Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, October 23, 1876, Page 7

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THE CHICAGO TRIBDUNE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1876, REVIVAL. Servicos at the Tab- A Trinity of _— ach of ‘Chem Attended by an Jmmense Audiences Discourso Dovoted to tho gubject of Han's Worlk, Afternoon and Evening os to the Now Birth. 3 MORNING. E{Sl‘uf\xufl STHYICES, Chuistlaus of Chicago, to the 000, gothered at the Taber- e to hear good advice aud goud Gospel slnging from The hymna were, Work, for the n 4 Am I a eoldier of the very cffective solos, ** What o, Brother,” and “ Qo_work there's plenty to do.”* Prayer esson waa from the twonty- of Matthow, tho parable of tho tal- Mr. Moody came to this toxt, #1 e that thou arluit hard man,” he threw ki ¢ That follow told an awiul knew the Lord was o hard man, fows that e didn't know Him yoke [s easy and Ilis Lurden s 1 Serlptuva lesson was read from ~0fth chapter of Lxodus, belng an the offerings of the people for the peclally on the verae, “0Of every man it willingly, with his Lcart, ye aball 1t aman could ot give erlet iim bring on bis braes, and If rass let i Lring a badger-skin— slenty and chicap; If e hind no flue Ining a little guat's hair; surcly 1 us much as that, and the irts are just a8 acceplablo to God as the i they aro only ofiered willingly. Scriplure lesson, another bymn was while the doors were opened to let n the 1o ccuets oub of thesain, and then blr. Moody THE ADDRESE. Tae text was Marks, stit, 34: “To every mon s workd!! Thero sro quite o number of leaves coming b of my Liblo ot the places where I hinve cacliod drum 1t the most, The thivd chapter Joln 13 Tooee, und 8o 48 (his thirteenth of Az, *To every man Iis work,” 1t dues not work or tome worls, but his work. Tho Taid o plain for every man's lfo, a4 out lug worl for nhu from ail ersitye Livery one of you has his ownap- pustea tasky aud no mithlster, ov deacou, or gz ur steward van possiuly do it for you, A ristlans are weak ol slekly, time getting Into se thoy dun't pave this toxt thor- 1 sometimes think 4 wateh the revords of e charches, and wien suybody wants o finy 10 have the minister g 1 Bied 1 LhetE herd e nitnn, * What tortotof tiouble, anid to sleep and takc it capt i that s the caze we don’t want you; ¥ steh menrbers alvendy.” What 4 there should be o many ailent part- glish call ft, slecplng unrt- cersy fu this buginess. of carryime on the salvit Wit a mlsfortune it would be It your il should mot grow sny for ten or teeu years; but that s just the case with o y ot ¢a0 Lord'a children hero fn Chl- 420, woeomie of them who ave praying e qame 0l prayers to-day that they were piay- n 183, when 1 first “eatng out herej they a'tgrown a bit in ail that time. The ey o it 18 beeause they have not done their think it 1 a great misfortune I a child Ia H ceat puny demib ehil- or busluess, or gos- liey can talk politl eiungeh, but they tell thelr pastor not to eIty W pray or speak i wectlngy oot think of doing such 8 thing—have o peof speech ot adl. Anont ninc-tenths of the Juople are dwars, and eripples, and deal and baud a good many ui thew are almost Yuakuow the old-country fashion of halding ouetings 1 the school-holtses nt early candle- lat, Welly when it begins to grow dark, o wsucomes and brings his candie; goes into the Gack room and etrikes u Hght. “Liat one talluw- whtlecan’t co much towards lighting-up the + Khwklonse, but pretty soon suotiier man catille, and then another, ¥ the time they huve n hun- tred candles lghted, the place Is pretey well 1t- wiesnd brisgs | xid shutler cadl, o Jou ke lighi-houses, but every one of you i t c. 0, 1 buve oni; £ 1 bat ten’t ke, L it e of_goin bl ‘Thu Lext suys, every mun o . You don't need talénts to do some- Uy tlse's work, wid every one of 0t wough fer bis own work. khat for eltpies Mr, Sankey hasu'ta very Eattulent for preaching, God bas appolnted Ve of ua bis own work, by, woman, andt chald In tho wholo world. Soitichody invited e to go duwn to the dog Jlesald they wers and to overy other i Lozdon une dny. £i57 10 luve sume prenchin péuple. The streets were ’l Wwith the ronghest-looking set 1 ever % Alwost everybody had sotething to eell: oclky or rotmetbing in shat ted to sell to gee liquor, awl tried to be heard, but ol patd no attention to them, d sume oue sald, ¥ Moody, youure from 'l_l them Who you are, and th ) tliey p o ‘n’wr‘i“’l fora Liap,ora Uglting vhile, for those peoplo think ea £ the next thing to Paradise, But Wt tu tell them nbout u bettor iea, and Invity them atl'to go to horred away from e and went dog-fighting wnd thelr cock-tight- came n rough man who had sht out from among that 3 uml when he got up on the chulr peak all his old niates crowded i tell the story of the Cross, him a work to do among rs which He had not given 9t of usj there ure plenty of uld tako things from you that ake from tho minster, tan at the Wushington Market Who was converted Tn our muet- that be usod to luok up hurs, and bying them Into £ 0 With them nto the el tho Bible ter another, (11 they .?pun\l o hiear i ul pray with Toumt Christ, b awd ook up sumebody olse, ough 1 skl to hims e a lst of those people,” for pt one; and he brought meu ty-ning nates and addresses on it s hie Ll that winter Ted to the i lem kind of work which every e Is augther lesgon T want you to_lenrn, EiVe s just us many talents as tee of, and if wo use one talent Lwo; if wo make good use dten, Don't you rement- les what they nt They salil %It fa enough,” one of the disciples, An- ho of the loavee, ufter to go out and feed not huye very much a littlo plece to give to iz tomnake the bread hold noless after e hud broken 8 Lreaks off a bigger Lo vedues the sleo of und g0 his fafth nuch os they noe ho hiad no doubt but evory 1p of Isroel believed thit 0 L0 out and ultitude with =£F% o believo that God will use Ly gives us » work to do for s our own, and which if pot ho done at all, und then lng perfectly £aco thers would ho going 2,000 or 8,000 lead to Chirist. you this questions promlse the Lord our sequaint- All of you who will do your fect while we ongregation responded by Wecun do g wy ? you’ herg il £, talng, and Mr. Moody closed tho prayer, eting with s, THE AVIERNOON, THE USUAL BUNDAY TIRONO was at the Tabernncle at 4 o’dock n spite of mud and ratn, with the usual overflow meetlng at Farwell lnll. " Mr. Moody's scrinon, *The New'Dirth," produced the most profound effect of nuy yot given. 'Iho sound of weeplng and sobbing contd bo hicard over the great cougre- Eatlon fn response to somo of his telling fius- trutions und vehement exhortations, At the close of tho serimon, o report of which Is given Letow, thy inquiry-rooms were filled with ear~ neat scokers, and Christian worlers, Bible fn h‘iuixll, afoctivnately inslructing them fn the way ol life, Thanks to somobody, porhaps to Mr, Trus- dell, the ehlef usher, perhaps to Mr. Cree, the manager, perhaps to thy Exceutlve Committee, the bymu-book pedaling, which used to be such n nulsance, on Sundnys ns well s othor duys, has heen altogether suppressed on the Lori's Day, and bronght within suftuble In tnls respect the Chi- 1tmits ut otlior thises, cago peetings aro n groat improvoniont oi those whiteh huve preceded them elsewhere. THE SENMON, Jr. Moody then mpoke s follows: I want toenll your uttention to n part of the third verse of tho third chapter ot St. John, S Except woman bo born again ho cannol see the Kiugdom of Heaven,” Bupposo I put the question to this audlonee, and usk how many bolleve fn the Word of God, 1 liave no doubit every wman and eyvery womnn would rise and eay *I belleve.” 'I'nere might be an intidel or skeptie here wind there, hut undoubtedly the great mnsy would say they believed. “Then what are you going 1o do with tals solenn truth, ¢ lExeept o mnn be born again he cannot see the Ringdom of God,” muchTess fnliorlt it] Theve ave a uveat many mysterfes In the Word of God. There sre o great nuny dark eoy ings o which we huve not yet discovered L dupth, But God has put that fssuv sv pininty amd slply Lmt he wino runs tay vead ) e will. “Thiis thivd chiapter of 8t. doin makes the way to Henven pluser than unly uther chapter inthe Bible; yet there ts no truti so imuch nls- nuderstood, and the Chureh and the world are b0 troubled ubout, aa this, Let me just suy, bafore 1 go any further, WHAT REGENENATION I8 NOT. It 1 not roing to church, llow many men think they are converted beeause they go to churehl £ come tn contact with 1 sny they are Christians beeause they go to cnureh pegulnrly. It ts o wrong fdea thut the deyil never frequents any place but bilfford- halig, ealoons, and theatses; wherever the Word of tied s prenched he fs there, 1Mo ls f this audience to-day. You |nn¥ o to cltieh il the daya of your HMfe, snd yet not he con- verted, Golng to caurch s not Lelng born agadn. But there {s another tlags Wl 0 sy * 1 dun't plaee iy hopes ih go! li to chiul 1 have been beptized, ana I thnk was regenerated when that Lok place.”" Where du thoso perzuns get their evidenve! Certainly not in tho Bible, “You camuot baptize men into regencration, If you conld, 1 would go up und down the world and baptize every inau, wWotn, anch ebfld g mnd §F 1 couid not do ft when they were swike, I would do it while they slept. But the Word says, ** Except o man be born again,'? —horn in the spirit, born i rlghteousncss iron above,~4 he cumiot gee Lhe hanpdom of God.™ Thers is wnother closs who say, “I was born ugrain when wna contirmed, I witd conllrmed wien 1 was 5 years oll.” - Lut conlirmution 1 nut regeneration. A new birth must be the work ot Gody mud not tho work of man. Baptism, vonlirmation, und other ordinanees are right In their pluce, hut the moent you butld hope on them inetead of on new birtd, yon are being de- ceived by Batun, Another mun snys “that s not wiat my hope s based upon; I say my wuyers tesuiarly, . 1 osuppose tiere wis no i prayed more regularly than Paul did be- Toru Chiriet et himg he was o praylng man, But saylng proyers {3 one tinng and prayogs b unuthier, ~ Baying pinyers s Hob conversion, You mny pray arom educstion; your mother nwy have taugint you when you werea little buy, 1 remember that B ocoudd not go to slecp when I was o littlo boy unless I eant my prayers, oml yet perhiaps the next word 1 uttered ight e no eatl 18 just us much virtue in countlg b suying prayerd, unless the neavs senciated and burn again, "Thero is another class who eny, ©I read the Bible regulnely,” Well, reading the Bible iy very goudy ang prayer 18 yery goud n [ta placos bur you don't sce anything i the Seriptures which eays, “Exceptn man vead the Biblo he canol see the Kingdom of God? "There §s wthl pnother class who say, * 1 am trying to do tho best 1ean, and I will come ont allricht, ‘I'hat I8 not new birt) ug been re- born of God, Trying to do_the best you can i3 nobt regencratfon. This ques- tlon of mew { uth 18 the 1nost Iinportant that ever came before the world, and ftonghbt to be settled in every mun's mlnd, Lvery une shouldt inguive, **Eave I seen born fn the eplrit; have 1 paased from death unto life, ar am L bulidiug my hopes of heaven on some form " 1n the fisst chuter of Genests we find Uud working alone; e went on creating the world atl alone, ) we lind Chirlst coming to Calvary nlone, His diselples foreook lim, und n redeinption fe was glune, And when we get to the third chapter of John we flid that the work of regenciution is the work ot God ulone, “The Btbluptan cannot change his spota; we are horn In ¢in, and the changus nf heart must come srom God. We heticve {n the good ol Gospel. WUAT MAX WANTS I8 to come to God for this new heart. The mo- tent he grets 1t he will work for the Lord, He cannot Lely itg it becones bl sceond nature, Somo eay, “I would like to have yon explaln tins new birth.” Well, 1 might us well be honest, and own right up that Leannot ex- plain {t. 1 bave read a great many bouks and sermons teylng to explam the philosophy of it, but they alt fuil to do ft. I don't uiicrstand liow It fs done. 1 cannot understand how tiud created eurth, It staggers mo und bewllders me when I think how God created nuture out of nothing, — Dut, the infidels, o did not do ft. Chen how did He do b Aauan eame to me fu Scotland, and salil e could explain it, and I nsked bl how those rocks are made. e eald “hhey are made from sand.” % \What mukes the sand” “Ou" ho replled, * rocks,' “Then," 1 asked him, * what _made the first sand* I couldu's tell. Notwithstandin the philosophy of some people, we do belley that Uod did'ereate tne world, We belleve in redanption, Wa belleve that Chrlst came from the Futher, and that Ile grew up and taught men, We believe He went Into the sepulecre und bursted the bauds of death, You wmay ask mo to expluin alt thiss but I don't know how todoit. You aak e to explain regeneration, Tecannot doit. But one thing 1 know—tbat I Jmve beon regencruted. All“tho nfidels and slkeptles coutd not mako mo believe differently, Ireel o ditferent mun than [ did twenty-oie ?-unru ago lust March, when God gave me w new joart, I have not swurn since that nizht, nml I haye no deslre to swear, Tabor for G, and all the influ cannot_convinee me that 1 ot nol a different man. ard some e ngo about four or five commercial travelers golng to hear a minls- tor preach, When they got back to thele hotel, they begon to diseuss tho sermon, A good maby peopls Just go to chureh for the purpoze of disettssing those things, but they should re- member thut they must be spiritually inciined to understund spliritunl things, Those truyel- ers came to the wise concluslon that the minister did not know what he was tallilng about. An old man hieard them say they would not believe anything unless they could reasun it out, and he went up to them and sulds ¢ While 1 was comlvg down {n the train this morning L noteed fn aaleld some shieop, suine gevse, some swine, and cattle eathng grass, Can you tell mo by whint process that greass s turnicd into hair, Teathers, wool, aud hurns? ¢ No,» tley suwered, “ not exnetly.” ¢ Well, do you hes Jieve it I8 donoi™ * Qli! yes, we belleve that,” # Dut,” sakl the old wan, you sald you could not bellevoanything uuless you understood it," S Oh," they anewered, ¥ wo cannot help bellev- ing that} wosce it." Well, 1 CANNOT UBLE UELIEVING TIAT I AM KBQEK- ERETED, BEUAURE § FREL IT, Christ could not explaln {t to Nicodemus, but sald ta him, *The wind blowethwhero ftlisteth and yo hear the saund thereof, but yo canvot tell whither it cometh or whence it goeth,” Can you tell all about the currentsof the airé o Enys It is every ono that {4 born of the Spirit, Brpposv, because I neversaw the wind, 1 say it was all fulse, I have lvednearly forty years, and 1 never saw the wind, I weversaw a man that ever did see {t. £ can hinugine that little #irl down there sa)‘lng, That man don’t know na much as I do, “Dida’t the wind blow my hat off the other day? Haven't I felt thocflects of the windl Haven't I felt it beating aguinst my fuepd” And 1 say Yol never saw tho oifeets of tho wind any mure thana child of God felt the Epirit working in Lils heart, 1le knowsthat his eyes buve beenopaned 3 it ho has been born of the Spizit; that he lng gut unothuer nature, a beart that gows up to tml arer ho hay beon born of the Spirit, 1t seems 10 ma this fa perfeetly reasonabie, Wo have i [uw thut no wan shall be elected President untees he was born on Aterican sofl, I nevor heard any one complain of thiat law, Wo have Germang, S, licrs frowm all parts of the worll, sud I never heard o wun complaln of that law, Haven't wo gut [y rn{hl. to say who shlh refgni Had I any right whon I was fu Engluud, where a Quuen koigus, to lutez- y wien who tall; that s not being. uidlnavisus, forefiznorscomlug. 1 forclaner any right to Interfere ¢l Iias not the God of Henven a right to sy low 4 1nan shalt como nto His Kigdon, atil who sliall coma! And Ho says: © pL man be born agalnhe cannob kee the Klogdom, ' Ilow rre you polng ta get it Uolng to Lry to tdueate ment ‘Fhat ts what men aie’ tryfng to o, but it is gt God's way, A man is not much hetler after hie I8 cducated If he hasn't got Goil I his hearte Other men sy, 1 will work my way up't ‘Thot 18 not “God's way, auil the ouly wnf Is God's wayy—to he born again. leaven fs & prepared place for a prepared people. You take an unregens erated iman in Chicago this afternoon, and put hiin o the eryatal payement of fleaven, amd it wouldl Le helfl A man that can's bear to speud uhe Sunday among o' people on enrth, with oll thelr Biperfeetions, what 18 he golis ta o unong thoae who have made thelr robes white nihebloud of the Lamb! e woulid sy that, was hell for him, Tuke the unregencrated man and put him into the very shindow of tie Free ol Lafo aud his wouldi't want to sit there, A man who Iaborn Into the Splrit heeopes o cftl- zen oLanuther worid, 1Mo Jins beon translated futo now 1fe, taken out of the power of dark- neag, nud translated fnto the Kingdom of Lizht, Haven't yau seen all around you 1 who had become suddenly and entirely chiny 1 AUST DUAW A PICTURE Bupposo we go dowit Into oue ol Lheee alleys— anu i have heen fnto some pretty dark livles down hero in thia alley that used to'lle back of Madlson atrect, and 1 bave seen some pretty wretehed homes, (o to one of those tooms, and you find wife, with her four or five chil- dren, e woman 18 Lieart-hroken, 8he 1s dis- couraged, When she marrled that man L swore to proteet, fove, and care for her, and provide fur all her wapts, He made good promises atid kopt them, for o few years, and did love her. But he got fed away hito one of these drinking roloons, He was a nodle-learted man by mature, and those are juse the ones thint nie led astray, He has now Lecome a couflrmed drankard, Fs children con tell by s footfnll thut he comes hoine drunk. They look upon bim us o moneter. The wife hay many u sear on her hody that ghe has recelved ironi that man's nrm wio swore to love and protest her, Justead of belng a kind-hearted dushind lie bay become o den He don't provide for thal pour womuan, Vi there 13! Aud may God i poordrunkard and his fanily s constant.y! Supposc he §3 here this aiternoon in that gatlery up there or i the dark back there and your can’t sco b, May be lie s su ushamed of lumzelf that he has got bebind o post, Tle heurs that e may be regen- crated; that God will take wway the love of strongy drink, and snap the totiers that have Leen vinditg fém, and make bin o free iau, und he says, By the grace of God 1 will usic Him to give me a new heart,” Awd he saye, “oh Gog, save me!” "Then Le goes home, 11s whesays, “Enever saw my husband look so happy or years. What bas come oyer him1" Hesays, *Lhave been up there to bear these strangers, I heard Mr, Bankey stuging ‘Jesus of Nuzareth passeth by, and it touched my heart, ‘Che sertnon wovout being born agafih tonched my heart, and, wife, 1 just prayed right there, and nrke God to give me s now hearty, and § belfeve He hnsdoneft. Comne, wile, pray with mel” Awd there thoy Kneel down and oreet tho family nltar. ‘Fhree months henee you go to that home, and what do you findf Al ds changed. He s “Hovk of Ages eleft for ng,” or thut n his wother oneo taught him, SThere” Is w ountaln filled with blood.”? s children _have thor orms upon his ne That 3 Ileaven upon earth, The Lord God dwells there, ‘Lunt man s pagsed from denth nnto life. ‘Ihat 5 tho couver- slon we are alindigg at. "The wan bs mude better, and that 3 what God does when & man hos the spirit o1 Heoven unon htm. He regenceates o, recteates thum in his own Jmaze, Let us pray that every man here this alternoon who I thu Jove of strone drink may ho convertal, Unite f prayer with me now und ask God to sn}'u these nien that are rushing on Lo death and ruin % TITE EVENING. THE AUDIENGE, II tho congregation which filled the Tabernacle throuzhout on lust evening was ehictly conposed of persons who do not betong to the regular church-golng cluss, then Meassrs, Moody and Bankey ought to Le both very abrry aul very glad; sorry that su muny sensible-looking peo- plo do not go tu church i Chic s and glad that they are coming Lo the Tabernacle to licar the Gospel ns it s set forth he this forclble, vvangelistle fushion of sermon and s and fellow-lnborers of they never kuew him to he more £ong. Mr. Mooy s happy {n speech than yesterday. The singing, ulso, was fuspliiug, Descon Thane taking Mr, Btebbing' pluce us chordster. hiave fhled this statlon clsewhgre. The hymne were, “I min so glad that Jesus loves me, “Take the name of Jesus with Thy welcome volee,” and # solo “Let us seatter the secds of kinduess for our reaplug bye-and-hye. The youy" Ll by Mr, Saul opening proyer wes by the He! Seripture: legson, Gulithus, Afth the Jourteenth verse. Ir. Erdinang huptery 1rom Ln answer to the question how any one was to know whether or not he swas a teie child of God Mr. Moady suld, “* L think this chapter will s tle it for you” * He then read the’lust of *tne worls of the fesh,” und also ** the fruits of the epirit.” “If any one §s doing the former works, hie I8 not converted s i the lattery ho may call himself a chd of Gods Agasust Lthose who ure bringing forth the frults of the 8plilt the Serip- ture says thero ds vo law, There would be very few lawycrs If every won was o child of Gou'y nu thleves, uo slanderers, ho r]uurml«, nuthing for lawyers aud Judges to do.' Mr. sloedy then prayed with much ferver, especially remembering the brethren who were Leginning their work m the couutry yesterduy, THE SERMON, You remember, suld hy, that I wns preaching this afternoon from tha third chupter of John, at the third verse, [this is one ot the clnprors which Mr. Moody says he hus vead and presched alnost out o bils Bivle], aud to-night L want to wako up the subject just where I left off. Weo had potas furua thu doetring that the new Blrth 1s not a reform, not mcerely turning over a now leaf, not w resolution to o better, but o cleassingr of the fountan su that the streams are pure; o cleansiog of the tres so that the frult will bu good. Hegeneratlon goes Tight Lo the root of the matter, und makes u sloner all new; gives him a new heart, und thut wmakes o new lte, Now, some man will say, “Oh, thatis the rlght sort of doctrine to preach to drunkaris amd harlots, and oll sorts of very bad people, but guod, respectable people don't need jtt But thnt is n grest” nistake. Chrlst didn't prench regenerntion to thut Samaritan woman at the weil, but to Nieodenius, who was an o thodox Jew, one of the furem en fn Lerael, « niue ugainst whom there f3 nut o slngle word in the Bible, 1lo was on the very tup round ot tho Jadder, but yeb Jesus says_Lo ' him, “Ye must Ly born ogaln' Nicodemuts s very much surprised at this kind of doctrine, and geets the statement witha *llow,” “Ilow ean these things bed" Cnrist tells him, That which Is born of thoe 1 in fleshs 0t B8 nothing else but fleshy, nd never will be, titl after the worms have eaten it I the prave.” God nowliere promises (o meud the ficali; be don't mean to put now patclies on old garments, or new wing lnto old bottles. i plaar 48 to make all new from the very be- umx‘nug, aud that {s what it means to be” burn again, When Iwas born, in 1837, I was born after the tlesh, bors with o bad nature which 1 Inher- fted all the way back from fullen Admm; but 1 was born agalit i 15645, und then I becuing clnld of God, A Chiristiunis the most remurkably thing un the [mee of the carth, e has two na- tured, o fleshly nuturc and w spiritusl nutire, und they are at war one ngalnst the other, til sracs finally and fuly triumphs over nuture. This world I8 une vast hospltal; overy ono s sk every one nueeds a physician, but,teanks bo to tiad, thore Is a Great Paysiclan ablo to cure all discases of soul and Gody, 1 beard of wn cminent surgeon in Belfust who used to go into thy hespital, and wuen he fonnd o wounded man ho would maoke rewly to operate on him, und then ho would say to the poor fellow, **Look ut your wound; take # good luok at §13* and when he bad come to roatizo what w bad und dungerous wound I was, he would say, % Now look ad me’* That ho way with Ciirist, the Great Physiclun, Howants ud 't tuke a good look ut our sick wud sinful souls, mid then e wants us to stap looking At ouraelyes and our sins, und ool straight at Hbn, NOW WH COML TO TIHE REMUDY this Great Physiclan uses, 1 always hike to get down to this jourtcenth verse: *¢ And as Maodes lifted up tho serpent u the wilderness, even o must the Bon of Man bo lifted up, that whosoover helleveth In Him stiould nut perishy but lave rlasting life.” Not oue hieie, and another there, und unother somowhiero else, but whosoover believeth, Uod wauts every stier to bu saved, Somebady will say, * Why!l that is Universalivun'’ Yes, the ofier ba g wlversel offer. (God vilurs to rave cyery one. Jesus Christ by the grace of ol tasted deuth for every man, All you need to prove Is thet you were born in this world, and I will prove to you that you hove uw Savior. you weve borit In the oo o some ol the ilancts, 1 don't know how the cuse may be, but ll yuu are born of our humay flesh aud bluod His quist and modest faghion of conducting the choir was in marked contrast with certaln gontlemen who may also be born again,—bhorn of the aplrit into everlasting life, J mceeta good many complaints that thero Is no Justice in God condemning sinners now on aceount of the slna of Adsin, and some people roy chey don’t belfeve the Bible, because it tewhes that doctrine. Now, thab isu be, ‘The Bible teaclies no euch thing, 11 anybody is lost it will not be on aceount of Adain's sin. Let mo fllustrate. We will suppose I have the con- sumption. $dld not get It by iy owit fuuit, by uny neglect of my liealths ¥ inberited 4, leb us suppose, Welly Fgo to the Lest pnysiclane, and togy all give me up, They say Tam focur- able; 1inust die; [ have not thirty doys to live, Wetl, u triend bubpenis to coute ulong and looks ot e, and Aoy “ Muudy, you bhave got the consumption,” 1 know It very well; I don't want any one to tell me that,” n l’l,nl there s a remedy—a remedy, 1 toll you, “But, eir, T dow't believe ft. 1 have tricd the leading physicians in this country and b Ku- rupe, min thiey teil me there b no hope,™ * But YO ko e, Mooy s you have Knuwn me for Fuaren? 4 Yon sir? Wiho you thinky then, [ Would tell youa fulschood? 7 6 NoJt ™ 4 Wl tun years o:xo | was us tar gone a8 yo. I wa. ch up by the phyalclana Lo die, "but I tovk s medieine wid It eured me. 1 am perfectly well=look ot e [ opay that it b o very LIS LA, o8, It may bo stranie, but it 13 0 fact, That medicine cured me; take this medicine snd It will cute you. Although It has cost e great deal, it shitll cost you nothing," SWelhY L eay, 1 would Jike to betieve you, but this s contrary to iy reason.' Hearing thix, iy triend poesaway and Lrags another triend to me, aud Lo testifies to the same thing, e ugaln goes away when 1 do not yeu believe, and urings in another friend, wnd vuother, and unothier, and snothier, end they alk testily to the eamne thing, ‘They say they were ns bud as 1 utny that they took tiie saine medicine that has becn oftered mey and {4 cured thenn, e then Lunds me the medivine, 1 idnshit to the ground; 1 donot hetieve in ity 1 will not take at, nn»li die, Whose lmut 15 itt Gud gave His only Hon to purchase He und pardon tor me. e oilers [ to me dreely, 01 refuse ft, and am Touty whose tault will it bet It we are i tae camp and are bitten by the flery serponts, it wiil do no good tu louk ot the wound, Louking ot o wound wil never suve any une, What we must do s to ook wt the remedy, to lovk away to Lim whe hath power to suve you from your sln, Behiold the ¢amp of the Ieraclites. Futhers aml mothees are wearfug wway thor ebliren, AMany u child has heen bitten by the liery sev- pents. Over yonder they are just burying a muther: adl “the family are weeplng. You hear th mourpful erfes, yuu see the bitier teare. Tue Luther s belug borue awuy o his lust restlog-pliee, "Tue plugue i3 raging from one end of theeatp tutheotner, 1 #ce moone tentun Israclitisi wmother bending over the lorm of & beloved boy Just coming fito tue bloou of lite, Bue WD uway the sweat of death that js guther- g upon s brow ; las eyes are glazed, and life 18 chinngg Tust, Alf at otice she hears a sliout i the camp,—n great shout, What does It neand “Why, iy goud woman, aven't you heard the goud hewsi 4 No" says the woman, * Good newst What fs L™ \vhy, ha'n’t you heurd about it! God has provided o remuedy:" *\What, o the bitten Ismuetites! Telb me what (b 1a2 *Why, God has instructed Moses to make n brazen sevpent, nnd put it ona pole fn the mid- dly of the cuyp, that alt who look upon 1t may live, nud the suout you hicar s the shout of the prople when tuey see the serpent ltved up’ The mothier goes back bito thie tent, and B My boyy I lave good news to tell you, ¢ hut ot to die, e {8 ulready 80 Weak not Wakn tu the dour ot Lhe teut, 50 slie Pilts her stroug arms under binme and s hinm up. " Luok youders ft 18 vight there on the Bl %Ldont ree i where §s it mothers” *Keep luoking nid you will see it.” At st hie catehesn glhinpse of the glistening serpent—and fie & wetl, "That {3 o youg convert, Lyee Wim now califug on all those that were With him to pralse God, e sees nuothier youn man bitten s he was, and hie ran aum g tetls b, ** You may Tthe young mat suyr, “Theve” s not a phyeleia “Why, haven't you heavd e news? God has provined o remedy," “What remedy?” Wiy, God has told Moses to lit up a brazen serpent, and ull that laolk to thal serpent sball dve” L e just see the youny mun, 1le i8 what you call an - teleetual yuing man, e saysto the yous cogyerts ** You don't thiuk; L amn gohur to e lieve anything Hke that! 10 the physicians in lsrael 'bedie ey, yoit dow’t tidak that an old bruss serpent on o pole s gong to cure me 't gut,y iy £ was as bad as q'uur:ull'." Yo dut't oy 20" Yes, Fdo” %That §s the most astonlshing thing § ever heard,” says the young muni “1 wizh you wonid explun the Ylulozopley of it w't. 1 only Kuow that L dooked ut that eerpeny, and L was cured. 1 just 1 SWell, 1 odou't heifey hadty us 1 have been" yuoung men publy up hits sleeve. ¢ Look there! 'fhere §s wiere 1was bitten, and 1 tell you I wis worse thun youure,” Well, i 1 tnderstood the philosos poy of 1t T would look and get well” et your philusaphy o3 Juok mnl Hvest o Lot By yott ask bie Lo do an unreasonable thing, I cthe brass wnd rub)t iu the nlte, Gond saidy take there night be something m the brass thao wouid cure the bite.” At lust the mother who haa been out in the cmup comes fu, nl says, Just the best uews 1 the we out fu the camp, aad 1osaw hundveds very tar poney and they are all perfectly well now.” e young man says: L wonld Jike to weal; it 68 a very patutui thought todie; | wan to go nto the promsed Jund, and s tervinle tu dle here in this wilderness; but the tact is 1 tdon't understand ft. 1t don'tappeal to my reagon, L can't belleve that I ean get well inn moment, just by looking at a brazen serpent on a pole,” und the young man dies in his own un- beticts Whosge faultisit? CGod provided n remedy for s bitten Jsyaclite—~*look wuml Dive!™ And there {3 oternal lide for every poor bltten dsrachite here, Look, and yon can be saved iy fricnds, this very night, God has proviaed a remedy, ool it fs offured to all, Tl trouble {8, 1 zreat many people are looking ut the pole, Don't Juok at tha poie; that don't do any good$ that s the Church. You need not louks at the Chuveiy the Chureh is ull rizht, hut the Churcl can’t #ave you. Look at the Cradiied One. Laok ot Caivury, Wo don’t want to look at Muosery Moges is all vlght iy bis place, but Moses can't save you, You need not ook at these ministers; " they ore Just God's chasen Instro- ments to holt up the scrpent, to holil up the remeddy, to hold up Chrdst, ~Amdso, my tdends, take your vycs ofl from men. Tuke your cyes Ofl from the Churely, WL them ap 1o desus, who touls uway the stus of the workd, and there witl }yu tite fw your perishing soul from thls very iour. Aftor the battle of Pittsburg Landing 1 was i hospitad at Murrceshore, And one nizit after umiduight, 1 was wolie up and told that there wus nnan In one of tho wards who wanted tosceme. 1 went to him and he called e & Chaplain,'—I wesn't a Chiaplniu though,—and he sakt he wanted me to help him die, suldly “ B tuke you rvight np fnmy sems and carcy yoninto the Kingdom of God if I could; buy T ean'tdo ity T can’t _help you o die. But the Lonl desus Chelst -~ cmye=Ilo - came for that very purpose.” e shook his Lead and said, 4o can’t eave me; T have sloned all my e, 1 thoughy of his mother fu the Northy, and 1 knew that she was anxlons that he nhun‘ql lie rlchty andd | thought 1'd stay with him, 1 prayed two or three tines, and res peated all the promises I could, knowiig that ma few hours o would be gone. At last 1 turned to the third chapler of Joim. His eyes were viveted upon me, and when I eame to the fourteenth and (ftecnth verses—ny text to- night—he catyzhe up the words, *As Moscs Hited up the serpunt i the wilderness, even su must the Son ot Man be lifted up; that wiose- eyer believeth on Hin shail not perish, but huve cternal e He stopped me und sald, “ls that there” 1 sall “Yes.” Ho nsked me to read ft again, and 1 did so. [Teleaned hlaelbows oo the covand elasped his hands tozether and sald, *'Thut's guod; won't you read It agalng’ 1 pead I8 the thard thine, sud then went on with the rest of the chapte When 1 finlshed bis eyes were closed, s lands were folded, and tiere was - smile on s fare, O how it was It upt What o change had come wver ! I %saw Ris lps gulver, heavd, in u saisny nggonnd 1 loaned over him nod Wliiaper, Mose wiliferness, that whosoeve ses lited up theserpentin the pust tho Son of Man bu litted up, belleveth on {lim shondd not perish, but b wal life” fle opened his eyes and sald, “"That's enough; don'’t read aoy more,’ e Hngered a few hours and then pil- lowed his head on those two verses, aml then went up In one of Cledst's chardots nnd toolt hbs sear fn the Kingdom of God. You muy spurn God's remedy and perish; but T tell yoi ol don’s want you to perish, e says, * As T Hye Bhave no pleasure fn the desth of the wieked,”? % 'Tarn yo, turn ye, for why will ve bl (iod help you all to look unto HEZ and bo saved. AT THL CLORH OP THH SERMON tho hymn was sung commencing *Alas aud did wy Savior bleed,” und thoss who could stay tora dpruyu\'-mcc(hlg of thirty minutes were fnvited todo so, A very large number re- nalued, und after the mecting wus over thers were two large gatherings of luqulrers: showing that the varnest and adinirable preaching of the |k|¥ had led to good and tmmediato pesults, Uhe overflow meeting at Fuarwell Hall at 4 p. . was conducted by Mr, Ingliss, a brother with an unmistakable Engllsh look and tanter, who comes to join the evangellstic movement under Mr. Moody, and {3 to he assigned to a local work inn fow days. ‘The remark in Tie Tuisuss, a fow days ‘nze, about. the want of o rlnging brother to hetp Mr, Moorehonee, has catled out applicationa for that pomtion. It mny eave sume people tronble and postaze Lo know that no more applleations ean be considered, Al the inectings will be continued this week at the usual times and plrcee. e ABRAIAM LINCOLN. A Hitherto Unpublished Autograph Letter from tho Martyred President, S tnggietd CIiL.) Janrnal, Below we print o remarkable and characterds- Ll autograph fetter of President Lincoln, ad- dressed to the late Col, Robert Allen, a former veell-known citizen of Springfield, aml which, so far as is now known, hes never ore. been In print. It was recently presented by Col, Allen's son, Mal, Robert Allem, to M, J. C. Power, Costodlan .of the Lincoln Mutument, Who has hai it framed with the design of de- poeitiug it in ** Memorinl Hall,” nt the base of the monunent, with otber relics of the Mar- tyred President. It will be scen that it hears date over forty {eun ago, anid was written by Mr, Lincoln when he was a candidate for the Jinofa Legisiature, he being then only 97 years of age. A notice- alle [ ot “the “origlual s the clears p esity ol vigor of 1ts style, aud its rrectness, even to the detalls of punctuation. Thi3 indlcates that Mr, Lincoln had heen before that time n close and aceurate student and had made Lilmsell anaster of his own lanzuage, Junlus himsclf could not have written with mure vigor, nor Willlam 11, Seward expressed blmself with more diplomatie skitl, Bearch has been made In the Nes of the Jour- nal ol that e for a reply to thls letter, hut neither the Jetter fsell nor the reply—I any was ever returned In writing—has yet "been dis- covered, The fact that Mr. Lincoln and Col. Allen, though opposed o polltlcs, remalned tluge | personal friends thereafter, would Indicate that there may have been come mls- representation fn the report which came to Mr, Lincoln of statements of the latter, aud this iaving been explained, there wus 1o’ ow slon for tig uublicatlon of the fetter or the re- Klly toit. ‘The letter ltsell shows how fralous M7, Lineoln waa at that day at once of his own ool name and of the Intercst of the State, and aifords a vlue to the reputation which In higher positions he afterwards won as an honest man and undelllsh slates: and patriot: 1133 LETT: NEw SaLss, June 21, b am Lofd that during my sh<ence yon passed through this place and statcd publicly, that you were in porees<lon of a fact or facts, “which, i known o tae public, vould entirely deatroy the prospects of N, W. ards and myscif at the ensudng clectios but that, thirongh favor to us, you ehould forbe: to divulge them, No one s needed favours more than 1, andgen- 5 few have been lers unwilling to accent e in this cuse, favour to me wonhl be ine Justice to the I 1therelore | must bez your pardan for ds 1 once bad the cond- sence of the peopie of Sanganon, s enilicient evident, audif § have siuce “done anything, by desizn or tisadventure, which, I known, woulld rubject me to a forfeitureof thut contldency, lie that kuowe of that thing and concealy it, i3 a traltor to his conntry's intorest, I fiud myeelf wholly unable to forn any conject- nre of wWhat fuct oF fucts, reul or suppnsed, yoi Kpuked Ul 1y opinion of your veracity will not ermit me for a moment to Gouot that you nt leart belleved what you suanl, 1 flattered with the rd” you taunlfested for me, but § do tare refiection, you will 4% & paramount eon<ld . detesiatie to let the worst come, Passuru you that the candld statement of factn “on your pirt, however Tow it gy sink w #hall never break the tie of personal fricndship b Liween s, —Drar Calonel: 1 an answer to this, and you ara at fberty to publish both if you clvose, Very x full Col. Hobert Allen, B — TWO SOUTHERN PICTURES, VIRST PICTURE, On Sept. 19 a viile club, commanded by Capt. AP Butler, went to Lilenton and took s woul 0y With which they proceeded to o station ed Ho! Here they found Coker qulctly seated on s vallae, witltine for a train, Some of them exclafed, *Fhere’s that — Radical nhegery Colier!” Capt, Butler went up to him aul, Coiser, 1 the nigger-rulen, i you have ol to o with me.” Fuen the unfortus nate pan was surrouided by Butless command and draggred into one of tie ears of the wonl train, which then returned to Ltlenton. Avriv- ing there, Coker was taken fnto an open flell, and Capt. Butler sahl to him, * Coker, what's your tteinesst” 4l ama Ji entutive fr Barnwell County to tie Souti Caroling turg," was the reply, Al the better, Butler; Representative or no Represeutative, L ated you bave to die? tho thile to pray,” cried appy hegio. “ Certaluly,” answered Capt. Butict, *pray away, but pry quick.) Crolier then knedt down and bezan” to pray, Waile he was in this positlon, Butler steppéd Dack gix or elzhit feet and sliot at him twice, He felt forward on his face bleeding and dyine, Butler tisen made o gien 1o bis wew, nd aix of them tired into the wounded mow. e dled, the i who Ellied hin took bis wateh, maney, el Tis gold shirt-huttons, sl then, ley bty Lo roy, veturned to ing, 1 wre sWorn to by three eye-witneases, Coker'a only erltme was his Repuvlicanism, onsttinn, CTUils, even nograteful, in the midst of the acknowledgements of charity ended by the people of the country 1o antiah and Brunswlek, dil we omib to ention consplenousty tie donations made to these reliel funds by the cotored pros In this scasun of ieep distress they e forwurd nobly and - contributed of their scant resources toatieviate suffering, They ave made no restrictlons as to the tse of 1heir woney, but have pmven it freely to suecor whumsoever it mizhi, Tais wis no moro thaa others ld, and _the reler extend tie stricken and dylng blacks of 5 amounts to many thousatnls or doilars oyer the tutal of contribtitions by ewlorel people. Bat the munner of giving decides the value of the gitt._Our calored people of Atlanta have re- sponded to o messiis not antielpated, and grently to’ their credit, When wo remember thelr gereral means of livelinood, and their al- AnL luek of sparo funds, the sacritiees have mado to swell thelr clarity tund, way be rygatly appreclated. o bn sddition, dur- for the dull business senson, thele purses nond Latidens have been mno to stamd tihe arafi ol o veek and more ol o Methodist teneral Conler- e, With w couple of hundred of colored min- Isters to feed. e ———— Jumes Ruencll Lowell on the Folitleal Sltu- utlon, Trof, James Russell Lowoell, in reply to the notitiention of his nomination for Presidential Elector, writes: Gusteswen: Though Twould much rather the cholco of tho Convention had fulicn elsewhere, 1 cannot bring myrclt to decline a fomination wuda with ruch friendly nusninity by so respectable u gathering of my fellow-citzzens, Helievipe as [ do, on ratifactory evidence, that 4 for the ol of Presldent amd our cany Viee-Fresldent ropresent the principles which mada the Republican 1-!"{ nseful to the wholo country, and that they will flzmly oppose tae prace tices which would degrnde it feom o national or- ganization to a closo corporation for private ad. vantage; being nasured thut Iht")' are in favor of an undeluglve currency, of o more far-seein pollcy toward the South, aud of a thorouh reform il rervice, now the most aristoceatic in the I, rinee It makes appoeintment to ollice tion herein depeident on patronage Ntncas, Laceept, with nuny thasks, the nomination you have dono mo the honor (o cou wuhicete, ¥ remanin, gentlemen, with great respect, your obedlent survaunt, d. 1L LuwELL, e — ur A Remarkablo Frog Story. Torunto Globe, A remarkuble Incident oeearred at Brown & Mali's suwmlll, in Actun, whilo o plie lox way Delgz sawed up (nto lumber, The outside stab and_ one board had been eut off, und whils the workmen wers turiing over the loz they wero surprised 1o seo a Lurge toad poko his head out of & hole I which bo was Imbedded, and where o had harely escaped belig cut up by the. saw, Tuw the stig P ot LACTe WaN 1k NYstery, a8 ho was cotpletely fueased In the wood, with ng poswibly means of fzress or eress, A3 the o was fourth or fitth from the buit of the tice, his porithon winet have heen at least ity or SIXty fect from the ground, uml he had no dottht “grawn up with it from infaney, belig 1 ably bidreds of years okl ‘T unimat wasgulre flut, and m'.'lrlf' ax dargo as a wan's hand, Ho was pertectly Dlind, but when taken from Riis bedd Jie e ueo of his Hinba to crawl away, The tree was perfectly sound with the pton of o decayed spot of ubout u fuot in length below the hollow place o whlch e was imbed- ‘l‘uxl‘ l'luw did Lo get there, and what did he Vo on —— A Now Quro for Rhcumatism, Methodiat, A winister afilfeted with rheumatism men- tloned his trouble to a Paddy employed on his premiseas * Och, sure,” replied Irelaid, *an' if yu wauld carry @ potater fn yer pocket ye'd get Well” A day oF two after the mindster st in the olegant study of un up-town city chureh chatting with the'pastor, & perfect gentienum, whosa eulture anil good sense are the pride of bk Conferenco. I'tis visitor asked, * What cun 4o for my rhoumatism " ‘Fho eultured pastor veplled, © Easlly cured, iny dear brother, 1 had thiv rhoumatiaui. A friend wivlsed e to curry u potuto {n my pocket. It looked o foolish tleng Lo do, but 1'tried 1ty and 1t cured me," ‘hoad split open and will dle, and anothar sas shot - . 1 . Two of the rlfers wera arvasted. Chineno factinns of Ban Diczo, in rote ir hnainess-difticnlties, have tesoried to Oh Chang was aeriunaly wonnded, ctions of Fau) 8in and Hop Sing, ty, thore exists an irreconclinble 'This venitetta han already Ted to the racrls fice of meveral lives, the destractlon of vainabla pruperty by fire, and to othor serious casnaltier, £erious rouble reema Imminent among the Chi. nare facllona av Eurcka, and two Chinamen have alreadsy been kiled and another scriously injared Sroc¢kToN. Sept. 10,—Ahout 1 o'clock to-da. Chinese gambling-honss on achington rirget, fn which two Chinamen were inetantly killed and one mortally wonnded. Two o y wotnded anl nre not expees- The feht originated from a dispuie ahont a Chinewo gnuie known as tan, ace when the shooting commencs cd_that upward of ity shots were fired, and g4 are liternily covgreu with bullet- The Celestials on Our Pa Between the fa at Virginla ©f John Chinaman as a Murderersss Assassination as a Trade, Nt ocenrced in o n A Rico Proolamation from the Wing Ye Tong Socisty. othera were retfous] thoro near the “Ifatchet-Men” and Thelr Uses Bloody FactlonsFightg«seIne wiltlsan celling Ing the fights the partielpants and specta- yet like wild Injuns,” thelr cyes ':;?am, and the whole face Is very mueh Jike that of a rat driven futo a corner, and razor-edged lntchet, Johin poands and chopy away with the energy of atri vehemence of a 8lotx, especlally {f the attack- ing party numbar six to onc. THAT INPANTICIDH I8 commltied amongst the Chineso In Calfornia Inavenocertain proot s hut theinference would ba that It is, since 1t as common eith them at home 08 lyinrs and siucs It i3 certaln that they cling too pertinaciously to the ctistoms nf thelr couns iry to have glven up that. Children are nu- merous in the streets now, [t s proportion of pirls is suspiclousiy & pushed fuguleies and scarch, with the view of being able to put forward some povof of the practice, tut without avail. . The serrocy pree eerved i the matter, and thoe great diflicultics met with, were too miuch for the perafstenco |l\‘u\l skill of O. I’ Queue a8 an amateur detect- Epectat Corresponden With a short {ron bar BAN Fraxcisco, Oct. Chinaman kills bis offending brother woulil offer no reason for looking upon him as & more pecutlor mortal than Joln Bullz 13 wide-spread, and has been universally prace ticed aince Colu's futal adventu relation, * when," says Sir Quibler, “Caln hotd- oz o fult hand of clubs, Abel—having nothing but one goud heart—pagsed out.’ It {s he- cauee Johiu's mordes and methods n killing ara a8 pecullar as those that mark his living, that sttention i3 fuvited tu this unpleasant side of his character. No country exists to-day {n which there s not & certain class of people who subslst by the practice of ultra Communiatic sentiments; but there are happily but very few where ASSASSINATION 13 A TRADE, China, howevcer, I3 one of them: ond her nar- row-cyed ehlidren who are ainongst us are large fpurters of the article. A certaln soclety ex- Ists fn this clty, called the Hip Te Yong, or “Hatehet-Men," ond {ts members are alwoys available for the removal of a marked man. s not necessary that the victitn shounld have commitied auy particularly-great crime to be thus summarily cut off, or rather ups telling the wlites a little too inneh, or ntericroice by one Company-man with theaffalrs of another Com- pany, being esteemed o sullicicat offenss to warrant the posting of an assassination-notice. I can seaveely cxpect Instant and yoluntary cre- denee to the assertion thut rewards for the kill- fnee of sucheand-such u nan wre publlety dis- c1a of San Francisco, and yet Is the translation of une, torn down from a Chivese pustin; WING L5 TONA, 1 of the Wiz Ve T reotnt of Cheuny Sum's shoesfac- tory violating uur rale. . uur Sucicty discontinned worl ;;((uuy comply with otr ruled again, we will of The Tridune, ‘The fact that John p-hammer and tho = 2 MIN FOIt TIL KILLING OF AN DOR ted without matiee or prejudice, and thero will be no attempt made to Iniluence the opinions of Tun Trisese" ot the sstonnding the lits of a fellow-creature; the inault he offese s readers by dilatlog disreard he has showa for or by dwelllug on d the tribunals of this coun- ey In the maintenance of others by an alien ¥ but very cffectually an- nul the proper administration of justice; or by pleturing the disgrace such & natlon as this - shoulil feel In allowing the stay for an instant riace, which cunningl, 8 representative) thut sets dtsell not only haa the Ineffable audacity to secretty bid for the death ol waite citizen,” All such tiflmnatory epeech s lert to those who seek o verdiet that (tement, and [s not the calm . vof facts, The latier a; growth of verdict bs asked for here, nnd it wiilcertainly be that of “Guilty, with extenu- atine circutnstances; the el too strietly necountable, by reason of his 1 tralnte and low urganization.” nest lettery which will fevien ths whole stlon pro and con, will conclude_the serics 0. . Queue. | e —— DOWN IN SOUTH CAROLINA. 1 Shudder to Think Wikt the End Will Be,* New Yurk firaphic, ) The following diapatehes are from our Demo cratic correspotudent on the apot @ w tir-aperine Telrgraph. . 16.=The nrrozanco of the prodace tronhle, mireet without faking off thelr h il one was eyen veen sinoklng on tho talcony ol are very dutigerons and biood. Thirety, but five thas fwrbeen Kept In eubjection . by the rlfle club which the Democrats haye organe tadieal meettugs and preserva ng Laif of the tue, spritgs from ¢ pinyed in the & prisuner not being it onr workmen sceretly commenced to or 2300 to 2oy able man for taking the = 0f those nen Wilo seeretly commenced or the milling of Sam xainy Clieany Sum. We write thie notice and seal by us for certaln! e reign of Quong Cl The fontta of Chine und $300 In tull in ke sccond ye e whites in the W This proclumnation, which Is also reproduced fnanauticle on * John Chinaman In San Fran- dlsea’ published In Seribner's for October, was used ag sworn evidence in the Police Court to the bezinning of thls year,—Sam Lee (allce swme Chlung Saw) baving, as may be seen, In- curred the danger of death, beeause he and his men had worked where and when forbldden to, ] e ftetkers in the faetory-districts ot Gireat Drituin have searcely wobw S far s this, und yet Charles Reade etirred the people’s 1 novel founded on tucts whdeh would seem tane idecd 10 told in the twosided style that marks theee Jetters, N Qeaddy-livery ayiies ure, 3 may uat ariely ditheult to et hold arder by speal talnk wont the end wil CHARLESTON, Oct. 17, ~—This morning In Calkonn p o vlick oy named dohnson, I bl gerandson to nttend a ladi meta carriaie-load of Iidies and rulnsed ta hem more than half the road, thirsty und fmpadent rascal waw Jerked ofl hiw lioree by mome passers-by and lins 1ot boen ecen Tho migsers of the lucality are loudly threaieninz, and our ciub will £o over this ofter- 100k t protect the whites, what the end will hearts with asensat 1 shudder to_think i, 8. ~The crinls hos a of Calnhoy havu risey, o uttending the seeeding reti- it tivy are common, assured on the y be remarked ety stands asa polive und Chities cent on the matter. however, tie Jmpndent niczers told them that the hall was small and there uponuk a meuace, and o preventthe aasassination ot all the white women and children fn the county the Club feit called upon to rash . \wan In 0mbush near by, and they ng two aud wonnding fourteen of s hefore we conld get off the eld, races hu now bezun, and the nlgeers are respon- v for 1t 1ahudder to think what the end ‘will o 155 Oct, 18.—0l, tator! Tlio tyr Grant orders our clubs 1o disperee and not to iry 1o %eep urder ot Radical meetings, eur fulr Iand tu the bloodibirety rapecity of tho L‘u‘hm'd Radicals? 1 shudder ta tiink what'the eud This was Jooked that the Wing Ye Tong 2 strong with the heathen Chince, ness-lce way i whish the deemnent {3 rounded As T haveso far endeayored to make these worthy of helng consldered re- sroups “of {lnstrative w It Would searcety be consistent or advisas Tetters the o Shall we leave te s to what Al Sin esteems a sutilelent esuse for Kiltinr o man, sud how ne does it will hest. be understoad by the relution of a few incidents eome under publie notice bere, wwo years ago, a Coltaman Hving in Sucramento, Wisiing to narry @ woman thes in 4 house of prostitutton, ranoif withaud married The woman's owners tmcdiately swore oug warrants against the man for abunction, et were started ufter the pair, and the to the Cninese, with into Coutt next day. ther the woman migit reke another bold stroke jor ——— THE WEATHER. mNgrox, D. C, Oct. 23=1 a. m.~For the Upper Lake regions, the Upper Mlssissippl and Lower Missourt Valleys rising barometer, west and north winds, colder, elear, or partly ing ratn areas in tho irst district apd followed by rising temperaturo In the Lwo Inss. LOCAL OBSERYATIONS. cioudy weathier, suceee wenun was hianded ov 1 me toulits wise nat be rempted to e downy rascals brought swore thut “she wes the party, and that she had been foreibly Atthat tme AN Quong was fie terpreter, amthe proved that the won T wad an lmpostor. W in the mornin onig was brought ba FIT ONLY T MAVE IS BOS) with a bullet-hole chopped apei v oecurred i o thorouzhiare of the Capltal of Californin, in roail duytzit, snd with hundreds of Chineso present at the tme,y Ewas found jmpossible to a sinzle copper-colored witness for the prosee iy, & fow white men were passing at the tine, and from thelr festimony two Chingmen were convided, and ure now Aervingg out sentenees for Hfe o the State Toough this @n O LRELREN ourt-room, who, at A Ovung’s huwfe-knives, re the result, ¢ Fwords, hntehets, and plstols o At the trial for munder tollowing, the Chlnese Companles opposed the prose ay, bringing torward witiesses by the score to Uon n cvery W'KEE, Speclal Dispateh o The Tribune. WABIINGTON, D). C. Oct, 22—t is sald that dngs for the pas count of the dlifienlties to he put out of the way Is an uld resident, and Kknows his countrymen here suf tficiently to be on his g MAN'' I AENT POR FROM CHISA. This oecurred fu the case of Ah Guw, who, from luwving been s Seo Yup man, beeatne one of the Al Gow was trouble- there Is a hitch in donof Mclee, on a about the payment of the fine of 81 Kee wishes 1o have the fine remitted authorities so far huve nok cousented (o du this, It is quite possible tint. Mck 1t 13 Lelloved had been determined upon for thia week, will be postponed tor some thne ou this Ning Yeuwg Company, 'a pardun, Which some, telllog more than lie ought; so th Yuppers, in their next order ol thiugs wi frow home, put down o cut-throut, e ——— s OCEAN STEAMSHIP HEWS, Hareax, Oct. 22—Aarrived, tho U. B, Gu Lont Gottysbur, from Norfolk, for the Modlt rec nomessage trom a fricnd warnizg him that he wis to he kitled, al himself, and went into one of his Comne- Ho had beou muarked, utes after, his murderer then, as Al Gow leaned pany’s gambling. howerer, aud, u fow was standing oppus il QreesaTows, Oct, 22—Arrived tho steamer L 0 of Berlin, from New York, ond the Indlona, roin Philadelphi Pryxorti, Ot 2—Arelved, the Wieland, from New York. e A Wonder of Art, Boston Commercial Bullettn, * What's this, mister" sail a caglous conne tryman who was wandering through a Washlu- ton etrevt Jeweler’s store, aml s he spoke he rans u Etatue of Mercury with bls horny his luty, he v dof the See Yup Com) was arrested for consplineys but, belng old, old man, your Worship," and the evidence helug of the urual contradictory order, he wis The actlon that ctit short Al Glow's thread of life was bis foollshly pointing out Louse in Marysville where he titoughit certaln murderers ol w Mr. Griswold might bo found, With bun, o little knowledie was n dangerous thing indeed. TRREGULARITY I MONEY-MATTERS, alsoy I8 an offende often couridered suflh rave Lo be mortal, us Al Saey sa latety found, who, haviug broken asoclety-nile in thisparticu Jar, was first surprired to “hear of o reward of $300 for his death, and then still more surprised by toa sudden trausitlon from Wasldigtons Lo Cone, through the medium “That,” sald the attendant, & Mercury,” and he pussed on to wait upon u customner. The rurnlist gazed for o moment with open mouth at the bronze representation of the mes- senger of the gods, and then beckoned to o companion at the other end of the store, to whotn he sakl. ’_‘_Jlm, what do yousupposo that ere figger I dunro,” responded Jiw, tn turn glving 1t sunding rap—** brunze, lialn't i8¢ 0,7 salld the other, “taiut; it's quick- S Whanat! the stull they put Into thermome- ters! Waal, I wa durned, cely need to multiply instances, FN reward offered for the Giurdon, late pubilslicr use he had threatened to tor a printing and to telt of sue the Wasli-lHouse Cotmprny Il unof the g6W for thy deal uve e u few truo figa the Chronleleof this city s orof o hun- drpd other ceses which would only redouble vroof of whut nust ulready Lo clears that Ase sasainution by the Ciduese [ 4 TUING OF SUCH EVERYDAY ERACTICE that wo In an Francleeo muet have come to Laok upon §t as but Inckdentat to thele presence 1t must be understood, too, that but a sl perventase of these Ity altatrs come to the public ear; tor the Companies very stifetly reserye to theiselves the vight of compounding nuurder by thy puyment of a e, anil esteem it umisfortune {la case ehips out of their courts What'll they do And after another long look the couple moved on hnpressed w vith the wonders of art, ————— The New Oul Iranstdes, itladelphia Ledger, nstitutiotr, butter known os the MOl Tromstdes,' which 18 now belws robullt ab Waud, Dialogue & Co. n's Point, 18 to be fitted up asa school ship for nsval apprentices, Commander Henry A Adwng, now of the reeciving-ship Potomac, will bein command, aud Licutenant vomander Neilds will bs exceutive ofiiver, A full comples ment of ien ure now befng ebdpped for s term of une year for the purpose of munning Lo ves sel and putthie ber in order for scu. boys wite were slupped at this polut a6 nuval apprentives werd sent to the Minnesota st New York, but hereulter they will go atoard the they wiil ho seatnanstp and taken on ghort crulsi pare thew for duty us seamen. The frlgate C{; PACTION-PIGUTS uro frequent, alwavs desperate, aud fuvarlably teautt in the flittlng ot u few souls, “sort of Itom that the San Franciseo news-edlior hus to keep ou clipplog: A row uccurved amons the Chiness at Ban Joso Eaturday nighty in wbich onv Chinaman kad bis

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