Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 25, 1876, Page 3

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onomincted, end the (adicatlony are ¢ fl::t'l‘:: Yv‘lfl“l Lo elected 'uy an incrensed majority. AROUND TOWN, CAR'T RAISE A CROWD. A meeting of German Tildonites was held yes- day alternoon tn Muecller's Hall, corner of Nrnh avenuo and Sedgwick atrest. In enthusi- ‘:n and slzo jLwas n faflyre, Thedurnout was, “mh!crinu tho natorlety givon to the mecting, u]zm‘ there ot being vver 300 persons prescnt, ¥ o fact Is—anid yestorday proved ft—tihat Tho et tow German Tildenites fn Chfengo, ul:),m. Lich called the meeting to order,’and r. Lindavor wos aclocted to preside. lemade nhus\hl set speech of thanks, and wanted the hu,m,n. to stand togother, as in union there :"mng(h. They camme to talk of the corrup- :x(m nthe Repubtican party, and to show b up. Cul. Happely of the *Ccentral Tilden Re- form Veroin,” mado o briel speceh, and gave a olhurlhlsu)ry of the Club and what (ts pur- 2 sowas. Hosang the old song, that they werg fghting for roform and to put down corritption, gwl ‘Arno Voss was then hum«'lucud. Hevon- 1 that upan v pleasant o day o ‘"m‘l:;‘::lm?mcumu ll‘:ll. to lnm:m\n pullllml "““(’mm The meeting was called on 8uniluy mc!"m ‘to give tha workinginen who were toi l?:dw goto & meeting 0t night a ehance, %N’w woulil b held next Bunday on the Weat Fide, snd the follawing Sundny” on the Bouth Ehle.' Tle then went on to argue that the finan- 1l jssne_shonld not bo mada the only any of :he arty. The mismansgement In publle uftfes d corruption should be thefr thenic, He then :chmxenl the old argumenta discussed by so many uthers hefora him. Thio most audacious nrgumant of the spenker was when he wanted the soldiers to forget An- dersonviile, Libby, and thie maltreatment they ccelved M other Rebel {u.-nu and prisons. L’nm are byeones,V sald the speaker, “and should_be forgotten,” Tho poiut fel aa dem) %3 tho Democratie party will be nfter the 7th of NogenbCl, man onil Dr. Ernet Schmidt woro (e next speakers, The meeting waa hield, It i3 mmcrswm{' for_tho purpose of Lelping Gen. Liets to get the Democratic nomination for Con- gress. JAGR. ectton for delezates to tha Repuhiican c;‘;‘:en:]nljnnl Convention for the Flrst District sesuited {n the eholee of tha followlng nawmea: * gol 1 Hopking, R I Hendershot, A, I, Yeeder, . Diester, 8, L. Bartholomew, \‘1.5(1elcgnuun will zive a complimientary vote to Trus Coy, after which Tlopkins will gu for Aldrich or some other good mal, not among the andidates now before the publie. Iendershot {s for Dore. Veeder and Bartholomew will not indleate thelr preference. Blester prefers Coy or Bugue. PIFTI_WARD, At o meeting of the Fifth Ward Republieans, ield ot headquarters, corner of Twenty-sixih and Butler streets, on the 234 Inst., the follow- Ing were clected ns delogates to come before the rimaries for tho Conizressional Conventlon: Vineent Reifsulder, duseph Stnith, Charles Seitorlek, Juhn Kramer, and Louls Ramp, They are clalmed to bo for Dore. 1T MUST B PURGED. The Demoeratic leaders swenr that the Leg- fslutive ticket foreed on them Suturday musy be purged. Sexton, Enzenbochier, and soime others will, tley say, bo taken oft by the Central Com- mittee. APPOINTMENTS, The following appointiuents lave been sn- nouniced? The Hon, George D. Chaffee, Republican TFlector for tho Fifteenth Distriet, will speak at Yaris, 111, Manday, Oct. 85 ut_Clurk, Tugsday; s Robinson, Wednesday; ot Lawrence, Thurs- day; nt Greenup, Cumnberlond County, Friday; |nfi at Efllnghatn, Saturday. Gen, Logan witl speak. dat Freeport, Tuesday, Oct. 95 ot Oregon, Wednesday; at Mendoti, Fridar; ot La Harpe, Saturday; at Quincy, Monday, Oct. 93 ut Plttsficid, Tuvsduy; at Boringileld, Wednesuny; and at Dwight, on Sat~ urday. Uuy\'. Beverldge will bo prevented from speaks Ing at Kankakee to-day, and at Elgin Satur- day, on aecount of his Liealth, which will not ad- ml{ of Ils speaking every duy, TII}: DEMOCRATS neFt yesterday, They ot up In the afternoon, a few of thein, however, and Jounged around he corrodirs of the Palmer House, “They went Yome very muel saddened when they re- celved a telegram from George W. Julinn to the effect that e cannot be licre to attend the grand blow-out, The unterrified aro still keep- fugr up their noisy talk about Ohlo and Indlunn, and adduce, 48 me of credible evidence I favor of thelr candidates, the asseriion that bet- tlng men are giving odds on Ohio, while on In- dluna the bettlue is about avenr, Inu the welght of such evidence ns this, only oue recourse is lelt—Gen, Hayes should resin at once. TIE SIXTI-WARDERS, . The 8ixth Ward Huyes and Wheeler Minute- men engaged In o grand tprehlight parade through the ward on Saturday ovenl "’f; Thero wore five companfes, firegnlluv ubout 450 Men, under coninand of Col. R, W. Hutehin. suri, Ot the line of march the procession halted ot the headquarters of the Scventh Ward Mfnute-Men, Comnany A, and gave a sorenade o Ald, Tarnow, ‘The display was o very fine one, and created much enthusiasm auonjz the spectutors on tho route, MISCELLANEOUS. FOND DU LAC, Bpectat Dispalch to The Tridune, Foxd pu Lag, Wis, Sept. 20,—Last night his city was the sceno of futense enthusiosm, it belng the oceasfon of a speech Ly ex-Gov. E«lwm:d Sulomon and the forniation of a Iayes and Wheeler Club, A company of Minute Men, 10 strong, the first of & number of companies t0 bo orgunized here, paraded the streets in uni- form with torches and o bond. Tho city was brilliautly Hlumiuated and tho streets a mass of human bolnfiu. Armory Hall was jainmed. The How. Mot Hi, Carpenter made o few remarks, snd was followed by Gen. Salomon fn o two hours' speceh, which elleited vociferous ap- plause, The Demoeracy guaweth o file, Spectal Diapaich s Fre v o Dnnlo‘m Mieli,, Sept, 2]t I'I;::'imen ascer. tafned ¢ ;31 that, ‘durlng the Huyes and Wheeler torehlight "procession here last night, the eolured organizations wero hooted by iy finally, us thuy were marching oo Monrow aveniie, o plstol wos fired on the sldowalk, Much oxcitement followed, but the inciplent rot was flually allayed, The old Democratic prefudice aguinst the negro ls showlng Staclf here, for the first thue in sowne years, in this re. form campalgn. Sz, Louss, Sept. S5—the D 3 y Sept. 23.—The Demoo primary clections in this efty and mum" ln!‘\f.)ng 10 cleel delegutes to the County and Cougres- slonal Conventions to bu held next week, Tho prineipal futerest centered In the Second Cop- gresslonat District, where Col, A, W, Bluyback murde o very spirifed fight fn opposivion to Frag- tus Wells, the present Incumbent. The result ls not known yet, ‘Thers was also 8 stroug cons test fu the Third District between W, 1L émnc. present member, and Mr, Frost, an entlrely now uppllcant for publle honors, BOLINERN' IOMES, L. Spectal Dispateh to The Zribune, WasiinuToy, D, C,) Sept. 2 'he Demo- crats, iL 8 nmlerstood, nre propavinge to mako goinie sensationsl charges with respeet to the nunagement of the Solliers’ Humes through. aut the country, and will begin with the inetfs tution at Daytun, O, It Is alleged that there iy Inpraper mubngement at that etitution, The avowed polltical object of the Demoeratie man- 2pers 18 Lo cadeavor to counteract the drist of Ln;lruunt i the soldler element tu favor of uyes. LINCOLN, NEI5, Bpecial Dispatch ta The Tridune. LixcoLN, Neb., Sept. 28.~The Republican County Convention met to-duy amd nomhiated Tuomas P. Kennard and Capt. €. M, Halrd for tho Btate Benute, and Grifliths, Phlilips, 8pell- 2, and Cadman for the House, ‘The delega- tlon s belloved to be strongly favorable to the reeloction of Hiteheock to’ ihe United Btates 3enate. Delogates to the Btate Convention will lupport Garber fur Goveenor, und pearly all the weumbent Stats offivers, CLEY D, CLEVELAND, Bopt. 24, The Democrats hedd o fraud sunss-meetlng Liere this evening, The E‘l‘xll)ul.fiu. i‘x‘nvtu was ldlll}]\?lly IIluquluwd with J nterns, ete. The' procession num- dered about s,mu'turvhuu. nhu& 600 horsvimel, wnd several Lauds of musie, Addresses wers :cllvum\ to lnrgu audioncesut the publicsquare “)‘_ihe {lun, 8, 8. Cox uud Bumuel d, Meany, uf o ark, i e Hoa. A, 3, Kelly,of filur:i hond, Va, Senator Kernay, who was expectes o speak, futled to arrive, it CONGRESSIONAL NOSMINATIONS, Ilomuvm.u, Bept, 2.—Albere B, Willla was "l:inluum) to-day by (he Demaocracy of Loufs- e, la the Flith Districe of Kentucky, for Con- 'l."rl;‘ul».b‘ur. Willls §s st present the Common- th's Attorney for Jefferson County, und dves 1y Loufaville, 8opt. 23.~The Republie- ANBas Ci1Y, Mo, wus of tho EBightts District today unanfmous] Sominuted Col, U. 8. Twicholl In{ Congress, % Torus LOUISVILLE, i VILLE, Bopt, 2,—Mr. Albert T, Wells, b utu "v'n.: nomluated for Congress by the De- hnf“l-‘y of Loufsvillo yesterday, will fiil the i tenn, Mr, Watterson now rc):rcsnntiug the Murt teem mude vacant by M ! de Ve detlined o rc-\‘luutl‘;n. e, 'TIIE PULPIT. Three Discourses on the Coming Moody and Sankey Re= vival. The Origin of the Organic World : Sermon by FProf. Swing. I‘n:;awa]l Address of the Rov, W, A, Bartlett to the Plymouth Congrogation, TIFE ORIGIN O THT ORGAN- 1C WORLD. RERMON DY THE KRV, DAVID BWING. Trof, Swing preached the following scrmon yesterday morning to & large congregation ab McVicker’s Thentro: n the llcg‘nnlm} Gnd ereatod the heavon and thu earth, —tien,. t, Lo With wondeeful fitners and boldness, the ible opens its long discoursc with n declaration upon which depends all the remnining doctrines of the tivok, It was fit that a volume In which 60 wreneratiuns wero to come, bringing thelr re- liglona thoughts ke the Hebrew women bring- fng riches for tho temple, should write down far Its opening or fundumental words the dece laration that * God ereated the heaven and the earth,” Aa men about to found a great repub- 1le come saying, Liberty! Liberty! beeause that ftis the thought to justity aud inapire the maovetnent, so the divinely-called writers come to tho work of founding the Rible with the word (odl God! upon theie Hps. Havive de- termined to deseribe to coming ages w certain strcam, they began thelr tusk at ita fountatn, Na constitution framed by an assembly of phl- lusophers, no aration of any anclent or modern orator, can equal the Bible In the Jogieal Hitness and moral sublimity of its opening soutence. This text invites us to examine the dactrine that a personal or consclous God Is the Author of tho licavens and the carth, In refleeting up- on this tople let us divide the world inte two parts, the organie and forganie; and then et us thiuk only of the vrganized form. The rea- on for this division may be found partly in the fact that either department of thought s by it~ sclf large enough for the hour, and partly in the faet that the organie world {8 the more won- derful, The clements, such a8 air, water, cartly, and Mght, are wondertal Indeed, but whenearth, and water, and afr, and light ure organized into a bird, or a fish, or a flower, or a man, they bu- come more aninzing. The lutnp of earth, or the fragment of rock, or the clond-midst may not seent to heed n erentor, but whien the lump of carth bursta Into a blossom, when the roek be- comes covered with lichen or velvet moss, or he- comes the home of the engle or the wild gont, whon the cloud-mist falla und makea ~ the hinrvest field, then tho thinking mind must needs the presence und help of n Delty. One might belleve with Lucretlus that matter f8 cternal, 18 not the product of an intelli- rent plaker long beforc; one might De- leve that notter orgavlzed Into Hvin, shapes of the treo and grain, and beast wnd bird, and man'were not the works of some Belng full of Intelligence and power. Lot unl there- fore, meditate over the organle world, leaving to deeper students the gquestion whenee come the inurganie ciements, Lot us discuss two themes: 1. The puture of tho urgument; and 2, the argument taell, Fipst—The ‘argument 18 not of the demon- alrative kind, but oaly of the cumalative class. 1t 1s the seck "F of probabilities, That the ex~ fstence of God 13 not absolutely demonstrable is shiown by the very fact that the {nquiry itself Into Ilis ‘existenee still continues, whereus no one inquires whether twice two makes four or whether water seeks its lovel, beeause demon- gtrable propositions pass fustantly from the ficld of debate, As soon a8 Euclid £ct forth his proof that the square of the bypotetuse of a trinngle equals the equares of * the other two eldex, all coneeded at onee the truth of his prop- osition, and noinfidel orskeptic in geomotry has ever apneared ; but, after Genesis and thousanus of otlier books, alter Paley and Butler, doubt #UHIL returns to the publie “or sndividan mind, Ll showing tlut the proof of a Qo Is nut de- monstrative, but {s only o gathering up of prob- nbilities and a throwln of them futo the seales ufljmlmlwut. n the case of the theorem of Euclid it was found fmpossible to belleve anything elee, but {1t the ease made by the Bible {t Was found cast 1y possiple to set up n counter-klea. Thy uddl- tlonal proposition that the sccount of Genesls was written down by inspiration did not ter- minate unbelief, for the proof of (nepiration was {tself lable to be rojected. The very fact that sliepticisin has always followed oMl rellgions shows that no rcllf'fuu has_ever possessud unf‘ evidence that wouid compel belies. The Church hins put twany thoussnds to deuth for doubting its religlous doetrines, but after ujl this cruelty of sword aud fagot it zecs the world still doubi- ing Its most enrdingl fdens, and ndding to the natural doubt of lo{:lc the alditional doubt en- gendered by the Church's former eruclty and 1-will, The bouda of friendship between the Chureh and the world might Degrentiy strengsth- enea i the Chureh would confess that it pos- sesees no absolute proof of fts ideas, but s holding to Ideas the most true ofany mornl doe- trinos of carth, und that 1t docs nut nak its fol- low-men Lo embrace absolute information, but only the best nnd_dearest hope, It has been a mfsfortunc of Christianfty that fts leaders Tiave often made no distinetfon between positive proof and Presbyterlun, or Methodist, or Bap- st or Catholie proof; and yet tho ditTercence is very great between what one mny enll Preshy- terfan evigence and Catholfe cvidence, and’a mathematienl evidence forblliting dissent und oxcluding possibility of unbellef,” Ono of the liest proofs that the past rigld methods of ull the churches were wroug (u sin ogainst the nature of the human mind), and wers an appeal for fulth beyond what they hud evidence to com- pel aud retaln, may be found fn the fact that to- day all the best churches are tull of minds wlileh doubt, ond whiel come to many homes when God I8 very far off. ‘Thero s Jving notjfar from this city an old man who was for & quarter of ncentury u most faithful Elder in the Pres- byterion Cliurch, und earrled o heart full of falth, but upon the death of an auly child he sunk to tho most utter unbelief, aud now_ for another yuarter of century has lved under n sky ns storless a8 (L waus ones bright, The “evidence that was am- ple when the lLome wus happy was not ablo to sustaln the hieart when ity measurcless grief came, What nrebuko of ull intoleranco und coldness when, after centuries and centuries of positivism, the Church finds {ts own com- munion table thronged by those whio know only In purtand see only In“part. The Holy Boo! itself ia full of sympathy with mun in his situn- tion of mingled eloud ad_sun, and cheers him by telling him that he shall know bereafter thnt hu shail be comforted in the valley and shadow of death, The Biblo confesses thie presence of this nurest by ts tender effort to answwer man's deep fuquiries and to comfort the soul. Chrlst Hd 1ot seorn the doubting Thomas, but led him oy toward mare assuriniz vrouf, hus the Creator of the universe 13 a velled ncl}lu. and though many have dented this amd huve persecuted those who lave maintuined {8, ).e'- tiey Lave now ot thy closeof the nineteentio tfljl‘“r‘ mied to take the vell away, Mun bo- Hovus In cougruphy and geomutry, bt he doubts u the department of religion, ths teachlug us ?uuwln cach zenerution that the unseen of Abra- o and Sujomon wiil bo the unseen of uvery land and centary, uving thus seen that the argument (s not demanstrativo, Iet us study o mtiro of the roof o lttle further, and” mark somu othier 0 i tho cage. "This fact thal the proof of God In cumulative larmonizes well with the general spirlt of man's world, for hu is every- whers the bullder-up of his fortune. lls prope erty, hls educatlon, his character, bis friendship, ureall tobo bulltupaslic possts along, Not only are the vak treo and tho leaf and the frainework of the antmal form buflt up by the aecamudution of cells, Iike the silken Tabrio wade by the Joom which pounds together so any délicuts threads, but the education and learuing of man are_canstructed also on the atomie princlple,—each hour coming forward with its edditional {dea ‘and additfonal decd, Tho universal startlog polut Is poverty. From thut burren and bleak rock every hum{“ nter- et hois sull Lo seck Its fortune.” As man creops Lefure e walks, 8o his politics, Wis sclence, uis urt, andhis religlon ullbvimn lite by croeping, aud s0 #low s the progross thai, ut the end of thousands = of yeurs, nefther our socfal sefence, nor our nolft(cs, nox our rellglon, ean yet walk uprightly ‘and nobly, For thy most part they arestill down ou afl fours, We do not cotne into the world fully endowed; but we uro all born poor, and nt tho crudle the t:cnlu» of labor cotnes, and, tak- g us up fnto lier arms, haptizes us into the nave of perpetual tofl, and su umruughlr docs this baptism of Iubor affeet man thet 3 bis 50th yuur he 8 still reachiug out after more fdeus, or are huppiness, or wore religon, Ap the vast tree of the forest, which has lived for 10 centu- ries, wall put out green leaves on the very spring of {ts death ond dies blossoming, so man puts out fresh effort to the lust und {3 attempting to Tewrn more aud do more when death steals suft- Iy up toward his pillow, = Labor s the umversa) explanation of Nfe., Theodore Verker said: ‘THIS CHICAGO ‘YRIBUNE: MONDAY, SEPLEMBER 20, 1s/u. “1abor s the on oney God will accept.”” ‘That I8, you can A e nothing of God by gi Ing Hin'rold or praise or prayer, you st wort yoursel? at 1 vineyard for work, i 1e ritleules Virgll for begluning bis eple with the words, * Arma tirumaue cano (I King nrin and a hero), for, anys Carlyle, the true eple of the world I8 Y tools and the man.” The argument on behalf of llbcr!{ and ednca- tlon hes been cumunlative, and has heen heaped up 80 sluwly that not only Europe, but cven Amerfen, §8 sl [ull of skeptics, there being many yet who are not certain about the rights of thuse whose complexion 18 black, The hia- tory of man s the history of the pursult of idens, Demonstration on the Instant {8 fotmd in only a narrow ficld of Inquiry in phyalcal scl- cuce, the greatest fsaites of fife b all hidden away like the Deity of Moses In the cleft of the rock, denying the hieart everything excapt the mysterfous ~tiailing of garments. \V}I the world was banded over o sueh a phitosophy no one may siy, but the fact Yoes vislble that as the human family Lofls over al} its problema of lap- piness, of government, of law, of taste, of right and wrong, so I toils (n search of (ts (’Iml. and in this longz purault it fils all lonely hours with meditation and bedews cevery altar with tears, ‘Therg are many questions to which fociety hos found no undeifuble responge, and the inquiries ahout 8 God differ from those ouly i the pain- ful anxiety with which they ml'the hearte A doubt shbut the truth of'a politieal or soctul propuaition can never cquul n sfignlticance nny doubt ubout the befng of God and the scenca beyond the chamber bf death, Taving scen now the nature of the argument, that it {8 an argument cumulative, and’ having scen Lhat such an argument fs in harmony with u world which bullds up man's body and soul by the celfulay process, we may noi pass to o branch of the argument ftself o stono of the uzmrln—tlm single argument of the organle world, s = An organlem fmplies mind, and hence an organtzed world Implies intelligence, A lump of dirt might not imply a Dicty, but a Iump of earth organized into u goldfishor a nightingale finplles what wa call thought, There{s s legend that whengthe Chirfat wns” stili a youth at home Heand some little companions’ were making some clay birds and setting them upon the linbs of the trees; that, having mude qu"u anumber, Chrfst amazed [lfs compunions by telling His Jittle produetions to flly awny. and suddenly.they became trite birds and darted away joyfully to the olive trees. But. that which so supriscs ns i this legend, and which induces us to refect it fs ll true in the realm of nuture, for some- bady has made tha clay of earth turn into living hirtls, for the woads and flelds bear dafly witness 10 such metamorphiosts. . Anorganfzatfon of means to an end (s the confessad evidenco of intelligence. This s the only method man pussesses of showing that he differs from a clod, Unless the adaptation of means to an end implies o consclous, reasoning mind, then all arguinent may ns well cense upon any question of politics, or ngricuiture, or re- liglon, Al who have been bori into this warld of thought hnve inforred an_ orgzanlzer from an organfem, o maker from a watel, and hence a th lllxln{: miind ns belng back of the fiying bird or gpeaking, neting, loving mnn, Jub cones to us from untlquity, telling us that the Lord un- swered him itk of the whirlwind and asked him who Jaid these foundations of varfed and strange Ufel Xenophon gathered u[s Ureek thought and feelntz, nnd Jeft the world his theoloty, es- tablished wpon the evidences of mind in the or- gunlzed forms of woud and field, mountaln and sea. Then Lactantius came in the enrly Chris- tinn Church and wrote out that argument for n Goi which hag In our times been rewritten and enfarged by Paley. The urgument has, too, ;irmm{ fallen fnto newlect, for after all the difficulties {n the puthtv fulth no reflection seems to bring God so wear as reflection over the wisdom and absolute thought involved [n the - world of Hving things, If any Infinite workings of natural” selection might give us a serles of rufmals, there I8 no survival of the strongest or Httest that will explain the plumagre of the peacork or ostrich, or the rongr of the nightingale. It might be that long run- ning in the desert gave the osteiel Its length of Hmb and imwm of dlizeeting conrsest fuud, hut long would need to e the runniog aud the Trdship that could at last decorate that cren- ture with plumes which have been the delight of Priucesses aud Queens. Darwin’s uaturat relection cannot explaln anything but the rudest. adaptations of utiiity, ffe might deduce n pheasant from an uf-ulcr, but not the decora~ tlona of the siiver pheasants mlght deduce o bird, but not une that conld sing all night in the Tuvely groves of Italy, In the organisms that not only theught about utllity hut thoueht ahout beauty, one caunot but sce”the presence of mind. Binee by only aceldent we arc in the world of the birds, let s note further what u withess of u Creafor i8 this single shape of organie 1fe. ‘The thougnt lnvulwx{’ In these beautiful cren- tures, dn thelr plumuge, thele songs, thelr offee- tlon, thetr infgratory fllehts, should by itself well nigh banish wnbelief from the ” world. Shelley's * Skylark,” read in this argument for a Delty, becomes a hymn: Nighor still nud higher Iram thie earth thon epringest Liko a cloud of fire} The l)uuy blue thou wingesy And !!nilug stll] dost sour, aud svaring ever sing. wat, The pale purnlo even Melts nround thy tight Liko a vtur of heuven, In tho hrond dayfivit Thon art uneeen, but yet | hear thy shrill delight. Teach ns, sprite or bird, What sweet thoughts aro tklno; 1 have never heard Pralge of love or wine That panted forth o tood of rapture ro divine, From this picture rnlmul 8o truthfully by that renfus of puetry Inspired by the Almighty 1o #how pur common fntelleets where the Diving garments are trailing, turn 1o your own vhser- vation in this fleld, and reeall the bird-song you Duve heard I eovly life when spring was conilng in at the window at daybreak in April and May, And from this morvel "of epring-time pags to those Octotier days when you lave reen these lmp\x{ children of the hedge and bower us- subling for the ?mlrm?' ronth, mukhui the sutumn leaf as it feil und the nutumn whid ns it sighed seem o part of the sad ceremony of farewell and sepuration, Our greatest r{mut‘ DBryunt, found In the * lone-wandering waterfqwl a lesson not only of an Intelijgent cause but of a loving Heavonly Fother—~ There fs n Power whose eare Teaches thy woy along thut pathless coast— The desertand illlmitable alr Lone wundering hut not lost, Chateaubriand snys the migration of birds is happler than the wanderings of man, for the Dirds ull o together, leaving no members of their family behind,und o but to return when the leaf, and tlower, nud sunshine come back. LFrom one learn ull, We laye seen but one form of dife. In the beaver as he butlds his ht, I the bee a8 ft constructs its cell, in the spider a8 It construets Its grreat sijken wheel, vomplet- dng the work perfeetly In a bulf hour, lu the car- rier dove that will tlud its home again thuueh a thousand unknown niles Intervene, thery is ving the evidence of a crentive thought back of all potd of clay or evolutlon, Mr. Huxjey T Just eald that e speakis not abont the caury of the universe, hut only ahout the manner of tho great event, . Now, to these [1ustrations of arganlzed waterlal ndd milions upon millons of varleties, lling the surfiuce of the carth with their 1ife, und the depths of the earth with thely bunes, mnd Emprints, id - forins, aud the seeng Bevomes 50 vust und fmpressive that. i presence of the spectacte nl unbellel for the monent vanlshes, the argument assumes the powor of o uemonstration, wnd the soul seems to feel all throngh {ts depths the presenee of the Al- mighty, The pagenntry of e upon the glabe in its most cloquent volee In tavor of aGod, One may ook npon the greut mountaing and Bl with delight and wordey, but he might feel thut the earthyualie made the Wil and that the clements made the soll nud the verdure; but when wmfd the sluudy pines one ees the cottage of mun and sees the juyous children at thegate, Dears them spenking o languuge or slnglug » sung, the earthquake forces and all the elotments must be set uslde as canges, nid a ereative mind must coms to help us expladn the mystery, In this pugeant of lite les the chlef evidence of o personal Creator, Luokitg at this smazing spee- taclo of Hfo the heart cannot but says T'hix clod Lives suroly through sume higher cncrr\)':; For from fteelf slone it could not ever bol As the marching of arles ot Gettysburg or Waterlon indicated that some commander sat somewliers fn cutnp or on throne lssuing thy urders which called “the nsen from their homes and hurled them onward toward glory or grave, 80 thu great marshuling of e un the earth poftita btk to Une who s life infinite und evor- usting, Oh, wanderful f8 the plenomction of enrth's lle! As nn fnsect it gleingtn the sun- beain, as u bird it flics, s the tuntd deer it 1s all grace ju the Jeafy woody, us man it vovers the continents with cities and arts, with clogquence, Wwith poetry, with love, with murnage, with death, 1t hath heon horetofhre my chance to see Huorvemen with martlul order shifthie canp, To unset rllying or In mater yanged, OF I retroni sunietines outsireichod for fight; Light-armed l:lnldmm and flieet furayers Beouring thy |‘1 uine, Arozzo! havo 1 eeen, Aud clashing tournaments and tliing Jodst ’l\‘ow with the sound of trumpots, nuwy of be Tubors or signale made frow castled helghits, Yes! brilllaut musterings and_encampments had this Florcuting il:un? but the yl:fluu of Arvzzo have witucsed only a single grouping of thut Louudless 1ifs whiclihes for nees perhups coubticss fxuu led this sad und huppy world, Now If life ltself be the beat pruct of a God, what must be tho eonclualon of him who marks further tha qnn"lf' of the e found (n moani Man docs not glinply live, but lo} he talks, he Flngzs, he lavghs, Tie loves, e piava, e weeps, ie rizes bigh ahove mere existente, for he per- celves right and wrong, and # nll post years with hisx memory and all fulure years with his hope, e dica, but bisdeath I ltself sllfnmmm.. for the monuments he feavea bebind him fo temples, and empires, and arte, aad Jearning,land even in rufng, tell us that the miad that leaves ruech memorfuls_of greatness cme not from dust, but from God, The chain of heln{z s complete In mo¢ 1 me Ia matter's lont gradathn It And tho noxt step in spirlt—Dbeity ] ‘Thus the organic forms of eirth hespeal a Q. This fs the argument camuintive which mn{ well 01 tho sonl with wotship and hope. Tt its well into the goneral planof earth, for as man tuds hig education, and his property, and his fame by the path of ever-retdrning labor, so by this method of study the heut must tofl to fiud the conclusions und consolations of rellgion, Man no more inherits n frue thinlogy or & de- vout splrit than he Inlierita the thuths of State or sclence, or on unwavering Inteerity. God no more lles inanifest to afl, incapable of befny de- nied or neglected, than the wouders of philogn- phy or mechanles Ne where no generation could eacape thefr discovery and thefruse. All things valnable are hidden awny: and hence In har- mony with such & system “the human mce has long groped around after its Miker and Savior, if, na Poul says: * Mao )Fy they might fecl after Him ‘sad fnd Hon0 Thougls the argument ho only ono of prohubilitics, 1t 18 one whose probability und affectionaty study will aiways fucrease {unt as Lo thelover of nature or musié these reains of the bheautiful forever cxpand, beeoning more real and fn- pressive. There 18 no provision In nature for rewarding negleet, The nassive gates of learn- ing, and enlture, amd honor open only to those who knock, and often the mortal outside must knock loud and long before the slow but beau- tiful nature within will come forward and draw nalde tho bolts and bars. Behind such portals the worll's Maker 18 enthroned, and blcssed shall be he who, after knocking and walting, shall gee tho lwleun of the everinsting doors| Huch Is the method of carth, No one can Juatity the method, no one can condemn it. It lea Hke Lhe ocean, to be pazed at, but not weghed or mwensured. Buch belng tho economy of earth, the fdes of o God will never overwhelm man and vompel bellef it will not assall the wicked heart that hates the idea, nor the ‘mmd mingd that treats it with contempt, hut, like all the blessings that come to the soul, 1t will come lovingly down from the sky to all Who seck ita fuce. There Is no pro- vision in nnture for religfous instructfon of an undevout hieart. The helie! Ina God must ask for one of {ts foundation etones a mind capable of humility and hope, and capable i prayer—n mind not demanding o demonstration, hut will- lu%z to cast itself futo the armsof apure and Jofty hope. 'The hand of such a soul everything in nuture scems to grasp and by it to pull up- ward, Nothing fully sssures fi, but ull the volees of earth, of nature and man, of Bible and Chlirlst, all the greatticss of the world, all the partings of friends, all the hours in the templo of relgion, all the profound lunclugs of the living und the tears or rapture of the dying ten- derly lead it and Iny deeper snd deeper tho foundations of ite falth, Waking up in ltnmor- L:\Hl?' in an unclouded light, §t wii find its e l]ny, not in boasting of what perfect knowl- edge ft posseesed on earth, but In the memory of u_service dully renderced In faith ot the altur of a Gud “whom, not having scen, it loved." THE REV. W. A. BARTLETT. 118 FAREWELL TO THE PLYMOUTH CONGREGA- TION. Plymonth Congregational Church was crowd- ed to overflowling lust night, the oceasion being the oftleinl Jeave-tsking of the pastor,, Dr. Bartlett, who has nceepted a call to Indian- npolis. The church was heautifully decked with flowers, Following Is an abstract of the farc- well discourse Fiunlly, brethren, farewell; b2 perfe oo comfort; be of one mind: Iive in pe the God of love and_peace shiail be with yo Corinfhlans,ritl., 11, 1 dfsiiss any excgetical handiing of this text. It suits me as {t 18, Coriuth In some ways was Itke Chicago; In sume ways different, It was o great commerelnl centre. 1t was fllled with life aud mental actlvity, Unllke Chleago, it had its grandeur In the past, while this clty forcensts it for the future. Tihis text fs Paul's farewell, unfolded in this letter to the Corin- thians, and it contalus in it a summary of all divine benediction, It tells how God may re- maln with a people, and that Is the supremest blessing, “Be perfeet,”—that is, have a per- fection of grace. * Be of good cemfort, —that I8, reach after spiritunl comsolations. *“Be of one mind,"—that Is, be a unit {n your pur- poscs and deslres. * Live In peace,”—not be quarreisome, and if you comply with these con- ditions **the God of Jove und pence, not the God of wrath and hatred, “nlm““ be with you," We have to do with this fext to-nicht obly so far ne in thy reeital the history that wo shall cursorlly run over, we may eco thut God Ind been with this peo- ple, and infer, hence, that Goa will be with them; for I belleve they have fn o measure put themselves under these conditions that would seeure the presence of God in days to come. * Weare not liere to separate, We aro here to be lited up into w higher and brighter ussovlu- tion, Men that meet shuply by evesight and physical contact have no Im mts of unlon neces- Rurl; 1f we have et in montal community, {€ we have met fn spiritual experience, 1 we have met under that unique cxperience that God gives through the Iloly (host, we shall never purt. Wo sft down ‘under thy same Lenfgnaut Father, just as we st under the same star, and we shall go no more out forever. Miuisters are eervants of God, to go where He cults, Thelr special duty {s to know that He calls, §f thoy can, and, when they hve nscertained it, to obey, 1t lins been known to this people that since the ealainity that befel me more than two years ngo the tenire of this olllee hns been to me slighit, T .have been held from Sabbntls to Sabbath, and duy today at first, by your partinl eymuathy snd affection, Getting strungey and more rendy for service, I have taken the full condnet of the 1I|ulull. long ag but never gitce that day have I fully sssumed the pastoral relatlon.” And there has been debate, oven to this present, a8 to whether 1 should aceept one of three calls: One to o abroad wnd finish some literary work that is planned and partially exe- cuted, the vther to Iudianapolls, and the otber to reptain bere. 1 have, finally, us I believe under the guldance of God, Wilh prayer, nud pain, and uneulish, and gorrow, made 8 de- cisfon, _God unly knows whether 1t be right ur best, T landed upon this coust from the Enst, und it wus embanked with fowers, 1 st sail from It under thy redolence of thess sweet ausplees, and you have strewn the way hetween these flower-banks very often with roses, Under the breath of "this general theme it was my purpose to talk over the past,—to see If in any way the promiss of achlevement ot the be- ginnlug had been fullilled,—to see whether the Aulls that were gt hiad etralned harder toward the harbor than the currents that were under and bave enused us to drift. In two months it will be cight years since I began my iinlstry in Chiesgo, It 1s not sufliclent to suy that the clirch hins been enlurged, thut 118 wember- ship hus largely increased, that wo lave passed from ona part of the city that was not as commodionus to another with inrger and grander uecommudations, These statisties tell u very small stury, but the unwritten power of w mii- lstr{ of that lemzth will never be aacertatned until the Judgment Day, This Church has heen open to strangers from all parts of the world,—from _the Presldent of the United States, who has worshiped with Plymouth Church, Lo the newsboy upon the strecty and . the influences that have been carrled Liere and there no man may tells Vst apiritual powers radlute from every spiritual centre, Tuthe firet place I propuse tu take o little ve- view of the truths I have preached, of the prin- cipul truths thot 1 have regarded as funda- mentul in Christian teaching, From my Ger- man educatlon 1 started out with skeptieal views. 1 believed that Teould find an casfer way, wid that thero must be somu Northwest Parsoge to this Chifnn of Eternity, . Mr. Hartlett weut on to state that after o struggelo ho arrived at the conclusion that the fundumental truths of the New Testament woulid alone provide for the necessitles of man's soul, liere or horeatter, and that he had preachs ed the usofuluess of man and the saving power of the Redecmer, Houlvo belleved fo und bt preached the power of the Holy 8pirit, the efli- caey of praver, splritusl power, gaud retribntian, nnd haa beon free to preach the adjustinent of these truths to the splrit of the age, He con- tinued: When I cume to Chieago it had 280,000 people; LHluly it hus B0 marvelons city!t (\'lu:u came here it was on thut fur coast, beyoud that great wall of lre; and 4 n man eame beforo that his pedigree fs assured—nothing turther {8 asked of bim. 8o that Lexpect, if 1 tiyo 100 yeurs, to_have the lonorury. eitlzonship of this goodly—I had al- most, out of my alfeetion, s wodly—=City of Chlcaga, Aftor reciting certain uceldents of the fire connocted with the church tho preawcher satd ¢ Thosy great days como back in their power, filled with assoclations thut can but revive an uifectionats remembrance of the power that hos converted thu flames futo commercial solld- fty and colned ashes dnto gold. In my years In this city I bave had wost del rhitful sssoclation with the vlcrfl. 1 bear testhnony at this hour to tho unobliity, the ecif-nscrifice and tho Christian deyotion of our Comgregationnl clergymen of this by, They nre a noble, an nvn'hunnc«l wnd 1nvnh'« ret af men, and 1 extond the compliment to 811 denotninations, I have met them atly lved with them all, and it there are denominational lines in Chicago, Ishould like sume one to whittle off a picee snd show it me, for 1 havo never been able find them in reality. I know tho Cathollc Rishop wery “well, and I esteem him yery highly; and all over this great, free city I bave found amazing Chirlstlan h.-llumllll) amony the elerey of every denomi- nation, I wish to bear testimony, also, to the nen who represent this congreization denori- natlonally In the Thaological” Beminary on the weat slde of the river at Unlon Park. T aonot heffeve that you can find o moro enltivated, reholarly, persistent, licroic body of teachers than they are. They stand there and fight for s mreat city, that may have nn educeational place where young men may hie teained especlally for the mlnlalrfi, and they do it at great personal sacrifice ns I know, Anil this year especlally, from lusses and pan- fen, I8 §u fl'mk al peril, and 1 beaeeeh of you to llc‘p it. The Secretaries of the different socle- tioa were then culoglzed, and a littie more of the hirtory of Plymouth Church was given. I belleve, continued the reverend gentleman, that the condition of this church I8~ promising nnd hopeful. 'They have a amall debt, but they enn pay rendily out of thelr receipts the inter- vat upon It until the thnes wed Letter, and thion they can casily pay It off, and will willingly tdo so. [ do not believe there 18 s more fasclii- pting field on tho continent for the right man to lator in thun this. To say that I love this peo- [ylc would be very little Lo eay, for the kindness liey bave shown me from the first day I came amongthen hins heen unfuterrupted,and,Ibelievo without cxception up to this hour, It starts in varloua inetances and runs in my mind so freshe Iy and g0 fulli- that [sbhould weary yuun to catn- lozue ft. But you know that ap- preciate it you know that I Jove you, every one. belleve that we buve been felfcitous in this chureh fu almost every way. I have beeome very much attached to the cliolr,—to our niusi- vinna,—not only on aceount of thefr very superfor #Killy which Ifain would sppreciste, from the organist to thoee who sing, but on sceount of their character as ladics and gentlemen, We have learned to love thein all, and I #hnil miss thelr sweet volees, 1 belleve thut this church hos within it a body of Christian women such na few churches can hoast of—herofe women,—woinen that etand with eelf- Inst, with ready hands, with willing hearts, and guick bratns to devire, and always busy for God. 1 the large and Lroad Chrlstlan senie, I have the highest admiration for thelr character, must mention tenight eome names of those %nne up from here.” Mrs. Underwood, Mrs, ‘ook, Mrs. Borland—all thesc of precious mem- ory. How they vome back 1o us on these ocen- slons] And on tlils, my last official acrylce ns your pastor, you will pardon ullusion to her who * came™ with to ovcupy this tleld,—she who my lelpmect, mi‘ ‘hnplmunn. the utmnsphcru in which my mind moved, who tnthe crucibieof her wonderful affection converted pain, and loss, andtroubla in- to juy. Blie has been more than two years in the elory of her Futher's house, and yet her Infiu- enety her Bpfrit. her thought, fier character, breathe In this unfque cdifice, aud er unselfish lubors and brayers still uplift many hearts, I woull honor lier blessed memory to-night. No flower {s rare enough to cm,y{m her nobillty; no star brleht enough to symbol her moral worth; no sun fs I-r¥c enough or wartn enough to rep regent her Hfel Bk, beloved, awny with the morc personall- thes of this vecaslon. e are men and women bound for the judgment geat of Christ; we nre to velifted up to meet the preat reulities of time and eternity, Thls uud now Is probatign; Lo-morrow we are (o meet theissues of the eter- nity, 1 have much, as 1 clusely serutinlze my workdiwere, to regret. I feel that I might have done vastly more, and yet 1do feel that 1 have not shunmed to declure the whole counsel of God; Iif I have, I now invite you one and all to Christ ns your Savior. Wherever you are, do not be esjoled, betrayed, or defrauded out of n pereonal tnterest In'Jesus Christ. Study [His e, honor His splrit, and you will get the reve- latiun of nll knowledge that will be with your suul an aspiration that will be the foresecing of heaven. 1 tcel to-night not as though we were starting off on long aud tedfous journeys, but liken fumily that” parts In the wurning with kisses and goud wishes, sn’qu, “We will nicet azain nt dinner at uight.' Or rather ke an army hat bus gathered for the conquest of the world, amd the great Captain enys: Y You take that me was positlon; ~you start for Afrlea, you for America, you for Elberla, you for the Islands ~ of the ~ Sen,” ‘and report: wu shall meet at the vietory.,” Purt not in ef- feminate tears nud geltish ‘sympathy os though in were forever, but ns thougli wu leard the bugle blast for the oneet: * Go ye Into all the carth and ;lm.‘nch the Gospel to every ereature, with the whole nrnior of God, assured that we move on to victory and reunlon, Let us be bold to enter into the flzht, and we shall meet in the lelsure of our eternal home. Finully, brethren, farewell—only in my offl- cinl eapacity, not 18 persoual friends, not as Christins Juvers, Finally, farewell! By per- feet, be of good comforts be of one mind, tve in peace, and the God of love and pence sball bo with you forever.” Amen. THE MOODY REVIVAL. BENMON NIY THI REV. D, J, BURRELL. The Rey, David J. Burrell, of the Westmins ster Preshyterian Chuschy In s mornlng dis< vourse yesterday, conaldered the comlug revival work of Moody and Bunkes, e thought Chl- cago o most excellent fleld for n great religlous nwakening, Christ had sclected the larger cit- ies for 1is Iabore, and when He sent His Apos. tles forth to preach Iie had bebn careful to tell them to start from Jeruealem. He urged upon Hls nearers tho fmportunce of prayer aud the neeessity of their chooslug now what they would do. The erisis was an fmportant oue fn view of the fuct that, out of the 500, 000 populatiun, only 20,000 were professed followers of Christ fun the clty, wand there could be no middle ground. The evan- gellsts could do nothing without the prayers of the people, aud he counseled the furgetting of churches naud creeds, and everything for the snke of the salvation of souls, in the great work at hand. SERMON IiT DR, COLLYER, The Rev, Robert Collyer preached yesterday morulng upon the coming revival, His text wag, ** Jesus sald they shall put you ont of the synagogies? (John, zvl., 2), nnd he sufd In- pul- sinnce what follows: Wo were to hinve @ re- vival in our city, 1o trusted 8 might be thne, a3 he could imagine no botter blesslug than that new life which o real revival would he sure to brmg. When Chicago hos had a revival of re- 1glon she will be ripe for o revival of bushness, and we would be nble to give n fair show buth to God and mammon. 1 this should turn_out tobea real revival of religion, the touch of yride and Joy they woull feel in befuz decmed worthy to give money towanl it must be mivgled with regeet that the chure) to Which muny of them belonged lud not been thought worthy of an fuvitation to ns- sist (n the movement.” They bad been organ- fzed about 20 years, and had never been sus- veeted of Bdisig thelr lght under u bushel. There never had been o Sundsy when lie was unwilling to exchango pulplts with n Romunist, a Rabbl, o Presbyterian, or any other man of n clean Nle and sound spiritusl {nsight, i he would exchange with him, The managers of the revival hud no ground for snplm!n‘:lhnt Unity Charel would not take hohd with them in any movement which would bake the Truth mare clear and bring it home to the heart with miore furco and tire, "It was high tine that elusivencss was dono away with, He helfe the time was coming whicn they would eee un end of §t. It was ugreat mistortune for any churel to have nothilng better to o thain show _evidences of spite, and bo did not think that man could do much to make his nelghbor whole by spendhys his time in tearhig o speck on his cont fnto o big rent, He protested against the drirt downwur nto o more resohite sectarianinm, which keemed to be setting fn after that woud fellowship which hiad been growing o lttle wider and sweeter, Tt seemed to Lo o stand for that terrible {den that the Futlier was ungry with His children for thedr intiritics. ‘The proof u real revival did not e fn raying nmuny pm{““ or vbgerving the ceremonies of u churehy these were good thinga in their way, and le,\cd 10 4 religfous e 1L wan [ croctly altars fu the home where rellgion hlnssu"ufi ont fnto fresh, sweet amenlty, Futheral alt world yet b re d taal] His ehlls deen [u the dght of” Hia Ufe. The Bible would not always huve to stagger under ts welght of misupprehiension, The day wus comime when crror would s away, and’ the truth grow so winsouie and Juninous that it would be what it was in the olaen thne, £ wo once ot an fn- slght of the true religlon, the true purposo and drift of It woull develop themselves more and moro and muke 8 lieayen of this earth for thusy who llye after we_dle, With u new energy and a new heert, we should strive for the noblest and brightcst truth that God had unrevesled 1o us, That would be a revival which would grow 08 thu little sevds of grasa fn the spring, and it would blomom and tdpen and yield u barvest that would cover the whole curth, SEIMON BY THE REV. J. T. BUNDERLAND, The Rev, J. T Sunderlund, pastur of the Fourth Unltarian Church, cortier of Prolric avenue and Thirtieth stre terday morimy g addreseed his hearera on Y The Coming Mowuy The God and and Bankey Mectings as an Instrumentality for “Reaching tho Masses.' " Ilistext waa: Tha Kingdom of heaven cometh not with ont- ward show,—Luke, aril,, 20. ‘The: speaker hc‘zan h{ m*‘lng that there twas nothing for which the Moody wnd Bankey mect- Inga had heen so generally commended” na for reuching the masscs, t therefore secmed proper to investigate the subject. In tho first Illm‘e‘ reaching the mnases was by no tneans & hard thing to do If ong waa not particular how he did it, and was w!llln%' to go down to thuir level, as if, being & polifical speaker, he made free use ot funny stories and low wity or, being a theatre manmzer, he put on hls atage senss- tonal and spectacular plays; or, belng an edi- tor, he fills hifs sheet with reports of crime; or, being o preacher, he was willing In the same encral y to descend to the leval of e masses,” Tut the_question to be answered was, © What does it a1l amount to when we get them o ‘reached’ ™1 The speaker believed that any reaching of the masses which was worthy the attention of any oue who aimed at lustingz good muat proceed on a radically Aiffer- ent principle, Concernlug the proper ‘method of dolngz that which the wise tan wisted to do In reaching tho masscs, the spenker sald: *1lo nust put utterly and forever away all such {deas a3 that his work Is one that can posalbly be ue- complished in a single eveniug, or under the heat and nervous tensfon of w great religious meeting, or that any single emational expetl- ence or distinet aetlon of tho will can probably hiave any larie or controlling partin it. If lie would reach the masses In a way really and per- manently to elevate them, he must set Iy oprer- atlon agencies wnlch begin to exert their Influ- ence upon people {n as carly life as possible and continue for terms of years: and which shnl} ahin at nothing short of “slowly creating intellf- gzence.” Further on in his discourse, sud as the application of it to the question, the Reverend eentlemon safd: As there Is no single panacea which can cure all the ills which flesh 1a helr to, g there fs no single panacea which can curgall the evila of a8 hiphly complex so- clety, Thework must go on i fnany lines and under many forms, though all governed by the eame general principle. “Such reaching of the masxes as shall be at all ndequate to the needs of the times must include, as of the very Orst importance, T apprehend, inany things that are not dreamed of n the revivalist philosaphy. 1 apprehend that it must fnclude—nod Include not merely Incidentally, but primarily and cen- trally—uli such work as founding public Jbra- rlea, opening free and coally-accessible reading- cluband nmusement rooms,msking soclal provis- fon of various kinds for young men and wouien, particularly of the clags that are lmited in teans and adrift In the world; and gettinz o uperation nunerous and varled courses of inter- esting and valusble Jectures at little or no costy circulating healthful, instructive, and Inspiring literaturein the form of tracts, pamphlets, apers, and books; industeinl schovlss fak- g systematic and persistent cffort to patherand Keep In the day schools ruch children s are now little else thaw vagrants anl truants; multiplying and building up {ato efticlency in all purts of the country such {nstitutions ns'the Chieago Atheneum and the New York Couper Iustitute, where all classes of people, uo matter how ‘Your they may be, can cducate thetneelves; founding hospitals, aeylume, homes, reform- schoole, Institutions of beneficence of every Kind; ur:.i:mlr.lng ageoclations to lietp the poor 1o chicap homes and to comtortable and health- ful tencments; forming co-operative ussocistions and assoclations to carry on industrial opera- tlons {n such ways as shall Insure work of some kind ot some wages (even though low) to the poor at all times. IOWA. METAODIST CONPERENCE, Fpecial Dirpatch to The Tribune, Davesront, la, Sept. 20.—The Upper Town Methodlst Conference 18 now In seselon at Mu- quokets, with over 200 ministers present. Bishup Foster presides. On Friday the regular annunl misslonury sermon wos preached. Yes- terday was held the annual Sunday-school and cdueational suniversary, To-lay was held the Conference Jove-feast, followed by preaching by Bisbop Foster, followed by ordluation of Deii- cons, - The Conference will adjourn to-morrow, The Upper Jowa Confercice wus organized at Maquoketa just 20 years ago, The CHICAGO EXTOSITION s now a Magnificent Euccess, only sccond to the Cgntennlal, withi an ntteud- ance proportionately larger. The exhibits are nore ELEGANT, VARIED, ond IN- TERESTING than ever before. The ART DISPLAY 13 the very best In Ameriea, all other departments challenge cumperison for quality with any similurshow, Nu Intelligent persan ur fazully shiould fall to visit this Great Western Contenntal—TIE INTER-STATE IN- DUSTRIAL EXPOSITION OF CHICAGO, PRICES OF ADMISSION, For Adults, one sdmlsston, good fur 8l dsy and evenin. ¥ For Chtld evening, For Adults on Saturds Al dl‘ and evenlug, For Chfldren on katu for all ¢ay and evenin, tassansaee For Adulis, every du&' after 6 p, m. For Chitdres. every day after 6 p. m. Commutation Tickets, 0ftécn aamissiuns. 3 The Commutation Tlekews are especlally adapted excursion parties, McVICKER'S THEATRE, MONDAY and TUESDAY EVENINGS, Sept. 2hand 24, an orizinal domestic dramu of greut intereat, entitlod the COURIER OF THIE ALPS. To conclude with the laugznable farce of & PHENOMBENON 1IN A SNMOOK FRODX, 5, grand revival of the SEA OF [CE, sday, Oct, 2, HEORGE FAWCETT ROWE ceewsful comedy of *VBIASS, ll()OLEm"S NEW CHICAGO THEATRE, o rkest., ounosito Shermaa Houre. “ THE MINSTREL PALACE.” MONDAY, Sept. 23, Every eventng at 6. Wednes- day and Sutiinduy Satinecs ab 215 1. m ANOTHER GLORIOUS RILL. week of the side-apliting urlesque on TIIE CIROUOK, fntroducing the celebrat Peruviat of tho great SHELL. I billy ftive_ ou, Astronomy. Fojette W mo and Kise My, Daker wid Duyle fu new sungs and dances, ete, HAVERLY'S THEATRE, Formerly Huoley's Thestre, MAGUILE, & HAVERL s WILL ECIARN For tha week commeneing Sept, % AN ENTIRE OHANGE OF BILL., Firsy appearanee of BEN GILFOYL. Grand produe. 100 OF the bensattonal Sketeh, LIEE ON THI MISSIRSIPPI, Whnew andeiaboratc cenery and efeete, ety 2= AT W pusitively appes grvattenon B AUMONT (KRG, CHPeLTE 8lio the ADELPHE THEATRE, Thiv, Manday eve., Sept. 25, first time of the Grand S'pm-(znrnlnr Druma the **Black Crook,™ in a vtsle litherty anequated. aguldeont Tallet torgvole ) Itandolphest., between Lasalie, 'rflli‘rlflur: anager ant scener utle Effccts,’ Twoy hune dred Arth Al new Bueclaltivs Introduced. Every ull dies' night. Extra nintinee Wedness day, tozether with the Grand Saturdsy Mutlnee, dvance in prices, fept. 25, Afternoon nnd Evening, TNCLE TOM’S QABIN —_ Y-m ‘1:”1‘!,\;“1’!!.!'-' u:‘;n_muu‘.‘ll_uuu.. SIATIREN=I0 wun 43 centy, —r 0 Seu: KID GLOVES. Courvoisier's Black 2-button, with the aclebra‘ed Lertin Cuff, 6l and 8% at §1.00; Gt $1,26 3 04 at S1.60} 6! at $1,76; OX at $2,00. Theso goods are sold in New York at $2.50 por pair. ParisKid Glove Store, 04 STATE-ST. ALGN GOODS, THE CONT L TOR NAL ToRCHY FOR PROCESSIONS AND PARADES) SHALEIVS LATEST AND BESTY {ileaoiu Kaull, 80 per Duich’ £10 ity by KL R . Frtabiy i Macuthen: arioaklug gos Troin Nabuiis, *§ie beal, eheay V30 World;, frumm & s Lusner 10 4, RESIUNBIBLE_AUENIS WANTED, FAIR wmiine STANDAKD CALES Oy ALL KiNDS, ANK®.[NORSE & 00, 3 Luke St., Chicaya, Berars nb. buy iy ile Gannine, EDUVOATIONAL. TTTH.B.BRYANTS (TICAGO BUSINESS COLLEGR And Ynglish Training School, BTATE-8T., 8, B. COR. WASHINGTOW, Largest inatitation of the kind In the United Statos, Th on, E. 3 forcireiase, T DRYAN T Caagne T R AAE g TR Charlier Tnstitute for Young Ladies, il lfl} .‘{ud::‘ml-nv., New York, reo A R LA o or . Lirculars ¢an be had on application, or *utnia; Mile, SOUPMIE LENZ and I?rormor !lllh,\ N, Prine e, e MADAME O. DA SILVA. and Mrs, Alex Hradford's (formeely Mra. Ogden Hoflman'a) English, French. and German Roarding onil Day-School for yonng fadlea and childeen, with ?f’\“‘mc,l,(l:' c::.o.il7&\';‘"Tlxrty]-lclullflh-ll.. Now . Tteo Sept, 43, picutio made hrh-ur::r orpcr"mnnlly. npdtmve‘ iy CITEGARAY INSTITUTE 18 Wednesdor, 9ant, o0, LAt AND ] 14488, bl French, Bprucesat. By S5 17 et omring o ThJ QNN ROHOOL, onrding and ['ay Bchool for Y e o e SOV g Ladies nd Chist, I e ineh eiten taihe Crody oF theTiinmey oF s % X H Flire Aris: neseingin November,” e HIMry of this N ORTH S16K BCIHOOL TOR nb‘vs.m i Torm arena Seqt. 28, iea. EARRATS Adurees or opply dally, 12102 GECIL . . JAILNES, A. T, Manter, XD INBTITOTE FOIt YOUNG LADIES— on-Ifuilsont beautitnl situation, pleasant :"::l‘m":‘:ll,‘un:‘!rlg{nnl‘m “'yll',""’.“"““““bj -l.lu d P Alhorehiinte frincl .ml“rlnc.;ll' Collegu) Lady Principal, IEMOISELLE 1 OREMTEULE AN 4 )" Keit) known formierly a4 Mrs. MeCauley's Beliwol, French and Engiish bosrding and duy sliol er;‘y&kkludlu reopens Sept. 23, No, 277 Madin iGi 0 mxwll:\“\ /\I(L_\'lllz)l\'. WOIRLE: cs lin gradintes T X o Ao aIUTIRC i UNIVERSITY, eteatlfie orthfield, Vi. Adiress Prof. Cil ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF YRALYS JORrwICH AN Hehoo), ¥ rive sunday atsa. m. 11, JTI0AGO & HORTHWESTERR RAILWAY, | Arrive, uPaclfic Fast Line. avubugue Doy Ex. via Ciintoi o iy Night kix, ViaGi'ton 1) auitinlia Night EXPress,.v.., u!runru.ut‘ . &Duburue ugreprttio-k'os #hubuque LUwaukee Faxt Mull (duiiy) waukee EXpria. a—=Depat cotner of WWells Debot Cormer of Cont and Ko s HICHIGAN Denot, B o8 S n LA St o P ATLEOAD. . Tirket-ollee, 67 o 1 Al southieast carnerof s ¢, 1 ¥ alnier Ho uo Atluutle EXimress (dalis.. RSN K2 (romperae s UHICAGO, ALTON & BT LOUI3 sul CHIOAGO i ln-;‘uyjcu:t At fifjfit’.fii lfi'{ffi"‘&?mfi-‘:{.‘ e _Leme. o Arrive, ‘Kuntas City & Denver s A oG ah Demer Fpre B Hngieid & i reds, eoria, iKéokuk & B Chitugue: Puiucali 1, Klreator, Lacuu, Wiy ton duiles o Dwlight' Ao, Matl, via Main Line.. Epecial N, Y. Expreas. Atlantic Express, duily Colehonr Avcourinudation’s P iosttonnn CAI0AQO, MTLWAUKEE & ST, PAUL RATLRIAD, Union Deput, cornier Madisun and Cahal-sis. Tlekes Oillce, (55 2outh Clurk-at,, uppos st ab, upposite bherwan House, Miiwaukee Fxi Wisconain & T Wi iy, oo ™ 1* 5:05 p. m, [*11:002. m. 15 p, m |t 7:00 8. m, AT, e s ekt (0 5 Tl d Minneapol guod eltier via Madison and Fray 4u Chivn, or vis Wateriown, Ls Crasse, fl:d w‘mc';.f : Depot, fo THLIOM JENTERL RARoAD. T e WULRORD, PO Dt T30 Habduipheuc., hear cintir o1+ £1. Louts Expres &1, Louly Fust L Catro & Now O Cairy Night springiicld, Rirlngtield Peord and Duliuiue & e Bloux g Dubugue, iilman 1 (HI0AGO, BURLINGTON & QUINOY RAILROAL Lepots, 1008 of Lakest,, [pifana-av,, wnd Sixteenty: 1., onid Canal aid Slxiventhests. Tieket Otlices, b Gl B Bt A T O Arrive. | Leave. | Bail and Express, Alalland Beores s Tigekrord, Dubuque & Sloux | X st Line, tor Kausas Uity, Leaveuwo, Ateltuoi &8t Joreph Aurors Passoiger Mt;l\dulll‘.‘t()nlwn\ nger. uro nier (Siniay) Dubuaug & luux City Ep... Pac(ic Sight Exp, for Owal Kanuua L WiLer's Urova Accomin Duwiier's Grove Accoimtuo, lexas Fxpress., * Ex. Sundsy, TRx. o Tikes o L COAG0 LINE, i Retiics maal Al et Eab0 i, Hapupates Grand Leave, | Arrive, 1 Ex. Saturday, Day Express—Pultman Dravw S IKoom Steeplng Cars, Bow Vork witliout elinge.. Afantlc Expres = Pulling PaluceDna ing- oo Sleep- Tk Cura und UL L Runp. m, “Uuly line running tha otel cars v New Yori CHICAQQ & PAUIPI0 RAILEOAD, Dgpot coruer ¢Chicago-aveoue N ficket Uive w0 Ciu Keatreute o0 Larrauce-utrect. B:30@ m.| 8:10a. m, |_Avtive, 1 Depart. Yewer ari “Curner Parl .| o }Ieln[ll.‘..A. n:ll,hll’- :n. PITISBURG. FT, WAYNA & CHICAQO RAILWAY, Day Express..., E;lflfi Dopres: jcal Paascoge: ] B0 Fils L ) B0 by 18 5:00p. i, & Bunda; et L fllundnyyu::fi?m:d' §ally, fSatunday excepied. Traon s i o OO, RATLROAD i 8 R g oy T T "aling i 1aciics aad Dept (Exposieion Lstiitng ™ Leave, tive. Day Express. Y& m. |} 5108, @, pm EX)rens e M T suifc kxpre Y358 fu .l 41408 w, VDally,” 9 Daily, Sundays czcepted, OHIOAQGO, ROOK ISLAND & PACLriU RAILROAD, Licpat, corucr 0F Vay iurel ahd Bheriman-st, Tickel . ujtice 66 Clark-at., Bhermiau il Omaha, Leavenw'th & Atch Rx's: €1 A ccowtnodativg,, N Ih'nl'i.'lulfill- wereen SAMIUNAVIGAELD GCODRIOH'S BTEAMERS, For Milwaukey, i,y dully (Sundays excepted, Eutardoy DUAC dos feuv untl 2 ’sfin"‘,, For Grand Haven, Grasd Japl " Gatly (sundoyy exeepie ur Grecl Friiey.

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