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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1876. 5 1300) REVIVAL bee the young an brought into the presence of the Republican tleket and elected the who amonz other special requests put apo hearty did not follow the: fashion of that wh Wed to overflowing, After the lectare, and or th je atands thera without the | though it might have cost him hls lite. . _ 7 $ongion Haury nething lees than one- Fghteat Tear die (iod, Inwhom ho teusted, har |. ‘The nextthing wo hear of Uabylon t9, that we net li of behalf OU he renee ern cae WAY uxt before tho alnging of the Doxology, 8 man, - this # a mlatake om: vas cant mate him muater ofthe altuation, ‘The King Jooks | grandson of Nebuchadnezzar, a wild young Prine, 4 the ch ey i PAE, ell | evidently deranged, rosu from hia reat in tho au- the German vow of Ohlo was cast for | pry mp, s * i athim, and «ays, ** Youngman, can you tell me | called Belehazzar, haw come to the throne, Ou noly a4 the choir, tshers, and other people who help | dience and eatd: ‘*Would tho pastor and thin af tian firkel, Last year tavo-third@ot 6 ree Services in the | xv DREAM ANO THe itzutietaTiON op vai | certaln occasion ho,inakes aurent tat ty 8 thon | {in ald Darin: Manytulne that lsntamped | ani carry on the goo worky Mr. Sankey rang the | church permit of a word from a rlraugert™ Mr. ie epi eGov. gon aceount of the “My God can!" answefed Danlel; and he be- | sand of hialords, ‘They come together ina great | with tie Kings weal cannot te clamued. volo, ‘Behold the bridegroom cometh,” the best | Terfard'’a pri WN, * fas givet 10 to ra laby nie Tabornacle Yesterday i hanquet-chamber, and. they drink aud caros Tuatiewhat we tought,” sald the Princes, | tie ut masie he hae given us forn fortnight, erford’a prompt "No, air, not one word! In yout dream, OKing, you saw animage—" adhinugs German a caused the man to be seated, and the services were ,, But as that (ssue was nob prominent Jn concluded uninterruptedly, It might perhaps be not night lea ‘They du not care for the armies of “Did you not make a decree that no inan should rar, which are bh ing tha city, They trast in | pray to any other god than to the King?” ta high walle an : Largely Attended. ‘The serinon was a continuation pf thatoft the af- fa ttf" Vet OZERT Auta dt? says Nebuchadnezzar, hin fact ternuon, and rarely how Mr. Moody ever been 7 lighting np all all at onca; ** you've got it, Tre- Its gates of bras, anil feel then *¥ee, Flt. wal Darius, , : : amlen to remark that the opening of all eampalgn, many of the Oble Ger: member Ital * ae eign aetna rater AC inate when the head of | ‘Then they tell hita that the Chief of the Presl+ | heard to Letter advantage. Ho falel pete aT py the delusive, humbug ery - , cree," aage Deniels “ty God revealed tt ta | the youre Hing an Bee ee en ae Lamas uete Eisieke ilar Helen chan retuned tas| Tote taceer esd a eeLEE eR ar crac Tea aes aii ia. cleat OF BIL the leds Is Hot mats ex anid Reforin, vated the Denrocrattc Mr. Moody Delivers His Great | motent bight ta a dria’ You acs ho dora | Orders Ae Be didn camtt at derucens ae | Choon Daria car atatake Thave madet't | Han with the way he wae toiling all sorts of false } chilly nights, \odily cormfory if not tho cause nf 3 ka any credit, to ‘ 6 npls at dernsulem, to be Yoo Darla °° i ve made!" F3 2 Tish envjorted Hares ngalnst Brit At- Lecture on the Prophet why to eilit to himaelt for It, but gives the | Caputo eee tat, that iney way drink | raya he. et might have known that Dantel would | excuses for not accepting God's invitation to tho | (cian aigiie’ CoNer Have been contulted than it tidsely put this defection was more than Daniel, ‘phe head of this great Imago was gold, hla | winw out of them tn honor of the gars of Babylon. | not obey auch a command ay thu. , Fhad quite for- ) marriage of His Son. The great congregation actu. | + breast and hia arma were livor, bia belly and hin thighs of urate, his leye of ron, and hie fect art of fon and pattof clay. And then, O King, you In which He Introduces the Story | cawaatone cut out withont hands, which truck tho image upon its feet, and crushed it to plecen ‘My object, ts to cleat away feom the slmpte and My object Is to clear away from the almpte an penturel religion of Juxna Cheint what IT Uelleve 19 be a great perversion and darkening of it. Ibis not pandast years the American Republican-Green- bi Ea yoted the rug-baby ticket last an returDin’ to their own party this fall. ye a But while they are dolug this tnploun thing, ve- | gotten about him when | made ft." ‘There Is ot a hold, a hand appears, writing with ita fingers ttpon | juan in ail Babylon who Ja xo troubled as the King. the wall—the doom of the Kingdom of Bahylon. The account xays that **he labored til the golng Drunk ag he, the nifserable King ts frightened. | down of the sun to deliver Daniel,” Hut the com. © Bring in the wise inen,” eayabe. And the wire | mand tat zone forth, the law had been mare, and ally broke into a langh eeyeral times as the speak er drove his supposed oppunent intoa corner and showed up the hojlowness of bis excuse, ‘The fol- lowing are sue of the most atriking passagos of ‘the TH the Likoait the other ministers in thiseliy, t have felt piatetohta Zimea (TH.DES organ) pro- OL che Three debrew {ite Became like the dust of tha suuumer turesh- | men como, tn haste, and tare wt the wills, but | Hosp Not De changes ever for thesake OF VAIL | avon there Is anethicuiee popular exeane, 1 | SPDreyred,by, the mee of sin and teeligion that The pablish an estimate from the chief Children, “Uphat's all right," saya the King. ‘(Now can | No unclrenmelsed eye can read Cnd's Hacturittas, | UE "ertus had only loved hia teiend ar much nn | ean ionaghes ove iene sroulh covey cere fact | uere te abont as.‘and by the consclonancss of how fests (Oech purty ft Pennsylvania of how | + you tell ine the futerpretation of ity” Bonehow of other, the news of thie etranze affair | Chiriat loves us, heswould have pone down laty tha | fs, Mr. Moudycl don't know that fom elected, ir | Witla we seem to touch it with all aur most earncat pauagera of eae ¢ will yote for President, and Now [maging come of you would have tried to | reaches the cara of the King’s mother, and xe | den of one for him. Gur Paria, our Klug, | Tthouzht 1 wae elected 1 would come. [know | came, felts with ings Sad ween, thera revivaliste grious counties will vote ’ “Sinners’ Exouses the Subject of | soltem sown tho interpretation in tle, It way a | sends p servant, to hive, telling itn tale in ie | counted not Iilstife deartinte itself, bat freely | tint 1 caanutcomeuntens | amelectedy and L teale: | eet tac tehat ieee ee ncrey ine even though J the tho result of the guessing: Republican bs pretty hurd thing for Daniel tortand up thero be- | days of his Rranifather, ‘there was aman in Baby- } delivered it up for ns, ly want to come very maneh, bat Taontt know thar | spall Fae wane with them, yet if thule works waa ii te eof the State, oinltting Philadelphia, Pertinent Remarks in the After foro hat grant, imonarct und all him ihe kinudom Tom Who could interpret dreama, aadroveal eeazcie, | AC rundionh the iting’e ofteerago for the old | Fam une of the elect: ‘Now, fuave heard that | Gedenceds ang, maotover there ina’ gront deal {mst A wastobe likethe dust of a summer threshing- | and. U 134, Ont ne . t tale him away to the fons, hey bin Thave got sick and tired of it. I want to say | fn thelr netting forth Nice for Haves; add Philadelphia ni re! y Moor; buthe did {t.. ‘*Thou art this head of gold. | would bo able to rend the writing. Itrccma that | hin hands behind hie back, and lead tem along the q er #4 in etting forth of relizion that na one can san ote flavzs' majority in the State noon and Evening floor; wuthe did tt, ‘Thou art thls wend of gold, | out bo ate to rete teil of for the fase Afteen | atecetsot Hahyion towards the deb. the wile | you lace no more todo with the doctaue gt clees | POPeamurine: When Dean Milman wae waked low you have no more todo with the doctrine of clec- tion than you have with the - Govern ment. of Chinn, IT ray no “to do with Aor teat solani theta a wt he coold atand tho Athanasian Creed (chich your which shall beur rule ail overthe carth. And t Mr. Moody's Sermon on The Blood” | fourhbinedor avail he stroue on iron, Afters year: but now there Is epecia) work for him tudo, | city yous out te eee the sad procession. The American Episcapal Church has put away a not At and ao they find him ont, and bring bin in, andas | Princes look out of thelr windows, and rub thelr on The Democratic estimate claims the bim to read the writing, hand, and lauzh over the success of thelr wicked gute by 16,700 outelde of Philadelphia, and tobe a part of Christian worship, he replicil, verted nian haa anythin: owen ae " at l fa , : at 4 u cll, k chante so beaatifally!” 80, one can hn Hepa nthe erie |" riled hy the Rev rooke | Ealuvtatee Qgrncttunrer ate | agg neneurhgy ets ac Sa hm, | Mecaane el uta teat des | Wd SttSaie Saw: ins tues | Rae zagehar eto ri a fed, majority ue Ghatt the God of fleavensct ups kingdom which | Now Ihave nodoubl tat a good many courtiers, | criminal; and poor Dariua walks the chamber of | eacvce will, let tim come to th 1." Tont; 5 Heh ing ane haprcasive ts that at tiie + cos tantamount to conceding the State to | , Horford, niall the God of HHeavon set, up Klagdem which | | Now Lave no dog tat ood may coneueri] | hiv oatace, wrinzing his hain in agony. eaylog, | tay ieiende: tet me nay that young invited, eeery | rascmmcle, Meriden, alt. Sluody. whatuver le and destroy all those i nydoma, and. if eball'stand forevel ing was greatly pleased with Daniel, and Republicans by 15,000, but it will bo nearer . Who Pronounces It Unserip= | Tho Penneylvania iq os sure for Hayzs a8 preaches, preaches so much downrlght practical Christlanity in nnd amongst tt,—ptnin, faltinfiul of the King’s palace, would havcsoftencdthemean- | °° Ah me! th ayed my Erlend.” i rebukes of the folites, and vanitiew, anil worldlt> Ing of {t alittle, and not have given it fn its full But Danlel watka with a fri step. His old atrength for fear of offending the King, Mutthat | knees don’t ehake o bit, ‘The wind of the evening one of you; and, if you don't come, it wil! be he- catiee you won't, not because God dues not want vou, or has not given you the power to come, | ness of the day. carnent rousing appvala to h sf, 3, of Town niaden great manaf tints and, for bia sake, put | wae not Danicl'a faehlénatall, Me renda it just ae | plays with bls white locke, and with a smile upon With the Invitation there contes the power. God Sufal Ute nt i BP Peale eo Uns, ab Iilnoks OF tural and Degrading. hls threo felends into oflce. Ygn eve Damel didn't | Cod writer it. **Menes God hath numbered thy Mis'iace he znesto meet the lous, ite hae rerved | tae headed iis invitation with whosoever, in geest | Mimdifs Wclutal Hfey—that no one Likes to Put, inn = Tunusn, Intensely Republican as tt | 4 Sees forgot his frienda when lie got inte a yuod place | kingdom, and finished ft. ekel: Thon art | bly God now for seventy long years, and be feels | burning letters; and, if you will go in, God will honest reid need when Mr. Moody puts ae the CRAG Fi e'the sowing of hie own hand, Gov. | 7 hineclt, * welghed in the halances, and art found wanting. | sure that God will not desert him inthie erent hour | recelve you to-night. He ~ wanta you | nam and cesence of the whole thing, and enpbn- 1 econ falsltying the record and returiing an | 2 DANIEL. Well, not long after that—insybeltwaathedecam | Peres: Thy kingdom Is divided, ond given tu the | of trint, Jean Imagine him euying, “Sy Godcan | to come thie hour,—thi¢ very min | sizes more than anything elAa fi ile preachiae tule Par a Rae Te MN. MOODY'S OREAT LECTURE. that pit lua his fend“ Nobucndnezzar made s | Meiet pour mivcratio Belshazsart Es tue | CUREMe ae ot Me Jaws of tue lions fant ap early | ute, |" WVhunowver willy let, hm take, uf | grogn and ‘ireadtul distortion of Scripture Which be i 103 artyny h 5 7 reat Imaxe,. and se in the plains of Dura. ni poor miserable Belshazzar! Even now the evaved my threa fr ron the furnace of | the water of Ife freely." Tbave ao 17) the: preatl An ke Eiditor af The Tribune, At 8 o'clock yesterday morning the ‘Christin | twas about ninety fect hiv and ‘about tine tect | soldiers of Cyrus have turned away the waters of | fire. Iut, even if they vat me, I «hall only die fur wee ae doa that the | cally the doctrine of ** Zhe Blood.” then I fur ong Lord Jesus Christ ssw how men were voing to atumble over that dactrine of election; for, after Ue had been back in Heaven for thirty or forty years, and Jolin was in the Spirit on the Lord's Day, in the Iste of Patios, Jesus came to bim and eald, *¢Joln. write thie, ond he wrote. Again Tie was John, before you closa the book, put in this—The Spirit and the Bride way, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let iim thot Is athiret come, And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." ‘Tha for ever Las eettled in my mind the doctrine of election. Some peaple aay: ‘ST haven't any doubt about the Word of God; but the fict ts, there are some mun In the Church who are bypocriter; therefore 1 don't purpose togo into the © So there nnd fcan imagine you saying: ¢* Uh yes—there isa man op here In one of the churches that che: ced me outof 8450. few yours agu; yon are nut po: ing tu catch ine in the coinpany of kuch hypocrites," Well, my friend, if you want to get out of the com. pany of hypocrites, you hud better get out of “the world as ‘qtiick os sou can, One of the twelve apostles turned ont to be dare not hold my peace any longer, and I fet T inuet stand up snd protest, su farus my words can reach, againet this being taken fur Christianity. Ido not need to spend much time in explaining to you what the doctrincof ‘*The Blood" is, fur ‘Mr. Moody hax lafd such stress upon it, not here only, but wherever he hax heen, that he has not Jeft much possibility of mistaxe about it. Inone form or other, it isan old enongh doctrine, but it tw an ald doctrine made harder nnd conrscr than i]- most ever Uefore. ‘The **Schene of Salvation * ar held by the various orthodox churches, ha: ways pat raore oF legs tu the Tront the suteritya and death of Christ aa having Wada peculiar aud myaterlous eflicacy In man’s salvation, and as be- ing something that it especially behoved Christtins to take to’ heart, to cling to. Gradually, but not til hundreds of — years after Christ's time, this feeling worked aut intu the definite doctrine of Substitntion, 1twas Anselm In the eleventh century who first worked ft one aquarely and eystematically that Christ on the cross wus Just uyiny ay the singer's substitute, punished {nutcad of the hell-doumed world, su ap- Wis, Oct. £8—Did Tux Cricaco ney Thy Dewve state immediately, and oaize® Mayes man. Usukosti, ‘Tou TRIBUNE never said anything of the kind stout Gov. HAYES. workers," to the number of 4,600, gathered atthe | wide, Some pooplasay it waa made of solld gold. Tabernacle to hear Mr, Moody's favorite adirces vate thine che Belay Intenden aa Imago ee on Daniel, Thie lecturo hasa history. Yara ago | resent Mimenls, Wing tu have a universal y religion, and he was going to be the head of it,— the Kev, Dr, Punshon, the great Wosloyan | {teers womneuct peoule nuwadayer-cand £0 ie preacher from England, gave his Tecture at Farwell | gave orders to tiave all the nobility and great ofll- Hall on **Danfel in Babylon.” Brother Moody | cersof his kingdom brought tozether to worably was one of the delighted listeners, and whon it waa | the golden image which he had set. Tdon'tknow where Danlel war at. thta timo. over he aald to, himself, ‘* Naw, why can't I atudy | pertiaps he was away in somo other part of th ap them Iilble characters and preach about ‘em? | Kinedsm on uieinerss Out ile frlende, Shadeachs Thelmmediste result of thisinsplration orrovelation | Meshach, and Abednegu, were there tu represent waa a scrles of biographical discourses atthe hol} | him. ‘Theleenemiea were thera tag, A faithful on twelyo successive Sunday evenings, some of warvank of God te pie co, baka cugmlots watching, which Mr. Moody afterwards repeated with grent Tt waa o great day when the [toage was unveiled. acceptance at conventions and other public gather- | T seem to sco it lashing in the sunlight; the vast ings, both Eset und West. It was the mating of | throng of worshipera atandtng around It; and the those ecrmona that gavo iim such a personal ac- King, at the head of o eplendid proccaslon of bis da and Indic, coming scr lain with fqhaluitance wills tho men and Women of tha Bible || (oun etme nae ona ete Ee Pct sane whom he ling been able to Introduce to hundreda of | have been a trying time for those three men, who thousanda of people with tho familiarity of an old | ‘vere 50 much out of fashion as uot to bow down to the Euphrates, and are coming {nto the city nlong | My God." And when’ they put him jute the den the empty banks, | ‘Tho soldiers ore batturing away | God vent one of hiv angels’ to shut the wouths of atthe doors of your palace, and heforo morning | the Hons, your blood aball be aplited upon the etones, along At the hour of the evening prayer, Daniel knecls With the wine which you have been drinking, out | fn the den; and. If he can yet the points of the of the veasels frum Go's holy temple atdern- | compars down there, he prays with his face towards salem. You are welghed in God's balance, aud { derdealem; and then, taking one of the Hons found wanting. for hls pilluw, be Hea “down and sleeps, ‘My friends, eupporo God ahontd begin to welgh | 4% #weelly us any oman in Bany- some of you to-day; suppoae you were tortep into |éon. The King sits tip all night, thinking the balatices now, don't you think yuu would be | What his ieee bad cost bim—eren the life of hia found wanting? ‘Get Into the scales, take along | movt falthful eervant. But he remembers that the + (iin you your edueation, and your wenith, and | Godof Daniel hae done strange things for them your dignity. and your fushion, and your fine | Whotrsted Wim, Ne has hard of Shadrach and clothes, and everything you have that fesplendld, | his friends coming out of the flery farnace: and he —and the Lord will put the ten commandments in | knows thut Dante! went {nto the ‘den feeling that the other, and up rou will go Ike feathers— ) his Gud wonld zo with him and rave him. At the “<weithed in the balances and found wanting.” | fret dawn of day he orders out hts chariot, and you Only they who have Chrlat In thefr souls can stand | Cu hear the wheels rattling over the pavements of the test of God's weighing, aro you step Into } Babylon before the people are up. Away he voer, tho balances to-day? with his horses un the run, ta the door of the lion's Some one willask me, '*Mr, Moody, dare you | den; springs out of the churjuty looks down into Afep into the balances to-day, aud ‘be weighed? | {t. and witha vulco trembling with anxicty, erles ———— ‘There were printed and sold of yesterday's gammvse 42,100 double-shect voples. On Sun- aya Week OBO) the edition amounted to 40,350 Heeahect coples. Ifthe editor of tho Times docs not believe st, Iet him visit our counting- room and he will be shown the proof of It. PERSONAL, Ivlenot generally known that faJ. Andre’a re- ins were browght from America and interred in (reetmlaster Abbey In 1821, Me, Sankey 18 warned that Boston will psy no. i the great (dul when everyuady else woe doing tt. | Do you know that you would be saved, 1f the Lord | out, *°O Daniel, servant of the living Gods {that | a hypocrite; and there i» no doubt there 1 ro q ying ee, criiion (ohms If he does not adapt his hynina to | Sud Intimate friend. Herre rol their Gadand ins inw of tie Hing | sould Urine zoute. Judgment” Ves, thaiks be | God whom tou wervest coutinuslly able to deliver J ‘w1ii Ye hypocrites in the Church tu the end of time, penne the. sinners tndnite debt ud bayine iit wieof (he future. Ile future ta beyond ‘To him those Scripture characters are real men | were in confilct, Tho King, sald How down! God | to God, Christ le nblé tu save me—even me; and | thee froin the Hons? Bat ‘what fe that to thee?” eaya Christ to Peter: | Sir srom hull. ‘The Christian world has boun ete tte mnt and women, and he makes them ecem as real to bis | suid. No!—and it didn't take them a minute to de- | He will eave all of you who will cast of your'sing, |, Hark? There comes up a voice out of the den. | **fullow thou Me.” We do not ask you to follow | pling in the meshew of thut cleventh-century doc: Voruer'e. audience ns to bimeolf, cade what to du. and take Christ instead, It {a the volce of Daniel, to whom this morning ie | hypocrites, but to follow Christ; we du not ask | tring ever since, Mow it could be? Why’ could ets noticed nga singular fact that New York Cuyeontains no statuo te Alexunder Hamilton, and {this been propozed that a public movement be or- lied to provide one, ‘The present Sultans of Turkey was, before mar- rage, ¢ dlereputable woman of Pera, Sho Is o welsisa by birth, and married the Sultan, when ho suteiee-removed frum his present position, asa eecolations ‘The Philadelphia awards aro being mangled and merged by some masters in the artof botching, and fieensnov tou late t0 hope that the work of the Conmfetton will be ns creditable fy ths respect ov sth been in every uthee, Brentano, the famuus newedcaler of New York, aniredin thiscuuntry du 1853, and began bual- qos by poddiing newspapers at retail, He is now, aibe age of 47, One of the best-known characters fo New York, and has a fortune estimated at $07,000. Amora studded with Jewels, and valued at 41,200, bas been presented to Gen, DB. IF, Butler catebalfuf the colored peuple of Virginia, Le delre de mon pere was pot a circumstance to. thie. ‘After s whilo Darius, tho Mede, comes to the | Mike the moruiny of the resurrection. Me has been throne of Babylon, fe must have met Daniel | down ta the gates of death, and yet he fs alive. somewhere in Hin travele, for no suoner does he pet “*O King! live for ever. My God hath sent Tis up the kingdom than he puts hin intoa place of | angel and ehutthe Mons’ mouths, that they have great power. He chooses a hundred and twenty | nel burt me.” Princes, whom he pluces over the kingdum? an Ob how glad King Darius was to hear the yolee of over these Princes ho appoints thive Presidents, | bis frien and makes Dantel the President of the Prealdents: | of the den, takes him up In his arms, Into tie char- no that he renlly ig the firat manin the kingdom, | lot, and away they go home to the palace to break- after the King. Hin busines waa to ‘sec that | fast together and talk over this wouderfal deliver> the King suffered no damage"; that is, he waste | ance. Keep watch of the accounts, to see that nobody | ‘Then King Darius published another decree. cheated the King. This must have been a very |.The experience of Daniel had thoroughly convert- didicalt place, and Daniel must have had his hands | ed him; und now he deciures ** that, inevery du- full, He had to wateb those hundred and twenty | miulon’ of bis Kinzdom, “man stall tremble and rascals, who were all the while tryfng to steal | fear befure the God of Danicl, whe werketh slens something off the revenue: nnd to fo over their | aud wonders in heaven and uy und hath deliv~ accounts agalo and again, eo as to be certain that | ered Mis servant from the power of the ony.” they were correct to a penny. We have not tine, this morning, to follow the iwna not long before Daniel became very nn- | history of dus mun any further, | Three tines a popular with the Prince, Teeem to hear them | tuessenzer came down from. heaven to tell bio talking amongst themecives in this way: that he was ureatly beloved of the Lord. ‘The “THERE 18 THAT MISERABLE OLD szw, Dan- | Spirit of Gud ‘was With him, aud the hand of God IRL: protecte ¥ if we only had htm ont ayy We cnald tak May thy God of Daniel te with us,—the courage if wo only lind him ont of the way, we geatl make | of Daniel be in ust Muy we have erace to countess We could huve our country houses and our eity | tie Lord, tozo through the re ond amongst the ecco and our fine homes and chariots, and we | Hout If need be, forthe sake of Hix truth; and at Would five In the very Iiahest style, off the tees | Met, after all the trials of this life ure over, ina, nuee of that kingdom; but that old fellow watebes | We be su happy ag to sit down witn Danlel and all Duce Of trwly aga cat watches a mouse, We cance | tue auelent Worthies, in the Kingdou of our God, Te ina lttlo surprising at fret torce those ancient | some Deapla, woald Hate ea eyo worthies behaving themsctves Ike citizens of Lon- | necdn't corehin, you kaow; juet bend your knees don ur Chicugo: wearing modern costumes, speuk- | a little, but don't say any prayers to the Idol," ing English in Mr, Moody'a own vernacular, and eae nee Phos acy Pee Rbk alae, permitting them to turn their heads aud hearts in- | Voowteveey well. ‘hu aur haa arelved; every- aldc out, in order to show his hearers what 1s golng tulng ia ready;, the King makes a elgn with his oninthere. But when the effect of the shock hae | hand, and the cémets ond aackbuts, and all the passed aay, the frea and moral of thle aor | Oh aa fall duh dele tags ints Leglns to bo uppreciated ar It scarcely could be, if a a : act forth vith Oriental stateliness of language, and | {Me Breet tumee wile, Kehr neat covered with the dust of remote antiquity. ati knees in that kingdom—three men who will Irreverent puople wometinies laugh at the fea of | not bow to the false gud.) ‘Their enemles have Shndrucn, Meshach, and Abednego, tumbling into | taken care to put them in the front rank, near to Nebuchndnezzur'a flery furnace, in brondeloth coats | themselves, where they can watch them, and 8o and trousers, stove-pipe hats, and boots; or to | find occasion to accuse them to the King, wont King Hadid telling ile experience, Iida man } Lwecu to veo these fellows poking out of the ina Metliod{st class-mnecting, and not always in | corners of thelr eyes, when, by the King’s com- geammatteal style, But there is no small advan- | mand, they onght to have been worshiping the tdol; tage In having these mien modernized: fur thereby | and {hear them saying to themvelves, ‘Aha! we thelr trlaly and trlumphs come home to men's awn | hove got you now!” audgv they go to tell the Warts mang fhe feel: that abe, Bert ptures: are King. not ont of date, but are still as fresh and #8 profit- | 469, King! live forever. Do you know ‘that able as In the times bf the prophets and apostles, a 1 ho fepore or this ‘mort popular of all. ‘sir. | there are three men fn your KeIngdom who will not Moody's addressos, which ty given below; isa | PO" Wo are they 1” careful comparison aud collation of the address ““Threo of those Hebrew captlyes; they don't “ aiveu by lat on ace Pecasions stud va he bow down song with the rest af us, and we In the volun entitied **D. L, aor ant is ey ” Worker’ dels the only. full ‘report of it in Mr, | MOnght you would Uke to kuow Ut. We ask you te belleve 4f you Want to get out mpany of hypocrites. you had ‘better make te and come to christ. Tnere will ve ne hypocrites at the marrlaze upper of the Lamb; they will all be dn hell, und you vill be thera with them If you do not make baste and come to Christ, There nother clase who voy: **] know they are hypocrites, but they don't have any foduence over ine," If I conld go te the dour as you ge out to-night, and take you by the hand and ‘eay, "'My frlend, why not accept of the Invitatiun to-night?” ‘ou would gay, '*] pray to be excused to-night; ot tine. T have got euine very pressing ‘bus 4 to-morrow morming to attend to, und t have te go honie to bed ag quick as povsldic, ty get my night's rest. You will have to excuse inc.” And the mothers here would aay, ‘tl have to co home and put the children to bed; you really mun excuse ome":—"tyery pressing buels new"—"*no tine. But” wit have you done with ol! the time God has given Fon Your locke are turning gray, your eye Is grow- ng dim, and that temple of your body is coming down; what have you done with all those years? $s ittrne you buve nus thine What did you do vith the three hundred aud #lxty-five dayslast year? No timet—what have you done with It ally Have not you had time toaccept of this fuvitatiun? Why, men spend diteenor twenty years to learn o pro- fession, or tive year to learn a trade, thut they ec not God freely foryive If iis mercy prompted Him? How cauld God's justice be satisfied by the innocent being punished instead of the gulltyr— thesu wore the sort of questions that perplexed men age after age, and led them Into many o cu rlous extravagance, Do you know, fur instunce, how Luther got out of that dfiiculty of the inno- cent belng punlehed for the guilty? He utd Christ became actually gullty,—not only bore man's poulshment, bat his very wing, '''Thiz, ne doubt" sald be, Said all the prupheta foresee fn apieit, that Christ should become the xreatest tranegressor, mur derer, adultercr, thief, rebel, ond Linsphemer, a ar ee re Fou.to belleye in bypocrt in Christ, Another thin of the once mere! He haa lm broazht up out Continued on the Secenth Pages BUSINESS NOTICES, To the'Conaumptive—Let those who lane guish under the fatal severity of our climate through any pulmonary compinint. or even those who are In decided consumption, by no means de- tpalr, The te fsa safe and sure remedy at hand, and one cadily tried, ** Witbor's Compound of Cod Liver Uj] and Lime,” without possessing the Yery nauseating favor of the oli as heretofore used, is endowed by the phosphate of lime with a heallag roverty which renders the ull deeply efficacious, F R : Iniontals of its vtlleacy can be Itistobe hoped that the list of the General's vic- ring them to me," saya the King, In a great | cheat hln—cven to a sbiliing.* ** Why,” says may eurna ving: and set they have not five uu | Remarkable testinion! 8 i trier Bae Leen properly engraved ou the potat of | Mugdy'sowy pecullar style tuat has ever appeared | sagas +67 will sco wheter Toepe fellewa are guing | ove, ii Lpever saw euch a raan to all my lite, “4 AFTERNOON SERVICE. utes ty sect thelr soul's salvation, | You bavy ny show ty those who desire to eee thems,” Suld by * ie obey my ordera like thin, ** a in an fount the other WL WHA 01 tance a ie 7 * is a . eseapen TUE PROURT DANIEL IN MR. MOODY'S VERSION. en 1s dune Hkely be would havo ordered their fw pounds short; and did not ca rend Trbsckto GOD'S INVITATION TO THE FRAT. you #o out to-nizht uneaved, it will not Le because Ms, Towneond says that Henry Watteraon'a When we come to the Ife of such a manag Dan- | hends to bu taken off at once, if he had not re- | me, und make ane pay the difference? I wink he At balf-past {$ the doore of the Tabernaele were | you huve not time, hut because you won't accept | There are thousands of pecpie In Chiengo pettheoraetimes “xouuds ike phitosophy—but it | fh, the drat thing vs skis: What was the socrot | membered that they were particular frlends of | were back in Jerusalem, where he came from." shut, and by 4 o'clock, the hour for opening ecr- | te tivitation. God says, with ehatterod necver and dvbilitated constitutions, , t*Seck first the kings dom of God." That is the firat thing todo, Don't vay, **P have no time,” take time, ‘Another man away back In the corner of the gal- lery bas tit another excuse, '*1 ain not fit to conte to this fenet, Fam ro bad." Pant eld be waa the *'chief" of alnners; and, tf the chief of «inners hae gone up on high, there 4s hope for everybody else. The devil makes uv believe that we are good euough without eatvation, if he can; and, If he caunut make us believe that, he says, “*You ute x0 bad the Lord won't have you.” know a stent many people want ta come, ‘but they are trying to get bettcrand-to et ready to come, Now mark you, my friend, the Lord invites you jo como jast as you ure: and, if you could make yonreelf better you would ‘not be any moro acceptable to Him, Do not put these althy raza of eelf-righteousnces about yen. God will auip every rng from you when you come to Mim, and He will clothe you With His own glorious garments. When our Wer wae going on, we would sometlates goto the recruiting ofiice and sce a man come In With a elk but, broadctuth coat, calfekin boots— hie ant might be worth $100; and another man woult come in Whose clothes were not worth $55 ‘put they both bad to strip and put on the unfform of the cuuntry, Aud #0 when we go into Chriet's yineyard we tnust put on the Hvery of Heaven, and be wiripped ‘of every rag of ont awn, Here {8 snother exctise coming down from tho Mery, **Ido not know that 1 feel just right.” Koway with your feelloge. Gad fx above feeling. We cannot control our feelings. If T could 1 would feel guod all the time—never catch me fecling bad atanything! eur in mind, Satan may change our feellage (tty thes a doy, bat he cannut change the Word of God; and what we want [sto build our hoper of Heaven upon the Word of Gu: When « pour sinner is coming up outof the pit, and just rate to get ble feet tpon the Ruck uf Aged, the devil aticks out a plank of feeling, and pays. **Geton that," and when he puts his feet on that, down he goes aguin, ‘Take one of thee texts— **Verlly, Laay anto you, he that heareth My Word and believeth on Hint that sent Me bath everiasting: Ufe, und shell not come into condemnation, but ta posecd fromdcath unto life.” Aty friend, that ia worth more thanall the feclings that you can have fn. a whole lifetime. I would a thousand times rather stand op that @ than on thy best franie of feel- af lgauccess? Stell, muy, friends, L'il tell you | Daniel. what Ink was the secret o! js Man's BUCCCHI— low the: 8 face witl . PelhawhiaGed, cA creat many profoning Caries | Mow they stand face to face with the reat dine. tlany never get on Intimate termA with thelr God, | nezzar, They aay you dliubey my orders, anddo aut no they never amount to much, BatDanicl | not bow down and’ worship my golden Image, from his boyhood, knew and trusted in the God of | Now, twill try you once mure; and then, if you Abraham, sud the God of Isaac, and the God of | don't how down, into tho furnace you go." daculg gud that was what put such courage into We dc not know who the spenkur was on thatoc- tm. casion; perhaps it was Shadruch, le stands there There ts another very important thing abont | with hietwo Tends looking calmly at the King, Daniel; he was able tomy vo/ at the right thne. | and thinklug of the flery furnace withont trembling Ttell you, my friends, it would be a great thing fur | jn the least, or feeling the ellghtest fear, And thle ouryoung wen to be uble to suy No! when the | iy what he saya: “We are not carcfal to answer Devil comes upto them and Uegine to coax them | the Bre tat ; away from the God of thelr father and mother, theedn thle aintier O Alag. pe cod whan: we: Wedon't know just how old he was when wo hear RUNNING FIERY FORNACE, of fins tires probably about 17, ha King Nebuck | and ie will deliver uy unt of thise hun 10,3 adnezzar had given orders to take some of the beat ‘| Gnd brightest boys among the Hebrew eaptivos and { #Ut,Whottier He deliver ue or not, wo will not bow bring them np among his wise men. Thoy were to be taught the Junguage und learuing of the Chal- ‘* Who fe this God of yours, that Is able to de- deans, und to be fed With teat und wine from the | liver you out of my handsr” says tho King, tno King's tublo,. "But Dunlel purpoved. in his heart | tewerlng sage, | *Goand heat tant furnace seven thut le would not defile hlmecif with the portion ot | tlme# hotter than evar, and take theya fellows the Ising'd ment, wor with the wing which he | 80, and thrnst them into it. Be quick about it. drank,” ‘There was something in the law of hiv | Will not havo such rebels in ny Kingdom. God forbidding him to eat meat or drink wine So some of Meg Mtnuta scrvauta hurry away to whieh hud beerroffered to idols: nud Daniel know | the fnrusce to stir up th ire, und others seize that the Iing's meat and the King's wine had been | Shadrach, Mosbach, nnd Abedneyo, und take offered to dul, do be determined not totouch It, | tem away; and when the furnace doors ure Ithe had been Hke n good many of our modern | opened, they come near to cust them into the fire, Christiane, he would have saldsomething Hke this: | Which $s so bot that it burns the vervants to dent, “Well, it can’t ba helped, don't like to dente | but dovs nog burin te men who ore cast down snyself in this way; the law of God forbida it; and | hesdlong into it, ‘Then the King goes und looky if were only home In deguealem 1 never would du | inte the furnace; und what is his astonishment at itin tue world, But} rahiy dowteee how weare | Seeing four men, Instead of three, walking in the going to help i we ure olaves, Besider, it a Pa ead as wufely os if thoy were in the the Aug's special order; and te shoutd hear o: 1g'é garde! our disubedience, onr hends would come off inno | 155 Div L not tell yon to.caat in three mon faand time, | dteully, we cau't be expected to run auch ® } fo o9 of the fourth te Ike the Son of God.” ‘Vhat's it; the devil told bim todo tn Babytonas | ‘be Lord Mineclt was with Ile three faithful the peuple of Babylon do. But Daniel had tho hate ied rASeAL ERI pAUS Shepherd looked coca fo eland wp to the law of hia God, und say Hts, Hock avout D be cast nt the ire} and tte Consequences? Never mind the consequences. | made bavte and came dow: haself to sce thai There Lae OY such word In his ‘aletionat When | they suffered no harm. Ab! Jesus ts always with Eafe oa a east hice swat | mul Stearns thew they pony tag fran being dese theme ae cunsequences be what | tre 'gze, they shall not bu burned, ‘The fire burned Du you hearwhat {t says here In this elghth verso ‘olf only the devil's bunds: i did not singe balr of of the tret chapter? *"Daniel purposed iu hls | thelr tends, | 7 Aeart," ‘That's the trouble with a grcut many peo- Does not Corin pale that the hairs of our heads ple; they purpose to do right, but they only pur- | SF atl numbered? here is wonderful care and Jone fy their heads, and that dogsn't amount to | love in thut, | Did you over kuow a mother who Thuch. Ifyou are golng to be Christians you mnet | 1oved ber child ¢owell that whe would count the DUrpade towerve God away down in your hearts, | Hulrs on ite curly hens Dnt the Land Ives sale a the’Aeart mun believeth unto righteous> ones and nob ane af thet conte to, any itty Sowhen the servant who had charro of them | £9 Jong a8 Ils a fatthinl to Aim. came to bring tem thelr dinner, Danlel and his | There way uotaven the smell of tre upon thelr three youny feiends told bis thoy couldn't eat that | garments; and the King’s Counsclors, | and ineat and drink that Wine, becuuse it was aguinat | Princes, and Governure, and Captalns, and all to- the law ef thelr Gud. gether, saw thede men upon whose bodies the fro Look ut that! Daniel docen't try to dodge the pod BG RDA: My Selena toh aa roblaan ue Eley Sie EAVES ‘ WW alwaya rate tu do what God wants u 1. mucabionat.ally ho givek the true Feneon FADE OL) Our way to Heaven lead through lire and water, It Jam afratd vome of you, $f you had been In his taal the wanes (tla all right, “hat te the proper T v ox- | way for us to yo, place, would have tried to hide belind seine ox: | Wiha Rite Nebuchadnezzar orders thesomen that mout and wine didn't agree with vou. Novo | to come out; and he restored them to thelr places with Damel.. He tells that heathen the true reayon | 8#8ln. | He has found out whe wis the God that why he can't est the King’s meat or drink the | Woe able tu deliver Hls servants out of the hands of King's wine, and I have uo doubt the man respect the Klug; and [oan qalte sure that, from this titi tor it. ** Hat, ways he, @it won'tdo et | time. nuither the King nue anybody else in Baby- all, 12 you don’t eal ft, the King will find it out, | lon ventured ta way anything ugainet those men, He'll gee you ome the Jookiny lean and thin, and | of against the God whoin they worshiped, and Bolund's Aromatic Bitter Wine of Iron isa sover- elgn restorative. Depot, 63 Clark-st, duike deep philosnphy of Jacques Oifenbach with LWysnel.” Mr. Wattercon has been known to talk pitole—a style of conversation which may be Ofendschian for the spectators, but Is xsaueedly era logle for the interlocutor, Among the hinportant pictures recently disposed of atthe Leavitt art-rale was Leon y Escosura's “Rode Parrot," which brought 21,251, ¢''Tho Bridal Present,” Ly the eames author, fetched $1,750; Adolphe Schrever's **'The Alurin* $1, G00, Melwoniera "French OMlcer” $551, and Pall Bally's Hawking Expedition" $1,405, Wea great plty! Mrs, Lucy Hooper went to Parle the most acdute of wotnen, and, after a brief Telence there, Wo nd her complaining because doile is noteo nauvrhty ws ehe chould be, Tf it's o Brest plece of cruelty—as Mr, Holmes says—to Yeas funnyasone can be, how ntuch woree would Stbeot Judic tu du her best In the way of nuugutl reat Theextent to which facility in the uae of means of expreesion may be Inguelous to the user Is Huw (ated Inechoote fur the deaf and dumb, whore It Willbe found that the pupits hive more expressive Gnteawices than thuee who are provided with orgs of onfculation,—us If the face were saatst- ‘by tw convey the meaning which could not be given tothe ordinary manner. ‘The Orleans Princes have begun an action of Tater azalnst Derlre Evault, who hag aplot of land teartheforeet of Bondy which he bid in fur 500 franca at the State enly of property In1852. Now, Alter aquarter af a century, the Orleans Princes the Hebeat wen of thelr rank {np Europe—have hioded topethicr to dbipossess the poor man. There's much ezeitement over tho aMule tu Parla, And itis likely (oaasume political {mportance. —” Peri Ufservice in the Brith Army uften ex- ai betes the Minits naval in this country. Sie ee been directed to the case of Col. ah tane retired from the Fifteenth Foot, wer fence of forty-three yeara fu the corpa, i Mbleh were paxwed In It In company with his ii tr, the lute Lient.-Col, W, Grierdon, who ced the regiment ay a Captain tn August, 1804, Thus father and won verved tn the regiment up- wards of teventy-two years, Rd Erantuer condenees ‘*Dantel De Hed ae deven myatic paragrephs, whieh glve clan i atthe hero Wtted Nlmself by the conte oi esnt outut most of the perplesities of wits peeatcltaton ls that the herolue, owlng: cela eatd conditlons of her ex, had no cont- tent a which to Iift herself, und was conse: ee ion vorrowlng,—which {8 the Woman tee ‘min a nut-hell, Glye us ceat-collare or ty Us, ts the mural of the story, at the Rev. SL J. Savage's now volumes In “Ligit on the Cloud.” ‘Tho New York mattis ofits ** There fy much tender and syim- Wilting tn I, and somo good ariginat However, the King trusted Daniel: and he wae | vice, Farwell all alse was Vy fall—quite full auch o thoroughly good and uonest man that they | yoct "ane wo waa omioat) y: Folate Ca fenlly. could FO oa eee eocringe Taempetecs | Hurly minutes tater, wo that Ite doors algo had ta upo him. They talked li over together azain und | be closed, auain, one AlUnmreed, that mere wes ne chisnes oF The opentng prayer at the principal meeting was gutting hin ont-of the way, unless they could in’ | by the Rev, Wr. Uitchcock, a ight of whose something ta. bie religion By wtelrtuey could bring snowy locks and fatherly fuco Is a benediction of “We shall not find any occasion against thiv | iteclf.. Mr. Sankey sang tho ‘*Nincty-ond-Nine,” Daniel, oxcept we dnd it against him concerning { and then Ieft to help at the overow-mevting at ho law of hile God.” What an honurt , Nothing | Faull lal im,—even eeyes of these bi: ony — fay Seri Hee thot ke wastoo faithful wis Godt ‘The Scripture lesson waa the parable of the wed- How many of you are Hkely to be complatned of | ding-feast, fron the fourteenth chapter of Luke, on that acepuntt Kea wuleniles thocgne [ee the ecrmon was one of Mr, Moody's prime old. Pnally, they hit upon a plan which they thought | favorites, with which ho haa awalened more sin- might possibly succeed. One night they are clos- ‘ ooh Sled together in secret: and uncof the Princes saya | Here than almost any ater, except that an ‘+The tothorust: ‘1 think’) have got a plan that ‘wi | Blood.” The text was: work. Youkoow King aria is very popular, TUD BERMON, and he Ja very proad of it, ‘he people pratee hin 1 pray theejhave we excused.—Luke, zir., 19. apreat deal, Bid he Hkes ft. Now, euppone we | Mr. Moody sald, in the opening of this chapter, ask him to eetablish o royal decree, ‘that whovo- | they were told that Cheiet was Invited: by the High ever aball ask a petition of any god or man for | Priest to heala man on the Sabbath day. Tt was thirty days, save of the King: he shall be cast into | cvidently their Intention to catch Him on this im- the den of Hons,’ ‘That will) be putting the King | portaut tine, but Jesus knew thelr object, and in the plice of the gody, aud he tg most Ukely to be | ayked if it was lawful to do much things on Sunday. flattered by that of anything] can think off then, | ‘They held thelr peace, and the man was healed if ance wa can got thut ald Mebrew Into the Hon's | without anuther word, Christ then began to speak den, we shall make a great teal more money than | ty him, and among other thingy told lim of thls wo have been ablo to do with him watching us all feast, | It wus couitnun when 3 inan gave n feat io he "ss that there was a rush to the tables, but when This notion, seemed to please the Princes very God prepared 8 feast men puzzled thelr well. ‘Thoy drew up the document immediately, | brains to find excuses, Did they ever con- Te would not do to let Duntel hear of {tbeforetae | slder what wonld happen If “God ehould King should sign {t; and wo they appointed a ccm | take people at thelr word when they refused to ot- mnittes to take the decree down to the pulace the tend Hla feust, and with one stroke swept all down very first thing inthe morning. ‘There were some | todeath? Ali thedrunkards, libertines, barlote in lawyars aimong these hundred and twenty Princes; | Chi te would be gone, Numbers of other citlzens and 1 seem to ses them drawing ont the law with | would be swept away, and the grads would be grow: great care, making it trm and Sinding-Isughing | inzdn our streets inside of three weeks, But God fo themselves, aud saying: ‘I'he law of the | did not want todo that; He desired that every one Medes and Persians change not. If unce we can } should accept the invitation. Nellect what it was get Darius to stamp this document with his elguet- | tu whieh they were duvtteds tt was the marriages ting, Danlel is done for, eure enough." eunper of the Lamb, Now, they all liked to go to ‘Su the Comtmiltce go down to the palace next [Pa upper, but the people, nevertheless, refused to morning to obtaln his algnature, ‘They began by | attend the Lord's feast, ‘The fact was, nen did nat flattering tlm, Ifa man waula another to doa | accept because they did not belleve it was a feast. Teak thing, he always begins by appealing to his ASLOG were dheexclecs ulyen by those. lnvited, es vanity. related In St. Luke ue had boughts pieces of “+ Klng, we have been th! how popular | land, and wanted to ga and “look at it. you oe your itngdony and et rae do Why tldnt ho fo the feast and Iotuake yourself even more famous than you. are; | Wok after lils real estate in the morning? Another and welave come to the conclusion that if you | eold lw had turried x wito, and theretury could not Would publiah advcree that nobody jin the king- | RO. Why didn’t ho take ty eswits atong with bint dom, for thirty days, should pray to any other god Those were paorexcuees; Indeed the men whe snake except yourself, it would turn the hearts of ull the them were iurs. But men, nowadays wore pettty: Peon towards you evun more than now. We | Wore Iu thelr excures, | The tret thins uty avited Qionld then have a universal religion, and the | guest now did was to talk about the ald Bible and King would be at the head of tt." ‘ criticise it unfavorably, Now he didn't belleve Darlus felt Mattered by this proposition. He Jatdeteard, akon, wo were feats the peat vs 1 Cul t oli book, had spent much the fn ite persual, Srna Ie over in hile windy aml ptensntly ashe waenot fa he expected that people could under- CAN riait maid the Princes, ‘Wo thonynt | stant the mysteries of God In a few years, If they you would Hike it; and, in order that thera tm vould understand §t Ike any other book, it would yee i ny delay, We have the document here | Be sure proof that it was wot the word of God, iiready druwn up’ Now, if you Will nicase to | Any mau contd yo to the Biblo If he hove, und stamp this with your signet-ring, we shall have It | find the Poa ty peaiions. “ann _ wheo he publlviied right away,” recelved that Might from heaven the ‘ho King’ tukea thw document, readait over, | Bible Wontd he a mew book to hin. Vor stauipys be geal upon ite and thd Committee go | himself he would rather give up. alt books fn the away laughing, and saying, Ma, hat old Me- provid thus ive ap te bio, | When they cons fi ‘ dere ee emembel brow wen have you th the den of Hons befure | To must be born of thy Spirit before ho exu woe ‘The Princes lost no. thne In pobllaiing the new derstand spiritual things. Another common ox+ decree of the King. can fiuagina S018 OTe 0 ee eee een tation unt Suse Ay ——. nae a NI ILLINERY, LUINERY, MILLINERY, AT THE Wast End Ory Goods House, Madison & Peoria-sts, TRIMMED HATS In great varioty and nowost designs, Tho Latest Novelties in UNTRIMMED HATS, Plain and Fancy Braids, Good Folts in all colors and shapes for 40c, Fine Fur Felts for Misses for 76c. JUST OPENED. A now lot of Fino French Folts for Ladios and Misses in all the loading shapes and shades, Just received, afino assortment of Fancy Foathors. Foather Bands in all the newest pattorns. Fancy Willow Plumes, Ostrich Plumos, all colors, Ostrich Tips in evory shade, Handsomo French Plowers and Fall Leaf Sprays and Monturos. Fino assortmont of Millinery Orna- monts, Velvots, Silke, Ribbons, &0. Hats trimmod tastefully and all ordors oxocuted with promptness. injr. Kinere fs another clas4, who say they cannot be- Mi id to me, **E-cannot Taaid, ** Whoy “Well, I cannot be- Taald, *Whor He stammered and stut- tered, and Ewald, ‘Who cannot yon belleve, Godt Oh, yes; T believe God, Peannot belleve myself." “*Well, you do not want to believe yourrelf, Your heart ts deceltfa), but God never duce! anybody, Hefare you venture to doubt the Alnghty just find outa eingle Instance where Tle hos broken dis word.”* Dare you make Nght of the Invitation ? Suppose you should just write ontun excusy tothe King of Heaven: ** While sitting In the Tabernacle, Oct. 20, 1876, [received a very pressing Invitu- ton from one of Your mesrengera to be present at the marriage supper of Your uly beroteen Son. Tpray Thee have me excused.” Would you como upund sen that? Would you take your pea and put your name down to that excuee? Tdoudt whether there is a man in this room who conld be made to #ign this excuse: but what will you dor Many of you will get up and go out of thiv hall, paying no attentlon te the invitation. 1 beg of ou, do not make light of thisdovitation, 1¢ 4 a loving God that fuvites you; but God fy not to be ho'tl ask you wit the matter 1s, aud then I'sual) | Why liad duilvered them out of the tlery furnace « H ; Danlel’s friends, who had sees the document, | yy sod bs at “ | mocked, Yoetry; butt has ‘ Jouw my head av well nu yor ‘Tho King hluwelf makes a decree, "That overy | going up to hls offco in great haste, ve inn | Well say that God ts a hard master and the Devil 18) ™ suet jut mo weite out another reply: To the teaplag ta comtons lakular charscterlatie uf at- | 18. Sie try forten dye, ways Dantol. ‘Give | people, nation, and langunge, which, shall spen Hariing that thero was sate trouble brewlng. gu eany one. That, bowever, was the reverse Of | xing of Hsaven. Whilo sitting In the Tabernacle, l Mlle woe amNeOrt those who sorrow by teachings | ye pulse co cut and water ty driak, audscehow wo | Anything wmles avant the Cod of Bhadrchy | + Linve you heard the news. Danlel? Those Ser ta etn Tle et a a ne EE | Oct. 2a, 18rd, I received & presalng Invitution i Ratt to founded well from tho pen of | yet along on ih") Biceeboch "anil Abatnegts ehall be cut tu pleces, | hundred und twenty Princes Inive xuuu anil ot Nard muvtert beetle ctlew Of Noe nas] -Tuae | from one of “Your vervaute to be preent at the * eal truth ot canes but wileh ignore tho Bo theaacvent fled Berle ea ri oie thera leno otuer God that can deliver after this Darius to publish a decree that moh na PTY | rexpouse, Alt. Moody eaid, was marriage supper of Your only-begotten Bon, 1 | meee tn ‘ te rlstlanity, and do not scem ‘Whe enouzh fora Chrietlan inintater to eay.** to say other god except him for thirty days. | would repeat the que: ao Victoria Wooduull, enrlougly enongh, scems to ‘That consptracy agaltet yuu. Now f watt to 2 give you @ litle duyico; and thit W to got out uf ‘ne arse a Tite sat dusten ‘to replys Iby the race of God | will be present." Who will sign that? Who will set to to-night that God ja trac? He wise tos fon. [the buat-looking of the whole crowd. sort.” Yo the King promoted thers men; and, in- Christ wae nots lard Some people think wine wakes them look better, | stead of belug burued to death tn the furnuce, they and that thoy can't got along without lt. Look at | came to by wore onurable than eve hele a (hem all tu change employers SHGOND-HAND ~~ STEINWAY PIANOS. tt rs ts town Ino hurry," - 4 cinvl c nf night and accept of the Invitation, Make up your “bore In favor at Howton than anywhera cleo, | thelr red nusce and bloated facea! I tell you, Mio next thing we hear of the King te, tat ho | Panter wage ne can't Teuve Mle bustncen, f fO-days Acces te Muamen at once, and tie WON | amind now: do not go avvay til the question of eat’ ot uncharitallo enough ta presuine that AUL THY STIMULANT A PRUSON NEED has had Mo iw afraid thees hundred und twenty Peluces will | gisgutolug that Christion Ute was 4 condict, put | eternity iw settled, ttl any myuterious bond of uympathy between, fu the Word und the grace of Uod. ANOTHER DRBAM. cheat tho revenuca whilu he is away, Hla daty te ) fire in every way was a conitict; but it wan a’ good, ANNOUNCEMENTS, ‘Thera was a soldier down in Tonnessce when I | He scems to have been o great man for dreams, was there,—a great, eteang, hearty tellow,—who | This thine he saw a great tree which **reached Wad a tuetotuler. One day, when tho army was | unte Heaven, und the wight thereof tu the end of golng on uloug march, awtin offered hima drink | alltuoearth; . . . und, behold, o watcher and of whleky,. anhuly onv camu down from Heaven, and cried “+L ama Cectotater,” waa hla raply. wloud: ‘*Hewduwn thia tree, and cut down his ‘*Never mind that, Your're im tho army now; | branches, shake off his leaves, and scatter lig right there, and he t¢ determined to wtay there and Mr. Moody {a called out of tuwnon account of attend to it. aicknesa in hile familly. He will not bu at the noon “Well, thes miveling wniil to-morrow. Pralee meeting to-night at the Tabernacle con- ducted by Br. Sankey, ‘The chuir are all urged to be prevent. They ure alaodealred to attend the deal better'te have Clirlst help ua fight the battle than fight italone. Tho excuse was made by some people that they were wicked, hard-learted, and worldly-minded, and the Lord woud not lave any- thing todo with them, ‘That was unother false ex- And | CH. God received sinnere; was the only us hCagainvt Christ while He was on et neal and Woadhulllam, bist mention, re haven la worth, ‘lhe Boston papers Graatie geet future for Mra, Woudhull on the techie gece: And epeak with werlousnces of hor ebut os Lay Macbeth at Covent Garden had yon not better pray more Fe. cretly? You have a habit, that ix all Well choug! In ordinary tines, of golig up to your cha where the windows open towards Jerusal saying your prayers there three times 3 any. | noon-inveting in Farwell Hall, Seats reserved for - aon. If Aung Dickinson, with her rare | bealtes, you need suino utimulant to bvlpyouon | frult: letthe beauty get away from under it, anit pomuticnes Aan pray pretty loud, aud peoply out of chase bron How He received the, droniard doha | them near (ue organ. is Wellave now in stock a number of superb fece Foren and natural graces, eannct aueceed, whay | ‘ule long march. * Hie fowls {rom lta branclies, Nevertheless, leave | doors cau ear you, “Now juwthut your windows | jin je hitna bright Hieht iu the world. |, ‘The concerts aad tuqulry.meeting appointed for ond-hand Steinway Saat daltwnich: we" are eae ee che! fer Sea, Wood? WHEE | Taking out a packet ible, he held Stup before | uostump of hid euots th thecal se veaate | Benedsuteaigo tu tuvo momo a0 layas for these | Goqiia ready reconelied tu aiumers, aud he be- | te,plcht ts recalted unit Se, Soouya return, || SUN g ager at extfadrainary barguina,” Haviug rane Sttakouct Wy a gay deceiver, Shut fv alt tho sttuutilant L want.’ Fo a EE ae eee iet seven titaee pase | at your prayers, “You bad botter stop up tne key. } feecell em fo accept the fuvitation and prepare r ree revatalatied and bollehed and thoroughly co- ¥ ‘a | Jast week. Chicago & Northwestern, Milwankes Division, at 9:30 p,m. SMlinols Central 5. Chicago, Hurlington & Quincy at 10 a'clack’ p. WW. ESpress etops at all wiations east of Auzors. Just wu wita Daniel. Iv took Gou's elde fu this | over him: to tho intent that thy lying may know questlon, aud Leld ta God's terms, aud God wade | that tho Most High ruleth tn the kingdom of mien, iim strony and Hunley pave hin favor with those | and ylvuth if to whumsouver Ho will,” who saw bis honesty, aud, above all, peace in ble ‘rhe King aecms to have been ad much puzzled own woul. by this dream as by the others and nobody could hi holy of your door ulaa, for these mean fellows ore 4 tee ero yaaa yous wut Ue Tie OVERELOW MEETING | Min better if you would wot need dowmat ally | ALP cinscun Mhe eeraun was by the fev but way your prayers after yon get into bed." | ate, “chamberluin, on the aubje ot, prayer, ay i i Alt how inany young men have kone to buses | justrated by the promiva of I aehueras to alred, they are practically equal to now, and when Paldwill be accolnpanied wish the ssiae Guaranty aa te given with our pew Bteluway IN & FEALY, Btate and Monroo-sts., Chicago, tthe fubricution of an active Horas) maslnatlon. He started with tha tresgrent ftaneleco, und obiaiied a coluumn of tyow ins there, ‘Then be brought ft to Chi- Mintle “ON, Sew ¥ hu wext we bear of him Iwabout two years af- | tell bin what it icant, untit he went for Daniel. | or tu college and fost their peace o iraled puns um BROOKE WERYORD. eee Wun tove nse fetulty. Now tt iv New York | ,,Fisuest wa heat Of I about, Ive yoertaye | leven uo wus troubled about Wat Grets but prevent- | ftope in Clirlut Uecanga they were afruld 2 pray | Qe Tt Lingdoms nv wellue the words of | TAB REVIVAL PREACHING OF The “DLOOD” WATONES, JEWELRY, &c. Vor papervee ged withthe boll, and the New | ing iv hand on Daniel's shoulders, und arresting | ly the Lord showed it ta iim and then he preached | befure their roommates! ccun te init ile bingom yas Mull ng the wore of Eee ee maUING oe e f refullof the scheme, Whether Mr. | bin in the King’ nad . Ser aeerimon tothe King about bbs prides and the | And whut does Danlel say to such adview aa thie? | Christ. of aimiiar aad even better Hnport, in Sar ‘The Rev, Brooke Herford lectured last night | PRICES ON AMERICAN WATCHES script San adlurd (o make mlsstatomente of this “What's the mutter? says Daniel. King's face turned palu, and his knees vegan to } Mewcoutstt. Yu tramples it undor his fret. No ee thle bret Sud -practleat- alscousee,, Tir je Rev, Bre r! jectured last olght in at a pion is, of conrse, entirely a question be- ovWhy, Laven’t you heard? aaye the officer. | shuke, and it wow not long before he louthfareason, | man shall binder him from praying. No King Thompson and Mr. Sunke: hoth gave short and the Church af the Messiah (of which be fw the HBENDALL’S, antlelt and hly own conelenen but it is | The King ae rein last hight, fo When he and wandered tat td fom i] palaces oe ae Te coal felghtgn Sarat ert C ae aidrewivs, citing rome caves they had met | tf. Corner of Michigun avenue and ‘Twenty-third No, 242 Statovat., corner duckson, eI 1 "b Fe er It; #0 woods uni cuerts, un ate ‘0 like & js ma! rt $ ver th ct ies ee 3 ‘ set, wey vat Dy s : a tea foe? vPATENL that no reapectabto newspaper | NONTAP uagtosethor aud ovked then tool higt | beast thana man, utat lust, tho Lord liad merey | usual; ud-wheu 1 u'eluck comes, he yucw tv dle % Inquiry-faum—one of a man who wis | street, upon **Tle Hevival Preaching of the before buying, | Am lun Hunting” ed Case Silver Wateh, Warranted, $2 ia ry, bia dream, and then interpret it for him. Rea on him, Ils coungelors and Princes gathered about Blood Unacriptaral and Degradin; could tell It, Tho Klug was #o angry that he eom- | him again, and brought him buck ‘tu the palace, manded thatall the wise men should be put to | int the Klag's heart was softenud. - think he be+ death, You Lelong ta that school; so you wit! | came truly converted tu God; aud from thia time have to die," we don't tear him eaylng any more: $*1y not tia **1t secins to me the King {a rathor hasty," says | the great Babylon that 1 have builded?" Lut we Danisl—cool and calm as a summer miorning. | bear bim blessing the Most High, and praising and se Justiet tim give uva little the, and J’ ebow | honoring iim whow dominion is everlasting, and bli bis dream and the interpretation alvo,"* whose Kingdom tv from generation to generation, He knew ble God and trusted fn Him, All And now the King makes one more proclamation, secrets bulung tu Godt, different from all the others. Up to this tine ho Tuas wight Danie) and hia three frionds hada | has been telling other people what tudo; now he ceraee tt Mlurd wo put any confidence In hin ether eet oF manager. It Iv equally tmprob- eden 22, uedltats tho building ‘of three Veli any, vor that ho ever verfously intended to ” The charch Sire ea ROYAL BAKING POWDER. wees OYAL rowper. in b Sd ite a eedawe wide oben, kneels | brought ta Chrint by m stranger who noticed lly Se a, vist to Darius, But to dhe’ Gad of | evident fouling; another af tau -loys we 1 aml te Abraham, Iewac, and dacub. His windows aru years who first came tothe | nau Sieet ane dpened towanta Jerusalem, and bls face i turned | found the Savior, und who three nlghte afte that way? for deruvaiera ie dearer to hin than bia ) Were there again with thelr mnuther sitting betwee Titer and the God of hia fathers is hivwure defense, | tem. whore beart bad been turned to seek the Jiehn ween, to avo bins knecting there—that old { Lord by thu childiiity fatth and earnestness of Ber man, with blu white locks und beard, praying at thy | Mons, | Me. Sankey aloo monhionue how hapiy te nrovaulv cost of his jife; but hw dove nut seein to | lad been in duding his own little eon with a bio Potroubied by the danger; neither ta ho ungey at | Plensifully marked for use, trylus to lead the boys Ree a ened ot the Kind or tue manifest wicked: | of tis own oye Into the way of Ife, He then aang d. y the aolo, Watching and Waitog. news of those hundred and twenty Princes. io Sethe clove an Staion ne ‘given for backs MOREL, ARRIVALS, wse~Thy Hon, Jolin A, Nye, Dako- (g¥ York: “tho Han. i. &, Mall, iE Norton, Now Yoriss Col, W. 8. gota Frauke, Pi wetptia. Sher Ne eruiilyes, at New Yorks In. 8, Roverta, Boston, _ erry ogother, : doubt | bogina to speak of bia own duty, oud ‘he says, | prays for tho King, his friond,—who, hu ty eure, yHuetons dates Sinith, de, and J. they deat sroviory ot desephis haw the dreame ee | eee Nebuchadnezzar, will do Thistor ‘will do | huedone thiv wickedness ia vome thoughtless mo- atone aie ee ee to Hee he sesiron Gg Pauls Beit Maven eae oe, andy. | iN uburauh were rovealedto' bin; and how, ia | that.” +1 will prave and oxtol and honor the | ment, Ho prayy for his enemles, tho Princes, who Dare teri cmp rarer tar aera y Faso, vos Henry fall, Filladelphta; came to bua great man In Egypt afterwards. And | King of Veaven, allot whose ‘works ase (ruth. | are wickedly eecklug to destroy him, ‘ab ro amends V" Palmer Houss—O. | theu thoy weot w weep. I dou't thtuk many of | Ie bas found ont bla own duty, Ile heart ty soft. ‘Those wen have taken care that two witnesses : a i MEAT EE ohn’ ¢ Caulfield, Spring- | you would have gone to sleep with euch danger aa | encd; sua, elthonul we do not hear anything wore | shall be undorneath Daniel's window at the time EVENING SERVICE, RECEIVED THB HIGHEST xanilve Guild, Welfavt, Ireland: E That hanging over your heuds. But Daniel slept; | of him, f have no joubt that Daniel and he used to | when he sstally ques 10 pray. **Harki" saya ono Tue BXCUSES OF TUM WICKED. MOLUF. ay Cape t alt A. G. Robinson, U. 8. A.; | aud iu bis alee the King’s dream wos revealed to walk the wtrecté of Babylon arm-in-arn, and talk | to the other, **Did you heur thatt The old man ie s g oe ee Pettey ath Melbuurne, Australia... rund im, over their oxperiences tugethes; and, Wheu the | up there pray toi sure enough! Listen; be da not Tho evening service way & continuation of that Ubogue Ureed, St. Panty J, ik. Graver The next morning therg wee a great atirall abont | King dlod, I feul quite sure that he went safely to | praying to King Darius.” of the afternoon, with another overtiow ot Farwell ies Willan oat, ee aykks Gkaven, | 4 The next morning thers wet ee oung Hebrew | heaven, to be welcomed by the God of Daniel; and |" ‘'No,” saya the ather; ‘*helapraying tothe God | 11s, conducted by B. F, Jacobs, Eq. At the Ae Auton: dudze f'n. Moons Heaukekee, | captive was going te tell th King Mia dn ugh tbe long eturnity King Nubuchadueszar Meee ail, conducted by y Bag. tive was going to tell the King his dream, aud | thro vite ibe tives of aul the wiso metot Babylon; aud | will rejolco that that young man, Daniel, took his wveryvedy was anxious to kupw allabout st Lcun atand for God whea hv camo down to Babylon, aud Centennial: Award. — Of the Hebrews. a W. Bo they listen till tho prayer tw Gulshed, and then | Tabernacle tho opening prayer was by Prot, F. W. tuoy Lusty aay to tas Pgaces, wo give welr evie | Pk, D. D., of Chicago Theoiozical Beminary, 4 4 Paces Cuuibeldgo; 0, By Urliln, Sau