Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1876, Page 13

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e ey A AL ATITR T TRTTY | B OV AT THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE BUI DAY. SEPTEMBER e e g e 1 S 10, 1876—SIXTEEN PAGE! an editorial enlled arth mmina of the teform rpleit of the whole artl Indicafod In tho first cennedd §1 referred to ag $*the Rov. Dr. Cimm W tant with himself. seribed a Inttive, howevef, as a frame-worl, nel or wicker, when one of the Indions grunt- bhilologlst At 01 " RELIGIOUS. The Indian Apostle and His 1o read everything. 1ie Lrave cnough to ucknowledge that they had not done so. Acain, it was well not to epend too mueh time on method, or they might wake the tmpression of having ninde grest prepatation to suy sumething if they only had something Lo puy, Theymight be compnred to the hoy who lind apent'all bis toney to huy sepocket-ook. In addition to n eritical knowledge of the lnn- guages in which the Word was first embodied, thers shoukd ho s knowledge of pavcholugy, & sound system of which is ut the bottom of all of aleence In order to meet aclentific ohjectlona; of theology, and of etli Chirlstianity plants Itacil, popular nowddays, hecause neatence, fn Wi setis for Iattlce, Bome vears af nostle ** hod learned thelr dink ily and correctly, heis outrjght upon dl ¢ had given hin *FTha mother of dow and cried through the col Of the origlnal Chureh,"—as though this were the only tl which, even under the plea which charity makes Justlce conld name him. exhlbition of rcarsin an apprixch to the new-mada grave of a Christian brother, whome * virtnes, ™ *ire- kindnessof heart ™ are recog- auggustive of o spirlt which in And yet we would not There wre men whom we he. woverned by the spiritof p 1untingion is one of ulte as unlike the man anunfike the mplelt of relfgfon ho preaches, must neverthiclers have ita explanstion in his belief and l‘llfi views of Chriatian duty, sn{d to have Jaughed fscovering that the stu) 1 the true term for cel-poty— isera looked ont at the win- -pot.”! T Up-Bibtm " not tore than 15 Intact coples are known d in the United States, and a atill smaller number in Great By copy is in the _possessiol City Library Comj New Yorle in 1863 ever paid for o single p! loua fervor, ' and Lord’s Prayer Set Forth in the Massachusetts Language. e too severelv, eve Incspable of bein Wit scema to us n_of the Philadelphia A copy was sol 140, tho highest price nted book i this couns Theology was uti- it was clalmed to be tieed, o8 much of sclence—for instunce trum anulysle, and yi vered soda In the sun was grea Whit would wo do If there wera o suda in the And thiswe find tohu el the men who mistorieal Slolch of the First Prosbyterian Church of Hyde Park. The Advocale I8 correct. vironment which surrounds this distingulalied Christian Bishop, pussessed of transcendent 1its and gracex, 1ias narrowed his visfon of the rue Church, chiflled his Christian sympathies, and put him fn o poesition he canuot for a mo- ment mnintaly. Bishop Cutviming dled a Bishop of the Re- piscopal Church and of the Church of God. It our friends of ' the Protestant Eplsco- hurel value consistency, anid respect thelr cnglon,” they will forcver after fiold thelr peace about the right of the Bishops of the Re- Spfscopal Church to thelr title and position. 1t will do 10 zood for anybody n the fornier Chureh torefuse to _recogutze thie valld- ity of the orders of thess Bishops of the latter ‘The highest high-churchnian must, andd does, aidmit thelr valldity, though from bis point they sra irregulnr, hibishop Kenrick thus lays down the law of oman Catholle Chiurch: Wero a Cathollc Blshop to npostatise from tho falth, nnd confer ordcrs on hix partlsans in_ crror, Tiln apostacy or herery wonld not invalidata tho acty although ( would render it unlawful, 1f o clerzyimnn who has been suspended from the excrcleo of his ministry continuento perform ofli- cinl ucts, these would, in And henco the Catholie CLurch regarda i) ord tlons that arc made In the rects separated from her hut *sho_considers only her the ordaining prolate was not Limaclf conaccrated, or fn which he em- ployed n defective forn, or in which he had o fne tentlon of perforning n racred rite. The Archbishop endeavors Lo prove that in every essentlal particular the Angllean orders are Doth unluwiul sud Invalld, and hence the persistent retural of the Church of Rome to recognize the Protestant Eplscopal seet, TYNDALL AND MARTINEAU. ORR BCIENCE AND RELIGION. Tv the Edlior of The Tritune. Cnicaco, 8ept. 9,—~The criticlsms which have recently appeared fn the dally press,” of the con- troversy between Prof. Tyndall and Mr. Marti- neau, seem to ineline so much to the latter, or religious slde, that I believe more may be sald without endangering the truth, Probably, n this most fmportant of all subjects, the moro inquiry wo have, thé more truth we shall get. 1t s salil the 10ost that ‘Lyndall has done is to assert tho aufficiency of matier as a creative principle. It will be found, an a close examina- tlon of Tyndall's works, that e has made no as- sertion which hio has not proved. On the other liand, the pretensions of the Church, from the time of her persecutions of Galileo down to the ent, are not sustained by demonstrative evi- The eeclesiastical en- IIYDE PARK CHURCIIES. TUR PIRST PREADYTERIAN. The First Preshyterian Church of Ilyde Park gssumed its form and titlo April 20, 1860, In answer to n petition of the resldents of, IIyde Park and Woodlawn, which was present- ed to the Presbyterlal Committee on Home Misstons of Chicago Presbytery, the Revs. Z. M. Humphrey, Robert . Patterson, and Will- {am IL, Spencer were uppointed A committee to organtzo a Presbyterian Church here, sbould the preacher’s words were borrowed, wos o mntter own—or ought to be. £ this cemmodity a man_ should neither give The extenston of thou) two-fold—depth and breadth, “ Bome minlsters have not the ca- Ono fecls that tho A degprthinker Prof, Patton's - Sermon at tho Open- ing of the Theological reatment 18 all on tho surface, both explodes fallacies and supports with argu- should he extenston ns well There should he seope i the treatment, ‘Tho text should first bo nnalyzed, thic inaterlal thus obtained laborated, and then memory, imagliation, and rhetoric in, the sermon Iy compled tle whether ot paper or not. will sny, ¥ We don’t need great serinons.” It pu for & sermon was o s best thought com- Wore the Jews Responsible On the above-named day this Committee, with for Jesus’ Crucifixion P # tho petitioners, met In tho ydo Park Chapel, whith was ereeted in the year 1858 by My, Paul Corneil, chiefly at his own expense, 28 a place of worship for all Christinnw, irrespective of see- i8 well wo don’t, saturated solution of one’ pressed into 40 inutes, It was often sald of preachers that the! preached over the heada of thelr hedrers, and were not understood, did not unie about themsclves, Controversy Between Prof. Tyn- b dall and Mr. At this meeting n s sermon was delivered by Dr, Humphrey, alter hich ten persous presented lettors from other and two made_a publie profession of hield May 0, of which the Rey. was Moderator, membuershlp rol Martineau. This was beeause they tand what thoy were tadking 1is wdviee wns to, haven vomplete apprehension of one's own_discourac, and " the hearcrs would not Le found lacking in understandingt, g By experlence he Ald not 8o much mean & the experience of others, which wis oblective, and & good thing in its pluce, # subjective experience in one's own life. one had Christ in would one be able sucecsshully to preach aud ooly as ‘a man was sinfulness could he turn others from tho crror of thelr ways, you wish to draw from the well of hunmn cx- exaine your own cousclence, for the water in thap bucket is a fulr sample of all the vat, After n closing prayer by Prof. Fisk, of the regationul Semlvary, the audicnce dis- persed to examine and almire the receutly-re- Notes and Personals ot Home and Abrond---Churoh Sorvices most instances, be valld, four others were added il; wo ruling Elders, 1inssan A. (eorge W, Bowman, were ordain- od and installed; and thus the church was fully At the lnst-mentioned nssemblago yns gat down together for the first bers of the sama church to cele- brate the Lord's Bupper. For two gears the church remained without ministers from Chicngo serv- on a8 circumstances perinite communion as unlnwfals thone Invalid in which el ELIOT’S BIBLE. THE COPY AT THI CENTENNIAL. Bpecial Correspondence of The Tribune. PriLApELrsiA, Scpt. 7.—Among other an- .&fent papers and documenty from the archives of tho natlon oxhibited in the bullding crected by the Unlted StatesGovernment, * Centennini grounds, 1s a scction of Ellot’s famous Indian Bible, the firat Bible in any language printed In Amerlca, and until within a few yeors the only transintion of the Gospuls Into the diatect of Northt Amerlean Indians, from the fingers but not the eyes of tho curious, . a few pages of coffec-colored paper bearing rude fmprints of ruder types, 8 monument to ono tuan’s zeal In an almost thanklcss philanthropy. Jolin Elfot was o minister of the Gospel to the hardy and plous scttlurs of New England, Lo wus born in England, but migrated to Amcrica In 1631, belug then 7 years of age., After his arrival in Boston he was' engaged na “ Teacher of the Church” fn Roxbury, In whicl eapacity he aerved many years, By the adoption into Dbis family of an old Indian who had Ly long restdenco amoug the whites attained the English Innguage without forgettiug his own dialect, Mr. Elfot was enabled to soon acquire n ready uso of the Massachusctts languagzo, the one most commonly spolcent by the *seventeen or twenty tribes within tho Jhnits of the En- glish plinters.” 1646, he began to preach to the continued "his labors with such success a8 to have been given the title of 4 Apostlc_to the Indians.!” His first serinon * waa from Ezeklel, xxx worship very simple: rhearsed and expiais He then deecribed tho charas. -, Chnist; told the wondoring savages of the\nan- ner i which lle appear labors and porsecutions and sacrifl told thom that 1le would como_aguin to ment, when the wicked should be punlsh the good rewarded. aud elmple outline of history, o Iife, and of salvntion,” and after ho had concluded inyited the Indians to ask such queations as occurred to thelr minds. Ouo puked fmmediatoly whether Jesus Christ could ‘understand prayer in the Indian langusge. And whother Euglishmen wero so iguorant of Jesus Christ a8 themsclyos, One wondered. Low thic world became full of peopla if thoy were once 8ll drowned, Bome of tho questions exhibited *“not_ little subtlety in the suvages Ellot 0f the labor which lay before Ono asked whether, it the’ (hild be and the parent uot, God will' bo_ otfended wi od saith fn the 8ccond Com- mandment that he visits tho bquitics of thie father upon the children, . he report of the Mnesa- cal Boclety for 1802 coutains the “Iherd always was a dilference in the temper of Indians who went upon hunting parties and those who reslile near ponds und rivers and sell . thelr flsh and cultivate the pround. neyer could bo civillzed. tho asslatance and encoursgement from the ‘whites, never could or would labor like other men,” It was, wo think, to peoplo of this lat- ter class that Mr, Ellot more especinlly direeted Dis labors, Visiting the Indiuna reslding ncur . Concord, he held a confercuce with the sachems and framed the followlng laws for the govern- meat of the trihes ropresented: That thero shall bo no more powawing npon the Bati bo druok shall forfelt 20 it an llhnlllm convictedof stealing hu shall That whosoovor shall profanc the Subbath he ‘That ‘whokoover shall commit fornication shall pay 20 whiliings, if & mun, and 10 sbillings, If s Wit murdor, adal d bestiall ul m T, A e punlshed wl;‘h d‘:!nlll. nitafys and hastialiiyifo o Nono to beat thelr wives upon penalty of 20 abil. This criminal code, which, if executed, would cause tho bankruptey or death of any modern Indiun -in two mlnutes, was ratificd by the varlous tribes, and history Informs us that the Indlans sdjacent to Coiicord were noted for their good #nd moral behavior, and other places, the Rev, ed Cliristiun infssions, and at Jength the first Indian church was founded, It ‘was located at Nutlek, and continued an Indian church tany .years after the death of tho apostle, having ot one tine a pastor from among the Indian people. ¢ Ellot’s 11 cars of Ellot's ltfe wero deyoted to a trauslution of the Bible fnto the Massa- chusctts language, and, fu spite of the many ently {nsuperable obatacles to o suceess- pletion of the work, e persevered Lo the end, ‘The translation wasvrinted at Cambridge, Bamuel Green and Marmaduke Johnson, in Thre edition of 1,000 cuples was soon ex- hausted, for, astde from the demnands upon it wado by the Indian missluns and schools, phitol- ogista unul scholurs from all payts of the world wished to obtain coples of thy trauslation, read with amazing rapl ven elght years in publication, aud the press of Harvard College, tipon which printed, beeume famons, Another edi- s was printed n 1088, four years before tho death of the trausiator. was pyinted in o small quart wutes, Th titlo page was us AMUBSH WUWNEETUPAUATAMWE UP-BIBLUM GOD knowledge of regular preaching, ing the congregutio impreesed with :]xl f \\'ustmlun:er Ghieiln y encouraged the young enterprise by his frequen ; olllwf The Rev. J, 8, Edwards, who resided in Hyde Patlc at the time, preached for sevetal inonths, and perforined pastoral du- ties when' necessury, ‘The Rev, Dr. Burroughs, then President of the Chieago University, ulso Tent bis personal usaistance, uud often sent the- ological students to conduct the religlous ser- vlcds, thereby benofiting both In_March, 1863, the It and aceeptuble There it ia, shut out TIIE CRUCIFIXION. ‘DID THT JRWA CRUCIPY JESUST The Now York Jewish Messenger has an artlele on the ahove subject, translated from the Pfael- xischen Kurier, from which the following ex- tracts aro tuken: : elical history, that I8 from the writ- o Testament, we know that Jesus went to Jerusalem duriug Pussover, and that many ncople uccompanied him, shouting Hosanuah, "lieke wero Jows from the provinces, joining im in the belief that 1lo wan the expecied Mesalah. Teovle do nut shout *¢ Loaanuah ** nnd ** Crucify » ) Thu Jaws had at that time lost their political in- dependence; thelr country formed topetlier with nce of the great Ronan Empire. and who exarcised ln- oy, C. F. Beach was in- or a8 stated supply for one year, Tinmediately upon his arrlval » sodety vrganiza- the election of & Buard of Boclety Mr. Paul Cornell deeded Lot No. 4 and one-half of No. 8, in Tlock 19, together with the lyde Park Chapel, thercon, The chapel now becane the property of the First Presbyterian Church and Soclety of Ilyde Park, On the 10th of March, 1 was organized. Mr. Hamilton B. Bogue, Seere- of tho present Villare Board ot Trustees, ordaiicd and {nstol of this year, making the total nuisber of Eldcrs hree. The Rev. Mr, Beach remained 1n connection with the church during two years, when he resigned, and the congref a shicpherd for o year and o half, Services were 1ield, however, quite uniformly on Sundny morn- and prayer-meotings were hul on Sunday dnesduy evenings of cach week, . The Hrst_pustor of the church was the Rey. Bradford Y. Averill, who was called July 1, 1865, mud fnvested with ministerial functlons brief but devoted larged one-third its orlgl grew in spiritual 1ife und efliciency cldership was again cnlargzed by the cl orton, slnce de After ten mouths’ servico Mr, becune fmpaired, nnd ho was nite respite, in hope thut he might soon recover; but this hope was not to be realized, for after 8 rering illnces it pleased God to trunsfer him {eaven, July 12, 1867, succeoding, tho Rov. Da- nstorate, aud instulled on tho Tth of Octo- er., This earncst und palnstaking gentleman still continucs the relationship then form which helins by untiring endeuvors renderu both plensant and benetleent. Mr, Cl Nelson, formerly an Elder in the First Presby- hurch of Chicago, wus made au Elder Durlug the summer of 1803, in view of tho demands of a pgrowing congregution, it was deemed advisable to make arrunguments for o new house of worship. El on the northeast corner of \Washington avenue, were soon sscured; a sub- sceription was sct on foot; pluns were adopted; a Bulding Committee appointed; 1860, the' [:umlhwurk wus uuspl tion waa formned 502, the Sundny-school den With the exception of tho moral maxims, which are not neceasarfly npart of any creed, Dut which ure taught an 08 inother socisl organizations, the basie princk ples of the Christion rellgion, after all its ref- . ormations, ace dircetly opposed to human rea- son. ‘Uhe story of the Immaculate Conception und of the Vivirious Atoncment, from the lips of a personage he bans been taught from child- hiood toregard and perhaps reverence, {8, without doubt,s comforting nssurance Lo the dying botey- er; but, examhied by the unblased Lu mun,—irled by the same rules wit try suything clse,—we find only tradition. Prof. Tyndall’s explanation of the plicnomena of o fs demonstrable, ty is evident. Wherever.you lind the conditious you tind life in some form. ool pupll to explain the bola or thy development of y at once, without ever_a thought of anucorn, “God made them.” He ves that answer without any montal effort, mply tells mewlhiat halias been told by sowe one else, whose teaching he hud been taught to 1 remember belng taught the definftion of Falth as *The sub- hoped for, the cvidence of 1 had unlinited: contldence in teacher and aceepted ity and, for sowe years whon called upon to detino Faith, I gava that answer; that.is, { remembered the words, and uttered them mechunieally, just as iny teachor bad done; forl am bound to suppose that ho hud never reflected on the substance in the mind of a thing hoped for, or s would not Again: wo often hear intelligent men speak as famillarly of the Almight thedr partuer tn busincss. Uoy practiced In religlous wa poverned by a_Procansul, perlal anthority, Now, every nation under fora) dominion pitempts to scere Its_ formar Indepel cnce, which can only Le accomplished hy 8 revolu. tion under the guldance uf somne patrlot. Such o ppened amnong the Jewa severul times. I wentative of tho new raler wan subjocted to the striciest reaponaibilit ch became very dangerous a thetimo of 'Pnssover, as & large mass of pouplo athored together from every part of tho conntry, (e enirance of Jeaus in shouting of the people, could not remna! The city anthorities investigated the proceed- and Josus was aske ¢ d not deny it, but simply sald,” **Thou snycat In what scnso this was meunt has nothing Lo The investigation had & puliti- cal character, and was conducled by a public o0i- How could the Jewish city “authorities uct otherwise? Suroly the authoritics of nny other city would not ottierwise act undor slmllar clroum- 'he loader of tho movement was arrost- cd, and It fa not impossible that the Cauncil and Chilof Pricsts, who hated Jesus, improved the op- tilng rid of him, not only t aleo us he did not epeak of them in a very dulicate manner. ‘blume to be attributed to the Jews ? Not Iu the jvast. Not one man hem who wonld assist in ities find o bu tion fwas left without 9, and his mode of short prayer ho Ten Coprmand- these rovolts, w the chapel was en- its “universall- inal sizo, tho church s Minom foin | fivorable, therg will Mr, Chatles A, do with the cuso. in shiort, gave o brief formation of then ho Chyistion theory of cased, Averlll’s health na oak, he will repl nted an indefl- aecept without stauce of thint things unscon.’ his arrest, and tho a ofil {5 amall circles of followers tobetray pointed liim_oat to the balliffa. Thepeople had nothing to do with it, and what was done by the ¢ty uthoritlen had to bo d come to-day to some clt; with a mass of people, under similar circunistunces, as thun at Jerusalon, the same would be done b authoritics at Jerusal Jesus to the Roman Proconaul, and after examina- tlon He was found guilty of a palitical offenve, such irocosdings wero the child, because ono. 1f Jesus shionld of Christlan Germany, the sawme manuer an us if e wero sall so-und-sv, &e. At the samo time, the chances are amalust such n man beiug ;l;lvo a ratlonul explunation of a com- . Tt 13 urgued by the opponcnts of this Apostle of 8clence thag bie has merely madean assertion, pes In the dark. Let us o ovidence beforo us to-day: Butie of the'most onlightened of Christians ndvance, the tlon or status of tho soul or spirlt, upon its ad- vunt to imniortality, is in proportion to the de- gree of refinument or culture of the individual at the close of the natural Hfe; aud the sumption is 'appurently rational though it is, o tainly no one will giinsay of enlture during nicans, then, {s this Jesfuerntu: The morul and futelleetunl grandeur of the ndall is a typu will per- out assertionor argument, although, if Macaulpy bo & correct historian, centuries ngo were but little Letter than savajres; but that was before 8o mauy of the fragments of Sclence had been gatheréd, Yot the Cliurch had them for many er hier_eare, and more ab- under her cotrol than their deccend- the world a striking {llustration of the trlumph of Material Belsuce. A correspondent of nt letter deseriifivg scencs In Bul says: % The peoplo are the most deg ever saw, Thelr faces ato absolutely repulsive, ond have the appearance of brutes rather than Not mors tban five in a thousand can and their pricsts are but little The blind lead the blind." These statements ero conflrmed by other trayelers, and, with ounded in the oxisting he country, and the Jewlsh nation_could not of- Only tho Jtunian Emporor bad 8 it over 1ife’ and dedth; the fuvestigution could only be continued by bis Jewa hence could notcrucify Jesus wors under Roman dominlon, politically indopendent, it would moi huve been voesible; cruciixion was a Roman Lut no Jewish node of capltal punishment. 1n reference Lo Jesus, the Jows of fare, did nothing; but' the proper authorities of Jerusalem {natituted & pels then delivered the accused for judgment, who cundemncd 1lim o death D, The detniled procecdings attending the condem- nation show evidenco of pressurc on the part of the accusing Jews, who were, however, not the "Ad there fe n mob In cvery large capeciallya hang- sted in Jernsalom ow peaple, who shonted **Cru- cify 1imt" but no reawouuble man will take the Borlin . Kckenstoher and other low clusses for tho eople of Berlln or for the Pruxsian natlon, and ake thomn responsible for such conduct, In the we luok upon tho shouters of *+Cracify Uhn 1" in connection with the Jewish pegple. \ "Fho whole account of the proeccdings bofara Pi- Pilate, tho repro- iic lutter, with all fuct aay cliango. was completed Elder Chorles A. Norton having . died fn the winter of 1673, the sesslon was aguin fnereased by the additlon of Judge Erast Joseph N, Barker, and " Judee Homer N, 1hb- making o grand total of six ruling Elders, wlont olliclute at the present dute, Alr, The Trustees of tho church are Judge IL N. Tibbard, Chairmun; Georgo M. Bogue, Secre- tary and Treasurer; Panl Cornell, James Wadsworth ) Root, and Colon ‘The growth of the church from its origin to resunt duto bus been hendthy, original nuber, 16, the membership hus been about 205, of which “death has moyal to othier churches 80, leaving 210, . b church ediflco fs ubout 108 by 55 feot, two storles high, und bullt of broken® ‘The organ {8 a_ good oue, for It s played by Mr. 8. of Plymouth after which he brletly glance ot t un 8. Williams, f Hiatime, there- nvestlgation, and penolty of 20 ehill Towan Procansul “I'hat whosoover i ieculativo; and cer- 1o great sdyants Charles L{tcheock, Jewlali people. city to \{‘ho?fl every public event, race of which Prof. haps o conceded witl thulr uncestors of twi same way, sl previous centuris un which 83,000 was paid. ¥. Bouton, formerl Chieago, who ds well known ‘as an ext During Its entire existence tho church s never hud a cholr, but has been for somo time led by a precentor, has hiad one_or two disasters. At the tlme of its crectlon the front watl fetl in, entalling o loss of $500, and Inst _spring, during the terrific lurrlcane that demolished the Michigan Southern frefght depot and lowered the steeple of Graco Episcopal Chureh, the epire waoa blown off and shattered to pleces, It hus just been repluced nt an cxpeuses of about Iatu_ appuars vors nentatfvo of the Emperor, 18 wade to app io London Zele ‘iich aa o nover sent 1o the provinces, Hon B ilate nover proved oun othor occasluns, Such & puppet would 5iot bo & suitable person to uct as & nlght watchman, much less a Proconsul, Wo are forcedl to assumo that the report sa found 1 Now Testument, written read and write, who _endeayored better than | sponwible for the condomnation. presentations by the Kvangeliats, which at any o uro In contrudiction alavl desfred to releaso Juesus, us he could fnd wrrong done byH im, but the accusing duws upon hiu condemnation. pear ina st dartcor i while howas sltting 1 Accordiny to the t doub, are correct. those peopleare Chirfstians, They have Ibles, churches, and pricsts. And, If thess are tho things which constitute licht, why do wo not sco at lenst.ia reflection of it in thelr wretehed countenances! 1In view of such testlmony as this, can therp be any donbt as to which sido of thia question has the most llzhti 1t may be observed hers that thu most devout Christian hna no reason to fear that the Scient- iat 18 offering him an Universe without a Crea« ving us revelations of a Crentlon, not of & Creator. 1abegins by cxplain- ing that which he secs and undorstinds, and stops whon he has reachied the Huits of Lis un- “When I attempt to sue monifested fu tho ersonnl or other- themsclves, Plinte $i0d. A 8wedlsh congregation of some thirty-five meets In this churchi every slternate Bunday, and o Sunduy-school of the same denomination, which formerly met_there, will cordnience oper- ations agaln in October, The experfunces of the remainlng churches, some of which are quits interesting, may bo ex- ected in the succecding Sunday lssues of Tus ‘fo have thelr hatred ape ght, the wife of Pliate, n tho chnlras judge, sent Uim o megsage that she had & droam about the nc- cuscd, cunsidered Hhn {nnocent, her husband that he may ba Influenced thoereby, Now, roprescat to yoursclf a juilie, whilo ofiiclally engaged, recelving a mospoge from his wife ahout rentna, - with the Intention of Influencing hix There sitw the chief judgo of the coun~ ntative of tho Limperor, undecided ifo, who sout the udvite nothing o do with thut just man," and ¢ Jows, who clamor for tho conviction, to And how ncts the and asked from fta famy hal s) The edition huil OPENING SERVICES, + PRESOYTIRIAN TJIEOLOUICAL BEMINARY. The elghteenth annual scssion of tho Presby- terlun Theologieal Bemfiary of the Northwest was opened Thuraday by the fntroductory dis- courso dellyered I the new chapel by Prof. Patton on “The Sermon.' room hias been tastefully fitted up and carpeted ‘with a neat pattern of small flgure, and on this occasion was comfortably filled with an attend- ance of friunds of the semioary. The prelim- inurles consisted of roading of the Scriptures by Prof, Blackburn, and prayer by Prot. Halsvy, after which Prof. Fatton held his audience in the closest attention by his most Interesting ad- Ho sald thrco differont theorics of the rid of th accused. condomina him, and waslics his han ns it an unjust judgment could nto & just onc by the washing of the plld 1t has beon proven that tho Jews then livingas a t to do with the cracifixion 40 dictatea this, but cons ewa alao, 8 few excepted, who fnter- 4 alm inJerusalem according to the exiutlng laws, were entirely lonocent of his death, Tho dewish people were prosecuto those who difered from thom fu craed. 'ho views of the Pharlsocs, sones difored widely. dve tho Lower which nlverso an objective form, wlse, it slips away from inej its mystery overs shadows ne,” ete., ete, God {s composed of this or thaf tellsus he does not Know, nne clafm to know all that will ultimately boknown, Hodoes not even inthnate thut this mystery, which now overshndows him, yill not bon plain to cuch one of us in props modestly says that he caunob scc into and be. yond the uext life,* and {s only expounding to s tho Inws which prevall ju the lifo that now is, which, If we conform with with murginal Ho'does not say that The audlence- - 5 NUKROKK TRSTAMENT All WON r scasony but ho Ky SENT, Wa quoshkinnumy ncamol Chrlst noh nsconesit ¢ JOIN ELIOT, CAMIILILG! ' Priatencop nashpe Samuel Gro Johnxon, Badiucoes, and i Inoyeents of Je v, tho Jewlsh peoplo cannot bu accused Lle traversed the, couut withont any diflenlty. We would like to gl t which was then allowed In the Jowlsh Inus 1 Christlan country? If at s dl to duliyor @ sormon on any hill, and gathered scverul thousand people, it hu not notify the police anthoritlea forty. clght houra beforelinnd? Aud would thoy sllow Ity he move about for threv yours without sniy Inturvention, anid work in tho nanner ho was cnubled to do 2,000 years ago? The reader wit] oxaming the’ twenty-third chapter of. Mntthow, and aak himpolf I€ he would, at tho press cut day, speak of our serlbes, high-priests, and pricsts—that Is, of the Cardinula (uot to wmention tho iloly Fathor), tho Archbishops and Bl tho Abbots and canonists, or of other superiutendonts, the connsolurs of the con- wistary, otc., in such & mannor and Leforo a viblis axscuibly, o did Jeaus, how loug would: tha officar in charge allow bun to continuo! 1 hopo that by thi plainly that tho Jews did not crucify Josu act was committod b; nequouce of Lho ki them, will enable us hapoier, and longer lives on the thero be any such thing,~of which uo mortal hus knowledge,~to preparo oursclves for that life which 1s wwn:'e. en kah Narmadule U, ‘The following Is the Lord's Prayer hif Eny the Massachusctts version sido by side. zeader will bo sure and apprecluto the exquisite cuphony und beauty of this lutter languago; Onr Father which art InNocshun keosukqut heaven TMallowed bo Thy namo [Quittianata munoch Thy kingdom come al, expedicntinl, and evangelistic,—the first uuthority on tho succeasion a8 formulated fn the Angllcau Chureh; the second holdiug the mintstry to b merely the result of a division of labo; tually’'u function of eve and, a8 Presbyteriuns hol o the minlstry as a apecial cluss, orc Qo to s purticulnr work, Tho mintster is par excellenco o sermontzer, a preacher a8 well as pastor. Ilis duty 1s to edily tho saints as well The sermon is not alone an oration, an essuy, an exposition, or a pars- hirases it §s un organism genctleally evolved omn & text und depending upon it,” with two terminl, o quo,and ad quein, fnits uature half- way betwesn an oration and an cx| combining the advantages of both, it orations, but few acriions, aud no r sermonizing 18 hard work. The reacher {s expected to equal tho lecturer, the thor, the luwyer, the actor, und the clocutions {st all ut onve, and for $1,000'a The four fuctors which condil mon-are expression, knowledge, thought, and expresslon, © To expression wus pecedsar comuand of Tangusice, which would bo galhed Dy u perusal of the Best writers, A proper col- 1ocutfon of thy words was the next destderatum, und wis obtathable from un scquantance with lturature. He would recommend poetry, no _howuver, to be read for the tobl DARWINIEM AND TIE INFIDRL. To the Kdllor of Tha Tribuns. OAK Pauk, Ill., Sept. 6.—T soo (n Trw Trin- UNB that the Darwinlan ides fu regard to the human fuinily s again, or yet, on the tapis; I have nlways opposed {t: but, after so long a time, and Jooking at ufidelty In its true light, In wiat countey could sasgoLaIM00 Thy will be done on|Kuttenantamaounck nete earthan ftisin heaven.| tachokkells uvouo kee . uk Qlve us thisds; dal), i ediyecutmuln us lustruct slnners. Now, there aro three classes of abjects, viz.: The iving, Ioly, Heayenly; thu human,~— that s, mankind,—intelligent beings, fntellec- tual; and tho brute. Well, now the infldel partakes or qoth; so tha monkey, ho {s not ye L0 okokish nssima. And forgive us our debts|Kah luosntaiollw- ::.W' lorglve our dobl- S aiohin e uean nummatchony quesgig nutch quonto lanation It appesrs coming-up {rom tho t fully developed. Bo fur w8 tho form, shape, or structure is concerned, it {s liuman; but, 8o far as the mind aud futel- is u{cl the brute,—uo J. C, WHBSLEK. RELI&OUB _MISOELLANY, TUB OMURCH IN GNNERAL, A Reformed Eplscopal Church ls to be estab- Nslicd {n Spn Fraoclico. Bishop Cringe 1s muk- Iug tho necessary arrangements, At (ho session of the Rocky Mountain Meth- odist, Eplscopal Confercace, n?nu! held o : ‘ho liousua Proconwul i cans A1l lead s Dot futalAl tion of tho city wuthoritics ot lect are concorned, idea of auy hercafter or sol Wussinosn wutchmels chitut Thine s tho king-|Newuichekutahtannk i, und the power, kul o glory. Amen. BISHIOP OUMMINS AND THE ‘“ NONTILERN CHRISTUN ADVOOATE. Ths dppeal, Seplember, ‘The Northern Christlan Advocate thus' vefers cditorally to an artictecn the Reformed Eplsco- pal Church, which has filted many Chrlstiun winds with ssducss and surprisos In thy last number of the Gospel Messen Byracuso, a amall monthly sheet, vdited by s ayocial 07285 fus hla dlogusc, P P Rlape Cpt T Sl ear and a houso. lon u good ser- r ; | 4 , b teswootamoonk wenubkesuonk, kah fle Eliot was transtuting, ho came to tho age, ¢ Tho mother of Blsera looked out ut indow aud cried through the lattive,” Not nssachuscits word siguityin of spng uf the Judluus, e —— e Hielana City, Montana, It was decided to make of it two Conferen 0 Lo named Montana and Utatn, The corner-stone of the Baptiat Temple In 8an Trancisco has just been lald with Christion and Masonle rites. The hiouse {s to coat §150,000, of which sum Deacon Jenac Lancanshim gives £109,000, The Pennaylvania Btate Conventlon of Young Men's Christlan Assoclations will be held at Danville, Sept. 31 to 24; Incluaite, Arrange- inents hiave been made for the entertalnment of delegates. The, Yuwr of the Church of the Fourteen Tloly Martyrs, Baltimore, refused to allow the body of o member who bad negleeted com- nunfon to be buried In the cemetery, and a law- suit will ensue. The old Court-ITouse in _Rappahannock, Va., in which John Waller, Robert Ware, John Shackieford, and James treenwood were In 1774 nrraigned for prmchhl¥ the Gospel contrary to the law of the colony, has heen purchased, and Ix,:.u be converted intya Buptist houso of wor- ship, Furman University In South Carolina has §ust been handsomely endowed by 1lberal Bap- 1lats, who have made up o fund of 819,000 for it. Al that was wanted was $200,000, and onc wealthy Boptist I8 now thinking about giving anotlier §1,000 just forthe sake of making a round sum. Tho average ministerial age of*171 Congreza- tlonal clergvmen {n Mane is 19 years, Dr. Pond, of Bangor, hns been preaching 61 years, nnd scveral uthers have been in the pulpit more than 50 years. New England scems to be favor- ed with'more long pastorates than any other sectlon of the country,—perliaps because its population is of a morc gettled character. The Baptists of Nova®Scotfa, N B, and Princo Edward's Island held their aunual Con- ventlon Aug, 23. The Convention lias deefded against the proposed ercction of a gyand Unl-, versity at Halifax by the union of all tbe de- nominational schiools of the Provinces. It has resolvell to_continue _Acadfa College, and to ralsc $100,000 for it. The Baptists ars the only denomination opposing tho University scheme. A colored orator at a recent eamp-meeting declared that he never would sell his birthright for a nest of partridges. His allusion was to the salo which Esau made of his for pottage, Auother remarked in s scrmon: * I know dat de good Lord do care for de lcastest ob de flock as well as do mos' glzunticuss, for moan® my ole woinan liab jest emerged from n most disas- trous state oh health, an' are now cojoyin’ series of convalorescence.” The Preabyterics of the Preshyterian Church in the Northwill before long begin Lo vote upon the overturcs in relation to the basis of répre- sentation sent down to them by the General As- sembly. The first overture substitutes B0 min- isters for 24 us tho basfs. The sccond provides one representative for every 20 minfsters ina Presbytery. The adoption of the second plan would, it Is said, reduce the number of minksters of the General Assombly to about 800, Tho laidies will bo glad to know that In cor- recting the text of the New Testament one of the apparcntly uncomplimentary, or, at least, unchivalrous, "expresslons of Bt. Paul, nterpo- lated or corrupted by an early ascetic, has been wiven a reading more in keeplug with the doc- trine of tho equality of the sexes. The pussage is in First Corinthlaus, vil, 8. In the autbor- fzed verslon It reads: Let the husband render unto the wife due beneo- olence. But the revision, rejecting this narrow and Orl- ental readlug, renders ft Let the husband render unto his wife her due. ‘Which Is much moro Christian and courteous. If the Souffiern Churchman {h right, some of the Epiacopul cliurches it Sputh Cotollua sre in n bad way. That Lrx\per utimates that some of them are bullt and maintaiued by the ald of such ungodly'devices ns horse-races, balls, and the- ntres; and It suggests that if churches are bullt and maintained by such means the best thing that can happen to themn I8 to be swallowed up, by carthqualies. The remedy which the South- eru Churchman suggests for this churchly evil fs certalnly a radical one—somewhat wnrac,’l’mlued, than the discase, The danger would be that the carthquake which wonld thus swallow an Epls- copal church which lived on horsc-races might also swallow its Presbyterian mclghbor wlich had never taken anything stronger than pin- cushfon fairs; or the Methodlst chiurch uround the corner, whose members mli)pnrtnd it by con- tributions of turkeys and the like. Earthquakes liave been difficult " things to hundle cver sfuce the days of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. - The “Bacred Penltentinry” at Rome an- nounces that major excommunication lias beon pronounced ‘against all members, ndherents, and promoters of the “Itallan Catholle Societ) for the Revindieation of the lllfhts of the Chris- tian Peopte.”: The object of this Socety Is secure the election of the Bishops, ane cially of the Pope, by the chplr. 1 the time of the appearance of this edict the Liberta Catolica of Naples, & liberal newspaper, published an articl upon the p‘;)gmlnr clection of the clergy Ly the Minister Grace and Justice The urtlele was fntended us an answer to aletter re- questing this reform, from the President of the muncipation Socloty. The Minster, whie ex- pressiug bis sympathy with the movement, states that his proy of this change made noticed that they dil not seek ono annther's as formerly. es| erning miatter, the young man gaveominous shakes of the head, and declared that he was not the man to glve any young lndy 8 bad name. His mother, however, Mrs. Eliza ITobby, it was al- Teged, stated frecly that her son hait found that the young lady was unchaste. The ‘mattcr was somuwhat extensively talked of, and v?‘u flnnll; Lronght to the notica of the youhg lady's moather, who at once preferred charges of slan- der hefore the sessfon of the church agalnst Mrs. Hobby. An exliaustiva Inquiry waa fnstituted b{ the chiurch authorities, and, after ten careful sft- tings, and the reception of a large mass of tes- timony proand con., the most damaging agatnst the eharacter of the young lady having been given by Mre, ITubby and her son, the venlict was unanimously in'favor of the young woman. After anermon on_the general “principles fn- volved in slander, Dr. McClelland ™ last Sune n{ morning announced the verdict to the church court, which was that. Mre, Hobby, o member of the church and au efficient Bunday-school teach- cer, having been convicted of the sin of slander, and efforts to bring her to repentance havin faled, ahe shinll be excluded from the churcl and nl'l its privileges until she returns from the errar of her woys and give solld evidenceof re- pentance. Tler son, not helng a chiurch member, could not be proceeded against. The Evangel- iat, commentityt on the casc, remarks that the community, with few exceptions, feel that the right has trlumphed, and” that 'speedily. The Blnml)lc Ia healthful and bracing, and the pro- cess “aceordlog to the book.'” 2 PERSONAL. The Rev, Dr. Parct, of Central Pennsylvania, has accepted a call to the Church of the Epiph- any, Washington, D. C., tosucceed the Rev. Dr. Watkina, 5 Archbishop Alemany, of S8an Francisco, re- cently pald a visit to Salt Lake for.the purpose of administering the S8acrament of Confirmation for the first time m that city. g The Rev. Willlam A. Cornell, a graduato of Brunswick College, and a minister of the Re- tormed Church, committed sulclde lately near Poughkeepsie, New York, by hanglng himscif to a tree. . TFvangelist Noedham has come from England with his famlily, and Is giving few Bible read- Ings in Montreal. Hewlll doalittle evangeliatic work on the way, and reach Philadelphia in two or three weeks, llo will make that city his liome for a while. Gov. Colburn, of Malne, having offerod $50,- 000 toward the endowment for colleges, pro« vided the Haptlsts of New England would duplieate thiat sum, they have gathered up cush and pledges umounting to 845,000, and liope in a little while to striko the other $8,000. ‘The Rev. D.J. Macdonnell, of Toronto, who ralsed such a commotion in the Presbyterian Church by vreaching the doctrine of unfversal restoratlon, witl, it is sald, be called_to the pas- torate of old Greyfriars’ Church, Edinburg, to succeed Dr. Wallace,who has just become editor of the Scolaman. According to Bishop Whittaker of the Protes- tant_Episcopal Missionnry Dlocese of Nevada, Al For, tife Christian Clinaman who hus been ro useful to lis cuumr‘ymcu in Virginla Cllg', has been so discouraged by the prosccution o which they are subjected that he will remove to the British Possessions. 1o will probably go to Victorin. Bishop Cridge, of British Columbta, recently conscerated Bishop of the Reformed Episcopal Church, {8 now In England,'as a fraternal dele- ate from the General Councll to the Free “hurch of England. e seems to be active over there, being announced to preach, to or- «ain some candhiate to the deaconate, to attend the convoeativn, aud to assist in conscerating u new Blshop. 01d Dr. Tyng is 86 years of aze, but he s as liearty us many men at 50, and s no {dea of entirely rullrmfiy trom_active work, although he los an‘able asslstant Rector, It Is announced that he will to-day personally conduct the ser- vives at 8t. George's Chiurch, which will buopen bath morning and afternoon. The church has been closed tor several weeks, and tho Doctor haa been taking his customary rest at his couu- try howe in Irvington-on-the-Hudson, BREVITIES. A London correspondent haa the following: 4 Dr. Temple I8 a Bishop, This fact fu fteell 13 not exactly reprehiensible. Dr. Temple says hie has no knowledge of wusic; there already dawns some suspldon. The cousequences, however, cams upon bim terribly. There was In the church of the Mission 8chuol ITouse ut Brixham full choral service. The Bishop did what he called singing; presently he felt un acute pain in bis rits, and, turning round, he found the most irreverent elbow of a sacrileglous saflor running through his .side, aud next to his car words were whispered, ¢ B——you, guv'uor, you are a howling out of tune!’ I say thls s ought to be medaled." ‘The following 18 n literal copy of a document, the original of - which s in the possession of & enticman s 3 during the discusssion of tho bill of the Papal 2 George the Sceond by the grace of God of Guarantees did not meet the spproval of the | Britain, France, and Ircland, King, defender of Chamber of Deputies. Al thatean be dono at | the fulth, &e.: To thie Shcrlfl of Prince George County ¢recting. We commund you to sutmnon Simon Busbs to appear before the Justives of our suld County Court, at the Court-House of sald county on the second Tucsduy fn December “next to wiswer the present- ment of the Grand Jury for not golne to churehy wnd have then and “there this writ, Wit- ness Wiliam Hamlin, Clerk of our suid Court at the Clerk's oftice the 21st duy of November, 17H, in the elghtecuth year of our roign. Wikl fmm Humltn. The_National Baptist thinks very highly of Gen, Dix, but does nut admlit the Jistice of bis logie ngnlnnl. taxing churches, It says: “The collector of water-ratey vomes along with his bill. *Whut!? erles the chirch trews- urer, his hulr standing on end, * Muko Jeaus Chrlst pay for the water in wiich 11is disciplea urg baptized! Monstrous!® And here comes preacnt, bo thinks, i to form a public opinion upon the lub]wtl.u' - ¢ = ‘The following {s the schedule of toples and speakers chosen for the weeting of the Protest- ant Eplscopal Church Congress, which opens in Boston Nov, 12: “The True Flueof Artin Christianity," Dr. Osgood, C. C. Perking, Prof, Weir, and Dr. T. H, Hopkins: * Forejzn Mls- sions," Dr. J. Colton 8mits, Dr. Gallsgher, Dr, Crummel, Mr. E. W. Clark; *The Church and Freedom of Religlons Thought,"” Dr. De Koven, Dr. Washburn, Dr. Rudder, and Mr. J. C. Ropen; “Sceular and Religlous Education,’ Drs. Elllott_and_Colt, Teury Alford, and the Rev, J. M. Kramer; “The Morals of Tolitics,’ Dr. Harwood, the Hon.. J. W. 8tevenson, ex- Gov. A, IL Bullock, the Ifon. Jumes Emuiott; “Thy Adaptation of Church Scrvices,” Iishops Nu]:e:l aud Whipple, the Rev. Mr, Greer, and Mr, 5 d;fvn'; # Prevention and Cure of Drunken- | the gas rnm{u iy, *What!' he cries again, ness," Drs. T{:lcr it Shattuck, and Newton; | *Shall God Almighty, who glves you the sun “gyivals of Christian urture,” Bishop Doane, | and afl youdaleea.ngs, be made to puy for your Dr. Newton, of Philadelplis, the Rev, Mesars. | wretchéd nd-hatd Nght, ot out of the conl Arthur Brooks and C. M. Wines, that Hegave yout’ Presentlyappears the large- checked Tusuruncengent. ¢\What! Yougravely l)mpuse to charge God Almighty for insurln 118 houscd Never] '™ A %' THE SBANDWICI ISLANDER'S LAMENT. \ 0 &1, Louls Republican, '+ A gentleman, Who appears to bo a perfectly rellabile Pursnu, has been Inand retated the sub- stanco of a conversation he recently enguged In with an intetligent native of the Bandwich Isl- ands who was converted to Christlanlty some years ngo, aud has since acted us a nutive mis- slonary, ‘The Bandwich Islunder fs at present fn this eountry on u tour of fuformation, 11 has been in Ban Franclsco several tines, but never east of the mountains before, though ho llnu:xku English perfectly, und would searcely bo taken for a forelgner wero it not for the durk color of his face, ~ Tho gentlomsn who describes the conversation with the Sundwich Islunder glves the substatice of it {u tho latter's own words as neurly ns possible. Bald the uuwl{ dvflimlmml {‘l‘x '.hulr::urlu of a coutidential Intorchauge of ¥, u8 you say, civilization Is undouhtedly at Llessing, wod I feel o great deal more respect for m{nsl( sluce I became s convert and since my people gave up sonc of thelr savago practices. Wo nover cat the misslonuries now, 1o matter how low provisions may run, and the lust of the men who wero really entitled to ba consldered epdeures fn misslovery meat dled some wonths ago. T regret to suy that when he diid ho didw't seem to uppreciate all the bene- tits of cmm} ull{v n3 ho slould have doue, Ho was u tough £:1d fotlow, who used to bo a kind of under-chlef fu the olil days, and just beforo hu dfed [ wentaround to sce hia_and try to winooth his pillow, as it were. e wouldn't aceept any consolatfon, but growled out that he would like to have one more square meal of ulee younys theoloirlenl student before he died, and then ko turned over with his face towards tho wall and passed away, [ know it's weak aud sinful,” but sometlnes, though I'm o wlsslonary mysell wow, I do long for a returu of ugood old tiimes when It slways secined like » kind of proyvidence that when the fishing wus bad and good eatlug of any kiud hard to dzct. # misslonary wus ulways sure to land. Sometiues ous would como so poor that we'd ave to stall-feed him on shell-fish and thlyn for a fow weeks before he'd be 11t for the tablo; but this didn’t often Lappea, We gener- ally dlsposed of thers about us soun as the billy of Tare coutd be printed aud distributed around, A wissionary shouldu’t be fg too goud condi- tion. 11Ike fab and loan coming in “streaks to- rether bost, aud that was the general taste, uce, when & very fat missionary arrived, wo bud to trot him up and down tho beuch hours every duy for u weok or two to reduce him to & condition fit for eating, SBome of the counols- sours on the lsluud ustd to pretend o distln- gulsh a difference betwoen the taste of preachurs of different denominations, but 1 never could wysell. Of coursy there's s great difference in the quality of dilfercut joluta of » mbislonary, ust ns there ds dn° bed or wmutton. jome lke 4 shoulder of misslonary bofled, with caper suuce, und ke slwuys go for a druuistick, and otliers liko notbiug betfer than to nibbl away at & toger brolled. As furiae, [don’t wuut snything better thau a nix o o op, surdid a el broughtan with+ <o Prot. Tyndall dees not belluve In the power of prayer to alter the materinl luwsof the universe, and very probably ho s right. Wedo not in- dorse hlm, for the reason that our knowledure of the universe is lmited, Lut when Jomeo r‘ruyed that the sun m.l/;m not rise aud scparate {1 from his beloved Juliet, the sun rose all the same nud divided tho Jovers forever. What a millfon of men pray for another willlun of men pray ng man wants ratn, but another wants sunshine, ITow canlocal futerests afleet the wisdom of Heavenl Is it possibie that Trovidence hesltates between fts clionts, and says Lo Junics, whoso arid potato fleld 18 wither- {ug for waat of wator, Dear James, It wili raln to-night,” and to 8mith, whose huy {8 not yot stacked, *Dear Bmith, your hay “will all'be sonked " No, there are cifects of prayer which are not logi al fu the tnfud, und so far'the chnl- lenge of Prof, Tyndall, 1o lave one hospitul rnsed for and thic other anmllmd for, must by eld to be Ukely to result to the advantego of his theory.—ew York Herald. The old pilgrimage of Verzclay (Yonne) was revived in lprmcl) ufi‘.’luu 23, the festlval of 8t. Mary Magdalene.. A portlon of the relfes of this'saint’once belonged to the monks of Vezo- 1ay, who made & present of them to Pope Mar- tin IV, in the year 1281, s Iloliness, who wns a Frenchman, and did not sufliclently uppreciate tha value of such gifts, made the boncs over to the Cathedral of Sens, Thero thoy remained till tho revolution, when they wera taken out and seattered to the four winds by & degenerute crowd, BSomebody, however, I8 presumed to have pleked them ups and now Monsignor Ber- nudon, Archibishop of Sens, has restored them, inclosed In_a maguificent reliquary, to the Church of Vezolay,” Oun tho 2, wccordingly, a procession of two_Archblshop, three Bishops, a itred Abbot, and 200 priests, with bauncrs aud crosses, made solewn entry futo thoold Bur- gundian town, and deposited the relis with wmuch pomp on the altarof the parish church, In the eveningtho strects were flluminated, such *touchiug® deviees,—so the Legitimists, call them,—belng visible us ¢ 8t. Louls, King of- France, pray forus," It is diifleult for the pro- fane to understand tho preelso connection he- tween Lady dMagdaleno and Louls IX. of France, A BLANDKRER EXCOMMUNICATED, In thesa daysof * free and casy®! church mombership, when numbers und not plety turn thy scale, cases of church discphine ure compar- atlvely rarc,and slander {8 unicof the rarest causcs for its exervise, Two or three cases huve been recorded In Plymouth Church and one in the Tabernacle, Brooklynj but the circumn- stances out of which they grow were poculiar In wany of thelr aspects. But uow we Lave 8 real cuso of diselptiug and excomumunication i the Fort Green Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, the Rev, Adamn McClelland, pustor. And it is the outgrowth of the church<holr, Tt appeard thut about twd years 20 & younfi ludy, who has al- ways boruo an irrepraschable churacter, sud who wus at the tlme connceted with tho cholr of the church, made the scquaintance of a youn, pan, who was al4o & member of the cholr, an they begun keeplng copany. After some fittle thoo it E«:wuu gencrally known thut they were engaged to bo marrled, mduu:n:ibelhsvw to s td Do tho caso untll & fww wonths” Byhen it wos R vy parsley to glve it an nicas. ~ Onct & migsfonary came ou h 3 car-old hoy. The wife dled on the 7! the missfonary and boy reach e baked him whole, stuf : Lread crumbs and onions mxc'm roast, pig ever made such a heavenly dish?, I have read_what your. Mr. ig, and T cannot but ro here Lo taste that chila. done justice to thesubject. The dishwas talked - of for years afterwards by all tho eploures oa ;.. the faland. It's all yanity now, a Christian misslonary I oug ok {»‘r such things, l»;u ufl":l alwayarestraln myself, .’ ' were poor, misgulded crentures, of courss, but thuuu‘waré BLalcyon days.” b 540 CIIURCH SERVICES.. “Tha Rev, Mr. Carroll will prasch at 10:458. m, and 7:30 p, m, {n the Twonty-fitth Street Daptist .. Lamb says of roast L uul.{l.sm not ¢ alone could have. ; 1 know, and a8 —~The Rev. D. B. Cheney will preas 2 Fourth Church, cornor Washington and Panlind streets, at 10:30 a, m, snd 7:30 p. m. . —~The Rev. James Paterson will preach at the Firnt Chnrch, South Park avenue, corner Thirty- first atreet, at 11 8. m. and 7:46 p. m. ¥ —The Itev. J. M. Whitchead will preach at the .| North Star Church, comer Divison and 8e : strects, morging and evening,, —The Hov. Galusha Anderson will preach at tha. Second Chureh, corner Morgun and Monrol At10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. p —There will be services at the Michigan Avenue / car Twenty-third atreet, at 10:45 n. m. ' Morning subject g TO —Theltey. N. F. Ravlin will preach momning and evening at the Open-Communian Churel Loomis and Jackyon atre: 9y reh, corner Indlana avenue and Twenty-Afth atreet, morningand evenin at the Central Chnreh, corner of and Campbell nvenae, at 3 p, m, CONGIEUATIONAL, . ‘Tha Rev. George H. Pecke will preach moming and evening {n the Leavitt-Street Church. lvlbrook will presch nt 10:48 inthe Oakland Church, on west of Coltago Grove : TRev. W. A. Dartlett will preach inthe' . morning and cvening at Plymouth Church, on Michigan avenue, b ty-sixth atceet The Rev. W. A, 8 preach at tho First Chal ctween Twenty-fth and Twosne T. Chamberinin_will preach at : street and Delawara place, morning and evenl o Ttev. N, 11" Aatell whi Avenae Ulurch morning ohrat. damen T iy Park Church in the mornlng. will proach at will proach st Lincola * gers will preach at 10:70 a. of tho Epipbany, * . A, m, and 7:40 . m, in the Chure on Throop street, between Monyoe aud Adains, he Itev, W, Ii. Hnpkina will preach morning and cvehing nt §t. dohn's Chureh, on Ashland aves nue, near Madison strect. —'The usual scrvices will be held atthe Chureh of Our Bavior, corner of Helden and Lincoln ave- —~The fev, TI, G, Perry will oficiate momning* d evening at All Baints* Church, corner of Nuz enter and Ohlo streets. The Rev. W. I' Morriron will preach at Ao morial Church, Indiana avenue, between Twenty- uinth and Thirtieth atreets, at 10:45a. m. Locke will proach at QGraee nd 7:30 p. m. van wiil preach at Trinit, Church, Michimn avenue, cornor Twenty-aixt] 5 p. m. P oredch st Catvary betwean Oakley strect street, at 10:45, —The Rey. Lutl Charch, Warren avenue, d Weatern avenuc, 1 10:30 8, m. apd 8 p. m. bere will be services at the censlon, eorner Elm and LaSalle streets, at 1l m, cls Manaficld preaches this morne ing and evening ot the Church of the Atonement, curuer Washington and Robey atre W- Borrlil wilt Church of the Lioly Comtmunion, South Dearbora street, between Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth, &l 45 8. m, snd 7:45 p. 'm. ~The 1it. - iev, Blsliop of Illinols will presch st the Cathedra] B3, Petor and Pe Vash- ingtun snd Peor!: Hiey. 8amuel Chase, D, College, in the evening, DEFORMED EIISCOTAL. ) The Jtev. Dr. Couper will preach at Immanuel Church, corner of Centre and Daytou strests, ening on ** Not Ashamed of the el the gvening on ** Christlan Thels «~Bluliop Fallows will preachat St. 'aul's. ‘Washington an on ** Mouut Zlon, inz God, " and In the cvening Equatlon in Belle?, " b —Tho Rev. W. F. M Wicker Park Church at —The flev, R. [1. Nuswort] fog and evening st Emmunuc) Chureh, corn Hunover and Twenty-elghith stroets, —Dishop Cheney will pi Michigan avenue aud Twenty- ota, preach st the trecty, {n the morning, and the ., President of Jubllea on **The Persons appin will preach-at th Thgpm TS will oficlate o " "lluurd“;_ oveulngs *F Knowlodge that Paya. METIODIST. ‘The Rev. W. C, Willing will preach at the | ley Avenue Church in the 1worning on ** Wit In thecvenlngon ** Anlry inx for Chyrist, an tion to 5 Wedding, —Tho Rev. Jolin Atiinsan will otnor Notth Lasalle and White atr jfect: **Two Prisa-FL."* e Rev. Dr. Willlamson will Avenue Chureh, What, ofter All, Is Heligion 11, Adams will_preach at Cento: nary Church, Monroe street, near Morgun, morn- medanism and C —Tho Rev. &, §, Cantine wil Street Church 1n the evenlng; subject: ** duy-School a3 Related to the Chureh. ™ R A W, Jewett will preact leat Church, corner of Clark and Wa a. m. and 7:30 e streets, at 10:45 —J'l‘lw Rtey. Dr. Church, Indiana nveaue, utreet, at 7380 p. . 'iifany will preach af Yy PT ¢ will preach at UNITARL The Rov, Robert Collyu: hurch. l —The Rev, Brooke ITcrford will preach ms and ovening at the Church of the of Michigan avenue and Twenty-third strcet. UNIVEHBALIST. The Rev, Bumner Ellls will preach in tho ingatthe Church of the Hedeemer, com Washiugton aud Songamon streets, —T'he Jtev. Dr. Ryder will preach at 8t Church, Michigan avenos, near Rlgh! PUESDYTEIIAN, e Rev. Mr. Gill, of Des Molnes, will p at 10:45 &, m, and 7:30 p. m, in tho Fourth Lyterlan Churcl, ou the corner of Rush ant . Qatrander, . of Dubunt m. and 7:45 p. DL W er Church, comer Weat Jackson sad | streots. —The Rev. C, L. Thompson will presch { Fifth Chusch, corncr of Indlana avenus and tleth strect, in the worning on ** Work Preps to the Itovival,” and {u the evening on ** It Jamiea Maclanghlan willprs’ - ing ond evening in the afiowh Chures, co ule, | —The Hev. J, I, Walkar will pruehn:l 01 Throop, morning and evenin:, —Thelte, Douald Fletcher will presch &1 i 8t tiio Stata St strest. Hubject: ** Cha: mkilfl‘l:xn‘.h,nw Hourt Tohn Powt will preach fa the mo_ In liolland, aud in the eventn, h, church corner of Noblo and West Erto-stree —The ltav, Willlam X Hansha will pre mll:mlng and evening.| . Lhe . corner of Michiganaveuue a0d U'weftlet —Tho Rev, H. I'. Muller will preach Blxth Church, comner of V1 avenues, morning and evening. Mosuing “+ A Woman Complimented. ncennce und | Oal UB.. Mrs. Cora L. V. Tappun will lecture tn the New Chicago Theatrs atd p. m., on **The Outlook for jom frowm the Present Btaudpolnt of Charles 0, Darnea will preach at Tarrl Chapel, coruer Paullna, at ‘e Disciplen of Christ moet at 220 Weast Ranw L s “f'ha Christlans will meet at 3 p. m. inths 1, No. 14 Weal Chleago avenio preach at the corner of Ei, B33 htoeuth and Pral e Temple, corper of gden avenue, at 3:3 Il preach at the e i tusplrationat speaker, ingtoniun Home at 3 p. will lecturo in Grow's 1 Eider L. C. Collins will pre: > evening at Advent Tabernacle, No. U1 budl s will preachst the Tabern Church, coruer of Morgan aud Indiana Frankland will be in attendance at tue Frionds' meetiug, on Twenty-alxth sirect, bo- twoen Indians sud Pralrio avenuea, #410:80 & 5. CALENDAR FOR TIR me- BPISCOPAL. Sept. 10-Talrtoeaths Busday after Tialy. rtecuth Bunday afiar g Er? Sqt 1§t Nielaluof Toleating

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