensyip *who, when He was re- | blow seltles notbing; when we Lave found thot | and rool as businees fricnds going home to thefr | ¥aos will make Rome howl. " 1o Italy they will | ana will not Hd hermelf of tho “bloody deed, resbyterlan Charch, coruer o y and | viled, reviled not again; when TTe auil’cmd} e | a woman's honor can be protecied nelther by | families after the toll of the day, and this after | e declared murtyr, Sho dare not and will not desire o foravbn thoss ‘Washipgton strects, preached the following threatensd not, but committed Himeelf to Him {llutol nor eowhide; wlhen we have fully known | talking over the wholo affolr, und Mr, Sullivan But let us look alittle more cloecly at the scrmon yesterday morning: thint judgoth righteousty.” There was nothing | that character, Lk a fouled spring, wiil'cleor it- | showliz to mEJldcnd in his own writlng s copy | work done by Rome for this representative, and L':fin{:l,mx?élnflm':}mng,‘";’,[“fimfl';.‘ &T”sh" & 1gh. | pusilianimous ubout Jesus Christ, aud therd | selfif let alune, we bave secured the unfulllug | of tho most ubjectionable paragraphs in thoss | the nature of the inspiration given her, ' Ti Y ] Mo thint fo slow Lo anget In belter than the, Ti#ha | need be nothing pulkitianimous shobt any con- | wislstance of calnmon ecnnc, i Hov ouble eiters, Tho (rlend suzgested tohim | moral resuly of the. doctring af Tafelliiey 1 | oy jocs broidgne, (9 Sve this gullty coupla n R from Jjust punishment. Wao may speak of them r.— Hrov, xol. 92, « | Quet which tinltatea it closely, I do uot mcan thot we sliould ever stand by | that there was uo charge nzainst hia wife’s char- | to put the Chureh fn the place of Uod tothe erel ¢: ¢t Arimete dtao tn Whittlor's Contennfal tiymn | . ‘Thie wo come to tho flusteation of thta ralf- | and ‘sce wrong nard Violeucs Which Wo cai | ucter, und that after hr prommingnce noi ctiv. | soul uf tho Rouantst: - Oubslda. of the Chur e s ey il e Sounih as miasg 2 s control, and naturally we find it best exhibited | prevent. Eaclt rosistanee to such conduct | [ty in writing for the press anid Stherwise, they | ull ure hereties, * Ex el N H s thel d touchies our national veakuess with the Ithuriet | {245 fobicat and Iojelest of the past. David | strengthicns public. scnthment. nid maks out: | Showld hot Gemum por expect ceonmtiog Trom | & TISHCE of Httle consomsone theretors whiste, | Make common cause with them thelr methods A midfie-aged man, possersing fird-claw Dusinets unlincations, and having restded for pust 18 years in O\icago, duslros an interest in some sfo and reiisbio Touse, Am good Jndga of credita, ] well a zood collectar. dnva goor ban) can givennla real.citals secarty. - Wou Skency for kome house that wishes fhrouh Qe West eat of clty reforonce eiven and cquired. * No,_ paten or ‘anythinie in that line, Ter % diream, In conndance, T 89, Tribugo of: Dow, for three days, statlug business, otc. MISCELILANEOUS, RED.CAP. PROPOSALS. " " i ‘ be candemned, but their work must be aus~ spear of genlus. We forgat too sadly often restratned himself from slaying Saul in the tent | rage more dungerons. And 1 honor the man | such attacks, Mr, Sullivan ascnted to this and | er such beretics Ttve o fittle fonger or die to- | o J The austers virtues strone to suve, ut stachllab, 1is nct lso in relusing the water | who, for the helpless, tho weak, or the op- | went home quict nnd ealm. No plea of inganity { day; thoy sreto be lost forever. gI.{ they tluns fi":flw‘ir l:‘h .m;‘llcoltlcl:x‘ ‘.'x‘i'&:',"’“fi.fy“zfi'r’f Il?fcphrt: and among them must be reckoned this grand | from the well at the gate, for which ho lud | pressod, undertakes o defense whieh costs him | or uncontrollable passion will etand in the face | atiack or cau fnjure the Church they are » . quality, ng“ -Control. In o state of barbarlsm | Jonged, uul. which bad™ been pn:x!urm\ ot the sumul'h ng. It l's‘ a8 theperpetual onument of | of this fact. H * | rebele spainst God and His Chureli; the; yh-.\vu :fi‘fig nvixl-( "nr ‘flt‘i woa mng.’i'gfié'm‘:: i 1 risk of men's Hves, was o grand example. It is | 8 brave and unsclilsh defiance of English avarice |~ qm,e5 whore fs the explanaton of themurder? | 1o Aght” to life, liberty, or properly. This fs | to thus “1{ but, fit s cverything goes by Ml-vegnlated Im- | ine prototyps of ‘all ok selt-denying decds | that Pllmeoll’s mark ¥ is now aitited aronnd | thab motive s faspivatfon ouid bwe led him | the téaching of Kome toxday wherever aho has | | chaed withthe warder while thie it pulse. Foree fs borm of powen * and | feom that day forvand. 1 temerod possiblo | a-vcssel hull. iy s fudiguant specch bo ub- | fo {he faucy cets oty son it S tunk | tho Power o caforee lor bt Do ot trew | Joeiaed il the murder whila this Is the power of seliahncss. Tho _abundonment | Sir Philip Siducy's ‘cup of yater ut Zutphon, | tained what, nothig Tess thun this dorermiun. | 12U 1840} het], Corpinty mot, Seinlooetbler | b Pt Salinied aiice th daya of tho T | fims B by mate, Fesult of thy teaching of onc’sown vplnfon or action, except under the | and protluced ‘s host of deseondanta fn the | tlon could have pecured—u guarantee aguftiat | 410 qld not even knosw his residonce, Mr. Ian- | Quisition. She.ouly cunforms to” the circum- more than twenty-fivo years. pr'?,x;. their .i-ma- - Crimean-War, the Rebollion, nud the Franco- | the fatal overlonding which sent tacn and'shins ¥ gl v the stances of coun and power s fi itls i A ol domand of force, f8 nover thought of. Bolf-") 1 siay Way! A good actionstimulates athiors | €0 often to the botiom of the sea. Such n case ford liad dons im no petsonal lojury that ho | JUASE 0556 ex’fi:m uu& Atally er o . Bulnt. his sln was anpasialiahle, and Hielr oo control In the purposcs or pasalune only oceurs | to afinilar felf-forgetiulness by the creation of | daca not violate the principle; [tonly establishes :};‘,‘,‘,1,‘{,‘,,';;;,‘"3.{’,‘, gt death, of, ,;‘;,‘;Li:, the e s black Ethiop hos no?klfin{mdlfrvrfl?fif: c:::fi:?w{‘{’fl]fi '.‘3&"&‘.5"&“2"? Sorvant of the ‘when expericnce percrnptor(lyl In:lsn Tpt}n ni nu‘ ‘7llnusphcre ‘; lofty dxlt‘nl\ar‘ e s ‘Xltm\mn: :lbdtr'un busis of self-forgetfulness aud | yeiug no reason that Mr, Suflivan shonld return | this le«;pmriuhu ;:‘ul chauged her spota, I have Pope can be trusted on l,lmgjury that u-ln: mfi " But even then it s cast askis In the majority of ¢ moy say tho sune of that devotion votiou to dnty. hirt: - | seen the Romish Church away trom Chicago cuses. Tho eavayro I8 rendy to pay the penalty principle which led Chirdst to the cross, Stephen lie who does ngt, ns d George Herbert ;; th‘fi)," ;‘,‘;?‘,‘,},‘,g:".‘,‘,:’R’,&‘;fl‘;‘,‘.‘fl;’,"]fi,‘;‘}.fl{o"{ #nd Protestaut Amerlca, and In every Hocx:fin fi:‘;:'g(::ul‘;r"y !nl:-u'i-‘: "‘\'v'l‘firgx;ffi ;}I?ul;l hl:%l!ih- f tl; ko ol tho Indulgen And whenover | 1, the atonc-hesp, and Paul to the sword, | puts it, *keep thé relus,' {8 one whn s unsafe nurrounficd by strangers to himself, but by the | Cathollc country wnder the heavens Francls | pevvants that by the execution of swift mfi m-‘.‘ or tho sako ol tho Indulgence. Wherover love of principls surpoenca lovo of { In friendship, untrue under trial, nnd (ngerous | erjonds of bl victim, and,resardless of personnl | 11anford’s sttack .on the Church and its ne- | ribla justice thay teach the infatuated dorvants this Is the shapo which the wishes ussume In | jife, thers eclf-control Is present In Its nobleat | tosoviety. If he fs ready to tako any insult, hn fr e ¥ kuowledged representativ s Y i 3 i A ¥ " or futiire consequences, attuck and kil an fnof- ntatlves, uo matter how | of Rome that thicir mistress hus no right to cumn- clvilized mun, we muy eafely belleve bim tobea | form. Tt ts not found to be nsceticlsm elther, | shows himself perfectly nuawnre of the old dis- | fengive citiaen, an extoomed nelghlior I the | rue the ol arges, would be a4 suf- Tho Tinard of Commisnioneraof Cook Cannty will J i 5 : tect them in this cliy or Jecutes blasumi) £ aielincicp, oy Aug. 81, 1870, | partiartan at heast. for the ! Bon of Man,? wo nro disthicity tohl, | tich, sleht of his neighbore, u loving husband aud | fiedeat —cause for death by legallzed otntre "Fhst fo Ut for the vrection uf tho L :bitheates nod corridore | "It cannot bo worso for the Central “Afriean to | *came eatlug and drlnklng,.",mln gling Inmae- | A modeat, sensible, welt-!:cd man Tathier In the prfiscm"c( s m%any. T4 would | Process, or moh violence. Look at thie deimands 'E:?x"" .oglll::la!:x;lu“:h: “‘Z:fi’.‘i“‘.in”.’:c?‘.“{?fi; The hlactt hounded on i north by Harrson. on the | driuk pombe and wallow tn the river iud with. | riage foaste and rumlflllnr‘u;]unfm -,,.“‘?"." Wil not fsalt mo; und 1o other cant secm _that 0 any pluce this side, | Innde by Rome upon the lately-established Got- | bar of American, not Poplsh, courts of justico aouth iy Dotk on_tue cnst by Wood, nd on the | in reach af the crocediles, than for the Pelyne. | gaules of ebiidren. His followers, while they | Thy rollglon of the Spirll mplics diseiplin. | of ~ Pardise promlsed’ protection; this | €rment in Spain. Napoleon IIL. to please tho | and public opinlon. west by Lincuoln-st, ’l‘h‘n ids will bo received separatoly es follows, -t Firet—For the maron work, Becond—For tho cut-stona work, Third—For the plastering, Tourth—For the alate and marble work. Fifth—Forthe carponter wark. Blxth—For the roofing and gatvanized-iron work, Seventh—Far the painting and glazing. Tighth—Plambing and gos-piping. Ninth—For tho steam works, Thu speclticutions for each class of work and ma- terials will ho under one covor and classifiod, and #1l contained thereln ta_be included in the bl for She wame, Contractors may bld for the whole of the work apecified, or in port, according to the epeciilcations, ¢ 4 Itut the Board of Commisslonera of Coolt County teverve tha richt to roject any or all of tho bide, or to accept auy bid or part of & bld thoy may deemn beat for the Intercet of the county. The plans and specifications can bo seen ot the oflice af 1. C. Cachrane, architect, No. 30 Bor- :‘l)u.ul‘n‘ Duildiug, corner LaSalle and Washing- n-nts, Tacli proposal mnst ba placed In a scnled en- velope, and indorsed ** Proposal * on the envelopo; and accompanylng the bift muat be a bond with two (2) or mnore satisfactory surcties to tho ‘*County of Cook"™ In the sumn of ve thoneand dollnrs, as anrety that the pnrl{ making the bid will enter inta a contract ond ,i ve good and enf- ficlent surety (to be npluaw:( h’ the Board of Commisslonera of Cook Cannty) for the fulthful performance of the same, should the conteact he uwarded to bim or themw, the bond to be incloscd in a scpnnite gealed envelope and indomsed **Tlonil " on tho envolope, and together with the proposal to be put in another and scparato en- velope, nealed and Indorsed ** Proposat and Bond ** fur Cook County luspital Duildings, and specify- Ing the class of ‘'work bld for (and lccomnnn{lng ke Wdnnst ba a printed copy of this advorilee- ment), and directed to the Bourd of Commisslonors of Cook County, and dellvered at the ofiice of the Clerk of the Doard of Commissloncra on or bofore R o'clock p. m. Aug, 21, 1870, as no bid will be gecuiven after that slan to guzzle ava and make an equat pig of | avolded Jevity and, bolsterousticss, wore always | Anq ymder genuings oliglons princlple—or oven | mun and his famly wera safe, that if hu- | Church forbnde every Protestunt preacher the | - ‘I'iifs done,dt is our dnty to retake the grou himaclf, with the American who gets drunk and remle‘ to be Erldo Thele utternnees nre hoalthy | ynder correck moral pui-pom—l"reu resultanre | manity could be affected by surronndings Mr, |right to criticlse or even dlscusa the dogwas of | atread; u\cflc‘n from us byynus i":wh w;n‘r’c‘:ngg Mew in the gutter. As thero s the spiritual go | and fuspiring. Thoy )m&t close nzt_h‘u hm]n. Of | possible. *1 protest,” sags Vaul, * by your tullivan could not hava reslsted the Inflicnee of | Jtome, and placed an officor In every congregs- | Tha Bible snust go back {nto obr public schools, thero 1s tho brutal side o every man, men, Thoy construed the eliares of out Lond | rejoiciug tn Chrlst dosus: T dio daity.)” Asif | that gufet sumnicr evening, that Christisn com- | ton to sce that the cdict wos obeved, I3 Glad- | Thisisa Christian Republfe, wherothe fatherslald® Sell-control Is mu{ a sort of refigion, Itls [ that they should be ncel:, not. by auy means to | 1y was dafly burylug © the dead hody of hate™ | munity, that happy family who affer their even- | #tone o dremner, or Bismarck ffightened atan | thefonndationofauniversal brothorhood with tho thouffort of the beiter self to ussumo com- | fchude the loss of B proper ""‘mnm-l o within his brenet. Like that flue philosophor | I mesl were reloieng it each othiers' socletyin | Imaginary demont 1could not cuter Russla | soverelznty of Chirist. One Is our meater, even mand. It holds the hund from a rush blow, it [ _ Whan Herod the Totrarch was plotting the | wygwiped the wine away which had bieen thrown | front of their own brigint home, hnr&\: inthen- | from the Bluck Sea, becaune #Rev.” was ot~ | Clirlst, and all we arc brethren., To no nation-. restricta the apnctite, i restruins themun within | death of Chrlst, message was brought to ‘y'l‘ fu bis face, be could thus mevt o trylng insult | €cives, o Joy to thelr admiring ncighbors, What | tached to my pasaport, so closcly does the Czur | ality will wo dewy the one; with no Chureh or the bounds of order, law, wid de:‘cnc}';u Inaug. | *Gict Thee out and flcnfl',lhe"fl;} for Horod will | b the reply, “This #6 n dijression. Now for | (nspiration conld heve led Alvxander Sullivanto | Wateh his dominlons againgt the entrance of the | Pope will e divide the other. i1 Word muat’ urated the first grent lmuclplcu of 'practical | Jill Theo”! Tt camo by the P mrhm..-sfl—-u At | the argumcnt.” The truth was more to him | spproach sucha ecene us this and, unfearcd as | Mmissurles of tha Pope. Chiuaknows and fears | teach our tnorality ahd religion, without priest! odlinss: tho® right of our meighbor | vehicle,—ond therefore i recelves the Suvior's | gl i trial, thescfors he could withstand-| he was unknown,leave his carringe, mount thos, | LS encmy to her peace, and_ complaius hllk‘flg explanation or dénominational cnuuncn{’. nfs 0 our asalstance, protection, and love, seyorest epithet, % Go ye und tell thut fox, | Poter to the fice In such & manner that Peter | steps, ssk thut dneuspecting wife to pofut ont | that roiestant Bugland allied hersell with | Word munt be the test of conscience fn our Tspeak to you then to-day’ of o ¥irtue which | ‘Doliold, 1 cast out devils and do_eures to-day | ghould acknowledga thut Paul was right. Tius | bls vietim, her hushand, atato his terrtblo mes- | Catholle France, and’ forced open the gates of | courts of justice, and must, shape onr leglala- 1 the direct” product of the religous slde of | and to-morrow, aud the third day T ehull bo per- | wren In the rush and charge of the grcatest con- | #age, und demsnd of Mr. Hanford a retruction | ber brond domalu to the righteously-bated | tion, Buddha ahd the Pupe, tho Rationnlist buman nature. Tho sttceess of austerity has en- | feeted.?? It stauds side by slde with thatother | piey tho” Christian “holds Wimsclf togother,” | of his weil-evidenced fafth, and that he stultify | Pricsts of Rome, glving them udvantages over | and the Mormon, moy como horo and live whilo couruged nsceticlsm. Penatice uml eucrilica aro | tremendous lightning-flush of truthy S Xe | pyd it g from the Chrlstian fdeul thut the gen- | Iis sense of right und truth, or meet his futef | 811 others, which "they ara not slow to uee to | thoy submit to Chirlst. When thuy will not. do exterior forms of the demund whieh every pe. | 6erpente, yo generation of = vipers, DoW | yjcman fs horn, M. Ollpliant—nlways one of | Francls Hanford could not vetract, he could not |- thelr sdvaucement, but never for thatof | this, they must stay away, We nro satisflod Tiglon makes upon 1its yotarice. Self<dcuinl fg | cau yo esenpe the damnation of hell” And 80 | gho purcat and most thoughtful of modern | die, but hocould and did tie o nartyr tothe | the people. The Catholic Chinese are not whit | with the Inheritance left us by tho fathers, and not morely Christiau. It fs pecullarly a_part of | evory how and then down the pages we fnd @ | yritors—expresses thls admirably o ouo | truth and for his loyalty to the faltl " Akain I | belter thau ‘the heathien {u moral eluracter or | belog In possesslon, do uot mgan to bo dlspos= the Buddhist's, thy Parsecs, the Tavist's, the | lcaplug forth of just indignation—a befpg 8Cry | of “her storjes. ‘Tho * fine old Lord | osk What motise, what power, cuuld_have so | itteltigence. The Japancse beliovo Romme tobe | genscd, ¢ Mohammeda’d and the Rorun Catholic's fali, | Withoub sinfulucss—which, 80 long us it 'ts Tui- | Bukeide I advising his geandson, as ho | chuoged dr. Sulllvan in thut brict half hour and | the saine to<dsy that e waa when 200 years | ““But do not think If an ensy task to do this. We muet not think that Jesus Christ s the only | personul and unsellsh, deserves ur closo copy- | jeayes for Iiton, “'The secrch of all suceess, | forced him on fn this terrible work) [unswer | since they were obliged ln Whisky, with its enormous resources of dee teacher of solf-control. One neods only to ob- | lue Val," safd the 61d Lord, 1 to know how todeny | that T finnly bolieve that ho would huve stept | Pationnl existence to “slay every repre- | praved sppotitc and property, with the splrt of serve the great religlons reformers to sce in | Baul, for fnstance, was * beaten openly un- | yourself. It docs not mutter very nmch what | that night, not in a prisoner's cell, hut in | bcutatveof this dangerous “enemy tohuman | yavery resurrected fn the: Democratie party, some hmportant particular the most marvelous | condemned by & Roman,” and when the sithor- | tho object s, . . . If you oncs learn to get | his own plessant lome the sicep of fnnocenco | Mberty. A convestel pricst told me thut in | navefiried an allfance, offensive and flefonelye, self-abpegation. It was by this quality moru | {tiea proposed to have him scerotly sent out ho | the whip-haud of rum-ml, ihat's the hest cifu- | ond. peace, but for the nspiration of an evil | feventeen years of milsalonary work for Rumo | ywith Romanlsw, for the conquest of this then by any other that’they secured thelr | refused. Thoy must come themsalves and take | catfon, . . . I'rove fo e that you can con. | spirit that enveloped his life, hut which took | 1 Chitia e never knew a corivert made by In- | Jand, What may wo expect from this trinity supromacy. him out. Mehadn principlo ut stake, snd a | trol yourself und Il say you are um cducated | form ond for the time contrulled bim, through | doctrination, that is, by a fulr prescntution of | of demons, with Rome to divide tho spollst There 4 a strugele, therofore, which fs scen | canso dearer to him than life dld not permit | man: and withont this oll vther education fs | the woman thut God had given him. 'Lbelieve | the dogmas of the Chiurch; but, finding a ¥il- | Bug they shall not muccecd. Forewnrned, e hy every thoughtful student of his kind going | him to be elthor vindictive or sclf-humiliating, | rood tor next to nothing, Other people, no [ that hie Would not have gon from his home that }1"@“. surting wder eome supnosed wrong | shall b forearmed. Welcomo poor crushed hu- on everywhere. 1t beconea a part of the very | for jeugeance {s mine, T will repay, aaith tho | doubt, can do you harimn more-or less, but there | benutifal ovening hour, that he would not baye | done them by theauthorities, they would prom- | manity from the crowded clties of Chlng aud traaltfon upon whiich our education ns gontle- | Lord,” " fut when the Hight-Priest commanded | fa po living creatire can do you tho hann' your. | sutisht his vicit in yonder Eden, that ho would | ¢ the people protuctlon i€ they would bo bap- | from the huta of Irgland, bearing the braud of men aod Indies fs conducted. It even cxtonds (1o smite him on the face, Puul's warrlor blood | gelf can, 1 would Wrlto thl up in_gold létters | never nve struck dwn that harintess strauger, | Lized lio ‘tho Gliurch, This beine doue, tlie | your master and the badee of your eivilizac: lo the oxtrome of colducss and tho repres- | flamed up. It lsnol recdnled that the Anostlo | gu every schiool If T had ft inmypower. Notthat | but for tho partner of his life, who rode by bis | Frencht fug was Lioisted, and aug attempton the | tion, Buddblsm aud Cathollcisa, ststers In slonof any slgn of umotion. And: thoso | wus ubsolupely struck. 1t Iy certadn, however, | likn usceticism,—far from it—but a max s no | sldo awt prestod him on to the completion of ’I‘"‘ 2 l““ Goyernment to enforce the law of | fiulatry, find no recommendation in your ap- who know no better fancy that It {s that he did nat striko back. But his tongue | man who eannot ruto hinselt.? s hoody work, who waa carulul to nee that ft, | the land was heralded asw persecution, aod | pearanié ta save you. We welcome yon, not a mark of the very hizhest cultura to be a well- f:uvunlllow wilch yus o great deal worso thun | How splendidiy s pendent to this precepy | was well done. | know this fs bard and terribie, .lj."“‘,“ uuboats und troops vate to the rescus, | {lem. But kuow e that conformity .10 tho Dehved statuc. I do not spenk of such a falso | fla hand eould_ deal, “ God shall smito thiee, | hangs the pleturs of thy siking steamor. Bivk | but 1 am dealiog with o hard and ferriblo ffair, | Tbis la but g snecimen of thelr miethod of prop- | customs aud spirlt “of o Christlan Republlc s cxbibition s tfis with sny approval. 1t 1s rankc | thou whited wall | for slttest thou to Judgze me | enhicad! She had steick ut desd of night upon [ and I declaro my deepest conviction when § de- | sgandism, Tiic alarming success of this system | 11,0 ynchungeable conditfon of welcome. liypoerisy except [n cortain cold naturcs which | after the law and commandest mo to be stultten | w rock near the African const. - Dufaciinents of | maod that justice shall not be defrauded fn the | 1t to the """’df musidcrs b Tin Sin'a few | *\What furtlier duty is presented to us to-dayd nre warmiod by 1o heart and fecl no sympathy | contrary to the lwwi’" Yot when b found that | the ~Twelfth, ~Soventy-fuurth, and _ Nino- | ¢stape rom punishuient of thnt gullty woman, | y6ars “"“"h How long will China ondure thisl | To believe aud remember that this conntry 1a with their felfow-men. And beeauso {6 {8 uii-y| ha had boenuddressing the High-Priest Auanios, | ty-irst regimonts ~of the English | but for whom Alexander Sullivan would not | i until her warllke applisnces and military | t1,6 only thope for Rome In the lmmediaty” fie- natural, naturo svenges herself tenfold when | and not,a private —member of tho Sun- | atmy were an_ board. The discipling was [ not now be & murderer, The broiher should | Skill will euable her to resist succcastully, It | fure, {luvlng cammitted moral, {utellectunl, e Lastier Lreake, ond tho yrcat strean of omo- | hedelm, ie apologiaed, rankly: ©1 wist nob | wimst perfect, Evary min came to lis' post | 1ot wholly aseapa. Tiiey went togetlieny and re- Mextoo the troops of the Republic jutst stand | and financiul gulclde In her anelefit hame, with our, Ceray| 27 convict-Iahor wlil bo rejacted. tlen pours fn a tide of destruction across tho | broturen, thut he was thoe High-Pricst; for b3 | without o murmur or n ery. The ship | garded themselyes as one party and all others | between the peaceful Protestunt missionary and | her character well undorstood by hor nelglibors, oS LON RO AR, Hifo. " Tho little natural otlets of loving Taoks, | writtan, * Thou shalt not apeak evil of the ruler | won fast breaking up and 1,«,.1.“5'3" boats wers | 8 encinice, and expressed surpriss that any | tC murderous hands of Home, sl covets the virein sull of this falr lind: . Owe ‘l'(é Sfi‘“éé‘,?fl{»“"' kind actlons, and generous impulses aru” all ob- | of thy people.” useless. But the cutter and two smatler boats | person who trled to stop them in thelr Kome s lp%urcm)y very differonf, in the | next great war will be with Roman Cathiolletsm, QUNTHE! tructed. Like thie easo of clogged pores fn the Womay boina trifle of doubt hiere how Panl | were filled with women and children. And | inurderous work was not shot. They { Unitod States, but it is only apparest, ot real. | Already shio (s bullding her fortlications in the A, “JONINSON, fkin, there 18 o turning of diseuse back upon the | could have fatled to know thoinfamous Anuutas, | then, na the vessel broke in two auidships ‘and | never thought of interference from or fujury lero shic has” her Sabbath-schiools for her chill- | symphibies of the world, because of the perso- . M, CLEARY, ' vital parts, Boon or lato, if there is any Interl- | and whether his lnngun(iu of apology 1s not | tho ufter purt of tho hull began to sink, the | to cach other, They were ong party to all in- | dren, because Protestautism forces herto the | cutions suffered by her servouls among [ HIAEL MULLOY. % MIC! or upheaval, the bardest soll makes the worst | equivalent to a sccoud stinging speceh,—os it | Captaln called oyt for those who could not | tents and purposcs, and the ruling epirit and | work, but 1 uever heard of & Komun Cathollc | us. Dr. Folton, Inio of thls _dly, wus 1oh‘1‘¢ |GRaETN) on Public Bulidings and Hos- pitals. carthquake. . he had 80 degraded himself that be could not | swhn to make for #he boats. But Col. Setow, | purpose of the party waa expressed by the | Babbath-school inslsnd where Rome ruled. | told the other day In Rome by the Pope {hat ho Bulgmon the King wrote mnxz‘y proverbs | be IL'EOZHIZCETA Uigh-Pricst. ‘Theoriginal may | the commanding aflcer, und Capt. Wright, of | muster-apirit in the cirrlsge to Mr, McMullon, Here they put pews or seats in thelr | hoped that ou hlny Tetum I'uy.\nwrlml he would They ate—when onc closely considers them— | casily, and perhapa pralwcr]_y\bc translated: * the Ninety-first 11fghlanders, shouted to them i | Which of courso ahe now denies, probably under churches for the peobly to come and listen to | be able to do something *to pruvent tho pere- the sweat-drops of ersonnl agany. And when | could not have scen o High-Driest it Lim." And | they did” so,—and’ thero were nearly 500 of | the instruction of thelr counsel. Tho attempt | the preaching of thelr doctrines, but you may | cutlons suffercd by l"{ people,' Wiy sre this I rend then, or, indeed, when I read ths writ- | however we may tako it, it {8 clear that Paul | thein,—~they would mvamp the boats with the | 1o account for the murderas s deed performied | travel from Siclly to Tyrol and never scea lloul‘ old man and mittlona of jiznorant Catholica fngs of somo of our best , o ! hueduped? 1 bellevs it is to sveure their symn- that they represent an iniluito deal ‘which | ed his rights as a man or a3 & citizen, company, plunged Into tho water, Tho rest | tause of any supposed danger to bls wife, or as | affected by Protestunt Germany. ‘Ihen, and | pathy and ald aguinat us when the fina) strugle {8 unspoken, Iaw much do you suppose A most pungent point is hers prosented to ua: | stood u'dlY. Thoy had no lLopo of safety. | growing out of an excited sltercation, is ouly thien, does she show this care for tho poo- | coines. Wae have the spmpathy of the poor ot it cost (Goctho before Ne could mako | * Is therc a reserved rlfim. of sell-pratection n- | They were Yn that Altuatlon of | 80 terthought, sad looks Jike the | ple. Bho hus lnpoverished the millions of Ituly | the world to-day which it would be limpossible thiat famous 'round O * which has pnased Into | heront fn soclety and belongiog to a Christion i | which Cupt. Marryatt states thot it | dishonest pretense of the crimiual Inw- | toenrich the Church, to build magnificent v | for Papacy to meet, it engnged with America in Proposals for Statiomery. OrricE oy BUPERIFTEXDENT OF PUBLID PROPFERRTY, Man July 18, 1876, | a0, Wi N P“"u‘ toChapter 211 of the Taws of Wisconain for' the ycar 1874, that scsled d s oflice up mxmwn of ] ember, 1476, for fui Elate of Wisconsin with the fllfi(’llllr'l’ statlo 1odern thinkers I feel | neither ob this time nor at any other surrender- | women and children. Threo only, of all that | under the sxcitement of tha moment aud be- seated church, witil you come to where Roue {3 a proverb! Every lino and thoughtful actlon— | Iam firmly conyinced that there {s, Whon law | ages a tan In half an Jiour 0s yoars of service | yer. Why did Mz, Bullivan under the | thedrals, by the slde of which our larprest ond | an aggressive religlous war. . Oh, how the worl® Beaauricy the year conimencing Js! 8 however awiftly “performed—1s representative, | fs mado no Jaw ond justico js driven from tho | cunuot. But thers they stood. = Aud, with pressurc hrought to bear on him at homo aud | best churclies ure frull nud chicap. In these the | ought to pity the poor perscented Catholies of nf"hc 'c.lm“ree%.}{;:-d?'wllhfln; ?u'fn': hed 10 all pers ":’u"! therofore, of nny l?nulmt of trnluh'u( nnd sells Benchj when there in a paralysis of power, aud x:fl-’nh n“lhu)!unr:nkmh{glell?c[r. llm“ llrndll;;')::l? !lur(np that thirty minuteachangehisgarmentsso | altar, not the pulpit; the priesty; not the peo- Amcllcnxu:d far the umm reason that the Cathe o Airiug o bid, wn aiplication (0 thiy office, elther pere wnal e A el Lo COFESAPORE. ith command which often cacapes our_notleo, We | homo ~and- famlly ore threatened; when | Joy with thele gunsl Soino few of them were | 85 to get a hip packet fu which ho could place a | ple; the Church, not the community, is whe | olics of meriea should pity the Pope becausa s ofica. | 876 prone to soy of a writer, “Ile works so | sudden and outrageous crimo In wild | saved,—few in comparisgn to thoentire number, | revolver which he had not carried before on that | great thought, This {s the renl spirit of Rome | of his jmprisonment In Kome, baying Iberty to “x\?-'.fi'.'.'{'ffl :'.'1?7 r:'n‘fa'p‘{‘fflz‘l"xf 1‘.‘.'.1“.‘5“1,3‘&:1-‘\4‘& u’a“ mn nph{‘ ! or of aynpuuk«r, “itcostshim nothing | regions sssafls Jife - tselt, then it | put n;nnv more uu':’; wgum have caceped bad | day? e had no revolver when he went up fn | to<lay in Chleago. 8he baa drawn the Word of p:: whoere lio may please, and absoluts control I uperiutendent of Public Property, at tho Capitol, 1 | to dellver an address,” o of o |,1.%-,.(mu, % 11a | {s mere cowardice to hold the hand, Citizens | there been rovolt sud confusion. the cars, That was admitted at the time, but | God out of vur gehools. Next sho will deatrey | the Vatiean, with {ta more than 10,000 rovmy flioclty of Muadison, Wik, oa or befufe the At day Gf | Goean' study ahout his medicine,” forgetting | armed thomscives and protected balf-burnt | ° Thusmoy It bo with us, In this series of ad- | tho story chianged in the next réviefon, a5 godloss, our publio achoules theisn coueqr | und goidons. Then tho public-school guestion The statfonary s divtded into fonr classe, A all tho while that these things are tho ripe pro- | Chicago—and they did well. Citizens have be- | ventures which we call life, moy we face each ‘Then, there Waa no tiine to get into o quarrel | ship over all teaching and publishing will fol- | s used to prejudice the millfons of American n, C and D, and # separate seaied bid must bo msda (Granch inae it Go0ds, and mpst bo nlataly Indorsed on tne oul: sdo of the wranper, !¢ Froposals (o furalal stationery.— claas (naming 100" Eneh bid inuat bs accomypauted by & bonul 10 tho Atate of Wisconsin fn the penisl suniof two thousand doliars, exccutod by tho blduer as prin- ‘cloat aud by a4 least Cwo sabiafactory sureties, cundi- Uoisad ghat ths bidder will furnish such statlotiery ac: conllng to the terms of Lis bid and the contract enlered inta in pursuance thereor, The surcilca shatl sitach w oF Indarse on sald hond tiolr justification affect inat they wro cach worth the suuy of four thousand follars uror and abovs ail dults, llabilliics, aud excinp: T'rinted blank bids and bouds will be foraished npon apjlication w this office., " he contrace will be awarded In each clnas to the Joweat biddor o Uist clusa Who shall furnish security 83 s00ve (ndicated, sutlsfactory to (he Buperintendent of Tubilo Peopertyy proried, owcor, Uit proferency wilibagiven 1o cach clas to any Didder reslding aud dolng businees {n the Sate of Wisconsin, 1f uis bidshull be a8 low as Lhiat o€ Ay athor bidder In'thet class, nob dotag business i tho taio af wWisconaln, he Buperintandzut of Publio) Froperty herchy ros s tha Flght to Tefoct aoy or sl bids wado by virtus NDREW SE. A Supertateibest of Fubte Fropérty. PROPOSALS FOR STONE., RoOK IaLAND AuaxNal, ILL., Aug. 11, 1676, JEALED PROFOSALS, 10 to o‘gcnud ) muel:fil 3.m., Bept. 12, 1876, “are lnvited to furnish sboul 106 'cubiic yards of Dimensiou, Asblar, snd Kubbla lhe for one shup At this Arsenal. Fartive desiring 1o Did can get full spocifications by aplying to the underiimed. s siicceaatul bidder” wili bo required to enter fnto fantiuct taduliver thie stope of tho qaulity, I quenti; fea., and at tlie tines speciied, sud W give good end uuiiclent bands for” the faliful perforimance of Wiy tontract, . About 400 yarde af the Stous insy be required this scuson. The purctiasa of the remainder will depend 3pon further prrupriations for e work Not inora ihian two-thirdy of the Btone would probably bo to- quired in any one year. | siate the nama of the quary from 1l Bo takent st be prevarvd to aliow that they bave such control of {ho quarry as will puablo thein {o (urnish tha Blone, sud the quorty must bo sumclently developad to shSW nat the requl uantity snd quslty ui within e duet of long and hard and oftentimes most | fora this, and In roro places than one, formed | danger without flinching. Rnling oursclyes, we | over the refusal of Mr, Hanford to retract, ‘The, | low, a3 fast as power shall be securvd. Resiit- | Ronantsts agalust our Goverament. Archbish- painful lubu:‘. and that thelr very case fe the vlzllxmr::' committees pngulm(, t‘!}nu whom 1o | atll be ulflghucr than tfio mlgmly!. Oberlyng'nur whole affafr took place on o apaco not over 8x10°| ance is disloyalty to the Chureh, to the Pope, | o 1'urc=ll.‘:§ hia letter, published last week in proof thelr true success. ordinary law could touclt. It was fl#m. [n every | Qreat Comtiander, wo ahall make lght even of | feet square, the carriage belng ane end of the n!ld to Uod, and all gullty of this should die, | Clncinnatl for the purposs of -huwlng thut tha ‘This particular proverb wos doubllessborn of | case where public good aud not private plque | death, And thus our names shall bo placed im- | space, and from the tine the carriuge lk)psed Far bettor, says Rome, that such should die, | Catholic Church wia loyal, sald that © No doubts fatlurc—as doubtless our heat lesraing Is most | produced it—whera Right and not Revonge was | mortal on tho roll of triumph, sct with stars | for the driver to ot them gut out, Mr. Bul- | than thut they should endangor the eterunllin- | justice and cquality would entitle tho Catholla Fcuenll born. Holomon had moat probably | Instigating force, and shining In eternsl lght) livau's gulufi up the eteps, cumiug down again, | terests of thousands, and, if we belioved with lmopln of this country to exemption from taxa- ust hla tomper at samo time o bis life, and al u{n{}m here {8 onr greatest danger as o peo- i * |- ond demanding an explanation, striking” Mr, | thew, wo should say the samo; no man cag be | tion for the nuE rt of other schools, or to = another tima had kopt it when it cost bim more | ple. Whena fow years sluce it was far from FRANCIS IIANTORD. Hanford down, and shootlng hini—I ssy from ) trio to such couvictions and do othervise. | share of the &z ic-echool funds n proportion than it would bave cost bim had ho taken Wcua. usual to carry a revolver or a bowle-kulfe, you N 8 tho time the carriago stopped, untll ths fatal | Popery I3 a forelgu power, :h.lmlnnhunb-:?mc to the number of |lmll in_the schools, but . }Vul;,:‘h:rfig "l.l‘xglufln;fg‘ ltmhll“ (i“.h other, and I4o-day rub C".':)lllvfl wlml :t lhmn mlm ;mn ms RBAL IWID;R!!;—,:E?‘:?: OY TOB BEV, M. auxln. ;uu fired, t|lmr Whulfl’ l_lumle O(C(’ur;lml wlxm rglr:x;nliiy‘. I.l: “lu': wn‘u Mxtz \'lll,l'lol be Ipyul ?X’m !.l\}h claim we are dispused to walve fu your U I I} ctory lay lu the conquest | {u twenty-tive upon tho strect who can Instant- o 1, 3T, only lung enough for & end of mive who any bitervst that antagonizes her; nofoue yor, ! of tho spirit. llugwu not -’n ll{u(;lcnl or nhgllow y prndu{'fl mchp:wcn]mn. Bome are delibernte Tha Rev. M. M, Parkhurst, pastor of tho Mich- mT:ed to walk ahout seventy-five steps, when, | can bctnY goud Paplst and a fiuod Americanjciti- ‘Then surely this righteous claim to what s a8 to Buppuss .that tho mors cutting | youghs, gamblers, bunko-men, and bullies of | jmn Avenue Metliodst Clitreh, preachod toa | learing the report, beturned andhastened back, | zen, When the coutict shal come, us cotpe it | just and equal will be walyed oulg until the no~ oft this or that wromg oction would | every sort. Others are ormed to protect our larg congregation yestorday morning on % The Flve persons who saw the affulr told me the [ w v_m?‘lu)nl child of the Pupe at his fom- | cossity to do so Is removed. Surely this old unswer instead of tho great battlo | property or their own, Othere—and they aro 1 derer of Francls Isntord,” T) "~ | whole affalr from the stopplug of the carriage | maud will strike ls country or his King, [The | Jesult knows how to make capital for the com- which murt be fought out at the centroof his | not nearly so few as one would supposo—have { Fo4) murderer of Francls Huntond. 10 FOver- | 4o tho tuul shol was not two minutes, Cer- | pulitiesl party or, persons ambltlous of power | ing struggle, when professing tor do Mfe. Ouco that sell was mastercd, all self's | fallen into the fashion, Lot us look the mat- | end speaker took his toxt from Ezekiel, Hl, 17: | talnly not much tinic to work up a raging | thut will sell themselves or betray thelr foun- | the opposite. Belleve e, Rowo Is gathie servants, eyc, and ear, and hand, aad tongue, | ter in the face, for our largo citica must opon Sonof man, 1 have made thee a watchman unto | passfon. The time, from tho tirst blow till "the | try, this dty or its publlc schouls, to such ¢ for- | ering lier material and drilllug her forces, surrender. ll was ||ku the capturo of the | thelr eyea upon It sovn. the Hauee of lersel; thorofaze, licar the word atMy | shot, was not over twenty sceconds, durlug | elign power, thirsting for absoluto supremacy, {6 | und with her allles and her skill sho expects to citadels securely hield, it guarautesd the city, Belf-control is alimost Imposaible to a man | Mouth, and give them warniug fromn mo, which Mrs. Sulliyan coald Lave been reached Ly | either s enemy at lieart or o jdlotic [t bo | take thls country for the Pope, and thst would Tu Solomon’s opinlon, thon, self-control start- | whose pistol or koifo fs n ecay . He I spealc upon this subject with deep and | Mr, Hanford only by her springing from tho | trusted with the Ubertics of our dearly-Jought | be a sad day for Amorica, for Lowe rules for ol with thecontrol of sc]t. There was not to ba | has imbibed part of the present spirlt of reck- | strong emations because of my personal ac- | carriage to joln the “wssailunts, which she did, Republic, Rotwe ia the necessary fos[af all | heraclf and not for the people. A wore grasp- stringency In some dircctions and Mcensv in | )essnesa by having such & weapon ugon his per- quaintance with the parties finnedintoly con- At that time, however, Mr, 1. was vo stuuned | earthly governinents that do not “acknoprledye | {og, mervileas, cruel tyrant naver bound chains others, but thero mnust bo & steady authority+| son, and hls moral forcu s perceptibly weaken- ed with Lh t, and P> and blinded by the blow and blood, that he |"ber supremacy, snd the final destructioy of all | ou the necks of eaplives. A lady friend, after continually kept up, Aud it 18 uotfceable that { ed.’ 1tis not as though he kopt it benenth his | Docted with the sad ovent, snd my former ro- | would not tell friend from foo. Tho fact is that | who do uot adinit her claiin is ber purpgse and | leaviug the Rotnish Church, gaye us the roason this was the very pointat which all Uie old re- | pillow, ortook it Into & lawloss country. It {s | lutlons to the deccased and his heart-broken | tho party went with the conviction that the lifo ex?muuun. ‘The right to do thls is dfleguted ufian which she declded that * Frotestantlsm, ligions and philosopulos have almed. They fall- I:urolu acrowded cily which has polico officers | fanlly as pastor and friend; also my acquaint- | of this stranger Was to them as the life of o | to hor by Johovaly, wnd the obligutiun fs buper- | lke Christ, lived for the fudividuals, the rcupln. o 5 In:wu‘lu '“‘Yh fldrul tzgmlluv“le l‘lfl 'i:l"nl- and courts of justice that u»e‘ man carries bis | ance with Miss Buchanan, now Mrs. Bulllvan, 3nngurnu- doj “«mlc:ll‘ le “:'lmlld dwm:- atl:u u‘» :.Ihu él!ul o; llmn.‘ Whoever deples this =ufli),|lu;:d "hf'fi vlm.h rln:rnrlnhll,l lnlta,-l ecuILxl. . fuejon of u divine sireng n the ristian | weapon. It §s practically saying to every one = raw as wo jeve his well-deserved ut- | duty of the Chiurch or uf moral, and spiritual wealth, while manlsuy e Assyrian pravers uro occasionally touche he laoirs. arie pmu’m-e,’ VB strads the b,s""“,“fi';“‘lmflf"’ "““"'"‘ of :lcumr;y six '""":l tack) who was to be terribly punished, and | no right to Ilfu or property; robbed them of xll these for the aggrandizment fugly spiritusl. Egyptian pricsts taught les City Governmncnt, or, 1 ‘desplso the City | While all tho chiel witncssea already ewor, and | yhot 1L g or bs friends dared toresist. “That | God, a heretlcal dug who™ ghonld diejund suy | of the Church, blind to the fact Miat shu therebs sons which oty no dlisgrac to advanced Chels- | Government.” The virtue of gelf-control fs | othors who will ba called In the futurc trial, | this was the urpose of the ruling spirit in that | honered wrent of the Church'hus the rfght and deatroys her owu support, and [n time herself.”? tlanity, Greek uhllywuhcu held firmly to the.| thus too fechle to resist any oxcn provocation, | havo boen Intimate fricnds for ycars, This | carriago, as 1t spprouchod the futed howe, I | I his duty to {,“".'“r such enemy ot ulf}ulll in ]‘“."' y, OUr great ;v.m'sf:u;. élmy lsl to pray—.: fdea that we must know and x:ula oursclyes, I Remernberlug our cuercut American fault, | whole affale comnes very close to me, aud I havo haye no doubt. hl:! povnush{ threats, injury, or dsu . Thisbe- | watching the providence of o and .Indlullunl o every natlon—whether it wero Indio, Persia, | lct us aualyso—na judicially as we can—a re- thought and fult much th blect 4 Now we proceed to ask .another question. | liefjuadest, Bartholomew pussible; tyisinvented ult\ul{—wllh faith to the Great Head of ths . Ching, or Peru—the woy of pros{pcrfl.{ was per- | cont occurrence, A woman, holding u positiog | thought and fult much upon the subject In- | ywpqy could. have been the motive, the fuspira- | the Bpautshy Inquisition, kios statued fhepages of | Chiristtan Church, Whom weacknawledge ua tha celved to b tho g;y pur e {«imrul. on the duily pros, feola freg mch her pen deal '01;:! “‘flfll ltx Ml:: but right and d:m to | tion of this woman umm we tave erliminated bistory for centurios with blood, ouf has unde | ‘Head of this utton, that He will turn aud overs The Nfe of on an priest was | with persons and with caracter after the fash- | 8] out my views to my own congregation. #0 sovorcly In our statements of beliefs and | mililons of widows wund orphans. as minutely regulated S'Pu lhfifi of s |lon nl,n kind of journallsm above which it is to p;. begin “5‘ much huly 1 l“‘glfdl‘{) harm to | factal ““l’l'- could have ftted her forsucha | Alexandor Sulllvan and his wife B 3 Lancy Jeauit or a Bonze. be hoped wu snall soon be penmanently placed. funocent parties, snd bocauso I expect It will terrible work? Canit bososweredt I belivve | lomo hus usurped the place of U 1f wo are,then,to claim any superior merit for Dircctly or indirectly—as every such writer seve u‘ld 1 test ot the outsot {4 can, and that tho sams terrible inspiration | has obtained absolute owncership of au Stone caa be furnished our own religion it must cowe from the sur- | of any power must needs do—$he wiclds an | C3use severacriticlam., 1 prolest o outsot | yyich'controlled ner had much to do withipre- | aud soul, time sud sbilities; Liss in: o apetifia Wins, ‘The Uiitod Siates rasryos the | usaingly excellent yiow which ¢ takos of this | Influeucn on publlc matters, This influcnoe ex- | that I bavoud desire to stirup bad blood, or udd | pasing her husband for tho controlling Infuguce | liove that parfect obedieuca to be o BN FLAGLEIR Lijor of Ordasuce J aud every virtus. Aud wo uced nob fear s just | tends, o¢ ts snpposed to extand, to tho schools | 4o the excltement already In the public mind; | of his'wife and for the performance of this fear- | und fuolulous pover) 1 tho b \ . s ' y . 3 . % u thls faith | torn, rule and overrulop until this giant evil - v educated, | shall be destroyed. R 1t is our duty to btll$va that e will bear snd suswer,—to doubt Is vin, weaknesa s aln, Freat expectations and desires are the duty of ' overy Cbristiau. . . _W: o to belleve for the salvation aad ep~